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, 2008 | Dr. Yvonne Thornton | Featured discussion of Thornton's book The Ditchdigger's Daughters: A Black Family's Astonishing Success Story. |
January 13, 2008 | Jonathan Karl | |
January 20, 2008 | Dr. Elmer Huerta | Featured discussion of Huerta's role as president of the American Cancer Society |
January 27, 2008 | Bill Buzenberg | Featured discussion of Buzenberg's role as executive director of the Center for Public Integrity. |
February 3, 2008 | Sudhir Venkatesh | Featured discussion of Venkatesh's book Gang Leader for a Day. |
February 10, 2008 | Frances Fragos Townsend | |
February 17, 2008 | David Burstein | Featured discussion of Burstein's film 18 in '08 . |
February 24, 2008 | Ken Dilanian | |
March 2, 2008 | Nathan McCall | |
March 9, 2008 | Robert Compton | Featured discussion of Compton's documentary Two Million Minutes: A Global Examination . |
March 16, 2008 | Doug Mills | Featured discussion of Mills's role as a photojournalist for the New York Times. |
March 23, 2008 | Phil Donahue | Featured discussion of Donahue's documentary Body of War. |
March 30, 2008 | Roger Mudd | Featured discussion of Mudd's book The Place To Be: Washington, CBS, and the Glory Days of Television News. (Part one of two.) |
April 6, 2008 | Roger Mudd | Featured discussion of Mudd's book The Place To Be: Washington, CBS, and the Glory Days of Television News. (Part two of two.) |
April 13, 2008 | Gordon Wood | Featured discussion of Wood's book The Purpose of the Past: Reflections on the Uses of History. |
April 20, 2008 | Richard Miniter | |
April 27, 2008 | Dr. Edna Greene Medford | |
May 4, 2008 | Justice Antonin Scalia | Featured discussion of Scalia's book Making Your Case: The Art of Persuading Judges. |
May 11, 2008 | Doris Buffett | Featured discussion of Buffett's role as head of the Sunshine Lady Foundation. |
May 18, 2008 | James Rosen | Featured discussion of Rosen's biography of John Mitchell, The Strong Man: John Mitchell and the Secrets of Watergate. |
May 25, 2008 | Thomas DiLorenzo | |
June 1, 2008 | Colman McCarthy | |
June 8, 2008 | Frederick Downs, Jr. | Featured discussion of Downs's role as Chief Prosthetics & Clinical Logistics Officer for the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. |
June 15, 2008 | Michelle Bernard | Featured discussion of Bernard's role as president of the Independent Women's Forum. |
June 22, 2008 | Renu Khator | Featured discussion of Khator's dual role as chancellor of the University of Houston System and president of the University of Houston. |
June 29, 2008 | Aaron Woolf | Featured discussion of Woolf's documentary King Corn . |
July 6, 2008 | Kathleen Parker | |
July 13, 2008 | David Maraniss | Featured discussion of Maraniss's book Rome 1960: The Olympics that Changed the World . |
July 20, 2008 | Brit Hume | |
July 27, 2008 | Chris Hedges | Featured discussion of Hedges's book Collateral Damage: America's War Against Iraqi Civilians. |
August 3, 2008 | Rep. Nancy Pelosi | Featured discussion of Pelosi's book "Know Your Power: A Message to America's Daughters. |
August 10, 2008 | Three Years Later: Conversations with Iraq War Veterans | |
August 17, 2008 | Ben Stein | Featured discussion of Stein's book How to Ruin the United States of America. |
August 24, 2008 | Greg Mortenson | Featured discussion of Mortenson's book Three Cups of Tea . |
August 31, 2008 | Bruce Cole | Featured discussion of Cole's role as chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the NEH "Picturing America" project. |
September 7, 2008 | Linda Robinson | Featured discussion of Robinson's book Tell Me How This Ends: General David Petraeus and the Search for a Way Out of Iraq. |
September 14, 2008 | Peter Wallison | Featured discussion of Wallison's work with the American Enterprise Institute. |
September 21, 2008 | Lionel | |
October 5, 2008 | John Podhoretz | |
October 12, 2008 | Lynette Clemetson | Featured discussion of Clemetson's role as managing editor of The Root . |
October 19, 2008 | Mark Levin | |
October 26, 2008 | Mark Farkas | Featured discussion of the C-SPAN program The White House: Inside America's Most Famous Home. |
November 2, 2008 | Rick Shenkman | Featured discussion of Shenkman's book Just How Stupid Are We? Facing the Truth About the American Voter. |
November 9, 2008 | Harold Holzer | Featured discussion of Holzer's book Lincoln President-Elect: Abraham Lincoln and the Great Secession Winter, 1860-1861. |
November 16, 2008 | Michael Rosenblum | |
November 23, 2008 | Brent Glass | Featured discussion of Glass's role as director of the National Museum of American History. |
November 30, 2008 | Lauren Whittington, John McArdle, and Emily Yehle | Featured discussion of the United States Capitol Visitor Center with Roll Call journalists Whittington, McArdle, and Yehle. |
December 7, 2008 | Rep. Donna Edwards | |
December 14, 2008 | William Seale | Featured discussion of Seale's two-volume work The President's House: A History. |
December 21, 2008 | Sen. Bob Corker | |
December 28, 2008 | Ray Price |
Youth activism is the participation in community organizing for social change by persons between the ages of 15–24. Youth activism has led to a shift in political participation and activism. A notable shift within youth activism is the rise of “Alter-Activism” resulting in an emphasis on lived experiences and connectivity amongst young activists. The young activists have taken lead roles in public protest and advocacy around many issues like climate change, abortion rights and gun violence.
Cro is an American animated television series produced by the Children's Television Workshop and Film Roman. It was partially funded by the National Science Foundation. Every episode has an educational theme, introducing basic concepts of physics, mechanical engineering, and technology. The show's narrator is an orange woolly mammoth named Phil, who was found frozen in ice by a scientist named Dr. C and her assistant, Mike. After they defrost him, Phil tells both of them about life in the Ice Age, including stories about his friend Cro, a Cro-Magnon boy.
WRVO 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.
Brian Patrick Lamb is an American journalist. He is the founder, executive chairman, and the now-retired CEO of C-SPAN, an American cable network that provides coverage of the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate as well as other public affairs events. In 2007, Lamb was awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom by President George W. Bush and received the National Humanities Medal the following year.
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.