66 min listen
Jane Rosenthal: 4/12/16
ratings:
Length:
64 minutes
Released:
Apr 12, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Jane Rosenthal is one of the most renowned producers in show business. Along with Robert De Niro, she co-founded Tribeca Productions in lower Manhattan and is also the co-founder of the TriBeCa Film Festival which begins this week in New York City. Go grab your tickets today. On today’s show, Jane talks about being the first female page in the Rhode Island State House (5:00), the roadblocks she had to fight through as a young woman producing television
(19:00), and meeting Martin Scorsese on the set of The Color of Money (23:00). Plus, Brian and Jane discuss the long road to making A Bronx Tale (31:00), Robert De Niro’s performance as Bernie Madoff in the upcoming HBO movie The Wizard of Lies (45:30), and the character trait that she knows about Hillary Clinton that nobody else can truly see (57:00).
Shownotes: Slate.com/TheMoment
Twitter: @BrianKoppelman
Leave us a review: itunes.com/themoment
The Moment is brought to you by Monster. Find employees who work as hard as you at Monster.com/hiring. Monster. Find Better.
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(19:00), and meeting Martin Scorsese on the set of The Color of Money (23:00). Plus, Brian and Jane discuss the long road to making A Bronx Tale (31:00), Robert De Niro’s performance as Bernie Madoff in the upcoming HBO movie The Wizard of Lies (45:30), and the character trait that she knows about Hillary Clinton that nobody else can truly see (57:00).
Shownotes: Slate.com/TheMoment
Twitter: @BrianKoppelman
Leave us a review: itunes.com/themoment
The Moment is brought to you by Monster. Find employees who work as hard as you at Monster.com/hiring. Monster. Find Better.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Released:
Apr 12, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
David Steinberg: 4/15/14: Comedy legend David Steinberg tells Brian Koppelman about how his jokes got a network show canceled, what it's like to direct Larry David, and why comedy still matters. by The Moment with Brian Koppelman