Notes from America with Kai Wright

Notes from America with Kai Wright is a show about the unfinished business of our history, and its grip on our future.

https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/anxiety

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 40m. Bisher sind 368 Folge(n) erschienen. .

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 9 days 14 hours 22 minutes

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episode 10: Keep Calm and Check Your Bias


Our current situation has left many of us asking fundamental questions about our work, about our relationships, and the meaning of home. This week, we're checking in on one another and taking stock. Host Kai Wright calls reporter Jenny Casas on her drive


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 March 26, 2020  25m
 
 

episode 11: Dispatches from People Stranded in Place


We’ve got two dispatches from communities where "social-distancing" is not an option. And where decisions we made long ago about homelessness and immigration policy are getting in the way of our ability to protect against Covid 19. WNYC Investigative Rep


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 April 3, 2020  27m
 
 

episode 12: A History of Style in a Pandemic


When health officials ordered everyone to wear face masks during the 1918 influenza pandemic, black women in Chicago got creative and crafted jewel-studded veils to stay safe. Kai Wright speaks with The Undefeated’s Soraya Nadia McDonald about seeking jo


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 April 8, 2020  10m
 
 

episode 13: Questions to Ask While Waiting


Right now, many of us are sheltered in our homes — alone or with company — finding ways to connect in our “new normal.” And as we grapple with how COVID-19 has reshaped our day-to-day, all most of us can do is wait it out. So in this episode, we’re going


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 April 13, 2020  16m
 
 

episode 14: Why Covid-19 Is Killing Black People


As black people die from Covid-19 at disproportionate rates, the disease is highlighting health disparities we’ve long known about. Kai Wright speaks with Arline Geronimus, a public health researcher, about what happens to black people’s bodies — on a ce


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 April 24, 2020  33m
 
 

episode 15: Inside the Prison Pandemic


Three months ago, Kai Wright joined The New Yorker Radio Hour's David Remnick, for a special episode about the effects of mass incarceration and the movement to end it. And now, as the coronavirus pandemic puts inmates in acute and disproportionate dange


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 May 1, 2020  21m
 
 

episode 16: The Life and Work of Ida B. Wells


Journalist and activist Ida B. Wells was in some ways, a forgotten figure, overlooked even in black civil rights history. But her reporting on lynchings across the South was unwavering in its mission: calling America out on racial injustice. And this wee


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 May 8, 2020  30m
 
 

episode 17: 'I Did Not Watch the Video'


The week Ida B. Wells’ reporting on lynching received a Pulitzer Prize, a video of 25 year-old Ahmaud Arbery being chased and killed began to circulate on social media. It was one of the few news stories that have grabbed widespread attention amid the co


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 May 21, 2020  30m
 
 

episode 18: Keeping Released Prisoners Safe and Sane


It’s hard enough when there’s no pandemic to keep mentally ill inmates from falling through the holes in a patchwork system when they come out. Now it’s harder than ever. A huge number of people who are locked up in this country are mentally ill or addic


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 June 4, 2020  41m
 
 

episode 19: 'Community' Is a Verb. And It’s Hard


As the nation faces the dual brunts of the pandemic and the on-going brutality against black bodies, people more than ever are finding ways to “do the work” in their communities. This week our reporter Jenny Casas takes us to a neighborhood in Chicago wh


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 June 12, 2020  28m