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What happens when you ask your parents if you can get vaccinated and they say no? Plus, Naomi Fry on a turning point for reality TV. (article)
A company offers a novel—and morally complicated—way for those in need to find shelter. Plus, a family grapples with vaccine denial. (episode)
What happens when you ask your parents if you can get vaccinated and they say no?
In the midst of a housing crisis, some without homes find shelter by temporarily guarding vacant properties—for the companies that contribute to their lack of housing.
“Keeping Up with the Kardashians” has wrapped up its twenty-season run. What are we going to watch now?
One of The New Yorker’s most celebrated journalists, who passed away this month, spoke with Ian Frazier about her craft, in 2011.
A. J. Smitherman founded one of the first Black-owned dailies. He addressed his eloquence and his ire at civic nuisances and at the gravest injustices of American life. (article)
Israel’s new coalition government includes leftists and an Arab-Israeli party, but nothing seems likely to shake the Prime Minister’s hard line on the Palestinian question. (article)
A. J. Smitherman documented Greenwood at its height, and tried to prevent its destruction in the Tulsa massacre. Plus, David Remnick on what a new Prime Minister will mean for Israel. (episode)
Israel’s new coalition government includes leftists and an Arab-Israeli party, but nothing seems likely to shake the Prime Minister’s hard line on the Palestinian question.
A. J. Smitherman founded one of the first Black-owned dailies. He addressed his eloquence and his ire at civic nuisances and at the gravest injustices of American life.
The largest Protestant denomination in the U.S. is in crisis over the group’s response to systemic racism. And our producer asks how the GameStop squeeze happened, and if it matters. (article)
An Asian-American director from California was tapped to adapt Lin-Manuel Miranda’s hit stage musical, a love letter to the Latino community of Manhattan. No pressure! (article)
The director talks about his film adaptation of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s hit musical. Plus, the politics of race drives a wedge deep into America’s largest Protestant denomination. (episode)
The largest Protestant denomination in America is in crisis over the group’s reluctance to acknowledge systemic racism.
An Asian-American director from California was tapped to adapt Lin-Manuel Miranda’s hit stage musical, a love letter to the Latino community of Manhattan. No pressure!
By facilitating a coördinated meme-stock surge, small investors following the Reddit forum r/WallStreetBets shook global financial markets. But why?
The musicians Yo-Yo Ma and Emanuel Ax explain how familiar music has taken on a new tone during the pandemic. (article)
Patricia Marx reviews the new vaccinated seating sections at New York’s baseball stadiums. And the activist talks about the AIDS action group, and its transformative impact on America. (article)