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The week after last November's election, we knew there was only one person we wanted to talk to: Connie Schultz. We were still immersed in grief, anger, and even despair following Trump's win - and Connie was dealing with her husband Sherrod Brown losing his re-election to the Senate as well.But we loved her advice.... it's our job to make hope possible, not despair convincing.The election results redefined the political landscape in America and the scope of this podcast. But we will continue to support our communities, encourage real conversations, and make hope possible.We'll see you next Wednesday for the final episode of The Suburban Women Problem.For a transcript of this episode, please email theswppod@redwine.blue. You can learn more about us at www.redwine.blue or follow us on social media! Twitter: @TheSWPpod and @RedWineBlueUSA Instagram: @RedWineBlueUSA Facebook: @RedWineBlueUSA YouTube: @RedWineBlueUSA
How are you doing? Are you okay? Are you staying connected to the other people in your life who share your values and are feeling the same way that you are right now?On today's podcast, we're starting the process of picking up the pieces. We're taking care of ourselves, we're finding reasons to stay hopeful, and we are NOT getting trauma bangs!We were so grateful this week to be joined by Connie Schultz. Connie is a writer, journalism professor, and the wife of Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown. The last time she was on the pod, she said she was “built for happy” and her Substack is called Hopefully Yours… needless to say, her uplifting energy was exactly what we needed.And don't misunderstand - she and Sherrod were disappointed and heartbroken by the results of last Tuesday, both in the presidential race and in Sherrod's own. But she had so much wisdom to share about how she's processing the election and the perspective of age. We've been through hard things before and found a way to keep moving forward, and we'll do it again. It's what we do.If you need a comforting voice or advice for how to talk to your kids or friends about what happened, we hope you'll find a little help and hope in this episode.For a transcript of this episode, please email theswppod@redwine.blue. You can learn more about us at www.redwine.blue or follow us on social media! Twitter: @TheSWPpod and @RedWineBlueUSA Instagram: @RedWineBlueUSA Facebook: @RedWineBlueUSA YouTube: @RedWineBlueUSA
Connie Schultz is on the #ReadingWithYourKids #Podcast to celebrate her debut children's picture book, Lola and the Troll. The book addresses the themes of bullying and self-esteem through the story of a little girl named Lola who is bullied by a neighborhood troll. With the help of her friend Mrs. B, Lola learns to embrace her uniqueness. Schultz drew inspiration for the book from her experiences battling trolls on social media. Both speakers emphasized the importance of having conversations with children about topics like bullying, self-esteem, love, and media literacy. They agreed that girls especially are negatively impacted by online abuse. Schultz discussed the challenges of writing her first children's book but enjoyed the process of learning something new. Click here to visit our website - www.readingwithyourkids.com Click here to buy Lola and the Trolls on our Amazon store - https://amzn.to/49zfdiH
Pulitzer-Prize winning writer Connie Schultz is Jen's guest today. Connie is the author of two memoirs. Her first Life Happens: And Other Unavoidable Truths and second …And His Lovely Wife: A Memoir from the Woman Beside the Man. Connie made her fiction debut in 2020 with her New York Times bestselling novel The Daughters of Erietown. And this coming February the youngest readers can welcome into the world her first children's book, Lola and the Troll. Formerly a columnist at The Plain Dealer in Cleveland she now writes a weekly column for USA Today. And, she just launched a substack called “Hopefully Yours.” When Connie's not writing, she's teaching. She was at Kent State for seven years and this fall is joining the faculty of Denison University's journalism program. What makes Connie so special is that she is one of those women who lifts as she rises. A true friend who is there for you in your moments of doubt and your moments of joy. Connie lives in Cleveland with her husband, Senator Sherrod Brown, and their sweet rescue dogs Franklin and Walter. Connie and Sherrod have four children and eight grandchildren. Contact Booked Up: You can email Jen & the Booked Up team at: BOOKEDUP@POLITICON.COM or by writing to: BOOKED UP P.O. BOX 147 NORTHAMPTON, MA 01061 Get More from Connie Schultz: Facebook | Website | Author of THE DAUGHTERS OF ERIETOWN and LOLA AND THE TROLL Get More from Jen Taub: taubjen on Threads| Money & Gossip Substack | Author of BIG DIRTY MONEY
