Podcasts about argot studios

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Best podcasts about argot studios

Latest podcast episodes about argot studios

Midday
Pamela Newkirk On The Failed Promise Of Corporate "Diversity"

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2020 49:00


(This program was originally broadcast live on December 10, 2019) The business of diversity is booming. Corporations and cultural institutions spend hundreds of millions of dollars every year on diversity training, yet despite the ubiquity and expense of these efforts, overall racial, gender and ethnic diversity remains an aspiration rather than a reality. Today on Midday: what's been tried, what has succeeded and what's flopped in efforts to achieve more inclusion in American life. Dr. Pamela Newkirk is a professor of journalism at New York University and author of "Diversity, Inc.: The Failed Promise of a Billion-Dollar Business." Dr. Newkirk joins Tom on the line from Argot Studios in New York City. (This program was previously recorded, so we can't take your comments or questions.)

Midday
Reimagining Baltimore's Inner Harbor

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2019 41:19


Today, a conversation about what Baltimore’s Inner Harbor used to be, and what it could be. Since it was built in 1980, Harborplace has been one of our city’s signature tourist attractions, a centerpiece of Baltimore's downtown redevelopment. Now, after years of neglect and declining profits, the ----festival marketplace---- has been placed in receivership. It’s losing money, it’s losing stores, and it’s losing patrons. Compared to the glitzier Harbor East, is Harborplace a loser?There are some who think we should convince new stores and restaurants to occupy the currently vacant storefronts, and others who think this is the moment to tear down much or all of it and re-purpose Harborplace as green space and non-retail space. In a recent competition, entrants were asked to let their imaginations soar when it comes to what Baltimore’s waterfront could look like. Today on Midday, a survey of some of the proposals to modernize the waterfront property, and what the redevelopment of Harborplace could mean for tourists, locals and local entrepreneurs. Some improvements are already underway. Just last week, the Waterfront Partnership of Baltimore and the City announced a public-private partnership to fund a major renovation of Rash Field Park on the southern side of Harborplace. Construction is set to begin in January. Joining Tom to talk about all of this: Melody Simmons covers real estate and economic development for The Baltimore Business Journal.Laurie Schwartz is president of the Waterfront Partnership of Baltimore. They join Tom in Studio A. Daniel Campo is associate professor and program director of city planning at the School of Architecture and Planning at Morgan State University. He joins us on the line from Argot Studios in New York City.We welcome listener calls, emails and Tweets.

Midday
Emmy Favilla, Artful Advocate of Good Grammar

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2019 49:39


Tom's guest today is Emmy Jo Favilla. She's the senior manager of “brand voice” at BuzzFeed in New York (she'll explain what that job entails), and formerly its senior commerce editor. For several years before that, she was BuzzFeed’s global copy chief. As such, she created the BuzzFeed Style Guide, which, when it went public in 2014, was heralded by one reviewer as “the style guide for the internet.” (Notice the lower-case ----i---- in ----internet.----) Favilla's years as a style guru led to her first book, published in 2017. It’s called A World Without “Whom”: The Essential Guide to Language in the BuzzFeed Age. It's an instructive and hilarious guide through the perils and pleasures of the modern English language. We first dove into Emmy Favilla’s book when she was a guest on Midday last November. And she joins Tom again today from Argot Studios in Manhattan.

