show episodes
 
Join The New Yorker’s writers and editors for reporting, insight, and analysis of the most pressing political issues of our time. On Mondays, David Remnick, the editor of The New Yorker, presents conversations and feature stories about current events. On Wednesdays, the senior editor Tyler Foggatt goes deep on a consequential political story via far-reaching interviews with staff writers and outside experts. And, on Fridays, the staff writers Susan B. Glasser, Jane Mayer, and Evan Osnos disc ...
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Listening to dreams analyzed is how we learn to analyze dreams. I created this podcast to have a platform for people who are interested in understanding their dreams to develop the skills and understand the tools used for dream analysis.
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Hosts Linda Cohn and Emily Kaplan bring their hockey expertise and passion for the sport, discussing the latest news around the league as well as interviewing the biggest names both on and off the ice. Longtime SportsCenter anchor Linda Cohn was the goalie on her high school boy's team and has kept that love of hockey throughout her life. She is a host of "In the Crease" on ESPN+ as well. Emily Kaplan joined ESPN in 2017 covering the NHL and is known for her in-depth stories on athletes.
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HFSS is a fun and life-changing guide toward creating REAL well being, and EMOTIONAL RESILIENCE: The New Happy. Could you be healthy if you eat food every day, but never poop? Of course not. Similarly, we can't be emotionally healthy if we live in the world trying not to have painful feelings. You've tried medicating feelings with success, validation, and distraction and still feel like an imposter. Learn what works! Rachel is professional, relatable, and dedicated to actually teaching you H ...
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Discussing the interaction between Nature (our biology, genes, evolutionary past, and the laws of our universe) and Nurture (our social environments, culture, history, and upbringings), and how these forces impact our lives. New episodes every week with scientists, authors, and bright minds from a wide array of backgrounds. YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheNatureNurturePodcast
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The Albert Breer Show brings listeners a one-of-a-kind combination of insight, information and attitude concerning all things football. Drawing from an unmatched collection of sources, Breer dives deep with original angles and unapologetic takes on the week's biggest headlines. Episodes feature an eclectic mix of interviews with big names from inside and outside the football world. It's the rare podcast experience that satisfies the hardcore gridiron junkie while remaining accessible to the ...
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Through Podcast Like It's... writers Phillip Iscove (Co-Creator of FOX's Sleepy Hollow), Kenny Neibart (Entourage, Hindsight) and now Emily St. James explore some of the best years in film, music and television. It all started in 1999, then 1989, then 2009 and now 1992! Follow Phil, Kenny and Emily as they dive into some of your favorite movies, TV shows and musicians! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Chelsea Mic'd Up is the official podcast of Chelsea FC, giving you exclusive access to the reigning champions of Europe! Each week, hosts Brandon London, Emily Kaplan, André Carlisle and Lee Parker break down the latest performances of the Chelsea men’s and women’s squads and bring you up to speed on team news, before being joined by big name guests, including current Chelsea players and club legends, famous Blues fans and media members giving you insight to ensure you are fully locked in on ...
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The world's most popular hockey podcast hosted by two blonde Americans under 30 who never played the game. Featuring distinguished guests, sad girl goal songs, and as many as one (1) good insights into the NHL per show. Call Audrey and Christina at 774-318-6952 and follow us on Twitter at @puckbunnies_pod!
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The Podcast 180 days in the making! Do you like hearing about cool people but then wonder what happened to them after the interview is over? Well do we have the podcast for you! Every week on Six Months Later… Tara Newton-Wordsworth and Matthew Chadourne interview interesting people about their lives and hopes for the future and then check in again in six months to see how everything worked out. Then we edit it all together into one long interview to create an audio time capsule. If you like ...
