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Eighty people were on board a Delta plane when it crashed while landing in Toronto on Monday. Flight attendants and crew members rushed to help the passengers, all who were able to escape the wreckage. CBS News' Tom Hanson has more. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was created after the 2008 financial crisis to be an advocate for American consumers. The Trump administration is making a push to gut the agency. CBS News business analyst Jill Schlesinger joins "CBS Mornings" with more on how shuttering it could impact Americans. A CBS News analysis found the cost of home construction supplies across the country has increased by 47% since 2016. Now, one company says it can rebuild a home in a matter of weeks for less money. CBS News' Nancy Chen shows how. Oprah Winfrey reveals her newest Book Club pick, Dream State by Eric Puchner, a novel about love, betrayal, and long-lasting friendships set in rural Montana. In an exclusive "CBS Mornings" interview, Oprah, Puchner and Gayle King discuss the powerful themes of the book and how it resonates with readers across generations. Amy Padnani, obituary editor at The New York Times, shines a spotlight on trailblazers who were once overlooked in the newspaper's obituaries. Through the "Overlooked" series, Padnani highlights remarkable women and people of color, including Maria Stewart, Annie Easley, and Lena Richard, ensuring their legacies are recognized. Inside Edition correspondent Alison Hall is back on the job after undergoing a double mastectomy to treat stage zero breast cancer. Following surgery, Hall received the uplifting news that she is cancer-free. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
SEGMENT 1 with Amy Padnani, starting at 0:00: Let's kick off the new year with an interesting story about being first. What drives some people always want to be first? Here's the untold story of Mr. First himself.Amy Padnani, a journalist for the NY Times, works on a series that tells the stories of remarkable people whose deaths were not originally reported on by The New York Times. One featured article is about Brooklyn-born Omero C. Catan who was known by New Yorkers as Mr. First. The name is quite literal. In his career, he was the first person present at 537 historic opening days across the east coast.SEGMENT 2 with Natalie Ruiz, starting at 14:15: How do you create a culture of learning, especially if your business has been around for a while or your employees have been working with you for a very long time? Natalie Ruiz is the CEO at AnywhereWorks, the parent company of AnswerConnect, and others. She leads a team that provides people-powered services and technology to support small and mid-sized businesses. This year, Natalie was listed in the Top 100 People to KNOW in America as one of the top female leaders across North America.--Visit Barry's Blog for complete show notes.
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The New York Times' Overlooked series was introduced on March 8, 2018 for International Women's Day, when they published fifteen obituaries of "overlooked" women, and has since become a hugely successful bi-weekly feature in the paper. As part Relevant Tones: Live, Access Contemporary Music has commissioned five composers to write musical portraits of the lives in the series, including surrealist painter and mystic Remedios Varo, singer-songwriter Judee Sill, journalist, teacher and political activist Jovita Idár, food inventor and war heroine Maria Orosa and the first African-American registered nurse in the United States, Mary Eliza Mahoney. Each new string quartet was performed live by The Overlook, and host Seth Boustead talked with special guests Amy Padnani, creator of the Overlooked series, filmmaker Vanessa Gould and obituary writer Jacques Kelley in between each performance. Live from Symphony Space in Manhattan.
New York Times Obituaries editor Amy Padnani and reporter Julia Carmel join us to discuss their series The A.D.A. at 30: Beyond the Law’s Promise, which explores how the Americans With Disabilities Act has shaped modern life for people with disabilities in the 30 years since it was passed. And listeners share how the A.D.A. has impacted their life, or the lives of family members.
George Takei, actor, on his book, “They Called Us Enemy.” Eric Goldman of Santa Clara University School of Law on emoji law. Alexander Chesler of the National Institutes of Health on our sixth sense, proprioception. Whitney Jenkins of AKQA on Speedgate, a game invented by AI. Kerry Murphy of The Fabricant on digital clothing. Amy Padnani of The New York Times on Overlooked, a project to write tributes for significant women in history.
