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He asked George W. Bush if he was smart enough to be president., confronted Dick Cheney about his lesbian daughter and gay rights mid-campaign, and gave Gavin Newsom both his best and worst interviews.
This week on Life After News, Jason sits down with legendary San Francisco political reporter Hank Plante for a wide-ranging, conversation about power, politics, the AIDS crisis, and why both of them chose a new chapter in Palm Springs. đŽđïž
Hank Plante is an Emmy- and Peabody-winning journalist who spent 25 years at KPIX in San Francisco. An openly gay reporter covering AIDS from ground zero in the 1980s and â90s, Hankâs work helped shape national understanding of the epidemic and the LGBTQ community. Today, heâs âretiredâ in Palm Springs (doing everything but sitting still), writing, volunteering, and staying deeply engaged in local journalism and civic life.
đ§ In this episode
Jason and Hank dig into:
đ Next week on Life After News
Jason sits down with Randy Lovely, president of the Coachella Valley Journalism Foundation and longtime Gannett editor and executive, to talk about:
đ Listen, follow, rate & review Life After News on your favorite podcast app.
đ Share this episode with someone who cares about journalism, LGBTQ history, or Palm Springs.
đ Consider supporting a local journalism nonprofit in your community.
Your rating âââââ, review đŹ, and share đ help keep these conversations and this mission alive.
Let Life After News inspire your next chapter. Because leaving the news doesnât mean the storyâs overâit means a new oneâs just beginning.
By Jason BallSend us a text
He asked George W. Bush if he was smart enough to be president., confronted Dick Cheney about his lesbian daughter and gay rights mid-campaign, and gave Gavin Newsom both his best and worst interviews.
This week on Life After News, Jason sits down with legendary San Francisco political reporter Hank Plante for a wide-ranging, conversation about power, politics, the AIDS crisis, and why both of them chose a new chapter in Palm Springs. đŽđïž
Hank Plante is an Emmy- and Peabody-winning journalist who spent 25 years at KPIX in San Francisco. An openly gay reporter covering AIDS from ground zero in the 1980s and â90s, Hankâs work helped shape national understanding of the epidemic and the LGBTQ community. Today, heâs âretiredâ in Palm Springs (doing everything but sitting still), writing, volunteering, and staying deeply engaged in local journalism and civic life.
đ§ In this episode
Jason and Hank dig into:
đ Next week on Life After News
Jason sits down with Randy Lovely, president of the Coachella Valley Journalism Foundation and longtime Gannett editor and executive, to talk about:
đ Listen, follow, rate & review Life After News on your favorite podcast app.
đ Share this episode with someone who cares about journalism, LGBTQ history, or Palm Springs.
đ Consider supporting a local journalism nonprofit in your community.
Your rating âââââ, review đŹ, and share đ help keep these conversations and this mission alive.
Let Life After News inspire your next chapter. Because leaving the news doesnât mean the storyâs overâit means a new oneâs just beginning.