Episodios

  • Ken Burns on Media, Truth, and Polarization in America
    Apr 4 2026

    Legendary documentarian Ken Burns joins Newstalk to discuss truth in a polarized media landscape, the enduring value of long-form storytelling, and why history offers perspective in moments of national division.

    Más Menos
    22 m
  • From Opinion: Harvard's Grade Debate
    Mar 31 2026

    When everyone gets an A, what does an A mean? Associate Editorial Editor Benjamin Isaac ‘27 discusses the merits of the recent faculty grading proposal with Crimson Editorial editor Allison P. Farrell ‘26.

    Más Menos
    24 m
  • EU Ambassador Jovita Neliupšienė on Trump's Relationship with Europe
    Feb 23 2026

    The European Union's Ambassador to the United States, Jovita Neliupšienė, comes on Newstalk to discuss President Trump's evolving relationship with our European allies.

    Más Menos
    24 m
  • Jason Furman on the Federal Reserve
    Feb 9 2026

    The Harvard Crimson's podcast Newstalk returns with special guest Jason Furman, who speaks on the Federal Reserve and President Trump's new nominee for Fed Chair Kevin Warsh.

    Más Menos
    28 m
  • Harvard Reacts to Trump’s Return
    Nov 11 2024

    Harvard students awoke to a somber campus following Donald Trump’s reelection to the presidency early Wednesday morning. “My heart dropped a little bit,” one student said.

    Some Harvard professors canceled classes. Others tweaked their lesson plans and asked students to care for their mental health. This week on Newstalk, Harvard reacts to Trump's return to the White House.

    Más Menos
    14 m
  • Harvard's Run-Up to the Election
    Nov 5 2024

    When you think about election organizing at Harvard, a few words might come to mind. Privilege. Access. Money.


    The Harvard College Democrats are backed by a federally recognized PAC. Student leaders at the Harvard Republican Club have dined with former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and pulled off speaking events with multi-billionaire Peter Thiel.


    Talk to them, and you’ll find that the name-dropping is constant, and the access is unparalleled. They’ll also tell you that all of it — the organizing, the networking — is available to any Harvard student who wants in on the action.


    You’ll get the sense that Harvard’s run-up to Election 2024 goes far beyond the confines of campus. It takes students to the Republican National Convention and Democratic National Convention — to Pennsylvania, to Georgia — rubbing shoulders with some of America’s most powerful politicians, in some of the election’s most high-profile moments. Today on Newstalk, in an election special, we talk to the presidents of the Harvard Republican Club and Harvard College Democrats about the world of election organizing at Harvard.

    Más Menos
    30 m
  • Harvard IOP Student Leader Resigns, Citing ‘Palestinian Exception to Free Speech’
    Oct 12 2024

    As we neared the one-year anniversary of October 7 earlier this month, the Harvard Institute of Politics — the largest student organization on Harvard’s campus and its flagship platform for political discourse — saw a high-profile shakeup in its student leadership.


    Citing the Palestinian exception to free speech, a vocal pro-Palestine activist resigned as the chair of one of the IOP’s popular programs on campaigns and advocacy.


    The reason? Closed-door infighting over how to handle the 2024 elections and Israel-Palestine conflict in its programming.

    As concerns about free speech and censorship ramp up, the IOP shakeup marked a fundamental disagreement between the IOP’s top student leadership on how to handle political campus discourse on Israel and Palestine.


    Today on Newstalk, we join our reporters to break down the dispute — and we join the student who resigned to hear his version of the story.

    Más Menos
    50 m
  • Is Harvard Doing Discourse Wrong?
    Oct 1 2024

    If you've been a student at Harvard at any point over the past three years, there’s one thing you’ve probably heard over and over again: intellectual vitality.

    You’ll see it in emails, in videos, from students, from our deans — it’s everywhere.

    And, overwhelmingly, you’ll get the sense that Harvard’s concerned about the state of discourse on campus.

    So what is intellectual vitality? A Harvard website says it’s about the college’s attempts to “establish a culture in which all members speak, listen, and ask questions of each other and ourselves with curiosity and respect.” The implication here is that the college isn’t quite hitting the mark. That there isn’t as much curiosity and respect as there should be. That Harvard’s civil discourse isn’t intellectually vital.

    And that’s meant that the college has rolled out measure after measure to try to change that. Hiring new people, putting on speaking events, getting students to talk about it with each other. And one of the newest phases of that came this fall, when intellectual vitality was included for the first time in mandatory training for freshmen entering the college and getting to know what Harvard is all about.

    But some people think that Harvard’s approach to all of this is wrong. That its attempts at intellectual vitality aren't helping. That it’s missing the real point — and the real problem.

    One of them, Matteo Diaz, is a student who was asked by a Harvard administrator to record a video for that training. He didn’t see what came of it until this fall, when he and one of his peers, Saul Arnow, saw that intellectual vitality training before it was shown to freshmen. Matteo and Saul are on The Crimson’s editorial board, and they join host Frank S. Zhou to talk about why they think Harvard is falling short.

    This week on Newstalk: is Harvard doing discourse wrong?

    Audio excerpted in this episode from the Harvard College YouTube channel and Harvard College Dean of Students YouTube channel.

    Más Menos
    26 m