
The Daily
New York Times
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 and Sabrina Tavernise. Twenty minutes a day, five days a week, ready by 6 a.m.
Location:
New York, NY
Genres:
News
Networks:
New York Times
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 and Sabrina Tavernise. Twenty minutes a day, five days a week, ready by 6 a.m.
Language:
English
Episodes
Should The Government Pay for Your Bad Climate Decisions?
3/24/2023
A few days ago, the Biden administration released a report warning that a warming planet posed severe economic challenges for the United States, which would require the federal government to reassess its spending priorities and how it influenced behavior.
White House reporter Jim Tankersley explains why getting the government to encourage the right decisions will be so difficult.
Guest: Jim Tankersley, a White House correspondent for The New York Times.
Background reading:
A chapter in...
Duration:00:27:07
Our Film Critic on Why He’s Done With the Movies
3/23/2023
A.O. Scott started as a film critic at The New York Times in January of 2000. Next month he will move to the Book Review as a critic at large.
After 23 years as a film critic, Mr. Scott discusses why he is done with the movies, and what his decision reveals about the new realities of American cinema.
Guest: A.O. Scott, a longtime film critic for The New York Times.
Background reading:
conducts his own exit interview65For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily....
Duration:00:41:12
Barney Frank on His Role in the Banking Crisis
3/22/2023
Barney Frank was one of the people most responsible for overhauling financial regulation after the 2008 economic crisis. After retiring from Congress, he supported a change to his own law that would benefit midsize banks, and joined the board of such a bank.
Last week, that bank failed. David Enrich called Mr. Frank and asked him to explain.
Guest: David Enrich, the business investigations editor at The New York Times.
Background reading:
had called for looser financial requirementswhy...
Duration:00:36:06
China, Russia and the Risk of a New Cold War
3/21/2023
As Xi Jinping, China’s leader, meets with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia in Moscow this week, Chinese officials have been presenting his trip as a mission of peace. But American and European officials are watching for something else altogether — whether Mr. Xi will add fuel to the full-scale war that Mr. Putin began more than a year ago.
Edward Wong explains what Mr. Xi is really up to, and why it’s making people wonder whether a new Cold War is underway.
Guest: Edward Wong, a...
Duration:00:23:18
How TikTok Became a Matter of National Security
3/20/2023
TikTok, the app known for short videos of lip syncing, dancing and bread baking, is one of the most popular platforms in the country, used by one out of every three Americans.
In recent weeks, the Biden administration has threatened to ban it over concerns that it poses a threat to national security.
Guest: Sapna Maheshwari, a business reporter for The New York Times.
Background reading:
TikTok’s owner, ByteDanceare trying to ban TikTokFor more information on today’s episode, visit...
Duration:00:28:50
The Sunday Read: ‘Spirited Away to Miyazaki Land’
3/19/2023
As an American, Sam Anderson knows what it feels like to arrive at a theme park. “The totalizing consumerist embrace,” he writes. “The blunt-force, world-warping, escapist delight.” He has known theme parks with entrances like “international borders” and ticket prices like “mortgage payments.” Mr. Anderson has been to Disney World, which he describes as “an alternate reality that basically occupies its own tax zone.”
In November, when Ghibli Park finally opened, Mr. Anderson made sure to...
Duration:00:54:46
Why the Banking Crisis Isn’t Over Yet
3/17/2023
In the past week, as spooked customers frantically withdrew $42 billion from Silicon Valley Bank, the U.S. government stepped in to craft a rescue operation for the failed lender.
But efforts to contain the crisis have met resistance, and the fallout of the collapse has already spread to other regional banks, whose stocks have plummeted.
Guest: Emily Flitter, a finance correspondent for The New York Times.
Background reading:
spurred soul-searchingHere’s what to knowFor more information...
Duration:00:29:06
France’s Battle Over Retirement
3/16/2023
This episode contains strong language
Millions of people have taken to the streets in France to protest a government effort to raise the retirement age to 64, from 62, bringing the country more in line with its European neighbors.
Today, as Parliament holds a key vote on the proposal, we look into why the issue has hit such a nerve in French society.
Guest: Roger Cohen, the Paris bureau chief for The New York Times.
Background reading:
vote on the measure are protesting the proposalsFor...
Duration:00:20:53
What to Know About the Covid Lab Leak Theory
3/15/2023
Three years after the start of Covid, the central mystery of the pandemic — how exactly it began — remains unsolved. But recently, the debate about the source of the coronavirus has re-emerged, this time in Congress.
The Energy Department has concluded, with “low confidence,” that an accidental laboratory leak in China was most likely the origin, but politics are making it harder to find definitive answers.
Guest: Benjamin Mueller, a health and science correspondent for The New York...
Duration:00:22:56
The Implosion of Silicon Valley Bank
3/14/2023
With federal regulators planning to take over the collapsed Silicon Valley Bank, a 40-year-old institution based in California, nearly $175 billion in customer deposits will be placed under the authorities’ control.
The lender’s demise is the second-largest bank failure in U.S. history and the largest since the financial crisis in 2008. The debacle raised concerns that other banks could face problems, too.
