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Rudy is in a jam. With Trump no longer covering for him, Rudy Giuliani is at the will and whim of the court system. And much like his track record in helping the former president challenge the 2020 election, Rudy is losing big time. America's mayor, the king of New York after the September 11th attacks in 2001, has been told by the state courts of NY he is no longer welcome to practice law there. He has bigger problems too. Rudy is staring down the barrel of a multi-billion dollar lawsuit from the voting machine company he has maligned by saying they threw the election to Biden in Nov of 2020. He won't be alone there as Lin Wood and Sidney what's her name will also be facing that lawsuit. Wonder who Rudy's lawyer will be?
Listen to this PREVIEW of the 42nd episode of On Second Thought, a special bonus series you can hear on the And the Runner-Up Is Patreon exclusive feed! On Second Thought is a series in which Kevin is joined by TWO special guests in breaking down another Best Picture nominee not reviewed on the regular show that could have still been the runner-up. In this episode, Kevin speaks with Ryan McQuade and Michael Domanico about Alan J. Pakula's "All the President's Men," the possible runner-up that lost Best Picture to "Rocky" in 1976. This episode includes a review of the film itself, its awards run, and another fun quiz! You can listen to the full episode of On Second Thought by going to patreon.com/andtherunnerupis and contributing at the $3 per month tier. Follow Kevin Jacobsen on Twitter: @Kevin_Jacobsen Follow Ryan McQuade on Twitter: @ryanmcquade77 Follow Nicole Ackman on Twitter: @mjdomanico Follow And the Runner-Up Is on Twitter: @OscarRunnerUp Music featured in this episode: "Deep Throat II" - David Shire
We head back to the 70s this week! We talk about about Sly Stallone's big night taking home Best Picture, Network's Aaron Sorkin-esque script, and our confusion with Martin Scorcese and Robert DeNiro.
"Follow the money." For Episode 159, Thomas and Brandon close out Journalism Month by diving into the filmography of Alan J. Pakula. From his early producing career to the famous "Paranoia Trilogy," Pakula was a figure that had a massive influence on New Hollywood cinema. Contact Us: Facebook: @cinenation Instagram: @cinenationpodcast Twitter: @CineNationPod Medium: CineNation E-mail: cinenationpodcast@gmail.com
Welcome to our 100th episode! In honor of this huge milestone, we're learning about Rory's journalism heroes. Who learned about boxing by hopping in the ring? Who joined the Hell's Angels? Who followed English soccer hooligans? Who survived 4 months in a Nazi prison? Who was killed in action while reporting? We talk about the reporters who inspire Rory to take a literal leap of faith, and then we dive into the legacy of All the President's Men, one of the best movies about journalism ever. Check us out on Instagram!Subscribe to our new email list! Other pop culture we ref: Jack Kerouac, The Rolling Stones, Out of Africa, Marathon Man, Rocky, Taylor Swift, Jojo Rabbit, Ted Lasso, Norman Mailer, Robert Mitchum, Stranger Than Fiction So it's a show? TwitterSo it's a show? Tumblr
Welcome to Regalview! Last time we were tasked with choosing 2 office-based movies for this episode and we ended up with Sorry to Bother You and All the President’s Men which happen to be the two films we’re talking about today. Section 1 - Anything Goes Nicole has stand-up comedy-related ideas and Dan is learning French. Plus we talk about the things we’ve recently seen on tele box. Section 2 – Movies Based in an Office: 00:18:59 - Dan’s topic intro 00:26:34 - Sorry To Bother You 00:39:26 - All the President’s Men 00:48:38 – Nicole announces her choice for the next theme. Section 3 – Stitch-Up 00:49:32 - Last time Dan lost a deciding toss and had to watch Pinocchio’s Revenge for this episode. BUT as will occasionally happen on the show, Dan couldn’t find it so he opted for an Atlantic Rim: Resurrection review instead. 00:58:08 - Next we find out if Dan will be watching Jurassic School or Nicole will be watching Troll 2 for the next stitch-up review. Lastly, we announce the films for the next poll so if you’d like to be a part of the votes follow the clicks to these places. Follow the show on Instagram @twinpickspod Catch up with Dan on Instagram @Flick.Face Nicole on Instagram @nikacreativ Email the show on twinpickspod@gmail.com And don’t forget to subscribe through your podcast player of choice and if that’s Apple Podcasts, we’ve made it easy for you Twin Picks Podcast If you would like to support the show so we can purchase some “on-air” lights head over to ko-fi.com/twinpickspodcast We now have a Youtube channel, so if you’re more partial to listening on there, check us out and don’t forget to subscribe and get notified when we drop a show. Spoiler warnings for Sorry to Bother You, All the President’s Men and Atlantic Rim 2. Don’t let your kids listen to this.
