The Times Podcast: April 5th

The Times podcast: Our Masters of Disasters know it’s windy, and they don’t care.

This week on the latest episode of the Times podcast, we’re joined by author and Times columnist Adam Sexton, who discusses the new report from the Council on Science and Public Health: How the Wind Turbines Used to Create Modern, Power-Efficient Cities Pose Real Harm to Birds and Bees, the Climate Crisis and our Brains. Plus, the Times’ longest-running podcast is the perfect way to catch up on the week’s news, from the New York Times’ own front page to the front page of the New York Times itself.

Transcript

Ezra Klein: You are truly the master of disasters. The Times podcast can help you stay informed on the world of news.

The New York Times’s podcast was started last year, and is regularly updated with new episodes at least once every week. It’s a daily conversation with you, the people, about the day’s biggest stories, including the most important stories here at The Times that everyone cares about. This week, the episode is called “Our Masters of Disasters.” Ezra Klein, I’m joined by Adam Sexton, the Times’s columnist and author, to talk about a new report from the Council on Science and Public Health: How the Wind Turbines Used to Create Modern, Power-Efficient Cities Pose Real Harm to Birds and Bees, the Climate Crisis and our Brains. Plus, the Times’ longest-running podcast, the perfect way to catch up on the week’s news, from the New York Times’ own front page to the front page of the New York Times itself.

Ezra Klein: Hi, and welcome to the latest edition of the Times podcast. It’s the week of April 5th. The world seems to be on fire, from the wildfires in the Arctic and the Mediterranean to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. There’s a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico, an asteroid threatening to rock the Earth next year. And if we haven’t gotten used to our climate crisis yet, we will very soon.

The world is awash in news and

Leave a Comment