65 episodes

David K. Shipler & Daniel Zwerdling have spent their lives investigating thorny and neglected issues, winning journalism’s top awards along the way. Now join Dave and Danny on TWO REPORTERS, as they interview stellar guests about pressing social problems and solutions - and just fascinating stuff - in ways you haven’t heard before. Advisory: Episodes may contain laughing, arguing and moments of irreverence.

TWO REPORTERS David K. Shipler & Daniel Zwerdling

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.6 • 11 Ratings

David K. Shipler & Daniel Zwerdling have spent their lives investigating thorny and neglected issues, winning journalism’s top awards along the way. Now join Dave and Danny on TWO REPORTERS, as they interview stellar guests about pressing social problems and solutions - and just fascinating stuff - in ways you haven’t heard before. Advisory: Episodes may contain laughing, arguing and moments of irreverence.

    How a sniper almost killed our guest (plus other chilling tales of a foreign correspondent) Part 2 / FROM THE ARCHIVE

    How a sniper almost killed our guest (plus other chilling tales of a foreign correspondent) Part 2 / FROM THE ARCHIVE

    Lewis Simon's Pulitzer Prize-winning reporting, in collaboration with colleagues, helped spark an international scandal and topple a corrupt dictator; he tells us in this episode how they did it. Lew also gives us remarkable insight into how he could do his work - taking notes as people got beaten to death and blown up in front of him - and survive emotionally. And finally, a roving correspondent talks honestly about the toll that constant traveling took on his spouse. After hearing Lew, you ...

    • 44 min
    How a sniper almost killed our guest (plus other chilling tales of a foreign correspondent) / FROM THE ARCHIVE

    How a sniper almost killed our guest (plus other chilling tales of a foreign correspondent) / FROM THE ARCHIVE

    Next time you hear details of the horrific wars in Ukraine and Gaza, think about how you're learning them: journalists are risking their lives to report from the front lines. Lewis Simons won the Pulitzer Prize during decades of reporting on the Vietnam war and other conflicts across Asia. He lived by a motto: "Whatever the threat or danger, I had to be there."

    • 31 min
    Check out how foreign autocrats whom Trump admires gutted their democracies, step by step - legally

    Check out how foreign autocrats whom Trump admires gutted their democracies, step by step - legally

    Now Trump and the Republican party are following their autocratic playbooks, whether by design or by instinct: pack courts and agencies with their cronies, slander and intimidate the media, and denigrate their opponents as "evil" and vermin. Harvard professor Steven Levitsky, co-author of How Democracies Die and Tyranny of the Minority, tells us why it could take many years to rescue America's democracy - even if Trump loses the next election.

    • 42 min
    When they taught you the history of these intrepid explorers, was it pretty much a lie?

    When they taught you the history of these intrepid explorers, was it pretty much a lie?

    When you learned about the American explorers who claimed to discover the North Pole, the answer seems to be, "Yes." In fact, the fabled drama of Robert E. Peary and Frederick Cook was an early example of how powerful newspapers - in this case The New York Times and New York Herald - spread fake news (although critics still debate whether the newspaper owners knew it was fake or didn't bother to corroborate the explorers' stories). Journalist Darrell Hartman tells us life and death tales from...

    • 49 min
    When apps ask to "share your location" or use voice ID, could it hurt you? / FROM THE ARCHIVE

    When apps ask to "share your location" or use voice ID, could it hurt you? / FROM THE ARCHIVE

    It could happen to you: police mistakenly suspect or arrest you, because an app's location data show you were near the scene of a crime. The ACLU's Nathan Wessler returns to explain how geolocation, voice recognition and other high-tech tracking methods - including the way you walk! - could disrupt your life in ways you hardly expect.

    • 39 min
    Should you worry about facial recognition at airports, malls and unexpected places? / From the archive

    Should you worry about facial recognition at airports, malls and unexpected places? / From the archive

    America's surveillance network is nowhere near as pervasive and chilling as China's, but U.S. companies and government agencies are already using high-tech tools like facial recognition to track you more than you might think. As the ACLU's Nathan Wessler tells us, the facial recognition software sometimes goofs - and ordinary, innocent people like you end up in jail.

    • 39 min

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5
11 Ratings

11 Ratings

drewphysics ,

First rate

Entertaining, very approachable podcasts full of information by two top notch reporters with a huge amount of experience and capability. These subjects are fresh and innovative, and not available anywhere else as far as I can tell. Thanks so much for digging so deep and broadening our understanding of the world!

Top Podcasts In Society & Culture

Stuff You Should Know
iHeartPodcasts
Fail Better with David Duchovny
Lemonada Media
This American Life
This American Life
We Can Do Hard Things
Glennon Doyle and Audacy
Shawn Ryan Show
Shawn Ryan | Cumulus Podcast Network
The Ezra Klein Show
New York Times Opinion

You Might Also Like

The Daily
The New York Times
The Rachel Maddow Show
Rachel Maddow, MSNBC
Matter of Opinion
New York Times Opinion
Hacks On Tap
Hacks On Tap
The Rest Is Politics
Goalhanger Podcasts