Afleveringen
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This week on the âModern Loveâ podcast, weâre sharing an episode from another New York Times podcast: âThe Daily.â
For decades, breast augmentations have been one of the most popular cosmetic surgeries in the United States. But in recent years, a new trend has emerged: the breast reduction. Lisa Miller, who reported the story for The Times, explores why this procedure has become so common with Rachel Abrams, the episodeâs host.
This episode originally aired Nov. 20, 2024. You can find âThe Dailyâ wherever you listen to âModern Love.â
How to submit a Modern Love Essay to The New York Times
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Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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It felt as if the dating world hit a breaking point this year. With news headlines like âIs Dating a Total Nightmare for You Right Now?â and âWhy the Young and the Single Canât Commit to Dating Appsâ appearing frequently, it became clear that there was a lot of pent up frustration.
We gave you all the opportunity to let it out, and asked you to send in voice memos about your worst dates. We enlisted the help of the actor Joel Kim Booster, who hosts the podcast Bad Dates, to turn your worst dates into tidbits of wisdom for a brand-new year of dating in 2025.
Hereâs how to submit a Modern Love Essay to The New York Times.
Hereâs how to submit a Tiny Love Story.
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Fake profiles. Unresponsive texters. Boring conversations. An endless stream of dudes on boats holding the fish theyâve caught. Talk to single people using dating apps, and they are likely to tell you that the experience is awful, but that they have to be there. Dating apps are just how singles meet one another these days. But what if artificial intelligence could fix modern dating? The Times reporter Eli Tan explored that hypothesis.
Eli joined several new dating apps that seek to duplicate a userâs personality via chatbot and let the A.I. clone do the dating. He also received flirting advice from a squadron of A.I. dating coaches. He used that advice on real dates, actually trying to find a connection, to see how the A.I.âs guidance held up.
On this episode of Modern Love, Eli tells us what happened when he revealed his use of A.I. to his dates, and whether the technology may actually push us toward more authentic interactions on the apps.
How to submit a Modern Love Essay to The New York Times
How to submit a Tiny Love Story
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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When Daniel Jones started the Modern Love column in 2004, he called for submissions and hoped the idea would catch on. Twenty years and over a thousand published essays later, Modern Love is a trove of real-life love stories.
Jones has put so much of himself into editing the column over the years, but as he tells Anna Martin, the host of the âModern Loveâ podcast, the stories shared in the columns have influenced him, too. Today, he talks about three Modern Love essays that have changed the way he thinks about love and relationships.
Read the essays below:
One Bouquet of Fleeting Beauty, Please
Nursing a Wound in an Appropriate Setting
My First Lesson in Motherhood
How to submit a Modern Love Essay to The New York Times
How to submit a Tiny Love Story
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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Townsend Davis had been married for more than a decade when his wife, Bridget, was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimerâs disease. Their lives changed immediately. Townsend became Bridgetâs caregiver, sorting her medication day after day, making their home accessible, and finding someone to look after her while he worked and raised their sons. He was committed to Bridget, and wanted to be there for her as her condition progressed.
One day, not long after her diagnosis, Bridget told Townsend she wanted him eventually to find a new partner. But Townsend couldnât imagine it. Searching for another love seemed too complicated, and he was focused on caring for Bridget and raising their family.
Then, years later, Townsend met Deb.
On this episode of Modern Love, Townsend explains what it was like to forge a new partnership as he remained married to Bridget, and what happened when he brought his wife and his girlfriend together for a Thanksgiving dinner.
This episode is adapted from Townsendâs Modern Love essay from 2024, âA Family Dinner With My Wife and Girlfriend.â
Modern Love is looking for your stories! Weâre working on an episode about the dating memories you want to forget. We want to know: What was the worst date you went on this year? What happened? And what are you trying to do differently when it comes to love in the new year? Whether youâre singled or partnered, tell us about your bad dates. Send us your story by recording a voice memo and emailing it to [email protected]. Please include your name and where youâre based. You might hear your voice on a future episode of Modern Love.
How to submit a Modern Love Essay to The New York Times
How to submit a Tiny Love Story
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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When Laura Cathcart Robbins checked into rehab for a severe Ambien addiction, all she could think about was getting out and going home to her two young sons. Laura was also in the middle of a divorce and facing a possible custody battle so she wasnât looking to make her life more complicated. Laura tells the host Anna Martin about the unexpected bond she formed during the worst 30 days of her life and what happened when she came out the other side.
