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- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
10,001 - 25,000 - Monthly Reach
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25,001 - 75,000 - Active Followers
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15,001 - 40,000
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On the show
Recent episodes
Making Community Change and Sharpening Activist Skills—A Conversation with Youth United for Community Action
May 1, 2026
41m 32s
The Continuing Struggle to #StopCopCity—Ordinary People Transformed into Activists of Conscience
Apr 27, 2026
43m 47s
Anna Badkhen: To See Beyond—Finding the Language of Survival and Hope
Apr 25, 2026
45m 07s
Bullshit and Infinity: Why AI Cannot Predict Anything: A Conversation with Carissa Véliz
Apr 23, 2026
53m 37s
The Effects of the War on the Iranian People: A Conversation with Fatemeh Jamalpour and and Nilo Tabrizy
Apr 19, 2026
53m 44s
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/1/26 | ![]() Making Community Change and Sharpening Activist Skills—A Conversation with Youth United for Community Action | Today I am excited to talk with three members of Youth United for Community Action, an organization based in East Palo Alto that has been fighting for community empowerment since 1994, when a small group of young people of color active in their communities came together to form YUCA—“a grassroots community organization created, led, and run by young people of color, the majority from low-income communities. It “provides a safe space for young people to empower[themselves] and work on environm... | 41m 32s | ||||||
| 4/27/26 | ![]() The Continuing Struggle to #StopCopCity—Ordinary People Transformed into Activists of Conscience | In 2021, the City of Atlanta announced that it was entering into a partnership with the Atlanta Police Foundation to destroy the South River Forest and build what became known as “Cop City,” a large facility for the training of police officers. This met with massive public outcry from those outraged by the destruction of the environment and an important historical site (a former prison farm), and the purpose to which the land was to be put—to train police in urban warfare techniques and by ex... | 43m 47s | ||||||
| 4/25/26 | ![]() Anna Badkhen: To See Beyond—Finding the Language of Survival and Hope | Today I have the immense pleasure of speaking with author Anna Badkhen about her new collection of essays, To See Beyond. Badkhen talks about how her experiences as a veteran war correspondent exposed her to War’s multiple forms of violence, destruction, and carnage, and how that compelled her to write these essays about survival, and hope. Speaking from many global locations and from a wide range of historical and cultural perspectives, from antiquity to the present, Badkhen’s es... | 45m 07s | ||||||
| 4/23/26 | ![]() Bullshit and Infinity: Why AI Cannot Predict Anything: A Conversation with Carissa Véliz | Today I have the immense pleasure of talking with Carissa Véliz, an associate professor at the University of Oxford, about her new book, Prophecy: Prediction, Power, and the Fight for the Future—from Ancient Oracles to AI. Linking this work to her previous book, Privacy is Power: Why and How You Should Take Back Control of Your Data, Véliz writes: “ surveillance and prediction are digital technology’s original sins.” In our wide-ranging discussion, we talk about how both massive and int... | 53m 37s | ||||||
| 4/19/26 | ![]() The Effects of the War on the Iranian People: A Conversation with Fatemeh Jamalpour and and Nilo Tabrizy | Today I am deeply honored to welcome back Iranian journalists Fatemeh Jamalpour and Nilo Tabrizy. Before, they talked about their book, For the Sun After Long Nights: the Story of Iran’s Women-led Uprising, today they tell us of conditions in Iran, which since January has suffered the government’s massacre of tens of thousands of protesters and the onslaught of the US/Israel war on Iran. Instead of concentrating on how the war is going and its effects on the global economy, as most media sour... | 53m 44s | ||||||
| 4/15/26 | ![]() How to Sell a Genocide, and Sustain It: A Conversation with Adam Johnson | Today I am excited to talk with journalist and media critic Adam Johnson about his new book, How to Sell a Genocide: The Media’s Complicity in the Destruction of Gaza. Many of us gained an intuitive sense of just how bad the media coverage of the genocide in Gaza and beyond was—not just in the right wing media, but also in the center-left media. Adam Johnson scoured thousands of stories, articles, news programs, cable shows, and social media posts to not only confirm our worst sus... | 50m 07s | ||||||
| 4/3/26 | ![]() Amplifying the Violence of Incarceration: Victoria Law on Prisons During Pandemic | Today I am honored to speak with veteran journalist Victoria Law. She is the author of such books as Resistance Behind Bars: The Struggles of Incarcerated Women, Prison By Any Other Name: The Harmful Consequences of Popular Reforms (co-authored with Maya Schenwar), and “Prisons Make Us Safer” and 20 Other Myths about Mass Incarceration. Today we talk about her new book, Corridors of Contagion: How the Pandemic Exposed the Cruelties of Incarceration. In this devastating study, Law shows ... | 56m 10s | ||||||
