Baldwin & Co. Ideas Explored

DJ Johnson

This podcast is your front-row seat to the world of intellectual thought, creative expression, books, ideas, and thought-provoking conversations with some of the most brilliant minds and celebrated authors of our time.

  1. How Black Artists Reclaim Beauty From Pain. - Irvin Weathersby Jr. & Gia Hamilton

    4월 15일

    How Black Artists Reclaim Beauty From Pain. - Irvin Weathersby Jr. & Gia Hamilton

    Irvin Weathersby Jr. and cultural strategist Gia Hamilton deliver a deeply reflective and personal conversation about grief, memory, and the transformative power of storytelling. With poetic clarity and emotional honesty, Irvin shares how the loss of his father and the devastation of Hurricane Katrina shaped his writing and identity as a Black man from New Orleans. Gia Hamilton, in turn, explores the intersections of trauma and creativity, asking how Black artists reclaim beauty from pain and build archives that preserve our truths. Together, they dive into the messy, necessary work of naming what hurts—and finding liberation in the telling. This episode is part of the ongoing conversations hosted by Baldwin & Co., a Black-owned bookstore, café, and cultural institution based in New Orleans. Baldwin & Co. exists at the intersection of literature, ideas, and community—creating space for rigorous dialogue, storytelling, and intellectual exchange. Through author talks, podcasts, live events, and community programming, Baldwin & Co. amplifies voices shaping how we understand culture, history, politics, faith, and the future. Stay connected with Baldwin & Co. across platforms: Instagram: @baldwinandcoX (Twitter): @baldwinandcoFacebook: Baldwin & Co.YouTube: Baldwin & Co.Website: www.baldwinandcobooks.com Visit us in New Orleans or online to support independent bookselling, discover powerful literature, and engage in conversations that matter. #IrvinWeathersby #GiaHamilton #BaldwinAndCo #BlackStorytelling #GriefToArt #HurricaneKatrina #BlackWritersMatter #CulturalMemory #ArchiveOurPain #BlackMenWrite #CreativeResistance #StorytellingAsHealing #BlackJoyAndPain #GriefIsPower #WritingThroughTrauma #ArtBornOfLoss #BlackCreativesUnfiltered #TruthTellingIsRadical #NewOrleansVoices #HealingThroughWords #GenerationalGrief #TraumaAndTransformation #ReclaimTheNarrative #EmotionalLiberation #BlackLegacyBuilders

    44분
  2. How Racist Ideas Spread! - Ibram X. Kendi & Eddie Glaude Jr.

    4월 13일

    How Racist Ideas Spread! - Ibram X. Kendi & Eddie Glaude Jr.

    In a landmark first-ever podcast conversation, Eddie Glaude Jr. and Ibram X. Kendi sit down for a powerful, deeply honest exchange on race, democracy, morality, and power in America. What makes this conversation so compelling is that it goes far beyond surface-level political commentary—they wrestle with whether racism is best confronted through policy, moral transformation, or both, and challenge the idea that simply “admitting” racism exists is enough. Instead, they argue that America has too often confused sentiment, symbolism, and performance with actual structural change. The conversation also takes a sharp and urgent turn into how anti-racism has been misread, politicized, and weaponized in the current era. Ibram reflects on how his work has often been flattened into something far less radical than he intended, while Eddie pushes the deeper question of what kind of people—and what kind of country—democracy actually requires. By the end, the discussion expands into a chilling analysis of Great Replacement Theory, authoritarian politics, and the dangerous narratives shaping public life around the world. This is not just a podcast—it’s a serious intellectual document of the moment. This episode is part of the ongoing conversations hosted by Baldwin & Co., a Black-owned bookstore, café, and cultural institution based in New Orleans. Baldwin & Co. exists at the intersection of literature, ideas, and community—creating space for rigorous dialogue, storytelling, and intellectual exchange. Through author talks, podcasts, live events, and community programming, Baldwin & Co. amplifies voices shaping how we understand culture, history, politics, faith, and the future. Stay connected with Baldwin & Co. across platforms: Instagram: @baldwinandcoX (Twitter): @baldwinandcoFacebook: Baldwin & Co.YouTube: Baldwin & Co.Website: www.baldwinandcobooks.com Visit us in New Orleans or online to support independent bookselling, discover powerful literature, and engage in conversations that matter. #EddieGlaudeJr #IbramXKendi #BaldwinAndCo #Podcast #BlackThought #RaceInAmerica #Democracy #Politics #PoliticalTheory #GreatReplacementTheory #AntiRacism #BlackIntellectuals #SocialJustice #PublicIntellectual #AmericanPolitics #BlackHistory #CivilRights #CurrentEvents #ThoughtLeadership #LongformPodcast #YouTubePodcast #PodcastClips #YouTubeShorts #TrendingNow #ViralVideo #MustWatch #DeepConversation #IntellectualConversation #NewsAnalysis #cultureandpolitics

