The Mark Riley Show

The Mark Riley Show is a weekday radio show on the Air America Radio network hosted by long-time talk radio host Mark Riley. Originally it was part of a larger Air America Mornings program, but as of September 18, 2006 the show was billed on its own. The show features news items read by Riley and his commentary on each of them. Riley interviews a wide variety of guests, though these segments are often pre-recorded due to the early airtime of the show. Riley often takes listener calls on a specific topic in a rapid-fire fashion.

The show began on January 2, 2006, originally airing weekdays from 5AM - 7AM ET. It now airs on weekdays from 5AM - 6AM ET on some Air America affiliates.

The show came to an end on May 11, 2007.

Regular features

  • Sunrise Soundbites - audio clips from some of yesterdays important news stories
  • Last Night's Clips - audio clips from the late-night television comedy shows
  • Overseas Live - Riley talks with an overseas reporter on the day's major international story
  • On the Grapevine - entertainment news
  • Nice Try of the Week - a political figure's failed attempt to justify their actions
  • Weekly Conversation with Robert Reich - Riley and Reich discuss the week's economic news
  • Winners and Losers - Friday roundup
  • Wayne Gillman - the morning AAR newscaster joins the show during the second hour
  • Common Sense Commentary - Jim Hightower's daily commentary
  • The Numbers - A list of numerical facts similar to Harper's Index

Music

Staff

  • Host: Mark Riley
  • Producer: Ron Dodd
  • Producer: John Crimmings
  • Sports reporter: Larry Hardesty
  • Sound Engineer: Kris Lo Presto
gollark: Wait, if America is as non-free as China, and the UK is generally considered less free than America... the UK is more authoritarian than China?
gollark: Decent prosperity and continually advancing technology?
gollark: *Somewhat* more.
gollark: I said "somewhat more".
gollark: People might have different criteria for these and it's irrelevant and pointless to say "well, yours are wrong".


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