Happy to say there is a new RSS feed for the show - you may want to add it from the web page, which has the past 20 or so episodes available in the archive. We also have some new episodes up on iTunes, but during the feed transfer, it appears a new iTunes channel may have been created for the show, which now isn't updating the latest episodes.
Ah, technology.
But the show is rolling an, and the archive is up, so why not spend a little time this weekend doing some "Independent Thinking"...?
Catch up on conversations with comedian and author Judy Carter about her book "The Message Of You"; ex-LAPD officer Brian S. Bentley talking about his belief in the things described in Christopher Dorner's manifesto; Thomas Gokey of Strike Debt, discussing the objectives and methods of the Rolling Jubilee from the Occupy Movement; director and filmmaker Jon Schnepp discussing his Kickstarter project for "What Happened? The Death Of "Superman Lives"!", the legendary never-made film with Tim Burton directing a Kevin Smith script that would have starred Nicolas Cage as Superman; several "Fridays With Dean" episodes with myself and Dean Evans wrapping up the week's craziness...
If you haven't already checked out the show, now's your chance - click on the faces of the Three Wise Men below:
Thanks! Seacrest, out!
"Independent Thinking" with Steve Gelder
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Yes, I'm Still A Show!
Hello, Radio Listeners, and welcome to the year 2013..!
This will be short, but sweet. I need to get back in the habit (such as it was) of writing more and updating this blog more regularly, but until then, a quick word about the status of the show, "Independent Thinking with Steve Gelder" (me).
There has been some change in the routine, and I worry that many of you aren't aware of what happened. Now we all know I broadcast from the interior of an active volcano on the Western coast of the United States. The exact location is a secret; that way, "they" can't get me. Duh.
However, the station the show is carried on, New Dissident Radio, moved from their location out West (somewhere in North Hollywood, CA) to the currently frozen tundra known as Pennsylvania. They had their reasons (you would have to). So, the station was off the air for about a week and a half, and in such a time frame that I didn't have the opportunity to update anyone on the move, and how it would affect the show.
One of the main things was - we were off the air for about a week and a half. And then, there was a little something called Christmas. And then, I found out that I need to start hosting my own show files somewhere new, since the setup was changing at NDR, and I need to get an RSS feed up and running. And shows are running on EST now, rather than PST, and there isn't currently a way for me to live stream anymore, so shows are now recorded in a new vault here inside the volcano and delivered to the capable NDR staff, who air each new episode at 2PM PST/5PM EST.
So, if you are curious as to when and where to find me these days, there's your answer, Fish-Bulb.
Please join me for new shows daily on NewDissidentRadio.com. "Fridays With Dean" have been continuing on a regular basis, and new interviews will continue as soon as I get an RSS feed established and shows hosted....somewhere.
Ah, Technology.
In the meantime, rest assured that I am covering all of the important news of the day, from the made-up Fiscal Cliff crisis to the lies surrounding baby carrots - it's all been covered in some of the recent episodes. Those will be posted for download as soon as possible - until then, try to catch us live at 2PM PST/5PM EST. Thanks - you're the best!
This will be short, but sweet. I need to get back in the habit (such as it was) of writing more and updating this blog more regularly, but until then, a quick word about the status of the show, "Independent Thinking with Steve Gelder" (me).
There has been some change in the routine, and I worry that many of you aren't aware of what happened. Now we all know I broadcast from the interior of an active volcano on the Western coast of the United States. The exact location is a secret; that way, "they" can't get me. Duh.
However, the station the show is carried on, New Dissident Radio, moved from their location out West (somewhere in North Hollywood, CA) to the currently frozen tundra known as Pennsylvania. They had their reasons (you would have to). So, the station was off the air for about a week and a half, and in such a time frame that I didn't have the opportunity to update anyone on the move, and how it would affect the show.
One of the main things was - we were off the air for about a week and a half. And then, there was a little something called Christmas. And then, I found out that I need to start hosting my own show files somewhere new, since the setup was changing at NDR, and I need to get an RSS feed up and running. And shows are running on EST now, rather than PST, and there isn't currently a way for me to live stream anymore, so shows are now recorded in a new vault here inside the volcano and delivered to the capable NDR staff, who air each new episode at 2PM PST/5PM EST.
So, if you are curious as to when and where to find me these days, there's your answer, Fish-Bulb.