| 3/30/26 | ![]() Note from Non-People: A Conversation with Serhat Tutkal and Hevin Karakurt on Kurdish History, Language, Culture | Today it’s a special honor to welcome Serhat Tutkal and Hevin Karakurt to Speaking Out of Place. These two scholars engage in a broad discussion of Kurdish history, culture, politics, literature and language, with particular attention to issues of statelessness, identity, and violence. We talk about the current moment with regard to Turkey, Syria, Palestine, and the US-Israel war on Iran and beyond. We use as a starting poet Serhat’s remarkable essay, “Note from Non-People,” and then move to ... | 1h 16m 33s | ||||||
| 3/26/26 | ![]() Science in Resistance--Direct Action for Climate Justice, Democracy in Education: A Conversation with Fernando Racimo | Today it gives me special pleasure to speak with Fernando Racimo, a leading scientist-activist, about his new book, Science in Resistance. This book gives a riveting account of the founding and growth of the international group Scientist Rebellion, in which now thousands of scientists from around the world have organized direct actions to draw attention to the climate crisis. Breaking through the censorship and silencing carried on by big fossil fuel companies, and also scientific groups in a... | 43m 54s | ||||||
| 3/24/26 | ![]() The Joy of Struggling Together for Freedom in Education—A Discussion with the Coalition for Action in Higher Education | Today I am excited and honored to be talking with Dr. Shamell Bell and Sherena Razek, two activist scholars who join us to talk about their work on the Coalition for Action in Higher Education, which will be convening its Third Annual National Day of Action on April 17th. We talk about the unique and central position CAHE occupies on the activist landscape. The Coalition brings together labor, anti-fascist and anti-racist activists, and those working for Palestinian freedom.... | 41m 17s | ||||||
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| 3/16/26 | ![]() What We Can Learn from Anti-Racist Organizing in Detroit in the 1960s and 70s—A Conversation with Say Burgin | Today, on Speaking Out of Place, I have the pleasure of talking with Say Burgin about her book, Organizing on Your Own: The White Fight for Black Power in Detroit. Tracing the changing terrain of anti-racist organizing and activism in the 1960s and 1970s, Burgin’s book focusses on what became known as “parallel organizing” amongst Blacks and whites. Delving into fascinating archival materials from many activist organizations at that time, Say finds that groups like the Student Non-Viole... | 46m 42s | ||||||
| 2/16/26 | ![]() The Seasons of a Shepherd's Life and the Importance of Belonging--A Conversation with Helen Whybrow | Today it gives me special pleasure to speak with Helen Whybrow about her book, The Salt Stones: Seasons of a Shepherd’s Life. Besides being a detailed account of the day to day, season by season life on her farm, where she and her family raise sheep, build a broad community, and maintain Knoll Farm, a center for activists, writers, artists and others to share ideas on how to promote healthier and more just ways of living together and in the environment, The Salt Stones is at base about ... | 49m 35s | ||||||
| 2/15/26 | ![]() Jamaica Osorio: Poems on Gaza—Contemplating the Impossible and Being Steadfast in Solidarity | Today I am deeply honored to spend time with poet, activist, and scholar Jamaica Osorio. Shortly after October 7, 2023, she began to write a series of astonishing poems about the war in Gaza and the genocide. Osorio graces us with readings of some of those poems, and engages in a rich, complex, and deeply moving discussion of what went into their composition. Throughout, we talk about the power of poetry to suspend time and allow us the space to contemplate the impossible. We talk about... | 48m 43s | ||||||
| 2/9/26 | ![]() The Imperative to Support the People of Venezuela: A Vitally Important Conversation with Anderson Bean, Simón Rodríguez, and Emiliano Terán | Starting in the autumn of 2025, the US began attacking small civilian boats in or near Venezuelan waters, summarily executing over 126 people. January, 2026 began with it kidnapping Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and his wife, and bringing them to the US. This month, just weeks after the kidnapping, Haymarket Books published the immensely useful and urgent book, Venezuela in Crisis. The historical range of the book begins with the regime of Hugo Chavez and ends with the 2024 electi... | 1h 00m 46s | ||||||
| 1/29/26 | ![]() Talking with Yuri Herrera About Season of the Swamp, Palestine, ICE, and Fighting for a Better World | Today I am deeply honored to speak with novelist, essayist, and scholar Yuri Herrera about his new novel, Season of the Swamp, which is a deeply researched and dazzlingly imagined account of Benito Juarez’s time spent in exile in New Orleans. We talk about what that time and place offered to Juarez’s understanding of a world coming into being—one of créolité and carnival, of mixedness and multiplicity, and what these sometimes hallucinatory moments offered his political vision. We... | 49m 30s | ||||||
| 1/26/26 | ![]() A Conversation with Andrew Ross: The Weather Report: A Journey Through Unsettled Climates | Today I am delighted to speak with Andrew Ross about his new book, The Weather Report: A Journey Through Unsettled Climates. In this study, Ross revisits areas of the world that he has written about before—Palestine, the United Arab Emirates, Phoenix, Arizona, and China. While he found no absolute correlates, he did discover that what he calls a “subterranean current of thought” emerged as he spoke with former interviewees and new ones, and visited old sites that became familiar in a differen... | 40m 20s | ||||||
