LISTEN online HERE— iTunes podcast HERE
The wonderful novelist JONATHAN LETHEM talks about Communists in Queens in the 1950s, Hippies in the Village the 1960s, and the Occupiers of two years ago – all in his novel Dissident Gardens.
Jonathan will be reading at the Skirball, Tues. Sept. 24, 8pm; admission is free, reservations recommended – online HERE .
Plus: Today Liberal education is under assault as never before—everyone from President Obama to Thomas Friedman are saying American business needs people in science, technology and engineering. TOM FRANK will comment – he writes for Harper’s and The Baffler – and he has a PhD in history.
Also: The world’s first big all-girl teenage hard rock band was The Runaways, from L.A., featuring Joan Jett –EVELYN MCDONNELL will talk about the real story of The Runaways, and we’ll listen to some of their music from the seventies. Her new book is Queens of Noise.
Playlist: “Cherry Bomb”; “Gotta Get Out Tonight”; “Queens of Noise.”
Remembering 9/11: My Q&A with Joan Didion, one week after 9/11, about American political rhetoric, and her own experience that day. “”People are talking about America losing its innocence. How many times can America lose its innocence?”
LISTEN online
“Brutality of Syrian Rebels Posing Dilemma in West”—that
The quest continues among venture capitalists to find the next Facebook, the next Google, the next eBay—and the Silicon Valley hype machine is suggesting that it might be Coursera, the “leader of the pack” among companies trying to make money with massive open online courses, or MOOCs. . . . continued at The Nation,
A federal judge in Los Angeles ruled August 29 that the Department of Veterans Affairs has been violating federal law by leasing land on its West LA campus for a hotel laundry, movie set storage, a baseball stadium for UCLA and a dog park. The lawsuit, brought by the ACLU of Southern California . . .
For the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, we are featuring an hour of special programming:
Plus: a new perspective on what people DO remember from that day: “The Speech” by Martin Luther King.
I met ELMORE LEONARD, who died on August 20 at age 87, only a couple of times, interviewing him on his book tours, but he was a memorable guy, totally unpretentious about his massive accomplishments. . .
Q. How did you feel when you first heard the news that the Supreme Court had overruled DOMA, the Defense of Marriage Act that had defined marriage as limited to two people of the opposite sex?