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Filming the early days of the war in Ukraine; documenting war crimes; why it's so difficult to hold war criminals accountable. (episode)
A conversation with the Sundance Audience Award-winning documentary's documentary
Russia's brutal military tactics in Syria were a preview to the war in Ukraine.
The Biden administration's historic decision could change the case against Putin in the Hague.
Why pursuing the "crime of aggression" could be the best way to hold Russian leadership to account.
Investigators unearth direct evidence of Russian war crimes. (episode)
The decline of digital media; The New York Times becomes a tech giant; a new business model in the news industry. (episode)
The former Editor-in-Chief of BuzzFeed News on the end of an era of digital news, and what's next.
The secret to The New York Times' wild success.
Media co-ops are championing a new business model for journalism, free from corporate overlords.
A. G. Sulzberger on why—in this age of deep political divides—he’s taking a stand in defense of "traditional journalist values." (episode)
"Greedflation"; the free market myth; the lasting influence of the Communist Manifesto. (episode)
What the term can tell us about our economy.
How a century-long PR campaign shaped American understanding of the free market.
The revolutionary text rears its head whenever capitalism falls short.
The pushback to the phasing out of AM radio has been bipartisan. (episode)
A renaissance of AI news; teaching machines to think; and computers waging war. (episode)
Why AI has fallen in (and out) of vogue, and how ChatGPT works.
The key to the latest AI tech lies in how humans think.
AI infiltrates the weapons industry.
And why it matters. (episode)