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EXTENDED VERSION The Ancient Heresy That Helps Us Understand QAnon

EXTENDED VERSION (includes content we had to leave on the cutting room floor to make the interview fit into the broadcast)It’s been two weeks since Trump lost the election to Biden. But he and his...

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Epidemics Show Societies Who They Really Are

Communicable disease has haunted humanity for all of history. As such, the responses to coronavirus in our midst have a grimly timeless quality. In fact, to one scholar, epidemics are a great lens for...

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"Defund the Police" revisited

On Wednesday morning, former president Barack Obama appeared on “Snap Original Good Luck America,” which is an interview program on Snapchat — and thus a proper setting to chasten the young. He warned...

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The Dominion Voting Circus

Late this week we learned that the Trump campaign had hauled in over $200 million in donations since Election Day thanks to a series of election fraud conspiracy theories, including the claim that a...

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Anti-Vax Ideas Have Metastasized in 2020

To understand how to combat anti-vaccination sentiment, we have to understand how the misinformation virus spreads. And to understand that, we have to first know where it has resided from birth. Brandy...

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How to Earn Trust in a Coronavirus Vaccine

The great news is that there are multiple vaccines headed our way. At least two vaccines undergoing review — Moderna and Pfizer — have efficacy rates above 90 percent, which is stunning compared to,...

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A Pastor's Plight to Address Vaccine Skepticism in Black Communities

A Pew study conducted this fall found that only 32 percent of Black Americans are likely to take a coronavirus vaccine, compared to about half of white people. The reasons are manifold: a legacy of...

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Another Front In The War On Facebook

Even if the Federal Trade Commission and most of the states’ Attorneys General succeed in breaking up Facebook, other questions remain about the ongoing damage from Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp —...

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The Cost of Facebook's Monopoly is User Privacy

In the late 1800s, Senator John Sherman pronounced: “If we will not endure a king as a political power, we should not endure a king over the production, transportation, and sale of any of the...

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Living Under Surveillance Capitalism

The list of harms perpetuated by Facebook is at this point well-known: quieting dissent, ignoring incitement, and profiting from distortion, to name a few. But, according to Harvard professor emeritus...

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The Year Of The Virus

As this horrid year ends, we review our coverage of the pandemic, including: 1. Alexis Madrigal, on the first drip of what became a torrent of confusion about the novel coronavirus. (January 31,...

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The Year Of The Uprising

We continue our review of our 2020 coverage with these conversations about the year's protests for racial justice, including: 1. Karen Attiah, who imagined how the Western press might've covered the...

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The Year Of The Right

Concluding our year-in-review, we revisit conversations from 2020 about the mind of the right, including: 1. Brandy Zadrozny, on Trump's vision of antifa terror and some of his supporters' QAnon...

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A Brief History of Timekeeping

We spend our lives bound to a clock and calendar that tell us what to do and what to expect. But now, millions of Americans are newly jobless, untethered from structure and predictability. Hundreds of...

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For Cities, Does Density Mean Coronavirus Destiny?

Earlier this year, commentators and elected officials often repeated George McFly's mistake: confusing destiny with density. “Pandemics naturally thrive most in big cities,” Joel Kotkin wrote in March...

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Body Meets World

The pandemic that has turned life upside-down will not end when it ends. Society, worldwide, will be retrofitted on a grand scale. And in one dimension in particular, the retrofitting will be literal....

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Why Appeasement Won't Work This Time Around

If historic parallels about white resentment and violence are useful for understanding Trumpism and other contemporary expressions of white supremacy, they may also help us to figure out what to do —...

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What Do We Call This?

As violence in and around the U.S. Capitol unfolded on Wednesday, and as law enforcement struggled to to respond, journalists struggled for words. Was this a riot? An attack? A terrorist attack? Were...

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The Dark Familiarity of Trump's Lost Cause

A few days before the armed insurrectionists stormed the Capitol, Republican Senator Ted Cruz stoked the Stop the Steal campaign with a callback to another election: that of 1876.One hundred and...

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The Great Deplatforming

If incitement falls in the forest, and almost nobody can hear it, can it trigger insurrection? The whole world of Big Tech this week began seriously, systematically and almost universally answering...

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The Zello Tapes: The Walkie-Talkie App Used During The Insurrection

Three months ago, On the Media reporter/producer Micah Loewinger brought us a deep dive into Zello, a walkie-talkie app that had become home to militia recruitment and organizing. Back then, teaming up...

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Follow The (Lack of) Money

In addition to arrests, investigations, impeachment, social media de-platforming, and general opprobrium, there have been financial costs for those responsible for the January 6th riot. Corporations...

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The Shepard Tone Turns Off

This past Wednesday, many Americans were released of the ever-ascending, never-quite-breaking "Shepard Tone" that, for the On the Media team, symbolized the tension of the past four plus years. The...

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Twenty Years of On The Media

This week, Bob and Brooke reflect on twenty years of On The Media. That's over a thousand (!) shows, about how the media adapted post-9/11, and also the rise of Trumpism, and the collapse of local news...

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Is Fox News Guilty of Incitement?

We know that freedom of speech in the United States, though strong, is not an inviolable right: libel and defamation stand to incur serious penalties. And so does incitement. Since the capitol...

