

Why Is This Happening? The Chris Hayes Podcast
MS NOW, Chris Hayes
Every week Chris Hayes asks the big questions that keep him up at night. How do we make sense of this unprecedented moment in world history? Why is this (all) happening? This podcast starts to answer these questions. Writers, experts, and thinkers who are also trying to get to the bottom of them join Chris to break it all down and help him get a better night’s rest.
Episodes
Mentioned books

10 snips
Mar 31, 2026 • 52min
The WNBA's "BIG Deal" with Tamika Tremaglio
Tamika Tremaglio, former NBPA executive director and current sports consultant, breaks down the WNBA's landmark labor deal. She discusses rapid valuation growth in women’s sports, why live sports hold premium value, the impact of NIL and mismatched rookie pay, the need for gross-revenue sharing and transparency, negotiation dynamics and public pressure, and mental health and gambling risks facing players.

10 snips
Mar 24, 2026 • 55min
'Longterm Disaster' in Iran with Robert Pape
Robert Pape, a University of Chicago political scientist who studies airpower and coercion, discusses air strikes, the seductive illusion of precision bombing, and the risks of escalation. He covers leadership decapitation, why air campaigns change politics not regimes, the pivotal escalation risk of ground troops, and the catastrophic consequences of state collapse.

37 snips
Mar 17, 2026 • 57min
What Trump’s Immigration Policy is Really Doing with David Bier
David Bier, director of immigration studies at the Cato Institute, explains shifting GOP politics on migration and how legal pathways are being shut down. He walks through bans on asylum, parole and visas. They trace historical conservative tensions, quantify system failures like the greencard backlog, and outline a pragmatic blueprint for restoring usable legal immigration.

27 snips
Mar 10, 2026 • 1h 6min
How to Stop Dictators with Zack Beauchamp
Zack Beauchamp, a Vox senior correspondent who studies democratic backsliding, walks through how countries resisted authoritarian moves. He discusses Brazil’s institutional pushback, Poland’s electoral and judicial fights, and South Korea’s mass mobilization that blocked martial law. Short, vivid comparisons show what sparks collective action and which reforms matter most.

52 snips
Mar 3, 2026 • 1h 1min
Demystifying Anthropic and ClaudeAI with Gideon Lewis-Kraus
Gideon Lewis-Kraus, a New Yorker staff writer known for deep dives into tech and AI, unpacks Anthropic and its Claude models. He explains how Claude learns patterns, the limits of interpretability, tests that reveal risky behaviors, and why AI threatens knowledge work. Short, clear takes on founders, safety vs market pressure, and what models teach us about human thinking.

54 snips
Feb 24, 2026 • 59min
"America, América" with Greg Grandin
Greg Grandin, C. Vann Woodward Professor of History at Yale and Pulitzer Prize–winning author, offers a hemispheric rethink of U.S.-Latin American ties. He explores how viewing the Americas together reframes conquest, disappearances, exportation of populations, racial narratives, and the political modern ties between neoliberalism and rising right-wing movements.

40 snips
Feb 17, 2026 • 53min
Is This MeToo 2.0? with Rebecca Traister
Rebecca Traister, writer and author known for books on gender and politics, discusses the Jeffrey Epstein files and what they reveal about institutional rot. She frames the story as about power, open secrets, and structural sexism. Conversation covers how MeToo has evolved, patterns of normalization around predatory figures, and why reckonings advance then recede.

Feb 12, 2026 • 6min
Check Out a Preview for “Clock It”
A lively preview of a new culture-and-politics conversation led by two seasoned commentators. They explore a heated Texas Democratic primary and contrasting campaign styles. They unpack how social platforms and creators are reshaping political norms. They also touch on media cuts, a controversial leaked exchange, and the intersection of art and politics around the Super Bowl halftime show.

33 snips
Feb 10, 2026 • 44min
Chris Hayes in Conversation with Jonathan Haidt about ‘The Sirens’ Call’
Jonathan Haidt, NYU social psychologist and author focused on youth mental health. He and Chris Hayes unpack the rise of the attention economy, how smartphones and apps hijack focus, the Skinner-box mechanics of short video, and cultural and policy ideas to reclaim presence and relationships.

Feb 5, 2026 • 2min
MS NOW Presents: Clock It with Symone and Eugene
Two former White House adversaries turned colleagues invite listeners into their lively groupchat. They track how culture and politics collide, from music and fashion to TikTok and sports. Expect sharp takes on who is borrowing what and why those cultural moves matter.


