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Season 2019

Season 2020

Season 2021

Season 2022

  • S2022E01 The Anatomy of Autocracy: Timothy Snyder (2021)

    • January 6, 2022

  • S2022E02 Bayard Rustin: The Man Behind the March on Washington (2021)

    • January 13, 2022

  • S2022E03 The Way We Dream

    • January 20, 2022

  • S2022E04 Throughline Sleeps

    • January 25, 2022

  • S2022E05 Russia's Longest Leader: Vladimir Putin (2019)

    • January 27, 2022

  • S2022E06 A Story Of Us?

    • February 3, 2022

  • S2022E07 Pirates of the Senate

    • February 10, 2022

  • S2022E08 Pirates of the Senate

    • February 17, 2022

  • S2022E09 There Are No Utopias

    • February 24, 2022

  • S2022E10 Of Rats and Men

    • March 3, 2022

  • S2022E11 Ukraine's Dangerous Independence

    • March 10, 2022

    To understand the current conflict in Ukraine, you have to understand how Ukraine's national identity formed. A conversation with Ukrainian historian Serhii Plokhii.

  • S2022E12 Our Own People (2021)

    • March 17, 2022

    In 2021, a gunman massacred eight people in Atlanta, including six women of Asian descent. Throughline reflects on activist Yuri Kochiyama's ideas around solidarity and struggle.

  • S2022E13 All Wars Are Fought Twice

    • March 24, 2022

    Pulitzer Prize-winning author and Viet Thanh Nguyen discusses his personal experience as a refugee of the Vietnam War, and how it led him to explore the way nations remember wars

  • S2022E14 The Land of the Fee (2021)

    • March 31, 2022

  • S2022E15 Capitalism: What Makes Us Free?

    • April 7, 2022

  • S2022E16 The Everlasting Problem (2020)

    • April 14, 2022

  • S2022E17 Force of Nature (2021)

    • April 21, 2022

  • S2022E18 The New Gilded Age

    • April 28, 2022

  • S2022E19 Cinco de Mayo and the Rise of Modern Mexico

    • May 5, 2022

  • S2022E20 Before Roe: The Physicians' Crusade

    • May 19, 2022

    Abortion wasn't always controversial. In fact, in colonial America it would have been considered a fairly common practice: a private decision made by women, and aided mostly by midwives. But in the mid-1800s, a small group of physicians set out to change that. Obstetrics was a new field, and they wanted it to be their domain—meaning, the domain of men and medicine. Led by a zealous young doctor named Horatio Storer, they launched a campaign to make abortion illegal in every state, spreading a potent cloud of moral righteousness and racial panic that one historian later called "the physicians' crusade." And so began the century of criminalization.In the first episode of a two-part series, we're telling the story of that century: how doctors put themselves at the center of legal battles over abortion, first to criminalize — and then to legalize.

  • S2022E21 The Characters That Built China

    • May 26, 2022

    Today, China is a global superpower. But less than two hundred years ago, the nation was in a state of decline. After what became known as the 'century of humiliation' at the hands of Western imperialist powers, its very survival was in question. A movement arose to fight off foreign interference and preserve Chinese culture in the face of intense pressure from a rapidly-changing world. And the key to that movement was language. In this episode, we follow three key reformers who worked to modernize written and spoken Chinese, sometimes risking their lives to do so. Their work simplified Chinese, standardized it, and took it from an inaccessible language built for the elite to a modern language for the masses. It was a struggle that spanned generations, changed the fate of millions of people, and helped create the powerful modern nation-state of China.

  • S2022E22 The Modern White Power Movement (2020)

    • June 2, 2022

  • S2022E23 By Accident of Birth

    • June 9, 2022

    In August of 1895, a ship called the SS Coptic approached the coast of Northern California. On that boat was a passenger from San Francisco, a young man named Wong Kim Ark who was returning home after visiting his wife and child in China. He'd taken trips like this before, and expected to come back to the city he was born in, to his life and friends. But when the ship docked, officials told him he couldn't get off. The customs agent barred him according to the Chinese Exclusion Act, which denied citizenship to Chinese immigrants. Though Wong Kim Ark had been born in the U.S. and lived his whole life there, the agent said he was not a citizen. Wong was moved from steamer to steamer for months. But he was able to contact representatives from the Chinese Six Companies, a consortium of Chinese business owners that often hired legal representation for people subject to discrimination. His subsequent legal battles culminated in the 1897 Supreme Court case United States. v. Wong

