Bölümler
-
"I think the race is a toss up," says Kevin Sullivan, "Trump has really captured the Republican Party." In this episode of Searching for America, Robyn Curnow talks with Washington Post journalist Kevin Sullivan about all the president's he has interviewed. They discuss the enduring influence of Donald Trump, the dynamics of the Biden administration, and the role of Kamala Harris as a progressive leader. Sullivan shares insights from his experiences covering American politics and reflects on the legacy of Jimmy Carter who turned 100 on Oct 1.
#America #Trump #Biden #Kamala Harris # Jimmy Carter #carter100
Chapters
00:00 Searching for America: Our Kevin Sullivan is NOT Kevin Sullivan the wrestler
01:47 Trump's Influence on American Politics and what he was like to interview
05:57 The Dynamics of the Biden Administration and Biden's long stories
10:08 Kamala Harris: A Pragmatic Progressive and what DC thinks of her
13:57 Reflections on Jimmy Carter's Legacy and his humble house in Plains, Georgia
18:10 The Global Perception of America where not all Americans are 'loud and stupid.'
21:48 The Role of Journalism in Society and being hired by Watergate editor Ben Bradlee -
Every week Robyn Curnow asks her guest the same questions in this bonus episode. Where would you go if you could time travel? Dream Thanksgiving dinner guest (dead or alive)? What does it mean to be an American? Why is the country polarized? Favorite movie?
Kevin Sullivan lists his favorite things
02:49 Time Traveling
06:09 The Role of Social Media in Polarization "It's amplified the worst of us"
09:00 Patience, listening and being a decent person -
Eksik bölüm mü var?
-
Unlike other Western democracies, America's politics are infused with religion. Why is God part of the get-out-and-vote plans? Republican strategist Doug Heye says Republicans and Democrats have used religion to attract voters in the past but evangelical fervor for Donald Trump has turbo-charged the Republican ticket in different ways.
FOR MORE BONUS CONTENT FROM ROBYN, SIGN UP TO
http://www.searchingforamericapod.com
http://www.instagram.com/robyncurnow
http://www.x.com/robyncurnow
-
In this bonus episode, Republican strategist Doug Heye shows his foodie side by listing his favorite restaurants and imagining his dream dinner party with Julia Child, Thomas Jefferson and Hank Aaron. When Robyn Curnow asks him about his favorite Presidents, Doug Heye gives a surprising answer.
Favorite piece of music or movie: Frank Sinatra singing
What makes him cry? Maybe a few tears were shed' seeing Bruce Springsteen sing "Thunder Road"
Favorite American landscape: Yellowstone
Favorite President; Ronald Reagan. George Washington. Richard Nixon.
Sports team: Tar Heels.
First job: Mr Barbecue, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. "I'll never forget the customer who returned his french fries because they tasted like potatoes."
SIGN UP FOR ROBYN'S NEWSLETTERS AND MORE FUN BONUS CONTENT AT http://www.searchingforamericapod.com
http://www.x.com/robyncurnow
http://www.instagram.com/robyncurnow
http://www.x.com/dougheye
-
Even though her family says American politicians 'are all crooks,' Sarah Smarsh was asked to run for Senate after she became a rare voice of an ignored part of America; the white, poor, rural working class. She choose not to go to run for office but instead wrote another book about her life in Kansas while working to save the prairies and fight against the stereotypes that paint her people as backwards.
The solution to American polarization? More honky-tonks, dancing and bourbon.
Her favorite landscape? The American prairie where she lives.
American movie? Wizard of Oz (even though everyone always says to her, 'You're not in Kansas anymore.")
Dinner party guests (dead or alive)? Dolores Huerta. Jodie Foster. Toni Morrison.
Three words to describe America? Stressed, militarized and empire. The USA spends to much money policing the world and underinvests in taking care of its own people.
-
Sarah Smarsh's grandmother had dentures in her twenties, after her teeth were pulled out due to poverty. Robyn Curnow asks why good or bad teeth explain whether America is a meritocracy?
Smarsh's new book is called Bone of Bone; Essays on America by a Daughter of the Working Class.
Robyn wanted to talk to Sarah because she's rare commodity in America - a whisperer or translator of two Americas; rural, white, poor middle America and the educated, urbane newsrooms of the coasts. As one of the few people in a newsroom who have worked in a wheat field, Smarsh says she takes the stereotypes of middle America personally because they can get her people so wrong.
Not all white, poor Americans in rural areas are Trump supporters, in the same way not all New Yorkers are walking around with Black Lives Matter t-shirts. Sarah blames a fractured media and the Democrat Party ignoring large chunks of America where people have felt ignored, and to whom Donald Trump speak to.
How to bring divided Americans together? Dolly Parton, the Patron Saint of the American Working Class.
http://www.x.com/scribnerbooks
https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Bone-of-the-Bone/Sarah-Smarsh/9781668055601
http://www.searchingforamericapod.com
http://www.robyncurnow.net
http://www.x.com/robyncurnow
http://www.x.com/sarah_smarsh
http://www.instagram.com/sarah_smarsh
-
We need to immerse kids in more ambiguity, says headteacher Josh Clark, who is also on the board of the National Association of Independent Schools. How do the divisions in America manifest in schools?
Is pressure to say the right thing and give the 'correct answer' stifling debate and critical thinking in classrooms? Why have kids lost the ability to put themselves in another person's shoes? Does simplification of complicated issues create less empathy?
