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Country superstar George Strait’s search for the next hit, and Lawrence Wright’s exploration of how Texas is our future. (article)
Country superstar George Strait’s search for the next hit; Lawrence Wright discusses how Texas is America’s future; and Sally Rooney considers adultery in the age of social media. (episode)
George Strait has so many No. 1 hits that he can’t play them all in a single show. Will he make more?
Though Texas’s demographics are shifting leftward, its politics are redder than ever. Lawrence Wright argues that the state has become the nation’s bellwether.
Liana Finck likes to ride the Long Island Rail Road, but not to commute. She just needs a place to work.
An Irish writer explores friendship and adultery in the digital age in her debut novel.
Taran Killam performs the part of a museum audio guide, who holds nothing back.
In 1967, a rookie reporter’s eyewitness account of the futility of the Vietnam War shocked readers. (article)
Maggie Haberman and Donald Trump go way back. (article)
A rookie’s account of Vietnam in 1967 changed how we saw the war. And Maggie Haberman, of the New York Times, on the gang war inside the White House. (episode)
Maggie Haberman covered Donald Trump years ago for the New York tabloids. Now she has a front-row seat in the White House.
In 1967, a young writer reported from Vietnam. His eyewitness report on the futility of the war shocked readers.
Bob Odenkirk has some remarkable tips that will deliver abs you’ve never even dreamed of.
On the summer variety specials of long ago, a kid could learn a few things about life.
Dr. Phil Davies, a country doctor in England, says that he owns Mars. What if he’s right? (article)
An Obamacare veteran keeps fighting the fight—even into the White House. And Jill Lepore explains the century-long battle for universal coverage. (article)
David Remnick on the past and future of American health-care law, and a mild-mannered Englishman claims that he owns Mars. (episode)
Ezekiel Emanuel advised the Obama Administration on the A.C.A. Now he’s meeting with a new White House, to try to keep health as the focus of a new health-care bill.
The historian and staff writer Jill Lepore digs into the century-long battle for universal coverage in America.
Etgar Keret has avoided musicals for decades, but he saw the light of “Groundhog Day.”
Maybe I’m just a crazy dreamer who also gets a monthly, no-strings-attached 60k deposited into my bank account.
A country doctor has filed papers with the United Nations asserting his right to own Mars. What if the claim holds up?
Lucinda Williams talks with Ariel Levy about God, Flannery O’Connor, and her long and twisting path through the music industry. (article)
Adam Gopnik talks with James Taylor and tries not to go all Chris Farley Show: “Remember when you wrote ‘Fire and Rain’? That was great.” (article)