It’s the time of year when many people feel an overpowering urge to dig—to plant their back yard or vegetable garden, or even the flowerpots on the fire escape. “I just love the whole process. I love the muck of it,” Jill Lepore tells David Remnick. “You’re kind of entrapped in a completely different rhythm, and it’s all so entirely out of your control. … It’s a never-ending process of education.” Lepore, a professor of history as well as a staff writer, wrote recently on her passion for seed catalogues, and shares a couple of things she’s excited about growing this year.
Geoffrey Hinton: “It’s Far Too Late” to Stop Artificial Intelligence
A Rise in Antisemitism, at Home and Abroad
Emerald Fennell’s Anatomy of Desire
Will the Government Put the Reins on Amazon?
From “On the Media”: David Remnick Talks with Brooke Gladstone About Reporting in Israel
Is a “Win-Win” Still Possible in Policing?
Sybrina Fulton: “Trayvon Martin Could Have Been Anybody’s Son”
From On the Media: We Don’t Talk About Leonard Leo
Is there a Path Forward for Gaza and Israel?
”Fellow Travelers”: A Showtime Series Explores a Forgotten Witch Hunt
Spike Lee on His “Dream Project,” a Joe Louis Bio-Pic
Rodrigo Duterte’s Deadly Promise
Werner Herzog Defends His “Ecstatic” Approach to the Truth
Rubén Blades Wasn’t Supposed to Be a Salsa Star
Al Gore on the Climate Crisis: “We Have a Switch We Can Flip”
Introducing Critics at Large: The Myth-Making of Elon Musk
Should Biden Push for Regime Change in Russia?
Olivia Rodrigo Talks with David Remnick
Hernan Diaz’s “Trust,” a Novel of High Finance
Kelly Clarkson on Writing About Divorce
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Should This Exist?
Without Fail
Hannibal Buress
Longform
Conversations