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Set in New York in the 1980s, Adam Ross's new novel, “Playworld,” tells the story of a young actor named Griffin as he navigates the chaos of the city, of his family and of being a teenager, and the dangers that swirl around each. Although “Playworld” grapples with bleak material, it sparkles with Ross's vivid eye and sardonic sense of humor. The result is a dark, off-kilter bildungsroman about one overextended teenager trying to figure himself out while being failed, continually, by every adult around him.On this week's episode, the Book Club host MJ Franklin discusses “Playworld” with his colleagues Dave Kim and Sadie Stein. Here are the books discussed in this week's episode:“Playworld,” by Adam Ross“Mr. Peanut,” by Adam Ross“The Catcher in the Rye,” “Nine Stories,” “Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction,” and “Franny and Zooey,” by J.D. Salinger“Long Island Compromise,” by Taffy Brodesser-Akner“How Little Lori Visited Times Square,” by Amos Vogel, illustrated by Maurice Sendak“The Squid and the Whale,” directed by Noah Baumbach“The Goldfinch,” by Donna Tartt“Headshot,” by Rita Bullwinkel“The Copenhagen Trilogy,” by Tove Ditlevsen“Jakob von Gunten,” by Robert Walser Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
“Missing And Not Forgotten” is the official podcast of the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency. Our mission is to find, recover, and identify American service members still missing from our past wars and conflicts and return them to their families. In the second episode about Marine Capt. Ron Forrester, who went missing on Dec. 27, 1972, while serving as an A-6A Intruder navigator and bombardier on a mission over north Vietnam and was accounted for Dec. 4, 2023, we talk to Army Capts. Dave Kim and Will Ryan, two of the DPAA Recovery Team Leads who led recovery missions to find Capt. Forrester in Vietnam. Song: Man Of War Artist: Aaron Paul Low Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/aaron-paul-low/man-of-war License code: JTRZNBDSDZJ3XM3Z
Sally Rooney is a writer people talk about. Since her first novel, “Conversations With Friends,” was published in 2017, Rooney has been hailed as a defining voice of the millennial generation because of her ability to capture the particular angst and confusion of young love, friendship and coming-of-age in our fraught digital era.“Intermezzo,” her fourth and latest novel, centers on two brothers separated by 10 years and periods of estrangement, who are grieving the recent death of their father. Peter Koubek is a 32-year-old lawyer with a younger girlfriend, Naomi, and an unextinguished flame for his ex, Sylvia; his brother, Ivan, is a 22-year-old chess prodigy who falls into a relationship with a 36-year-old divorcée, Margaret.In this week's episode, the Book Review's MJ Franklin discusses the book with fellow editors Joumana Khatib, Sadie Stein and Dave Kim. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Thank you to all of our listeners and clients for your support in 2022! What a year of growth this has been and we've truly enjoyed sharing all of the ups and downs with all of you! In this episode, we present to you from Logans Lodge, our latest STR investment. We cover our reflections on 2022 and what we're looking forward to in 2023! Instagram: @menapace_realestate About the hosts: Dave is also a licensed real estate agent with Realty Executives Boston West. He specializes in helping investors find their next short term rental investment! If you'd like to learn about the different STR markets in Massachusetts, then call Dave at 508-277-7716 or email davemenapace@realtyexecutives.com for a free consultation! Contact Info for Hosts: Dave Menapace Call/Text: 508-277-7716 Email: Davemenapace@realtyexecutives.com Kim Menapace Call/Text: 781-738-3403 Email: thefivestarcohost@gmail.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dave-menapace/support
Elisa Gabbert, the Book Review's On Poetry columnist, visits the podcast this week to discuss writing about poetry and her own forthcoming collection of poems, her fourth, “Normal Distance.”“When I'm writing what I would call nonfiction or an essay or just pure prose, I'm really trying to be accurate,” Gabbert says. “I'm not lying, I'm really telling you what I think. There's very minimal distance between my persona on the page and who I really am. And then when I'm writing poetry, that persona really takes on more weight. I'm definitely creating more distance, and it really feels more like fiction or even more like theater, I might say. I'm really more creating a character that's going to be speaking this monologue I'm writing.”Ian Johnson visits the podcast to talk about his review of “Golden Age,” a novel by Wang Xiaobo recently translated by Yan Yan. The novel, set against Mao's Cultural Revolution, made waves in China when it was originally published there in the 1990s.“It was controversial primarily because of sex, there's a lot of sex in the novel,” Johnson says. “The sex is not really described in graphic detail; this isn't Henry Miller or something like that. It's more like they're having sex to make a point: that they're independent people and they're not going to be trampled by the state. And it's very humorous — he talks about sex using all kinds of euphemisms, like ‘commit great friendship,' stuff like that. It's meant to be a sort of parody, a somewhat absurd version of a romance.”Also on this week's episode, Elisabeth Egan and Dave Kim talk about what people are reading. John Williams is the host.Here are the books discussed in this week's “What We're Reading”:“Time Shelter” by Georgi Gospodinov, translated by Angela Rodel“The Displacements” by Bruce Holsinger“The Annotated Wizard of Oz” by L. Frank Baum, edited by Michael Patrick HearnWe would love to hear your thoughts about this episode, and about the Book Review's podcast in general. You can send them to books@nytimes.com.