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Deplatforming Fox News

Does it seem like Fox has become more extreme recently? From downplaying COVID to feeding election fraud conspiracy theories to blaming Antifa for the insurrection, the network has spent the last year...

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The Fairness Doctrine Won't Fix Fox

Someone with a passing knowledge of media history might be inclined to wonder at some point during our program this week on Fox News: didn’t we once have a literal rule against extreme, partisan...

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How Rush Limbaugh Paved The Way For Trump REBROADCAST

What more can we say: El Rushbo is dead. He died Wednesday after a months-long bout of lung cancer, and following decades of racist invective, misogynistic bombast, and other assorted controversy. He...

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An Ex-Neo-Nazi on De-radicalization

In our effort to consider the various tactics and techniques that the government might employ to that end, we start by talking to a person who describes his descent into and journey out of...

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Neutralizing Hateful Propaganda

One-on-one interventions to aid in de-radicalizing people away from right-wing hate might seem like a potentially effective approach. But in a country where tens of millions of citizens express...

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The Checkered History of "Deradicalization"

Nobody wants to be threatened by extremism, so methods for tamping it down are natural — and fetching — to consider.  But that doesn't mean they're all dependable. Who decides what is "extreme"? Who's...

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Redirecting Extremism's Recruits

Moonshot CVE, a private consulting firm, treats the disease of extremism not with a general vaccine but with something closer to monoclonal antibodies: in 2016, it undertook an eight-week pilot,...

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Beware Trump Investigation Big-Talk

With the news this week that the Supreme Court gave the go-ahead for Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance to obtain key financial documents relating to Donald Trump, some news consumers may find...

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The Complexity of Vaccine Hesitancy

There are now 11 vaccines available across the world, and three authorized for use here in the United States. Many Americans are vying for spots to get inoculated — constantly refreshing website pages...

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To Name, or Not to Name

It's been a staple of local, nightly news for decades: while an anchor recites a vivid crime report, sometimes embellished with security footage or street interviews, a name and mugshot flash across...

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In the Fight Over Natural Gas, Stoves Are a Wedge Issue

It isn't such a bright future for so-called  “clean natural gas.” Turns out, clean as it may be compared to coal and oil, natural gas presents its own environmental perils. Phase-out plans are now...

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How the Petrochemical Industry Made the Public Responsible for Plastic Waste

If you are a well-trained environmental citizen, no doubt you separate your recyclables to make it easier for your soda cans and apple sauce jars and especially your plastic milk jugs, yogurt cups, and...

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The Legacy of Anti-Asian Violence — and its Erasure — in America

The shootings of eight people, including six Asian women in Atlanta on Tuesday, happened amid a plague of anti-Asian-American incidents from coast to coast — nearly 3,800 assaults and other types of...

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Taylor Lorenz on Carving Out Her Internet Culture Beat

Taylor Lorenz of the New York Times's internet culture beat has yielded some of the most zeitgeist-y stories in recent memory — from the unionization of online creators, to the Redditors behind...

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A YouTube Empire Is Crumbling

Just a month ago, David Dobrik was one of YouTube's most beloved vloggers. With over 18 million subscribers, several big name brand deals, and a successful merchandise line, the 24-year-old star was...

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Substack's Honeymoon Phase Is Over

Substack is a newsletter service that allows readers to subscribe to the weekly or daily offerings of their favorite writers — journalists included — on nearly every subject under the sun. And like...

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SLAPP Un-Happy

For over four years, Reveal, an award-winning program from the Center for Investigative Reporting, was embroiled in a multimillion-dollar libel suit. Planet Aid, a non-profit known for clothing...

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How the Mainstream Media Abandoned the Working Class

As the sometimes breathless coverage of the union vote in Bessemer, Alabama showed, labor stories are having a moment — in part due to the work of digital outlets since the Occupy movement, as well as...

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A Little-Known Statute Compels Medical Research Transparency. Compliance Is...

Evidence-based medicine requires just that: evidence. Access to the collective pool of knowledge produced by clinical trials is what allows researchers to safely and effectively design future studies....

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How the Right is Redefining "Peaceful Assembly"

Derek Chauvin’s conviction comes nearly one year after he knelt on George Floyd’s neck for over nine minutes. The protests sparked by the murder ranged far and wide, with millions across the globe...

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The Price of a Free Market

Last Friday, the Department of Labor released its monthly jobs report, and the numbers were...disappointing. Expectations had rested around adding approximately a million jobs, and April yielded a...

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Out of the Ashes of Steel, Health Care

In part one of our hour on the rust belt economy with history Gabriel Winant, author of the new book The Next Shift: The Fall of Industry and the Rise of Health Care in Rust Belt America, we heard so...

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Who Does This Economy Work For?

In this final segment on the economic transformation in the rust belt, historian Gabriel Winant, author of the new book The Next Shift: The Fall of Industry and the Rise of Health Care in Rust Belt...

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Looking Back On Steel City

In Pittsburgh, PA stands a tall tower: a black monolith and symbol of old industrial power. It once headquartered United States Steel; now, it's home to the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. And...

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The Ancient Heresy That Helps Us Understand QAnon

It’s been two weeks since Trump lost the election to Biden. But he and his followers are still claiming victory. Jeff Sharlet, who has been covering the election for Vanity Fair, credits two...

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