エピソード

  • Trey’s Table Episode 307: The Best Black Movie You’ve Never Seen
    2025/05/21
    The CIA. A Black spy. A guerrilla revolution. And a cover-up. 🕵🏾♂️💥

    The Spook Who Sat by the Door* (1969) wasn’t just a book—it was a warning. The 1973 film adaptation was yanked from theaters weeks after release. Coincidence? Or suppression?

    Decades later, Tim Reid (legendary actor & activist) tracked down the last surviving copy and brought it back to the people.

    New Trey’s Table ep dives into:
    - Why this story terrified the establishment
    - How it mirrors today’s struggles
    - Why preserving radical Black art MATTERS

    🎧 Listen now [link] & reply with your take:
    Can liberation ever be ‘polite’?

    #BlackFilm #ConspiracyOrFact #ResistanceCinema
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    27 分
  • Trey’s Table Episode 306: Oscarville, GA
    2025/05/21
    The Forgotten Massacre: Oscarville, Georgia (1912) – Episode 306 of Trey’s Table"

    In 1912, the thriving Black community of Oscarville in Forsyth County, Georgia, was violently destroyed. After the rape and murder of a white woman, two Black men were lynched without trial, and white mobs terrorized Black families—burning homes, churches, and schools. Over 1,000 Black residents were forced out, and Forsyth County became an all-white "sundown county" for generations.

    On Episode 306 of Trey’s Table, we uncover this buried history: Who benefited from the stolen land? How did lies and silence shape the county’s future? And why does Oscarville’s story still matter today?

    https://www.npr.org/2016/09/15...

    Listen now (link in bio) and join the conversation. #BlackHistory #HiddenHistory #TreysTable
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    40 分
  • Trey’s Table Episode 305: Jayme Lawson
    2025/05/20
    Let’s talk about the breakout star of the movie Sinners.
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    18 分
  • Trey’s Table Episode 304: Race and Comedy in America
    2025/05/20
    At a time when America was a violent, racist, and anti-black nation these two black men became the most dynamic and popular comedy duo in the nation.


    https://youtube.com/@jesstorrescomedy?si=QOijB5GHPetpaVYe
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    38 分
  • Trey’s Table Episode 303: Chefs, Bartenders, and Race
    2025/05/17
    Only three African-American chefs working in the United States have received a Michelin star. Let’s talk about this and representation of African-Americans in the culinary industry.
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    44 分
  • Trey’s Table Episode 302: Beautiful Hair
    2025/05/16
    The beauty of black women and their hair is so powerful. Let’s talk about it.

    https://youtu.be/7mjgeKpkMUU?s...

    https://youtu.be/G5vFFvxMR2w?s...
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    29 分
  • Trey’s Table Episode 301 Amerikaners
    2025/05/14
    Why is the US GOVERNMENT providing special treatment for White South African refugees?

    https://www.amerikaners.com/
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    35 分
  • Trey’s Table Episode 300 The Color of Law
    2025/05/13
    🚨 NEW EPISODE ALERT! � EP. 300: The Racist Double Standard in Cocaine Sentencing

    For decades, the U.S. criminal justice system has treated crack and powder cocaine offenses wildly differently—despite being the same drug. The result? Mass incarceration of Black and Brown communities, fueled by racist policies like the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act, which created a 100:1 sentencing disparity.

    In Episode 300 of Trey’s Table, we break down:
    ✔️ The racist origins of the crack vs. powder sentencing gap
    ✔️ How these laws devastated generations of Black families
    ✔️ Why "reforms" like the 2010 Fair Sentencing Act didn’t go far enough
    ✔️ The fight to end this injustice for good

    This isn’t just history—it’s about who still gets targeted by the system today.

    🎧 Tap the link in bio to listen NOW! Then drop a comment: Did you know about this disparity? What surprised you?

    #TreysTable #CrackVsPowder #EndTheDisparity #JusticeReform #Podcast
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    44 分