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The Political ConversationThe Political ConversationJulie Pitta on the Billionaire-Led Campaign to Flip San FranciscoA handful of ultra-wealthy donors have quietly fueled a campaign to swing San Francisco politics to the right -- according to Julie Pitta, the founder of The Phoenix Project. In our conversation, she maps the forces transforming San Francisco, from tech billionaires funding ballot campaigns to the rise of YIMBY politics and a new mayor few had heard of a year ago. How has this city, long seen as a progressive beacon, become ground zero for privatized governance?Warning: no discussions of reopening Alcatraz included. 2025-05-1538 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationUnderstanding Populism & The Trump Presidency's Chaos, with Chris LehmannChris Lehmann, Bureau Chief for The Nation in Washington, D.C., objects to the easy characterization of Trump as a populist by both left and right-leaning media, which misunderstands the term grossly. He explains that the idea of Trump as a populist is a tool in Trump's narrative—one that suggests he’s fighting for “the people.” This plays right into his hand, giving him a cloak of legitimacy that obscures his authoritarian nature.  The past weeks' barrage of executive orders are keeping most of us, including those in the media, feeling underwater. But we don't have t...2025-02-1941 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationAre we just in a "crappy political period"? With Mo FiorinaThe dust has settled. The inauguration is around the corner. In an effort not to disconnect, I turned to a wise friend for some insight and levity -- Mo Fiorina. A professor at Stanford, Mo is one of the most respected political scientists in our country, and he's navigating this season with an informed, blunt perspective and --thank God-- some lightheartedness. 2025-01-1742 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationBreaking down the 2024 Election, with John Mark HansenPundits are, at the end of the day, motivated by attention. Their takes need to provoke and intrigue -- which is why, when looking for insight on this election, I prefer to turn to a people who are motivated instead by the drive to understand the moment, and to embed it in its context: Academics. I sat down with John Mark Hansen, a Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago. Hansen recently wrote a piece of post-election analysis that hit the mark for Project Syndicate, so I invited him onto TPC to continue the conver...2024-12-2428 minHysteria RadioHysteria RadioHysteria Radio 4491. Alexis Knox - Through The Night (Extended Mix) 2. Mohtiv - Kicking You Out (Extended Mix) 3. Quarterhead - Move Your Body (Radio Mix) 4. Astrohertz - Lift Your Hands (Extended Mix) 5. Luke Alessi - After Five (Extended Mix) 6. Wally Lopez - Dance Dance Dance (Extended Mix) 7. CHANEY - Lose My Number (Extended Mix) 8. Lady Bee ft. SISI - All Over Me (Extended Mix) 9. Elias Veer - The Same Way (Original Mix) 10. Okan & Leon Price ft. Zak Messenger - Love Like This Before (Extended Mix) 11. AWIIN - Soundboy Killah (Extended Mix) 12...2024-11-061h 00The Political ConversationThe Political ConversationCan Democrats win big without the working class? with Timothy ShenkThe last time Democrats won an election BIG was in 1964. Why? Just a few days out from the November 5 election in which the victor will win by one or two percentage points, that question becomes pressing. Timothy Shenk, an historian and assistant professor at George Washington University, who for years was co-editor of Dissent Magazine, has an answer and it is one that must be heard regardless of who wins the election on November 5th.   2024-10-2453 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationThe Latino Century, with Mike Madrid After months of panic and uncertainty, we Democrats have a candidate - Kamala Harris. Finally, we can get back to what we have roughly 100 days to accomplish: winning this election. So, who do we need to win over? Mike Madrid, a leading Latino political strategist and co-founder of the anti-MAGA Lincoln Project, urges us not to underestimate the power of the Latino vote. Latino voters well outnumber the margins of error in most swing states, giving them significant power in this election.  As we witness Republicans attempt to tie Biden's record on immigr...2024-07-301h 07The Political ConversationThe Political ConversationHas Biden knocked himself out of the race? With Molly BallIf you tuned into the debate, you may have done what I did —  wince, pace, and try to process the second-hand embarrassment. Even the most hardened partisans are having a hard time continuing to advocate for another four years for our rapidly declining President, even as Biden himself has rarely shown any signs of interest in stepping aside.The argument that Biden should step aside has been refueled by the debate, but well predates it. Even before this debate, Biden was losing.  