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How far FBI infiltration can go; using leaked data...responsibly; and what we'll pay for other's information. (episode)
New reporting on the FBI’s role in breaking up the plot to kidnap Michigan’s governor spotlights the earlier, more credulous coverage.
What, if anything, has the press learned from the 2016 DNC hacks?
We're getting a better sense of how journalists are navigating the use of hacked or stolen data in their reporting. But what about data that’s been purchased?
A peek into the world of conservative Catholic media and its tropes.
Journalists face more threats around the world, and newsrooms grapple with age-old debates around journalism and objectivity. (episode)
Brooke speaks with Joel Simon about his almost 25 year journey with the Committee to Protect Journalists.
In a profession where trauma is an occupational hazard, trauma has also been used to disqualify journalists from covering certain subjects.
White editors still have significant control of newsroom leadership positions — and "objectivity" itself.
Covering gay marriage when your own vows are at stake.
Moving on from so-called "objectivity."
A nightclub fire. Hospital deaths. Government corruption. And the Oscar-nominated film that tells the whole story. (episode)
How the quintessentially English Bard became an American icon; and Shakespeare resonates in Kabul. (episode)
What the Bard can teach us about what it means to be American.
Staging Shakespeare's Love's Labors Lost in Kabul as a celebration of hope and a form of therapy.
Swedish artist Hilma af Klint was one of the first abstract painters. So why are we just learning about her now? Plus, how dead spirits helped women find their voices. (episode)
The history of solitary drinking in the US; alcohol's ancient roots; red wine's shifting reputation; and a possible synthetic replacement for alcohol. (episode)
America's relationship with solitary drinking started far before COVID.
The drinks of yore.
How 60 Minutes made red wine popular.
On developing a synthetic alcohol with all of the benefits but none of the risks.
Composer Aaron Copland and the search for an American national identity. (episode)
Six months after January 6th, we look back on our year of reporting into the militia movement. (episode)
A grassroots pro-gun movement, militias, and the threat of civil war.
How violence surrounding the election began unfolding months earlier.
Listen to recordings from an insurrectionist as she stormed the Capitol.