Le Show; 2017-01-08
- Transcript
From deep inside your audio device of choice. Ladies gentlemen, there was a, well, it wasn't A, it was the headline on the front page of the New York Times on Saturday of this very week that we're finishing up or starting a new one of, however you think of that out, Saturday's New York Times, I say, and the banner, banner headline on the front page, quote, Putin led scheme to aid Trump. Report says Putin led scheme to aid Trump. Report says banner headline in the New York Times here, ladies and gentlemen, is what the report by the intelligence community, which is a real community, not actually says, quote, Putin. We assess Russian President Vladimir Putin, ordered an influence campaign in 2016 aimed at the U.S. presidential election.
Russia's goals were to undermine public faith in the U.S. democratic process, denigrate Secretary Clinton, and harm her electability and potential presidency. Period. Next sentence, we further assess that Putin and the Russian government developed a clear preference for President-elect Trump, which if, all right, so anyway, compare that with the headline. Now some data points, or Paul Harvey used to call the rest of this story, when mass protests against Putin erupted in Moscow in December 2011, this is from Politico, Putin made clear who he thought was really behind them, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. He pointed an angry figure at her, angry figure at her. She had issued a statement sharply critical of the voting results in the 2011 election. She said they were dishonest unfair Putin fumed in public remarks.
He said Clinton gave a single demonstrators working with the support of the State Department, U.S. State Department, to undermine his power. He did issue such a denunciation, publicly, of the Russian election in 2011. That was diplomatic, I guess she hadn't been briefed that he might retaliate. Quote, she has policies in history that the Russians don't like. Michael McFaul, U.S. Ambassador to Moscow during her final year of Secretary of State, told the Washington Post, it's frequently forgotten because there's so much noise about Trump and Putin, but this history is real, and Putin doesn't forget these things, unquote. The Intelligence Report, subject of the New York Times banner headline, Putin led a scheme to aid Trump, says in fact that Putin had a longstanding grudge against Hillary Clinton. Maybe what Putin and Trump have in common, they both like to hold grudges.
Hey, who can blame him? This is, we know that Trump came up under the tutelage of Roy Cohn, who was an aide to Senator Joseph McCarthy when he was chasing communist. Roy was chasing other things, but what Roy Cohn taught Trump, and this is, you can find this in almost any biography of Donald Trump, was when somebody hits you, hit them back twice as hard. That also seems to be what Vladimir Putin learned in the KGB. See some lines converging here? Anyway, oh, also, you heard on this broadcast a piece of a telephone conversation a couple of years ago, three years ago now, wiretapped from Clinton's then, well, I think Clinton
had left by them, but she had appointed her assistant secretary of state for Central European affairs, Victoria Newland, to the then US ambassador to Ukraine, Jeffrey Piot, in which Newland told Piot who should be, in her opinion, in the new Ukrainian government following the overthrow of the pro-Russian Ukrainian government. Nutty coins in its time, those were the people who actually ended up in the government. See, oh, the taped conversation, it was wiretapped and placed on YouTube by the Russians. And let's game to a Trump report says, by the way, apropos of our reverence for the electoral process and the our widespread desire, judging by what politicians have been saying all week, to keep other countries from trying to influence our democratic process.
Back out the 1996 election, oh, no, no, not ours, Russia's. Hello from a very, very cold, I mean, freezing New Orleans, cold Canadian air. Thank you, Canada. We'll send you some moist Gulf air next summer and don't bother to thank us. Ladies and gentlemen, the digital wonderland embraces more and more, Norway will begin switching off its FM radio network next week, a controversial move, closely watched by other nations. Critics have said the government is rushing the move, a poll by a newspaper, dagbladet, I feel that way all the time, suggests 66% of Norwegians oppose it. Experts argue, according to the BBC, that the change needs to happen because digital radio can carry more channels and is clearer sound. Michelin Denmark and the UK are also considering a switch off.