Guest: Emily Flitter, a finance correspondent for The New York Times.
Background...
Duration:00:34:11
What Is E.S.G., and Why Are Republicans So Mad About It?
3/13/2023
The principle behind E.S.G. is that investors should look beyond just whether a company can make a profit and take into account other factors, such as its environmental impact and action on social issues.
But critics of that investment strategy, mostly Republicans, say that Wall Street has taken a sharp left turn, attacking what they term “woke capitalism.”
Guest: David Gelles, a climate correspondent for The New York Times.
Background reading:
a target of conservatives a political...
Duration:00:27:05
The Sunday Read: ‘Can Germany Be a Great Military Power Again?’
3/12/2023
After Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February last year, Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany told Parliament that the attack was a Zeitenwende — a historic “turning point” for Europe and Germany. The risk of a large land war in Europe had previously been considered far-fetched, but recent years of Russian aggression have inspired fear in Germany and a 100-billion-euro fund to bolster its military.
In Germany, skepticism of the merits of military strength has enabled a long...
Duration:00:53:03
Protests and the Future of Democracy in Israel
3/10/2023
Almost immediately after taking power in December, Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right coalition in Isreal proposed a highly contentious overhaul of the Supreme Court.
The court has long been seen as a crucial check and lone backstop on the government, and the plan has divided Israeli society, kindling fears of political violence and even civil war.
Guest: Patrick Kingsley, the Jerusalem bureau chief for The New York Times.
Background reading:
restricted road access what to knowFor more...
Duration:00:29:03
A New Child Labor Crisis in America
3/9/2023
Slaughterhouses, construction sites, factories. A Times investigation has found that migrant children have been thrust into jobs in some of the most demanding workplaces in the United States.
How did this crisis in child labor develop? And now that it has been exposed, what is being done to tackle the problem?
Guest: Hannah Dreier, an investigative reporter for The New York Times.
Background reading:
shadow work force of migrant children lawmakers clamor for actionhas announced a wide...
Duration:00:32:50
Who Blew Up the Nord Stream Pipelines?
3/8/2023
The sabotage in September of the Nord Stream pipelines carrying Russian gas to Europe has become one of the central mysteries of the war in Ukraine, prompting months of finger-pointing and guesswork.
Now, new intelligence reporting has provided the first significant known lead about who was responsible.
Guest: Julian E. Barnes, a national security correspondent for The New York Times.
Background reading:
the detonations ideal crime sceneFor more information on today’s episode, visit...
Duration:00:22:03
Ron DeSantis’s Rise From Unknown to Heir Apparent
3/7/2023
As the race to be the Republican Party’s presidential candidate gets underway, one figure has emerged as a particularly powerful rival to Donald J. Trump.
That person, Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, has broken away from the pack by turning his state into a laboratory for a post-Trump version of conservatism.
Guest: Patricia Mazzei, the Miami bureau chief for The New York Times.
Background reading:
his wish list of proposals for Florida a template for governingFor more information on...
Duration:00:28:07
How a Derailed Train Galvanized an Ohio Town, and Congress
3/6/2023
On Feb. 3, a nearly two-mile long freight train carrying hazardous materials derailed near East Palestine, Ohio, a town of about 4,700 people.
The railroad company and local officials decided to do a chemical burn to neutralize the cargo, but as a giant plume of black smoke settled over the town, residents’ anger about the handling of the accident has intensified.
Guest: Emily Cochrane, a national correspondent for The New York Times.
Background reading:
stricter rules for freight rail...
Duration:00:27:11
Sunday Special: An Episode of ‘The Coldest Case in Laramie’
3/5/2023
Today, we’re taking some time out of our regularly scheduled programming to share the first episode of “The Coldest Case in Laramie.” In the new series from The Times and Serial, Kim Barker, a Times investigative reporter, digs into the 1985 murder of Shelli Wiley, a young woman who was a few years older than Kim when they both lived in Laramie, Wyoming.
The long-unsolved case took a turn in 2016 when the police arrested someone for Shelli’s murder: a former officer named Fred Lamb. The...
Duration:00:24:42
Why Russia Is Taking Thousands of Ukrainian Children
3/3/2023
As Russian troops pushed into Ukraine, children who were fleeing newly occupied territories were swept up. Many became part of a Russian effort to portray itself as a charitable savior.
The children were placed in Russian families and paraded on television. The Times interviewed one child who was taken from Ukraine, a girl named Anya, who said she ached to return.
Guest: Emma Bubola, a reporter for The New York Times based in London.
Background reading:
spoils of war questions about his...
Duration:00:30:19
Will the Supreme Court Let Biden Cancel Student Debt?
3/2/2023
In August, President Biden announced a loan cancellation plan that would erase an astonishing $400 billion in student debt — one of the most ambitious and expensive executive actions ever.
Now, in a far-reaching case, the Supreme Court will decide whether the president is authorized to take such a big step.
Guest: Adam Liptak, a Supreme Court correspondent for The New York Times.
Background reading:
the limits of presidential power how the arguments at the Supreme Court played out what...
Duration:00:24:49