Tag Archives: Podcasts

Jerry Seinfeld Apologizes for Saying Howard Stern Lacks ‘Comedy Chops’ and Has Been ‘Outflanked’ by Comedians With Podcasts – Variety

  1. Jerry Seinfeld Apologizes for Saying Howard Stern Lacks ‘Comedy Chops’ and Has Been ‘Outflanked’ by Comedians With Podcasts Variety
  2. Jerry Seinfeld apologizes to Howard Stern after saying he was ‘outflanked’: ‘It was bad and I’m sorry, Howie’ Entertainment Weekly News
  3. Jerry Seinfeld Apologizes for Saying Howard Stern Wasn’t Funny on Podcast TMZ
  4. Jerry Seinfeld apologizes to Howard Stern after saying he isn’t that funny: ‘Please forgive me’ Page Six
  5. Jerry Seinfeld says he thinks Howard Stern has been ‘outflanked’ by other comedy podcasters… before issuing Daily Mail

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Tony Kushner: Israel’s Gaza War ‘Looks a Lot Like Ethnic Cleansing to Me’ – Podcasts – Haaretz

  1. Tony Kushner: Israel’s Gaza War ‘Looks a Lot Like Ethnic Cleansing to Me’ – Podcasts Haaretz
  2. Tony Kushner Backs Jonathan Glazer’s “Unimpeachable, Irrefutable” Oscars Speech: “Who Doesn’t Agree With That?” Hollywood Reporter
  3. The Jewish Oscar winner who twisted the Holocaust to shame Israel deserves all the fury he gets New York Post
  4. Over 1,000 Jewish Creatives and Professionals Have Now Denounced Jonathan Glazer’s ‘Zone of Interest’ Oscars Speech in Open Letter (EXCLUSIVE) Variety
  5. Open letter condemning Oscar winner’s Israel-Gaza speech doubles in signatures after going viral Fox News

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From Recession Fears to Too Good? What This Week’s GDP Data Will Tell Us – WSJ’s Take On the Week – WSJ Podcasts – The Wall Street Journal

  1. From Recession Fears to Too Good? What This Week’s GDP Data Will Tell Us – WSJ’s Take On the Week – WSJ Podcasts The Wall Street Journal
  2. After a robust third quarter, US economic growth will likely slow. That bodes well for rate cuts next year. CNN
  3. Economists Predict US Recession Unlikely, Mortgage Rates Soar, And China’s Economy Surpasses Expectations Benzinga
  4. US Prepares GDP Scorcher As Fed Goes Silent Heisenberg Report
  5. America’s economic hot streak is just warming up as early data suggests the fastest growth in nearly 2 years during 3Q Fortune
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Spotify Will Translate Podcasts Into Other Languages Using AI – Forbes

  1. Spotify Will Translate Podcasts Into Other Languages Using AI Forbes
  2. Spotify is going to clone podcasters’ voices — and translate them to other languages The Verge
  3. Spotify will use AI to replicate podcasters’ voices and translate them to other languages CNBC
  4. Spotify’s AI Voice Translation Pilot Means Your Favorite Podcasters Might Be Heard in Your Native Language — Spotify For the Record
  5. Spotify Is Testing AI-Powered Podcast Language Translation — Which Mimics the Podcaster’s Own Voice Yahoo Entertainment
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Apple Podcasts Removes 1,900 Glenn Beck Episodes From Platform, Then Restores Them – Deadline

  1. Apple Podcasts Removes 1,900 Glenn Beck Episodes From Platform, Then Restores Them Deadline
  2. Apple responds after Glenn Beck claims podcast was removed ‘with no explanation’ The Independent
  3. Glenn Beck falsely claims show ‘censored by Apple Podcasts’ Podnews
  4. They ‘Deplatformed Me!’ Glenn Beck Goes Off on Apple for Temporarily Pulling His Podcast Catalog, Bashes Company Chalking it Up to a ‘Trademark Dispute’ Mediaite
  5. Apple Says Removal of Glenn Beck Podcast Was Related to a Trademark Dispute That Has Since Been Resolved Variety
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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“$20m Wasn’t Enough For Her” Should Harry And Meghan’s Spotify Dumping Spell End For Celeb Podcasts? – TalkTV

