- 51 minutes 55 secondsGladiators, real housewives and the pull of reality TVPeople used to say "believe your eyes." But these days that's not so easy to do. What we scroll through every day blurs the line between entertainment and fact. And nowhere is that phenomenon more evident than in reality television. Today on the show, we tackle the genre that takes our most potent feelings – love, hope, anxiety, loneliness – and turns them into profit. This episode originally ran in 2022.
Guests:
Goloka Bolte, reality TV casting director
Dr. Jana Scrivani, licensed clinical psychologist
Racquel Gates, associate professor of film and media studies at Columbia University
Dr. J'tia Hart, nuclear engineer on Survivor (Season 28)
Jeff Jenkins, founder of Jeff Jenkins Productions (JJP)
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NPR Privacy Policy30 April 2026, 7:10 am - 15 minutes 3 secondsThe fight that shook AmericaJack Johnson was the first world Black heavyweight champion, but winning the title was only part of the battle. Every time Johnson stepped into a boxing ring, he struck a blow to white supremacy. In this week’s episode, the story of Jack Johnson and the legacy of Black athletes pushing for social change in America.
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NPR Privacy Policy28 April 2026, 7:05 am - 48 minutes 34 secondsThe billionaires' utopia blueprintStarbase. Prospera. California Forever. Mars. From private cities to interstellar colonies, tech billionaires like Elon Musk and Peter Thiel have backed experiments designed to operate beyond the borders — and laws — most of us live by. So we wondered: has this happened before? In this episode, we visit an Arctic archipelago, homesteads floating in the ocean, and a startup city in Honduras to explore where places built with the ultra-rich in mind leave all the rest of us.
Guests:
Atossa Araxia Abrahamian, author of The Cosmopolites and The Hidden Globe: How Wealth Hacks the World
Wayne Gramlich, retired computer engineer
Dan Girma, producer on NPR's Embedded podcast
Jacob Silverman, author of Gilded Rage: Elon Musk and the Radicalization of Silicon Valley
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NPR Privacy Policy23 April 2026, 7:05 am - 13 minutes 13 secondsWhy the wall was builtAs the United States expanded into a global superpower, it simultaneously strengthened its national borders and began to limit who could come in and out of the country. In this week’s episode, the story of how one of the very first walls meant to divide people was built on the US Southern border.
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NPR Privacy Policy21 April 2026, 7:05 am - 48 minutes 11 secondsThe original clickbait kingWhen we call something "clickbait," we don't mean it as a compliment. But let's be real: we also click. It's hard to resist a spicy story, and 19th-century newspaper tycoon William Randolph Hearst knew it. At a time when most papers merely reported events, his papers created them, sending reporters out to perform daring rescues, solve sensational murders, and even meddle in geopolitics. Today on the show: the man who brought spectacle and scandal to the news — and changed journalism forever.
Guests:
Karen Roggenkamp, professor of English at East Texas A&M University and author of Narrating the News and Sympathy, Madness, and Crime
W. Joseph Campbell, emeritus professor of communication at American University and author of The Year That Defined American Journalism: 1897 and the Clash of Paradigms and Lost in a Gallup: Polling Failure in U.S. Presidential Elections
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NPR Privacy Policy16 April 2026, 7:10 am - 15 minutes 39 secondsHow the US became AmericaIn the late 1890s, the United States fought wars and backed independence movements around the world. By the time the fighting was over, the US emerged as a new global power —and with it, a new identity. This week: how the U.S. became an empire, and why it started calling itself America.
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NPR Privacy Policy14 April 2026, 7:05 am - 51 minutes 18 secondsWill AI destroy us... or save us?Like it or not, artificial intelligence is deeply rooted in our lives. Its invisible architecture stretches everywhere from dating apps to medical care. In this new world, what remains uniquely human? On today's episode, we explore the tension between our love of AI and our fear of it — and try to decode the humans behind the machines. This episode originally published in March of 2023.
Guests:
George Zarkadakis, author of In Our Own Image: Will Artificial Intelligence Save or Destroy Us?
Francis Collins, physician-geneticist who led the Human Genome Project
Stephanie Dick, assistant professor in the School of Communication at Simon Fraser University
Meredith Broussard, data journalism professor at New York University, and author of More Than a Glitch: Confronting Race, Gender and Ability Bias in Tech
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NPR Privacy Policy9 April 2026, 7:05 am - 15 minutes 26 secondsWho gets to be an American citizen?The 14th Amendment guaranteed equal citizenship after the Civil War, but who exactly counted as a citizen? Today on the show, the story of Wong Kim Ark, a man born in San Francisco to Chinese parents, whose Supreme Court case defined birthright citizenship more than a century ago.
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NPR Privacy Policy7 April 2026, 7:05 am - 51 minutes 37 secondsAl Capone and the transformation of the IRSGangsters, banksters, and politicians. Today on the show, how the hunt for Al Capone helped turn the IRS into one of the U.S. government's most powerful tools — and most effective weapons. This episode originally published in May of 2025.
Guests:
Joe Thorndike, historian for Tax Analysts and author of Their Fair Share: Taxing the Rich in the Age of FDR.
Paul Camacho, retired special agent for the IRS Criminal Investigation Division and member of the board of directors at the Mob Museum in Las Vegas.
Jason Scott Smith, historian at The University of New Mexico and author of two books about FDR and the New Deal.
Lawrence Reed, president emeritus of The Foundation for Economic Education.
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NPR Privacy Policy2 April 2026, 7:05 am - 14 minutes 35 secondsWhat the banana tells us about US historyWhat do bananas have to do with American history? On this week’s episode, how the sweet fruit became an American staple because of one entrepreneur who took business off US shores, expanding the country’s economic reach and influence.
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NPR Privacy Policy31 March 2026, 7:05 am - 49 minutes 39 secondsHow Saudi Arabia shaped Silicon ValleyElon Musk. Donald Trump. Bill Gates. Sam Altman. Larry Ellison. Alex Karp. Jared Kushner. Mr. Beast. Jeffrey Epstein… Those are just a few of the people who have been friendly with, and often done business with, Saudi Arabia over the last decade. Today on the show: how one of the world’s most authoritarian regimes became one of Silicon Valley’s biggest investors – and what that’s meant for the rest of us.
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