No matter what comes next, no matter who our candidate will be, we ha...2024-07-0241 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationHein de Haas: How Immigration Really WorksBiden is making a move on immigration — he has to because, as it stands, it's the Republicans issue to win on. Will it matter? For both the election, and at the border, this remains an open question.  It's tempting to think of immigration in black and white terms — or, rather, in terms of the left and the right. But what Hein de Haas, author of "How Immigration Really Works" and a leading researcher in the field, teaches us is that many of our common beliefs about immigration — coded red and blue — could benefit from a hard look a...2024-06-1146 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationIs DEI a top-heavy bureaucracy? For Harry Lewis at Harvard, it is.Lewis, a notable and long-standing member of the Harvard faculty, worries about the state of American education — what do we want our students to learn? For him, too much emphasis is placed in course catalogs on intersectionality, and too little on a more canonical foundation of understanding.  For Lewis, the campus protests are a mere symptom — we are "reaping what we have taught." Harry Lewis is the Gordon McKay Research Professor of Computer Science at Harvard, and was the Dean of Harvard College for 8 years around the millennium.  2024-05-281h 00The Political ConversationThe Political ConversationCan the Democrats win if their only base is college educated elites? With Michael KazinAs Gallup finds that only 28% of people consider themselves Democrats, the eminent historian Michael Kazin’s fascinating new book What It Took To Win asks if “college educated cosmopolitans in search of a majority” have driven out ordinary working people — the people we need to win.  Michael Kazin is a distinguished professor of history at Georgetown University and Co-Editor of Dissent magazine. While a student at Harvard in the 70s, Kazin led Students For A Democratic Society and today he is a member of Democratic Socialists of America. He is the author of Barons of Labor, The Pop...2024-05-1128 minThe Political ConversationThe Political Conversation"The 2024 Election Will Be Determined by Who People Dislike More"Michael Kazin introduces the concept of "moral capitalism" while discussing his new book, "What it Took to Win." Kazin is a professor of history at Georgetown University and editor emeritus of Dissent. His books include American Dreamers: How the Left Changed a Nation, The Populist Persuasion, and A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and editor of The Princeton Encyclopedia of American Political History.2024-04-1627 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationWhy Party Loyalty is Fading and Independent Voters are Surging, With Lynn VavreckAs party loyalty declines, independent voters are becoming a powerful force in politics. In this video, we'll discuss the rise of independent voters and the impact they're having on elections, as well as the impact that extremely polarized or calcified politics is having on the voting public. We also discuss that in 2022 no candidate who lost called for an insurrection to overturn the results.  Is the fever breaking? Our guest is Lynn Vavreck, a political scientist at UCLA and leading researcher into the electorate. We dive into the analysis of the most recent federal election in 2022, to look to t...2024-03-2034 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationThe Bitter End: 2024 US Election Voter Analysis with Lynn VavreckToday, politics feels both stuck and explosive, as both parties are becoming increasingly unrecognizable to the majority of voters. According to Lynn Vavreck, a political scientist at UCLA and leading researcher into the electorate, it has to do in no small part with this: Most voters identify as moderate, whether a moderate Republican or a moderate Democrat. She describes the state of our politics as "calcified", and her extensive research and analysis for her book The Bitter End serves as a guide into what the 2024 election has in store.  2024-02-2825 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationWhere have all the Democrats gone? With Ruy TeixeiraAfter Obama was elected, Ruy Teixeira and his co-author John B. Judis were hailed as having gotten it right— in their 2002 book "The Emerging Democratic Majority", they accurately predicted the coalition on the rise to carry Democrats to a majority.  