Explain It to Me

by Vox
7,615
News #110Politics #37

Is my dentist scamming me? Why do political campaigns cost so much? Should Gen Z bother to save for retirement?Explain It To Me is the hotline for all your unanswered questions. Sometimes explanations are hard to find, misinformation is rampant, and those internet searches and AI asks can come up empty. Call 1-800-618-8545 with what’s on your mind, and host Jonquilyn Hill will be your friendly guide to the answers you're looking for — and maybe even the ones you don’t expect. New episodes every Wednesday starting September 18. Part of Vox and the Vox Media Podcast Network.

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Recent Reviews
  • JoeMac7345
    Referred by Gray Matter
    I gave this a try from Sean Illing’s podcast. These kids are adorable, but hard to take them seriously.
  • BSchubAZ
    Amazing Podcast
    First of all, I love any podcast with Jonquilyn Hill — she’s real, compassionate, and funny! I appreciate always hearing the warmth in her voice. Second, I love the work Vox does! And third, it’s just a fascinating show! Thank you for covering a wide variety of topics and doing so in an up-beat way!!
  • Blulex
    A great addition to my day!
    This podcast is one of my favorites to listen to on my way to and from the office. Jonquilyn does a great job of tackling tough questions without bias. She also adds just the right amount of humor to lighten things up. If you’re the type of person who likes to understand the “why” behind things, subscribe! Plus, it’s really fun to call in questions & get them answered. I truly look forward to every episode.
  • Bsmith121212
    Keep Going
    I’ve enjoyed the show format and topics thus far. Looking forward to how a new president potentially impacts some of the show’s topics
  • AlieX D
    ⭐️⭐️
    Not a fan of being told to leave a five star review if the content doesn’t meet that standard. Also don’t enjoy being told that it’s the listeners fault/responsibility for the topics covered.
  • TrendKilla
    Like, like, like.
    If you enjoy a person using the word like ad nauseam, this is the podcast for you. Topics are not interesting enough to keep me subscribed.
  • Myra Tyler
    Need more interesting topics
    I really liked the weeds and while I miss it, I liked the *idea of this show. I will hold off on a final opinion for a few more weeks but I’m just not into the questions that have been posed so far. The idea was so interesting, but I feel like it hasn’t quite lived up to it’s potential yet. I will say that I like the format and I like the host. Just hoping for better topics. Weeds was a 10/10 show. So far explain it to me is a 4/10. Hope to see it hit it’s stride soon.
  • yochristianx
    'will the world end before i retire?'
    how are you going to get someone like vivian tu on your platform and treat it like salient advice. 'wealthfluencers' are NOT authorities on financial fluency and especially not one that so so so badly wants to be one of the 'wealthy elites' she portrays.
  • iGreeley
    Not as good as I hoped
    Has such promise. The ads take up way too much time of the show. I'm not sure I would pay for this though. Host talks too much and there is not enough meat.
  • (no more nicknames available!)
    Review for episode “Is it okay to go to the zoo?
    In general this isn’t the best Vox podcast, but it’s fine. The “interviews” feel more like tee-ball practice rather than critical dialogues aiming at getting to the heart of an issue or topic. For example: I’m a bit annoyed by the “Zoo” episode. Oddly there was no real discussion of the value of zoos for small children. Are zoos worthwhile for 20-something? As the guest argued, probably not. However, are they valuable for introducing children to conservation and animal advocacy? I’d argue that the guest evaded this question by noting that surveys of zoo-goers show no meaningful change in their attitudes toward conservation before and after their visit. Did a lot of 4 year olds fill out these surveys? Both the guest and the interviewer dismissed the value of having children see real animals and build empathy toward other creatures (not something they can really do by watching “nature documentaries” as the guest suggests). Unless I’m mistaken, this is the point of the listener Dave’s story about having a deeply meaningful interaction with another non-human primate at the zoo. This interaction helped him form a lifelong attitude toward animal welfare and advocacy. Of course this is a complicated issue, but the efforts to steelman the affirmative position were half-hearted and lazy at best, leading to a pretty unconvincing discussion of the topic. Anyhow, maybe the producers of this show should take some notes from the consistently excellent “Grey Area” or the erstwhile Ezra Klein show. That said, I’ll still subscribe and listen to all of the Vox content.
