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For our final episode in this run of Longplay, we bringing you not one, not two but three classic NES Capcom soundtracks as we play you all the music from the first three games in the Mega Man series. Note - The live airing of this episode included two corrupted tracks from the Mega Man 2 soundtrack. These tracks have been omitted from this podcast as no replacement versions could be found. Chapters: (00:00:00) - Welcome to Longplay! (00:00:43) - Mega Man - Stage Select (00:00:52) - Mega Man - Game Start (00:00:58) - Mega Man - Cutman Stage (00:02:20) - This is Longplay 1 (00:07:04) - Mega Man - Gutsman Stage (00:07:59) - Mega Man - Iceman Stage (00:09:09) - Mega Man - Bombman Stage (00:10:17) - Mega Man - Fireman Stage (00:11:14) - Mega Man - Elecman Stage (00:12:35) - Mega Man - Boss (00:12:53) - Mega Man - Stage Clear (00:12:58) - Mega Man - Dr. Wily Stage 1 (00:14:03) - Mega Man - Dr. Wily Stage 2 (00:14:49) - Mega Man - Dr. Wily Stage Boss (00:15:16) - Mega Man - All Stage Clear (00:15:30) - Mega Man - Ending (00:17:03) - Mega Man - Game Over (00:17:05) - This is Longplay 2 (00:20:50) - Mega Man 2 - Opening (00:21:31) - Mega Man 2 - Title (00:22:14) - Mega Man 2 - Pass Word (00:22:29) - Mega Man 2 - Stage Select (00:22:42) - Mega Man 2 - Game Start (00:22:48) - Mega Man 2 - Metal Man Stage (00:24:06) - Mega Man 2 - Air Man Stage (00:25:38) - Mega Man 2 - Bubble Man Stage (00:26:54) - Mega Man 2 - Quick Man Stage (00:28:13) - Mega Man 2 - Crash Man Stage (00:30:48) - Mega Man 2 - Flash Man Stage (00:32:19) - Mega Man 2 - Heat Man Stage (00:33:24) - Mega Man 2 - Wood Man Stage (00:34:37) - Mega Man 2 - Stage Clear (00:34:43) - This is Longplay 3 (00:38:19) - Mega Man 2 - Get A Weapon (00:38:25) - Mega Man 2 - Dr. Wily UFO SE (00:38:26) - Mega Man 2 - Dr. Wily Map (00:38:33) - Mega Man 2 - Dr. Wily Stage 1 (00:41:04) - Mega Man 2 - Dr. Wily Stage 2 (00:43:39) - Mega Man 2 - Boss (00:44:13) - Mega Man 2 - All Stage Clear (00:44:22) - Mega Man 2 - Ending (00:45:26) - Mega Man 2 - Credit Roll (00:47:14) - Mega Man 2 - Game Over (00:47:17) - This is Longplay 4 (00:57:41) - Mega Man 3 - Title (00:59:00) - Mega Man 3 - Pass Word (00:59:30) - Mega Man 3 - Stage Select (00:59:51) - Mega Man 3 - Game Start (00:59:57) - Mega Man 3 - Needle Man Stage (01:02:05) - Mega Man 3 - Magnet Man Stage (01:03:19) - Mega Man 3 - Gemini Man Stage (01:05:11) - Mega Man 3 - Hard Man Stage (01:06:46) - Mega Man 3 - Top Man Stage (01:08:24) - Mega Man 3 - Snake Man Stage (01:09:45) - Mega Man 3 - Spark Man Stage (01:10:50) - Mega Man 3 - Shadow Man Stage (01:12:51) - Mega Man 3 - Proto Man (01:13:04) - This is Longplay 5 (01:14:24) - Mega Man 3 - Boss (01:15:27) - Mega Man 3 - Stage Clear (01:15:31) - Mega Man 3 - Get A Weapon (01:16:36) - Mega Man 3 - Dr. Wily Stage Map (01:16:53) - Mega Man 3 - Dr. Wily Stage 1 (01:18:30) - Mega Man 3 - Dr. Wily Stage 2 (01:19:50) - Mega Man 3 - Dr. Wily Stage 3 (01:21:15) - Mega Man 3 - Dr. Wily Stage Boss (01:21:56) - Mega Man 3 - All Stage Clear (01:22:01) - This is Longplay 6 (01:29:10) - Mega Man 3 - Ending (01:32:44) - Mega Man 3 - Credit Roll Longplay is a Terra Player Original podcast and is produced and distributed by Terra Player. Get more episodes of Longplay, alongside all our Terra Player Original podcasts and the best gaming music radio and entertainment podcasts from across the internet at https://terraplayer.com.
