The “grandmother of Juneteenth” on the holiday’s past, present, and future
Please note: This transcript has been automatically generated.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham Hey y’all, it’s Brittany. On July 5th, 1852, famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass spoke at an Independence Day celebration in New York. He was kicking ass and taking names and asked the question on all Black folks’ minds, “What to the American slave is the Fourth of July?” One Independence Day when I was a kid, between the fireworks and the cookout, my dad made sure I read that speech. Now, I didn’t understand everything in it, but that question I got. And he wanted to make sure I knew that barbecue aside, this was not the day of our independence. For us, that day is our beloved Juneteenth. This Saturday, June 19th, will mark one hundred fifty six years since the day slavery was ended in Texas. And for years, Juneteenth celebrations have been mostly regional, but especially in the years since the Ferguson uprising, and especially after last year, more and more of us have wanted to reclaim our stories and our history, our celebrations. And so Juneteenth has risen in the American consciousness for Black folks and for non Black folks too. Personally, I’ve found myself caring more about this holiday. Last year I was invited by Billie Eilish, yes that Billie Eilish, to take over her Apple radio show for Juneteenth. And up until UNDISTRACTED it was the thing I was proudest to create. Between playing songs from DJ 2.0’s revolutionary playlist, shout out to my homie George Peters. I shared stories from my own family and musings about race and justice from my artist and activist and historian friends. Afterwards, thousands of teenagers found me on the internet to tell me that what they had gleaned from that single Juneteenth special, it was more than they had ever learned in school. You know, we usually teach what Black people lost, but rarely what we’ve created. Our contributions to this country from our labor to our culture to our innovations, have made this country what it is from root to tip. And what we’ve made, including our holidays, deserve to be just as much part of the American canon as anything else. This is our Independence Day, and it’s as good a time as any to go get free.
We are UNDISTRACTED.
On the show today, Miss Opal Lee. I’ll be talking to the 94 year old social activist from Texas about her campaign to get Juneteenth recognized as a national holiday.
Miss Opal Lee We weren’t free on the Fourth of July, 1776 and we are part of these great big United States. So let’s make it unanimous.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham That’s coming up, but first, it’s a special edition of “UNtrending News.”
This week, we are switching things up a bit. I wanted to kick off summer, yes, it is officially about to begin. It’s hot out here in these streets. And I wanted to give you some culture recommendations. So here’s what I’m watching, reading and listening to right now. First up, I can’t let Juneteenth pass without giving a shout out to the new Netflix food show that has been blowing up the internet High on the Hog. The four part docu-series hosted by food writer and chef Steven Satterfield, explores the legacy of Black American cuisine and the countless ways that African and African-American food and cooking traditions have influenced what we all just call American food. Here’s a clip with culinary historian Michael Twitty.
Michael Twitty We call our food soul food. We are the only people who named our cuisine after something invisible that you could feel like love and God, something completely transcendental. It’s about a connection between us and our dead and us and those who are waiting to be born.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham Steven, the host, starts the show in the country of Benin in West Africa and travels throughout the U.S. to meet chefs and learn about the history of dishes that are central to Black-American culture and American culture. You may even see some familiar faces and names that you heard in our episode a few weeks ago with Natalie Bazile. I’m honestly getting hungry, thinking about it. I want some grilled lamb with spicy Mojo sauce. I want some mac and cheese. I definitely want some Texas barbecue. So come for the food, but stay for the themes of Black creativity, community and resilience.
Twitter’s favorite writer and one of mine too, Ashley C. Ford, well she has a new memoir out called Somebody’s Daughter. It’s about her childhood, growing up a Black girl in Indiana and her relationships with her father, who was incarcerated for most of her life, and her mother, who she struggled with. Ashley is a brilliant writer. She took a look at some very hard truths with honest introspection and thoughtfulness. It made me think about my own family and about how all of our families shape everything about us. I am forever changed by losing my dad at age 12 and being raised by a Black woman, a widow of deep faith and purpose. I’m also grateful Ashley touches on the Black and Midwestern experience, which is my own, and a lot of times it’s ignored. We are thankfully now starting to get more stories about Black southerners and Black folks from the coasts. But Black folks in the Midwest, we need love too.
