jwiener

ISIS & America Muslims; Republicans & American Guns: The Nation Podcast 12/10

Listen online HERE  iTunes podcast HERE
On this week’s podcast, Laila Lalami says ISIS wants to eliminate what they call “the grey zone” between their Caliphate and “the Crusaders,” even though that’s where most of the world’s Muslims live.

Also: Joan Walsh talks about the real reason we don’t have gun control: far-right fantasies about Obama coming to take your guns.

And we remember Chernobyl, thanks to the greatest writer about that disaster, Svetlana Alexievich—she was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature this week. Amy Wilentz and Tom Lutz comment.

‘One Person, One Vote’ at the Supreme Court: KPFK 12/9

Listen online HERE
Voting Rights Are Threatened Again Before the Supreme Court: ARI BERMAN
reports on yesterday’s argument, where the same conservatives who gutted the Voting Rights Act are now challenging “one person, one vote.”  Ari’s new book, Give Us the Ballot: The Modern Struggle for Voting Rights in America, was named one of the best books of the year by the New York Times.

 Also: The New York Times coverage of Bernie Sanders has been condescending—remember the page one story, “Bernie won’t kiss your baby”? AMY WILENTZ reviews the record — she’s a longtime contributing editor at The Nation, and she teaches Literary Journalism at UC Irvine.

Naomi Klein: the Paris Climate Protest:
TheNation podcast 12/3

Listen online HERE  iTunes podcast HERE
On this week’s episode of “Start Making Sense,” progressive news without the boring parts, Naomi Klein reports from the streets of Paris that the French government has enlisted the Shock Doctrine to block street protests at the Paris Climate Summit.

Also: Katha Pollitt says the refugee crisis has shown the worst, and the best, of Europe; now, she says, we have a chance to do the right thing.

Plus: Historian Eric Foner argues that Princeton students are right that Woodrow Wilson was a racist, and that the university should remove his name from campus buildings.

And Joan Walsh reports on Republican anti-abortion politics after the killings at Planned Parenthood in Colorado Springs.

The San Bernardino Shootings: KPFK 12/2

LISTEN online HERE
We open with breaking news at 4pm about the shootings in San Bernardino that left 14 dead and 17 injured: we start with a news update from ERNESTO ARCE, KPFK’s news director, on the scene in San Bernardino, and then go to President Obama’s statement about the shootings.

GREIL MARCUS talks about writing the “Real Life Rock Top Ten” column for thirty years – the column features brief items not only on songs but on all kinds of stuff that delighted or puzzled one of our greatest cultural critics that week. Now Yale University Press has published the first thirty years of the columns in a monumental 600 page book, Real Life Rock: The Complete Top Ten Columns, 1986-2014.
.

And JOHN NICHOLS comments on today’s news about the mass shooting and on gun violence in America, and in American politics, today.
John of course is National Affairs correspondent for The Nation — read him at TheNation.com.

 

Bernie & Socialism, Thanksgiving & Football:
The Nation Podcast 11/24

Subscribe to The Nation podcast, “Start Making Sense,” on iTunes and SoundCloud
When Bernie Sanders talked about democratic socialism in his major speech at Georgetown University last week, he used FDR to explain what socialism could do for the country today. But Eric Foner says there’s a much deeper and richer history of socialism in America, and Sanders should call on that when making his pitch to the American people.

Also: Republicans want to block refugees from Syria and Iraq: The Nation’s Julianne Hing has an update on their efforts and what happens next.

Plus: Football has America’s biggest TV audience, especially on Thanksgiving weekend: but Dave Zirin, sports editor of The Nation, asks why anyone even plays football anymore, given what we know about head injuries.

And Ari Berman discusses the latest in the long history of the battle for voting rights—his new book is Give Us the Ballot.

The shootings at the Black Lives Matter march in Minneapolis: KPFK 11/25

LISTEN online HERE iTunes podcast HERE
Your Minnesota Moment, news from my home town of St. Paul: White supremacists in Minneapolis shot five people at a Black Lives Matter demonstration on Monday night: well get an update ANGILEE SHAH in Minneapolis—she’s a journalist and blogger and the social media manager at Public Radio International.

Also: HAROLD MEYERSON talks about Bernie and Socialism—Harold of course writes for the Washingon Post op-ed page and The American Prospect

And we’ll have a music segment: the award-winning writer PETER GURALNICK will talk about Sam Phillips, the man who discovered Howlin Wolf, Ike Turner, Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley. Peter’s new book is Sam Phillips: The Man who Invented Rock in Roll.

New from The Nation: “Start Making Sense”
Podcast 11/19/15

The first episode of our new weekly podcast, “Start Making Sense” from The Nation:
iTunes
podcast HERE – SoundCloud audio HERE
LAILA LALAMI talks about the origins of ISIS, and what to do about it now.  Laila grew up in Morocco; her novel The Moor’s Account was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.

Also: The New York Times coverage of Bernie Sanders has been condescending, and terrible: journalist AMY WILENTZ comments on the recent page one story ‘Bernie Sanders Won’t Kiss Your Baby.

Plus: CHARLES BLOW, op-ed columnist for the New York Times, talks about growing up poor and black in rural Louisiana; his book Fire Shut Up in My Bones is out now in paperback.

And TERRY GROSS explains the difference between interviewing Hillary and interviewing Bill. It’s her 40th anniversary hosting ‘Fresh Air’; she’s done 13,000 interviews.  (Recorded in 2004)

Dustin Hoffman, Kurt Vonnegut, John Coltrane:
from the Pacifica Archives: KPFK 11/18

Today we’re featuring gems from the Pacifica Archives, and asking you to support the Archives: they are perserving our history, the sounds of our struggles and our dreams, and the voices of our heroes. Please call during the hour and pledge: 800-735-0230 – or online HERE .

This hour we’ll be featuring rare audio, the source for amazing animation from Blank on Blank: DUSTIN HOFFMAN in 1971, recalling living next door to the building in Greenwich Village blown up accidentally by the Weather Underground. He also says that, as a kid, “I carried a knife taped to my leg. I never used it but it was there.” Watch the animation from Blank on Blank HERE
.

Plus: Novelist KURT VONNEGUT remembers “learning to walk around looking tough” growing up in Indianapolis. Watch HERE
.
Also: JOHN COLTRANE in 1966 was living on Long Island. One afternoon, Frank Kofsky took the train out to interview him. Coltrane picked him up at the station. They drove around town. They stopped to talk. (Coltrane died less than a year later.) Watch HERE.