  1. “$20m Wasn’t Enough For Her” Should Harry And Meghan’s Spotify Dumping Spell End For Celeb Podcasts? TalkTV
  2. Prince Harry Reportedly Wanted to Interview Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin for a Podcast About Childhood Trauma MarieClaire.com
  3. What Kind of Celebrities Do Harry and Meghan Want to Be? Pajiba Entertainment News
  4. ‘F–king Grifters’: Spotify Exec Slams Prince Harry And Meghan Markle After Parting Ways — Here’s How Much The Royal Couple Could Have Made From Their Podcast Deal Yahoo Finance
  5. Meghan, Harry hit with new blow over ‘Archetypes’ trademark after Spotify deal ends msnNOW
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Trial begins for combined Covid-19 and flu vaccine

There are 1600 people undergoing the trial in Australia and New Zealand.
Photo: Getty Picture Alliance

A Wellington medical company is running a trial of a combined vaccine for both flu and Covid-19.

P3 Research managing director Richard Stubbs believes the combined vaccine will reduce the workload for healthcare services.

Stubbs told Morning Report the aim was to make things as convenient as possible – both for health professionals and patients.

“This is a lengthy process, there is incremental knowledge achieved with all new treatment programmes.

“We know that the flu vaccines are effective, we know that Covid vaccines are effective and we know that probably they can be given together but we don’t know the optimum doses.”

The trial was taking place at nine different sites in New Zealand plus various sites in Australia, and would include 1600 people across both countries which both have a very good reputation for clinical trials, Stubbs said.

People taking part in the trial would be seen five times and undergo a lengthy process that involved health checks, he said.

“It’s a well regulated process, there’s a lot designed to see individuals know what is asked of them and that they can be reassured by any or all safety aspects for the trial so it’s not a fast process.”

Stubbs expected the flu and Covid vaccines would be given together in the next one or two years.

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After 25 years of wrongful imprisonment, 2 Georgia men set free after newly uncovered evidence exonerates them of murder charges



CNN
 — 

After spending 25 years in prison on murder convictions related to the 1996 shooting death of their friend, two Georgia men were exonerated this week, after new evidence uncovered in a true-crime podcast last year proved their innocence, their lawyers said.

Darrell Lee Clark and his co-defendant Cain Joshua Storey were 17 years old when they were arrested for their alleged involvement in the death of 15-year-old Brian Bowling.

He died from a gunshot wound to the head in his family’s mobile home on October 18, 1996, according to Clark’s lawyers, Christina Cribbs and Meagan Hurley, with the nonprofit Georgia Innocence Project.

Moments before the gun was fired, Bowling was on the phone with his girlfriend and told her he was playing a game of Russian roulette with a gun, which was brought to his home by Storey, who was in the room at the time of the shooting, according to a news release from the Georgia Innocence Project.

Storey was charged with involuntary manslaughter, but months later, police began investigating the death as a homicide, and interviewed two witnesses whose statements led authorities to tie Clark to Bowling’s death, the Georgia Innocence Project said.

“Despite the circumstances, which strongly indicated that Bowling accidentally shot himself in the head, at the urging of Bowling’s family members, police later began investigating the death as a homicide,” according to a motion filed by Clark’s attorneys, requesting a new trial.

The two teenagers were sentenced to life in prison after being convicted of murder and conspiracy to commit murder, following a weeklong trial in 1998.

Clark’s exoneration came a year and a half after investigative podcasters Susan Simpson and Jacinda Davis began scrutinizing his case in their Proof true-crime podcast in 2021, and interviewed two of the state’s key witnesses.

Through their investigation, new evidence emerged which “shattered the state’s theory of Clark’s involvement” in Bowling’s death and the podcasters flagged his case to the Georgia Innocence Project, according to its news release.

The first witness, a woman who lived near Bowling’s home was interviewed by police, who claimed she alleged the teens confessed they had “planned the murder of Bowling because he knew too much about a prior theft Storey and Clark had committed,” according to the Georgia Innocence Project.

