Year-End Special: Don’t Despair

Year-End Special: Don’t Despair

The year 2021 has seemed like a cavalcade of disasters, from the attack on the U.S. Capitol on January 6th through the resurgence of COVID-19. Calamities are catnip for the media, but the year has shown some signs of promise. This week, four New Yorker writers discuss the political stories that give them hope. Jane Mayer explores the Biden Administration’s accomplishments, and why they might be undervalued. John Cassidy makes a case for a strong economy in 2022. Bill McKibben explains how the excitement over increasingly inexpensive renewable energy crosses party lines. And Evan Osnos, examining how pessimism can skew political reporting, offers a way for combating toxic political polarization.

Episoder(150)

The U.K.’s “Funkapolitan” Conservative Party Struggles with the Effects of Brexit and the Pandemic

The U.K.’s “Funkapolitan” Conservative Party Struggles with the Effects of Brexit and the Pandemic

The United Kingdom officially withdrew from the European Union on January 31, 2020. On that day, the first cases of COVID-19 were officially confirmed in Britain. Like every other country, the U.K. ha...

14 Okt 202120min

Attorney General Merrick Garland, Interviewed by Jane Mayer

Attorney General Merrick Garland, Interviewed by Jane Mayer

At the 2021 New Yorker Festival, the investigative journalist Jane Mayer sat down for a conversation with Merrick Garland, the longtime federal judge now serving as President Biden’s Attorney General....

11 Okt 202116min

How Many Scandals Can Facebook Survive?

How Many Scandals Can Facebook Survive?

Last month, the Wall Street Journal began publishing a series of reports called “The Facebook Files.” Based on leaked internal documents, the series highlights how Facebook has stoked fear, anger, and...

7 Okt 202120min

Jonathan Franzen Talks with David Remnick About “Crossroads”

Jonathan Franzen Talks with David Remnick About “Crossroads”

Jonathan Franzen’s sixth novel, “Crossroads,” is set in 1971, and the title is firmly on the nose: the Hildebrand family is at a crossroads itself, just as the America of that moment seemed poised to ...

4 Okt 202126min

Recurring Nightmares on Rikers Island

Recurring Nightmares on Rikers Island

The first jail on Rikers Island opened in 1932, and the complex has since expanded to include ten jails holding thousands of inmates every day. Violence among Rikers inmates is common, and there are a...

30 Sep 202121min

Andreas Malm on the Environmental Movement and “Intelligent Sabotage”

Andreas Malm on the Environmental Movement and “Intelligent Sabotage”

Andreas Malm, a climate activist and senior lecturer at Lund University, in Sweden, studies the relationship between climate change and capitalism. With the United Nations climate meeting in Glasgow r...

27 Sep 202121min

Biden’s Big Economic Gamble

Biden’s Big Economic Gamble

Even before his election, Joe Biden described the upheaval caused by the coronavirus pandemic as an opportunity to reform the American economy. Now, after months of negotiations, Biden’s trillion-doll...

23 Sep 202126min

Jelani Cobb on the Kerner Report, an Unheeded Warning about the Consequences of Racism

Jelani Cobb on the Kerner Report, an Unheeded Warning about the Consequences of Racism

In 1967, in the wake of a violent uprising in Detroit, President Lyndon B. Johnson assembled the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders to investigate what had happened. This seemed futile: a...

20 Sep 202118min

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