podcast

Podcast recommendation, no. 3: Hot Corner.

I’m not podcasting, but if I were, Hot Corner, www.cornerhistories.com, would be a model.

Hot Corner is the historic commercial hub of Athens, Georgia’s African-American community. Much like the 500 block of Wilson’s East Nash Street, Hot Corner once buzzed day and night with Black-owned shops, restaurants, and entertainment venues. Over the span of six episodes, hosts Broderick Flanigan and Aleck Stephens explore Athens’ racial dividing lines and “what Black communities have built in the spaces between.” Find Hot Corner wherever you listen to podcasts.

Podcast recommendation, no. 2: Archive Atlanta.

I resisted podcasts for an unreasonably long time, as I better absorb information by reading rather than hearing. A few years ago though, when my father’s illness necessitated more frequent seven-hour drives between Wilson and Atlanta, I got with the times with the help of Victoria Lamos’ Archive Atlanta. (Which is — for my money — the gold standard in local history podcasts.)

A recent episode about Blandtown, a historic African-American community in what is now Atlanta, encapsulated everything there is to love about Archive Atlanta and made me wish I had the time, resources, and know-how to produce a Black Wide-Awake podcast. Maybe in time….

Anyway, nothing to do with Wilson, but I highly recommend this “weekly history podcast about the people, places, and events that shaped the city of Atlanta.” Find it wherever you listen to podcasts.