Transcripts are posted to each segment as they become available.

Specialized High School Segregation; FDA Panel's 'Misinformation' on Antidepressants in Pregnancy; Robert Reich's Critique of Fellow Boomers; Dating IRL
On today's show:
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Offers came out for the city's highly-coveted spots at specialized high schools, and the percentage of Black and Latino students who received offers was just 3%, and 6.9%, respectively. Alex Zimmerman, reporter at Chalkbeat New York, reports on the ongoing issue of segregation at specialized high schools, and how the mayoral candidates say they'd like to tackle it.
- A recent expert panel organized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration cast doubt on the safety of SSRIs in pregnancy -- sparking backlash from medical institutions and doctors. Lauren Osborne, M.D., vice chair of Clinical Research at the Department of OBGYN at Weill Cornell Medicine and chair of The National Curriculum in Reproductive Psychiatry (NCRP), explains what the science says about antidepressant use during pregnancy.
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Robert Reich, recently retired as Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, Secretary of Labor under Pres. Clinton, a columnist for Newsweek and The Guardian and Substack, and the author of several books, including his latest, Coming Up Short: A Memoir of My America (Knopf, 2025), shares his story and why he thinks his generation 'came up short' and why young progressives listen to his political analysis.
- Listeners call in to talk about how they have met their significant other in person (as opposed to online), and share their frustrations with dating apps.


