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THE FIVE NSA PROGRAMS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT It’s been a little over a year since revelations from Edward Snowden’s historic NSA leak started appearing in newspapers around the world, and information about new surveillance programs is still surfacing every month. Last week, The Washington Post analyzed 160,000 NSA records and found that “ordinary Internet users, American and non-American alike, far outnumber legally targeted J. S. BACH'S "HABIT OF PERFECTION": ANDREW RANGELL Waiting the election returns (Obama v. McCain) in November, 2008, we repair to the consolations of J.S. Bach, and in this conversation, to the perfect nest of keyboard masterpieces known collectively as The Well-Tempered Clavier, delivered to the world in two prodigious installments: Book One in PETER HESSLER'S NEW CHINA: IS THIS ANY WAY TO LIVE? Peter Hessler, covering the new China for The New Yorker, made himself the rising star of the John McPhee school of reporting. It’s not just that he’d taken McPhee’s writing course at Princeton — known sometimes as The Literature of Fact. (“I prefer to call it factual writing,” McPhee has said.) SAMUEL BECKETT: NOTHING FUNNIER THAN UNHAPPINESS Samuel Beckett: Nothing Funnier Than Unhappiness. David Mamet nails it. “He was a great kisser,” Mamet faxes the New York Times in answer to the centennial survey of American playwrights on the modernist master, Samuel Beckett. WHERE DOES ALL THAT MONEY GO? College tuition is rising faster than medical costs, inflation, and certainly the income of 99% of Americans. Four years at a private university now costs as much as a new Ferrari, and a student at a public university can expect to graduate $25,000 in debt. DAVID KENNEDY: REQUIEM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS? David Kennedy: Requiem for Human Rights? Twenty five years ago on a human-rights mission to Uruguay, David Kennedy fashioned the legal argument that freed five tortured prisoners (mostly medical students) from prison under a military dictatorship. The odd part is that Kennedy (now Brown University’s vice president for international affairs) came away from his own adventure with OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Christopher Lydon in conversation on arts, ideas and politics. Pandemic Premonitions A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known. PANDEMIC PREMONITIONS Pandemic Premonitions. A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known. Even now, nobody can tell you absolutely whether the infectious virus might have leaked, or been leaked, from a Chinese lab in Wuhan. LAB LEAK - OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Lab Leak. There’s a swerve in the road, signs that say “Sharp Curves Ahead,” in the origin story of the COVID pandemic. Where did that virus come from? WHAT IS ENGLISHNESS? We loved Hurley’s idea for a series picking apart contemporary European identity. To kick it all off: what is Englishness? Some recent studies have shown that the inhabitants of the different regions of the British Isles are genetically nearly identical to each other. Rather than each successive invasion of Celts, Anglo-Saxons, and Normans pushing the former inhabitants to the margins and VAN MORRISON'S COSMIC ACCIDENT Van Morrison’s Cosmic Accident. In the annals of rock music albums, Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks is one of a kind. In an earthy medium, it’s a masterpiece of abstraction. AT HOME IN JAPAN WITH PICO IYER At Home in Japan with Pico Iyer. Pico Iyer once described himself as “a global village on two legs.” He’s the writing champion of cosmopolitan consciousness who lived awhile inside the Los Angeles airport just to feel the great stream of humanity, displaced like himself, in endless motion. SEEING RED IN TRUMP'S AMERICA Seeing Red in Trump’s America. So! It happened. Hillary Clinton failed. Donald J. Trump will become the 45 th of the United States. His election marks an earthquake in American politics – one that the seismic monitors of Big Media political pundits, data heads and op-ed waxers all failed to predict. JAMES VS. ROOSEVELT: LETTERS TO THE CRIMSON Jackson Lears has dramatized the relationship between Theodore Roosevelt and William James, but evidence of that conversation is actually hard to find. We turned up one interesting chapter in the conversation turning around the Venezuelan Crisis of 1895, and playing out in the pages of the Harvard Crimson. J. S. BACH'S "HABIT OF PERFECTION": ANDREW RANGELL Waiting the election returns (Obama v. McCain) in November, 2008, we repair to the consolations of J.S. Bach, and in this conversation, to the perfect nest of keyboard masterpieces known collectively as The Well-Tempered Clavier, delivered to the world in two prodigious installments: Book One in NAEL EL TOUKHY: A POST-MODERN NOVELIST'S EYE ON EGYPT Nael El Toukhy: a post-modern novelist’s eye on Egypt. Nael El Toukhy is