The Gray Area with Sean Illing

The Gray Area with Sean Illing takes a philosophy-minded look at culture, technology, politics, and the world of ideas. Each week, we invite a guest to explore a question or topic that matters. From the the state of democracy, to the struggle with depression and anxiety, to the nature of identity in the digital age, each episode looks for nuance and honesty in the most important conversations of our time. New episodes drop every Monday.

https://www.vox.com/vox-conversations-podcast

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 1h6m. Bisher sind 661 Folge(n) erschienen. Dieser Podcast erscheint alle 4 Tage.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 32 days 6 hours 11 minutes

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episode 119: Is Mitch Landrieu the "White, Southern Anti-Trump"?


Mitch Landrieu is the white mayor of New Orleans, and he wants America to talk about race. Landrieu is the author of the new book, In The Shadow of Statues: A White Southerner Confronts History. The statues he refers to are Confederate war memorials, four of which he controversially took down in May of 2017...


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 March 26, 2018  1h25m
 
 

episode 118: Melinda Gates (live!) on stopping climate change, ending malaria, and the problems money can’t solve


Melinda Gates is the co-founder and co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the largest private foundation in the United States. With more than $40 billion in assets, the Gates Foundation works on a dizzying array of issues, from eradicating polio to feeding the world to treating HIV to stopping climate change to reforming the US education system. Gates has also been working, in recent years, on increasing diversity in the technology industry...


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 March 19, 2018  55m
 
 

episode 117: A better conversation on guns


Want to know why we can’t make any progress on the guns debate? Because this isn’t a debate over policy. It’s a debate over identity. After last month’s shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, I remembered a book Evan Osnos recommended on this show, called Citizen-Protectors: The Everyday Politics of Guns in an Age of Decline by Jennifer Carlson...


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 March 12, 2018  54m
 
 

episode 116: This isn’t Joe Kennedy’s grandfather’s Democratic Party, and he knows it


When you’re sitting in front of Rep. Joe Kennedy, it’s clear that you’re sitting in front of a Kennedy. The face, the jawline — it’s all uncannily familiar. But Kennedy, the grandson of Robert F. Kennedy, is rising in a changed Democratic Party. In the 1950s, the nonwhite share of the Democratic vote was about 7 percent. In 2012, it was about 44 percent — and that number is ticking upward. Kennedy is navigating it smoothly...


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 March 5, 2018  1h7m
 
 

episode 115: Amy Chua on how tribalism is tearing America apart


Human beings are tribal creatures, particularly when they feel threatened. And the reality of living in America in 2018, at a time of massive demographic change and social upheaval, is that we all feel threatened, and so we are all becoming more tribal...


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 February 26, 2018  1h4m
 
 

Ezra's favorite new podcast


Vox just released a daily news podcast called Today, Explained. On this episode, Vox's Alex Ward walks us through the six easy steps to launch a nuclear weapon and tells Sean Rameswaram about the time we accidentally dropped a nuke on North Carolina. Twice. There are a full week’s full of episodes like this one for you to enjoy! Subscribe to Today, Explained on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, or anywhere else you get your podcasts.


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 February 23, 2018  22m
 
 

episode 114: How technology brings out the worst in us, with Tristan Harris


In 2011, Tristan Harris’s company, Apture, was acquired by Google. Inside Google, he became unnerved by how the company worked. There was all this energy going into making the products better, more addicting, more delightful. But what if all that made the users’ lives worse, more busy, more distracted? Harris wrote up his worries in a slide deck manifesto...


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 February 19, 2018  1h14m
 
 

episode 113: Steven Pinker: enlightenment values made this the best moment in human history


Does the daily news feel depressing? Does the world feel grim? It’s not, says Harvard professor Steven Pinker. This is, in fact, the best moment in human history — there’s less war, less violence, less famine, less poverty, than there ever has been. There’s more opportunities for human flourishing, more personal freedom, more democracy, more education, more equality, more technological wonder, than the world has ever seen...


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 February 12, 2018  1h11m
 
 

episode 112: Why my politics are bad with Bhaskar Sunkara


Bhaskar Sunkara is the founder and publisher of Jacobin, a journal of “socialist perspectives on politics, economics, and culture.” He launched the publication in 2011 when he was an undergraduate at George Washington University. Today, its print edition has 40,000 subscribers and a million readers monthly online...


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 February 5, 2018  1h16m
 
 

episode 111: How Democracies Die


The year is young, but Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt’s How Democracies Die is going to be one of its most important books. It will be read as a commentary on Donald Trump, which is fair enough, because the book is, in part, a commentary on Donald Trump. But it deserves more than that. It is more than that. How Democracies Die is three books woven together. One summarizes acres of research on how democracies tumble into autocracy...


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 January 29, 2018  1h17m