Based on her testimony, Storey was charged with murder and Clark was arrested as a co-conspirator despite having a corroborated alibi, stating he was home on the night of the shooting, which was supported by two witnesses, according to Clark’s motion for a new trial.

But the woman revealed in the podcast, police coerced her into giving false statements and threatened to take her children away from her if she failed to comply, according to the Georgia Innocence Project.

Police claimed the other witness, a man who was in a different room of the Bowlings’ home at the time of the shooting, identified Clark from a photo lineup as the person he saw running through the yard on the night Bowling was shot, the news release said.

It was uncovered in the podcast the man’s testimony was based on an “unrelated, factually similar shooting” which he witnessed in 1976, and he never identified Clark as the individual in the yard, nor did he ever witness anyone in the yard on the night of the shooting, according to the Georgia Innocence Project.

Davis told CNN in an interview when she and Simpson started their investigation, they weren’t expecting anything to come of it, but as they interviewed more people, it was “clear that it just wasn’t adding up.”

“It took us a long time to talk to both of those witnesses. The podcast was happening in almost real time as an investigation. When we finally found and were able to talk to those two witnesses, it really solidified that both of these guys had been wrongly convicted,” Davis said.

Clark’s attorneys filed pleadings in September to challenge a wrongful conviction and ask for a new trial, citing new information which proved his conviction was based on false evidence and coercion, Hurley told CNN.

Clark, now 43, was released from the Floyd County Jail Thursday after the Rome Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office and Floyd County Superior Court Judge John Neidrach agreed the conviction should be overturned and all underlying charges against him dismissed, after evidence in the case was reexamined.

Storey, who admitted to bringing the gun to Bowling’s home, was also released after accepting a plea deal for involuntary manslaughter, and a 10-year sentence with time served, after spending 25 years in prison. He was also exonerated of murder charges.

Storey told CNN in an interview he was afraid to go to sleep the first night after he was released in case he would wake up and “realize it was all a dream.”

“It’s been surreal to say the least,” he added. “I believe it’s going to be great. One step at a time. I never allowed my mind to get locked up all those years, anyhow.”

“You never think something like that is going to happen to you,” said Lee Clark in a statement released by the Georgia Innocence Project. “Never would I have thought I would spend more than half my life in prison, especially for something I didn’t do.”

Clark’s father, Glen Clark, told CNN in an interview, “I’ve been waiting for this day for a long, long time. 25 years. My son was wrongly accused, and I knew it all these years. It’s hard for me to live with that.”

“I watched my son go into prison as a kid, I watched him go through prison, I watched him come out as a man. He became a man in prison,” he added.

Clark is living with his family in their home in Floyd County for the foreseeable future as he focuses on readjusting to life outside prison and rebuilding his life, he told CNN. Storey said he also moved back to Floyd County, with plans to go back to school and get a job.

Clark said Judge Neidrach apologized on behalf of the state of Georgia and Floyd County this week during the court hearing this week, which was an important step toward healing.

“That really touched my heart, because I had been living in corruption for so long, and it meant a lot to have someone acknowledge that wrong,” he told CNN.

The Georgia Innocence Project will work to support Clark during his transition and connect him to resources, and a personal fundraiser has been organized on the MightyCause platform, open to the public for donations to Clark and his family, Hurley said.

“It’s probably going to take some time to like truly process that he is free and doesn’t have to go back behind prison walls, because he spent most of his life behind them,” Hurley said.

“More than anything, he’s looking forward to getting to spend time with his family and rebuilding some of those relationships that he was, frankly, ripped away from at the age of 17,” she added.

The exonerations of both men were the culmination of a collaboration between Clark, Storey and his defense team, as well as the Bowling family, which was willing to take an “objective look at this case and reevaluate some of the things they have been told in the past,” Hurley said.

Davis was in the courtroom during Clark and Storey’s hearing this week and said she’s still “in shock” and feels a huge amount of relief for both men.

“In the end, I also feel for Brian Bowling’s family who have been incredibly gracious and supportive as well. It’s really rare when you have the victim’s family support the convictions being overturned,” Davis said.