Welcome! This month Scott and Chad are back at it. They are talking about the Presidents Cabinet as of 2/25/21. Listen in while the guys talk about these little known positions of power and prestige in the U.S. Government. Come and sit back, relax and enjoy the show. We want to hear from you, do you like what you hear? Do you have a question about something we said in an episode? Let us know and we will read your thoughts on the next podcast. If you want us to research and talk about a topic your interested in please drop us a line at one or more of the following places. You can find us on Facebook @eclecticmediaproject or you can drop us a line at eclecticmediaproject@gmail.com either way we look forward to hearing from you! We are on Anchor.fm, iTunes, Spotify, and PocketCasts as Eclecticmediapodcasts. Tweet us on Twitter! @EMPScott or @ChadEmp or @poigamestudio Check out our websites: www.eclecticmediaproject.com or www.poigamestudio.com Sources: https://archive.defense.gov/ https://www.justice.gov/ag/bio/randolph-edmund-jennings https://www.justice.gov/ag/staff-profile/meet-acting-attorney-general https://www.justice.gov/ag/about-office https://www.doi.gov/whoweare/history https://www.bia.gov/as-ia https://www.doi.gov/whoweare/past-secretaries#top https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Secretary_of_the_Interior#:~:text=The%20acting%20secretary%20of%20the,woman%20selected%20for%20the%20position. https://www.bia.gov/leadership#:~:text=Director,U.S.%20Department%20of%20the%20Interior. https://ballotpedia.org/U.S._Department_of_Health_and_Human_Services https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Secretary_of_Health_and_Human_Services https://www.whitehouse.gov --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/eclectic-media-podcasts/support
Journalism has long been a pressurized and risky endeavor, not just in the era of Fake News. All the President’s Men stands as a look into a profession and the unique ideological challenges involved as much as a glimpse of a historical moment. Tim offers Warren Beatty’s Reds and James L. Brooks’ Broadcast News as two other films presenting some seemingly eternal political challenges and other unique questions of medium and entertainment, both of which speak to Journalism writ large.
It doesn't take the investigative powers of a Woodward or Bernstein to pick up on the giddiness that Adam and Josh bring to their review of ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN, the first film in the 7 From '76—Best Year Ever series. Long a favorite of both hosts - and an early entry in the Filmspotting Pantheon - they revel in the opportunity to praise the film's unmatched acting ensemble and exquisite, if subtle, craft. Their good mood carries over to their review of the divisive MALCOLM & MARIE (new to Netflix), a volatile, two-hander relationship drama starring Zendaya and John David Washington. 0:00 - Billboard 1:00 - 7 From '76—Best Year Ever: "All The President's Men" David Shire, "All The President's Men 45:16 - Polls / Notes 1:02:02 - Review: "Malcolm & Marie" 1:23:32 - Outro Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
WARNING: If you hate when The Cine-Files gets political, then, this podcast isn't for you. A few days ago we lost the great Hal Holbrook, an actor who has been a mainstay of Theater, TV and Film for more than seven decades. He is most known for two things, the decades he devoted to his iconic portrayal of Mark Twain and a the portrayal of a man who only appears in the dark shadows of an empty parking lot, Deep Throat. It is that performance in the brilliant, All The President's Men, that we are revisiting today. This episode was originally recorded in April of 2017 and it's no surprise that, in light o everything that's happened since then, Steve and John have a lot to say about journalism, democracy and the devaluation of truth. If you haven't seen this incredible film you can buy or stream it right here. https://amzn.to/3ayQ76Q Don’t forget to support The Cine-Files at https://www.patreon.com/TheCineFiles and purchase any film we feature at https://www.cine-files.net Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheCineFilesPod/?ref=bookmarks John @therochasays Steve @srmorris The Cine-Files Twitter @cine_files Instagram thecinefilespodcast --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thecine-files/message
According to then Presidential Counsel John Dean, January 27, 1972 marked "the opening scene of the worst political scandal of the twentieth century and the beginning of the end of the Nixon presidency." He of course was talking about Watergate. Listen to find out what film a special guest and I are talking about this month! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-formal-review/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-formal-review/support
Book Vs Movie: “All the President’s Men” (1976) The Margos search for 70's creeps, dogged reporting, and “Deep Throat” “Follow the money.” The Watergate scandal of the early 1970s made headlines around the world as Richard Nixon and his loyal group of henchmen basically tried to intimidate their way into making Nixonian policies the law of the land (while breaking the law!) And they would have gotten away with it too if it weren’t for those meddling Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein who painstakingly investigated the Watergate hotel break-in for years. Under the leadership of publisher Katharine Graham and editor Ben Bradlee, Woodward and Bernstein helped expose the corruption of the Nixon administration and made newspapers look cool. “All the President’s Men” was published in 1974 and immediately became a bestseller and made stars out the Washington