Advice from Mom
Ep 32: Self-Care Sammiches with Lizz Winstead & Negin Farsad

Advice from Mom

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2018 39:18


Whether you’re building an organization, pitching your big idea, or harnessing your creative brilliance for social change, we are serving up some self-care sammiches in our first-ever advice cooking show and what might be our kookiest episode yet. We have two hilarious, wise, and self-reflective comedians as guests: Lizz Winstead of Lady Parts Justice and The Daily Show, and Negin Farsad of Fake the Nation. Let’s get that advice cookin'! .·:*'`*:·..·:*'`*:·.·:*'`*:·..·:*'`*:·.·:*'`*:·. Lizz Winstead is the founder and chief creative officer of Lady Parts Justice League and one of the top political satirists working today. As co-creator and head writer of Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show,” she forever changed the way people get their news. Now with Lady Parts Justice League, Winstead has taken her satirical brilliance one step further, combining it with her passion for reproductive rights to expose anti-choice hypocrisy and inspiring a whole new model of activism. Learn more about her work: https://ladypartsjusticeleague.com and follow her brilliance: https://twitter.com/lizzwinstead Negin Farsad is host of Fake the Nation, a political comedy podcast on the Earwolf network and she’s a regular panelist on NPR’s Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me. She is the author of How To Make White People Laugh, a memoir-meets-social-justice-comedy manifesto, which was nominated for the Thurber Prize for Humor and recommended by Oprah Magazine. She’s also the director/producer of the feature film, The Muslims Are Coming! Listen to her every week on Fake The Nation: http://www.earwolf.com/show/fake-the-nation/ and follow her brilliance: https://twitter.com/neginfarsad .·:*'`*:·..·:*'`*:·.·:*'`*:·..·:*'`*:·.·:*'`*:·. A BLACK & GOL’ GOODIE BAG OF HELPFUL LINKS Why are we using the metaphor of a Pittsburgh Sammich, aka. a sandwich with the french fries and coleslaw inbetwixt the bread? Because it’s the PERFECT metaphor for good advice—combining unexpected things together and stacked things just so. The combination is delicious and nutritious! Also, because Momma B & Rebecca love Pittsburgh. Learn more about the wonderous world of the Pittsburgh sammich: https://www.saveur.com/pittsburgh-sandwich-history Learn more about Pittsburghese: http://guides.library.duq.edu/pittsburghese Feel your cares melt away while you watch this Julia Child highlight reel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M9AITdJBTnQ Support Advice from Mom and the art of jingle-making by supporting our sponsor: Prep Dish: Try a FREE 2-week trial of Prep Dish: PrepDish.com/pickleball Advice from Mom is a production of Wise Ones Advice Services. It was produced by Juliet Hinely & Rebecca Garza-Bortman. Editing by Juliet Hinely. Mixed and mastered by Jake Young. Lizz and Negin’s interview was recorded at Argot Studios, by Paul Ruest. Audio assistance by Bryan Garza. Our theme music is by Love Jerks. This podcast is for informational purposes only and is not intended to offer diagnosis or treatment of any medical or psychological condition. All treatment decisions should be made in partnership with your health professional.

Midday
Andrew Essex's Challenge to Advertisers: Innovate or Die

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2018 49:37


It was clear from watching Super Bowl 52 this past Sunday -- regardless of which team won -- that the tradition of companies spending millions of dollars for a 30-second Super Bowl advertisement to promote their brands is still going strong. ETrade, M----Ms, Avocados from Mexico, as well as Amazon and Netflix, all took the expensive plunge. Beer and cars, not surprisingly, were well-represented too. Perhaps the most controversial ad was for Dodge Ram Trucks, whose appropriation of a sermon by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., drew swift criticism online. Some ads were very funny, some much less so, and a few even used important global issues, such as scarce drinking water, to connect with audiences. Virtually absent from the ads yesterday were the frequent Super Bowl themes of sex and heavy social drinking.Tom's guest today calls the Super Bowl the “high holiday” of advertising, but he predicts that because of the many new ways we have to rid our lives of ads -- at least on all of the days that are not SuperBowl Sunday -- the advertising we know and love (or hate) today will soon be changing.Andrew Essex is the former CEO of Droga5, an advertising agency in New York that won multiple “Agency of the Year” awards. Its clients have included Under Armour, Google, and Hillary Clinton’s presidential bid. Essex, who is sometimes described as a ----recovering---- ad man, published a book last summer called The End of Advertising: Why it Had to Die, and the Creative Resurrection to Come (Penguin/Random House) Andrew Essex joins us on the line from Argot Studios in New York, and takes listener calls, emails and tweets.

