The David Pakman Show

The David Pakman Show (TDPS), originally Midweek Politics with David Pakman, is a multi-platform progressive[1][2] news talk show currently airing on television, radio, and the Internet, hosted by David Pakman.

The David Pakman Show
Created byDavid Pakman
Presented by
  • David Pakman (host)
  • Pat Ford (producer)
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
ProducersDavid Pakman (executive)
  • Pat Ford
Production locationsNew York, New York
Running time
  • Television: 1 hour
  • Radio: 1 hour
  • Online: 1 hour (+15min Bonus Show for subscribed members)
Release
Original network
Original release
  • Radio + Online (podcast): August 17, 2005 (2005-08-17)
  • Television + Online (video): September 5, 2009 (2009-09-05)
External links
Website

The program first aired in August 2005 on WXOJ, a radio station located in Northampton, Massachusetts, later being nationally syndicated, and eventually achieving broader international distribution in a number of countries, as well as online.[3]

The focus of the show is modern North American politics and society, with frequent discussion of economics, science, religion in public life, culture, reason, gay rights, capital punishment and crime, policing, the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, North-American foreign policy, technology, and other topical issues. The show is noted for interviewing many fringe, or "extremist" personalities in an effort to expose their views, in addition to hundreds of interviews with professors, scientists, lawmakers, and others.[4]

History

David Pakman was born to an Ashkenazi Jewish family in Buenos Aires, Argentina in February 1984 and moved to the United States of America at the age of five.[5]

As Midweek Politics with David Pakman

Pakman started the radio version of the program at age 21 on Pacifica radio affiliate WXOJ while an undergraduate student at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, during his time as an intern at the Media Education Foundation.[6] Public radio syndication began in 2006 on the Pacifica Radio Network. Initially, a handful of non-commercial talk radio stations broadcast the show in syndication.

The show expanded in 2007 to more public radio stations. Pakman was for a time the youngest syndicated radio host in the United States.[7] The same year, Louis Motamedi, a childhood friend of Pakman's, was added as radio producer.[8]

In 2009, TDPS added its first commercial radio affiliates, starting with Green 1640 in Atlanta, Georgia and WHMP Northampton, Massachusetts. On September 2, Midweek Politics, a simultaneously-produced television show, was launched, originally offered to public-access television stations across the country as well as published on the show's YouTube Channel. The number of television affiliates grew and Pakman attributed this to expanding from radio to a visual medium. Pakman's brother, Natan Pakman, became the program's television director in September 2009.

As The David Pakman Show

In 2010, TDPS launched a paid membership program maintaining the podcast at no charge, but offering subscribers extra show segments, behind-the-scenes interviews, and access to show archives. In July of that year, the show obtained national television distribution through Free Speech TV.[9] The show's first international affiliate, Öppna Kanalen Skövde in Skövde, Sweden, announced in September 2010 that it would be airing the program.[3] At the same time, the show was moved from WXOJ to its own studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, for both the radio and television versions. The name was then changed to The David Pakman Show (TDPS), expanding from a weekly program to two episodes per week, broadcast live on Mondays and Thursdays at 3pm Eastern Standard Time.

In August 2012, TDPS moved from a studio in Northampton, Massachusetts to a studio housed on the campus of Greenfield Community College in Greenfield, Massachusetts.

In March 2012, TDPS announced an expansion to four episodes per week, Monday-Thursday, and a move to an earlier live broadcast time, 2pm EST. The same year, the show joined The Young Turks network,[10] although it has since left the network.[11] New content and video versions of existing radio programming were produced, including Liberal Oasis Radio Show hosted by blogger Bill Scher, Take Action News with David Shuster, television journalist, and World View with Denis Campbell, Editor-in-Chief of UK Progressive Magazine. As of October 2013, only Word View with Dennis Campbell was being actively produced by TDPS, and as of January 2014, TDPS stopped all production of ancillary content.

By the beginning of 2013, The David Pakman Show had on its YouTube channel over 25,000 subscribers and 20 million views.