  • quecour
    “like”
    the use of “like” injected into our vocabulary came from the girl movies & shows of the 80’s ( valley girls)
  • Jdoajwnajaks
    Sometimes killing Weeds is a bad thing
    The Weeds was a great show. Matt, Sarah, Ezra, Jane, were all great. Since then it’s been downhill and now it’s hit bottom. No longer worth listening.
  • Carolina Vela
    Why is the new host bad
    This podcast used to be good, it was my go to and had great conversation with every topic. This new host is painful to listen to and not even a summer break or complete change to the podcast can save it with this host.
  • Mogera Robusta
    Not What it Used to Be
    Edit: Apparently, the response to falling reviews is to keep the unpopular host and ditch the actual show. Keep the element that is driving away your listeners and get rid of the thing that brought us all here to start with. What a terrible idea. The Weeds used to be a great podcast for getting into the fine detail complex policy issues. Since the change in hosting, it’s just another hour of random people talking about social issues, and in a decidedly dumbed-down way compared to the tone of the old show. While those are important conversations, that’s not what this show was supposed to be, and other podcasts do it far better. I’m out.
  • mbossch14
    Those Pesky Delivery Fees
    After listening to this I am wondering who the target audience is? People who are just idiots? People who are so blinded by their views that they don’t comprehend basic economics? The ‘expert’ on this episode showed zero understanding of basic economics, how businesses work, employee/independent contractor. She was either clueless, or chose to ignore basic things important to the conversation in order to push her ‘workers are getting screwed’ agenda. I feel a lot dumber after listening to this.
  • akw92626
    Pesky fees
    I don't know about this one... it took a really long time to meander to the notion of calling the restaurant for pick up and then another 40 minutes to avoid shaming the laziness of if all. Then to top it off to end with the suggestion of tipping even more. It's a pretty privileged discussion when just boycotting the apps to support local businesses is the most obvious solution.
  • ChesterPotts
    Podcasters should not say “like” so much.
    Just listened to the episode about delivery fees and both there host and reporter said “like” as a filler word in every other sentence. It became hard to listen to. It lowered their credibility and unfortunately made them seem very green. If the hosts aren’t trained to not use like all the time, then there are software tools that automatically take words such as “like” and “ummm” out.
  • alschwartz3
    Needs a new host
    Under JQ, the analysis seems to have gotten shallower (she is not bringing out a new white paper every week), but the tone has also grown less appealing. It feels like she begins by feigning more ignorance about the week's topic than should be possible for someone who has been in her job for as long as she has. And that seems to be in service of gently walking the audience toward positions that more or less anyone clicking subscribe on a Vox politics podcast already holds. It makes me miss Yglesias, who despite having a voice made for sign language, had a way of starting from a place of at least some knowledge and digging into whether the latest avaialbe data supported or undermined the positions his acknowledged liberal values were "supposed" to be endorsing. That was a more engaging format than the current iteration.
  • Bsgsksbjhshshs
    Gone downhill
    I’ve been listening to the show since the very beginning. It’s gotten much worse over the last couple years, as has Vox in general. I’ve continued to follow the show and tried listening to select episodes, but I’m disappointed every time. It’s become smug and pretentious and it’s time to just accept that it’s no longer the great show it once was. Only show worth listening from Vox is the Grey Area.
