Yo, Miss! Podcast
In 1981, shots outside the Washington Hilton nearly killed Ronald Reagan—and the aftermath boosted his popularity as the country rallied around him. More than four decades later, gunfire again erupted at the same hotel during events tied to the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, where Donald Trump was in attendance and later evacuated. The suspect in the Washington dinner shooting ws just charged with attempting to assassinate Trump [https://apple.news/ATGCQHpcaTRmfTxLwNhfRDA] Same building. But a very different America. In 1981, there was broad national sympathy. Today, the reaction is immediate, fractured, and shaped by partisan media ecosystems ranging from calls for increased security via a White House Ballroom to conspiracy-laden speculation that this was a false flag event. In this video, I break down the eerie historical parallel and ask the real question: in a hyper-polarized era, do moments like this still unite the country the way they did for Reagan… or do they just deepen the divide? Spoiler: it’s far more likely to deepen the divide than unite the country. Get full access to Yo, Miss! at saribethrosenberg.substack.com/subscribe [https://saribethrosenberg.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
61 episodios
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