| 1/19/26 | ![]() Ananya Roy and Veronika Zablotsky: Beyond Sanctuary: The Humanism of a World in Motion | Today I am happy to speak with Ananya Roy and Veronika Zablotsky about their co-edited volume, Beyond Sanctuary: The Humanism of a World in Motion, which was based on a Sawyer Seminar they convened at UCLA. The essays collected in this book are international in scope and interdisciplinary in nature. What links them is a commitment to show that the idea of sanctuary all too often forgets its radical histories and possibilities, and lapses into a liberal humanism that not only does not solve th... | 55m 24s | ||||||
| 1/15/26 | ![]() Thea Riofrancos: Confronting Contradiction and Working for the Planet | I am delighted to talk with scholar, journalist, and activist Thea Riofrancos about her new book, Extraction: The Frontiers of Green Capitalism. She takes us deep into the mining of lithium and the production of lithium batteries, which have been welcomed as a key element in our transition from fossil fuels. Traveling widely through Latin America to see lithium extraction at work, Thea brings us stories of how this industry has disrupted lives, changed local and national economies... | 1h 03m 27s | ||||||
| 1/12/26 | ![]() Fighting Academic Cowardice and Activating Fearlessness: Speaking with Roderick Ferguson | Today I am delighted to talk with Roderick Ferguson about his provocative and much-needed intervention, “An Interruption in Our Cowardice.” Initially driven by his deep disappointment in some Black intellectuals’ compliance and even assistance with reactionary forces, this essay opens onto profound issues of institutionalization, professionalization, and the deadening and repressive mental, social, and intellectual habits being “accepted” create. In our conversation we spend some time t... | 50m 06s | ||||||
| 1/8/26 | ![]() Indigenous Surviving, Thriving, and Love: A Conversation with Julian Brave Noisecat | Today I have the true honor of speaking with journalist, storyteller, historical researcher, and Native American ceremonial dancer Julian Brave Noisecat about his book, We Survived the Night. This highly original book blends many voices and registers, from both well-known but also buried and purposefully obscured historical archives, to tribal and family stories. Foremost are the legends and adaptations of the Coyote figure—which haunts, inspires, deceives, and, yes, teaches lesso... | 47m 28s | ||||||
| 1/5/26 | ![]() Movements, Media, and Sustaining Solidarity: A Conversation with Rachel Kuo | Today we speak with Rachel Kuo about her book, Movement Media: In Pursuit of Solidarity, recently published by Oxford University Press. This fascinating study understands political activism through a unique perspective, asking the question, how do the choices activists make about how to present their movements to the public indicate key strategic, tactical, and political decisions? Kuo shows that as they seek to persuade others to join their causes, activists work out their own question... | 45m 53s | ||||||
| 12/15/25 | ![]() Nicholas Mirzoeff and Priscilla Wathington in Dialog: To See in the Dark; Making Language Say What it Should Not Have to Do | Today I have the privilege and pleasure of speaking with Nicholas Mirzoeff and Priscilla Wathington about the genocide in Gaza, and how developing a new way of seeing and writing is demanded of us to address this historical moment. In the words of Silvia Federici, “Palestine is the World.” We take Nick’s recent book, To See in the Dark, and animate it by having Priscilla read from her poetry. Nick writes: “After a year of genocide, I think politics is now the meeting of the visibl... | 1h 09m 58s | ||||||
| 12/11/25 | ![]() The Student Intifada Is Alive and Well, and on Both Coasts: Talking with Members of Students for Justice in Palestine | Intimidation, repression, and punishment with regard to activism for Palestine has only increased over the past year. Today I speak with three campus organizers from Students for Justice in Palestine who remain determined and committed, even in the face of their university’s complicity with genocide. They come from both coasts of the United States—from the City University of New York and from San Jose State University. They explain what is happening on their campuses, and the ways in wh... | 31m 42s | ||||||
| 12/8/25 | ![]() Erin McElroy: Hacking in “Postsocialist” Times—Unbecoming Silicon ValleyEpisode | Today I am delighted to welcome activist and scholar Erin McElroy to the podcast. She is the author of a remarkable book, Silicon Valley Imperialism: Techno Fantasies in Postsocialist Times. At the center of this rich and provocative study is the Romanian city of Cluj, which has been dubbed the “Silicon Valley of Eastern Europe.” McElroy untangles this notion by going back to the socialist period, whose technological advances made Romania a particularly attractive site for foreign tech ... | 46m 20s | ||||||
| 12/4/25 | ![]() Iranian Women Leading Fight for Freedom: A Conversation with Nilo Tabrizy | Today I am honored to speak with Nilo Tabrizy, co-author of a remarkable and powerful book, For the Sun After Long Nights: The Story of Iran's Women-Led Uprising. This interview complements another episode I did with her collaborator, Fatemeh Jamalpour. Ms Tabrizy tells us about her work in Visual Forensics, which she used to complement Ms Jamalpour’s reporting on the ground. The two pieces together form a vivid account of the uprising, and the repression that preceded and followed it. ... | 40m 03s | ||||||
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Chart Positions
2 placements across 2 markets.
Chart Positions
2 placements across 2 markets.


























