Profiles, storytelling and insightful conversations, hosted by David Remnick.
A monthly reading and conversation with the New Yorker fiction editor Deborah Treisman.
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The New Yorker: The Writer's Voice - New Fiction from The New Yorker


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The New Yorker: The Writer's Voice - New Fiction from The New Yorker
WNYC Studios and The New Yorker
New Yorker fiction writers read their stories.
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The Political Scene | The New Yorker


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The Political Scene | The New Yorker
WNYC Studios and The New Yorker
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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Real Talk, Real Quick! W/The Southern New Yorker..DJ LaLa


Real Convos Real Quick! An open round table about every topic- love,life,health,music,current events bringing the 🔥🔥🔥and all that other good ish..
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Two New Yorkers, A Thousand Opinions

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Two New Yorkers, A Thousand Opinions
Evelyn Calleja and Pasquale Cardone
A weekly podcast about two long-time friends and native New Yorkers, who share funny stories and opinions. In every episode, co-hosts Evelyn and Pasquale share funny, entertaining, insightful stories, anecdotes, and reminiscences about the wonderfully diverse NYC as only two true New Yorkers can!
Readings and conversation with The New Yorker's poetry editor, Kevin Young.
Where New Yorker cartoons get described and your time gets lovingly wasted. Then our official podcast stenographer recreates each cartoon for you here.
A weekly reading of the magazine’s “Comment” essay.
RingTales brings the world famous cartoons of The New Yorker to fully animated life. They're short. They're smart. They're wickedly funny. They feature the hysterical work of renowned cartoon artists such as Sam Gross, Bob Mankoff and Roz Chast. Enjoy a bite-sized gift of comic comedy three times a week. Animation that's addictive. You can't watch just one.
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Dan & Eric Read The New Yorker So You Don't Have To


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Dan & Eric Read The New Yorker So You Don't Have To
Dan & Eric
Writers Daniel Torday and Eric Rosenblum discuss the weekly content of the New Yorker Magazine. Plus special guests!
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The Political Scene | The New Yorker


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An "Anger Olympics" Between Trump and the Rest of the 2024 Republican Field
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The Republican Nikki Haley is widely expected to announce a Presidential run later this month. As a former U.N. Ambassador and South Carolina governor, Haley brings strong credentials to a sparse Republican field. The defeated former President Donald Trump is making his third bid for the White House. Governor Ron DeSantis, of Florida, is expected t…
You couldn’t write a history of American music without a solid chapter on Bonnie Raitt. From her roots as a blues guitarist, she’s created a gorgeous melange of rock, R. & B., blues, folk, and country—helping to establish a new category now known as Americana. But she’s far from resting on her laurels; her latest album, “Just Like That . . . ,” is …
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The New Yorker: Fiction


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Clare Sestanovich Reads Alice Munro
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Clare Sestanovich joins Deborah Treisman to read and discuss “The Moons of Jupiter” by Alice Munro, which was published in The New Yorker in 1978. Sestanovich’s story collection, “Objects of Desire,” was published in 2021.Por WNYC Studios and The New Yorker
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The New Yorker: The Writer's Voice - New Fiction from The New Yorker


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Clare Sestanovich Reads “Different People”
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Clare Sestanovich reads her story “Different People,” which appeared in the January 30, 2023, issue of the magazine. Sestanovich’s début story collection, “Objects of Desire,” which came out in 2021, was a finalist PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize. She was named a “5 Under 35” honoree by the National Book Foundation in 2022.…
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The Political Scene | The New Yorker


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How the Memphis Police Controlled the Narrative of Tyre Nichols’s Killing
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Last Thursday, the Memphis Police Department announced that it was firing five police officers who beat a man named Tyre Nichols to death during a traffic stop. Shortly afterward, all five officers were jailed and charged with murder. Then the police department released body-camera and surveillance-camera footage of the incident. In the days that f…
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Two New Yorkers, A Thousand Opinions

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Season 4, Episode 5- CelebrateSeason 4 Episode 5, Celebrat National Dark Chocolate Day, National Baked Alaska Day, National Get Up Day, National Girls and Women in Sports Day and National Serpent Day!
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This week the co-hosts chat about Pasquale’s birthday last week, and the pair chit chat about birthdays in general. Alexa annoyed Ev to the point she got unplugged. Algeria is still Number 5 in listeners world-wide. Their conversation about Harry and Meghan continues. Please Like us AND SHARE on https://www.facebook.com/2newyorkers1000opinions/and …
Gm Kings & Queens!.please listen to todays ep "Freaky/Fun Ladies Lunch and hmu with ur thoughts...Learn to Love Live & Laugh!..Be Happy!.😍❤🥰
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The New Yorker Radio Hour


