{
  "tags": [],
  "chapters": [],
  "title": "Fresh Air, Stacey and Doug Loizeaux and Donald Woods",
  "subtitle": null,
  "authors": [
    "D"
  ],
  "narrators": [
    "Terry Gross"
  ],
  "series": [],
  "genres": [
    "Biographies & Memoirs"
  ],
  "publishedYear": "2001",
  "publishedDate": null,
  "publisher": "WHYY-FM",
  "description": "<p>Building demolition experts Stacey and Doug Loizeaux and remembering newspaper editor and anti-apartheid activist Donald Woods on this edition of <i>Fresh Air</i>. Stacey and Doug Loizeaux are niece and uncle and are part of the family-owned demolition company, Controlled Demolition, of Maryland. The buildings they've brought down include the Seattle Kingdome, the Sands Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas (which was brought down spectacularly with a fireworks display), and the bombed federal building in Oklahoma City. Doug's father pioneered the techniques of implosion nearly 60 years ago. Controlled Demolition holds a number of world records including tallest building brought down, and the most buildings felled simultaneously. And, <i>Fresh Air</i> remembers Donald Woods. His relationship with the slain black South African activist Steve Biko was dramatized in the 1987 film, <i>Cry Freedom</i>. He died yesterday in England, where he had lived for over 20 years. (Broadcast Dates: August 20, 2001 and September 2, 1987) </p>",
  "isbn": null,
  "asin": "B002VCRXK0",
  "language": "English",
  "explicit": false,
  "abridged": false
}