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6 Views
08:00:00 02/01/12
Mosaic News - 02/01/12: World News From The Middle East [VIDEO]
[LESS INFO] 6 VIEWS | ADDED 08:00:00 02/01/12
Islamists clash with anti-military protesters in Egypt, Kuwait marred by violence on election eve, Pakistan rejects NATO report on links to Afghan Taliban, and more.
Islamists clash with anti-military protestors in Egypt
Al Jazeera, Qatar
Egypt football riots leave 74 dead, over 1,000 injured
Press TV, Iran
Detained Bahraini activists begin third day of hunger strike
Press TV, Iran
Iranians mark anniversary of Islamic Revolution victory
Press TV, Iran
Kuwait marred by violence on eve of election
Al-Alam, Iran
Pakistan rejects NATO report on Afghan Taliban links
Dubai TV, UAE
Fifty-six killed in Syria as UN chief calls on Damascus to halt violence
BBC Arabic, UK
UN chief: Israeli settlement expansion 'not helpful' to Mideast peace
IBA, Israel
Netanyahu claims win in party primary
IBA, Israel
Palestinians rally in solidarity with Khadar Adnan's 45-day hunger strike
Palestine TV, Ramallah
2 Views
08:00:00 02/01/12
Mosaic News - 02/01/12: World News From The Middle East [VIDEO]
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 08:00:00 02/01/12
Islamists clash with anti-military protesters in Egypt, Kuwait marred by violence on election eve, Pakistan rejects NATO report on links to Afghan Taliban, and more.
Islamists clash with anti-military protestors in Egypt
Al Jazeera, Qatar
Egypt football riots leave 74 dead, over 1,000 injured
Press TV, Iran
Detained Bahraini activists begin third day of hunger strike
Press TV, Iran
Iranians mark anniversary of Islamic Revolution victory
Press TV, Iran
Kuwait marred by violence on eve of election
Al-Alam, Iran
Pakistan rejects NATO report on Afghan Taliban links
Dubai TV, UAE
Fifty-six killed in Syria as UN chief calls on Damascus to halt violence
BBC Arabic, UK
UN chief: Israeli settlement expansion 'not helpful' to Mideast peace
IBA, Israel
Netanyahu claims win in party primary
IBA, Israel
Palestinians rally in solidarity with Khadar Adnan's 45-day hunger strike
Palestine TV, Ramallah
7 Views
08:00:00 01/25/12
Mosaic News - 01/25/12: World News From The Middle East [VIDEO]
[LESS INFO] 7 VIEWS | ADDED 08:00:00 01/25/12
Egypt's revolutionaries vow second uprising against military council, Bahraini police violently disperse anti-regime protesters, Iran dismisses Obama's war threats as election propaganda, and more.
A look back at the Egyptian revolution
Al-Alam, Iran
Egypt's revolutionaries vow second uprising against military council
Al-Alam, Iran
Bahraini police violently disperse anti-regime protestors
BBC Arabic, UK
Iran dismisses Obama's war threats as election propaganda
Press TV, Iran
Iranian trade expanding despite US, EU sanctions
Press TV, Iran
Syria commits to Arab mission as Gulf monitors leave the country
Future TV, Lebanon
Ashton encourages continued Mideast peace talks in Israel
IBA, Israel
UNICEF: 750,000 Yemeni children are malnourished
Dubai TV, UAE
Mauritania holds conference on reformist thought
Al Jazeera, Qatar
3 Views
08:00:00 01/25/12
Mosaic News - 01/25/12: World News From The Middle East [VIDEO]
[LESS INFO] 3 VIEWS | ADDED 08:00:00 01/25/12
Egypt's revolutionaries vow second uprising against military council, Bahraini police violently disperse anti-regime protesters, Iran dismisses Obama's war threats as election propaganda, and more.
