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The Bird & The Bear - Session 78 - "The Birdy South"

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Manage episode 402449160 series 1421778
Content provided by Dimes In The Dozen, Sammy Ray, and Daryl Lazer. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dimes In The Dozen, Sammy Ray, and Daryl Lazer or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Please share, rate, and review … Follow us on all social media platforms @dimesinthedozen

On this week’s session of The Bird & The Bear … Our hosts, Sammy Ray and Daryl Lazer discuss Super Bowl ads and the Deep South … The Deep South portion of their discussion is based off to two YouTube documentaries by Peter Santenello, “Deep South - First Impressions” and “Deep South’s Poorest Region - What’s It Like?” … Let’s sort through it together!

(0:00) - The session opens with a short discussion about the Super Bowl that’s mostly focused on the weird “He Gets Us” ads that ran during the commercial breaks - “Money made off of selling crap s**t for your home … Period”

(11:40) - Our hosts share their personal experiences with the south before introducing the first documentary they’ll be analyzing, “Deep South - First Impressions” by Peter Santenello - “M-I-S-S-I-S-S-I-P-P-I … I said that cause I wanted to know if I knew how to spell it correctly”

(20:34) - The subject of the documentary, Booker T, starts to show some negative feelings towards welfare recipients - “Not, I had to get out of here because somewhere else was less racist … I had to figure out a place that was racist in a different way”

(26:11) - A conversation about people’s guarded attitudes in the Deep South turns into a debate over just how much Booker T’s community really likes him - “They take that line of, ‘He hasn’t been through anything that I haven’t been through … Why’s he important?’”

(34:44) - The age, condition, and historical significance of the small communities in parts of the Deep South - “Even if their communities were poorly constructed and poorly made, they worked so hard to make what they had last”

(42:28) - Critiques of the documentary turn into a second, but productive debate about combating prejudice - “If I cannot be black, you better stand on business and be not black with me”

(51:44) - As the documentary focuses in on Booker T’s personal life, our hosts give their final thoughts on what his true character might be - “He makes sure everybody knows him … So that nobody can cross him … He’s jivin”

(1:06:00) - Our hosts move onto a second documentary on the Deep South, “Deep South’s Poorest Region - What’s It Like?” by Peter Santenello - “Those names couldn’t be more old America … Of course, Mr. Bruno and Mr. Brimm Brimley … Monopoly characters … Put alligators in the lake”

(1:12:40) - The mayor of Alligator, Mississippi and his desire to bring a dollar store to the community - “They have the land to be self-sufficient … They can have the barter system”

(1:20:10) - Our hosts discuss the many issues that have left the Deep South economically stunned and give their final thoughts on both documentaries - “They don’t want you … They took it away from you … They patented your ability to make a living”

  continue reading

98 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 402449160 series 1421778
Content provided by Dimes In The Dozen, Sammy Ray, and Daryl Lazer. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dimes In The Dozen, Sammy Ray, and Daryl Lazer or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Please share, rate, and review … Follow us on all social media platforms @dimesinthedozen

On this week’s session of The Bird & The Bear … Our hosts, Sammy Ray and Daryl Lazer discuss Super Bowl ads and the Deep South … The Deep South portion of their discussion is based off to two YouTube documentaries by Peter Santenello, “Deep South - First Impressions” and “Deep South’s Poorest Region - What’s It Like?” … Let’s sort through it together!

(0:00) - The session opens with a short discussion about the Super Bowl that’s mostly focused on the weird “He Gets Us” ads that ran during the commercial breaks - “Money made off of selling crap s**t for your home … Period”

(11:40) - Our hosts share their personal experiences with the south before introducing the first documentary they’ll be analyzing, “Deep South - First Impressions” by Peter Santenello - “M-I-S-S-I-S-S-I-P-P-I … I said that cause I wanted to know if I knew how to spell it correctly”

(20:34) - The subject of the documentary, Booker T, starts to show some negative feelings towards welfare recipients - “Not, I had to get out of here because somewhere else was less racist … I had to figure out a place that was racist in a different way”

(26:11) - A conversation about people’s guarded attitudes in the Deep South turns into a debate over just how much Booker T’s community really likes him - “They take that line of, ‘He hasn’t been through anything that I haven’t been through … Why’s he important?’”

(34:44) - The age, condition, and historical significance of the small communities in parts of the Deep South - “Even if their communities were poorly constructed and poorly made, they worked so hard to make what they had last”

(42:28) - Critiques of the documentary turn into a second, but productive debate about combating prejudice - “If I cannot be black, you better stand on business and be not black with me”

(51:44) - As the documentary focuses in on Booker T’s personal life, our hosts give their final thoughts on what his true character might be - “He makes sure everybody knows him … So that nobody can cross him … He’s jivin”

(1:06:00) - Our hosts move onto a second documentary on the Deep South, “Deep South’s Poorest Region - What’s It Like?” by Peter Santenello - “Those names couldn’t be more old America … Of course, Mr. Bruno and Mr. Brimm Brimley … Monopoly characters … Put alligators in the lake”

(1:12:40) - The mayor of Alligator, Mississippi and his desire to bring a dollar store to the community - “They have the land to be self-sufficient … They can have the barter system”

(1:20:10) - Our hosts discuss the many issues that have left the Deep South economically stunned and give their final thoughts on both documentaries - “They don’t want you … They took it away from you … They patented your ability to make a living”

  continue reading

98 episodes

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