The Ryles Report
In this episode of The Ryles Report, Richard welcomes ESPN journalist Howard Bryant to discuss his book, Kings and Pawns, which examines the complex intersection of the Cold War and the lives of Paul Robeson and Jackie Robinson. The conversation explores how Robeson, a brilliant "Renaissance man" and All-American athlete, was effectively erased from history due to his independent political stance and refusal to disassociate from anti-capitalist ideologies during the Red Scare. Bryant details the 1949 House Un-American Activities Committee testimony that pitted these two icons against one another, analyzing the "double consciousness" of the Black experience and the strategic decision by the Black establishment to decouple domestic civil rights from global Pan-African movements. The discussion also challenges the idealized narrative of baseball integration, specifically re-evaluating Branch Rickey’s motivations. Bryant reveals that Rickey was a conservative anti-New Dealer who initially sought to integrate the game using international Latin American players on work visas to avoid upsetting domestic segregation. Moving into the present day, Richard and Howard critique the modern state of baseball, noting how stylistic choices and business decisions have led to a decline in Black American participation, making the sport a "white suburban game reinforced by foreign labor". Share your thoughts on social media using the hashtag #TheRylesReport
29 episodios
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