The Mueller Report – in Podcast by Lawfare

Ed note: Have you really read the Mueller Report? Or did you stay up all night at Town Hall listening to the non-stop reading? Or have you at least bought the book? Most of us including me, would sheepishly say “no” to these questions. The report itself is highly dense and not easy to read. So Lawfare has initiated a Podcast. It’s a useful way to give us what we should know – in more detail and context. Part One of the podcast deals with the Internet Research Agency (IRA) in Moscow and details Russia’s interference activities. Part Two, I believe, is now out.

If you are new to Podcasts, it’s the purple icon preloaded on your smartphone. Tap on the “search” magnifying glass icon at the bottom of the screen, type in “The Report” and select it from the list of results. Then click “listen” or “subscribe” to have future episodes automatically downloaded.

From Lawfare: For the past several weeks, a group of us has been working on a project to tell the story of the Mueller Report in an accessible form. The Mueller Report tells a heck of a story, a bunch of incredible stories, actually. But it does so in a form that’s hard for a lot of people to take in. It’s very long. It’s legally dense in spots. It’s marred with redactions. It’s also, shall we say, not optimized for your reading pleasure.

Various folks have made efforts to make the document easier to consume: the report is now an audiobook; it’s been staged as a play; there have been live readings. We took a different approach: a serialized narrative podcast.

The extended network of writers, experts, lawyers, and journalists around Lawfare represents a unique body of expertise in the public conversation of the issues discussed in the report. So we teamed up with Goat Rodeo, a podcast production group in Washington, to use that group of people as a lens through which to tell the story contained in the report. The first episode, entitled “Active Measures,” is now out and covers the Russian social media campaign and the activities of the Internet Research Agency.

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