79 episodes

The Time of Monsters podcast features Nation national-affairs correspondent Jeet Heer’s signature blend of political culture and cultural politics. Each week, he’ll host in-depth conversations with urgent voices on the most pressing issues of our time.

The Time of Monsters with Jeet Heer The Nation Company LLC

    • News
    • 4.5 • 26 Ratings

The Time of Monsters podcast features Nation national-affairs correspondent Jeet Heer’s signature blend of political culture and cultural politics. Each week, he’ll host in-depth conversations with urgent voices on the most pressing issues of our time.

    Where Did Biden’s Foreign Policy Go Wrong?

    Where Did Biden’s Foreign Policy Go Wrong?

    Writing in The Nation, David Klion recently reviewed Alexander Ward’s new book on Biden’s foreign policy, which offers a redemption arc whereby an administration wounded by the botched exit from Afghanistan made good by its handling of the Ukraine invasion.
    But as Klion notes, the two year frame of the book is too narrow. In conversation on this podcast, David and I contextualize Biden’s foreign policy, which is deeply unpopular and flawed, in the larger history of hawkish liberalism. We look at the attempt to revive a style of military Keynesianism and at Biden’s deep investment in Zionism, as well as the contradictions on issues of human rights that are hampering Biden’s presidency.
    During the discussion, I alluded to this excellent Mother Jones article by Noah Lanard on Biden and Israel. 


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    • 1 hr
    Larry David Was The Last Man

    Larry David Was The Last Man

    On this episode of The Time of Monsters, Daniel Bessner on Larry David.


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    • 44 min
    Hollywood’s New Lesbian Plot

    Hollywood’s New Lesbian Plot

    In the last few weeks, Hollywood has given us Drive-Away Dolls (directed by Ethan Coen, who also co-wrote it in collaboration with Tricia Cooke) and Live Lies Bleeding (directed by Rose Glass who co-wrote it with Weronika Tofilska). Although very different in tone, the two movies have some striking commonalities, both are set in the late 20th century and take familiar genres (the buddy road comedy, the erotic thriller) while featuring lesbian lead characters.
    To talk about this trend, I spoke to Moira Donegan, a frequent guest of the podcast, who sees the movies as evidence of “the lesbian plot” becoming Hollywood fare. She locates both films as exercises in nostalgia in a period when actual lesbian culture is rapidly changing.


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    • 47 min
    The Roots of Trump’s Dictator Fetish

    The Roots of Trump’s Dictator Fetish

    Donald Trump recently hosted Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, praising the would be autocrat to the skies as “fantastic” and “a boss.” Of course Trump’s love of autocrats is nothing new. 
    Jacob Heilbrunn has written a valuable new book, America Last: The Right’s Century-Long Romance with Foreign Dictators, that places Trump’s love of dictators in a larger historical context. I wrote about the book in this column, where I summarize his arguments and take issue with a few of his claims.
    I was happy to talk to Jacob both about his findings and also places where we disagree.


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    • 40 min
    Farewell to Freakonomics

    Farewell to Freakonomics

    Steven D. Levitt, best known for co-writing the bestselling 2005 book Freakonomics, is retiring from the University of Chicago with a bang. On the Capitalism and Freedom podcast, Levitt gave a farewell interview where he detailed many internecine feuds in the discipline and examples of toxic abuse, with particular focus on his long-time colleague and nemesis James Heckman. 
    The economist Marshall Steinbaum, a University of Chicago graduate who now teaches at the University of Utah, returns to the Time of Monsters to elucidate not just the Levitt/Heckman spat but also the question of why economics is a notoriously toxic discipline, how economics has changed over the decades rendering both Levitt and Heckman anachronistic, and the recent backlash against anti-racist politics in the discipline. 
    To supplement the article, listeners can read: Noah Scheiber’s 2007 article on the intellectual origins of Freakonomics, Marshall Steinbaum’s  2020 post about racism in the University of Chicago economic department, and a recent Bloomberg story on racism and sexism in economics.


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    • 33 min
    “Dune” and the Allegories of Empire

    “Dune” and the Allegories of Empire

    On this episode of The Time of Monsters, David Klion and Jeet Heer on Dune: Part Two, the science fiction epic with real world echoes.


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    • 52 min

Customer Reviews

4.5 out of 5
26 Ratings

26 Ratings

mimshow ,

Sanity in a Time of Monsters

Jeet Heer helps me to stay anchored in reality.

Nickyb_123 ,

Fine show

Interesting perspective from of how a third worldist views their new home in the west

Kalfisher ,

Big Jeet Heer fan!

I often listen to this podcast twice because Mr Heer will have some brilliant point and I’ll have to jot it quickly down in the notes app on my phone. I love this podcast.

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