Episode 171: Begging for Context

The shows continue to fail to explain and contextualize the Black Lives Matter and the Defund the Police Movements. Experts, researchers, and activists who have been working in this space are still not leading the conversations. And we still see journalists use partisan language like using the word '“warlord” to describe protesters.

Today on Polilogue, we look at the strategic choices and clumsy framing by the hosts and how it leads to shallow explanations of one of the largest protests we’ve seen in the United States in decades. We also look at some of the responses from Republican and Democratic leaders shaping legislative responses.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • Host Performances

  • Republicans Talk Police Reform

  • Democrats Talk Police Reform

  • The Missing Segment

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Articles Discussed on the Show

  • The End of Policing by Alex Vitale

  • Laquan McDonald shooting puts Rahm Emanuel in battle over the truth (The Guardian)

  • Chicago mayor says 'sorry' for police misconduct in Laquan McDonald case (The Guardian)

  • The Definitive Guide for Cable Hosts, Bookers, and Editors to the Fraud and Failure that was Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel (The Intercept)

Contact us

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 170: Where are the Experts?

For a second week, all the Sunday political shows focused their time on the national uprisings and racial injustice protests. Last week when the story was fresher and developing, we gave the shows more leniency in how they covered the topic. We asked if the shows were explaining why people were angry and if they were explaining the fervor that was spilling into the streets in cities across America.

A week later, the protests have not waned. But disappointingly, we find the shows are still failing to explain this moment. They are failing to include important voices on this topic. They are using incendiary and/or unnecessary language. There remains a deference to military and police that we are not seeing towards the average Black American. This is an important moment in history. The shows need to realize that they are failing to get this story right.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Meet the Press

  • State of the Union

  • This Week

  • Face the Nation

  • Fox News Sunday

  • Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Articles Discussed on the Show

Contact us

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 169: Anger and Pain Across America

For the first time since March 2, today’s episode of Polilogue focuses on something other than the Coronavirus. All of the Sunday shows centered the bulk, if not the entirety, of their time on the 140+ protests that took place after the death of George Floyd. Floyd died Monday, May 25 while in custody with the Minneapolis Police Department. This death, like many others before him, was videotaped by a witness nearby and has reignited a deep heartbreak and anger in this country.

All week thousands of people have taken to the streets protesting police brutality and echoing other frustrations of the Black Lives Matter movement. The news coverage of these protests has been non-stop all week. Today on Polilogue, we look at how these important weekly political shows are framing and explaining this issue. We explore whether they are simply reporting that people are angry, or if they are explaining why people are angry. We look at interviews that examine police accountability, and we scrutinize ones that focus only on violent protesters instead of violent police officers.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight / Lowlight

  • The Police

  • The Protesters

  • Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Articles Discussed on the Show

  • Echoes of 1969 (Harvard Magazine)

  • Prisons are packed because prosecutors are coercing plea deals. And, yes, it's totally legal. (NBC News)

  • Thousands of Complaints Do Little to Change Police Ways (NYT)

Contact us

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 168: Things We Can't Let Go

Today on this holiday-edition of Polilogue, we took a different approach to design the show. Instead of our typical format (highlight, lowlight + 2 themed segments), we took a page from the NPR Politics podcast. For each show, we identified one thing that we can’t let go. We discuss a wide range of observations, including the missing Hong Kong context, the inflated spotlight of Chris Christie and Rham Emmanuel, learning in public, the tone and tenor of military coverage, and much more.

Happy Memorial Day to everyone and thank you to all of our veterans and active-duty service members!

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Meet the Press

  • This Week

  • Fox News Sunday

  • State of the Union

  • Face the Nation

  • Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Articles Discussed on the Show

  • Why are there protests in Hong Kong? All the context you need (BBC)

  • Exclusive: Too risky to come home, crew of 'clean' U.S. warship in coronavirus limbo (Reuters)

Contact us

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 167: Seeking Worthwhile Questions

Today on the Sunday news shows, the hosts covered a wide range of topics, including Coronavirus, the economy, new Trump rumors about Obamagate, the November election, and many other topics. Instead of examining topics, today on Polilogue we group questions in two buckets: unproductive and productive questions. Across topics, we noticed that some hosts carefully selected questions to seek a very specific answer, whereas other hosts asked broad questions for a less structured conversation.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • Unproductive Questions

  • Productive Questions

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Contact us

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 166: What's the Plan?

