Almost Here: Remade in America with Bassem Youssef

Almost Here: Remade in America with Bassem Yo...

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Telling Stories with Sheila Nevins

Sheila Nevins was the longtime President of HBO Documentary films.She has worked on productions that have been recognized with 35 News and Documentary Emmy Awards, 42 Peabody Awards, and 26 Academy Awards. Sheila has also won 32 individual Primetime Emmy Awards, more than any oth ...  Show more

Free Speech in Comedy: A Live Podcast with Jason Ross, Kendrick Sampson and Guy Branum

Jason Ross is a comedian and writer best known for his work on “The Daily Show” and “The President Show.”Kendrick Sampson is a comedian and actor who has been on shows like “How to Get Away with Murder” and “The Flash.”Guy Branum is a comedian, actor, writer and producer best kno ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Bassem Youssef and Maz Jobrani
Comedians vs. the News

Egypt’s top satirist Bassem Youssef and acclaimed American comic Maz Jobrani join comedy duo Jess Salomon and Eman El-Husseini to take on the world's headlines. This week, what do immigrants in the US really think of Donald Trump? Why are Egyptian performers being censored on Tik ...  Show more

E521 Bassem Youssef
This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von

The conflict in Gaza is heartbreaking, so we decided to have different perspectives on to help us learn more. For the Palestinian perspective we welcome Bassem Youssef. Bassem Youssef is a comedian, author and political commentator from Egypt who now lives in the United States. B ...  Show more

Bassem Youssef: Egypt's Jon Stewart on Palestine, the press and Piers Morgan
Full Disclosure with James O'Brien

In 2011 Bassem Youssef was a little-known heart surgeon in Cairo. A year later, he was hosting his own political satire TV show, Al-Bernameg, drawing in 30 million weekly viewers as he made fun of the Egyptian regime. Bassem's comedy was groundbreaking but it proved too controver ...  Show more

Asian Enough: Maz Jobrani
Foretold

A conversation with comedian and actor Maz Jobrani about centering his Iranian American identity in his standup, toeing the line with stereotypes onstage, and immigrating to California as a child when his family fled the Iranian Revolution. Guest photo by Storm Santos.