Talk with Tom McGrath

Follow Talk with Tom McGrath
Share on
Copy link to clipboard

Great conversations about culture, politics, arts, business and more.

Talk with Tom McGrath


    • Apr 6, 2021 LATEST EPISODE
    • monthly NEW EPISODES
    • 45m AVG DURATION
    • 11 EPISODES


    Search for episodes from Talk with Tom McGrath with a specific topic:

    Latest episodes from Talk with Tom McGrath

    How Will the Pandemic Change Restaurants?

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2021 40:26


    Few industries have been as devastated by the coronavirus pandemic as the restaurant business. What's that been like for restaurant owners and their staffs -- and how will things change going forward?  In this episode, Tom talks with restaurateur Ellen Yin about the challenges of the last year and what comes next, from menu changes to shifts in employee compensation. Yin's restaurants include Fork, High Street and a. kitchen.

    Michael Nutter Gets Candid on Politics, Race and Being Mayor

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2021 47:28


    Five years after leaving office, former Philly Mayor Michael Nutter opens up in a freewheeling conversation. Nutter touches on everything from growing up in West Philly to why he loved being mayor to the quest for racial justice to why he sometimes wishes white people "would do some fucking work." (Plus, he offers a few constructive comments on the name of this podcast.)

    Angelo Cataldi on Sports, Philly Negativity, and Going to Bed at 6:30 P.M.

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2021 42:36


    For three decades Angelo Cataldi has been Philly's sports-fan-in-chief, shaping opinions with his popular morning radio show. In this episode, he talks with Tom about the long-term success of the show, his love of Philly's negativity, his hatred of Andy Reid, and why Cataldi might be close to retiring.

    Inside the Epoch Times, MAGA-World's Favorite Newspaper

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2021 44:50


    Tom talks with journalist Simon van Zuylen-Wood about the Epoch Times, the right-leaning, Trump-supporting, conspiracy-peddling newspaper that's seen a huge growth in readership over the last four years. He's just written an in-depth look at the paper for the Atlantic.

    Ed Rendell on Joe Biden, Rudy Giuliani, Living with Parkinson's and What Will Happen to Cities

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2020 38:39


    In the wake of the presidential election, Tom talks with Ed Rendell. The former Pennsylvania governor and Philadelphia mayor weighs in on Joe Biden's decency, Rudy Giuliani's mental problems, his own battle with Parkinson's, and whether or not cities can survive Covid-19.

    The Real Scranton

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2020 28:43


    It's become semi-famous as President-elect Joe Biden's home town and the setting for the TV show The Office, but what's Scranton, Pennsylvania really like? Tom talks with current Scranton mayor Paige Gebhardt Cognetti about the city of 77,000 people. They chat about the fact that Scranton is Tom's home town, its place in Presidential politics, its surprising rise in pop culture, and the difference between Scranton's image as a faded coal mining town and its more upbeat reality.

    Journalist Ernest Owens on Race, Protests and Politics

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2020 46:21


    Where does the movement for racial justice stand in this year of unrest? Tom talks with award-winning journalist Ernest Owens, who discusses the recent killing of Walter Wallace Jr. by Philadelphia police; why white people's empathy doesn't necessarily advance the cause; and what he heard at a recent meeting with Barack Obama.

    The College Admissions Game: Who Gets In and Why

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2020 43:08


    If you’ve been paying attention to college admissions in recent years, you know one thing for certain: it’s a fraught, out-of-control process that only seems to be growing more competitive and stressful for everyone involved. In this episode, Tom talks with author Jeffrey Selingo about Selingo's new book Who Gets In and Why: A Year Inside College Admissions. Selingo pulls back the curtain on how admissions really works and offers some compelling findings, including: How admission is big business and is often more about what a college needs than what a student offers. How today’s colleges are divided between “buyers” and “sellers”—and how families can tell the difference. And why getting into college is both harder—and easier—than ever.Selingo also offers some special insider tips on how to manage the admissions process successfully.

    Is It Time to Rethink the Internet?

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2020 49:04


    Have Google, Facebook, Amazon and Apple become so dominant in American life that it's time to break them up? The Justice Department and a recent Congressional report say yes — and so does our guest in this episode, journalist Noam Cohen. A columnist for Wired and author of the book The Know-It-Alls, Cohen talks about his own journey when it comes to technology — from wide-eyed idealist to clear-eyed skeptic — while arguing that the real problem is the everyone-for-themselves philosophy that underpins the entire industry. The only solution, he says, is to fundamentally rethink the Internet."You look at Facebook and You Tube and Twitter today, and it's clear they're just oblivious to the harm they're causing," says Cohen.

    Trump 2024?

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2020 64:53


    What happens after Donald Trump loses next month's election? Political journalist Sasha Issenberg talks about various scenarios, from Trump challenging the legitimacy of the vote to the fragility of Joe Biden's coalition to the fact that the instant frontrunner in the 2024 GOP primary could be...Donald Trump.

    Politico's Elizabeth Ralph on How the Pandemic Will Finally End

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2020 53:04


    How soon will a coronavirus vaccine really be here? How long will it take to distribute it? And how long before life actually goes back to normal again? Politico Magazine deputy editor Elizabeth Ralph, author of a new, in-depth piece about the pandemic, talks about why rolling out a vaccine is way more complicated than most of us realize, what our lives will look like over the next year and why COVID-19 will likely be with us forever.

    Claim Talk with Tom McGrath

    In order to claim this podcast we'll send an email to with a verification link. Simply click the link and you will be able to edit tags, request a refresh, and other features to take control of your podcast page!

    Claim Cancel