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Moyers & Company
2012 - 2014 7.0 (2 votes) 2 Seasons
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Moyers & Company

Overview

No overview available.

Key Crew

Writer: Bill Moyers

Top Cast

Seasons

Season 1 (2012)

No overview available.

50 episodes

Episodes
Episode 1: On Winner-Take-All Politics
2012-01-13

In its premiere episode, Moyers & Company dives into one of the most important and controversial issues of our time: How Washington and Big Business colluded to make the super-rich richer and turn their backs on the rest of us. Bill’s guests – Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson, authors of Winner-Take-All Politics: How Washington Made the Rich Richer — And Turned Its Back on the Middle Class, argue that America’s vast inequality is no accident, but in fact has been politically engineered. How, in a nation as wealthy as America, can the economy simply stop working for people at large, while super-serving those at the very top? Through exhaustive research and analysis, the political scientists Hacker and Pierson — whom Bill regards as the “Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson” of economics — detail important truths behind a 30-year economic assault against the middle class.

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Episode 2: Crony Capitalism
2012-01-20

This weekend, continuing its sharp multi-episode focus on the intersection of money and politics, Moyers & Company explores the tight connection between Wall Street and the White House with David Stockman – yes, that David Stockman — former budget director for President Reagan. Now a businessman who says he was “taken to the woodshed” for telling the truth about the administration’s tax policies, Stockman speaks candidly with Bill Moyers about how money dominates politics, distorting free markets and endangering democracy. “As a result,” Stockman says, “we have neither capitalism nor democracy. We have crony capitalism.” Stockman shares details on how the courtship of politics and high finance have turned our economy into a private club that rewards the super-rich and corporations, leaving average Americans wondering how it could happen and who’s really in charge.

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Episode 3: How Big Banks are Rewriting the Rules of Our Economy
2012-01-27

Big banks are rewriting the rules of our economy to the exclusive benefit of their own bottom line. But how did our political and financial class shift the benefits of the economy to the very top, while saddling us with greater debt and tearing new holes in the safety net? Bill Moyers talks with former Citigroup Chairman John Reed and former Senator Byron Dorgan to explore a momentous instance: how the late-90’s merger of Citicorp and Travelers Group – and a friendly Presidential pen — brought down the Glass-Steagall Act, a crucial firewall between banks and investment firms which had protected consumers from financial calamity since the aftermath of the Great Depression. In effect, says Moyers, they “put the watchdog to sleep.” There’s no clearer example of the collusion between government and corporate finance than the Citicorp-Travelers merger, which — thanks to the removal of Glass-Steagall — enabled the formation of the financial behemoth known as Citigroup.

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Episode 4: How Do Conservatives and Liberals See the World?
2012-02-03

Our country is more politically polarized than ever. Is it possible to agree to disagree and still move on to solve our massive problems? Or are the blind leading the blind — over the cliff? Bill and social psychologist Jonathan Haidt talk about the psychological underpinnings of our contentious culture, why we can’t trust our own opinions, and the demonizing of our adversaries. “When it gets so that your opponents are not just people you disagree with, but… the mental state in which I am fighting for good, and you are fighting for evil, it’s very difficult to compromise,” Haidt tells Moyers. “Compromise becomes a dirty word.” Also, a Bill Moyers essay on why Newt Gingrich might be afraid of Saul Alinsky.

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Episode 5: Economic Malpractice and the Millennials
2012-02-10

There are 80-plus million Americans today who were born roughly between 1978 and 2000, and they’re getting hit hard by economic circumstances created over the past 30 years. The Millennials are the first generation of Americans who cannot count on doing better than their parents. Many Millennials are working longer hours, and have seen their earnings decrease. Meanwhile, their personal debt has increased over the last four years to the point where they face unrelenting payments on interest for money they borrowed for college or just to stay above water. How have these realities affected their outlook? And how will it impact Barack Obama’s future? Millennials turned out for him by huge margins in 2008, but their enthusiasm has waned. On this week’s Moyers & Company, Bill Moyers talks with a Millennial who has dedicated herself to tackling these issues.