    1시간 8분
  3. If You’re Not Uncomfortable, You’re Not Doing Enough. Gary Chambers and Dr. Lakeysha Hallmon Talk!

    4월 12일

    If You’re Not Uncomfortable, You’re Not Doing Enough. Gary Chambers and Dr. Lakeysha Hallmon Talk!

    Political activist Gary Chambers and entrepreneur/author Dr. Lakeysha Hallmon deliver a bold blueprint for what real Black liberation looks like—beyond hashtags and into strategy, ownership, and community-driven resistance. Reflecting on Hallmon’s book No One Is Self-Made, the duo dismantles the myth of individual success and call out the comfort-addicted, privilege-insulated tendencies stalling progress in Black communities. They challenge the “we’re not our ancestors” narrative with reverence, reminding listeners of the grit, sacrifice, and strategy our elders wielded without applause. The message is clear: we need less performance, more patience, less ego, more unity—and we must be willing to lose convenience to win liberation. From economic strategy to political discipline, this conversation is a call to stay, fight, and finish what our ancestors started. This episode is part of the ongoing conversations hosted by Baldwin & Co., a Black-owned bookstore, café, and cultural institution based in New Orleans. Baldwin & Co. exists at the intersection of literature, ideas, and community—creating space for rigorous dialogue, storytelling, and intellectual exchange. Through author talks, podcasts, live events, and community programming, Baldwin & Co. amplifies voices shaping how we understand culture, history, politics, faith, and the future. Stay connected with Baldwin & Co. across platforms: Instagram: @baldwinandcoX (Twitter): @baldwinandcoFacebook: Baldwin & Co.YouTube: Baldwin & Co.Website: www.baldwinandcobooks.com Visit us in New Orleans or online to support independent bookselling, discover powerful literature, and engage in conversations that matter. Order Lakeysha Hallmon Books Here: https://bookshop.org/a/20190/9780063315891Order Baldwin & Co. Merch Here: https://shop.baldwinandcobooks.comLearn more about Baldwin & Co. Foundation: https://bcofoundation.org #GaryChambers #LakeyshaHallmon #NoOneIsSelfMade #BaldwinAndCo #BlackLiberationNow #RevolutionRequiresStrategy #BlackUnityMatters #PurposeOverPrivilege #CommunityOverClout #OwnershipIsPower #BlackExcellenceUnfiltered #EconomicEmpowerment #DisciplineOverDistraction #MovementOverMoment #StayAndBuild #UnapologeticallyStrategic #WeAreOurAncestorsWildestDreams #FinishTheWork #BlackLeadershipRising #ComfortIsNotFreedom #ReclaimTheFight #MicrowavedMovementsFail #LegacyNotLikes #RadicalCollaboration

    32분
  4. Black People Need to Stop Waiting for the System to Save Us! -- Ben Crump & Gary Chambers

    3월 10일

    Black People Need to Stop Waiting for the System to Save Us! -- Ben Crump & Gary Chambers

