This was a good listen, it’ll be exciting to see the video. Gladwell is a good author and now I’m wanting to listen to his podcast as well. Thanks for the content.
@WhatNowPodcast I am loving the diversity of guests that you are having on the show. Enjoyable episode, and it was really great to see this side of Malcom Gladwell. Love his books.
Cognitive flexibility is a skill and is something that a LOT of people were never taught as children and continue to struggle with the rest of their life. Malcolm Gladwell was really lucky to learn that skill from his father and it's no surprise that Malcolm's fans get frustrated when he changes his mind because those individuals have not been taught the skill of cognitive flexibility
Agree...many of us love and respect him. There are about 42M black people in the US and 1.2B in the world..I'm sure many from these numbers don't know him.
@@LaTanyaMarketingAcademy Your comment reminds me of that time Malcolm was on a late night show maybe 8 years ago maybe promoting “Blink” and he was explaining that he’s black. And that “people” often don’t realize it, but then he explained, “but Black people always know”. 😂
Every time I listen to Trevor Noah anywhere in any form I just want to pick up a book and read more. His love of reading will always be my favourite trait of his
"Rules" to live by...never stop being curious and asking questions. And never stop learning because the world is forever changing! Hence having an open mind to recognize that the world and your opinions can change...see Malcolm...
As a Jamaican, I have my own biases when it comes to Malcolm Gladwell. The man is a genius who can do very little wrong. And as a fan of Trevor Noah from the minute I picked up my copy of Born a Crime, I knew instinctively that this podcast episode would be engaging from beginning to end. This podcast episode was also my first introduction to Christian Mbakwe Medina and she was lovely. Thank you all for this conversation. No lies were told and it was enriching. Huzza!
I feel like changing your mind is a wonderful way to remind yourself you have one ❤. And saying I was wrong - that’s the best . As a teacher I do that all the time and it models for the kids we all make mistakes, what matters is we grow.
It is so important to evolve your thinking on certain matters. In the 90’s during young adulthood, I was very much pro Malcolm X which I assumed would place me against King’s Civil Rights Movement. I saw the distraction of the CRM and its effects on the Black community and Black owned businesses. Now at 50, I see the nuance of the CRM and the Black Panther Party and how each has contributed positive changes to the society as a whole.
I often think back to the conversation Gladwell had with Amanda Knox on her podcast where they talked about his writing on her case and what she imo successfully argued he got wrong (and so did everyone) about her case, but the most striking part of it for me was them discussing their pasts and how they got to their views. It's one of my favorite things about his work & why I've listened to his podcast many times, my views change every single time sometimes in massive ways usually in many infinitesimally minute ones. And in that conversation listening to him talk about how he got to the view he did or when he talked about things he got wrong reporting on medical studies earlier in his career. I recalled also falling for broken windows and it's fallacious arguments --for me it was undergrad '08-'12 so literally just as the drop was just beginning and I was getting spoon-fed the orthodoxy of broken windows by some of my criminology professors (and one of the sociology professors was teaching racial color blindness (eg there's no structural issues) & (being gay was in the DSM) referenced in my psychology classes--I guess if I have any point it's that anyone getting angry he's changed his thinking truly needs help.
Thank you for this refined conversation. I did not realize how much of a fan I've already been of Gladwell. Keep the pace. This podcast continues to increase potency.
It's hard to not love MG, his personality is just contagious. His optimism and curiosity keep me drown to every video he is in. I am a forever fan + I have all his books, which I read, which keep me always pushing the boundaries of norms. I'm also glad he branched into history, because I love history. He is, in my view, the equivalent of a renascence Man.
Absolutely 💯…this entire exchange! My husband has always for years had a concern that society losing our personal, live, connections. God bless innovation and evolution, and at the same time, my Lord. Also, what the leader of South Africa did is the joy and laughter VP Harris was trying to bring to America…we’re not ready, shamefully!
I love that Trevor and Malcom are friends, its a beautiful mind meld in proximity. Trevor makes such a fascinating case study. For people who embrace evolving their minds and ideas, this was very gratifying. Trevor's co hosts, always asks insightful, pertinent questions or articulates interesting observations , she is the perfect cohost to Trevor. Can you please mention her name in the credits as well, just so the world can know her by name too, thank you!