a bright light among Egypt’s millennial writers at a breakpoint in Arab culture as well as politics. On a rooftop in Cairo we’re talking about the family effects of the Tahrir Square revolution: In every house in Egypt, he’s saying, you’ll find a father who voted for the Muslim Brotherhood and a son who voted OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Christopher Lydon in conversation on arts, ideas and politics. Pandemic Premonitions A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known. PANDEMIC PREMONITIONS Pandemic Premonitions. A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known. Even now, nobody can tell you absolutely whether the infectious virus might have leaked, or been leaked, from a Chinese lab in Wuhan. LAB LEAK - OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Lab Leak. There’s a swerve in the road, signs that say “Sharp Curves Ahead,” in the origin story of the COVID pandemic. Where did that virus come from? WHAT IS ENGLISHNESS? We loved Hurley’s idea for a series picking apart contemporary European identity. To kick it all off: what is Englishness? Some recent studies have shown that the inhabitants of the different regions of the British Isles are genetically nearly identical to each other. Rather than each successive invasion of Celts, Anglo-Saxons, and Normans pushing the former inhabitants to the margins and VAN MORRISON'S COSMIC ACCIDENT Van Morrison’s Cosmic Accident. In the annals of rock music albums, Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks is one of a kind. In an earthy medium, it’s a masterpiece of abstraction. AT HOME IN JAPAN WITH PICO IYER At Home in Japan with Pico Iyer. Pico Iyer once described himself as “a global village on two legs.” He’s the writing champion of cosmopolitan consciousness who lived awhile inside the Los Angeles airport just to feel the great stream of humanity, displaced like himself, in endless motion. SEEING RED IN TRUMP'S AMERICA Seeing Red in Trump’s America. So! It happened. Hillary Clinton failed. Donald J. Trump will become the 45 th of the United States. His election marks an earthquake in American politics – one that the seismic monitors of Big Media political pundits, data heads and op-ed waxers all failed to predict. JAMES VS. ROOSEVELT: LETTERS TO THE CRIMSON Jackson Lears has dramatized the relationship between Theodore Roosevelt and William James, but evidence of that conversation is actually hard to find. We turned up one interesting chapter in the conversation turning around the Venezuelan Crisis of 1895, and playing out in the pages of the Harvard Crimson. J. S. BACH'S "HABIT OF PERFECTION": ANDREW RANGELL Waiting the election returns (Obama v. McCain) in November, 2008, we repair to the consolations of J.S. Bach, and in this conversation, to the perfect nest of keyboard masterpieces known collectively as The Well-Tempered Clavier, delivered to the world in two prodigious installments: Book One in NAEL EL TOUKHY: A POST-MODERN NOVELIST'S EYE ON EGYPT Nael El Toukhy: a post-modern novelist’s eye on Egypt. Nael El Toukhy is a bright light among Egypt’s millennial writers at a breakpoint in Arab culture as well as politics. On a rooftop in Cairo we’re talking about the family effects of the Tahrir Square revolution: In every house in Egypt, he’s saying, you’ll find a father who voted for the Muslim Brotherhood and a son who voted WHAT IS ENGLISHNESS? We loved Hurley’s idea for a series picking apart contemporary European identity. To kick it all off: what is Englishness? Some recent studies have shown that the inhabitants of the different regions of the British Isles are genetically nearly identical to each other. Rather than each successive invasion of Celts, Anglo-Saxons, and Normans pushing the former inhabitants to the margins and AT HOME IN JAPAN WITH PICO IYER At Home in Japan with Pico Iyer. Pico Iyer once described himself as “a global village on two legs.” He’s the writing champion of cosmopolitan consciousness who lived awhile inside the Los Angeles airport just to feel the great stream of humanity, displaced like himself, in endless motion. THE FIVE NSA PROGRAMS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT It’s been a little over a year since revelations from Edward Snowden’s historic NSA leak started appearing in newspapers around the world, and information about new surveillance programs is still surfacing every month. Last week, The Washington Post analyzed 160,000 NSA records and found that “ordinary Internet users, American and non-American alike, far outnumber legally targeted HACKING THE CONSTITUTION With that in mind, we’ve convened a panel of our favorite lawyers: Lawrence Lessig, a former Scalia clerk and an advocate-turned-candidate against money in politics; Jedediah Purdy, of Duke, a philosopher of modernity and democracy along with a professor of law; and Katharine Young of Boston College, in the business of comparing the world’s constitutions with an eye towardimproving them.
