The podcast co-hosted by Barack Obama and Bruce Springsteen is called
Renegades: Born in the USA. As titles go, it’s not so hot. It lacks the zing of, for example,
Born in the U.S.A. It has the feel of a much-workshopped and whiteboarded compromise, hammered out in bleary Zoom sessions by people who know that money is at stake and that the interests of three big brands including Spotify, the exclusive outlet for the eight-episode series must be met. The title is also false advertising. At one time, Obama and Springsteen may have qualified as rebels, or something along those lines. (As Obama puts it in the series’ premiere: “We both felt like outsiders as kids.”) But the rule of thumb is, if, like the former POTUS and the Boss, you’ve been spotted off the coast of Tahiti, lunching with Oprah Winfrey and Tom Hanks on David Geffen’s $300 million “superyacht,” your claim to the mantle “renegade” must be rescinded. The same law applies if you’ve been in possessio
Morning Journal
HOMEWORTH When Grant Mosher donated part of his liver to save his toddler nephew’s life, it not only gave 1-year-old Brooks a new lease on life, but it gave one to Grant as well.
In 2019, Brooks Campbell was your typical healthy and happy toddler rambunctious and a bundle of energy and joy. On Nov. 6 while taking photos, his mother, Andrea Campbell, noticed that something was off.
“While lying in bed and looking at the photos we took that day, I thought he looked a little yellow,” she said. Her husband Matt tried to talk her off the edge and assured her that he looked fine, but her maternal gut instinct wouldn’t let it go.
LILY NICKEL
Special to the Journal/Toula Joy photography
Matt Campbell, Grant Mosher, Brooks and Andrea Campbell on the first anniversary of the transplant.
HOMEWORTH When Grant Mosher donated part of his liver to save his toddler nephew’s life, it not only gave 1-year-old Brooks a new lease on life, but it gave one to Grant as well.
In 2019, Brooks Campbell was your typical healthy and happy toddler rambunctious and a bundle of energy and joy. On Nov. 6 while taking Christmas photos, his mother, Andrea Campbell, noticed that something was off.
“While lying in bed and looking at the photos we took that day, I thought he looked a little yellow,” she said. Her husband Matt tried to talk her off the edge and assured her that he looked fine, but her maternal gut instinct wouldn’t let it go.
LILY NICKEL
Brooks and Grant show off their matching scars in Dec. 2019, a month after the transplant. (Photo courtesy of the Cleveland Clinic/Erica Foreman)
HOMEWORTH When Grant Mosher donated part of his liver to save his toddler nephew’s life, it not only gave 1-year-old Brooks a new lease on life, but it gave one to Grant as well.
In 2019, Brooks Campbell was your typical healthy and happy toddler rambunctious and a bundle of energy and joy. On Nov. 6 while taking Christmas photos, his mother, Andrea Campbell, noticed that something was off.
“While lying in bed and looking at the photos we took that day, I thought he looked a little yellow,” she said. Her husband Matt tried to talk her off the edge and assured her that he looked fine, but her maternal gut instinct wouldn’t let it go.
the deal. here s the deal. it looks it s like you don t have any more backbone than trump does. let the guy talk, let him talk. my more questions? david axelrod is senior adviser to the administration. i wonder what you made of that type of thing. is that the right way for biden to handle it? i think the technical term, anderson was he was really pissed, and he showed it. and part of it is that he s very reactive to questions about his children and about his son. that said, and so, you know, i think people will excuse him that much. that said, it turned into a bit of a rant and he was overtorqued so that s not the way he should handle it. and i would suggest that he could have spared himself a lot of trouble at the beginning of this whole saga if he had simply said what hunter biden has said