607 episodes

Voted “Favorite Political Podcast” by Apple Podcasts listeners. Stephen Colbert says "Everybody should listen to the Slate Political Gabfest." The Gabfest, featuring Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz, is the kind of informal and irreverent discussion Washington journalists have after hours over drinks.

Political Gabfest Slate Podcasts

    • News
    • 4.5 • 480 Ratings

Listen on Apple Podcasts
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Voted “Favorite Political Podcast” by Apple Podcasts listeners. Stephen Colbert says "Everybody should listen to the Slate Political Gabfest." The Gabfest, featuring Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz, is the kind of informal and irreverent discussion Washington journalists have after hours over drinks.

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

    John Dickerson’s Navel Gazing: Remembering George and Defending the Morning

    John Dickerson’s Navel Gazing: Remembering George and Defending the Morning

    This episode will be available for free beginning April 20th.

    In this week’s essay, John dives deep into the loss of his beloved dog, George, the essayist’s dilemma, the comfort of quiet mornings, and more.

    Notebook Entries:
    Notebook 75, page 5. September 5, 2021
    I go to the morning alone.

    Notebook 75, page 6. September 6, 2021
    Phantom nails on the stairs

    References:
    “Every Dog Is a Rescue Dog” by John Dickerson for The Atlantic
    “Oxytocin-gaze positive loop and the coevolution of human-dog bonds” by Miho Nagasawa et.al for Science
    Haikus by Jennifer Gurney
    “Which Pet Will Make You Happiest?” by Arthur C. Brooks for The Atlantic
    “The Family Dog Is in Sync With Your Kids” by Gretchen Reynolds for The New York Times

    Podcast production by Cheyna Roth.

    Email us at navelgazingpodcast@gmail.com

    Host
    John Dickerson

    John Dickerson’s Navel Gazing: Sending our Son to College

    John Dickerson’s Navel Gazing: Sending our Son to College

    In this week’s essay, John remembers dropping his son off at college, and trying to hold onto moments and feelings while you can. 
     
    Notebook Entries:
    Notebook 75, page 6. September 2021:
    They chose you.
     
    Notebook 15, page 4. April 2004:
    Sitting with Brice by waterfall. Throwing rocks in stream. Loading sand from dump truck and loader and back again.
     
    References:
    What Got You Here, Won’t Get You There by Marshall Goldsmith
    Songwriter Nick Cave
    Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin
     

    Podcast production by Cheyna Roth.
    Email us at navelgazingpodcast@gmail.com
      
    Want to listen to Navel Gazing uninterrupted? Subscribe to Slate Plus to immediately unlock ad-free listening to Navel Gazing and all your other favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts by clicking “Try Free” at the top of our show page. Or, visit slate.com/navelgazingplus to get access wherever you listen.
     
    Host
    John Dickerson
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    • 28 min
    Arizona Territory’s 1864 Abortion Law

    Arizona Territory’s 1864 Abortion Law

    This week, Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz discuss the revival of Arizona’s 1864 abortion ban; the end of No Labels; and the past and future of presidential debates. 
     
    Here are some notes and references from this week’s show:
    Mary Jo Pitzl and Reagan Priest for The Arizona Republic: Arizona House GOP halt Democrats’ effort to overturn Civil War era law in chaotic session
    Dan Balz for The Washington Post: The Arizona Supreme Court just upended Trump’s gambit on abortion
    Jamelle Bouie for The New York Times: The Man Who Snuffed Out Abortion Rights Is Here to Tell You He Is a Moderate
    Ramtin Arablouei and Rund Abdelfatah for NPR’s All Things Considered: Abortion was once common practice in America. A small group of doctors changed that
    A.O. Sulzberger Jr. for The New York Times: Reagan Says Ban On Abortion May Not Be Needed
    David Faris for Slate: Why No Labels Didn’t Stick
    Slate’s Political Gabfest: The “No Mugshot” Edition
    Thomas B. Edsall for The New York Times: Has No Labels Become a Stalking Horse for Trump?
    Michael H. Brown for The Washington Post: Joseph Lieberman, senator and vice-presidential nominee, dies at 82

    Here are this week’s chatters: 
    Emily: Dartmouth’s Leslie Center for the Humanities: People, Place, Podcasts: Emily Bazelon and Erica Heilman in Conversation and the Rumble Strip podcast 
    John: Slate’s Navel Gazing podcast and Rachel Wolfe for The Wall Street Journal: The Calls for Help Coming From Above the Poverty Line
    David: Hannah Seo for The New York Times: Is It Better to Brush Your Teeth Before Breakfast or After?
    Listener chatter from Mark Phillips in Baltimore, Maryland: Ben Crair for The New Yorker: The Magic of Bird Brains
     
    For this week’s Slate Plus bonus segment, David, John, and Emily discuss AI communications with loved ones after they die. See Walter Marsh for The Guardian: Laurie Anderson on making an AI chatbot of Lou Reed: ‘I’m totally, 100%, sadly addicted’ and Ira Glass for This American Life: The Ghost in the Machine. See also Niamn Ancell for Cybernews: These apps could resurrect your relatives using artificial intelligence; Rebecca Carballo for The New York Times: Using A.I. to Talk to the Dead; and Tamara Kneese for Wired: Using Generative AI to Resurrect the Dead Will Create a Burden for the Living.
     