Today on the Sunday news shows, the hosts questioned if the Trump administration has any comprehensive plans to address the public health crisis and the financial catastrophe of COVID-19. Multiple representatives of the White House went on the shows, including Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin,  White House Council of Economic Advisers Chairman Kevin Hassett, and Economics Advisor Larry Kudlow. Not all the hosts appropriately interrogated the talking points of the White House. George Stephanopoulos, in particular, missed the mark and gave too much leeway to Kudlow.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • Talking to Scientists

  • Interrogating Economists

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Contact us

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 165: Open Like Nobody's Business

The Coronavirus pandemic enters a new month and the Sunday talk shows focused on familiar subtopics, including the public health responses and economic pains of Americans and state governments. The Sunday shows also discussed the scientific breakthroughs in treating this virus. After many weeks of only COVID-19-centric episodes, most shows, at least for one segment, also discussed the presidential election.

Today on Polilogue, we explore the value of nuance in understating states that choose to reopen, the benefits of seeing the long-view COVID-19 picture, and why the Tara Reade allegation— at this point in time— is not as complicated of a story that most people are making it out to be.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • Tepid Mitigation Success

  • Additional Economic Support on Pause

  • COVID-19 Breakthroughs

  • Election 2020: Amash for President

  • Election 2020: Tara Reade’s Biden Allegations

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Articles & Resources Discussed

  • Investigate Tara Reade’s Allegations (NYT Editorial Board)

  • NIH Trial Finds Gilead's Remdesivir Shows Early Promise in Treating COVID-19 (AJMC)

  • Gov. DeWine reverses decision to make masks mandatory, now 'recommended' while shopping (News 5 Cleveland)

  • Bewildering computer crashes and glitches for those in Florida seeking unemployment benefits (Tallahassee Democrat)

  • “Florida Is a Terrible State to Be an Unemployed Person” (NYT)

  • Why Won’t TV News Book Tara Reade? (NYT)

  • Webinar: COVID-19 in Context: News Coverage and News Literacy in Uncertain Times (News Literacy Project)

  • Overall fantastic resources with the News Literacy Project

Contact us

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 164: Pandemic Responses of Experts, Press

Every week for the last couple of months, either Dr. Anthony Fauci or Dr. Deborah Birx go on the Sunday talk shows and explain the current state of the national COVID19 response. Fauci and Birx are medical and public health professionals with decades of experience and public service. Lately, however, their roles have been more political lately as they struggle to defend or deflect bombastic statements by President Trump. Today on Polilogue, we discuss the role of scientists in Trump’s administration — and the role of the press in interviewing these experts.

We also talk about the next wave of economic support — including another round of money going into the Paycheck Protection Program to support struggling small business owners and the fight to get money allocated for revenue-depleted states and municipalities.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • A Michigan Correction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • Scientists Try to Defend Trump

  • PPP Fund Replenished

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Contact us

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 163: More Money, More Testing Problems

The Paycheck Protection Program was designed to give small business owners a lifeline during this unprecedented economic crisis. However, within two weeks of the program going live, the funds have been depleted, leaving many small business owners empty handed. The Trump administration and Congressional leaders are steadily working on the next round of support. This time around, journalists ask if unfair loopholes and unnecessary barriers will be resolved.

In addition to financial support, many Americans are wondering when it will be safe to resume their lives. Extensive testing and contact tracing are crucial components to making that possible — and yet, testing across the US remains a mess.

In today’s episode we look at both of these issues.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • The Next Financial Aid Bill

  • Testing Barriers Remain

  • Trump Foments Unrest

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Resources

  • Scott Gottlieb on how, and when, to end social distancing (Ezra Klein Podcst on Vox)

  • Last year, we searched Google for how to tie a tie. Now we’re using it to find toilet paper. (WaPo)

Contact us

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 162: Getting to the Post-Virus Future

New data shows that the Coronavirus is devastating Black and other marginalized communities disproportionately compared to their white counterparts. Several Sunday shows had segments or interviews that highlighted this new trend. The quality of those discussions were largely dependent on the guests that were invited to speak on the topic. Highlights include the Governor of New Mexico Michelle Lujan Grisham on State of the Union, the Governor of Maryland Larry Hogan on This Week, and the Mayor of Chicago Lori Lightfoot on Face the Nation.