The shutdown of the FM network will start in the northern city of Bodo. That's my dog. No, on January, oh, coming this week, by the end of the year, all national FM broadcasts in Norway will end, even though Norway has two million vehicles on the road that are not equipped with digital receivers. They're being told to buy adapters, which you know, cost some money. Royal expert John Thorsen wrote in, dagbladet, dagbladet, earlier this year, Norwegian politicians of the tide have to make 15 million FM radios in Norway completely useless. That's a bad idea. So tune in while you can. Hello, welcome to the show. The
You know nothing but blues I know this and somebody else is made with love Give us some fun, that music you treat you nice Feed us a monthly mega, you love it twice The girls don't seem to care tonight As long as the moon is right No step, no step, no step
And they're all standing alone Give us some fun, that music you treat you nice Feed us a monthly mega, you love it twice The girls don't seem to care tonight
As long as the moon is right No step, no step, no step From where cold Canadian air comes to spend the winter I'm Harry Scherer welcoming this edition of the show By the way, we further assess that Putin and the Russian government developed a clear preference for President-elect Trump That sentence could also be read as he decided the enemy of his enemy was his friend
Oh, and yes, he is an astronaut It's all true And now ladies and gentlemen, news of the warm, won't you? Ward winning, news of the warm, Pete Smith Migrating breeds are arriving at their breeding grounds earlier as global temperatures rise According to a new study, berries have reached their summer breeding grounds on average about one day earlier per degree of increasing global temperatures According to Edinburgh University, which looked at hundreds of species over five continents
Well, that's not enough It's helped scientists predict how different species may respond to future environmental changes Reaching their summer breeding grounds at the wrong time even by a few days may cause birds to miss out on maximum available availability of vital resources You know, your food and your rest nesting places, late arrival to breeding grounds may in turn affect the timing of offspring hatching and their chances of survival Long distance migrants are less responsive to rising temperatures they may suffer most Other birds gained advantage by arriving at breeding grounds ahead of them Takuji Usui from Edinburgh University says many plant and animal species are altering the timing of activities associated with the start of spring such as flowering and breeding I know I am Now we've detailed insights into how the timing of migration is changing and how this change varies across species These insights may help us predict how well migratory birds keep up with changing conditions on their breeding grounds The birds take flight in response to cues such as changing seasonal temperatures and food availability
They examined records of migrating bird species dating back almost 300 years Drawing upon records from amateur birders and scientists including Henry David Thoreau Thoreau, he's still relevant Two world leading clean energy products, a project have opened in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu An industrial plant is capturing the CO2 emissions from a coal boiler and using the CO2 to make valuable chemicals It's a world first Just 60 miles away is the world's biggest solar farm Making power for 150,000 homes The industrial plant appears especially significant toward the BBC as it offers a breakthrough by capturing CO2 without subsidy That won't last Built at a chemical plant, it is projected to save 60,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions a year By incorporating them into the recipes for baking soda and other chemicals
What they do is turn the CO2 It's fed into the chemical's plant as an ingredient for baking soda and other compounds including the manufacturing of glass, detergents and sweeteners The firm admits its technology won't cure climate change but say it may provide a useful contribution by gobbling up perhaps 5-10% of the world's emissions from coal Almost benign, a copyrighted feature of this broadcast The latest from our freedom-loving friends in Saudi Arabia A group of foreign construction workers who staged a protest about unpaid wages have been sentenced to 300 lashes and 4 months behind bars in Saudi Arabia Video from the protest in April shows a row of buses belonging to their employer