TABLEAU 2022: Tableau is Akron Roundtable's annual fundraising dinner which sets the stage for an evening of great discussion with a celebrated speaker. Our special guest, Connie Schultz, will step away from the podium to share personal insights and life experiences in an intimate conversation with Justin Hilton, Executive Director, Leadership Akron. Your generosity by attending this fundraiser will help Akron Roundtable bring exceptional speakers to Northeast Ohio. Speaker: Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize winning columnist for USA Today and author of the New York Times bestselling novel, The Daughters of Erietown. She is also a Professional in Residence at Kent State University's School of Media & Journalism, where she teaches opinion writing, feature writing and ethics. Schultz has been featured for her work in numerous publications and interviews, including The New Yorker, NPR, Politico, Kirkus Reviews Magazine, Glamour, Columbia Journalism Review, The Washington Post, and Ohio Magazine. Her book reviews appear regularly in The Washington Post, and she has also written for The New York Times, Politico, Parade, The Atlantic, Time, The Nation, Glamour, Democracy Journal and ESPN Magazine, among others. For more event details and full speaker bio please visit: https://bit.ly/3eRT9Jt
We're finally here… the last full episode of the podcast before the midterm elections! All year, we've been talking about what's at stake in this election: antisemitism and racism, abortion rights, book bans, guns, election denial, and extremism in a million different forms. Now is the moment we've been working for, so let's get everyone we know out to vote.This week, Amanda got the chance to talk to Connie Schultz about why this election is so important… and at the same time, how we can take care of our mental health. Elections are stressful, and daily prognostications from dubious pollsters aren't helping matters. Amanda and Connie had an amazing chat about what they've been hearing from women coming into this election and what they're doing to stay calm in these last few crucial days. If you've been as anxious about the midterms as we are, we hope this interview makes you feel a little better.Finally, Amanda, Jasmine and Rachel raise a glass to making a difference, kindness, and connecting with our neighbors in this episode's “Toast to Joy.”Want to save reproductive rights and help women in need at the same time? Then check out RWB Votes! If you live in (or have friends in) Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania, or North Carolina, for every 10 friends you talk to about voting, we'll donate $50 to an abortion fund in your state. Visit https://go.redwine.blue/rallyswp to sign up and learn more.For a transcript of this episode, please email theswppod@redwine.blue.
Mary Trump is joined by USA Today columnist and author, Connie Schultz, and former GOP Comms. Director, and host of The Lincoln Project's ‘The Breakdown' Tara Setmayer. Together, they examine the dangers of right wing media and supposed balance on the news in the Donald era, how to find the strength to keep fighting, and the importance of making the midterm elections about democracy versus autocracy instead of left against right. ‘Ask Mary Anything' Email: MARY@POLITICON.COM Get More From This Week's Guests: Connie Schultz: Twitter | USA Today | Kent State | Author Tara Setmayer: Twitter | Website | The Breakdown | Harvard's Institute of Politics
Mother's Day. Believe it or not it's a holiday that is not without controversy. Those who love it see it as a day set aside to honor their mother and the mother's in their life. For others it is a painful day filled with disappointment and grief. For single mom's its rarely a day to relax and reflect. In fact, it's often just another day. For those who have lost their mother it's a day of reflection but also of pain as the grief takes over.On this Mother's Day three mothers, USA Today's Connie Schultz, Shannon Rae Green and Ashley May, discuss love, loss, motherhood, and Mother's Day.To read Connie Schultz's article click here. To follow Connie on Twitter click here.To follow James Brown on Twitter click here.To follow Shannon Green on Twitter click here.To follow Ashley on Twitter click here.Episode Transcript available hereAlso available at art19.com/shows/5-ThingsSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
On today's episode, Rachel Vindman, Jasmine Clark, and Amanda Weinstein talk about how overwhelming everything has been feeling lately. There are so many fires to put out and we can only carry so many buckets. They talk about the absurd GOP antics at Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson's confirmation hearings, Biden's remarks about Ukraine, and how we can redirect the national conversation while still whacking all of those right-wing “whack-a-moles.”Then TN mom Taylor Lyons joins the pod to talk about her work with Chattanooga Moms for Social Justice. Taylor's organization has organized a banned book fair, provided books for libraries in underserved communities, held a workshop for parents of trans kids, and had difficult but important conversations with their neighbors. Taylor is basically an all-around super mom-- and her adorable baby even makes her presence known!After that, Jasmine sits down with one of our favorite humans on the planet, Connie Schultz. They talk about how to stay hopeful and engaged, how to lean into love, how to put down our buckets once in a while, what advice she'd give her younger self, and who she'd cast as her husband in the movie version of their life.Finally, our hosts raise a glass to family and to Spring Break in this week's “Toast to Joy.”For a transcript of this episode, please email theswppod@redwine.blue.
