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A look back at our country's radical and inconsistent free speech tradition. (episode)
A hard look at the assumptions under-girding free speech absolutism.
We think we know what free speech is. But history and the history of the law make things tricky.
Is the path to a better society paved through laws? Or norms? Or something else altogether?
How New York Times v Sullivan changed journalism. (episode)
How the maligned women of the 90s and the noughts help us understand our media — and ourselves. (episode)
Back in the 90s, the media caricatured the Virginia housewife who'd cut off her husband's penis. How this telling missed the real story.
Revisiting the stories of maligned women of the '90s with the hosts of You're Wrong About.
Biases built into radio technology have shaped how we hear women speak. (episode)
Eviction, and the long history of racist housing discrimination in America. (episode)
On what would be the 100th birthday of Star Trek creator, Gene Roddenberry, Brooke explains her love of the iconic show. (episode)
On the narratives spread by and about anti-vaxxers, the impacts and history of anti-trans rhetoric, and what was missing from Jeffrey Epstein coverage. (episode)
Why stories of remorse may only appeal to the vaccinated.
Anti-trans rhetoric forms a unexpected alliance, and online disinformation once again spawns violence in the streets.
Julie K. Brown on how she found the women Epstein abused, and why his life and death is rife with conspiracy.
International media coverage following President Moïse's assassination repeats centuries-old tropes about Haiti. (episode)