The Gist - Jason Guriel: Why Culture Got Nicer—and Much Less Useful
Critic and essayist Jason Guriel joins to talk about Fan Mail and how cultural criticism curdled once gatekeepers vanished and celebration replaced judgment. He makes the case that abundance without curation doesn't democratize culture so much as drown it, leaving readers unsure what's worth their time—or why craft should matter at all. Plus, an analysis of Jack Smith's combative testimony before Congress and how "perjury traps" function when politics, not truth, is the goal. Also, dueling descriptions of Donald Trump at Davos—Pericles to admirers, shambolic horror show to skeptics—and what the split says about our fractured attention economy.
Produced by Corey Wara
Coordinated by Lya Yanne
Video and Social Media by Geoff Craig
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Marketplace All-in-One - Here’s what kept GDP climbing last summer
Revised GDP data for this past summer shows the U.S. economy grew faster than we initially thought. A few key parts of the private services sector propelled that growth. In this episode, which parts of the economy are actually doing pretty well. Then: Gap leans in to “fashiontainment,” packaging costs weigh on food prices, and elderly care facilities stand to lose critical employees when TPS ends for Haitian immigrants.
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PBS News Hour - Art Beat - Filmmaker Jafar Panahi on ‘It Was Just an Accident’ and challenging the Iranian government
CBS News Roundup - 01/22/2026 | Evening Update
Massive winter storm expected to impact most of the country with ice, snow and frigid temperatures beginning tomorrow and lasting until Monday.
Former special counsel Jack Smith grilled by House Republicans on his prosecutions of President Trump.
Vice President Vance urges cooperation between local Minneapolis and federal authorities as ICE continues its activities there.
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Consider This from NPR - How HIV researchers overcame setbacks and kept a vaccine trial going
Scientists say research into a vaccine for HIV is further along than it’s ever been.
But Trump administration cuts to scientific research have set that effort back.
Including a promising trial for an HIV vaccine in Africa – which was shut down altogether.
NPR’s Ari Daniel has the story of how researchers there refused to give up.
Ari’s reporting for this story was supported by a grant from the Pulitzer Center. The Gates Foundation is a financial supporter of NPR.
This episode was produced by Mallory Yu and Kira Wakeam.
It was edited by Rebecca Davis and Courtney Dorning.
Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.
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Newshour - Trump: Board of Peace to forge ‘everlasting peace’
President Trump says his Board of Peace will help forge 'everlasting' peace in the Middle East and the wider world, but a number of European countries have refused to join the body. We hear from the president’s former Deputy National Security Adviser.
Also on the programme: US envoys head to Moscow to meet with President Putin in latest round of Ukraine peace talks; and the nominations for this year's Oscars are out, with vampire horror Sinners receiving a record-breaking sixteen nods.
(Photo: US President Donald Trump holding charter for his Board of Peace initiative in Davos, Switzerland, on 22 January 2026; Credit: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)
WSJ What’s News - Trump Sues JPMorgan and Jamie Dimon for ‘Debanking’ Him
P.M. Edition for Jan. 22. President Trump sues JPMorgan Chase for $5 billion, alleging that the country’s biggest bank closed his accounts in 2021 for political reasons. Plus, after more than 20 years as a private company, SpaceX may soon be going public. WSJ reporter Corrie Driebusch discusses what’s pushed CEO Elon Musk towards an IPO. And this year’s Oscar nominations are out, with a record-breaking 16 nods for “Sinners.” Alex Ossola hosts.
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1A - Best Of: Who Gets To Decide What School Means For Students?
Or did it feel like it wasn't made for you? Did it feel constricting, or like a place with lots of rules about how you had to act and what you couldn't do?
Your experience of schools likely depended on the administrators, who your teachers were, how your city or state set up the curriculum, and the resources your school received. Writer Eve L. Ewing argues that experience could also be shaped by who you are.
We sit down with Ewing to talk about her new book, "Original Sins: The (Mis)education of Black and Native Children and the Construction of American Racism."
What has school meant for students, and who influenced how schools function the way they do? And what are alternatives for how school could work for students?
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WSJ Minute Briefing - Stocks Rise as Tariff Tensions Cool
Plus: Intel predicts further losses next quarter in after-hours earnings report. And Abbott Laboratories stock fell after missing sales expectations. Katherine Sullivan hosts.
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An artificial-intelligence tool assisted in the making of this episode by creating summaries that were based on Wall Street Journal reporting and reviewed and adapted by an editor.
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