Why Can’t Taylor Swift Take A Joke?
Taylor Swift can’t take a joke, comedy was so much better when it wasn’t woke, a NYC musician throws a joint baby shower for all five women he got pregnant, […]
play_arrow
play_arrow
Deebo & Joe – Browns fall to Bears, Mahomes tears ACL, Bengals ELIMINATED! Steelers-Dolphins preview podcast
play_arrow
Morning Maddhouse: Monday Maddhouse ReCap (12/15/25) podcast
play_arrow
play_arrow
Ep: 458-The Power of being Adaptable: Shedeur Sanders podcast
play_arrow
Black Entrepreneur Blueprint 600 – Jay Jones – Three Simple Lead Magnets That Convert podcast
play_arrow
play_arrow
play_arrow
play_arrow
Aye Bo, You Good???? podcast
For decades, Evangelicals have propped up Republican presidents. And while church attendance has fallen across the board, Evangelicals are still making waves politically; they just helped deliver Trump a historic win in the Iowa caucus. But the political bent of Evangelicals begs for closer inspection because white Americans who align with Trump are more likely to start identifying as Evangelical, even if some of them no longer sit up in the pews. NPR Political Correspondent Sarah McCammon joins the show to dig into host Brittany Luse’s question: are Evangelicals now a religious group or a political one?
Then, after calls for a ceasefire interrupted President Biden’s speech at Mother Emanuel AME Church, many people denounced the protest saying that it was not the right time or place. But Brittany wonders; if not there, then where? She sits down with Dr. Anthea Butler, religious scholar and chair of the department of Religious Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, to dive into the roots of political activism within the Black church. They also look at the complicated relationship between Democrats and the Black church.
Taylor Swift can’t take a joke, comedy was so much better when it wasn’t woke, a NYC musician throws a joint baby shower for all five women he got pregnant, […]
Copyright Blackpodcasting 2025