And lastly, my friends Karega and Felicia Bailey have an incredibly empowering podcast called SOL Affirmations that’s S-O-L. And it’s a weekly listen for me.
Karega and Felicia Bailey Singing It could be a dark world sometimes. Don’t be afraid to be a source of light.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham They are also fantastic musicians and did the theme song. In 2019, Karega and Felicia became angel parents to their newborn daughter, Kamaiu Sol, who died shortly after birth. SOL Affirmations is a show about grief, but ultimately it’s a show about love. Karega and Felicia are beautiful examples of resilience in my life and my husband’s, and they are incredibly vulnerable in their pain and in their joy. They’ve gotten me through some really tough days because their care just comes through the speakers so clearly. They’ve recently welcomed their second child, Kamali, just a few weeks ago. Their journey has been so blessed and so beautiful to see. And this podcast they’ve shared with us is such a gift.
Coming up, I will be talking to the formidable Miss Opal Lee about her dream to make Juneteenth a federal holiday, right after this short break.
And we are back. My guest today is known as the grandmother of Juneteenth, but she’ll be the first to tell you that she’s just a little old lady in tennis shoes getting in everybody’s business. Miss Opal Lee is a former teacher and now full time community activist from Texas who for the past five years has made it her mission to get Juneteenth recognized as a national holiday. She started a walking campaign, a series of lectures and events and an ever growing online petition. Miss Opal wants Juneteenth to be as big, if not bigger, than the Fourth of July, because, as she reminds everyone, Black folks were not free in 1776. Right now, at the age of 94, Miss Opal is as determined as ever, and it looks like her dream is getting closer to becoming a reality. In fact, much closer. On Tuesday, the Senate passed a bill to make June 19th a federal holiday, Juneteenth National Independence Day. It still needs to pass in the House and be signed by President Biden to become law, but it is expected to happen. I spoke to Miss Opal last week before this news came out. Miss Opal, thank you so, so much for having this conversation with us. I am just beyond thrilled to be talking to you.
Miss Opal Lee Well, thank you, sweetheart. I’m thrilled to be talking to you.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham So, I want to begin at the beginning. There are a lot of people who are not familiar with the holiday. Can you explain what Juneteenth is all about? What does it represent?
Miss Opal Lee Well, I’d have to tell you about enslaved people that were brought to these United States and worked on cane and cotton fields on plantations under the most adverse circumstances. So, the president Abraham Lincoln, issued a proclamation called the Emancipation Proclamation, and he issued it in 1863. With the United States being so large, the word didn’t get to the Texans and those enslaved in Texas until 1865, when a general Gordon Granger, made his way to Galveston with thousands of colored troops and they fanned out to tell the people there, all the enslaved people were free. And he nailed the general order to the door of what’s really now Reedy Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church. When the enslaved came in from their work and somebody read that to them, we started celebrating and we’ve been celebrating ever since.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham You believe that freedom should be celebrated from the 19th of June all the way to the Fourth of July?
Miss Opal Lee That’s right. We weren’t free on the Fourth of July, 1776 and we are part of these great big United States. So let’s make it unanimous. Let’s celebrate freedom, unity as long as we can, not just one day.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham So before I ask you about this year’s Juneteenth, take me back a few years. You were born in Marshall, Texas, in 1926. How did you celebrate Juneteenth growing up?
Miss Opal LeeIn Marshall, Juneteenth was celebrated at the state fairgrounds. Oh, that was music and baseball and food and more food. And I tell you, it was almost like Christmas. We were so glad. I can remember, and I was really small. When we made our way to Fort Worth, people weren’t celebrating so much, you know, families would get together. But the Tarrant County Black Historical Society sponsored Juneteenth in the ‘70s in Sycamore Park, a tiny little park on the south side. And would you know, the paper said there were 30,000 people in a three day period. Ten thousand people a day. And if I tell you that was a festival, believe it. It was — I’m going to say what the kids say, it was off the chain. Marvelous.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham I love that. That is such an incredible experience of joy and beauty and humor and Blackness. Oh, my gosh. What a time. What a time to be alive. But I know that every Juneteenth, unfortunately, was not that festive. When you were 10, you and your family moved from Marshall to a mostly white neighborhood in Fort Worth. And I understand that when you were 12, you and your family experienced something absolutely horrific on June the 19th. Do you feel comfortable just telling us a little of what happened?
