PENELOPE ANN MILLER CHECKS IN
** "These dreams that become unrealized - and then how do you move forward from that, whether it's what is going on in the world..."

Penelope Ann Miller, The Shadow
Penelope Ann Miller Talks After All - and joined by Erika Christensen, co-starring together as mother and daughter duo in this dramatic spotlight on fractured rural American poverty and disintegration emotionally and economically, within this broken family. The actresses also share memories of their characters on screen that have meant the most to them - including Erika in Steven Soderbergh's Traffic.

Erika Christensen, Veronica Decides To Die
And Miller in her many roles, with Al Pacino in Carlito's Way, and portraying real people, that includes the plantation owner's wife Elizabeth Turner, in confrontation with slave rebel Nat Turner in The Birth Of A Nation...

** There are so many countries we're thinking about attacking, I get confused..."
Pacifica Host Garland Nixon in a continuing quest into the art of figuring out the world. And what it has to do with Tulsi Gabbard and regime change, John Bolton's book, Venezuela as Vietnam on steroids - and Trump talking trash and pulling the trigger..."
** "We made a conscious decision to choose our next neighborhood to be Freddie Gray's neighborhood - a call to build, we take that quite seriously, and that's where we are now..."

UK Desk: A Conversation With David Litz And The Worker Owned Water Bottle Movement - not just about co-ops. With connections to role models on the street corner and the lack of economic hope, a Guy Fawkes mask, Freddie Gray and the Baltimore Uprising - and 'responding to that cry out by looking into rebuilding that very neighborhood...'
Plus...Veterans Day, violence, the new rebranded US mercenary army and war, in the art work of Leon Golub. And how 'people will accept a Goya because it's 200 years ago, it's very far away.'

But 'when it's 'Mercenaries 1979,' Golub scraped off paint from his work with a meat cleaver in order to give a violent undertone to the texture - and illustrated the violence coming from the people who hold power...'
