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Mark and Kenny hit the dance floor for Season Five to begin a conversation about Confessions on a Dance Floor - Madonna's TWELFTH album - and the anthemic first single. Topics include lucky butterfly necklaces, Martha Raye and the lost Texas Guinan musical, Wilson Stone, Luc Besson, Stuart Price and Zoot Woman, Depeche Mode, the allure of the Twenties, ABBA (naturally), Gwen Stefani, Johan Renck, summer songs, Damon Albarn, the gorgeous Arianne Phillips, Hunter College, John Norris and the fade of MTV, Cynthia McFadden, Kenny's regularity at breakfast time, Dua Lipa, Chus & Ceballos, the bad-ass Tracy Young, the many MANY promo appearances, Coachella, and that former friend who suggests Madonna gets up on that damn horse. Plus, Mark schools Kenny on who Madonna would play in A Chorus Line (hint: it's not Val!). “Time goes by so slowly …” but not for this MEGA-episode. We missed you so much!
The three judge panel seemed skeptical of the Biden Administration's argument. Meanwhile, abortion is banned or restricted in almost half of all states. Katie Benner, Kavita Patel, Barbara McQuade, Amy McGrath, Reed Galen, Peter Spiegel, and Cynthia McFadden join.
Nicolle Wallace discusses the latest hearing in Rep. Jim Jordan's subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government as Democrats push back against the GOP's claims of censorship, revelations from Dominion's lawsuit against Fox News after former producer Abby Grossberg has announced she is now suing her former employer, the breaking news that Donald Trump has been indicted by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and more. Joined by: Rep. Linda Sanchez, Jake Sherman, Mike Schmidt, Cynthia McFadden, Laurence Tribe, Tim Heaphy, Luke Broadwater, David Jolly, Harry Litman, Andrew Weissmann, Michael Cohen, Joyce Vance and Ari Melber.
Days after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, some of the nation's top banks banded together, pledging $30 billion to rescue First Republic Bank. Meantime, a new report reveals former President Trump plans to wage a political war on the Manhattan D.A. as a potential indictment looms in the hush money case. Kyle Cheney, Neal Katyal, Guy Adami, Sen. Michael Bennet, Jonathan Capehart, Tim Miller, and Cynthia McFadden join.
NBC News' Cynthia McFadden reports on the dark history of Native American boarding schools in the U.S. An effort is ongoing to use ground-penetrating radar to look for the unmarked graves of children who may be buried at Red Cloud Indian School in South Dakota.
NBC News is projecting that the GOP will win House control. What will a divided Congress mean for President Biden's agenda? And how is the GOP leadership shaping up? We'll have an analysis and a projection of a high-profile mayor's race. We're learning more about how a Russian-made missile ended up in Poland. It raises new concerns over Russia's war spilling beyond Ukraine. We'll have an update from Lviv, near the Polish border. Then, atrocities are the focus of an excavation at a former boarding school for Indigenous children. Cynthia McFadden has more in an NBC News investigation. And fans of Taylor Swift are furious at how hard it has been to buy tickets. Some say the Department of Justice should investigate the industry's major players. Do they have a point? Or should they just shake it off?
Allison Gilbert is an award-winning journalist and co-author of Listen, World!, the first biography of American writer Elsie Robinson, a newspaper columnist who came from nothing and became the most-read woman in the country and highest-paid woman writer in the William Randolph Hearst media empire. The New York Times raves “One does not tire of spending time with Elsie Robinson” and the Wall Street Journal proclaims the book “an important contribution to women's history.” Susan Orlean effuses the biography is “the rarest of things — a lively piece of unknown history, a marvelous story of a woman's triumph, and a tremendous read.” Gilbert is host of “Women Journalists of 9/11: Their Stories,” a 20-part documentary series produced in collaboration with the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. For this, she interviewed such luminaries as Savannah Guthrie, Maggie Haberman, Dana Bash, and Linda Wertheimer. She is co-executive producer of the companion 2-hour film that featured, among many others, Tom Brokaw, Rehema