Please join me for new shows daily on NewDissidentRadio.com. "Fridays With Dean" have been continuing on a regular basis, and new interviews will continue as soon as I get an RSS feed established and shows hosted....somewhere.
Ah, Technology.
In the meantime, rest assured that I am covering all of the important news of the day, from the made-up Fiscal Cliff crisis to the lies surrounding baby carrots - it's all been covered in some of the recent episodes. Those will be posted for download as soon as possible - until then, try to catch us live at 2PM PST/5PM EST. Thanks - you're the best!
Sunday, November 18, 2012
State Of The Unions...
I posted this to Facebook the other day, and it prompted a lot of discussion, so I thought I'd throw it out here for people to consider.
"If employers provided a fair wage, safe working conditions, reasonable hours and some kind of opportunity for their workers to advance within the company, there wouldn't be a need for Unions.
However, when left to their own devices, employers choose to under-pay their employees and reward themselves with huge salaries and bonuses. They leave workers in conditions that are physically dangerous or
"If employers provided a fair wage, safe working conditions, reasonable hours and some kind of opportunity for their workers to advance within the company, there wouldn't be a need for Unions.
However, when left to their own devices, employers choose to under-pay their employees and reward themselves with huge salaries and bonuses. They leave workers in conditions that are physically dangerous or
harmful to
their health. They want overtime with no pay, longer work weeks and
throw some kids on those assembly lines while you're at it. They don't
want to provide health care or benefits. They want to pay less than
minimum wage to "bring jobs back" to our country, the same jobs they
shipped out, so they wouldn't have to pay the minimum wage.
If employers weren't such dicks, workers wouldn't have to be such dicks.
And that's why Unions exist."
If employers weren't such dicks, workers wouldn't have to be such dicks.
And that's why Unions exist."
Sunday, November 11, 2012
Veterans Day
My
profile pic on Facebook today is my Dad, Kenneth Nutting Gelder, during his time in
the Army Air Force during World War II. The Air Force used to be a
division of the Army, before becoming it's own military branch. He was a
Gunnery Sergeant and earned a number of medals and honors, flying more
than 50 missions.
As I understand it, the "deal" at the time
was, if you flew 50 missions, you were given your ticket home. Fifty
times in the air was enough risk, as far as Uncle Sam was concerned, and
if you made it to that mark and you were still alive, they let you go.
(My favorite band, the Tragically Hip, coincidentally has a song called
"Fifty Mission Cap")
Dad flew his 50th mission near the end of
the war, when fighting was at some of its worst. His commander called
him in and told him that he was released, but that they were asking men
if they would stay to help finish the job.
Dad said yes, and
flew several more missions, where he could have lost his life. When I
asked him what made his stay, he shrugged - literally, shrugged - and
said, "We had a job to do."
Thanks, to my Dad, and all the
Fathers and Sons before and since who have sacrificed for all of us.
Let's try to make sure no one else has to remember a loved one lost to
war ever again.
Monday, November 5, 2012
Predictions & Considerations
So, this is it. November 5, 2012, the day before Election Day.
Although many early votes have been cast across the country already, absentee ballots mailed by those who can't make it to the polls, etc., the big day is tomorrow, and an anxious nation waits to see what the results will be.
I made a couple of predictions on today's show, and I'll share them with you again, here. I think President Barack Obama will win re-election. I believe he will pull in somewhere between 280 - 290 electoral votes, and I think he might edge out the popular vote, as well. However, I'm not confident enough to say it's a lock or a shoe-in, even with pollsters as reliable as Nate Silver claiming 80% odds that Obama will win by a sizable margin.
Partially, that's because I'm a little nervous about declaring anything a "sure thing." After the results of the national elections during 2000 and 2004, I consider very little in politics and voting as a sure thing. In other part, it's due to the overwhelming support some of my friends are throwing behind the Romney/Ryan ticket, support I can't fully understand.
I worry that we may run into lawsuits and legal actions following this election, much as we did in 2000. Florida is already having problems with early voting; the Northeast has been slammed by Sandy and left many people displaced and unable to vote; a number of States are running anti-voter fraud initiatives that are more like voter suppression tactics. I hope we have a clean, clear winner, so we can get back to the business of running (or ruining) our country quickly.
