NPR’s Lulu Garcia-Navarro discusses the apocalypse film I Think We’re Alone Now with director Reed Morano and star Peter Dinklage.
Photojournalists Are Demanding A #MeToo Reckoning

Vox photo editor Kainaz Amaria talks about the unaddressed culture of sexual harassment in the photojournalism industry — a rampant issue she says stems from a glaring gender imbalance.
(Image credit: Nick Oza/Courtesy of Kainaz Amaria)
Homer’s ‘Unwilling’ Women Are No Longer Quiet In ‘The Silence Of The Girls’

Told from the perspective of Achilles’ concubine, Briseis, Pat Barker’s The Silence Of The Girls brings new life to the women of Homer’s Iliad.
(Image credit: Cameron Pollack/NPR)
Here’s How Much Rain Is Still To Come From Florence
At Least Five People Have Been Killed As The Storm Makes Its Way Inland
Here’s A Photo Of Chicago West, True Thompson, And Stormi Webster All Together
27 Products For People Who Hate Clutter But Have A Lot Of Stuff
Apocalypse? Naw. ‘Woman World’ Is a Laid-Back Utopia

Aminder Dhaliwal’s popular Instagram comic chronicles life in a world where men have gone extinct. It turns out, without men, life is pretty mellow — making for a sly critique of patriarchy.
(Image credit: Cameron Pollack/NPR)
Fresh Air Weekend: Michael Che And Colin Jost Of ‘SNL’; Chef José Andrés

The SNL head writers have different attitudes toward co-hosting the Emmy awards Monday night. Jost admits to being nervous, but Che says, “there’s nothing to be afraid of.”
(Image credit: NBC/Mary Ellen Matthews)
‘Dear America,’ Writes A Pulitzer-Winning Journalist — And Undocumented Immigrant

Jose Antonio Vargas’ new book is a memoir about living in the U.S. as an “undocumented citizen” — a secret he himself didn’t discover until he was 16.
(Image credit: Alex Wong/Getty Images)