    Ben Crump is one of America’s most prominent civil rights attorneys, known for representing the families of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and many others in landmark cases seeking accountability and justice. Gary Chambers is a Louisiana activist and political organizer recognized nationally for his unapologetic advocacy for voting rights, criminal justice reform, and economic justice. The conversation between civil rights attorney Ben Crump and activist Gary Chambers is a political strategy session for the unfinished work of American democracy. Crump opens with a blunt reminder: legality and morality are not the same thing—a truth that echoes from slavery and segregation to modern courtrooms where justice is still negotiated rather than guaranteed.  From there, the dialogue widens into a sweeping reflection on power, economics, and political courage. Both men argue that the struggle for civil rights has always been tied to economic independence, noting that every time Black Americans have accumulated wealth—from land ownership after Reconstruction to Black Wall Street in Tulsa—the rules of the game were rewritten or the prosperity violently destroyed. The law, they suggest, can be a path to liberation, but only if communities are willing to fight relentlessly to ensure it is interpreted fairly. This episode is part of the ongoing conversations hosted by Baldwin & Co., a Black-owned bookstore, café, and cultural institution based in New Orleans. Baldwin & Co. exists at the intersection of literature, ideas, and community—creating space for rigorous dialogue, storytelling, and intellectual exchange. Through author talks, podcasts, live events, and community programming, Baldwin & Co. amplifies voices shaping how we understand culture, history, politics, faith, and the future. Stay connected with Baldwin & Co. across platforms: Instagram: @baldwinandcoX (Twitter): @baldwinandcoFacebook: Baldwin & Co.YouTube: Baldwin & Co.Website: www.baldwinandcobooks.com Visit us in New Orleans or online to support independent bookselling, discover powerful literature, and engage in conversations that matter. #BenCrump #GaryChambers #CivilRightsAttorney #JusticeForAll #BlackLivesMatter #FightForJustice #CivilRightsMovement #AccountabilityNow #JusticeNotJustLegal #BlackJustice #SpeakTruthToPower #ProtectBlackLives #UnapologeticallyBlack #EconomicJustice #BlackPower #CommunityJustice #BreakingNews #USPolitics #CivilRights #JusticeSystem #EconomicJustice #VotingRights #EducationMatters #JusticeInAmerica #LawAndPower #HistoryInTheMaking #PoliticalCourage #PowerAndJustice #FightForFreedom #DemocracyInAction #TruthToPower

    33분
  5. Why Black Women Aren’t Your Metaphor! -- Tia Williams

    3월 3일

    Why Black Women Aren’t Your Metaphor! -- Tia Williams

    Tia Williams: Tia Williams is the New York Times bestselling author of Seven Days in June and a veteran beauty editor who has spent decades centering Black joy and modern glamour in her storytelling. Farrah Rochon: Farrah Rochon is a USA Today bestselling author celebrated for her hit series The Boyfriend Projectand her ability to weave ambitious, relatable Black women into the heart of contemporary romance. Author of Seven Days in June, Tia Williams and author Farrah Rochon traced the long, winding road behind Williams’s success—one paved with magazine deadlines, rejected manuscripts, stubborn conviction, and a refusal to flatten Black women into symbols of struggle. Williams spoke openly about building a career by straddling two worlds—glossy fashion media by day, fiction by night—until a toxic relationship, burnout, and a self-imposed exile to Spain cracked her open creatively and gave birth to her first novel. What followed was a sharp, often funny meditation on what it means to write romance without apology: insisting that Black women can exist in stories simply to love, desire, and dream; pushing back against an industry that doubted her credibility; and embracing risk, whether that meant indie publishing, watching her work transformed by Hollywood, or folding Harlem Renaissance history and Louisiana ancestry into contemporary love stories. Along the way, Williams dismantled myths about “Black excellence,” admitted the physical toll of writing with chronic migraines, and revealed how intuition—not permission—has guided every pivot in her career. The result was a reminder that literary success is rarely linear, never polite, and often born from refusing to make yourself smaller for anyone watching.  This episode is part of the ongoing conversations hosted by Baldwin & Co., a Black-owned bookstore, café, and cultural institution based in New Orleans. Baldwin & Co. exists at the intersection of literature, ideas, and community—creating space for rigorous dialogue, storytelling, and intellectual exchange. Through author talks, podcasts, live events, and community programming, Baldwin & Co. amplifies voices shaping how we understand culture, history, politics, faith, and the future. Stay connected with Baldwin & Co. across platforms: Instagram: @baldwinandcoX (Twitter): @baldwinandcoFacebook: Baldwin & Co.YouTube: Baldwin & Co.Website: www.baldwinandcobooks.com Visit us in New Orleans or online to support independent bookselling, discover powerful literature, and engage in conversations that matter. #BlackAuthors #BlackRomance #WritingCommunity #BookTalk #AuthorConversation #LiteraryCulture #PublishingTruths #CreativeProcess #BlackWomenWriters #RomanceReaders #BookLovers #BookYouTube #WriterLife #BehindTheBook #LiteraryDiscussion #CulturalConversation #BaldwinAndCo #IndependentBookstore #ReadBlackAuthors