This episode is adapted from Lauraâs 2024 essay, âMarriage Made an Actor Out of Me.â Her memoir, âStash: My Life in Hidingâ is available now, and she hosts a podcast called âThe Only One in the Room.â
What were your worst dates of 2024? Weâre working on an episode about the dating memories you want to forget. We want to know: What was the worst date you went on this year? What happened? And what do you want to do differently when it comes to love in the new year? You donât have to be single to share your story. If youâre partnered and went on an awful date, we want to hear from you, too. Send us your story by recording a voice memo (just a few minutes long) and emailing it to [email protected]. Please include your name and where youâre from. You might hear your voice on a future episode of Modern Love.
How to submit a Modern Love Essay to The New York Times
How to submit a Tiny Love Story
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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Stories of romantic love are everywhere, but the actor, singer and comedian Bridget Everett says great friendships deserve our time and attention, too. Not just onscreen, but in reality.
On the HBO Original series âSomebody Somewhereâ (now in its third and final season), Everett stars as Sam, a character inspired by the actorâs own life. She tells Anna about how heartbreaking, hilarious and central platonic friendship is in the fictional world of the show, and in Everettâs own relationships.
Everett also reads a Modern Love essay called âWhen Your Greatest Romance Is a Friendship,â by the novelist Victor Lodato. Lodato was in his 40s when he accidentally found his âperson,â and became the platonic life partner of an artist in her 80s who lived across the street.
âSomebody Somewhereâ is now streaming on Max.
In April 2024, Lodato published âHoney,â a novel inspired by Austin Brayfield, the friend he wrote about in his essay.
Want to leave us a voice mail message on the Modern Love hotline? Call (212) 589-8962âŹ, and please include your name, hometown and a callback number.
How to submit a Modern Love Essay to The New York Times
How to submit a Tiny Love Story
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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The actress and producer Mayan Lopez has seen a majority of her life play out on television.
Her father, the comedian George Lopez, produced and starred in a hit â90s sitcom based on his real-life relationship with Ann Serrano, Mayanâs mother. But their fictionalized story became a reality when she watched her parents go through a very messy, public divorce.
The experience could have shattered the family beyond repair. But more than a decade later, Mayan and her father have turned their painful experience into another sitcom on NBC, based on their relationship. Itâs all very meta. The show is called âLopez vs. Lopez.â
Mayan reads a Modern Love essay about a daughter who also watched her parentsâ marriage fall apart, but then as an adult sees them repair their relationship. The essay, âThe Original Conscious Uncouplers,â by Cole Kazdin, explores what it means to redefine what a family means after divorce.
Want to leave us a voice mail message on the Modern Love hotline? Call (212) 589-8962âŹ, and please include your name, hometown and a callback number.
How to submit a Modern Love Essay to The New York Times
How to submit a Tiny Love Story
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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Madeline de Figueiredo lost her husband, Eli, just a year after they married. After his death, she tried everything she could to reconnect with him: cooking from his recipe book, dancing to playlists he made, watching videos of him and listening to voice mail messages he left her. But her grief persisted.
Then, on what was supposed to be Eliâs 27th birthday, Madeline realized she could use A.I. to recreate his voice and try to talk to him again. On this episode of the âModern Loveâ podcast, Madeline tells us what it felt like to hear that recreation of Eliâs voice, and how it changed the way she reconnects with him.
This episode is adapted from Madelineâs Modern Love essay from 2024, âOur Last, Impossible Conversation.â
We want to hear from you! Weâre looking for stories, thoughts and feelings about egg freezing. Are you planning to freeze your eggs? What are you considering? Have you frozen your eggs? What happened, and how do you feel about it now? Leave us a voice mail message on the Modern Love hotline at (212) 589-8962âŹ. Please include your name, hometown and a callback number.
Want to submit your own Modern Love essay to The New York Times? Read how, or consider submitting a Tiny Love Story.
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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Whether itâs Cher or Paul Mescal, Amelia Dimoldenberg can turn her âdatesâ at a fast-food restaurant into chemistry-fueled, revealing interviews. The dates may be fake, but viewers are always left with the impression that the celebrity guest would probably be game for a second one.