Returning guest Caitlin Thompson, co-founder of Racquet, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to catch up on what's new at her tennis media company: Racquet House, Ambush Tennis, and dealmaking. We also talk about junior wheelchair tennis at the U.S. Open, what makes something Racquet, and what she has learned about her audience. Links: Caitlin on Twitter Racquet on Twitter Racquet in Hellgate Racquet House Ambush Tennis 1976 Davis Cup final Thirty Love is back for a mini-season around the 2022 U.S. Open. Have feedback, a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, or anything else you want to say? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Returning guest Giri Nathan, who writes about tennis for Defector and Racquet, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik the day after Serena Williams's loss in what she has said will be her final tournament, to talk about what he saw at her last match of this tournament. We also talk about whether there will ever be an event like her retirement at a future Open, and about Nathan being awarded the inaugural Tom Perrotta Prize for Tennis Journalism by the International Tennis Writers Association during this year's tournament. Thirty Love is back for a mini-season around the 2022 U.S. Open. Have feedback, a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, or anything else you want to say? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Returning guest Jim Chairusmi, part of the Wall Street Journal's team covering the 2022 U.S. Open, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik the day after Serena Williams's loss in what she has said will be her final tournament, to talk about what's next for her and he sister Venus Williams. We also talk about what's left in the tournament and memories of Tom Perrotta. Thirty Love is back for a mini-season around the 2022 U.S. Open. Have feedback, a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, or anything else you want to say? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Returning guest Tumaini Carayol, the Guardian's tennis correspondent, joins the show right after Serena and Venus Williams lost their first-round doubles match, and ahead of Serena Williams's third-round match in singles, to marvel at how thoroughly Serena and her retirement have dominated the tournament — and how realistic a long stay in the draw suddenly looks for the 23-time major singles champ. We also talk about the prospects of British men's hopes Jack Draper, Cam Norrie, and Andy Murray. Thirty Love is back for a mini-season around the 2022 U.S. Open. Have feedback, a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, or anything else you want to say? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Filmmaker Barney Douglas, director of the new Showtime documentary "McEnroe," joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about how a non-tennis diehard came to make a film about John McEnroe, how New York City became a costar, the interview that got away, and which tennis figure he'd want to profile next. Thirty Love is back for a mini-season around the 2022 U.S. Open. Have feedback, a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, or anything else you want to say? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Returning guest Ian Katz, who has been playing and following tennis for nearly 50 years, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to weigh in on major tennis debates ahead of the 2022 U.S. Open: should head-to-head records count when evaluating who is the most accomplished player, should the sport allow in-match coaching, and more. Thirty Love is back for a mini-season around the 2022 U.S. Open. Have feedback, a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, or anything else you want to say? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Returning guest Matt Marolf, who writes match previews for big tournaments year-round and teaches Thirty Love host Carl Bialik a thing or two on the court in between, joins the show to preview the 2022 U.S. Open: how far Serena Williams can go, what her entry in the doubles draw means, favorites in the women's and men's draws, and tips for attending the tournament. Thirty Love is back for a mini-season around the 2022 U.S. Open. Have feedback, a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, or anything else you want to say? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
In school, the teachers always said to, “Give credit, where credit is due”. So, we at XPression U want to help you out with that. Simon created a quick tutorial on how to create a simple credit roll in the XPression Sequence view, where users can link together multiple scenes to create a roll. He also shows users how to use an event marker and some cool functions of inertia and speed. He even shows users how to add an image into the roll and make the roll pause with the image as a full screen on the roll. Living Live! with Ross Video www.rossvideo.com/XPression-U
Tim Wigmore, sports journalist for The Telegraph and co-author of The Best: How Elite Athletes are Made, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to apply his sports-science insights to tennis: why younger siblings thrive in tennis and other sports, how Andre Agassi figured out how to beat Boris Becker, and how the pandemic upended 2020 for athletes and the people who write about them. Have feedback, a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, or anything else you want to say? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
The audio for a Youtube presentation posted at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lbz11ojnYUI&fbclid=IwAR2yUjaRqhnosT1EUS7BvexraasHz8JfngSSRQAZW9oNbSgK-ihiE3JYckkKootenai Brown Pioneer Village Education Coordinator Youtube channel:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4_qjGMo5zOjb6GWsygTVNgAbout the film:A Sony video tape V-30H (1/2”) of this short dramatic documentary was recently found (2020) in the Archival collection of Waterton Lakes National Park’s, by Edwin Knox, Parks Canada, Cultural Resource Management for Waterton, and converted to digital. Visually, the video suffers in quality due to the age of the film, but the audio is good, due to the excellent vocal and dramatic performance. The plot is simple: John George “Kootenai Brown” is on horse patrol in Waterton in 1914, battling old age and reminiscing about his life: he discusses the British Army in India, Cariboo goldfields of British Columbia; Conflict with the Blackfoot at Seven Persons Creek; a Metis buffalo hunt; guiding in the Rockies; Olive's burial; the creation of Kootenay Forest Reserve; Oil City and conflict with nature; and his appointment as Forest Ranger of the designated national park. The film was produced for the now-defunct ACCESS-TV, an educational production initiative of the Alberta government in 1975. The film/tape case was dated Jan 16, 1976. The “Pincher Creek Museum” as Kootenai Brown Pioneer Village is now known, is named in the Credit Roll as assisting with the production. Kootenai Brown is portrayed by Peter James Haworth (1927-2014), from a script written by Ted Ferguson. From Peter Haworth's obituary: "Peter passed away peacefully at Cedarview Lodge in North Vancouver on February 10, 2014 at the age of 86. Youngest child of the late Reginald and Florence Haworth and brother to the late Cyril Haworth. Lovingly remembered by his soul mate and dear wife Betty Muriel (nee Phillips). Although Peter began his career as an English teacher, he became an outstanding actor, writer and documentarian. As a writer for CBC radio, his writings included the adaptation of plays by writers such as Chekhov, Ibsen, Brecht, and Shakespeare, documentary series on notable figures such as Captain Cook, Sir Ernest Macmillan, and William Morris and portraits of the great twentieth century actors and directors.As an actor, he performed on national radio, television and the stages of major Canadian theatres in plays by Shakespeare, Shaw, Wilde and many others. His final performance as an actor was at the Vancouver Playhouse in "An Ideal Husband" by Oscar Wilde. Peter was a member of UBCP, ACTRA and was a lifetime member of the Writers' Guild. He was, also, presented with the Sam Payne Lifetime Achievement Award by the Union of BC Performers and is in the Walk of Fame at the Orpheum Theatre, Vancouver B.C.
