Connecticut Public Radio
Disrupted
Disrupted is about the changes we all encounter and the forces driving those changes. Some disruptions spark joy and possibility. Others move us to take action and re-evaluate our world. But the show isn't just about those disruptions; it’s about embracing them, exploring new perspectives, and feeling more connected to ourselves and our communities. Host and political scientist Khalilah Brown-Dean creates a place where changemakers come together to help us see the world differently and challenge us to grow together. Visit ctpublic.org/disrupted for more!
Author
Connecticut Public Radio
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
Jul 9, 2026
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Episodes
After #MeToo, what has changed? 08.01.2026 49:00
Many people remember #MeToo from when it went viral in 2017. And before the hashtag, there was the Me Too movement, started by activist Tarana Burke 20 years ago as a way to support survivors of sexual violence, especially Black women and girls. This hour, we’re reflecting on what has changed since the height of the Me Too movement. We'll discuss everything from policy to social media. GUEST...
Our 2025 favorites: Often undervalued, student journalists play a vital role in our communities 02.01.2026 49:00
The Disrupted team is welcoming the new year by choosing a couple of the episodes we loved from 2025. We have so many favorites that we couldn't reair all of them, but these are some of the ones that we wanted to listen back to. This week, producer Kevin Chang Barnum chose our episode on student journalism. Student journalists have been in the spotlight in recent years. In 2024, amidst massi...
Our 2025 favorites: Megan Greenwell on the ways private equity upends the lives of everyday people 26.12.2025 49:00
The Disrupted team is welcoming the new year by choosing a couple of the episodes we loved from 2025. We have so many favorites that we couldn't reair all of them, but these are some of the ones that we wanted to listen back to. This week, host Khalilah-Brown Dean chose our interview with journalist and author Megan Greenwell. Megan Greenwell's book, Bad Company: Private Equity and the Death...
Authors like Angeline Boulley and Ainissa Ramirez help young readers see a wider range of representation 19.12.2025 40:16
The way people approach children’s books in the U.S. has changed a lot over time. Philosopher John Locke helped popularize the idea that learning to read should be fun with his 1693 treatise Some Thoughts Concerning Education . Fast forward 300 years and television series continued Locke’s legacy. Today's adults might remember the joy of reading being touted to young people through sho...
Lizards, scallops and funding cuts: Connecticut biologists talk about our ever-changing world 12.12.2025 48:30
Studying oysters can help us understand how Connecticut’s shoreline is changing. Studying lizards can help us understand the history of life on our planet. Biologists research living organisms. And in doing so, they help us understand not only ourselves, but also the way our lives are intertwined with those of every other species. This hour— Connecticut biologists tell us how their wor...
John Maduko on CT’s state college system and Jamal Watson on the student debt crisis 05.12.2025 48:30
For students and families, navigating the world of higher education isn’t easy. Some of the challenges, like student loan debt, have been going on for years. Other challenges come from more recent changes in how the federal government approaches universities. To explore these challenges, we're talking to John Maduko , who was appointed Interim Chancellor of the Connecticut State Colleges and...
Connecticut leaders breaking barriers with historic firsts 21.11.2025 49:00
Being the first person to do something isn’t easy. There’s no blueprint for what you are doing, no conventional wisdom to fall back on when all else fails. There is also the pressure of expectations and all the people who are counting on your success. But it’s a way to show people what is possible. Being first means being a pioneer. And here in Connecticut, people are pioneering...
Poet Tracy K. Smith on how poems get us through ‘Perilous Times’ 14.11.2025 49:00
When Tracy K. Smith served as Poet Laureate of the United States, she used her platform to bring people together. In 2018, she traveled the country for a series called American Conversations: Celebrating Poems in Rural Communities . At these events, she encouraged people to share their thoughts, regardless of their background. While Tracy’s two terms as poet laureate ended in 2019, she is st...
Vanessa Priya Daniel on the three superpowers women of color bring to their leadership 07.11.2025 48:30
In Unrig the Game: What Women of Color Can Teach Everyone About Winning , author Vanessa Priya Daniel writes about the challenges that women of color face. She includes a satirical section formatted like a job description, where she details the duties of women of color leaders. They include “Be likable at all costs,” “Work with zero margin of error” and “Be a willing...
Pushing for peace: A look at the past and future of the United Nations as it marks 80 years 31.10.2025 49:00
The United Nations General Assembly is celebrating the 80th anniversary of its founding this month. This hour we look at the status of the organization today, and the challenges it faces. Plus, historian Thant Myint-U has a new book out about his grandfather, U Thant, who was the UN’s first non-European secretary-general, and a leading ambassador of peace during the Cold War. Myint-U joins u...
Barrier-breaking former White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre talks about our current political moment 23.10.2025 49:00
This hour, we’re talking to a journalist and a member of the Biden administration to try to understand both sides of the press briefing podium. CNN Senior Writer Matthew Vann tells us about how D.C. journalists are covering the current presidential administration. And former White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre's new book is Independent: A Look Inside a Broken White House, Outside...
