Government social programs

4 episodes about this topic

After the shutdown, SNAP will still be in trouble

The episode examines how a new federal law, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, ties states' costs for food stamps (SNAP) to their payment error rates, shifting part of the financial burden from the federal government to states. Reporters follow Oregon official Nate Singer as he works to reduce the state's high error rate without making it harder for people like Safeway cashier and SNAP recipient Vicki Aguilar to access benefits. The story also explores the auditing system, the tradeoff between accuracy and accessibility, the perspective of Governor Tina Kotek, and the added pressure from a federal government shutdown threatening to suspend SNAP payments.

Nov 1, 2025 Business

The year NYC went broke

The episode examines New York City's 1975 fiscal crisis, when years of accounting gimmicks and reliance on short-term debt led the city to the brink of default and inability to pay basic municipal workers. Through interviews with key participants like Steve Clifford and Donna Shalala, it details how the true scale of the hidden deficit was uncovered, how the Municipal Assistance Corporation (MAC) and an emergency control board were created, and how unions, real estate interests, the state, and ultimately the federal government were pressured into a shared-sacrifice bailout. The story traces the painful austerity and structural reforms that eventually restored the city's credibility and became a playbook for later municipal debt crises.

Oct 15, 2025 Business

Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl

Radiolab revisits the Supreme Court case Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl, centered on the custody of Veronica, a child eligible for Cherokee Nation membership, and the application of the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA). The episode traces the mid‑20th century history of widespread removal of Native American children from their families that led to ICWA, then walks through the conflicting narratives of Veronica's adoptive parents, her Cherokee father Dustin Brown, and their lawyers as the case moves through the courts up to the Supreme Court. A 2025 update explains that Veronica was ultimately returned to her adoptive parents and that, despite repeated legal challenges, ICWA was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2023 but continues to face ongoing challenges.

Oct 3, 2025 Science

Government Shutdown, OpenAI's Sora 2, and Hegseth's Lecture

Kara Swisher and Scott Galloway discuss the ongoing U.S. government shutdown, its political dynamics, and how Democrats and Republicans are messaging around healthcare subsidies and spending. They analyze Electronic Arts' record leveraged buyout led by Saudi capital, the strategic push by Gulf states into gaming, and OpenAI's new video-generation tool and the broader copyright and synthetic-relationship concerns around AI, including Scott's decision to take down an AI version of himself built with Google Labs. The hosts also critique Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's appearance before senior military leaders, review social platforms' multimillion-dollar settlements with Donald Trump, and end with a prediction that Netflix should pursue a mega-merger with Disney, plus a brief tribute to Jane Goodall.

Oct 3, 2025 News