BBT #12 Snippet | Why Is Everyone Talking About Chicago? episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 13, 2026 · 4 MIN

BBT #12 Snippet | Why Is Everyone Talking About Chicago?

from Black Box Theory Podcast · host Black Box Theory

Chicago gets named in every crime conversation. Politicians use it. Cable news runs the same B-roll. Social media turns it into a punchline. But when you actually look at the per-capita murder rates — St. Louis, Baltimore, Memphis, New Orleans, Birmingham all rank higher. Chicago isn't the most dangerous city in America. It's just the most useful one to talk about.Malcolm and Thomas break down why Chicago stays at the center of the crime narrative while cities with worse numbers stay out of the headline — the racial coding baked into crime reporting, the gaps in how law enforcement resources get allocated based on who lives in a neighborhood, and why the selective outrage around one city's statistics is not an accident. When data is weaponized instead of analyzed, someone is always choosing which data to use. The question is who, and why.⏱️  Timestamps00:00 — The Chicago narrative: why one city carries the weight of every crime conversation — and what the actual numbers say📊 By the Numbers- Chicago's per-capita murder rate ranks below St. Louis, Baltimore, New Orleans, Memphis, and Birmingham — cities that receive a fraction of Chicago's national media coverage (CDC/FBI Uniform Crime Report, 2025)- St. Louis has consistently ranked as the most dangerous large city in the US by per-capita homicide rate for multiple consecutive years (FBI UCR, 2024–2025)- Law enforcement response time averages 11 minutes in predominantly Black neighborhoods vs. 7 minutes in predominantly white neighborhoods in the same cities (ACLU Policing Equity Report, 2024)- Cable news mentions of "Chicago crime": 3x higher than comparable coverage of St. Louis and Baltimore combined, despite lower per-capita rates (Media Matters analysis, 2025)—📦 Black Box Theory breaks down tech, investing, and corporate culture for early-career professionals. New episodes every week.🎧 Listen everywhere:SpotifyApple PodcastsAmazon MusiciHeartRadioDeezer📲 Follow us:InstagramTikTokYouTube📩 Partnerships & Inquiries: [email protected]⚠️ Disclaimer: We are not financial advisors, tax professionals, or legal experts. All content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Always do your own research and consult qualified professionals before making financial decisions.#BlackBoxTheory #Chicago #CrimeNarrative #MediaBias #SelectiveOutrage #RacialDisparities #CrimeStatistics #BlackProfessionals #podcast #youngprofessionals #PropagandaMachine #MalcolmAndThomas #BlackPodcast #PodcastClip #SystemicRacism

Chicago gets named in every crime conversation. Politicians use it. Cable news runs the same B-roll. Social media turns it into a punchline. But when you actually look at the per-capita murder rates — St. Louis, Baltimore, Memphis, New Orleans, Birmingham all rank higher. Chicago isn't the most dangerous city in America. It's just the most useful one to talk about.Malcolm and Thomas break down why Chicago stays at the center of the crime narrative while cities with worse numbers stay out of the headline — the racial coding baked into crime reporting, the gaps in how law enforcement resources get allocated based on who lives in a neighborhood, and why the selective outrage around one city's statistics is not an accident. When data is weaponized instead of analyzed, someone is always choosing which data to use. The question is who, and why.⏱️  Timestamps00:00 — The Chicago narrative: why one city carries the weight of every crime conversation — and what the actual numbers say📊 By the Numbers- Chicago's per-capita murder rate ranks below St. Louis, Baltimore, New Orleans, Memphis, and Birmingham — cities that receive a fraction of Chicago's national media coverage (CDC/FBI Uniform Crime Report, 2025)- St. Louis has consistently ranked as the most dangerous large city in the US by per-capita homicide rate for multiple consecutive years (FBI UCR, 2024–2025)- Law enforcement response time averages 11 minutes in predominantly Black neighborhoods vs. 7 minutes in predominantly white neighborhoods in the same cities (ACLU Policing Equity Report, 2024)- Cable news mentions of "Chicago crime": 3x higher than comparable coverage of St. Louis and Baltimore combined, despite lower per-capita rates (Media Matters analysis, 2025)—📦 Black Box Theory breaks down tech, investing, and corporate culture for early-career professionals. New episodes every week.🎧 Listen everywhere:SpotifyApple PodcastsAmazon MusiciHeartRadioDeezer📲 Follow us:InstagramTikTokYouTube📩 Partnerships & Inquiries: [email protected]⚠️ Disclaimer: We are not financial advisors, tax professionals, or legal experts. All content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Always do your own research and consult qualified professionals before making financial decisions.#BlackBoxTheory #Chicago #CrimeNarrative #MediaBias #SelectiveOutrage #RacialDisparities #CrimeStatistics #BlackProfessionals #podcast #youngprofessionals #PropagandaMachine #MalcolmAndThomas #BlackPodcast #PodcastClip #SystemicRacism

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BBT #12 Snippet | Why Is Everyone Talking About Chicago?

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This episode is 4 minutes long.

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This episode was published on April 13, 2026.

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Chicago gets named in every crime conversation. Politicians use it. Cable news runs the same B-roll. Social media turns it into a punchline. But when you actually look at the per-capita murder rates — St. Louis, Baltimore, Memphis, New Orleans,...

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