Racquet Magazine cofounder Caitlin Thompson, cohost of The Racquet Podcast and The Main Draw, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about the new book collecting the best of Racquet, how the pandemic did and didn't affect the latest issue of Racquet, and how to celebrate a fan-free US Open with friends, Racquet-style. Previously on Thirty Love: Caitlin Thompson On The Expanding Racquet Empire Caitlin Thompson on Racquet Magazine's Sophomore Surge Have feedback, a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, or anything else you want to say? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Tennis enthusiast Ana Mitric, who refers to herself as a fake Serb and not quite a journalist, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about the tennis world's English-language bias and what the tennis media missed about Novak Djokovic and the ill-fated Adria Tour. Previously on Thirty Love: Katrina Williams on Djokovic Fandom Have feedback, a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, or anything else you want to say? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Rodney Rapson, PlaySight's managing director for Europe & UK, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about the company's role in staging and televising the return of live pro tennis, how to write the rules on sports safety during a pandemic, and the way to host an event with the fewest possible people. Trying something new: The episode has bonus content after the first 30 minutes. If you want to leave before we get to Minute 31, the first playing of the outro music is your cue. Previously on Thirty Love: Ben Rothenberg On PlaySight PlaySight's Chen Shachar On Helping Tennis Players To Know Themselves Have feedback, a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, or anything else you want to say? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Freelance tennis writer Ben Rothenberg, host of the No Challenges Remaining tennis podcast, rejoins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about the pandemic's effect on the tennis writing business, the seismic effect the tours' interruption could have on its power balance, and his first two acts if he became commissioner of tennis (Carl's idea). Previously on Thirty Love: Ben Rothenberg On PlaySight Ben Rothenberg On Exposing The Darko Grncarov Myth Ben Rothenberg On Former Phenom Monique Viele Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Matt Marolf, writer for UbiTennis, rejoins his neighbor Carl Bialik—host of Thirty Love—from an appropriate social distance to talk about Roger Federer's tweeted support for a WTA-ATP merger, speculate wildly (OK, that's mostly Carl) about what drove the move and what might come next, and discuss which member(s) of tennis's Murray family would make the best boss of tennis. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Former college tennis player Alex Aksanov, now a coach and a physical therapist at a Brooklyn hospital, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about helping people with coronavirus recover their health and strength, exercises for the homebound tennis player without a net, and the joys and heartbreak of finding a tennis court to play on in New York City. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Carlos Silva, the CEO of World TeamTennis, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about planning for the possible return of the pro game; the range of possibilities for what could constitute World TeamTennis in an age of physical distancing; and why this unusual season could be unusually American, or atypically global. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Craig Shapiro, host of the Under Review Tennis Podcast, joins Thirty Love podcast host Carl Bialik to talk about tennis organizations and players uniting during the virus-induced shutdown of sports, which classic matches to watch when there are no live ones, and how he's built and grown his 20-month-old show. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Matt Marolf, writer for UbiTennis, joins his neighbor Carl Bialik—host of Thirty Love—from an appropriate social distance to talk about Wimbledon's cancellation, the implications for the record books, and how tennis might come back—as a live sport, a spectator sport, and a participatory sport—before the tours are ready to return. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Cecil Harris, author of the books Different Strokes and Charging the Net about black tennis history, rejoins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about his sense that the Williams sisters will retire in 2020, why young African-American men aren't picking up tennis racquets, and where the Black Tennis Hall of Fame should make its home. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Dan Golden, senior editor at ProPublica and author of The Price of Admission, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about the ProPublica article he co-wrote entitled "An Unseen Victim of the College Admissions Scandal: The High School Tennis Champion Aced Out by a Billionaire Family"; all the ways college admission for sports can bypass merit; and who's harmed when wealthy parents buy spots on teams for their children. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Taiwan men's tennis No. 1 Jason Jung, fresh off reaching his second straight New York Open quarterfinal, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about his aspiration to break into the top 100 and qualify for the Olympics, how close he came to never playing professional tennis, and why he used to blog more. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Doctor, farmer, and peace activist Peter Underwood joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about his book The Pros: The Forgotten Era Of Tennis. Underwood explains why tennis took so long to go professional, what motivated pros such as Jack Kramer and Rod Laver to endure tough conditions for small purses, and how today's top men would do as barnstormers. Underwood works with the Medical Association for Prevention of War, the founder of ICAN (the International Campaign Against Nuclear Weapons) and the recipient of the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize. His forthcoming book is a collection of poetry. He lives in Perth and runs a small farm in Denmark, West Australia. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Freelance tennis writer Ben Rothenberg, host of the No Challenges Remaining tennis podcast, rejoins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about his two-part series for Racquet about Monique Viele, who was hyped as the next big star in tennis but never won a tour-level match. Among the adults who helped make Viele a millionaire while possibly hurting her tennis prospects: Donald Trump. Previously on Thirty Love: Ben Rothenberg On PlaySight Ben Rothenberg On Exposing The Darko Grncarov Myth Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Filmmaker Theo Anthony, director of ESPN Films 30 for 30 Shorts documentary Subject to Review, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about the origin story of instant replay in sports, how cricket does it better, and why the 2018 World Tour Finals set the perfect stage for his film. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Guitar repair hero and tennis-racquet expert Ethan Lee rejoins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about Lee's idea for a new kind of tennis tiebreaker: the Aphabreaker, in which not every point is created equal. Lee explains how his innovation puts the serve in its rightful place and suggests ways tennis can embrace new formats to find the best ones it's never tried. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Novelist Benjamin Markovits rejoins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about his two books that touch on tennis: "A Weekend In New York" and its sequel, "Christmas in Austin." On the publication day of his latest book, and after a tennis match with his podcast host, Markovits describes how solitary an athlete's existence can be, whether in career or out, in a team sport or an individual one; how a retired tennis pro in the midst of a breakdown can make a lot of reasonable points; and how a career of competition can into an entire life viewed through the lens of competition. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Author Ann Leary, whose 2013 Modern Love essay in The New York Times "Rallying to Keep the Game Alive" was adapted for the Modern Love streaming series this year, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about how tennis has fit into her marriage to her husband (actor Denis Leary), why she has been using a one-handed backhand lately, and whether the tennis tradition can make way for alternative rules. A recent New York Times interview with Leary about her essay Leary on the Modern Love podcast Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Patrick Moran, who recently became the president of Racketlon USA, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about who joined tennis with three other racquet sports to form racketlon, how the sport has grown worldwide, which discipline is most prone to blowouts, and what makes racketlon so mentally tough. Wall Street Journal video on racketlon Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Former Top 5 player Julie Heldman rejoins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about what she learned while touring to promote her memoir "Driven: A Daughter's Odyssey," why she's glad she decided to include her struggle with mental illness in the book, how tennis has changed since she retired, and what it was like to narrate her story for the book's new audio edition. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Alex Tilney, author of The Expectations, joins his longtime friend and occasional racquet-sports opponent Carl Bialik to talk about how squash figures in both his novel and an exclusive slice of American society, why substituting tennis for squash would have made for a very different tale, and what tennis and squash can learn from each other about keeping spectators entertained. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Wall Street Journal columnist Jason Gay and longtime tennis writer Tom Perrotta rejoin Thirty Love host Carl Bialik from the US Open to wrap the 2019 tournament: the epic men's final, Bianca Andreescu's earth-shaking win, the preeminence of women's tennis, and what it'll all look like in five years. Listen to Jason Gay's prior appearances on Thirty Love: after the 2018 US Open, after the 2017 US Open, and in July 2017. Listen to Tom Perrotta's prior appearances on Thirty Love: from the 2018 US Open, in October 2017, in July 2017, and in May 2017. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Host Carl Bialik's friends Amanda Herling and Morlene Chin joined him on the last day of the 2019 US Open for their first live-tennis experience. They share their impressions, including a newfound love for doubles, immense appreciation for wheelchair tennis, and a preference for watching tennis from on high. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, during the US Open or beyond? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Laura Wagner, who covers tennis and sports media for Deadspin, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik from the US Open to talk about Bianca Andreescu's swagger, Nick Kyrgios's ennui, tennis's web of conflicts of interest, and how to make the sport more exciting. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, during the US Open or beyond? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Kamakshi Tandon, who is covering the US Open for tennis.com, rejoins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik from the Open to talk about the rise of tennis emotions, positive and negative; what social media has done for tennis and what it can still do; and how to make the sport a better TV product. Listen to Kamakshi's 2018 appearance on Thirty Love. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, during the US Open or beyond? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Rose Hobson, coordinator of volunteers for the US Open bookstore, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik from the US Open to talk about her favorite tennis book, her own tennis game, how the Open has changed, and the volunteer life at the tournament. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, during the US Open or beyond? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Tumaini Carayol, a sportswriter for The Guardian, rejoins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik from the US Open to talk about Serena Williams's candor after her fourth-round win, Coco Gauff's precociousness and penchant for doubles, and the young men's stars' heel turns. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, during the US Open or beyond? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Jim Chairusmi, who writes and edits sports articles at The Wall Street Journal, rejoins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik from the US Open to share ideas for how to expand the sport, from tiebreaks at 4-4 to reaching the platonic ideal of two-hour matches to 3-on-1 against Novak Djokovic. He also makes his title picks. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, during the US Open or beyond? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Glenn Gilliam, executive director of strategic partnerships for the documentary film "Althea," joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik at the US Open to talk about the new Althea Gibson sculpture on the grounds, how Gibson compares to Serena Williams, and what's holding tennis back from being more representative of the world around it today. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, during the US Open or beyond? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Liz Weil, writer-at-large for the New York Times Magazine under the byline Elizabeth Weil, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about Weil's profile of Venus Williams for the Times Magazine, covering tennis as an outsider, whether there would have been Venus without Serena, and what's next for Venus. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, during the US Open or beyond? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Adriana Isaza-Mohring, founder of the New York City-based Elite Tennis Travel company, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik at the US Open to talk about what the "elite" in the name means, why Havana has been such a hit with her customers, and her own playing career's very different travel style. Have a suggestion for a Thirty Love guest, during the US Open or beyond? Email Carl at bialik@pm.me Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Eric Goulder, the artist who conceived of and created the new Althea Gibson sculpture at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center unveiled on the first day of main-draw play at the 2019 US Open, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about what he learned about Gibson during the creative process, why he normally doesn't like sports sculptures, and how he hopes technology will make his artwork a living and evolving creation. Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Don Van Natta Jr., host and executive producer of the new ESPN show Backstory, joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about the debut episode of his new show, on the 2018 US Open women's final. Won by Naomi Osaka over Serena Williams, the match was overshadowed by chair umpire Carlos Ramos's officiating and Williams's reaction. Van Natta and Bialik talk about the controversy's impact on tennis, why new footage adds to the case that Williams received the barred coaching instruction, and what happened when Williams and Ramos met privately immediately after the match's conclusion. Listen to Don's 2017 appearance on Thirty Love. Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Tennis journalist Reem Abulleil joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik from the US Open to talk about the struggle to find stories in qualifying, the unique approach the US Open takes to qualies, why she finds it essential to be on site even when travel logistics pose a burden, why she launched a Patreon, and how she finds stories in every interview she conducts with players. Listen to Reem's 2017 appearance on Thirty Love. Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Economist Ian Fillmore of Washington University joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about his recent co-authored study on how racquet change disrupted tennis, gave rise to faulty predictions, and lifted a young generation of stars. Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Sportswriter Joe Posnanski joins Thirty Love host Carl Bialik to talk about his recent essay reflecting on Novak Djokovic's defeat of Roger Federer in the Wimbledon final, why his view on the greatest-of-all-time debate has evolved, how much he'd like to cover tennis full-time, and what it was like getting beaten by Joe McEnroe. Music by Lee Rosevere: "Credit Roll" and "Glass Android."