In August 2013, the show moved from Greenfield, Massachusetts to New York City, where the program's main studio was housed until May 2015. Concurrently, producer Louis Motamedi moved to Austin, Texas, where he launched the Austin bureau of The David Pakman Show. Motamedi's role on the program remained unchanged, including serving as co-host, producer, and host of the members only Bonus Show. In 2014 the show expanded to a full 5 shows/week.

By early 2015, the show had 100,000 subscribers on YouTube. In November of that year, TDPS moved to a new location in Boston, Massachusetts, with Motamedi returning to Massachusetts to produce the show in-studio. The new location was also the studio of similar progressive-independent program The Benjamin Dixon Show whose host Benjamin Dixon would regularly later fill in for David while he would travel to various political events, and also co-hosted live coverage of the election night on November 8, 2016.

During the general election season of 2016, The David Pakman Show YouTube channel passed a quarter-million subscribers and 200 million views.

On August 15, 2016 it was announced that producer Louis Motamedi would be leaving the show, in search of a better living environment in the southern United States. His last day on the program (other than later call-in appearances) was August 26, 2016. Temporary producer Jason Shepherd filled in during September, and Patrick Ford became Louis' successor thereafter, becoming the new producer. David returned to hosting the Bonus Show himself. Segment producer Rachel Gordon was also added to appear on a few episodes per week, adding a female co-host to the show for a short while.

As of late 2019, producer Patrick Ford hosts the Bonus Show on Fridays, while the main show is hosted by David, with Patrick joining into discussions in the other daily bonus shows.

In November of 2020 the show moved back to New York City. [12]

Format

TDPS is made up of both live and pre-recorded interviews, clips from television and radio programs related to politics and current events, segments with correspondents on the street and in public, and other specially produced segments. Pakman has said that the show is a "cross between Howard Stern, Rush Limbaugh, and Rachel Maddow."[13]

Content

TDPS is a progressive/left-wing/liberal talk radio program,[8] although according to Pakman it notably does not follow what he characterizes as the typically pro-Palestinian view of progressive media in relation to Israel and Palestine, and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.[5]

Pakman and TDPS are strong supporters of same-sex marriage, a topic which has often provoked conflict with guests on the program.[14][15][16] Additionally, a strong support for the scientific position on evolution, and rebuking of literal Bible interpretation have created conflict with guests.[17] Pakman has regularly indicated that the more outrageous, extreme guests are not only interesting to interview, but create the most interest and engagement on behalf of the audience,[5][7] and that he often interviews people who "would be classified as 'extremists.'"[18] This has led to criticism, for example from Arthur Chu that he is indulging in sensationalistic "clickbaiting" and giving attention and a platform to people who otherwise would not have one.[19] Pakman has argued that interviewing "extremists" exposes their opinions to the public, putting them on record, and that he does not simply give them a "platform" to express their views without balance.[20]

Glenn Miller

Political candidate Glenn Miller appeared on Midweek Politics on April 28, 2010.[21] Miller repeated anti-Semitic statements and espoused a number of anti-Jewish conspiracy theories, including control over media and government. Additionally, he referred to host David Pakman as a "Jew liar" and "Kike-a-Like" during the interview. Miller also stated that Adolf Hitler was a "great man" and similarly expressed disappointment that Hitler had not ultimately succeeded in the Holocaust. Video and podcast versions of the interview spread virally throughout the internet garnering varied reaction, ranging from those who found the interview comical and entertaining, to those who were offended, and even a contingent who believed Pakman was wrong to have Miller on the program and should be removed from the air.[22][23]

On the following program, Pakman commented on the uproar and controversy, disagreeing with the notion that people like Miller 'go away' if they do not get on media outlets, and considered the interview a success. Pakman attributed this success to Miller being "ridiculed across the internet and on the radio".[24][25]

On April 13, 2014, Miller was arrested as the prime suspect in the Overland Park Jewish Community Center shooting. This arrest led to a frenzy of media interest, with Pakman and the original interview featured on CNN,[26][27] HLN with both Nancy Grace[28] and Dr. Drew,[29] The Huffington Post,[30][31] The Boston Herald,[32] The Alan Colmes Show,[33] Mother Jones,[34] Raw Story,[35] Democracy Now,[20] WGGB40,[18] The Randi Rhodes Show,[36] and Minneapolis radio station AM950.[37] Miller was later found guilty of capital murder, and was sentenced to death by lethal injection.[38]