Post team. So, of course, Hollywood came calling with an adaptation directed by Alan J. Pakula and a screenplay by past Book Vs Movie subject William Goldman. Robert Redford’s production company “Wildwood Enterprises” helped bring together the team which includes himself play Bob Woodward and Dustin Hoffman as Carl Bernstein. Jason Robards won a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for playing Ben Bradlee. So between book & movie--which did we like better? Have a listen! In this ep the Margos discuss: The true story of Nixon’s crimes and why he almost got away with his multiple crimes The process of reporting and how much work went into it in a short period of time Who was “Deep Throat” and why didn’t anyone listen to Nora Ephron? The cast: Robert Redford (Woodward,) Dustin Hoffman (Carl Bernstein,) Jason Robards (Ben Bradlee,) Jack Warden (Harrey Rosenfeld,) Martin Balsam (Howard Simons,) Hal Holbrook (Deep Throat,) Jane Alexander (Bookkeeper,) and Ned Beatty (Dardis.) Clips used: All The President’s Men trailer Woodward and Bernstein decide who is the better writer Woodward and Berstein working on the story Deep Throat gives advice Ben Bradlee stands by the story Music by David Shire Join our Patreon page to help support the show! https://www.patreon.com/bookversusmovie Book Vs. Movie podcast https://www.facebook.com/bookversusmovie/ Twitter @bookversusmovie www.bookversusmovie.com Email us at bookversusmoviepodcast@gmail.com Brought to you by Audible.com You can sign up for a FREE 30-day trial here http://www.audible.com/?source_code=PDTGBPD060314004R Margo D. @BrooklynFitChik www.brooklynfitchick.com brooklynfitchick@gmail.com Margo P. @ShesNachoMama https://coloniabook.weebly.com/
We’re back for episode ten with Chelsea guiding us through ‘All the President’s Men’!Tianna confesses she will rat out any of her bosses to the Washington Post while Christy worries about wiretapping in the bathroom. Chelsea can’t get over the X-files inspo and reveals an insider connection to the Nixon administration.
We are starting our new series, focusing on Best Picture Nominees from 1976 onward either Oscars or Golden Globes.
Troy and Rob discuss two films about exposing the seedy underbelly of the institutions of power: Michael Mann's Insider and Alan J. Pakula's All The President's Men. How has the film industry's portrayal of investigative journalism and corporate whistleblowers changed with the times? What can each of these stories still teach us today?
This week on Extra Film, Ryan and Jay continue their Powell and Pressburger Movie Series as they discuss their 1946 film A Matter of Life and Death and also Alan J. Pakula's classic All the President's Men! - Review: A Matter of Life and Death (3:55) - Review: All the President's Men (48:46) Thanks for listening and be sure to subscribe on iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, Soundcloud or TuneIn Radio! iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/insession-film-podcast/id605634337 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5LIi40D5BTFnsRMP57O5nG IHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-insession-film-podcast-30916083/ Google Play: https://play.google.com/music/listen?authuser&u=0#/ps/It5foal422yoktioaclalk3ykyi Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/insession-film Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/insession-film TuneIn Radio: http://tunein.com/radio/The-InSession-Film-Podcast-p522717/ Listen Now: http://insessionfilm.com/isten-now/
On this episode we continue our political films series with All The President's Men from 1976 starring Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman! We discuss the real life Watergate scandal, and also how accurate the movie is to the actual events (spoiler alert: It's pretty close!) Follow the show on social media! Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SilverScreenPodcast Twitter: https://twitter.com/podcastsilver Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/podcastsilver/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-silver-screen-podcast/message
EVERYTHING IS POLITICAL in the second entry of our "Politics, UGH!" movies as Katie introduces Ashley to the 1976 multiple-Oscar Winning film, All The President's Men. While the gang discusses the importance of journalism and the power of words as weapons, they also dive in to the stylistic choices across the board that add up to this incredible masterpiece detailing the real-life story of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein's investigative report on Watergate. With an incredible cast (all at the top of their game during the mid-70s) including Robert Redford, Dustin Hoffman, Jack Warden, Martin Balsam, Hal Holbrook, Jason Robards and Jane Alexander, and written by the incredible William Goldman, it just goes to prove that...IF YOU'RE ON YOUR PHONE DURING A MOVIE YOU WILL MISS IT. Don't worry, just follow the money... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It’s the grand-zaddy of all journalism movies, All The President’s Men. Tara and Jacob discuss the myth of the journalist superhero and how the media covers political corruption. Timely! As Jerry Maguire would say, follow the money! Box Office Bylines is a podcast about movies about journalism. Is it fair for Hollywood to cast hot people as schlub reporters? Email us about it at boxofficebylines@gmail.com Follow us on the old bird box (AKA Twitter): @BoxBylines (don’t ask) @rwjboon @thorneyhfx Theme Music: Dance Movie (dancemovie.bandcamp.com) If you’re a fan of this show please consider leaving a five-star review on your favourite podcast platform so we can get recording gear that doesn’t mess up every episode.