    55분
  6. Are You REALLY Safe at the Doctor? Dr. Uché Blackstock Explains The Real Reason We Mistrust Hospitals

    3월 3일

    Are You REALLY Safe at the Doctor? Dr. Uché Blackstock Explains The Real Reason We Mistrust Hospitals

    Dr. Uché Blackstock is a renowned emergency medicine physician and the founder of Advancing Health Equity, whose memoir Legacy tackles the deep-seated racial disparities within the U.S. healthcare system. Jarvis DeBerry is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and celebrated columnist known for his sharp, soulful insights into social justice and the Black experience in America. In a powerful and deeply personal conversation at Baldwin & Co., Dr. Uché Blackstock and journalist Jarvis DeBerry tear the veil off America’s broken healthcare system—exposing not just systemic racism, but the emotional and physical toll it exacts on Black patients and Black health professionals alike. From being misdiagnosed with appendicitis as a Harvard med student, to watching her mother practice medicine with soul and cultural accountability, Dr. Blackstock shares how her journey to healing became an act of resistance. Together, they challenge the myth of “trust in the system,” flipping the script to ask: can a system built on exploitation ever be trusted at all? This isn’t just a talk—it’s a reckoning. And it’s a call for Black professionals to choose joy, rest, and self-preservation over martyrdom. This episode is part of the ongoing conversations hosted by Baldwin & Co., a Black-owned bookstore, café, and cultural institution based in New Orleans. Baldwin & Co. exists at the intersection of literature, ideas, and community—creating space for rigorous dialogue, storytelling, and intellectual exchange. Through author talks, podcasts, live events, and community programming, Baldwin & Co. amplifies voices shaping how we understand culture, history, politics, faith, and the future. Stay connected with Baldwin & Co. across platforms: Instagram: @baldwinandcoX (Twitter): @baldwinandcoFacebook: Baldwin & Co.YouTube: Baldwin & Co.Website: www.baldwinandcobooks.com Visit us in New Orleans or online to support independent bookselling, discover powerful literature, and engage in conversations that matter.

    1시간 4분
  7. Black History Is Buried—Literally. Here's Who's Digging It Up From the Water. -- Tara Roberts & Alexandra Jones

    3월 1일

    Black History Is Buried—Literally. Here's Who's Digging It Up From the Water. -- Tara Roberts & Alexandra Jones

    Dr. Alexandra Jones is a seasoned archaeologist and educator dedicated to empowering communities through the preservation and excavation of African American history. Tara Roberts is a National Geographic Explorer and storyteller whose work uncovers the lost stories of the transatlantic slave trade through the lens of maritime archaeology. National Geographic Explorer Tara Roberts and archeologist Dr. Alexandra Jones dove into an electrifying conversation that spanned the deep metaphor of water, the power of the divine feminine, and the urgency of community action. Using Roberts’ new memoir Written in the Waters as a launchpad, the two women explored the spiritual and political dimensions of environmental justice, Black history, and intergenerational resilience. They unpacked how water serves as both a symbol and a survival tool—a metaphor for Black femininity, flexibility, and force. With searing clarity, they challenged capitalist frameworks that destroy ecosystems and disconnect people from ancestry and collective care. What emerged was more than dialogue—it was a call to arms for radical education, systems change, and generational healing through cooperation, not heroism. This episode is part of the ongoing conversations hosted by Baldwin & Co., a Black-owned bookstore, café, and cultural institution based in New Orleans. Baldwin & Co. exists at the intersection of literature, ideas, and community—creating space for rigorous dialogue, storytelling, and intellectual exchange. Through author talks, podcasts, live events, and community programming, Baldwin & Co. amplifies voices shaping how we understand culture, history, politics, faith, and the future. Stay connected with Baldwin & Co. across platforms: Instagram: @baldwinandcoX (Twitter): @baldwinandcoFacebook: Baldwin & Co.YouTube: Baldwin & Co.Website: www.baldwinandcobooks.com Visit us in New Orleans or online to support independent bookselling, discover powerful literature, and engage in conversations that matter. #TaraRoberts #AlexandraJones #WrittenInTheWaters #BlackHistoryMatters #EnvironmentalJustice #WaterIsMemory #DivineFemininePower #RadicalCooperation #BaldwinAndCo #ArcheologyOfTheDiaspora #BlackWomenLead #OceanAsArchive #RestorativeJustice #ReclaimTheNarrative #AncestralKnowledge #SacredWaters #DiggingUpTruth #ClimateJusticeNow #WeAreTheFuture #BlackExplorers #LiberationThroughLearning #BlackEnvironmentalists #HealingThroughHistory #CommunityOverCapitalism #SpiritualReclamation

