
This Day Starbucks Fixes Racism [2025 Favorite]
Dec 21, 2025
In a quirky retrospective, the hosts dive into Starbucks' short-lived 'Race Together' campaign from 2015, contextualizing it against the backdrop of the Obama era. They discuss the failures of the initiative, including untrained baristas and a meme backlash that mocked the effort. The conversation highlights the romantic notion of coffee shops as civic spaces versus the harsh realities of corporate practices. Finally, they reflect on the irony of corporate DEI initiatives often falling short of meaningful economic change, revealing the limits of corporate goodwill.
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Corporate Optimism Meets Structural Problems
- The Race Together campaign reflected early Obama-era faith that corporate-led conversations could address deep social problems.
- That optimism collided with rising awareness of structural racism and growing skepticism of corporate solutions.
Coffee Runs Aren’t Conversation Hubs
- Kellie Carter Jackson recalls personal impatience with long racial conversations during quick coffee runs.
- She says people often visit Starbucks for expediency, not deep public dialogues about systemic racism.
Conscientious Capitalism’s Limits
- Conscientious capitalism framed corporations as able to 'do good and make money' and shaped Starbucks' ambitions.
- The episode notes that public pushback began to erode that glow and reveal corporate limits.