Miss Opal Lee My parents bought this house and my mom had it fixed up so nice. But on the 19th day of June, people started gathering across the street in the evening and the paper says there were 500 of them and the police couldn’t control them. When my dad came home with a gun, the police said if he busted a cap they’d let the mob have us. My parents sent us to neighbors several blocks away. They stayed and they left under the cover of darkness. Those people took the furniture out. They burned it. They burned the house. It was horrible. My parents never, ever talked to us about it. They struggled and struggled and they bought another house.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham I’m so sorry, I’m overcome listening to this. So that — that mob of — of 500 white supremacists, they ransacked your family’s home, set fire to it in 1939. Like you said, the police did nothing to intervene and no arrests were made. And like Black people know how to do, you made immense beauty out of literal ashes. I mean, it propelled you into a life of activism.
Miss Opal Lee I think it did. I really think it did.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham You went on to become a mother and a teacher and a community activist. And not only do you believe that we should celebrate freedom from Juneteenth to July the 4th, you have made it your mission to have Juneteenth be declared a national holiday. Why do you think this needs to happen? What — what is your vision?
Miss Opal Lee I really believe that we should be able to work together to dispel the disparities that exist now, and I’m talking about homelessness. Everybody needs a decent place to stay. Joblessness, and even if you got a job and I’m paid one thing and you paid another, that’s not cool. Healthcare, I can get treatment and you can’t. Climate change, I’m adamant about climate change. The scientists have told us that we are committing the worst things on our Earth and I truly believe if we don’t do something about it, that we’re all going to be annihilated, but we can work together as opposed to what is happening now. I firmly believe that, and I believe Juneteenth is the catalyst to make that come true.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham So in 2016, when you were only 89, you began your campaign by walking from your home in Fort Worth, Texas, all the way to Washington, D.C.. I mean, that’s some revolutionary stuff Miss Opal. What can you tell us about that walk?
Miss Opal Lee I can tell you that I started it from the steps of my church, Baker Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church. My pastor was there and the musicians and the county commissioner and the school board members and others, we had a little ceremony. And so they sent me off walking two and a half miles to symbolize that the enslaved didn’t know they were free for two and a half years after the emancipation. And when I finished that, the next day I started where I left off. I did that through several cities, Arlington, Grand Prairie, Dallas, two and a half miles. I was invited all over these United States. Fort Smith and Little Rock, Denver Colorado, Colorado Springs, down in Atlanta, Hampton Virginia, all over the place. So if I left September 2016, I actually got there January 2017. I met so many people, so many people and lots and lots who knew absolutely nothing about Juneteenth. I’ve had a grand time making people aware. So like I say, I keep on walking, I keep on talking until it’s a holiday.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham So you kept on walking and you kept on talking and you ended up gathering one point five million signatures for your Change dot org petition, which you delivered to Congress last September in 2020. What are the next steps? What is it going to take for Juneteenth to become a national holiday?
Miss Opal Lee It’s going to take people making themselves a committee of one. Each one of us should teach one of us. Now, you know, people who are not on the same page you are on.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham Certainly.
Miss Opal Lee Their minds need to be changed. If somebody can be taught to hate, they can be taught to love it. It’s up to us to change the minds of those people so that we can get about the business of eradicating the disparities that are all around us that need to be taken care of. And it takes all of us. Not Black people, not white people, but all people working together. I think about the Underground Railroad and how the Quakers and Lloyd Garrison and Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, those people were untiringly to help those people get away from what was happening to them. And we can do the same thing. We can eradicate the things that are plaguing our nation. And I want us to do it together.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham So Juneteenth started in Galveston, but it’s now being recognized in some way, shape or form by forty seven states. Washington, New York and Virginia are making it a paid day off for state workers. There are some companies that are now giving their employees the day off on June 19th. How does it feel to see your vision at least begin to become a reality?