As he approaches 90, Chef Jacques Pépin is still spreading joy through food 17.10.2025 40:00
For decades, legendary author, TV host, instructor and chef Jacques Pépin has spread his love for cooking across the world. He’s cooked for heads of state and on numerous public television shows, appearing alongside Julia Child in Julia and Jacques Cooking at Home . He’s also Executive Chairman of The Jacques Pépin Foundation . The foundation supports culinary training fo...
Dr. Beverly Daniel Tatum reflects on the 'Peril and Promise' of being a college leader today 10.10.2025 41:00
From COVID-19 to protests to legal battles with the federal government, college and university leaders have been in the spotlight a lot in the last five years. Because of that attention, if we want to understand the news, we need to understand higher education. Disrupted first aired five years ago this week. Thank you to our listeners for returning week after week and making these five years possi...
From woodworking to summer camp, there are endless ways to spread Black Joy 03.10.2025 49:00
For Black Americans, following the news can be a psychological challenge. 4 in 5 Black adults say they see or hear racist or racially insensitive coverage about Black people at least sometimes. That’s according to a 2023 Pew Research survey . And coverage can be hard to watch even if it isn’t insensitive. While news about violence against Black people is important for communities to kn...
Connecticut leaders breaking barriers with historic firsts 26.09.2025 49:00
Being the first person to do something isn’t easy. There’s no blueprint for what you are doing, no conventional wisdom to fall back on when all else fails. There is also the pressure of expectations and all the people who are counting on your success. But it’s a way to show people what is possible. Being first means being a pioneer. And here in Connecticut, people are pioneering...
Oral histories preserve the stories of communities that might otherwise be lost 19.09.2025 49:00
Oral history preserves the past by recording people’s real voices. It’s not just about recording the stories people tell. It’s also about the way they tell them. Oral history is about memory and humanity. It’s a form of history that anyone can be a part of. This hour, we’re returning to our conversations with two Connecticut residents about the stories they have prese...
The cultural forces that shape gun violence with Dr. Jonathan Metzl 12.09.2025 48:00
For years, Dr. Jonathan Metzl thought about gun violence as a public health issue. His approach treated it like an epidemic and treated guns as a health risk. But as he studied a mass shooting that happened near where he lives in Nashville, he realized he had been missing something crucial for years— the cultural power of guns. This hour, as we reflect on the gun violence that has shaken the...
Elizabeth Bruenig on witnessing executions and opposing capital punishment 05.09.2025 49:00
According to Amnesty International , 15 countries used the death penalty in 2024. The United States was one of those countries. Capital punishment is illegal in 23 states and isn’t used in some of the states where it is legal. But the United States still executed 25 people last year . We’ve surpassed that number already in 2025. Capital punishment can be a contentious topic. And...
Why 'natural' disasters aren't as natural as their name suggests 29.08.2025 48:30
Listening to the news, it feels like there are more natural disasters than ever. This hour, as we reflect on 20 years since Hurricane Katrina, we return to conversations about why flooding and droughts are becoming so common and how the word "disaster" affects the way we view an event. First, Connecticut State Historian Andy Horowitz explains why understanding disasters involves looking at the dec...
The power of craft, from activism to connecting with ancestors 22.08.2025 49:00
When people think of craft, certain images might come to mind, like knitting in a rocking chair by a warm fireplace. People often think of it as a quiet, solitary activity— one that doesn’t make much of a public statement. But crafts like knitting can be radical. The rocking chair by the fireplace isn’t just quiet and solitary— it can also be a site of real political change...
Local Black entrepreneurs on building a business and the power of representation 15.08.2025 48:57
Black Americans make up close to 14 percent of the US population. But only about three percent of U.S. businesses are Black-owned. That’s according to the 2023 Annual Business Survey , which is conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau and the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics. August is National Black Business Month, so we are spotlighting some of the Black entrepreneurs righ...
80 years ago, the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Japan. Connecticut’s Shizuko Tomoda still feels the impact 08.08.2025 49:00
On August 6th, 1945, the United States’ military dropped an atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima in Japan. Three days later, they dropped another bomb, this time on Nagasaki. According to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists , estimates of people killed by these bombs range from around one hundred thousand to more than two hundred thousand. And the impact of the bombs isn’t limited to...
Innovations in the care and treatment of Alzheimer's disease 31.07.2025 49:00
Doctors, researchers and patients are facing a critical moment in the care and treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease. This hour, we talk with Jon Hamilton of NPR’s Science Desk about new medicines available to people in the early stages of Alzheimer’s. He also describes the impact federal funding cuts will have on Alzheimer’s research. Plus, Sujata Srinivasan, Senior Health Repo...
Lizards, scallops and funding cuts: Connecticut biologists talk about our ever-changing world 25.07.2025 49:00
Studying oysters can help us understand how Connecticut’s shoreline is changing. Studying lizards can help us understand the history of life on our planet. Biologists research living organisms. And in doing so, they help us understand not only ourselves, but also the way our lives are intertwined with those of every other species. This hour— Connecticut biologists tell us how their wor...
Connecticut artists reflect on the power of art in community 18.07.2025 49:00
This hour, we talk to two Connecticut artists whose work reflects on the impact we have on our communities. Photographer Bill Graustein’s exhibition, “ Traces ,” features vast western landscapes that represent different moments in Bill’s life, but it’s not just about Bill. It also includes question prompts that give viewers a chance to reflect on how the photos relate...
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