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Diane Rehm: On My Mind

WAMU 88.5

Diane Rehm’s weekly podcast features newsmakers, writers, artists and thinkers on the issues she cares about most: what’s going on in Washington, ideas that inform, and the latest on living well as we live longer.

Copyright WAMU 88.5 American University Radio - For Personal Use Only

Diane Rehm’s weekly podcast features newsmakers, writers, artists and thinkers on the issues she cares about most: what’s going on in Washington, ideas that inform, and the latest on living well as we live longer.

Copyright WAMU 88.5 American University Radio - For Personal Use Only
6hr 38min
Thumbnail for "A conversation with folk legend Joan Baez".
For decades legendary folk singer Joan Baez wrote poems on scraps of paper, tucked away in old notebooks. Now 83, she's sharing them in her first poetry collection, "When You See My Mother, Ask Her to Dance." Baez joined Diane for her August 2024 book club event.
Thumbnail for "Trump, Social Security and the future of retirement in America".
During the campaign Donald Trump promised not to touch Social Security benefits. But his policies could lead to deep cuts. Economist Teresa Ghilarducci explains why.
Thumbnail for "How RFK could change public health in America".
Vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been tapped to run the Department of Health and Human Services. Dr. Celine Gounder of KFF Health News on the impact RFK could have on public health in America.
Thumbnail for "Trump’s immigration crackdown. How far will he go?".
Promises of mass deportation took center stage in Donald Trump's campaign. So what will that actually look like when he takes office? The Washington Post's Nick Miroff on the coming immigration crackdown. 
Thumbnail for "What to expect from a second Trump presidency".
Donald Trump won a decisive electoral victory Tuesday. With a GOP majority in the Senate and possibly in the House, political scientist Norman Ornstein looks ahead at how Trump could transform our government.
Thumbnail for "What does it really mean to call Trump a "fascist"?".
Donald Trump has been called a "fascist" by historians, his former White House staff and now Kamala Harris. Fascism expert Jason Stanley joins Diane to talk about what that term means and why voters should care.
Thumbnail for "How secure is the 2024 election?".
Donald Trump has laid the groundwork to challenge the election if he loses.  Legal expert Rick Hasen says lessons learned from 2020 could help secure the vote in 2024.
Thumbnail for "Kamala Harris makes a push to energize Black voters. Will it work?".
Weakening support among Black voters prompts a last-minute push by the Harris campaign. So, what's her message? And is it too late? Diane talks to New York Times reporter Maya King.
Thumbnail for "Thirty years after the Violence Against Women Act".
It has been 30 years since Congress passed the Violence Against Women Act. And yet one in three women will experience abuse in their lifetime. Journalist Rachel Louise Snyder talks about progress made — and work to be done -- to end domestic violence.
Thumbnail for "Dr. Francis Collins on faith, science and healing our divisions".
Former NIH director Francis Collins talks about his new book, "The Road to Wisdom: On Truth, Science, Faith, and Trust."

A conversation with folk legend Joan Baez

Thumbnail for "A conversation with folk legend Joan Baez".
November 27, 202447min 19sec

For years, legendary folk singer Joan Baez wrote poems and tucked them away in notebooks and on scraps of paper. She started this decades ago, around the time memories surfaced of childhood abuse at the hands of her father. 

Baez says poetry was a way to explore the reasons behind her lifelong phobias, insomnia and panic attacks – and to come to terms with a diagnosis of dissociative identity disorder, which for her meant she lived with several other voices in her head. 

Now 83, Baez has taken these musings about her life, her trauma, and her passions for nature and art, and is sharing them with the world. 

“When You See My Mother, Ask Her to Dance” reads like a diary in verse, and offers deep insight into the experiences and creativity of one of our nation’s most beloved folk musicians.

Diane spoke to Joan Baez on Zoom in front of a live audience as part of The Diane Rehm `Book Club in August of this year. They talked about the book, as well as the recent documentary about Baez’s life, “Joan Baez: I Am a Noise.”

Find out more about The Diane Rehm Book Club here: dianerehm.org/bookclub

Thumbnail for "A conversation with folk legend Joan Baez".
A conversation with folk legend Joan Baez
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