Dua is joined by the lawyer, civil rights leader, and founder of the Equal Justice Initiative, Bryan Stevenson, whose dedication to the poor, the incarcerated and the condemned once led Archbishop Desmond Tutu to call him “America’s young Nelson Mandela.” In 2018, Bryan also founded the Legacy Museum and the National Monument for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama, two national landmarks that chronicle the country’s evolution through slavery, the Jim Crow era and lynching to today’s epidemic of mass incarceration and racial injustice. Their conversation touches upon themes of injustice, poverty, racism and apartheid.
Tim Cook: What it takes to run Apple, the world’s largest company
My Favourite Moments
Troye Sivan: The power of identity
Ziwe: What's funny these days?
Billie Eilish: On growing up
Paloma Elsesser: On spirituality, and finding quiet in the noise
Amanda Feilding: Let’s talk psychedelics
Sasha Velour: Is drag "dangerous"?
Penn Badgley: On defining yourself
BLACKPINK's Jennie: How I share my culture
Esther Perel: Is your relationship “normal”?
Amelia Dimoldenberg: How to shoot your shot
We're Back for Season Three!
Book Club Bonus Episode: Dua Lipa and Douglas Stuart, live at Hay Festival
Dean Baquet (and a Season Two Wrap-up)
Pedro Almodóvar
Greta Gerwig
Mo Farah
Dita Von Teese
Dan Levy
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Every L Podcast
The Empty Rooms of Gorski Manor
Jim Harold’s Campfire
Witch
Lady Killers with Lucy Worsley