Theme Music: "Late Night Tales" and "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
Ecoutez Julia, community et social media manager! Dans cet épisode, elle raconte comment elle gère les clients qui ne comprennent pas bien son métier. Références: Le site pro de Julia + son blog Pour vous abonner à la (future) newsletter de La Cohorte, c'est sur le site du podcast qu'il faut vous inscrire ! Merci à Audiobinger et Lee Rosevere pour ce deux morceaux géniaux: http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_For_Podcasts/Lee_Rosevere_-_Music_For_Podcasts_-_13_Credit_Roll http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Audiobinger/~/City_Lights_1859 La page Facebook de La Cohorte: www.facebook.com/cohorte.freelances/
This week in entertainment, it's all about having the last word! We discuss the ongoing Drake-Pusha T diss volley that flared up again this week, after the release of Daytona. The stakes are lower for diss tracks in 2018, but investigative reporter Pusha T might have messed up Drake's SEO play, and that's a new kind of malice. We also discuss the Roseanne cancelation and the grift of the #boycottABC hashtag, and have some recommendations for summer streaming, including Amazon's subversive adaptation of Picnic at Hanging Rock and Coralie Fargeat's stunning film Revenge. Mood: A scene from 'Picnic at Hanging Rock' Theme Music:"Late Night Tales" and "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
Should you see Solo: A Star Wars Story? Gavia Baker-Whitelaw swoops in with a spoiler-free review of the Star Wars spinoff, and discusses the film's long road to completion, Emilia Clarke's bad acting, and whether Lando is really pansexual. As she writes in her review, the film is "a competently made blockbuster with nothing at its core." Is that what we want in a film that no one asked for? These are the questions we ask in 2018. Plus, we've got thoughts about spoiling Deadpool 2, 13 Reasons Why season 2, Fahrenheit 451, and Ramon recommends a DIY toilet-repair video to watch this weekend. Jump in. Theme Music:"Late Night Tales" and "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
C&EN reporter Tien Nguyen takes us inside her months-long dealings with ChemRxiv, one of chemistry’s new preprints servers. She examines the benefits, questions, and frustrations presented by the server—not the least of which was chemists unwilling to discuss their own work with us. But it’s not all doom and gloom. We kinda got a Science publication out of this story. UPDATE: On March 16, 2018, Angewandte Chemie announced on Twitter that its editorial board voted to allow submissions of papers posted as preprints on ChemRxiv. https://twitter.com/angew_chem/status/974603394219462656?s=20 Nominate chemists for C&EN’s Talented 12 Class of 2018: http://talented12.cenmag.org/nominate-candidates-for-2018/ All music in this podcast is by Lee Rosevere and licensed under CC BY 4.0. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ The music you heard first and most often was “Puzzle Pieces.” http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_For_Podcasts_2/Lee_Rosevere_-_Music_for_Podcasts_2_-_10_Puzzle_Pieces The music just before the break was “Sad Marimba Planet,” and the music playing during the call for T12 nominations was “Southside.” http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_for_Podcasts_4/Lee_Rosevere_-_Music_for_Podcasts_4_-_02_Sad_Marimba_Planet http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_for_Podcasts_4/Lee_Rosevere_-_Music_for_Podcasts_4_-_09_Southside And the music at the end of the episode is “Credit Roll.” http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_For_Podcasts/Lee_Rosevere_-_Music_For_Podcasts_-_13_Credit_Roll Hosted by Tien Nguyen, Matt Davenport, and Kerri Jansen Written by Tien Nguyen Produced by Matt Davenport
How do you respond in a crisis? Is this a result of your personality or something you have learned? Can you change this? Where is God in a crisis? Shannon and Ogun diagnose Bryan's need to blame and try to pin an enneagram number on him. Tune in! It's Episode 76. [end music: Lee Rosevere, "Credit Roll."]