A look back at the Egyptian revolution
Al-Alam, Iran
Egypt's revolutionaries vow second uprising against military council
Al-Alam, Iran
Bahraini police violently disperse anti-regime protestors
BBC Arabic, UK
Iran dismisses Obama's war threats as election propaganda
Press TV, Iran
Iranian trade expanding despite US, EU sanctions
Press TV, Iran
Syria commits to Arab mission as Gulf monitors leave the country
Future TV, Lebanon
Ashton encourages continued Mideast peace talks in Israel
IBA, Israel
UNICEF: 750,000 Yemeni children are malnourished
Dubai TV, UAE
Mauritania holds conference on reformist thought
Al Jazeera, Qatar
38 Views
08:00:00 11/29/11
Mosaic News - 11/29/11: World News From The Middle East [VIDEO]
[LESS INFO] 38 VIEWS | ADDED 08:00:00 11/29/11
Iranian students storm British embassy during protest against sanctions, Saudi regime deploys troops to suppress protests in Qatif, Libya's Amazigh angry over cabinet exclusion, and more.
Iranian students storm British embassy during protest against sanctions
BBC Arabic, UK
Saudi regime deploys troops to suppress protests in Qatif
Press TV, Iran
Heavy turnout on second day of Egyptian parliamentary elections
Press TV, Iran
Libya's Amazigh angry over cabinet exclusion
Al Jazeera, Qatar
Syrian opposition rallies for 'protection and loyalty of medics'
Future TV, Lebanon
Yemeni protestors slam Riyadh agreement for being brokered under "US-Saudi auspices"
Al-Alam, Iran
Iran officials backtrack on reports of blast at nuclear facility
IBA, Israel
Rockets from Lebanon hit Israel for first time since 2009
IBA, Israel
Israeli occupation turns Jordan Valley region into military training camp
New TV, Lebanon
1 Views
08:00:00 11/29/11
Mosaic News - 11/29/11: World News From The Middle East [VIDEO]
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 08:00:00 11/29/11
Iranian students storm British embassy during protest against sanctions, Saudi regime deploys troops to suppress protests in Qatif, Libya's Amazigh angry over cabinet exclusion, and more.
Iranian students storm British embassy during protest against sanctions
BBC Arabic, UK
Saudi regime deploys troops to suppress protests in Qatif
Press TV, Iran
Heavy turnout on second day of Egyptian parliamentary elections
Press TV, Iran
Libya's Amazigh angry over cabinet exclusion
Al Jazeera, Qatar
Syrian opposition rallies for 'protection and loyalty of medics'
Future TV, Lebanon
Yemeni protestors slam Riyadh agreement for being brokered under "US-Saudi auspices"
Al-Alam, Iran
Iran officials backtrack on reports of blast at nuclear facility
IBA, Israel
Rockets from Lebanon hit Israel for first time since 2009
IBA, Israel
Israeli occupation turns Jordan Valley region into military training camp
New TV, Lebanon
0 Views
09:40:18 10/21/11
Tunisian election 2011: protesters demand freedom of speech
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 09:40:18 10/21/11
Tunisian election 2011: protesters demand freedom of speech
A week before Tunisians vote in their country's historic general election -- the first since the Arab spring -- protesters gathered to demand free speech. Their demonstration was prompted by a series of protests by Islamists against the screening of Persepolis, a 2007 French animated film set during the Iranian revolution From: TheGuardian Views: 386 5 ratings Time: 04:09 More in News & Politics
0 Views
18:55:14 06/12/11
Death of Iranian journalist on hunger strike - reports
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 18:55:14 06/12/11
Death of Iranian journalist on hunger strike - reports
A jailed Iranian journalist has died a week after going on hunger strike according to an opposition website. Hoda Saber was jailed after the disputed oresidential election in 2009. He began to refuse food on June the Second, in protest at the death of a woman during a confrontation with the security forces at her father's funeral.... www.euronews.net From: Euronews Views: 289 3 ratings Time: 00:21 More in News & Politics
8 Views
08:00:00 11/30/10
Mosaic News - 11/30/10: World News From The Middle East [VIDEO]
[LESS INFO] 8 VIEWS | ADDED 08:00:00 11/30/10
Today's Headlines:
21 international organizations call for immediate end to Gaza siege, US 'dismayed' at Egypt vote, and Thousands of Iranian students stage protests over scientist slaying
21 Int'l organizations call for immediate end to Gaza siege
Al Jazeera TV, Qatar
NGOs accuse Israel of not easing Gaza blockade
IBA TV, Israel
Gazans prefer used cars over fear of tapped new cars
New TV, Lebanon
US launches criminal probe of WikiLeaks
BBC- Arabic
US 'dismayed' at Egypt vote
Dubai TV, UAE
Thousands of Iranian students stage protests over scientist slaying
Press TV, Iran
Saddam's top aides sentenced for crimes against Iraqi Kurds
Al-Iraqiya TV, Iraq
Sudan boycotts EU-AU summit in Libya
Al-Alam TV, Iran
54 Views
23:42:01 09/14/10
Biz Stone and Evan Williams - The Iranian Revolution That Almost Wasn't (Tweeted)
[LESS INFO] 54 VIEWS | ADDED 23:42:01 09/14/10
Complete video at: http://fora.tv/2010/07/07/Short_Messages_Big_Impact_Twitter_Founders_Biz_and_Ev
And you thought you were inconvenienced by Twitter's server maintenance? Twitter founders Biz Stone and Evan Williams discuss how the Iranian election riots nearly weren't broadcast over Twitter due to routine website maintenance. The company postponed the scheduled downtime after being flooded with tweets, emails and calls - including one from the State Department.
