cover of episode The New Co-Hosts of 'The Daily'

The New Co-Hosts of 'The Daily'

2025/6/3
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Michael Barbaro
知名新闻播客主持人和记者,主持《The Daily》播客。
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Natalie Kitroeff
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Rachel Abrams
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Michael Barbaro: 我非常激动地宣布Rachel Abrams和Natalie Kitroeff将成为我的联合主持人。她们过去曾是节目的嘉宾和客座主持人,现在正式加入。我相信我们三人会合作愉快,为听众带来更多精彩内容。 Natalie Kitroeff: 我很荣幸能加入《The Daily》。这个节目对我影响深远,它帮助我更好地理解和报道新闻。我一直很喜欢这个节目,而且和这里的团队合作感觉像家一样。我希望我过去在墨西哥城做记者时所学到的经验,特别是关于锡那罗亚贩毒集团和芬太尼危机的调查,能为节目带来新的视角。 Rachel Abrams: 我一直梦想成为像Lois Lane一样的记者,通过揭露真相来为世界做好事。在《纽约时报》早期,我参与报道了通用汽车汽车突然熄火导致事故的事件,这让我意识到我正在实现我的理想。我认为《The Daily》是讲述故事的最佳平台,特别是像Me Too运动中一位因泄露信息而失去律师执照的女性的故事,音频可以更好地呈现她的经历。

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Paradise is Hulu's critically acclaimed addictive drama series starring Sterling K. Brown, Julianne Nicholson, and James Marsden. A serene community is rocked by a shocking murder and the high-stakes investigation that follows. Filled with nail-biting twists and turns, The Daily Beast calls Paradise your next TV obsession, and The New York Times says it's exhilarating in all the right ways.

Paradise is for your Emmy consideration in all categories, including Outstanding Drama Series. For more information, visit fyc.hulu.com. Come on in. I'm going to sit in the middle. Okay, I'm taking the flank. Well, Rachel. Hello. Natalie. Hi. Welcome to the next chapter of The Daily. I know. Hosted by you. Well, and you. It's the three of us. Yeah. The three of us, yep.

And of course, our listeners know who you are, first, because you have been distinguished guests over the past eight years of the show, and then you were guest hosts. And now I'm extremely excited to announce you are both becoming my co-hosts. There are going to be three of us, Michael Barbaro, Natalie Kitcheroef, Rachel Abrams, and Natalie Kitcheroef.

Natalie, you start today, officially. Yes. Rachel, listeners will know, you already started. You've been at it for a couple of months. Yep. And we wanted to take a moment outside of the regular rigors of the show to mark this moment and officially share this news with our listeners. And honestly, we're

Take a few minutes to talk about who you both are, what you did before this, why you wanted to be co-hosts of The Daily. So I'm going to start, Natalie, with you. What made you ever want to be a journalist? I think that I got to give my mom credit on this one. She is a professor of Latin American politics and

She was always, from when I was really young, doing research in Guatemala. And when I turned 12, she started taking me there. And her research was doing interviews with victims and survivors of the genocide in Guatemala. And I would go and do these interviews with her.

I mean, she wasn't just talking with the survivors. She also talked to the guerrilla fighters who were part of the conflict. She talked to the ex-army commanders who were involved in some of these massacres. And so I was going in and out of these often tense conversations.

and just getting all sides of this very complicated story. And I took that with me, you know, right out of college when I was looking for a job. I realized you could get paid to do this. And it's basically what I've done ever since. And

And what about you, Rachel? I have to follow that? God, I'm sorry. I know. That's such a good answer. No, I might answer. No, no, no. My dad was a screenwriter in L.A. that read comic books, which I read, and I was like, Lois Lane's the coolest person. Like, a reporter is the coolest person you could be. They had to give the man superpowers, but she is saving the world because she's smart and dogged and tenacious to speak truth to power and reveal things and uncover things. I just, like, I want to be that. And I don't think there was

Any more thought. It was just that is how you can, the coolest way to do good in the world. And once you actually became a journalist, when did you feel you were realizing that? Really early in my career at the Times, there was a story I worked on that I think will probably stay with me forever. General Motors was having this issue where their cars were just suddenly shutting off while people were driving them. And obviously people were crashing. There were a lot of deaths. Yeah.

