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The Daily
Description

This is what the news should sound like. The biggest stories of our time, told by the best journalists in the world. Hosted by Michael Barbaro. Twenty minutes a day, five days a week, ready by 6 a.m. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Listen to this podcast in New York Times Audio, our new iOS app for news subscribers. Download now at nytimes.com/audioapp

Episodes
  • 2025 / 5 / 9
    An American Pope

    The world’s 1.4 billion Catholics have a new pope, and for the first time, he is from America.Jason Horowitz, the Rome bureau chief of The New York Times, introduces us to Pope Leo XIV.Guest: Jason Horowitz,...

  • 2025 / 5 / 8
    A Frightening Moment to Fly

    A 90-second failure of Newark Airport’s air-traffic safety systems, which blacked out communication to planes carrying thousands of passengers, has exposed a new level of crisis in air travel.Kate Kelly, an...

  • 2025 / 5 / 7
    What Warren Buffett Understood About Capitalism

    A few days ago, Warren Buffett, the most successful investor in history, said he would retire as C.E.O. of Berkshire Hathaway, the conglomerate that he built into a trillion-dollar colossus.Andrew Ross...

  • 2025 / 5 / 6
    A Climate Warning From the Fertile Crescent

    As the Middle East braces for another year of extreme heat, climate change is turning the soil to dust in the landscape that has long been known as the fertile crescent — and water has become a new source of...

  • 2025 / 5 / 5
    You Have Questions About the Economy. We Have Answers.

    At a time of enormous economic upheaval and uncertainty prompted by President Trump’s trade war, we asked our listeners what they wanted to understand about this financial moment.Ben Casselman, the chief...

  • 2025 / 5 / 4
    The Sunday Read: ‘This Is the Holocaust Story I Said I Wouldn’t Write’

    When Taffy Brodesser-Akner became a writer, Mr. Lindenblatt, the father of one of her oldest friends, began asking to tell his story of survival during the Holocaust in one of the magazines or newspapers she...

  • 2025 / 5 / 3
    'The Interview': Ocean Vuong Was Ready to Kill. Then a Moment of Grace Changed His Life.

    The poet and novelist on the real reason he became a writer.Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on...

  • 2025 / 5 / 2
    Family Separation 2.0

    In his first 100 days in office, President Trump has struggled to fulfill his promise to carry out mass deportations, a reality that has prompted his administration to change its strategy.Rather than putting...

  • 2025 / 5 / 1
    The Crypto President

    President Trump was once a loud skeptic of cryptocurrency — one who called it a haven for drug dealers and scammers. But over the past few months, he’s emerged as the industry’s biggest cheerleader.A New York...

  • 2025 / 4 / 30
    100 Days

    On Tuesday, the second Trump presidency officially reached the 100-day mark.It’s been a hundred days of transformation, tariffs, retribution, firings and deportation the likes of which America has never seen...

  • 2025 / 4 / 29
    The Housing Market Has New Rules. Realtors Are Evading Them.

    Last year, a historic legal settlement resulted in sweeping rule changes that were supposed to lower the price of buying and selling a home across the country.But those changes would cost real-estate agents...

  • 2025 / 4 / 28
    Americans to Trump: You’ve Gone Too Far

    Warning: This episode contains strong language.One question that has hung over the first 100 days of President Trump’s second term: Is his aggressive approach to everything from deportations to tariffs what...

  • 2025 / 4 / 27
    The Sunday Read: ‘The Strange, Post-Partisan Popularity of the Unabomber’

    Online, there is a name for the experience of finding sympathy with Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber: Tedpilling. To be Tedpilled means to read Paragraph 1 of Kaczynski’s manifesto, its assertion that the mad...

  • 2025 / 4 / 26
    'The Interview': Isabel Allende Understands How Fear Changes a Society

    The beloved author left Chile at a time of great turmoil and has longed for the nation of her youth ever since. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop...

  • 2025 / 4 / 25
    Children’s Books Go Before the Supreme Court

    On Tuesday, the Supreme Court heard a case that could hand parents with religious objections a lot more control over what their kids learn in the classroom.Adam Liptak, who covers the Supreme Court, explains...

  • 2025 / 4 / 24
    What an Iowa Farmer Fears About the Trade War

    In the increasingly bitter trade war between the United States and China, perhaps nobody has more at stake than America’s soybean farmers, whose crop has become the country’s single biggest export to...

  • 2025 / 4 / 23
    Trump Says They’re Foreign Gang Members. Are They?

