
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Scroll through enough retro photos or vintage ads, and it’s easy to convince yourself that life used to be simpler, even happier. But why does the past look better the farther away it gets?
Host Megan McArdle unpacks how nostalgia distorts our view of history — from the food people ate to the cost of everyday life — and why forgetting the hardships can shape how we think about the present.
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
By The Washington Post4.1
158158 ratings
Scroll through enough retro photos or vintage ads, and it’s easy to convince yourself that life used to be simpler, even happier. But why does the past look better the farther away it gets?
Host Megan McArdle unpacks how nostalgia distorts our view of history — from the food people ate to the cost of everyday life — and why forgetting the hardships can shape how we think about the present.
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.

38,430 Listeners

6,881 Listeners

4,113 Listeners

3,647 Listeners

1,380 Listeners

1,381 Listeners

1,523 Listeners

6,304 Listeners

4,444 Listeners

113,121 Listeners

2,480 Listeners

2,380 Listeners

107 Listeners

7,244 Listeners

5,217 Listeners

2,782 Listeners

2,370 Listeners

16,525 Listeners

232 Listeners

294 Listeners

1,600 Listeners

3,538 Listeners

1,261 Listeners

994 Listeners

405 Listeners

347 Listeners

57 Listeners

32 Listeners

632 Listeners