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show series
 
Dr. Cory Clark is a social psychologist and Director of the Adversarial Collaboration Project at the University of Pennsylvania. In this episode we talk about adversarial collaboration and open science, meta-psychology research on common biases in psychology carried by psychologists themselves, and its moralization. We also discuss gender differenc…
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Aidan Jones! Comedian! Story-teller! Podcaster! Musician! Edinburgh Fringe Fest 2023 new friend! Delight! Aidan is a hilarious new friend I made this year at the Edinburgh Fringe Fest in Scotland. He tells funny stories, he plays serious piano, he meets up for tea in ways that are funny AND serious. (Did I just want a third thing for that sentence?…
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The Washington Roundtable: Ukraine’s President, Volodymyr Zelensky, travelled to New York City and Washington, D.C., this week to request more support for his country. Before the United Nations General Assembly, Zelensky called Russia’s war an act of “genocide.” In Washington, the Ukrainian President met with senators, House members, President Bide…
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Twenty years after her breakout on “American Idol,” Kelly Clarkson released an album called “Chemistry” that deals with the long arc of a relationship and her recent divorce. She sat down to talk with Hanif Abdurraqib, a music writer passionate about the craft of songwriting. “This literally was written in real time,” Clarkson reflects. “That was m…
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On this episode of Podcast Like It's 1992, editor/podcast co-host at Letterboxd Mitchell Beaupre is on to talk about Light Sleeper. We talk about Willem Dafoe’s performance, what Paul Schrader has to say as a filmmaker, and our feelings on repetition in art. Patreon: patreon.com/Podcastlikeits Twitter: twitter.com/podcastlikeits Instagram: instagra…
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In the past year, more than a hundred thousand migrants have arrived in New York City. This particular chapter in the city’s immigration history began last August, when Governor Greg Abbott of Texas sent buses of Venezuelan asylum seekers north. The city welcomed these new arrivals, who used social media to encourage more migrants to make New York …
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For twenty-some years, Naomi Klein has been a leading thinker on the left. She’s especially known for the idea of disaster capitalism: an analysis that the forces of big business will exploit any severe disruption to take over more space in our lives. She was often confused with another prominent political writer, Naomi Wolf—once a feminist on the …
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About 1.4 million people in the United States end up in homeless shelters every year, with many thousands more living on the street. You could fill the city of San Diego with the unhoused. The problem seems gigantic, tragic, and intractable. But there are proven solutions. For the chronically homeless, a key strategy is supportive housing—providing…
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Clay Keller (Screen Drafts) joins us for a dip into the SEA OF LOVE! We discuss the state of Al Pacino's career in the late 80s, including how this movie was the beginning of his famous, unhinged line readings. We also talk about buddy cop movies, what repertory cinema houses are getting wrong, and why this movie isn't a revered classic. Find Clay …
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The Washington Roundtable: Congress has returned from summer recess to a hectic month of business. This week, as Kevin McCarthy sought to avoid a government shutdown, the House Speaker announced that he plans to initiate an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden. McCarthy is feeling pressured by hard-right Republicans who forced fifteen round…
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About 1.2 million people in the United States experience homelessness in a given year—you could nearly fill the city of Dallas with the unhoused. But there are proven solutions. For the chronically homeless, a key strategy is supportive housing—providing not only a stable apartment, but also services like psychiatric and medical care on-site. The N…
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On this episode of Podcast Like It's 1992, journalist/podcast host Michael Hobbes joins us to discuss School Ties. We talk about other 90’s boarding school movies, where this film stands among them, and the portrayal of angsty teenage antisemitism. Patreon: patreon.com/Podcastlikeits Twitter: twitter.com/podcastlikeits Instagram: instagram.com/podc…
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Elyssa Maxx Goodman! Writer! Photographer! Friend! Delight! More! Elyssa's new book out TODAY is called "Glitter and Concrete: A Cultural History of Drag in New York City" and she's great and it's great and I recommend it and her and all! We have a great chat and you can have a great listen! Thanks friends! PS This is just the first HALF of our con…
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At the end of this month, after more than two decades, Netflix is phasing out its DVD-rental business. While that may not come as a surprise given the predominance of streaming platforms, it’s a great loss to cinephiles, according to the New Yorker’s Richard Brody. Streaming services routinely drop titles from circulation, and amazing films may be …
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David Grann is a staff writer for The New Yorker and the author of two nonfiction books that topped the best-seller list this summer: “The Wager” and “Killers of the Flower Moon,” from 2017, which Martin Scorsese has adapted into a film opening in October. Grann is among the most lauded nonfiction writers at The New Yorker; David Remnick says that …
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Dr. James Roney is a Professor of Psychological & Brain Sciences at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he runs the Human Behavioral Endocrinology Lab.In this episode we talk about the proximate and ultimate evolutionary explanations of different sex hormones’ roles in coordinating motivated behavior, such as testosterone’s influence…