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Episode 6: Decoding the Campaigns
2012-02-17

We’re saturated with deceptive political advertising — aided and abetted now with spending by citizens, corporations and super PACs that seems to know no bounds. Add to that relatively cheap “buys” on the media landscape including television, the web, print media and social networks, and there’s no place for the electorate to escape. But help is on the way. This weekend on Moyers & Company, Bill asks political communication expert Kathleen Hall Jamieson to decode the political misinformation campaigns of 2012 thus far. Jamieson runs the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania, including the sites FactCheck.org and FlackCheck.org. The show then moves from politics to poetry as Bill welcomes former U.S. Poet Laureate Rita Dove, who this week received the National Medal of Arts from President Obama. Dove was the youngest and the first African American to be named poet laureate in 1993.

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Episode 7: Where Movies End and Politics Begins
2012-02-24

This weekend’s Moyers & Company starts with a compelling Bill Moyers Essay: Is it fair for parents to opt out of vaccinations for their children on the basis of religion or philosophy? Bill weighs the value of personal liberty versus the greater public health. Next, film historian and culture critic Neal Gabler joins Bill to discuss how representations of heroism in movies shape our expectations of a U.S. president, and how our real-world candidates are packaged into superficial, two-dimensional personas designed to appeal to both the electorate and the media. As a result, says Gabler, we never get to the true pressing questions and issues of America. Finally, Bill has a moving conversation with acclaimed poet and Poetry Magazine editor Christian Wiman about how finding true love and being diagnosed with a rare and incurable blood cancer reignited his religious passion as well as his creative expression.

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Episode 8: Moving Beyond War
2012-03-23

Nine years after Baghdad erupted in “shock and awe,” we’re once again hearing in America the drumbeat for war in the Middle East. Now, the bull’s-eye is on Iran. But what we need more than a simple change of target is a complete change in perspective, says Andrew Bacevich, a West Point graduate and Vietnam veteran-turned-scholar who’s become one of the most perceptive observers of America’s changing role in the world. This week, on an all-new Moyers & Company, Bill Moyers and Bacevich explore the futility of “endless” wars, and provide a reality check on the rhetoric of American exceptionalism. “Are we so unimaginative, so wedded to the reliance on military means that we cannot conceive of any way to reconcile our differences with groups and nations in the Islamic world, and therefore bring this conflict to an end?” Bacevich tells Moyers. Bacevich also answers the question of whether Iran is a direct threat to America with a definitive no.

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Episode 9: Standing Up For Democracy
2012-03-29

American history is rich with stories of social change inspired by the actions of motivated individuals and organized groups. Today’s activists are no different — facing long odds against powerful and systemic special interests. On this weekend’s Moyers & Company, Bill Moyers talks with young but very experienced organizers George Goehl, Ai-jen Poo, and Sarita Gupta – all involved with a nationwide citizens’ initiative called the The 99% Spring, which takes place the week of April 9th. Organizers aim to train 100,000 Americans to teach about income inequality in homes, places of worship, campuses and the streets. A 99% Spring co-organizer, George Goehl is executive director of National People’s Action, a network of grassroots organizations using direct action to battle economic and racial injustice.

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Episode 10: Gambling With Your Money
2012-04-05

You’d think after such a calamitous economic fall, there’d be a strong consensus on reinforcing the protections that keep us out of harm’s way. But in some powerful corners, the opposite is happening. Business and political forces, including hordes of lobbyists, are working hard to diminish or destroy these protections. One of the biggest bull’s-eyes is on the Volcker Rule, a section of the Dodd-Frank Act that aims to keep the banks in which you deposit your money from gambling it on their own — sometimes risky — investments. On this week’s Moyers & Company, Bill talks with the namesake of the Volcker Rule — Paul Volcker, who served two terms as Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System from 1979-1987 and formerly headed President Obama’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board. Volcker contends the rule aims to curb conflicts of interest between bankers and their customers.

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Episode 11: An Optimist for Our Times
2012-04-13

Angela Glover Blackwell has spent her adult life advocating practical ways to fulfill America’s promise of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” for all. Now, with our middle class struggling, poverty rising, and inequality growing, the founder and chief executive officer of PolicyLink, an influential research center, finds reasons for hope in the face of these hard realities. On this week’s Moyers & Company, Bill Moyers and Blackwell discuss what fuels her optimism. “I’m not discouraged, and I wouldn’t even dream of giving up, because we’re at a moment right now where I think we have more possibility than I’ve seen in my adult lifetime,” Blackwell tells Moyers. “Part of what I’ve been feeling is that all the issues are finally on the table… So many people who are being left behind are now in places where they have voice, and influence, and they’re forcing their way into the conversation.