The Bin Laden group Set ablaze by the angry men They got to avenge the Bin Laden group, come on, men claim they had not been paid for six months You know, that's the knock on Bin Laden, slow pay Authorities confirmed the time seven buses were set alight in the courtroom in Mecca Some of the protestors were reportedly sentenced to four months and 300 lashes for inciting unrest Others were given a lesser sentence Bin Laden group was founded more than 80 years ago by the father of, you know, who? The workers were waiting for their wages after a collapse in oil revenues left the kingdom unable to pay the private firms It had contracted to undertake major building projects So it goes to the king, okay? Workers still with the company would get their back pay as the government settled Rears, the company said, having nothing to do with the lashes Freedom-loving friends in Saudi Arabia
And now, ladies and gentlemen, another special feature of our program I just want to say one word to you. Just one word. Yes sir. I ain't listening. Yes, are you? Microplastics. Think about it. What do you think about it? Yes I will. Love said. Way Min Wu, a specialist on environmental biotechnology at Stanford, says recent studies show bacteria contained in mealworms' guts They are able to eat and degrade polystyrene and polyethylene foams Today most of the microplastics waste are coming from China, Europe, and America Thank you. Polluting rivers, oceans, and groundwater Wu says microplastics are essentially microbeads tiny plastic balls that can be found In light of your toothpaste, he said they cannot be removed by existing treatment water plants, only micro filtration works He said the result is a contamination of the fish, fish, ballasks, plankton, and even sea salt that can be found in every supermarket
Wu believes plastic contamination can be reduced by minimizing the use of plastics, but he said Microplastics are essentially comprised of polystyrene and polyethylene, only 9% or currently recycled So here comes the yellow mealworm, mostly found in Europe and North America, rich in protein, the yellow mealworm It's a mealworm in itself is commonly used to feed animals Some restaurants are starting to propose the mealworm for human consumption However, besides these common uses, future sounds better every day, doesn't it? Wu said it had been observed that mealworms are able to eat plastics, especially styrofoam It's not just for breakfast anymore, they're mostly eating styrofoam, they're not only eating styrofoam plastics Wu says, but also degrading it
We'll get to work on the culture Studies showed mealworms can eat up to 50% of the styrofoam in over two weeks, up to 70% of the plastic has been degraded It takes from 5 to 15 hours to digest plastics for a mealworm, Wu says it's pretty fast Mealworm races, ladies and gentlemen, I'm seeing it Race him and eat him Mealworm is more efficient when the temperature reaches 77 degrees Fahrenheit, so it would like warmer thing But it has better chance to survive in lower temperatures, so it would like cooler thing Wu says the assimilation and degradation of the plastic are made possible by several types of bacteria contained in the mealworms Good, one of them, the exiguo bacterium is particularly efficient You can't not as efficient when you take the bacterium out of the mealworms gut Other stuff's going on in there besides the bacterium
Wu says other bacteria contain an insect such as wax worms and cockroaches Oh, don't tell me we're going to be eating those Come on now, come on Wu, could play an important role in the degradation of petroleum plastic in the next decade No industrial process is in place now to take advantage of the mealworm efficiency for eating and degrading plastics But now that it's been broadcast on this program, you know industry will follow News of Monochrome Plastics ladies and gentlemen, it is a also copyrighted feature of this very program And that brings us to bad banks News of bad banks ladies and gentlemen, the Bank of England's chief economist has admitted his profession is in crisis Having failed to foresee the 2008 thing and having misjudged the impact of the vote in the United Kingdom to leave the EU, so-called Brexit
Andrew Haldane of the Bank of England said it was a fair cop referring to a series of forecasting errors before and after the financial crash which have brought the economics profession's reputation into question, blaming the failure of economic models to cope with irrational behavior in the modern era The economist said the profession needed to adapt to regain the trust of the public and politicians That's right, economics assumes traditional mainstream economics assumes we're all rational actors, rational utility maximizing actors The Bank of England has come under intense criticism for predicting it, and you know how rational we all are The Bank of England has come under intense criticism for predicting a dramatic slowdown in the UK's fortunes and the event of the vote out of the EU Only for the economy to bounce back strongly and remain one of the best performing in the developed world