Miss Opal Lee I’m ecstatic, I really am so happy I could do a holy dance, but you wait until it is actually a holiday i am going to do a holy dance. So get ready for it.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham I’m ready for it, we’re going to be dancing with you. I promise you, Miss Opal. It seems like so many more people have learned about Juneteenth in the last year right? Especially following the murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor and all of these protests and demonstrations for Black lives. I guess people are — we’re finally starting to catch up to you.
Miss Opal Lee Well, I think people have decided that enough is enough and we need to sit down at the table and figure things out and get things going so that everybody will have an opportunity. And I think our schools could do a lot better than they are about telling the truth. I’ve seen pictures in the school books, people picking cotton, smiling. Nobody smiles about picking cotton. It’s not something that you’re going to be smiling about.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham Like you said, there is really still a long way to go to achieve true emancipation. I mean, you listed off so many of the issues that we have. And this past year, the pandemic has been a really sobering reminder of just how far we have to go. You know, as someone who has been witness to a whole lot of history, where do you think we’re at right now in terms of our struggle for freedom?
Miss Opal Lee We are at a crossroads and we need to make up our minds in what direction we want to go. I hear people say we’ll soon be able to go back to normal. That’s not the normal I want to go back to. I want us to make strides in eradicating the things that are divisive and get on with the business of making this the best country in the whole wide world.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham So before I let you go, I know you have been very busy in the lead up to this year’s Juneteenth celebrations. I truly don’t know where you get all the energy, but I hope you drop some of that off at my house. How are you celebrating Juneteenth and really this season of freedom that you have pushed us to celebrate? How are you celebrating it this year?
Miss Opal Lee Oh, listen, I thought you’d never ask. Last year, because we couldn’t have the parades that we usually have. We had a caravan, I walked the two and a half miles and I was under the impression ten or fifteen cars would follow. I had three hundred cars, three hundred cars followed me on that two and a half mile walk. this year we’re going to do it again. But if we walk at 10:00 here in Fort Worth, in L.A. they’ll be walking at 8:00, in Atlanta, Philadelphia, New York, they’ll be walking at 11:00. It’ll be simultaneous. It’s going to be all over the United States. I think it’s going to be fabulous.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham It sounds like it’s going to be fabulous. And we can’t wait to join in it with you. And I just cannot tell you how grateful I am for your commitment to us for your entire life. Thank you for helping set us free.
Miss Opal Lee Thank you, sweetheart. And thank you for having me.
Brittany Packnett Cunningham Miss Opal Lee is a social activist from Texas who’s known as the Grandmother of Juneteenth. You can find out more information about Miss Opal’s campaign at Opal’s Walk, the number two, DC dot com. There is a ZZ plant in my office, I named her Joanna for my great, great, great, great grandmother who was born enslaved in 1820. Joanna has been the fastest, tallest growing plant in our entire home. And she reminds me of Miss Opal and so many of our ancestors and our elders; unstoppable, unflappable, unbowed, unbossed and unbought. And with the news that the Senate just passed this bill to make Juneteenth a federal holiday there’s been some concern that this move is just to placate those of us who are demanding more. And frankly, it’s a concern I share. I mean, in a time when everything from voting rights to police violence has been ignored by Washington, it is more than fair to worry. And I’m willing to bet plenty of GOP and Democratic lawmakers just wanted to pass this bill to get us to shut up about the other stuff. Their motivations may not be pure, but Miss Opal’s motivations are. And we have to refuse to let them hijack Miss Opal’s true fight. I didn’t hear Miss Opal say this holiday was the end. I heard her say it’s just the beginning. She said each one of us should teach one of us. So in this season of freedom, let’s heed Miss Opal’s wisdom. Let’s learn and share the powerful history of Juneteenth and embrace all that it means now, including the elders we should always honor and the fights that we continue in their name. The bill to make Juneteenth a federal holiday is now headed to the House and then to President Biden’s desk for his signature. Well done, Miss Opal. I can’t wait to do that holy dance with you.
