On Being with Krista Tippet: Episode 847 with Eula Biss –Talking about Whiteness
You can’t think about something if you can’t talk about it, says Eula Biss. The writer helpfully opens up lived words and ideas like complacence, guilt, and opportunity hoarding for an urgent reckoning with whiteness. This conversation was inspired by her 2015 essay in the New York Times, “White Debt.”

Race and Redemption The Race and Redemption podcast exists to provide first-hand testimonies along with Biblically and factually accurate, non-partisan content so that our listeners are empowered to pursue racial redemption right where they are planted.

Unlocking Us with Brené Brown – with Ibram X. Kendi on How to be Anti Racist
I am talking with professor Ibram Kendi, the New York Times bestselling author of How to be an Antiracist and the Director of the Antiracist Research and Policy Center at American University. We talk about racial disparities, policy, and equality, but we really focus on How to Be an Antiracist, which is a groundbreaking approach to understanding uprooting racism and inequality in our society and in ourselves.


Unlocking Us with Bréne Brown – Brene with Austin Channing Brown on I’m Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness
Austin Channing Brown’s anti-racism work is critical to changing our world, and her ability to talk about what is good and true about love, our faith, and loving each other is transformative. She is a writer, a speaker, and a media producer providing inspired leadership on racial justice in America. In this episode, we connect on her book I’m Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness, and talk about her online television show, The Next Question.

Unlocking Us with Brene Brown – Brene with Emmanuel Acho on Uncomfortable Conversations with a Black Man (Also a book and Youtube video series) In this episode, I talk with Emmanuel Acho, creator, host, and producer of Uncomfortable Conversations with a Black Man, a web series about racism to drive open and uncomfortable dialogue. His book with the same name is a thoughtful manifesto, a mandate and a playbook that’s both generous and full of love. We get personal, and we talk about what these important questions mean in context of history and for culture today.