WHERE DOES ALL THAT MONEY GO? College tuition is rising faster than medical costs, inflation, and certainly the income of 99% of Americans. Four years at a private university now costs as much as a new Ferrari, and a student at a public university can expect to graduate $25,000 in debt. A PIKETTY PRIMER: "CAPITAL" IN 10 GRAPHS A Piketty Primer: “Capital” in 10 Graphs. By Kunal Jasty. In the Piketty surge to the top of the best-seller list, there’s a misleading polemic evolving (and not from people who have read the book, it turns out): i t’s been attacked on the right as a new call for communism and heralded on the left as proof that capitalism simplydoesn’t work.
SAMUEL BECKETT: NOTHING FUNNIER THAN UNHAPPINESS Samuel Beckett: Nothing Funnier Than Unhappiness. David Mamet nails it. “He was a great kisser,” Mamet faxes the New York Times in answer to the centennial survey of American playwrights on the modernist master, Samuel Beckett. THE SPREAD OF HIV IN AFRICA The Spread of HIV in Africa. Africa is home to roughly two thirds of the world’s HIV/AIDS cases, and the enduring question is: why? The popular explanations include extreme poverty, lack of HIV education, and insufficient access to condoms and healthcare. PETER HESSLER'S NEW CHINA: IS THIS ANY WAY TO LIVE? Peter Hessler, covering the new China for The New Yorker, made himself the rising star of the John McPhee school of reporting. It’s not just that he’d taken McPhee’s writing course at Princeton — known sometimes as The Literature of Fact. (“I prefer to call it factual writing,” McPhee has said.) DAVID KENNEDY: REQUIEM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS? David Kennedy: Requiem for Human Rights? Twenty five years ago on a human-rights mission to Uruguay, David Kennedy fashioned the legal argument that freed five tortured prisoners (mostly medical students) from prison under a military dictatorship. The odd part is that Kennedy (now Brown University’s vice president for international affairs) came away from his own adventure with OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Christopher Lydon in conversation on arts, ideas and politics. Pandemic Premonitions A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known. PANDEMIC PREMONITIONS Pandemic Premonitions. A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known. Even now, nobody can tell you absolutely whether the infectious virus might have leaked, or been leaked, from a Chinese lab in Wuhan. LAB LEAK - OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Lab Leak. There’s a swerve in the road, signs that say “Sharp Curves Ahead,” in the origin story of the COVID pandemic. Where did that virus come from? WHAT IS ENGLISHNESS? We loved Hurley’s idea for a series picking apart contemporary European identity. To kick it all off: what is Englishness? Some recent studies have shown that the inhabitants of the different regions of the British Isles are genetically nearly identical to each other. Rather than each successive invasion of Celts, Anglo-Saxons, and Normans pushing the former inhabitants to the margins and VAN MORRISON'S COSMIC ACCIDENT Van Morrison’s Cosmic Accident. In the annals of rock music albums, Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks is one of a kind. In an earthy medium, it’s a masterpiece of abstraction. AT HOME IN JAPAN WITH PICO IYER At Home in Japan with Pico Iyer. Pico Iyer once described himself as “a global village on two legs.” He’s the writing champion of cosmopolitan consciousness who lived awhile inside the Los Angeles airport just to feel the great stream of humanity, displaced like himself, in endless motion. SEEING RED IN TRUMP'S AMERICA Seeing Red in Trump’s America. So! It happened. Hillary Clinton failed. Donald J. Trump will become the 45 th of the United States. His election marks an earthquake in American politics – one that the seismic monitors of Big Media political pundits, data heads and op-ed waxers all failed to predict. JAMES VS. ROOSEVELT: LETTERS TO THE CRIMSON Jackson Lears has dramatized the relationship between Theodore Roosevelt and William James, but evidence of that conversation is actually hard to find. We turned up one interesting chapter in the conversation turning around the Venezuelan Crisis of 1895, and playing out in the pages of the Harvard Crimson. J. S. BACH'S "HABIT OF PERFECTION": ANDREW RANGELL Waiting the election returns (Obama v. McCain) in November, 2008, we repair to the consolations of J.S. Bach, and in this conversation, to the perfect nest of keyboard masterpieces known collectively as The Well-Tempered Clavier, delivered to the world in two prodigious installments: Book One in WHERE DOES ALL THAT MONEY GO? College tuition is rising faster than medical costs, inflation, and certainly the income of 99% of Americans. Four years at a private university now costs as much as a new Ferrari, and a student at a public university can expect to graduate $25,000 in debt. OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Christopher Lydon in conversation on arts, ideas and politics. Pandemic Premonitions