Part one of a series examining the theory of constitutional interpretation that has eaten the law and gobbled up a bunch of your rights with it.
Getting used to a new city, work advice, passing on wisdom, and more are explored in this week’s audio essay from John Dickerson.
The Money crew discusses the DEA’s softer cannabis rules, Binance founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao’s prison sentence, and why ravioli costs so much.
The legacy of the Flint water crisis: disability, disinvestment, and despair.
Jenée Desmond-Harris is joined by writer, producer, and host Heben Nigatu.
Scientists are observing, for the first time, the virus spreading cow-to-cow—is human-to-human next?
Campus protests march on; Supreme Court tries “history and tradition”; and killing her dog bites Governor Kristi Noem.
Slate’s parenting podcast on global flavors, sans jetlag.
The hosts discuss the challenges of setting deadlines for your work as a freelancer.
‘Every single thing about this is completely maddening. And none of it had to happen.”
Bryan and Jules review the new series from Starz with guest host June Thomas
Even surgeon generals get sticker shock. Here are Jerome Adams’s suggestions for how to fight back.
This week, the hosts discuss Challengers, Netflix’s Baby Reindeer, and the state of magazines.
How the abrupt closure of two popular venture-backed brands will affect yuppie lunch culture and cult brand-ism
We’re doing more than ever, and still not nearly enough.
Advice for what to do when the path forward suddenly isn’t so clear.
Courtney Martin talks with Carvell Wallace about writing, interviewing—and his new memoir.
Wall Street Journal fitness writer Jen Murphy shares tips for staying in shape while running the rat race.
It’s the law of unintended consequences.
Republicans these days are ceding popular elections but holding on to power. That strategy is older than you think.