Peter LaBarbera

Peter LaBarbera was a guest on the program on July 28, 2010. During the interview,[39][40] LaBarbera stated numerous times that Pakman's producer should have told him Pakman's position on the issue of gay rights in advance of his appearance, a suggestion that Pakman refuted. This caused controversy, including being the center of a discussion on Sirius XM's The Michelangelo Signorile Show.[41]

In later programs, Pakman has mentioned that LaBarbera personally emailed him later to insist that Pakman was dishonest by not telling him in advance about his position on gay rights. During the interview, LaBarbera also discussed his regular trips to gay fetish events, including leather events, and indicated that his group, Americans for Truth About Homosexuality is a "pro-family" organization.

Paul Cameron

During an interview with Paul Cameron,[42] the anti-gay psychologist and sex researcher, Cameron made a number of comments, among these were the suggestion that homosexuality was equivalent to drug abuse, that homosexuals were addicted to homosexual activity, and cited a study conducted by his own Family Research Institute which reported that gays and lesbians in the military are far more likely to rape or sexually abuse fellow soldiers. The Huffington Post reported on the interview.[43]

Westboro Baptist Church "live hack"

Members of the Westboro Baptist Church have been interviewed many times on the show, including one incident in which Jake Davis, then only known as "Topiary", who represented the Anonymous internet collective, announced a live hacking attack on the church's website during a group interview with WBP Spokesperson Shirley Phelps-Roper.[44]

Chaplain Gordon Klingenschmitt

A recurring guest on The David Pakman Show is former Navy Chaplain Gordon Klingenschmitt, who has expressed anti-gay positions,[45][46] and who was honorably but involuntarily discharged from the Navy after a court-martial proceeding for refusing an order not to appear in uniform at political events to "pray in Jesus' name".[47] During a notable appearance, Klingenschmitt debated Jonathan Phelps, of the anti-gay Westboro Baptist Church. The interview drew media coverage[48] due to the fact that both men held anti-gay positions, but disagreed on the reasons why being homosexuality is a bad thing.[49] Klingenschmitt is also known for his efforts to shut down the YouTube channel of one of his most vocal critics, Right Wing Watch, which uses video clips of his statements.[50]

Gamergate

Starting in October 2014, Pakman conducted a series of interviews with people involved in Gamergate, a controversy in video game culture. People interviewed included game commentator John "TotalBiscuit" Bain, 8chan owner Fredrick Brennan and game developer Brianna Wu, among others.[51][52]

Website hacking

Shortly after the April 28, 2010, broadcast, visitors to the show's website began to observe that the site was not functioning properly, and sometimes was inaccessible altogether. Denial of service attacks continued, eventually taking the site offline for two days.[53] On the May 12, 2010, broadcast,[54] Pakman announced that the website had indeed been in the target of unknown deliberate malicious attacks starting immediately after the April 28, 2010, broadcast. Pakman did not indicate the specifics of who was suspected to be involved, but said a more detailed investigation was underway, and alluded to a connection between a guest on the program between April 28 and May 12. Guests appearing on Midweek Politics during that time include former Governor Jesse Ventura, Senate candidate Glenn Miller, Congressman Dennis Kucinich, and terrorism expert Richard A. Clarke.

Misidentification

On January 24, 2013, Pakman came to realize that he had been identified in the documentary film Minnesota Nice as a gay teenager who had committed suicide. Pakman clarified in a YouTube video that he was neither gay, nor a teenager, nor dead.[55]

On the April 15, 2014, edition of HLN's Dr. Drew On Call, Pakman was misidentified as former Neo-Nazi and KKK member Frank Meeink.[56] Pakman was scheduled to be interviewed later on during that program.[57]

YouTube demonetization

The David Pakman Show YouTube channel featured prominently in the YouTube demonetization crisis, known colloquially as "Adpocalypse." Both the New York Times[58] and Wired[59] covered Adpocalypse through the lens of The David Pakman Show's YouTube channel.

References

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