Lee Camp: Harnessing Humor to Unveil America’s Ugliest Truths
The political comedian wants to dismantle systems of oppression with a molotov cocktail filled with facts and some good old fashioned laughter.
The political comedian wants to dismantle systems of oppression with a molotov cocktail filled with facts and some good old fashioned laughter.
The co-directors' film, which documents the uprising in Ferguson, say they made the film for black people who have lived through similar experiences.
The author's collection of essays explores his past as a youth involved in the drug trade and eventually his path out of jail and into college.
The author of "Hannah Mary Tabbs and the Disembodied Torso" discusses a lurid crime that took place in Philadelphia in 1887.
The author talks about how her early childhood in New Hampshire was idyllic but changed with adolescence as she was alienated because of her race.
When you have privilege, a crime is a 'mistake,' and when you don't, a mistake becomes a crime.
Journalist and activist Chris Hedges and Jimmy Dore discuss Hedges' most recent article for Scheerpost and the latest events on the streets of America.
The former Black Panther talks about the plight of African Americans and his involvement in the Real News Network.
The play he directed in Louisiana, where he was incarcerated, became the subject of the documentary "Cast the First Stone."
Mr. FishDwayne Booth (a.k.a., Mr. Fish) is a cartoonist and freelance writer, has been published in many reputable and prestigious magazines, journals and newspapers. In addition to Harper’s Magazine, his…
The professor and activist dissects the dangers of Donald Trump's presidency, the legacy of the Black Power Movement and more.
When it comes to matters of race, the entertainment industry fails its increasingly diverse audience time and again.
After every system failed her, Susan Burton became the helping hand she and so many other formerly incarcerated women needed.
The documentarian discusses her new film, "Passing: A Family in Black & White," and the lasting legacy of America's original sin.
Kevin Cooper was convicted of a 1983 quadruple murder and sentenced to death in a trial in which evidence that might have exonerated him was withheld from the defense. Visit…