Today, the revered political strategist has a different message, or rather, a question: "Where have all the Democrats gone?" Since Obama's second term, the Democrats have rapidly lost white working class voters; in some crucial election states, Biden is under water by 20 points with this crucial demographic. According to Ruy, Democrats embraced "cultural radicalism", making them unpalatable to the media...2024-01-2221 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationUnderstanding Immigration in the US, with Ruy Teixeira"We need a system for deciding who gets in and who does not. That's not cruel, it's just rational." Meet Ruy Teixeira, political demographer, commentator and author of the deeply influential 2002 book "The Emerging Democratic Majority" with co-author John B. Judis. Today, he has a new book out: "Where have all the Democrats gone?" with the same co-author, and a very different message.  Encounters at the border have tripled since Trump left office, and for Teixeira, the reasons why Biden's approval rating on immigration hangs around 23% in some battleground st...2024-01-0829 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationMarriage and Families in the US: Melissa Kearney's Controversial ResearchPart 2 of our conversation with Melissa Kearney. Listen to our episode titled "What is happening to marriage and families in the US?" for part 1. Melissa Kearney, a professor of Economics at the University of Maryland, argues that "we can't keep ignoring the fact that the share of kids raised by one parent is rising — especially among lower income families, and that this is having an impact on the economic mobility of those children." Kids who grow up in two-parent households tend to have better outcomes, both in young adulthood and later in li...2023-12-2220 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationWhat is happening to marriage and families in the US?Melissa Kearney, a professor of Economics at the University of Maryland, argues that "we can't keep ignoring the fact that the share of kids raised by one parent is rising — especially among lower income families, and that this is having an impact on the economic mobility of those children." "Kids who grow up in two-parent households tend to have better outcomes, both in young adulthood and later in life." The New York Times immediately dubbed Kearney's research a blind anti-feminist argument for entering into or staying in a marriage — but t...2023-12-1120 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationUnless we change course, we’re going to lose to China; with Rob AtkinsonRob Atkinson, who has advised George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Joe Biden on how to promote the high tech industry, just wrote in the Asia Times:  “The Chinese Communist Party has made manufacturing robot adoption a top priority, backing it up with generous subsidies. To the extent US policymakers talk about robots, it is usually to criticize them for taking jobs.”In my conversation with him, Atkinson advocated an aggressive industrial policy to boost productivity and economic growth even if it displaces workers with, yes, robots.  We tussle on that question as well a...2023-10-171h 00The Political ConversationThe Political ConversationBiden is betting on Bidenomics. Young voters are not feeling it.Since June, President Biden has campaigned on Bidenomics, making the argument that he's in charge of the economy and things are looking up.He’s right that the economy will play a crucial role in the coming election—but not in the way he currently imagines.Listen to this 15-minute episode that engages with several prominent perspectives, taking stock of the discourse and offering a distinct perspective focused on the voters we need most in 2024: young people. 2023-09-1414 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationAvoiding an accidental conflict with China—with Stephen RoachRemember the trade war with China under Donald Trump? Some argue that Joe Biden started a tech war with China, setting limits on US investments in Chinese technology. Are we headed for a cold war next?  The goal is not to be alarmist, but to understand: what is at play in our relationship with China? What is the best way forward? And how do we avoid accidental conflict—coincidentally, the title of an excellent new book by Stephen Roach. Now at Yale, Roach is the former chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia and led the bank int...2023-08-2355 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationHarvard is working on a plan for the future of our economy, with Gordon HansonMost of us no longer believe globalization is the answer to our economic woes and inequity—perhaps the more interesting question is:  Then what is?  Bernie Sanders has an answer. So does Kevin MCarthy. But I prefer to listen to those with a less politically informed view.  