GBH News
Rooted
Paris Alston hosts this weekly series that serves up Black intellect, culture and joy. Rooted covers Black news and culture from down the block to around the diaspora. In a global news cycle that’s always cooking up new headlines, Rooted brings you the recipes you don’t want to lose: the stories, the voices, the dialogue that keep us connected. Tell us what you think and what you’d like to hear on future episodes at Rooted@wgbh.org . Find more content and subscribe to our YouTube channel .
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Episodes
Can 300,000 voices redefine democracy for Black America? 08.07.2026 25:30
Alexsis Rodgers explains how the Black Census Project is helping Black communities turn their experiences into real policy change. Instead of just counting people, it asks what they actually want, like better wages, safer communities, and improved health. The goal is to reach 300,000 voices and build a shared vision for the future. At a time of low trust in institutions, this project is all about...
Is the World Cup in the U.S. covering up serious human rights issues? 01.07.2026 19:40
Political activist Ajamu Baraka and the Black Alliance for peace is calling for a boycott of the U.S.-hosted World Cup arguing the tournament is helping “normalize” global human rights abuses. He accuses FIFA of double standards and warns the games are being used as “sportswashing.” Despite that, he tells fans to enjoy the matches—but stay politically aware. So can you love the game and still chal...
Is the DNC 2024 autopsy a warning sign for Black voters? 24.06.2026 26:24
In an exclusive sit down with Rooted, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley breaks down the Democratic Party’s 2024 election autopsy and what it reveals about shifting Black voter support, economic frustration, and messaging failures. She challenges the idea that identity politics is to blame, arguing that issues like reproductive rights and racial equity are fundamentally economic, while highlighting vot...
For Black women farmers, tending the land is ancestral and healing 22.06.2026 27:06
A lineage rooted in soil stretches from ancestral farmland to modern city plots, where Black women are reclaiming their role as stewards, healers, and innovators. Generations of knowledge—once carried in seeds and sustained through resilience—now face the weight of historic land loss and systemic barriers to access. Yet across communities, a new movement is taking hold, blending tradition with pol...
Can kink be the safest space for Black disabled women? 10.06.2026 23:16
Rooted digs into the overlooked intersection of Black womanhood, disability, and sexual autonomy—spaces where desire is policed, consent is unevenly taught, and safety is too often denied. Through a candid conversation with disability and kink advocate Nyla Morton, the episode explores how Black disabled women navigate a world that misreads their bodies, and why some find more agency in kink commu...
What does 'AI literacy' really mean for the future of work and education? 27.05.2026 25:48
As Boston Public Schools moves to introduce AI literacy districtwide, Rooted examines what artificial intelligence education really means for Black and brown students whose futures are being reshaped by automation. Host Paris Austin speaks with a former Department of Labor innovation leader and a Harvard labor economist about whether AI literacy is becoming a baseline requirement for economic surv...
Can the World Cup really unite Haiti while the U.S. bans Haitians? 20.05.2026 20:13
Can the World Cup really unite Haiti while the U.S. bans Haitians?
Is gaming’s “woke” backlash hiding a bigger race problem? 13.05.2026 21:11
As Black “blerd” culture pushes further into the mainstream, questions about who gets to belong and who gets left out are becoming impossible to ignore. From toxic gaming environments where harassment remains widespread to culture‑war backlash over diverse characters and stories, the fight for representation has collided with a broader debate over identity, power, and ownership in fandom spaces. A...
Is Don Lemon redefining what a Black journalist can be? 06.05.2026 22:20
Paris Alston sits down with longtime journalist Don Lemon for a candid conversation about truth‑telling in a political era that punishes it. Lemon opens up about his arrest during immigration‑crackdown coverage, his complicated evolution since Ferguson, and why his new partnership with comedian D.L. Hughley works despite — or because of — their disagreements. Together, they unpack what it means to...
Is anyone actually 100% Black? Henry Louis Gates Jr. on DNA, race, and power 29.04.2026 26:46
Paris speaks with renowned historian and public intellectual Henry Louis Gates Jr. about race, identity, and how history continues to shape American life. Gates challenges long‑held assumptions about Blackness, explaining why race is not a biological fact but a social construct rooted in power and history. Drawing on genetic ancestry research, he unpacks what DNA reveals about African American ide...
Why do we exist? Dr. Hakeem Oluseyi on the universe, Black representation, and access to science 22.04.2026 26:46
Paris sits down with acclaimed astrophysicist and NOVA’s Particles of Thought host Dr. Hakeem Oluseyi for a wide‑ranging, thought‑provoking conversation that bridges cutting‑edge science, identity, and purpose. Drawing from his new book, Why Do We Exist?: The Nine Realms of Universe that Make You Possible , Dr. Oluseyi unpacks the hidden layers of the cosmos, from subatomic particles to the vast s...
What the capture of Maduro reveals about U.S. fear of Black sovereignty 15.04.2026 26:46
Four months after the capture of Venezuela’s president Nicolás Maduro, debates over corruption and authoritarianism have dominated headlines. On Rooted , scholars Dr. Layla Brown, Dr. Tony Van Der Meer, and Yvette Modestin look deeper examining the Bolivarian Movement’s roots, its central relationship to Afro‑Venezuelan identity, and the long U.S. tradition of intervening when Black‑led movements...
Why does America celebrate Black music 50 years late? 08.04.2026 26:46
In this episode of Rooted , we ask what it really means to make jazz now . From Boston jazz clubs and basement jam sessions to TikTok lives and global stages, Grammy-nominated saxophonist Godwin Louis breaks down how jazz continues to evolve across generations, cultures, and continents. We explore jazz’s deep roots in Black American history, its ties to the African diaspora, and why America so oft...
