
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Ahead of President Donald Trump’s inauguration, scores of career diplomats at the State Department were asked by Trump aides to resign.
Trump campaigned on dismantling what he has called the “deep state” of federal bureaucrats, who he views as lacking loyalty to him and undermining his agenda. The forced departures were seen as confirmation of this plan – and a step toward changing the tone of the department.
But who are these bureaucrats, and what are their stories?
Those are the driving questions behind Netflix’s “The Diplomat.” Martine Powers spoke to its creator and executive producer, Debora Cahn. The show is about the life of a no-nonsense Foreign Service officer who’s suddenly made the U.S. ambassador to Britain. It is messy, it is human, and it – unintentionally – sometimes seems to be in conversation with the headlines.
On “Post Reports” today, Martine and Debora talk about the stories we don’t hear out of the Foreign Service, the allure of “competency porn,” and what “The Diplomat” can tell us about the value of “using your words.”
Today’s show was produced and mixed by Rennie Svirnovskiy, with help from Peter Bresnan. It was edited by Maggie Penman.
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
4.2
50765,076 ratings
Ahead of President Donald Trump’s inauguration, scores of career diplomats at the State Department were asked by Trump aides to resign.
Trump campaigned on dismantling what he has called the “deep state” of federal bureaucrats, who he views as lacking loyalty to him and undermining his agenda. The forced departures were seen as confirmation of this plan – and a step toward changing the tone of the department.
But who are these bureaucrats, and what are their stories?
Those are the driving questions behind Netflix’s “The Diplomat.” Martine Powers spoke to its creator and executive producer, Debora Cahn. The show is about the life of a no-nonsense Foreign Service officer who’s suddenly made the U.S. ambassador to Britain. It is messy, it is human, and it – unintentionally – sometimes seems to be in conversation with the headlines.
On “Post Reports” today, Martine and Debora talk about the stories we don’t hear out of the Foreign Service, the allure of “competency porn,” and what “The Diplomat” can tell us about the value of “using your words.”
Today’s show was produced and mixed by Rennie Svirnovskiy, with help from Peter Bresnan. It was edited by Maggie Penman.
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
3,906 Listeners
6,635 Listeners
25,715 Listeners
3,634 Listeners
1,382 Listeners
86,172 Listeners
4,528 Listeners
111,083 Listeners
55,867 Listeners
2,479 Listeners
2,245 Listeners
105 Listeners
10,085 Listeners
6,753 Listeners
2,400 Listeners
2,766 Listeners
5,975 Listeners
2,368 Listeners
15,313 Listeners
233 Listeners
293 Listeners
1,145 Listeners
983 Listeners
395 Listeners
305 Listeners
169 Listeners
57 Listeners
32 Listeners