The Hewlitt foundation has given 40 million dollars to the Reimagining the Economy project to power research at MIT, Harvard and other universities. This project aims to examine what works to power the working class, and inform policy.  At Harvard, Gordon Hanson leads this project with D...2023-07-3154 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationThe 2023 debt crisis is over. But what happens in 2025? With Frances E. LeeWe just survived another debt ceiling crisis. Whew! The media told us this time was different; there was a real chance the government would default on paying its debts. After all, the players were now crazy enough to let it happen. But a deal was passed, extending the ceiling to early in 2025. I spoke to Prof. Frances E. Lee of Princeton about the history of debt limit crises—are we really in unprecedented territory? She lays out patterns of behavior to look for in 2025, and gives us perhaps an antidote to the frenzy.  Website: htt...2023-06-0816 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationRepublicans are crazy. So why can't the Democrats win big? With Ruy Teixeira"Democrats should be asking themselves every day: With as crazy as the Republican Party is, and as Trumpified as it is, why can’t you beat them? As opposed to just squeezing through.” The Times recently called him "a liberal heretic"; but these are the important questions Ruy Teixeira—who many consider to have written the manual on the future of the Democratic Party 20 years ago—intends to ask of his party today. Back in 2002, Democrats were in despair. President George W. Bush had an approval rating of 84% as he led the United States in...2023-05-1754 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationWhat comes after globalization's end? With Rana ForooharIn 2009 this was the cool thing to say about globalization: "Consumers across the globe have benefited from the increased competition, lowered prices and unprecedented availability of goods and services for every socioeconomic stratum." – The Hill.  Today the false promise of globalization is clear: millions of Americans lost their good-paying jobs to cheap foreign competition.  Who won? Big corporations and overseas governments. I speak with Rana Foroohar –a Global Business Columnist and an Associate Editor at the Financial Times, and CNN's global economic analyst– to discuss how it happened. We dive into her plan for A...2023-03-2847 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationVoters without college degrees are moving to the right. Why? With Joan C. WilliamsWe all know where we were the day Trump was elected. To many Democrats – myself included – it was a shock but also a moment of great insight. In her book, "White Working Class", released just four months after the election, Joan Williams describes a Trump voter in the South Carolina election as saying: "We are voting with our middle finger". After all, incomes of the white working class had doubled in the three decades after World War II, but had stagnated since the late 1970s. Williams concludes: "When you leave the two-thirds of Americans without coll...2023-02-2858 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationWho Are the Independents? Part 2, with Lynn VavreckFrom 2019 to 2020, Dr. Lynn Vavreck –professor of political science at UCLA and contributing columnist to The New York Times– and her colleagues interviewed over 500,000 voters, leading them to conclude that our politics aren’t just polarized, but calcified. According to the authors, “polarization — a blanket term that gets thrown around a lot in the media — doesn’t really do much to explain the situation we’re in. Yes, we're polarized. But talk to three different people, even three different political scientists, and you will get three different definitions of what polarization means. In the book, we use the term “calcification” bec...2023-02-071h 04The Political ConversationThe Political ConversationWho Are the Independents? Part 1, with Morris FiorinaTo understand the significance of the 2022 elections, we have to understand just who the Independents are. If you doubt this, Google “2022 election independents”: CNN: “How Trump’s legacy became ‘pure poison’ for independents." Bloomberg: “Independent voters are more important than ever." Vox: “How independents saved Democrats." To dig into the significance of the 2022 election I had conversations with three very smart observers. Today I am sharing my interview with Mo Fiorina of Stanford, author of “Unstable Majorities." Up next is Lynn Vavreck of UCLA, author of “The Bitter End", and last is Joan Wil...2023-01-2445 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationWho is Hakeem Jeffries? A new Leader with expanded power.While the nation was engrossed in the slow-motion car crash that was the election of a