• Mark Arax on California's extraction ethos
    Jul 9 2026

    The author and journalist Mark Arax joins us to discuss his recent sweeping essay in the Guardian, published under the headline "California: Land of Plunder and Hypocrisy." From the Gold Rush to the artificial intelligence boom, Arax explores how California's myths, ambitions, and repeated reinventions have often concealed a far more complicated history of extraction, contradiction, and self-deception.

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    40 mins
  • Matthew Stepka and the Silicon Valley that once was
    Jun 26 2026

    Matthew Stepka is a product of Silicon Valley — a teenager who built worlds on an Atari, a founder of one of the first internet cafés, and a Google insider shepherding its mission projects. He offers a deeply personal account of a place that once believed companies should do good, the anxiety shadowing it now, and why he hopes artificial intelligence might yet honor those older California values.

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    39 mins
  • Jonathan Weber on what the tech boom cost San Francisco
    Jun 18 2026

    Jonathan Weber, a longtime San Francisco journalist, is the author of the new history "City on the Edge: Technology, Politics, and the Fight for the Soul of San Francisco." He explains how the internet took root in the city, how local politics transformed as tech grew from 2% of jobs to 35%, and how the artificial intelligence wave has finally made the industry indigenous to San Francisco. He worries the wealth is turning a misfit city into a money town.

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    51 mins
  • David Beard on Brian Wilson, the Beach Boys, and the music that called us west
    Jun 11 2026

    One year after the death of the legendary Beach Boys leader Brian Wilson, author David Beard joins us to talk about his new book, "All Summer Long: Conversations with The Beach Boys from Surfin' to SMiLE." Beard discusses how the Beach Boys didn't just make iconic music but defined Southern California itself — surf, sun, cars, the postcard invitation west — while Wilson quietly pushed pop into uncharted territory.

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    47 mins
  • Dan Walters on the governor's race and ungovernable California
    Jun 4 2026

    CalMatters columnist Dan Walters joins the podcast to talk about California's strangest governor's race in a half-century: a field with no clear frontrunner, marquee names who sat out, and a billionaire's fortune that couldn't buy a finish. With Xavier Becerra now the heavy favorite and ballots still trickling in, Walters explains why the state may be ungovernable — and what the costly, exhausting, and largely uninformative campaign can and can't fix.

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    41 mins
  • Ivo Jeramaz: The Paris tasting at 50 and the future of California wine
    May 28 2026

    Ivo Jeramaz grew up in the same Croatian soil as his uncle Mike Grgich — the man who made the Napa Valley Chardonnay that beat the French at the Paris Wine Tasting of 1976, which recently turned 50. Jeramaz later followed his uncle to California, where he carries that legacy forward as winemaker at Grgich Hills, navigating an industry under pressure. He is still connected to that afternoon in Paris, holding fast to the belief that the land, farmed right, tells you everything you need to know.

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    22 mins
  • Joe Mathews on California's generic governor's race
    May 21 2026

    With eleven days to go before the June 2 primary, Joe Mathews examines how California's race for governor has become strangely disconnected from the state itself. With almost all the campaigns built around generic national talking points and anti-Trump messaging, Mathews explores the growing nationalization of state politics, the issues candidates avoid, and why the actual mechanics of governing California barely seem to be part of the conversation.

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    33 mins
  • Professor William Riggs on why we fear Waymos more than bad drivers
    May 14 2026

    William Riggs is a professor of engineering and management at the University of San Francisco and an expert on transportation innovation. He says San Francisco — now ground zero for America's autonomous vehicle future, with more than 1,000 Waymos on its streets — is exposing a strange contradiction: Society tolerates the deadly carnage caused by human drivers while holding self-driving cars to an impossible standard, even as the data increasingly suggests the technology will save lives.

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    33 mins