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Episode 12: The Case for Old-School Faith & Politics
2012-04-18

Two movements once at the vital center of our society, liberal politics and American Christianity have gone astray, says Eric Alterman (from the left) and Ross Douthat (from the right). On this weekend’s Moyers & Company (check local listings) each meets separately with Bill to discuss the implications of this wayward course on American Democracy. First, Eric Alterman describes the grand aspirations, ambitions, and historical ironies that prompted him to write his new book The Cause: The Fight for American Liberalism from Franklin Roosevelt to Barack Obama. He calls on liberals to regain “the fighting spirit” that characterized Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal and to put it in service of new liberal policies for the 2lst century. Liberals, he tells Moyers, have overpromised and underperformed, and it’s time once again to make government credible.

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Episode 13: Big Money, Big Media, Big Trouble
2012-04-27

Big money and big media have coupled to create a ‘Disney World’ of democracy in which TV shows, televised debates, even news coverage is being dumbed down, resulting in a public less informed than it should be, says Marty Kaplan, director of USC’s Norman Lear Center and an entertainment industry veteran. Bill Moyers talks with Kaplan about how taking news out of the journalism box and placing it in the entertainment box is hurting democracy and allowing special interest groups to manipulate the system. Later on the show, Bill talks about Florida Rep. Allen West and shocking modern-day McCarthyism.

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Episode 14: Between Two Worlds - Life on the Border
2012-05-04

No writer understands the border culture between Mexico and the United States more intimately than Luis Alberto Urrea, whose life is the stuff of great novels. Son of a Mexican father and Anglo mother, Urrea grew up first in Tijuana and then just across the border in San Diego. Over the years he has produced a series of acclaimed novels, including The Hummingbird’s Daughter, The Devil’s Highway, and his latest, Queen of America — each a rich and revealing account of the people of the borderlands that join and separate our two nations. Three of Urrea’s books were among scores of others removed from classrooms earlier this year when the Tucson school district eliminated Mexican-American studies on the accusation it was “divisive.” But there’s no ban on ideas in Bill’s studio, and Urrea talks with Bill Moyers about that episode as he unfolds the modern reality of life on the border.

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Episode 15: Fighting for Fair Play on TV and Taxes
2012-05-11

With the 2012 campaign season moving from primary to election mode, Bill invites back to his studio master media decoder Kathleen Hall Jamieson for a closer look at the role misinformation will play in the Obama vs. Romney TV ad slugfest. Jamieson, who runs the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania, including the sites FactCheck.org and FlackCheck.org, discusses the sharp increase in deceptive advertising in the 2012 race, and equally-alarming new obstacles to campaign ad transparency. Later in the show, Bill talks to RoseAnn DeMoro, who heads the largest registered nurses union in the country, and will lead a Chicago march protesting economic inequality on May 18. DeMoro is championing the Robin Hood Tax, a small government levy the financial sector would pay on commercial transactions like stocks and bonds.

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Episode 16: Tom Morello, Troubadour for Justice
2012-05-18

Songs of social protest — music and the quest for justice — have long been intertwined, and the troubadours of troubling times — Guthrie, Seeger, Baez, Dylan, and Springsteen among them — have become famous for their dedication to both. Now we can add a name to the ranks of those who lift their voices for social and economic justice: Tom Morello. Morello is the Harvard-educated guitarist who dabbled in politics, then chose rock music to make a difference. He played guitar for the popular band he co-founded — Rage Against the Machine — and then for Audioslave. Rolling Stone chose his album “World Wide Rebel Songs” as one of the best of 2011, and named him one of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time. As likely to be spotted at a grass-roots rally as he would at a concert hall, Morello was in Madison, Wisconsin last year, braving bitter winter weather to sing on the steps of the state capitol in support of public service workers.

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Episode 17: Reckoning with Torture
2012-05-26

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Episode 18: Dark Money in Politics
2012-06-15

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Episode 19: How Big Banks Victimize Our Democracy
2012-06-22

Matt Taibbi and Yves Smith discuss the folly and corruption of both banks and government. Also, Peter Edelman on fighting U.S. poverty.

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Episode 20: Confronting the Contradictions of America’s Past
2012-06-29

Bill and Khalil Gibran Muhammad discuss what we should learn from our racial past to better understand the present.