The election is over (kind of) and now what the fuck is going to happen? We spoke to journalist Abner Hauge, of Left Coast Right Watch, about what he is seeing and what he anticipates in the months to come from right-wing extremists of various types committed to President Trump's political project.Check out Abner's work at https://leftcoastrightwatch.org/ and support his work at https://www.patreon.com/lcrw.We also spoke to him about collective self-defense. He trains with the Truckee Meadows John Brown Gun Club as well as the Los Angeles Black Coyotes. Learn more about the former on Twitter at @TMJBGC and the latter on Twitter at @LABlackCoyote.If you enjoyed this podcast, please consider giving to us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/futureleftIf you enjoyed this podcast but can't support us with money, consider helping us get the word out by sharing us on social media or recommending us to a friend.
The 1976 film, All the President's Men, follows The Washington Post reporters, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, as they uncover the details of the Watergate scandal that leads to President Richard Nixon's resignation. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Dana and Tom discuss one of their personal favorites, All the President's Men, starring Robert Redford, Dustin Hoffman, Jason Robards, Jack Warden, and Martin Balsam that cemented the legacies of Watergate, Bob Woodward, and Carl Bernstein. Two green reporters and rivals working for the Washington Post, Bob Woodward (Robert Redford) and Carl Bernstein (Dustin Hoffman), research the botched 1972 burglary of the Democratic Party Headquarters at the Watergate apartment complex. With the help of a mysterious source, code-named Deep Throat (Hal Holbrook), the two reporters make a connection between the burglars and a White House staffer. Despite dire warnings about their safety, the duo follows the money all the way to the top. For more on the episode, go to: https://tj3duncan.wixsite.com/tj3duncan/post/40-all-the-president-s-men-1976 For the entire list so far, go to: https://tj3duncan.wixsite.com/tj3duncan/post/greatest-movie-of-all-time-list --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
NAHB CEO Jerry Howard and Chief Lobbyist Jim Tobin discuss a very busy week of meetings with Administration officials on a variety of topics, including lumber prices and affordable housing. Jerry and Jim also address the passing of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and offer their support for the president’s nominee, Judge Amy Coney Barrett.
Donald Trump talked to Bob Woodward for his upcoming book on the Trump presidency, “Rage.” This raises a very interesting question: WHY!? Over the course of those interviews Trump apparently admitted to downplaying the seriousness of COVID-19 and had nice things to say about Kim Jong Un. Is anyone shocked? Not if you’ve been paying attention. Will it matter much? Of course not. It’s 2020 after all. Eric saw a movie in the theater for the first time in what feels like an eon. And there are identity politics changes coming to the criteria a movie must meet to win a Best Picture Oscar. We’re sure there’s no way this ends up working out poorly at all, no sir. Fireworks from a gender reveal party start a fire that is currently burning down about half of California. You know another way to have a gender reveal? Just have the baby. That’s almost certain to not to burn anything down. At least we hope it’s not. And finally, Phil Collins is running for President as the candidate of the Prohibition Party. No, not that Phil Collins. But this one did get his political start here in Illinois. We know he’s running against all odds, but that’s the chance he’s gotta take. We know you’re thinking that there must be some misunderstanding, that there must be some kind of mistake. But it’s true. At least we’ll always be in his heart. Okay, we’ll stop now. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
On this next installment of the "Robert Redford Retrospective" we go back to the 1970s to talk about All the presidents Men. Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman hit the streets to find out what happened at the Watergate building. Kevin and Doug hit the mics to find out if the movie is still worth watching. Listen and find out.
We sure do understand politics around here, we politics every day, so listen to our deep throats talk about All the President's Men for a few, or stick around for equally authoritative babbling about The Neverending Story, Better Off Dead, Back to the Future bells, Star Trek 2-4-6, and DC Fandome outta nowheres!
This week’s episode, we watched Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman's political, newspaper-thriller, All The President's Men. We discuss the influence this movie played on thrillers and other news movies, Dylan nerds out on the use of split-diopters, we read how one reviewer wants to utilize a time machine, and play a round of Zach's Quiz. Our cocktail this week is the Nixon. https://www.socialandcocktail.co.uk/cocktails/nixon/ Support those who sponsor us: Audible is the leading name in audiobooks. If you would to try it out with a free 30 day trial, use http://www.audibletrial.com/cocktailsandclassics. Surfside Sips makes high-impact glass straws & more for your cocktail & bar needs. For 20% off, use coupon "CocktailsandClassics" at checkout. www.surfsidesips.com/?ref=cocktailsandclassics Music Used: ModulationStation -80's riff --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
More than a 100 charges were filed, 34 people were arrested, 3 companies were shut down, all in relation to President Trump. He's comical if nothing else. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/prosandcons/support
The first "walk and talk" political thriller is on the block, 1972's Nixon Drama Docu-pic, All The President's Men. Welcome to Film Buffing up, the world's latest AFI watchcast where two casual film-goers, Jen and Mike, sit down and go through all of the American Film Institutes' 100 Films for 100 years and see where they stack in a new century. Every week we watch a new film in ascending order, discuss them and ultimately rank them on our own personal lists. Where will your favorites be placed? Listen and find out!
