How Black women won the election

November 13, 2020

NEWSLETTER

Host Brittany Packnett Cunningham speaks with LaTosha Brown, one of the organizers who made it happen

America has emerged from Election Week, and two things are clear: One, we saw massive, record, historic turnout with more people voting in this election than in any in over 100 years. (You did that.) And two, the victory for the Biden-Harris ticket—a ticket that breaks a 231-year run of white male Vice Presidents—was won in part through the advocacy, and the voting, of BIPOC women. In the South, Black-woman-led organizations helped make Georgia a swing state—one of the reasons Vice President-elect Kamala Harris (that sounds nice, doesn’t it?) called Black women the “backbone of our democracy.”

THIS WEEK ON UNDISTRACTED

On this week’s episode of UNDISTRACTED, Brittany Packnett Cunningham sits down with one of the women who made the Biden-Harris victory possible: LaTosha Brown, co-founder of the Black Voters Matter Fund, which works to increase Black voter turnout in the U.S.

Brown, a Georgia native, tells Packnett Cunningham why she’s expecting some “poetic justice” in the state’s two Senate run-off races come January.

  • Some of the other not-to-miss points in their conversation:
    Brown on why Black women show up: “I really believe that we sit at this unique intersection of both race and gender, and we’ve had to navigate those things ever since we came to the shores of this nation.”
  • Brown on VP-elect Harris: “She’s put a crack in the ceiling—and whenever there is a crack in glass, the light enters the room…I am hoping that we will start seeing more progressive women take the reins of leadership and really be able to lead this country in a new direction.”
  • Brown on what comes next: “This can’t be just a transactional moment about acknowledging what Black women have done…I hope that this administration is listening. I hope that President-elect Biden actually recognizes that his role…is to serve the people. That his agenda is actually the people’s agenda.”

Listen on Apple Podcasts,  SpotifyStitcher or wherever you get your podcasts.


WHAT OUR COLLECTIVE IS INTO RIGHT NOW

The Meteor is guided by our collective: an advisory group of filmmakers, writers and artists doing great feminist-minded work. Here’s what one founding member is up to this week!

Paola Mendoza profile photo

Hola! I'm Paola Mendoza and this is what is giving me strength, joy and clarity now:

WATCHING Pen15 It makes me laugh out loud and I need that right now!

LISTENING This Joy, The Resistance Revival Chorus. If you haven’t listened, do yourself a favor and do it!

READING Sontag: Her Life and Work

FOLLOWING @LasAmericasIAC This immigrant rights organization based in Texas provides legal services to asylum seekers, migrants and families that have been separated.

DOING MORE OF Sleeping

DOING LESS OF Doom scrolling

GETTING MY JOY FROM Winning the election!

Paola Mendoza is a director, activist, author and artist whose work focuses on human rights. A co-founder of The Women’s March, she served as its artistic director. Paola’s most recent book is the critically acclaimed YA novel Sanctuary.


MARIANE PEARL: LOVE, LIFE AND WHY I VOTED

In the month before the election, artists, filmmakers and writers spoke out about what was at stake in The Meteor’s series 30 Days Till Tomorrow. You can see their work on our Instagram now—and don’t miss journalist Mariane Pearl’s intensely personal story of her own vote, with beautiful illustrations by Debbie Millman.

Courtesy of Gilles Peress

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Listen now to our new podcast: UNDISTRACTED

WELCOME TO THE METEOR!

Thank you for being part of our community

If you’re getting this email, it’s because you signed up to hear more about The Meteor. And hello! We’re a group of creative people using the power of storytelling, journalism and art to advance gender and racial equity. Maybe you’ve seen some of our early work; if not, roam around on our site or our Instagram and enjoy. We’ll launch officially in 2021, and there’s lots more to come.

In the meantime, we’re five days out from the end of an election the world is watching. We’re ready for a new tomorrow, one built by the voices and the vision of women. With that in mind, we’re thrilled to share our newest project with you:

INTRODUCING: UNDISTRACTED

Listen to The Meteor’s new podcast with Brittany Packnett Cunningham—live today!

Hosted by educator, activist and TV commentator Brittany Packnett Cunningham, UNDISTRACTED takes on the most pressing issues of our time with a laser focus on the underrepresented angles of gender, race, ability and more. The goal? To create a more just world—one that works for all of us.

You probably already know Packnett Cunningham, but here’s a refresher: Described by President Barack Obama as a leader “whose voice is going to be making a difference for years to come,” she was a member of the White House Task Force on 21st Century Policing and the Ferguson Commission, and a co-host of “Pod Save the People” for the last three years.

Today’s launch episode features Cecile Richards, co-founder of Supermajority, who’s been working since the day after the last election to help drive women to the polls for this one. She talks to Packnett Cunningham about how that’s going, and you don’t want to miss their raw, real discussion.

Listen on Apple Podcasts,  SpotifyStitcher or wherever you get your podcasts.

Presented by


30 DAYS TILL TOMORROW

Take a break from your pre-election routine and dive into 30 days of inspiration about voting rights on our Instagram—including these two minutes of joy from poet Nikki Giovanni.