Hosted by Molly Fischer and created in partnership with Gimlet Media, The Cut on Tuesdays is our weekly podcast diving into all the stuff we can’t stop talking about: politics, people, style, culture, and more. Below, for your bingeing pleasure, we gathered all of our episodes into one place. Click on any episode to listen, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
Episode 1: Power
From the inadequacy of empowerment, to what it feels like to be powerful (and powerless), and how to change who actually has power, three women we know well weighed in on this subject: Stella Bugbee, the Cut's president and editor-in-chief; Lindsay Peoples Wagner, Teen Vogue's editor-in-chief and a former Cut staffer; and Rebecca Traister, the Cut's writer-at-large.
Episode 2: The Anonymous List That Started an Uproar, 28 Years Before ‘Shitty Media Men’
Decades before the Shitty Media Men spreadsheet (and resulting $1.5 million lawsuit against its creator, Moira Donegan), Brown University had a similar list on a bathroom wall. In this episode we talk about the weaponization of whisper networks.
Episode 3: How Did My Former Schoolmate Become a White-Nationalist Internet Personality?
Back when our senior culture writer Anna Silman knew her, Faith Goldy was an outspoken feminist who was voted school prefect at their private all-girls school in Canada. Now, she’s an internet personality for the far right. In this episode Anna returned to Toronto to confront Faith, working to understand the roots of radicalization and the propagation of hateful rhetoric online.
Episode 4: How Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Became a Political Superstar
For our Election Day 2018 episode, we talked to women who helped shape Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s successful campaign, examining how the 29-year-old Bronx native represents something new in American politics. Listen to her story through the voices of voters, door-knockers, and the filmmaker behind her viral video.
Episode 5: Ferrante Forever: Revisiting My Brilliant Friend
HBO's adaptation of My Brilliant Friend gave us the perfect excuse to revisit Ferrante Fever, circa 2014–2016. We talked to Ann Goldstein, the translator who’s become a stand-in for the pseudonymous author; Danielle Oteri, who leads tours of Lila and Lenu's Naples; and the writer Dayna Tortorici, whose essay “Those Like Us” is essential for anyone interested in learning more about the author's ideas. For further reading (books that might scratch the same itch as the Neapolitan novels), read our list of recommendations here.
Two meaty conversations about motherhood, in one episode. The first is a How I Got This Baby story, from a woman who split up with her husband when she was six months pregnant with their second child. The second is the first interview in our How I Get It Done spinoff series: Anna Sale, host of the beloved Death, Sex, and Money podcast, who caught our attention with her unusual approach to maternity leave.
As an audio companion to the Cut’s Beat Around the Bush series, we talked to lots of women and experts about pube-related anxieties, memories, routines, and misadventures. In short, we attempted to answer a question that we all privately think about a lot: What’s going on with pubes these days?
The Good Morning America host told us how she juggles her early morning schedule while making time for the people she loves, along with how she works to be a better boss, and what she wishes she could tell her younger self. Read the full interview here.
"Down the Street From a Mass Shooting" is the other title of this episode. It follows Kate Ranta, who shared the story behind a photo she took in her house right after she was shot. We interviewed her not long after doctors started sharing photos of the bloody effects of gun violence on Twitter.
The artist who painted Michelle Obama’s stunning official portrait quickly went from being a relatively unknown artist, making ends meet however she could, to becoming famous and in high-demand. Here she talks about the breakthrough moment and everything that came after, including how she's managing a drastically busier schedule.
Episode 11: What Comes Next for the Migrants of the Caravan?
When a caravan of migrants from Central America reached the U.S. border, after weeks of overheated news coverage and scare-mongering tweets from the president, our producer Sarah McVeigh visited the camp and talked to women about what life is like in limbo — when you're caught between countries and separated from your family, with no idea what comes next.
The writer, actress , and star of her own three-season Bravo series, Odd Mom Out, talked to us about raising three kids while working 18-hour days, surviving breast cancer, and turning 40.
Every week, the Cut's staff writer Maddie Aggeler presents her Over Easy food column, “by a 20-something woman who can barely cook an egg, and just wants to learn how to throw together an elegant three-course meal for her friends.” In this episode Maddie attempted to do just that, with three culinary professionals: Samin Nosrat, Angela Dimayuga, and Carla Lalli Music. They taught her how to roast vegetables and bake a proper dessert.
Episode 14: 15 Women on What They Wish They Could Say Sorry For
New Year's Day kickstarts the perfect time of year for apologies. But instead of thinking about everything you’re going to do right in the future, what about everything you did wrong in the past? We asked our listeners what they were sorry for … and they had a lot to say. From making another girl cry in the second grade to damaging family relationships, here's what they wish they could apologize for.
The host and co-creator of Serial, the show that debuted in 2014 and made podcasts a cultural phenomenon, talked to us about procrastination, "time mismanagement," and her work wife.
Two different eras of sexual tumult, two very different blockbuster stories about sex. This week, we talked about what “Cat Person” meant to readers when it came out a year ago — and what Fear of Flying meant to readers when it came out in 1973.
The week after four women entered the 2020 presidential race — Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Tulsi Gabbard — we talked about the fraught nature of "likability" for women in politics.
