USA Today’s Front-Page Story on Back to Our Future
On March 10th, USA Today ran a front-page profile of Sirota and his new book Back to Our Future: How the 1980s Explain the World We Live In Now. Read the piece here, read Sirota’s sidebar here and watch USA Today’s video report about the story here:
Here’s how the story looked on the page (download the PDF of of the piece here):

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Back to Our Future
How the 1980s Explain The World We Live In Now
Available at:B&N / Amazon
Indy Bookstores"Back to Our Future is wildly entertaining - and scary.”
- Rachel MaddowSirota’s Writing
Sirota is the author of three books and publishes a weekly newspaper column. He also writes long-form magazine articles, contributes to The Huffington Post and takes cold showers to find writing inspiration.Sirota’s Radio Show
Sirota hosts the morning drive-time show on Colorado's Clear Channel affiliate, KKZN-AM760. Find out more about the show here.Sirota Television
Sirota appears periodically on MSNBC, CNN, PBS and Comedy Central. Find his YouTube channel here. Newspaper Column
- Will We Choose a Chinese Future? for 02/17/2012For the last two decades, we've heard many myths purporting to explain the loss of American manufacturing jobs. CEOs, for instance, typically say they've sent jobs overseas because they can't find skilled American workers. Conservative economists say the giant sucking sound is that of technology replacing obsolete workers. And conservative pol ...
Read Sirota's article here
- Will We Choose a Chinese Future? for 02/17/2012
SALON.COM ARTICLES
- The real problem with honoring Whitney February 21, 2012If any single political figure in America is a flesh-and-blood personification of a Rorschach test, it is Republican New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. In almost every way, he raises vexing questions which ultimately say more about us than they do about him.Is he, for instance, refreshingly authentic or just downright offensive? Is he regular-guy fat or too obe ...
Read Sirota's article here
- The real problem with honoring Whitney February 21, 2012
Other Articles
Hollywood Glorifies Military at Taxpayers’ Expense
San Francisco Chronicle
Since the taxpayer-supported “Wings” won the first Academy Award in 1927, the U.S. government has worked closely with Hollywood to promote, glorify and celebrate the armed forces. In the 1980s, this partnership became a highly political Military-Entertainment Complex, which today grants and denies filmmakers access to military hardware on the basis of filmmakers’ ideology and message.
The result is that many pro-war films are supported by huge public subsidies that underwrite studios’ use of military planes, boats and hardware – as long as those studios promise to produce a film that Pentagon spinmeisters approve of. Antimilitarist filmmakers, by contrast, are often barred by the government from even photographing the same hardware.
Read Sirota's article here