Ellis, Ann Thompson, Scott Pelley, Byron Pitts, Ann Compton, and Cynthia McFadden. Gilbert is the official narrator of the 9/11 Memorial Museum's historical exhibition audio tour, the only female journalist to be so honored. Allison Gilbert writes regularly for the New York Times and other publications. On her blog, she features Q & A's with some of the most notable names in our culture today including, Arianna Huffington, Jon Stewart, Henry Louis Gates Jr., Dani Shapiro, and Gretchen Rubin. Allison is co-editor of Covering Catastrophe: Broadcast Journalists Report September 11 and author of Always Too Soon: Voices of Support for Those Who Have Lost Both Parents, Parentless Parents: How the Loss of Our Mothers and Fathers Impacts the Way We Raise Our Children, and Passed and Present: Keeping Memories of Loved Ones Alive. Gilbert lives in New York with her husband and two children. You can connect with her on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram Events: Wednesday, November 9 New York Public Library — IN PERSON 6:00pm ET 476 5th Ave, New York, NY 10018 A special evening with Sunny Hostin (co-host of ABC's The View and author of Summer on the Bluffs) https://www.nypl.org/events/programs/2022/11/09/allison-gilbert-sunny-hostin-listen-world Wednesday, November 16 Society of Illustrators — VIRTUAL 6:00pm ET In conversation with Liza Donnelly (New Yorker cartoonist and author of Very Funny Ladies: The New Yorker's Women Cartoonists) https://societyillustrators.org/event/listenworld/ Friday, November 18 New-York Historical Society — IN PERSON 7:00pm ET 170 Central Park West, New York, NY 10024 In conversation with Brooke Kroeger (founding director of the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute at NYU and author of the forthcoming Undaunted: How Women Changed American Journalism and Julie Golia (associate director of Manuscripts, Archives, and Rare Books at NYPL and the author of Newspaper Confessions: A History of Advice Columns in a Pre-Internet Age) https://www.nyhistory.org/programs/listen-world-elsie-robinson-newspaper-columnists?date=2022-11-18 Tuesday, November 29 Books & Books Key West — VIRTUAL 7:00pm ET In conversation with Christina Baker Kline (author of The Exiles) https://booksandbookskw.com/events/gilbert/
As part of our network-wide special series “The New Normal,” we are focusing on a group of often-forgotten children: those who have lost a parent or primary caregiver to the pandemic. Cynthia McFadden is sharing one family's emotional story. Plus, Hoda Kotb and Savannah Guthrie are chatting with Ryan Reynolds about his new film “The Adam Project” and family life. And, Renée Zellweger is also stopping by Studio 1A to chat about “The Thing About Pam” – a limited series based on a popular “Dateline” storyline and podcast.
In our series “Living Longer TODAY,” Cynthia McFadden travels to South Carolina where a certain rice you won't find anywhere else could hold the key to a longer life. Plus, Cynthia Nixon stops by Studio 1A to chat about the “Sex and the City” revival, “And Just Like That…” — what it was like continuing Miranda's story. Also, TODAY Best Sellers: ideas for holiday hosting.
Could the very first Thanksgiving meal hold the secret to living a longer and healthier life? Cynthia McFadden is tasting the very first foods of the holiday with National Geographic explorer Dan Buettner. Plus, celebrating 22 years of Natalie Morales at NBC — her goodbye letter to TODAY viewers. Also, TODAY Loves Football — to get you ready for Sunday Night's battle between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Los Angeles Chargers, cookbook author and restaurant owner Adrienne Calvo has some fun recipes!
Kelly talks with longtime friend Cynthia McFadden about her amazing Career, World Hunger, Madonna and some of her most notable interviews! 3 Things you NEED to know about Cynthia McFadden 1. World Hunger is still a HUGE issue and we all need to do our part to end it 2. Interviewing someone is about being the vessel of someone's truth 3. Good girlfriends and good wine is what life is about --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
An evening of live conversation with Cynthia McFadden, the senior legal and investigative correspondent for NBC News. She is a Lewiston native who graduated Phi Beta Kappa and Summa Cum Laude from Bowdoin College. McFadden was interviewed by Portland Press Herald reporter Kelley Bouchard.
