Dave Davies
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So how did you get the role? Did you audition?
So how did you get the role? Did you audition?
So how did you get the role? Did you audition?
You were making a โ well, it didn't turn him off.
You were making a โ well, it didn't turn him off.
You were making a โ well, it didn't turn him off.
Your character, Jim, and then Pam, the receptionist, were important characters throughout The Office and the relationship โ evolved and you eventually got together and got married, had a kid. What is it like to have a long-term fictional romance with somebody that lasts that long?
Your character, Jim, and then Pam, the receptionist, were important characters throughout The Office and the relationship โ evolved and you eventually got together and got married, had a kid. What is it like to have a long-term fictional romance with somebody that lasts that long?
Your character, Jim, and then Pam, the receptionist, were important characters throughout The Office and the relationship โ evolved and you eventually got together and got married, had a kid. What is it like to have a long-term fictional romance with somebody that lasts that long?
In 1949, a Republican activist named Suzanne Stevenson formed an organization called the Minute Women of the USA to fight what she perceived as the creep of Soviet communism in America.
In 1949, a Republican activist named Suzanne Stevenson formed an organization called the Minute Women of the USA to fight what she perceived as the creep of Soviet communism in America.
In 1949, a Republican activist named Suzanne Stevenson formed an organization called the Minute Women of the USA to fight what she perceived as the creep of Soviet communism in America.
The group would attract tens of thousands of members, and they were told to meet in small cells and appear as individual concerned citizens when they wrote letters or heckled liberal speakers or packed a city council meeting to oppose public housing. The story of the Minutewomen is one of many told in a new book by our guest, journalist and historian Clay Risen.
The group would attract tens of thousands of members, and they were told to meet in small cells and appear as individual concerned citizens when they wrote letters or heckled liberal speakers or packed a city council meeting to oppose public housing. The story of the Minutewomen is one of many told in a new book by our guest, journalist and historian Clay Risen.