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The Custody Battles Awaiting Mothers of Children Conceived in Rape
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Exceptions in the case of rape used to be considered a necessity in abortion legislation, even within the pro-life movement. But today ten states have no rape exception in their abortion laws, and more will likely consider moving in that direction this year. “I think few people understand how common this scenario actually is,” the contributing writ…
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The Political Scene | The New Yorker


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What Does “Woke” Mean, and How Did the Term Become So Powerful?
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For years, many on the right have been lambasting a certain kind of progressive sensibility denoted with the term “political correctness”—endless fodder for Rush Limbaugh and others in the nineteen-nineties. But those semi-comic tirades were nothing compared with the serious political fight against “woke.” Florida’s governor, Ron DeSantis, for exam…
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The Political Scene | The New Yorker


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Why Chief of Staff Is “the Hardest Job in Washington”
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The White House chief of staff is the second most powerful but hardest gig in Washington, D.C. Dick Cheney blamed the job for giving him his first heart attack, during the Ford Administration. A hapless chief of staff can break a Presidency; effective ones get nicknamed the Velvet Hammer. On Friday, the Biden Administration announced that Ron Klain…
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The New Yorker Radio Hour


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What Exactly Does “Woke” Mean, and How Did It Become so Powerful?
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Many on the right blame “wokeness” for all of America’s ills—everything from deadly mass shootings to lower military recruitment. Florida’s governor, Ron DeSantis, recently signed a so-called Stop WOKE Act into law, and made the issue the center of his midterm victory speech. In Washington, there has been talk in the House of forming an “anti-woke …
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The Political Scene | The New Yorker


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The Competing Narratives of the Monterey Park Shooting
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Last weekend, a man shot and killed eleven people at a ballroom-dance studio in Monterey Park, California, an Asian enclave outside of Los Angeles. Then, less than forty-eight hours later, in Half Moon Bay, California, another man shot and killed seven Chinese farmworkers. Notably, both alleged killers were older men with Asian backgrounds. While m…
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Two New Yorkers, A Thousand Opinions

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Season 4, Episode 4- Celebrate National Irish Coffee Day, National Florida Day and National Opposite Day!
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This week the co-hosts chat about the Oscar nominations, Pasquale asks Evelyn-Google “Who invented windows?” Our Sandra- Wisdom is back with her sage words and KK buys Diana’s necklace. Like us AND SHARE on https://www.facebook.com/2newyorkers1000opinions/and follow us on Twitter and Instagram and Subscribe on your preferred podcast platform --- Se…
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The New Yorker Radio Hour


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Michael Schulman on Oscars History, and a Visit with “Annie” Composer Charles Strouse
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Despite years of controversy, the Academy Awards and the other awards shows remain must-watch television for many Americans. The awards may be “unreliable as a pure measure of cinematic worth,” Schulman tells David Remnick. “But I would argue that the Oscars are sort of a decoder ring for cultural conflict and where the industry is headed,” Schulma…
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The Political Scene | The New Yorker


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The Local Paper That First Sounded the Alarm on George Santos
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George Santos is hardly the first scammer elected to office—but his lies, David Remnick says, are “extra.” Most Americans learned of Santos’s extraordinary fabrications from a New York Times report published after the midterm election, but a local newspaper called the North Shore Leader was sounding the alarm months before. The New Yorker staff wri…
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The Political Scene | The New Yorker


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Examining Biden's Second Year, and Tax Avoidance for the Rich
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President Biden has faced remarkable challenges in his first two years in office, from the overturning of the national right to abortion and the management of the U.S.’s COVID response, to the invasion of Ukraine. The staff writers Susan B. Glasser, Jane Mayer, and Evan Osnos gather for their weekly conversation to look at what the Biden White Hous…
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The New Yorker Radio Hour


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A Local Paper First Sounded the Alarm on George Santos. Nobody Listened.
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George Santos is hardly the first scammer elected to office—but his lies, David Remnick says, are “extra.” Most Americans learned of Santos’s extraordinary fabrications from a New York Times report published after the midterm election, but a local newspaper called the North Shore Leader was sounding the alarm months before. The New Yorker staff wri…
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The Political Scene | The New Yorker


