On Point
The Guardian plans a new project on voter suppression And not a moment too soon. The Fight to Vote series will investigate voter suppression efforts across the U.S., and plans in-depth reporting, data analysis, videos, and will focus on the role of social media in the dissemination of disinformation and propaganda. Former Vice editor Ankita Rao, an adjunct professor at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at the City University of New York, is the new voting rights editor for Guardian U.S. The series is being funded by grants from Craig Newmark Philanthropies, Schumann Media Center, and Park Foundation.
The Guardian
There's more than one way to take a knee The Players Coalition, a nonprofit of current and former NFL athletes established in 2017 to support social justice and racial equality, launched an online social media campaign yesterday to address police misconduct and violence. It builds on the conversation started by Colin Kaepernick. Co-founder Malcolm Jenkins of the Philadelphia Eagles says the campaign will center the voices of parents who have lost kids to police and gun violence. "We want this PSA to generate productive dialogue between people of all backgrounds, so we can start to bridge the communication gap and work together to end these injustices," Jenkins told CNBC. The first video tells the story of the Oct. 17, 2010, shooting death of 20-year-old student-athlete Danroy "DJ" Henry. #EveryonesChild. Bring tissues.
CNBC
Elite colleges solicit applications from low-performing students to be able to claim "selectivity" It's a very dodgy deal. Colleges buy student data from the College Board, the nonprofit that owns the SAT, and then use that data to send recruitment brochures to their homes. Students interpret the brochures as an invitation to apply, even if their scores might otherwise eliminate them. The solicitations boost applications and rejections, making the colleges seem popular and selective. "They are buying some students' names who don't have a great chance of getting in," says one enrollment counselor, dashing the hopes—and denting the bank accounts—of aspirational families who might have been better served elsewhere. But it also helps the College Board. "Those rejection rates have amplified the perception of exclusivity that colleges are eager to reinforce, pushing students to invest more time and money in preparing for and retaking exams College Board sells," says the Wall Street Journal.
Wall Street Journal
Revenge is back and you're not going to believe the twist Back in 2011, Revenge was an impossibly popular ABC drama starring a bunch of impossibly wealthy and attractive white people, several of whom were impossibly good at hand to hand combat. But that's not important now. Breaking news: It turns out that ABC is planning a reboot starring a Latina immigrant who comes to Malibu to take revenge on… hang on a sec… "a Sackler-esque pharmaceutical dynasty, whose insatiable greed lead to the murder of her biochemist mother, the destruction of her family, and a global epidemic." Super topical!
Deadline
On Background
A lost manuscript provides searing testimony on the 1921 Tulsa Massacre A 10-page manuscript, yellowed and folded, was recovered from a storage facility in 2015. It was written by Oklahoma attorney Buck Colbert Franklin (1879-1960), who was the father of historian John Hope Franklin (1915-2009). In it, he describes the attack in horrifying terms (and affirming the choices used to bring the episode to life by the producers of HBO's Watchmen). "I could see planes circling in mid-air. They grew in number and hummed, darted and dipped low. I could hear something like hail falling upon the top of my office building. Down East Archer, I saw the old Mid-Way hotel on fire, burning from its top, and then another and another and another building began to burn from their top." It gets much worse. The manuscript is now in the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture.
Smithsonian Magazine
Get to know Phillip Youmans At 19, Youmans is the youngest filmmaker ever to screen at the TriBeCa Film Festival, and he did not go unnoticed. He became the first Black director to win Best Narrative Feature for his gritty feature Burning Cane , and the film's star, Wendell Pierce, won for Best Actor. The film was also snapped up for a distribution deal by Ava DuVernay's ARRAY and was released yesterday on Netflix. Youmans is now a freshman film student at NYU (I know, right?), and spoke at length with Beandra July about how he views his art, and what it was like to collaborate with other filmmakers during the edit process. "Benh Zeitlin [of Beasts of the Southern Wild], he really motivated me to be as fluid as my instinct led me to be," says Youmans. "So, in the edit, I decided that I wanted the film to be like a revolving door," but also "not necessarily being tied to a specific time and place of things chronologically."
Hyperallergic
A behavioral economist explains political strife Krista Tippett has a thoughtful interview with Daniel Kahneman, the Nobel Prize-winning founder of behavioral economics, and author of Thinking Fast and Slow. His central thesis, that human behavior toggles between two contradictory modes of thinking—fast and automatic, slow and conscious—offers some comfort during times of political turmoil. "[O]ne of the important realizations that come from thinking of the world in terms of System 1 and System 2 is that our beliefs do not come from where we think they came," he explains. "So the real cause of your belief in a political position, whether conservative or radical left, the real causes are rooted in your personal history." See also: Uncomfortable conversations.
On Being
Tamara El-Waylly helps write and produce raceAhead.
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Quote
"We are not supporting roles ... We are stars on our own journeys."
—Constance Wu, in an interview with Time on the impact of Crazy Rich Asians.
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