Additionally, the shows had many conversations about what it would take to open restart the economy and to reopen the country. And while the physical and economic safety concerns run rampant, one component remains steadfastly important: achieving extensive and widespread testing capabilities.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • The Coronavirus and Race

  • Steps to Open the Economy

  • Why It Matters: Moving Past the Trump Story

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Contact us

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 161: Demanding Perspective on Coronavirus

Another Sunday with Coronavirus-filled segments on the political shows. Today the shows focused on the federal response (or lack thereof) and the testing and treatment options that need to be in place to finally get a handle on this pandemic.

Face the Nation also had very important interviews about the economic impact and the dire need to get support into the hands of small business owners and workers as quickly as possible.

Oh — and for one last time — Happy Birthday, Brendan!

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • Looking Ahead on the Coronavirus

  • The Pandemic’s Economic Impact

  • Why It Matters: Why Style Matters in Journalism Now

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Resources we discuss

Contact us

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 160: One Virus, Many Regional Experiences

For the fifth week in a row, the Sunday talk shows focused entirely on the coronavirus. Today the shows explored the regional variation of the virus. There is no unified experience in fighting the coronavirus, nor is there one solution to tackle. New York City, California, and Washington state are deep in mitigation strategies and trying to help the patients filling their hospitals. Newer outbreaks in Michigan and Louisiana leaves those states desperate for equipment. And other regions like Florida, Maryland, and others could be getting their testing infrastructure in place so that contact tracing helps prevent massive spread in their communities.

After 3.3 million people applied for unemployment, it is clear that the virus is also having a huge impact on people financially. The Sunday shows discussed if and how much financial support would be getting into the wallets of hurting Americans.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • Regional Responses to a Pandemic

  • America’s Economic Relief

  • Why It Matters: Calling Attention

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Resources we discuss

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 159: Virus Spreads, Congress Stalls

The coronavirus continues to impact schools, workplaces, and communities across the US and the world. FEMA is now coordinating the federal material response. Administrator Peter Gaynor went on multiple shows — but didn’t have much to say, which hosts like Martha Raddatz and Jake Tapper very much noticed.  There was also significant conversation about the stimulus package that is waiting to be revived and voted on.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • The Public Health Crisis

  • The Economic Crisis

  • Why It Matters: A Testing Approach

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Resources we discuss

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Double Episode 158: Eleventh Democratic Debate / Coronavirus Crisis

In this special double episode, we analyze the 11th democratic primary debate. Last night, CNN hosted the first debate between only two candidates. Former Vice President Joe Biden and independent Sen. Bernie Sanders. It was a debate reflective of America’s reality: the candidates didn’t shake hands, they stood 6 feet apart, there was no audience, and a significant part of the debate explored how the country should best address the Coronavirus.

In the second half of this double episode, we look at how the Sunday shows discussed the Coronavirus, which has quickly escalated, shutting down restaurants, bars, schools, and the general way of life in many parts of the country. The Sunday show hosts asked various public health and elected officials one question in many different ways: “Will our drastic actions be enough to slow the spread of this frightening virus?”

——

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Eleventh Democratic Debate

  • Joe Biden

  • Bernie Sanders

  • Health Experts on the Sunday Shows

  • Governors and Mayors

  • Economic Impact of the Virus

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

——

Shows discussed 

——

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket and a significant commitment of time every week. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 157: WH Fumbles as Virus Spreads

Multiple representatives of the Coronavirus Taskforce went on the Sunday shows to reassure and calm the American public regarding US public health readiness. Many officials, however, could not answer basic data requests or describe imminent plans. Surgeon General Jerome Adams could not say how many Americans have been tested for the Coronavirus on State of the Union. And HUD Secretary Dr. Ben Carson refused to describe to George Stephanopoulos a mitigation plan that would be implemented the very next day.

As more and more states and cities learn of Coronavirus cases in their communities, local leaders will lean on the federal government for direction and guidance. If today’s shows are any indication, the White House and the Coronavirus Taskforce have a lot more work to do.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • The Coronavirus Response

  • Bernie Sanders Makes his Case

  • Why It Matters: Learning from Other Countries

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Shows discussed 

Resources we discuss

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 156: WH Tested by Coronavirus

Former Vice President Joe Biden had a resounding win in South Carolina — thus reviving his campaign and making a clear case to be the alternative to Sen. Bernie Sanders. Additionally, late on Sunday evening, Mayor Pete Buttigieg dropped out of the race as well. The Sunday talk shows focused their coverage of the Democratic race on Sanders and Biden and ignored most of the other candidates.