-----
Twitter co-founders Evan Williams and Biz Stone discuss the social microblogging platform with Aspen Institute President and CEO Walter Isaacson. This program was recorded in collaboration with the 2010 Aspen Ideas Festival, on July 7, 2010.
Biz Stone is co-founder of Twitter, the one-too-many network that is changing the way people communicate around the world. He has previously helped build other popular social media services such as Xanga, Blogger, and Odeo. And went on to publish two books about the origins and social significance of blogging: Who Let the Blogs Out? and Blogging: Genius Strategies for Instant Web Content.
Evan Williams is chairman and chief product officer of Twitter, Inc. Previously, he was co-founder and CEO of Pyra Labs, who created Blogger in 1999. In 2003, Blogger was purchased by Google, where Williams worked as a product and engineering manager until late 2004. Williams was raised on a farm in Nebraska and dropped out of college as a sophomore, prior starting his first Internet company in 1994.
Walter Isaacson is the President and CEO of the Aspen Institute. He has been the Chairman and CEO of CNN and the Managing Editor of Time Magazine.
41 Views
11:00:00 06/16/10
One Year Later: Iran's Green Revolution
[LESS INFO] 41 VIEWS | ADDED 11:00:00 06/16/10
One year ago, the largest protests since the Islamic Revolution of the 1970s exploded in Tehran. How has the Green Movement changed Iranians and the Iranian regime?
0 Views
22:09:34 08/10/09
Other Voices Tv Uprising In Iran Exploring The Deeper Meanings
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 22:09:34 08/10/09
Dr. Ali Ferdowsi is an Iranian American political scientist who spends each summer in Iran, researching the latest political dynamics there. This year's visit put Dr. Ferdowsi right in the middle of the most significant political development since the Iranian revolution 30 years ago. A native of Iran, Dr. Ferdowsi was in Iran from the first week of June through the first week of July, watching and participating in the election and the protests that followed it. We will discuss, among other things, why an election that was poised to be a routine exercise in a limited democracy turned into a mass protest against a fraudulent election which met with a bloody response by the security and paramilitary forces. What do the protesters want? What does this mean for the future of the Islamic Republic? And what can we do as Americans to side with the Iranian people in their century old yearning for democracy and human rights? While most mainstream media reporting -- where it was able to function at all -- focused on the capital city of Tehran, Dr. Ferdowsi traveled throughout the country, witnessing the "green wave" uprising in cities and towns large and small. Please join us for this special edition of Other Voices as Dr. Ferdowsi shares his unique insights as an Iranian and as a political scientist and gives us a perspective that no domestic analyst could provide. After receiving his Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Pennsylvania in 1985, Ali Ferdowsi studied as a post-doctoral fellow in the Graduate Program in Demography at the University of California, Berkeley. He taught for three years as a visiting professor in the Department of Middle Eastern Studies at Tokyo University for Foreign Studies in Japan. After working for five years as an International Specialist for NHK (Japan Broadcast Corporation), he returned to the United States in 1997 and began teaching in the Department of History and Political Science at Notre Dame de Namur University.
3 Views
21:33:14 06/25/09
Creator of Iran Voices Facebook App.
