The New Yorker Radio Hour

Profiles, storytelling and insightful conversations, hosted by David Remnick.

https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/tnyradiohour

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 26m. Bisher sind 377 Folge(n) erschienen. Dieser Podcast erscheint alle 3 Tage.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 6 days 22 hours 2 minutes

subscribe
share






Are U.F.O.s a National Security Threat?


In June, the director of National Intelligence and the Secretary of Defense are expected to deliver a report about what the government knows on the subject of “unidentified aerial phenomena,” more commonly known as U.F.O.s. The issue is nonpartisan: whil


share








 April 30, 2021  31m
 
 

A Surge at the Border, and the Children of Morelia


Nearly a century ago, during the Spanish Civil War, a group of parents put five hundred of their children on a boat and sent them across the ocean to find safety in Mexico. Few of the refugees ever saw their parents again. The youngest of the children wa


share








 April 27, 2021  37m
 
 

Jelani Cobb on Derek Chauvin’s Conviction and the Future of Police Reform


The murder of George Floyd galvanized the public and led to the largest protests in American history. Even Donald Trump said of the videos of Floyd’s killing, “It doesn't get any more obvious or it doesn't get any worse than that,” presumably referring t


share








 April 23, 2021  12m
 
 

What Is Happening in the Internment Camps in Xinjiang


In a special episode on the crisis in Xinjiang region of China, the staff writer Raffi Khatchadourian investigates Xi Jinping’s government’s severe repression of Muslim minorities, principally Uyghurs and Kazhaks. Accounts from a camp survivor and a woma


share








 April 16, 2021  49m
 
 

Rickie Lee Jones’s Life on the Road


Rickie Lee Jones emerged into the pop world fully formed; her début album was nominated for five Grammys, in 1980, and she won for Best New Artist. One of the songs on that record was “The Last Chance Texaco,” and Jones has made that the title of her new


share








 April 13, 2021  22m
 
 

The Brody Awards, and Louis Menand on “The Free World”


Oscars, schmoscars! Richard Brody is a critic of wide tastes and eccentric enthusiasms. His list of the best films of the year rarely lines up with the Academy’s. Each year, he joins David Remnick and the staff writer Alexandra Schwartz to talk about the


share








 April 9, 2021  27m
 
 

David Fincher on “Mank,” and Daniel Alarcón’s Favorite Children’s Books


David Fincher made his name in Hollywood as the director of movies that pushed people’s buttons—dark thrillers like “Fight Club,” “The Game,” “Seven,” and “Gone Girl”—but his new film belongs to one of Hollywood’s most esteemed genres: stories about Holl


share








 April 6, 2021  24m
 
 

Race and Taxes, and Jane Mayer on How to Kill a Bill


The investigative reporter Jane Mayer recently received a recording of a meeting attended by conservative power brokers including Grover Norquist, representatives of PACs funded by Charles Koch, and an aide to Senator Mitch McConnell. The subject was the


share








 April 2, 2021  25m
 
 

The Complex Story of Being Trans in Africa, and Derek DelGaudio on Deception


Our producer talks with the South African scholar Dr. B Camminga, whose essay “Disregard and Danger” deconstructs the viewpoints of so-called TERFs—trans-exclusionary radical feminists—through an African-feminist lens. And we speak with Derek DelGaudio,


share








 March 30, 2021  32m
 
 

Will the Most Important Voting-Rights Bill Since 1965 Die in the Senate?


No sooner had Joe Biden won the Presidential election than Republican state legislatures began introducing measures to make voting more difficult in any number of ways, most of which will suppress Democratic turnout at the polls. Stacey Abrams, of Georgi


share








 March 26, 2021  17m