    42분
  8. Why Justice Terrifies White Supremacist More Than Revenge -- Kellie Carter Jackson & Shennette Garrett-Scott

    2월 21일

    Why Justice Terrifies White Supremacist More Than Revenge -- Kellie Carter Jackson & Shennette Garrett-Scott

    Kellie Carter Jackson is a historian and writer (author of 'We Refuse') whose work centers Black resistance, abolition, and the political meaning of freedom in American history. Shennette Garrett-Scott is a historian and author whose scholarship explores Black women’s economic power, labor, and political life beyond traditional civil rights narratives. What unfolded on that stage was not a polite author talk—it was a bracing reminder that history has teeth. Writing We Refuse in the heat of 2020, Kellie Carter Jackson rejects what she calls the “trauma porn” of American racial storytelling and replaces it with something far more unsettling: proof that Black resistance has always been deliberate, strategic, and ordinary. Again and again, she dismantles the comforting myth that Black people merely endured injustice quietly, arguing instead that refusal—through protection, flight, revolution, community care, and even joy—has been constant, if deliberately obscured. The most arresting moments arrive when scholarship meets memory: a great-grandmother who chose a child’s life with a limp over lifelong bondage; a grandmother whose loaded pistol complicates sentimental ideas of Southern gentility; siblings lost, whose names anchor grief as a form of resistance. Kellie Carter Jackson’s point is devastatingly clear: white supremacy is not only mobs and violence, but erasure, coercion, and “niceness” masquerading as morality. And yet, the conversation never collapses into despair. It insists that liberation is collective, that joy is a discipline, and that the most radical threat to injustice has always been an educated, cared-for, and politically conscious people. The result is less a lecture than a reckoning—one that refuses easy answers and demands a wider imagination of what freedom has always required. This episode is part of the ongoing conversations hosted by Baldwin & Co., a Black-owned bookstore, café, and cultural institution based in New Orleans. Baldwin & Co. exists at the intersection of literature, ideas, and community—creating space for rigorous dialogue, storytelling, and intellectual exchange. Through author talks, podcasts, live events, and community programming, Baldwin & Co. amplifies voices shaping how we understand culture, history, politics, faith, and the future. Stay connected with Baldwin & Co. across platforms: Instagram: @baldwinandcoX (Twitter): @baldwinandcoFacebook: Baldwin & Co.YouTube: Baldwin & Co.Website: www.baldwinandcobooks.com Visit us in New Orleans or online to support independent bookselling, discover powerful literature, and engage in conversations that matter. #WeRefuse #BlackResistance #RadicalHistory #BlackHistoryToldRight #FreedomIsCollective #JusticeNotRevenge #WhiteSupremacyExposed #LiberationThinking #AbolitionNow #HistoryWithTeeth #IntellectualResistance #BlackJoyAsResistance #CommunityCare #PoliticalEducation #StoriesTheyErased #TruthOverComfort #BooksThatChallengePower #BaldwinAndCoPodcast #IdeasInConversation #ReadToResist #CulturalReckoning #BookBans #AttacksOnBlackHistory #EnvironmentalJustice #VoterSuppression #MassIncarceration #DemocracyInCrisis #FreeSpeechMatters #EducationUnderFire #WhoseHistory #PowerAndNarrative

    59분
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This podcast is your front-row seat to the world of intellectual thought, creative expression, books, ideas, and thought-provoking conversations with some of the most brilliant minds and celebrated authors of our time.

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