Cet épisode de La Cohorte est consacré à un métier: développeur web freelance. Grâce à Matthieu, alias Coreight, nous découvrons ce qui fait vibrer ces bâtisseurs numériques, nous appréhendons les défis auxquels ils sont confrontés et comment ils les relèvent. Références: https://coreight.com http://www.coreight.net Pour vous abonner à la (future) newsletter de La Cohorte, c'est sur le site du podcast qu'il faut vous inscrire ! Merci à Lee Rosevere pour ces deux titres superbes! http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_For_Podcasts/Lee_Rosevere_-_Music_For_Podcasts_-_13_Credit_Roll http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Colourless_Green_Ideas_Sleep_Furiously/LeeRosevere_CGISF_-_05_-_Hamburg
Le congé maternité des freelances n'est pas vraiment un congé. Beaucoup de mamans freelances ne peuvent - ou ne souhaitent - pas interrompre leur activité. Comment s'organiser pour continuer à travailler avec un bébé? Où trouver l'énergie? Chouchou Cendré et Margarida témoignent. Durée du congé maternité selon le RSI, indemnités... Frédéric Aucoin, conseiller en protection sociale chez AG2R La Mondiale, nous éclaire. Références: http://www.lesaventuresduchouchou.com http://www.lesmotsdemarguerite.com http://artilingua.eu Pour vous abonner à la (future) newsletter de La Cohorte, c'est sur le site du podcast qu'il faut vous inscrire ! Merci à Lee Rosevere pour ces deux titres superbes! http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Colourless_Green_Ideas_Sleep_Furiously/LeeRosevere_CGISF_-_05_-_Hamburg http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_For_Podcasts/Lee_Rosevere_-_Music_For_Podcasts_-_13_Credit_Roll
In this mini-episode Wayne and Maggie hang out as the credits roll on Blair Witch and give the movie a review.
In this episode: New format - new tunes - new goofs. We're practically a new show! Except for the boyz. Also Turbo Kid is good and Skeletor(tron) is in it. Stick around for Tina moaning, 8-bit greatness, bicycle guts, blood rain, and Mitch's dual (voice) personality. Site: wtfaww.com Tweet: @wtfaww Mail: whatthefaww@gmail.com - Give us your streaming film suggestions! You numbskulls. Intro/Summary Music: My Time is Now (Remix), and The Ultimate (Final Boss), Good Ending, Credit Roll by Rakohus as part of the Urban Brawl Soundtrack. Check him out at rakohus.bandcamp.com Turbo Kid clips from Epic Pictures Group, EMA Films, Timpson Films
Dedrick Asante-Muhammad sits down with Dr. Mariko Chang (http://www.mariko-chang.com/), author of Shortchanged: Why Women Have Less Wealth and What Can Be Done About It and a coauthor of the 2015 Color of Wealth-Boston report. Dr. Chang recounts her journey into finding her passion in improving economic inequality. From there, Dr. Chang explains the gender wealth divide and its close relation to the racial wealth divide. The conversation then turns to an analysis of the wealth data from multiple demographics. Finally, Dr. Chang discusses the true impact of marriage on personal wealth and communal wealth. The Color of Wealth in Bostonhttps://www.bostonfed.org/commdev/color-of-wealth/color-of-wealth.pdfCorporation for Enterprise Development and the Institute of Policy Study present The Ever-Growing Gaphttp://www.ips-dc.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/The-Ever-Growing-Gap-CFED_IPS-Final-1.pdf The intro is "Curiousity" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.The outro is "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.Both tracks can be found at http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_For_Podcasts/Race and Wealth is edited and produced by Kye Hunter and Jessika Lopez with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad as co-producer
Dedrick Asante-Muhammad and Kylie Patterson of the Racial Wealth Divide Initiative at CFED talk with Kilolo Kijakazi, currently an Institute Fellow at the Urban Institute and formerly a Program Officer for the Ford Foundation. We talk with Kilolo about her key role in helping to create the institutions, and even the words to describe and advocate, around the racial wealth divide. Kilolo explains her background and how she became a champion for savings and building assets, and discusses historical savings trends among different communities. The conversation then shifts to Kilolo's role in creating the Experts of Color Network and how it's bringing national attention the racial wealth divide.Closing the Racial Wealth Gap: Establishing and Sustaining an Initiativehttp://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12552-016-9165-xYou can contact the Racial Wealth Divide Initiative of CFED at the Bridging the Racial Wealth Divide Facebook page- www.facebook.com/racialwealthdivide/The intro is "Curiousity" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.The outro is "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.Both tracks can be found at http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_For_Podcasts/Race and Wealth is edited and produced by Kye Hunter and Jessika Lopez with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad as co-producer
Homeownership is a true benchmark of wealth. In this episode, Dedrick Asante-Muhammad sits down with James Carr, Coleman A. Young Endowed Chair and Professor of Urban Affairs at Wayne State University. James reveals his background, gives a quick history of African American homeownership in America and then discusses his article, "America Needs a 21st Century Housing Finance System.” Doug Ryan, Director of Homeownership at CFED, joins the conversation to discuss rental housing and improving Fannie and Freddie Mac.You can contact the Racial Wealth Divide Initiative of CFED at the Bridging the Racial Wealth Divide Facebook page - www.facebook.com/racialwealthdivide/"America Needs a 21st Century Housing Finance System.” by James Carr-http://www.urban.org/policy-centers/housing-finance-policy-center/projects/housing-finance-reform-incubator/james-h-carr-america-needs-21st-century-housing-finance-systemThe intro is "Curiousity" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.The outro is "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.Both tracks can be found at http://freemusicarchive.org/music/lee_rosevere/music_for_podcasts/Race and Wealth is edited and produced by Kye Hunter and Jessika Lopez with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad as co-producer
