Sinopsis
A weekly dive into the big questions about this city of ours, hosted by Christina Greer, Azi Paybarah and Harry Siegel, and produced by Alex Brook Lynn.
Episodios
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Episode 248: Rikers and the ‘World‘ Tour to Nowhere
17/01/2023 Duración: 46minA conversation with the authors of Rikers: An Oral History.
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Episode 247: A State of the State for an Unsettled State
12/01/2023 Duración: 29minProfessor Christina Greer and Harry Siegel break down Kathy Hochul's first state of the state as New York's elected governor.
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Episode 246: 2023 Predictions Through a Hazy Crystal Ball
05/01/2023 Duración: 42minA look back at Eric Adams' first year as mayor, and ahead to the even bigger challenges looming for New York City.
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Episode 245: The View From the Broken End of the Bottle
29/12/2022 Duración: 41minAnthony Almojera, lieutenant paramedic with the FDNY EMS, explains what Eric Adams’ new plan for bringing more severely mentally ill street into hospitals can’t accomplish, how that population has changed over his two decades on the job as violence against, and what those encounters are actually like for the medical first responders regularly interacting with the city’s street population.
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Episode 244: The Stories Behind the Pictures
25/12/2022 Duración: 40minDaily News legend Susan Watts and THE CITY's Ben Fractenberg talk with Alex Brook Lynn about the art of shooting the news in New York, and share the stories behind some of their most powerful photographs.
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Episode 243: Libraries Are on the Chopping Block in Eric Adams' New York
22/12/2022 Duración: 32minChristina Greer and Harry Siegel reflect on the mayor's first year, which was anything but boring. and what's to come.
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Episode 242: ‘A Typical Kid’
18/12/2022 Duración: 43minAlex Brook Lynn talks about her brother Zack's schizophrenia and her family's efforts to navigate New York's broken systems. WARNING: This episode contains a discussion of suicide.
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Episode 241: Fear and Felonies
14/12/2022 Duración: 28minA conversation about fear, crime, Al Sharpton and what, if anything changed in New York's political dynamics after Democrats mostly survived this year's election.
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Episode 240: Get Intimate With the City You Only Thought You Knew
11/12/2022 Duración: 39minMichael Kimmelman, author of The Intimate City: Walking New York, joins THE CITY's Alyssa Katz in the latest installment of her series asking the big question: What Is New York For?
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Episode 239: ‘Not on Miss New York’s Watch’
07/12/2022 Duración: 48minTaryn Delanie Smith, AKA Miss New York 2022, joins the pod just ahead of her bid to become Miss America 2023, to discuss “the advocacy role, the immense philanthropy that goes into the job” and to discuss using social media to make the most of her position: “It's really just me being a friend, a New Yorker, and saying ‘here’s something that you didn't know about social services. Here's what you didn't know about transitional housing programs in your community. And here's why they need your support.’"
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Episode 238: The City Wants to Help People Who Don’t Want To Be Helped
02/12/2022 Duración: 34minBrian Stettin, city hall’s senior advisor on severe mental illness, explains Eric Adams’ new approach and why “compassion and care” should take priority over consent when city workers encounter people who aren’t able or interested in caring for themselves even when those people don’t present any immediate danger.
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Episode 237: Eric Adams' New Mental Health Plan Is Less Than It Seems
01/12/2022 Duración: 26minThe mayor says that forcing people with untreated mental illness into hospitals is a "moral obligation," but it's not clear how that's different from what the city was already doing with those people almost always released after 72 hours.
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Episode 236: NYC’s New Weed Wild West
27/11/2022 Duración: 37minA year and a half after legalizing recreational marijuana, the first retail licenses have finally been issued even as the black market is booming and smoke shop robberies are through the roof. Ashley Southall, who covers cannabis in the city for the New York Times, goes into the weeds to explain what New York’s doing — and not doing — to correct the drug war’s damage, whether buyers can really trust the stuff getting sold here with California packaging, and much more. Listen here.
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Episode 235: ‘Democrats Are a Huge Part of the Problem’
22/11/2022 Duración: 38minPublic Advocate Jumaane Williams rejoins the podcast to talk about his primary run against Kathy Hochul, the party's poor performance in November from candidates running as "Republicans light" and much more.
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Episode 234: Mmmm, Chaat Dogs
20/11/2022 Duración: 26minPervaiz Shallwani dipped a hot dog into New York’s melting pot, and what came out was delicious.
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Episode 233: Bucks and Blame to Spread Around
16/11/2022 Duración: 32minWho's responsible for Democrats' losses in New York even as the party over-performed expectations nationally? Everyone seems to be pointing figures, and they might all have a point.
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Episode 232: Was COVID NYC a Better Version of Ourselves?
13/11/2022 Duración: 32minJeremiah Moss, the author of Feral New York, talks with THE CITY's Alyssa Katz about the "tremendous community connection and and oftentimes joyfulness in a moment of tremendous trauma and tragedy” for the people out in the streets amid the city's shutdown and reopening.
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Episode 231: Hochul Makes History as Red Wave Falls Short
09/11/2022 Duración: 41minGotham Gazette’s Ben Max joins an election-night FAQ NYC podcast to offer some late-night early analysis in an episode that began before the governor’s race was called and continued after it was.
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Episode 230: Andrew Cuomo Says Cities Are in Trouble in a ‘Post-Covid World’
06/11/2022 Duración: 58minThe former governor won't say if he voted for Letitia James, but he’s got lots to say about how the Democratic Party has lost the script on crime as people “are afraid of the feeling I get in the city,” and much more.
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Episode 229: Will Lee Zeldin Defund the MTA?
02/11/2022 Duración: 36minThe City senior reporter and bona fide train knower Jose Martinez joins FAQ to break down the gubernatorial race's very high, yet hardly noticed, stakes for the already troubled future of the city’s circulatory system.