Republican House Speaker, the unanimously-elected new House Minority Leader was paid little attention. Yet, there is much about Jeffries to note–not least of which is the fact that he has already reinstated some key powers of the Democratic Leader that Nancy Pelosi previously had lost, and has introduced a new leadership position that could prove consequential on the road to 2024. In this short, 8-minute episode of TPC, I dive into who Jeffries is, what he has already done, and what is nex...2023-01-1007 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationShort: The Independents Are Calling The Shots. Who Are They? With Samara KlarIn the 2022 midterms post-mortem, some Republicans went for the Democratic candidate over their Trump-endorsed alternative, much more impactful was the a majority of Independents voted for the Democratic candidate. The power of the Independents has risen alongside their numbers–at 42% of the electorate, they far outnumber Dems (25%) and Republicans (32%). Samara Klar has studied Independents as part of her work at University of Arizona, and shares her findings, which complicate the conventional view of polarization, in this episode.2022-12-2746 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationShort: The ECA Can Still Pass. Here's what's at play–with Cong. Adam SchiffAt this moment, only two members of Congress can challenge any state's electoral college votes and throw the election into chaos in 2024. That's why passing the Electoral Count Act is paramount–to prevent a Jan 6 repeat, and to protect election integrity. But it's never that simple, of course–it has to make it through Congress first. Listen to this week's ten-minute episode, to hear Congressman Adam Schiff discuss what the bill aims to do, the opportunity for bipartisanship, and how and when this bill may make it through the chambers.2022-12-0610 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp. 13: What To Believe on Inflation and Recession, with Brad DelongSeveral camps have strong views on what the Federal Reserve should do next to control inflation.  And on the federal budget, there always are arguments about whether the deficits are too large or needed to keep America working. Who do we believe?   Wally asked that of Brad DeLong, a heavy-duty macroeconomist at Berkeley and former Assistant Director of the Treasury who has just published Slouching Toward Utopia, a history of the economy from its takeoff around 1870 to our times. https://www.thepoliticalconversation.org/2022-11-221h 00The Political ConversationThe Political ConversationShort: The Impact of the Midterms In the Era of InstabilityWill the 2022 Midterm election show that we have polarized into hostile camps? That the center in our politics called the shots in the key races?  In race after race, were the results determined by which way the Independents went? Or were races dominated by Democratic or Republican loyalists?  An interesting context for thinking about the Midterms and their role over time is provided by Stanford professor Morris Fiorina who takes a wider, academic view–in today's 15-minute episode, I return to his work to examine this moment.2022-11-0814 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp. 12: Globalization is Out and Productivism is In, with Dani RodrikGlobalization made many promises, but left one detail out: it would pit American workers against workers elsewhere around the globe working for a fraction of their pay. The result was a multi-decade decline of our middle class. In the 1990s, Dani Rodrik of Harvard predicted that people would rebel and elect a spokesperson to voice their rage. Anyone come to mind? Decades ago Rodrik’s was a lonely voice; today he is sought after. Rodrik is looking ahead again, this time he foresees the rise of a new economic consensus. I sat down with him to examine ju...2022-10-2555 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp. 11: Can taxes be pro-technology and pro-worker at the same time? With Daron AcemogluFor Daron Acemoglu, the prominent MIT economist relied on from The Times to Politico, what is missing from our current debate on business taxation is an awareness of the difference between taxes on labor and taxes on capital.  In our conversation on The Political Conversation, Acemoglu lays out how the huge rate difference between taxes on work (25 percent) and the taxes on capital (now 5 percent) has driven a reckless embrace of automation and has been the primary driver of the destruction of our middle class.   Can taxes be pro-technology and pro-worker at the same time? Daron weighs in. 2022-10-111h 00The Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp. 10: MIT's plan to save our middle class, with David Autor.America's middle class has not had a decent raise since the 1970s.  