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Glenn Sacks Takes On Tough Gender Issues
New radio show looks at gender issues from the male perspective
In a world where equality" has come to mean special privileges," and rights" means we want something somebody else has," one man has taken on the task of making some sense of it all.
Glenn Sacks sorts through the rhetoric and separates the facts from comfortable fictions on his weekly radio show, His Side," on KRLA 870 AM out of Los Angeles. Also available online at http://www.hisside.com/ , this program presents gender issues to the world. Whether the guest is well-known like syndicated columnist Kathleen Parker, or unknown like the LA reservist who lost custody of his son due to active military service, His Side" takes a hard look at the realities of equal rights for all.
Every Sunday at 11 p.m. Pacific time, Glenn talks to experts and activists from all over North America and explores what went wrong and whats going right in issues from Title IX to divorce to domestic violence. Listeners can phone in and give their take on these questions that now affect their families and communities like never before.
For the first time on-air, you can hear what these issues are and what people are doing about them. Whos to blame? How can we change things? Do we really need to change anything? And most important, How does this affect me? All these questions and more are answered on the His Side" program.
If you miss the live broadcast, you can hear past programs 24/7 at http://www.hisside.com
Biography:
Glenn Sacks is a men's and fathers' issues columnist and radio talk show host. His radio show, His Side with Glenn Sacks, can be heard on KRLA 870 AM in Los Angeles. His columns have appeared in dozens of the largest newspapers in the United States, including the Boston Globe, the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, and Newsday.
He has made over 100 radio and TV appearances, including the O'Reilly Factor, CNN's TalkBack Live, Fox News Live, and the Al Rantel Show.
Glenn taught high school, elementary school, and adult school in the Los Angeles and Miami public school systems, and in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. As a high school teacher, he was named to "Who's Who Among America's Teachers" in 1996 and again in 1998.
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