  • S2022E24 After Roe: A New Battlefield

    • June 16, 2022

    The Supreme Court's decision in Roe v. Wade transformed the landscape of abortion rights overnight. For the doctors, lawyers, feminists, and others who had fought for nationwide legalization, Roe was the end of a long battle. But for the growing movement against abortion rights, it was the beginning of a new battle: to protect the fetus, challenge abortion providers, and ultimately overturn Roe. This is the story of how opponents of abortion rights banded together, built power, and launched one of the most successful grassroots campaigns of the past century.

  • S2022E25 The Evangelical Vote (2019)

    • June 23, 2022

    When Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died, the door opened on one of those rare opportunities to tip the balance of the highest court in the U.S. It was the opportunity that one particular voting bloc had been waiting for: evangelical Christians. Now, we await a ruling in a case that has the potential to overturn Roe v. Wade – an outcome evangelical Christians have spent decades voting and lobbying for. So how did this religious group become such a powerful force in U.S. politics? In this episode, we examine how white evangelicalism in particular became linked to conservative political issues...beginning with a roaming Irish pastor in the 1800s.

  • S2022E26 Do Not Pass Go

    • June 30, 2022

    There's more to Monopoly than you might think. It's one of the best-selling board games in history — despite huge economic instability, sales actually went up during the pandemic — and it's been an iconic part of American life at other pivotal moments: a cheap pastime during the Great Depression; a reminder of home for soldiers during WWII; and an American export during its rise as a global superpower. It endured even as it reflected some of the ongoing inequities in American society, from segregation and redlining to capitalism run rampant. That's because Monopoly is also built on powerful American lore – the idea that anyone, with just a little bit of cash, can rise from rags to riches.Writer Mary Pilon, the author of The Monopolists: Obsession, Fury, and the Scandal Behind the World's Favorite Board Game, describes Monopoly as "the Great American Dream in a board game – or, nightmare." This week: how a critique of capitalism grew from a seed of an idea in a rebell

  • S2022E27 Throughline Presents: School Colors

    • July 7, 2022

  • S2022E28 The Long Hot Summer (2020)

    • July 14, 2022

    Things in the U.S. feel tense right now. Two years after a police officer killed George Floyd outside a Minneapolis corner store, videos of police violence still appear regularly – and protests follow. Maybe the closest parallel to what's happening today is the so-called "long hot summer" of 1967, when more than 150 cities across the country experienced civil unrest. That year, President Lyndon Johnson appointed a commission to diagnose the root causes of the problem and to suggest solutions. What the so-called "Kerner Commission" concluded — shocking to many Americans – was that the fires in America's cities could be traced back to inequality, white racism, and police brutality. This week, the Kerner Commission's report and its consequences, nearly six decades later.

  • S2022E29 Student Loans: The Fund-Eating Dragon

    • July 21, 2022

    At the start of the 20th century, only the most privileged could afford to go to college. Today, millions of students pursue higher ed — and owe $1.7 trillion in debt.

  • S2022E30 Nikole Hannah-Jones and the Country We Have (2021)

    • July 28, 2022

  • S2022E31 The Mystery of Inflation

    • August 4, 2022

  • S2022E32 Afghanistan: The Center of the World (2021)

    • August 11, 2022

  • S2022E33 Afghanistan: The Rise of the Taliban (2021)

    • August 18, 2022

  • S2022E34 Drone Wars (2021)

    • August 25, 2022

  • S2022E35 American Socialist (2020)

    • September 1, 2022

  • S2022E36 How Korean Culture Went Global

    • September 8, 2022

  • S2022E37 Getting to Sesame Street

    • September 15, 2022

  • S2022E38 Five Fingers Crush the Land (2021)

    • September 29, 2022

  • S2022E39 Editing Reality

    • September 29, 2022

  • S2022E40 Silicon Island

    • October 6, 2022

  • S2022E41 The Dance of the Dead (2021)

    • October 13, 2022

    Halloween — the night of ghost stories and trick-or-treating — has religious origins that span over two thousand years. Over time, the Catholic Church, pagan groups, and even the brewing company Coors have played a role in shape-shifting the holiday. How did Halloween turn from a spiritual celebration to a multi-billion dollar industry? From the Great Famine of Ireland to the Simpsons, we present the many evolutions of Halloween.