Trevor, there are people who discipline other people’s kids all the time. They’re called teachers and they often do a better job than the parents. I had a parent tell me once that she uses my name on the weekends to keep her kid in line. “You better stop or I’m going to tell your teacher”. This really happened.
I could listen to Malcolm Gladwell all day long. A very fine human being. Such a beautiful brain ... and that voice just draws you in, hook line and sinker. Thank you for educating me.
I knew from way back, when he spoke at a YMCA conference in 1996 or so. I just counted him as another remarkable Black author that could help my employer improve.
I love Malcolm's affinity for broadening his perspective. As much as I love him, I always find myself "arguing with his books", so I'm really pleased that he went back to The Tipping Point with new eyes.
This is a rare occasion when an interview made me like the subject LESS. It also reminds me why I enjoy yet mistrust Noah. For reasons I won't detail here.❤
Thank you Malcolm Gladwell for demonstrating the strength, benefit, and grace of humility and the recognition of human fallibility. What if we (humans) realised that learning more and discovering evidence that may be contrary to our understanding is progress, is enhancement of our wisdom and intellect, and changing our minds, adjusting our actions accordingly is beneficial to us personally and globally. We create conflicts and suffering when we indulge the misdirection of our instinctive reticence: human tendency to refuse and reject perceived “threats” to our beliefs and perspectives which our minds have falsely enmeshed with our selves and specifically , our mortality. Why is this grave error of human nature and mistaken thinking (and corresponding correction ) still such a novel piece of information and not recognised as influential across all manner of conflict?
Gladwell could possibly benefit from Braver Angels podcast on intellectual humility. Here he goes from being absolutely certain about one assumption or finding to expressing absolute certainty about another. I do love how articulate and persuasive he can be.
This is such a beautiful and thought provoking conversation and all the others that Trevor and team. If you are not subscribed please do so now, you are missing valuable conversations and information 🙏🙏🙏🙏
It was my joy in hearing Malcolm Gladwell in different tones of giddy and joy. prior 2019 interviews with a bit on topic integrity tone. Congratulations on the children
My friend is a computer programmer, and when a computer system needed a change or fix, he would look up who wrote the code with a who wrote this dogsh!t in his mind. Probably 50 percent of the time, he was the original author.
the "Harvard chapter" was may favorite too. But, being a D1 athlete is not "easy." A different discipline than fitting in a classroom and excelling, but not easy. Thank you for sharing
I really enjoyed your show in Melbourne last night Trevor. I wondered if you knew that your book “Born a Crime” is a part of the high school curriculum and is required reading for year 12 high school students in the state of Victoria, Australia. I would have loved to hear what you have to say about that!
amazing convo! my takeaway from malcolm, trevor, and christiana's convo can best be summed up in a quote from the Puerto Rican rapper Rene Perez...the older I get the more I contradict myself
Another interesting episode always learn something new I've always liked Malcolm gladwell a new book I need to get I got the message by Ta nehissi coates great read
I miss the moments where you watch a live TV program, then immediately call your best friend(on land line) to discuss the episode for longer than the episode itself. I really miss the opportunity to debate and explore the possibilities of "what's next". I agree live is the only opportunity to explore this way of socialising.
@Trevor, actually Second System Effect is when someone builds a second version of a software, and then adds too many extra features, making it more complicated -which in turn making its development harder to complete.
Thanks for the clarification. I was wondering why what Trevor was referring to wasn't just simple "collateral damage" rather than some kind of esoteric computer programming situation.
