// Show briefing
Listen to CLNS Media Network's <strong>The Muckrake Political Podcast</strong> podcast on Apple Podcasts. Listen to The Muckrake Political Podcast on Spotify. The Muckrake Podcast is <strong>the political podcast that promises to dig deeper</strong>. Political analysts Jared Yates Sexton and Nick Hauselman tackle the news of the day but go beyond the stale and tired ... In this episode of The Muckrake Podcast, Jared Yates Sexton discusses the horrific tragedy in Texas with floods killing over 100 people, the rise of climate fascism, and how demand for climate and economic justice have to be at the center of a movement...
Link personalities to this show to populate the roster.
Listen to CLNS Media Network's <strong>The Muckrake Political Podcast</strong> podcast on Apple Podcasts.
Listen to The Muckrake Political Podcast on Spotify. The Muckrake Podcast is <strong>the political podcast that promises to dig deeper</strong>. Political analysts Jared Yates Sexton and Nick Hauselman tackle the news of the day but go beyond the stale and tired ...
In this episode of The Muckrake Podcast, Jared Yates Sexton discusses the horrific tragedy in Texas with floods killing over 100 people, the rise of climate fascism, and how demand for climate and economic justice have to be at the center of a movement...
The Muckrake Podcast is <strong>the political podcast that promises to dig deeper</strong>. Political analysts Jared Yates Sexton and Nick Hauselman tackle the news of the day but go beyond the stale and tired narratives to provide historical context and alternative ...
Political analysts Jared Yates Sexton and Nick Hauselman host the weekly Muckrake Podcast to <strong>address the news of the day while moving past the headlines and tired narratives to deliver extensive historical and societal context</strong>.
Creating Podcasts and One-of-a-Kind Political Coverage
The noun muckrake (literally, a rake for muck, i.e., manure) rose out of the dung heap and into the realm of literary metaphor in 1684. That's when John Bunyan used it in Pilgrim's Progress to represent man's preoccupation with earthly things.
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