The cartoonist Liana Finck's new book, “Let There Be Light,” recasts the story of Genesis with a female God who is a neurotic artist.“At the very beginning of this book, she's existing in a void and she just decides to make something,” Finck says. “And it's all fun and games until she starts to feel some self-doubt and realizes that she hasn't done well enough. She's really kind of a self-portrait of me at that point. She's well-intentioned, she's happy and she's very hard on herself.”Jonathan Van Ness of “Queer Eye” fame visits the podcast to discuss his new book, “Love That Story.” He talks to Lauren Christensen, an editor at the Book Review.“As a queer person, we are told very early on what spaces you are able to thrive in. Beauty is often one of those spaces. There are just a lot of spaces that you can be directed to. And I love hairdressing and I love beauty and I love what I get to do on ‘Queer Eye,'” Van Ness says. “So I am eternally grateful to that. But also, I think that queer people who are feminine and who are flamboyant — as I've been called my entire life — are not also allowed to be information gatherers, are also not allowed to be seen as credible.” He continues: “Obviously I didn't go to journalism school. I didn't graduate college. But that doesn't mean that I can't learn and share my experiences with others.”Also on this week's episode, Joumana Khatib and Dave Kim talk about what they've been reading. John Williams is the host.Here are the books discussed in this week's “What We're Reading”:“In the Country of Others” by Leïla Slimani“Phenotypes” by Paulo Scott“Tamarisk Row” by Gerald MurnaneWe would love to hear your thoughts about this episode, and about the Book Review's podcast in general. You can send them to books@nytimes.com.
Fintan O'Toole was born in Dublin in 1958, the same year that T.K. Whitaker, a member of the Irish government, published an influential report suggesting that Ireland open its doors economically and culturally to the rest of the world. O'Toole's new book, “We Don't Know Ourselves,” weaves memoir with history to tell the story of modern Ireland.“There's a lot of dark stuff in the book,” he says, “there's a lot of violence and repression and hypocrisy and abuse. But there's also the story of a people coming to terms with itself. One of the reasons why we're still dealing with darkness is at least we're dealing with it. There's a kind of confrontation with the past going on in Ireland which I think is very healthy. It's not easy.” He continues: “One of the hopeful things about the Irish story is that it shows you that you can transform a nation — you can make it in many ways an awful lot better than it was, you can open it up to the world, you can develop much more complex, ambivalent, nonbinary senses of who you are — and yet you can still feel very much attached to a place and an identity.”Julie Otsuka visits the podcast to discuss her third novel, “The Swimmers,” which begins with a large group of characters at a public pool before becoming the powerful story of one particular woman, Alice, who is suffering from dementia.Alice is “actually there from the very beginning,” Otsuka says. “She's there at the end of the very first paragraph. But I did not want the reader to be too aware of her. I want her to be there very peripherally, just as one of many. I want the reader to realize, as the story is going on, that it is Alice's story, but I don't want that to be so apparent in the beginning. I really wanted to paint the world that she had thrived in before she enters the second half of the book.”Also on this week's episode, Alexandra Alter has news from the publishing world; and Gregory Cowles and Dave Kim talk about what people are reading. John Williams is the host.Here are the books discussed in this week's “What We're Reading”:“Lucky Breaks” by Yevgenia Belorusets“2666” by Roberto Bolaño“Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont” by Elizabeth TaylorWe would love to hear your thoughts about this episode, and about the Book Review's podcast in general. You can send them to books@nytimes.com.
