• David Remnick Breaks Down Trump, Bezos, and the Press Under Pressure
    Dec 18 2025

    Pulitzer Prize–winning editor David Remnick joins Lachlan Cartwright for a wide-ranging conversation on The Breaker Pod about Trump’s pressure on the press, billionaire media ownership, the weakening of legacy institutions, and how journalism survives its most dangerous era.

    Remnick reflects on running The New Yorker through a century milestone, the collapse of print advertising, adapting to the internet and AI, the chilling effect of political intimidation, and why talent — not tech — still determines whether journalism endures.

    They also discuss Bezos and the Washington Post, the Harvey Weinstein investigation, Trump’s attacks on the media, the role of ownership, and what the next generation of journalism must protect at all costs.

    ⏱ CHAPTERS

    00:00 – Trump, Bezos, and billionaire pressure

    01:25 – The New Yorker at 100

    02:55 – Ad collapse and reader loyalty

    05:35 – Why paywalls finally worked

    07:00 – AI, archives, and audio

    09:00 – Washington Post fallout

    12:00 – Editing, longevity, and succession

    17:50 – Weinstein investigation inside The New Yorker

    22:10 – Trump, aging, and media scrutiny

    27:40 – Free speech and intimidation

    30:05 – Ownership, courage, and standing tall

    33:25 – The future of journalism

    #DavidRemnick #Journalism #MediaIndustry #FreePress #DonaldTrump

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    43 mins
  • Janice Min Breaks Down Netflix’s Power Play and the Industry Fallout
    Dec 9 2025

    Hollywood is reeling after Netflix’s bombshell plan to buy Warner Bros. — and Janice Min joins Lachlan Cartwright to explain exactly why the town is in full-blown panic.

    From mass layoffs to collapsing leverage, shrinking marketplaces, shrinking salaries, and the death of bidding wars, Min breaks down how the merger could reshape Los Angeles, destroy thousands of jobs, and tilt all power toward tech giants. She also dives into HBO’s future, Disney’s succession mess, David Zaslav’s payday, the collapse of the trades, AI disruption, Substack’s rise, and why she built The Ankler as Hollywood’s inside-the-room voice.

    This is one of the most definitive conversations yet about the future of entertainment, streaming, journalism, and power.

    ⏱ CHAPTERS

    00:00 – Welcome to The Breaker Pod at Fish Cheeks

    00:22 – Introducing Janice Min and her media legacy

    01:00 – Netflix shocks Hollywood with plan to buy Warner Bros.

    01:25 – Why the entire town went into meltdown

    02:10 – The history of consolidation and why it always means job losses

    03:00 – LA’s unemployment crisis and what comes next

    03:50 – Shrinking marketplaces and the death of bidding wars

    04:40 – Pay cuts, leverage collapse, and Sarandos spin

    05:30 – Why Netflix triggers Hollywood more than anyone

    07:00 – The Albanian Army metaphor and what it means now

    09:20 – How Netflix + Warner Bros. upends every studio’s strategy

    11:00 – Does the deal get approved? The Trump factor

    13:00 – David Zaslav’s windfall and Warner Bros. whiplash

    15:00 – Is HBO still the crown jewel?

    17:00 – Anxiety, layoffs, fires, and Xanax in Hollywood

    18:30 – The Ankler’s origin story

    21:00 – Why the trades failed and The Ankler thrived

    22:00 – Why chasing scale destroyed journalism

    25:00 – Leo DiCaprio, Danny DeVito, and what US Weekly was like

    27:00 – Managing Jan Wenner and the old magazine wars

    33:00 – Jimmy Finkelstein, Trump, and The Hollywood Reporter

    36:00 – Why the Harvey Weinstein story was impossible to land

    38:00 – The Quibi chapter and lessons from failure

    40:00 – Disney succession in a post-Netflix-Warner world

    44:00 – Is Disney becoming a luxury brand?

    46:00 – AI arrives in Hollywood — quietly

    48:00 – GPT-5, Sora 2, synthetic actors, and the next guild war

    52:00 – Will The Ankler sell? What’s next for niche media

    55:00 – Is subscription fatigue here?

    56:30 – Can the California Post succeed?

    01:00:00 – Closing thoughts

    #JaniceMin #Netflix #Hollywood #MediaIndustry #WarnerBros

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    48 mins
  • Tina Brown on Epstein, Vanity Fair, Olivia Nuzzi, and the Future of Media
    Dec 4 2025

    Tina Brown — legendary editor of Vanity Fair, The New Yorker, Talk, and The Daily Beast — joins Lachlan Cartwright for one of the sharpest, funniest, and most revealing conversations ever on The Breaker Pod.