I'm not voting for either of the two major party candidates this election cycle; I live in California, which will go to Obama (alright, I guess that's one result that can almost be considered a sure thing), and my vote is not as necessary here as it is in a swing state. So, since I support the idea of more voices in the national conversation, I am going to support and vote for Dr. Jill Stein, the Green Party Candidate. I've interviewed her on my show, I support many of her stances, and I appreciate her on a number of personal levels. Those are the things that add up to support for a candidate, to me.
If I lived in a swing state, or a state where the candidates were polling neck and neck, I would support Obama for re-election over Romney, 100%, no question. I have many reasons for this, first and foremost being - I think he's done a decent job, given the circumstances. I remember an Onion headline the day after the election in 2008 that read something like, "Black Man Gets World's Shittiest Job," and I couldn't help but both laugh and agree. We all knew whoever took over the office of President in 2009 had their work cut out for them.
President Obama has done a decent job of starting us back on the right track to a full-fledged recovery. The stock market is at all-time high levels. Corporate profits are breaking records. Job growth has been slow, but steady, for the past 30+ months. We have regained many of the jobs lost at the end of the Bush term, when the housing bubble burst and the financial markets were collapsing, and we were all talking about the economy of the world - the world! - tanking beyond repair. That didn't happen, and part of that was due to the stimulus and other actions set in motion by our current administration.
I do not believe Obama has been without fault, or is above reproach, which is another reason I am supporting another candidate this election. I don't approve of the drone strikes that are killing as many innocents as bad guys overseas. I am appalled that he signed and supports the NDAA. He may have released a signing statement that says it would never be necessary to hold Americans without due process on our soil, but if it's so unnecessary, why sign off on it? I think there are other areas he could have been a better President, but it comes down to a choice between two candidates, and when I look at the option of a Romney presidency, I shudder.
Mitt Romney is a politician, and I don't mean that as a title or a compliment. He is the worst kind of politician, a man who stands for nothing solid, but instead bends and molds himself at every stop on the campaign trail to say whatever that group wants and needs to hear, and then hops back aboard his bus or plane to travel to the next stop, and fresh promises that he knows are untrue.
So many experts in finance have looked at his and his running mate, Paul Ryan's, financial strategies and written them off, saying there's no way they can accomplish what they say they will do: cut tax rates 20% across the board in a revenue-neutral manner by offsetting the cuts by closing existing tax loopholes. It isn't possible, especially when you're not willing to specify which loopholes you'll be closing. Some say that EVERY loophole could be closed, and it still wouldn't raise enough revenue to support Romney's plan. And Mitt Romney owes too many favors to close every loophole. After all, do you think Sheldon Adelson is donating multiple tens of millions of dollars to a candidate who will do away with every tax loophole he currently enjoys? Not bloody likely.
I can't tell you Romney's positions on much of anything. One day he's pro-choice, the next he's pro-life with no exceptions, or some, or not. He's going to get rid of Obamacare, which is essentially Romneycare, and replace it with something he hasn't defined. He refuses to answer questions on the campaign trail. He consistently ignores reporters standing a few feet away from him, shouting questions about FEMA (which he opposed, but now supports, after "Frankenstorm" Sandy, caused by climate change he once supported, but now - oh, you can probably guess by now...). That's not leadership. That's not a person I want in charge, someone who ignores the press, changes constantly and has the emotional depth of a snake-oil salesman.
What it comes down to is, I don't like or trust Mitt Romney.
And this doesn't even touch on the fears I have about his deeply-held religious convictions, bordering on cult-like (and apologies to my Mormon relatives, but as an Anthropology teacher told my step-daughter and her classmates once, "The only difference between a cult and a religion is the number of members."), his lack of transparency on his taxes, his shift from "Americans want a leader to take all deductions allowed" to not taking full deductions in 2011 to keep his tax rate above 13%, because the actual rate he could have paid, around 9.8%, might have freaked out a few of the diehards who think "Mitt pays enough taxes, already." Oh, and his donations to "charity" which include over $100,000 to the George W. Bush Memorial Library and $70,000 to the Harvard Business School, among other things.
So, I encourage people to look at where we were, and where we are now. We currently have a leader who has reversed our downward course and has set up back on a slow, but positive, path of growth. We have an opponent who is running on an unachievable platform, who has many of the same advisers that President Bush took with him into the White House who helped tank our surpluses and overall economy, and a plan to cut taxes to create more jobs. Sound familiar? Remember the results of that strategy?
