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Podcast: More Perfect

WNYC Studios
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Radiolab’s More Perfect is a series about the Supreme Court. More Perfect explores how cases inside the rarefied world of the Supreme Court affect our lives far away from the bench. WNYC Studios is a listener-supported producer of other great podcasts including Radiolab, Death, Sex & Money, On the Media, Nancy and Here’s the Thing with Alec Baldwin. © WNYC Studios
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfectlast year
    The law protects creators' original work against copycats, but it also leaves the door open for some kinds of copying. When a photographer sues the Andy Warhol Foundation for using her work without permission, the justices struggle not to play art critics as they decide the case. More Perfect explores how this star-studded case offers a look at how this Court actually makes decisions.
    Voices in the episode include:
    • David Hobbs — known as Mr. Mixx, co-founder of the hip-hop group 2 Live Crew
    • Jerry Saltz — senior art critic and columnist for New York magazine
    • Pierre Leval — judge on U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
    • Jeannie Suk Gersen — More Perfect legal advisor, Harvard Law professor, New Yorker writer
    • Lynn Goldsmith — photographer
    • Andy Warhol — as himself
    Learn more:
    • 1994: Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc.
    • 2023: Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. v. Goldsmith
    • "Toward A Fair Use Standard" by Pierre Leval
    • The Andy Warhol Foundation

    Shadow dockets, term limits, amicus briefs — what puzzles you about the Supreme Court? What stories are you curious about? We want to answer your questions in our next season. Click here to leave us a voice memo.
    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Click here to donate to More Perfect.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram, Threads and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and X (Twitter) @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfectlast year
    In 1902, a Swedish-American pastor named Henning Jacobson refused to get the smallpox vaccine. This launched a chain of events leading to two landmark Supreme Court cases, in which the Court considered the balancing act between individual liberty over our bodies and the collective good.
    A version of this story originally ran on The Experiment on March 21, 2021.
    Voices in the episode include:
    • Rev. Robin Lutjohann — pastor of Faith Lutheran Church in Cambridge, Massachusetts
    • Michael Willrich — Brandeis University history professor
    • Wendy Parmet — Northeastern University School of Law professor
    Learn more:
    • 1905: Jacobson v. Massachusetts
    • 1927: Buck v. Bell
    • 2022: National Federation of Independent Business v. Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Administration
    • 2022: Biden v. Missouri
    • "Pox: An American History" by Michael Willrich
    • "Constitutional Contagion: COVID, the Courts, and Public Health" by Wendy Parmet

    Music by Ob (“Wold”), Parish Council (“Leaving the TV on at Night,” “Museum Weather,” “P Lachaise”), Alecs Pierce (“Harbour Music, Parts I & II”), Laundry (“Lawn Feeling”), water feature (“richard iii (duke of gloucester)”), Keyboard (“Mu”), and naran ratan (“Forevertime Journeys”), provided by Tasty Morsels. Additional music by Dieterich Buxtehude (“Prelude and Fugue in D Major”), Johannes Brahms (“Quintet for Clarinet, Two Violins, Viola, and Cello in B Minor”), and Andrew Eric Halford and Aidan Mark Laverty (“Edge of a Dream”).
    Shadow dockets, term limits, amicus briefs — what puzzles you about the Supreme Court? What stories are you curious about? We want to answer your questions in our next season. Click here to leave us a voice memo.
    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram, Threads and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and X (Twitter) @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfectlast year
    Dred Scott v. Sandford is one of the most infamous cases in Supreme Court history: in 1857, an enslaved person named Dred Scott filed a suit for his freedom and lost. In his decision, Chief Justice Roger Brooke Taney wrote that Black men “had no rights which the white man was bound to respect.” One Civil War and more than a century later, the Taneys and the Scotts reunite at a Hilton in Missouri to figure out what reconciliation looks like in the 21st century.