This is our final episode of Season One, can you believe it? We've had 32 weeks of amazing guests and incredible conversations, 32 sets of Rapid Fire questions and 32 Toasts to Joy. So today, Rachel Vindman, Jasmine Clark, and Amanda Weinstein chat about their favorite moments from Season One and what they've loved about hosting The Suburban Women Problem. The hosts reflect back on some of their favorite guests (Chasten Buttigieg! Lauren Underwood! Heather McGhee! Connie Schultz!) and some of their favorite “everyday women” who have joined us as well. We even get a quick update from Jaime Jara from Episode 2 and Maya Guy from Episode 12 (spoiler: everyone's doing great, and Maya won her election!). Then Jasmine, Amanda and Rachel close us out with the final Toast to Joy of the year.We hope everyone has a happy and healthy holiday season. We'll see you on January 19 when we kick off Season 2 with a very exciting guest! Tune in to today's episode to hear who it'll be...And as always, we invite you to sign up for one of our Troublemaker Trainings! They're fun events where you can learn strategies to stand up for your values and for the kids in your community.For a transcript of this episode, please email theswppod@redwine.blue.
Maren Hesla has done virtually everything there is to do in Democratic politics. She's currently a partner in leading Democratic direct mail firm Mission Control…but before that she managed campaigns, worked for the DNC, DCCC, and EMILYs List, and spent time as a media consultant and pollster. Maren talks her personal journey as a Minnesota transplant growing up in the Deep South and what she's learned navigating the political profession. Great episode with both smart political stories and highly actionable advice for pursuing and succeeding in a career in politics. IN THIS EPISODE…Maren's first political memory at a local protest…Maren's memories growing up in the Atlanta area during the height of the Civil Rights Era…Maren's memories of seeing a fellow Georgian in the White House….Maren's first campaign with a local political icon in the Atlanta area…How a mistake calculating voter IDs played havoc in the Mondale targeting operation…How Maren built the first statewide voter file in Georgia county by county…Maren manages the campaign of Ben Jones (“Cooter” from the Dukes of Hazzard)…The Democratic member who broke Maren's heart…Maren talks what a field plan looked like in the 1990s…Maren's time in the polling industry learning under Diane Feldman…Maren remembers Tammy Baldwin's underdog first race for Congress…Maren's unlikely path to EMILY's List…Maren's best practices to running independent-expenditure campaigns…Maren's early modeling project at EMILYs List…Maren talks the talent pipeline produced by EMILYs List…How Maren joined up with Mission Control and Ed Peavy…Maren explains Direct Mail 101…The most common mistakes in direct mail…Maren talks how smart direct mail aided in the recent elections of Sherrod Brown and Jon Ossoff…AND…the Analyst Institute, Julian Bond, Sherrod Brown, cutting turf, Rahm Emanuel, Emory University, Jennifer Granholm, Amy Green, Clay Henderson, Allison Jaslow, John Lewis, Ann Liston, Lester Maddox, Hal Malchow, Ellen Malcolm, Manuel Maloof, Martha McKenna, Ellen Moran, Jim Moran, Jerry Nadler, Jon Ossoff, the Peanut Brigade, Mike Podhorzer, psychographic profiles, Jim Quackenbush, Connie Schultz, Doug Sosnik, standard-issue white guys, Pat Swindall, George Wallace, Karen White, Andrew Young, and MORE!