Please vote. Vote wisely, and vote for all of our best interests. We The People need strong, responsible leadership. I think we have that in President Barack Obama.
Good luck, America.
Although many early votes have been cast across the country already, absentee ballots mailed by those who can't make it to the polls, etc., the big day is tomorrow, and an anxious nation waits to see what the results will be.
I made a couple of predictions on today's show, and I'll share them with you again, here. I think President Barack Obama will win re-election. I believe he will pull in somewhere between 280 - 290 electoral votes, and I think he might edge out the popular vote, as well. However, I'm not confident enough to say it's a lock or a shoe-in, even with pollsters as reliable as Nate Silver claiming 80% odds that Obama will win by a sizable margin.
Partially, that's because I'm a little nervous about declaring anything a "sure thing." After the results of the national elections during 2000 and 2004, I consider very little in politics and voting as a sure thing. In other part, it's due to the overwhelming support some of my friends are throwing behind the Romney/Ryan ticket, support I can't fully understand.
I worry that we may run into lawsuits and legal actions following this election, much as we did in 2000. Florida is already having problems with early voting; the Northeast has been slammed by Sandy and left many people displaced and unable to vote; a number of States are running anti-voter fraud initiatives that are more like voter suppression tactics. I hope we have a clean, clear winner, so we can get back to the business of running (or ruining) our country quickly.
I'm not voting for either of the two major party candidates this election cycle; I live in California, which will go to Obama (alright, I guess that's one result that can almost be considered a sure thing), and my vote is not as necessary here as it is in a swing state. So, since I support the idea of more voices in the national conversation, I am going to support and vote for Dr. Jill Stein, the Green Party Candidate. I've interviewed her on my show, I support many of her stances, and I appreciate her on a number of personal levels. Those are the things that add up to support for a candidate, to me.
If I lived in a swing state, or a state where the candidates were polling neck and neck, I would support Obama for re-election over Romney, 100%, no question. I have many reasons for this, first and foremost being - I think he's done a decent job, given the circumstances. I remember an Onion headline the day after the election in 2008 that read something like, "Black Man Gets World's Shittiest Job," and I couldn't help but both laugh and agree. We all knew whoever took over the office of President in 2009 had their work cut out for them.
Turns out the headline was "cleaner" than I thought... |
President Obama has done a decent job of starting us back on the right track to a full-fledged recovery. The stock market is at all-time high levels. Corporate profits are breaking records. Job growth has been slow, but steady, for the past 30+ months. We have regained many of the jobs lost at the end of the Bush term, when the housing bubble burst and the financial markets were collapsing, and we were all talking about the economy of the world - the world! - tanking beyond repair. That didn't happen, and part of that was due to the stimulus and other actions set in motion by our current administration.
I do not believe Obama has been without fault, or is above reproach, which is another reason I am supporting another candidate this election. I don't approve of the drone strikes that are killing as many innocents as bad guys overseas. I am appalled that he signed and supports the NDAA. He may have released a signing statement that says it would never be necessary to hold Americans without due process on our soil, but if it's so unnecessary, why sign off on it? I think there are other areas he could have been a better President, but it comes down to a choice between two candidates, and when I look at the option of a Romney presidency, I shudder.
Mitt Romney is a politician, and I don't mean that as a title or a compliment. He is the worst kind of politician, a man who stands for nothing solid, but instead bends and molds himself at every stop on the campaign trail to say whatever that group wants and needs to hear, and then hops back aboard his bus or plane to travel to the next stop, and fresh promises that he knows are untrue.
So many experts in finance have looked at his and his running mate, Paul Ryan's, financial strategies and written them off, saying there's no way they can accomplish what they say they will do: cut tax rates 20% across the board in a revenue-neutral manner by offsetting the cuts by closing existing tax loopholes. It isn't possible, especially when you're not willing to specify which loopholes you'll be closing. Some say that EVERY loophole could be closed, and it still wouldn't raise enough revenue to support Romney's plan. And Mitt Romney owes too many favors to close every loophole. After all, do you think Sheldon Adelson is donating multiple tens of millions of dollars to a candidate who will do away with every tax loophole he currently enjoys? Not bloody likely.