Legacy of the Berlin Wall's Collapse (0:32)Guest: Peter Fritzsche, PhD, Professor of History, University of Illinois, author of “Hitler's First Hundred Days”This week marks 30 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall between communist East Germany and capitalist West Germany. Less than a month later, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and US President George HW Bush sat side by side and declared the Cold War was ending. Two years later, the Soviet Union itself would collapse. So let's take a look at the legacy of November 9, 1989 –the day the wall came down. In Arid Regions, the Fog Harp Gets Water from Thin Air (18:17)Guest: Brook Kennedy, Industrial Designer and Professor at Virginia Polytechnic Institute's School of Architecture + DesignMore than one billion people around the world live where water is scarce. Another billion face water shortage because their country doesn't have the proper infrastructure for water gathering. And the United Nations predicts it's only going to get much worse in the coming years. That means we have to find new sources of H2O. So how about using fog? A couple researchers figured out how to more effectively harvest that eerie mist for drinkable water. Remembering the Overlooked Figures in History Through Obituaries (35:12)Guest: Amy Padnani is an Editor on the Obituaries Desk at the New York Time and the Creator of OverlookedThey say history is written by the winners. But Amy Padnani believes it's up to us to decide who should be remembered. After becoming an editor of obituaries at the New York Times, Amy Padnani asked herself “Where are all the dead women?” Very few people get the privilege of an obituary in the Times, but surely not all of the people of note dying are white men. So Padnani hatched a project called “Overlooked.” For the last year and a half, they've been publishing obituaries the New York Times missed. Computer programmer Ada Lovelace. Journalist and civil rights activist Ida B. Wells. Poet Sylvia Plath. “Jane Eyre” author Charlotte Bronte. Plus, lots of names you wouldn't recognize but should. The Apple Seed (51:07)Guest: Sam Payne, Host of the Apple Seed on BYUradioSam Payne of the Apple Seed shares a story. HR Handling of Sexual Harassment Needs Improvement (1:02:36)Guest: Laurie Ruettimann, HR Consultant, Host of Let's Fix Workpodcast, Author of “Let's Fix Work”Two years ago, a series of female Hollywood stars went public with their experiences of sexual assault and harassment using #MeToo on social media. It sparked a movement that demanded accountability from powerful men in Hollywood and other industries. Since then, reports of workplace sexual harassment filed with the Equality Employment Opportunity Commission have increased 13 percent. But what's happening after those reports are made? HR consultant Laurie Ruettimann says too often nothing happens. Or worse, the woman who reports the harassment ends up facing retaliation at work. What America Can Learn from Germany's Response to the Holocaust (1:14:04)Guest: Susan Neiman, Director of the Einstein Forum and Author of “Learning from the Germans: Race and the Memory of Evil”The Civil War ended and slavery was abolished more than 150 years ago. How well do you think we've moved on from that as a nation? Not just moved on, but reckoned with –repented of, even –the wrongs done by men and women, who laid the foundation for our freedoms and prosperity? Whether its debate over reparations for slavery or fierce disagreement about whether the Confederate Flag is appropriate to fly in public, I think it's pretty clear we've got some unresolved business there. Philosopher Susan Neiman is a Jew who was born and raised in Georgia and has spent most of her adult life living in Germany. She's come to believe America could benefit from studying the way Germans have wrestled with the crimes of the Holocaust.
Peter Fritzsche, University of Illinois, on the legacy of the Berlin Wall. Brook Kennedy from the Virginia Polytechnic Institute’s School of Architecture and Design on fog harvesting Amy Padnani from the New York Times on remembering the overlooked figures in history. Sam Payne from the Apple Seed shares a story. Author Laurie Ruettimann, “Let’s Fix Work," on HR improvement. Author Susan Neiman, on book “Learning of the Germans: Race and the Memory of Evil.”
Since its founding in 1851, the "New York Times" has published thousands of obituaries -- for heads of state, famous celebrities, even the inventor of the sock puppet. But only a small percentage of them chronicle the lives of women and people of color. In this insightful talk, "Times" editor Amy Padnani shares the story behind "Overlooked," the project she's leading to recognize people from history whose deaths were ignored -- and refocus society's lens on who is considered important.
Since its founding in 1851, the "New York Times" has published thousands of obituaries -- for heads of state, famous celebrities, even the inventor of the sock puppet. But only a small percentage of them chronicle the lives of women and people of color. In this insightful talk, "Times" editor Amy Padnani shares the story behind "Overlooked," the project she's leading to recognize people from history whose deaths were ignored -- and refocus society's lens on who is considered important.
Desde su fundación en 1851, el "New York Times" ha publicado cientos de obituarios: para jefes de estado, celebridades famosas, incluso el inventor de la marioneta de calcetín. Pero solo un pequeño porcentaje de ellos narran las vidas de mujeres y personas de color. En esta charla perspicaz, la editora del "Times" Amy Padnani comparte la historia detrás de "Overlooked", el proyecto que lidera con el objetivo de reconocer a personas de la historia cuyas muertes fueron ignoradas, y reenfocar los lentes de la sociedad sobre quiénes deberían ser consideradas importantes.
