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List of After Words interviews first aired in 2010

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

After Words is an American television series on the C-SPAN2 network’s weekend programming schedule known as Book TV. The program is an hour-long talk show, each week featuring an interview with the author of a new nonfiction book. The program has no regular host. Instead, each author is paired with a guest host who is familiar with the author or the subject matter of their book.[1]

First air date
(Links to video)
Interviewee(s) Interviewer(s) Book Topic of interview / Comments
January 2, 2010 Gail Collins Gwen Ifill When Everything Changed: The Amazing Journey of American Women from 1960 to the Present
January 9, 2010 David Wessel Alice Rivlin In Fed We Trust: Ben Bernanke's War on the Great Panic Ben Bernanke, Financial crisis of 2007–2008
January 16, 2010 Peniel Joseph Kevin Merida Dark Days, Bright Nights: From Black Power to Barack Obama
January 23, 2010 Thomas Fleming Barbara Mitnick The Intimate Lives of the Founding Fathers Founding Fathers of the United States
January 30, 2010 John Yoo Victoria Toensing Crisis and Command
February 6, 2010 Joseph Stiglitz Lori Wallach Freefall Financial crisis of 2007–2008
February 13, 2010 Garry Wills Tom Blanton Bomb Power
February 20, 2010 Ken Gormley Greg Craig The Death of American Virtue: Clinton v. Starr Impeachment of Bill Clinton
February 27, 2010 George Packer Christopher Hitchens Facing Unpleasant Facts and All Art Is Propaganda George Orwell
March 13, 2010 Bill and Janet Cohen John Lewis Race & Reconciliation
March 21, 2010 Diane Ravitch Valerie Strauss The Death and Life of the Great American School System
March 27, 2010 Bill Bennett Walter Isaacson A Century Turns
April 3, 2010 Jack Matlock Dimitri Simes Superpower Illusions: How Myths and False Ideologies Led America Astray - and How to Return to Reality
April 10, 2010 Deborah Amos Mohamad Bazzi Eclipse of the Sunnis Sunni Islam
April 17, 2010 Harry Markopolos Nicole Gelinas No One Would Listen Madoff investment scandal
April 24, 2010 Mark Perry Larry Johnson Talking to Terrorists
May 1, 2010 Elaine Tyler Christina Hoff Sommers America and the Pill: A History of Promise, Peril, and Liberation The birth control pill, Margaret Sanger, Katharine McCormick
May 8, 2010 Piper Kerman Ted Conover Orange is the New Black: My Year in a Women's Prison
May 15, 2010 John Kiriakou Frederick Hitz The Reluctant Spy
May 22, 2010 Michael Graham Jonathan Karl That's No Angry Mob, That's My Mom The Tea Party movement
May 29, 2010 Sebastian Junger Paul Rieckhoff War 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team in Afghanistan, 2007-2008
May 31, 2010 Mitt Romney Juan Williams No Apology: The Case for American Greatness
