Synopsis
An innovative blend of ideas journalism and live events.
Episodes
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Francis Fukuyama, “The Neoconservative Legacy and the Future of American Foreign Policy”
21/06/2006 Duration: 58minOne of America’s most formidable intellectuals, Francis Fukuyama, visits Zócalo to discuss his new book America at the Crossroads and to explain his very public break with neoconservative foreign policy. Always brilliant, incisive, and compelling, Fukuyama will outline his vision of a “Realistic Wilsonianism” that he thinks ought to guide America’s future relations with the outside world.
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Robert K. Ross, M.D., “What’s Wrong With Philanthropy in LA?”
06/06/2006 Duration: 58minAre private foundations doing enough to help improve the quality of life in Los Angeles? Robert K. Ross, M.D., President and CEO of The California Endowment, the state’s largest private health foundation, will visit Zócalo to discuss the challenges the philanthropic community faces in LA.
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Do Popular Artists Have a Moral Responsibility?
16/05/2006 Duration: 58minAcclaimed actress, Amy Brenneman, creator and star of CBS’ hit series “Judging Amy,” and Brad Silberling, director, writer and producer whose films include “City of Angels” and “Lemony Snickett’s A Series of Unfortunate Events”, visit Zócalo to discuss what role morality plays in the creative process. Husband and wife and occasional coworkers, Brenneman and Silberling will compare notes, assess the state of their industry, and welcome audience input as they explore what kinds of responsibility artists have to both their audience and themselves.
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William Deverell, “The Redemptive West”
02/05/2006 Duration: 58minHistorian William Deverell, the director of the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West, visits Zócalo to deliver a groundbreaking lecture on the role that the American West played in healing the wounds inflicted by the Civil War. After all, it was questions about the future of the West that provoked the war in the first place. Unable to reconcile antagonistic positions regarding the expansion of slavery into western territories, North and South capitulated to four years of catastrophic warfare. Then what? Did the post-war American West become a region in which to heal the wounds of disunion? Deverell explores themes of reunification through stories of the convalescence of individuals and the re-fashioning of what it meant to be an American after the Civil War.
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Antonio Damasio, "Understanding Emotions and the Brain"
04/04/2006 Duration: 58minAntonio Damasio, "Understanding Emotions and the Brain" by Zócalo Public Square
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An Evening with Dan Glickman
06/03/2006 Duration: 58minModerated by Jon Healey of the Los Angeles Times Editorial Board. Dan Glickman, the Chairman and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), joins us to discuss the state of the film industry at a pivotal moment in its history. As Hollywood’s point man in global capitals from Washington to Beijing, Glickman works to open markets to the studios’ goods, battle piracy and promote the movie industry. In a wide-ranging interview, he will discuss everything from box office trends and the advent of high-definition home video to the challenge posed by bootlegged DVDs. He will also talk about the opportunities presented by the industry’s experiments with digital cinema as well as Hollywood’s ongoing battle to access movie screens around the world.
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Steve Wasserman, “Do Books Have a Future in the Digital Age?”
07/02/2006 Duration: 51minIs the Age of Gutenberg finished? Has the Internet now become so widespread as to render books obsolete? Are publishers dinosaur institutions? Is the crisis of American literacy also a crisis of American democracy? Does it matter? Steve Wasserman, former editor of the Los Angeles Times Book Review, will argue that books will survive as long as the human species is defined by its opposable thumb and its obsessive need to tell each other stories.
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Can Hollywood Survive the Internet? A Discussion with the Los Angeles Times Editorial Pages
01/02/2006 Duration: 58minCan Hollywood Survive the Internet? A Discussion with the Los Angeles Times Editorial Pages by Zócalo Public Square
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Greg Critser, “Generation Rx: How Prescription Drugs Are Altering American Lives, Minds, and Bodies”
10/01/2006 Duration: 59minGreg Critser, “Generation Rx: How Prescription Drugs Are Altering American Lives, Minds, and Bodies” by Zócalo Public Square
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Patty Stonesifer, All Kids College Ready
28/11/2005 Duration: 59minPatty Stonesifer, “All Kids College Ready: What Will it Take to Ensure that Our Public Education System Prepares All Children?”
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Tamar Jacoby, “Fixing America’s Immigration System”
11/10/2005 Duration: 25minTamar Jacoby, “Fixing America’s Immigration System”
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Leonard Chang, “The Terminator, John Updike, and Asian Americana”
13/09/2005 Duration: 29minLeonard Chang, “The Terminator, John Updike, and Asian Americana”
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Joel Kotkin, “Los Angeles and the Future of Cities”
03/05/2005 Duration: 29minJoel Kotkin, “Los Angeles and the Future of Cities”
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Hollywood, Mexicans, and the History of LA
12/04/2005 Duration: 26minHollywood, Mexicans, and the History of LA