Every reporter was trying to figure out who had died, piecing together various federal crash data to find the earliest victims, to notify them or to notify their survivors, their families, to let them know you didn't just have an accident. Your car malfunctioned. You didn't do anything wrong. You didn't do anything wrong. And.

Reporters around the country, including a team I was on, we had basically identified all these people. But there was one person in one of the earliest, if not the earliest crash, and nobody could find her name. And everybody was looking for it. And I...

I was like, I will find this person. And I probably made a hundred phone calls to everybody that might know somebody who knows somebody who knows somebody. And eventually I found someone. It was a woman whose car had driven off the road and she'd crashed into a tree and she had died. Wow. And I tracked down her family and...

Up until then, they had no idea. They thought maybe she had a heart attack. It was this lingering mystery. And they finally got some sort of closure. And I know that there was a compensation fund that existed. And by telling them, they actually had a chance to apply for it. So anyway, that was the thing where I was like, if I didn't do that, they would have never known. And that would have been that. Right. I mean, that's public service. I was really proud of it. Natalie, as we've already hinted at,

You take the lessons that you drew from your mom's work, and you become one of the greatest correspondents, I can recall, in Mexico City. I don't know about that. And I wonder when all those lessons apply clearly in your work.

I think really the most recent stories that I did are the clearest example of how those lessons I learned early on began to apply. Because I spent, as you know, because we talked about on the show, several months investigating the Sinaloa cartel as a way of understanding the fentanyl crisis that was killing, you know, tens of thousands of Americans.

We really tried to get inside the cartel by going to Sinaloa, visiting a fentanyl lab where they were cooking and producing the drug, talking to chemists. We talked to people who were tested on by the cartels as they were looking to perfect their formulas for these drugs. It was risky, it was dangerous, but it was the only way that I knew to try to understand how this billion-dollar business worked.

behind this incredibly lethal drug actually worked. And yeah, I was reminded of all of those hours in a car, going up to the mountains, sitting and just listening with my mom. So then why, both of you, but start with you, Natalie, why leave print and come here on The Daily full-time?

I mean, I love The Daily. I remember when the show first started, and it oriented me. As a reporter covering this world, I needed to listen to what was on The Daily because it helped me think about coverage. And then I got to be a guest on the show, as we said. I worked with some of the very same editors and producers who are still running this show today.

So it feels like it's been a home away from home for me for a long time now. And so I'm excited to make it permanent. And you, Rachel? Well, another line of reporting that I did years after the General Motors stuff was I was involved in the paper's coverage of the Me Too movement. And one of the stories involved a woman who lost her law license because she was a source to us. But eventually she reached out to me and said, I kind of want to talk about why I leaked.

And we had lunch, and I listened to her, and I eventually said, the daily is where I think your story belongs. I just feel like audio can just do something for the story. And you were right. Yeah, and it was incredible to listen to her, and that's what brought me to the show first. After that, I started guest hosting with you guys. So there it is. Can we start talking about you? Yeah, can we start talking about you? Do you have any questions for me? Yes, we have so many questions. But the basic one, how do you think about this job, about hosting the show? Mm-hmm.

I think the job is to imagine that someone is at home, maybe doing their dishes or on the subway, listening to the show. And they're plugged in, but there's also like passing trains and kids running behind them. Right. A million things going on. There's things going on. And the job is to ensure that.

Right.

Or the president of Princeton University like you just did, Rachel. Or Natalie with the whistleblower from Boeing. Or any of our 1,500 colleagues who are the beating heart of this show. And the real challenge is standing in for the listener while also yourself being really present in the conversation. And it's kind of like those two jobs at once that is the challenge. Right. Yeah. Okay. We are reaching the end of our conversation here. And I just want to tell you both.

how much I am looking forward to working with you as my co-host. I think it's going to be a lot of fun, and I think we're going to do great things. Me too. Me three. I'm really excited. Or I'm going to say thank you in that kind of like classic way. No, can I? I'm going to do the honors. Please. Is that okay? Okay. Michael, Rachel, thank you so much. You're very welcome. You're welcome.

Okay, Rachel. You want to? Yeah, yeah, I'll do it. I'll do it. Okay, so. We're all going to do it now? We're all going to do it. We're going to go around the world. Yeah, we're going to go around the world. Yeah. We're going to see who's best. Go for it. Michael, Natalie, thank you both so much. Thank you. You're welcome. All right, now my turn. And this is it. This is it.