    Brown reflects on four decades of shaping culture, breaking talent, reinventing media brands, and surviving the chaos of both legacy institutions and modern digital empires. She talks about the myth of celebrity power, the collapse of magazines, the rise of Substack, the limits of tech moguls, Anna Wintour’s misunderstood persona, Harvey Weinstein, Tucker Carlson, Meghan Markle, and why the Epstein story simply will not die.

    This is a masterclass in storytelling, leadership, cultural intuition, and the business of media — delivered by someone who defined it.

    ⏱ Chapters

    00:00 – Welcome to The Breaker Pod from Il Tolo East

    00:22 – Introducing Tina Brown and her cultural impact

    01:10 – Tina Brown on being “feral” and instinct-driven

    01:18 – Editing Vanity Fair and the stars she never landed

    02:00 – Melania Trump covers and the infamous Talk magazine shoots

    03:00 – Olivia Nuzzi, Ryan Lizza, and media reputations

    04:30 – The most misunderstood power players in media

    05:24 – Anna Wintour and the reality behind the persona

    06:26 – Who will succeed Anna Wintour and what Condé Nast needs

    06:58 – Media projects Tina Brown never understood

    07:21 – Which institutions still command fear

    08:07 – Emma Tucker vs. Will Lewis: reviving the Wall Street Journal

    08:53 – What made magazines magical — and what broke them

    10:26 – The art of editing and the seduction of magazines

    12:00 – Highbrow/lowbrow mix and the pleasure principle

    13:36 – Tina’s biggest career flameout: the Talk magazine era with Harvey Weinstein

    14:22 – What Harvey was really like as a media partner

    16:03 – Assignments, gossip columnists, and chaos at Talk

    16:45 – Advice for legacy media and why great content still wins

    17:43 – Tech moguls as media owners and why it never works

    20:00 – The LA Times, arrogance, and the collapse of newsrooms

    21:49 – Celebrity culture, influencers, and the myth of overnight fame

    23:32 – Meghan, Harry, and the realities of royal machinery

    25:45 – The biggest underreported tension inside the monarchy

    26:53 – Epstein, the Epstein class, and why the story is “sticky”

    29:27 – Michael Wolff, The Daily Beast, and selective media outrage

    30:33 – Reinvention as the key to a long career

    31:07 – Live journalism and the rise of investigative summits

    32:55 – The chilling effect and legal threats shaping journalism

    33:50 – Identifying talent: what Tina looks for in a writer

    35:25 – Investigative reporters and the curmudgeon gene

    36:27 – Tucker Carlson, humiliation, and what changed him

    37:45 – Is Substack the future of Tina Brown?

    39:00 – The joy of stats, engagement, and independence

    40:00 – Who should succeed David Remnick at The New Yorker

    41:01 – Gossip, media games, and global reach

    42:00 – What Tina would blow up first if handed a legacy title in 2026

    43:26 – Young talent and the future of investigative journalism

    45:00 – Closing and farewell

    #TinaBrown #MediaIndustry #Journalism #CelebrityCulture #EpsteinFiles

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    🎙️ New episodes weekly — exposing power, decoding media, and asking better questions.

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    44 mins
  • Robert Sherman on War Reporting, the White House, and the Future of Journalism
    Nov 26 2025

    War correspondent and NewsNation White House reporter Robert Sherman joins Lachlan Cartwright for a remarkable conversation about covering Ukraine, Israel, and Washington — and what he learned about the world, journalism, and himself along the way.

    At just 25, Sherman was parachuted into Ukraine just days after the Russian invasion. He shares what he witnessed on the ground, how quickly modern warfare is evolving, and why drone technology is rewriting the battlefield. Sherman also reflects on humility, fear, responsibility, and the emotional toll of reporting from conflict zones.

    The conversation then shifts to his work at the White House — what it’s like covering Donald Trump, how fast the news cycle moves, why access is changing, and how conflict reporting has shaped the questions he asks in the briefing room.

