Not for the first time,Pinoy Archives ABC's black-ishasked the difficult and direct political question on everyone's minds. "At the end of the day, no one wants to be on the losing side of an upset, but what happens when the winners and the losers are supposed to be on the same team?"
In Season 3 episode 12, black-ishdidn't talk around the irreconcilable difficulties of a Trump presidency for a Black family. The kids find solace in learning about Black leaders and literally making lemonade. Dre's (Anthony Anderson) workplace becomes overrun after the election as the employees work endlessly to figure out why and how this happened.
Dre and his colleagues try to lay blame for Trump's presidency. They speak openly about who they voted for and why, about what one employee saw in Trump and about the mountain of problems with him as a person. It was all-too familiar for many Americans who have struggled since the election, and resonated deeply with audiences as a result:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The episode is streaming on Hulu now.
Topics Donald Trump
Previous:Brown Existence Anxiety
Next:Whitewash
We Picked the Wrong Side by Neel PatelPoets on Couches: Reading Max Jacob by Suzanne Buffam and Srikanth ReddyA Letter to the Professor Whose Name I Carry by Malcolm TariqAn Open Letter to All the Future Mayors of Chicago by Laurence RalphMore Than Just a Lesbian Love Story by Lucy ScholesWhat’s the Use of Being a Boy: An Interview with Douglas A. Martin by Spencer QuongOn Horseback by Nell PainterStaff Picks: Cardboard Cities, Choral Singing, and CrossStaff Picks: Brownstones, Ballpoint, and Belonging by The Paris ReviewAmerican, Indian by Jaswinder BolinaOn Translationese by Masatsugu OnoAn Open Letter to All the Future Mayors of Chicago by Laurence RalphStaff Picks: Dictators, Deep Souls, and Doom by The Paris ReviewRedux: In the Latter Days by The Paris ReviewThe Art of Distance No. 12 by The Paris ReviewThe Wicked Candor of Wanda Coleman by Terrance HayesAn NDN Boyhood by BillyWhat Our Contributors Are Reading This Summer by The Paris ReviewThe Art of Distance No. 13 by The Paris ReviewStaff Picks: Gabbert, Guzzler, and Greene by The Paris Review The 'Friends' cast finally reunited for a sweet selfie: Photo The internet bands together to help Chrissy Teigen get Fun Dip off her hands States that made the switch to Indigenous Peoples' Day this year Indian Railways finds a way to make money off Uber, Ola cabs Full Tesla memory cards aren't bricking older cars, but you'd better replace them Harvard Book Store trolls the Trump administration with its new section This cosplayer might be the most convincing Taylor Swift lookalike yet Disney's back catalog is coming to Disney+. Here are all the titles. Apple's iPhone SE 2 might cost $399 and come in early 2020 Kids absolutely lose it over football hero in this sweet video Irish man hilariously pranks his family at his own funeral Pope unwittingly tweets support for NFL team and look, it was bound to happen 9 photos that show Typhoon Hagibis' destruction Beyoncé fans are still in shock after that Grammys result Support for Facebook's cryptocurrency is already falling apart Tinder's in Coinbase CEO calls Libra scrutiny 'un Donald Trump's inauguration poster has an embarrassing typo Gordon Ramsay delivers Twitter food reviews with classic brutality Scooter rental companies are at the mercy of cities
1.1872s , 10106.4140625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Pinoy Archives】,Miracle Information Network