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Monday Morning Politics; White House Changes; Inside the New Order at I.C.E.; How Cheap DNA Tests Upend Family Trees and Reveal Family Secrets. (episode)
CNN's GPS host Fareed Zakaria discusses his CNN special report, "Why Trump Won," which focuses on four key aspects of politics: capitalism, culture, class, and communication.
Charlie Sykes, longtime conservative talk host, talks about the ousting of Reince Priebus as White House chief of staff and his replacement John F. Kelly.
An insider view from a veteran immigration agent is not as black and white as one might think. The New Yorker's Jonathan Blitzer speaks about his conversations with an I.C.E. agent.
As the popularity of affordable genetic tests like 23 and Me grows, so does the amount of people discovering complicated and surprising family secrets.
Our favorites from this week include: The MTA's Plan to Fix the Subways (First) | Sexism in the Trump Era (Starts 36:00) | Reading Rainbow for Adults (Starts 1:02:58) (article)
Ask the Mayor; Rep. Hakeem Jeffries' "Better Deal" for American workers; Would you move for a job?; A new canon of pop music featuring women. (episode)
The mayor talks the most recent vote on the health care bill, employment discrimination, investments into the city by private developers, homeless shelter facilities, and the MTA.
U.S. Representative Hakeem Jeffries talks about the new Democratic messaging campaign that is aimed at winning back moderate, blue-collar American voters.
After Foxconn announced a new plant in Wisconsin, the 'New York Times' Patricia Cohen, talks about the history of people moving for work, and why people aren't moving as much anymore.
Find out who made it on to NPR's list of 150 best albums in popular music and why its comprised of all women artists.
The President's transgender military ban; the GOP's 'skinny repeal'; Losing New York City; MTA Chairman Joe Lhota on how he plans to fix the subways; LeVar Burton aims to read. (episode)
President Trump announced that transgender people will not be allowed in the military. The founding director of the NYC Veterans Alliance discusses who this affects and what it means.
POLITICO Pro's health care reporter Jennifer Haberkorn reports on the latest health care debates, amendments and votes, as the Republicans continue to try to repeal and replace the ACA.
Writer for Vanishing New York, Jeremiah Moss explains how he went from lamenting the closing of NYC's distinctive businesses to campaigning to preserve them.
New Yorkers are frustrated by the seemingly incessant delays and service disruptions with the subways. MTA Chairman Joe Lhota talks about his Subway Action Plan to change that.
Actor, director, author, and now host of the new podcast 'LeVar Burton Reads', LeVar Burton, talks about the podcast, what he likes to read, and how reading has shaped his life.
How Steve Bannon helped propel Trump; The People's Guide to Power: Regulating E-Bikes; South Asian Hollywood Portrayals. (episode)
Bloomberg Businessweek's Joshua Green says Steve Bannon propels Donald Trump forward. One key tactic Bannon uses and continues to rely on is distraction, distraction, distraction.
Annoyed by electric bikes zipping around his neighborhood, one UWS resident decided to document the problem. He discusses his crusade to find the people responsible for their regulation.
The New York Times' Sopan Deb and writer Aditi Natasha Kini discuss their personal takes on seeing a slew of Hollywood depictions of South Asian men falling in love with white women.
What happens when Trump and Putin meet; Sexism sincew the election; Governing the 21st century city; the Journalists of tomorrow. (episode)
So President Trump and President Putin have met. But what does their meeting mean when it comes to the ongoing investigations into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election?
Susan Chira, senior correspondent and editor on gender issues at The New York Times, discusses whether men have become less shameful in expressing their sexist attitudes post-election.
What does the 21st century metropolis look like? What is its key to success? Chief resiliency officers from New York City, Boston and Mexico City discuss.
Despite President Trump's constant attack on the media, high school students are still interested in pursuing careers in journalism.
Catching up on politics over the weekend; Looking into bias of the city's property taxes; Polling and the President; MTA Solution from the work boots on the ground. (episode)
We talk about what happened over the weekend and the latest developments between Trump and Russia, especially regarding Jared Kushner's statement denying any collusion.
Tax Equity Now NY, a coalition of justice leaders, filed a class action lawsuit claiming the city's property taxes are unfair and racially biased.
Six months into Trump's presidency, where are his approval ratings? Professor of statistics and political science, Andrew Gelman, offers analysis of recent approval ratings polls.
Can the men and women who work the subway system figure out the solution to fix the MTA? The president of the Transport Workers Union Local 100, John Samuelson, has a plan.
Our favorites from this week include: Who Does the Constitution Serve? (First) | Civics Lessons for Stronger Democracy (Starts 22:52) | The Constitution and the Human Body (Starts 47:30) (article)
Hear a few of our past favorites: Elizabeth Holtzman talks Watergate and #TRussia, Masha Gessen on Russia and Putin, learn how to run for office, what makes America an exception. (episode)
Updates on Thursday morning politics with MSNBC's Joy-Ann Reid; the latest in New York City political news; NY's plan for inclusive arts and culture; who does the Constitution serve? (episode)
How the Republican voters and elected officials are holding up under President Donald Trump.
A deep dive into NYC's local ongoing political races, including backlash surrounding Greenfield's replacement for city council.
Mayor Bill de Blasio's cultural plan was released July 19th. We take a look at where funding for the arts is being allocated around the city.
What does the constitution really mean? And who's protected by it?