The group looks at two movies involving the downfall of Presidencies. Will Robert Redford's dreamy cream velvet suit beat out Gerard Butler's grizzled skull knifings?
This week... We cover the 1970's Presidential scandal of Watergate & A's favorite "fall asleep to" movie "All The President's Men" from 1976 while K goes over the 2014 attempted murder of a young girl with the Slender Man Stabbing & the movie "Mercy Black" Don't forget to rate, review and subscribe - everyone loves 5 star reviews - even us!!! Check us out on IG - basedonatruecrimestory Twitter - basedonatruecr1 Email: Basedonatruecrimestory@gmail.com Theme music: Confused Piano by Symphoid on Freesound.org
Sintonía: "Swing Shift" - Jimmy Giuffre "Lover Come Back to Me" - Lester Young; "Lestorian Mode" - Brew Moore; "Concentration" - Gene Ammons; "These Foolish Things" - Stan Getz; "One for Prez" - Wardell Gray; "Jane´s Bounce" - Allen Eager; "Coop´s Solo" - Bob Cooper; "Port of Rico" - Illinois Jacquet; "Passport to Pimlico" - Herbie Steward; "Ain´t Nothin´ Much" - Budd Johnson; "Sweet and Lovely" - Dexter Gordon; "Let´s Get Away From It" - Al Cohn; "Don´t Worry About Me" - Zoot Sims; "Out of Nowhere" - Henri Renaud; "I´m Shooting High" - Warne Marsh; "Fine and Dandy" - Sonny Stitt Escuchar audio
Audio engineer and extremely handsome individual Pete Byrnes joins Lucé and Cozi this week to sing the praises of Martin Scorsese’s ~$50 million box office bust Silence. Have his 13 years of Catholic education prepared him enough to convert two heathens to the cause? Silence is available to rent on Amazon Prime. Referenced in this episode: Spotlight, Zodiac, All the President's Men, The Age of Innocence, Cats, Call Me By Your Name, The Dead Don’t Die, King of Comedy, Doubt, The California Missions, and The Spread of Catholicism. Recommendations: Pete: Eurovision Song Contest Cozi: Special K: Fruit and Yogurt Lucé: Shirley --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/youneedtoseethis/support
Take aim as Brendan and Jason talk all about the meticulous attempted assassination of Charles de Gaulle in the sniper thriller The Day of the Jackal. Could this film have influenced All the President's Men in some way as a procedural thriller? What difficulties did the production experience shooting the massive parade finale? Could Fred Zinnemann have had a more haunting and traumatizing childhood? Plus - Edward Fox gets nominated for nothing! What!? The guys also roll the dice to find out what they'll be watching next week. Join us, won't you? Full List: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BFI_Top_100_British_films Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/forscreenandcountry Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/bfi_pod Our logo was designed by the wonderful Mariah Lirette (https://www.instagram.com/mariahhx) The Day of the Jackal stars Edward Fox, Michael Lonsdale, Derek Jacobi, Delphine Seyrig, Alan Badel and Cyril Cusack; directed by Fred Zinnemann.
New York-born master filmmaker Alan Pakula produced To Kill a Mockingbird and directed Sophie's Choice, but, as WNYC's Sara Fishko and guests tell us, he's also known for a trio of dark and urgent thrillers which are not getting old - they're getting new. (Produced in 2018) Amy Taubin is a film critic and contributing editor for Film Comment and Sight & Sound. Matt Zoller-Seitz is the Editor-at-Large for RogerEbert.com and a TV critic for New York Magazine. Alan Pakula's Selected Filmography Fear Strikes Out (1957) To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) The Sterile Cuckoo (1969) Inside Daisy Clover (1965) Klute (1971) Love and Pain and the Whole Damn Thing (1973) The Parallax View (1974) All the President's Men (1976) Starting Over (1979) Sophie's Choice (1982) Presumed Innocent (1990) The Pelican Brief (1993) Fishko Files with Sara Fishko Assistant Producer: Olivia BrileyMix Engineer: Wayne ShulmisterEditor: Karen Frillmann
Andy and Sean commemorate the 75th Anniversary of VE Day by discussing films that depict World War II through children's eyes. This week they discuss Grave of the Fireflies and The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas. Andy and Sean discuss films representing the media in 1976 - Network and All the President's Men. Hosts Andy Williams / Sean Wilson Follow us on social media: Instagram: frame_to_frame250 Twitter: frametoframe2 Music: Gothamlicious by Kevin MacLeod - Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/5741-gothamlicious License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ We Made This on Twitter: @wemadethispod wemadethispod.com
Andy and Sean discuss Mock-Rock-Docs including This is Spinal Tap! and Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping. Andy and Sean discuss films representing the media in 1976 - Network and All the President's Men. Hosts Andy Williams / Sean Wilson Follow us on social media: Instagram: frame_to_frame250 Twitter: frametoframe2 Music: Gothamlicious by Kevin MacLeod - Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/5741-gothamliciousLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ We Made This on Twitter: @wemadethispod wemadethispod.com