Josh Clark's dad was a prison warder which meant Josh grew up in the warder's house inside a prison complex in Hopewell, Virginia. "My first friend in life was Nelson. Nelson was an inmate who worked in our yard. He smuggled cocaine into the country in a private plane in the 70s. I was seven. I thought he walked on water."
Growing up in the dynamic of the federal prison system gave Josh a perspective that informs his views on right, wrong, legal, illegal and the need to understand ambiguities and embrace complexity.
http://www.searchingforamericapod.com
http://www.madebydyslexia.org
http://www.x.com/robyncurnow
-
Josh Clark would love to time travel to the 1850's just before the Civil War when the country was dealing with what it meant to be an American. As a Southerner, who grew up Mississippi, he is intrigued by a country that was grappling with itself and at the same time embracing transcendentalism. He lists his favorite books from the pre-Civil War days, written during an time of national tension. Leaves of Grass, Moby Dick and the Scarlet Letter.
Motto: Make it New.
Best President: Abraham Lincoln.
Greatest fear for America: Apathy
What can bring Americans together in divided times? Football, of course. And in particular, college football in the South. (Go Tennessee...)
http://www.x.com/robyncurnow
http://www.instagram.com/robyncurnow
http://www.searchingforamericapod.com
http://www.madebydyslexia.org
-
What does it mean to die for America? What is it like losing men under your command? Why do so many American civilians dress up like soldiers in camouflage gear and carry deadly weapons of war? (Lt. Gen Mark Hertling has strong opinions about that...)
General Mark Hertling earned the Purple Heart in Operation Desert Storm and commanded the US Army Europe and Seventh Army. He's a Westpoint graduate and has numerous university degrees.
When she was a CNN anchor, Robyn Curnow and Mark Hertling had numerous conversations on air about battles, wars or terror attacks, but now Robyn gets a chance to ask Mark all the questions she never had the chance to during breaking news.
In this episode they dive into what it means to be an American soldier in divided times.
@markhertling
@robyncurnow
@searchingusapod
www.searchingforamericapod.com
-
Why do so many American civilians dress up like soldiers in camouflage gear and carry deadly weapons of war? Lt. Gen Mark Hertling talks about what makes a soldier, and what it means to die for America. Hertling earned the Purple Heart in Operation Desert Storm and commanded the US Army Europe and Seventh Army.
When she was a CNN anchor, Robyn Curnow and Mark Hertling had numerous conversations on air about battles, wars or terror attacks, but now Robyn gets a chance to ask Mark all the questions she never had the chance to during breaking news.
In this episode they dive into what it means to be an American soldier in divided times.
-
What is Kamala Harris like? Why do Trump voters believe he's on their side?
US Army veteran and a former Democratic Party wunderkind, Jason Kander says he 'sorta ran for President.' He's also ran for Senate along with Kamala Harris so he knows what it's like working with her.
Kander pulled back from public life after admitting he was struggling with PTSD from his time serving in Afghanistan. His book Invisible Storm, a soldier's memoir of politics and PTSD is a New York Times bestseller.
Even though he's no longer in politics he - like everyone in the US - has an opinion on this election.
In this episode, Robyn and Jason talk about who their neighbors might vote for (Robyn is in Atlanta, Jason is in Kansas City) and whether Kamala Harris's progressive agenda is a 'bridge to far' for some, and what that might mean for the vote in November.
Listen now!
@jasonkander
@Majority54
@VCP_HQ
www.jasonkander.comX
@robyncurnow
@searchingusapodwww.searchingforamericapod.com
www.robyncurnow.netInstagram: @robyncurnow
@searchingforamericapod -
Jason Kander tells the (funny) story of when checked himself into a military psych ward for PTSD
Jason Kander was 'sorta' running to be President when he realized he needed to back out of politics because he was suffering from PTSD after a deployment in Afghanistan. His New York Times Best Selling book is called Invisible Storm, a Soldier's Memoir of Politics and PTSD.
In a humorous account of when he checked himself into a military psychiatric ward, he explains to Robyn Curnow why the doctor thought he was hear ing voices (President Obama really did suggest he should run for President.) With the benefit of perspective and a healthy dose of therapy, Kander talks about the army, mental health and fighting for America.
@jasonkander
@Majority54
@VCP_HQX
@robyncurnow
@searchingusapodwww.searchingforamericapod.com
Instagram: @robyncurnow
@searchingforamericapod -
Jason Kander on his Field of Dreams and New York New York!
@jasonkander
@Majority54
@VCP_HQX
@robyncurnow
@searchingusapodwww.searchingforamericapod.com
Instagram: @robyncurnow
@searchingforamericapod -
Listen to a fast-moving summary of what to expect from Robyn Curnow's new podcast called Searching for America.
Based in Atlanta, Georgia after decades reporting around the world for CNN, Robyn Curnow wants to understand what it means to be an American in 2024.
In this trailer she asks Democrats, Republicans, head teachers, ex-CIA officers, US Army Generals, Pulitzer prize winning journalists and photographers, Presidential historians and Americans from across the political spectrum why the country is divided and what can be done to bring people together.
Make sure to tune into her bi-weekly podcasts on Tuesdays and Thursdays
#america #usa #americans #americanlife #searching #politics #unity #talking #listening #outsider #perspective #
www.searchingforamericapod.com
Twitter: @robyncurnow
@searchingforamericapodInstagram:@robyncurnow
@searchingforamericapodFacebook: Searching for America pod