Haldane is known to be concerned about mounting criticism of experts and for the potential for the bank's forecast to be dismissed by politicians if errors should persist He blamed, did Haldane, the profession's reliance on models that were built for an age when consumers and businesses, and especially banks, quote, behaved rationally You remember that? You lived through that, didn't you? Since 2008 consumers have maintained their spending when the classic economic models would have expected them to be more circumspect He said the lack of numeracy skills was stark in England due to education policies, in comparison with other countries which placed more emphasis on workers having more than a basic level of mathematical skill Yeah, like us, so problem is they didn't anticipate irrational behavior, aside from that it's a fine science. Now, word has gotten out that there's going to be an inauguration coming up very shortly
Like in 11 days of a new president, you know, the one the Russians elected And news came out this week that, you know, we've been hearing who's not going to be at the inauguration, all the celebrities who are not going to be performing all the folks who have taken a pass But in keeping with historic protocol and tradition, former president George Bush and his wife Laura announced this week, they would be attending the inauguration And perhaps even more surprisingly, the announcement this week came that other people who will be attending the inauguration
Include former president and Mrs. Clinton. Yes, it's another episode of Clinton Something Next Here on the Show Clinton Something To Wilderness Years Please hold for the president. President, what president? Am I calling myself now? Hey, 42, it's your pretty successor. President, the other Bush? You could say that if you were so indisposed. Hey, how the hanging?
They're, they're hanging just fine and you. Oh, listen, I've been a good boy so long. I wouldn't remember how to behave other which way wise. So, look, please convey my sincerest conveyances to the Mrs. about the election Oh, well, thanks. She's in the other room. I mean, nobody wanted this SOB to lose more than I did, you know. I mean, we all know politics is a tough old game. But, hex bells, when he called me a Lyron public, that was just, you know, completely beyond the pay lay. We'll pass on your good words to Hillary. Matter of fact, she's just... So, let me just cut to the chaser. Lower and I were invited to the inauguration of this Trump fellow. Well, we were too. I sort of assimilated that. Now, I understand it's protocol and the elders and all that for former presidents to attend the swearing end of a new president. Well, even their opponents, I mean, Al Gore attended yours, right?
Sure, I did. Look more teed off than the three-legged prairie dog. So, I figured, you know, if you folks are gone, then I guess so are we. Well. On the other hand, Lord, I'd be delighted to skip it if you folks were planning to be, uh, elsewise on that Augustine occasion. You know what, George? Between you and me, uh, I think it's up to Hillary. Well, then it in between you and me, really. I guess you're right. So, look, I'm going to talk this over with, uh, Hill. Just as soon as she's, uh, able to talk again. Oh, I'm good. I'll get back to you. Yeah, just let me know in time for a lower the gussie out. You got it. You know, I, me, I just put on a clean suit. Doctor later. Who was that? Uh, a president bush. Really? No, the other one. Oh. How's he taking it?
Pretty good, considering he wasn't running. Well, I know, but his whole family was hung out to drive by Cockcork Orange. Yeah, that's clever. You just think of it? Mm-hmm. Huma came up with it. I, uh, think she's still processing the Anthony Weiner thing. Hey, I'm still processing the documentary that we're in. Man, you really have to be addicted to power to stick around a guy like that. I guess. So what was up with 43 offering sympathy or wanting some? Neither. He just wanted to know whether we're going to, uh, you know, the thing. Are they going to, uh, the thing? What it sounded like was they're going if we're going. What's his dad going to do?
Probably skydiving and the swearing in. Cute. Trying. That too. So. I was leaning towards taking a long walk in the woods that day. You mean like today and yesterday and every other day since the other thing? The woods are different every day. You know what else is different every day? What? Being president of a major university. Not quite the same as, you know. No. But the salary is better. It's amazing what university presidents get paid these days. More than chose is getting paid to run the foundation. You know something, Bill. I don't really envision spending the next four years deciding which professor's class needs a trick or warning in the catalog. Well, you can't just walk in the woods for the next four years.