This weekend will mark the 25th anniversary of Fox News Sunday, the public affairs program which debuted April 28, 1996 with the late Tony Snow as host. Chris Wallace took over as host in 2003 and will mark the anniversary with a special edition of FNS, which airs Sunday mornings on Fox Broadcasting stations and later in the day on Fox News Channel.“When I came on [in 2003], I wanted to put Fox News Sunday at the forefront of the conversation, that it would be taken as seriously and make as much if not more news than any of the other Sunday shows,” Wallace told me this week. “And I think we've succeeded at that.” Previous episodes:“Until the world is vaccinated, no one is vaccinated,” said NBC News correspondent Cynthia McFadden. “The virus will continue to spread. This pandemic could go on for another 7 years if we don't succeed in distributing the vaccine around the world.”In Episode 12 of the podcast, I talked to McFadden, who recently traveled to Uganda, where she had exclusive access to the international teams working to bring Covid-19 vaccines to some of the most vulnerable—and remote—communities on Earth. “We got to see a small part of a very big puzzle,” McFadden said. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit standupkid.substack.com
“Until the world is vaccinated, no one is vaccinated,” said NBC News correspondent Cynthia McFadden. “The virus will continue to spread. This pandemic could go on for another 7 years if we don't succeed in distributing the vaccine around the world.”McFadden recently traveled to Copenhagen and Uganda, where she had exclusive access to the international teams working to bring Covid-19 vaccines to some of the most vulnerable—and remote—communities on Earth. “We got to see a small part of a very big puzzle,” McFadden said.McFadden took two international flights, a soaking boat ride and then a three-hour drive alongside UNICEF teams carrying a small ice chest packed hope—40 vials of vaccine destined for health care workers in the Buvuma Islands of Uganda. It's the first time a broadcast news crew has seen the global distribution effort first hand, showing viewers of NBC Nightly News and Today exactly how difficult it is, both to access the vaccine and then to get it to remote communities in the world's poorest countries.Recent Stories:In Episode 11 of the podcast, I talked to Politico's Eugene Daniels about race, journalism and covering the Biden-Harris Administration.“When I go into the White House it's not lost on me the reason that I'm there is because of the hard work of my family members, the hard work of Black people in general, and the fact that slaves built that building.”In our conversation, we talked about covering DC, being a Black man and a gay man working the White House beat, and about his experience in local news in Colorado, when a news executive told him his “voice was too Black to be a full time reporter in Colorado Springs.” This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit standupkid.substack.com
2002: Cher gets grilled about plastic surgery by Cynthia McFadden, performs with Cyndi Lauper & Michael Stipe, and heads out on her "farewell" tour. It's all included here!
CPF Co-Directors Bob Shrum and Mike Murphy talk to journalist Cynthia McFadden about the presidential election with a focus on election security and voting mechanisms. McFadden is a broadcast journalist who is the Senior Legal and Investigative Correspondent for NBC News. She was an anchor and correspondent for ABC News, who co-anchored Nightline and occasionally appeared on ABC News special Primetime.
CPF Co-Directors Bob Shrum and Mike Murphy talk to journalist Cynthia McFadden about the presidential election with a focus on election security and voting mechanisms. McFadden is a broadcast journalist who is the Senior Legal and Investigative Correspondent for NBC News. She was an anchor and correspondent for ABC News, who co-anchored Nightline and occasionally appeared on ABC News special Primetime.
In keeping with the theme and general ethos of 2020, we had a few last-minute changes. Fortunately, the inimitable author, strategist and pollster Doug Schoen stepped in, along with the razor-sharp election whisperer, Rachel Bitecofer, as well as the brilliant, Emmy award-winning journalist, Cynthia McFadden, as moderator. And we're lucky they did, as there's plenty to unpack from the final (*phew*) presidential debate. To RSVP for upcoming events, visit our events page at: https://www.thecommongoodus.org --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
I learned that if you want to be in broadcasting, you've gotta be able to take tough criticism and not let it get you down. You've just got to take it, soak it up, cry at home and get to work and do your best. -Cassy Arsenault If you've ever wondered what would be like to work at Good Morning America and Nightline, this episode is for you. Born and raised in the little town of called Leominster, Massachusetts (also the home of Johnny Appleseeds), Cassy promised herself that someday, she'd fly away and live large in New York City. As luck would have it, she gained admission to New York University and before you know it, was interning for network TV. She got her start as a live producer for Lara Spencer on Good Morning America and then became an associate producer for Cynthia McFadden producing segments that ran the gamut from extreme bachelorette parties to an investigation into the case of poison leaching into the watersource used by military families at Camp Lejeune. Although she loved what she did, Cassy realized that if she was ever going to make the switch from working behind the camera to being the face in front of the camera, she'd better do it quick. After stints at small stations in Salinas/Monterey California and in Michigan where she was a member of the Problem Solvers Team at WXMI, Cassy made her way back home to Boston where she is now a freelance reporter for NBC 10 and the creator of an empowering video series called Bosstown which features boss ladies from every walk of life. The oldest of 4 children, Cassy credits her parents with instilling her unstoppable work ethic and sense of resiliency no matter what the obstacle may be: “When things are going bad, you just have to self talk and say: don't quit. Keep going. You CAN do this.” At a time when members of the media are often accused of being vultures, Cassy subscribes to a more personal approach to her stories. “As a general assignment news reporter, I show up in people's lives on their worst days. I'm inspired by their courage. I'm respectful of everyone I meet. I'm gonna give a good name to our industry. “ #womeninmedia #storybehindhersuccess #gma #nightline
TV host and “Tonight Show” Alum Ross Mathews and NBC’s Cynthia McFadden join MSNBC’s Ari Melber, for a special 2020 edition of Fallback, an irreverent segment on the news show “The Beat with Ari Melber.” Mathews and McFadden discuss the fallout from Iowa and Pete Buttigieg’s historic presidential run.