  • Miss the old weeds
    Used to love the show
    It feels like this show is losing its secret sauce. As others noted, I used to love this pod because it felt like there was a strong emphasis on nuance, complexity, and unexpected realizations. Basically I loved when the show really got into the nerdy, messy weeds and data, the stuff below the mainstream top line. Lately, the show has had a strong focus on inequality and systemic inequities. These are very important topics but it has felt like the discussion is demanding of more complexity and fewer easy answers. Maybe this content is revelatory to some, but to me I feel like the episodes have had a sort of no-duh quality (yes, racism is bad, pervasive, and systemic, you don’t need to convince me. I’m sold!). I think there’s a lot of value in talking about these topics, I just wish the discussion was more nuanced. Like the DEI episode, would have loved to hear host and guests talk about the research showing DEI trainings don’t work, what that means, is this research right, and what is path forward? Basically vox has a well read, liberal audience and folks who tune into the weeds expect complex content. It sometimes feels like there is a discussion over whether something is an issue. You don’t need to convince us inequity is an issue - we agree. Now let’s talk about the not so easy things, like what to do about it.
  • The_ship_ is_going_down
    Eviction show
    I completely understand the points you’re making during this episode. Numbers don’t. I honestly, don’t see a clear answer to this problem. Yes, some ppl need help. With that being said, ppl needing help and ppl trying to work the system and get free lodging can look the same. Before I got sober a few years back, I was friends with allot of shady ppl. Most of them tried to get out of paying rent, in one form or another. Most would just hit up church outreach centers. Anyway, I said all that to make the point that ppl are never going to take those in need seriously, until ppl stop trying to use those social programs to skirt their own responsibilities.
  • ian from madison
    Love Keds <3
    I love Kathryn Edward’s’ videos! Thanks for inviting her as a guest. Loved her perspective!!!!!
  • Kidddssguuugffhj
    bds episode
    the episode was basically propaganda. All arguments from those who oppose bds were reduced to “it’s antisemitic.” The host kept referring to the movement being controversial, and then made a bad faith effort to unpack the nuance in such a way that bds didn’t come out looking like a squeaky clean social justice movement.
  • Usability guy
    Lost its weedsy-ness
    I’ve been listening to this show since it began. I’m about to stop. When it started it was very much in the weeds and had more of a focus on actual research and technical details and tended to give a more balanced view. It has lost most of that, most of it seemingly with the big Vox shake up a few years ago. I am a deeply progressive liberal. But I want to understand the facts underneath something and not just listen to something spouting from a left biased perspective, and it feels that that’s where this has gone. I know what my viewpoint is – but I want to understand technical details to understand if I should adjust it, not just listen to confirmation bias
  • Em Castro
    Bring Back The Depth
    I miss when this show was unashamedly wonky. I didn’t love every single take back then, but it forced me to think more deeply about issues in ways recent episodes just don’t. I was particularly irked by the episode about fast fashion. I think the average Vox listener understands the basic problems with modern clothes production — we’re looking for the next level of analysis. I felt a bit insulted by the lack of depth of the episode’s coverage as someone who cares particularly about this issue. Also, leave the host and her vocal fry alone. Those comments come off as quite misogynistic. I have never in my life been distracted by someone’s vocal fry, if I even notice it at all.
  • jsh.boston
    Please stop
    Vocal fry. Is like nails on a blackboard. I am forced to boycott all podcasts who use women that slip into this annoying habit that’s become epidemic. Stop it!
  • Helpersonety
    Too much vocal fry
    Y’all do a terrific job, really, and I want to keep listening. But you sound like a couple of Valley Girls explaining the news. I just can’t take it anymore. Unsubscribing
  • justdanielle
    Biased towards government intervention
    I appreciate the information and viewpoints shared in the show, but it makes me sad that their first solution is always to have the government who created our problems fix those same problems……………………………………………. The hosts are Ivy League, privileged intellectuals who debate philosophy while never talking to people actually affected or promoting community over government (they don’t need community, they have everything they need). They don’t understand the problems real people have while they sit in their ivory tower. Recently they highlighted how the government props up pharmaceutical companies with intellectual property law. (Insulin specifically)………………… ……………………….Instead of addressing the fact that government is supporting and protecting companies who sell insulin at steep prices through patent laws preventing others from making those drugs affordably, they celebrate giving the government MORE POWER over our healthcare by having the State produce medicine. If the insulin patents were not enforced by our government (or the government shared the patent they plan to use publicly), then anyone could make insulin. Seems much easier than starting an entirely new drug manufacturing department of the government……… ………….More and more people are losing trust with our government and we need MORE options, not a single centralized option as dictated by the political party in power. Putting decisions like these in the hands of government is why we are so divided, and we can’t get past the 2 party polarization until we stop trying to control everyone with our party politics.
