2021
August
05
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 05, 2021
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

I have never been mistaken for a foodie. The seven Olympic Games I covered involved more meals at McDonald’s than I would care to admit. So Tyler Bey’s story in today’s issue on a television show about food was not likely to spark my interest.

And yet it did.

Why? Because in his story, Tyler remarked how the Black American cuisine featured in “High on the Hog” has a unique ability to connect – how it can connect the fractured and fractious history of the United States or two people across a dinner table. “We need a lot of connection in the world today,” one of his sources told him.

Today’s Daily is all about connection, in a way. We look at how the U.S. can find connection in talking about the pandemic, building credibility, transparency, and trust. We ask how the world can find connection to people in places like Lebanon and Myanmar, remembering the need for progress even when the media spotlight turns away. And we tell the story of refugees finding a sense of connection and home at the Olympics.

All these stories are a thread about the power of connection. Says one refugee Olympian: “That’s why we really feel like we are a family.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Patterns

Tracing global connections
Vincent Thian/AP
Sanda Aldass (right) of the Refugee Olympic Team and Marica Perisic of Serbia compete during their women's 57-kilogram elimination round of the judo match at the Summer Olympics in Tokyo July 26, 2021. Ms. Aldass fled the Syrian civil war in 2015.

Television

Courtesy of Netflix
Jessica Harris and Stephen Satterfield are shown in the first episode of “High on the Hog: How African American Cuisine Transformed America.” The show emphasizes the role of Black ingenuity in many American dishes.

The Monitor's View

Ramil Nasibulin/BelTA/Handout via REUTERS
Belarusian opposition politician Maria Kolesnikova attends a court hearing in Minsk, Belarus, August 4.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Andrew Boyers/Reuters
Damian Warner of Canada looks on after finishing the decathlon 1,500-meter race at the Summer Olympics in Tokyo on Aug. 5, 2021. Finishing with 9,018 points, Mr. Warner is the first to pass 9,000 at the Olympics and the fourth man to do so in competition. The decathlon (for men) and heptathlon (for women) have long been regarded as tests of the "world's greatest athletes."
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when we look at how wildfire prevention has remained a bipartisan issue even amid political polarization. If there’s a silver lining to this year’s catastrophic fires, it might be that Republicans and Democrats in western states are showing willingness to work together to pass wildfire-related legislation.

More issues

2021
August
05
Thursday
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