    In the latest Gabfest Reads, Emily talks with Tana French about her book, The Hunter: A Novel.
     
    Email your chatters, questions, and comments to gabfest@slate.com. (Messages may be referenced by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.)
     
    Podcast production by Cheyna Roth
    Research by Julie Huygen
     
    Hosts
    Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 58 min
    John Dickerson’s Navel Gazing: An Exploration of Inklings

    John Dickerson’s Navel Gazing: An Exploration of Inklings

    In this week’s essay, John Dickerson looks back on a Sunday morning in 2021, and ruminates on the empty spaces left behind by the people that once filled our lives. 
     
    Notebook Entries:
    Notebook 75, page 6. September 5, 2021:
    “Oh my god. We dropped our son at college and our dog is dead.” – Anne.
     
    References:
    “Sunday Morning Coming Down” by Johnny Cash
    “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” by T.S. Eliot
    “When Someone You Love is Upset, Ask This One Question” by Jancee Dunn for the New York Times
    “A Case of ‘Sunday Neurosis’” by Jena McGregor for the Washington Post
    “Waking Early Sunday Morning” by Robert Lowell
    Master of Change: How to Excel When Everything is Changing by Brad Stulberg
    Jason Isbell: Running With Our Eyes Closed
    “Alabama Pines” by Jason Isbell
     
     Podcast production by Cheyna Roth.
     
    Host
    John Dickerson
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 28 min
    Florida Bans Abortion Again

    Florida Bans Abortion Again

    Here are this week’s chatters:
    Emily: Scott Bauer for AP: Wisconsin voters approve ban on private money support for elections and Unfair Share: The Gerrymandered Chocolate Bar on Kickstarter
    John: Joey Roulette and Will Dunham for Reuters: Exclusive: White House directs NASA to create time standard for the moon and John Dickerson Introduces: Navel Gazing 
    David: Corvid Research: All in the (crow) family; 3 Body Problem on Netflix; The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu; and Foundation and For All Mankind on Apple TV+
    Listener chatter from Kim in Spartanburg, S.C.: The fish doorbell and thunder_keck on TikTok: fish doorbell season is back 
    For this week’s Slate Plus bonus segment, David, John, and Emily discuss the April 8 total solar eclipse. See John Dickerson and David Parkinson for CBS News: Massive storm system threatening millions across U.S. See also Atlas Obscura’s Ecliptic Festival; Annie Dillard for The Atlantic: “Seeing a partial eclipse bears the same relation to seeing a total eclipse as kissing a man does to marrying him.”; The Guardian: Columbus and the night of the bloody moon; and John Uri for NASA: Eclipses Near and Far.
    In the latest Gabfest Reads, Emily talks with Tana French about her book, The Hunter: A Novel.
    Email your chatters, questions, and comments to gabfest@slate.com. (Messages may be referenced by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.)
    Podcast production by Jared Downing
    Research by Julie Huygen
    Hosts
    Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz
    Follow
    Slate Political Gabfest on Facebook / https://www.facebook.com/Gabfest/ 
    @SlateGabfest on X / https://twitter.com/SlateGabfest
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 1 hr 4 min
    John Dickerson Introduces: Navel Gazing

    John Dickerson Introduces: Navel Gazing

    Political Gabfest host John Dickerson has been a journalist for more than three decades, reporting about presidential campaigns, political scandals, the evolving state of our democracy. Along the way, he’s also been recording his observations in notebooks he has carried in his back pocket. On the Navel Gazing podcast, John Dickerson invites you to join him in figuring out what these thirty years of notebooks mean: sorting out what makes a life --or a day in a life— noteworthy.
    Listen to Navel Gazing every week, starting April 6th, wherever you get your podcasts.
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 1 min

Customer Reviews

4.5 out of 5
480 Ratings

480 Ratings

Dame ichie ,

David Plotz — Devil’s reluctant advocate

The Devil is smart, and David is smart too — yet … your occasional challenges to Emily’s and John’s arguments somehow ring hallow (hello!). The Plotz thicken (use of the plural is a gesture of generosity).

Pixelaki ,

The best podcast to catch up on American political discourse

I live in Europe and find it is a great vehicle to catch up/understand the political discourse in America- as much as it can be understood the past few years. I have been following this podcast since probably 2010, and it is the one in my feed that I make sure to listen to every week. Thank you for all of the insight over the years

itsack ,

So mad about gov action

Long time listener… the anger about any gov action though hard ball and the inability to recognize that this is how the US gov has and will operate for the foreseeable future is infuriating.

We tortured people…. And u go off the henge about student loans but not about the major question doc? That u rightly admit is heads I win tales u lose. You have lost a functional gov long ago and the anger to repair it is misplaced/not useful. The crew as a whole has been not great for at least a year and this was my last episode..

I would advice others that 2 of the 3 no longer do the work or have lost the plot long ago.

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