  • profroguerouge
    Earnest naïf gives guest monologue
    This podcast has grown increasingly introductory in its content. This isn’t really in the weeds, it’s stuck on the surface. I’d prefer the host to actually know more about the topic and have a viewpoint, like Ezra Klein or 538 (back in the day).
  • Mphase
    Aug 9 episode on behavioral/mental health care
    I am a therapist and I feel there are a lot of Important nuances that are being left out of the conversation here and elsewhere, including the Biden proposal. It’s frustrating to me that the bulk of this conversation is being led by policy experts and not the people on the ground providing care. First and foremost, the mental health reimbursement rate from most insurance companies is simply inadequate to provide quality care. It’s not just “not lucrative” it’s just not enough. It’s expensive to become a therapist. It’s 2 years in a graduate program plus post graduate supervision as well as licensure fees and continuing education. Then we have to pay for expenses as well as our own livelihoods. A huge chunk of therapists are also small business owners who need to figure out their insurance, retirement, etc, and the reimbursement rate is just too low. So we leave the networks for our own survival. Most therapists really don’t want lucrative, they just want enough to feel financially stable. Second, people come to therapy for a lot of different reasons, just like some people go to the doctor for a lot of different reasons. If you have a therapist seeing mostly low risk patients with strong support networks, they can take a much higher caseload than clients who take high risk or complex cases, yet the reimbursement rate is the same. 45 min of therapy is 45 min of therapy regardless of the diagnosis or work outside of session. Also, none of that work outside of face to face therapy is compensated. If I have a patient who needs to seek inpatient care and I have to coordinate with the care team at the hospital, that could be hours, but I won’t get paid. This is ESPECIALLY burdensome and problematic for therapists of color, who are more likely to have higher student loan debt and less likely to have any generational wealth to lean on. There is a reason people of color cannot find therapists of color and it’s because the system is horrible for them. Horrible behind reimbursement rates but that’s for another day. Yes, insurance providers put up barriers for patients that make it harder for them to access care. That needs to be stop. But until therapists are paid what they are worth for their work, the issue simply will not be solved.
  • Splashy63
    Your podcasters described an issue, but
    It is near impossible to get an outpatient appointment with either and/or BOTH a psychiatrist and/or a non-MD therapist that is covered by health insurance. It is impossible to do so when your insurance is Managed Medicaid. Many days weeks months hours scouring lists and placing phone calls take your time and take you down bottomless rabbit holes. if one weren’t already mentally I’ll, this thankless task will drive you there. What is changing and when? I eagerly listened to find out.
  • sydwms
    Aug 9 ep on mental health coverage re medicaid
    In alabama on medicaid (not managed care) they will not allow you to choose your provider (for any other medical service on medicaid -except dental for adults- you choose who you see, if they take medicaid). For mental health, you have to go through a state agency and have to be seen in an office. It’s terrible and underfunded and sub par because the need is so high the therapists are so overburdened. It is absolutely not a priority in alabama to care for its residents.
  • marbel1010
    Used to be a balanced/informative left-leaning podcast
    I used to truly appreciate this podcast. Now it’s much less “the weeds”—a deep dive into issues of interest—and much more just self-affirming chatter between progressive left host and guest. The first part of the student loan episode was indistinguishable from just reading twitter outrage. Fine if that’s what you like, but that’s not what I signed up to listen to. Sigh.
  • Mandofresco13
    Balance is needed
    Occasionally listen to weeds to balance out the far right news feed I ingest including media companies like the federalist and newsmax. By listening to far left media like the weeds and far right media like news Max, I get closer to the truth and further away from each viewpoints bias “truth”
  • wfhvjhdbkuf
    Right? Not right.
