
Michael Harriot joins Geoff Bennett on 'Settle In'
Clip: 2/26/2026 | 5m 55sVideo has Closed Captions
Michael Harriot and Geoff Bennett rethink Black history on 'Settle In'
This month marks 100 years since Americans first held the celebration that would eventually become Black History Month. On our video podcast "Settle In," Geoff Bennett commemorated this anniversary with the award-winning journalist and writer Michael Harriot. His most recent book, “Black AF History,” frames Black history not as a counter-narrative, but as the narrative of American history.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Major corporate funding for the PBS News Hour is provided by BDO, BNSF, Consumer Cellular, American Cruise Lines, and Raymond James. Funding for the PBS NewsHour Weekend is provided by...

Michael Harriot joins Geoff Bennett on 'Settle In'
Clip: 2/26/2026 | 5m 55sVideo has Closed Captions
This month marks 100 years since Americans first held the celebration that would eventually become Black History Month. On our video podcast "Settle In," Geoff Bennett commemorated this anniversary with the award-winning journalist and writer Michael Harriot. His most recent book, “Black AF History,” frames Black history not as a counter-narrative, but as the narrative of American history.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch PBS News Hour
PBS News Hour is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipGEOFF BENNETT: This month marks 100 years since## Americans first celebrated what would# eventually become Black History Month.
On our video podcast, "Settle In," we# marked the centennial with award-winning## journalist and writer Michael Harriot.
We# talked about the ongoing fight over how## history is taught and his bestselling book# "Black AF History," which argues that Black## history isn't a counternarrative to the# American story, but the narrative itself.
Here's part of that conversation.
There's so much reverence around America's# founding story, and your take on Jamestown## stands out because it was so irreverent and# biting and you portray the English settlers## not as these heroic figures, but as these sort# of bumbling founders.
Tell me more about that.
MICHAEL HARRIOT, Author, "Black AF History: The# Un-Whitewashed Story of America": Yes, well, first## of all, like, of the 109 people who came here,# .. other.
They starved to death because they ate all# their provisions.
They didn't know how to plan.
They thought they could, like, climb in the# tree and see the Pacific Ocean.
Remember,## these were investors.
People came# here to make money.
They weren't## people who explored other nations.
And they# perished because of their incompetence.
And that reframing objectively, right, instead# of a mythology of these rugged individualists who## came here looking for freedom, we know that that's# not what they came here for.
And to tell that## truth, not just through the eyes of Black people,# but through an objective lens, is important.
GEOFF BENNETT: And then there's what transpired# in 1619, which gets a lot of attention now## because of the book.
But you look at this not# as a symbolic moment, but as a structural one,## the point at which the American colonies# became viable because of slave labor.
MICHAEL HARRIOT: And even the term# slave labor insinuates that it was## like the muscles and the brawn and the# hard work of those enslaved people.
But it is important to understand the# intellectual capacities of these people,## the intellectual know-how, the skills that# they brought to this country really kind## of made America a viable proposition# for the investors in Europe, right?
They didn't have an edible cash crop# until the enslaved people in South## Carolina started growing rice, and that# rice-growing culture, through language,## through the ability to eat and through the# average life expectancy that created this country,## and not this idea of like white people came here# and worked hard and made this country what it was.
GEOFF BENNETT: How do you respond to# people who might suggest that your take## on this is in some way controversial# or in some way revisionist history?
MICHAEL HARRIOT: Well, so, if I'm being honest,# I fortunately haven't kind of encountered that,## because no one has ever argued about the# contents of the actual history in this book.
The only argument against it is, well, why do# you have to bring up that version of history?## Don't you think that is divisive?
And I always# wonder, what part of the truth is divisive, right?## What part of recognizing everyone's humanity and# telling everyone's side of the story is divisive?
For most Black children in America, we have been# educated to revere men who are white supremacists.## We have been educated to respect men who saw us# as less than human.
And to tell those children,## to give those children a story about# their past that shows their humanity,## that shows that they are worthy of respect, that# shows that their parents and their grandparents## and their great-grandparents did great things and# contributed to this country is important to me.
And I don't think it's divisive.
And# I think that we can respect all of it,## right?
There's never been one side arguing that# we shouldn't revere Thomas Jefferson or think## that he is a founding father.
We are saying that# you should contextualize everything that he did.
And if you choose to respect the# documents and the stuff that he wrote,## rather than the stuff that he# did, that is perfectly fine.## But don't hide the stuff that he did and say the# stuff that he wrote is all that we should know.
GEOFF BENNETT: If there's a chapter in# this book that you could lift out and have## included in every history book in this country# that schoolkids are given, what would it be?
MICHAEL HARRIOT: Oh, that's a great question.
I think the chapter on Reconstruction and the# idea that it was the Black American revolution,## right?
And what I did is kind of mirror the# ideas of the American Revolution and saying,## like, this was Black people's chance.# There were founding fathers.
There was## a Constitution with ideals.
I think that's one.
And then there's an excerpt on the Stono# Rebellion, which kind of is the genesis## of the treatment of Black people, formed# our slave laws, formed the slave codes,## it formed the Black Codes after 1865.
And# it reached into Reconstruction and until## the civil rights movement.
I think that's# one of the things that we should understand.
GEOFF BENNETT: You can watch# that full episode of "Settle## In" and others on our YouTube page# or wherever you get your podcasts.
Actor Rose Byrne on her Oscar-nominated performance
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 2/26/2026 | 7m 9s | Rose Byrne on her Oscar-nominated performance as an unraveling mother (7m 9s)
Mideast experts on U.S.-Iran talks and potential for war
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 2/26/2026 | 7m 31s | Mideast experts on U.S.-Iran negotiations and potential for war (7m 31s)
News Wrap: 2 U.S. citizens involved in Cuba boat shooting
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 2/26/2026 | 6m 12s | News Wrap: 2 involved in Cuba speedboat shooting were U.S. citizens, official says (6m 12s)
Trump halts Minnesota Medicaid funds over fraud allegations
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 2/26/2026 | 5m 35s | Trump administration halts Minnesota Medicaid funds over fraud allegations (5m 35s)
U.S.-Iran talks end without deal, mediator reports progress
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 2/26/2026 | 4m 4s | No deal reached as U.S.-Iran talks conclude, but mediator says progress made (4m 4s)
What happened during Hillary Clinton's deposition on Epstein
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 2/26/2026 | 6m 24s | What happened during Hillary Clinton's closed-door deposition on Jeffrey Epstein (6m 24s)
Whistleblower warns ICE has slashed training for recruits
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: 2/26/2026 | 8m 24s | Whistleblower warns ICE has slashed training for recruits (8m 24s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship
- News and Public Affairs

FRONTLINE is investigative journalism that questions, explains and changes our world.

- News and Public Affairs

Amanpour and Company features conversations with leaders and decision makers.












Support for PBS provided by:
Major corporate funding for the PBS News Hour is provided by BDO, BNSF, Consumer Cellular, American Cruise Lines, and Raymond James. Funding for the PBS NewsHour Weekend is provided by...







