California Sun Podcast

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 140:06:52
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Sinopsis

The California Sun presents conversations with the people that are shaping and observing the Golden State

Episodios

  • Gustavo Arellano's guided tour of L.A. politics

    02/06/2022 Duración: 36min

    Gustavo Arellano, Los Angeles Times columnist and host of The Times podcast, provides a personal and provocative view of Los Angeles and Southern California politics. He talks of his ongoing feud with Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva, the endless ads for mayoral candidate Rick Caruso, and the future of young Latino power brokers. With California's June 7 primary election only days away, Arellano shares a perspective on the candidates, elected officials, and Latino vote that you won't hear anywhere else.

  • John Waters reminds us where the wild things are

    26/05/2022 Duración: 17min

    Filmmaker John Waters has long been a fixture in San Francisco. After a very rough week, a conversation with him gives us a few moments of levity courtesy of his sometimes twisted worldview. The 76-year-old writer, director, and curator of bad taste has made a career of showing us the weirdest of human behavior. In films including "Pink Flamingo," "Mondo Trash," and "HairSpray" and books such as "CarSick" he's made us laugh or at the very least taken us briefly out of the day's reality. He’s now written his first novel, "Liarmouth," which continues the John Water legacy.

  • Carolyn Chen on how work became Silicon Valley’s religion

    17/05/2022 Duración: 25min

    Carolyn Chen, a sociologist and professor of ethnic studies at UC Berkeley, argues in her new book "Work Pray Code" that Silicon Valley has become a “techtopia” where workplaces and charismatic leaders now provide for employees' every need. The workplace has become their community, their place of worship, and resulted in the elimination of boundaries between work and life. Remote work may have changed this, but the institutions that might pick up the slack have now disappeared.

  • Tripp Mickle on how California’s most valuable company lost its soul

    12/05/2022 Duración: 26min

    Long-time tech journalist Tripp Mickle explains how Steve Jobs’s personality defined Apple. He was both a founder and a legend. But his successors, Tim Cook and Jonny Ive each had their own very different ideas about the company's future. Their battle was so fundamental that it deconstructed the company culture built under Jobs. Mickle tells the story in his new book "After Steve." However, the final story is still being written inside Apple’s $1 billion dollar headquarters in Cupertino.

  • Lettie Teague on Napa Valley's new cash crop

    05/05/2022 Duración: 22min

    Lettie Teaque, a longtime Wall Street Journal wine columnist, created a buzz recently with a column about how the Napa Valley may have jumped the shark with respect to pricing and gentrification. It's a look at $10,000 weekends, $1,700-a-night hotels, and $200 tastings that are becoming de rigueur. What might all this mean for our future perception of Napa Valley and its wines?

  • Ryan Gattis on 30 years after the L.A. Riots

    28/04/2022 Duración: 29min

    At 3:15 pm on April 29, 1972, as the verdict came down in the Rodney King beating, Los Angeles exploded with another in a long history of race riots. Everyone knew what might happen, but nothing prepared the city for what came next. Ryan Gattis captured the horror and power of that in his 2015 fictional account "All Involved." The award-winning Los Angeles author talks to us from the perspective of this 30th anniversary of what is still the apogee of domestic civil unrest.

  • John Markoff on Silicon Valley’s own Zelig

    20/04/2022 Duración: 30min

    Long Time Silicon Valley journalist John Markoff unearths the roots of a tree, whose branches include, among others, Ken Kesey, Steve Jobs, and Elon Musk. Markoff's new book, "Whole Earth: The Many Lives of Stewart Brand,” examines a Zelig-like character in both California's 1960s counterculture and the ethos of Silicon Valley. Brand’s Whole Earth Catalog remains a cultural bible, from which we are still singing hymns.

  • Thomas Walsh and Karen Maness on the lost art of the Hollywood backdrop

    31/03/2022 Duración: 31min

    Thomas Walsh and Karen Maness are the co-curators of "Art of the Hollywood Backdrop: Cinema's Creative Legacy," an exhibit opening at Boca Raton Museum of Art on April 20. It showcases a collection of monumental scenic backdrop paintings that were an essential part of the filmmaking era that included movies such as "North by Northwest," "The Sound of Music," and "Singing in the Rain."

  • Vanessa Hua is a triple threat

    24/03/2022 Duración: 16min

    Vanessa Hua, a Bay Area native and graduate of Stanford and U.C. Riverside, has focused her extensive writing on issues of immigration, identity, diversity, and parenting. Moving seamlessly between short stories, novels, journalism, and her San Francisco Chronicle column, she offers important insights into the Asian American experience. The author of the forthcoming novel "Forbidden City" shared some of her own history.

  • Susan Sorrells and her own desert town of Shoshone

    17/03/2022 Duración: 40min

    Susan Sorrells has been called the “Queen of the Desert” and among a "shortlist of the most interesting people in California.” The Smith College graduate spent time in Liberia with the Peace Corps, worked for California Sen. Thomas Kuchel in Washington, D.C., and lived for four months in the Soviet Union during the Cold War while considering a career as a diplomat. She ultimately returned to California to claim her birthright, the entire town of Shoshone — a small, once-bustling mining town, whose cluster of historic buildings flanks two sides of a highway that slices through the Mojave on the way to Death Valley. Sorrells shared the story of her journey and how she is using the town to advance a new kind of ecotourism.