June 5, 2010 Stephen Prothero Sally Quinn God is Not One Conceptions of God
June 13, 2010 Gary Rivlin Heather Mac Donald Broke USA
June 26, 2010 Jere Van Dyk George Packer Captive: My Time As A Prisoner of the Taliban
July 10, 2010 Andrew Napolitano Ralph Nader Lies the Government Told You
July 11, 2010 Arthur Brooks and Strobe Talbott The Battle: How the Fight between Free Enterprise and Big Government Will Shape America's Future (by Brooks) and Fast Forward: Ethics and Politics in the Age of Global Warming (by Talbott) Brooks and Talbott interviewed each other about the other's book.
July 17, 2010 Alan Brinkley Sam Tanenhaus The Publisher: Henry Luce and His American Century Henry Luce
July 24, 2010 Ayaan Hirsi Ali Paula Dobriansky Nomad
July 31, 2010 Carl Cannon Paul Clement Circle of Greed William Lerach
August 7, 2010 Richard Whittle John Pike The Dream Machine V-22 Osprey
August 14, 2010 Peter Beinart Mike Allen The Icarus Syndrome
August 21, 2010 Michael Belfiore Joanne Carney The Department of Mad Scientists: How DARPA Is Remaking Our World, from the Internet to Artificial Limbs DARPA
August 28, 2010 Sebastian Mallaby Gillian Tett More Money Than God: Hedge Funds and the Making of a New Elite Hedge funds
September 4, 2010 David Kilcullen Lawrence Wilkerson Counterinsurgency Counterinsurgency
September 11, 2010 Arianna Huffington Maria Bartiromo Third World America: How Our Politicians Are Abandoning the Middle Class and Betraying the American Dream
September 18, 2010 Gabriel Schoenfeld Michael Mukasey Necessary Secrets: National Security, the Media, and the Rule of Law
September 27, 2010 Louise Knight Dan Moshenberg Jane Addams: Spirit in Action Jane Addams
October 3, 2010 James Swanson Edna Greene Medford Bloody Crimes Jefferson Davis, Funeral and burial of Abraham Lincoln
October 9, 2010 Hooman Majd Hamid Dabashi The Ayatollah's Democracy Politics of Iran
October 16, 2010 Maria Bartiromo Yves Smith The Weekend That Changed Wall Street
October 23, 2010 Dinesh D'Souza Jonathan Alter The Roots of Obama's Rage
November 1, 2010 Scott Rasmussen and Doug Schoen Amity Shlaes Mad as Hell Tea Party movement
November 14, 2010 Nigel Hamilton Richard Norton Smith American Caesars
November 20, 2010 John Dower Sanho Tree Cultures of War
November 21, 2010 Ron Christie Janet Langhart Cohen Acting White
November 28, 2010 James Zogby Barbara Slavin Arab Voices: What They Are Saying to Us and Why it Matters
December 11, 2010 Noah Feldman Dahlia Lithwick Scorpions: The Battles and Triumphs of FDR's Great Supreme Court Justices Felix Frankfurter, Hugo Black, Robert Jackson, William O. Douglas
December 12, 2010 Jimmy Carter Doug Brinkley White House Diary
December 18, 2010 Hugh Shelton William Cohen Without Hesitation: The Odyssey of an American Warrior
December 27, 2010 Jane Smiley Cecilia Kang The Man Who Invented the Computer John Vincent Atanasoff

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Transcription

TV shows may be seen as small-scale siblings to movies, but they require just as many cast and crew to tell their own stories the best way possible. That means writers, actors, camera operators and crew members working in perfect unison. Unsurprisingly, things don’t always go as planned – but the viewers get to enjoy the results all the same. Here are Screen Rant’s Biggest Mistakes in Popular TV Shows. Lost One look at modern television shows just how much ABC's Lost changed the game, delivering clues, hints, twists and massive conspiracies from week to week. As a result, fans regularly re-watched the early episodes to see just how much they'd missed. Online discussion exploded when viewers took a closer look at the pilot episode, as the survivors of Oceanic Flight 815 took cover from an exploding jet engine. Specifically, the swooping black object that seemed to trigger the explosion. Was it the island's smoke monster? Another creature yet to be revealed, or the mystery that would explain all others. The showrunner were finally forced to explain that it was only a mistake: an error in the CG effect. Fans had to look elsewhere for answers. Firefly It may have lived for less than a single season, but that didn't stop Joss Whedon's Firefly from becoming a cult hit. In the years since it originally aired, fans have had no choice but to watch their favorite adventures on repeat, learning every detail and building a series' worth of fiction out of a handful of episodes. But we're willing to bet one mistake might have slipped by. The pilot episode is capped off by a deadly escape from a ship full of murderous Reavers, due mainly to the skills of the crew's pilot, Wash. When the ship is home free, Wash relaxes - but it's clear that he's only *pretending* to be gripping the steering wheel. He may steer the ship with his mind, but the episode also shows he relies on crew members, not gas, to run the ship's mule. Supernatural When dealing with demons, exorcisms and magic hexes, some mistakes are bound to happen. Most of Supernatural’s errors are easy to miss, but a few are easy to spot for those paying close attention. When Sam and Dean Winchester are tracking down a haunted painting in the first season, Dean gets his brother's attention with a different name - not the character's, but actor Jared Padelecki's. A slip-up that small is one thing, but the brothers cast serious doubt on their exorcism skills when chasing a demon onto a commercial airliner. Deciding holy water is too extreme to detect a demon in flight, Sam has a better idea. Actually, it’s “Deus.” Not only is “Christo” the word for Christ, not God, it's Greek, not Latin. Thankfully, the demon apparently didn't know the difference. The Big Bang Theory When the cast of your show is described as a group of know-it-all geniuses, writing the script becomes a minefield of inaccuracies that could truly sell the characters short. It’s possible that Sheldon could misquote the rules of feeding Mogwai after midnight in the movie “Gremlins”. But hearing Amy explain that the Viennese Danish was invented in Denmark makes it clear that another fact-checker was needed on set. But even within the show’s history, the writers have forgotten, or simply ignored prior storylines. As just one example, the hypochondriac Leonard can’t drink wine, except for the times he does. And even more dramatically, Sheldon tells Penny early on in the series that none of his roommates know how to dance, later breaking out his best moves that he apparently mastered in his youth. The cast may claim to have flawless memories, but it seems the writers can’t keep up. Breaking Bad When series creator Vince Gilligan decided to set his tale of a chemistry teacher turned drug kingpin in the year 2007, he did it knowing that some pop culture references would be off the table. For most of the series, the timeline was simple enough to follow, with time in the show passing much slower. But that led to one particular mistake in the show’s fifth season, when a character made a direct reference to the death of Osama bin Laden. Unfortunately, the show was still set in 2010 at the latest – several months before bin Laden’s death took place. The creator had to admit it was a mistake, but in a show with so few, it can be forgiven. Buffy the Vampire Slayer For every actor in a given shot, there are dozens of crew members and camera men working just off screen. It’s no surprise then that that some will wander into frame from time to time. Viewers may be shocked to see just how many crew members slip by unnoticed, but one cameraman on the set of Buffy the Vampire Slayer stuck out worse than almost any other. When the show’s fourth season saw Buffy’s longtime nemesis Faith wake from a coma and seek revenge at the Summers house, a fight broke out, with the two Slayers quickly coming to blows. The camera tracks them both as they go tumbling down a staircase, before the opposite angle shows the cameraman responsible for the previous shot, impossible to miss on screen. Different editions of the show have been tweaked to keep him out of frame, but with a cameo this glamorous, we say he deserves a supporting actor credit. Friends You can’t stay on the air for ten seasons without re-using a few plot lines or jokes. But usually, it isn’t the same characters caught up in them. When Chandler and Monica wind up waiting for a table at an upscale restaurant, she suggests Chandler slip the host a bill slyly concealed inside his palm. Chandler can’t pull it off, but suspects it was no problem for Monica’s suave ex-boyfriend Richard (played by Tom Selleck). That’s exactly where she learned the trick – but Chandler should know that. After all, it was Richard who taught both Chandler and Joey to do the same five seasons before. Chandler forgetting the steps is fine, but the writers feeling such a tiny joke was worth telling twice is the real mystery. Battlestar Galactica Few sci-fi revivals can claim to be as successful as Battlestar Galactica, with the second season of the series ramping up the tension, stakes, and drama substantially. Character deaths and betrayals were everywhere – apparently, the crew thought viewers wouldn’t notice some hilarious mistakes amid all the chaos. When Helo and the Chief first let off steam by throwing some punches, they did so with an audience. Why the camera crew visible in the frame was necessary for the shot is a mystery, but it wasn’t even the most obvious mistake in the season. When President Roslin was re-elected, her campaign staff didn’t even notice the cameraman capturing the moment for viewers to witness all the way back on Earth. So what do you think of our list? Did we miss any great mistakes or bloopers in your favorite TV shows? Let us know in our comment section and don't forget to subscribe to our channel for more videos like this one.

References

  1. ^ Jim Milliot (10 January 2005). "BookTV Eyes More Original Programming". Publishers Weekly.
This page was last edited on 9 April 2023, at 20:16
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