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Being a good neighbour

By: bq
24 June 2024 at 13:40
Fred Rogers breaks the color barrier in a kiddie pool with Officer Clemmons in 1967. Fred Rogers Previously. The only known violation of Betteridge's Law of Headlines: Is Mister Rogers' Neighborhood the greatest television show ever made? by Emily St. James for AV Club. Segregation & Swimming Timeline in the United States. An episode of the podcast 5-4 discussing the Supreme Court case Palmer v. Thompson, in which the court decided that the Equal Protection Clause does not prohibit the city of Jackson, Mississippi from avoiding integration by closing its public pools.

The push to stamp out galling ethnic name bias on phones and computers

14 June 2024 at 10:20
Is autocorrect racist? The push to stamp out galling ethnic name bias on phones and computers. A new campaign โ€” called I Am Not A Typo โ€” is urging tech companies to fix ethnic bias in their algorithms to stop autocorrect mangling so many people's names.

"Brace yourself 'cause this shit is bananas."

12 June 2024 at 15:40
"You Didn't See Nothin'" is a seven-part investigation of the 1997 racist assault on a Black child in Chicago's Bridgeport neighborhood. (cw for racism and violence--most of the links in this post mention or describe the assault at the center of this podcast.) The podcast is the work of Yohance Lacour, who reported on the nearly fatal assault of Lenard Clark in 1997 for the South Street News, a South Side neighborhood paper. Returning to the story 25 years later, Lacour looks into the local figures who pushed a racial reconciliation narrative on the story and details the mob ties of the primary identified assailant.

Throughout the podcast, Lacour also reflects on his journey from a young aspiring artist and journalist, through a prison sentence for selling drugs, and into his current work. There is some heavy truth-telling on the expectation of forgiveness and reconciliation when Black people are wronged in US society. I learned quite a bit from this podcast even though I was already well familiar with the story. 'You didn't See Nothin'' podcast revisits a 1997 Chicago hate crime and its aftermath, NPR, May 2024 In 1997, a 13-year-old was beaten by white Bridgeport teens. A podcast challenges the racial narrative that followed, Chicago Tribune, June 2023 'You Didn't See Nothin' Podcast Takes A Closer Look At The Lenard Clark Case And Its Impact On A Fractured City, Block Club Chicago, March 2023 The podcast is over a year old, but has gotten a boost recently after it won a Pulitzer. As an aside, Lacour is also a leather artist whose work is featured in this Smithsonian article and on his website.
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