Accessibility statementSkip to main content
Democracy Dies in Darkness
Sign in
Advertisement
All Post podcasts
Frank, thoughtful conversations on the news and cultural debates we can’t stop thinking about, from Post Opinions columnists.
Latest episode

What do men want?

The evidence is in. American men are facing a crisis — in health, in education and in the labor force. But under all of that runs deeper trends — disconnection, loneliness and a lack of role models. Columnists Theodore Johnson and Shadi Hamid talk with Richard Reeves, founder of the American Institute for Boys and Men, about the dueling visions of masculinity on the political stage and a hopeful way forward for the modern man.

Tuesday, September 3, 2024
Loading...
Add to a podcast app
Listen to new episodes on your smartphone or other device.
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Amazon Music
RSS
About Impromptu

A little-known secret: Washington Post Opinions columnists like talking to one another. They don’t always agree, of course, but they are in almost constant conversation – testing their ideas, refining their thoughts and sometimes changing their minds. Now you can listen in on some of those conversations. Each week on “Impromptu,” Post columnists go beyond hot takes and have personal, candid conversations on the latest topics in news and culture that we can't stop thinking about. Listen in on the conversations that happen before the columns are written. New episodes every Wednesday.

About us
Produced by: Hadley Robinson 
Edited by: Damir Marusic, Chris Suellentrop 
Mixed by: Emma Munger 
  • Latest episode

    What do men want?

    The evidence is in. American men are facing a crisis — in health, in education and in the labor force. But under all of that runs deeper trends — disconnection, loneliness and a lack of role models. Columnists Theodore Johnson and Shadi Hamid talk with Richard Reeves, founder of the American Institute for Boys and Men, about the dueling visions of masculinity on the political stage and a hopeful way forward for the modern man.

    Tuesday, September 3, 2024
    Loading...
  • More episodes

    Why not pay teachers $100,000?

    As American kids head back to school, columnist Daniel Pink makes the case for paying teachers more money. High-quality teachers, he argues, significantly improve student learning, so shouldn’t they be paid as much as somebody assessing insurance premiums on your car? Plus, humor columnist Alexandra Petri discusses sending her child to school for the first time.

    Tuesday, August 27, 2024
    Loading...
  • Out with the old at the DNC

    We are in Chicago, where it's Kamala Harris's party now. Columnists Dana Milbank, Jennifer Rubin, Jonathan Capehart and Jim Geraghty discuss why gender isn’t being talked about in this campaign so far, and they do the math on what percentage of the Democrats’ energy is from excitement, relief and just avoiding existential dread.

    Tuesday, August 20, 2024
    Loading...
  • Surviving Putin's gulag: Vladimir Kara-Murza tells his story

    Pulitzer Prize winner Vladimir Kara-Murza, who was part of August’s massive prisoner exchange with Russia, talks about his time in jail, freedom of speech and the future of Putin’s regime.

    Wednesday, August 14, 2024
    Loading...
  • Tim Walz won’t hurt Kamala Harris. Will he help?

    Tim Walz went from being a little-known Midwestern governor to Democratic vice-presidential candidate in a matter of a few weeks. But in this sprint of a campaign, nothing is moving slowly. Charles Lane, Molly Roberts and Matt Bai talk through whether Walz can keep up the momentum of the Harris campaign, if the “weird” strategy is good or bad, and how much of a unifier Walz will be for the Democratic ticket.

    Tuesday, August 6, 2024
    Loading...

More podcasts

Post Reports
Unparalleled reporting, insight and analysis. Every weekday afternoon.
The 7
Get caught up in just a few minutes every weekday at 7 a.m.
Washington Post Live
Washington Post Live brings The Post’s newsroom to life.
washingtonpost.com © 1996-2024 The Washington Post
  • washingtonpost.com
  • © 1996-2024 The Washington Post