What we do here is hear first-hand from neat progressives about the work they do and dreams they dream. Our motto is "People are interesting!" Things to do here right now include reading and responding to the interviews, grabbing the feed, and suggesting a future interviewee. [More]


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John Wonderlich: The Sunlight Foundation

Joe Green: Project Agape and Facebook's Causes

Hannah Sassaman: Prometheus Radio Project

Paul Rieckhoff: Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America

Ilir Zherka: DC Vote

Jefferson Smith: The Oregon Bus Project

Andrea Batista Schlesinger: The Drum Major Institute

Phillip Anderson: The Albany Project

Tim Karr: Free Press


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John Wonderlich: The Sunlight Foundation

Interviewed by Nancy Scola on April 14, 2008 | Comments (3881)

John Wonderlich is the Program Director for the Sunlight Foundation, a Washington DC-based organization that applies a "let's throw it against the wall and see what sticks" approach to using technology to make government more transparent and accountable. Sunlight is best known for projects like the Punch Clock Campaign, an effort to convince Members of Congress to post their daily schedules online, and Public Markup, a recently-launched experiment on collaboratively edited legislation. John, a former sales manager in Pennsylvania, came to his job at Sunlight via an usual route. His dogged blogging on Daily Kos in the wake of the 2006 Democratic sweep of the House and Senate caught the attention of some on Capitol Hill, which in turn caught the attention of Sunlight. Now settled in Washington, John heads up the Open House Project, an attempt to drag Capitol Hill into the 21st century. John spends his days explaining how setting information free is the key to saving our democracy.





Joe Green: Project Agape and Facebook's Causes

Interviewed by Nancy Scola on June 5, 2007 | Comments (2697)

When Facebook opened up its F8 platform last week to developers, I wasn't the only one to get excited about it might be used in political ways. Within hours after Facebook opened, I had already gotten a number of requests to support non-profit groups via a new app called Causes. Seemed to me that Causes would be a good place to start investigating how social networks like Facebook, MySpace, and the like can be used to redistribute power and resources. So I tracked down Joe Green of Project Agape, the group behind the Causes app.

Together with his partner Sean Parker (of Napster and Plaxo), Green has plans to leverage existing offline relationships online, starting by directing funds and volunteers to non-profits. Green is also the founder of the political social-network site essembly.com and the old college roommate of Mark Zuckerberg, the creator of Facebook. Green has been a field organizer for years, and has been thinking about how to use social networks in politics since he was a Kerry intern in New Hampshire. I think we get some insight from Green on where politics meets social networks now, and where we can go from here.





Hannah Sassaman: Prometheus Radio Project

Interviewed by Nancy Scola on May 4, 2007 | Comments (2030)

Hannah Sassaman is the Program Director for the Prometheus Radio Project, a Philadelphia-based group that helps set up community radio stations and fights for a media landscape that is more fair, more balanced, and more open to all. The particular focus of Prometheus' fight these days is Low Power FM -- small, community-based radio stations that have a broadcast range of only a handful of miles. In a day and age where Clear Channel owns more than a thousand radio stations across the country, community radio is a means by which the people can communicate, organize, and effect change. But the future of LPFM in America is not certain. Legislation passed by Congress has restricted low-power stations to small cities and towns, claiming concerns over interference with full-power stations of the sort owned by Clear Channel and other corporate broadcasters. There's a chance in the 110th Congress to re-open the radio spectrum to local broadcasting, and even the rare opportunity this fall to grab full-power licenses for non-profit broadcasters. In this interview, Hannah and I discussed deejay-public feedback loops, untying the hands of the FCC, and Prometheus' pirate radio roots.





Paul Rieckhoff: Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America

Interviewed by Nancy Scola on April 19, 2007 | Comments (346)

Paul Rieckhoff is the Executive Director and Founder of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA, formerly called Operation Truth) and author of Chasing Ghosts -- Failures and Facades in Iraq: A Soldier's Perspective. I asked to interview Paul because I want to start to understand the political role of the millions of veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan, especially in the wake of Walter Reed. More than that, I went to him for this reason: in the context of a war we're increasingly experiencing through the eyes and ears of soldiers, Paul has used new media tools and outlets to grow a robust and broad member-focused organization from the ground up. Given that Paul is a self-described "little i" independent who was tapped to deliver the Democratic radio response on the first anniversary of Mission Accomplished, a soldier who feels "revulsion for the President" and resists being labeled progressive, it's perhaps not surprising that what followed was a provocative interview.