    Voices in the episode include:
    • Lynne Jackson — great-great-granddaughter of Dred and Harriet Scott, and president and founder of the Dred Scott Heritage Foundation
    • Dred Scott Madison — great-great-grandson of Dred Scott
    • Barbara McGregory — great-great-granddaughter of Dred Scott
    • Charlie Taney — great-great-grandnephew of Roger Brooke Taney, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court who wrote the Dred Scott v. Sandford decision
    • Richard Josey — Manager of Programs at the Minnesota Historical Society
    Learn more:
    • 1857: Dred Scott v. Sandford
    • The Dred Scott Heritage Foundation

    Special thanks to Kate Taney Billingsley, whose play, "A Man of His Time," inspired the episode; and to Soren Shade for production help. Additional music for this episode by Gyan Riley.
    Shadow dockets, term limits, amicus briefs — what puzzles you about the Supreme Court? What stories are you curious about? We want to answer your questions in our next season. Click here to leave us a voice memo.
    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram, Threads and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and Twitter @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfectlast year
    David Souter is one the most private, low-profile justices ever to have served on the Supreme Court. He rarely gives interviews or speeches. Yet his tenure was anything but low profile. Deemed a “home run” nominee by Republicans, Souter defied partisan expectations on the bench and ultimately ceded his seat to a Democratic president.
    In this episode, the story of how “No More Souters” became a rallying cry for Republicans and inspired a backlash that would change the Court forever.
    Voices in the episode include:
    • Ashley Lopez — NPR political correspondent
    • Anna Sale — host of WNYC Studios' Death, Sex & Money podcast
    • Tinsley Yarbrough — author and former political science professor at East Carolina University
    • Heather Gerken — Dean of Yale Law School and former Justice Souter clerk
    • Kermit Roosevelt III — professor at University of Pennsylvania School of Law and former Justice Souter clerk
    • Judge Peter Rubin — Associate Justice on Massachusetts Appeals Court and former Justice Souter clerk
    • Governor John H. Sununu — former governor of New Hampshire and President George H.W. Bush’s Chief of Staff
    Learn more:
    • 1992: Planned Parenthood v. Casey
    • 1992: Lee v. Weisman
    • 2000: Bush v. Gore
    • 2009: Citizens United v. FEC

    Shadow dockets, term limits, amicus briefs — what puzzles you about the Supreme Court? What stories are you curious about? We want to answer your questions in our next season. Click here to leave us a voice memo.
    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram, Threads and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and Twitter @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfectlast year
    Recently, On the Media’s Micah Loewinger was called to testify in court. He had reported on militia groups who’d helped lead the January 6 attack on the Capitol. Now the government was using his work as evidence in a case against them. Micah wanted nothing to do with it — he worried that participating in the trial would signal to sources that he couldn’t be trusted, which would compromise his work.
    As he considered his options, he uncovered a 1972 case called Branzburg v. Hayes. It involved New York Times reporter Earl Caldwell, who was approached multiple times by the FBI to testify against sources in the Black Panther Party. His case — and its decision — transformed the relationship between journalists and the government.
    Voices in the episode include:
    • Micah Loewinger — correspondent for On the Media
    • Earl Caldwell — former New York Times reporter
    • Lee Levine — attorney and media law expert
    • Congressman Jamie Raskin — representing Maryland’s 8th District
    Learn more:
    • 1972: Branzburg v. Hayes
    • Listen to On the Media's "Seditious Conspiracy" episode. Subscribe to On the Media here.
    Special thanks to the Maynard Institute For Journalism Education for allowing the use of its Earl Caldwell oral history.
    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and Twitter @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfectlast year
    Last week, the Supreme Court upheld the Indian Child Welfare Act in a case called Haaland v. Brackeen. The decision comes almost exactly 10 years after the Supreme Court ruled in Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl, which planted the seed for last week’s big ruling. To mark the new landmark decision, More Perfect re-airs the Radiolab episode that tells the story of two families, a painful history, and a young girl caught in the middle.