A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known. PANDEMIC PREMONITIONS Pandemic Premonitions. A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known. Even now, nobody can tell you absolutely whether the infectious virus might have leaked, or been leaked, from a Chinese lab in Wuhan. LAB LEAK - OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Lab Leak. There’s a swerve in the road, signs that say “Sharp Curves Ahead,” in the origin story of the COVID pandemic. Where did that virus come from? WHAT IS ENGLISHNESS? We loved Hurley’s idea for a series picking apart contemporary European identity. To kick it all off: what is Englishness? Some recent studies have shown that the inhabitants of the different regions of the British Isles are genetically nearly identical to each other. Rather than each successive invasion of Celts, Anglo-Saxons, and Normans pushing the former inhabitants to the margins and VAN MORRISON'S COSMIC ACCIDENT Van Morrison’s Cosmic Accident. In the annals of rock music albums, Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks is one of a kind. In an earthy medium, it’s a masterpiece of abstraction. AT HOME IN JAPAN WITH PICO IYER At Home in Japan with Pico Iyer. Pico Iyer once described himself as “a global village on two legs.” He’s the writing champion of cosmopolitan consciousness who lived awhile inside the Los Angeles airport just to feel the great stream of humanity, displaced like himself, in endless motion. SEEING RED IN TRUMP'S AMERICA Seeing Red in Trump’s America. So! It happened. Hillary Clinton failed. Donald J. Trump will become the 45 th of the United States. His election marks an earthquake in American politics – one that the seismic monitors of Big Media political pundits, data heads and op-ed waxers all failed to predict. JAMES VS. ROOSEVELT: LETTERS TO THE CRIMSON Jackson Lears has dramatized the relationship between Theodore Roosevelt and William James, but evidence of that conversation is actually hard to find. We turned up one interesting chapter in the conversation turning around the Venezuelan Crisis of 1895, and playing out in the pages of the Harvard Crimson. J. S. BACH'S "HABIT OF PERFECTION": ANDREW RANGELL Waiting the election returns (Obama v. McCain) in November, 2008, we repair to the consolations of J.S. Bach, and in this conversation, to the perfect nest of keyboard masterpieces known collectively as The Well-Tempered Clavier, delivered to the world in two prodigious installments: Book One in WHERE DOES ALL THAT MONEY GO? College tuition is rising faster than medical costs, inflation, and certainly the income of 99% of Americans. Four years at a private university now costs as much as a new Ferrari, and a student at a public university can expect to graduate $25,000 in debt. WHAT IS ENGLISHNESS? We loved Hurley’s idea for a series picking apart contemporary European identity. To kick it all off: what is Englishness? Some recent studies have shown that the inhabitants of the different regions of the British Isles are genetically nearly identical to each other. Rather than each successive invasion of Celts, Anglo-Saxons, and Normans pushing the former inhabitants to the margins and AT HOME IN JAPAN WITH PICO IYER At Home in Japan with Pico Iyer. Pico Iyer once described himself as “a global village on two legs.” He’s the writing champion of cosmopolitan consciousness who lived awhile inside the Los Angeles airport just to feel the great stream of humanity, displaced like himself, in endless motion. THE FIVE NSA PROGRAMS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT It’s been a little over a year since revelations from Edward Snowden’s historic NSA leak started appearing in newspapers around the world, and information about new surveillance programs is still surfacing every month. Last week, The Washington Post analyzed 160,000 NSA records and found that “ordinary Internet users, American and non-American alike, far outnumber legally targeted HACKING THE CONSTITUTION With that in mind, we’ve convened a panel of our favorite lawyers: Lawrence Lessig, a former Scalia clerk and an advocate-turned-candidate against money in politics; Jedediah Purdy, of Duke, a philosopher of modernity and democracy along with a professor of law; and Katharine Young of Boston College, in the business of comparing the world’s constitutions with an eye towardimproving them.
IMMIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT, WITH AMARTYA SEN Immigration and Development, with Amartya Sen Click to Listen to the Show (24 MB MP3) With the Nobel economist Amartya Sen, we pick up the question hanging at the end of our conversation on remittances and the flood of migrant workers. A PIKETTY PRIMER: "CAPITAL" IN 10 GRAPHS A Piketty Primer: “Capital” in 10 Graphs. By Kunal Jasty. In the Piketty surge to the top of the best-seller list, there’s a misleading polemic evolving (and not from people who have read the book, it turns out): i t’s been attacked on the right as a new call for communism and heralded on the left as proof that capitalism simplydoesn’t work.
