Review: Exposing a Broken Juvenile Court System
Kids were jailed for minor offenses, as detailed in The Kids of Rutherford County podcast.
Kids were jailed for minor offenses, as detailed in The Kids of Rutherford County podcast.
Please enjoy our special webathon video episode, where we answer a wide-ranging batch of listener questions!
Subscribe to a new show hosted by Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe, airing on YouTube every Thursday and podcast feeds every Friday.
Host Liz Flock delivers a compelling narrative but misses chances to interrogate the justice system.
A New York Times podcast tells a story about both the drug war and institutional incompetence.
In The Rest Is History, two historians strike a pleasing balance between fact-dense narratives and witty banter.
“We've taught young people that any of their missteps or any of their heterodox opinions are grounds to tear them down. That's no way to grow up.”
Popular podcasts and shows portray crime as salacious and sexy, failing ordinary victims in the process.
A podcast about a man everyone already has an opinion about.
Did Laura Ingalls Wilder's libertarian daughter have an outsize role in crafting the beloved children's series?
Popular podcasts and shows portray crime as salacious and sexy, failing ordinary victims in the process.
A new podcast asks whether federal agents are catching bad guys or creating them.
"There's nobody that says, wait, is this good for America? Is this good for the American consumer?"
"It's not easy to make one of these rules, but it's a thousand times harder to get rid of one."
"You need an argument for why this is good for society. That's important, but you also need money."
The answer? Because special interests and government prevent the free market from working the way it should.
"It's just a very classic case of everything wrong with Washington."
The U.S. tariff code is "quite regressive and somewhat misogynist" because the most powerful lobbyist in Washington is muscle memory.
A combination of "absurdly high" federal tariffs and excessive FDA regulations created the conditions for a crisis.
A boomer, a Gen Xer, and a Millennial discuss the causes and conflicts of today's generational gaps.
A six-part podcast series on trade policy launching next week
The independent journalist talks about true press freedom, the Twitter Files, Russiagate, Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
The wildly popular podcaster is still "politically homeless" but says leaving California and having a kid have improved her life immensely.
and other matters from the latest episode of Divided Argument
The Blocked & Reported cohost talks about cancel culture, activism vs. truth, and why he quit Twitter.
Her podcast Unreformed: The Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children delves into abuse at a state-run institution.
The authors of Mediocrity say it's well past time to end "factory schooling" and set kids free to learn.
Did the Court misunderstand its "adequate and independent state ground" doctrine?
The mystery writer and cultural critic is an outspoken defender of free thinking and cultural appropriation.
Perhaps unintentionally, this podcast holds up a mirror to the social justice movements of today.
Podcaster and music critic Rob Harvilla reminds us of the debts we owe to the tunes of that often cringeworthy decade.
The director worries that the public doesn't trust his spy agency.
Enjoy our special webathon video episode, where we answer your batty listener questions. Now donate, you delightful bunch of free-thinking misfits!
The Of Boys and Men author documents why the modern male is struggling and suggests solutions that don't come at women's expense.
and some thoughts about judicial fearlessness
Podcaster Molly Lambert's gambit to get listeners to critically examine the conflation of sex work is mostly successful.
"PM has made mistakes," tweeted Podcast Movement. "The pain caused by this one will always stick with us."
The creator of The Moth talks about why the past is never dead, especially in his new novel The Kingdoms of Savannah.
A new limited series podcast incoming next week
A seven-episode mini series on critical race theory.
The political podcast uses relevant history to contextualize controversial current events.
Nathan Rabin celebrates The Joy of Trash—and Gen X irony and cynicism—one terrible movie, book, and TV show at a time.