  • Libby Schaaf’s love affair with Oakland

    10/03/2022 Duración: 26min

    Libby Schaaf is about to complete her second and final term as mayor of Oakland. Unlike a lot of other political jobs, as Willie Brown once said, mayors are judged by results. When Schaaf took office in 2014, Barack Obama was still president. Today, she presides over a very different city. Homelessness, a new baseball stadium, the creation of a whole new neighborhood, police reform, and the potential for gentrification were not as front and center then as they are today. In this week's podcast, she talks about the changes and how she thinks she’s fared.

  • Frances Dinkelspiel on the power of local reporting

    03/03/2022 Duración: 28min

    Frances Dinkelspiel is working hard to counter the decline of local reporting. The co-founder of Berkeleyside, Oaklandside, and their parent organization Cityside believes it is more important for us to know what's going on in our neighborhoods than what’s happening 6,000 miles away. The longtime Bay Area author and journalist shares her journey and what’s at stake for our communities.

  • Peter Hartlaub and the S.F. Chronicle are one

    24/02/2022 Duración: 24min

    Peter Hartlaub and the San Francisco Chronicle are inseparable. Peter delivered the Chronicle as a paperboy in the 1980s, went to work there as a journalist in 2000, and 22 years later, continues to put his imprimatur on the paper and the institution. Currently the culture critic, Hartlaub has helped bring the Chronicle into the multimedia age, has unearthed its voluminous archives, co-hosts its Total SF podcast, and has the paper's ink in his blood.

  • Sebastian Mallaby on the real power in Silicon Valley

    17/02/2022 Duración: 27min

    The work of Sebastian Mallaby, a financial journalist and author of the new book "The Power Law," shines a light on how Silicon Valley really operates. The names you know — Zuckerberg, Jobs, Dorsey, Brin & Page — are not really the gatekeepers of the future, he argues. The future of technology rests in the hands of people you’ve probably never heard of, such as Arthur Rock, Alan Patricof, John Dore, Don Valentine, and Marc Andreessen. They control what companies get to start up, what technology gets to market, and what your future will be like. Like so much else, it’s about following the money.

  • Erich Schwartzel on how China may deal Hollywood a fatal blow

    10/02/2022 Duración: 26min

    Erich Schwartzel has covered Hollywood for the Wall Street Journal for almost a decade. This week, the author of "Red Carpet: Hollywood, China, and the Global Battle for Cultural Supremacy" joins the California Sun Podcast to talk about how two big stories — Hollywood and the Oscars, and our eyes on China — may have more in common than we thought. The economic decline of Hollywood and the rise of China’s film history are directly related and certainly will impact the California economy.

  • Alice Waters delicious conversation

    03/02/2022 Duración: 35min

    Alice Waters is among the most influential restaurateurs of the last half-century. Her legendary Berkeley restaurant Chez Panisse gave birth to farm-to-table cuisine and gave California a global culinary presence. She has nurtured talent that has spread to restaurants around the world. Chez Panisse is now preparing to reopen post-pandemic, and Waters has just touched down in Los Angeles with a new restaurant in the Hammer Museum. She shares with us a remarkable food journey that began back in 1964.

  • Mark Fainaru-Wada wrote the book on Barry Bonds

    27/01/2022 Duración: 23min

    Mark Fainaru-Wada was a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle when he co-authored "Game of Shadows," the definitive book about Barry Bonds, BALCO, and baseball's steroid scandal. An award-winning ESPN reporter since 2007, Fainaru-Wada talks about the ongoing debate over Bonds’ rightful place in Cooperstown and in baseball history.

  • Marty Nemko on the future of work in California

    20/01/2022 Duración: 29min

    Marty Nemko is one of the premier career counselors in the Bay Area. The long-time host of “Work with Marty Nemko" on KALW in San Francisco, a long-time regular guest on KGO, and a contributor to Psychology Today, Nemko shares his thoughts on our post-Covid world of work in California. Topics include: why so many don’t want to go back to the office, the hatred of long commutes, and lack of work structure at home.

  • Elizabeth Weil on California's relationship with fire

    12/01/2022 Duración: 23min

    Elizabeth Weil has had a 25-year relationship with California. She’s written about it for years, and her most recent piece, “This is Not the California I Married," appeared recently in the New York Times Magazine. She’s lived through many California disasters, including fires, droughts, earthquakes, and floods. But today she sees fire differently. Both in how we fight them and how we prepare for them. Right now, she says, "the state is hurting, and we need to take care of it."

  • Sammy Potter and Jackson Parell’s excellent adventure

    06/01/2022 Duración: 36min

    Sammy Potter and Jackson Parell, two Stanford University students, put their pandemic year to good use. While many of us watched too much Netflix, they took the ultimate outdoor adventure. In 295 days, they completed the calendar year triple crown of hiking — a 7,400-mile journey across the Appalachian, Pacific Crest, and Continental Divide trails, ending in the hills of northern California. They share their story.

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