    Voices in the episode include:
    • Allison Herrera — KOSU Indigenous Affairs reporter
    • Matt and Melanie Capobianco — Veronica's adoptive parents
    • Dusten Brown — Veronica's biological father
    • Mark Fiddler — attorney for the Capobiancos
    • Marcia Zug — University of South Carolina School of Law professor
    • Bert Hirsch — attorney formerly of the Association on American Indian Affairs
    • Chrissi Nimmo — Deputy Attorney General for Cherokee Nation
    • Terry Cross — founding executive director of the National Indian Child Welfare Association (now serving as senior advisor)
    • Lori Alvino McGill — attorney for Christy Maldonado, Veronica’s biological mother
    Learn more:
    • 2013: Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl
    • 2023: Haaland v. Brackeen
    • "Baby Veronica belongs with her adoptive parents" by Christy Maldonado
    • "Doing What’s Best for the Tribe" by Marcia Zug
    • "The Court Got Baby Veronica Wrong" by Marcia Zug
    • "A Wrenching Adoption Case" by The New York Times Editorial Board
    • National Indian Child Welfare Association
    • In Trust podcast, reported by Allison Herrera

    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and Twitter @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfectlast year
    Now that the “viability line” in pregnancy — as defined by Roe v. Wade — is no longer federal law, lawmakers and lawyers are coming up with new frameworks for abortion access at a dizzying rate. In this second part of our series, More Perfect asks: what if abortion law wasn’t shaped by men at the Supreme Court, but instead by people who know what it’s like to be pregnant, to have abortions, and to lose pregnancies? We hear from women on the front lines of the next legal battle over abortion in America.
    Voices in the episode include:
    • Mary J. Browning — pro bono lawyer for The Justice Foundation
    • Dr. Shelley Sella — OBGYN (retired)
    • Greer Donley — University of Pittsburgh School of Law professor
    • Jill Wieber Lens — University of Arkansas School of Law professor
    Learn more:
    • 1973: Roe v. Wade
    • 2022: Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization
    • Listen to Part 1: The Viability Line

    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and Twitter @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfectlast year
    When the justices heard oral arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the landmark abortion case, one word came up more than any other: viability. The viability line was at the core of Roe v. Wade, and it’s been entrenched in the abortion rights movement ever since. But no one seems to remember how this idea made its way into the abortion debate in the first place. This week on More Perfect, we trace it back to the source and discover how a clerk and a couple of judges turned a fuzzy medical concept into a hard legal line.
    Voices in the episode include:
    • George Frampton — former clerk to Justice Harry Blackmun
    • Judge Jon Newman — Second Circuit Court of Appeals
    • Khiara Bridges — UC Berkeley School of Law professor
    • Alex J. Harris — lawyer, former member of the Joshua Generation
    Learn more:
    • 1973: Roe v. Wade
    • 2022: Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization

    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and Twitter @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfectlast year
    This week, we revisit one of the most important Supreme Court cases you’ve probably never heard of: Baker v. Carr, a redistricting case from the 1960s, which challenged the justices to consider what might happen if they stepped into the world of electoral politics. It’s a case so stressful that it pushed one justice to a nervous breakdown, put another justice in the hospital, brought a boiling feud to a head, and changed the course of the Supreme Court — and the nation — forever.
    Voices in the episode include:
    • Tara Grove — More Perfect legal advisor, University of Texas at Austin law professor
    • Guy-Uriel Charles — Harvard law professor
    • Louis Michael Seidman — Georgetown law school professor
    • Sam Issacharoff — NYU law school professor
    • Craig A. Smith — PennWest California humanities professor and Charles Whittaker's biographer
    • J. Douglas Smith — Author of "On Democracy's Doorstep"
    • Alan Kohn — Former Supreme Court clerk for Charles Whittaker (1957 term)
    • Kent Whittaker — Charles Whittaker's son
    • Kate Whittaker — Charles Whittaker's granddaughter
    Learn more:
    • 1962: Baker v. Carr
    • 2000: Bush v. Gore
    • 2016: Evenwel v. Abbott
    Music in this episode by Gyan Riley, Alex Overington, David Herman, Tobin Low and Jad Abumrad.

