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We take a walk down memory lane, and ask ourselves some existential questions. (episode)
A walk through 2019 starts with confronting a deep sense of unreality.
At the core of the narratives we unpacked this year, a consistent theme.
How public radio's signature media show has come to expand our mission.
A special history lesson in time for the holidays. (episode)
Impeachment coverage, the “Afghanistan papers,” and the story of a radical TV news archivist. (episode)
The latest impeachment coverage has been vital. It hasn't always been perfect.
A monumental report from the Washington Post reveals years of lies, futility and corruption.
A new documentary examines the work and life of the extraordinary archivist, Marion Stokes.
How Hindu nationalists are rewriting the story of India. (episode)
Justice Ginsburg says she wishes it had been another case, not Roe v. Wade, that SCOTUS heard as the first reproductive rights case. On the Media and The Guardian take a closer look. (episode)
In 1970, Captain Susan Struck challenged an Air Force rule banning pregnant women or women with children from serving. Her story has important lessons about reproductive freedom today.
For decades, the conversation about reproductive rights in the US has been shaped and dominated by a debate over Roe v. Wade. Is there another way to discuss these issues?
A monumental report from the Washington Post reveals years of lies, futility and corruption. (episode)
The latest on Trump's impeachment, its parallels to the Andrew Johnson trial, and the rise of the "illiberal" right. (episode)
In recent months, analogies to the Clinton and Nixon eras have been frequent. But what about our first presidential impeachment?
How the conservative conversation about democracy is shifting.
An extended conversation with Lilliana Mason about tribalism, anger and the state of our politics. (episode)
A special hour with lessons on truth, conspiracy, history & the battle over the future. (episode)
Since 2014, a far-right nationalist party has been in power in Poland. How a conspiracy theory helped it get there.
A right-wing nationalist party comes to power. Its first takeover? The museums.
When the state controls the story, how can you tell a different one?
On the press's role to educate the public about participating in democracy. (episode)