In the three years that Saudi Arabia, supported by the United States, has been at war with the Houthis in Yemen, very few journalists have been allowed into the country to document what’s happening there. The New York Times journalist Tyler Hicks is one. This is the story of how he came to take a photograph of Amal Hussain that drew international attention to the country’s plight. Guest: Tyler Hicks, a senior photographer for The Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.
A Forced Reckoning in the Restaurant Industry
Nuclear Secrets and Taped Conversations: A Look at the Evidence Against Trump.
The Sunday Read: ‘The Most Dangerous Person in the World Is Randi Weingarten’
Special Episode: A Second Trump Indictment
There’s No Escaping Wildfire Smoke
A Guide to the Suddenly Crowded Republican Primary
Turned Away and Left at Sea
The Fight Over Phonics
The New Afghanistan, Through the Eyes of Three Women
Special Episode: A Crash Course in Dembow, a Misunderstood Pantry Staple and Simple Tips to Keep Calm and Carry On
America’s Big City Brain Drain
How the G.O.P. Picked Trans Kids as a Rallying Cry
Republicans Impeach One of Their Own
The Godfather of A.I. Has Some Regrets
Special Episode: An Interplanetary Jazz Legend, a Cosmic Vegetable and a Psychic Prodigy
The Ticking Clock of a U.S. Debt Default
The Headlines: May 26
Millions of Dollars, Thousands of Robocalls and 1 Legal Loophole
The Headlines: May 25
Ukraine Lost in Bakhmut. But It Has Much Bigger Plans.
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