PaperTrail BlogPaper Trail Blog

RSS Feed

Tag : Public I Podcast

  1. May 07, 2009, 11:18 am

    ECONOMY: A Discussion About The Roots of the Financial Crisis

    Yesterday, PaperTrail highlighted the top 25 subprime lenders that were responsible for triggering the economic crisis, according the Center’s latest report, Who’s Behind the Financial Meltdown. In this week’s Public I podcast, Executive Director Bill Buzenberg talks to lead reporter John Dunbar about how these companies came to make nearly $1 trillion in subprime loans, and why the banks that financed at least 21 of them received federal bailout money. Read more

  2. April 23, 2009, 10:43 am

    ENERGY & ENVIRONMENT: Looking at the ‘Clean Coal’ Lobbying Blitz

    This week on the Center’s Public I podcast, Executive Director Bill Buzenberg talks to reporter Marianne Lavelle about a controversial new voice shaping the climate change debate on Capitol Hill. Read more

  3. April 16, 2009, 2:39 pm

    FINANCE: Discussing Inflated Housing Appraisals

    In our latest Public I podcast, the Center’s Executive Director Bill Buzenberg talks to Michael Zuckerman, editor of our Land Use Accountability Project, about the role that inflated home appraisals played in the recent mortgage crisis. Read more

  4. March 18, 2009, 2:51 pm

    ACCOUNTABILITY: Changing Washington: The Hard Part

    You can get the latest from the Center by tuning in to our podcast series, the Public I, now offered every two weeks. Read more

Tags

President Obama, Election '08, Environmental Protection Agency, Politics, politics, Energy, Coal Ash, Environment, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, John Murtha, Defense, New York, West Virginia, Hillary Clinton, Treasury Department, Transportation, Freedom of Information Act, American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, Public I Podcast, Federal Election Commission, Justice Department, Tennessee, Alabama, Blue Dogs, Bill Buzenberg, Department of Homeland Security, Duke Energy, Broken Government, Lamar Alexander, Freddie Mac, Arlen Specter, Tim Armstead, Deval Patrick, Southern Company, Henry Waxman, Economy, House Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, Mitch McConnell, President Bush, Kathleen Sebelius, Federal Elections Commission, American Electric Power, Congress, James Oberstar, Climate Change, Investigative Reporting Workshop, Fannie Mae, Defense Department, Sunshine Week, Securities and Exchange Commission, Government Accountability Office, Supreme Court, Nancy Pelosi, States, John McCain, Robert Gates, Blue Dog Coalition, Government Accountability Project, Andrew Cuomo, Department of Defense, Iraq, Bob Riley, Blue Dog Democrats, Energy Department, Mel Martinez, Tobacco, Department of Transportation, United Nations, Superfund, National Association of Realtors, Air Force, Cato Institute, Illinois, IRS, Maurice Hinchey, Obama, FBI, Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, Appraisal, Saxby Chambliss, Robert MacLean, New Jersey, Health, States of Disclosure, George LeMieux, Center for American Progress, Mike Cox, Kyoto Protocol, Pesticides, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, Sunlight Foundation, Home Valuation Code of Conduct, Harry Reid, Massachusetts, Common Cause, Copenhagen, Texas, Chris Dodd, ICIJ, The Washington Post

Stay Connected

Subscribe to our e-mail newsletter and get the latest from our in-depth investigations, articles, interviews, blogs, videos, and more.

Support the Center

Your support will help us bring you more investigations, articles, interviews and news related materials relevant to U.S. politics and politics abroad.

Donate

About the Center

The Center for Public Integrity is dedicated to producing original, responsible investigative journalism on issues of public concern in the USA and around the world.

More about the Center

International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

The Center’s International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) is a collaboration of some of the world’s leading investigative reporters. ICIJ extends globally the Center’s style of watchdog journalism, working with 100 reporters in 50 countries to produce long-term, transnational projects.

ICIJ website