Providing more than half of all US jobs, small businesses have a big impact on the economy. In this episode, Dedrick Asante-Muhammad and Kylie Patterson, sit down with Torey Alston, Equal Economic Opportunity Director and Chief Diversity Officer of Gainesville, Florida and the Economic Chair of the NAACP-Florida Chapter. Torey explains the importance of small business development in Florida and how factors like scale and fund procurement effect development. Also, Torey gives a preview of the 2016 NAACP Diversity Matters Report Card. 2016 NAACP Florida State Conference Diversity Matters Report Card - http://www.flnaacp.com/naacp/naacp-florida-state-conference-releases-diversity-matters-report-card/ Where is the Diversity? Florida Government Spending Bypasses Minority Businesses co-authored by Lillian Singh and Torey Alston - http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lillian-d-singh/where-is-the-diversity-fl_b_9538780.html You can contact the Racial Wealth Divide Initiative of CFED at the Bridging the Racial Wealth Divide Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/racialwealthdivide/The intro is "Curiousity" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.The outro is "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.Both tracks can be found at http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_For_Podcasts/Race and Wealth is edited and produced by Kye Hunter and Jessika Lopez with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad as co-producer
Owning a home has long been considered a pillar of the American dream, but for many households of color, homeownership continues to feel out of reach. In this episode, Dedrick Asante-Muhammad and Lillian Singh sit down with Phyllis Logan, Housing Committee Co-Chair and second vice president for the Illinois branch of the NAACP to discuss the central role of housing and homeownership in the vision of the NAACP and the challenges to getting more households of color on the path to affordable homeownership. Plus, Phyllis busts some mortgage myths.You can contact Dedrick Asante-Muhammad through Facebook: www.facebook.com/dedrickm1You can contact Phyllis Logan through Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/CHICAGOWESTNAACPPlease remember to rate, comment, and subscribe to the Race and Wealth Podcast on Itunes, SoundCloud and Stitcher Radio.Supplemental Reading:How the 'Black Tax' Destroyed African-American Homeownership in Chicagohttp://www.citylab.com/housing/2015/06/how-the-black-tax-destroyed-african-american-homeownership-in-chicago/395426/Financial Insecurity in Chicago: A Data Profilehttp://familyassetscount.org/pdf/Chicago%20Family%20Assets%20Count%20A%20Data%20Profile.pdfThe intro is "Curiousity" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.The outro is "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.Both tracks can be found at https://exit.sc/?url=http%3A%2F%2Ffreemusicarchive.org%2Flabel%2FHappy_Puppy_Records%2Fblog%2FMusic_for_PodcastsRace and Wealth is edited and produced by Kye Hunter and Jessika Lopez with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad as co-producer
Is development possible without displacement? In this episode of the Race and Wealth podcast, our host Dedrick Asante-Muhammad and Racial Wealth Divide Initiative associate director Lillian Singh sit down with Sheley Secrest,Vice President and the Economic Development Chair of the Seattle branch of the NAACP. They discuss recent victories by Sheley and the NAACP for more equitable development throughout the Seattle Metro Area, including the 23rd Avenue revitalization project and its impact on the city's small business owners of color. Finally, Sheley explains the mission of Development without Displacement—inclusive community development that invests in the futures of all residents; a form of development that opposes gentrification, yet supports new investment. Seattle- King County NAACP: http://www.seattlekingcountynaacp.org/Draze- Irony on 23rd: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSUaa_rckaAYou can contact Dedrick Asante-Muhammad through Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dedrickm1Please remember to rate, comment, and subscribe to the Race and Wealth Podcast on Itunes, SoundCloud and Stitcher Radio.The intro is "Curiousity" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.The outro is "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.Both tracks can be found at http://freemusicarchive.org/label/Happy_Puppy_Records/blog/Music_for_PodcastsRace and Wealth is edited and produced by Kye Hunter and Kylie Patterson with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad as co-producer
Race and Wealth and The Color of EntrepreneurshipIn this episode of the Race and Wealth podcast, our host Dedrick Asante-Muhammad and new Racial Wealth Divide Initiative senior program manager Kylie Patterson sit down with Algernon Austin of the Center for Global Policy Solutions. The interview starts with a discussion about how the African-American poverty rate has been cut in half over the last 50 years during times of great and growing inequality. The conversation then moves to its central topic, the new report, "The Color of Entrepreneurship: Why the Racial Gap Among Firms Costs the U.S. Billions." Finally, the conversation ends with a discussion of the annual Color of Wealth Summit and a brief reflection on Donald Trump as the Republican nominee as a follow up to our previous podcast, “Race and Wealth in the U.S. Elections.” Here is a link to the graph referenced in this episode- http://bit.ly/1V7t8D7You can contact Dedrick Asante-Muhammad through Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dedrickm1You can find Algernon Austin at http://www.algernonaustin.com/The Center for Global Policy Solutions at http://globalpolicysolutions.com/Algernon Austin's new report at http://globalpolicysolutions.org/report/color-entrepreneurship-racial-gap-among-firms-costs-u-s-billions/For more information on the Color of Wealth Summit, please visit http://globalpolicysolutions.org/2016-color-of-wealth-summit/Please visit SCORE- http://www.score.orgOther articles referenced in the episode:Locked Out of the Market- http://greenlining.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/HMDA-InteriorCover-to-post-spreads.pdfResponsible Banking the Twin Cities- https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B2L0_Tafp1oBTVFJMEtZc2M3QzQ&usp=drive_web#Please remember to rate, comment, and subscribe to the Race and Wealth Podcast on Itunes, SoundCloud and Stitcher Radio.The intro is "Curiousity" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.The outro is "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.Both tracks can be found at http://freemusicarchive.org/label/Happy_Puppy_Records/blog/Music_for_PodcastsRace and Wealth is edited and produced by Kye Hunter and Kylie Patterson with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad as co-producer