African inclusiveness always amazes me. I'm half Mizrahi/Israeli, half white, non-Jewish German. Guessing from my DNA test results, I assume that I am of North African Jewish descent, but I don't know for sure because non-Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry is very hard to pin down with DNA tests. I was raised to believe that I was European Jewish and that my more or less African hair was a "jewfro", except I was exposed to relentless racism by Jews and non-Jews alike, also by my family and their friends, so I eventually figured out that I look Middle Eastern/North African because I am; and that the European Jewish relatives I thought I had probably are not my relatives. However, my family refused to give me any information about my real ancestry, so all I have to describe my background as accurately as possible under the circumstances is the ugly word "Mizrahi", which was invented by European colonisers in Palestine to describe Jews from Islamic countries, from Türkiye and Iran over the Arab Peninsula and Yemen all the way to Morocco, regardless if they have lived in their original home countries longer than the Bible exists (Iranian/Iraqi Jews) or if they descendants of the Jews who were expelled from Spain in the course of the Reconquista 500-odd years ago (many North African Jews) and have a lot in common with European Sephardic Jews both in terms of culture and in terms of ancestry, but you can't say so anymore because European Sephardic Jews generally do one hell of a lot of racist gatekeeping these days. Because I'm of Jewish descent by my father only and hence not Jewish according to Jewish religious law, too traumatised by racism and the aftermath of the Holocaust in Germany (I am old: I had to keep my Jewish descent a secret growing up and was forced to act as if it was perfectly normal to have bona fide nazis - murderers and their families - as neighbours and teachers, again both by my Jewish and my non-Jewish relatives) and not white enough to be a German among Germans, and more importantly as a result of colonial French divide-and-conquer policies in North Africa, which systematically favoured Jews over Muslims and successfully split them apart, I experience no inclusiveness whatsoever. African inclusiveness never ceases to amaze me. Sorry, I had to tell you immediately after I listened to Malcolm Gladwell's experience with his Jamaican background and African ancestry. P. S.: Free Palestine 🍉
How much of my intelligence and analytical skills would I have to lose to enjoy this podcast? Because, at the moment, I can poke holes in nearly everything they say.
"A human being" ... my son is multi-racial (but, aren't we all?), and grew up with kids from a southern culture; he could pass. But, the school genealogy assignment happened, and all his kindergarten to high school friends learned who he was, his parents, and his grandparents. By then, though, he was their friend, a human being.
I am a black person who knows who Malcolm is and that he’s black. However very few black folks I know who he is and that he’s black…and that’s a crime lol 📚 ❤👑
The problem with the swapping addresses thing is it really doesn't take into account disability and more specifically neurodiversity, like at all. So then we'd just keep not addressing our biases against neurodiverse people.
“We” were willing to pay the price. The “we” who accepted the practice are not the “we” who paid the price. He made a lot of money off that book. Has he contributed anything to counter the impact of the broken windows policy he championed? Will any part of the profits from this new book be put towards that effort? Make no mistake, stop & frisk was not a minor inconvenience to the many thousands of men and boys who were subjected to it. I am not anti Malcolm Gladwell, but we should not lose sight of the fact that this is really a bid to capitalize on the popularity of The Tipping Point and get you to buy his new book.
The thing about Will and Grace. The actor who played Will is straight. Another actor John Barrowman who was gay was up for the part - he was told that he was too gay for the role. Not camp. Gay. That's a different thing.
I grew up that way..neighbours, teachers ..if u were seen misbehaving you got beating n then they told our parents when they got home n yup prepare yourself...if the deed was bad you got another😂😂😂
Seriously, is it okay (as a non-parent, and a stranger) walk up to the kid throwing a tantrum in the grocery store, and say something along the lines of "don't treat your mother that way! You need to be kind to your mother, it's so much work to buy this food for you..." ? Feel free to msg me the answer
I am in those spaces, but where is the space for politics and religion? I am in the old land rover group that crosses alot of groups, rich and poor etc. but with no common ground there is no conversation. Been there a lot and it is depressing to see the wall created by different realities. Wall is already built and we can't see it.
ruclips.net/video/0nzREiczBaA/видео.html That's a beautiful thought, but at least in my experience, Africans embrace eachother when we're outside of Africa. Out here we are all brothers and sisters. However, when we are within our own borders, we can still be very divided, competetive, and judgemental. Recent example is how South Africans treated the beauty queen who had a Nigerian father.
Be one of the first subscribers to the podcast! bit.ly/SubscribeToWhatNowPodcast 🙌 What are your thoughts on the episode?
This was a good listen, it’ll be exciting to see the video. Gladwell is a good author and now I’m wanting to listen to his podcast as well. Thanks for the content.
@@WhatNowPodcast sir one day come to Kenya 🇰🇪
Best lunch break for me this week! Will continue tonight!
Hello Trevor! Please try to have Denzel Washington on. I really want to hear his insight on life in general. Thank you
@WhatNowPodcast I am loving the diversity of guests that you are having on the show. Enjoyable episode, and it was really great to see this side of Malcom Gladwell. Love his books.