[LESS INFO] 3 VIEWS | ADDED 21:33:14 06/25/09
The Iranian government may be trying to silence the media about what’s going on in the troubled nation but in the age of social networking they’re finding they can’t. Scott Drake interviews Ali Reza Manouchehri developed IranVoices a Facebook applica
2 Views
11:43:00 06/23/09
WHO'S TWEETERING NOW? **updated**
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 11:43:00 06/23/09
I
ranian tough-guy Prez Mahmoud has been in a rough mood these days but he's now coming out of his shell to throw down the gauntlet, in a challenge to those who object to shooting lovely and dignified women in the heart on the street.
Take it away President Ahmatwitterjad:
Seriously....
Iran's digital tracking capabilities against online citizens is far more extensive than previously known, far outstripping the snooping capacity of even China's net police, and also aided by western technology companies .
Her passion was travel, and she hoped someday to be a guide for Iranian tour groups to other countries. She had saved up and made trips to Turkey, Dubai and Thailand. She also loved and studied music. Her friend told her not to go out, that it was too dangerous. "Don't worry," she said. "It's just one bullet and it's over." Family and friends remember Neda .
Professor Fouad Ajami on Obama's Persian Tutorial . Please let him be a quick learner. Joe warned us about this, but no one listens to Joe (not the plumber, the other one).
This Friday a new film starring the magnificent Shoreh Aghdashloo ("The House of Sand and Fog") opens in North America. Be there or be square, wider release will follow. Take all your friends. The Stoning of Soraya M.
Hotdogs! Mustard! Diplomatic Action! July Fourth partying with the official agents of Neda's killers will proceed as planned. You guys bring the potato salad, ok? AFP: US says hot dog diplomacy still on with Iran .
The President needs to add a new word* to his vocabulary, and to pair it with another word he uses too much. The latter word is "I", the former is "condemn". Try it out, man. It's not that hard. Beating and shooting people who hunger for freedom is no clerical error. Nothing could be more deserving of clear condemnation, whether in Tibet, Burma, China, Iran, or formerly in South Africa, Poland, Hungary... the list is long. The leader of the free world position has always carried with it certain responsibilities.
*UPDATE* (00:30): Gecko gets results! (Actually, Trita Parsi made the same request earlier in the day.) " I strongly condemn these unjust actions ," Obama said in a news conference at the White House.
Addendum: > "She died full of love," Golshad said. From the above LAT story on Neda's family and friends. Golshad is not her real name.
The grey haired gentleman with Neda was not her father but her music teacher, Hamid Panahi. Her family was forbidden to eulogize her, but Mr. Panahi defies them saying he has nothing to lose.> "They know me," he said. "They know where I am. They can come and get me whenever they want. My time has gone. We have to think about the young people."
Neda, he said, was smart and loving. She had a mischievous streak, gently teasing her friends and causing them to laugh. She was passionate about life and meant no one any harm.
In the election unrest, friends found in her an unexpected daring, a willingness to take risks for her beliefs.
"She couldn't stand the injustice of it all," Panahi said. "All she wanted was the proper vote of the people to be counted.
"For pursuing her goals, she didn't use rocks or clubs," he said. "She wanted to show with her presence that 'I'm here. I also voted. And my vote wasn't counted.' It was a very peaceful act of protest, without any violence."
As to the person or persons responsible for her death, they will not be forgiven, he said.
"When they kill an innocent child, this is not justice. This is not religion. In no way is this acceptable," he said. "And I'm certain that the one who shot her will not get a pass from God."
1 Views
11:41:00 06/22/09
LIONESS DOWN, SPIRIT SOARS
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 11:41:00 06/22/09
Neda Agha Soltan, a 27 year old philosophy student, died by the hand of the Islamic Republic's Basij militia on Saturday.
Photo: "A Voice for Neda" H
er name is Neda. Her name will always be Neda. When she fell and left it behind her, it was raised by hundreds, then thousands, now millions. Not was — her name is Neda.
Neda Agha Soltan was a 27 year old student of philosophy in Tehran. The bare outline of her story can only be provisionally pieced together from the unconfirmed snippets of discussion trickling out of Iran by her compatriots in freedom's cause. Perhaps one day soon, when journalism is no longer illegal in that country, her full story will be told.
It is said that she was standing on the sidelines of Saturday's forbidden protest, watching beside her father teacher. A wobbly cell-phone video shows the two of them together among the crowd. He is the grey-haired man in a blue striped shirt, she wears black.