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The Fraudster Mentored by New York’s Mayor
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A few days before Christmas, the New York City pastor Lamor Whitehead—known to some as the “Bling Bishop”—was federally indicted for a number of alleged crimes. Among the charges was that Whitehead, a close friend of New York’s mayor, Eric Adams, tried to extort a businessman by claiming he had pull with City Hall. This is not the first time that f…
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Two New Yorkers, A Thousand Opinions

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Episode 3 - It's National Winnie the Pooh Day, National Peking Day, National Michigan Day, and National Thesaurus Day!
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Season 4, Episode 3 - The pair chit chat about how cold it is in Florida, Pasquale shares some "Breaking News" Our very own, Sandra-Wisdom is back. Both firmly stay in their respective Harry & Meghan corners! Like us AND SHARE on https://www.facebook.com/2newyorkers1000opinions/and follow us on Twitter and Instagram --- This episode is sponsored by…
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The New Yorker Radio Hour


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Deepti Kapoor Discusses “Age of Vice” with Parul Sehgal
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Deepti Kapoor describes New Delhi, the setting of her novel “Age of Vice” as “extremely beautiful, but also violent. . . . It’s a place where you think you’re gonna get cheated and robbed until someone does something incredibly kind and breaks your heart.” The highly anticipated book, published simultaneously in twenty countries this month, is part…
Yiyun Li reads her story “Wednesday’s Child,” which appeared in the January 23, 2023, issue of the magazine. Li is the author of two story collections and five novels, including “Must I Go” and “The Book of Goose,” which was published last year. She won the Windham Campbell Literature Prize in 2020.Por WNYC Studios and The New Yorker
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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The Political Scene | The New Yorker


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House Republicans Launch Their Campaign Against the Bidens
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The House Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government was launched on Tuesday, with Representative Jim Jordan, a combative ally of Donald Trump and a co-founder of the far-right Freedom Caucus, at the helm. This powerful new committee has the authority to investigate the federal government and how it has collected, analyzed, …
It wasn’t so long ago that Ronald Reagan was considered over the hill, too old to govern. Now a sitting President has turned eighty in office, and a Presidential contest between Joe Biden and Donald Trump would put two near-eighty-year-olds against each other. (Trump—while denying President Biden’s fitness—commented, “Life begins at eighty.”) Yet t…
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The Political Scene | The New Yorker


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A January 6th for the “Trump of the Tropics”
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On Sunday, a mob of protesters ransacked Brazil’s capital, claiming that the recent Presidential election had been rigged. The riots, eerily reminiscent of the United States Capitol attack, were carried out in the name of Brazil’s former President, Jair Bolsonaro, a political figure who has been described as the “Trump of the Tropics.” Andrew Maran…
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Two New Yorkers, A Thousand Opinions

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Season 4 - Episode 2: It’s National Step in the Puddle and Splash Your Friends Day, National Milk Day and National Arkansas Day! Oh! And Heritage Treasure Day! WOO HOO!!
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This week the co-hosts chat about their disagreement regarding Megan And Harry, again. Sandra-Wisdom is back and they chitchat with their first special guest production wizard, Eric Rode. Like us AND SHARE on https://www.facebook.com/2newyorkers1000opinions/and follow us on Twitter and Instagram --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/2newyo…
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The New Yorker Radio Hour


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The Photographer Who Documented a Long-Forgotten Pan-African Festival
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Forty-six years ago, a young photographer named Marilyn Nance got the opportunity of a lifetime. A student at the Pratt Institute, an art school in Brooklyn, Nance had never left the country. But she became one of the official photographers documenting a festival in Lagos, Nigeria, called FESTAC ’77. The monthlong festival featured artists from acr…
Bob Woodward is 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 how to make a decision and trying to browbeat him into listening to public-health experts. Woodward has released audio recordings of some of their interviews in a new a…
Han Ong reads his story “Hammer Attack,” which appeared in the January 16, 2023, issue of the magazine. Ong, the recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship and a Berlin Prize, is the author of more than a dozen plays and two novels, “Fixer Chao” and “The Disinherited.”Por WNYC Studios and The New Yorker
By Thursday evening, Kevin McCarthy had lost eleven votes for Speaker of the House, the longest series of inconclusive ballots for the role since 1859. Until the next Speaker is selected, nothing can happen in the House of Representatives: no new legislation, no top-secret briefings, not even paychecks for lawmakers. McCarthy’s fate remained unclea…