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June 3, 2009

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and former Detroit bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal Paul Ingrassia offers his take on how GM lost its way. Three-time Emmy-winning actress Edie Falco, star of the new Showtime series Nurse Jackie, talks about navigating celebrity life.


Paul Ingrassia

Paul Ingrassia

Paul Ingrassia

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Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist explains how bankruptcy for GM was inevitable. (1:48)
 
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Full interview. (10:18)
 
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Before his retirement, Paul Ingrassia spent 31 years with The Wall Street Journal. During his tenure, he was Detroit bureau chief for eight years and, along with his deputy, won a Pulitzer Prize for coverage of GM's management turmoil. Ingrassia is also former president of Dow Jones Newswires and author of Crash Course: The American Automobile Industry's Road from Glory to Disaster. A native of Mississippi, he has journalism degrees from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.


 

Edie Falco

Edie Falco

Edie Falco

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Former Sopranos star recalls her anger at being outed as having cancer. (3:05)
 
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Full interview. (13:26)
 
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Edie Falco is one of America's most respected actresses. She's appeared on the Broadway and London stages and in indie and mainstream films. After recurring roles in HBO's Oz and NBC's L&O and Homicide, her star-making role came in The Sopranos. For her performance in the acclaimed HBO series, she was the first actress to win the Emmy, Golden Globe and SAG Awards in the same year. A Brooklyn native, Falco successfully battled breast cancer in '03. She next stars in the new Showtime series Nurse Jackie.