Part three of our Originalism series examines how SCOTUS became captive and what we can do about it, in a live edition with Hawaii State Supreme Court Justice Todd Eddins, Madiba Dennie, and Slate’s Mark Joseph Stern.
What the Justice’s upside down American flag tells us about SCOTUS’ declining legitimacy.
The Money team discusses new China tariffs, Congress debating AI, and Melinda French Gates’ departure from her foundation.
Bill Wasik and Monica Murphy’s new book, Our Kindred Creatures explores the evolution of our feelings about animals.
Renting before Zillow, the orange carpet of the garret, September 11th, and more are explored in this week’s audio essay from John Dickerson.
The comedian’s latest project is simultaneously enthralling and utterly repellant.
What is a girl group? In the ’60s, harmonizing ladies saved rock & roll. In the ’90s, sisters with voices gave pop some TLC.
Meme stocks are back—wait, they never really went away.
The Compton lyricist humbled the Canadian rapper on the charts. Why, and what’s next?
Jenée Desmond-Harris is joined by author and professor Kiese Laymon.
Joe Biden is losing the presidential-poll horserace in battleground states but is ready to rumble and debate Donald Trump who is silent inside the courtroom but talking through surrogates outside?
Slate’s parenting podcast on getting a dog (or a boyfriend).
The hosts speak with author Justin Taylor about pushing through struggles to finish creative projects.
Miss USA’s resignation letter is vague. But the first letter of each sentence spells out “I am silenced.”
Netflix’s hit reality show has spurred spinoffs, real estate celebrities and a community of more than 250,000 rabid fans
Or is it only for the rich?
The network couldn’t launch DeSantis, but its thumb can still tip the scales this fall.
This week, the hosts discuss the latest Planet of the Apes saga, John Mulaney’s live comedy special, and Steve Albini’s legacy.
Bryan, Jules, and Mathew tackle who can say ‘they’, the sir/ma’am binary, and navigating what to wear to a straight wedding
Alison Green on the pitfalls of constructive criticism.