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Notes from America with Kai Wright

Kai Wright Presents Blindspot Episode 1: Mourning In America

Notes from America with Kai Wright

WNYC Studios

News Commentary, Politics, History, News

4.41.5K Ratings

🗓️ 2 February 2024

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Valerie Reyes-Jimenez called it “The Monster.” That’s how some people described HIV and AIDS in the 1980s. Valerie thinks as many as 75 people from her block on New York City’s Lower East Side died. They were succumbing to an illness that was not recognized as the same virus that was killing young, white, gay men just across town in the West Village.

At the same time, in Washington, D.C., Gil Gerald, a Black LGBTQ+ activist, saw his own friends and colleagues begin to disappear, dying out of sight and largely ignored by the wider world.

In the first episode of Blindspot: The Plague in the Shadows, host Kai Wright shares how HIV and AIDS was misunderstood from the start — and how this would shape the reactions of governments, the medical establishment and numerous communities for years to come.

Listen to more episodes and subscribe to Blindspot here.

Voices in this episode include:

Valerie Reyes-Jimenez is an HIV-positive woman, activist, and organizer with Housing Works. She saw the AIDS crisis develop from a nameless monster into a pandemic from her home on New York City’s Lower East Side.Dr. Larry Altman was one of the first full-fledged medical doctors to work as a daily newspaper reporter. He started at The New York Times in 1969.Dr. Anthony Fauci was director of the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease from 1984 to 2022. Known most recently for his work on Covid-19, Dr. Fauci was also a leading figure in the fight against HIV and AIDS.Gil Gerald is a Black HIV and AIDS activist and writer, who co-founded the National Coalition of Black Lesbians and Gays.Phill Wilson is the founder of the Black AIDS Institute, AIDS policy director for the city of Los Angeles at the height of the epidemic, and a celebrated AIDS activist in both the LGBTQ+ and Black communities since the early 1980s.Dr. Margaret Heagarty ran the pediatrics department of Harlem Hospital Center for 22 years. She died in December 2022.

Blindspot is a co-production of The HISTORY® Channel and WNYC Studios, in collaboration with The Nation Magazine.

A companion photography exhibit by Kia LaBeija featuring portraits from the series is on view through March 11 at The Greene Space at WNYC. Photography by Kia LaBeija is supported in part by the Economic Hardship Reporting Project.

Tell us what you think. Email us at [email protected]. Send us a voice message by recording yourself on your phone and emailing us, or record one here. We’re also on Instagram and X (Twitter) @noteswithkai.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey everybody it's Kai and as I'm sharing something really special with you all month here on our

0:15.6

Notes from America Podcast. These are episodes from the latest season of Blind Spot.

0:21.1

It's called The Plague in the Shadows and yours truly is your guide through a

0:26.0

reported series about the early days of an epidemic that is still very much with us.

0:32.0

Right now I invite you to listen to the first episode

0:35.2

of that series, and you know me,

0:37.4

I always want to hear what you think,

0:39.3

or how what you've heard relates to

0:42.2

or widens your worldview.

0:43.7

So check the show notes for ways to get in touch with me

0:47.6

after you have listened.

0:49.5

Here's the first episode of Blind Spot.

0:56.0

Hi!

1:04.0

Valerie Reyes-Menez remembers how it all started. Or at least when they first started to notice it.

1:08.0

We said that people had the monster because they had that look.

1:12.0

They had the sucked in cheeks. They were really thin.

1:14.8

A lot of folks were saying, oh, you know, they had liver cancer, you know, they had cancer, that's what they died from.

1:22.0

Because you couldn't name it yet. cancer that's what they died from.

1:22.8

Because you couldn't name it yet.

1:25.9

You called it the monster, or grid,

1:28.3

or in another part of town, maybe the gay plague. Mostly, you avoided talking about it at all until you just

1:38.5

couldn't anymore. People just started like disappearing like one day they were there and the next day they were gone.

...

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