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Hours after a Manhattan jury convicted the movie producer of sex crimes, Ronan Farrow talked with the actress, one of Weinstein’s accusers. Plus, Sue Halpern visits Spark Neuro. (article)
An accuser of Harvey Weinstein responds to his conviction. And David Remnick assesses the political career of Michael Bloomberg with two people who watched it up close. (episode)
Eleanor Randolph, a biographer of Michael Bloomberg, and Andrea Bernstein, a WNYC reporter who covered the former mayor’s terms in Gracie Mansion, analyze his approach to governing.
Hours after a Manhattan jury convicted the movie producer of sex crimes, Ronan Farrow talked with the actress, who is one of Weinstein’s accusers.
Using E.E.G. sensors and heart-rate monitors, a company investigates how political candidates engage our attention and emotions.
Diplomats use a low-tech tool to analyze high-stakes conflicts. And Michael Schulman sits down with the first heroine of blaxploitation cinema. (article)
Jonathan Blitzer examines how one adviser turned Trump’s xenophobic rhetoric into a set of hard-line policies. (article)
How one adviser almost single-handedly engineered the Trump Administration’s nativist policies. Plus: a conversation with Pam Grier, the first action heroine of blaxploitation cinema. (episode)
Jonathan Blitzer examines how one adviser turned Trump’s xenophobic rhetoric into a set of hard-line policies.
War-gaming is an old and low-tech tool, but officers and diplomats still turn to it to model today’s most complex geopolitical situations.
Outrageous, raunchy, and empowered, the star of “Foxy Brown” helped change the way black lives were presented onscreen.
Can a leftist consolidate the Party faithful and rally voters in the general election? Plus, a teen-age Trump tries to win over his high school. (article)
The author’s fifth novel is about baseball, class warfare, and a sentient Internet. (article)
Centrist Democrats have their hair on fire over Sanders as the front-runner. Is he the Party’s future, or an electoral disaster? Plus, Gish Jen on baseball and artificial intelligence. (episode)
Centrist Democrats regard Sanders’s front-runner status as an existential threat. But can a leftist win over the Party faithful and rally voters in the general election?
A civics project goes off the rails when high-school students run a simulation of the 2020 primaries.
The author’s fifth novel is about baseball, class warfare, and a sentient Internet.
The New Yorker’s Hilton Als reviews the comic’s return after a sexual-misconduct scandal. Plus, a Patriotic Millionaire who wants to raise his own taxes. (article)
Black voters may be key to who wins the Democratic nomination—and the general election. Will any of the white front-runners get the turnout they need? (article)