The show debuted on September 8, 2016. Wesley Morris and Jenna Wortham are working it out in this weekly show about culture in the broadest sense. Everyone should listen to this. Thank you for giving us the best commentary on pop culture and always leaving me with thought provoking questions! Still Processing on Apple Podcasts 121 episodes Step inside the confession booth of Wesley Morris and Jenna Wortham, two culture writers for The New York Times.

they blow my mind every episode. Jenna Wortham, who co-hosts The New York Times culture podcast Still Processing podcast with critic-at-large Wesley Morris, on how presenting a podcast taught her to trust in her own views. Still Processing won a 2017 Webby Award in the Podcast & Digital Audio category, and was nominated for a 2019 Shorty Award. A collection of podcasts episodes with or about Jenna Wortham, often where they are interviewed.15 of The Best Podcast Episodes for Jenna Wortham. And what sort of compensation is appropriate — and to whom — from a brand that maintained that image in public for so long?Excerpts from our June 12 live event, where we caught up about the uprisings and resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement. New York Times writers Wesley Morris and Jenna Wortham take a critical look at cultural issues in their popular podcast, "Still Processing." 15 of The Best Podcast Episodes for Jenna Wortham. Please also rate us on iTunes! Below, check out an excerpt of the first conversation with Jenna Wortham, staff writer for The New York Times and host of the podcast Still Processing. She co-hosts The New York Times podcast Still Processing.“Hamilton” is back in the mix, but the flavor has changed from beloved historical blockbuster to “wait, that’s what this is?” Elsewhere, in new works like “Baited,” on Instagram Live, and “I May Destroy You,” on HBO, Black women are getting personal in ways that are expanding our palates for discomfort.Discussed this week:“Hamilton” (written by Lin-Manuel Miranda, Disney+, 2020)“Baited” on Instagram LiveZiwe Fumudoh“I May Destroy You” (written by Michaela Coel, HBO, 2020)Native Land project“White Fragility” lecture (by Robin DiAngelo, 2019)When Quaker decided to take Aunt Jemima off the red pancake box after 131 years, did it also try to scrub the legacy she represents?
She co-hosts The New York Times podcast Still Processing. She co-hosts the New York Times podcast Still Processing with Wesley Morris, and just before her rise to fame at the Times, she was one of BUST’s superstar freelancers, interviewing Diablo Cody, Solange Knowles, and Sarah Silverman for us all in 2008 alone. It was already the golden age of podcasting, back when we could ride the subway or drive to work with familiar voices in our ears.

Still Processing is where they try to understand the pleasures and pathologies of America in 2020.Step inside the confession booth of Wesley Morris and Jenna Wortham, two culture writers for The New York Times. Jenna Wortham is a technology reporter and staff writer for The New York Times Magazine. They devour TV, movies, art, music and the internet to find the things that move them — to tears, awe and anger. We’re so excited and hope you are, too. This is the first of three special summer episodes.Discussed this week: Jenna Wortham and Wesley Morris in a live New York Times event (June 12, 2020)“‘Cops,’ Long-Running Reality Show That Glorified Police, Is Canceled” (The New York Times, June 2020)“LEGO Pulls Back Police Playset Affiliate Marketing Amid George Floyd Protests” (ToyBook, June 2020)“NASCAR Says It Will Ban Confederate Flags” (The New York Times, June 2020)Jenna Wortham and Wesley Morris on “CBS This Morning” (Aug. 18, 2017, CBS)Speech by Stokely Carmichael (a.k.a.
Screens have revealed superstars as civilians, and turned sitcom grouches into teddy bears. And what sort of compensation is appropriate — and to whom — from a brand that maintained that image in public for so long?Discussed this week:“Aunt Jemima Brand to Change Name and Image Over ‘Racial Stereotype’” (Tiffany Hsu, The New York Times, June 2020)“Aunt Jemima: I’se in Town, Honey” (Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia at Ferris State University)“The Dixie Chicks Change Their Name, Dropping the ‘Dixie’” (Ben Sisario, The New York Times, June 2020)“Lady Antebellum Sues the Singer Lady A Over Name Change” (Joe Coscarelli, The New York Times, July 2020)“Aunt Jemima’s Heirs’ $3 Billion Lawsuit Against Pepsi, Quaker Oats Tossed by Judge” (Tim Kenneally, The Wrap, February 2015)“What Is Owed” (Nikole Hannah Jones, The New York Times, June 2020)“The Case for Reparations” (Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Atlantic, June 2014)Excerpts from our June 12 live event, where we caught up about the uprisings and resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement. They devour TV, movies, art, music and the internet to find the things that move them — to tears, awe and anger. so grateful for their work and their sheer intellectual power They devour TV, movies, art, music and the internet to find the things that move them — to tears, awe and anger. It’s okay.