Interviews with Hachette Book Group authors discussing the top issues of the moment.
MIT Professors and winners of the 2019 Nobel Prize in Economics, Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo discuss the implications of COVID-19 globally, the decline in trust of governments, unsustainable debts, and their book, GOOD ECONOMICS FOR HARD TIMES - out now in trade paperback via PublicAffairs. Learn more about the episode: https://bit.ly/3yrJWLv Learn more about the book: https://bit.ly/3ymblie Sign up for The Current newsletter to stay up to date with all new episodes and exclusive content from your favorite authors: https://bit.ly/2QdbG6r Subscribe to our channel for weekly content from your favorite authors: https://bit.ly/3kpfxaP
This week on The Current, editor Gretchen Young and bestselling author Kabir Sehgal discuss their relationship to the late Congressman John Lewis, how his book CARRY ON came together, #BLM protests, his connection to President Joe Biden and more. LEARN MORE ABOUT THE BOOK: https://bit.ly/2VjiHFP Sign up for The Current newsletter to stay up to date with all new episodes: https://bit.ly/2QdbG6r
#MeToo has been searched in all 196 countries around the world. Is the movement a global phenomenon? Rachel Vogelstein and Meighan Stone, co-authors of AWAKENING: #MeToo and the Global Fight for Women's Rights discuss the global success of the #MeToo movement, how the U.S. can continue to support women, what Bill Cosby's overturned conviction means and more on this week's episode of The Current.
Two judges in the same courthouse give markedly different sentences to people who have committed the same crime. Why? This week on The Current, Olivier Sibony, Professor at HEC Paris, keynote speaker and co-author of NOISE: A Flaw in Human Judgement talks about the detrimental effects of noise in fields and systems, the difference between noise and bias, how noise influenced Harry Potter and more.
What made Nancy Pelosi rip Donald Trump's State of the Union speech? Susan Page, USA Today Washington Bureau chief, vice presidential debate moderator and author of MADAM SPEAKER talks Nancy Pelosi retiring, the infamous Mike Pence fly fiasco, Nancy preparing herself to fight during the Capitol Riot and more on this week's episode of The Current.
What did Woodrow Wilson fail to do to stop World War 1? Philip Zelikow, White Burkett Miller Professor of History, former executive director of the 9/11 commission and author of THE ROAD LESS TRAVELED talks successes in American diplomacy, the role of diplomats in history, the Cuban Missile Crisis and more on this week's episode of The Current.
What repercussions did the Meghan Markle and Prince Harry tell-all have on the British royal family? Kehinde Andrews, Professor of Black Studies at Birmingham City University and author of THE NEW AGE OF EMPIRE talks about the royal family, the role of white supremacy throughout history, why readers should feel uncomfortable reading his book and more on this week's episode of The Current.
Is there racial inequality in book publishing? Walter Mosley, acclaimed crime fiction writer and author of BLOOD GROVE, talks being a teenager in 1969, the honesty of his characters, the event that led him to establish the Publishing Certificate Program at The City College of New York and more on this week's episode of The Current.
How did Trump mobilize Twitter when he was elected president in 2016? Damon Centola, sociologist and author of CHANGE, talks in-depth about Twitter, regulating social networks, crowds influencing individual behavior, the fall of the Berlin Wall and more on this weeks episode of The Current.
Best-selling author Michael Connelly talks to our host Clive Priddle of PublicAffairs on forensic science, inspirations for his character Mickey Haller, and his view on the future of Los Angeles.
Non-fiction book editor of the Washington Post and Hachette Books author Steven Levingston discusses his book BARACK AND JOE and about incoming president Joe Biden with Clive Priddle of PublicAffairs.
Writer and performer on Late Night with Seth Meyers Amber Ruffin talks with her sister Lacey Lamar on their book YOU'LL NEVER BELIEVE WHAT HAPPENED TO LACEY and everyday experiences of racism growing up in Nebraska.
This Week on The Current: Authors David Rothkopf, Keith Boykin, and Elizabeth Becker join Clive Priddle of PublicAffairs to discuss the events of January 6th at the Capitol.
Sarah Knight, author of The No F*cks Given Guides, joins Clive Priddle, VP, Publisher of PublicAffairs for an episode of our author interview series The Current. Knight discusses her book How to Not Give a F*ck at Christmas and forming new traditions to conserve your joy and dispense with your annoy during a holiday season that's unlike any other.
Becky Cooper, author of WE KEEP THE DEAD CLOSE, joins us for an episode of our author interview series The Current. Cooper speaks to our host Clive Priddle, VP, Publisher of PublicAffairs on the inspirations behind her book about an unsolved Harvard murder from the 1960s.
Rick Steves, America's leading authority on European travel discusses the value of travel as a political act and a means to become a better global citizen with Clive Priddle, VP, and Publisher of PublicAffairs.
Sarah Blaskey, Miami Herald journalist and co-author of THE GRIFTER'S CLUB talks to Clive Priddle, VP, and Publisher of PublicAffairs.
Keion Henderson, senior pastor of The Lighthouse Church and author of THE SHIFT talks to Clive Priddle, VP, and Publisher of PublicAffairs.
Dr. Zeke Emanuel, recently appointed advisor to president-elect Biden's coronavirus task force and author of THE TRILLION DOLLAR REVOLUTION and WHICH COUNTRY HAS THE WORLD'S BEST HEALTH CARE? talks to Clive Priddle, VP, and Publisher of PublicAffairs.
Ibram X. Kendi, director of the Center for Antiracism Research at Boston University and author of STAMPED FROM THE BEGINNING: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America talks to Clive Priddle, VP, and Publisher of PublicAffairs.