    ⏱ Chapters

    00:00 – Welcome to The Breaker Pod at Tucci’s

    01:10 – Robert Sherman on his new book and lessons from Ukraine

    02:20 – Being 25 in his first war zone

    03:10 – Getting buzzed by fighter jets on Day One

    04:05 – Learning humility in conflict reporting

    05:00 – What drew him into war coverage

    06:00 – The state of play in Ukraine today

    07:20 – Inside a Ukrainian frontline drone lab

    08:55 – The tech revolution changing warfare

    10:30 – How Sherman mentally prepares for danger

    12:00 – Why he reports with iPhones in war zones

    13:25 – Covering the White House after the battlefield

    15:00 – Trump’s promises on Ukraine

    16:10 – The speed of the modern news cycle

    17:00 – How access to the White House has changed

    18:00 – How war shaped the way he interviews voters

    19:25 – What Americans really care about

    21:00 – Road trips, diners, and the real country

    22:05 – What it’s like to fly on Air Force One

    23:45 – How Fox shaped him — and why he left

    25:20 – NewsNation’s mission: news, not noise

    27:00 – The rise of independent journalism

    28:00 – Views on cable news, Substack, and YouTube

    29:20 – How conflict reporting affects mental health

    31:00 – Why he’s still an optimist about America

    32:10 – The audience’s appetite for foreign news

    34:00 – American troops abroad and the connection at home

    35:15 – Regions Sherman wants to cover next: Russia and Iran

    36:20 – Final thoughts and farewell

    #RobertSherman #UkraineWar #Journalism #NewsNation #WhiteHouse

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    25 mins
  • Vanessa Grigoriadis on Fame, Cults, Epstein, and the Death of Magazines
    Nov 21 2025

    Vanessa Grigoriadis — one of the most distinctive magazine writers of her generation — joins Lachlan Cartwright for a sharp, funny, and revealing look at how celebrity, journalism, podcasting, and culture have transformed over the past two decades.

    From Rolling Stone and New York Magazine to Campsite Media, Vanessa traces how the magazine industry became a “Titanic,” how she helped pioneer the boom in narrative podcasts, and why serialized audio storytelling is now collapsing under its own economics. She breaks down the making of her new limited-series on NXIVM’s Allison Mack, why it was so hard to sell, and the surprising place it finally landed.

    The conversation also dives into the weirdness of modern media — TikTok fame, AI-generated podcasts, the Rogan effect, the death of the celebrity profile, the resurgence of Epstein reporting, and the ethics of interviewing powerful people. This is one of the most wide-ranging and brutally honest media conversations on The Breaker Pod to date.

    ⏱️ Chapters

    00:00 – Welcome to The Breaker Pod at Seahorse, Union Square

    01:10 – Vanessa Grigoriadis on leaving magazines for podcasting

    02:10 – Selling spoken features in 2019 and the podcast gold rush

    03:20 – Limited-series podcasts and the crash of the bubble

    04:00 – The Allison Mack project and how the deal finally sold

    05:15 – Why serialized storytelling is struggling

    06:20 – The Rogan phenomenon and first-mover advantage

    07:10 – Crime Junkie, Call Her Daddy, and the new audio power players

    08:20 – Why making money in podcasting is brutally hard

    09:10 – Merch, live events, Substack: the new media ecosystem

    10:30 – Shopping the NXIVM project and why Americans didn’t bite

    12:00 – Why Canadians bought the show

    13:10 – Journalism vs. documentary and why tape gathering is dying

    14:00 – AI podcasts and the 175,000-episode flood

    16:00 – The future of YouTube creators and longform conversation

    17:10 – How Vanessa chooses profile subjects

    18:00 – Early magazine days: Carl Lagerfeld, Paris Hilton, and access

    19:20 – Celebrity culture in the TikTok era

    20:10 – The death of the real celebrity profile

    22:00 – The red-rope era of journalism

    23:15 – Will print die? Why magazines still matter

    24:50 – Epstein reporting and the story that won’t die

    26:40 – Public records, Florida law, and early Epstein coverage

    28:10 – Why the Epstein story resurges every election cycle

    29:30 – Best interview, worst interview, and the one that got away

    31:40 – Lies, tape recorders, and protecting credibility

    33:10 – How public personas diverge from reality

    34:40 – Regrets, write-arounds, and the ethics of profiling

    36:00 – Final thoughts and closing

    #VanessaGrigoriadis #jeffreyepstein #MediaIndustry #Epstein #EpsteinFiles

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    35 mins
  • Piers Morgan: “Woke Is Dead” — Inside His War on Cancel Culture
    Nov 13 2025

    Media firebrand Piers Morgan joins Lachlan Cartwright on The Breaker Pod for an unfiltered conversation about the collapse of woke culture, the future of journalism, and why he believes common sense is finally fighting back.

    From his feuds with Meghan & Harry to his friendship with Donald Trump, Morgan shares candid insights into celebrity hypocrisy, legacy media’s decline, and how YouTube is changing everything. The episode also covers his new book Woke Is Dead, his decades inside the Murdoch empire, and his vision for the next generation of journalists.

    ⏱ Chapters 00:00 – Welcome to The Breaker Pod 01:20 – “Go Woke and Go Broke”: How DEI Lost Its Way 04:00 – Growing Up in a Pub & Learning to Debate 06:00 – Cancel Culture, Common Sense & Free Speech 08:40 – Vegan Sausage Rolls & Virtue Signaling 10:50 – Meghan & Harry: “The High Priests of Woke” 14:50 – Inside the Murdoch Machine & Rupert’s Legacy 18:40 – From Fleet Street to YouTube: The Future of News 23:20 – Tabloid Journalism & Why Scoops Still Matter 26:10 – Trump, Fox, and the Politics of Power 32:00 – Piers on Trumpism, Polls & “Finding His Feet” 36:40 – Barry Weiss & the New CBS News Shake-Up 41:20 – Tucker Carlson, Nick Fuentes & Platforming Debates 44:30 – The Next Generation of Journalists 47:00 – Trump, Mellowness & Being Your Own Boss 51:00 – Legacy, Lessons & What Comes Next

    🎙 About the Episode After decades at the center of the media storm, Piers Morgan reflects on controversy, courage, and reinvention.