THE SPREAD OF HIV IN AFRICA The Spread of HIV in Africa. Africa is home to roughly two thirds of the world’s HIV/AIDS cases, and the enduring question is: why? The popular explanations include extreme poverty, lack of HIV education, and insufficient access to condoms and healthcare. SAMUEL BECKETT: NOTHING FUNNIER THAN UNHAPPINESS Samuel Beckett: Nothing Funnier Than Unhappiness. David Mamet nails it. “He was a great kisser,” Mamet faxes the New York Times in answer to the centennial survey of American playwrights on the modernist master, Samuel Beckett. PETER HESSLER'S NEW CHINA: IS THIS ANY WAY TO LIVE? Peter Hessler, covering the new China for The New Yorker, made himself the rising star of the John McPhee school of reporting. It’s not just that he’d taken McPhee’s writing course at Princeton — known sometimes as The Literature of Fact. (“I prefer to call it factual writing,” McPhee has said.) DAVID KENNEDY: REQUIEM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS? David Kennedy: Requiem for Human Rights? Twenty five years ago on a human-rights mission to Uruguay, David Kennedy fashioned the legal argument that freed five tortured prisoners (mostly medical students) from prison under a military dictatorship. The odd part is that Kennedy (now Brown University’s vice president for international affairs) came away from his own adventure with OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Christopher Lydon in conversation on arts, ideas and politics. Pandemic Premonitions A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known.SHOWS ARCHIVES
There’s a swerve in the road, signs that say “Sharp Curves Ahead,” in the origin story of the COVID pandemic. Where did thatvirus come from?
CRAIGSLIST - OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Once, at an Internet conference, I was standing next to Craig of Craigslist and I thanked him for my wonderful apartment. He was as gracious as could be, but you could see it pained him a little; clearly he spends most of his time in public fielding strangers who want to thank him for their apartments. SEEING RED IN TRUMP'S AMERICA Seeing Red in Trump’s America. So! It happened. Hillary Clinton failed. Donald J. Trump will become the 45 th of the United States. His election marks an earthquake in American politics – one that the seismic monitors of Big Media political pundits, data heads and op-ed waxers all failed to predict. AT HOME IN JAPAN WITH PICO IYER At Home in Japan with Pico Iyer. Pico Iyer once described himself as “a global village on two legs.” He’s the writing champion of cosmopolitan consciousness who lived awhile inside the Los Angeles airport just to feel the great stream of humanity, displaced like himself, in endless motion. VAN MORRISON'S COSMIC ACCIDENT Van Morrison’s Cosmic Accident. In the annals of rock music albums, Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks is one of a kind. In an earthy medium, it’s a masterpiece of abstraction.THE FOG OF VIETNAM
Viet Cong had penetrated the US embassy in Saigon and made a 6-hour fight of it. And the gruesome back-and-forth battle of Hué was underway in Vietnam’s old capital, a university town on the Perfume River, described by the late Michael Herr as “the one really lovely city” in the country. THE FIVE NSA PROGRAMS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT It’s been a little over a year since revelations from Edward Snowden’s historic NSA leak started appearing in newspapers around the world, and information about new surveillance programs is still surfacing every month. Last week, The Washington Post analyzed 160,000 NSA records and found that “ordinary Internet users, American and non-American alike, far outnumber legally targeted JAMES VS. ROOSEVELT: LETTERS TO THE CRIMSON Jackson Lears has dramatized the relationship between Theodore Roosevelt and William James, but evidence of that conversation is actually hard to find. We turned up one interesting chapter in the conversation turning around the Venezuelan Crisis of 1895, and playing out in the pages of the Harvard Crimson. WHERE DOES ALL THAT MONEY GO? College tuition is rising faster than medical costs, inflation, and certainly the income of 99% of Americans. Four years at a private university now costs as much as a new Ferrari, and a student at a public university can expect to graduate $25,000 in debt. OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Christopher Lydon in conversation on arts, ideas and politics. Pandemic Premonitions A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known.SHOWS ARCHIVES
There’s a swerve in the road, signs that say “Sharp Curves Ahead,” in the origin story of the COVID pandemic. Where did thatvirus come from?