Mission To Zyxx
116: X-Marse in Chimnacia [ft. Paul F. Tompkins]

Mission To Zyxx

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2017 48:12


The crew enjoys a well deserved day off for X-Marse. Oh wait. Nope. They are deployed to the sooty planet Chimnacia, where they encounter a hardworking raconteur. Bargie plays the hits and flops. Dar is spared from family drama. Pleck makes it about himself. Who fancies C-53’s new voice? Featuring: Jeremy Bent as C-53 Alden Ford as Pleck Decksetter Allie Kokesh as Dar and Brianna the Log Flume Seth Lind as Nermut Bundaloy and Urchin Bot with a Weird Accent Winston Noel as ART_DODGA and Aggressive Urchin Bot Moujan Zolfaghari as Bargie, Broken Urchin Bot, and The Great Beast With special guest Paul F. Tompkins as Rip Seeso Edited by Seth Lind Recorded at Argot Studios by Paul Ruest Sound Design and Mix by Shane O’Connell Music by Brendan Ryan Opening Crawl narration by Jeremy Crutchley Ship design for The Bargarean Jade by Eric Geusz

Midday
----A Hunger Artist---- Teams Playwright Luxenberg, Actor Levin at Baltimore's Theatre Project

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2017 11:43


Actor Jonathan Levin and Baltimore born playwright Josh Luxenberg join Tom to talk about their new production, A Hunger Artist, which opens at Baltimore Theatre Project next week after acclaimed runs Off-Broadway in New York and at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.Their adaptation of the Franz Kafka short story uses physical theater, Victorian miniatures, puppetry, and a set of simple props to support a powerhouse performance.Luxenberg wrote the script. Levin is the show’s only performer. They are co-founders and co-artistic directors of Sinking Ship Productions, a theater company based in Brooklyn, NY. For more information about the upcoming Baltimore run of A Hunger Artist and for tickets, click here. Josh and Jonathan join Tom on the line from Argot Studios in New York.A Hunger Artist runs December 14th through 17th at The Theatre Project, located at ​45 W. Preston St., Baltimore, MD 21201.

Life of the Law
123: The Battle Over Your Right to Vote

Life of the Law

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2017 44:11


The polls got it wrong. What matters in the end, on election day, is who has the right to vote and who goes to the polls to cast their ballot. Due to strict voter ID laws, not all Americans are allowed to vote on election day. In fact, some 21 million are prevented from voting simply because they don't have the required ID or paperwork when they go to the polls. The Government Accounting Office reports that can shift the election outcome in some states by 2-3 percentage points. In our most recent episode GOVERNMENT GHOST reporter Megan Marrelli told the story of one American who could not cast a ballot or vote for much of his adult life because he did not have a birth certificate to get a government issued photo ID. This week on Life of the Law, our team meets IN-STUDIO with Wendy Weiser, Director of the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law to talk about the battle now taking place in state legislatures and in the courts to further restrict who can vote. According to a report in the NY Times, "In Georgia, which ended a program in September (2017) that had canceled or marked for purging roughly 35,000 registered voters, two-thirds of them African Americans. That purge was based on a data-matching program that had flagged registrations for errors as niggling as a missing apostrophe or missed hyphen." Wendy Weiser joins Life of the Law's Advisory Board Members Osagie Obasogie, Professor at UC Berkeley School of Public Health and Jessica McKellar, Software Engineer and author; Tony Gannon, Life of the Law's Senior Producer and Nancy Mullane, Life of the Law's Executive Producer. Production Notes:In-Studio: The Battle over your Right to Vote -- was produced by Nancy Mullane and Tony Gannon. Special thanks to Wendy Weiser, Director of the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center for Justice and our Advisory Board Members Osagie Obasogie and Jessica McKellar. Our Post Production Editors are Kirsten Jusewicz-Haidle and Rachael Cain. Music in this episode was by Ian Coss. Katie McMurran was our engineer at the studios of KQED in San Francisco. We had engineering support from Ivan Kuraev at Argot Studios in New York City. This episode of Life of the Law was funded in part by grants from theLaw and Society Association, and theNational Science Foundation. © Copyright 2017 Life of the Law. All rights reserved. Suggested Reading and Viewing: ACLU – Oppose Voter ID Legislation Fact Sheet US Government Accountability Office -Issues Related to State Voter Identification Laws 2014 (Reissued 2015) Brennan Center for Justice  – New Voting Restrictions in America Brennan Center or Justice – Research on Voter ID Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited

The author of the Patrick Melrose novels talks about adapting the story of one of Shakespeare’s most dysfunctional families for the Hogarth Shakespeare series. In Edward St. Aubyn’s version of “King Lear,” called “Dunbar,” Lear becomes a media mogul whose evil daughters have locked him away in a psychiatric hospital. Edward St. Aubyn is interviewed by Barbara Bogaev. From the Shakespeare Unlimited podcast series. Published November 1, 2017. © Folger Shakespeare Library. All rights reserved. This episode, “Th’ Untented Woundings of a Father’s Curse,” was produced by Richard Paul. Garland Scott is the associate producer. It was edited by Gail Kern Paster and Esther Ferington. Esther French is the web producer. We had help from Andrew Feliciano and Evan Marquardt at Voice Trax West in Studio City, California and Paul Reuest at Argot Studios in New York.

Midday
Living Questions: What Does Religious Freedom Really Mean

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2017 40:01


Joining Tom today to discuss ----religious freedom---- in America today: The Rev. Dr. Serene Jones. She is the president of the Union Theological Seminary in New York. She is the first woman to head the historic institution. She also holds the Johnston Family Chair for Religion and Democracy at UTS. She is the Immediate Past President of the American Academy of Religion, and she served for 17 years on the faculty of Yale University. She joins us from Argot Studios in New York.Asma Uddin joins us as well. She is the founder and editor-in-chief of altmuslimah.com, and the co-founder of altFem Magazine and altVentures Media, Inc. She is a lawyer and a scholar who speaks frequently about American and international religious liberty. She speaks to us from NPR Studios in Washington, D.C.

Midday
The Legacy of Letterman, In Jason Zinoman's New Bio

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2017 257:53


(This program was originally aired on June 5, 2017) With more than 6,000 hours of shows logged during an influential career that spanned more than 30 years, David Letterman’s impact on the landscape of late-night is unquestioned. On today's Midday, a closer look at the life and work of the trend-setting funny man, through the eyes of a writer-journalist who's spent the past three years sizing up the Letterman legacy.Jason Zinoman writes about comedy for the New York Times, and has contributed to Slate, the Guardian and Vanity Fair. He’s the author of three books: Shock Value, a chronicle of the horror film industry, and Searching for Dave Chappelle, a probing look at the unexpected twists and turns in the career of that brilliant comedian.Zinoman's latest book is a study of another gifted and enigmatic comedian: David Letterman retired in 2015 after more than three decades on TV, during which time he became a cultural icon. Today, Zinoman joins host Tom Hall from Argot Studios in New York City to talk about his new biography: Letterman: The Last Giant of Late Night.

Life of the Law
109: Unequal Protection - Pt. 2

Life of the Law

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2017 35:59


Last time on Life of the Law we presented Unequal Protection - Part 1, the story of Warren McCleskey’s unsuccessful appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. McCleskey argued that his death sentence by the state of Georgia had been prejudiced by the color of skin and that he had not been given equal protection under the law as guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. Walking into the prison, I was the first one. I walked in and his lawyers were walking toward me.  I was looking at them and I said, 'What’s wrong?' They said, Tthey denied him.' And I just dropped to the floor. Just screaming and crying and like, they didn’t even take time to think this through. They really gonna kill my dad. -- Carla McCleskey This week, we present Part 2 of Sarah Marshall’s report on Warren’s McCleskey’s life after the Supreme Court ruling and his execution on September 25, 1991 by the state of Georgia. Production Notes Unequal Protection was reported by Sarah Marshall, edited by Nancy Mullane, and produced by our Senior Producer, Tony Gannon.  Our Post Production Editors are Kirsten Jusewicz-Haidle and Rachael Cain. Our engineers were Paul Ruet of Argot Studios in San Francisco and Katie McMurran of KQED Radio in San Francisco. Music in this episode was composed and produced by Ian Coss. Transcript of Unequal Protection: Part 2 This episode of Life of the Law was funded in part by grants from the Open Society Foundations, the Law and Society Association, and the National Science Foundation. © Copyright 2017 Life of the Law. All rights reserved. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Life of the Law
94: Courting Voters - Pt 4: A Fair Fight for a Fair Court

