Members of the House Judiciary Committee question Special Counsel Mueller: some have gone on the attack, others have read sections of his report. Former federal prosecutor Shan Wu provides analysis.
On the next Fresh Air, Terry talks with the San Quentin inmate Earlonne Woods, who’s told his story and the stories of his fellow inmates on the podcast Ear Hustle.
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos announced sweeping rules on how colleges handle cases of sexual assault and harassment she says will fix a "failed" and "shameful" system that has been unfair to accused students.
Journalist Eli Saslow says there's a "straight line" between the suspect charged with 29 counts related to the deaths of 11 people at a Pittsburgh synagogue on Saturday and the views of the white nationalist movement.
Journalist Eli Saslow says there's a "straight line" between the suspect charged with 29 counts related to the deaths of 11 people at a Pittsburgh synagogue on Saturday and the views of the white nationalist movement.
When Emily Blunt landed the title role in Mary Poppins Returns, she made a conscious decision not to rewatch the 1964 version of the film, which featured Julie Andrews as the iconic nanny.
On the next Fresh Air -- an unstuffy talk about grammar and usage with Random house copy chief Benjamin Dreyer author of the new book Dreyer's English which he sarcastically subtitled "an utterly correct guide to clarity and style.
The new documentary The Human Element follows James Balog as he captures the places and people affected by the rising oceans, wildfires and air pollution associated with climate change.
On the next Fresh Air, Barbara Brown Taylor is an ordained Episcopal priest who left the pulpit to become a professor of religion.
DAVID BIANCULLI, HOST:
This is FRESH AIR. In July 1963, jazz saxophonist, flutist and bass clarinetist Eric Dolphy recorded a pair of sessions for record producer Alan Douglas, who later would produce Jimi Hendrix.
DAVE DAVIES, HOST:
This is FRESH AIR. I'm Dave Davies, in for Terry Gross, who's off this week. Today, we'll listen to the interview I recorded last year with cartoonist and essayist Tim Kreider.
Change is happening in Ethiopia. What was once one of the most authoritarian countries in the world is opening up and people there are trying to navigate their new freedom.
Letter-for-letter, no part of speech gets people more worked up than pronouns do. Linguistic history is dotted with eruptions of pronoun rage. Right now, the provocation is the gender-neutral pronouns that some nonbinary people have asked to be called by, so that they won't have to be identified as "he" or "she.
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