I can't tell you Romney's positions on much of anything. One day he's pro-choice, the next he's pro-life with no exceptions, or some, or not. He's going to get rid of Obamacare, which is essentially Romneycare, and replace it with something he hasn't defined. He refuses to answer questions on the campaign trail. He consistently ignores reporters standing a few feet away from him, shouting questions about FEMA (which he opposed, but now supports, after "Frankenstorm" Sandy, caused by climate change he once supported, but now - oh, you can probably guess by now...). That's not leadership. That's not a person I want in charge, someone who ignores the press, changes constantly and has the emotional depth of a snake-oil salesman.
What it comes down to is, I don't like or trust Mitt Romney.
And this doesn't even touch on the fears I have about his deeply-held religious convictions, bordering on cult-like (and apologies to my Mormon relatives, but as an Anthropology teacher told my step-daughter and her classmates once, "The only difference between a cult and a religion is the number of members."), his lack of transparency on his taxes, his shift from "Americans want a leader to take all deductions allowed" to not taking full deductions in 2011 to keep his tax rate above 13%, because the actual rate he could have paid, around 9.8%, might have freaked out a few of the diehards who think "Mitt pays enough taxes, already." Oh, and his donations to "charity" which include over $100,000 to the George W. Bush Memorial Library and $70,000 to the Harvard Business School, among other things.
So, I encourage people to look at where we were, and where we are now. We currently have a leader who has reversed our downward course and has set up back on a slow, but positive, path of growth. We have an opponent who is running on an unachievable platform, who has many of the same advisers that President Bush took with him into the White House who helped tank our surpluses and overall economy, and a plan to cut taxes to create more jobs. Sound familiar? Remember the results of that strategy?
Please vote. Vote wisely, and vote for all of our best interests. We The People need strong, responsible leadership. I think we have that in President Barack Obama.
Good luck, America.
• • • • •
"Independent Thinking With Steve Gelder" airs on www.NewDissidentRadio.com and GreenEarthRadio.com,
weekday mornings at 10AM Pacific, 1PM Eastern.
Follow me on Twitter: @SteveGelder
or Facebook: Independent Thinking with Steve Gelder
"Follow your heart." "What if my heart is bad with directions?" "Get your heart a GPS."
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Bring It On Home, Foreign Policy Debate
Monday evening, October 22nd, 2012. The final Presidential debate of the election cycle, and a palpable sigh of relief can be heard over a weary nation.
The two candidates met in Boca Raton, Florida, in another different format - sitting at a big table, talking directly to Bob Schieffer and each other. Foreign Policy was on the agenda, but given enough time and pivot room, either of these candidates could turn "foreign policy" into "Des Moines needs less socialist firefighters."
If you don't know the format for my liveTweets, check out one of the previous posts, which will catch you up on the process and hopefully give you some laughs and insight into my spontaneous thinking while watching these carefully coordinated appeals for our attention. With that out of the way, here were a few of my warm-up Tweets:
The first one Tweet actually contains a reference to my appearance in the early 2000s on the TV show Jeopardy! (Yes, I lost on Jeopardy!, and the only reason I say that with an exclamation point is because the show spells it that way.)
So, without any further ado, here is the video of the full debate, so you can start it up and follow along. It's the political equivalent of starting Dark Side Of The Moon while watching The Wizard Of Oz.
And now, to the Tweetmobile...!
And, just like that, it was over. I give this one to Obama, by a decent margin. But, as I learned watching the debate with a visiting conservative friend, everything is colored by what you believe going in to the debates. She did concede that she thought Obama did win it, but she thought Romney did much better than I felt he did. Especially when you consider blunders like Syria being Iran's route to the sea and the "horses and bayonets" moments.
The candidates now have two weeks to hit the road, run their ads, and make their final appeals to the American people, Sheldon Adelson and whichever foreign countries may be contributing to superPACs in order to influence our elections.
Oh, there is one more Presidential debate taking place, among several of the third-party candidates running this year, including the candidate I am endorsing, Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party and Gary Johnson, former Governor of New Mexico, both of whom have been guests on my show. Larry King is moderating the event, and it will be streaming live on the Internets. I will not be Tweeting this debate, due to the a fore-mentioned friend in town, but I recommend you check it out. You'll probably hear topics that haven't even been mentioned by either of the two party candidates this entire election cycle.
Now, if you are, somehow, one of those undecided voters still out there, I'll stop using multi-syllabic words...
