Here's an excerpt from a live call-in show I do every week.
It's an amazing experience to be able to let people call in and discuss their feelings.
When you let the people talk to each other, magic can happen...especially now in these very political times in the US.
Audio is a little low on the tape.
This is also my first video in MPEG4.
Let me know if you have problems.

I'm pretty happy with this. Yes..I can see where its going. It makes a lot of sense. I'm on the floor in hysterics. I mean its like who do I vote for? Coke or Pepsi?
Posted by: Shannon | August 20, 2004 at 03:09 AM
I haven't seen a talk radio host handle errant callers this well since listening to Jerry Brown's, "We The People" a number of years ago. As I recall, he did a great job of politely correcting callers with hairbrained conspiracy theories.
http://www.wtp.org/archive/index.html
Posted by: Sean Gilligan | August 20, 2004 at 04:11 AM
I can't see it. Firefox on Windows. It asks me what program to use to download it or to save it to disk...
Posted by: Peter | August 20, 2004 at 05:06 AM
POST MORE!
More clips from this show!
oh and the mp4 worked fine for me (safari os x), and the volume was good too.
Posted by: weagel | August 20, 2004 at 11:22 AM
Wow. The power of this medium. :-)
Posted by: Chuck | August 27, 2004 at 08:07 PM
That was great. Handled well.
Posted by: ryan | August 28, 2004 at 11:14 PM
Jeez that was WICKED! Nice job keeping your cool. Very nice!
Posted by: Ro | November 05, 2004 at 04:31 PM
Thanks for the video! It worked fine for me, popup window and all. Windows 2000 Pro PC, Firefox 1.0, using the quicktime alternative 1.39
I was wondering - how did MPEG4 compare to your regular compression setting, and what where you using as your regular compression before? File size reduced 30% for a bit less video quality? Same video quality with a 10% smaller file? No difference?
Posted by: Ray in Chicago | November 21, 2004 at 01:56 PM
It´s really a great joy being here. Your site is a varied mixture of the latest news, specified information and
activ power.
Posted by: Phil Collin | November 23, 2004 at 05:11 AM