Andy and Sean discuss films representing the media in 1976 - Network and All the President's Men. Hosts Andy Williams / Sean Wilson Follow us on social media: Instagram: frame_to_frame250 Twitter: frametoframe2 Music: Gothamlicious by Kevin MacLeod - Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/5741-gothamliciousLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ We Made This on Twitter: @wemadethispod wemadethispod.com
Andy and Sean discuss films representing the media in 1976 - Network and All the President's Men.HostsAndy Williams / Sean WilsonFollow us on social media:Instagram: frame_to_frame250Twitter: frametoframe2Letterboxd: frametoframeFacebook: Frame to FrameEmail: frame.to.frame250@gmail.comMusic:Gothamlicious by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/5741-gothamlicious License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Leave us a review on Podchaser or Apple Podcasts!We Made This on Twitter: @wemadethispodwemadethispod.com
L'avantage avec toutes les plateformes existantes, c'est qu'on peut vous fournir une bonne flopée d'épisodes avant d'en avoir fait le tour. Là où on pêche un peu plus, c'est dans la sélection des titres tant on se retrouve souvent devant des contenus drastiques. Alors on nous a suggéré que la solution se trouvait sûrement vers Mubi. Mubi, c'est un site qui propose pas plus de 30 films à la fois. Quotidiennement, ils en ajoutent un, qui reste disponible une trentaine de jours, et retire le plus anciennement arrivé. Le choix est plus restreint, plus précis aussi, et il s'agit de se laisser porter par la découverte, d'ouvrir son cadeau journalier sans savoir ce qu'il va être. Des films plus exigeants, moins "pop-corn", mais qui promettent un grand écart, tant dans leurs origines que leur époque. Alors on s'est laissé porter vers l'Amérique bigarrée des années 2000 avec l'étrangeté Southland Tales de Richard Kelly, vers le Japon du 17ème siècle avec Les Amants Crucifiés de Kenji Mizoguchi, vers l'Italie des années 50 où Ingrid Bergman découvre la pauvreté d'après-guerre avec Europe 51 de Roberto Rosselini. Et enfin vers un double choix : l'inde du début du 20ème siècle avec une romance maudite, La Maison Du Monde de Satyajit Ray, et de l'animation japonaise avec la suite du cultissime Ghost In The Shell, Innocence, dans son univers futuriste. Des grands écarts comme on les adore, bonne écoute ! Invités : Inès de Critique-film et Just Focus David de Plopcast, réseau de podcasts traitant de la pop-culture. Temporalité de l’épisode : 09:10 Southland Tales (2006) de Richard Kelly, avec Sarah Michelle Gellar, Dwayne Johnson, Sean William Scott, Christophe Lambert.... 32:50 Les Amants Crucifiés (Chikamatsu monogatari) (1954) de Kenji Mizoguchi, avec Kazuo Hasegawa, Kyoko Kagawa, Eitaro Shindo.... 50:12 Europe 51 (Europa ’51) (1952) de Roberto Rossellini avec Ingrid Bergman, Alexander Knox, Ettore Giannini... 1:11:27 La Maison Et Le Monde (Ghare Baire) (1984) de Satyajit Ray, avec Soumitra Chatterjee, Victor Banerjee, Swatilekha Chatterjee... 1:21:52 Innocence - Ghost In The Shell 2 (Inosensu: Kôkaku kidôtai) (2004) de Mamoru Oshii, avec les voix d'Akio Otsuka, Atsuko Tanaka, Koichi Yamadera.... 1:30:07 les recos Première Désillusion (The Fallen Idol) (1948) de Carol Reed Souvenirs de Kenji Mizoguchi, livre de Yoshikata Yoda aux Cahiers du Cinéma #confinementlecture livres numériques gratuits durant le confinement Dark Crystal (1983) de Jim Henson et Frank Oz Les Hommes du Président (All the President's Men) (1976) d’Alan J. Pakula La Garçonnière (The Apartement) (1960) de Billy Wilder Le Sorceleur (Wiedźmin / The Witcher) livre de Andrzej Sapkowski Au Royaume des Fauves (Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness) (2020) série documentaire Netflix d’Eric Goode et Rebecca Chaiklin (par le même studio que Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened) Crédits : Émission animée par Thomas Bondon, Thierry de Pinsun, Yassa Harbane, Hera Laskri, Marwan Foudil et Elie Bartin. Générique original : Kostia R. Yordanoff (tous droits réservés) Retrouvez aussi Certains l’aiment à chaud sur : Facebook : @claacpodcast Instagram : @claacpodcast Twitter: @CLAACpodcast Ausha Itunes / Apple Podcast Spotify Deezer Stitcher Podmust Podcloud Podinstall
