Podcasts about chozick

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Best podcasts about chozick

Latest podcast episodes about chozick

Book Club with Michael Smerconish
Amy Chozik: "Chasing Hillary"

Book Club with Michael Smerconish

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2024 15:49


The dishy, rollicking, and deeply personal story of what really happened in the 2016 election, as seen through the eyes of the New York Times reporter who gave eight years of her life to covering the First Woman President who wasn't. For a decade, award-winning New York Times journalist Amy Chozick chronicled Hillary Clinton's pursuit of the presidency. Chozick's front-row seat, initially covering Clinton's imploding 2008 campaign, and then her assignment to “The Hillary Beat” ahead of the 2016 election, took her to 48 states and set off a nearly ten-years-long journey in which the formative years of her twenties and thirties became – both personally and professionally – intrinsically intertwined to Clinton's presidential ambitions. Listen to her conversation with Michael here on the book "Chasing Hillary: Ten Years, Two Presidential Campaigns, and One Intact Glass Ceiling." Original air date 23 April 2018. The book was published on 24 April 2018.

Collider Conversations
Melissa Benoist Interview: From Glee & Supergirl to The Girls on the Bus

Collider Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2024 37:24


Melissa Benoist stepped into the Hollywood spotlight in a big way via Glee. Then she cemented herself as a bonafide star and headliner with Supergirl. Now she continues to broaden her range and her industry skill set by starring in and producing the hugely entertaining political drama, The Girls on the Bus.Created by Amy Chozick and Julie Plec, The Girls on the Bus is inspired by Chozick's memoir, Chasing Hillary. It follows four female journalists played by Benoist, Carla Gugino, Christina Elmore and Natasha Behnam, who are on the campaign trail with aspiring presidential candidates. They all have vastly different backgrounds and goals, but find themselves supporting one another as they navigate career pressures, personal challenges, and frustrations with flawed presidential hopefuls.As Collider's Taylor Gates noted in her review, “[Girls on the Bus] handles serious topics, from sexism and racism to abortion and corruption, in a way that feels both raw and palatable while never taking away from the show's watchability and enjoyability,” and I must agree. Powered by its perfectly assembled core four and their infectious charm, Girls on the Bus quickly earned my investment and heart. Given that, it'll probably come as no surprise that the show's cancellation was a massive disappointment. However, that's not stopping Benoist from celebrating what she and the team achieved.Benoist took the time to join me for a Collider Ladies Night conversation to recap her road to Girls on the Bus, to discuss her collaboration with her three top-tier co-stars, and to explain why the show's cancellation will have zero impact on how she looks back on the experience of making it and the final product she and the team produced. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

What's The Hook with Diane & Andy
Julie Plec and Amy Chozick Talk About THE GIRLS ON THE BUS

What's The Hook with Diane & Andy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2024 20:54


Diane talks with co-creators and executive producers Julie Plec and Amy Chozick about THE GIRLS ON THE BUS and how they took a chapter of Chozick's book CHASING HILLARY to the screen for this MAX series starring Melissa Benoist, Carla Gugino, Christina Elmore and Natasha Behnam.

The Megyn Kelly Show
New Biden Memory Revelations, and Movie Set Shooting Verdict, with Jonna Spilbor, David Wohl, Dave Aronberg, Mike Davis, and Amy Chozick | Ep. 744