Life of the Law

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2016 21:57


On October 4th, the justices on the Kansas Supreme Court traveled to Hutchinson, a small town in central Kansas. The seven men and women donned their black robes and took the bench in a community college auditorium to hear oral arguments in upcoming cases. This is pretty much the extent of campaigning the justices are allowed to do and for more than 50 years this has been enough. But this year, many people in Kansas say they are disillusioned by several rulings the justices on Kansas’ highest court have made and now, they want to boot four of the five justices on the ballot, from the bench. Never before has a sitting justice on the Kansas Supreme Court not won a retention election. But as we all bear witness, 2016 is a different sort of election year. In Part 4 of our A Fair Fight for a Fair Court series, Life of the Law reporter Ashley Cleek takes us to Kansas for COURTING VOTERS. PRODUCTION NOTES Courting Voters was reported by Ashley Cleek and edited by Nancy Mullane with sound design and production by Shani Aviram. Our Post Production Editors are Kirsten Jusewicz-Haidle and Rachael Cain. Ceil Muller and Howard Gelman of KQED in San Francisco and Paul Ruest of Argot Studios in New York were our sound engineers. Special Thanks to Hutchinson Community College and Lisa Taylor at the Kansas Supreme Court and Professor James Gibson of the American University for his scholarly advice. Full Transcript of Courting Voters Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Uninterrupted
Episode 17: Why Lindy West Doesn't Mind Being Called Fat or Shrill

Uninterrupted

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2016 27:32


The writer discusses her new memoir, "Shrill: Notes from a Loud Woman," how she perseveres against the meanest of internet trolls, and why she's totally comfortable calling herself the F-word. The Women Promoted on this Episode: "Samantha Irby has a blog called Bitches Gotta Eat, and she has a book called Meaty,” says Lindy. “I just love her so much. I feel like people sometimes call my work ‘vulnerable and brave,' and she just makes me feel like a coward and a liar, you know? She's so candid about things that I would just never touch, and then she writes about them in ways that are so funny and relatable and smart. Then I'm just like, ‘Oh, why was I afraid? Why was I afraid to talk about that?'” Follow These Women on Twitter: Women's Health: @womenshealthmag Caitlin Abber: @everydaycaitlin Lindy West: @thelindywest Episode Credits: Uninterrupted is produced by Caitlin Abber, with audio production by Paul Ruest at Argot Studios. Editorial and public relations was provided by Lisa Chudnofsky. Our theme music is “Bullshit” by Jen Miller.

Uninterrupted
Episode 14: Two Strong Female Role Models Share Their Personal Stories of Mental Illness

Uninterrupted

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2016 39:18


Hear how Chirlane McCray, the First Lady of New York City, and Amy Keller Laird, the Editor-in-Chief of Women's Health, are trying to smash the stigma. The Women Promoted in This Episode: “I basically watch MSNBC like a fool, and Rachel Maddow is my favorite person to watch,” says Amy. “It was so exciting to see that our podcast, which is still in its infancy, had made the, New and Noteworthy list on iTunes, and that we were right alongside her.” “Hillary Clinton was an enthusiastic cheerleader of Thrive NYC,” says Chirlane. “She actually gave us advice about how to approach it by going to communities and having town halls and getting people's first hand experiences with the mental health system. She's just incredible. The other woman I want to promote is the author Tanwi Nandidi Islam. Her book, Bright Lines, is about what the life of an eighteen year old daughter of Bangladesh immigrants in 2003 in Brooklyn was like. It's a coming of age story and it is really wonderful.” Follow These Women on Twitter: Women's Health: @womenshealthmag Caitlin Abber: @everydaycaitlin Amy Keller Laird: @amykellerlaird Chirlane McCray: @chirlane Episode Credits: Uninterrupted is produced by Caitlin Abber, with audio production by Paul Ruest at Argot Studios. Editorial and public relations support from Lisa Chudnofsky and Lindsey Benoit. Our theme music is “Bullshit” by Jen Miller.