On this week’s show, we revisited contributing editor Lisa Miller’s cover story for New York Magazine about the links between menopause and schizophrenia. Lisa told us how the story came to be — and why she got more invested in it than she ever expected to. And we heard from some of the women who told Lisa about what they went through.
Right now, weed exists in an in-between state. It’s not quite legal, but it’s not quite illegal either. It’s accepted, but not totally normalized. So, we asked several of our friends, including Ben Sinclair and Katja Blichfeld of HBO's High Maintenance, Jia Tolentino, and Aminatou Sow, one very basic question: What do you do when you get high?
Episode 20: Hear One Woman’s Story of an Abortion at 23 Weeks
The reality of later-stage abortion is nothing like the political rhetoric surrounding it. So, on this week’s show, we told the story of what it was like for one woman, Laura, who needed an abortion at 23 weeks pregnant.
Episode 21: Cathy Horyn on Seeing Another Side of Karl Lagerfeld
After the death of Chanel creative director Karl Lagerfeld, the obituaries were a blur of eccentric details, crazy quotes, and huge pronouncements about how this was the end of an era. But why, exactly? To find out, we spoke to Cathy Horyn, the Cut's fashion critic-at-large.
Earlier this year, Adam Moss, New York Magazine’s editor-in-chief, announced he’d be stepping down. He said his plan for the future was to try “living with less ambition.” But for anyone with firsthand experience of Adam at work, this sounded slightly far-fetched. So we brought him by the studio to talk about his career — and why he’s always been ambivalent about ambition. We also spoke with writer, director, and actor Pamela Adlon and the Cut's editor-in-chief, Stella Bugbee.
Episode 23: How the Stars of Russian Doll, Shrill, and Top Chef Get It Done
This episode featured some of our favorite conversations from the Cut's How I Get It Done live event in March 2019: Natasha Lyonne, Greta Lee, and more women shared their secrets for success.
Episode 24: Author Sally Rooney on the Books That Shaped Her
The Irish novelist behind the critically acclaimedConversations With Friends and soon-to-be-released Normal Peoplesays she found inspiration in books she's read in her 20s, from Marxist and feminist theory to Henry James and J.D. Salinger.
In this How I Get It Done podcast episode, Stella Bugbee talked to Rukmini Callimachi, a New York Times foreign correspondent who reports on Islamic extremism. She also hosts the podcast Caliphate, a devastating series that follows Rukmini as she reports on the realities of life under ISIS.She discussed finding a supportive partner, life on the road, and sexism in the journalism industry.
A return to the dawn of sexual knowledge: What is sex? For all of us, there was a time when we did not know … and we wanted very much to find out. In this episode we posed the question to friends, colleagues, and listeners: How did you start to make sense of sex? There were a multitude of possible answers.
Episode 27: Nora McInerny on How to Get It Done While Grieving
On this week’s How I Get It Done podcast episode, Stella Bugbee talks to Nora McInerny, a self-labeled “tragedy connoisseur.” In 2014, McInerny had a miscarriage and lost her father and husband in a six-week span. In the years since she’s written books entitled No Happy Endings, It’s Okay to Laugh, (Crying is Cool Too), and The Hot Young Widows Club, as well as started her podcast called Terrible, Thanks for Asking. Stella and Nora discussed how to get it done while grieving, and how to manage the unmanageable.
Episode 29: What a ‘Conjugal Visit’ Is Actually Like
Marriage comes down to a story — one that two people are telling together. On this week’s show, we got two couples to tell us their stories. And for one of those couples, Sheila Rule and Joe Robinson, getting married meant building a relationship in the narrow windows of opportunity allowed by the prison system.
Episode 30: Yasmeen Hassan on Fighting for Women’s Rights Internationally
On this week’s How I Get It Done podcast episode, Stella Bugbee talks to Yasmeen Hassan, the global executive director for Equality Now, an international nonprofit that has successfully pushed governments around the world to pass laws protecting women from sexual exploitation and harmful cultural practices like genital mutilation. Stella and Yasmeen discussed how to get it done as a single mom, the importance of face-to-face communication, and growing up in Pakistan.
If you want to make art, how do you get the money to do it? And what compromises are you willing to make along the way? Those questions are nothing new, of course — artists have been subsidized by people with money going back to the Medicis. But now that spon-con and brands have replaced commissions and renaissance patrons, the compromises have only gotten blurrier and more confusing.
Episode 32: Tamara Mellon on How to Get It Done With Anxiety
On this week’s How I Get It Done podcast episode, Stella Bugbee talks to Tamara Mellon, the co-founder of Jimmy Choo. Mellon sold her stake in the company in 2011 and has since founded her own shoe website with her own designs. Stella and Tamara discussed what it was like to start her professional life over again at 44, her journey to sobriety, and how to manage anxiety.
Episode 33: How to Tell Your Best Friend You’re Trans
This week, we’re talking to Daniel Mallory Ortberg and Nicole Cliffe — co-founders of the much-mourned website The Toast — about how they became friends, and about what it’s like to make and remake a friendship when your friend is going through enormous changes.
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