The White House also sent Vice President Mike Pence and Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar to all of the Sunday talk shows to calm and reassure the American public. Secretary Azar achieved this objective; Vice President Pence did not.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • South Carolina win revives Biden campaign

  • White House responds to Coronavirus

  • Why It Matters: Public Trust

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Also, don’t miss our special episode about the Tuesday Democratic debate! It will appear in your podcast feed on Wednesday morning.

Shows discussed 

Article we discuss

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket and with about 10 hours of work every Sunday. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 155: The 10th Democratic Debate

In this special episode, we analyze the 10th democratic primary debate. Last night, CBS News hosted the last debate before Super Tuesday—and did a pretty bad job of it. From the questions to the botched ending to the loss of control, it was a lesson in what NOT TO DO when hosting a debate. Despite all of this, an intrepid crew of candidates continued on with their agendas—attacking the newly-crowned frontrunner Bernie Sanders and making the argument for their candidacies.

As always with our debate special episodes, we provide an analysis of the host performances and then we rank the candidates in three distinct categories: candidates who have improved their standing; candidates that are in the same place they were  yesterday; and candidates who are in a worse place than they were yesterday. 

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket and a significant commitment of time every week. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 154: WH deflects intelligence reports

Acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire was forced to resign after he and his staff insinuated to the House Intelligence Committee that Russia was continuing to meddle in the 2020 election and favored President Trump to win. National Security Advisor Robert O’Brien and Vice President Chief-of-Staff Marc Short were on the Sunday shows to explain the situation. They came with conflicting and confusing statements.

In addition, the shows also brought more scrutiny and attention to the Bernie Sanders campaign. After the Nevada caucus win, Sanders is shaping up to be the frontrunner, which is finally bringing on a more nuanced and thorough conversation about the Sanders campaign.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • Another DNI Shake Up

  • Sanders Wins Nevada

  • Why It Matters: Truth to Power

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Also, don’t miss our special episode about the Tuesday Democratic debate! It will appear in your podcast feed on Wednesday morning.

Shows discussed 

Articles we discuss

  • For more on the NYT The Daily podcast episode about Bernie Sanders, read the article and listen to the episode here.

  • To read more about the story discussed in Why It Matters, check out the full article in the Financial Times

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket and with about 10 hours of work every Sunday. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 153: The 9th Democratic Debate

In this special episode, we analyze the 9th democratic primary debate. Last night, NBC News and Noticias Telemundo hosted the most energetic democratic debate ever—with six candidates in Las Vegas. Elizabeth Warren took control of the stage as Bloomberg was welcomed for the first time—if you could call it a welcome.

As always with our debate special episodes, we provide an analysis of the host performances and then we rank the candidates in three distinct categories: candidates who have improved their standing; candidates that are in the same place they were  yesterday; and candidates who are in a worse place than they were yesterday. 

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket and with about 10 hours of work every Sunday. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto
Episode 152: Beyond the Horserace

This week, we examine how 2020 campaign conversations are being framed on the Sunday shows. Most notably, we examine if the shows are asking candidates about their ability to do the job of president, rather than simply looking at the horserace.

Plus, in our “Why It Matters” segment, we go back to examine what the media has learned about its coverage of 2016. We discuss the interview with New York Times Executive Editor Dean Baquet in the January 31 episode of The Daily podcast. In the episode, Baquet is interviewed by Michael Barbaro on the NYT coverage of 2016, from Bernie to Hillary’s emails (the leaked ones, at least) and the upset win by Donald Trump.

Chapters

  • Introduction

  • Highlight/Lowlight

  • Criminal Justice Spotlight

  • Michael Bloomberg Conversations without Michael Bloomberg

  • Beyond the Horserace

  • Why It Matters: The NYT Coverage in 2016

  • Show Rankings

  • Closing

Also, don’t miss our special episode about the Wednesday democratic debate! It will appear in your podcast feed on Thursday morning.

Shows discussed 

Email us at podcast@polilogue.com or you can send us your feedback @PolilogueCast. You can also follow us at @sotonaomi_ and @bsteidle.

Support the show: We produce Polilogue out of our own pocket and with about 10 hours of work every Sunday. If you’d like to support the show with a one-time or recurring donation, please visit our donate page here. Thank you!

Check out some of our other work: 

Brendan’s website: www.armisticedesigns.com  

 Naomi's website: www.startwithaquestion.org

Naomi Soto