Lovely- all the three of you. Thank you
I’m black and named my son after him. Love MG❤
Cognitive flexibility is a skill and is something that a LOT of people were never taught as children and continue to struggle with the rest of their life. Malcolm Gladwell was really lucky to learn that skill from his father and it's no surprise that Malcolm's fans get frustrated when he changes his mind because those individuals have not been taught the skill of cognitive flexibility
Black people know who Malcolm Gladwell is, and he's highly respected!!
Agree...many of us love and respect him. There are about 42M black people in the US and 1.2B in the world..I'm sure many from these numbers don't know him.
@LaTanyaMarketingAcademy
Oh, stop it, lady. Only people who read know Malcolm Gladwell.
@@LaTanyaMarketingAcademy Your comment reminds me of that time Malcolm was on a late night show maybe 8 years ago maybe promoting “Blink” and he was explaining that he’s black. And that “people” often don’t realize it, but then he explained, “but Black people always know”. 😂
Every time I listen to Trevor Noah anywhere in any form I just want to pick up a book and read more. His love of reading will always be my favourite trait of his
"Rules" to live by...never stop being curious and asking questions. And never stop learning because the world is forever changing! Hence having an open mind to recognize that the world and your opinions can change...see Malcolm...
And, if I may add on to this - never stop questioning yourSELF.
As a Jamaican, I have my own biases when it comes to Malcolm Gladwell. The man is a genius who can do very little wrong. And as a fan of Trevor Noah from the minute I picked up my copy of Born a Crime, I knew instinctively that this podcast episode would be engaging from beginning to end. This podcast episode was also my first introduction to Christian Mbakwe Medina and she was lovely. Thank you all for this conversation. No lies were told and it was enriching. Huzza!
Malcolm Gladwell is my favorite author. I first read Blink in 2009 and I was hooked. And now today I will never forget, Idea ≠ Identity.
I feel like changing your mind is a wonderful way to remind yourself you have one ❤. And saying I was wrong - that’s the best . As a teacher I do that all the time and it models for the kids we all make mistakes, what matters is we grow.
Love love Malcolm Gladwell. As a very proud Jamaican I am so happy he is one of us.
I definitely will claim him.
This man has had my two favorite living authors on in less than a month. Noah the 🐐
It is so important to evolve your thinking on certain matters. In the 90’s during young adulthood, I was very much pro Malcolm X which I assumed would place me against King’s Civil Rights Movement. I saw the distraction of the CRM and its effects on the Black community and Black owned businesses. Now at 50, I see the nuance of the CRM and the Black Panther Party and how each has contributed positive changes to the society as a whole.
I love intelligent conversations that help me change the way I think and see the world.
Me too.
I love Malcolm Gladwell… love ❤️ and I love Trevor Noah… two beautiful minds together…greatest greatest conversation!
I often think back to the conversation Gladwell had with Amanda Knox on her podcast where they talked about his writing on her case and what she imo successfully argued he got wrong (and so did everyone) about her case, but the most striking part of it for me was them discussing their pasts and how they got to their views. It's one of my favorite things about his work & why I've listened to his podcast many times, my views change every single time sometimes in massive ways usually in many infinitesimally minute ones. And in that conversation listening to him talk about how he got to the view he did or when he talked about things he got wrong reporting on medical studies earlier in his career.
I recalled also falling for broken windows and it's fallacious arguments --for me it was undergrad '08-'12 so literally just as the drop was just beginning and I was getting spoon-fed the orthodoxy of broken windows by some of my criminology professors (and one of the sociology professors was teaching racial color blindness (eg there's no structural issues) & (being gay was in the DSM) referenced in my psychology classes--I guess if I have any point it's that anyone getting angry he's changed his thinking truly needs help.
This is a fantastic conversation. I am huge fan of Malcolm and Trevor! Well Done!
Thank you for this refined conversation. I did not realize how much of a fan I've already been of Gladwell.
Keep the pace. This podcast continues to increase potency.
It's hard to not love MG, his personality is just contagious. His optimism and curiosity keep me drown to every video he is in. I am a forever fan + I have all his books, which I read, which keep me always pushing the boundaries of norms. I'm also glad he branched into history, because I love history. He is, in my view, the equivalent of a renascence Man.