    Archival interviews with Justice William O. Douglas come from the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections at Princeton University Library.
    Special thanks to Jerry Goldman and to Whittaker's clerks: Heywood Davis, Jerry Libin and James Adler.
    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and Twitter @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfectlast year
    Unlike other branches of government, the Supreme Court operates with almost no oversight. No cameras are allowed in the courtroom, no binding code of ethics, and records of their activities are incredibly hard to get. So how do reporters uncover the activities of the nine most powerful judges in the country?
    Live from the Logan Symposium on Investigative Reporting at UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism, host Julia Longoria talks to journalists behind bombshell investigations of the Court and its justices and how Clarence Thomas’ personal relationships intersect with his professional life.
    Voices in the episode include:
    • Jo Becker — New York Times reporter in the investigative unit
    • Justin Elliott — ProPublica reporter
    Learn more:
    • "The Long Crusade of Clarence and Ginni Thomas" by Danny Hakim and Jo Becker
    • "Clarence Thomas and the Billionaire" by Joshua Kaplan, Justin Elliott and Alex Mierjeski
    • "Billionaire Harlan Crow bought property from Clarence Thomas. The Justice didn’t disclose the deal" by by Justin Elliott, Joshua Kaplan and Alex Mierjeski
    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and Twitter @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfectlast year
    To many Americans, Clarence Thomas makes no sense. For more than 30 years on the Court, he seems to have been on a mission — to take away rights that benefit Black people. As a young man, though, Thomas listened to records of Malcolm X speeches on a loop and strongly identified with the tenets of Black Nationalism. This week on More Perfect, we dig into his writings and lectures, talk to scholars and confidants, and explore his past, all in an attempt to answer: what does Clarence Thomas think Clarence Thomas is doing?
    Voices in the episode include:
    • Juan Williams — Senior Political Analyst at Fox News
    • Corey Robin — Professor of Political Science at Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center
    • Angela Onwuachi-Willig — Dean of Boston University School of Law
    • Stephen F. Smith — Professor of Law at Notre Dame Law School
    Learn more:
    • 1993: Graham v. Collins
    • 1994: Holder v. Hall
    • 1999: Chicago v. Morales
    • 2003: Grutter v. Bollinger
    • 2022: Students for Fair Admissions v. President and Fellows of Harvard College
    • 2022: Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina
    • “The Enigma of Clarence Thomas” by Corey Robin
    • “Black Conservatives, Center Stage” by Juan Williams
    • “Just Another Brother on the SCT?: What Justice Clarence Thomas Teaches Us About the Influence of Racial Identity” by Angela Onwuachi-Willig
    • “Clarence X?: The Black Nationalist Behind Justice Thomas's Constitutionalism” by Stephen F. Smith
    • “My Grandfather’s Son” by Justice Clarence Thomas
    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and Twitter @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfect2 years ago
    More than 30 years ago, a Native American man named Al Smith was fired for ingesting peyote at a religious ceremony. When his battle made it to the Supreme Court, the decision set off a thorny debate over when religious people get to sidestep the law — a debate we’re still having today.