    Seems as though too many people use the word ‘right’ and ‘you know’, to the point of excess and into annoying.
  • JmitchK
    How did it go so far off the rails?
    I have been a fan of this podcast since at least 2016 when it stood out from the crowd for its critical thinking, deep dives into complex issues, and discussions of intriguing white papers. In its first iteration, you always had the sense that the hosts—Ezra Klein, Matt Yglesias, Dara Lind, and Sarah Kliff—had meticulously researched their topics rather than relying on Twitter or the media narrative of the moment. I also felt that, while the hosts themselves had fairly openly left-leaning views, they nonetheless strove to present issues as objectively as the could and generally tried to avoid relying too heavily on opinions that couldn’t really be supported except through moralistic appeals. I’ve held on and continued to listen to the show through many changes of hosts and all the upheaval at Vox. I think I’m finally turning in my card after the recent Affirmative Action episode. While I support Affirmative Action in hiring and admissions to various degrees, the whole presentation of the subject was so biased and just disingenuous it really left a terrible taste in my mouth. Aside from essentially equating any opponent of the policy to white supremacists, the podcast also minimized the data Harvard was forced to release in which they systematically downgraded the “personality” scores of applicants of East Asian descent. Moreover, they began the historical discussion of these policies with the civil rights movement, employing an out of context MLK quote in a totally bogus way, conveniently neglecting the checkered origin of “holistic admissions” as a means of minimizing the number of Jewish applicants that Ivy League universities would have been forced in a system based solely on aptitude testing. There was also little to no reckoning with the fact that Affirmative Action has become democratically unpopular across all demographic groups, including 60% of Black Americans who oppose race being a consideration in admissions. At this point, considering race in college admissions has about an identical degree of support and disapproval as the use of legacy admissions (about 5-7% approval for each as a major factor in admissions, and about 75% of Americans saying that both should “not be a factor” in admissions). There are good cases to be made for racial preference in admissions and hiring, but the notion that this is self-evident to anyone but a blatant racist is ridiculous. It’s all just a shame because this really was a great show that seemed to avoid some of the more divisive elements of political debate by drilling down to the facts and embraced complexity. Now it seems to have all the journalistic integrity of Fox News, but just on behalf of the other team.
  • 😉💙🙃
    17 May 2023
    The US has a huge new child immigration population. Most of these are ESL and high school students. They may have a large payment to pay for their immigration costs and are often feeling obliged to send monies home to their families. Unfortunately, a lot of these children are being forced into the workforce by their own families…
  • Lucille_Lucille
    I want to keep loving the Weeds
    JQ is a delightful young reporter but simply doesn’t have the tenure in this work to bring the kind of nuanced and referenced thought partnership that prior hosts have contributed to the show’s dynamic. This is not a failure of JQ or other who join the show; this is a failure of Vox to be a compelling place for tenured reporters and thoughtleaders to congregate since its founding class has moved on. Vox has become a de facto incubator for reporters who intend to eventually end up at large national outlets and/or writing books. No shade to Vox for taking on that role in the media ecosystem, but it does mean that a show like this, which relies on relatively experienced hosts connecting current events to trends and prior data, flounders. It was by definition wonky and in the weeds as the title suggests, and the current set up just sets a newer reporter up for failure unless they happen to be a political historian on top of being a good journalist.
  • Curio25
    not what it used to be
    Unfortunately, the new host (Ms. Hill) has a very limited understanding of the subjects covered on the podcast, so the episodes rise and fall on how clearly and intelligently the guests can explain a subject. Do not expect probing or clarifying follow-up questions from the host.
