Steidle says after years of criticizing panels that mix journalists and pundits. KELLY: And all this while parenting their 15-month-old daughter and preparing for their actual jobs. The goal is to get it out before, you know, Monday morning commutes on the East Coast. SOTO: We get it posted late, late Sunday night. STEIDLE: On Sundays - we did the math - it takes 8 to 9 hours to put the show together. SHAPIRO: So they created the show they were craving to hear all for fun. SOTO: There were just a lot of journalistic changes and institutional decisions that were being made, and we felt like nobody was really talking about the role of the media in decisions, you know, media organizations were making. KELLY: The show was born out of their unhappiness with coverage of the 2016 election cycle. We've got to come up with something else to work on. That's also the same year they got married.īRENDAN STEIDLE: After the wedding, we were on our honeymoon, and we said, well, that wedding project's gone. She and her co-host husband, Brendan Steidle, have produced "Polilogue," a combination of politics and dialogue, every week since 2017. NAOMI SOTO: Hello and welcome to "Polilogue," a weekly dialogue on the substance and style of the Sunday morning political shows. Every Sunday morning, politicians and public figures "Meet The Press" or "Face The Nation," discuss "This Week," appear on "Fox News Sunday."Īnd every week, one husband and wife duo watches all the political talk shows and makes a podcast about them.
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