    Voices in the episode include:
    • Garrett Epps — Professor of Practice at the University of Oregon Law School
    • Ka’ila Farrell-Smith — Al Smith’s daughter, visual artist
    • Jane Farrell — Al Smith's widow, retired early childhood specialist
    • Galen Black — Al Smith’s former coworker
    • Steven C. Moore — senior staff attorney at the Native American Rights Fund
    • Craig J. Dorsay — lawyer who argued Al Smith’s case before the Supreme Court
    • Dan Mach — director of the ACLU Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief
    Learn more:
    • 1963: Sherbert v. Verner
    • 1990: Employment Division, Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith
    • 2022: 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis
    • Peyote vs the State: Religious Freedom On Trial, Garrett Epps
    • Factsheet: Religious Freedom Restoration Act Of 1993, The Bridge Initiative at Georgetown University
    • Our History, the Klamath Tribes

    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and Twitter @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfect2 years ago
    To kick off the new season, host Julia Longoria returns to high school, where she first fell in love with the Supreme Court. She was a star on her high school’s nationally-ranked “Constitution team” (read: nerd Super Bowl). For Julia, the Court represented a place where two sides of an issue could be discussed and debated. A lot has changed since then — and public perception around the Court is polarized, to say the least. Which is why we’re taking a cue from high schoolers: this season on More Perfect, we’re questioning everything.
    Learn more:
    • The We the People, The Citizen, and the Constitution Program
    Supreme Court archival audio comes from Oyez®, a free law project by Justia and the Legal Information Institute of Cornell Law School.
    Support for More Perfect is provided in part by The Smart Family Fund.
    Follow us on Instagram and Facebook @moreperfectpodcast, and Twitter @moreperfect.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfect2 years ago
    More Perfect has been dark for four years now. But next year, hosted by Julia Longoria, we're coming back!
    The past few weeks have been historic, to say the least, in Supreme Court history. So in the meantime, we want to hear from you. What do you want to know right now about the Supreme Court? What are your questions, your worries, your fears?
    Record a voice memo or write us a note and send it to moreperfect@wnyc.org.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfect6 years ago
    This season, More Perfect is taking its camera lens off the Supreme Court and zooming in on the words of the people: the 27 amendments that We The People have made to our Constitution. We're taking on these 27 amendments both in song and in story. This episode is best listened to alongside 27: The Most Perfect Album, an entire album (an ALBUM!) and digital experience of original music and art inspired by the 27 Amendments. Think of these episodes as the audio liner notes.
    In More Perfect's final episode of the season, listen to liner notes for two amendments that contemplate the still-unfinished status of our Constitution. "27" is an album that marks a particular point in our history: this moment when we have 27 Amendments to our Constitution. What will be the 28th?
    Maybe it will address our nation's capital. The capital has been a bit of a Constitutional anomaly for much of our nation's history — it's at the heart of the democracy, but because it's not a state, people in Washington D.C. have been disenfranchised almost by accident. The 23rd Amendment solved some of the problem — it gave D.C. the right to vote for president. But it left much of D.C.'s representation questions unanswered. D.C. still does not have voting representation in Congress. Instead, D.C. sends a "non-voting delegate" to Congress. For this liner note, More Perfect profiles that delegate, Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, and her unique approach to fighting for power in a virtually powerless role.
    The song for the 23rd Amendment is by The Mellow Tones, a group of students from D.C. high school Duke Ellington School of the Arts, along with their teacher Mark G. Meadows. The chorus, "Why won't you count on me?" reflects on the continued disenfranchisement of our nation's capital.
    The final amendment of the album, the 27th Amendment, put limits on Senators' ability to give themselves a pay raise, and it has arguably the most unusual path to ratification of all 27. The first draft for the amendment was written by none other than James Madison in 1789, but back then, it didn't get enough votes from the states for ratification. It wasn't until a college student named Gregory Watson awakened the dormant amendment centuries later that it was finally ratified. The 27th Amendment song is by Kevin Devine and tells Watson's story.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfect6 years ago
    This season, More Perfect is taking its camera lens off the Supreme Court and zooming in on the words of the people: the 27 amendments that We The People have made to our Constitution. We're taking on these 27 amendments both in song and in story. This episode is best listened to alongside 27: The Most Perfect Album, an entire album (an ALBUM!) and digital experience of original music and art inspired by the 27 Amendments. Think of these episodes as the audio liner notes.
