Media News

Former WSJ staffer Hawkins launches 10-part podcast

May 14, 2024

Posted by Chris Roush

Lee Hawkins

APM Studios and award-winning journalist Lee Hawkins are launching “What Happened in Alabama?,” a limited series podcast about the intergenerational ripple effect of Jim Crow segregation on Lee’s family dating back to the 1600s.

The 10-part series premieres on Wednesday. Listeners can subscribe now and listen to the trailer on Apple PodcastsSpotify and all podcast platforms.

“I was a small kid when I started hearing my father’s frequent nightmares in the middle of the night,” said Hawkins. “When I mustered the courage to ask him what he was dreaming about, ‘Alabama, son. Alabama,’ was his only answer. This podcast and my forthcoming book are the result of several years of my work – with my dad’s help – to investigate 400 years of family history, to finally uncover the answer. My probe into my family’s history under slavery and Jim Crow helped me understand my father, my family, and my country.”

In “What Happened in Alabama?,” Hawkins turns to interviews with his Alabama-born father and other elders, newspaper and governmental archives, and DNA testing for answers about why he was raised with a balance of unwavering love and belt whippings.

The podcast is born out of personal experiences of intergenerational trauma, and the impacts of Jim Crow that exist beyond what we understand about segregation.

Through intimate stories of his family, coupled with conversations with experts on the Black American experience, Hawkins unpacks his family history and upbringing, his father’s painful nightmares and past, and goes deep into discussions to understand those who may have had similar generational — and present day — experiences. “What Happened In Alabama?” is a series to break the cycles of injustice and trauma for Lee, for his family, and for Black America.

Hawkins is the author of the forthcoming book, “Nobody’s Slave: How Uncovering My Family’s History Set Me Free” (HarperCollins 2025). He was previously a reporter for the Wall Street Journal for 19 years.

He’s  a 2023-24 Fellow at The Carter Center for Mental Health Journalism, and an Alicia Patterson Foundation Fellow. He is a five-time winner of NABJ’s “Salute to Excellence” Award, and was a finalist for the Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business Reporting.

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