Pulitzer Prize Winner Connie Schultz joins Leann for a discussion of her work as a journalist and columnist for over twenty years, the transition to fiction writing, and what it's like to be a living Ohio icon. After this episode the BPL Podcast will be on a brief hiatus for the summer! Join the BPL Virtual Book Club in discussing Connie Schultz's The Daughters of Erietown (out in paperback now) on Wednesday, July 7, 2021. https://bexley.libnet.info/event/5102269 ----more---- Follow Connie Schultz across platforms @connieschultz on Twitter and @schultz_connie on Instagram. Find out about upcoming Bexley Public Library events at https://www.bexleylibrary.org Follow Bexley Public Library across platforms @bexleylibrary
On today's episode, hosts Rachel Vindman, Jasmine Clark, and Amanda Weinstein discuss the one-year anniversary of George Floyd's death. When George cried out for his mother, moms across America felt that cry in their hearts and began working for justice. But despite a year of protests and conversations, it still seems impossible to gain any traction on the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act. Jasmine mentions a fellow legislator in Georgia who would rather talk about “Black on Black violence” than take any action to protect Black lives.And speaking of laws that have failed to pass, our hosts then discuss the recent Senate vote to block a commission that would investigate the attempted insurrection on January 6. From there, they discuss QAnon and right-wing misinformation more generally... what exactly is QAnon? And how do we deal with loved ones who have been sucked into Q or other conspiracies? To learn more, they chat with Lisa Reese, who lost her relationship with her sister over QAnon.After that, Rachel gets the opportunity to chat with Connie Schultz. Connie is a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, columnist for USA TODAY, an author, and the wife of Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown. She and Rachel discuss the events of January 6th, how Connie deals with trolls on social media, what makes her laugh, and how she ended up with a trash bag full of boxes of hair dye. Finally, our hosts celebrate the supportive women in their life in this week's “Toast To Joy.”Suburban women helped decide the 2020 election. But we're just getting started. Are you ready to be part of The Suburban Women Problem? Sign up here to join our amazing community of women.For a transcript of this episode, please email theswppod@redwine.blue.
Synopsis from bookshare. Hidden desires, long-held secrets, and the sacrifices people make for family are at the heart of this powerful first novel by the popular Pulitzer Prize—winning journalist.and0A moving, unforgettable story about time, progress, and how the mistakes of one generation get repeated or repaired by the next.and?—J. Courtney Sullivan, New York Times bestselling author of Saints for All Occasions 1957, Clayton Valley, Ohio. Ellie has the best grades in her class. Her dream is to go to nursing school and marry Brick McGinty. A basketball star, Brick has the chance to escape his abusive father and become the first person in his blue-collar family to attend college. But when Ellie learns that she is pregnant, everything changes. Just as Brick and Ellie revise their plans and build a family, a knock on the front door threatens to destroy their lives. The evolution of women&'s lives spanning the second half of the twentieth century is at the center of this beautiful novel that richly portrays how much people know—and pretend not to know—about the secrets at the heart of a town, and a family. Host: Randi Shelton E-Mail: rshelton820@gmail.com Co-Host Ruth ann Acosta, E-Mail: ruth1244@gmail.com
Synopsis from bookshare. Hidden desires, long-held secrets, and the sacrifices people make for family are at the heart of this powerful first novel by the popular Pulitzer Prize—winning journalist.and0A moving, unforgettable story about time, progress, and how the mistakes of one generation get repeated or repaired by the next.and?—J. Courtney Sullivan, New York Times bestselling … Novel Ideas to discuss The Daughters Of Erietown DB 99958 by Connie Schultz 04/16/2021 Read More »
“What am I talking about?” 2021 is off to a flying start! David Aldridge and Lorraine Voles join Torie and featured author (and Pulitzer Prize winner) Connie Schultz. They talk new year’s resolutions (we’re for and against them). Connie crushes the pop quiz on books that changed the lives of famous people. We love Walter Tevis (he wrote Queen’s Gambit, The Hustler and more) and didn’t know it. Connie shares her “…voice for the underdog and unprivileged.” Her novel “The Daughters of Erietown” compellingly shares the hopes and dreams and heartaches of one very real family.
