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The White House on guns, inflation; NJ AG opens political murder investigation that is the subject of WNYC's pod Dead End; Malcolm Gladwell; Why are you still working from home? (episode)
NPR White House correspondent Tamara Keith talks about President Biden's -- and the Senate's -- plans for gun control, and what the president is saying on inflation.
Nancy Solomon, host of the new podcast "Dead End: A New Jersey Political Murder Mystery," talks about news on the investigation.
Malcolm Gladwell talks about an experimental live show he'll be doing re-examining some notorious films from Hollywood's history.
For listeners who are able to — why are you still working from home?
Memorial Day's post-Civil War origins; Elie Mystal on the Constitution; Regional accents; Illustrator Edward Sorel looks back; The New Yorker's women cartoonists (episode)
Kenneth C. Davis on the post-Civil War origins of today's holiday.
Three of our favorite segments from the week, in case you missed them. (article)
Best-of: Elizabeth Alexander on 'The Trayvon Generation'; Food and climate change; Elie Mystal and Suzanne Nossel debate 'cancel culture'; and Protecting piping plovers (episode)
New York gun regulation laws; A school psychologist on managing trauma; Latest on long COVID; Netflix and transphobia (episode)
Reporter Jon Campbell talks about renewed calls for regulating guns in the wake of two mass shootings, with State Senator Zellnor Myrie and Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon.
A school psychologist's advice on how to talk to students about shootings, and how to help teachers and staff process these events.
The latest information on the lingering effects of COVID-19 infections, some of which have been found to last for more than a year.
The latest controversy at Netflix and why it matters.
Yet another school shooting in America: The latest from Texas; Gun policy; Common-sense school safety measures (episode)
How the community of Uvalde, Texas is coping after yesterday's mass school shooting.
Christopher Poliquin talks about why tighter gun restrictions aren't passed by lawmakers following mass shootings.
Tony Montalto, president of Stand With Parkland, shares what he's learned about school safety.
Adam Lankford, professor of criminology at the University of Alabama, talks mass shootings in the U.S. and how to prevent them.
Tuesday Morning Politics: Primaries in Progress; 51 Council Members in 52 Weeks: District 22, Tiffany Cabán; France Indebted Haiti, Twice; #MeToo and the Johnny Depp-Amber Heard Trial (episode)
Key primary races and discusses results in Pennsylvania and other states, so far.
Our series, 51 Council Members in 52 Weeks, continues with Councilmember Tiffany Cabán.
What happened when France demanded reparations from formerly enslaved Haitians to their French slaveholders and how it has impacted Haiti's economy to this day.
New York Times columnist Michelle Goldberg joins us to discuss her recent opinion piece, "Amber Heard and the Death of #MeToo."
National politics with Susan Page; New York's new district maps and who is running where; Apartment rent madness; The risks of the Rockaway beach closures (episode)
USA Today's Susan Page with the latest national politics news.
The new court-ordered district maps mean several incumbents are facing each other. Jon Campbell and Brigid Bergin report on the latest.
Bidding wars have driven up the price of apartments in NYC.
Jake Offenhartz and Janet Fash talk about the potential dangers in the upcoming temporary closure of Rockaway beach this summer for construction.
Three of our favorite segments from the week, in case you missed them. (article)
COVID Update: Omicron Subvariants and a New Wave; The Right's Fascination with Hungary; In India, Climate Change Has Arrived; Restaurant Check In (episode)
Updates on BA.2, the threat of additional omicron sublineages, and more, as the public health emergency endures.
Kim Lane Scheppele discusses the American conservative movement's obsession with Viktor Orbán and Hungary’s authoritarian nationalism.
Roxy Mathew Koll joins to discuss how rising temperatures are tied to climate change and how residents are coping.
Earlier this week, Grubhub announced New Yorkers could order a free lunch — but they apparently didn't tell restaurants in the city the plan, and chaos ensued.