The Megyn Kelly Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2024 96:56


Megyn Kelly is joined by attorneys Dave Aronberg and Mike Davis to discuss special counsel Robert Hur's testimony today about the Biden classified documents case, new details about Biden's faulty memory, the reason Hur says he couldn't charge Biden, the Fani Willis disqualification case Judge Scott McAfee speaking out in a radio interview, whether he'll rule differently now that there's a primary challenger, new person speaking out about boxes at Mar-a-Lago, new info from the driver of "The Beast" about Trump and January 6, and more. Then attorneys Jonna Spilbor and David Wohl join to discuss the "Rust" movie armorer being found guilty, what that verdict means for Alec Baldwin, the shocking details of the Michelle Troconis case, the father of the Michigan school shooter now on trial, whether he will be or should be convicted of involuntary manslaughter, how unique this trial is, a major potential delay in the Kohberger case, and more. Then Amy Chozick, creator of "The Girls on the Bus," joins to discuss the erosion of trust in the media, how the media landscape has changed, objectivity vs. authenticity in the press, her time covering the Clinton campaign, and more. Aronberg- https://www.youtube.com/@DaveAronbergFLDavis- https://article3project.org/Spilbor-https://jonnaspilbor.com/Wohl- https://criminaldefenseriverside.com/Chozick- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mY5FmbI45YU Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow

All Of It
'The Girls on the Bus' Follows Female Campaign Reporters

All Of It

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2024 23:04


The new Max series "The Girls on the Bus" follows a group of female political reporters as they cover a presidential campaign. The series stars Carla Gugino and Melissa Benoist and is based on Amy Chozick's memoir Chasing Hillary. Chozick is the creator, writer, and producer of the series, and joins us to discuss. "The Girls on the Bus" premieres on Max on March 14th. *This episode is guest-hosted by Kousha Navidar

All Of It
'The Girls on the Bus' Follows Female Campaign Reporters

All Of It

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2024 23:00


The new Max series "The Girls on the Bus" follows a group of female political reporters as they cover a presidential campaign. The series stars Carla Gugino and Melissa Benoist and is based on Amy Chozick's memoir Chasing Hillary. Chozick is the creator, writer, and producer of the series, and joins us to discuss. "The Girls on the Bus" premieres on Max on March 14th. *This episode is guest-hosted by Kousha Navidar

The ALL NEW Big Wakeup Call with Ryan Gatenby

From April 26, 2018: Amy Chock,  writer-at-large for the New York Times, visited the show to talk about her book, CHASING HILLARY: Ten Years, Two Presidential Campaigns, and One Intact Glass Ceiling.The debut memoir from award-winning New York Times journalist Amy Chozick, CHASING HILLARY: Ten Years, Two Presidential Campaigns, and One Intact Glass Ceiling is the rollicking, irreverent, refreshingly honest personal story of Chozick's decade spent covering Hillary Clinton's pursuit of the presidency.ABOUT AMY CHOZICKAmy Chozick is a writer-at-large for the New York Times. She served as a national political reporter and was the Times' lead reporter covering Mrs. Clinton's 2016 campaign. Previously, Ms. Chozick was a business reporter at the paper. Before joining the Times, she spent eight years at The Wall Street Journal, where she served as a foreign correspondent based in Tokyo and a political reporter traveling with Mrs. Clinton and Barack Obama's 2008 presidential campaigns. Ms. Chozick is a frequent contributor to CBS News, MSNBC, CNN and NPR. She was recently profiled in Vogue and Cosmopolitan and interviewed on Fresh Air with Terry Gross. She served as a consultant on the Netflix political drama,House of Cards,advising the writers on the development of the female journalist characters. Born in San Antonio, Ms. Chozick moved to New York in 2001 with no job, no apartment and a stack of clips from The Daily Texan. She lives in New York with her husband.

The Omnichannel Marketer
Building Community and the Power of Honest Reviews with Emma Chozick from ThingTesting

