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The Uncertain Hour

The Uncertain Hour - Investigative Podcast
Krissy Clark
Latest Episode

Without a home in a pandemic

Jun 11, 2020 · Season 4 · Episode 5
The Exhibition Hall at the Seattle Center has been turned into a temporary men's shelter on April 6, 2020 in Seattle, Washington. The space currently has 150 beds, separated six feet apart.

Episodes 21 - 30 of 52

  • Jun 3, 2020 · Season 4 · Episode 4

    There are cracks in the foundation of our housing system

    There are cracks in the foundation of our housing system
    F. Roy Kemp/BIPS/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

    Generations of discriminatory housing policy, and lending practices that favored white borrowers, have entrenched segregation and inequality in American cities.

  • May 27, 2020 · Season 4 · Episode 3

    Unemployment benefits are hard to get. That’s on purpose.

    ![Some of the first recipients wait to receive benefits at the division office of the State Employment Service in San Francisco, California, 1938.
    Library of Congress

    The program dates back to the Great Depression, and even then it wasn’t meant to cover everyone.

  • May 20, 2020 · Season 4 · Episode 2

    An unequal history of quarantines

    Whether it's 14th century Italy or present-day America, the history of quarantine has always been divided along economic lines.
    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    Long gone are the days of the government sending your family fennel sausage, cheese and wine to make it through.

  • May 13, 2020 · Season 4 · Episode 1

    You’re an essential worker. Do you get essential protections?

    William McNeal was a chicken catcher, a job that severely damaged his hands. Now he drives a van crowded with other chicken catchers, with no protective gear to reduce the risk of getting COVID-19. “We're putting our lives on the line to make sure everybody got food, in various places, to eat,” McNeal said.

    America’s chicken supply chain is in danger, in part because its workers are getting sick. Some are dying.

  • May 6, 2020 · Season 4

    A History of Now: The Trailer

    The Uncertain Hour returns with new episodes next week.
    Marketplace/iStock/Getty Images

    This season, we explore the history and policies that help make sense of this current moment, a time where issues of wealth and poverty feel even more stark than usual. New episodes start May 13.

  • Dec 19, 2019 · Season 3 · Episode 7

    A new piece of the opioid crisis origin story, revealed

    A new piece of the opioid crisis origin story, revealed
    Darren McCollester/Getty Images

    Why were some states hit harder than others? New research builds upon our reporting to connect the dots between drug regulations and marketing.

  • President George H.W. Bush addressing the nation on Sept. 5, 1989. The president illustrated the threat of drugs by holding up a baggie of crack he said had been seized across the street from the White House.
    Courtesy: George Bush Presidential Library and Museum

    Today, we’re revisiting our episode about that speech, the events that led up to it and the lives it affected.

  • Apr 18, 2019 · Season 3 · Episode 6

    Kicking the habit

    Nurse Joie Cantrell checks the Naloxone supply in December at the Virginia Department of Health in Wise. Every participant of the needle exchange program is offered Naloxone, which can reverse an overdose.
    Julia Rendleman for Marketplace

    Many people in Wise County agree that they can’t jail their way out of a drug epidemic, but there’s a lot less agreement on what to do instead. And we find out what happened to Joey Ballard.

  • Apr 11, 2019 · Season 3 · Episode 5

    Supply

    Lt. Ryan Phillips of the Wise County sheriff's office drives through Appalachia, Virginia, on Friday, Dec. 7, 2018. Phillips has seen the opioid epidemic up close as a law enforcement officer and life-long resident of Wise County. "I knew them [persons suffering addiction] before they got addicted, so I know they're not just some dope head," he said.
    Julia Rendleman/Marketplace

    It’s not easy being an undercover cop in a county of just 40,000 people. But drugs were making it hard for Bucky Culbertson to run his business, so he made it his business to get rid of drugs.

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About the show

Obscure policies, forgotten histories and why America’s like this.

"The Uncertain Hour" explains our weird, complicated and often unequal economy — and why some people get ahead and some get left behind.

Season six is an up close look at the welfare-to-work industrial complex and some of the multimillion-dollar for-profit companies that run many welfare offices around the country today. By weaving together eye-opening moments in history with immersive field reporting, the series brings us a hidden-in-plain-sight story about the strange way our cash welfare system has evolved and where it might be headed. Today, anyone who signs up for cash welfare must quickly find a job or navigate a maze of work requirements in order to qualify for a government check, to prove they’re not freeloading off the government. But where did this idea that you should have to work to benefit from the social safety net come from? Does the policy actually help people climb out of poverty? And how are for-profit welfare centers cashing in? 

As politicians call for more work requirements in safety-net programs, this series tells story about what work requirements feel like up close, and the industry that has been built around these policies that coerce labor out of low-income people — sometimes for what amounts to less than minimum wage.  

Krissy Clark is the award-winning host and senior correspondent of "The Uncertain Hour," where she tries to make sense of the wonky policies that shape wealth, poverty and economic mobility in America. Her reporting has been featured by outlets including "99% Invisible," The Center for Investigative Reporting and "Last Week Tonight With John Oliver."  

Find “The Uncertain Hour” wherever you get your podcasts.

The Uncertain Hour