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Black Voices at the Mic: Great Podcasts on Love, Sci-Fi, and Radical Honesty

Black stories are more than just struggles with racism and traumatic events.

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Read when you’ve got time to spare.

Must-listen podcasts from Black voices, curated by radio producer Bethel Habte.

I’ve been thinking a lot recently about what it means to listen to Black voices. I’m a radio producer—a voice elevator—after all.

One of the many awful things about living in a world that discriminates against people for something as arbitrary as the level of melanin in their skin is how much it can flatten and reduce individual experiences. There are so many ways to exist in the world when you’re Black, and they don’t always center on our relationship to racial oppression.

It’s vital to listen to stories from Black folks that don’t solely address our struggles with racism, or our stories that are touched by trauma. So these recommendations aim to reflect the fact that while it’s critical to listen to Black voices that address this moment in history, it’s equally pressing to listen to the stories that remind everyone we contain multitudes.

BH

We’ve Been Here Before [LISTEN]

Brittany LuseEric Eddings
The Nod

Amid a still raging global pandemic, the nation has been reeling over the most recent spate of killings of Black people at the hands of police. Brittany and Eric sit down to process their feelings and memorialize the lives we lost.

The Liberation of RNA [LISTEN]

Brandon Ogbunu
Radiolab

Starting when he was a senior in college being shook down by a couple cops, Brandon tells us about navigating his ups and downs of a career in science, his startling connection to scientific racism, and his battle against biology’s central dogma.

Borders Between Us [LISTEN]

Saidu Tejan-ThomasJay Allison
Transom

Saidu Tejan-Thomas is a young poet. For a long time, he had a story he needed to tell: an homage and apology to his mother.

Art Maven Kimberly Drew [LISTEN]

Kimberly DrewHelga Davis
Helga

Tastemaker Kimberly Drew on the importance of mental health, what it really means to work in the art world, and how drinking water helps her keep the beat.

We Are in the Future

Neil Drumming
This American Life

Afrofuturism is more than sci-fi. It’s a way of looking at Black culture that’s fantastic, creative, and oddly hopeful—which feels especially urgent during a time without a lot of optimism.

Bethel Habte

Bethel Habte is an associate producer at Radiolab. She also curates a newsletter called “wilt” (what I’m listening to) and sends out five podcast and song recommendations every Friday. She’s a proud aunt, aspiring dog-mom, and on-and-off salsa dancer.