The Omnichannel Marketer

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2023 23:11


In this episode, we meet Emma Chozick, Head of Community and Curation at Thingtesting. ‍Thingtesting is a consumer product discovery and review website, i.e Yelp for CPG. ‍Emma highlights the importance of engaging with your brand's community and establishing connections.Topics coveredThe importance of identifying who the consumers and stakeholders areHow the Thingtesting community is engaged and utilized by the company.What are brands doing right when it comes to being omnichannel? ‍TakeawaysIt's important for consumers to feel heard by brands and connected to them in a genuine way.Conversation and communication is vital! Create one with your customers who spend the most time on your platform and get their insight on different things you (as a brand) want to try.Successful brands meet their customers where they are whether that be on TikTok or any other platform. This creates visibility and also gives the brand exposure to other potential customers. Being self-aware and knowing when something is not working; don't waste any more time on it.  Any mistake is reversible when working on an online platform. Be confident in your choices. ‍Please let us know your thoughts about the episode!‍Where to find Emma Chozick:Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emmachozick/ ​Website: https://thingtesting.com/ ‍Where to find Kait Stephens:Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kait-margraf-stephens/Website: www.brij.it ‍SUBSCRIBE TO THE OMNICHANNEL MARKETERwww.theomnichannelmarketer.com

In The News
With jail looming, is Theranos fraudster Elizabeth Holmes sorry?

In The News

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2023 22:20


The headline on the New York Times interview with the one-time darling of Silicon Valley, now convicted fraudster, said it all: “Liz Holmes Wants You to Forget About Elizabeth.”Writer Amy Chozick met Elizabeth Holmes, the former media darling, in San Diego where she now lives. Gone is the uniform of black polonecks, driven ambition, the austere manner and weirdly deep voice – done to ape her hero Steve Jobs – instead “Liz” presented as a thirtysomething, cool west coast mom of two, hanging out, going to the zoo, talking about her dog and Burning Man.But the convicted Theranos founder is awaiting prison – she has been sentenced to 11 years having been found guilty of defrauding investors out of more than $100 million in her blood-testing start-up. She was set to go to prison in April but she has appealed.Her invention at age 19 when she dropped out of Stanford – a blood test from a finger prick that could diagnose hundreds of conditions including cancers – never came close to working despite her many promises, and the millions of dollars investors poured into the company.Since the interview was published – Holmes' first in seven years – it has sparked controversy with sceptics on social media suggesting that the New York Times fell for the fraudster's new image, that it facilitated her carefully planned rehabilitation effort. Not so, Chozick tells In the News, who explains how the interview came about, and that rehabilitation was far from the former tech whizz kid's mind as she faces jail time. Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by John Casey. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Good for U (?)
Confessions of a professional brand spotter with Emma Chozick from ThingTesting

Good for U (?)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2023 50:13


Welcome to episode sixty-five. Our most unhinged and ThingTested episode yet. We're talking: The pod is heading into retirement! Have no fear, we're giving you a good long irish goodbye