In her new memoir, “Both/And: A Life in Many Worlds,” Huma Abedin writes about her Muslim faith, her years working alongside Hillary Clinton and, of course, her relationship with her estranged husband, the former Democratic Representative Anthony Weiner. On this week's podcast, Abedin says that writing the book was “the most therapeutic thing I could have possibly done,” and that writing about her marriage and its time in the tabloids gave her perspective.“Now that I am on the other side, I can say with confidence: I don't think what I went through is all that singular,” she says. “What's different is that I had to go through it on the front page of the news. So I know there is a sisterhood and brotherhood of people out there in the world that have had to endure betrayal and have had to figure out how to move on with their lives. And these are the conversations that I still am called into; the people who stop me on the street and ask me a simple question: ‘When does it stop hurting?' ‘Should I stay?' ‘When do I leave?'”Gary Shteyngart visits the podcast to discuss his new novel, “Our Country Friends,” about seven friends (and one nemesis) spending time together in one Hudson Valley property during the early months of the pandemic. The novel's drama, Shteyngart says, comes from people confronting their “deepest selves,” as Chekhov's characters did when they left Moscow for rural surroundings.“When you're stuck in the countryside, no matter where you are, life just goes so much slower than it does in the city, and you're able to really begin to think about your place in the world,” Shteyngart says. “There's definitely a feeling of time slowing down and you're able to ascertain your true relationships. If you love someone, you love them more in the country. If you hate them, you hate them more in the country. Everything is turned up to 11.”Also on this week's episode, Tina Jordan looks back at Book Review history as it celebrates its 125th anniversary; Elizabeth Harris has news from the publishing world; and Dave Kim and Sarah Lyall talk about what they're reading. Pamela Paul is the host.Here are the books discussed in this week's “What We're Reading”:“Man in the Holocene” by Max Frisch“A Wrinkle in Time” by Madeleine L'Engle“Perfect Little Children” by Sophie Hannah“The Flight Attendant” by Chris Bohjalian
Ellen ends, Whitmer admits she lied, Gary Graff on the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Colonial Pipeline madness, Judge v. BuFu'er 3000, Drew Crime, Chuck Berry's farts, highest paid athletes, and we bracket J Lo's men for Trudi.The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees have been announced and they are the "most diverse class yet" Trudi has a theory that Rage Against the Machine was snubbed because Tom Morello did some work with Dennis DeYoung.We have received the audio of Chuck Berry's SECOND fart. Enjoy.Gretchen Whitmer admits she lied about her Florida trip, but is still so vague that the issue will not go away.Hypoc-Chrissy Teigen is SO sorry she told a minor to kill themselves 10 years ago. Other celebs piled on as well.The Colonial Pipeline madness has led to gas hoarding in the southeast.Gary Graff joins the show to discuss the Rock and Roll HOF, Iron Maiden's snub, his take on Vax Live starring Prince Harry and cranky old Van Morrison.The Simpsons have released their Morrissey-inspired song.Breaking News: The Colonial Pipeline is being re-started.Dave Grohl joins an elite list of people inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with multiple bands.The Ellen DeGeneres Show is coming to an end and its totally not because her ratings have been cut in half and she's a terrible person.SPORTS: RIP Jerry Burns. We'll always have his Hall of Fame rant. The highest paid athletes of 2020 list. The Detroit Lions know some of their 2021 games. 1st round draft pick Penis Sewell has COVID-19. The NBA ratings are still garbage. Michigan's Dr. Robert Anderson scandal remains top news and Bo statue is in trouble.A listener has some insider info on the Rochester School Board debacle.Virginia has their own School Board debacle surrounding Critical Race Theory.Famous Zoom Judge, Jeffrey Middleton, had to deal with Buttfucker 3000. More like Asspounder 4000, amirite?Tethers don't work so well for some people... like Adrian Brown.Despite trying to hire a hitman to kill his ex, Derrick Jackson insists he's still is a "good dude". "Hendercide" is the new Marklecide.Drew Crime features the murder of Ron Shumway. Separated at birth: Shumway and Drew Lane.A Rod will NOT talk to J Lo anymore after Ben Affleck got the re-tap. Did Tammy Morris break them up the first time around?Tara Reid has not had the great comeback predicted last year. She looks "AMAZING", but not in a good way. Speaking of which, check out all the great new Cameo family members.Sara Gilbert and Linda Perry settle their divorce.Trudi completes a bracket of JLo's former lovers. Spoiler... the winner has a massive tattoo some people never knew existed.James Charles is being sued by an employee who had to "shave his butt" for Coachella.Donald Glover vs Cancel Culture.Tony Blair looks bizarre.100.7 Ferndale Radio features music our listeners like and a connection to Dave Kim's waist size.Hey. Call or text 209-66-Boner if you are reading this.Social media is dumb but we're on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter (Drew and Mike Show, Marc Fellhauer, Trudi Daniels and BranDon).