Why are Black women in reality TV held to a higher standard of accountability? 01.04.2026 26:46
Rooted digs into reality TV accountability, revisiting America’s Next Top Model through a critical lens that centers Black women and power. Our panel unpacks the now‑iconic “We were all rooting for you!” moment, how a new documentary reframes Tyra Banks and the early‑2000s modeling industry, and what accountability looks like when those traditionally marginalized are positioned as gatekeepers. Sub...
Is America losing its history? Fired librarian of Congress warns of the risks under a Trump 2.0 presidency 25.03.2026 26:46
Just days before she was fired by President Trump, Carla Hayden - the first woman and the first African American to serve as the librarian of Congress - warned about the risk of losing important parts of U.S. history. Hayden and Noelle Trent, the head of Boston's Museum of African American History, spoke with GBH News Rooted Host Paris Alston about their efforts to preserve Black history. Rooted...
A new era? What the 2026 Oscars mean for Black cinema, representation, and Hollywood’s future 17.03.2026 23:54
Callie Crossley guest hosts Rooted in leading a panel that breaks down the biggest surprises of the 2026 Oscars, from Michael B. Jordan’s groundbreaking win and Ruth E. Carter’s historic nomination milestone to the heated debates around Teyana Taylor’s role, Paul Thomas Anderson’s sweep, and whether the new casting category can push Hollywood toward real representation—all while questioning what t...
Bluey to Baddies: Why is there no 'tween' media? 11.03.2026 26:46
On Rooted , we’re unpacking the “Bluey‑to‑Baddies” pipeline—and why tween media feels impossible to find in a world drowning in YouTube algorithms and AI‑generated slop. Paris taps award‑winning animator Chaz Bottoms to break down the brutal realities of making it in cartoons, especially for creators of color. Then Genie Deez and Thy Than, showrunners of the new PBS Kids series Phoebe & Jay ,...
88% Women, Majority Women of Color — So of Course Their Degrees Got Devalued 03.03.2026 26:46
The federal government just slashed how much future nurses, counselors, educators, and social workers can borrow — a move that hits women, Black students, and entire communities like a punch to the gut. Paris Alston digs into how a bureaucratic “reclassification” could gut the nursing pipeline, deepen care shortages, and widen racial health disparities. Then we head to Roxbury, where Children’s Se...
Are we drifting away from Black History Month? The conversation no one is having! 25.02.2026 26:46
In this episode, we mark 100 years since Carter G. Woodson launched Negro History Week by asking what Black History Month truly means today— and whether it still matters . We hit the streets to hear how everyday people perceive the holiday’s legacy, then sit down with Dr. Kellie Carter Jackson, comedian Jason Cordova, and culture commentator Shane Faiteau for a candid conversation about the ways B...
Ivory Tower, Broken Workers: The Academic Labor Crisis No One Wants to Own 18.02.2026 26:46
Graduate student workers are the engine of American universities—teaching classes, grading papers, running labs—and many are doing it while earning less than a barista’s paycheck. In this episode, Paris Alston exposes the brutal reality behind the prestige: retaliation, homelessness, mental health crises, and a 206‑day strike that made history. We hear from a BU grad worker whose fight for surviva...
Bad Bunny shut the whole Super Bowl down — the culture, the unity, the backlash 11.02.2026 26:46
A raw, cultural breakdown of Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl takeover — from the unity message and Latino representation debate to the nostalgia‑heavy ads that fell flat. Our roundtable featuring equity and justice reporter Trajan Warren, eXpozedtv and #GrindCon founder Katiria Colon, and Auzzy Byrdsell of The Boston Globe dig into the moments that hit, the ones that missed, and why this performance still...
Losing Recipes, Keeping Trauma: The Family Secrets Behind Our Favorite Dishes 11.02.2026 26:46
Black families love to joke that “we’re losing recipes,” but what we’re really losing—and sometimes finally confronting—are the unspoken histories baked into every pan of mac and cheese. In this episode, Paris Alston digs into the generational drama simmering beneath our traditions, then sits down with Sarah Amos to unpack the chaotic, brilliant legacy of her father, Wally “Famous” Amos. And if th...
3800 New Voters, Same Old Question: Do the Grammys Still Matter? 04.02.2026 26:46
The 2026 Grammys rolled out 3,800 new voters, diverse nominees, and a whole lot of “we promise we’ve changed” energy — but in a world where careers are built on TikTok loops and viral sandwiches, does the gramophone still mean anything? Paris Alston breaks down a night where Bad Bunny used his moment to call out ICE, Kendrick Lamar made history while amplifying lesser-known artists, and the Record...
We’re Not Afraid of the Water—We’re Afraid of What America Put in It 04.02.2026 26:46
Black folks have always had a complicated relationship with water—from West African aquatic cultures to the terror of the Middle Passage, from segregated pools to Flint and Jackson. In this episode, Paris Alston dives deep with National Geographic explorer Tara Roberts, who documents slave shipwrecks the world pretends not to care about, and champion rower Arshay Cooper, who’s reclaiming the heali...
Data do it! AI’s Harsh Trade-Off for Black America 28.01.2026 26:46
Tech giants are cashing in on our data while Black communities face the environmental fallout of data centers and the job‑shifting wave of AI. Paris Alston talks digital sharecropping, climate justice, and the real cost of automation with activists and experts who are pushing back—NAACP’s Abre’ Conner, journalist Willie Blackmore, and tech ethicist Rev. Chris Hope. From polluted neighborhoods to b...
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