Fearless Portraits
Janet Yellen: On making economics work for everyone

Fearless Portraits

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 5:28


“Economics should be about caring for real people.” Janet Yellen First female Secretary of the Treasury First female Chair of the Federal Reserve Chair of the Council of Economic Advisors First person to hold all three roles   The Artwork: Yellen's portrait in the Fearless Portraits project consists of an Ink and colored pencil drawing on a map of San Francisco. She's wearing a purple blazer with her trademarked popped collar. The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco she presided over from 2004 – 2010 is on the right side of the map, just over her shoulder.    The Story: Janet Yellen's philosophy on how economics should be about caring for real people had its roots in her childhood. Growing up in a working-class Brooklyn neighborhood, she watched a stream of factory workers and dock hands visit her father's medical practice, paying $2 cash to be seen, or not paying if they couldn't. “I came to understand the effect that unemployment could have on people in human terms,” she says.  This philosophy was solidified in college during a macroeconomics lecture: “I remember sitting in class and learning about how there were policy decisions that could have been taken during the Great Depression to alleviate all that human suffering—that was a real ‘aha' moment for me. I realized that public policy can, and should, address these problems.” Fast forward 50 years and Yellen—in her role as president of the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank—would be among the first to raise concerns about the impending subprime mortgage bubble. Later, as vice chair of the Fed and then chair of the Fed, she oversaw a controversial plan to buy trillions of dollars in assets to prevent the economy from further collapse. Called quantitative easing, the plan may well have been the difference between keeping a job or losing it for millions of workers in the US economy.  Yellen's human-centric economics mindset was a marked shift in thinking for the Federal Reserve and later to the Department of the Treasury. As she put it, the job of central bankers as she sees it, “isn't just about fighting inflation or monitoring the financial system. It's about trying to help ordinary households get back on their feet and about creating a labor market where people can feel secure and work and get ahead.”  In her long and distinguished career, Yellen served as one of President Clinton's top aides, chairing the Council of Economic Advisors. Then, she led the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco and became the first female Chair of the Federal Reserve system in 2014. Five days into Joe Biden's presidency, Yellen was confirmed by the Senate as the first female Secretary of the Treasury. She is the first person in history to hold all three of the US's top economic positions.    Background on Yellen: Yellen's household is a true economics powerhouse. She's married to Nobel laureate and UC Berkeley professor George Akerlof and their son, Robert, is also an economics professor.  Aside from collaborating on raising their son together, (Yellen notes that if all hours on parenting and housework were added up, Akerlof did “more than 50%”) the economics super couple also co-wrote a famous paper together. Drawing on their experience hiring a babysitter for their son, the paper illuminates why lower wages don't always lead to higher employment.  “Firms are not always willing to cut wages, even if there are people lined up outside the gates to work. So, why don't they?” asks Yellen. Their conclusion was that some companies choose to pay higher wages to attract better talent and motivate their employees to do good work.  As Yellen notes, “When you hire a nanny, the question you ask yourself is, ‘what's best for my precious child?' And do you really want someone who feels that your motive in life is to minimize the amount you spend on your child?”   Music: This episode contains music by Geovane Bruno and Praz Khanal.   Sources:  Akerlof, G. A., & Yellen, J. L. (1988). Fairness and Unemployment. The American Economic Review, 78(2), 44–49. http://www.jstor.org/stable/1818095 Akerlof, G. A., & Yellen, J. L. (1990). The Fair Wage-Effort Hypothesis and Unemployment. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 105(2), 255. https://doi.org/10.2307/2937787  Amadeo, K. (2021, March 4). Who Was the Only Female Federal Reserve Chair? The Balance. https://www.thebalance.com/janet-yellen-3305503  Appelbaum, B., & Couturier, K. (n.d.). Yellen's Path to the Pinnacle. Timeline - NYTimes.Com. https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/interactive/business/yellen-timeline.html#/#time276_7992  Bell, S. (2018, January 24). The Tragedy of Janet Yellen. POLITICO Magazine. https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2018/01/24/janet-yellen-fed-chair-donald-trump-216509/  Chozick, A. (2017, December 11). Janet Yellen Didn't Set Out to Be a Feminist Hero. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/09/business/janet-yellen-didnt-set-out-to-be-a-feminist-hero.html  Counts, L. (2021, January 12). Prof. Janet Yellen, trailblazing former Fed chair, is Biden's Treasury pick. Haas News | Berkeley Haas. https://newsroom.haas.berkeley.edu/research/janet-yellen-former-fed-chair-bidens-expected-treasury-pick/  Foroohar, R. (2014, January 20). Janet Yellen: The Sixteen Trillion Dollar Woman. TIME.Com. http://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,2162267,00.html  Gibbs, N. (2014, January 9). The Most Unprecedented Thing About Janet Yellen. Time. https://time.com/275/nancy-gibbs-janet-yellen/  Graveline, D. (2017, September 22). Famous Speech Friday: Janet Yellen on holding women back. Denise Graveline. https://denisegraveline.org/2017/09/famous-speech-friday-janet-yellen-on.html  Lane, S. (2020, November 30). Biden names Janet Yellen as his Treasury nominee. The Hill. https://thehill.com/policy/finance/526996-biden-picks-janet-yellen-for-treasury-secretary?rl=1  Mejia, Z. (2018, December 12). Janet Yellen survived the “horrifying” financial crisis thanks to this one simple habit. CNBC. https://www.cnbc.com/2018/12/12/how-did-janet-yellen-survive-the-horrifying-financial-crisis-sleep-.html  The Economic Times. (2013, October 12). Janet Yellen moves out of her Nobel-laureate husband George Akerlof's shadow. https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/opinion/et-editorial/janet-yellen-moves-out-of-her-nobel-laureate-husband-george-akerlofs-shadow/articleshow/23993099.cms?from=mdr  Wolverson, R. (2021, January 27). Janet Yellen's past mistakes will haunt her as treasury secretary. Quartz. https://qz.com/1962724/janet-yellens-greatest-mistakes-will-haunt-her-toughest-job-yet/ 

