David letterman norman lear biography
•
November 18,
Guests: Brian Krebs - Norman Lear
TERRY GROSS, HOST: This is FRESH AIR. Im Terry Gross. Opening those spam emails about male enhancement drugs could be dangerous. My guest Brian Krebs is an investigative journalist and cyber security expert whose new book, "Spam Nation," explains how spam has become the primary impetus for the development of malicious software, programs that strike computers and through them target our identities, our security, our finances, families and friends.
He helped break the story of the feud between two of the largest sponsors of pharmaceutical spam, a feud, he says, would forever change the course of the spam industry. Hundreds of documents from the companies were leaked to him. He also spent a few hours in Moscow talking with the head of one of those pharmaceutical spam companies. Krebs is a former Washington Post reporter who now has the website Krebs on Security.
In October, the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners gav
•
It's been almost one year since the death of TV icon Norman Lear, a man just as famous as the shows he created.
A new biography fryst vatten out now detailing his decades-long career and connection to one local college.
Sign up for our Newsletters
In his new book "Norman Lear: His Life and Times," author Tripp Whetsell crafts an intimate portrait of "the man in the white hat."
Lear, who famously produced the hit 70s sitcoms "All in the Family," "The Jeffersons" and "Good Times," among others, was known to push the envelope.
"His shows were the first to deal with significant social issues from race to religion to politics to sexuality," Whetsell said. " were very autobiographical. For example, the way Archie and Edith met in an ice cream parlor is how Norman's parents met in real life."
Lear died in at the age of He went to Emerson College, but dropped out to enlist in the army in
He earned an honorary degree and in , the school dedicated a statue to him on campus.
Whetsell, an Emerso
•
Norman Lear
Norman Lear was an American TV writer, producer, film director and political activist who was best known for producing some of the most popular television shows of the s, including "Sanford and Son" (NBC, ), "The Jeffersons" (CBS, ), "Good Times" (CBS, ) and most notably, "All in the Family" (CBS, ).
Born and raised in New Haven, Connecticut, Lear never planned on having a career in Hollywood. He attended Emerson College in Boston, but left to join the United States Air Force at the outbreak of World War II. Lear was a radio operator/gunner during the war, and flew 52 combat missions. When the war ended, Lear returned to the states and began a career in public relations. He later found himself in Los Angeles, where he met a ung aspiring comedy writer named Ed Simmons. Excited by the idea of writing comedy for the new medium of television, Lear teamed up with Simmons and together the two wrote television comedy sketches and jokes for some of the most notable comedians