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- Keep Under Wraps
- When a presidential candidate dies unexpectedly in the middle of the campaign, Washington, D.C. alderman Mays Gilliam is unexpectedly picked as his replacement.
- An unemployed journalist keeps blaming everyone but himself for problems in his love life and bad policies of the country only to find out what he can change when he becomes the President.
- The physician and professor Herman Lundborg headed the world's first state racial biology institute in Uppsala, Sweden, from 1922 to '35. He was obsessed by the threat of racial mixing between Sámi, Finns and Swedes in the north. On his travels, he is drawn to a woman of Finnish-Sámi descent, and has a child with her.
- A delicate situation develops when the French President, due in London for talks, refuses to attend. He demands to meet the real head of state. With the Queen in self-imposed exile and the Prime Minister little more than a pawn of the General, who is the real head of state?
- When the President is expected to stop by Pop's diner for a bathroom pit stop, Marlon has high hopes to be able to shake his hand.
- President Bishop enlists the help of the Turtles when he is attacked by monsters he helped create in his past life. The "brain" behind the attacks is revealed to be Baxter Stockman who seeks revenge for Bishop's actions fifty years prior.
- While the British monarchy retains the formal trappings of its absolute past, the Sovereign no longer rules, all political power has shifted to the democratically mandated politicians, parliament and cabinet. Although the organs of state are officially known as H.M.'s government, armed forces etc., the monarch's only influence is informal, trough confidential meetings such as the weekly audience granted to the Prime Minister, who once a year spends a whole weekend at the royal castle Balmoral in Scotland. Similarly the sovereign is nominal commander in chief of the military, in fact just meets officers and visits units while the cabinet and Ministry of Defense are in charge. As head of the Anglican state church, the monarch nowadays furthers ecumenism and religious tolerance. Famous symbols of the royal (formerly real) 'authority' include the priceless crown jewels, which in turn star in the mayor annual ceremony, the State Opening of Parliament, which symbolizes the constitutional rapport between crown and political power as the pomp is royal, the actual opening speech a policy statement entirely written by the PM.
- Episode: (2017)2008–Podcast Episode
- 2015–Podcast Episode
- Episode: (2017)2016– 23mPodcast EpisodeHelene Cooper, Pentagon Correspondent for the New York Times and author of a new book, "Madame President: The Extraordinary Journey of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf" joins Chuck Todd to talk about how Sirleaf became the first woman to lead an African country, and why Liberia has been left behind by the United States despite a deep history connecting the countries.
- 2019– 21mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2018)2016– 44mPodcast Episode
- 2018– 15mPodcast Episode
- 2013– 4mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2022)2020– 1h 20mPodcast Episode
- 2017– 55mPodcast Episode
- 2017– 35mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2019)2018– 24mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2021)2021– 9mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2021)2021– 8mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2021)2021– 10mPodcast Episode
- 2015– 28mPodcast Episode
- 2015– 15mPodcast Episode
- 2017– 56mPodcast Episode
- 2017– 38mPodcast Episode
- 2020– 3mPodcast Episode
- 2020– 6mPodcast Episode
- 1970– 31mPodcast Episode
- 2011– 1h 43mPodcast Episode
- 2020– 32mPodcast Episode
- 2019– 1h 6mPodcast Episode
- Episode: (2018)2017– 21mPodcast Episode
- 2018– 22mPodcast Episode
- 2019– 24mPodcast Episode
- 2016– 34mPodcast Episode
- 2022– 8mPodcast Episode