Why not? Well, that's what the Russians and the FBI would want you to do. At least out in the woods there's nobody telling me that they told me to campaign in Wisconsin and Michigan. No, I told you so as in a frozen forest like I only mentioned it a couple of times. What about Mayor of New York? He never mentioned it. No, I mean, how about running for mayor? New York's almost as big and important as the United States. At least in New Yorkers. You know something, huh? I think I'm about through with trying to be half as good a natural politician as you. Whatever I do, if I do anything, I'm not going to campaign for it. You could be pressing the red cross, clean that up a little bit, clean up a little bit yourself. That pays a million plus. I could also take Tony Blair's old job flanking for Kazakhstan. That pays more. Hey, he's given the whole post-elected office business model a bad name. Don't go there.
I won't. So you and me and W and Laura in the impossibly good sport box at the inauguration. W is always good for a laugh or two. Sure. And Laura is so bitter at Michelle's adoring press, she'll probably be good for at least a couple of cringy zingers. Nice name for a dog treat. That's my gal. I'll call George. I'll be in the woods. Youthful angst and post-middleaged angst, together they add up to Clinton something, the wilderness years. I'll be in the woods.
I'll be in the woods. Round and round at the Montelillon. One gin fizz in the mind was gone. I'll be in my back where you started before. I'll be in the woods. Round and round at the Montelillon.
Round and round at the Montelillon. I'll be in the woods. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon.
Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon.
Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon.
Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon.
Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon.
Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon.
Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon.
Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon. Round and round at the Montelillon.
Round and round at the Montelillon. Trump has asked Murdoch to submit names of his preferred candidates for chair of the Federal Communications Commission. That news suggests Murdoch already wields significant influence in the incoming administration. The story says Murdoch is now talking to Trump by telephone several times a week, and then of course there was the meeting on Friday with the intelligence community, following some criticism of Trump for disrespecting our intelligence people. He issued a statement saying how much he respects and looks forward to working with him.
That took a while to cover. It could be done more quickly. This week, for the first time, an inauguration day gets ever closer. And now, with a pointy still to be chosen and others to be defended, the businessman turned President-elect faces tougher tasks and so do those who seek his approval. I hear you've offered 25 million to make in Kelly. It's very important for Fox News, we keep it. I want you to let it go. Do you think you can do that? I'd have to listen to you. I'll file a lecture from my son, James. Let it go to NBC. Let it fail there like Schwarzenegger. Let it bleed from her wherever. James talks to my wife. God knows if he'd say this is an early warning of something wrong upstairs. I didn't say it would be easy.
I didn't say anything. Just do it. The next time you call, you'll be talking to my son-in-law. If I can get out of phone hacking, I can do this. Great. Yes, Mr. Trump. I came to your building. You didn't come to mine, right? That's correct, sir. Something about- Something about your task that's better done right here where you work. Okay, we were hoping to ask you some questions. If I wanted to answer questions, I'd start reading. Here. It's the world's best tape measure. Okay, I didn't know there were competitions for that. Your task is to measure my hands. Oh, look. It was a joke we started decades ago. Can we- I think you know what you have to do. I'll get the lady from Vogue to do it. Noot. Still here through all these weeks. Must be doing something right. You've been extremely loyal. Well, sir, it seems to me that more loyal than Christie.
More loyal than Rudy. I always entertain suspicions about the evanescence of their fields. He had tasked this week. Yes, keep an eye on Christine Rudy. Well, but in a surfer of honesty, I, sir, I have to observe that they're far away from the action. So I guess that's where you have to be. I'm going against accordingly. James Klappa. Yes, sir. People who work for me usually get very good at making deals. Yes, sir. Now we assess with very high confidence. Oh, I know all about confidence. Some people say that's my business. It's a little unusual for me to be criticizing your agencies and public, isn't it? Our community certainly agreed with that conclusion. It's a little unusual for you guys to make such public statements about cyber war, right? I mean, that's usually secret stuff. Well, we've been given what the president had tasked us with. Yeah, different tasks now. He's our deal. You stopped doing our secret business in public.