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Episode 21: Is Labor A Lost Cause?
2012-07-06

Exploring if unions can rebound and once again act strongly in the interest of ordinary workers.

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Episode 22: Banking on Greed
2012-07-13

The uphill fight to make banks honest and accountable, plus the latest battleground in the war on Planet Earth.

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Episode 23: Capitalism’s ‘Sacrifice Zones’
2012-07-20

Bill and journalist Chris Hedges talk about parts of America “that have been destroyed for quarterly profit.

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Episode 24: What It’s Like to Go to War
2012-07-27

Bill talks to Vietnam veteran and author Karl Marlantes about what we need to understand about the minds and hearts of our modern warriors.

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Episode 25: Suppressing the Vote
2012-08-03

Bill talks with Keesha Gaskins and Michael Waldman of the Brennan Center for Justice about how voter ID laws enable voting suppression.

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Episode 26: Nuns, Faith and Politics
2012-08-24

On a road trip of faith and politics, American nuns spread the word: Paul Ryan’s budget would hurt those already struggling to make ends meet.

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Episode 27: The Resurrection of Ralph Reed
2012-08-31

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Episode 28: Challenging Power, Changing Politics
2012-09-07

Bill discusses the power of independent thinking with Senator Bernie Sanders and Green Party candidates Jill Stein and Cheri Honkala.

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Episode 29: The One Percent Court
2012-09-14

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Episode 30: Elections for Sale
2012-09-21

Bill Moyers and Trevor Potter discuss how American elections are bought and sold, who covers the cost, and how the rest of us pay the price.

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Episode 31: United States of ALEC
2012-09-28

How corporations and state legislators are colluding to write laws and remake America, one statehouse at a time.

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Episode 32: Hispanic America’s Turn
2012-10-05

Univision’s Jorge Ramos and María Elena Salinas on Hispanic influence and power in America.

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Episode 33: Justice, Not Politics
2012-10-12

Exploring efforts to capture climate change in action, and the fight to protect our state courts from predatory politics.

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Episode 34: Plutocracy Rising
2012-10-19

Journalists Matt Taibbi and Chrystia Freeland discuss how far America’s super-rich will go to keep the One Percent in charge.

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Episode 35: What’s Behind the Presidential Campaign Messages?
2012-10-26

Marty Kaplan and Kathleen Hall Jamieson judge the political debates, and Neil Barofsky describes the obstacles to banking reform.

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Episode 36: The Election is Over — Now What?
2012-11-09

A bitter election behind us, and burning questions ahead. Bill explores what happens next with journalists Bob Herbert, Reihan Salam, and James Fallows.

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Episode 37: Hurricanes, Capitalism & Democracy
2012-11-16

Naomi Klein joins Bill to discusses the links between capitalism and climate change, and Trevor Potter assesses Big Money’s true impact on the election.

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Episode 38: Big Media’s Power Play
2012-12-07

What you can do to stop Big Media from controlling more of what we see, hear and read.

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Episode 39: Fiscal Cliffs and Fiscal Realities
2012-12-14

Why the fiscal cliff is merely a phantom menace — and what we should be talking about instead.

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Episode 40: Junot Díaz on Rewriting the Story of America
2012-12-28

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Junot Díaz straddles two cultures while telling the story of America’s past and future.

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Episode 41: What We Can Learn from Lincoln
2012-12-21

Tony Kushner, who wrote the screenplay for Lincoln, talks about America’s 16th president and “the history lesson of politics.

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Episode 42: Ending the Silence on Climate Change
2013-01-04

Climate change communication expert Anthony Leiserowitz explains why climate change gets the silent treatment, and what we should do about it.

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Episode 43: Paul Krugman on Why Jobs Come First
2013-01-11

The New York Times columnist explains why our top priority should be getting America back to work – if only Washington would stop throwing distractions in the way.

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Episode 44: Fighting for Filibuster Reform
2013-01-18

Larry Cohen, president of the Communications Workers of America, joins Bill to make the case for common-sense reform that would bring the Senate back to serving democracy.

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Episode 45: Foul Play in the Senate, and Today’s Abortion Debate
2013-01-25

Bill explores Senate favoritism for the world’s largest biotech firm, and takes a deeper look at modern abortion rights activism.

