S2 - Ep 5: But They Make it so Easy! (with Stacy Mitchell)

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S2 - Ep 5: But They Make it so Easy! (with Stacy Mitchell)

Our extreme wealth inequality isn’t just caused by economic exclusion; we are also struggling with the concentration of corporate power. Simply put, most of our money flows directly into the pockets of a few wealthy individuals. This week, Baratunde learns how it’s possible for Amazon to receive one out of every four dollars spent online. He speaks with antitrust reformer Stacy Mitchell who breaks down why concentrated power like this is a threat to our businesses, communities, and democracy.

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S2 - Ep 4: Land Without Landlords (with Noni Session)

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S2 - Ep 4: Land Without Landlords (with Noni Session)

Imagine land without landlords. With shared ownership and without racialized displacement. Sounds too good to be true. The East Bay Permanent Real Estate Cooperative [EBPREC] is fighting for this future. Baratunde sits down with Executive Director Noni Session and learns how EBPREC is reclaiming their community, and building local ownership through real estate.

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S2 - Ep 3: Ownership Is Key (with Sam Polk)

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S2 - Ep 3: Ownership Is Key (with Sam Polk)

Everytable founder, Sam Polk, wants to change the way we do business by not only creating jobs but going a step further to create wealth-building, ownership opportunities through a social franchise model. In this episode, we follow Sam’s journey from Wall Street tycoon, to non-profit connoisseur, to social entrepreneur, and how he found himself with a new mission to transform the food system by making it delicious and profitable for everyone.

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S2 - Ep 1: It’s All Greek to Me! (with Astra Taylor)

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S2 - Ep 1: It’s All Greek to Me! (with Astra Taylor)

In Season One we asked ourselves, what does it mean “to citizen”? How do we show up and stand up for our community? Coming off the heels of January 6th, 2021, Baratunde starts Season Two by taking a step back with the question, “How can we citizen with so much division?”. In this episode, we speak with author and filmmaker Astra Taylor who takes us back to ancient Greece and reveals how our political and economic rights are deeply intertwined.

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Season 2 Trailer

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Season 2 Trailer

This season we explore the deep roots of wealth inequality in the US, learn how its historic levels impact democracy, and search across the nation for inspiring people working to find solutions.

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Feeding Ourselves Our Way (with Chef José Andrés)

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Feeding Ourselves Our Way (with Chef José Andrés)

Baratunde learns about mutual aid and local, distributed approaches to feeding ourselves during this time of crisis. José Andrés, chef, humanitarian, and founder of World Central Kitchen, speaks about the power of food to build community, and his belief that we can indeed feed ourselves with dignity in this moment if we have the political will to do so. Two representatives of the LA Community Fridge movement tell us about how neighbors are feeding neighbors and learning more about each other in the process.

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Fight COVID With Everyone And Everything You Know (with Danielle Allen and Dr. Amy Aminlari)

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Fight COVID With Everyone And Everything You Know (with Danielle Allen and Dr. Amy Aminlari)

Baratunde explores how, in the absence of national leadership, determined, newly-minted leaders are problem-solving and mobilizing people around them to protect and save lives during this pandemic. Danielle Allen breaks down what has ACTUALLY been happening with regional leadership and how she stays hopeful in the work of protecting all of us during this pandemic. Emergency medicine physician, Dr. Amy Aminlari, shares her experience standing up a Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) operation and finding community.

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Making Work Work for Everyone (with Saru Jayaraman and Michelle Miller)

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Making Work Work for Everyone (with Saru Jayaraman and Michelle Miller)

Baratunde wonders what today’s labor movement looks like and how workers are responding to the unprecedented consolidation of corporate power across all industries from tech to agriculture to retail. He learns how our economy and our democracy are impacted by these extremes. Saru Jayaraman speaks to the Davida and Goliath power dynamics in the restaurant industry, the origins of the $2.13 per hour minimum wage for tipped workers, and the progress of One Fair Wage. Michelle Miller of CoWorker.org reimagines how we can be agents of our economy instead of objects in the economy.

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Bonus Episode: The Power of Creative Freelancers (with Mathieu Young)

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Bonus Episode: The Power of Creative Freelancers (with Mathieu Young)

In this bonus episode, Baratunde follows up on an audience member’s question asked during the live taping of episode six, “Making Work Work for Everyone.” How can independent contractors or freelancers find their collective power to address issues they face as self-employed workers? Baratunde speaks with Mathieu Young, a creative freelancer based in Los Angeles who straddles all the employment labels.

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Building Bridges, Not Walls (with Tonika Johnson)

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Building Bridges, Not Walls (with Tonika Johnson)

Baratunde ignores the headlines about Chicago and heeds a listener’s advice to learn more about the South Side from a local artist who is building bridges in her community and literally helping people find common ground. Tonika Johnson helps us understand the pride that comes from being a Chicagoan and the root causes of today’s community struggles grounded in segregation and discrimination. Through her Folded Map Project, she is a perfect example of using art as a way to citizen.

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Making Our Voices Heard (with Maria Teresa Kumar)

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Making Our Voices Heard (with Maria Teresa Kumar)

Baratunde speaks with Maria Teresa Kumar, President of Voto Latino, about the power in numbers of Latinx voters and the work of relationship-building for this moment. Maria shares stories of what effective government looks like and its impact on the lives of the Latinx community.

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Making Our Votes Count (with Sherrilyn Ifill)

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Making Our Votes Count (with Sherrilyn Ifill)

Baratunde speaks with Sherrilyn Ifill, the President and Director-Counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund about the very long history of voter suppression, why it still exists (hint: white supremacy and racism), and the current tactics being deployed for the 2020 election.

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Making Our Presence Felt (with Angela Lang and Quentin Palfrey)

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Making Our Presence Felt (with Angela Lang and Quentin Palfrey)

Baratunde digs into the feeling of disconnect and neglect felt by the black community in Milwaukee during the 2016 election and learns from Angela Lang, Executive Director of Black Leaders Organizing Communities (BLOC MKE). They are changing what it means to get people politically engaged in their community Quentin Palfrey also weighs in on how data scientists and lawyers are uniting on the ground to stop voter suppression.

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Making Our Returning Citizens Whole (with Desmond Meade)

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Making Our Returning Citizens Whole (with Desmond Meade)

Baratunde learns to think about sacrifice and having skin in the game in terms of a ham, egg, and cheese sandwich analogy. Desmond Meade, founder of the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition (FRRC), reminds us that to error is human and the need for second chances, and how that reminder mobilized a grassroots citizen’s movement that transcended racial and political lines to restore voting rights to 1.4 million Floridians with past felony convictions.

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Flexing Our Civil Resistance Muscle (with Jamila Raqib)

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Flexing Our Civil Resistance Muscle (with Jamila Raqib)

Baratunde wrestles with how to handle rising political violence in the U.S. by learning from a leading steward of strategic nonviolent action. Jamila Raqib, executive director of the Albert Einstein Institution, shares lessons on the superiority of nonviolent approaches to change, options for defending democracy against authoritarianism, and tips on what to do if a certain head of state refuses to leave office. Hypothetically.

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