He is totally listening to Daily Kos Radio.
Daily Kos Radio is on the air, Monday through Friday, now from 9 a.m. to noon, ET. We start with two hours of the
Kagro in the Morning show from 9-11, and then it's
The Ministry of Truth, with Armando Llorens, starring Jesse LaGreca from 11-12.
How to Listen
Your options to listen LIVE:
- Click on the embedded Flash player below
- Go to netrootsradio.com and click on the embedded player or direct link there
- Click on this direct link if you need a non-Flash player, say, for iPad or iPhone
- iPad and iPhone users can download the SHOUTCast Radio app for your mobile device & search for "Blue Skies Radio." That's the Netroots Radio home base, and it's where you'll find our Daily Kos Radio programming
- For Android: go with the "StreamFurious" app
- BlackBerry users, see this guide by idbecrazyif
For podcasts you can stream or download, watch the Daily Kos Radio group page, where we post our shows daily.
We're moving ever closer to being able to take your calls during the show without blowing up our computers. But in the meantime, you can reach me at @KagroX on Twitter with comments, suggestions, story ideas, etc. Try your hand at the job of Program Director! If you're any good at it, maybe we'll hire you #Retroactively!
What'd you miss if you skipped Daily Kos Radio last week? Well, some of the good stuff went like this:
On George Will's Sunday irrelevance:
Non-Flash link
On today's show
Our stalwart DemFromCT drops by to update us on issue trends and polling, and we audition a new voice subroutine for the Romneybot3000's readings of Hunter's series, The Chronicles of Mitt. And if you're good, maybe, just maybe, I can experiment with taking some phone calls, and letting things really get out of hand.
Be sure to hang around afterwards for Jesse and Armando, and a full day of solid, progressive programming afterward, brought to you by the gang at Netroots Radio!
The Daily Kos Radio Player
Non-Flash
What's happening in Congress today?
In the House
It's the first day of the actual "work" week in the House today, which means Members face a slate of 19 suspension bills, including the very obnoxious "District of Columbia Pain–Capable Unborn Child Protection Act," which you can read about and lament here.
In the Senate
The Senate failed to invoke cloture on yesterday's judicial nomination, and so moved to the adoption of the motion to proceed to the cybersecurity bill, and then to the bill itself. Debate on that bill continues today, but no word on whether any votes are expected.