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Episode 46: Are Drones Destroying our Democracy?
2013-02-01

Bill explores the moral and legal implications of using drones to target our enemies. Also, Matt Taibbi on big bank privileges.

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Episode 47: Who’s Widening America’s Digital Divide?
2013-02-08

Internet scholar Susan Crawford explains how media conglomerates put profit ahead of the public interest, and author Nick Turse shares what we never knew about the Vietnam War.

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Episode 48: The Fight to Keep Democracy Alive
2013-02-15

Exploring the virus of money in our politics, and how we need to combat it.

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Episode 49: Taming Capitalism Run Wild
2013-02-22

Economist Richard Wolff and Restaurant Worker Advocate Saru Jayaraman talk about battling rampant capitalism, and fighting for economic justice.

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Episode 50: Fighting Creeping Creationism
2013-03-01

Zack Kopplin on fighting the onslaught of creationism and Susan Jacoby on the challenges of free thinking in America.

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Season 2 ()

No overview available.

52 episodes

Episodes
Episode 1: Paul Krugman on Why Jobs Come First

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Episode 2: Fighting the Filibuster

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Episode 3: What's Fueling the Modern Abortion Debate

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Episode 4: Are Drones Destroying Our Democracy

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Episode 5: Who's Widening America's Digital Divide

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Episode 6: The Fight to Keep Democracy Alive
2013-02-15

Dan Cantor, New York Working Families Party; Jonathan Soros, Friends of Democracy super PAC; the power of poetry with Martin Espada.

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Episode 7: Taming Capitalism Run Wild

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Episode 8: Fighting Creeping Creationism
2013-03-01

Anti-creationism activist Zack Kopplin; author Susan Jacoby discusses secularism.

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Episode 9: What We Can Learn From Lincoln
2013-03-08

Screenwriter Tony Kushner talks about Abraham Lincoln.

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Episode 10: Ending the Silence on Climate Change
2013-03-15

Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication.

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Episode 11: What Has Capitalism Done for Us Lately?
2013-03-22

Economist Richard Wolff analyzes income equality; Sheila Bair, former chairperson of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

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Episode 12: And Justice for Some
2013-03-29

Bryan Stevenson, founder of Equal Justice Initiative, discusses the American justice system; an essay on the idea of justice for all.

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Episode 13: MLK's Dream of Economic Justice
2013-04-05

Historian Taylor Branch and theologian James Cone discuss Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s vision of economic justice.

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Episode 14: Living Outside Tribal Lines
2013-04-12

Economic inequality in California; writer Sherman Alexie.

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Episode 15: A Mother Fights Toxic Trespassers
2013-04-19

Activist Sandra Steingraber discusses protecting children from toxic trespassers contaminating air, water and food.

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Episode 16: Trading Democracy for National Security
2013-04-26

Journalist Glenn Greenwald discusses the Boston Marathon bombings; political scholars Norman Ornstein and Thomas Mann.

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Episode 17: The Sandy Hook Promise
2013-05-03

Francine Wheeler, whose son Ben was among the children killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., and singer Peter Yarrow, discuss the power of music to create change; David Wheeler talks about resolving the gun issue.

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Episode 18: How People Power Generates Change
2013-05-10

Marshall Ganz, senior lecturer in public policy at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government; Rachel Laforest, executive director of Right to the City and Madeline Janis, co-founder of Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy.

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Episode 19: The Toxic Politics of Science
2013-05-17

Public health historians David Rosner and Gerald Markowitz discuss the dangers of lead; Sheila Krumholz, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics; Danielle Brian, Project on Government Oversight.

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Episode 20: Going to Jail for Justice
2013-05-24

Environmental activist Tim DeChristopher, co-founder of Peaceful Uprising; columnist Gretchen Morgenson.

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Episode 21: Living Outside Tribal Lines
2013-05-31

Economic inequality in California; writer Sherman Alexie.

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Episode 22: Taming Capitalism Run Wild
2013-06-07

Economist Richard Wolff; activist Saru Jayaraman.

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Episode 23: Big Brother's Prying Eyes
2013-06-14

Professor Lawrence Lessig, director of the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics at Harvard University.

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Episode 24: United States of ALEC: A Follow-Up
2013-06-21

ALEC -- the American Legislative Exchange Council.

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Episode 25: The Faces of America's Hungry
2013-06-28

Filmmaker Kristi Jacobson and Mariana Chilton, director of the Center for Hunger-Free Communities, discuss hunger in America; journalist Greg Kaufmann.

