Q&A is an interview series on the C-SPAN network that typically airs every Sunday night. It is hosted by C-SPAN founder Brian Lamb. Its stated purpose is to feature discussions with "interesting people who are making things happen in politics, the media, education, and science & technology in hour-long conversations about their lives and their work." [1]
Original air date (Links to video) | Interviewee(s) | Comments |
---|---|---|
January 6, 2013 | Timothy Naftali | Featured discussion of the oral history project at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum. (This discussion is continued on the February 17, 2013 program.) |
January 13, 2013 | Jason Brennan | Featured discussion of Brennan's book, Libertarianism: What Everyone Need to Know. |
January 20, 2013 | Sheila Bair | Featured discussion of Bair's book Bull By The Horns: Fighting to Save Main Street From Wall Street and Wall Street From Itself. |
January 27, 2013 | Cathy Lanier | Featured discussion of Lanier's role as Chief of the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia. |
February 3, 2013 | Mark Shields | |
February 10, 2013 | Amity Shlaes | Featured discussion of Shlaes's biography of Calvin Coolidge. |
February 17, 2013 | Timothy Naftali | Featured discussion of the oral history project at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum. (This discussion is a continuation of the discussion from the January 6, 2013 program.) |
February 24, 2013 | Keith Richburg | |
March 3, 2013 | Bill Steigerwald | Featured discussion of Steigerwald's book Dogging Steinbeck: Discovering America and Exposing The Truth About "Travels With Charley", about John Steinbeck's book Travels with Charley . |
March 10, 2013 | Jody Williams | Featured discussion of Williams's book My Name is Jody Williams. |
March 17, 2013 | Fred Barnes | Featured discussion of Barnes's role as executive editor of the Weekly Standard . |
March 24, 2013 | Dr. Francis Collins | |
March 31, 2013 | Medea Benjamin | Featured discussion of Benjamin's book Drone Warfare: Killing by Remote Control. |
April 7, 2013 | Tom Korologos | |
April 14, 2013 | U.S. Senate Youth Program | |
April 21, 2013 | Rajiv Chandrasekaran | Featured discussion of Chandrasekaran's Washington Post article "Too Big to Bail", about the Joint Strike Fighter program. |
April 28, 2013 | Bob Ney | Featured discussion of Ney's book Sideswiped: Lessons Learned Courtesy of the Hit Men of Capitol Hill. |
May 5, 2013 | David Stockman | Featured discussion of Stockman's book The Great Deformation: The Corruption of Capitalism in America. |
May 12, 2013 | Scott Shane | Featured discussion of Shane's New York Times Sunday feature story "From Spy to Source to Convict" about former CIA officer John Kiriakou. |
May 19, 2013 | S. James Gates, Jr. | |
May 26, 2013 | Tom Goldstein | Featured discussion of Goldstein's website SCOTUSblog. |
June 2, 2013 | Shola Lynch | Featured discussion of Lunch's documentary Free Angela and All Political Prisoners about Angela Davis. |
June 9, 2013 | Robin Nagle | Featured discussion of Nagle's book Picking Up: On the Streets and Behind the Trucks with the Sanitation Workers of New York City |
June 16, 2013 | Patrick Gavin | Featured discussion of Gavin's role as a reporter for Politico . |
June 23, 2013 | Yuval Levin | Featured discussion of Levin's role as editor of National Affairs . |
June 30, 2013 | Charles Bolden | Featured discussion of Bolden's role as NASA Administrator. |
July 7, 2013 | Richard Baker | Featured discussion of Baker's book The American Senate: An Insider's History. |
July 14, 2013 | George Packer | Featured discussion of Packer's book The Unwinding: An Inner History of the New America . |
July 21, 2013 | John Taliaferro | Featured discussion of Taliaferro's book All The Great Prizes: The Life of John Hay, from Lincoln to Roosevelt, about John Hay. |
July 28, 2013 | Jack Doyle | Featured discussion of Doyle's website, PopHistoryDig.com. |
August 4, 2013 | William Seale | Featured discussion of Seale's participation in the C-SPAN series First Ladies: Influence and Image . |
August 11, 2013 | Nikita Stewart | Featured discussion of Stewart's Washington Post article, "The Governor of D.C.: The Rise of Jeffrey E. Thompson and the Fall That Has Rattled District Politics". |
August 18, 2013 | Mark Leibovich | Featured discussion of Leibovich's book This Town: Two Parties and a Funeral - Plus Plenty of Valet Parking! - In America's Gilded Capital . |
August 25, 2013 | Amanda Terkel | Featured discussion of Terkel's appearance at the Netroots Nation Annual Conference where she spoke on the “Political Opponents Caught on Tape” panel. |
September 1, 2013 | Charlie Cook | Featured discussion of Cook's career and newsletter. |
September 8, 2013 | A. Scott Berg | Featured discussion of Wilson , Berg's biography of Woodrow Wilson. |
September 15, 2013 | Andrew Bacevich | Featured discussion of Bacevich's book, Breach of Trust: How Americans Failed Their Soldiers and Their Country . |