That is it for today, but y’all know, never for tomorrow.
UNDISTRACTED is a production of The Meteor and Pineapple Street Studios.
Our lead producer is Rachel Matlow.
Our associate producer is Taylor Hosking.
Thanks also to Treasure Brooks, Grace Chen and Hannis Brown.
Our executive producers at The Meteor are Cindi Leive and myself, and our executive producers at Pineapple are Jenna Weiss-Berman and Max Linsky.
You can follow me @MsPackyetti on all social media and our incredible team @TheMeteor.
Subscribe to UNDISTRACTED and rate and review us on Spotify, Apple Podcast or wherever you check out your favorite podcasts.
Thanks for listening. Thanks for being. Thanks for doing.
Have a great Juneteenth y’all.
I’m Brittany Packnett Cunningham. Let’s go get free.
MORE UNDISTRACTED TRANSCRIPTS
UNDISTRACTED: November 14, 2024
S3 Ep10: “Heartbreaking, Maddening and Ready to Fight”: Cecile Richards and Paola Ramos
UNDISTRACTED: November 08, 2024
S3 Ep9: “We Did Not Consent To Chaos”: The Group Chat Talks Election
UNDISTRACTED: October 24, 2024
S3 Ep7: A Girl's Girl Fight for Abortion, with Kaitlyn Joshua
UNDISTRACTED: October 17, 2024
S3 Ep6: Hip Hop's promise and pain, with Drew Dixon
UNDISTRACTED: October 10, 2024
S3 Ep5: Everybody Watches Women’s Sports
UNDISTRACTED: October 02, 2024
S3 Ep4: The Group Chat Decodes Your Week's News
UNDISTRACTED: September 26, 2024
S3 Ep3: Our Right to Party with Rep. Ruwa Romman and Maurice Mitchell
UNDISTRACTED: September 19, 2024
S3 Ep2: “We Elect Partners, Not Saviors”: Rep. Ayanna Pressley and Dr. Brittney Cooper
UNDISTRACTED: September 12, 2024
S3 Ep1: - Ava DuVernay Want Us to Dig Deeper
UNDISTRACTED: September 06, 2024
Season 3: We’re Baaaaaack
UNDISTRACTED: June 21, 2023
Exclusive: Vice President Kamala Harris on a Year Without Roe
UNDISTRACTED: October 20th, 2022
“Every Hashtag is a Human Being”: Honoring the Five-Year Anniversary of #MeToo
UNDISTRACTED: October 13th, 2022
The End of the World as We Know It? Dr. Ayana Elizabeth Johnson Rates our Climate Future
UNDISTRACTED: October 6th, 2022
“You Can’t Win if You Don’t Start”: Rep. Cori Bush on Running for Office—and Making a Difference
UNDISTRACTED: September 29, 2022
Derecka Purnell on Living (and Loving) Outside the Police State
UNDISTRACTED: September 22, 2022
The Queen Died. Now What? Three Brilliant Women on Colonialism and the Future
UNDISTRACTED: September 15, 2022
The Hidden Latinx Stories We Don’t Hear, with Julissa Natzely Acre Raya
UNDISTRACTED: September 1, 2022
The Kids Are All Right. The Adults Are F***ing Up!
UNDISTRACTED: August 25, 2022
Will We Be Smarter About the Next Epidemic? Two Experts Break it Down.
