Course & Discourse Newsletter #3

Welcome to the third edition of the Course & Discourse Newsletter. At Course & Discourse we believe the best conversations happen over a shared meal in a comfortable space. Each event pairs a thoughtfully prepared meal with curated discussion, drawing from current events, big ideas, lived experiences, and beyond.

3/24/2026

Flat lay of gourmet dishes including risotto, salad, and appetizers served on a marble countertop.
Flat lay of gourmet dishes including risotto, salad, and appetizers served on a marble countertop.

Black, and White, and Grey All Over: Nuance in a Polarized World

This month's discussion explored polarization and the challenge of navigating an increasingly fragmented media landscape. Around the table, journalists, readers, and podcast listeners alike reflected on how they engage with news and information and how trust in the media is built, lost, and, at times, rebuilt.

The food matched the theme – we talked about traditional media over black olive tapenade, podcasts over a salad of white asparagus and black chickpeas with black garlic dressing, and rounded it out with a discussion on algorithm-driven content over black cocoa roulade with vanilla bean cream. The conversation moved between personal habits and broader media ecosystems, the decline of shared information spaces and the rise of individual voices, and the tension between clarity or complexity.

Guests shared who their trusted narrators are and how they came to rely on them. We discussed what makes a source credible like consistency, transparency, expertise, and evolution over time. Where traditional media institutions once served as shared reference points, today's media environment is more personalized, shaped by algorithms, individual preferences, and self-curated information streams. We touched on the practice of triangulating information across sources and whether that felt empowering or at times exhausting to sort, interpret, and verify what we consume. It may be easier to see the world in black and white but most of what matters lives somewhere in the grey.

Finally we recognized that it was a very DC discussion and that while there was diversity at the table, we lacked input from those outside the beltway.

As always, what made the evening memorable was engagement and a willingness to share sources. Guests even offered tips and tricks for navigating news anxiety and information overload.

Next on the Menu

Future Course & Discourse dinners are already on the calendar, each with its own topic and menu. These gatherings are intentionally intimate, and guest lists are thoughtfully diverse, so space is limited.

A reminder to express your interest in upcoming dinners. The reservations page has more details on each event. Invitations typically go out about three weeks in advance. Also keep an eye out for emails from hello@courseanddiscourse.com — some invitations have been landing in spam folders.

Upcoming dinners:

Church and State: Organized Religion in the United States Today (initial invites are out - spaces still available)

April 11th, 7:00 PM

The Missus: Beyond the Roles, Norms, and Stereotypes

May 2nd, 7:00 PM

More Than the Game: Sports Diplomacy

June 13th, 7:00 PM

Fear in the Age of Uncertainty

July 11th, 7:00 PM

And finally, we're open to your suggestions, feedback, and ideas! Is there a theme you'd like to see? A topic you want to discuss that tests our menu creativity? We'd love to hear from you at hello@courseanddiscourse.com.

More soon,

India

Elegant dinner table setting with wine bottles, desserts, and glasses in a pink room.
Elegant dinner table setting with wine bottles, desserts, and glasses in a pink room.