September 22, 2013 | Phyllis Fong | Featured discussion of Fong's work as Inspector General at the United States Department of Agriculture, and her leadership of the Council of Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency. |
September 29, 2013 | Toby Cosgrove | Featured discussion of Cosgrove's role as President and CEO of The Cleveland Clinic. |
October 6, 2013 | Josh Bolten | Featured part one of a discussion of Bolten's role as White House Chief of Staff in the George W. Bush Administration. |
October 13, 2013 | Josh Bolten | Featured part two of a discussion of Bolten's role as White House Chief of Staff in the George W. Bush Administration. |
October 20, 2013 | Tevi Troy | Featured discussion of Troy's book What Jefferson Read, Ike Watched, and Obama Tweeted: 200 Years of Popular Culture in the White House. |
October 27, 2013 | Jonathan Goodman Levitt | Featured discussion of Levitt's documentary Follow the Leader. |
November 3, 2013 | Stephen Kinzer | Featured discussion of Kinzer's book The Brothers: John Foster Dulles, Allen Dulles, and Their Secret World War, about John Foster Dulles and Allen Dulles. |
November 10, 2013 | Gregg Easterbrook | Featured discussion of Easterbrook's book The King of Sports: Football's Impact on America. |
November 17, 2013 | Doris Kearns Goodwin | Featured discussion of Goodwin's book The Bully Pulpit: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism. |
November 24, 2013 | Josh Sapan | Featured discussion of Sapan's book The Big Picture. |
December 1, 2013 | Hassan Tetteh | Featured discussion of Tetteh's novel Gifts of the Heart, and of his experiences as a U.S. Navy surgeon in Afghanistan. |
December 8, 2013 | David Finkel | Featured discussion of Finkel's book Thank You For Your Service. |
December 15, 2013 | Margaret MacMillan | Featured discussion of MacMillan's book The War That Ended Peace: The Road to 1914. |
December 22, 2013 | Patty Stonesifer | Featured discussion of Stonesifer's role as President and CEO of Martha's Kitchen. |
December 29, 2013 | Hugh Hewitt | Featured discussion of Hewitt's book The Happiest Life. |
Theodore Zeldin is an Oxford scholar and thinker whose books have searched for answers to three questions. Where can a person look to find more inspiring ways of spending each day and each year? What ambitions remain unexplored, beyond happiness, prosperity, faith, love, technology or therapy? What role could there be for individuals with independent minds, or who feel isolated or different, or misfits? Each of Zeldin's books illuminates from a different angle of what people can do today, that they could not in previous centuries.
Futures studies, futures research, futurism or futurology is the systematic, interdisciplinary and holistic study of social and technological advancement, and other environmental trends, often for the purpose of exploring how people will live and work in the future. Predictive techniques, such as forecasting, can be applied, but contemporary futures studies scholars emphasize the importance of systematically exploring alternatives. In general, it can be considered as a branch of the social sciences and an extension to the field of history. Futures studies seeks to understand what is likely to continue and what could plausibly change. Part of the discipline thus seeks a systematic and pattern-based understanding of past and present, and to explore the possibility of future events and trends.
Mona Charen Parker is a columnist, journalist, and political commentator in the United States. She has written three books: Useful Idiots: How Liberals Got it Wrong in the Cold War and Still Blame America First (2003), Do-Gooders: How Liberals Hurt Those They Claim to Help (2005), both New York Times bestsellers, and Sex Matters: How Modern Feminism Lost Touch with Science, Love, and Common Sense (2018). She was also a weekly panelist on CNN's Capital Gang until it was canceled. A political conservative, she often writes about foreign policy, terrorism, politics, poverty, family structure, public morality, and culture. She is also known for her generally pro-Israel views.
WRVO Public Media is a non-profit public radio network in Oswego, New York licensed to the State University of New York at Oswego, operating from studios in the Penfield Library on the SUNY Oswego campus. Its multi-station network serves more than 20 counties in central and northern New York from flagship WRVO in Oswego, repeaters WRVD in Syracuse, WRVH in Clayton, WRVN in Utica, and WRVJ in Watertown. Low-power translators serve Geneva, Hamilton, Ithaca, Norwich and Watertown.
Q&A is an interview series on the C-SPAN network that typically airs every Sunday night. It is hosted by C-SPAN founder Brian Lamb. Its stated purpose is to feature discussions with "interesting people who are making things happen in politics, the media, education, and science & technology in hour-long conversations about their lives and their work."
Watch Q&A every Sunday night on C-SPAN at 8pm ET. Each week we introduce you to interesting people who are making things happen in politics, the media, education, and science & technology in hour-long conversations about their lives and their work.