In this episode of B**K It!, we sit down with Pulitzer Prize-winning author Connie Schultz and discuss her debut novel THE DAUGHTERS OF ERIETOWN. We talk all about the midwest as depicted in the arts, the upcoming election, our clingy but lovable pets, and more!Featuring:The Daughters of Erietown
This episode originally aired on September 15, 2020. The plight of working-class families, and the women who quietly raise them, take center stage in a new novel set in 1950s Ohio. Classified as fiction but rooted in reality, The Daughters of Erietown spans generations and reflects the gender inequality, class struggles and racism through the experiences of one Midwest family.
This episode originally aired on September 15, 2020. The plight of working-class families, and the women who quietly raise them, take center stage in a new novel set in 1950s Ohio. Classified as fiction but rooted in reality, The Daughters of Erietown spans generations and reflects the gender inequality, class struggles and racism through the experiences of one Midwest family.
The plight of working-class families, and the women who quietly raise them, take center stage in a new novel set in 1950s Ohio. Classified as fiction but rooted in reality, The Daughters of Erietown spans generations and reflects the gender inequality, class struggles and racism through the experiences of one Midwest family.
The plight of working-class families, and the women who quietly raise them, take center stage in a new novel set in 1950s Ohio. Classified as fiction but rooted in reality, The Daughters of Erietown spans generations and reflects the gender inequality, class struggles and racism through the experiences of one Midwest family.
Andy is joined by Lana this time for a conversation with another cool couple, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Connie Schultz and Senator Sherrod Brown. The four of them talk about the changing political climate of Connie and Sherrod's home state of Ohio and their commitment to people in the working class -- many of whom are on the front lines of the pandemic. Plus, what everyone thinks of President Trump's recent executive actions and Sherrod's take on what the Senate will do for a relief package. Join Basketball Hall of Fame photographer Andrew Bernstein as he sits down with the biggest names in sports to discuss the NBA’s return in Legends of Sport: Restarting the Clock. https://link.chtbl.com/LegendsofSport Visit expressvpn.com/bubble to get three months of free online protection from ExpressVPN. NBC Sports' podcast series Sports Uncovered offers never-before-known facts on the stories that took the sports world by storm. https://art19.com/shows/sports-uncovered Lemonada Media has a powerful new podcast out in conjunction with Campaign Zero. The Untold Story: Policing confronts cracks in the police system and how to fix them. https://www.lemonadamedia.com/show/the-untold-story-policing/ In the Bubble is supported in part by listeners like you. You can become a member, get exclusive bonus content, ask Andy questions, and get discounted merch at https://www.lemonadamedia.com/inthebubble Stay up to date with us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram at @LemonadaMedia. For additional resources, information, and a transcript of the episode, visit lemonadamedia.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Pulitzer Prize winning author Connie Schultz is out with her first novel, and talks to Jeanne Destro about it.
Samantha Bee talks to journalist Connie Schultz about teaching a new generation of journalists, why she used to be called "Connie Tyler Moore," and who cheats more at Scrabble--her or her Senator husband.
Curator of a free poem-of-the-week email list Interview starts at 20:34 and ends at 51:52 Links Jeff Bezos's opening statement to Congress (YouTube) - July 29, 2020 “Amazon's Antitrust Paradox” by Lina M. Khan at The Yale Law Review - January 2017 “Amazon confirms Prime Day delay in the US” by Jon Porter at The Verge - July 21, 2020 reMarkable 2 tablet - available for pre-order at $399 iPad Pro - starting at $749 To request inclusion on Richard Bruno's free email list for weekly poems, please email him at richardgbruno AT gmail DOT com “The familiarity of a poem: Connie Schultz” at Cleveland.com - April 13, 2011 Click here to enable my daily Morning Journal flash briefing at the Alexa Skills store. You will then hear each day's entry by saying, “Alexa, what's new?” or “Alexa, what's my flash briefing?” Right-click here and then click "Save Link As..." to download the audio to your computer, phone, or MP3 player.
