The Hard Truths of Ta-Nehisi Coates
On the modern era’s answer to James Baldwin.
Showing 25 articles matching coates.
On the modern era’s answer to James Baldwin.
Benjamin Wallace-Wells New York Jul 2015 25min Permalink
Ta-Nehisi Coates is an author and journalist. His next book is The Message.
“I don’t think we have the luxury as journalists of avoiding things because people might say bad things about us. I don’t even think we have the luxury of avoiding things because we might get fired. I don’t think we have the luxury of avoiding them because somebody might cancel some sort of public speech that we have. I then have to ask you, what are you in it for? Like, why did you come here? Did you come here just to make a living? Because there are many other things where you could make more money.”
Jun 2024 Permalink
“Things don’t just flow out of your brain. It’s not like, Hey, I’m brilliant. Show up, paper right here, bam, another banger. No—you sit and you struggle with yourself and you stop cutting your hair. I’m not cutting my hair right now. You stop shaving, like I’m not shaving right now. You remember that you can fail. I’ve failed several times. The fact that everybody else don’t see that don’t give me the right to not see it.”
Bomani Jones, Ta-Nehisi Coates Playboy Jun 2016 25min Permalink
A profile of the author on the eve on his debut novel, The Water Dancer.
Jesmyn Ward Vanity Fair Aug 2019 20min Permalink
Ta-Nehisi Coates is an author and journalist. He served as guest editor for the September issue of Vanity Fair, titled "The Great Fire."
“There’s this pressure to say something. Say something. The world’s burning, say something. But I try to stay where I’ve been or where I’ve tried to be in my career. ... Good things take time. You gotta let things cook. You can’t insta-bake something like this.”
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Sep 2020 Permalink
Ta-Nehisi Coates is a national correspondent for The Atlantic. His latest book, Between the World and Me, just won the National Book Award.
“When I first came to New York, I couldn't see any of this. I felt like a complete washout. I was in my little apartment, eating donuts and playing video games. The only thing I was doing good with my life was being a father and a husband. That was it. David [Carr] was a big shot. And he would call me in, just out of the blue, to have lunch. I was so low at that point. ... He said, I think you're a great bet. ... He was remembering people who had invested in him when he was low. That more than anything is why I'm sad he's not here for all of this. Because it's for him. It's to say to him, you were right.”
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Thanks to MailChimp, Casper, Squarespace, MasterClass, and "The Message" for sponsoring this week's episode.
Nov 2015 Permalink
Ta-Nehisi Coates is a senior editor at The Atlantic. His latest cover story is "The Case for Reparations."
"The writer hopes for change, but writers can't assume that their work is going to cause change."
Thanks to TinyLetter and I Am Zlatan, the international bestseller published by Random House, for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jun 2014 Permalink
Ta-Nehisi Coates is a senior editor at The Atlantic and author of The Beautiful Struggle.
"I was 24 when my son was born. People always say that kids get in the way, right? But actually it had the opposite effect on me. I feel like I could have spent my twenties doing all sorts of self-destructive things--that was my natural inclination--but having a kid suddenly makes that not OK ... The stakes of everything just went up. I think I'm the type of person where, for any reason, I only respond to pressure. That kid just so raised the pressure, for everything ... So I started writing for the Washington Monthly, and the Monthly pays shit, everybody knows that, right? They were paying ten cents a word at this point. But because they have these big-shots writing for them, nobody ever calls for the check! But I would say, 'no, I need you to send me that check. Yeah, I know it's only $150, but I actually need that check, you really need to send that check.'"
Sep 2012 Permalink
Ta-Nehisi Coates is the author of The Beautiful Struggle, We Were Eight Years in Power, and Between the World and Me. His new novel is The Water Dancer. Chris Jackson is Coates's editor, and the publisher and editor-in-chief of One World.
“I don’t think an essay works unless I can pin a story to it. You don’t want people to just say, ‘Oh that was a cool argument.’ You want people to say, ‘I could not stop thinking about this.’ You want them to nudge their wives and husbands and say, ‘You have to read this.’ You want them to be bothered by it.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Squarespace, Vistaprint, and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this week's episode.
Sep 2019 Permalink
Ta-Nehisi Coates is the author of Between the World and Me and a national correspondent for The Atlantic. His latest cover story is “My President Was Black."
“[People] have come to see me as somebody with answers, but I don’t actually have answers. I’ve never had answers. The questions are the enthralling thing for me. Not necessarily at the end of the thing getting somewhere that’s complete—it’s the asking and repeated asking. I don’t know how that happened, but I felt like after a while it got to the point where I was seen as having unique answers, and I just didn’t. I really, really didn’t.”
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Dec 2016 Permalink
Two hundred fifty years of slavery. Ninety years of Jim Crow. Sixty years of separate but equal. Thirty-five years of racist housing policy. Until we reckon with our compounding moral debts, America will never be whole.
Life in your nineties.
