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By Paige Morse
5
1010 ratings
The podcast currently has 17 episodes available.
Have a merry merry Christmas and a happy New Year. Let's hope it's a good one without any fear! Caroline Elfland returns to TRIT to discuss three Christmas songs: "Someday at Christmas" by Stevie Wonder, "Happy Xmas (War is Over)" By John Lennon and Yoko Ono, and "Do They Know It's Christmas?" by Band Aid. Paige and Caroline decide it is time to get rid of "Do They Know It's Christmas?" once and for all. Topics include the Vietnam War, Jesus Christ, Catholicism, bed-ins for peace, the "single story" of Africa, the white savior complex, and more. Happy New Year!
Follow the podcast on Twitter: www.twitter.com/TRITpodcast
Write into the show: www.paigemmorse.wordpress.com
Paige is joined by three politically-engaged college students – Moira Honohan, Sophie Kenward & Caroline Elfland – to reflect on what just happened. They discuss Trump supporters, congressional races, socialism, the dangers of idolizing politicians, the role of broadcast media, Kamala Harris, and more.
Write to Paige: paigemmorse.wordpress.com
Follow TRIT on Twitter: twitter.com/TRITpodcast
Paige dives into Aretha Franklin's iconic 1967 cover of Otis Redding's song "Respect," examining how the adaptation of a cover can completely change the political meaning of the song. Paige also looks at how journalists like Wesley Morris view the song and how Black women have historically been written out of rock 'n' roll history. There will be no new episode next week. Celebrate Thanksgiving, but don't forget to reflect on the Indigenous lives lost in this nation's shameful history.
Write in to the show: paigemmorse.wordpress.com
Follow the podcast on Twitter: twitter.com/TRITpodcast
Paige breaks down the infamous 2003 controversy involving the country group The Dixie Chicks, where the lead singer criticized then-President George W. Bush's plan to go to war. Backlash ensued as people burned CDs, wrote to radio stations, and called the group sexist names. Paige thinks about when it is okay for musicians to comment on politics, and what sparked such a strong backlash in this specific instance. Topics include sexism, conservatism in the country genre, and more.
Write in to the show: paigemmorse.wordpress.com
Follow TRIT on Twitter: twitter.com/TRITpodcast
The podcast currently has 17 episodes available.