There’s not much that’s more uncertain than our current moment.
Our day-to-day lives and the economy at large have been upended by the coronavirus pandemic. The crisis has set in high relief the inequalities that already existed in America.
Each season, “The Uncertain Hour” dives into one controversial topic to reveal the surprising origin stories of our economy. On this new season, which we’re calling “A History of Now,” we’ll dig into history and policy to cast light on what’s happening in the economy, why it’s happening, and what that means for people trying to get ahead — or just get by.
We’ll explore why we handle unemployment the way we do in this country, how the holes in our social safety net got there, the history of quarantine and how your income and class will likely determine your fate.
Our Wealth & Poverty team has been doing this for a long time — it was born out of the 2008 financial crisis to help explain the recession’s impact on vulnerable communities, and over three seasons of “The Uncertain Hour” we’ve explored welfare reform, government regulation and America’s war on drugs.
Listen to the trailer, catch up on those first three seasons here, and subscribe on your podcast app so you don’t miss it when the first episode of “The Uncertain Hour: A History of Now” drops May 13.
The future of this podcast starts with you.
This season of “The Uncertain Hour” tells the unheard stories of real people affected by the welfare-to-work industrial complex.
Stories like these are seldom in the limelight. It takes extensive time and resources to do this type of investigative journalism … to help you understand the complexity of our economy and to hold the powerful to account.
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