Uninterrupted
Episode 13: A Real Conversation About Women and Mental Health

Uninterrupted

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2016 66:47


Comedian and mental health advocate Sara Benincasa talks about her new book, 'Real Artists Have Day Jobs,' and WNBA All Star Champion Chamique Holdsclaw discusses her autobiographical documentary, ‘Mind/Game.' The Women Promoted in This Episode: “Phoebe Robinson and Jessica Williams have a new podcast based on their comedy show, Two Dope Queens,” says Sara. “They try to always book women, book people of color, and to book people of different kinds of orientations, and gender identifications. Basically they try to book people other than just white dudes. Although they have white dudes on too.” “I love Oprah Winfrey,” says Chamique. “I just think she's such a giver to people and a very strong woman. And I also like Ellen DeGeneres, because I think she embodies the same thing—but she's also just really funny.” Follow These Women on Twitter: Women's Health: @womenshealthmag Caitlin Abber: @everydaycaitlin Sara Benincasa: @sarajbenincasa Chamique Holdzclaw: @chold1 Episode Credits: Uninterrupted is produced by Caitlin Abber, with audio production by Paul Ruest at Argot Studios. Editorial and public relations support from Lisa Chudnofsky and Lindsey Benoit. Our theme music is “Bullshit” by Jen Miller.

Uninterrupted
Episode 12: 'More Voices, More Choices': Why Americans are Really Excited to Vote

Uninterrupted

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2016 39:38


Debra Cleaver, the CEO of Vote.org, talks about the problems with voter ID laws, and 24-year-old Erin Schrode explains why she's running for Congress. The Women Promoted on this Episode: "Anna Galland inspires me everyday," says Debra. "Not only is she the director of MoveOn.org but she has three, all under 3 years old. Clearly she has amazing time management skills." "Michelle Alexander is a powerful woman who wrote an exceptional piece of literature called The New Jim Crow, which is about the legacy of racism in our country," says Erin. Follow These People on Twitter: Women's Health: @womenshealthmag Debra Cleaver: @DebraCleaver Erin Schrode: @ErinSchrode Caitlin Abber: @everydaycaitlin Episode Credits: Uninterrupted is produced by Caitlin Abber, with audio production by Paul Ruest at Argot Studios. Editorial and public relations support from Lisa Chudnofsky and Lindsey Benoit. Our theme music is “Bullshit” by Jen Miller.

Uninterrupted
Episode 11: Why Can't Fashion Be Fun For Everyone?

Uninterrupted

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2016 39:48


Jacob Tobia, a leading LGBTQ activist, takes us through their style evolution, and we discuss what can be done to make fashion more inclusive and playful for all bodies and genders. Follow These People on Twitter: Women's Health: @womenshealthmag Jacob Tobia: @jacobtobia Caitlin Abber: @everydaycaitlin Episode Credits: Uninterrupted is produced by Caitlin Abber, with audio production by Paul Ruest at Argot Studios. Editorial and public relations support from Lisa Chudnofsky and Lindsey Benoit. Our theme music is “Bullshit” by Jen Miller.

Uninterrupted
Episode 10: Why the Founder of Emily's List Thinks America Needs a Woman President

Uninterrupted

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2016 25:26


Ellen Malcolm, the CEO and founder of EMILY's List, has spent the last 31 years helping women get elected to office. Hear what she thinks of Hillary Clinton, the things that surprise her about the 2016 election, and why she thinks women make excellent politicians. The Women Promoted on this Episode: Ellen wants you to pay attention to the women who could very possibly take back the Senate from the Republicans, including Tammy Duckworth, Maggie Hassan, Ann Kirkpatrick, Deborah Ross, and Katie McGinty. You can learn about all of them at emilyslist.org This week we want to promote the female politicians who work for you! Please go online and find out who they are, and tweet their names and what they stand for using the hashtag #WHUninterrupted. We'll be retweeting you along the way! Follow These Women on Twitter: Women's Health: @womenshealthmag EMILY's List: @emilyslist Caitlin Abber: @everydaycaitlin Episode Credits: Uninterrupted is produced and hosted by Caitlin Abber, with audio production by Paul Ruest at Argot Studios. Editorial and public relations support from Lisa Chudnofsky and Lindsey Benoit. Our theme music is “Bullshit” by Jen Miller. Check her out at jenmillermusic.com

Uninterrupted
Episode 9: Are Female Friendships More Valuable Than Marriage?

