We welcome 2014 with Paul F. Tompkins, Eddie Pepitone, Janie Haddad Tompkins, Laura House, Mark Thompson, Frank Conniff and Chris Pina. Eddie talks about last month’s anxiety attack before, during and after his audition for The Middle. And Mark Thompson talks about creating Who Wants to Marry a Multi-Millionaire? and how it led to the creation of The Bachelor. Portions written by Ben Zelevansky, Steve Rosenfield, and David Feldman. Please subscribe to our show for free on iTunes and Stitcher.
How Wall Street buys professors to teach, write and testify on Wall Street’s behalf with two time Pulitzer Prize winning investigative journalist David Kocieniewsk from The New York Times. David Kocieniewski wrote two investigative articles this year about Goldman Sachs and Apple that we discuss all the time on this show. His latest investigative piece will make you question everything you’re told by economists and professors. Then Film Critic Michael Snyder lists his favorite movies for 2013. Also Will Ryan and The Cactus County Cowboys, Jimmy Lee Wirt, Janie Haddad Tompkins, Hal Lublin and Jeremy S. Kramer. Portions of our show are written by Hal Lublin, David Weiss and David Feldman. Please subscribe to our show for free as a podcast on iTunes and Stitcher.
David Kocieniewski is a business reporter who has been covering the nation’s tax system for The New York Times since 2010. Previously, Mr. Kocieniewski had been a reporter on the paper’s Metro desk since 1995 where he focused on law enforcement, corruption and its offshoot and the New Jersey government.
In 2013, he was part of the team awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting
“for its penetrating look into business practices by Apple and other technology companies that illustrates the darker side of a changing global economy for workers and consumers.”
In 2011, Mr. Kocieniewski examined the efforts by businesses to lower their taxes and the debate over how to improve the tax system in a series titled “But Nobody Pays That.’‘
In April 2012, the series was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting. The Pulitzer jury said his work
“penetrated a legal thicket to explain how the nation’s wealthiest citizens and corporations often exploited loopholes and avoided taxes.”
Mr. Kocieniewski joined The Times in 1995. Previously, he worked at The Detroit News from 1986 to 1990, and New York Newsday from 1990 to 1995. He has covered criminal justice and politics for most of his career.
While at New York Newsday, he wrote a series of stories about corruption in the New York Police Department that led to the Mollen Commission hearings and won a handful of awards from various organizations, including the New York State Bar Association and the National Association of Black Journalists.
Mr. Kocieniewski is the co-author of “Two Seconds Under the World,” a book about the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center and the F.B.I.’s failure to takes steps that might have prevented it. He also wrote “The Brass Wall,” an exposé about corruption in the police department’s Internal Affairs Bureau that nearly cost a hero undercover detective his life; the book was cited as one of the top 10 nonfiction books of 2003.
Mr. Kocieniewski was born in Buffalo, N.Y. He graduated from the State University of New York at Binghamton in 1985, and Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1986.
A Kitchen Wet Dreams spectacular with conversation, sketches and song! We have something for everybody today. Michael Snyder, our resident film critic, tells us what movies to avoid this holiday weekend, Paul Dooley, Hal Lublin, Eddie Pepitone, Kevin Rooney, Janie Haddad Tompkins, Jeremy S. Kramer, Rick Overton, Will Ryan and Cactus Chloe Fiorenzo also join us along with David Mizner who wrote the cover story for this week’s Nation Magazine. Portions of today’s show are written by Hal Lublin, David Weiss, Will Dixon and David Feldman. Please subscribe to this show for free as a podcast on iTunes and Stitcher. This is another amazing show for everyone, so please share it with your friends, and give us a great review on iTunes.
Dan Pasternack is head of programming for IFC. He joins Paul Dooley, Paul Provenza, and Jeremy S. Kramer to tell you who’s funny and everything about the history of comedy. Paul Dooley is the star of Breaking Away and Sixteen Candles. Paul Provenza is the host of Showtime’s The Green Room, director of The Aristocrats and author of Satiristas. Jeremy S. Kramer is the holy grail of comedy. Also Andrea Martin, Will Ryan and The Cactus County Cowboys, Eddie Pepitone, Rick Overton, Frank Conniff, Janie Haddad Tompkins, Mark Thompson and Shop War On Christmas’ Jimmy Wirt. Today’s show is written by David Weiss, Ben Zelevansky, Steve Rosenfield and David Feldman. Please subscribe to our show on iTunes and Stitcher and share it with your loved ones.
David Sedaris’s favorite story teller Dylan Brody talks about performing in front of 3,000 people with David Sedaris. Then he recites the seven minute story he told that night. Our lady female woman doctor returns to tell the boys that their Attention Deficit Disorder is a figment of the pharmaceutical industry’s craven imagination. Also the Nation Magazine’s Moscow correspondent Alec Luhn fills us in on the protests in Ukraine. Michael Snyder talks movies. Plus new music from Will Ryan and The Cactus County Cowboys. This is the episode that almost didn’t happen. You can smell the tension in the air. But we did it. We almost had a fistfight break out, but everybody calmed down. Please subscribe to this show for free on iTunes and Stitcher.
One of this show’s most requested guests ever has come black! Law Professor Jodi Armour returns to offer up some surprising thoughts on Mandela, The Paradox of Black Patriotism, Chris Rock and Welfare Queens. Jody Armour is Roy P. Crocker Professor of Law at the University of Southern California, where he specializes in race issues in legal decision-making. Professor Armour also writes the “Nigga Theory” blog and is author of “Negrophobia and Reasonable Racism: The Hidden Costs of Being Black in America” published by New York University Press. Today’s program includes Will Ryan And The Cactus County Cowboys featuring Hal Lublin and Jeremy S. Kramer.
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