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Meghan Markle enjoys retail-therapy amid ‘Deal or No Deal’ backlash

Enjoying some deals!

Meghan Markle was spotted enjoying some retail therapy after she revealed she felt objectified by her role as a briefcase girl on “Deal or No Deal.”

The Duchess of Sussex wore a strapless green romper, which she paired with an olive sweater, an oversized brown hat, sunglasses and sandals. She completed the look with a braid.

The former royal, 41, was accompanied by a friend and the two seemed deep in conversation as they shopped for home goods at the gourmet food boutique Pierre La Fond in Montecito, Calif.

The pair of friends went on to have lunch in nearby Santa Barbara.

Her outing comes one week after she admitted that she quit her job on Season 2 of “Deal or No Deal” back in 2006 because she felt she was being “reduced to a bimbo.”

Despite feeling “really grateful” to have a job that could pay her bills, she still felt there was “little substance” to the role.

“I ended up quitting the show. I was so much more than what was being objectified on the stage,” she said on the latest episode of her podcast, “Archetypes.”



Her outing comes after she was slammed for saying she felt objectified on “Deal or No Deal.”

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Her outing comes after she was slammed for saying she felt objectified on “Deal or No Deal.”

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“That’s an interesting way to phrase it because a beef…

Her disparaging comments about the game show sparked blowback, including from fellow briefcase holders Claudia Jordan, who went on to star in “Real Housewives of Atlanta,” and model Donna Feldman.

Even Whoopi Goldberg blasted Prince Harry’s wife saying she knew what she was getting into.

“When you’re a performer, you take the gig,” the talk show host, 66, explained on Wednesday’s episode of “The View.”



Whoopi Goldberg and fellow briefcase girls responded to her comments.

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Whoopi Goldberg and fellow briefcase girls responded to her comments.

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“That’s an interesting way to phrase it because a beef…

“You take the gig. Sometimes, you’re in a Bozo suit, sometimes you got a big nose, and this is just the way it is.”

Goldberg continued, “We’re not journalists. We’re actors. We’re trying to get to another place.”

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Barack Obama blasts cancel culture, calls Dems ‘buzzkill’

Former President Barack Obama took a shot and cancel culture and knocked “buzzkill” Democrats for getting caught up in “policy gobbledygook.”

In a new interview with on the “Pod Save America” podcast on Friday, the 44th President said that Democrats have strayed away from a message of equality to “scolding” on social issues.

“My family, my kids, work that gives me satisfaction, having fun,” Obama said. “Hell, not being a buzzkill. And sometimes Democrats are.”

“Sometimes people just want to not feel as if they are walking on eggshells, and they want some acknowledgment that life is messy and that all of us, at any given moment, can say things the wrong way, make mistakes,” he added.

Obama said Democrats need to “be able to speak to everybody about their common interests.”

“And what works for I think everybody, is the idea of a basic equal treatment and fairness. That’s an argument that’s compatible with progress on social issues and compatible with economic interests,” he said.

“I think where we get into trouble sometimes is where we try to suggest that some groups are more – because they historically have been victimized more – that somehow they have a status that’s different than other people and we’re going around scolding folks if they don’t use exactly the right phrase,” Obama said. “Or that identity politics becomes the principle lens through which we view our various political challenges.”

Obama said Democrats get caught up too much in “policy gobbledygook.”
AP

He said that Democrats, himself included, sometimes see their message bogged down by “policy gobbledygook.”

“Look, I used to get into trouble whenever, as you guys know well, whenever I got a little too professorial and, you know, started … when I was behind the podium as opposed to when I was in a crowd, there were times where I’d get, you know, sound like I was giving a bunch of policy gobbledygook,” Obama explained.

The former president added, “And that’s not how people think about these issues. They think about them in terms of the life I’m leading day to day. How does politics, how is it even relevant to the things that I care the most deeply about?”

Ahead of November’s midterm elections, Obama has been campaigning for Democratic candidates in key states. He will travel to Georgia, Michigan and Wisconsin this month.

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