CRAIGSLIST - OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Once, at an Internet conference, I was standing next to Craig of Craigslist and I thanked him for my wonderful apartment. He was as gracious as could be, but you could see it pained him a little; clearly he spends most of his time in public fielding strangers who want to thank him for their apartments. SEEING RED IN TRUMP'S AMERICA Seeing Red in Trump’s America. So! It happened. Hillary Clinton failed. Donald J. Trump will become the 45 th of the United States. His election marks an earthquake in American politics – one that the seismic monitors of Big Media political pundits, data heads and op-ed waxers all failed to predict. AT HOME IN JAPAN WITH PICO IYER At Home in Japan with Pico Iyer. Pico Iyer once described himself as “a global village on two legs.” He’s the writing champion of cosmopolitan consciousness who lived awhile inside the Los Angeles airport just to feel the great stream of humanity, displaced like himself, in endless motion. VAN MORRISON'S COSMIC ACCIDENT Van Morrison’s Cosmic Accident. In the annals of rock music albums, Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks is one of a kind. In an earthy medium, it’s a masterpiece of abstraction.THE FOG OF VIETNAM
Viet Cong had penetrated the US embassy in Saigon and made a 6-hour fight of it. And the gruesome back-and-forth battle of Hué was underway in Vietnam’s old capital, a university town on the Perfume River, described by the late Michael Herr as “the one really lovely city” in the country. THE FIVE NSA PROGRAMS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT It’s been a little over a year since revelations from Edward Snowden’s historic NSA leak started appearing in newspapers around the world, and information about new surveillance programs is still surfacing every month. Last week, The Washington Post analyzed 160,000 NSA records and found that “ordinary Internet users, American and non-American alike, far outnumber legally targeted JAMES VS. ROOSEVELT: LETTERS TO THE CRIMSON Jackson Lears has dramatized the relationship between Theodore Roosevelt and William James, but evidence of that conversation is actually hard to find. We turned up one interesting chapter in the conversation turning around the Venezuelan Crisis of 1895, and playing out in the pages of the Harvard Crimson. WHERE DOES ALL THAT MONEY GO? College tuition is rising faster than medical costs, inflation, and certainly the income of 99% of Americans. Four years at a private university now costs as much as a new Ferrari, and a student at a public university can expect to graduate $25,000 in debt. PANDEMIC PREMONITIONS Pandemic Premonitions. A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known. Even now, nobody can tell you absolutely whether the infectious virus might have leaked, or been leaked, from a Chinese lab in Wuhan. THE FIVE NSA PROGRAMS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT It’s been a little over a year since revelations from Edward Snowden’s historic NSA leak started appearing in newspapers around the world, and information about new surveillance programs is still surfacing every month. Last week, The Washington Post analyzed 160,000 NSA records and found that “ordinary Internet users, American and non-American alike, far outnumber legally targetedST. LOUIS BLUES
St. Louis Blues. The city of St. Louis is the story of this hour. At the heart of North America, where the great Missouri River joins the Mississippi, it was the gateway to Thomas Jefferson’s Louisiana Purchase—to Indian territory, the fur trade, the buffalo, the plains, and all the minerals below—redefined in the 1800s as theAmerican West.
IMMIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT, WITH AMARTYA SEN Immigration and Development, with Amartya Sen Click to Listen to the Show (24 MB MP3) With the Nobel economist Amartya Sen, we pick up the question hanging at the end of our conversation on remittances and the flood of migrant workers. JFK IN THE AMERICAN CENTURY A bold new life of JFK cues Emerson’s line: “there is no history, only biography,” particularly when the life of a man and the American Century roll out together. John F. Kennedy was born – WHERE DOES ALL THAT MONEY GO? College tuition is rising faster than medical costs, inflation, and certainly the income of 99% of Americans. Four years at a private university now costs as much as a new Ferrari, and a student at a public university can expect to graduate $25,000 in debt. THE BANALITY OF EVIL, PART II The Banality of Evil, Part II Click to Listen to the Show (24 MB MP3) We started this conversation last week with our first show on Hannah Arendt and the “banality of JAMES DOUGLASS: JFK AND THE UNSPEAKABLE. PART ONE. James Douglass: JFK and the Unspeakable.Part One. James Douglass is bracing us to reimagine John F. Kennedy around the 50th anniversary of his “rendezvous with death.” He’s encouraging us to face what has seemed to me a central question — not so much the “Who Killed JFK?” bumper-sticker, but more “Why can’t we know?” ONE NATION UNDER SURVEILLANCE It’s the artists — from Orwell of Nineteen Eighty-Four, to Philip Dick and Margaret Atwood, to Trevor Paglen and Banksy — who raise the big questions: about voyeurism, about safety and risk, and the essence of our public and private selves. Is there a book or a movie that tells us what kind of world are we living in, or where the surveillance state begins and ends? What impact does mass READING CHEKHOV V: "THE TEACHER OF LITERATURE" Reading Chekhov V: “The Teacher of Literature” Why, again, are we reading Anton Chekhov — the doctor, playwright, story writer, model man who died young in 1904? He’d been the toast of twilight Russia before the revolution, and as we keep discovering again, he was a modern in so many ways, a contemporary of ours, really. OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Christopher Lydon in conversation on arts, ideas and politics. Pandemic Premonitions A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known.SHOWS ARCHIVES
There’s a swerve in the road, signs that say “Sharp Curves Ahead,” in the origin story of the COVID pandemic. Where did thatvirus come from?