Ilir Zherka: DC Vote

Interviewed by Nancy Scola on March 5, 2007 | Comments (3587)

Ilir Zherka is Executive Director of DC Vote, the force behind the fight for voting rights in the nation's capital. A predominantly black 68 square-mile city whose half million residents voted for John Kerry at a rate of 90%, the District of Columbia has no U.S. Senators. Its sole congressional Representative cannot vote on the House floor. Ilir and I talked about the 'Taxation without Representation' battle cry, the challenge of having low-knowledge supporters and dedicated opponents, agitating for domestic change in the global space, and what we all can do about the failure of democracy in Washington DC.





Jefferson Smith: The Oregon Bus Project

Interviewed by Nancy Scola on March 3, 2007 | Comments (9118)

Jefferson Smith is executive director of the Bus Project, a volunteer-driven progressive organization based in Portland, Oregon. Since 2002, the Bus Project has been touring the state, registering thousands of voters, and knocking on thousands of doors. For our interview, Jefferson was brave and kind enough to tackle Gmail chat for the very first time. We talk about raging for progressive change, why the "Vote, F*cker" message works, taking a Moneyball approach to politics, and the need for a little "benevolent irrationality."





Andrea Batista Schlesinger: The Drum Major Institute

Interviewed by Nancy Scola on February 16, 2007 | Comments (197)

Andrea Batista Schlesinger is the Executive Director of the Drum Major Institute, a progressive public policy think tank based in New York City "dedicated to challenging the tired orthodoxies of both the right and the left" and aimed at promoting "progressive public policy for social and economic fairness." I discovered the Drum Major Institute when I first moved to the city, when I met one of their staffers in a loud bar and asked her "you work where?!" But I quickly realized that this tiny shop was doing compelling work, articulating the issues at the heart of what they call again and again "the American Dream." Andrea and I discuss the origins of DMI's funny name, making an end run around Lou Dobbs, trading pundits for practitioners, and what Martin Luther King might think.





Phillip Anderson: The Albany Project

Interviewed by Nancy Scola on January 29, 2007 | Comments (633)

Phillip Anderson is a filmmaker, editor, and activist now with The Albany Project. If you were to design a political system from scratch with the goal of consolidating power in the hands of the very few, what you'd end up with might look at lot like New York's state legislature. Bills sail through both chambers unread. Empty seats are tallied as "yes" vote. Rank-and-file legislators have little agency and perhaps less accountability. In the words of one former state senator, "the system of governance in Albany is so broken that I don't believe it functions any longer as a representative democracy." The Albany Project's ambition is big -- to change the game and change the players. I spoke with Phillip about New York's "sad joke of a state government," how the roots of the problem reach back to FDR-era progressivism, and the Albany Project-plan for bringing change to the Empire State.





Tim Karr: Free Press

Interviewed by Nancy Scola on January 15, 2007 | Comments (209)

Working at the heart of media reform today is Free Press, a Northampton, MA-based organization with offices in Washington, DC. You may know Free Press from the work they did to organize and drive the Save the Internet coalition. Yesterday in Memphis, the organization wrapped up a National Conference for Media Reform that saw over 3,500 attendees. Tim Karr is Campaign Director at Free Press. Tim and I talk about the state of public broadcasting, what comes after network neutrality, the Internet Freedom Declaration of 2007, and more.




With New York state politics in the news, check out Phillip Anderson's take on how Albany really works.

"For the public conversation to yield the public interest, we need a healthy dose of benevolent irrationality."
Jefferson Smith


"What damages morale is a car bomb, 120 degree heat, the fact that your wife left you, or that you just got extended for another three months in Iraq. Not what some singer says in London."
Paul Rieckhoff


"You change the conversation by changing who participates in it, and so we engage people who actually understand what policy looks like when it works and when it doesn't."
Andrea Batista Schlesinger