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 7, 2007 | Michael Gerson | |
January 14, 2007 | Melody Barnes | |
January 21, 2007 | Gary Walters | Featured discussion of the responsibilities of the White House Chief Usher. |
January 28, 2007 | Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones | |
February 4, 2007 | Sen. Tom Coburn | |
February 11, 2007 | John Burns | |
February 18, 2007 | Kimberley Strassel | |
February 25, 2007 | Andrew Cockburn | Featured discussion of Cockburn's book Rumsfeld: His Rise, Fall, and Catastrophic Legacy. |
March 4, 2007 | Robert Kagan | |
March 11, 2007 | Margaret MacMillan | Featured discussion of MacMillan's book Nixon and Mao: The Week That Changed the World . |
March 18, 2007 | Lyle Denniston | |
March 25, 2007 | Kasey Pipes | Featured discussion of Pipes's book Ike's Final Battle, about the Little Rock Nine and Little Rock Central High School. |
April 1, 2007 | Ishmael Beah | Featured discussion of Beah's book A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier . |
April 8, 2007 | Zbigniew Brzezinski | Featured discussion of Brzezinski's book Second Chance: Three Presidents and the Crisis of American Superpower . |
April 15, 2007 | Gen. Michael Hayden | |
April 22, 2007 | David Stewart | Featured discussion of Stewart's book The Summer of 1787: The Men Who Invented the Constitution, about the U.S. Constitutional Convention. |
April 29, 2007 | Robert Dallek | Featured discussion of Dallek's book Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power. |
May 6, 2007 | Emmett Tyrrell | |
May 13, 2007 | Borzou Daragahi | |
May 20, 2007 | Andrew Ferguson | Featured discussion of Ferguson's book Land of Lincoln. |
May 27, 2007 | Joseph Cirincione | Featured discussion of Cirincione's book Bomb Scare: The History and Future of Nuclear Weapons. |
June 3, 2007 | Frank Gaffney | Featured discussion of Gaffney's documentary Islam vs Islamists . |
June 10, 2007 | Katrina vanden Heuvel | |
June 17, 2007 | Evan Osnos | |
June 24, 2007 | Robert Kurson | Featured discussion of Kurson's book Crashing Through: A True Story of Risk, Adventure, and the Man Who Dared to See. |
July 1, 2007 | James Billington | |
July 8, 2007 | Asra Nomani | |
July 15, 2007 | Robert Novak | Featured discussion of Novak's memoir The Prince of Darkness: 50 Years Reporting In Washington. |
July 22, 2007 | Randall Robinson | Featured discussion of Robinson's book An Unbroken Agony: Haiti, From Revolution to the Kidnapping of a President. |
July 29, 2007 | Kevin Leffler | Featured discussion of Leffler's film Shooting Michael Moore . |
August 5, 2007 | Dr. Christine Montross | Featured discussion of Montross's book Body of Work: Meditations on Mortality from the Human Anatomy Lab. |
August 12, 2007 | Tony Snow | |
August 19, 2007 | Janks Morton | Featured discussion of Morton's film What Black Men Think . |
August 26, 2007 | Rep. Dave Obey | Featured discussion of Obey's book Raising Hell for Justice: The Washington Battles of a Heartland Progressive. |
September 2, 2007 | Rep. Ray LaHood | |
September 9, 2007 | Michelle Rhee | |
September 16, 2007 | Al Neuharth | |
September 23, 2007 | John Batchelor | |
September 30, 2007 | Wendy Kopp | Featured discussion of Kopp's role as CEO and founder of Teach For America. |
October 7, 2007 | Justice Clarence Thomas | Featured discussion of Thomas's book My Grandfather's Son. |
October 14, 2007 | Michael Korda | Featured discussion of Korda's book IKE: An American Hero. |
October 21, 2007 | Michael Oreskes | Featured discussion of The Genius of America: How The Constitution Saved Our Country and Why It Can Again. |
October 28, 2007 | Charles Ferguson | Featured discussion of Ferguson's film No End In Sight . |
November 4, 2007 | John Bolton | Featured discussion of Bolton's book Surrender Is Not an Option: Defending America at the United Nations and Abroad. |
November 11, 2007 | David Kennedy | |
November 18, 2007 | Bob Drogin | Featured discussion of Drogin's book Curveball: Spies, Lies, And The Con Man Who Caused A War. |
November 25, 2007 | Nicholas Negroponte | Featured discussion of the One Laptop Per Child program. |
December 2, 2007 | John Micklethwait | |
December 9, 2007 | Kimberly Kagan | |
December 16, 2007 | Joe Madison | |
December 23, 2007 | Tom Blanton | Featured discussion of Blanton's role as director of the National Security Archive, and his work responding to Freedom of Information Act requests. |
December 30, 2007 | Marc Pachter | Featured discussion of Pachter's role as director of the National Portrait Gallery. |
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.