Sympathy Pains ends up falling a bit flat due to Laura Beil’s detached, television-news approach to hosting.
What Foundering: The Amazon Story does well is outline the discrepancy between Amazon’s business goals and its leadership values.
The latest series from Wondery is disturbing, entertaining, and ultimately disappointing.
The series unspools the story of Tom and Will Green, two young men who arrive hungry in the small town of Vernon with not much more than their backpacks.
Each episode explores one of the most unusual corners of the web, from “ASMR” to “Facebook Marketplace."
The podcast’s momentum comes from the investigation’s expansiveness, the notion that the story is getting perpetually bigger one interview at a time.
Sweet Bobby takes a close look at the events of Kirat Assi’s hellish nightmare that unfolded over a span of 10 years.
Storytime, like Rogen’s best movies, is propelled by an undercurrent of heart, charm, and unexpected human connection.
Nice Try! Interior is, at its best, a material exploration of mainstream American mores and their origins.
Host Payne Lindsey sheds light on the maddening bureaucracy that complicates the effort to find missing Indigenous people.
The stories Nate DiMeo tells are detailed and thoroughly researched, but above all they are beautifully told.
Juxtaposing stories from people with wildly different lives, the 9/12 team plays anecdotes off of each other so they absorb new meanings.