Uninterrupted

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2016 48:42


Rebecca Traister, author of "All the Single Ladies: Unmarried Women and the Rise of an Independent Nation," talks with her best friend Sara Culley—the Senior Managing Editor of Women's Health—about their long and winding friendship, and the fallacy that a woman's adult life only begins when she gets married. The Women Promoted on This Episode: Rebecca wants you to check out the great work Myra Jones Taylor is doing with early childhood education in Connecticut. Follow These Women on Twitter: Women's Health: @womenshealthmag Rebecca Traister: @rtraister Caitlin Abber: @everydaycaitlin Episode Credits: Uninterrupted is produced by Caitlin Abber, with audio production by Paul Ruest at Argot Studios. Editorial and public relations support from Lisa Chudnofsky and Lindsey Benoit. Our theme music is “Bullshit” by Jen Miller.

10 Minute Writer's Workshop
Workshop 13: Alexander Chee

10 Minute Writer's Workshop

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2016 10:40


Alexander Chee is a careful craftsman of language. As we came to find out, when we talked to him from Argot Studios in NYC, he is as measured, unassuming and thoughtful in his speech. A retiring man, who prefers to write in transient spaces, he also just so happens to have penned the most hotly anticipated literary novel of 2016 - The Queen of the Night, a sophomore work fifteen years in the making*. *He assures us it only took eleven or twelve.

Uninterrupted
Episode 8: Hot Mess 2016: Trump, Political Correctness, and the Questions We're Not Asking

Uninterrupted

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2016 40:50


CNN commentator Sally Kohn and writer/comedian Akilah Hughes share their takes on WTF is going on with the presidential election. The Women Promoted on This Episode: Sally wants you to follow Franchesca Ramsey, a writer and comedian who is currently working on "The Nightly Show": @chescaleigh Akilah thinks everyone should follow Amber Gordon and Femsplain: @amberdiscko @femsplain Caitlin would really like Full Frontal host Samantha Bee to come on the show: @FullFrontalSamB Follow These Women on Twitter: Women's Health: @womenshealthmag Sally Kohn: @sallykohn Akilah Hughes: @AkilahObviously Caitlin Abber: @everydaycaitlin Episode Credits: Uninterrupted is produced by Caitlin Abber, with audio production by Paul Ruest at Argot Studios. Editorial and public relations support from Lisa Chudnofsky and Lindsey Benoit. Our theme music is “Bullshit” by Jen Miller.

Uninterrupted
Episode 7: Ingrid Nilsen Is Having a Period Party, and Everybody Is Invited

Uninterrupted

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2016 40:52


YouTube star/UN Change Ambassador Ingrid Nilsen discusses the period tax, we swap period horror stories, and talk about whether all bathrooms should just be gender neutral. The Women Promoted on This Episode: Ingrid would love for you to pick up a copy of 'Chelsea Girls' by Eileen Myles and learn more about Concious Period. Caitlin thinks you should treat yourself to a pair of Thinx (visit SheThinx.com to learn more). Follow These Women on Twitter: Women's Health: @womenshealthmag Ingrid Nilsen: @IngridNilsen Caitlin Abber: @everydaycaitlin Episode Credits: Uninterrupted is produced by Caitlin Abber, with audio production by Paul Ruest at Argot Studios. Editorial and public relations support from Lisa Chudnofsky and Lindsey Benoit. Our theme music is “Bullshit” by Jen Miller.

On Being with Krista Tippett
[Unedited] Paul Raushenbush with Krista Tippett

On Being with Krista Tippett

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2011 83:27


Paul Brandeis Raushenbush is the Senior Religion Editor for the Huffington Post. Krista Tippett spoke with him on October 5, 2011 from the studios of APM in Saint Paul, Minnesota; Paul Brandeis Raushenbush was in the Argot Studios in New York City. This interview is included in our show “Occupying the Gospel.” Download the produced show at onbeing.org.