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Episode 26: Surviving the New American Economy
2013-07-05

First profiled 22 years ago, two American families in Wisconsin struggle to keep up with the changing U.S. economy; authors Barbara Miner and Barbara Garson.

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Episode 27: Distracted From Democracy
2013-07-12

Columnist Marty Kaplan discusses economic inequality in the U.S.; historian Gary May.

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Episode 28: A New Case for Gun Control
2013-07-19

Tom Diaz discusses gun control; Baldemar Velásquez fights for the rights of farmworkers.

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Episode 29: John Lewis Marches On
2013-07-26

Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) discusses his leadership role during the civil-rights movement of the 1960s.

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Episode 30: The Faces of America's Hungry
2013-08-02

Director Kristi Jacobson and Mariana Chilton, director of the Center for Hunger-Free Communities, discuss hunger, food insecurity and poverty in America.

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Episode 31: Taming Capitalism Run Wild
2013-08-09

Economist Richard Wolff; activist Saru Jayaraman.

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Episode 32: How People Power Generates Change
2013-08-16

Marshall Ganz, senior lecturer at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government; Rachel LaForest, executive director of Right to the City; Madeline Janis, co-founder of Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy.

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Episode 33: America's Gilded Capital
2013-08-23

Journalist and author Mark Leibovich discusses his views on Washington, D.C.

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Episode 34: John Lewis Marches On
2013-08-30

Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) discusses the 1963 march for civil rights.

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Episode 35: What Are We Doing in Syria?
2013-09-06

Correspondent Deborah Amos, National Public Radio; historian Andrew Bacevich; guest host Phil Donahue.

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Episode 36: The Collision of Sports and Politics
2013-09-13

Davie Zirin, sports editor of The Nation.

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Episode 37: Robert Reich on Inequality for All
2013-09-20

Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich discusses the movie "Inequality for All," which examines income disparity in America.

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Episode 38: Saving the Earth From Ourselves
2013-09-27

Kumi Naidoo, international executive director of Greenpeace.

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Episode 39: Wendell Berry: Poet & Prophet
2013-10-04

Writer Wendell Berry discusses the environment.

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Episode 40: Citizens United: The Sequel
2013-10-11

Yale Law School professor Heather Gerken discusses McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission; historian Joyce Appleby.

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Episode 41: The Debt Ceiling Is a Nuclear Bomb the US Has Aimed at Itself
2013-10-18

British journalist Martin Wolf discusses the debt ceiling debate and its potential impact on the global economy; MIT professor Sherry Turkle.

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Episode 42: Progressives Pick Up the Pieces
2013-10-25

Financial journalist Gretchen Morgenson; historian Peter Dreier.

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Episode 43: The Top Secret Trade Deal You Need to Know About
2013-11-01

Yves Smith, the Naked Capitalism blog; Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research; a preview of "Unmanned: America's Drone Wars."

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Episode 44: How Dollarocracy Is Destroying America
2013-11-08

John Nichols, The Nation; professor Robert McChesney.

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Episode 45: The Path of Positive Resistance
2013-11-15

Dr. Jill Stein, co-founder of the Massachusetts Coalition for Healthy Communities; Dr. Margaret Flowers, Physicians for a National Health Program.

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Episode 46: Zombie Politics and Casino Capitalism
2013-11-22

Author Henry Giroux; remembering novelist Doris Lessing; the documentary "Birth of the Living Dead."

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Episode 47: Wendell Berry: Poet & Prophet
2013-11-29

Author and environmental activist Wendell Berry; short documentary "Dance of the Honey Bee."

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Episode 48: Behind Washington's Closed Doors
2013-12-06

Mark Leibovich, The New York Times Magazine, discusses Washington's powerbrokers.

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Episode 49: Gunfighter Nation
2013-12-13

Historian Richard Slotkin talks about guns and violence in America.

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Episode 50: Incarceration Nation
2013-12-20

Civil rights lawyer and legal scholar Michelle Alexander.

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Episode 51: The Pope, Poverty, and Poetry
2013-12-27

Historian Thomas Cahill discusses Pope Francis and the relevance of the church in the 21st century.

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Episode 52: State of Conflict: North Carolina
2014-01-03

The battle of American politics rages on in North Carolina.

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