    This week, More Perfect takes a look at three amendments on the more obscure end of the spectrum. The 12th, 17th, and 20th Amendments made fine-tune adjustments to the way we pick our leaders. More Perfect is here to prove these three are more interesting than you think they are.
    For starters, the 12th Amendment is the secret star of the hit musical Hamilton. The Election of 1800 and the kerfuffle between Aaron Burr and Thomas Jefferson was one of the reasons we passed the 12th Amendment, which made it so that presidential and vice presidential candidates run alongside each other on a single ticket. It was meant to avoid awkward situations where political opponents suddenly had to be partners in government. But Radiolab's Rachael Cusick reflects on the Clinton-Trump race and the ways the 12th Amendment may have polarized politics. Then, listen to Octopus Project's original song about the 12th Amendment.
    The idea for the 20th Amendment, which shortened the "lame duck" period for outgoing presidents and members of Congress, was first proposed around the same time as the 12th, but it took years to get political momentum to pass it. That momentum came in part from infamous president, Warren G. Harding, whose missteps ignited a movement to pass it. Huey Supreme wrote an original song about the 20th Amendment from the perspective of a lame duck.
    Then, More Perfect skips back to the 17th Amendment, which made the election of U.S. senators more democratic. Our state legislatures used to hand-pick Senators, but the 17th made it so the people elect their Senators directly. More Perfect reflects on whether direct democracy is all it's cracked up to be. Listen to original songs about the 17th amendment by Stef Chura and Donny Dinero (of Mail the Horse).
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfect6 years ago
    This season, More Perfect is taking its camera lens off the Supreme Court and zooming in on the words of the people: the 27 amendments that We The People have made to our Constitution. We're taking on these 27 amendments both in song and in story. This episode is best listened to alongside 27: The Most Perfect Album, an entire album (an ALBUM!) and digital experience of original music and art inspired by the 27 Amendments. Think of these episodes as the audio liner notes.
    The 25th and 26th Amendments-— ratified in 1967 and 1971, respectively-— are some of the newest additions to our founding document. However, they tackle some pretty basic questions: who gets to rule, and who gets to vote? If a president dies or is incapacitated, who takes over? And how old do you have to be in order to participate in American democracy?
    In recent months, the 25th Amendment has swirled in and out of news cycles as Americans debate what it takes to declare a president unfit for office. But this episode looks back, even before the 25th Amendment was ratified: a moment in 1919 when President Woodrow Wilson became bedridden by stroke, and his wife, Edith Wilson, became our country’s unofficial first female president.
    The 26th Amendment is best encapsulated in a Vietnam-era slogan: “Old enough to fight, old enough to vote.” Eighteen-year-olds at the time argued that if they were old enough to be drafted to fight in the War, they were old enough to have a voice in our democracy. But what about today, when even younger Americans are becoming victims of gun violence and finding themselves at the center of national political debates? Does it mean we should lower the voting age even further?
    When you're done with the episode, check out songs by Pavo Pavo and Suburban Living inspired by Amendments 25 and 26 on 27: The Most Perfect Album.
    Special thanks to The White House Historical Association.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfect6 years ago
    This season, More Perfect is taking its camera lens off the Supreme Court and zooming in on the words of the people: the 27 amendments that We The People have made to our Constitution. We're taking on these 27 amendments both in song and in story. This episode is best listened to alongside 27: The Most Perfect Album, an entire album (an ALBUM!) and digital experience of original music and art inspired by the 27 Amendments. Think of these episodes as the audio liner notes.
    On first read the 16th and 22nd Amendments are at best sleepers and at worst, stinkers. In a list of Constitutional hits like the right to free speech, the right to bear arms, and birthright citizenship, the amendments covering taxes and term limits tend to fall by the wayside. But in Episode 6 of More Perfect's third season we take these forgotten gems and make them shine.
    The 16th Amendment sets up the income tax, sinking dread into the hearts of millions of Americans every April. But if the income tax is so hated, why did we vote to put it in the Constitution? And why do so many people willingly pay? In this episode we take on those questions and contemplate whether the 16th amendment might be less about money or law, than is about deciding what it means to belong.