Welcome back to the fourth episode of the Race and Wealth Podcast, titled “Race and Wealth and the Baltimore Rebellion: one year later”.First, Dedrick sits down with two long term residents and activists of Baltimore Brother Faraji Muhammad and Brother Andrew Muhammad. They speak on their personal experiences of being on the ground during the rebellion and how they are working to advance the socio-economic conditions of youth and young adults in the aftermath of the uprising.Around the 45 minute mark, Dedrick is joined by Lillian Singh, Associate Director of the Racial Wealth Divide Initiative at CFED to speak with Carmen Shorter, Senior Manager for Learning and Field Engagement at CFED. Carmen is also a Baltimore resident and shares her experiences of being in Baltimore during the uprising. Carmen, then discusses her work, and the recently released CFED Baltimore Building Economic Opportunity Data Profile and how these relate to the challenges facing Baltimore.For inquiries, suggestions or about the Race and Wealth Podcast, please email RacialWealthDivide@cfed.org. To communicate with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad please reach out to him through Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/dedrickm1) or Twitter (https://twitter.com/DedrickM). You can also find the picture discussed of the Bloods and Crips standing with the Nation of Islam in Baltimore at http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3059143/The-Wire-Unimaginable-scenes-Baltimore-s-Crips-Bloods-Black-Guerrilla-Family-Nation-Islam-unite-black-men-stop-violence.html and video of the stopping of the attack on a cell phone store in Baltimore at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d91-rSk3ESI. The intro is "Curiousity" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.The outro is "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.Both tracks can be found at freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rose…c_For_Podcasts Race and Wealth is edited and produced by Kye Hunter with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad as co-producer.
Welcome back to the third episode of the Race and Wealth Podcast. Our host Dedrick Asante-Muhammad, sits down with Melany De La Cruz, Assistant Director at the UCLA Asian American Studies Center. They discuss Melany's work at the Asian American Studies Center and her beginnings in studying Racial Wealth Inequality. The conversation then moves to a discussion of the Color of Wealth series, which just released a report of Los Angeles. Finally, Dedrick and Melany discuss the Asian American Pacific Islander Nexus Journal's special issue, which deals with Wealth Inequality.Starting at 26:30, Dedrick sits down with Lillian Singh, Associate Director of the Racial Wealth Divide Initiative at CFED, to discuss Lillian's background growing up in Los Angeles and the circumstances that led Lillian to the asset building field. Lillian also gives personal stories of how she is using her macro view of asset building to help people gain wealth on a micro level.For inquiries, suggestions or about the Race and Wealth Podcast, please email RacialWealthDivide@cfed.orgTo find more information on the Asian American Studies Center and the AAPI Nexus Journal, please visit www.aasc.ucla.eduFollow Melany De La Cruz on Twitter: @MelanyDeLaCruz4The intro is "Curiousity" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.The outro is "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.Both tracks can be found at http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_For_Podcasts Race and Wealth is edited and produced by Kye Hunter with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad as co-producer.
Welcome back to the second episode of the Race and Wealth Podcast. Our host, Dedrick Asante-Muhammad, sits down with Dr. Algernon Austin, Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Global Policy Solutions. Dedrick and Algernon discuss the ways in which race and the economy play into the current political season, the Obama presidency; the fallacy of a post racial America and the Tea Party; and the challenges going forward with trying to close the racial wealth divide. For inquiries, suggestions or about the Race and Wealth Podcast, please email RacialWealthDivide@cfed.orgTo find more work from Algernon Austin, please visit http://www.algernonaustin.com/?page_id=191For more information about the Racial Wealth Divide Initiative, please visit http://cfed.org/programs/racial_wealth_divide/For more information about the Color of Wealth Summit, please visit http://globalpolicysolutions.org/2015colorofwealthsummit/ The intro is "Curiousity" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.The outro is "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.Both tracks can be found at freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rose…_For_Podcasts/Race and Wealth is edited and produced by Kye Hunter with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad as co-producer.
Tom Shapiro, co-author of the seminal work Black Wealth/White Wealth: A New Perspective on Racial Inequality, will speak about the continuing drivers of wealth inequality in America, and the role of public policy in addressing themThe intro is "Curiousity" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.The outro is "Credit Roll" by Lee Rosevere from the Album- Music for Podcasts.Both tracks can be found at http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/Music_For_Podcasts/
SPOILER ALERT AGAIN! In this episode, Doug, Wayne, Laurie, Maggie, and Kendall take to the Majestic Theater to view The Visit. When the credits roll, the crew huddles up and gives their initial reactions. Severed Thumbs Up = 5 Pantload = 0
All adventures eventually come to an end, but they're not without their fair share of impressions left when experiencing closure, for better or for worse. For this episode, tissue boxes are advised for any possible tears that may be shed when listening to these closing themes.
All adventures eventually come to an end, but they're not without their fair share of impressions left when experiencing closure, for better or for worse. For this episode, tissue boxes are advised for any possible tears that may be shed when listening to these closing themes.