If the gentle reader has not yet seen what happened to Neda (some news outlets are showing it), and is willing to have his or her heart broken yet again, then click the button while observing my strong content warning . Neda was alive at the beginning of this scene, but not at the end.
Direct Video Link The original upload carried the following description:> At 19:05 June 20th
Place: Karekar Ave., at the corner crossing Khosravi St. and Salehi st.
A young woman who was standing aside with her father watching the protests was shot by a basij member hiding on the rooftop of a civilian house. He had clear shot at the girl and could not miss her. However, he aimed straight her heart. I am a doctor, so I rushed to try to save her. But the impact of the gunshot was so fierce that the bullet had blasted inside the victim’s chest, and she died in less than 2 minutes.
The protests were going on about 1 kilometers away in the main street and some of the protesting crowd were running from tear gass used among them, towards Salehi St.
The film is shot by my friend who was standing beside me.
Please let the world know. I've gathered from reading many Iranians (who have become like autonomous solo broadcasters) these past days that her name, Neda, means "Calling" or "Voice". The man believed to be her father is calling to her as she dies, which has been translated as:> "Neda, don't be afraid. Neda, don't be afraid. [obscured by others yelling] Neda, stay with me. Neda stay with me!" Courageous women have been the backbone of these demonstrations, according to many witnesses. I listened to an Iranian professor this morning talk about the phenomenon, which is not new. "Shirzan" is the Persian word he used for them, which he said Iranians will commonly use to describe such women without fear. It means "lioness" or "lion-woman," he said. Women have been estimated to comprise around 40% of the freedom protesters during the past 10 days.
No one knew whether the planned Saturday protest would go ahead or not, following the unveiled threat delivered by Supreme Ayatollah Khamenei on Friday. Everyone who considered going out of their house on Saturday knew that they could be risking their life. Mr. Moussavi had promised a statement in the afternoon, but it never came (his website has come under attack as well). Yet less than an hour after the planned meeting time of 4 pm, everyone who was following any of the many autonomous solo broadcasters (twitterers with a reliable reputation), knew that Tehran's people were in the streets again and were being foiled by huge numbers of riot police and Basijis already occupying their meeting places in the public squares. International media continued for hours saying the streets were quiet, while heads were already being cracked. CNN's not the "first name in news" anymore, and if they keep getting "Khomeni" and "Khamenei" mixed up and refering to demonstrators as "rioters" for defending themselves, they'll be the last name in news before long.
While earnest news anchors were saying that no one had seen Mr. Moussavi on Saturday, those who followed the solo tweet-casters already knew that he had spoken to the demonstrators in Jeyhoon Street. Before long, his words were translated, posted and linked by the Iranian tweeters.
By late night in Tehran the truth was evident to all, finally including international media. A vicious crackdown was underway, an unknown number of the freedom movement had been killed, and protests were continuing in most (if not all) Iran's major cities. Tweets from eyewitnesses circled the earth in seconds, thousands of citizen videos were uploaded to sharing sites, there are no secrets any more — at least, nothing this big can be kept secret when technology and an adept people are present.
I'm in a time zone two and a half hours ahead of Tehran. At around 2 am on Sunday morning here, the screen of the AP satellite feed showed a caption warning agencies to be ready. (paraphrasing) "Standby. White House statement 3:10 pm. Standby." The time corresponded to 02:10 am Bangkok time, in other words, imminent. It was just before midnight in Tehran, and we all knew what had happened during the afternoon and evening there. The White House was finally ready to take a stronger moral stand after these latest brutal killings, I thought. It could have come days earlier, after Basijis had raided Tehran University, beating and killing a number of students in their dorms. Or, a day or two before that when Basijis shot up a crowd around one of their bases, killing at least seven. But better late than never. I waited.
Nothing came across the AP feed after an hour, then after two hours of staying awake refreshing some pages of those solo broadcasters, I crashed out around dawn. Sunday afternoon, I learned what the "Standby" was all about.
Can't a man enjoy his waffle(cone)? The White House statement was that the President had taken his daughters out for a Father's Day ice cream. Seriously! And that's not all. Bo got frozen Puppy Pops to go. (The photo is from an earlier ice cream excursion, I can't find any pictures from Saturday's fun.) Take a look at Patterico's juxtaposition of contemporaneous tweets out of Iran and Washington. Hey, did you know that real journalists use Twitter too? It's true! But only click on that one if you don't mind your heart being broken yet again.