At the same time, our national productivity has soared and almost all the benefits have flowed to our upper echelon.  MIT's David Autor explains what is needed to restore wide shared prosperity.2022-07-131h 03The Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp. 9: Is America Ready for a Third Party? With Darry SragowWe've all wondered, at one time or another: Are these really our only two choices? But turning that thought to action is not the popular thing to do. This didn't phase Darry Sragow in 2011, when the opportunity to join a serious effort to create a third American party came about.  Sragow's views on America's need for a third party come out of decades spent as a senior official at the federal and state levels and as campaign consultant for a small armada of successful candidates. https://www.thepoliticalconversation.org/2022-06-1547 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp. 8: Thinking beyond partisan gridlock with Henry Waxman and Frances LeeSome say Washington just hasn't gotten much done; for others, our democracy seems to be on the brink of collapse. Take a break from the despair with Frances Lee of Princeton and Congressman Henry Waxman. Lee discusses her new book The Limits of Party, which aptly challenges the idea of total partisan gridlock. Henry Waxman adds the inside perspective as one of the foremost legislators of his times.2022-05-061h 08The Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp. 7: What it Takes to Govern Versus What it Takes to Win, with Governor Steve BullockIn 2012 and in 2016, Steve Bullock was elected to be a Democratic Governor in Montana. In 2016, 25% of his vote also voted for Donald Trump. It is safe to say Bullock understands rural voters, swing voters, and persuadable Trump voters. In his interview on The Political Conversation, he argues: Democrats might be able to win the presidency with a coastal majority. But with only that, you cannot govern. Governing requires a lot more.2022-03-0753 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp. 6: The Electoral College and Trump's Hold with Adam SchiffIs a (bipartisan) deal on reforming the Electoral College Act possible? Donald Trump is attempting to restore his domination of the Republican Party; is there reason to think that his domination is not complete? We sat down with Congressman Adam Schiff to get his perspective. 2022-01-3028 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp. 5: Loud Polarization, Quiet Agreement? With Michael HiltzikMichael Hiltzik, a Pullitzer-Prize winning colunist with the LA Times, opens up our view of polarization to be more specific: Polarized voices are everywhere, yes. But does that mean most of us are polarized? He argues that the media are not reporting a genuine schism in American politics; they’re reporting on a divide pitting a majority in broad agreement against a boisterous minority.2022-01-1740 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp. 4: How Do the Deeply Politically Involved Impact the Rest? With Yanna KrupnikovWe all know someone who follows political news obsessively, who gets anxious if they can’t follow the news, and who goes on social media to tell lots of people that they are wrong. That describes less than 20% of us, but, as Yanna puts it, "It, it feels like 80%!” Yanna Krupnikov, a professor of political science at Stony Brook University, talks about what it means to be deeply involved in politics and how those people — on the right and on the left — have two things in common: they care about different issues than the vast majority of other vo...2021-11-291h 00The Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp 3: What is Political Engagement? With Dr. Eitan HershBetween tweets, op-eds, newsletters and, well, podcasts–what does it mean to be politically engaged today? We explore this question with Associate Professor of Political Science at Tufts University, Dr. Eitan Hersh. He is the author of Politics Is for Power.2021-11-1248 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp 2: Who Are The Independents? With Samara KlarWith slim majorities on either side of the aisle depending on the election cycle, we wonder: Who are the 'swing voters'? What motivates them to be Independents? We explore this with Associate Professor at the University of Arizona School of Government and Public Policy, Samara Klar. She has extensively studied how individuals’ personal identities and social surroundings influence their political attitudes and behavior.2021-10-2957 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationEp 1: Morris Fiorina: Polarization and the Era of InstabilityMorris Fiorina looks ahead to the midterm elections and back into the history of the political majority to address a paradox: The country is increasingly polarized, and yet voter's willingness to subscribe to either party is sharply declining. Morris Fiorina–who will insist you call him Mo–holds an endowed chair of political science at Stanford University and is a fellow at the Hoover Institute. He has previously taught at Harvard and CalTech. Mo has written several books on polarization: “Disconnect” (2009), “Culture War?” (2004), and “Unstable Majorities” (2017).