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There is no reason that a podcast in which someone pontificates on daily quotes from one of those cheugy inspirational calendars should be so effervescent. But, if the someone is JB Smoove, you can trust it’s a whole ass moment.
May I Elaborate, from Team Coco, is hosted by JB Smoove and his friend Miles. Smoove, an actor and comedian you might remember from early
Def Comedy Jam or
Curb Your Enthusiasm, has a website banner that flashes the words “Create a Ruckus,” and this daily podcast delivers. The concept seems simple: Rip a quote from the calendar and extrapolate its meaning. But Smoove takes the straightforward episode structure and turns it into high concept art. This episode explores a poetic quote from the Talmud, opening up discourses on Neil deGrasse Tyson, why Superman can’t save Lois Lane by flying backwards, and how life isn’t a stationary shadow. Hell yeah. If you are a person who wonders if the sun and moon work at the same factory, beli
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This American Life
On a friend’s recommendation, B.A. Parker decides to try attending First Corinthian Baptist Church in Harlem. Parker is black, much like the majority of the church’s congregation. But when she gets to FCBC, she notices a long line of white tourists waiting to get inside. (13 minutes)
CBS News
Is America a Christian nation? Pastors at odds about fusion of faith and politics
Watch the CBSN Originals documentary The Right s Fight to Make America a Christian Nation in the video player above.
Outside the Capitol insurrection in January, a group of protesters carried a large wooden cross and a flag flew reading Jesus is My Savior, Trump is My President.
Some in the crowd embraced Christian nationalism, an ideology that combines Christian and American identities and promotes Christianity as the reigning religion. Research has found that adherence to Christian nationalism was a significant predictor of support for Donald Trump in the 2016 election.