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By Pit Perspectives UNC
5
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The podcast currently has 18 episodes available.
Who is your celebrity crush?
Welcome to Tuesday 10, a new short-form segment of Pit Perspectives. Our opinions are a little messier, and the topics are a little less important. Enjoy candid and anonymous opinions more similar to confessions than convictions.
Listen to our hosts react to UNC students admitting their love for everyone from Kim Possible to Matthew Gray Gubler to the fox from Zootopia. We discuss celebrity crushes, sexual awakenings, fan-fiction, and more in this short segment that'll make you cringe, laugh, smile, and hopefully share with a friend.
This week's Tuesday 10 was edited by Will Kleinschmidt.
As always, follow us on Instagram @PitPerspectivesUNC to stay up-to-date.
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Welcome to Pit Perspectives Season 5! Thanks for joining us and returning to the show for our third year.
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Taylor Swift has lived in news headlines for over a decade now. Recently, her Ticketmaster drama and criticism of her private jet usage have ruled her public image, though her new relationship with NFL player Travis Kelce is starting to rewrite the media cycle.
Today we're staying out of the politics and diving into the personal; what do UNC students think about Taylor Swift as an artist, a businesswoman, a girlfriend, a celebrity, and an industry powerhouse?
Students shared both their love of her music and their visceral hatred for the community she's created; some accused her fandom of being just privileged white women and others celebrated her for paving the way for other women in the industry. Some complained that they've heard enough of her breakups and others wished we'd stop treating her as if she's no more than the men she dates.
Today's episode is a short and sweet introduction to Pit Perspectives Fall 2023. But although we aren't diving as deep into history, philosophy, or politics, you'll leave the episode with just as many new questions and curiosities about yourself and your peers.
We end the episode with a question: what does your Taylor Swift opinion say about you?
We'd like to thank Jesse Ainslie for this episode's music. His work can be found here: jesseainslie.com
Pit Perspectives is a student-run podcast. We record your candid and anonymous opinions in The Pit, add commentary and supplementary materials, and create episodes on relevant social issues facing college students at UNC and across the country.
Find us on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/pitperspectivesunc/) and online (https://www.pitperspectivesunc.com/).
Support the show
Happy Valentine's Day!
Welcome to Tuesday 10, a new short-form segment of Pit Perspectives. Our opinions are still candid and anonymous but a little messier. Topics are less important but just as juicy as usual.
Today, we're celebrating Valentine's Day (or not...)
Listen to our staff break down cheating, sex positions, Valentine's Day fails, and love languages.
This week's Tuesday 10 was edited by Will Kleinschmidt.
As always, follow us on Instagram @PitPerspectivesUNC to stay up-to-date.
Support the show
Welcome to Tuesday 10, a new short-form segment of Pit Perspectives. Our opinions are still candid and anonymous but a little messier. Topics are less important but just as juicy as usual.
Today, we're sharing shit perspectives, ...get it... ;)
Listen to Will Kleinschmidt, Sritha Chilumula, and Noah Powell break down the best and worst bathrooms on campus, bathroom horror stories, and proper etiquette on campus.
This week's Tuesday 10 was edited by Sritha Chilumula.
As always, follow us on Instagram @PitPerspectivesUNC to stay up-to-date.
Support the show
With election day around the corner, UNC students are struggling to balance their interests in their votes: hometown ties or the fight to turn NC blue?
College students today have a unique opportunity to strategize when they take to the voting booth- vote in Chapel Hill or in your home state? Or, don't vote at all? While UNC students expressed an overwhelming excitement for political activism, young people are projected to be least likely to vote in the upcoming election. Why?
What does it mean to abstain from voting?
Has politics in this country outgrown the use of our voting system?
Is voting obsolete?
Today's episode begins with a forgotten moment in NC and US history and an attack on voting rights and democratic government itself: the Wilmington Massacre of 1898. Next, we examine why UNC students do and do not vote. Finally, we examine the philosophical concerns behind our right to vote: are we supposed to act out of self-interest, or with social empathy?
We'd like to thank Jesse Ainslie for this episode's music. His work can be found here: jesseainslie.com
Pit Perspectives is a student-run podcast. We record your candid and anonymous opinions in The Pit, add commentary and supplementary materials, and create episodes on relevant social issues facing college students at UNC and across the country.
Find us on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/pitperspectivesunc/) and online (https://www.pitperspectivesunc.com/).
Sources: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1FokdCdrJy-6GokbM8Y47imlbUxA5Nfl-Lk1imIoGuW4/edit?usp=sharing
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Welcome to Tuesday 10, a new short-form segment of Pit Perspectives. Our opinions are still candid and anonymous but a little messier. Topics are less important but just as juicy as usual.
Today, we're getting spooky :)
Listen to our staff discuss couples' costumes, best and worst Halloween candies, dos and don'ts of dressing up, and scary stories from the student body.
This week's Tuesday 10 was edited by Will Kleinschmidt.
Support the show
Welcome to Tuesday 10, a new short-form segment of Pit Perspectives. Our opinions are still candid and anonymous but a little messier. Topics are less important but just as juicy as usual.