  • S2022E42 The Woman Question

    • October 20, 2022

    What's happening in Iran right now is unprecedented. But the Iranian people's struggle for gender equality began generations before the death of 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian woman Mahsa Amini, also known by her Kurdish name, Jina Amini. The successes of this struggle, as well as its setbacks and horrors, are well-documented, but often misunderstood. Scholar Arzoo Osanloo argues that women have been at the center of Iran's century-long fight for freedom and self-determination. It's a historical thread that goes all the way back to Iran's Constitutional Revolution in the early 20th century: A complicated story of reform, revolution, and a fundamental questioning of whether Iranian people — and people around the Islamic world — will accept a government of clerics as the sole arbiters of Islam and the state.

  • S2022E43 The State of Disunion

    • October 27, 2022

    Is the U.S. on the brink of civil war? It's a question that has been in the air for a while now, as divisions continue to worsen. Beyond the political speeches and debates in the halls of Congress, it's something you're likely feeling in your day-to-day life. Vaccines, school curriculums, climate change, what you define as a human rights issue, even who you call a friend. Some say we've moved beyond the point of discussion. But when words fail, what comes next? In conversation with Malcolm Nance, Anne Applebaum, and Peniel Joseph, we take a deeper look at what we mean when we say civil war, how exactly the country reached this political moment, and where we go from here.

  • S2022E44 The Most Sacred Right (2020)

    • November 3, 2022

  • S2022E45 Dreams, Creatures, and Visions

    • November 10, 2022

    We are in the season of chaos. It can feel like everything is happening at once: You might be sprinting across an airport; or around your kitchen, with a few too many dishes cooking at once. Your phone keeps pinging — texts, weather alerts, and more and more breaking news. Here at Throughline, we're always going to different places in time and space. So this week, come with us: to another time, another place, another realm. In this episode, we'll be your sonic travel guides on a journey through bite-sized pieces of Throughline's most immersive episodes, from the shadowy world of dreams, to the midst of the Revolutionary War, to the haunting music of Radiohead and their visions of the future.

  • S2022E46 Qatar's World Cup

    • November 17, 2022

    Football, aka soccer, is life. At least, it is for many people across the globe. There are few things that are universally beloved but this sport comes close. And as teams on nearly every continent prepare for the start of the World Cup, all eyes are on one tiny country at the tip of the desert. Qatar. The first Arab country ever to secure the World Cup bid. But it's been a long and complicated road to get to this moment. Espionage. Embargoes. Covert deals. This is the story of Qatar's decades-long pursuit of the World Cup bid and its role in the nation's transformation into a global power.

  • S2022E47 The Last Cup: The Kid's Dream

    • November 24, 2022

    This week we're bringing you something special from our friends at NPR and Futuro Media: the first episode of the podcast, The Last Cup. From his earliest goals on the soccer fields of his hometown in Argentina to his arrival at Spain's Barça Football Club, host Jasmine Garsd follows the journey of a gifted kid who would go on to become one of the best soccer players ever. In Argentina, where the national sport is a fierce obsession, Lionel Messi was the one that got away. As Garsd retraces Messi's early career, she examines the consequences of Argentina's devastating economic crisis of 2001, how it shaped Messi's path, and what it meant for her own life.

  • S2022E48 La Última Copa: El sueño del pibe

    • November 26, 2022

  • S2022E49 The Nostalgia Bone (2021)

    • December 1, 2022

  • S2022E50 400 Years of Sweetness

    • December 8, 2022

  • S2022E51 Road to Partition

    • December 15, 2022

    What happens when a nation splits apart? It's a question many of us are asking ourselves today. It happened 75 years ago with Partition, when India and Pakistan became independent nations, divided by a somewhat arbitrary line that separated neighbors, families, and communities. 15 million people were displaced, leaving a trail of chaos and violence that in some ways has never ended. In today's episode, NPR politics reporter Asma Khalid takes us back in time to learn how the road to Partition was paved, and to try to understand how people and nations reach a tipping point when neighbors realize it's no longer possible to live side by side.

  • S2022E52 God Wants You To Be Rich (2021)

    • December 22, 2022

  • S2022E53 The New Gilded Age (2022)

    • December 29, 2022

Season 2023

Season 2024