    In recent weeks, the Trump administration has deported hundreds of Venezuelan migrants by quickly labeling them as gang members and foreign enemies, and boarding them on planes to El Salvador. It’s...

  • 2025 / 4 / 22
    How Pope Francis Changed the Catholic Church

    Church bells rang out across the world on Monday to mark the death of Pope Francis at the age of 88.Jason Horowitz, the Rome bureau chief at The New York Times, discusses the pope’s push to change the church,...

  • 2025 / 4 / 21
    Is the Era of Student Loan Forgiveness Officially Over?

    Across the country, millions of Americans with unpaid student loans are discovering that years of patience and forgiveness from the U.S. government have officially come to an end.Stacy Cowley, a business...

  • 2025 / 4 / 21
    The Era of Student Loan Forgiveness Is Officially Over

    Across the country, millions of Americans with unpaid student loans are discovering that years of patience and forgiveness from the U.S. government have officially come to an end.Stacy Cowley, a business...

  • 2025 / 4 / 20
    The Sunday Read: ‘How Analytics Marginalized Baseball’s Superstar Pitchers’

    One day at Wrigley Field in Chicago last May, Paul Skenes was pitching for the Pittsburgh Pirates, carving out a small piece of baseball history in his second big-league game. He struck out the first seven...

  • 2025 / 4 / 19
    'The Interview': Nate Bargatze Doesn’t Mind if You Think He’s an Idiot

    The self-deprecating stand-up comic discusses having a magician for a father, the challenge of mainstream comedy and his aspirations to build the next Disneyland. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts...

  • 2025 / 4 / 18
    Do Trump Voters Like His Tariffs? We Went to Michigan to Find Out.

    President Trump’s tariffs have terrified stock markets, business owners and anyone with a 401(k). Does that mean that his approach to trade is becoming a major political liability?Astead W. Herndon, a...

  • 2025 / 4 / 17
    The Trial Mark Zuckerberg Couldn’t Prevent

    Testimonies began this week in one of the most aggressive cases the government has ever brought against a big tech company. Over the next eight weeks, the Federal Trade Commission will argue that Meta, the...

  • 2025 / 4 / 16
    Trump Trashed the Iran Nuclear Deal. Will His Be Any Better?

    For years, President Trump has mocked the Obama administration for the nuclear agreement that it reached with Iran — a plan he disliked so much that he revoked it.Now, as he embarks on talks with Iran to...

  • 2025 / 4 / 15
    Trapped Abroad: The Man at the Center of a Constitutional Standoff

    When President Trump met with El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, at the White House, the fate of one man was hanging in the balance.Adam Liptak, who covers the Supreme Court, discusses the Maryland man...

  • 2025 / 4 / 14
    Her Business Was Thriving. Then Came the Tariffs.

    When President Trump raised tariffs against China to an astonishing 145 percent last week, he radically changed the cost of doing business for thousands of American companies.Michael Barbaro speaks to Beth...

  • 2025 / 4 / 13
    The Sunday Read: ‘Unburying the Remains of the Third Reich’

    When Daniel and Victoria Van Beuningen first toured their future home, a quiet villa in the Polish city of Wroclaw, it had been abandoned for years, its windows sealed up with bricks. But something about its...

  • 2025 / 4 / 12
    'The Interview': Ramy Youssef Is Just Trying to Be ‘Emotionally Correct’

    The creator and comedian discusses his penchant for self-reflection, how politics fits into his work and why he’s not interested in representing anyone but himself.Unlock full access to New York Times...

  • 2025 / 4 / 11
    The Conservative Activist Pushing Trump to Attack U.S. Colleges

    Over the past five years, the activist Christopher Rufo has spearheaded the conservative critique of and assault on critical race theory and diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, organizing effective...

  • 2025 / 4 / 10
    A U-Turn on Tariffs

    After promising that tariffs against dozens of countries were here to stay, no matter how much they hurt businesses or the stock market, President Trump has abruptly reversed course.But there’s an exception:...

  • 2025 / 4 / 9
    The University President Willing to Fight Trump

    Over the past few weeks, some of the most prestigious universities in the country have faced a threat to their very existence.President Trump has frozen billions of dollars in federal funds in an attempt to...

  • 2025 / 4 / 8
    How Trump Wiped Out $10 Trillion in Wealth in 3 Days

    On Monday, global stocks whipsawed over President Trump’s tariffs, a bear market briefly became official in the United States and tit-for-tat retaliation with China intensified.As trillions of dollars in...