CRAIGSLIST - OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Once, at an Internet conference, I was standing next to Craig of Craigslist and I thanked him for my wonderful apartment. He was as gracious as could be, but you could see it pained him a little; clearly he spends most of his time in public fielding strangers who want to thank him for their apartments. SEEING RED IN TRUMP'S AMERICA Seeing Red in Trump’s America. So! It happened. Hillary Clinton failed. Donald J. Trump will become the 45 th of the United States. His election marks an earthquake in American politics – one that the seismic monitors of Big Media political pundits, data heads and op-ed waxers all failed to predict. AT HOME IN JAPAN WITH PICO IYER At Home in Japan with Pico Iyer. Pico Iyer once described himself as “a global village on two legs.” He’s the writing champion of cosmopolitan consciousness who lived awhile inside the Los Angeles airport just to feel the great stream of humanity, displaced like himself, in endless motion. VAN MORRISON'S COSMIC ACCIDENT Van Morrison’s Cosmic Accident. In the annals of rock music albums, Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks is one of a kind. In an earthy medium, it’s a masterpiece of abstraction.THE FOG OF VIETNAM
Viet Cong had penetrated the US embassy in Saigon and made a 6-hour fight of it. And the gruesome back-and-forth battle of Hué was underway in Vietnam’s old capital, a university town on the Perfume River, described by the late Michael Herr as “the one really lovely city” in the country. THE FIVE NSA PROGRAMS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT It’s been a little over a year since revelations from Edward Snowden’s historic NSA leak started appearing in newspapers around the world, and information about new surveillance programs is still surfacing every month. Last week, The Washington Post analyzed 160,000 NSA records and found that “ordinary Internet users, American and non-American alike, far outnumber legally targeted JAMES VS. ROOSEVELT: LETTERS TO THE CRIMSON Jackson Lears has dramatized the relationship between Theodore Roosevelt and William James, but evidence of that conversation is actually hard to find. We turned up one interesting chapter in the conversation turning around the Venezuelan Crisis of 1895, and playing out in the pages of the Harvard Crimson. WHERE DOES ALL THAT MONEY GO? College tuition is rising faster than medical costs, inflation, and certainly the income of 99% of Americans. Four years at a private university now costs as much as a new Ferrari, and a student at a public university can expect to graduate $25,000 in debt. OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Christopher Lydon in conversation on arts, ideas and politics. Pandemic Premonitions A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known.SHOWS ARCHIVES
There’s a swerve in the road, signs that say “Sharp Curves Ahead,” in the origin story of the COVID pandemic. Where did thatvirus come from?