Amelia reads a Modern Love essay from Rachel Fields, who is not sure how her last date has gone. After sending a risky text message, Rachelâs insecurities cloud her morning routine as she waits for a response. Amelia offers tips on how to soothe the anxieties that creep up in the early phases of dating, and how to feel confident throughout the process.
Her show, âChicken Shop Dateâ is celebrating its 10th anniversary this month.
Want to leave us a voice mail message on the Modern Love hotline? Call (212) 589-8962⏠and please include your name, hometown, and a callback number in your message.
How to submit a Modern Love Essay to The New York Times
How to submit a Tiny Love Story
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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In the new movie âWe Live in Time,â the actor Andrew Garfield plays a newly divorced man named Tobias who falls in love with a chef named Almut, played by Florence Pugh. Their story feels epic and expansive, but still intimate. It focuses on the small, everyday moments that make up a love story: washing dishes together after a dinner party, sharing biscuits, smelling fruit at a farmersâ market. These are the moments that sustain them through Almutâs excruciatingly difficult medical crisis.
In this episode, Garfield reads the Modern Love essay âLearning to Measure Time in Love and Loss,â by Chris Huntington. His reading was unlike any other in the history of this show. Mr. Garfield was so moved by Mr. Huntingtonâs essay that he spoke in a surprisingly raw way with the host Anna Martin about the need for art to crack us all open, including himself.
We want to hear from you! This year is the 20th anniversary of the Modern Love column, and we want to know what impact reading the column has had on you. Has reading Modern Love made a difference in how you think about your own relationships? How? Tell us by leaving a voice mail message at (212) 589-8962âŹ. Please include your name, hometown and a callback number, and you might hear yourself on a future episode.
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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Courtenay Hameister worked hard to stop feeling shame about her body size, but she also had a cruel inner monologue that just wouldnât leave her alone. At times, her internalized fatphobia was so powerful, she couldnât think about romance at all. But when Courtenay started dating Jason, everything felt different. He was fat, too, as well as smart, funny, and handsome.
When Courtenay realized she was starting to gain weight again, though, she became obsessed with the idea that other people were judging her and Jason, and she made a decision she would immediately regret.
This episode is adapted from her 2023 essay âWere We the âFat Coupleâ?â
Leave a message on the Modern Love hotline! This year (2024) is the 20th anniversary of the Modern Love column, and we want to know what impact it has had on you. Has reading Modern Love made a difference in how you think about your own relationships? How? Tell us in a voice mail message at (212) 589-8962âŹ. Please include your name, location and callback number, and you might hear yourself on a future episode.
How to submit a Modern Love Essay to The New York Times
How to submit a Tiny Love Story
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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On the HBO high finance drama âIndustry,â basically everyone serves cruel insults. Itâs part of the culture at their bank, Pierpoint. But Myhaâlaâs character, Harper Stern, goes after friends and enemies with deep, cutting verbal attacks.
Myhaâla reads a Modern Love essay by a woman with the opposite problem: Laura Pritchett and her husband have avoided conflict for so long, she writes, that the fights theyâre not having are tearing them apart. Myhaâla also tells the host, Anna Martin, about the kind of communication style she strives to maintain, and what itâs like when she and her fiancĂ©, Armando Rivera, find themselves in a fight.
The Season 3 finale of âIndustryâ drops Sunday night on HBO.
Laura Pritchett has written seven novels, including her latest, âThree Keys.â
Want to leave us a voice mail message on the Modern Love hotline? If so, please include your name, your hometown and a callback number in your message: (212) 589-8962âŹ
How to submit a Modern Love essay to The New York Times
How to submit a Tiny Love Story
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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The actor Gillian Anderson (âThe X-Files,â âThe Fall,â âSex Educationâ) has become an advocate for sexual openness, whether through her on-screen personas, launching a libido-boosting soda brand, attending the Golden Globes in a vulva-embroidered dress or through her new book, âWant: Sexual Fantasies by Anonymous,â which showcases the secret fantasies of anonymous women, curated by Ms. Anderson herself.
Today, Ms. Anderson reads and discusses the Modern Love essay âOn Tinder, Off Sex,â which follows a woman who becomes unintentionally celibate after a painful breakup. The author fantasizes about past and potential loves but canât seem to break out of what her doctor has called âsecondary abstinence.â Ms. Anderson tells us about a time she felt similarly, and how a good yoga practice snapped her out of it.
We want to hear from you. Tell us how love is showing up in your own life. Call in at (212) 589-8962⏠with your name, location and story.