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It's campaign season so Politics Editor of the National Journal and host of the Against the Grain Podcast, Josh Kraushaar, joins the sibs to rank favorite fictional politicians, political movies, and dream up our best celebrity cabinet. We talk everything from Wag the Dog and All the President's Men to Election and Napoleon Dynamite. The Friday Night Movie Podcast will be at Baltimore Comic Con - October 23-25, 2020. Join the hosts for an interactive audience experience where YOU get to be on the show, win prizes, and take pictures at our photo booth. Get your tickets now! Subscribe, rate and review us on your favorite podcast platform, including iTunes | Spotify | Stitcher | Google Play | Podbean | Overcast. Play along with Friday Night Movie at home! Read the FNM Glossary to learn the about our signature bits (e.g., Buy/Rent/Meh, I Told You Shows, Tradesies, etc.) and then head on over to our merch store your very own official FNM t-shirt. Send us your recommendations and your tradesies! We'll watch them and report back on the show! Email us at pancake@pancake4table.com or tweet @FriNightMovie, @pancake4table, @chichiKgomez, and/or @paperBKprincess. Follow our creations and zany Instagram stories @frinightmovie and @pancake4table. Follow us on Letterboxd (@pancake4table) where we're rating every movie we've EVER watched. Subscribe to our quarterly newsletter for exclusive giveaways and news! Theme music by What Does It Eat. Subscribe and leave a review on IOS or Android at www.fridaynightmoviepod.com. Follow all of our pop culture shenanigans at www.pancake4table.com.
Jane Hoover, former VP of Government Relations with P&G provides the inside story through the lens of Brice Harlow, personal advisor to LBJ, Nixon and others. Hear her story of getting glam'd up to meet Robert Redford as she advised him on the movie All the President's Men.
Chet and Dee discuss the lengths to which the filmmakers went to ensure the accuracy and realism of their production, while also fitting the story into a classic dramatic structure that keeps the audience on the edge of their seats. This is the perfect film for inspiring and teaching future journalists, and your hosts talk about how the news media landscape has changed since the 1970s. Not coincidentally, attitudes about presidential behavior and impeachment have changed a great deal, as well.
Howdy! Hello!Welcome back as the boys have two “historic” films. These two films might be the least Tyler of Tyler's picks. Up first we have the classic paranoid 70s thriller All the President's Men. Then in second place we have the paranoid 2000s thriller Zodiac. The boys have a long talk about both. Enjoy won't you? Best thing Tyler watched: Sleepless in Seattle Best thing Ben watched: The Parallax View 00:00-10:04: Intro 10:05-16:53: Best things we watched this week 16:54-18:05: All the President's Men intro 18:06-19:44: “...Now don't fuck it up.” 19:45-54:52: All the President's Men discussion 54:53-55:02: All the President's Men ratings 55:03-55:45: Zodiac intro 55:46-57:42: “The guy who used to sit there was a great cartoonist...” 57:43-1:38:24: Zodiac discussion 1:38:25-1:39:36: Zodiac ratings 1:39:37-1:53:00: Coming Attractions/Outro
BackTrekking returns again to look back at the real-world inspirations of classic Trek episodes!There's a reason that the Pepe Silvia scene from "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" has become a popular meme. In our post-Watergate/Gamergate/Deflategate/et al. world, governmental conspiracy has gone from something the Washington Post investigates to fodder for the obsessive, "crazy" tinfoil hat characters of prime-time TV. Conspiracy was popular as a subject long before ex-President Nixon took his last helicopter ride out of Washington, but Watergate seemed to solidify paranoia as a *genre*, leading to the classic paranoid thrillers of the '70s like "Three Days of the Condor", "The Conversation", and of course, "All the President's Men". Generally, conspiracy films end with justice done and our hero's integrity being rewarded. Unfortunately, however, the actual process of uncovering a conspiracy tends to be a long and frustrating one, replete with half-truths and redactions and missing the satisfying third act reveal, the bad guys in question going unpunished and often keeping the positions they abused in the first place. Such was the Iran-Contra affair, a twisted, multi-national criminal conspiracy to fund right-wing rebels in a Central American nation that the Reagan Administration used illegal weapons sales and drug money to support. Iran-Contra was all anyone on either side of the aisle could talk about in the late '80s; in 2019, it's a barely remembered footnote of the Reagan presidency, as is the stack of pardons handed out to nearly everyone involved by Reagan's successor, George H. W. Bush. Bush (and his son) went on to be president, the Sandinista party (with a new coat of paint) remains in power in Nicaragua to this day, and Ollie North got a TV show on Fox News. Players with bit parts---like CIA-recruited pilot Barry Seal, focus of the 2017 movie "American Made"---got a bullet for their troubles, disposable by design and by policy.The TNG episode "Too Short a Season" and the conspiracy it contains doesn't have a Barry Seal character exactly. Imagine instead that Ronald Reagan himself---the "Great Communicator"---began his diplomatic career by secretly negotiating with terrorists and giving them exactly what they wanted. Now, after 45 years of lies and cover-ups, he's returning to the planet in question to atone for his crimes . . . as