
The Brian Lehrer Show
WNYC
Brian Lehrer leads the conversation about what matters most now in local and national politics, our own communities and our lives.
Location:
New York, NY
Networks:
WNYC
Description:
Brian Lehrer leads the conversation about what matters most now in local and national politics, our own communities and our lives.
Twitter:
@BrianLehrer
Language:
English
Contact:
WNYC Radio 160 Varick St. New York, NY 10013 212-433-9692
Website:
http://www.wnyc.org/shows/bl
Email:
brianlehrershow@wnyc.org
Episodes
Preserving the Internet
4/17/2025
Mark Graham, director of the Wayback Machine at the Internet Archive, explains his work preserving digital history in the face of fewer companies preserving their web content and the White House directives to take down government web pages. Plus, Annie Rauwerda, who runs the Depths of Wikipedia social media accounts, weighs in.
Duration:00:26:18
Grandparents as Childcare
4/17/2025
Faith Hill, staff writer at The Atlantic, talks about the reliance of working parents on grandparents for childcare and when it gets to be too much.
Duration:00:14:10
Meet the Mayoral Candidates: Adrienne Adams
4/17/2025
Adrienne Adams, New York City Council speaker, talks about her campaign to be the Democratic nominee for NYC mayor and the issues facing the city.
Duration:00:30:47
Thursday Morning Politics: Trump and the Courts
4/17/2025
Emily Bazelon, staff writer for The New York Times Magazine, co-host of Slate's "Political Gabfest" podcast, Truman Capote fellow for creative writing and law at Yale Law School and author of Charged: The New Movement to Transform American Prosecution and End Mass Incarceration (Random House, 2019), talks about the latest developments in the stand-off between a federal judge and the Trump administration over deportations, and other national news.
Duration:00:38:36
Spring Allergies 101
4/16/2025
Jennifer Toh, MD, practicing allergist and immunologist at ENT and Allergy Associates, and member of the executive committee of the New York Allergy & Asthma Society, answers questions about diagnosing and coping with spring allergies.
Duration:00:14:07
How IVF Challenges Our Understanding of Embryos
4/16/2025
Anna Louie Sussman, freelance journalist covering gender, economics, health, and reproduction, discusses her three-part series for The New York Times about human embryos, which explores the legal and ethical considerations people have to manage when they create embryos as part of the IVF process.
Duration:00:23:30
City Politics: Cuomo's Campaign Faces Ups and Downs
4/16/2025
Andrew Cuomo's campaign has hit some road bumps this week, but recent polls still have the former governor in strong first place. Elizabeth Kim, Gothamist and WNYC reporter, and Brigid Bergin, WNYC's senior political correspondent, explain why Cuomo's campaign didn't receive any matching funds from the New York City Campaign Finance Board this week, who gave him a big check instead, and more of the latest news from the mayoral race.
Duration:00:34:31
The Trump Administration's Latest Moves on Immigration
4/16/2025
Hamed Aleaziz, reporter covering the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy for The New York Times, shares his reporting on the Trump administration's immigration policies, including what he and his colleagues at the Times found in their investigation into the deportation of 238 migrants to a prison in El Salvador.
Duration:00:38:25
RFK Jr's 'Chronic Disease Tour' Wraps
4/15/2025
Julie Rovner, chief Washington correspondent for KFF Health News and host of the What the Health? podcast, breaks down the headlines from Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s so-called "Make American Healthy Again" tour, designed to highlight Kennedy’s plan to fight chronic disease and promote a healthy diet, amid cuts to chronic disease prevention programs and widespread layoffs at the Food and Drug Administration.
Duration:00:30:30
Meta's Big Antitrust Trial
4/15/2025
Cristiano Lima-Strong, associate editor at Tech Policy Press, offers analysis of the Federal Trade Commission's antitrust case against Meta, where they will argue that the social media giant maintained a monopoly after it bought Instagram and WhatsApp.
Duration:00:39:04
Advice for Non-Citizen International Travelers
4/15/2025
Allan Wernick, legal advisor to CUNY Citizenship Now! - CUNY's free immigration law service program, offers guidance to tourists, visa-holders and permanent residents with green cards on their rights at the U.S. border.
Duration:00:20:28
How Trump's Climate Cuts Will Impact NYC
4/15/2025
Samantha Maldonado, senior reporter for THE CITY, where she covers climate, resiliency, housing and development, explains how recent Trump administration cuts to Federal Emergency Management Agency threatens over $300 million in climate resiliency for New York City-specific efforts, plus a new executive order that takes aim at state programs meant to charge polluters in order to drive down greenhouse gas emissions.
Duration:00:19:58
Monday Morning Politics: Budget Blueprints
4/14/2025
Catie Edmondson, congressional correspondent for The New York Times, offers political analysis of the budget blueprints passed by Congress last week, including what tax and spending cuts might look like, and why Republicans were far from united on this.
Duration:00:39:26
100 Years of 100 Things: Commonweal and American Catholicism
4/14/2025
As our centennial series continues, Dominic Preziosi, editor of Commonweal, talks about the 100-year history of the magazine and American Catholicism, in general.
Duration:00:28:13
Procrastinators Guide to Tax Filing
4/14/2025
Andy Phillips, vice president of the Tax Institute at H&R Block in Kansas City, MO, offers advice and answers questions on this day before the deadline to file income tax returns.
Duration:00:13:07
Trump’s Tariffs Could Still 'Pummel' NYC
4/14/2025
Even with a 90-day pause on President Donald Trump's reciprocal tariffs, Greg David, who covers fiscal and economic issues for THE CITY and directs the business and economics reporting program and the Ravitch Fiscal Reporting Program at the Newmark Graduate School of Journalism, argues that local economy—supported in part by Wall Street and tourism—will worsen, and how state and city budgets will respond to the economic turmoil.
Duration:00:29:41
Bronx Borough President on the State of the Borough
4/11/2025
Bronx Borough President Vanessa Gibson kicks off a new series of interviews with county executives as she talks about her work on maternal health disparities, her State of the Borough address, and other Bronx news, including the impact on The Bronx of Trump administration actions.
Duration:00:22:25
100 Years of 100 Things: Roller Coasters
4/11/2025
As our centennial series continues, Robert Coker, author of the book Roller Coasters: A Thrill Seeker's Guide To The Ultimate Scream Machines (Main Street, 2002) and Douglas Barnes, co-hosts of The Season Pass podcast, talk about the history of roller coasters, from the "Golden Age" of 1920's wooden coasters like Coney Island's Cyclone through modern steel "strata coasters," like the late lamented Kingda Ka, which was recently imploded to make room for a new ride.
Duration:00:21:42
Trump's Trade War and Wall Street
4/11/2025
William Cohan, financial writer for Puck News and author of many books, including Power Failure: The Rise and Fall of an American Icon (Penguin Random House, 2022), offers analysis of the latest twists and turns of President Trump's trade war, and how Wall Street is reacting to the chaotic rollout (and rollback) of the tariffs.
Duration:00:48:15
No Degree, No Problem
4/11/2025
Listeners share their stories of obtaining and advancing in white collar, nonmanual professions without a bachelor's degree.
Duration:00:16:05