Ryder Strong
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
This is Ryder Strong, and I have a new podcast called The Red Weather.
In 1995, my neighbor and a trainer disappeared from a commune.
And back then, I lied to my parents.
I've decided to go back to my hometown in Northern California, interview my friends, family, talk to police, journalists, whomever I can, to try to find out what actually happened.
Listen to The Red Weather on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Each week, we're bringing you true crime through a legal lens.
And we're not just lawyers, we're also husband and wife.
It makes for some pretty entertaining episodes.
And now it's March 15th and Lyndon Johnson is speaking on the TV.
He condemns the actions of Bloody Sunday and demands equal rights for millions of oppressed Americans.
Dr. King has returned to Salem and is happy to hear about the president's newly announced civil rights bill.
But Dr. King knows that this isn't the end.
What the president says is one thing, but they need the local government to follow orders.
John and Hosea suggest marching again, but Dr. King is wary about pushing it too far.
But he admits that this is the moment to maintain their commitment to nonviolence.
And yet downtown, there are still marches and celebrations being monitored and discouraged by the police.
The city has set up a barricade they're calling the wall that no black people can go beyond.
Tension is rising, and back home, Cheyenne asks Reverend Jonathan if he's going down there to the wall to protest.