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Sergiy Kyslytsya, who represents Ukraine at the United Nations, says the U.N.’s flaws come from Stalin’s “DNA.” He fears a brutal offensive in advance of Russia’s May 9th holiday. (article)
Sergiy Kyslytsya, who represents Ukraine at the United Nations, says the U.N. is flawed because it contains Stalin’s “DNA.” Plus, songwriter Rickie Lee Jones on her chaotic early life. (episode)
Sergiy Kyslytsya, who represents Ukraine at the United Nations, says the U.N.’s flaws come from Stalin’s “DNA.” He fears a brutal offensive in advance of Russia’s May 9th holiday.
The pop star’s memoir explores the joys and the chaos of a life of travelling, which started when she was not far into her teens. She reads as a modern Huck Finn.
In a new memoir, Davis traces how she emerged from a difficult childhood to become one of the most acclaimed actors in Hollywood. Plus, a ride to nowhere with the cartoonist Liana Finck. (article)
Pegasus is marketed as a spyware to catch terrorists, but governments have also used it to suppress political opposition. Now tech companies such as Meta are going to battle against it. (article)
The reporter takes us inside NSO Group, the makers of Pegasus, the world’s most notorious spyware. Plus, Davis talks with David Remnick about her new memoir, and playing Michelle Obama. (episode)
In a new memoir, Davis traces how she emerged from a difficult childhood to become one of the most acclaimed performers in Hollywood.
Pegasus is marketed as a spyware to catch terrorists, but governments have also used it to suppress political opposition. Now tech companies such as Meta are going to battle against it.
A regular presence in The New Yorker, Finck explains how a ride on the Long Island Rail Road gets her creative ideas flowing; she can work among people without anyone talking to her.
The director Jane Schoenbrun’s new horror film is about a teen girl’s coming of age online. She talks with the Radio Hour’s Alex Barron about how movies have depicted the virtual world. (article)
Jackson’s musical “A Strange Loop” parallels his own struggles navigating the world as a Black, queer writer; plus the music producer Jack Antonoff on growing up Jersey. (article)
The playwright, whose musical won the Pulitzer Prize, speaks with Hilton Als. And the director Jane Schoenbrun discusses “We’re All Going to the World’s Fair” and coming of age online. (episode)
The playwright speaks with the staff writer Hilton Als about his musical, which won the Pulitzer Prize, and its inspirations in his own coming of age as a young writer.
Antonoff, who just won a Grammy Award for producing albums by Taylor Swift and other artists, talks with David Remnick about how growing up in the suburbs fuelled his creative drive.
The director Jane Schoenbrun’s new horror film is about a teen girl’s coming of age online. She talks with the Radio Hour’s Alex Barron about how movies have depicted the virtual world.
The writer—whose new book, “The Candy House,” is one of the year’s most anticipated novels—delves into the musical influences on her writing. (article)
What to make of confirmation hearings marked by grandstanding and racial attacks; and how controversy around Clarence and Ginni Thomas is further eroding the Court’s reputation. (article)