Today we inaugurate Tuesday 10 with Fall Fashion Fits + Faux Pas, a complementary episode to last week's Thrifting: Goodwill and Good Will. Listen to hear what UNC students have to say about fall fashion trends; cowboy boots, jorts, cableknit sweaters, athleisure, and more.
This week's Tuesday 10 was created by Will Kleinschmidt, Sritha Chilumula, and Jess Foday.
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Fast fashion, online reselling, and class consciousness are on the rise; how do UNC students feel about today's practices of consumption?
Here in Chapel Hill, students have access to Rumors- a secondhand boutique, Frat Court Flea- a UNC-alumni-run vintage vending event for students, and a Goodwill just a few minutes away. Students also have access to millions of secondhand items on their phones via apps like Depop, Poshmark, and eBay. As social media pressures us to fit in, the rise in the trendiness of thrifting has created pressures to stand out. But, as much as we want to dress like (or unalike) our peers, we're bombarded with a new class consciousness fueled by Gen Z's renewal of environmentalism, marxism, and social justice.
Where does thrifting fit into the puzzle? Some UNC students worry that affluent thrift shoppers are taking away from low-income shoppers who need thrift prices, but others place the moral wrongdoings only with resellers who take from thrift stores and sell online at 100%+ markups.
Today's episode begins with a short history of thrift stores and thrifting practices in Chapel Hill, then, we examine the ethical pros and cons of thrifting, retail shopping, and reselling. Along the way, hear from Marshe Wyche, co-owner and co-founder of Rumors Boutique, and Jennifer Le Zotte, UNCW History Professor and author of Goodwill to Grunge (https://www.amazon.com/Goodwill-Grunge-Secondhand-Alternative-Economies/dp/1469631903).
We end with a question: how should we make decisions about our consumption?
We'd like to thank Jesse Ainslie for this episode's music. His work can be found here: jesseainslie.com
Pit Perspectives is a student-run podcast. We record your candid and anonymous opinions in The Pit, add commentary and supplementary materials, and create episodes on relevant social issues facing college students at UNC and across the country.
Find us on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/pitperspectivesunc/) and online (https://www.pitperspectivesunc.com/).
Sources: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1MRpFOCpKin22a27R7agx81e6FXPCFcqiDoh1r4NpfIQ/edit?usp=sharing
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The abortion debate has been framed over the last decade as a matter of pro-life vs. pro-choice. But, is this distinction productive?
Here at UNC, students engage with important social topics every day in and outside class. A college campus is supposed to be the marketplace of ideas, but what preconditions are required for civil discourse? In the abortion debate, it seems that we're lacking a common ground. Students have to wrestle with morality, religion, biology, and federalism when discussing abortion with their peers, although a majority of students we spoke to seemed to skip straight to "choice."
We ask, however, if a pro-choice mindset presupposes that abortion is not murder? And, do students understand the assumptions they bring into their discussions?
Today's episode begins with a short history of the abortion debate in America with a focus on social control. Then, we examine several possible solutions to the chaotic nature of abortion discourse, looking at a website worked on by UNC students (https://www.respectpeople.org/) and a research report produced by Dr. Timothy Ryan (https://fecdsurveyreport.web.unc.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/22160/2022/08/FECD_Report_8-21-22.pdf).
We end with a question: how do we move forward?
We'd like to thank Professor Timothy Ryan and Professor Jillian Hinderliter for their insights and support. Also, thanks to Jesse Ainslie for this episode's music. His work can be found here: jesseainslie.com
EDIT: Dobbs v. Jackson was decided on June 24th, not June 4th.
Pit Perspectives is a student-run podcast. We record your candid and anonymous opinions in The Pit, add commentary and supplementary materials, and create episodes on relevant social issues facing college students at UNC and across the country.
Find us on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/pitperspectivesunc/) and online (https://www.pitperspectivesunc.com/).
Sources: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1WjrRfURWmor2oMcLjKick0Zhx-AXJRLQG8Ml9CUSOfk/edit?usp=sharing
Support the show
Pit Preaching on UNC's campus has been historically attributable to Gary Birdsong, a fundamentalist Christian preacher whose message is riddled with racism, homophobia, and sexism. This semester, student preachers have been growing in popularity, and we're forced to face the consequences of free speech and potential censorship on our campus. Today's episode includes student views on Pit Preachers, the First Amendment, Censorship, and methods used by religious student organizations to recruit new members.
This episode also includes recordings with Pit Preachers, taken in The Pit. Preachers were overwhelmingly excited to take the floor and spread God's word, but some students question whose word they're really spreading, and what their intentions are. What makes a conversation productive, and can productive discourse happen between preachers and students?
Pit Perspectives takes soundbites recorded candidly in The Pit at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and mixes them with commentary and statistics to create a comprehensive review of the student body's thoughts on an important social issue. Our method allows regular students to share anonymous opinions and gives a voice to those who have thoughts on the topic but do not have access to more formal outlets of expression.
Check out our Instagram @PitPerspectivesUNC to stay up to date on the podcast.
Click this link to view our sources for this episode.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kS87qlg7CfVNQIpjsqn5-n9MuympobR5/view?usp=sharing
Support the show
The podcast currently has 18 episodes available.