The Last Archive

The Last Archive​ is a show about the history of truth, and the historical context for our current fake news, post-truth moment. It’s a show about how we know what we know, and why it seems, these days, as if we don’t know anything at all anymore. The show is written & hosted by Ben Naddaff-Hafrey, and was created by the historian Jill Lepore. iHeartMedia is the exclusive podcast partner of Pushkin Industries.

https://www.pushkin.fm

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 40m. Bisher sind 76 Folge(n) erschienen. Jede Woche gibt es eine neue Folge dieses Podcasts.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 1 day 18 hours 33 minutes

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Presenting: Lost Hills


Season 2 of The Last Archive is coming later this spring. But in the meantime, here's an episode of Lost Hills: A new show from Pushkin and Jill Lepore's fellow New Yorker writer Dana Goodyear.


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 March 23, 2021  12m
 
 

episode 11: Election Special

[transcript]


We're back with a special, election-themed episode of The Last Archive! While reporting Episode 5: Project X, Jill spoke to Bob Schieffer, famed TV newsman of CBS, about how computers and the Internet changed the way we report on elections, and even the way they turn out. It's been sitting on the shelf here in the last archive for a little while now, but it feels eerily prescient. So, take a listen, take a deep breath, and good luck come November...


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 October 22, 2020  24m
 
 

The Last Archive Presents: Brave New Planet


Introducing Brave New Planet, a seven-part series that delves deep into the powerful technologies changing our world.


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 October 12, 2020  4m
 
 

The Last Archive Presents: Into the Zone


Into the Zone is a podcast about opposites, and how borders are never as clear as we think.


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 September 3, 2020  50m
 
 

The Last Archive Presents: The Chronicles of Now


Three billion birds have gone missing in North America over the past 50 years. Or is that fake news?


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 July 23, 2020  16m
 
 

episode 10: Tomorrowland

[transcript]


For ten episodes, we’ve been asking a big question: Who killed truth? The answer has to do with a change in the elemental unit of knowledge: the fall of the fact, and the rise of data. So, for the last chapter in our investigation, we rented a cherry red convertible, and went to the place all the data goes: Silicon Valley...


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 July 16, 2020  48m
 
 

episode 9: For the Birds

[transcript]


In the spring of 1958, when the winter snow melted and the warm sun returned, the birds did not. Birdwatchers, ordinary people, everyone wondered where the birds had gone. Rachel Carson, a journalist and early environmentalist, figured it out — they’d been poisoned by DDT, a pesticide that towns all over the country had been spraying. Carson wrote a book about it, Silent Spring. It succeeded in stopping DDT, and it launched the modern environmental movement...


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 July 9, 2020  46m
 
 

episode 8: She Said, She Said

[transcript]


In 1969, radical feminists known as the Redstockings gathered in a church in Greenwich Village, and spoke about their experiences with abortion. They called this ‘consciousness-raising’ or ‘speaking bitterness,’ and it changed the history of women’s rights, all the way down to the 1977 National Women’s Convention and, really, down to the present day...


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 July 2, 2020  41m
 
 

episode 7: The Computermen

[transcript]


In 1966, just as the foundations of the Internet were being imagined, the federal government considered building a National Data Center. It would be a centralized federal facility to hold computer records from each federal agency, in the same way that the Library of Congress holds books and the National Archives holds manuscripts. Proponents argued that it would help regulate and compile the vast quantities of data the government was collecting...


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 June 25, 2020  41m
 
 

episode 6: Cell Strain

[transcript]


In the 1950s, polio spread throughout the United States. Heartbreakingly, it affected mainly children. Thousands died. Thousands more were paralyzed. Many ended up surviving only in iron lungs, a machine that breathed for polio victims, sometimes for years. Scientists raced to find a vaccine. After a few hard years of widespread quarantine and isolation, the scientists succeeded. The discovery of the polio vaccine was one of the brightest moments in public health history...


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 June 18, 2020  45m