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Updated 2024-11-23 20:46
47: Christmas and Commerce
Stories about the intersection of Christmas and retail, originally broadcast in 1996 when our show was only a year old. Including David Sedaris's story "Santaland Diaries," which first aired on NPR's Morning Edition in a much shorter version.
214: Family Physics
We take the stately laws of physics—laws which mathematicians and scientists have spent centuries discovering and verifying—and apply them to the realm of human relationships, to see if they shed useful light on our daily lives.
756: But I Did Everything Right
People earnestly doing what they're told, and absolutely not getting what they were promised.
755: The Convert
In 2006, a new convert showed up at a mosque in Orange County, California. Known as Farouk al-Aziz, the convert was actually an FBI informant named Craig Monteilh. That informant’s infiltration of the mosque is at the heart of FBI v Fazaga, a case heard at the Supreme Court last month. We return to our episode from 2012, which tells the story behind it.
754: Spark Bird
This bird-focused week, stories about birds and the hearts they sway, the havoc they wreak, the lives they change.
660: Hoaxing Yourself
People who tell a lie and then believe the lie more than anyone else.
753: What We’ve Got Here is Failure to Communicate
Getting the point across — or trying to, anyway.
628: In the Shadow of the City
Stories that take place on the edge of civilization, just out of sight.
752: An Invitation to Tea
A man who was imprisoned for 14 years in Guantanamo Bay, without charges, gets out and issues an invitation to all the people who kept him there. Amazingly, three of them agree to talk.
751: Audience of One
In a world where a virus spreads across the country and most people are not going to movie theaters, we bring the movies to you.
750: The Ferryman
Stories about getting from Point A to Point B—with expert assistance.
203: Recordings for Someone
Personal recordings one person made for just one other person, including what some have called the greatest phone message ever.
749: My Bad
An hour devoted to embarrassing stories. They’re not always just little moments – funny, daily stuff that we laugh about later. Some can change you for the rest of your life.
553: Stuck in the Middle
People caught in limbo, using ingenuity and guile to try to get themselves out.
748: The End of the World as We Know It
What happens when one family goes all in on fighting climate change.
747: Suitable for Children
Who thought that would be good for a kid?
746: This Is Just Some Songs
We made you a mixtape. Don't make a big deal out of it or anything.
745: Getting Out
People trying to escape all kinds of seemingly impossible situations.
218: Act V
A group of inmates at a high-security prison rehearse and stage a production of the last act—Act V—of Hamlet.
744: Essential
The pandemic forced jobs to change, but then the workers changed, too.
582: When the Beasts Come Marching In
We human beings think we run the world, that we’ve got things under control. Then an animal shows up, and things don’t go as planned. This week, seals, wolves, and a moose drop in and show us who isn't boss.
743: Don't You Be My Neighbor
Bad neighbors. What can you do about them?
742: The Thing I'm Getting Over
What’s recovery mean, anyway?
436: The Psychopath Test
We heard about a test that could determine if someone was a psychopath. So, naturally, our staff decided to take it.
741: The Weight of Words
Words mean things, but some words are especially meaningful.
740: There. I Fixed It.
Solving problems using very extreme measures.
539: The Leap
Most of us go from day to day just coasting on the status quo. If it ain’t broke, why fix it—right? But when routines just get too mundane or systems stop making sense, sometimes you just have to hold your breath and jump. People who leap from their lives, their comfort zones, even through time.
506: Secret Identity
A bank robber on an undercover mission. A teenage girl with the powers of a tiger. A vigilante seeking vengeance in Ciudad Juarez. All have secret identities. But not all of them chose those identities for themselves.
739: Sisters
Sisters build worlds together, worlds that are just for them. Stories about the bonds between sisters and how they get broken and fixed—or not.
74: Conventions
Remember conventions, before the pandemic? When people with one common interest gather in monstrous, fluorescent-lit halls for the weekend. Sometimes they drive each other crazy, sometimes they fall in love.
738: Good Grief!
So many of us, we don’t want to think about death. We avoid grieving when we lose someone, distract ourselves, look away. In this episode, at a moment when so many families are mourning, we have stories of people figuring out how they’ll grieve, and doing a pretty good job of it.
706: A Mess to Be Reckoned With
Lissa Yellow Bird searches for missing people. Cold cases, mostly. People no one else is looking for. It’s not her job, but a lot of Native Americans go missing and their cases remain unsolved, so families often ask Lissa for help. But then, Lissa’s own niece goes missing.
737: The Daily
An ode to life's daily practices, and what you learn from doing a thing every single day.
233: Starting From Scratch
People starting over—sometimes because they want to, other times because they have to.
588: Mind Games
People who try simple mind games on others and find themselves in way over their heads.
736: The Herd
What happens when your own community suddenly turns on you?
691: Gardens of Branching Paths
Other universes that are just like our own, but with one small difference.
735: Bloody Feelings
Stories about the power of blood.
549: Amateur Hour
People put in positions they’re completely unqualified to handle, but who try to make it work anyway. Including one story of a tough group of soldiers who attempt to save lives through the power of show tunes.
676: Here’s Looking at You, Kid
Adults telling kids who they are, and kids wondering — are they right?
734: The Campus Tour Has Been Cancelled
How the pandemic has thrown college admissions process into a kind of slow-motion chaos. One of the biggest changes: most colleges have stopped requiring the SAT. For decades, there’s been a debate over whether schools should drop the test. What’s it mean that it finally happened?
695: Everyone's a Critic
People squirming in a world where everything is rated and reviewed.
733: Warriors in the Garden
This week, three men who came together to protest the murder of George Floyd. They were unified, loud, and impressive, but over time these three friends end up in three very different places.
635: Chip in My Brain
A boy who can’t dribble gets a coach, a new best friend, and something to believe in.
732: Secrets
Why we tell them, and what happens after we do.
731: What Lies Beneath
Stories of people summoning up stuff that’s usually hidden down deep.
670: Beware the Jabberwock
Stories from the upside-down world where conspiracy theorists dwell.
489: No Coincidence, No Story!
We asked listeners to send us their best coincidence stories, and we got more than 1,300 submissions! There were so many good ones we decided to make a whole show about them. From a chance encounter at a bus station to a romantic dollar bill to a baffling apparition in a college shower stall.
730: The Empty Chair
Things we’ve lost in the past year — since the first American coronavirus case — that we haven’t talked about so much. Gossip. The chance to make new friends. And much larger stuff.
694: Get Back to Where You Once Belonged
People looking everywhere to find a place—any place—where, for once, they don't have to be the odd man out.
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