My Neighbor's Cookies Taste Like Jim Crow - Comedian Marvin Phipps #shorts
*suspiciously squints*
“This recipe has been in your family for how long?”
After eating some of his neighbor's homemade goods comedian Marvin Phillips realized that his neighbor is not a racist but her cookies taste like it. Watch the full clip on our channel now!
For more Marvin Phillips follow him on social media @marvinphipps
#ChocolateSundaes
“In The Land of Jim Crow” | A Book Review
In The Land of Jim Crow
by Ray Sprigle
Join me as I talk about In The Land of Jim Crow. It is an out of print book published in the late 1940s about an award-winning white journalist who went undercover as a Black man into the Jim Crow South. Does this scenario sound like Black Like Me? Well, Ray Sprigle did it 12 years before John Howard Griffin. Learn how I found the book, what it's about, and how it compares to the similar themed Black Like Me and Soul Sister.
Visit my website for a more detailed write up:
#inthelandofjimcrow #raysprigle #bookreview #booktube #blacklikeme #blackhistory #nonfiction #outofprintbook
***Correction: I kept saying Atlanta when I meant Georgia.***
Food, Jazz, and Protest in Jim Crow Washington, D.C
Listen to the full episode here:
“Food, Jazz, and Protest in Jim Crow Washington, D.C,” a podcast from author Fred Opie’s book Southern Food and Civil Rights: Feeding the Revolution. In an abstract of the related chapter to the podcast, Opie writes, in the 1940s through the early 1960s, Washington, D.C. had predominantly Jim Crow restaurants and cafeterias that catered to a “whites only” customer base. Historically, U.S. officials created the nation's capital out of the southern territories of Virginia and Maryland, and a small but powerful block of Dixiecrats ensured that Jim Crow keep eateries in the city segregated. Those who lived and worked in D.C. also had to endure the “battle of the plate,” referring to the long lines outside of restaurants with high customer demand but inferior food and service. At the same time, in Northwest D.C. one could find good food at black-owned restaurants in the old U Street Northwest corridor now called the Shaw neighborhood. During the first half of the 20th century, it became a jazz haven for Washingtonians with various clubs that propelled local music careers and hosted legendary jazz artists.
Opie is a Professor of History and Foodways at Babson College
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Jim Crow Joe Authorizes $2.5 Billion In Arms Sales To Egypt Despite Human Rights Concerns
Wongel Zelalem reports on the Joe Biden administration authorizing more than $2 billion in arms sales to Egypt despite ongoing concerns about Cairo's human rights record.
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Jim Crow Debt: How Black Borrowers Experience Student Loans
Student debt has been a crisis for years, and the pandemic has only exacerbated matters for many borrowers. This is especially true for Black borrowers, who are among those most negatively affected by student loans — due, in large part, to systemic racism, the inequitable distribution of wealth in this country, a stratified labor market, and rising college costs.
Put simply, student debt is a racial and economic justice issue, and any proposed solution to the student debt crisis must center the perspectives, lived realities, and voices of Black borrowers, rather than solely use their data to frame the problem.
Read more in the full report:
Expert Interviews: The Jim Crow Museum and corporate sensitivity
Nationwide protests against racial injustice have sparked another movement in corporate America.
Aunt Jemima, Uncle Ben's, Cream of Wheat -- those are just the handful of brands and logos set to be changing amid recent calls against racism. Ferris State University's Jim Crow Museum is home to the nation's leading experts on racial artifacts and stereotypes.
13 ON YOUR SIDE's Angela Cunningham spoke with the museum's founder Dr. David Pilgrim to gain insights on the latest push for corporate sensitivity.
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