In an extended interview with NBC’s Cynthia McFadden, the two-time Oscar winner and former politician discusses her long career and being able to take on Shakespeare's King Lear.
You know her music. You may just not know her name.Ester Dean has written music for Katy Perry, Rihanna, and Beyonce, among others. She sits down with NBC’s Cynthia McFadden in an extended interview to discuss how she found success in her career.
Queen Latifah talks to NBC’s Cynthia McFadden about finding success when she was just a teenager, the meaning behind her name, and her new mission to give back to aspiring female filmmakers.
OCTOBER 31, 2018 - It's THE DAILY SHOW WEEKLY, hosted by Vic Shuttee (@VicShuttee) and Chandler Dean (@chandlerjdean)! In a Daily Show rarity, Comedy is on the menu! Jon gets a visit from Mr. Show legends Bob Odenkirk and David Cross, Ed Helms undergoes major surgery for a laugh and Corddry prepares for a break-up fuck! Plus, the return of Even Stevphen (YAY!) and THOSE INFERIOR ANIMALS (Boo!). The Daily Show Weekly is produced by Vic Shuttee, with album artwork designed by Felipe Flores Comics! #MeanwhileTheSeries
Cynthia McFadden, NBC News Senior Legal and Investigative Correspondent, joins us for a discussion on her career, the state of journalism, and geopolitical relations.
Cynthia McFadden, NBC News Senior Legal and Investigative Correspondent, joins us for a discussion on her career, the state of journalism, and geopolitical relations.
In this episode of 92Y Talks, legendary O.J. Simpson trial prosecutor Marcia Clark talks about her new book, Blood Defense, with NBC News Senior Legal and Investigative Correspondent Cynthia McFadden. The conversation was recorded on May 26, 2016 in front of a live audience at New York's 92nd Street Y.
Hear a candid conversation about the "habits" of successful psychopaths. Sounds crazy? Not really. Turns out, it’s not only screen psychos that we love. Many of the people we admire -- and even elect as our leaders -- share traits with psychopathic killers. Your Brain On Story features futurist Jason Silva on why and how people are hardwired for stories and cinema. Also, actor Bryan Cranston (“Breaking Bad”) and Terence Winter (“The Sopranos,” “Boardwalk Empire”) discuss the connection between horror and humor and what makes a great screen villain. Chiming in is neuroscientist James Fallon, who not only studies the brains of serial killers, but has one himself. Moderated by Cynthia McFadden (ABC News, Nightline Co-Anchor).
Jane Velez Mitchell: Author, Investigative Journalist, and Host of HLN's Issues with Jane Velez MitchellJane comes to Justice Interrupted to share her experiences as a notable television news journalist, Jane Velez-Mitchell is the host of the TV show “Issues with Jane Velez-Mitchell” which airs on HLN every night at 7p.m. eastern and 4 p.m. pacific. She will also discuss her prior work experiences as a reporter for the nationally syndicated Warner Brothers/Telepictures show "Celebrity Justice." Jane will also discuss her soon to be released book, "I Want" which traces her unique quest for an addiction-free life over the course of many years, detailing her struggles to stop drinking, smoking, overeating, and overworking.Lisa R. Cohen is an Emmy award winning television news magazine producer with over twenty years of network news experience at both ABC and CBS News. At “PrimeTime Live” and then at “60 Minutes II” she produced reports for Diane Sawyer, Sam Donaldson, Peter Jennings, Cynthia McFadden and others, on topics as diverse as the right to bear arms, have abortions and exercise the death penalty. She has covered some of the biggest moments in recent history including TWA 800, the Oklahoma bombing, and the September 11 terror attacks. Her 1996 one-hour documentary for ABC News Prime Time Live, “Judgment at Midnight,” won multiple awards, including the NATAS Emmy; CINE Golden Eagle; International Film and Television Award; and the Foundation of American Women in Radio and Television “Gracie” award.And she is the author of “After Etan” Join Hosts: Prosecutor and Author Robin Sax, Police Officer and Author Stacy Dittrich, Advocate and Author Susan Murphy-Milano each week as they provide justice for those whose lives have been interupted by rape, murder, child sexual predators, strange and unexplained disappearances, domestic violence, and cold cases yet to be solved...