Impromptu – Détails, épisodes et analyse
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Impromptu
The Washington Post
Fréquence : 1 épisode/5j. Total Éps: 107

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What do men want?
mardi 3 septembre 2024 • Durée 30:49
The evidence is in. American men are facing a crisis — in health, in education and in the labor force. But under all of that runs deeper trends — disconnection, loneliness and a lack of role models. Columnists Theodore Johnson and Shadi Hamid talk with Richard Reeves, founder of the American Institute for Boys and Men, about the dueling visions of masculinity on the political stage and a hopeful way forward for the modern man.
Check out some of the work Richard Reeves mentioned in the show:
“Men are having a health crisis. Why aren’t we paying attention?”
“The State of Working Class Men”
And read more from Washington Post Opinions on this topic:
Theodore Johnson: “I grappled with masculinity. My mother showed me the truth.”
Christine Emba: “ Men are lost. Here’s a map out of the wilderness.”
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
Why not pay teachers $100,000?
mardi 27 août 2024 • Durée 13:00
As American kids head back to school, columnist Daniel Pink makes the case for paying teachers more money. High-quality teachers, he argues, significantly improve student learning, so shouldn’t they be paid as much as somebody assessing insurance premiums on your car? Plus, humor columnist Alexandra Petri discusses sending her child to school for the first time.
This essay by Daniel Pink is part of a year-long project with Washington Post Opinions called “Why Not?” Check out some of the other columns in his series:
Why not ban left turns on busy streets?
Why not shake up the Olympics?
Why not overhaul America’s national holidays?
Why not require a civics test as a rite of passage for all Americans?
Don’t miss any of Daniel Pink’s “Why Not?” columns. You can follow his LinkedIn newsletter here.
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
America, we love you. But it’s hard.
mercredi 3 juillet 2024 • Durée 16:58
It’s the week of the Fourth of July and the word patriotism is as divisive as the rest of American politics. Theodore Johnson, Karen Attiah and Jason Rezaian discuss the good and the bad about the United States, and how to reconcile its shortcomings while pushing for a better future.
Read more from some of our columnists —
Ted Johnson: “American democracy is fine. It's the republic that's in trouble.”
“Buck up, America. Help is on the way.”
Karen Attiah: “How to reckon with the cult of the gun”
Biden finally overshadowed Trump, in all the wrong ways
vendredi 28 juin 2024 • Durée 19:33
President Biden’s debate performance has Democrats in a panic and Donald Trump supporters gleeful. Columnists Karen Tumulty, Dana Milbank and Jim Geraghty process how things feel the morning after, whether the president should step aside and how the truth was the night’s biggest loser.
Read more from our columnists about the debate:
Karen Tumulty: “The Great Democratic Freakout is upon us”
Dana Milbank: “If America is failing, that debate showed why”
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
Is the smartphone panic dumb?
mercredi 26 juin 2024 • Durée 22:55
Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy recommended putting a warning on social media for minors last week, while governors from coast to coast have pushed for restrictions on teen phone use. But how worried should we really be, and what is there to do about it? Post columnists Amanda Ripley, Molly Roberts and Theodore Johnson talk through the dumbphone trend, how explicit lyric warnings on CDs backfired and what actually worked in the campaigns to stop kids from smoking.
Listen to Murthy talking to our colleagues on the daily news podcast, Post Reports, about why he sees social media as such a threat to young people.
"How bullying shaped the surgeon general's fight against social media"
Read more from the Washington Post:
“Surgeon general calls for social media warning labels”
“What research actually says about social media and kids’ health”
“Opinion | Why a warning label for social media is so crucial”
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Movie theaters are dying. Do you care?
mercredi 19 juin 2024 • Durée 24:13
It’s been a rough few years for movie theaters, and the dismal start to the summer blockbuster season hasn’t helped. If people go to theaters less often, will that change the type of movies that are made? Is the future of moviegoing a boutique, high-end experience? Matt Belloni, host of “The Town,” joins The Post’s Alyssa Rosenberg and Chris Suellentrop to talk about what’s going on with the movies and what, if anything, will get people out of their living rooms and into theaters.
Read more from Belloni here and subscribe to his “What I’m Hearing” newsletter. Or you can find his podcast about the entertainment business, “The Town” wherever you listen.
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
Why can't Americans agree on immigration?
mercredi 12 juin 2024 • Durée 20:08
A quarter of Americans, most of them Republicans, say immigration is the most pressing issue facing the country. Post columnists Karen Tumulty, León Krauze and Jim Geraghty discuss why this issue is top of mind for so many people, how politics continues to thwart policy and whether Americans still see our country as a cultural melting pot.
Read more from the columnists.
Karen Tumulty: “The U.S. is failing millions of undocumented essential workers”
León Krauze: “Baltimore Francis Scott Key Bridge fall spotlights immigrant workers”
Jim Geraghty: “Why America Needs a Secure Border | National Review”
And here’s more information on the topics discussed in the show:
“Immigration Named Top U.S. Problem for Third Straight Month”
“The Economic Impacts of Removing Unauthorized Immigrant Workers”
“Fueled by unprecedented border crossings, a record 3 million cases clog US immigration courts”
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
So you married a Supreme Court justice
mercredi 5 juin 2024 • Durée 25:41
The Alitos are the latest couple to face the question: When you are married to someone in public life — a Supreme Court justice, a member of Congress, a Post Opinions columnist — what compromises do you need to make? Should you be held to the same ethical standards as your spouse? Charles Lane, Ruth Marcus and James Hohmann discuss the politics of marriage, whether the Supreme Court is more partisan now than in the past and why they don’t think Justice Alito needs to recuse himself in the Jan. 6 case.
Read more from the Washington Post:
“The strange case of Alito v. Alito”
“Sam Alito's flag flew upside down. Are his ethics?”
“Read Justice Alito’s letter denying requests to recuse from Jan. 6 cases”
An impromptu ‘Impromptu’: Processing Trump’s conviction
vendredi 31 mai 2024 • Durée 25:12
Do we actually want AI that seems human?
mercredi 29 mai 2024 • Durée 19:35
Do we actually want AI that seems human?
Chatbots are being made to act and sound like humans. That makes them easier to talk to, but there could be other consequences. As our relationships with artificial intelligence evolve, do we need to draw a brighter line between what is technology and what is us? Opinions columnists Josh Tyrangiel, Bina Venkataraman and Amanda Ripley talk about what we really want out of AI.
Read more on AI from our Washington Post columnists.
Josh Tyrangiel:
“Honestly, I love when AI hallucinates”
“Let AI remake the whole U.S. government (oh, and save the country)”
“College students are dropping out in droves. Two sisters could fix that.”
Bina Venkataraman:
“When technology of the future traps people in the past”
“Can AI solve medical mysteries? It's worth finding out.”
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