I think I only heard one half of a deal there. You said my tweeting has affected your agencies morale? Well, I have delivered that assessment publicly. I could stop the tweeting. I like morale. So we certainly like these people to be considered for the FCC. Oh, they're good people. I'm sure they are. Your next task is to let O'Reilly go. Not possible to use your phrase. He's our ratings machine. He hasn't been that nice to me either. Are you up to it? It pains me to say this. Yes. I'll have to talk to my son. New team, new tasks, same mission. We are going to make this format great again now. The world is his boardroom. The president is this week. Watch like you mean it.
Summer is a sizzler. Sweat pouring down your face. Your armpits are a fountain. Your shirt's a wet disgrace. And it's hard to sleep that night time. I can't walk the streets by day. Four months in the hot box. Just one thing I can say. You won't hear me moan. Because heat on this candy.
Cold is to the bone. Winter's clean and brittle. Humidities all gone. You can ski and you can snowboard. The weather's got it going on. About to keep blood circulating. You wear 50 pounds of stuff. Forget your gloves or layers. You're a dead man soon enough. I can see my breath before me. Got to be a Roman stone.
His heat is only candy. But cold is to the bone. Cold is to the bone. Cold is to the bone. Cold is to the bone. Cold is to the bone.
Sunscreen's not a bother. And I love those longer days. Clean air makes me shiver. Give me some muggy hay. Oh, winter lasts forever. Summer's over in a flash. I hear tea bleep talk of freezing. I got to make a dash. Snowbirds all around me. So I know I'm not alone.
The heat is only candy. Cold is to the bone. Cold is to the bone. Cold is to the bone. Cold is to the bone. And now it is gentleman the apologies of the week. The Yahoo Finance Twitter account this week quickly deleted a post that accidentally included the N word. We deleted an earlier tweet due to a spelling error. We apologize for the mistake. They ran with a link. Quote, Trump wants a much bigger navy. They didn't type bigger. That's a typo.
That's not a spelling error. Israel's ambassador to the UK is apologized after an embassy official was recorded discussing how to take down a UK foreign office minister. In a secretly recorded conversation, the embassy's secret political officer, Shy Mosshot, etc. Sir Alan Duncan was causing a lot of problems. The conversation was recorded at a restaurant. Opposite the Israeli embassy in October last year by Al Jazeera. Other countries to attempt to interfere with the ambassador, Regav, said the Israeli embassy. It rejects remarks concerning minister Duncan, which is completely unacceptable. The comments were made by a junior embassy employee who was not an Israeli diplomat who will be ending his term of employment shortly. The ambassador spoke with minister Duncan to apologize for the comments and made clear the embassy considered the remarks to be completely unacceptable. Less than 48 hours after calling the veteran leadership of his Denver Nuggets team, calling them out, head coach Michael Malone issued an apology to his players. He had said the Nuggets have no veteran leadership. One seven year veteran objected to his coach's words, saying,
I don't agree with that. I apologize to our veterans, Malone said. Anything that's going on with our locker room should be left in the locker room. A radio software company has reportedly bricked its software for one of its users after we left a negative review of the product online. The Ham Radio Software Application Suite Ham Radio Deluxe was reviewed as suffering from compatibility issues with Windows 10. We apologize for what has happened here. I've stepped in and personally taken corrective action to ensure that this mistake does not get made again, said the head of the company involved that makes Ham Radio Deluxe. Facebook has apologized for taking down a photo of a statue of the Seagod Neptune that originally violated its policy on nudity. Art historian Alisa Barbari chose to put up a picture of the Renaissance statue to illustrate her page called Stories, Curiosity, and Views of Bolonia. The Neptune statue is located in a square in Bolonia.