UNDISTRACTED: August 18, 2022
A Future Without Police? Andrea Ritchie on Crime and Abolition
UNDISTRACTED: August 11, 2022
“People’s Kids Are the Center of Their World” - Caitlin Dickerson on the Horrors of Family Separation
UNDISTRACTED: August 4, 2022
Beyoncé’s Renaissance, According to Four Brilliant Black Women
UNDISTRACTED: July 28, 2022
“The System Works For Those Who Occupy It”: María Teresa Kumar on Voting Rights
UNDISTRACTED: July 21, 2022
Phoebe Robinson is Writing Her Own Rules (on TV and in Life)
UNDISTRACTED: July 14, 2022
“Covering the End of the World”: A Reporter on Gun Violence
UNDISTRACTED: July 7, 2022
Tiffany Cross on Roe, Resistance and What Comes Next
UNDISTRACTED: June 30, 2022
Michelle Colón is Living Through The Last Days of Legal Abortion in Mississippi
UNDISTRACTED: June 25, 2022
The Roe v. Wade News—and Finding Hope
UNDISTRACTED: June 23, 2022
Having a Baby While Black: Martina Abraham and Gabrielle Horton Know *All* The Stories
UNDISTRACTED: June 16, 2022
You Can Be Successful Where You Are: Majora Carter on Reclaiming Communities
UNDISTRACTED: June 2, 2022
God is Big Enough for Our Questions:” Candice Benbow on Faith, Feminism, and Lipstick
UNDISTRACTED: May 26, 2022
During a Dark Time, A Little Light with Bevy Smith
UNDISTRACTED: May 19, 2022
“Tell the Truth to Set Us Free”: Kimberlé Crenshaw on White Supremacy, CRT and Lies
UNDISTRACTED: May 12, 2022
WTF, TEXAS?! Cisneros, Crockett and O’Rourke on The Madness (and Promise) of The Lone Star State
UNDISTRACTED: May 5, 2022
What Happens Now? Gloria Steinem and Renee Bracey Sherman on the Future of Abortion
UNDISTRACTED: April 28, 2022
The Senator of TikTok: Morgan Harper’s Run for Office (and Our Hearts)
UNDISTRACTED: April 21, 2022
Motherhood, Love and the “Trayvon Generation,” with Elizabeth Alexander
UNDISTRACTED: April 7, 2022
“I’ve Been Proud So Many Times”: A Texas Family Fights the Anti-Trans Laws
UNDISTRACTED: March 31, 2022
“We See Who Pays the Price”: Muzoon Almellehan on War and Refugees
UNDISTRACTED: March 24, 2022
“You Deserve to Be Safe”: Nicole Chung on Parenting in a Wave of Anti-AAPI Violence
UNDISTRACTED: March 17, 2022
“Buckle Up:” Senator Elizabeth Warren still has a plan for change
UNDISTRACTED: March 10, 2022
“I don’t believe in the guilt:” Real climate talk, with Mary Annaïse Heglar
UNDISTRACTED: March 3, 2022
Anita Hill on the Supreme Court’s future—and its past
UNDISTRACTED: February 24, 2022
“We are here to fight disinformation”: Sara Lomax-Reese and Akoto Ofori-Atta build the future
UNDISTRACTED: February 17, 2022
Ai-jen Poo on caregiving: “We take for granted that women will just figure it out”
UNDISTRACTED: February 10, 2022
Jemele Hill and Cari Champion on racism (and liberation) in sports
UNDISTRACTED: February 3, 2022
Dr. Uché Blackstock on pandemic fatigue—And the new COVID normal
UNDISTRACTED: January 27, 2022
Elaine Welteroth on the “Great Resignation” and rewriting your own definition of success.