通勤學英語
每日英語跟讀 Ep.K147: 當間諜駭入新聞界

通勤學英語

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2021 4:37


每日英語跟讀 Ep.K147: When Spies Hack Journalism界   For decades, leakers of confidential information to the press were a genus that included many species: the government worker infuriated by wrongdoing, the ideologue pushing a particular line, the politico out to savage an opponent. In recent years, technology has helped such leakers operate on a mass scale: Chelsea Manning and the WikiLeaks diplomatic cables, Edward Snowden and the stolen National Security Agency archive, and the still-anonymous source of the Panama Papers.But now this disparate cast has been joined by a very different sort of large-scale leaker, more stealthy and better funded: the intelligence services of nation states, which hack into troves of documents and then use a proxy to release them. What Russian intelligence did with shocking success to the Democrats in 2016 shows every promise of becoming a common tool of spycraft around the world. 數十年來,向新聞界揭露機密情報的洩密者,多為同一屬但涵蓋許多種的人物:被不法行為激怒的政府工作人員,推動特定路線的意識型態者,試圖攻擊對手的政治人物。近年來,科技成為這些洩密者採取大規模行動的助力:雀兒喜.曼寧和「維基解密」的外交電報,愛德華.史諾登和被竊的國家安全局檔案,以及「巴拿馬文件」和它仍是無名氏的消息來源。然而現在這個由各不相同的角色構成的卡司,又增加了另一種迥然不同的大規模洩密者,更隱密,銀彈也更足:他們是各國的情報部門。這些情報部門駭得大量文件資料,再利用代理人發布出去。俄羅斯情報部門2016年驚人成功地駭入美國民主黨這件事,顯示這種作法肯定會在未來成為通行全球的間諜活動工具。 In 2014, North Korea, angry about a movie, hacked Sony and aired thousands of internal emails. Since then, Russia has used the hack-leak method in countries across Europe. The United Arab Emirates and Qatar, Persian Gulf rivals, have accused each other of tit-for-tat hacks, leaks and online sabotage. Other spy services are suspected in additional disclosures, but spies are skilled at hiding their tracks.“It's clear that nation states are looking at these mass leaks and seeing how successful they are,” said Matt Tait, a cyber expert at the University of Texas who previously worked at Government Communications Headquarters, the British equivalent of the National Security Agency. 2014年,對某部電影怒不可遏的北韓,駭入索尼公司,並公布了數千封內部電子郵件。此後,俄羅斯在歐洲各國也採用了這種駭入─洩露方法。波斯灣的對立國家,阿拉伯聯合大公國和卡達互控對方肆行以牙還牙的駭客攻擊、洩密和網路破壞。其他情報單位也被懷疑是另一些洩密事件的主謀,只是這些間諜擅長隱藏他們的蹤跡。德州大學網路專家馬特.泰特說:「顯然,各國正在審視這些大規模洩密行動,且目睹它們是多麼成功。」泰特之前在英國等同於美國國家安全局的政府通信總部工作。 What does this mean for journalism? The old rules say that if news organizations obtain material they deem both authentic and newsworthy, they should run it. But those conventions may set reporters up for spy agencies to manipulate what and when they publish, with an added danger: An archive of genuine material may be seeded with slick forgeries.This quandary is raised with emotional force by my colleague Amy Chozick in her new book about covering Hillary Clinton. She recounts reading a New York Times story about the Russian hack of the Democrats that said The Times and other outlets, by publishing stories based on the hacked material, became “a de facto instrument of Russian intelligence.” She felt terrible, she reports, because she thought she was guilty as charged.Others hurried to reassure Chozick that she and hundreds of other reporters who covered the leaked emails were simply doing their jobs. “The primary question a journalist must ask himself is whether or not the information is true and relevant,” wrote Jack Shafer, the media critic for Politico, “and certainly not whether it might make Moscow happy.” 這對新聞界而言意味著什麼?按照老規矩,新聞組織一旦取得他們認為具有真實性和新聞價值的材料,就認為應該公諸於世。但是這些慣例可能導致記者遭到間諜機構操縱他們所發布的內容以及時間,而且還有一項風險:真材實料的檔案可能暗藏巧妙的造假。我的同事艾咪.丘齊克在她談採訪希拉蕊.柯林頓的新書中,情緒激動地說明了這項窘境。她描述看過紐約時報與俄羅斯駭入民主黨相關的一篇報導,文章指出,紐時和其他媒體根據被駭資料做報導時,「實際上也成了俄羅斯情報單位的工具」。她報導說,她感覺糟透了,因為她自覺犯了這樣的錯。其他人急忙安慰丘齊克,她和數百位採訪外洩電子郵件新聞的記者,只是盡職而已。 Politico媒體評論家傑克.薛佛寫道:「記者必須問自己的首要問題是,這些資料是否屬實以及是否相關,絕不會是這樣做會不會讓莫斯科高與。」Source article: https://paper.udn.com/udnpaper/POH0067/327698/web/ 更多Podcast單元: 每日英語跟讀Podcast,就在http://www.15mins.today/daily-shadowing 精選詞彙 VOCAB Podcast,就在https://www.15mins.today/vocab 語音直播 15mins Live Podcast, 就在https://www.15mins.today/15mins-live-podcast 文法練習 In-TENSE Podcast,就在https://www.15mins.today/in-tense 用email訂閱就可以收到通勤學英語節目更新通知。   老師互動信箱: ask15mins@gmail.com 商業合作洽詢: 15minstoday@gmail.com

