The Interview

The Interview
David Marchese and Lulu Garcia-Navarro take turns hosting The Interview for the New York Times, and each brings a completely different energy that keeps the show unpredictable. Marchese is known for his probing, sometimes uncomfortable questions that push famous guests off their talking points. Garcia-Navarro, who came from NPR, has a warmer but equally incisive approach. New episodes drop every Saturday, running about 45 minutes to an hour, and the guest list reads like a who's who of global influence: Gisele Pelicot discussing surviving abuse, Michael Pollan on AI and consciousness, Chloe Zhao on filmmaking and fear, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey confronting federal overreach. The show has 99 episodes and a 3.9-star rating from about 1,500 listeners, with the lower rating likely reflecting some guests being polarizing rather than any quality issue. What sets this apart from standard celebrity interview shows is the preparation. These hosts clearly read everything their guests have published and use that knowledge to ask questions that actually produce new information. It's journalism as conversation, backed by the full reporting power of the Times. Not every episode will interest every listener, but when the pairing of host and guest clicks, it produces some of the best long-form interviews available anywhere in audio.

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