
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Coleman Hughes believes we should strive to ignore race both in public policy and in our private lives. But when it comes to personal identity and expression, how feasible is this to achieve? And are there any other individual traits we should also seek to ignore?
Coleman and Tyler explore the implications of colorblindness, including whether jazz would've been created in a color-blind society, how easy it is to disentangle race and culture, whether we should also try to be 'autism-blind', and Coleman's personal experience with lookism and ageism. They also discuss what Coleman's learned from J.J. Johnson, the hardest thing about performing the trombone, playing sets in the Charles Mingus Big Band as a teenager, whether Billy Joel is any good, what reservations he has about his conservative fans, why the Beastie Boys are overrated, what he's learned from Noam Dworman, why Interstellar is Chris Nolan's masterpiece, the Coleman Hughes production function, why political debate is so toxic, what he'll do next, and more.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video.
Recorded March 6th, 2024.
Other ways to connect
Photo Credit: Evan Mann
By Mercatus Center at George Mason University4.8
23802,380 ratings
Coleman Hughes believes we should strive to ignore race both in public policy and in our private lives. But when it comes to personal identity and expression, how feasible is this to achieve? And are there any other individual traits we should also seek to ignore?
Coleman and Tyler explore the implications of colorblindness, including whether jazz would've been created in a color-blind society, how easy it is to disentangle race and culture, whether we should also try to be 'autism-blind', and Coleman's personal experience with lookism and ageism. They also discuss what Coleman's learned from J.J. Johnson, the hardest thing about performing the trombone, playing sets in the Charles Mingus Big Band as a teenager, whether Billy Joel is any good, what reservations he has about his conservative fans, why the Beastie Boys are overrated, what he's learned from Noam Dworman, why Interstellar is Chris Nolan's masterpiece, the Coleman Hughes production function, why political debate is so toxic, what he'll do next, and more.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video.
Recorded March 6th, 2024.
Other ways to connect
Photo Credit: Evan Mann

1,932 Listeners

26,341 Listeners

4,264 Listeners

2,274 Listeners

74 Listeners

377 Listeners

909 Listeners

24 Listeners

7,232 Listeners

692 Listeners

519 Listeners

35 Listeners

821 Listeners

8,697 Listeners

2,220 Listeners

151 Listeners

393 Listeners

10 Listeners

96 Listeners

4 Listeners

39 Listeners