Curious Machines

How Obama's Presidency Changed Race Relations: Calvin Butts Explains

13 min Ā· Ayer
Portada del episodio How Obama's Presidency Changed Race Relations: Calvin Butts Explains

Descripción

Did Obama's presidency actually make racism worse? In this eye-opening episode, Alex Romano sits down with the late Calvin Butts, who led Harlem's historic Abyssinian Baptist Church for over 30 years, to unpack the uncomfortable truths about race relations after 2008. Spoiler alert: the "post-racial America" narrative was pretty much fantasy. šŸŽÆ What You'll Discover: • Why racial wealth gaps actually widened during Obama's presidency (the numbers are shocking) • How hate crimes increased in some areas after 2008 - and what that tells us about progress • The real reason Butts switched from supporting Hillary Clinton to backing Obama • Why a church founded in 1808 became ground zero for honest conversations about systemic racism šŸ‘¤ Perfect for: lifelong learners and anyone passionate about personal growth who wants to understand how historic moments really impact everyday people. šŸ“ Chapters: [00:00] Alex Romano introduces the "post-racial myth" [02:15] Calvin Butts explains Abyssinian's 200-year fight for justice [04:30] The uncomfortable truth about wealth gaps under Obama [06:45] Why hate crimes spiked after the election [08:30] Butts reveals his Clinton-to-Obama conversion story [11:00] What real progress actually looks like today Butts doesn't sugarcoat anything here. He breaks down why symbolic victories, while important, can't fix centuries of systemic problems overnight. You'll walk away with a much clearer picture of where we actually stand on race relations - and why ongoing conversations matter more than ever. šŸ”” Never miss an episode: Follow Curious Machines on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily - your next favorite insight is one tap away. šŸ” Topics: Obama presidency, racial wealth gap, Calvin Butts, systemic racism, post-racial America ------------ Keywords: cognitive science, brain function, brain psychology Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

Comentarios

0

SĆ© la primera persona en comentar

”Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Curious Machines!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 dĆ­as de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

53 episodios

episode How Travel Changes Your Definition of Home: The Psychology Behind It artwork

How Travel Changes Your Definition of Home: The Psychology Behind It

Ever wonder why some people can drop everything and start fresh in a new city while others feel anxious just thinking about changing their morning coffee shop? In this episode, Alex Romano breaks down the fascinating psychology behind how travel literally rewires your definition of "home" and why this mental shift might be the secret to handling life's curveballs. Turns out, your brain doesn't just collect passport stamps when you travel. It's quietly building a superpower that makes you more resilient, confident, and surprisingly grateful for what you already have. šŸŽÆ What You'll Learn: • Why kids who move frequently before age 12 show 23% higher problem-solving skills as adults • How just one solo trip can boost your confidence in handling unexpected situations by 40% • The counterintuitive reason regular travelers are 65% less likely to panic when plans fall apart • Why exposure to different cultures before age 16 helps you maintain 50% more long-distance friendships šŸ‘¤ Perfect for: lifelong learners and anyone passionate about personal growth, especially if you've ever felt stuck in your routine or wondered whether that big move or trip is worth the stress. šŸ“ Chapters: [00:00] Alex Romano introduces why "home" isn't what you think it is [01:30] The surprising brain science behind frequent movers [03:45] How solo travel builds unshakeable confidence [06:00] Why plan changes don't stress out world travelers [08:30] The childhood culture effect that lasts decades [10:15] Three ways to get these benefits without boarding a plane This isn't about becoming a digital nomad or selling everything to backpack through Europe. It's about understanding how your brain adapts to new places and how you can use that knowledge to become more flexible and confident right where you are. šŸ”” Never miss an episode: Follow Curious Machines on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, your next favorite insight is one tap away. šŸ” Topics: travel psychology, home definition, resilience building, cultural adaptation, confidence development --------------- Keywords: human cognition, science communication, human nature Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

10 de jul de 202612 min
episode How HIV Drug Cocktails Work: The Physics Equation That Saved Millions artwork

How HIV Drug Cocktails Work: The Physics Equation That Saved Millions

Here's the HIV epidemic: 1981 to 1996, AIDS was essentially a death sentence. Then a physicist looked at the virus like a math equation and changed everything. In this episode, Alex Romano breaks down how mathematical modeling cracked the code on HIV treatment and why three drugs work when one fails. šŸŽÆ What You'll Learn: • Why HIV produces 10 billion new virus particles daily (and how math predicted this insane reproduction rate) • The exact calculation that proved triple drug therapy could drop viral loads by 99% in weeks • How reducing resistance probability from 1 in 1,000 to 1 in 100 million saved millions of lives šŸ‘¤ Perfect for: lifelong learners and anyone passionate about personal growth who wants to understand how scientific breakthroughs actually happen in the real world. šŸ“ Chapters: [00:00] Alex Romano introduces the AIDS crisis turning point [01:30] Why single drug treatments failed every time [04:00] The physics approach that changed everything [07:00] Mathematical models predicting viral behavior [10:00] How probability math saved lives [12:00] What this teaches us about solving impossible problems This isn't just medical history. It's about how thinking differently about a problem can literally save the world. Before cocktail therapy, people diagnosed with AIDS lived about 2 years. Today, with proper treatment, HIV can be undetectable. That's the power of treating biology like physics. You'll walk away understanding not just how HIV drugs work, but how mathematical thinking can solve problems that seem unsolvable. Sometimes the answer isn't trying harder with the same approach. Sometimes it's stepping back and asking a completely different question. šŸ”” Never miss an episode: Follow Curious Machines on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily and your next favorite insight is one tap away. šŸ” Topics: HIV treatment, AIDS epidemic, mathematical modeling, drug resistance, medical breakthroughs -------- Keywords: human behavior podcast, cognitive science, human cognition, decision making, mind science Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