For the past half century working class Americans have watched as their economic status has been in decline. Manufacturing jobs went away. Labor unions have seen their power to protect American jobs dwindle. The lives of working class Americans are rarely depicted in fiction. Connie Schultz understands the lives of our working class citizens. She grew up in a working class family and her experiences and insights inform the action and inspired the characters in her novel "The Daughters of Erietown." The Book Nook on WYSO is presented by the Greene County Public Library with additional support from Washington-Centerville Public Library , Clark County Public Library , Dayton Metro Library , and Wright Memorial Public Library .
The working class takes center stage in the debut novel from Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Connie Schultz. Then we have a spoiler-free discussion with Emily Liebert about her new thriller's surprise ending.
Connie gives a voice to the working class through the characters in her novel, Samantha, Ellie and Brick. She writes of their hidden longings, the sacrifices they make and the knock on the door that rocks their world.
On this edition of The Weekly Reader, we review two new novels that feature unexpected pregnancies and their unintended consequences: Connie Schultz's The Daughters of Erietown and Emily Gould's Perfect Tunes. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ep. #457 - On today's episode, Adam and Jill are joined by Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Connie Schultz to talk about her debut novel, The Daughters of Erietown. They discuss Connie's inspiration for the book, working class America in the 1960s and now, and the state of journalism in 2020.
In the words of Tom Haverford, sometimes you have to treat yo self. What purchases have you made to help you through the pandemic? We talk to an editor at The Strategist about the most common purchases people are making during COVID-19. Then, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Connie Schultz joins to discuss her debut novel, "The Daughters of Erietown."
Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Connie Schultz published her first book Life Happens: And Other Unavoidable Truths, a collection of her columns for The Cleveland Plain Dealer newspaper in 2006. She followed this in 2007 with a book about accompanying her … Continue reading →
This week’s episode is sponsored by Penguin Young Readers Group, publishers of Darius the Great Deserves Better by Adib Khorram (https://www.kirkusreviews.com/contest/darius-the-great/). In our lead interview, bestselling novelist Max Brooks discusses Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre (Dey Street, June 16). Then Kirkus’ editors make their weekly reading recommendations, with books by Ben Clanton, Abdi Nor Iftin, Robert Kolker, and Connie Schultz.
Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, formerly with the Cleveland Plain Dealer, who has just released her first novel. She joins Barbara Gray via Zoom to talk about The Daughters of Erietown .
The President continues his purge of government officials who expose corruption, the Trump campaign uses a kitchen sink strategy to define Joe Biden, Barack Obama reminds us of what a normal president sounds like, and House Democrats pass an economic relief bill with some defections. Then Senator Sherrod Brown and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Connie Schultz talk to Jon L. about Senate negotiations over the next stimulus bill, and what it’s like to quarantine together.
Sophy and Kelly speak with Pulitzer prize winning journalist Connie Schultz. They discuss grandparenting from afar during quarantine, the fiftieth anniversary of the Kent State shooting, journalism in the age of Trump, being the outspoken wife of a US Senator, and Connie's upcoming novel, The Daughter of Erietown.
Sophy and Kelly speak with Pulitzer prize winning journalist Connie Schultz. They discuss grandparenting from afar during quarantine, the fiftieth anniversary of the Kent State shooting, journalism in the age of Trump, being the outspoken wife of a US Senator, and Connie's upcoming novel, The Daughter of Erietown.
Since his election to the U.S. Senate in 2006, Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown has sat on the Senate floor at a mahogany desk with a unique history. In his newest book, Desk 88, he tells the story of eight of the Senators who inhabited the desk before him, all of which -- despite their flaws and frequent setbacks -- made a decisive contribution to the creation of a more just America. The eight men -- from Hugo Black to Robert F. Kennedy to Al Gore, Sr. to George McGovern, among others -- offer a range of stories. Taken together, Senator Brown argues, these eight portraits tell a story about the triumphs and failures of the Progressive idea over the past century. Join us as Senator Brown, in conversation with Connie Schultz, shares the stories of Desk 88 and why he continues to believe in the enduring power of the Progressive idea.