UNDISTRACTED: January 20, 2022
“This big old lie:” Heather McGhee on the real cost of racism
UNDISTRACTED: January 13, 2022
LaTosha Brown on our “Moment of Reckoning”
UNDISTRACTED: January 6, 2022
One Year Later: “The Next Coup is Already Happening”
UNDISTRACTED: December 17, 2021
Nikole Hannah-Jones on America’s “400-Year Racial Pandemic”
UNDISTRACTED: December 9, 2021
Beyond Roe: Gloria Steinem and Renee Bracey Sherman on How We Got Here and What Happens Next
UNDISTRACTED: December 2, 2021
From SCOTUS to white womanhood: Dr. Brittney Cooper decodes our world
UNDISTRACTED: August 19, 2021
Bonus: Your UNDISTRACTED Highlights Reel
UNDISTRACTED: August 12, 2021
Tarana Burke on her powerful new memoir — and the future of #MeToo
UNDISTRACTED: August 5, 2021
Pleasure activist adrienne maree brown on conflict, canceling, and community
UNDISTRACTED: July 29, 2021
Jemele Hill on “The Cursed Olympics”—and Simone Biles choosing her peace
UNDISTRACTED: July 22, 2021
The billionaire space race and patriarchy in physics, with Dr. Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
UNDISTRACTED: July 15, 2021
Connie Walker on covering the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women
UNDISTRACTED: July 1, 2021
Professor Kimberlé Crenshaw on the truth about Critical Race Theory
UNDISTRACTED: June 24, 2021
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand on finally fixing the military’s sexual assault problem
UNDISTRACTED: June 10, 2021
Lawyer Chase Strangio on “genocidal” anti-trans laws—and resistance
UNDISTRACTED: June 3, 2021
Amani on why this moment “feels different” for Palestinians
UNDISTRACTED: May 27, 2021
"Queen Sugar" author Natalie Baszile on the new black farming revolution
UNDISTRACTED: May 20, 2021
Travon Free wants to flip the script on masculinity
UNDISTRACTED: May 13, 2021
Nikole Hannah-Jones wants us to confront the truth of who we are
UNDISTRACTED: May 6, 2021
Insecure's Yvonne Orji on Black joy...and her "homie" Jesus
UNDISTRACTED: April 29, 2021
Dr. Ayana Elizabeth Johnson on the "feminist climate renaissance"
UNDISTRACTED: April 22, 2021
Andra Day on the tragedy and triumph of Billie Holiday
UNDISTRACTED: April 15, 2021
Sophia Bush on surviving "relentless" harassment in Hollywood
UNDISTRACTED: April 8, 2021
Alexis McGill Johnson on the “Dire” Landscape for Abortion Rights
UNDISTRACTED: April 1, 2021
Shannon Watts Believes We're at a Tipping Point for Gun Reform
UNDISTRACTED: March 18, 2021
Rep. Cori Bush Is What "Keeping It Real" Looks Like
UNDISTRACTED: March 25, 2021
Comedian Amber Ruffin Wants to "De-Gaslight" America
UNDISTRACTED: March 11, 2021
Lisa Ling on Anti-Asian Violence—And the Rising Movement Against It
UNDISTRACTED: March 4, 2021
Padma Lakshmi on the New Food Revolution
UNDISTRACTED: February 25, 2021
The Squad is Big, Y’all: Rep. Ayanna Pressley on the Power of the People
UNDISTRACTED: February 18, 2021
What Would a Future Without Prisons Look Like?
UNDISTRACTED: February 11, 2021
Opal Tometi on the Righteous Rise of Black Lives Matter
UNDISTRACTED: February 4, 2021
Raquel Willis Believes in Black Trans Power
UNDISTRACTED: January 27, 2021
Want A Safer Internet? Listen To Black Women
UNDISTRACTED: January 18, 2021
A Historic Day… And Why The ‘Nap Bishop’ Believes Rest Is Radical
UNDISTRACTED: January 14, 2021
Valerie Jarrett on Impeachment...And the Next 100 Days
UNDISTRACTED: January 7, 2021
America Ferrera Is Talking ‘Bout a Cultural Revolution
UNDISTRACTED: December 24, 2020
Jenna Wortham and Kimberly Drew Are Building Black Futures
UNDISTRACTED: December 17, 2020
Flattening the Curve of Inequality
UNDISTRACTED: December 10, 2020
Sue Bird Won't Shut Up and Dribble
UNDISTRACTED: December 3, 2020
Tracee Ellis Ross Is The Lead in Her Own Life
UNDISTRACTED: November 26, 2020
Nikki Giovanni Believes Your Dreams Are Worth It
UNDISTRACTED: November 19, 2020
Rebecca Traister Is Still Good and Mad
UNDISTRACTED: November 12, 2020
LaTosha Brown Is Betting On the South
UNDISTRACTED: November 5, 2020
Soledad O’Brien Is Calling It Like It Is
UNDISTRACTED: October 29, 2020
Cecile Richards Is Ready for the Uprising