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Three of our favorite segments from the week, in case you missed them: Losing Faith (First) | First-Gen College Students (Starts at 16:01) | NYC's Pizza Evolution (Starts at 36:10) (article)
Week one of the Clinton campaign; how to think about sex; the logic problem that puzzled the Internet; how child support laws punish parents and how LBJ's "Great Society" came to be. (episode)
Three reporters covering the Clinton campaign break down the first week of the campaign, including this week's visit to Iowa by Mayor de Blasio, who has yet to endorse her.
Estimates put the number of people incarcerated for unpaid child support at roughly 50,000, and this disproportionately affects African-American men.
Alain de Botton, the Swiss philosopher whose new book is the kind you "read in bed and weep quietly as your partner sleeps beside you," examines the ways we think about sex.
Princeton professor Julian Zelizer talks about the forces that helped shape the legislation that President Johnson labeled the 'Great Society.'
Dr. Eugenia Cheng helps us find the answer to the math problem plaguing the internet: When is Cheryl's Birthday? Plus she breaks down the logic of logic puzzles.