Come Through with Rebecca Carroll
Society & Culture
As a struggling screenwriter, Twitter was exactly what Ira Madison III needed to get noticed. More than 200k followers later, he’s writing for Netflix (“Daybreak” and the upcoming “Q-Force”). He tells host Rebecca Carroll, “I think that by virtue of being Black and telling your story, you are already analyzing and critiquing what it means to be Black in this era.” For writer and producer Kay Oyegun (NBC’s “This is Us”), “Black women are always my protagonists.” When she writes a script, “I always say, ‘assume everyone's Black unless I say otherwise.’”
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15. Julián Castro's Common Census
13. Waubgeshig Rice Saw This Apocalypse Coming
12. Ava DuVernay Takes Us Online, Desmond Meade Leads Us to Vote
11. Gabrielle Union is Raising Black Daughters and Learning As She Goes
10. Don Lemon is a Soldier for The Army of Truth
9. Bassey Ikpi Didn’t Enter the World Broken
8. Elie Mystal: Call It a Lynching
7. Walter Mosley Believes in Freedom of Speech. Period.
6. Jeff Yang on the Hard Work of Allyship
5. Robin DiAngelo Wants to Be a Little Less White
4. Issa Rae is Still Rooting for Everybody Black
3. Brittany Packnett Cunningham on Activism in Crisis
How Bishop T. D. Jakes Keeps the Faith
Dr. Camara Jones Saw the Tsunami
Introducing Come Through with Rebecca Carroll
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Intersectionality Matters!