The Killing of Alex Pretti and ICE’s Terror in Minnesota

The Killing of Alex Pretti and ICE’s Terror i...

Up next

70: Federal Power, Voter Data, and the ICE State (with Jon Favreau)

Voting rights are the Trump administration’s next big target. This week, Stacey is joined by Pod Save America’s Jon Favreau to discuss the aftermath of a raid by federal authorities in Fulton County, GA for boxes of election related materials from the 2020 cycle. They also talk a ...  Show more

America’s Unaffordability Crisis, and ICE Protests (with Jelani Cobb)

This week, Stacey begins by offering a response to Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins’ ridiculous assertion that Americans could save money if only they limited their dinners to a piece of chicken, a piece of broccoli, and a corn tortilla. Then she speaks to Jelani Cobb, Dean o ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

A Second Look at Book Banning
60 Minutes: A Second Look

When Morley Safer traveled to West Virginia in 1975 to report on a fight over books in schools, he couldn't have known how that conflict would help lay the blueprint for many contemporary challenges over what students are allowed to read. In our first "second look," we revisit a ...  Show more

Amy Winehouse biopic Back to Black and Percival Everett's James reviewed
Front Row

Back to Black is the Amy Winehouse biopic out this week and directed by Sam Taylor-Johnson. James is Percival Everett’s retelling of Mark Twain’s 1884 novel Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, narrated by the enslaved Jim. The Wallace collection spotlights Ranjit Singh, the Maharaja ...  Show more

Defending Pornography, Hate Speech and the ACLU: Nadine Strossen on The Unspeakable
The Unspeakeasy With Meghan Daum

This week, Meghan talks with legal scholar, former law professor, and legendary free speech advocate Nadine Strossen.

Nadine was president of the American Civil Liberties Union from 1991 to 2008 and she's the author of many books, including Defending Pornography, which ...

  Show more

Reading Dostoevsky Behind Bars (Update)
People I (Mostly) Admire

Reginald Dwayne Betts spent more than eight years in prison. Today he's a Yale Law graduate, a MacArthur Fellow, and a poet. His nonprofit works to build libraries in prisons so that more incarcerated people can find hope.

 

<ul><li>SOURCES:<ul><li>  Show more