    From Fleet Street to Fox to YouTube, he explains why free debate still matters — and why he’s not done stirring things up yet.

    📺 Watch the full conversation for unfiltered insights into power, politics, and the fight for free speech.

    👍 Like, comment, and subscribe for new episodes of The Breaker Pod every week.

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    #piersmorgan #trump #harryandmeghan #wokeism #media

    🎙️ New episodes weekly — exposing power, decoding media, and asking better questions.

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    30 mins
  • Inside the A.I. Bubble with Alex Heath
    Nov 7 2025

    Alex Heath, tech journalist and founder of Sources, joins Lachlan Cartwright at Super Burrito in Greenwich Village to talk about breaking away from legacy media, the rise of AI, and how technology and journalism are colliding in 2025.

    Heath reveals what really happened inside OpenAI, why Substack is changing the rules of reporting, and how creators like him are reshaping the future of independent media. From Sam Altman to Zuckerberg to the Ellisons, this conversation dives deep into power, disruption, and the future of truth online.

    ⏱ Chapters 00:00 – Welcome to The Breaker Pod at Super Burrito 01:00 – Alex Heath on Leaving The Verge and Building Sources 04:00 – The Reality of the AI Bubble and What Reporters Miss 07:00 – Inside Sam Altman’s Dinner and OpenAI’s Power Games 10:00 – Media Meets Tech: The Ellisons, TikTok and the New Murdochs 14:00 – How AI Is Changing Reporting and Storytelling 18:00 – Independence in 2025: Substack, Spotify and Platform Power 22:00 – Legacy Media vs Independents — Who Survives? 25:00 – Vox, Podcasts and the Next Wave of Media Networks 28:00 – Tech Talent and AI Poaching — Half-Billion Dollar Hires 31:00 – Elon Musk, Sam Altman and the Religion of Tech 35:00 – What Comes After Large Language Models (World Models Explained) 39:00 – Can Journalists Keep Up with AI? 42:00 – The Next Big Storylines in Silicon Valley (2026 Preview) 47:00 – Closing Thoughts and Farewell

    🎙 About the Episode Tech journalist Alex Heath built his career breaking stories at The Verge and The Information — now he’s building his own media brand. In this episode, he talks about the AI revolution, the future of independent news, and why truth and taste will be the most valuable currencies in media’s next chapter.

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    32 mins
  • Vicki Ward on Epstein, Power, and the Golden Age of Journalism
    Oct 31 2025

    Vicki Ward — bestselling author, investigative journalist, and founder of Vicki Ward Investigates — joins Lachlan Cartwright at Delmonico’s in New York City to talk about the powerful people she’s covered and the future of journalism.

    From her groundbreaking Epstein reporting to her work on Jared Kushner, Leon Black, and the world of Manhattan power, Ward reflects on decades of exposing influence, abuse, and secrecy. She also shares what it means to go independent in an age where truth and storytelling matter more than ever.

    ⏱ Chapters 00:00 – Welcome to The Breaker Pod at Delmonico’s 01:00 – Vicki Ward on Epstein’s Victims and “Nobody’s Girl” 03:00 – The Psychology of Control: Epstein, Ghislaine, and the Victims 08:30 – Why the Epstein Story Keeps Coming Back 10:30 – Power, Money, and Who Protected Epstein 14:00 – What the Media Missed: Why It Took #MeToo to Expose Him 17:00 – Jared and Ivanka: The Evolution of the Kushners 19:30 – How Kushner’s Deals Shaped the Middle East 23:00 – The Idaho Murders and Understanding Motives 28:00 – Luigi Mangione and America’s Fascination with True Crime 32:00 – Barry Weiss and CBS: “A Breath of Fresh Air” 34:30 – Going Independent: Life After Legacy Media 38:00 – Who Wields Power Well — and Who’s Faking It 40:00 – Why This Might Be the Golden Age of Journalism 41:30 – Closing Thoughts and Farewell

    🎙 About the Episode After decades reporting on billionaires, political operators, and media power brokers, Vicki Ward tells The Breaker Pod why she believes journalism’s best days might still lie ahead.

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    🎙️ New episodes weekly — exposing power, decoding media, and asking better questions.

    #epsteinfiles #epstein #mangione #kohberger #truecrimestories

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    42 mins