
Today, Vox announced the launch of America, Actually, a new video-first podcast hosted by Astead W. Herndon. Designed from the ground up for video platforms, the show will bring audiences inside the forces shaping American politics for a post-Trump era through immersive reporting, sharp analysis, and deeply human storytelling. America, Actually will explore the question: What does American politics look like without Trump at the center? It’s been a one-man show for more than a decade, but now, the country is heading toward the first open presidential election since 2016. With episodes rolling out on YouTube and social platforms alongside audio, America, Actually reflects Vox’s continued emphasis on premium, multiplatform journalism that meets audiences where they are.
“A decade in politics journalism has only made me more certain that America is a more diverse country changing faster than our political system reflects, and the centrality of Donald Trump has only further flattened that nuance,” says Herndon. “My goal with America, Actually is to make a program that highlights that broad landscape of often ignored people and ideas — while remaining accessible and inviting. We will lead with the kind of rigor and curiosity that is Vox’s signature, but we will also have fun.”
The show will take a variety of platform-native formats, from one-on-one interviews with compelling elected officials (Herndon has recently interviewed New York City Mayor Zohran Mandani and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker as a guest host on Vox’s flagship podcast Today, Explained), to classic Vox explainers with outside experts, to group discussions with an eclectic mix of journalists and podcasters. Each episode is built to travel seamlessly across YouTube, social video, and audio. The show expands on Vox’s signature explanatory journalism by pairing it with firsthand reporting and a strong point of view, offering a clearer, more grounded understanding of American politics.
The launch is further strengthened through a partnership with Report for America, a national program dedicated to revitalizing local journalism and expanding coverage in underserved communities. Through this partnership, Vox will deliver community-centered reporting, drawing on Report for America’s network of journalists to elevate diverse voices, surface overlooked perspectives, and help audiences understand how power and policy shape their lives.
“America, Actually represents exactly where we see the future of Vox storytelling — journalism that is rigorous, ambitious, and designed first for video,” says Swati Sharma, editor-in-chief of Vox. “Astead has a rare ability to connect deeply with people and translate complex political dynamics into stories that feel urgent and accessible. This show is not just about explaining the news; it’s about showing it, in a way that brings audiences closer to the realities shaping the country.”
Herndon joined Vox in 2025 as a host and editorial director, and is known for his deeply reported, on-the-ground coverage of American voters and the changing dynamics of the political landscape. As a national politics reporter for the New York Times, he was a central part of election coverage for seven years and previously hosted the politics podcast, The Run-Up. His reporting has taken him across the country, chronicling how identity, culture, and power intersect in modern American politics, and he is widely recognized for his ability to surface nuanced perspectives from voices often left out of the national conversation. Herndon’s profile of Vice President Kamala Harris for the New York Times Magazine was nominated for a National Magazine Award in profile writing. He has received the Distinguished Journalist Award from DePaul University and was named 2025 Journalist of the Year by the National Association of Black Journalists. Herndon is also a political analyst for CNN.
About Vox
When Vox was founded in 2014, it was animated by a simple observation: The media did a good job of reporting the news and commenting on it, but there was a disconnect between that work and the audience truly understanding why something happened. Vox started as — and remains — an organization dedicated to addressing that gap, which not only persists but has grown.
We are proud to have popularized explanatory journalism in many forms, across many mediums. Our work has been used to educate people everywhere, from elementary schools to college classrooms to vaccination sites in Taiwan to footnotes in congressional memos.
About Report for America
Report for America recruits, places and supports talented journalists in local newsrooms across the United States. We provide salary support, training, and newsroom sustainability coaching, enabling our partners to expand coverage on critical, often overlooked issues and strengthen trust with their audiences. By July 2026, Report for America will have placed more than 850 journalists in 465 newsrooms nationwide and will have helped newsroom partners raise more than $60 million in local donations. Report for America is an initiative of Report Local, a nonprofit journalism organization dedicated to strengthening local journalism across the US and around the world.
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