Posted by: reallawyers | August 26, 2009

Has The Jury Reached a Verdict? Darren Penn

Has The Jury Reached A Verdict? Is an interview with Trial Lawyers who have gotten notable results in area courtrooms. Hosted by Jamie Bendall, this interview is with Georgia Trial Lawyers Association member Darren Penn.

Posted by: reallawyers | February 23, 2009

Leading Questions 2-1-09

Leading Questions 2-1-2009

Posted by: reallawyers | February 23, 2009

Leading Questions 1-25-09

Leading Questions 1-25-2009

Posted by: reallawyers | February 23, 2009

Leading Questions 1-18-09

Leading Questions 1-18-2009

Posted by: reallawyers | February 23, 2009

Leading Questions 1-11-09

Leading Questions 1-11-2009

Posted by: reallawyers | February 23, 2009

Leading Questions 1-4-09

Leading Questions 1-4-2009

Posted by: reallawyers | February 23, 2009

Leading Questions 12-28-08

Leading Questions 12-28-08

Posted by: reallawyers | December 30, 2008

Leading Questions: James Kunstler

This show features Jim Bendall and Kevin Mednick talking with James Kunstler.

As is noted on Wikipedia:

James Howard Kunstler (born in 1948, New York City, New York) is an American author, social critic, public speaker, and blogger. He is best known for his books The Geography of Nowhere (1994), a history of American suburbia and urban development, and the more recent The Long Emergency (2005), where he argues that declining oil production is likely to result in the end of industrialized society as we know it and force Americans to live in localized, agrarian communities. He has written a science fiction novel conjecturing such a culture in the future, World Made by Hand in 2008. He also gives lectures on topics related to suburbia, urban development, and the challenges of what he calls "the global oil predicament" and a resultant change in the “American Way of Life.” He is also a leading proponent of "The New Urbanism" movement.

Posted by: reallawyers | December 30, 2008

Leading Questions: Carl Strock

This show features Jim Bendall and Kevin Mednick who host Carl Strock, columnist for the Daily Gazette.

According to biography on the Gazette website, "Carl joined the Gazette in 1981 and has been writing The View From Here column since 1987. He was born and raised in Saratoga Springs. Before coming to the Gazette he lived and worked in Mexico, Peru, and several countries in Asia. He got his start in journalism reporting on the war in Laos for The Associated Press and later worked as an editor at the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong. He attended Tufts University and earned a bachelor's degree in philosophy from the New School for Social Research, now the New School University, in New York City. He lives in Saratoga Springs with his wife, Pearl. They have two children and three grandchildren.
Read his blog "Strock Freestyle" on dailygazette.com."

Posted by: reallawyers | December 30, 2008

Leading Questions: Wes Holloway/Myra Armstead

This show features Jim Bendall and Kevin Mednick who interview Wes Holloway, from the Price Chopper Company and Myra Armstead, professor at Bard College.

Wes Holloway's bio, is in part, as follows: "head of diversity for Golub Corp., he deals with at Price Chopper Supermarkets. He was captain of the football team in high school in Beaumont, Texas, and graduated from Prairie View A & M College with a B.A. in economics with a business administration minor. After retiring from a 28-year career with IBM in 1992, he set up W.L. Holloway Public Affairs, working as IBM's lobbyist for New York state. He offers his perspective of diversity and its value in the workplace."

Myra Armstead's bio, is in part, as follows, "B.A., Cornell University; M.A., Ph.D., University of Chicago. Specialization: U.S. social history, with emphasis on urban and African American history. Fellowships: Danforth-Compton, Josephine de Karman, University of Chicago Trustees, and New York State African-American Research Institute. Frederick Douglass Award, Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History (Sullivan County, New York, chapter). Speaker in the Humanities, New York Council for the Humanities (2003–05). Author of “Lord, Please Don’t Take Me in August”: African Americans in Newport and Saratoga Springs (1999) and Mighty Change, Tall Within: Black Identity in the Hudson Valley (2003). Faculty, The Master of Arts in Teaching Program at Bard College (2004). (1985– )."

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