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The Promise

Nashville Public Radio

A Peabody Award-winning series from Nashville Public Radio about inequality and the people trying to rise above it, with host and reporter Meribah Knight. In Season 1 of The Promise, we told the story of Nashville's largest public housing complex, smack in the middle of a city on the rise. In Season 2, we explore how that divide reveals itself in the classroom. One neighborhood, two schools — one black and poor, the other white and well-off, and the kids stuck in the middle.

2018 Nashville Public Radio

A Peabody Award-winning series from Nashville Public Radio about inequality and the people trying to rise above it, with host and reporter Meribah Knight. In Season 1 of The Promise, we told the story of Nashville's largest public housing complex, smack in the middle of a city on the rise. In Season 2, we explore how that divide reveals itself in the classroom. One neighborhood, two schools — one black and poor, the other white and well-off, and the kids stuck in the middle.

2018 Nashville Public Radio
12hr 17min
Thumbnail for "Coming Soon: The Promise".
Here's a preview of the new special six-part series from Nashville Public Radio, where we take you inside Nashville's oldest and largest public housing project.
Thumbnail for "WPLN News & NPR's Embedded present: "Supermajority"".
A new 4-part series by Meribah Knight
Thumbnail for "Preview: "Making Noise" from WPLN and WNXP".
A new podcast from Nashville Public Radio
Thumbnail for "Bonus: How one police chief struggled to change the system".
Exclusive interview from The Kids of Rutherford County
Thumbnail for "Dedicated Public Servants | The Kids of Rutherford County".
The lawsuit against Rutherford County comes to an end, but the hard part is getting everybody paid.
Thumbnail for "Bonus: Rutherford County is not alone. This youth detention center superintendent in Knoxville illegally locks kids alone in cells.".
Juvenile injustice in Tennessee
Thumbnail for "Bonus: Behind the music of The Kids of Rutherford County".
Meribah Knight discusses the musical scoring for The Kids of Rutherford County
Thumbnail for "Would You Like to Sue the Government? | The Kids of Rutherford County".
Wes Clark reads a telling line in a police report that comes to reveal how Rutherford County’s juvenile justice system really works.
Thumbnail for "What the Hell Are You People Doing? | The Kids of Rutherford County".
A young lawyer named Wes Clark can’t get the Rutherford County juvenile court to let his clients out of detention— even when the law says they shouldn’t have been held in the first place.
Thumbnail for "Bonus: Locked up and treated ‘like I’m a dog'".
A bonus interview from The Kids of Rutherford County
Thumbnail for "The Egregious Video | The Kids of Rutherford County".
11 kids in Rutherford County, TN are arrested for watching a fight. The arrests do not go smoothly.
Thumbnail for "Coming Soon: The Kids of Rutherford County".
A new series by The New York Times and Serial Productions in partnership with ProPublica and Nashville Public Radio.
Thumbnail for "Coming Soon: Behind The Blue Wall".
In WPLN News' latest investigation, we'll holds up a mirror to see how officers treat their own. Episodes drop Sept. 29.
Thumbnail for "Part 1: A Change is Gonna Come".
At 61 years old, Vernell McHenry is like the grandmother of her corner of the James Cayce Homes.
Thumbnail for "Part 2: A Beautiful Day In The Projects".
A husband, a father, a community leader, a showman — Big Man is a name everyone knows here. We follow him one afternoon as plans for a family barbecue are upended by a fatal shooting outside his apartment.
Thumbnail for "Part 3: The People And The Police".
The relationship between James Cayce residents and Nashville police is a tenuous one. In this episode, we explore two defining moments in Cayce: A viral cell phone video of a police officer being assaulted, and the most controversial police shooting in the city’s recent history. Both were caught on camera. And both reveal the strain between the people who live in Cayce and the people who patrol it.
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This is a story about the assumptions we all make. And the secrets we keep. With WPLN reporter Meribah Knight as the go-between, Big Man, a public housing resident from the Cayce Homes, walks across the street to meet the wealthy couple who live in the fancy new home on the hill.  In many ways, their lives couldn’t be more different, but in breaking the silence between the two sides of the gentrifying neighborhood, a friendship begins to form — only to be dashed in a way no one could have expected.
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There is a saying in Nashville’s James Cayce Homes: “Get some gone.” Three simple words that describe the urge, the mission, to move out, to get away from the city’s oldest public housing project.
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Does this big idea to have low-income and higher income people living side-by-side really make a community better, safer, healthier?
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We return to the James Cayce Homes to follow up with residents amid the $600 million overhaul. But in checking back, we trip into some news.
Thumbnail for "Bonus 2: The Big Man Interview".
If you've listened to The Promise, you no doubt remember Big Man. Meribah Knight interviews him live on stage.
Thumbnail for "Update: Letting Go".
Ms. Vernell has another big decision to make: to stay in Cayce through the chaos of redevelopment, or to leave? Her conclusion reveals something about this long, messy process to overhaul Nashville’s public housing.
Thumbnail for "Season 2 Coming Soon".
This is a story about one school trying to stay afloat, a neighborhood divided over race and economics, and a city that’s resisted school desegregation every step of the way.
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It’s the start of the 2019 school year, and two elementary schools in Nashville are about to be at the center of a neighborhood battle over the resegregation of schools.
Thumbnail for "The Nashville Way".
In this episode, we’re going back to the early days of this battle for racial equity in the classroom, to the time not that long ago when school desegregation literally blew this city apart.
Thumbnail for "The Unraveling".
After 43 years of courtroom battles, Nashville's landmark school desegregation lawsuit was settled.  In the eyes of the law, the city finally made an honest effort to racially integrate its schools. But in truth, the matter was far from settled.
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In a neighborhood with tons of Black families, Willie Sims’ daughter was the only Black child in the kindergarten class of one East Nashville elementary school. Then he started hearing murmurings from other families, white families. They were mobilizing against resegregation. Did he want in?
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Warner Elementary is about to turn itself around. It finally has all the right tools to be successful — an infusion of cash, an energetic principal. But will white families choose to send their children there?
Thumbnail for "A Reckoning".
Last fall, parents from Lockeland Elementary met to talk about the elephant in the room: Their school was now the whitest school in the entire district. But not that long ago, an idea was floated that could have changed the makeup of Lockeland’s student body — and it did not go well.
Thumbnail for "The Recruitment Divide".
There was a time when the decision of where to send your child to school was relatively simple: public or private. Now, those choices have multiplied — and the resulting system of school choice hasn't solved the inequalities at play.
Thumbnail for "The Final Exam".
It’s February 2020, and Warner Elementary is rising from one of the lowest performing schools in Tennessee to one of the best. But we all know what happens next. And at a school with mostly low-income students, the challenges of a global pandemic hit especially hard.

WPLN News & NPR's Embedded present: "Supermajority"

Thumbnail for "WPLN News & NPR's Embedded present: "Supermajority"".
June 17, 20243min 2sec

Supermajority is a new podcast from NPR’s Embedded, in partnership with WPLN News, exploring what happens when one political party has near-complete control. In this four-episode series, hosted by Meribah Knight, we follow the story of three conservative women challenging their own party.

As Americans focus on national politics this election year, NPR's Embedded takes an up-close look at one state – Tennessee – where Republicans hold a powerful majority. We ask: What does that power mean to lawmakers, who are the constituents pushing back, and what might it all reveal about the fragility of our democracy?