Poll Hub
Chasing Hillary

Poll Hub

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2018


  In this week’s episode of Poll Hub, the team sits down with Amy Chozick, best-selling author of Chasing Hillary and writer-at-large for The New York Times. In her work, Chozick recounts the details of covering the complex candidate for a decade. In this thoughtful and candid interview, Chozick opens up about her struggles on the campaign trail, opines about Clinton’s impact on the current feminist movement, the state of media today, and what reporters and potential 2020 presidential candidates can take away from 2016. About Poll Hub Poll Hub goes behind the science to explain how polling works, what polls really show, and what the numbers really mean. Poll Hub is produced by The Marist College Institute for Public Opinion, home of America’s leading independent college public opinion poll, The Marist Poll. Lee Miringoff (Director of The Marist College Institute for Public Opinion), Barbara Carvalho (Director of The Marist Poll), and Jay DeDapper (Director of Innovation at The Marist Poll) dig deep to give you a look at the inner workings of polls and what they tell us about our world, our country, and ourselves.  

The Book Review
Amy Chozick on 'Chasing Hillary'

The Book Review

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2018 63:22


Chozick discusses her time covering Hillary Clinton on the campaign trail, and Sloane Crosley talks about her new collection of essays, “Look Alive Out There.”

The Ezra Klein Show
The New York Times’s lead Clinton reporter reflects on her coverage

The Ezra Klein Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2018 60:38


It’s time to talk about the damn emails — and the way the media covered them. Amy Chozick reported on Hillary Clinton for a decade. She was there as Clinton’s campaign fell short in the 2008 Democratic primaries. And as the New York Times’s lead reporter on the Clinton campaign in 2016, she was there as Clinton seemed certain to win in 2016 — and there on that night in November when she lost. Her new book, Chasing Hillary, is a memoir of these years and that reporting. In it, Chozick reflects on her coverage of Clinton, her relationship with the candidate, the incentives of her newsroom, and how all of it intertwined with her own life. It’s an unusually honest book, exposing much more of the psychodrama that exists between politicians, campaign staff, editors, and reporters than is normally shown, and Chozick is frank about both her discomfort with some of the stories she wrote and the ways her subjects tried to manipulate her. In this conversation, we talk about the emails, as well the media’s deep and pervasive biases, what Trump could do that Clinton couldn’t, the ways campaign coverage distorts campaign reporting, our gendered expectations for politicians, Chozick's clashes with Bernie Sanders supporters, Chelsea Clinton’s criticisms of Chozick’s book, and much more. Books: What It Takes: The Way to the White House by Richard Ben Cramer Nixon Agonistes: The Crisis of the Self-Made Man by Gary Willis A Woman in Charge: The Life of Hillary Rodham Clinton by Carl Bernstein The Boys on the Bus by Timothy Crouse Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Recode Media with Peter Kafka
'Chasing Hillary' author Amy Chozick looks back on a decade of writing about Hillary Clinton

Recode Media with Peter Kafka

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2018 46:02


New York Times writer-at-large Amy Chozick talks with Recode’s Ed Lee about her new memoir, “Chasing Hillary: Ten Years, Two Presidential Campaigns, and One Intact Glass Ceiling.” Chozick says the book is about more than Hillary Clinton’s unsuccessful campaigns for president; it’s also about all the things reporters didn’t write in their stories about Hillary Clinton, and the “decline of campaign reporting.” In 2016, she explains, dramatic technological changes made Donald Trump’s victory possible and made it harder for political reporters like her to justify always being “on the bus” with Clinton. She also talks about the Clinton family’s contentious history with the New York Times, and how attending the annual media/finance conference Sun Valley led to one of the most humiliating experiences of her reporting career. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Tofugu Podcast: Japan and Japanese Language
How to Become a TV Star in Japan feat. Matthew Chozick

The Tofugu Podcast: Japan and Japanese Language

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2017 85:23


Get more from us at: https://tfg.li/2fEcRty It’s totally possible for you, a foreigner, to move to Japan and become a TV star. That’s exactly what happened to our guest this week, Matt Chozick, who has appeared weekly on one of Japan’s biggest variety shows for the past five years. But he gets to be where he is because of all the Japanese practice he put in (and a generous portion of luck). Learn how you can follow Matthew’s method to learn Japanese IN JAPAN! FOR FREE! And when we say "learn Japanese" we mean "learn Japanese to the level where you can present on national television every week." This is some serious stuff. On top of this, you’ll also hear what it’s like to work with some of Japan’s biggest stars and how the creative process plays out in the Japanese TV and film industry (hint: it’s a bit more inclusive than the West). If you want to learn Japanese like a pro and/or become a celebrity in Japan, listen to the whole episode. Then you can be like Matt. iTunes:https://tfg.li/tofugu-podcast Google Play: https://tfg.li/tofugu-gplay

Vogue Podcast
Amy Chozick and Annie Karni

Vogue Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2016 40:28


In the latest installment of the Vogue podcast, Vogue Executive Director of Communications Hildy Kuryk and Vogue Senior Editor Taylor Antrim catch up with two reporters following Hillary Clinton on the 2016 presidential campaign trail: Amy Chozick, a national political reporter at The New York Times, and Annie Karni, a political reporter at Politico. The conversation comes shortly after the release of the Vogue June issue featuring Chozick and Karni in Irina Aleksander’s coverage of the changing demographics of campaign reporters, namely, the increasing number of female journalists. Although Chozick and Karni discuss the significance of this shift, they also got to talking about Clinton’s relationship to reporters now in comparison to the 2008 presidential campaign, the obstacles they think Clinton will face in the run-up to the election, and the critical differences between Clinton and Donald Trump, for example, the pressures as a woman to constantly look presentable. “Women [have to] work harder and... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.