About this episode
Yesterday
After Watergate: The Backslide (Part 2)
40m 2s
Jun 9
After Watergate: Reforming Government (Part 1)
32m 24s
Jun 7
A Nation Of Readers: Isabel Wilkerson + Tara Westover
51m 36s
Apr 2025
[BEST OF] Malcolm X: By Any Means Necessary
2h 39m
Jan 2020
Episode 45: The Nation Of Islam Against The Carceral State In Garrett Felber's Those Who Know Don't Say
1h 3m
Nov 2025
Was Lee Harvey Oswald a Lone Gunman?
47m 9s
Jul 2021
Alyssa Goldstein Sepinwall, "Slave Revolt on Screen: The Haitian Revolution in Film and Video Games" (UP of Mississippi, 2021)
1h 10m
Apr 2025
The Assassination of Malcolm X Pt. 1
41m 15s
Oct 2019
Episode 41: Racism and Capitalism in Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor's Race For Profit
1h 8m
Oct 2025
Justice Anthony Kennedy's book is not boring
9m 32s
Aug 2025
We the People: Succession of Power
47m 31s
Oct 2025
Remembering Anticolonial Algiers: Panthers & Pan-African Revolutionaries w/Elaine Mokhtefi
1h 16m
It’s February 22nd. This day (February 21st, in fact) in 1965, Malcolm X is assassinated as he’s giving a speech at a Harlem ballroom.
Jody, NIki, and Kellie discuss why X felt as if his killing was almost an inevitability, why the details of that day remain murky — and how two of the accused were exonerated decades later.
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Our team: Jacob Feldman, Researcher/Producer; Brittani Brown, Producer; Khawla Nakua, Transcripts; music by Teen Daze and Blue Dot Sessions; Audrey Mardavich is our Executive Producer at Radiotopia
In part two of our conversation about the long shadow of Watergate, we discuss the ways in which Nixon tried to rehabilitate his image -- and how many of the reforms of the Watergate era were tested and exploited in the decades since.Join our America250 newsletter community! Subs ... Show More
For the twenty-third installment of “50 Weeks That Shaped America” we go to 1974. Of course we had to do an episode on Watergate as part of this series, but in this week’s two-parter we try to paint a picture of what came immediately after the scandal that brought down Nixon. We ... Show More
Isabel Wilkerson, author of "Caste" and "The Warmth of Other Suns" and Tara Westover, author of "Educated," on the power of books and history to expand our horizons.For the past 250 years of America’s existence, books have been fundamental instruments through which we preserve, i ... Show More
<p class="date"><em><strong>ORIGINALLY RELEASED Aug 1, 2019</strong></em></p> <p>Chuka Ejeckam joins Breht to discuss the one and only Malcolm X. In this episode, we honor the life, legacy, and radical clarity of Malcolm X, one of the most fearless and honorable figures in the st ... Show More
<p>In this episode we talk to author Garrett Felber about his book <em>Those Who Know Don't Say: The Nation of Islam, The Black Freedom Struggle, and the Carceral State</em> which is out today, January 13th. 2020. The book is a political history of the Nation of Islam which cente ... Show More
Why not have a go at understanding one of the most famous conspiracies of the 20th Century?We will probably never get an answer for what really happened in Dallas on November 22, 1963. But in this episode, we're questioning why? What is the evidence that prevents us from believin ... Show More
Michel-Rolph Trouillot wrote that “the silencing of the Haitian Revolution is only a chapter within a narrative of global domination. It is part of the history of the West and it is likely to persist, even in attenuated form, as long as the history of the West is not retold in wa ... Show More
Malcolm X’s radical ideas about racial justice won him many followers, and spawned just as many enemies. When Malcolm X was assassinated in 1965, three men were promptly arrested. But for decades, questions have lingered about whether the right men went to prison, and more import ... Show More
<p>In this episode we interviewed professor and author Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor about her latest book <em>Race For Profit: How Banks and the Real Estate Industry Undermined Black Homeownership.</em> The book has already been put on the long-list for the National Book Award. Taylor ... Show More
As a justice on the Supreme Court, Anthony Kennedy wrote some big opinions.He was appointed by President Reagan, and most often voted with conservatives.But his vote was often pivotal in controversial cases about hot-button issues like same-sex marriage and abortion, and in sever ... Show More
The 25th amendment. A few years before JFK was shot, an idealistic young lawyer set out on a mission to convince people something essential was missing from the Constitution: clear instructions for what should happen if a U.S. president was no longer able to serve. On this episod ... Show More
In this collaboration between Guerrilla History and the Adnan Husain Show, Adnan has a wonderful conversation with a remarkable radical activist, Elaine Mokhtefi, as part of our ongoing series of interviews with living historical revolutionaries. Elaine Mokhtefi is author of "Alg ... Show More