Search
Latest Videos
A library of interviews with the world’s biggest thinkers.
37mins
A conversation with the author and New York Times cooking columnist.
2mins
The New School University anthropologist thinks insects are “astonishingly beautiful,” both individually and en masse.
3mins
The New School anthropologist explains why, instead of killing bugs, we should pay attention to them and think about their place in the world around us.
4mins
There’s a lot of irrational fear of insects among humans, but there are some that can be lethal.
4mins
The New School anthropologist explains how using language about insects in reference to people can lead to violent acts.
6mins
Some men find videos of women crushing insects a turn-on, which the professor thinks is probably connected to their size, sound and texture.
5mins
People tend to think of insects as having very rigid and well-developed social organization. During the Cold War, insect colonies were considered examples for how communist social systems should work.
3mins
People project their fears, desires, and yearnings onto insects, and many of our ideas about society and social organization have been worked out on them.
30mins
A conversation with the anthropology professor at New School University.
3mins
As a person of “mixed race,” the NAACP president has little use for racial categories.
6mins
The NAACP president gives the president “wide latitude,” but wishes Obama would focus more on one issue: criminal justice reform.
2mins
Obama’s election surprised the NAACP president’s grandfather—but not Jealous, who saw it as another “big and impossible dream” that black Americans would prove possible.
5mins
The man who organized MLK Jr.’s march on Washington was gay; so is Ben Jealous’s brother. The NAACP president thinks LGBT activists could find their staunchest allies in African-Americans—if they […]
1mins
Environmental catastrophe affects everyone, yet the green movement is mostly white. What can be done to bring minorities into the fold?
3mins
As old forms of discrimination disappear, new ones arise. The NAACP president describes an injustice that’s hitting particularly hard during the recession.
6mins
Education reform was “job one” for the NAACP in the last century. Sadly, despite progress in other areas, it still is.
2mins
Why is a subject long treated as a joke now drawing serious attention? Because white-collar criminals are coming forward with horror stories.
3mins
How the American justice system turns petty (and mostly black) criminals angry, desperate, and dangerous.
4mins
From battling the black incarceration rate to retooling public education, the NAACP’s 21st-century platform is nothing short of a “broad domestic human rights movement.”