Facebook took down the image because of its sexually explicit nature. Your listing is not approved as it violates the guidance on advertising to Facebook because it shows a sexually explicit picture that overly focuses on the body or body parts without the need, said Facebook. Our team processed millions of advertising images each week and in some instances we incorrectly prohibit ads. We apologize for the error and have let the advertiser know we are approving their ad. Oh it is the apologies of the week ladies and gentlemen. A copyrighted feature of this broadcast. A former Alaska governor Sarah Palin apologized to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in a Facebook post
so after Assange was interviewed by Fox News host Sean Hannity. She was apologizing for her remarks where she compared Assange to the al-Qaeda and Taliban. I apologize for condemning Assange. That's an apology. That concludes this week's edition of the show. The program returns next week at the same time over the same stations or NPR worldwide throughout Europe, the US and 440 capable system in Japan, around the world through the facilities of the American forces network up it down the east coast of North America via the shortwave giant WBCQ the planet. On the Mighty 104 and Berlin on Soho Radio and London, around the world via the internet at two different locations live and archive whenever you want at harryshear.com and KCSN.org available for your smartphone through Stitcher.com and we can listen to you listening to it probably and available as a free podcast at iTunes SoundCloud,
www.tunin.com and www.no.org and to be just like smart underpants. If you did, join with me then. Would you already thank you very much? The email address for this program, playlist for the music heard here on and your chance to get cars I talk t-shirts and time for Valentine's Day. Who thought of that? All at harryshear.com and join the conversation on Twitter. Come on. At the harryshear. It's not really a conversation and it won't be Twitter for long either. The show comes to you from century progress predictions and originates through the facilities of WWW and on New Orleans flagship station
of the Changes Easy Radio Network. Oh a tip to show Shapota. Jenny Lawson and Pam Wallston. So long from New Orleans.
- Series
- Le Show
- Episode
- 2017-01-08
- Producing Organization
- Century of Progress Productions
- Contributing Organization
- Century of Progress Productions (Santa Monica, California)
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- cpb-aacip-d4d6d3bcc1c
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- Description
- Segment Description
- 00:00 | Open/ NYT headline on Russian hacking, compared with the actual IC report | 05:29 | Cold NOLA | 05:44 | Norway change to digital radio and kill FM | 07:05 | 'FM' by Steely Dan | 11:25 | News of the Warm : a way to get rid of the CO2? | 14:57 | Our Freedom-Loving Friends : lashes for protests | 16:23 | News of Microplastics : mealworm bacteria eat Styrofoaam! | 20:15 | News of Bad Banks : economists assumed we act rationally | 22:55 | Inauguration set-up | 24:09 | Clintonsomething : Going to the Inauguration? | 31:04 | 'The Creole Nightingale Sings' by The Hub City All-Stars | 35:44 | Reading the Trades : live torture vid on Facebook might scare advertisers | 41:10 | Trump's week | 43:53 | The Appresidentice : Episode 3 | 47:58 | 'Cold to the Bone' by Harry Shearer | 52:41 | The Apologies of the Week : Facebook, Sarah Palin | 55:54 | 'Lingus' by Snarky Puppy /Close |
- Broadcast Date
- 2017-01-08
- Asset type
- Episode
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- Sound
- Duration
- 00:59:05.338
- Credits
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Host: Shearer, Harry
Producing Organization: Century of Progress Productions
Writer: Shearer, Harry
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Century of Progress Productions
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- Citations
- Chicago: “Le Show; 2017-01-08,” 2017-01-08, Century of Progress Productions, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed December 8, 2024, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-d4d6d3bcc1c.
- MLA: “Le Show; 2017-01-08.” 2017-01-08. Century of Progress Productions, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. December 8, 2024. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-d4d6d3bcc1c>.
- APA: Le Show; 2017-01-08. Boston, MA: Century of Progress Productions, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-d4d6d3bcc1c