Episodes

  • 886: Blackout
    May 3 2026

    Since the war began in Iran, we've heard very little from people inside the country — and there's a reason for that. The entire country has been under an internet blackout. We worked with reporters Roxana Saberi and Fatemeh Jamalpour to get voice memos out of the country. Even though it was dangerous and difficult, people wanted to be heard.

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    • Prologue: Shirin's parents suddenly disappear into the blackout. (5 minutes)
    • Act One: It’s a war and a blackout. People want to talk about both. (17 minutes)
    • Act Two: What happened before America and Israel went to war with Iran. (9 minutes)
    • Act Three: Iranians have many opinions about the war, and about each other. (12 minutes)
    • Act Four: What happened inside Iran the night President Trump threatened that "a whole civilization could die." And a clue about where the internet blackout is headed. (19 minutes)

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • Ira (Reluctantly) Gives a Graduation Speech
    May 1 2026

    Ira always hated commencement speeches. Then he felt like he had to give this one.

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    8 mins
  • 466: Blackjack
    Apr 26 2026

    The casino game everyone thinks they can beat.

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    • Prologue: Host Ira Glass and producer Robyn Semien get a blackjack lesson from Andy Bloch, who played for the MIT blackjack team. He teaches them the basics of card-counting, the technique that gives players an advantage against the house — enough of an advantage that most casinos will ask you to leave if they catch you doing it. (9 minutes)
    • Act One: Jack Hitt tells the story of the Christian card-counting team featured in the documentary Holy Rollers, and why they see no contradiction in being devout Christians who spend their days in casinos. (18 minutes)
    • Act 2: Ira and Robyn go to the casino to try out their newfound card-counting skills. (5 minutes)
    • Act Two: Producer Sarah Koenig tells the story of a woman who sued the casino where she lost her inheritance, saying that it was to blame, not her. (25 minutes)

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • 393: Infidelity
    Apr 19 2026

    Stories of cheating, cheaters, and the cheated.

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    • Prologue: Ira talks with Jessica Pressler about a phenomenon she noticed in the wedding notices in The New York Times. Couples were cheerfully telling—as part of their "meet cute" stories—how their relationships began with one of them cheating on a spouse or long-time partner. (4 minutes)
    • Act One: From England, Ruby Wright has a story of an affair where—even years after it ended—it wasn't much discussed. (14 minutes)
    • Act Two: Ira reviews some infidelity stats from his mother's book on the subject, Not Just Friends. And author James Braly tells a story of temptation live onstage at The Moth. (15 minutes)
    • Act Three: Dani Shapiro on the confusing mess things can be during an affair. The story is from her memoir, Slow Motion. (16 minutes)
    • Act Four: Etgar Keret describes the moment in the immediate aftermath of an affair. Actor Matt Malloy reads. (4 minutes)

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    1 hr
  • 885: Bless This Mess
    Apr 12 2026

    At a time when the U.S. government is trying to make American history tidier, we try to learn from the mess. Including the untold, messy story of Paul and Essie Robeson.

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    • Prologue: Guest Host Emanuele Berry talks to Nichole Hill about the Black movie characters Nichole was curious about as a child. (7 minutes)
    • Act One: A giant of the Harlem Renaissance, Paul Robeson was the most famous American of his day. Until he wasn’t. Nichole Hill tells the messy, complicated story of Paul and his wife, Essie Robeson. (38 minutes)
    • Act Two: In 1865, a formerly enslaved man named Jourdan Anderson received a letter from his former enslaver, asking Jourdan to return to the plantation and work. Actor Laurence Fishburne reads Jourdan’s response.

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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • 884: The Idiot
    Mar 29 2026

    M. Gessen returns to our show with a true-crime story that takes place entirely within their own family. This story comes to us from the producers at Serial Productions—who invented the true-crime podcast more than a decade ago—and from The New York Times.

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    • Act One: M Gessen tells Ira Glass about the surprising events that prompted them to begin reporting on their own family for their new podcast, The Idiot. They play the first episode of the series. (14 minutes)
    • Act Two: Ira Glass and M Gessen continue to talk through the story of M’s cousin, Allen Gessen. They play more clips from the podcast, and we finally hear about the big, shocking thing that snapped their family apart. (20 minutes)
    • Act Three: M Gessen tells Ira Glass about Allen’s trial, and we hear a recording of his conversation with the undercover agent. (21 minutes)

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    1 hr
  • 883: Call Your Parents
    Mar 22 2026

    In the early days of the radio show, Ira did a series of interviews with his parents that completely changed his relationship with them. This week, he returns to those interviews.

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    • Prologue: Ira talks about why four conversations reveal how his relationship with his parents changed. (4 minutes)
    • Act One: Ira’s mom, Shirley, is invited to lead a discussion about how to get along with your adult children. Her adult children question her expertise. (9 minutes)
    • Act Two: Ira asks his parents for advice on how he should build the radio show. His parents don’t hold back. (9 minutes)
    • Act Three: Ira talks with his dad, Barry, about Barry’s own brief and doomed career in radio. (21 minutes)
    • Act Four: An interview with Ira’s mom that, to this day, makes Ira’s skin crawl. (13 minutes)

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    1 hr
  • 882: Give a Little Whistle
    Mar 8 2026

    Two lawyers who work for ICE step forward and lift the curtain on what is really happening inside our immigration system right now.

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    • Prologue: Two lawyers dive into the details of what they’ve witnessed behind the scenes in different parts of the immigration system. (2 minutes)
    • Act One: Former ICE attorney Ryan Schwank explains the chaos and dysfunction he observed at an ICE training academy, which led him to whistleblow to Congress two weeks ago. (12 minutes)
    • Act Two: A federal judge orders the government to immediately release a bunch of people from detention. Days pass, and the government doesn’t comply. So the judge calls a hearing to figure out what’s going on. The lawyer's response is not what he or anybody expected. (25 minutes)

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    1 hr and 2 mins