I kid. I kid, because I love.
No, if you are undecided, please use the next two weeks to explore the candidates who are running to lead the "Free World." Get informed about your state and local candidates, and the propositions on your ballots, and then use that knowledge to vote like an informed citizen.
Tuesday, November 6. See you at the polls, or in line at the supermarket with one of those lousy "I voted" stickers on our shirts. Either way, do it. Because, in the words of my parents, Kenny and Marie Gelder, "If you don't vote, you can't bitch."
The two candidates met in Boca Raton, Florida, in another different format - sitting at a big table, talking directly to Bob Schieffer and each other. Foreign Policy was on the agenda, but given enough time and pivot room, either of these candidates could turn "foreign policy" into "Des Moines needs less socialist firefighters."
If you don't know the format for my liveTweets, check out one of the previous posts, which will catch you up on the process and hopefully give you some laughs and insight into my spontaneous thinking while watching these carefully coordinated appeals for our attention. With that out of the way, here were a few of my warm-up Tweets:
The first one Tweet actually contains a reference to my appearance in the early 2000s on the TV show Jeopardy! (Yes, I lost on Jeopardy!, and the only reason I say that with an exclamation point is because the show spells it that way.)
So, without any further ado, here is the video of the full debate, so you can start it up and follow along. It's the political equivalent of starting Dark Side Of The Moon while watching The Wizard Of Oz.
He's been saying this since March or May of this year. One of those "M" months. |
The candidates now have two weeks to hit the road, run their ads, and make their final appeals to the American people, Sheldon Adelson and whichever foreign countries may be contributing to superPACs in order to influence our elections.
Oh, there is one more Presidential debate taking place, among several of the third-party candidates running this year, including the candidate I am endorsing, Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party and Gary Johnson, former Governor of New Mexico, both of whom have been guests on my show. Larry King is moderating the event, and it will be streaming live on the Internets. I will not be Tweeting this debate, due to the a fore-mentioned friend in town, but I recommend you check it out. You'll probably hear topics that haven't even been mentioned by either of the two party candidates this entire election cycle.
Check out the THIRD PARTY DEBATES, OCTOBER 23RD.
Now, if you are, somehow, one of those undecided voters still out there, I'll stop using multi-syllabic words...
I kid. I kid, because I love.
No, if you are undecided, please use the next two weeks to explore the candidates who are running to lead the "Free World." Get informed about your state and local candidates, and the propositions on your ballots, and then use that knowledge to vote like an informed citizen.
Tuesday, November 6. See you at the polls, or in line at the supermarket with one of those lousy "I voted" stickers on our shirts. Either way, do it. Because, in the words of my parents, Kenny and Marie Gelder, "If you don't vote, you can't bitch."
• • • • •
"Independent
Thinking With Steve Gelder" airs on www.NewDissidentRadio.com and GreenEarthRadio.com,
weekday mornings at 10AM Pacific, 1PM Eastern.
Follow me on Twitter: @SteveGelder
or Facebook: Independent Thinking with Steve Gelder
Friday, October 19, 2012
The Second #Debate
Sixty-something Tweets during the debate, which ran a little long, or at least felt like it. Some pre-debate warm-ups (test Tweets..?):
Not sure which channel provided the video I will link to below this next brief set of Tweets. The video comes from Lawrence Gaughan's Gov360.com YouTube channel (Lawrence is a showbuddy). I was watching on CBS, which might explain my "opening credits" remark. It really did feel overblown.
Here is the debate video, in its entirety, courtesy of Gov360. Follow along at home and maybe see where I was making smart-ass comments along the way:
And we're off!
And we reach the end of the debate, and a few afterTweets:
Chris Novembrino did join me for the breakdown show, that episode can be found HERE.
Tweet to your Mother...!
* * * * *
Steve
Gelder has spent his life living independently; his unusual jobs, his
politics, his warped sense of humor and his personal values have all
come together to form one interesting individual.
Steve works as
an actor on a number of slightly cheesy TV shows and in quality plays
involving nakedness around Los Angeles. He made a living as a stand-up
comedian for years, worked as an editor on a number of popular
television shows and films, is an award-winning columnist, appeared as a
contestant on Jeopardy!, and is also a former Kelly Girl.
"Independent Thinking" with Steve Gelder is available on iTunes and Stitcher.com.
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