I love Malcolm Gladwell. Read/own every single book he has authored. Enjoyed this episode.
Absolutely 💯…this entire exchange! My husband has always for years had a concern that society losing our personal, live, connections. God bless innovation and evolution, and at the same time, my Lord.
Also, what the leader of South Africa did is the joy and laughter VP Harris was trying to bring to America…we’re not ready, shamefully!
And Jamaicans know Malcolm Gladwell as well, and we love him. This guy is my book hero.
I love that Trevor and Malcom are friends, its a beautiful mind meld in proximity. Trevor makes such a fascinating case study. For people who embrace evolving their minds and ideas, this was very gratifying. Trevor's co hosts, always asks insightful, pertinent questions or articulates interesting observations , she is the perfect cohost to Trevor. Can you please mention her name in the credits as well, just so the world can know her by name too, thank you!
I tried to find her name 2 wks ago after an episode but could not. It seems deliberate. I agree, she should be in the credits.
I thoroughly enjoyed this podcast.
Trevor, there are people who discipline other people’s kids all the time. They’re called teachers and they often do a better job than the parents. I had a parent tell me once that she uses my name on the weekends to keep her kid in line. “You better stop or I’m going to tell your teacher”. This really happened.
Malcolm's voice and ideas are always fun to listen to.
You are awesome! All of you
I could listen to Malcolm Gladwell all day long. A very fine human being. Such a beautiful brain ... and that voice just draws you in, hook line and sinker. Thank you for educating me.
He had me at..no one likes to change his mind more than me..I was browsing and immediately got hooked..tell me more, Malcolm
It is so true, we have to find the joy in life. Tapping into that inner child and be playful. Life is too short to be so serious :)
Beautiful interview by some of my favorite people. I resonate so much with all that was discussed in this interview. ❤
I knew from way back, when he spoke at a YMCA conference in 1996 or so. I just counted him as another remarkable Black author that could help my employer improve.
Blessed love Trevor🙏💜
What a moving episode
Thank you ❤
This was entertaining, thought provoking and funny. Thanks guys. Keep them coming please.
I love Malcolm's affinity for broadening his perspective. As much as I love him, I always find myself "arguing with his books", so I'm really pleased that he went back to The Tipping Point with new eyes.
This is a rare occasion when an interview made me like the subject LESS. It also reminds me why I enjoy yet mistrust Noah. For reasons I won't detail here.❤
I love this episode 💞
Thank you Malcolm Gladwell for demonstrating the strength, benefit, and grace of humility and the recognition of human fallibility. What if we (humans) realised that learning more and discovering evidence that may be contrary to our understanding is progress, is enhancement of our wisdom and intellect, and changing our minds, adjusting our actions accordingly is beneficial to us personally and globally. We create conflicts and suffering when we indulge the misdirection of our instinctive reticence: human tendency to refuse and reject perceived “threats” to our beliefs and perspectives which our minds have falsely enmeshed with our selves and specifically , our mortality. Why is this grave error of human nature and mistaken thinking (and corresponding correction ) still such a novel piece of information and not recognised as influential across all manner of conflict?
Gladwell could possibly benefit from Braver Angels podcast on intellectual humility. Here he goes from being absolutely certain about one assumption or finding to expressing absolute certainty about another. I do love how articulate and persuasive he can be.
This is such a beautiful and thought provoking conversation and all the others that Trevor and team. If you are not subscribed please do so now, you are missing valuable conversations and information 🙏🙏🙏🙏
This conversation is Good it is better I didn't miss it🎉❤
It was my joy in hearing Malcolm Gladwell in different tones of giddy and joy. prior 2019 interviews with a bit on topic integrity tone. Congratulations on the children
My friend is a computer programmer, and when a computer system needed a change or fix, he would look up who wrote the code with a who wrote this dogsh!t in his mind. Probably 50 percent of the time, he was the original author.
Lol *insert Spiderman meme
Lol @@th4nhph0ng
Debugging: an opportunity to be the detective, the victim, and the murderer all at the same time.
