Background Briefing has a new home at BackgroundBriefing.org.
Please visit and bookmark the new site. You can search show archives here.
Background Briefing has a new home at BackgroundBriefing.org.
Please visit and bookmark the new site. You can search show archives here.
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with Jessica Levinson |
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We begin today’s show with Laurie Levenson, a professor at Loyola Law School, discussing Loyola Law School’s Project for the Innocent, an organization dedicated to the exoneration of the wrongfully convicted.
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Then we are joined by Fran Seegull, the Chief Investment Officer and Managing Director of Impact Assets. She helps shed light on the growing field of impact investing and creative ways to incentivize philanthropy. |
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Our last guest is Carla Marinucci, the Senior Political Writer for the San Francisco Chronicle, who joins us to discuss the upcoming elections in California where we are seeing too little engagement from both the public and the candidates. |
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with Jonathan Taplin |
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| With the 2014 Nobel Prize in economics just being awarded to Jean Tirole for his work studying monopolies, today we look into the rise of digital monopoly capitalism in the media industries. We begin and speak with Bob Kohn, a technology lawyer, entrepreneur and investor, about Amazon's domination of the book bussiness. | ![]() |
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| Then we are joined by John Bergmayer, a senior staff attourney at Public Interest, to discuss the upcoming Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger and net neutrality. | ![]() |
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| Finally, we speak with Ethan Zuckerman about the role of Google and the ad-centered web economy. Ethan directs MIT's Media Lab and is the author of Rewire: Digital Cosmopolitans in the Age of Connection. | ![]() |
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With the midterm election three weeks away, we will begin with the underlying issues of race in our politics following consistent and blatant efforts by Republicans in states like Texas, North Carolina, Ohio and Wisconsin to restrict minority turnout at the polls in November in the name of protecting the sanctity of the vote. Doug McAdam, Professor of Sociology at Stanford University and a former Director of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences joins us to discuss his new book “Deeply Divided: Racial Politics and Social Movements in Postwar America”. We look into how President Johnson’s signing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 led to a break-up of the Democratic Party’s coalition of northern liberals and southern Dixiecrats, and the southern takeover of the Republican Party by these same Dixiecrats whose dominance of the GOP today has led to something of a civil war within the party between the insurgent Tea Party wing who represent the endangered white man in America and traditional conservatives who recognized that race-based voter suppression is alienating the fastest-growing constituency, the Latino vote, and that is not a winning strategy for the GOP over the long term.
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Then we look further into the politics of race and race-baiting with Ian Haney Lopez, a Professor of Law at the University of California, Berkeley, and author of “Dog Whistle Politics: How Coded Racial Appeals Have Reinvented Racism and Wrecked the Middle Class”. I spoke with Ian Haney Lopez back on February 19thwhen we discussed his analysis of our divided politics in which the younger generation are leading us into a post-racial and post-sexual America, while the current Republican Party is heading in the opposite, keeping racism alive to rile up their voters and drive them to the polls. |
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with Amy Wilentz |
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We begin today's show looking at what life is like in Gaza with Saree Makdisi, a professor at UCLA and author of Palestine Inside and Out: An Everyday Occupation. He joins us to discuss the future of Gaza and the agreement between Fatah and Hamas to turn over the civil administration of Gaza to a Palestinian unity government led by President Mahmoud Abbas. Then we get an analysis of the conflict in Israel and Palestine from David Myers, the chairman of the UCLA History Department whose latest article at Jewish Journal is "After Gaza: The Trail of Destruction and its Costs". David discusses the future of Gaza, the West Bank and Israel in the wake of the summers' disastrous war and the new agreement. |
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| Then we discuss efforts to abolish the death penalty in the United States. Mike Farrell, an actor and President of Death Penalty Focus, joins us to talk about the growing revolsion with the fact that the US is among the last countries in the developed world to still execute people. |
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Then finally, on John Lennon's 74th birthday, we talk about the stubborn, endurring legacy of The Beatles with Joshua Shenk, a writer whose latest book is of Powers of Two: Finding the Essence of Innovation in Creative Pairs, an excerpt of which was recently featured in the Atlantic Monthly examining the famous partnership between John Lennon and Paul McCartney. |
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with Amy Wilentz |
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Part 1 |
With the death of Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier, we begin and speak with a Hatian hotelier and musician, Richard Morse, about unrest in Haiti and the legacy of Duvalierism. | ![]() |
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Then we further discuss Haiti and the hold President Martelly has on the country with the delay of elections. We also discuss the house arrest of former president Jean Bertrand Aristide. Brian Concannon, the Executive Director of the Institute for Democracy and Justice in Haiti, joins us. |
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| Then finally we speak with IT expert and writer Christopher Surdak whose latest book is Data Crush. We discuss the affect of big data on the average citizen and weigh the pros and cons of "connectedness". | ![]() |
Taking listeners deep into the underlying issues and forces that shape our world.
Listen Live on KPFK FM-90.7 - Los Angeles (98.7 FM Santa Barbara, 99.5 FM China Lake, 93.7 FM San Diego)
Listen on Itunes
LA: Background Briefing Monday-Thursday 5pm-6pm and Sundays 11am-12pm
NY: on WBAI 99.5 FM Monday-Friday 5am-6am and rebroadcast at 10am
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