a sweaty 25-year-old? Star Trek!This week, we're looking at one of early TNG's botched attempts at political commentary and the Tom Cruise film that swooped in to set the record straight. On the show, we talk about the twisted conspiracy underpinning Iran-Contra, the film's attempt to "McKay" a potentially stultifying subject, the "Three Billboards" vibe, Domnhall Gleason=weak dick, getting your "Burn After Reading" in your "Goodfellas", too much medicine and not enough sugar, Tom Cruise question acting, the Federation's first Muppet admiral, Professor X chairs, "Oops, you war-crimed", exactly when to Benjamin Button yourself, Troi clownface, the dreaded "anti-Bechdel", running phasers to the Contras, pharmacological crime-fighting ethics, and LEONARD MAIZLISH! *gasp*This episode is dedicated to DC Fontana, Rene Auberjonois, and the many Trek actors and staff we've lost this year.Join us in the Just Enough Trope Discord!https://discord.gg/EAx5VGXTweet at the show or your hosts with your suggestions for future episodes!http://www.twitter.com/backtrekkinghttp://www.twitter.com/ka1ibanhttp://www.twitter.com/gooeyfameCheck out the other shows on the Just Enough Trope network!http://www.justenoughtrope.comTheme: Disco Medusae Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
In at #77 of the American Film Institute's top 100 movies is All the President's Men. Do I like this classic political thriller? Listen in and find out!Be sure to like Helix Reviews on FaceBook and Subscribe on iTunes and Stitcher!helixreviewspodcast@gmail.comThe American Film Institute's #77 Review: https://ia601505.us.archive.org/23/items/afi77allthepresidentsmen/AFI%20%2377%20All%20the%20Presidents%20Men.mp3
We had so much to talk about at this year's Hamptons International Film Festival that we had to do our podcast in two parts. In part two we start with "Red Penguins." It was a last-minute entry into the festival and you'll be able to tell why the festival's director was so eager to get it in there. We talk to director Gabe Polsky about his depiction of capitalism and opportunism run amok - complete with gangsters, strippers and live bears serving beer on a hockey rink in Moscow. It all happened when the Pittsburgh Penguins bought the fabled Russian National Hockey Team. And you'll hear from Steven Warshaw, whose job it was to make the whole deal come together. Then we hear from Tania Cypriano. She made "Born to Be" which tells how Dr. Jess Ting took on a new role as the lead gender-affirming suregeon at the Mount Sinai Center. It's as current a topic as there is now days. And finally, we have director Matthew Miele who talks to us about his documentary "Alan Pakula: Going for the Truth." It's all about the director of such landmark films as "All the President's Men," "Sophie's Choice" and "To Kill a Mockingbird." It's more than a podcast can handle but it's all right here!
The true story of Theranos is stranger than fiction. From its conception to its downfall, this Silicon Valley startup reveals truths about human nature and questions about its founder. In Bad Blood, John Carreyrou exposes Elizabeth Holmes as a fraud and crafts a narrative about the power of FOMO, the fear of missing out. You don’t have to like nonfiction, business, science, or medicine to enjoy this story. It’s a page-turning tale about human nature, privilege, and justice. We read and loved Bad Blood over summer, and it got us thinking about the appeal of investigative journalism in general. Email us here Follow us here Sign up for Libro.fm here Support the show here Seven Fallen Feathers by Tanya Talaga Unbelievable: My Front Row Seat to the Craziest Campaign in American History by Katy Tur Tiger Force: A True Story of Men and War by Michael Sallah and Mitch Weiss All the President's Men by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein Spotlight (Film) All the President's Men (Film) State of Play (Film) Five Days at Memorial by Sheri Fink The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 by Lawrence Wright The Looming Tower (Hulu) The Black Count by Tom Reiss
This triple bill covers Sidney Lumet's outstanding adaptation of 12 Angry Men, Alan J. Pakula's political thriller, All the President's Men and Alfonso Cuarón's Children of Men. 12 Angry Men stars Henry Fonda, Martin Balsam, Lee J. Cobb, E.G. Marshall, Jack Klugman, Ed Begley, Edward Binns, Jack Warden, Joseph Sweeney, George Voskovec and Robert Webber. All the President's Men stars Robert Redford, Dustin Hoffman, Jason Robards and Hal Holbrook. Children of Men stars Clare-Hope Ashitey, Julianne Moore, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Caine and Pam Ferris. But also Clive Owen and Charlie Hunham. Please review us over on Apple Podcasts. Got comments or suggestions for new episodes? Email: sddpod@gmail.com. Seek us out via Twitter and Instagram @ sddfilmpodcast Support our Patreon for $3 a month and get access to our exclusive show, Sudden Double Deep Cuts where we talk about our favourite movie soundtracks, scores and theme songs!