Trump caves on his Mexican trade war, and the race to win Iowa brings 19 Democratic candidates to Cedar Rapids. Des Moines Register pollster Ann Selzer joins Jon, Jon, Tommy, Dan, and Connie Schultz on stage in Des Moines, Iowa.
Fox shifting from partisanship to propaganda?; Debating the DNC's decision to exclude Fox from debates; Democrats probing Trump's opposition to AT&T deal; Lights out for Bill Shine at the White House; Will daily W.H. press briefings make a comeback?; Connie Schultz's view of 2020 campaign coverage; Why Alex Trebek and 'Jeopardy!' are so special; BuzzFeed CEO: We can build a better internet
Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and journalism professor. She is married to a Senator, Sherrod Brown, who is seriously considering a run for president in 2020. So she has a unique perspective about campaign coverage and President Trump's attacks against the media. In this interview with Brian Stelter, Schultz talks about her family's deliberations, her recent comments to Politico, her experiences teaching journalism, and her views about how political journalism can be improved.
Dave's not here man. Instead we have comic (and first remote Skype guest) Steve Swanson (IG: @fleamarketfanatics) discussing his default setting: stoned. Jess recalls her wedding night run in with the law, Gigi reads the tea leaves and we discuss the new series 'Flea Market Fanatics' hosted by Steve, ANOTHER Steve (Steve Kreider) and Jess. Can someone please hand me those Doritos? * * * Correction: I referenced Connie Schultz as the author of a story we discuss, but it was actually Maureen Dowd. Don't smoke weed, kids.
NARAL’s The Morning After is a production of NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio. This week, Kelley, Jaime, and Gabe discuss the upcoming battles in the state legislature, including likely hearings on Senate Bill 28 and Senate Bill 145. Email your state legislators to stop the Abortion Method Ban. Connie Schultz has a must-read op-ed on Trump and his […]
Senator Sherrod Brown and Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Connie Schultz join Jon, Jon, Tommy, and Dan in Cleveland, where the crew talks Trump's North Korea tweets, the Harvey Weinstein scandal, Bob Corker's newfound freedom, and how Democrats can win in Ohio.
If you’re a journalist, the ultimate recognition of excellence is the Pulitzer Prize. Today’s guest has one. Connie Schultz was honored in 2005 for distinguished commentary for her Cleveland Plain Dealer columns that the Pulitzer committee said “provided a voice for the underdog and underprivileged.” On this episode of Town Hall Ohio, Schultz joins us to talk about the journalism profession, and her views on the America we live in.
Nationally syndicated columnist Connie Schultz won a 2005 Pulitzer Prize for Commentary for her work with the Cleveland Plain Dealer, teaches journalism at Kent State University, and is the the author of two books including … and His Lovely Wife: A … Continue reading →
Join U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Connie Schultz as they share their insights and observations on the current state of civil liberties in Ohio and across the country. The post 2013 Ed Likover Memorial Lecture: An Afternoon with Senator Sherrod Brown and Connie Schultz » Cleveland appeared first on ACLU of Ohio.
Join U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Connie Schultz as they share their insights and observations on the current state of civil liberties in Ohio and across the country. The post 2013 Ed Likover Memorial Lecture: An Afternoon with Senator Sherrod Brown and Connie Schultz » Cleveland appeared first on ACLU of Ohio.
Robin explains why WMC Live’s move to a new day and time on CBS is a homecoming to a previous life and career, and speaks with columnist Connie Schultz about Ohio as the front line of fair voting; California Representative Barbara Lee on the Congressional Black Caucus and women; and actress, activist, author, and Women's Media Center co-founder Jane Fonda on sex, intimacy, age, health—and furnishings.
Nicole Sandler speaks with FL-17 Congressional candidate Marleine Bastien, Pulitzer prize winning columnist Connie Schultz, TRNS' Ellen Ratner, and comedian Matthew Filipowicz
Pultizer Prize winning columnist, and wife of US Senator Sherrod Brown from Ohio, Connie Schultz speaks with Nicole Sandler