  • Zowg
    Downhill
    Ezra, Sarah, Dara, Jane, Matt were incredibly insightful hosts and always brought a deep dive into wonky topics. Dylan, Jerusalem, and German clearly had less experience and gave a slightly less serious tone, but still brought a lot of insightful and useful conversations. Then at some point without notice this became a completely different show under the same name, but bearing more resemblance to Vox’s Today Explained than it did to the Weeds of before. For many months now it has been a surface-level explainer and interview show. Bring back the white papers! Bring back Dylan (and Dara or anyone else if willing). Bring back the nuanced conversations and difficult debates, not just an explanatory narration or question-and-answer interview format.
  • James Tripoli
    Feb 1 episode
    Very shabby job on the housing discrimination episode. The host and guest dishonestly elide the distinction between de facto and de jure segregation.
  • Structure man 888
    Used to be awesome now it’s terrible
    I used to look forward to the deep dives on this show. Now it’s just an interview podcast. This show was great and unique, now it’s just plain terrible. Unfollowed.
  • Clionrock
    No longer
    This used to an insightful podcast that dissected complicated policies and provided in depth analysis. Now the analysis barely gets past the surface. The topics covered are no longer interesting or captivating.
  • pwj7050
    I miss Sara Kliff
    I used to listen to “The Weeds” regularly but then Sarah Kliff left and then Ezra Klein and they were left with the barely useful Matthew Yglesias. Matthew was tolerable but then he left. And, I don’t miss him at all. I can catch Ezra on his new podcast but I still miss Sarah. She was the best of the bunch.
  • itunes-jan-rate
    Excellent excellent podcast
    This podcast deals with extremely important subjects of our time and not at a superficial level but really delves deep and I learne so much from listening to this podcast. This type of programming makes me think about these Important issues in a serious serious way.
  • csw79
    Gone downhill
    The show used to be good with its old hosts, but now it’s way too dumbed down. I would have thought their target audience to be a lot more well-informed than they seem to believe.
  • river science
    Bring back Matt!
    When Matthew Yglesias hosted this podcast, it was among the best available: great topics and guests and highly insightful and nuanced discussion. Now the topics are much less interesting and the analysis and discussions are fairly predictable...nothing that surprises me or makes me question or refine my existing views, as occurred frequently in the Yglesias era. Time for a reboot.
  • Sam, longtime fan
    A devoted fan calls for a podcast to remain true to itself
    The Weeds began as the flagship podcast for Vox.com. With its wonky and earnest discussion of the minutiae of public policy, it embodied so much of what Vox was attempting to build as a digital publication: deep dives that explain the news in an accessible format. Week after week, hosts Ezra Klein (now at the New York Times), Sarah Kliff (also The NY Times), and Matt Yglesias (now Substacking at Slow Boring) chopped it up on the ins and outs of policy proposals or whatever might be the wonky topic of the day. It was glorious, unique, and made a name for itself, blazing a trail for other policy-minded podcasts to follow. As the years went by other wonky hosts came and went: Jane Coaston (NYT), Dara Lind (ProPublica, now a freelancer), German Lopez (NYT), Jerusalem Demsas (the Atlantic), and Dylan Matthews (still at Vox). Each host brought their own quirks and interests to the mic but remained true to Vox’s and the Weeds’ original spirit. Of late, as other reviewers have highlighted, the Weeds seems to be getting away from deep dives and wonky policy discussions and stepping towards becoming something of a general news discussion podcast. While there is nothing wrong with that, it is not what has brought fans of the Weeds back week after week for hundreds of episodes. I am someone who has listened to this podcast for years and considered it among my favorites; I even attended a live taping some years back. The last few months of episodes have made me question whether it is essential listening the way it once was. If this podcast is moving towards more general explainer fare, it should probably rename itself. My hope is that it will stay true to its animating spirit.
  • 17KJ17
    Very rapidly going downhill!
    Have listened weekly for years but I think it’s time to cut the cord. Feels like this podcast has abandoned its old audience in search of a few new listeners. Conversation has shifted to become very surface level.
  • MaddowFan
    What happened to this?
    Long time listener. This now feels like a high school class not a college level class. You all lost your way in a great brand Vox had. Rename or recast please!
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