​2021-10-1544 minThe Political ConversationThe Political ConversationThe Political Conversation – TrailerIntroducing The Political Conversation, a podcast going beyond the two-party binary to have a different kind of conversation. 2021-05-2001 minThe Tchune Up ShowsThe Tchune Up ShowsMichael K's Bi Atlantic Bi Soul Show 01 AvrilAuteria Wally Winzer Junior(feat/vedette Candi Stampley,Steve Fernandez)-Dont't judge the book Lenny Fontana +Dtrain-When you feel what love has Toulouse-Je n'ai jamais pense Knox Feat/Vedette Dawn Souluvn Williams-Turn it up Will Sessions+Amp Fiddler-Lost without you Geoffroy-Pusherman The Spectrum-Theme from Captain Scarlett(Barry Gray) The Whispers-Will you be mine Rasheed Ali-Once upon a time Minuit-Cafeine Keni Burke-Gotta find my way back in your arms We art the people-Sound of my life(promo) Jimmy cliff-Fantastic Plastic people Donovan Blackwood-Walls of Jericho Broolklyn Funk...2017-04-022h 00Vuelo 180 podcastVuelo 180 podcastVuelo 180 6B- Reaganastic!Dime, McLane ¿Qué es 11 de 44? Acometemos al fin nuestro más arduo periplo hasta el momento: un exhaustivo repaso cronológico de los presidentes de Estados Unidos, de Washington a Obama. Centrándonos, por supuesto, en anécdotas, sucesos y momentos bochornosos, bien sazonados con nuestro especial humorisque. Esta primera entrega cubre hasta el undécimo paisano, John Knox Polk, en 135 minutazos donde tienen cabida acción explosiva, amor ardiente, rebeliones con pelucas, superpoderes mutantes, tesoros ocultos, natación extrema y gente aburrida en despachos.2015-03-292h 18The Comics AlternativeThe Comics AlternativeInterviews - Still More Craig YoeIt’s a brand spanking new year, and it’s sure to be another great twelve months for interviews on The Comics Alternative. In fact, Andy and Derek start things off with a bang! this month with another visit from the always-friendly, always-funky, and always-fun Craig Yoe. This is the third time he has been on the show, and this time around the guys not only talk with Craig about his latest releases, but they also discuss the past, present, and future of Yoe Books. It’s the 5th anniversary of the imprint, and starting off a year-long celebration markin...2015-01-0500 minProperly ChilledProperly ChilledProperlychilled.com Podcast #67The first episode of Properly Chilled's exclusive podcast was published only a couple weeks from now, five years ago. That's right, October of 2006. For all the trends of music that come and go one thing is constant, and that's good music. We hope you find this mix as fresh today as when it was originally recorded. [HOUR 1] Soulphiction "Used" from State Of Euphoria (Sonar Kollektiv) Thunderball "The Mysterious Mr. Sandobar" from Cinescope (Eighteenth Street Lounge Music) S-Tone Inc. "Emotional Dancing" from Luz Y Sombra (Schema) DeRigueur "Chillin' on The Afro Rhodes (KidGusto Mix)" from Time I Got My Own Thing...2011-10-0300 miniFanboy: Don\'t Miss - Comic Books PodcastiFanboy: Don't Miss - Comic Books PodcastiFanboy: Don't Miss #56 - Vertigo Resurrected: FinalsMarch 7, 2011 - This week's Don't Miss hops into the Way-Back Machine and takes us on a trip to 1999 as VERTIGO resurrects Finals. Originally a four issue mini-series written by Will Pfeifer with art by Jill Thompson. Finals is back in print and being collected for the first time. Listen in as Will Pfeifer reminisces about writing this satirical look at college life in the pre-9/11 world. Wally Maurer and his fellow seniors at Knox University must complete their final project to graduate, but the only catch is that they may not live through the experience. Finals is a dark and...2011-03-0715 minProperly ChilledProperly ChilledProperlychilled.com Propercast 1Properly Chilled's Propercast 1 is an introduction to the eclectic down tempo sounds of Properly Chilled, a site dedicated to the music and culture of downtempo music. The Properlychilled.com web site offers reviews, interviews, downloads, DJ sets, and more. Set list (29 tracks): 1. Soulphiction "Used" from State Of Euphoria [Sonar Kollektiv] 2. Thunderball "The Mysterious Mr. Sandobar" from Cinescope [Eighteenth Street Lounge Music] 3. S-Tone Inc. "Emotional Dancing" from Luz Y Sombra [Schema] 4. DeRigueur "Chillin' On The Afro Rhodes (Kidgusto mix)" from Time I Got My Own Thing [Citrona] 5. Speedy Consuela "Sukka Suited" from The New Gold Standard [Fort Knox Recordings] 6. Caroline "Drove...2006-10-2400 min