An identity crisis at the heart of the election; plus, disrupting biracial fantasies

a statue of a farmer and his daughter depicted from Grant Wood

Following the false allegations against the Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, the city received over 30 bomb threats, saw school closures and even the cancellation of a celebration for diversity in arts and culture. Host Brittany Luse talks to NPR Immigration correspondent Jasmine Garsd about what she’s learned from her reporting in the region and how all this could tie into a larger Midwest identity crisis.

Then, Brittany is joined by Danzy Senna, author of Colored Television, to talk about how she’s seen biracial representation change over the last three decades, and what it means to be in the “Not Like Us” era. They dig into her latest novel and its perspective on racial profiteering.

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Author: Brittany Luse

‘Megalopolis’ is a sprawling megalopo-mess

Adam Driver in <em>Megalopolis. </em>

Francis Ford Coppola, the legendary filmmaker behind The Godfather trilogy and Apocalypse Now, is back with his first new film in over a decade. It reimagines the fall of Rome through a futuristic American city, and has a lot of big and messy ideas about time and the fate of humanity. It’s also jam-packed with stars like Adam Driver, Giancarlo Esposito, and Aubrey Plaza. We try to make sense of it all.

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Author: Aisha Harris

‘His Three Daughters’ puts three acting dynamos in one apartment

Natasha Lyonne in <em>His Three Daughters. </em>

Elizabeth Olsen, Carrie Coon, and Natasha Lyonne are often the best thing about their projects, and they’re all together in the moving new Netflix film His Three Daughters. They play three sisters who are odds with one another, but must gather in their father’s apartment when he’s dying. As his illness progresses, their own sibling relationships are tested.

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Author: Linda Holmes