show every day, if i could plug that, 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. that s the bulk of what i do. i do a lot of different segments for ftm and fox news. i did one this morning on fox and friends. i do a radio show every saturday morning for three hours. a national radio show. that runs here on wabc radio. we are livestreamed and syndicated. and i also do i write op-ed pieces to much constantly. some informal political consulting with my friends on policy. pretty much anybody who asks. so i am a busy camper. i m a grateful camper. life after the white house has been terrific. it s a real blessing. host: this is your second stint in the white house. the first being? larry: just a few years ago 40 years ago. a somewhat lower position. i was that economics deputy at the office of management and budget during the reagan administration. the director of omb was a fellow named david stockman who remains a friend of mine. that was my first job, in reagan s first term. host: your trip the 16 b
in the trump administration? larry: i don t have anything planned at the moment. i m very busy, i m loving life. never say never, but not at the moment, i don t. host: how may jobs do you have? how many jobs do you have? larry: there s a foxbusiness show every day, if i could plug that, 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. that s the bulk of what i do. i do a lot of different segments for ftm and fox news. i did one this morning on fox and friends. i do a radio show every saturday morning for three hours. a national radio show. that runs here on wabc radio. we are livestreamed and syndicated. and i also do i write op-ed pieces to much constantly. some informal political consulting with my friends on policy. pretty much anybody who asks. so i am a busy camper. i m a grateful camper. life after the white house has been terrific. it s a real blessing. host: this is your second stint in the white house. the first being? larry: just a few years ago 40 years ago. a somewhat lower position. i wa
nonfiction writer and reporter. who was not only great at what he did but also cared a lot about the field. this kind of work is not part of mass culture shall we say. but it s a distinct community of people who really care about it and are devoted to it and help and support each other and it was very important to tony to be part of that community. he puts on with me as is sort of deputy a big conference on nonfiction writing. the new york state writers institute in albany back in 91 or 92 telling the truth. at the time of his death he was the president of the authors guild. he just did as much as he could possibly do, not just for his own work but for other people who do his work. and i think he would be really pleased to see what this program named after him has become. we never got to know mark linton because he had died by the time we started this program. i got to know hiswidow and his children who were here very well . and i gather he was an equally remarkable man but i
tony lucas was a wonderful nonfiction writer and reporter who was not only great at what he did, but also cared a lot about the field. this kind of work is not part of mass culture shall we say but it s a distinct community of people who really care about it and are devoted to it and help and support each other and it was very important to tony to be part of that community he put on with me as his sort of deputy a big conference on nonfiction writing at new york state writers institute in albany back in 91 or 92 called telling the truth at the time of his death. he was the president of the author s guild he just, you know did as much as he could possibly do not just for his own work, but for other people who do this work, and and i think he would be really pleased to see what this program named after him has become i never got to know mark linton because he had died i think by the time we started this program i got to know his widow and his his children who are here very well
1997. i guess 25 years ago part of the founding crew that set up this this program. tony lucas was a wonderful nonfiction writer and reporter who was not only great at what he did, but also cared a lot about the field. this kind of work is not part of mass culture shall we say but it s a distinct community of people who really care about it and are devoted to it and help and support each other and it was very important to tony to be part of that community he put on with me as his sort of deputy a big conference on nonfiction writing at new york state writers institute in albany back in 91 or 92 called telling the truth at the time of his death. he was the president of the author s guild he just, you know did as much as he could possibly do not just for his own work, but for other people who do this work, and and i think he would be really pleased to see what this program named after him has become i never got to know mark linton because he had died i think by the time we star