  • 2025 / 4 / 7
    ‘I Felt Ashamed.’ Why One Lawyer Resigned When His Firm Caved to Trump

    Over the past few weeks, President Trump has used executive orders to wage war on law firms, specifically targeting those whose lawyers have investigated or sued him, or represented his enemies in...

  • 2025 / 4 / 6
    The Sunday Read: ‘What Happened to Val Kilmer?’

    “The force of his will is the thing I remember about him,” says Taffy Brodesser-Akner, who wrote a profile of Val Kilmer for The New York Times Magazine in May 2020. “He was sure he was going to come back to...

  • 2025 / 4 / 5
    'The Interview': Bill Murray Says He's Not the Man He Used to Be

    The actor talks about his new film “The Friend,” his jerky past and what he doesn’t get about himself. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture....

  • 2025 / 4 / 4
    Fear and Fury: The Fallout From Trump’s Tariffs

    The reverberations from President Trump’s new global tariffs have rocked financial markets and world capitals. American stocks have plunged, and foreign leaders have issued forceful condemnations.The Times...

  • 2025 / 4 / 3
    The Trump Tariffs Poised to Remake Global Trade

    In a history-making day of tariffs, President Trump imposed charges of at least 10 percent on nearly all of America’s trading partners.Ana Swanson, who covers trade for The Times, discusses who will be...

  • 2025 / 4 / 2
    Shen Yun: The Dark Side of a Dance Troupe

    A few days ago, one of the most ubiquitous live shows in the country, Shen Yun, began its latest run at Lincoln Center, drawing thousands of people to a performance that is colorful, acrobatic and — according...

  • 2025 / 4 / 1
    Is Elon Musk Buying Today’s Election in Wisconsin?

    On paper, the election in Wisconsin on Tuesday is about who should control the state’s highest court. In reality, it has become a referendum on Elon Musk, his agenda in Washington and his willingness to flood...

  • 2025 / 3 / 31
    ICE on Campus

    Immigration arrests are taking place at universities across the country. The story of three Columbia students helps explain what’s happening, and why.Hamed Aleaziz, who covers immigration policy, lays out...

  • 2025 / 3 / 30
    The Sunday Read: ‘Why Airline Pilots Feel Pushed to Hide Their Mental Illness’

    Troy Merritt, a pilot for a major U.S. airline, returned from his 30th birthday trip in Croatia in October 2022 — sailing on a catamaran, eating great food, socializing with friends — and cried. This wasn’t...

  • 2025 / 3 / 29
    'The Interview': Megyn Kelly Is Embracing Her Bias and Rejecting the 'Old Rules'

    The former Fox News and current YouTube host on her professional evolution, conservative media and why she endorsed Trump.Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to...

  • 2025 / 3 / 28
    Trump 2.0: Group Chats and a New Spat

    What does the continuing fallout from the Signal text security breach tell us about President Trump’s cabinet’s approach to blame and accountability?The Times journalists Michael Barbaro, Eric Schmitt, Julian...

  • 2025 / 3 / 27
    J.F.K., the C.I.A. and the Original ‘Deep State’

    For the past three decades, the U.S. government has released documents related to the assassination of John F. Kennedy with an overriding goal of dispelling conspiracy theories.Julian E. Barnes, who covers...

  • 2025 / 3 / 26
    The Editor Who Was Accidentally Texted War Plans

    This week, top Trump officials inadvertently shared secret U.S. military plans with a prominent journalist after mistakenly adding him to a group chat.The journalist, Jeffrey Goldberg, who is editor in chief...

  • 2025 / 3 / 25
    Nixon Dreamed of Breaking the Media. Trump Is Doing It.

    As President Trump set out to systematically eliminate or intimidate those who stood in his way — inspectors general, judges, law firms — the news media loomed as one of his most stubborn obstacles. Or so it...

  • 2025 / 3 / 24
    Trump’s Escalating War With Higher Education

    In recent weeks, the Trump administration has put the American university system on notice.It has pressed for changes, opened investigations — and in some cases withheld critical funds.Alan Blinder, who...

  • 2025 / 3 / 23
    The Sunday Read: ‘What I Found on the 365-Mile Trail of a Lost Folk Hero’

    Sometime in the 1850s or ’60s, at a terrible moment in U.S. history, a strange man seemed to sprout, out of nowhere, into the rocky landscape between New York City and Hartford, Conn. The word “strange”...

  • 2025 / 3 / 22
    'The Interview': Dr. Lindsay Gibson on What We Owe Our 'Emotionally Immature' Parents

    The clinical psychologist explains the foundations of egocentric parental behavior, the impact it has on their children and the freedom of saying “no.”Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore...