Dan Poneman, John Burns
Hewitt: Hour 3 – 1994 North Korea agreement participant Daniel Poneman discusses the potential impact of today’s agreement with Pyongyang, and a replay of Friday’s interview with the New York Times’ John Burns.
Hewitt: Hour 3 – 1994 North Korea agreement participant Daniel Poneman discusses the potential impact of today’s agreement with Pyongyang, and a replay of Friday’s interview with the New York Times’ John Burns.
Hewitt: Hour 2 – Hugh spends the hour discussing torture and interrogation, separating reality from television and movies, with one of the leading experts in the field of intelligence and interrogation, retired Army Colonel Stuart Herrington.
Hewitt: Hour 2 – Mort and Charles discuss the news outside of Anna Nicole Smith, although Charles has a good idea of why people are drawn to that story. Later in the hour, Yoni Tidi analyzes the latest rioting by the Palestinians.
Hewitt: Hour 1 – Former Massachusetts governor and presidential candidate Romney updates us from the campaign trail, and then Hugh spends the rest of the hour with John Burns, the phenomenal war correponsdent for the New York Times.
John Burns, the New York Times foreign correspondent, talks about the state of Iraq, and how the media has covered it.
Hewitt: Hour 3 – Emmett gives us the top ten astronaut movies, and Tarzan Joe reflects on the Senate over the last couple of weeks.
Hewitt: Hour 2 – Hugh interviews the president of the Society For Ethnomusicologists, and begins what will go down as one of the more remarkable interviews Hugh’s ever had. John Podhoretz and James Lileks each reacted to the controversy and the interview of Dr. Bohlman.
Hewitt: Hour 3 – After a replay of Mark Steyn, Hugh interviewed Brian Bird, the producer of the new movie, The Last Sin Eater.
Hewitt: Hour 1 – The show opened with a mention of the statement condemning the use of torture by the Society For Ethnomusicologists, and Mark Steyn and the callers took off with it.
Hewitt: Hour 3 – The Smart Guys discuss the two border patrol officers convicted of wrongdoing against suspected illegal drug runners, a replay of the John Thune interview, and Ken Wales has produced a wonderful new movie called Amazing Grace that looks at the lives of William Wilberforce and John Newton, who were instrumental in the British abolitionist movement in the early 1800’s.
Hewitt: Hour 1 – Vanity Fair’s Christopher Hitchens goes into Iraq and Iran policies, and South Dakota Senator John Thune updates on the Democrats’ strategy of blaming Republicans for their lack of scheduling a pro-troop resolution for a vote.
Hewitt: Hour 2 – The callers took over the direction of the show as the topic rapidly became the two border patrol officers convicted and sentenced to long prison terms for crimes against suspected illegal aliens.