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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Actor Peter Gallagher (Sex, Lies, & Videotape and The O.C.) met his wife, Paula Harwood, over forty years ago in college in a stairwell meet-cute. Since then, theyâve maintained a loving marriage and managed to raise a family while navigating the world of show business.
We talked to Peter on his 41st wedding anniversary, and he read us the Modern Love essay âFailing in Marriage Does Not Mean Failing at Marriageâ by Joe Blair. Despite the essayist being kicked out of the house by his wife five times, the couple managed to remain married and learn that a relationship can mean trying together and failing together. Reflecting on the essay, Peter gave us his advice for staying the course.
Peter Gallagher will be performing on Broadway this fall in Delia Ephronâs play âLeft on Tenth.â
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On the Emmy- and Peabody-winning series âThe Bear,â Liza ColĂłn-Zayas plays Tina Marrero, a cook at the Chicago restaurant at the center of the story. Tina and her fellow workers are in a constant struggle for the survival of their restaurant, and they fight just as fiercely with one another. Only at rare moments do we see them drop the tough exterior and show one another love or respect.
Today, ColĂłn-Zayas reads âA Web Between Her Body and Mine,â by Karen Paul. Itâs a Modern Love essay about two friends who also met at work, but have a different kind of bond: Karen has no problem showing affection to her best friend, Miriam. But after Miriam has a terrible accident, Karen finds herself in uncharted territory, not certain when, or how, to support her. Itâs a story ColĂłn-Zayas says she relates to personally, and her reaction to it takes her by surprise.
Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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John Paul Brammer writes the âÂĄHola Papi!â advice column for The Cut at New York magazine, answering questions like, âWhy am I dreaming about sex with a man when Iâm a lesbian?â Or, âWhat if my partner judges me for writing smut?â This candor has given John Paul an intimate connection with his readers. However, as todayâs episode reveals, he doesnât think we necessarily need that level of openness with all of our loved ones.
Ahead of Motherâs Day, Brammer reads an essay about a recent college graduate who sets out to spend the summer exploring his sexuality, but whose plans are derailed by his duty to his grandmother. Itâs called âYoung, Gay and Single Among the Nuns and Widowsâ by Kevin Hershey. Brammer says itâs âbizarreâ how much this essay resonates with his own life.
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Emily Ratajkowski is doing a balancing act many famously beautiful women have to perform. In her 2021 book âMy Body,â she reflects on what itâs been like to build a career based on her public image, and her struggle to control that image in an industry largely run by men. Since getting divorced a few years ago, sheâs been thinking a lot about gender dynamics and the type of agency she wants to have in dating, too.
Today, Ratajkowski reads âWhy I Fell for an âIâm the Manâ Man,â by Susan Forray. Forray is also a successful, self-sufficient woman, dating after divorce. Sheâs surprised to find herself falling for a man with old-fashioned ideas about who does what in a relationship. (He pays for dinner, handles the finances and initiates sex). As a single mom who handles everything, Ratajkowski says, she can relate to the desire to be cared for once in a while. And that doesnât have to mean playing into a sexist stereotype.
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Laufey, the 25-year-old singer-songwriter, has risen to prominence by taking the trials of todayâs dating world â casual relationships, no labels and seemingly endless swiping on apps â and turning them into timeless love songs.
Today, Laufey reads Coco Mellorsâs essay, âAn Anxious Person Tries to Be Chill,â which is about a woman trying to work through her deep-seated relationship anxieties and attachment issues in an on-again, off-again situationship. Laufey says she, too, has been an anxious partner. While she thinks a toxic relationship, like the one in the essay, can make for a great love song, she now knows secure relationships can make beautiful music, too.
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The actor John Magaro is picky about whom he goes to dinner with. Magaro is an adventurous eater. So whether heâs buying offal from the butcher, making stews from the 1800s or falling in love over a plate of rabbit, he says itâs important to him that the people he shares a meal with are willing to be curious. For Magaro, itâs about more than personal preferences. Sharing a meal and connecting with other people, he says, is the bedrock of society.
Magaro played Arthur in âPast Lives,â one of our favorite movies last year. His character is constantly working to understand his wife on a deeper level. And Magaro sees that quality in âMy Dinners With Andrew,â by Sara Pepitone, a Modern Love essay about food as a love language, and a series of dinners that make, and break, two relationships.
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