Lmbo
My parents never hit me-but the matrons and teachers at boarding school were generous with their plethora of punishments. I agree with Trevor!🤣😂
the "Harvard chapter" was may favorite too. But, being a D1 athlete is not "easy." A different discipline than fitting in a classroom and excelling, but not easy. Thank you for sharing
Love from Srilanka ❤
This white girl knows Malcolm Gladwell! Never clicked on a video so fast as seeing my favorite modern author being interviewed by my favorite comedian
I really enjoyed your show in Melbourne last night Trevor.
I wondered if you knew that your book “Born a Crime” is a part of the high school curriculum and is required reading for year 12 high school students in the state of Victoria, Australia.
I would have loved to hear what you have to say about that!
amazing convo! my takeaway from malcolm, trevor, and christiana's convo can best be summed up in a quote from the Puerto Rican rapper Rene Perez...the older I get the more I contradict myself
Off the hook convo. Wonderful! Thanks TN
Luv this! I’ve read all his books! Looking forward to the newest one. ❤
Another interesting episode always learn something new I've always liked Malcolm gladwell a new book I need to get I got the message by Ta nehissi coates great read
Thank you.
I really enjoyed this one
I actually found the "broken window" theory fascinating too 😄, so this was a pretty interesting session 👏
9:15 He's a 100% correct. The stop and frisk policies were obviously wrong, and it really called in to question the rest of the book.
They were so SHOCKINGLY wrong and AWFUL. Lives were destroyed. Hope the chapter acknowledged that moral failure.
I love this. Thanks
In my dream multiverse, Malcolm Gladwell x Robert Greene would right a book together.
Oh that would be epic! 😂
psychprofile AI fixes this. "Tight Values, Loose Ideas Podcast"
“Three of us gathered in his name” 😂😂😂 that didn’t get the laughs it deserved! 6:24
Where's this been all my life. I'm so glad my algorithm finally chose you again since the daily show.
I miss the moments where you watch a live TV program, then immediately call your best friend(on land line) to discuss the episode for longer than the episode itself. I really miss the opportunity to debate and explore the possibilities of "what's next".
I agree live is the only opportunity to explore this way of socialising.
If hollywood had done a "bridgerton" from day one, the country would be vastly different. People would have seen themselves in each other
@Trevor, actually Second System Effect is when someone builds a second version of a software, and then adds too many extra features, making it more complicated -which in turn making its development harder to complete.
Thanks for the clarification. I was wondering why what Trevor was referring to wasn't just simple "collateral damage" rather than some kind of esoteric computer programming situation.
this was so enjoyable
So enjoyable 😊
The irony of the TV thing is that people said similar things about TV when it was new.
Finally!!!!
😂 Shelly -Ann is correct🇯🇲 Trevor u need to visit with Josh.."Real Conversations Intelligently Funny".
Damn. Trevor's dropping some Knowledge today.
Two brains 🧠 in one room 🤯🤯🤯
African inclusiveness always amazes me.
I'm half Mizrahi/Israeli, half white, non-Jewish German. Guessing from my DNA test results, I assume that I am of North African Jewish descent, but I don't know for sure because non-Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry is very hard to pin down with DNA tests. I was raised to believe that I was European Jewish and that my more or less African hair was a "jewfro", except I was exposed to relentless racism by Jews and non-Jews alike, also by my family and their friends, so I eventually figured out that I look Middle Eastern/North African because I am; and that the European Jewish relatives I thought I had probably are not my relatives. However, my family refused to give me any information about my real ancestry, so all I have to describe my background as accurately as possible under the circumstances is the ugly word "Mizrahi", which was invented by European colonisers in Palestine to describe Jews from Islamic countries, from Türkiye and Iran over the Arab Peninsula and Yemen all the way to Morocco, regardless if they have lived in their original home countries longer than the Bible exists (Iranian/Iraqi Jews) or if they descendants of the Jews who were expelled from Spain in the course of the Reconquista 500-odd years ago (many North African Jews) and have a lot in common with European Sephardic Jews both in terms of culture and in terms of ancestry, but you can't say so anymore because European Sephardic Jews generally do one hell of a lot of racist gatekeeping these days.