Desde sua fundação em 1851, o "New York Times" publicou milhares de obituários - para chefes de estado, celebridades famosas, até mesmo para o inventor do fantoche de meia. Mas apenas um pequeno percentual deles narra a vida de mulheres e pessoas negras. Nesta palestra perspicaz, a redatora do "Times" Amy Padnani compartilha a história por trás de "Overlooked", projeto liderado por ela para reconhecer pessoas da história cujas mortes foram ignoradas e redirecionar as lentes da sociedade para quem é considerado importante.
뉴욕타임스는 1851년 창립 이래로 국가 원수들, 유명 인사들, 심지어 양말 인형 발명가까지 수천 명의 부고 기사를 발간했습니다. 그러나 그들 중 소수 여성과 유색 인종만이 부고 기사에 실렸습니다. 통찰력이 돋보이는 이 강연에서 뉴욕타임스 편집자인 에이미 파니니(Amy Padnani)는 '주목받지 못한 이들'이란 프로젝트에 관한 이야기를 공유하고자 합니다. 그녀는 역사적으로 주목받지 못했던 사람들의 삶과 업적을 들춰낼 뿐만 아니라, 역사에서 어떤 사람을 중요한 사람으로 평가해야 하는지 상기 시켜 줍니다.
Since its founding in 1851, the "New York Times" has published thousands of obituaries -- for heads of state, famous celebrities, even the inventor of the sock puppet. But only a small percentage of them chronicle the lives of women and people of color. In this insightful talk, "Times" editor Amy Padnani shares the story behind "Overlooked," the project she's leading to recognize people from history whose deaths were ignored -- and refocus society's lens on who is considered important.
Depuis la fondation en 1851, le « New York Times » a publié des milliers de nécrologies -- pour les chefs d'État, les célébrités, même l'inventeur de la marionnette chaussette. Mais seulement un faible pourcentage de ces chroniques retracent la vie de femmes et de personnes de couleur. Dans une intervention pertinente, Amy Padnani partage l'histoire de son projet « Overlooked » [ignorés], visant à reconnaître le décès des personnes que l'histoire a ignorées -- et à revisiter l'opinion de la société sur les personnes considérées comme importantes.
In this episode, it's New York City, baby! Our sister spin-off show — hosted and curated by Molly O'Laughlin Kemper at KGB Bar — represents with two excellent talks about fantastic American Dead Ladies. First up is Amy Padnani on BESSIE BLOUNT. Amy is an obit editor at the New York Times, and creator of the acclaimed Overlooked series. Much like our Dead Ladies Show, Overlooked corrects history, by recognizing women who were left off the NYT's obituaries pages over the decades. Amy introduces us to dedicated nurse, brilliant inventor, and skilled forensic handwriting analyst BESSIE BLOUNT. Then, we go big with fabulous Black feminist radical activist FLORYNCE KENNEDY, who fought injustice and spoke truth to power dressed in a flamboyant cowboy hat, pink sunglasses, and false eyelashes. Yale University PhD student Deborah Streahle tells FLO KENNEDY's tale. DLS co-founder Florian Duijsens joins host and producer Susan Stone for the fun. The talks in this episode of the podcast come from the New York Dead Ladies Show, which is hosted and curated by Molly O'Laughlin Kemper, with support from Nicolas Kemper and Claire O'Laughlin, as well as Lori Schwarz of the KGB Bar and bartenders Dan and Seiji. See photos of fabulous FLO, and marvel at images of BESSIE's inventions in our show notes here: https://deadladiesshow.com/2019/05/16/podcast-23-bessie-blount-and-flo-kennedy/ __ The Dead Ladies Show is a series of entertaining and inspiring talks about women who achieved amazing things against all odds, presented live in Berlin and beyond. This podcast is based on that series. Because women's history is everyone's history. We now have a Patreon! www.patreon.com/deadladiesshowpodcast Follow us on social media @deadladiesshow and please share, rate, and review the show as it helps others to find our feminist women's history podcast!
GUESTS ARE: The comedy duo Cody Ko & Noel Miller, two former software engineers who left their rock solid, bulletproof careers to become pretty decent comedians with no health insurance. They started the Tiny Meat Gang podcast late last year and starting January 2019, are going on a national tour which is currently sold out in all locations. Amy Padnan, the digital editor of the obituaries section chats about The Times new special section "Overlooked." which is a new project that's giving recognition in the NY Times obituary section, to people who made astounding accomplishments but were often overlooked until now. Link to OVERLOOKED: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/obituaries/overlooked.html
The Australian media have come under criticism over the way coverage was handled when Renae Lawrence was released from a jail in Bali. Our Indonesia correspondent Anne Barker has questioned why Indonesia allows the media circus in the first place.
The New York Times has published thousands of obituaries in its long history, but incredible women who made a huge contribution often weren't included. Now, there's a project underway to change that.