エピソード

  • Hiccup One: How We Got Here
    2020/07/16

    In this final episode of season one, Risa and Maureen look back at the last few months of working on the podcast. They revisit interviews that didn't make it into this first season but were crucial in their journey chronicling the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States.

    hic·​cup: a usually minor and short-lived interruption or disruption, or change

    Though this is the end of their official season, Hiccup episodes will be scattered throughout the year. So stay tuned!


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    37 分
  • Arrested Development: The Challenges Facing Education
    2020/07/07

    We explore how education is evolving in different parts of Michigan, a state which often serves as a barometer of things to come throughout the United States. Paula Alejo (a sophomore in high school) and Nashawn Longmire (a senior in high school) speak with us about their final months of this school year and their hopes for the next. Heather McKaig, a high school English teacher and theatre director, opens up to us about her concerns for students during this time and into the future. And Aaron Williams, the principal at Burton Glen Charter Academy outside Flint, Michigan, discusses the specific challenges his community faces, both regarding COVID-19 and the protests surrounding George Floyd's death.

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    37 分
  • Loss of Taste, Smell, & Love Scenes: Art & Entertainment
    2020/06/29

    At the start of California's Stay-at-Home orders, Maureen and Risa speak with actors William Jackson Harper (NBC's "The Good Place") and Haley Joel Osment (Hulu's "Futureman", "The Sixth Sense") to discuss what is entertaining them in quarantine, the future of Hollywood, and the "new normal". 

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    35 分
  • Deaths of Despondency: Ravaged Nursing Homes
    2020/06/22

    Annie Wild shares her experience of having her father in the memory care unit of a nursing home in Michigan. Sarah Slocum, Co-Director of Altarum's Program to Improve Elder Care, gives a brief history of elder care in the United States and hope for where it is heading.

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    33 分
  • Law & Order: The Criminal Injustice System
    2020/06/18

    Prison populations across the country are being devastated by COVID-19, with few state governments intervening to help. In order to protect those within the prison system at risk of needlessly contracting the virus, Yosha Gunasekera, a public defender in New York, is advocating for early prisoner release for numerous clients at Rikers Island. 

    José Saldaña shares his struggles and triumphs in the work he does as Executive Director of the Release Aging People in Prison Campaign, as well as his personal experience as a prisoner in the NYS prison system for 40 years. 

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    41 分
  • Beat the Drum: #SayTheirNames
    2020/06/12

    Deonta Williams is an educator and photographer residing in Davison, Michigan. He talks to us about George Floyd's death, documenting peaceful protests in Flint, and inspiring his mostly African American students in painfully difficult times like these. 

    Elz Cuya Jones is the Deputy Director of North Star Fund, a social justice nonprofit supporting grassroots organizing in NYC and the Hudson Valley, led by communities of color. She shares her thoughts on what it means to be an ally, actions we can take to help support African American communities, and her personal journey in fighting for racial justice.

    We especially want to thank the Magic Theater in San Francisco. We remixed the powerful episode, #SayTheirNames, from their podcast Far Apart Art, at the end of this podcast, about which the Magic Theater wrote:

    "Friday, June 5th should have been Breonna Taylor’s 27th birthday. Breonna was an EMT and an emergency room technician. She was also a daughter, granddaughter, sister, and a niece. In honor of Breonna and the hundreds of thousands of Black bodies that have been terrorized by white supremacy since the genesis of this country, Magic has put together a special edition of our podcast during which we will #SayTheirNames.

    We invite you to hear, to see, and to pay tribute to the person behind each of those names. We have left room for you to say their names in a call and response fashion, or to write down unfamiliar names so you might learn more about them. We owe a debt of gratitude to Kimberlé Crenshaw, The African American Policy Forum, and The Black Lives Matter network for this movement. Playwright Aleshea Harris also offers some meaningful rituals here: What To Send Up On Your Own.

    Let this move you, but work diligently to transform your emotions into tangible action. As artists, we are nothing if not catalysts for change.

    We want to thank Magic family members Steven Anthony Jones, Leigh Rondon-Davis, Rod Gnapp, Safiya Fredericks, Sarah Nina Hayon, Adrian Roberts, Rinabeth Apostol, and Sara Huddleston for their generous contributions to this podcast."

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    37 分
  • Put a Stamp On It: Save the USPS
    2020/05/25

    Roxxann, a mail artist and USPS letter carrier, describes her struggles working for an under-resourced government agency serving every corner of our country, including the most underprivileged populations.

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    31 分
  • Superman's Kryptonite: The Myth of Youth
    2020/05/18

    Dylan Hales, an Australian restaurateur residing in Brooklyn describes surviving COVID-19 during New York City's initial surge, when little was known about the virus itself and less was set up to help those suffering from it.

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    23 分