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On this episode of the Blue Crew, Jonny Lazarus, and Cody Frankel talk about how excited they are for the Fall in New York City. Then, Jonny and Avery Zaretsky are joined by former New York Ranger, Brian Boyle, to talk about his playing time in the Big Apple. Boyle shares some hilarious stories about former teammates like Henrik Lundqvist and Brand…
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David Grann is a staff writer for The New Yorker and the author of two nonfiction books that topped the best-seller list this summer: “The Wager” and “Killers of the Flower Moon,” from 2017, which Martin Scorsese has adapted into a film opening in October. Grann is among the most lauded nonfiction writers at The New Yorker; David Remnick says that …
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The New Yorker presents a special conversation from Slate’s “Amicus” podcast, hosted by Dahlia Lithwick. Lithwick talks with Judge Margaret M. McKeown, of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, about McKeown’s new book, “Citizen Justice: The Environmental Legacy of William O. Douglas―Public Advocate and Conservation Champion.” Th…
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On this Special Bonus Episode of Podcast Like It's 1992, author/writer Dana Schwartz joined us to talk about Newsies. ‌ We discuss the musical’s pro labor message, the lore behind Alfred Nobel, and of course some hot dirty dusty newsboys! Patreon: patreon.com/Podcastlikeits Twitter: twitter.com/podcastlikeits Instagram: instagram.com/podcastlikeits…
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Steffan Alun! Comedian! Delight! New friend I just made at the Edinburgh Fringe Fest this past month! I just met Steffan last month and saw his newest solo standup show and loved his comedy and love his humanity and am excited to share this conversation we had! I recommend checking him out wherever you can! He's on TikTok as "stalungrad, " Instagra…
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In January, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell passed a career milestone: he became the Senate’s longest-serving party leader. Since then, McConnell has suffered a number of health setbacks. This includes a fall and subsequent concussion in March and, most recently, a medical episode at a press conference in which he abruptly froze while taking…
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On this Special Bonus Episode of Podcast Like It's 1992, Kathryn VanArendonk joins us to talk about Murphy Brown. We talk about the real world stories this show tackled, audience expectations of the 2018 revival, and the fight to keep a show like this from fading into our memories. Patreon: patreon.com/Podcastlikeits Twitter: twitter.com/podcastlik…
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Henry Worsley was a husband, father, and an officer of an élite British commando unit; also a tapestry weaver, amateur boxer, photographer, and collector of rare books, maps, and fossils. But his true obsession was exploration. Worsley revered the Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackleton and he had led a 2009 expedition to the South Pole. But Worsley p…
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Bob Woodward has been writing about the White House for more than fifty years, going toe to toe with nearly every President after Richard Nixon. Woodward is every inch the reporter, not one to editorialize. But, during his interviews with Donald Trump at the time of the COVID-19 crisis, Woodward found himself shouting at the President—explaining ho…
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Dr. Joseph Henrich is an anthropologist and Chair of the Human Evolutionary Biology Department at Harvard University, where he runs the Culture, Cognition, and Coevolution Lab. Joe is also the author of the WEIRDest People in the World and The Secret of Our Success. Timestamps:0:00:46 Environmental factors leading to cultural evolution0:03:19 Cultu…
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The Washington Roundtable: Mark Meadows, Donald Trump’s former right-hand man, took the stand in Georgia this week to argue that his actions in the election-racketeering case—in which he was indicted two weeks ago, alongside eighteen co-conspirators, including Trump—were taken in his capacity as a federal official. For that reason, he and his lawye…
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David Souter is one of the most private, low-profile Justices ever to have served on the Supreme Court. He rarely gave interviews or speeches. Yet his tenure was anything but low profile. Deemed a “home run” nominee by the George H. W. Bush Administration, Souter refused to answer questions during his confirmation hearing about pressing issues—most…
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On this week’s episode of Podcast Like It's 1992, writer/directors Harry Elfont & Deborah Kaplan join us to talk about Wayne’s World. ‌ We dive deep into the mechanics of this beloved classic, audience expectations back in 92 vs our own rewatch, and how a movie like this seemingly shouldn’t work but very much does! ‌ Patreon: patreon.com/Podcastlik…
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It’s been eighteen months since Russia invaded Ukraine. In that time, Russia has annexed four Ukrainian territories; the mercenary Wagner Group staged a coup against Putin, and then its leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, died in a mysterious plane explosion; Ukraine mounted a successful counter-offensive, and then a less successful one, which is currently …
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Mindy Raf! Comedian! Musician! Actor! Story-teller! Friend! Delight! I love Mindy and I love Mindy's website where she shares some of what she does in her own words, which I like, so I also share some of those words here: "Hi. I’m Mindy Raf. I tell stories. I write stories. I sing songs. I write songs. The current skills that support my mind, body,…
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Welcome to this Special Bonus Episode of Podcast Like It's 1992! Emily St. James is here to talk about her obsession with country music! We talk about the evolution of the genre, what songs rise to the top, and Emily’s theory on Garth Brooks finding gender euphoria. Patreon: patreon.com/Podcastlikeits Twitter: twitter.com/podcastlikeits Instagram: …
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