CRAIGSLIST - OPEN SOURCE WITH CHRISTOPHER LYDON Once, at an Internet conference, I was standing next to Craig of Craigslist and I thanked him for my wonderful apartment. He was as gracious as could be, but you could see it pained him a little; clearly he spends most of his time in public fielding strangers who want to thank him for their apartments. SEEING RED IN TRUMP'S AMERICA Seeing Red in Trump’s America. So! It happened. Hillary Clinton failed. Donald J. Trump will become the 45 th of the United States. His election marks an earthquake in American politics – one that the seismic monitors of Big Media political pundits, data heads and op-ed waxers all failed to predict. AT HOME IN JAPAN WITH PICO IYER At Home in Japan with Pico Iyer. Pico Iyer once described himself as “a global village on two legs.” He’s the writing champion of cosmopolitan consciousness who lived awhile inside the Los Angeles airport just to feel the great stream of humanity, displaced like himself, in endless motion. VAN MORRISON'S COSMIC ACCIDENT Van Morrison’s Cosmic Accident. In the annals of rock music albums, Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks is one of a kind. In an earthy medium, it’s a masterpiece of abstraction.THE FOG OF VIETNAM
Viet Cong had penetrated the US embassy in Saigon and made a 6-hour fight of it. And the gruesome back-and-forth battle of Hué was underway in Vietnam’s old capital, a university town on the Perfume River, described by the late Michael Herr as “the one really lovely city” in the country. THE FIVE NSA PROGRAMS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT It’s been a little over a year since revelations from Edward Snowden’s historic NSA leak started appearing in newspapers around the world, and information about new surveillance programs is still surfacing every month. Last week, The Washington Post analyzed 160,000 NSA records and found that “ordinary Internet users, American and non-American alike, far outnumber legally targeted JAMES VS. ROOSEVELT: LETTERS TO THE CRIMSON Jackson Lears has dramatized the relationship between Theodore Roosevelt and William James, but evidence of that conversation is actually hard to find. We turned up one interesting chapter in the conversation turning around the Venezuelan Crisis of 1895, and playing out in the pages of the Harvard Crimson. WHERE DOES ALL THAT MONEY GO? College tuition is rising faster than medical costs, inflation, and certainly the income of 99% of Americans. Four years at a private university now costs as much as a new Ferrari, and a student at a public university can expect to graduate $25,000 in debt. PANDEMIC PREMONITIONS Pandemic Premonitions. A year and a half into the COVID story, notice the many unknowns, and one big known. Even now, nobody can tell you absolutely whether the infectious virus might have leaked, or been leaked, from a Chinese lab in Wuhan. THE FIVE NSA PROGRAMS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT It’s been a little over a year since revelations from Edward Snowden’s historic NSA leak started appearing in newspapers around the world, and information about new surveillance programs is still surfacing every month. Last week, The Washington Post analyzed 160,000 NSA records and found that “ordinary Internet users, American and non-American alike, far outnumber legally targetedST. LOUIS BLUES
St. Louis Blues. The city of St. Louis is the story of this hour. At the heart of North America, where the great Missouri River joins the Mississippi, it was the gateway to Thomas Jefferson’s Louisiana Purchase—to Indian territory, the fur trade, the buffalo, the plains, and all the minerals below—redefined in the 1800s as theAmerican West.
IMMIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT, WITH AMARTYA SEN Immigration and Development, with Amartya Sen Click to Listen to the Show (24 MB MP3) With the Nobel economist Amartya Sen, we pick up the question hanging at the end of our conversation on remittances and the flood of migrant workers. JFK IN THE AMERICAN CENTURY A bold new life of JFK cues Emerson’s line: “there is no history, only biography,” particularly when the life of a man and the American Century roll out together. John F. Kennedy was born – WHERE DOES ALL THAT MONEY GO? College tuition is rising faster than medical costs, inflation, and certainly the income of 99% of Americans. Four years at a private university now costs as much as a new Ferrari, and a student at a public university can expect to graduate $25,000 in debt. THE BANALITY OF EVIL, PART II The Banality of Evil, Part II Click to Listen to the Show (24 MB MP3) We started this conversation last week with our first show on Hannah Arendt and the “banality of JAMES DOUGLASS: JFK AND THE UNSPEAKABLE. PART ONE. James Douglass: JFK and the Unspeakable.Part One. James Douglass is bracing us to reimagine John F. Kennedy around the 50th anniversary of his “rendezvous with death.” He’s encouraging us to face what has seemed to me a central question — not so much the “Who Killed JFK?” bumper-sticker, but more “Why can’t we know?” ONE NATION UNDER SURVEILLANCE It’s the artists — from Orwell of Nineteen Eighty-Four, to Philip Dick and Margaret Atwood, to Trevor Paglen and Banksy — who raise the big questions: about voyeurism, about safety and risk, and the essence of our public and private selves. Is there a book or a movie that tells us what kind of world are we living in, or where the surveillance state begins and ends? What impact does mass READING CHEKHOV V: "THE TEACHER OF LITERATURE" Reading Chekhov V: “The Teacher of Literature” Why, again, are we reading Anton Chekhov — the doctor, playwright, story writer, model man who died young in 1904? He’d been the toast of twilight Russia before the revolution, and as we keep discovering again, he was a modern in so many ways, a contemporary of ours, really.Details
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