Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Call Her Daddy is an advice and comedy podcast created by Alexandra Cooper and Sofia Franklyn in 2018. The podcast was formerly owned and distributed by Barstool Sports until June 2021, when it was announced that Cooper had signed an exclusive deal with Spotify worth $60 million.
Podcast Year Style Starring, Narrator(s), or Host(s) Produced by Ref The History Chicks: 2011–present Beckett Graham and Susan Vollenweider Headgum [2] 2 Dope Queens: 2015–2018 Jessica Williams and Phoebe Robinson: WNYC Studios [3] The Guilty Feminist: 2015–present Deborah Frances-White: The Spontaneity Shop [4] Guys We Fucked: 2015–present
Alexandra "Alex" Cooper (born August 21, 1994) is an American podcaster and co-creator and host of Call Her Daddy, a weekly comedy and advice podcast on Spotify.In 2021, Time Magazine called her "arguably the most successful woman in podcasting" after she signed a three-year exclusive deal with Spotify worth $60 million. [1]
On Nov. 22, Forbes released a cover story on Cooper along with a video interview with the podcaster, where she told the outlet that speaking with Harris on her podcast, which tackles topics like ...
Almost every episode of the podcast features an interview with a Broadway performer. Originally, the guests were actresses who had portrayed Elphaba on Broadway or in a touring company. [ 2 ] Since its debut, the show has expanded to featuring interviews with other current and former Wicked cast members or Broadway actors who have not been ...
The podcast began when Graham, not finding any podcasts solely covering women's history, decided to create the show she wanted to listen to. She found Vollenweider on an online moms' message board. [citation needed] Vollenweider, is a freelance writer and columnist for The Kansas City Star. [2]
Sope Dirisu to Lead Akinola Davies Jr.’s ‘My Father’s Shadow’ for Element Pictures, BBC Film, Mubi. Ṣọpẹ Dìrísù has landed a leading film role. The fast-rising British actor — best-known for “Gangs of London” but recently seen in the third season of “Slow Horses” — will appea…
She was co-founder of DoubleX, the now closed women's site connected to the online magazine Slate, and the DoubleX (now The Waves) podcast. [4] Rosin has written for The Atlantic, The Washington Post, The New Yorker, GQ, New York and The New Republic. She is the author of God's Harvard (2007) and The End of Men: And the Rise of Women (2012).