Critics at Large | The New Yorker

By: The New Yorker
  • Summary

  • Critics at Large is a weekly culture podcast from The New Yorker. Every Thursday, the staff writers Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz discuss current obsessions, classic texts they’re revisiting with fresh eyes, and trends that are emerging across books, television, film, and more. The show runs the gamut of the arts and pop culture, with lively, surprising conversations about everything from Salman Rushdie to “The Real Housewives.” Through rigorous analysis and behind-the-scenes insights into The New Yorker’s reporting, the magazine’s critics help listeners make sense of our moment—and how we got here.

    Condé Nast 2023
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Episodes
  • The Splendor of Nature, Now Streaming
    Jan 30 2025

    In 1954, a young David Attenborough made his début as the star of a new nature show called “Zoo Quest.” The docuseries, which ran for nearly a decade on the BBC, was a sensation that set Attenborough down the path of his life’s work: exposing viewers to our planet’s most miraculous creatures and landscapes from the comfort of their living rooms. On this episode of Critics at Large, Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz trace Attenborough’s filmography from “Zoo Quest” to his program, “Mammals,” a six-part series on BBC America narrated by the now- ninety-eight-year-old presenter. In the seventy years since “Zoo Quest” first aired, the genre it helped create has had to reckon with the effects of the climate crisis—and to figure out how to address such hot-button issues onscreen. By highlighting conservation efforts that have been successful, the best of these programs affirm our continued agency in the planet’s future. “One thing I got from ‘Mammals’ was not pure doom,” Schwartz says. “There are some options here. We have choices to make.”

    Read, watch, and listen with the critics:

    “Mammals” (2024)
    “Zoo Quest” (1954-63)
    “Are We Changing Planet Earth?” (2006)
    The Snow Leopard,” by Peter Matthiessen
    “My Octopus Teacher” (2020)
    “Life on Our Planet” (2023)
    “I Like to Get High at Night and Think About Whales,” by Samantha Irby

    New episodes drop every Thursday. Follow Critics at Large wherever you get your podcasts.

    This episode originally aired on July 11, 2024.

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    44 mins
  • The New Western Gold Rush
    Jan 16 2025

    Westward expansion has been mythologized onscreen for more than a century—and its depiction has always been entwined with the politics and anxieties of the era. In the 1939 film “Stagecoach,” John Wayne crystallized our image of the archetypal cowboy; decades later, he played another memorable frontiersman in “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance,” which questions how society is constructed. On this episode of Critics at Large, Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz trace the genre from these cinematic classics to its recent resurgence, marked by big-budget entries including “American Primeval,” which depicts nineteenth-century territorial conflicts in brutal, unsparing detail, and by the wild popularity of Taylor Sheridan’s “neo-Westerns,” which bring the time-honored form to the modern day. Sheridan’s series, namely “Yellowstone” and “Landman,” often center on a world-weary patriarch tasked with protecting land and property from outside forces waiting to seize it. Sometimes described as “red-state shows,” these works are deliberately slippery about their politics—but they pull in millions of viewers from across the ideological spectrum. What accounts for this success? “Whether or not we want to be living in a Western,” Schwartz says, “we very much still are.”

    Read, watch, and listen with the critics:

    “Yellowstone” (2018–24)
    “Landman” (2024—)
    “Horizon: An American Epic” (2024)
    “American Primeval” (2025—)
    “Stagecoach” (1939)
    “Dances with Wolves” (1990)
    “Doctor Quinn, Medicine Woman” (1993–98)
    Laura Ingalls Wilder’s “Little House on the Prairie” series
    “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance” (1962)
    “Shōgun” (2024)
    “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre” (1948)
    “Oppenheimer” (2023)

    New episodes drop every Thursday. Follow Critics at Large wherever you get your podcasts.

    Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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    46 mins
  • The Elusive Promise of the First Person
    Jan 9 2025

    The first person is a narrative style as old as storytelling itself—one that, at its best, allows us to experience the world through another person’s eyes. On this episode of Critics at Large, Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz trace how the technique has been used across mediums throughout history. They discuss the ways in which fiction writers have played with the unstable triangulation between author, reader, and narrator, as in Vladimir Nabokov’s “Lolita” and Bret Easton Ellis’s “American Psycho,” a book that adopts the perspective of a serial killer, and whose publication provoked public outcry. RaMell Ross’s “Nickel Boys”—an adaptation of Colson Whitehead’s 2019 novel—is a bold new attempt to deploy the first person onscreen. The film points to a larger question about the bounds of narrative, and of selfhood: Can we ever truly occupy someone else’s point of view? “The answer, in large part, is no,” Cunningham says. “But that impossibility is, for me, the actual promise: not the promise of a final mind meld but a confrontation, a negotiation with the fact that our perspectives really are our own.”

    Read, watch, and listen with the critics:

    “Nickel Boys” (2024)
    The Nickel Boys,” by Colson Whitehead
    Lolita,” by Vladimir Nabokov
    Meet the Director Who Reinvented the Act of Seeing,” by Salamishah Tillet (The New York Times)
    Great Books Don’t Make Great Films, but ‘Nickel Boys’ Is a Glorious Exception,” by Richard Brody (The New Yorker)
    “Lady in the Lake” (1947)
    “Dark Passage” (1947)
    “Enter the Void” (2010)
    “The Blair Witch Project” (1999)
    Doom (1993)
    The Berlin Stories,” by Christopher Isherwood
    American Psycho,” by Bret Easton Ellis
    The Adventures of Augie March,” by Saul Bellow
    Why Did I Stop Loving My Cat When I Had a Baby?” by Anonymous (The Cut)
    Harmony and Dissonance: Orphism in Paris, 1910-1930” at the Guggenheim Museum

    New episodes drop every Thursday. Follow Critics at Large wherever you get your podcasts.

    Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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    46 mins

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