Because I'm of Jewish descent by my father only and hence not Jewish according to Jewish religious law, too traumatised by racism and the aftermath of the Holocaust in Germany (I am old: I had to keep my Jewish descent a secret growing up and was forced to act as if it was perfectly normal to have bona fide nazis - murderers and their families - as neighbours and teachers, again both by my Jewish and my non-Jewish relatives) and not white enough to be a German among Germans, and more importantly as a result of colonial French divide-and-conquer policies in North Africa, which systematically favoured Jews over Muslims and successfully split them apart, I experience no inclusiveness whatsoever.
African inclusiveness never ceases to amaze me.
Sorry, I had to tell you immediately after I listened to Malcolm Gladwell's experience with his Jamaican background and African ancestry.
P. S.: Free Palestine 🍉
How much of my intelligence and analytical skills would I have to lose to enjoy this podcast? Because, at the moment, I can poke holes in nearly everything they say.
Yay! I didn't miss it this time! Lol
"A human being" ... my son is multi-racial (but, aren't we all?), and grew up with kids from a southern culture; he could pass. But, the school genealogy assignment happened, and all his kindergarten to high school friends learned who he was, his parents, and his grandparents. By then, though, he was their friend, a human being.
61 with a two year old is wild .
I am a black person who knows who Malcolm is and that he’s black. However very few black folks I know who he is and that he’s black…and that’s a crime lol 📚 ❤👑
Fun episode.
but, 'Russia lose?', quick, change your mind if that's what you think (we didn't get to hear that part)...Abrakadabra...✨✨
"I think therefore I am"......idea is my identity. The flaw of thought.
Trevor, can you come to Srilanka
The problem with the swapping addresses thing is it really doesn't take into account disability and more specifically neurodiversity, like at all. So then we'd just keep not addressing our biases against neurodiverse people.
Hope the comment helps, so glad I rando checked ur twitter.
Could you consider placing guests in the upper left frame, rather than in the lower left corner. The profile puts them in an inferior seat.
“We” were willing to pay the price. The “we” who accepted the practice are not the “we” who paid the price. He made a lot of money off that book. Has he contributed anything to counter the impact of the broken windows policy he championed?
Will any part of the profits from this new book be put towards that effort?
Make no mistake, stop & frisk was not a minor inconvenience to the many thousands of men and boys who were subjected to it.
I am not anti Malcolm Gladwell, but we should not lose sight of the fact that this is really a bid to capitalize on the popularity of The Tipping Point and get you to buy his new book.
The thing about Will and Grace. The actor who played Will is straight. Another actor John Barrowman who was gay was up for the part - he was told that he was too gay for the role. Not camp. Gay. That's a different thing.
💚Wins🎖️ClearlyLovinglyFun♥️💟
🌍♥️💜💙💚💛🧡❤♥️💜🌎
My son wouldn't allow his kid to watch coco melon. The few times he did watch it, we saw negative changes in his behavior.
I go to libraries and run my finger along all the spines. I stop and take what ever book my finger lands. That way I read things outside my scope.
I lived in NYC under stop and frisk and knew it was wrong.
Y'all were joking but some discipline is better if it's external. We do really need our villages.
I grew up that way..neighbours, teachers ..if u were seen misbehaving you got beating n then they told our parents when they got home n yup prepare yourself...if the deed was bad you got another😂😂😂
Who is the woman?
🍿 🤗
Who is Cheryl? Is Trevor becoming dad? He said" our parenting"
Happy for you Trevor❤️you deserves all the love and happyness❤️
Seriously, is it okay (as a non-parent, and a stranger) walk up to the kid throwing a tantrum in the grocery store, and say something along the lines of "don't treat your mother that way! You need to be kind to your mother, it's so much work to buy this food for you..." ?
Feel free to msg me the answer
I am in those spaces, but where is the space for politics and religion? I am in the old land rover group that crosses alot of groups, rich and poor etc. but with no common ground there is no conversation. Been there a lot and it is depressing to see the wall created by different realities. Wall is already built and we can't see it.
Trevor,
Why don’t you talk about Trump anymore?
His life wasn't impacted/drastically altered by it.
ruclips.net/video/0nzREiczBaA/видео.html That's a beautiful thought, but at least in my experience, Africans embrace eachother when we're outside of Africa. Out here we are all brothers and sisters. However, when we are within our own borders, we can still be very divided, competetive, and judgemental. Recent example is how South Africans treated the beauty queen who had a Nigerian father.