Earlier, President Obama had said something which seemed stronger than the previous "concern" and "bearing witness."> "I'm very concerned based on some of the tenor and tone of the statements that have been made that the government of Iran recognise that the world is watching," Obama said on US television on Friday.
"And how they approach and deal with people who are, through peaceful means, trying to be heard will, I think, send a pretty clear signal to the international community about what Iran is and is not." Well, it nudged the concern and witness ideas ahead a little bit (if ya squint!). A later written statement added the mourning of innocent life lost to the bearing of witness and concern. The toughest line was, "We call on the Iranian government to stop all violent and unjust actions against its own people."
Those brave 21st century Iranians need to hear that the free peoples of the world are with them. The placards, chants and comments of the demonstrators have often asked specifically for this, and it would mean a lot for them to hear it unambiguously from the leader of the free world. Whether he makes a strong, principled statement on the urgent need for liberty and the dignity of Iran's freedom-seeking people, or sticks with the current weak expressions of concern, makes no difference to the ruling hardliners in that country. They are blaming Britain, France, USA and all western countries for fomenting the rebellion in any case. To hell with them — speak directly to those millions of Iranians who are demanding their fundamental rights. They are the only ones who count, and the only ones listening anyway.
So far, the Prophet of Cairo seems to be all Barack and no bite. His original "on the one hand, but on the other hand" stance (that dealing with Ahmedinejad or Moussavi makes no difference to him, that they are about the same) certainly did offend many of those risking life and limb for liberty, and they should expect clearer messages from a US president. For better or worse, those who want to live in a free(r) country have gathered together with Mr. Moussavi, demanding the fair election they have yet to receive. That alone means that the two are not the same.
A Life Magazine photojournalist disappeared on Saturday in Tehran. You can view his gallery here , with the following notification:> A NOTE TO OUR READERS: We are saddened to report that the Iranian photojournalist, whose pictures appear in this gallery, is missing. He has not been in contact with us; this morning we received the following email from one of his relatives. We will update this space when we have more details.
THE EMAIL: Hi im [photographer’s relative], when he go outside yesterday for he never came back home and also his friend and a lot of our young brave people, government arrested them [. . .] don’t let them suffer in those bloody hands. With thanks. Here's a sample of some of the proven reliable Twitter feeds. Most are in Tehran. The last two are hashtag searches (categories). #Neda sprang up on Saturday night. #IranElection is very high volume (beware of rumours and regime dis-information there).> Raymond Jahan (StopAhmadi)
Iranian Student (Change_for_Iran)
Alireza Sedaghat (IranElection09)
TehranBureau.com (TehranBureau)
madyar (madyar)
Iran (IranRiggedElect)
oxfordgirl (oxfordgirl)
persiankiwi (persiankiwi)
#Neda
#IranElection If you need to get caught up on the important developments over the weekend, there's no better place at the moment than Hot Air. AllahPundit is keeping on top of things very well, and these were continually updated on Saturday and Sunday . Also very good is NYT's The Lede Blog . The blog of the National Iranian American Council is worth keeping an eye on, for nuggets like this — which stuck in my mind last week (and I had a hard time finding it again). Posted on June 17 :> 9:47 am: In response to Ahmadinejad calling Mousavi supporters “brushwood and thorns” at the victory rally Monday, Iran’s most famous classical musician has ordered that Iranian government television/radio never play his music again. Mohammad Reza Shajarian told BBC Persian in an interview:> “Don’t broadcast my voice on Seda va Sima [IRIB Music channel] ever again: my voice is like brushwood and thorns, and it will forever remain brushwood and thorns!”
0 Views
20:42:00 06/17/09
Wednesday's Full Show, 06/17/09 @ BreakRoomLive.com
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:42:00 06/17/09
http://breakroomlive.com
On Today's Show: The Assassin Pt. 2; Air America Softball Game; Senior Iranian Ayatollah Condemns Election; Sen. Ensign (R) admits affair; Fire Letterman Protest; Sam's Mailbag Update
BreakRoomLive w/ Maron & Seder is LIVE weekdays, 3-4pm from Air America's Break Room.
Catch comedy sketches, interviews, political & cultural discussions, & interact with hosts and guests live: 3pm, M-F @ BreakRoomLive.com!
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