Roger Angell New Yorker 20min
She tried public appearances. She tried being reclusive. She tried leaving the country, and she tried finding a job. But the epic humiliation of 1998, when her affair with Bill Clinton became an all-consuming story, has followed Monica Lewinsky every day. After 10 years of self-imposed reticence, and now hoping to help victims of Internet shaming, she critiques the culture that put a 24-year-old through the wringer and calls out the feminists who joined the chorus.
Monica Lewinsky Vanity Fair 20min
A memoir of gay male literature.
Philip Kennicott VQR 25min
“How young were my boys when I moved them to a town, actually not even a town but a hamlet situated inside a town that would, within months, become the site of the largest primary school shooting in the country’s history?”
The false promise and double standard of integration in the Obama era.
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic 40min
The insanity of U.S. gun law.
Jill Lepore New Yorker 30min
Lessons learned about Washington from investigating how the “grand bargain” fell apart.
Hanging out with Barack Obama.
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair 55min
How a high-speed rail disaster exposed China’s corruption.
Evan Osnos New Yorker 30min
On August 13, 1986, Michael Morton came home from work to discover that his wife had been brutally murdered in their bed. His nightmare had only begun.
Pamela Colloff Texas Monthly 50min
During the 25 years that Michael Morton spent wrongfull imprisoned for murdering his wife, he kept three things in mind: Someday he would prove his innocence to their son. Someday he would find out who killed her. And someday he would understand how this had happened to him.
The miracle of the great Zanesville zoo escape—which began last fall when a depressed, desperate man named Terry Thompson set free his vast collection of exotic animals—was that not a single innocent person was hurt. The incident made global news. It also thrust into daylight, if only for a brief moment, a secret world of privately owned exotic animals living off the grid, and often right next door. We sent Chris Heath to Zanesville, Ohio, to find out where the wild things are—and what the hell they’re doing there.
Chris Heath GQ 45min
As a candidate, Barack Obama said we needed to reckon with race and with America’s original sin, slavery. But as our first black president, he has avoided mention of race almost entirely. In having to be “twice as good” and “half as black,” Obama reveals the false promise and double standard of integration.
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic 40min
In 2011 the Legislature slashed funding for women’s health programs and launched an all-out war on Planned Parenthood that has dramatically changed the state’s priorities. A year later, the battle is still raging, and the stakes could not be higher.
Mimi Swartz Texas Monthly 35min
As a candidate, Barack Obama said we needed to reckon with race and with America’s original sin, slavery. But as our first black president, he has avoided mention of race almost entirely. In having to be “twice as good” and “half as black,” Obama reveals the false promise and double standard of integration.
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic 40min
The real war on women is in the Middle East.
Mona Eltahawy Foreign Policy 10min
The era of medical miracles has created a new phase of aging, as far from living as it is from dying. A son’s plea to let his mother go.
Michael Wolff New York 25min
[Requires Subscription] What the dead don’t know piles up, though we don’t notice it at first.
Does success spell doom for Homo sapiens?
Charles C. Mann Orion 35min
A profile of MF Doom.
Ta-Nehisi Coates New Yorker Sep 2009 20min Permalink
“Until we reckon with our compounding moral debts, America will never be whole.”
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic May 2014 1h Permalink
“Peril is generational for black people in America—and incarceration is our current mechanism for ensuring that the peril continues.”
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic Sep 2015 1h20min Permalink
The audacity of Bill Cosby’s black conservatism.
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic May 2008 25min Permalink
How Black America talks to the White House.
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic Jan 2014 10min Permalink
The false promise and double standard of integration in the Obama era.
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic Sep 2012 40min Permalink
An essay on African-American fatherhood.
Ta-Nehisi Coates Washington Monthly Mar 2002 15min Permalink
What Kanye West really wants.
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic May 2018 20min Permalink
The writer on his father’s religious devotion to personal style.
On the talent, ego, and late father of Bryant Gumbel.
Rick Reilly Sports Illustrated Sep 1988 25min
“My father didn’t believe in things that were a reminder of the past because he had never had things in the past, and, more important, he had never had a past—not a past that mattered, that should be passed on to me, his son.”
Pat Jordan Men's Journal Dec 2009 20min
A melancholic Billy Ray Cyrus on the trauma of being the father of a famous 18-year-old girl, his friendship with Kurt Cobain, and his favorite mullet nicknames (Kentucky Waterfall and Missouri Compromise).
Chris Heath GQ Mar 2011 25min
An essay on African-American fatherhood.
Ta-Nehisi Coates Washington Monthly Mar 2002 15min
Dominick Dunne’s account of the trial of his daughter’s murderer.
Dominick Dunne Vanity Fair Mar 1984 1h
Swept out to sea by a riptide, a father and his 12-year-old autistic son struggle to stay alive. As night falls, the dad comes to a devastating realization: If they remain together, they’ll drown together.
Justin Heckert Men's Journal Nov 2009 25min
Mar 1984 – Mar 2011 Permalink
“We are invited to listen, but never to truly join the narrative, for to speak as the slave would, to say that we are as happy for the Civil War as most Americans are for the Revolutionary War, is to rupture the narrative.”
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic Nov 2011 15min Permalink
A history of the first African American White House—and of what came next.
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic Dec 2016 1h5min Permalink