


Dennis Prager is one of America’s most respected radio talk show
hosts. He has been broadcasting on radio in Los Angeles since 1982. His
popular show became nationally syndicated by Salem Communications in 1999.
Dennis is the author of four books and writes a syndicated column that
appears in newspapers and on the Internet across the country. His writings
also appear in major national and International publications including The Weekly Standard and the Wall Street Journal.
Dennis has lectured on all 7 continents, in 45 U.S. states and in 9 of
Canada’s 10 provinces. Widely sought after by television shows for his
opinions, he’s appeared on Larry King
Live, Hardball, Hannity & Colmes, CBS Evening News and many others.


As a kid, Paul made dozens of Super 8 movies, and in his early 20s shot
one pretentious b&w 16mm rock video. Deciding not to go to film school,
he became active in Democratic politics and later started a successful
political printing and direct mail business, which is going on its 16th year
and has become one of the leading political printing and voter data
management companies in California.
But after years of listening to the Dennis Prager Show, and reading the
standard Christian classics, Paul could no longer deny the evidence for the
Lord and the pull of religious faith.
Paul is married, 17 years to Cheryl. They have two kids,
David 14, and Claire 13. They attend All Saints Anglican Church in Long Beach, California.

Peter graduated from the UCLA Film School cum laude, and for the last two decades has shot everything from feature films to Public Service Announcements featuring Elliot Gould. The documentaries he has filmed include "Survivors of the Holocaust," "The Magical World of Chuck Jones," "Fields of Fuel," and 24 episodes of "Nova ScienceNow."
The programs he has worked on have won numerous awards including the Peabody, and two National Emmys.

Mark earned undergraduate and graduate degrees in English Literature. His
doctoral dissertation on Cognitive Metaphor
Theory in Shakespeare has been central to his writing on Shakespeare
as well as to his work as Lecturer in Advanced Writing at the University of Southern California.