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Atomic Gambit: Black Saturday

JFK35 - A podcast by the JFK Library Foundation

Release Date: 10/25/2022

Election 2024: Passing the Baton show art Election 2024: Passing the Baton

JFK35 - A podcast by the JFK Library Foundation

In 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson told the nation he would not seek re-election as President. This year, President Joe Biden stepped down in the middle of the 2024 presidential campaign. In this episode, we speak with LBJ Foundation President and CEO Mark Updegrove along with presidential historian Alexis Coe about presidents who chose to “pass the baton” and the country’s legacy of ensuring peaceful transitions between presidents for nearly 250 years.

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Election 2024: The High Costs of Presidential Campaigns show art Election 2024: The High Costs of Presidential Campaigns

JFK35 - A podcast by the JFK Library Foundation

In John F. Kennedy’s Presidential Campaign, there were many concerns over the high costs of running for president. Still, the money required to run in 1960 is dwarfed by the expenses of today’s presidential and congressional campaigns. Former Senator Russell Feingold, a chief architect of bipartisan campaign finance reform, discusses how our elections got to this point and how America can still untangle the mess of financing political campaigns.

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Election 2024: Political Violence and Presidential Campaigns show art Election 2024: Political Violence and Presidential Campaigns

JFK35 - A podcast by the JFK Library Foundation

For the first time in more than 40 years, a president was fired on and injured by an assassin’s bullet. In this episode, we speak with presidential historian Alexis Coe about the history of violence against presidential candidates and author and writer Tom Nichols about how the country’s intensely partisan politics have spurred violent acts across American communities.

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Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy - A Political Matriarch show art Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy - A Political Matriarch

JFK35 - A podcast by the JFK Library Foundation

Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy was the mother of a 20th century political dynasty. In this episode, we’ll explore her history through the museum she helped create at the John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic Site and speak with historian Barbara Perry, author of Rose Kennedy: The Life and Times of a Political Matriarch.

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From Moonshot to Earthshot show art From Moonshot to Earthshot

JFK35 - A podcast by the JFK Library Foundation

This Earth Day, the JFK Library Foundation announced the Earthshot Innovation Challenge: Northeast U.S. Edition. The challenge is a $100,000 prize to ignite regional innovations to address climate change. Foundation Executive Director Rachel Flor discusses the award and when winner’s will be announced.

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A Conversation with U.S. Archivist Colleen Shogan show art A Conversation with U.S. Archivist Colleen Shogan

JFK35 - A podcast by the JFK Library Foundation

In 1934, the National Archives and Records Administration was created to oversee the protection and dissemination of governmental and historic records of the United States. In this episode, we speak with the Dr. Colleen Shogan, the 11th Archivist of the United States.

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Hemingway's Letters show art Hemingway's Letters

JFK35 - A podcast by the JFK Library Foundation

The Hemingway Letters Project seeks to publish a comprehensive edition of the writer Ernest Hemingway’s letters. In this episode, we talk with two of the project's editors, Verna Kale and Sandra Spanier, in advance of the publication of volume 6 of the series. We talk about the detective work they’ve done and how Hemingway’s letters give a deeper understanding of the man.

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Being the President show art Being the President

JFK35 - A podcast by the JFK Library Foundation

What did President Kennedy think of the presidency himself? And what makes a president? In this episode, we hear from JFK himself and talk to historian Alexis Coe about her project at New America on the presidency, as well as her work as an historian.

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Bayard Rustin: The Man Behind the March show art Bayard Rustin: The Man Behind the March

JFK35 - A podcast by the JFK Library Foundation

On August 28, 1963, 250,000 people of different races, religions, and economic backgrounds convened on the nation’s capital for the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. The man behind organizing the event – Bayard Rustin – is profiled in a new Oscar-nominated film “Rustin.” In this episode, we speak with producers of the film, Tonia Davis and Bruce Cohen, and historian Dr. Clayborne Carson of Stanford University.

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Let Us Begin: A Legacy Continued show art Let Us Begin: A Legacy Continued

JFK35 - A podcast by the JFK Library Foundation

In February 1963, President Kennedy said, “A man may die, but an idea lives on.” In this episode, we look at the legacy JFK left behind and how some are continuing the spirit of his work. We speak with NASA astronaut Victor Glover who represents the new generation of space explorers and is set to be the first black man to travel to the Moon. We also have a conversation with JFK Presidential Library Director Alan Price and JFK Library Foundation Executive Director Rachel Flor about their work preserving President Kennedy’s legacy for generations to come.

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More Episodes

October 27, 1962, also known as “Black Saturday," was the most dangerous day of the Cuban Missile Crisis as events began to spiral out of control. With two contrasting messages from Chairman Khrushchev, President Kennedy had to find a way to resolve the crisis or risk a nuclear war. Outside of the White House, the crisis took a fatal turn and war was expected to break out at any moment.