10 de jul de 202615 min
episode How to Spot Quality Journalism: Jim Lehrer's Guide to Media Literacy artwork

How to Spot Quality Journalism: Jim Lehrer's Guide to Media Literacy

Can you spot quality journalism in about 3 minutes? Most people can't - and that's exactly what news organizations are counting on. In this episode, Alex Romano breaks down Jim Lehrer's legendary insights on media literacy and why understanding how your news gets funded might be the most important skill you'll learn this year. šŸŽÆ What You'll Learn: • Why PBS NewsHour's no-advertising model creates completely different reporting than cable news (and what this means for what you're actually hearing) • The 2-3 minute rule that's destroying deep journalism - and how to spot when you're getting the fast-food version of news • How only 16% of Americans know who pays for their news (spoiler: this changes everything about what gets covered) • A simple funding test you can do in 30 seconds to evaluate any news source's independence šŸ‘¤ Perfect for: lifelong learners and anyone who wants to cut through media spin and actually understand what's happening in the world. šŸ“ Chapters: [00:00] Alex Romano introduces the journalism credibility crisis [01:45] The funding model that changes everything about news [04:00] Why 2-3 minutes isn't enough time for real journalism [06:30] The average person's news diet vs. what actually informs you [08:45] Jim Lehrer's simple test for editorial independence [10:30] Your 30-second credibility check for any news source The scariest part? Most of us consume news without ever asking who's paying for it. After this episode, you'll never read a headline the same way again. šŸ”” Never miss an episode: Follow Curious Machines on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily - your next favorite insight is one tap away. šŸ” Topics: media literacy, journalism quality, news credibility, editorial independence, information literacy ---------- Keywords: brain science, human cognition, brain psychology, psychology facts, psychology podcast, behavioral psychology, science storytelling, behavioral science Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

10 de jul de 202612 min
episode How Humor Actually Works: The Science Behind What Makes Us Laugh artwork

How Humor Actually Works: The Science Behind What Makes Us Laugh

Why does a joke about a duck walking into a pharmacy make you laugh, but the same setup with a chicken falls flat? In this episode, Alex Romano sits down with Robert Mankoff, former cartoon editor of The New Yorker, who spent decades figuring out the hidden mechanics behind what makes 50 million people chuckle every week. Turns out humor isn't just entertainment - it's one of the most sophisticated tools humans use to process complex ideas and connect with each other. šŸŽÆ What You'll Learn: • Why The New Yorker rejects 98% of cartoon submissions (and what the 2% that make it have in common) • The incongruity theory that explains why puns hijack your brain's pattern recognition system • How comedians use humor as a "safe space" to explore taboo topics without triggering defensiveness • Why the same mental process that creates jokes is crucial for creativity and problem-solving šŸ‘¤ Perfect for: lifelong learners and anyone passionate about personal growth who wants to understand the psychology behind human connection and communication. šŸ“ Chapters: [00:00] Alex Romano introduces the hidden science of humor [01:45] Inside The New Yorker's cartoon selection process [03:30] Why incongruity makes your brain laugh [06:00] How humor creates safe spaces for difficult conversations [08:15] The connection between comedy and creativity [10:30] Key takeaways you can use in your own communication šŸ”” Never miss an episode: Follow Curious Machines on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily - your next favorite insight is one tap away. šŸ” Topics: humor psychology, communication skills, creativity research, cognitive science, human behavior ------------ Keywords: behavioral science, human nature, psychology facts, neuroscience, human behavior Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

10 de jul de 202614 min
episode How Late Night TV Became America's Political News Source artwork

How Late Night TV Became America's Political News Source

How did late-night comedy hosts become America's primary source of political news? In this episode, Alex Romano reveals how Johnny Carson's 15-20 million viewer empire transformed into today's battlefield of political satire where Stephen Colbert gained 2.3 million viewers after Trump's election while Jimmy Fallon lost 400,000. What started as safe variety shows is now shaping how we understand democracy itself. šŸŽÆ What You'll Learn: • Why David Letterman's $200,000 budget experiment in 1982 changed everything about TV comedy • How political jokes increased 300% between 2000 and 2020, creating a new form of journalism • The psychological reason millions now trust comedians over traditional news anchors • Why your brain processes Jon Stewart's Daily Show differently than CNN (and why that matters) šŸ‘¤ Perfect for: lifelong learners and anyone passionate about personal growth who wants to understand how entertainment secretly shapes political opinions. šŸ“ Chapters: [00:00] Alex Romano introduces the Carson comedy empire [01:30] How Letterman's weird late-night format broke all the rules [04:00] The moment comedy became news (and news became comedy) [07:00] Why your brain trusts Trevor Noah more than cable news [10:00] What this means for democracy and information bubbles [12:00] Key takeaways about media influence you can spot today Discover how three decades of late-night evolution accidentally created a new class of political influencers. From Carson's apolitical monologues to Colbert's partisan deep dives, this shift reveals something fascinating about human psychology and how we process information when we think we're just being entertained. šŸ”” Never miss an episode: Follow Curious Machines on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily - your next favorite insight is one tap away. šŸ” Topics: late night television, political comedy, media psychology, entertainment news, comedy history ------- Keywords: brain research, science podcast, human behavior podcast, brain function, mental processes, human nature, behavioral economics Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

10 de jul de 202613 min