    Next we move on to the 22nd Amendment and presidential term limits. If we as U.S. citizens are happy with our leadership, why shouldn't we be able to keep electing the same president for as many terms as we want? The ghost of George Washington comes back to give Franklin Delano Roosevelt some major side-eye as we explore the roots of the rule, and why it matters today.
    When you're done with the episode, check out songs by Post Animal and Pavo Pavo inspired by Amendments 16 and 22 on 27: The Most Perfect Album.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfect6 years ago
    This season, More Perfect is taking its camera lens off the Supreme Court and zooming in on the words of the people: the 27 amendments that We The People have made to our Constitution. We're taking on these 27 amendments both in song and in story. This episode is best listened to alongside 27: The Most Perfect Album, an entire album (an ALBUM!) and digital experience of original music and art inspired by the 27 Amendments. Think of these episodes as the audio liner notes.
    Amendments 13, 14, and 15 are collectively known as the Reconstruction Amendments: they were passed as instructions to rebuild the country after Civil War. They addressed slavery, citizenship, equality and voting rights for black people. This week, the More Perfect team explores the legacy of the amendments beyond the Civil War — the ways the promises of these amendments changed the country and the ways they've fallen short.
    First, More Perfect Executive Producer Suzie Lechtenberg and Legal Editor Elie Mystal explore the loophole in the 13th Amendment's slavery ban that's being used in a strange context: college football. We share songs about the 13th Amendment from Kash Doll and Bette Smith. Then, producer Julia Longoria shares a conversation with her roommate Alia Almeida exploring their relationship to the amendments.
    Inspired by the 14th's Amendment's grant of equal protection and citizenship rights, Sarah Kay's poem tells the story of her grandmother, a U.S. citizen who was interned during World War II in a Japanese American Internment camp. Despite the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause, the Supreme Court upheld the internment of U.S. citizens based solely on their Japanese heritage in a case called Korematsu v. United States. In 2018, the Supreme Court said Korematsu was "wrong the day it was decided." The Court went on to uphold President Trump's controversial travel ban in Trump v. Hawaii. "Korematsu has nothing to do with this case," wrote the majority. In a dissenting opinion, Justice Sotomayor accused the majority of "redeploying the same dangerous logic underlying Korematsu" when they upheld the ban.
    Finally, hear songs inspired by the 15th Amendment by Aisha Burns and Nnamidi Ogbonnaya.
    WNYC Studiosadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: More Perfect6 years ago
    This season, More Perfect is taking its camera lens off the Supreme Court and zooming in on the words of the people: the 27 amendments that We The People have made to our Constitution. We're taking on these 27 amendments both in song and in story. This episode is best listened to alongside 27: The Most Perfect Album, an entire album (an ALBUM!) and digital experience of original music and art inspired by the 27 Amendments. Think of these episodes as the audio liner notes.Episode Four begins, as all episodes should: with Dolly Parton. Parton wrote a song for us (!) about the 19th Amendment and women (finally) getting the right to vote.Also in this episode: Our siblings at Radiolab share a story with us that they did about how the 19th Amendment almost died on a hot summer night in Tennessee. The 19th Amendment was obviously a huge milestone for women in the United States. But it was pretty well-understood that this wasn’t a victory for all women; it was a victory for white women. People of color have faced all sorts of barriers to voting throughout our nation's history. This includes poll taxes, which were fees people had to pay in order to vote. The 24th Amendment eliminated federal poll taxes in 1964. We hear a song inspired by the 24th Amendment, created for us by Caroline Shaw. Kevin Morby made an excellent song for us about the 24th, too. Check it out here.
    Finally, Simon Tam, from the band The Slants tells the story of the Supreme Court case about their name, and talks about the song they wrote about the 18th and 21st Amendments for our album. (It’s a jam!)
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