Post Reports The Washington Post
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Post Reports is the daily podcast from The Washington Post. Unparalleled reporting. Expert insight. Clear analysis. Everything you’ve come to expect from the newsroom of The Post, for your ears. Martine Powers and Elahe Izadi are your hosts, asking the questions you didn’t know you wanted answered. Published weekdays around 5 p.m. Eastern time.
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The Baltimore bridge collapse reveals who is most vulnerable
Today on “Post Reports,” reporter Teo Armus walks us through what we know about the Baltimore bridge collapse — and what it says about the lives — and tragic deaths — of immigrants in tough construction jobs.
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When police officers are predators: One teen's story
Today, the story of a teenager who was sexually abused by a police officer, and her journey to find justice.
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Why the Justice Department is taking on Apple’s iPhone
Today on “Post Reports:” Why the Justice Department is going after Apple over green text bubbles. And what its lawsuit says about the Biden administration’s stance on Big Tech.
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Abortion, guns and the state of a divided Supreme Court
Public trust in the Supreme Court is at historic lows, just as justices weigh in on some of the nation’s most important debates, from abortion pills to guns. Today, Ann Marimow on the state of a divided court and its attempts to regain credibility.
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Post Opinion: What to expect when you're expecting an abortion pill argument
On the first episode of their new podcast "Impromptu," our colleagues
at Washington Post Opinions discuss what’s at stake the Supreme Court hears a case on access to mifepristone. Post columnists Ruth Marcus, Alexandra Petri and Amanda Ripley discuss how it feels to be a woman in the post-Dobbs world. -
When a viral fairy tale slams against reality
Today on “Post Reports,” a viral fundraiser for an unhoused man triggers backlash online. And, how platforms like GoFundMe are increasingly replacing America’s social safety net.
Customer Reviews
Lacking depth
Unfortunately lack depth. Difficult to do when you have more than one subject. I wanted but I am unable to become a regular listener.