The Equator Podcast

Equator

Navigating the politics, art and culture of the post-American world.

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  1. 5月21日

    "Should we cancel 'The Gods Must Be Crazy?' I don't know"

    This week, Equator's Nesrine Malik talks to the writer Carey Baraka about a piece that isn't out yet – but will be soon, in the first print issue of Equator next month. To receive it, make sure you're subscribed to our Insider or Patron tier of membership. For both Nesrine and Carey, the film The Gods Must Be Crazy (1980) is a significant childhood memory, even if they now view it very differently. The movie was an instant global hit that led to a series of sequels and million-dollar paydays for its creators. But as Carey rewatched the film decades later, the nostalgia he held collided with a far more uncomfortable truth, and he explains how deeply the film relied on racist tropes and inaccurate portrayals of African people. In writing his forthcoming essay for Equator – part reconsideration, part travelogue, part film criticism – Carey shares what he uncovered: a director who mythologised the production and embellished stories about how he “discovered” the cast; how he portrayed them as naïve and untouched by modernity; and how these narratives weren’t just misleading but instrumental in shaping how audiences perceived both the film and the people in it. What do the creation of this film and its legacy say about how stories about Africa are told, even down to the present day? Who gets to decide which stories are told, and how? This episode is an exploration of how the media shapes perception, how myths get constructed around creative work, and what it means to revisit the stories that shaped us with clearer eyes. If you haven't already, sign up today to get Equator's first print issue, which includes Carey's gripping piece on The Gods Must Be Crazy. This is the last episode of Season 1 of the Equator podcast. Stay tuned for Season 2!

    36 分鐘
  2. 5月14日

    "The American Jewish identity has been weaponised as a cover for genocide"

    Equator's Nesrine Malik talks to the writer Benjamin Moser, whose personal story and political analysis reveal the entanglement between American Judaism and the project of American power. Drawing on his upbringing in a Jewish-American community, Benjamin reflects on the values he was raised with and how they intersected with a broader narrative of American exceptionalism. He narrates how the alignment between liberal Zionism and US global dominance has shaped both political discourse and moral frameworks, leading to profound contradictions -- and tragic consequences in Gaza. It's sad, he says, "that Judaism and [the] Jewish identity could be weaponised to the extent that it could be used as a cover for genocide." The conversation delves into Benjamin's argument that a sense of moral authority, rooted in both historical trauma and national identity, has influenced how many in the American Jewish community have understood their place in the world. The Jews in the US, he says, "became so much a part of [the] white power structure that they, or I should say we, forgot about it." But younger generations are increasingly questioning these inherited narratives, rethinking longstanding assumptions about Israel, Palestine and diaspora identity. What does it mean to speak out today? And what should we expect when we do it? Read Benjamin's essay for Equator, We Have Talked Enough About Ourselves.

    46 分鐘
  3. 5月7日

    "The American university is simply a corporate institution"

    The American university today, the writer Siddhartha Deb tells Equator's Pankaj Mishra, is "a money-making, MBA- and lawyer-run hedge fund and real estate operation with a minor sideline in education." It's hard, he says, to tell the difference between "Columbia University and the New School on the one hand and X and Elon Musk on the other." Siddhartha, an Indian writer and novelist, came to academia in the US in the belief that it was a citadel of free thought and open minds. But as he wrote in his Equator essay From Calcutta to Columbia, disenchantment set in quickly. He saw how students were loaded with debt, how his university was voraciously expanding across its pocket of Manhattan, and how the jargon of theory "allowed people to cultivate a moral distance from capital and empire". Journalism has suffered in parallel as well, both in the US and India. Siddhartha, a former journalist, tells Pankaj that newspapers as much as universities have cravenly surrendered to the Trump administration and but also to previous presidents. "I grew up with this idea of writing being a noble vocation," says Pankaj. "One of the great disillusioning experiences really of the last two or three decades has been that very few people seem to think of it that way. Most people think of it  as a pathway to the most hideously conventional forms of success." Read Siddhartha's essay for Equator, From Calcutta to Columbia.

    29 分鐘
  4. 4月30日

    "Americans are finally aware that their internet isn't free and open"

    Beneath the headlines and half-truths, what is the Chinese internet really like? Equator's Samanth Subramanian speaks to Yi-Ling Liu, author of The Wall Dancers: Searching for Freedom and Connection on the Chinese Internet, who reveals how life online in China actually operates – from the subtle, ever-shifting cycles of state oversight to the surprising spaces where creativity and subcultures thrive. Increasingly, Yi-Ling is asked by people she meets in America: how should they deal with the constraints and diminishing freedoms of their own internet? The internet began as a utopian promise of a free, open and fair space, but for most of the world, it is now distorted by a handful of American tech giants, the tyranny of algorithms, and AI engines that spew out slop. China's internet has faced different kinds of restrictions, imposed by the government. But it, too, was once more open, allowing new kinds of connections and identities to be forged online. The Wall Dancers profiles several people who blossomed online – including Kafe Hu, a hip-hop artist whose genre blossomed in China thanks to the internet – but who also then saw their lives curtailed by fresh censorship. Still, Yi-Ling says, the internet in China remains playful, vibrant and inventive, as people find ways to collaborate and bypass the state's restrictions.  As governments and platforms reshape the boundaries of digital expression, what might the future of the internet look like? And who gets to decide? This episode invites you to rethink what you know about life online - both in China and beyond. Read Have Money Daddy, an excerpt from Yi-Ling's book published exclusive in Equator.

    25 分鐘
  5. 4月9日

    "Governments have never used cricket as nakedly as they do now"

    Equator's Samanth Subramanian and the journalist Osman Samiuddin dive into one of world sport's most charged rivalries - India versus Pakistan in cricket - and explore the "geopolitical hot mess" that is cricket in South Asia today. Osman, a senior editor at ESPNCricinfo and the author of The Unquiet Ones, a history of cricket in Pakistan, recently wrote The Hidden Imran for Equator, about the Pakistani government's attempt to erase the country's most famous man from public view. But even beyond the imprisonment and effacement of Imran Khan, cricket in the subcontinent has long been shaped by political tension, conflict and fragile diplomacy. Osman and Samanth discuss how cricket matches have doubled as proxy battlegrounds, how players carry the weight of national identity, and how the line between sport and statecraft has all but disappeared. The India-Pakistan rivalry, in particular, escalated around the recent World Cup, to the point that it appears as if cricket and politics in these nations can never be separated. Finally, Osman narrates the story of one of cricket's most iconic figures: Imran Khan, revered as Pakistan's World Cup-winning captain and then as politician and prime minister. Osman explains how Imran was jailed on corruption charges, many of them spurious, and how, as the government has tried to mask Imran and his legacy, the internet has played a crucial role in keeping his story alive. Read The Hidden Imran on Equator.

    36 分鐘

關於

Navigating the politics, art and culture of the post-American world.

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