
The Brian Lehrer Show Summer Friday: AI & Education; 1963; 100 Years of Flying; Helping Hands
Aug 29, 2025
Hua Hsu, a New Yorker staff writer and Bard College professor, discusses the repercussions of AI like ChatGPT on college writing and student learning. Jessica Gould, an education reporter, shares insights on the collaboration between Big Tech and teachers' unions for AI training in NYC schools. Peniel Joseph examines the crucial events of 1963 and their influence on civil rights. Bob van der Linden reflects on a century of aviation, while listeners share personal stories of unexpected acts of kindness that shaped their lives.
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Episode notes
1963 Launched A Long Progress Arc
- Peniel Joseph argues 1963 created a decades-long racial progress arc that lasted until Shelby v. Holder in 2013.
- He connects 1963's reforms to expanded opportunity across education, wealth, and political representation.
Baldwin Shaped 1963's Moral Frame
- Joseph centers James Baldwin's moral leadership in 1963, citing The Fire Next Time and public interventions.
- Baldwin framed America's racial crisis as a universal moral failing demanding a national reckoning.
Protests Forced Presidential Action
- Joseph says 1963's mass demonstrations created leverage that pushed presidential rhetoric and policy shifts.
- He traces how protests compelled JFK and later LBJ to publicly reframe civil rights as central to American democracy.