There’s nothing wrong with your eyes: The title of Thomas Dyja’s new book is “New York, New York, New York.” (The triplicate is inspired by the urbanist Holly Whyte’s answer when he was asked to name his three favorite American cities.) On this week’s podcast, Dyja discusses how he went about organizing this sweeping look at the past four decades in the city’s history.“I love timelines,” Dyja says. “I make huge charts to take themes through, so this had an eight-foot-long thing on my wall that basically took certain themes and wove them through all those years.” With all that material, “having to make tough choices was just basic," and "there are things that are on the cutting room floor that I kind of miss. But at the end of the day, I think it conveys that subway-express-train-blasting-along-from-stop-to-stop experience of New York.”The magician, writer and theatrical performer Derek DelGaudio visits the podcast to talk about his new book, “Amoralman: A True Story and Other Lies,” which is told in two parts: The first covers his childhood in Colorado, and the second the time he spent doing a very unusual job.“When I was in my 20s, I worked as what’s known as a bust-out dealer, which is a professional card cheat hired by the house to cheat its customers,” DelGaudio says. “And what I experienced at that house, and what I recognized, I thought was something worth sharing.”Also on this week’s episode, Tina Jordan looks back at Book Review history during this year of its 125th anniversary; Alexandra Alter has news from the publishing world; and Gal Beckerman and Dave Kim talk about what people are reading. Pamela Paul is the host.Here are the books discussed in this week’s “What We’re Reading”:“An Empire of Their Own” by Neal Gabler“My Heart” by Semezdin Mehmedinovic“Le Freak” by Nile Rodgers
If you don't have good systems in place to streamline progress reports, they are often out of date by the time they get completed. Ashley Kielbratowski joins us today to talk about how she is helping solve this problem with the help of an unlikely technology – text messaging. Ashley is Co-Founder and GCO at Harbr which allows teams to handle communication, progress reporting, and invoicing via SMS. Ashley gives us an idea of her background and how she partnered with Dave Kim and began building out Harbr's initial offering using a site rather than an office-centric approach. We talk to Ashley about what the app does, how to use it, and how it helps the entire vertical of a job from the back office to site supervisor and subcontractor. Ashley helps us understand what the onboarding process looks like and the benefits it presents to many different sectors of construction. Toward the end of our conversation we talk about what is in store for Harbr and Ashley shares some exciting optimizations they are making to streamline invoicing so that payments can be more accurately processed. Tune in and hear about how you can upgrade your progress reports and financials using one of the most basic and well-understood technologies that exist today!
Has virtual reality grown to the point where traditional cinema should be looking over its shoulder? In our first episode of season two, Swish sits down with Dave Kim, Account Director at THRILLWORKS (previously Director, Strategic Partnerships at Cineplex) and Josh Gonsalves, Co-Founder and CEO of Contraverse. Throughout the conversation, Swish finds the answers to how VR is changing the traditional viewing experience, how organizations like cineplex can shape strategic partnerships for success. and the way VR can impact advertising experiences for customers.Contraverse: https://www.contraverse.co/Josh LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joshgonsalves94/Cineplex: https://www.cineplex.com/Dave LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davekimtoronto/Origins Media Haus: https://www.originsmediahaus.com/Trufan: https://www.trufan.io/Swish LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/swishgoswami/
This week we give our inaugural "Hellion of the Week" award to Dave Kim, retired LA County Sheriff Department Forensic Firearms Expert who started a YouTube channel about shooting things, check it out (the audio is Korean, but the content is All-American): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VFeG3rU33aQ Quarantine Kitchen: Slice of Heaven spice mix: https://www.grillinggods.com/product-page/slice-of-heaven Chipotle Sweet Potato Patties: https://www.plantoeat.com/recipes/22183031/34394046 We talk attendance, long term results of COVID on college sports, update on Jaxon Dart and Raider Damuni and discuss Athlon's preview of the Cougars. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/give-em-hell-brigham/support
Bag Manufacturing in Vietnam Design Exchange Podcast Episode 3 is our first episode with two guests while drinking Korean soju. Dave Kim has been working at Korean owned bag factories in Vietnam for more than 15 years. Marc Mendoza is a product designer from Silicon Valley who relocated to Vietnam to start Post Carry, a brand catering to cyclists. Marc's Links: https://postcarry.co/ Instagram: @postcarrycoThomas's Links: https://sefu.jp/ Instagram: @sefustyleThis episode is also available on Youtube: https://youtu.be/iUoHJVbqolw Table of Contents: 00:38 - Intro Banter 02:46 - Marc made over 100 bags for friends, why he moved to Vietnam 06:17 - 15 years ago Saigon street coffee was better and people were friendlier 09:58 - Taking taxis vs driving in Saigon 11:14 - Korean Noodles 12:25 - Dave's job: bring design to reality, and bag production at a factory. 19:30 - Tech Packs and Design Documentation - How detailed does it need to be? 25:41 - Advice for New Product Designers 31:06 - Dave's Dream for 1 Million Dollars 33:08 - Feeling Good through Customer Feedback 36:20 - Climbing in Vietnam 38:55 - Vietnam is a "Woman Country" 40:31 - One of the benefits of being a foreigner is anonymity 42:33 - Cheap Smoothies and a Growing Economy drew Thomas to Vietnam 47:51 - The Number One Thing Thomas Doesn't Like About Vietnam. 51:39 - Driving a Motorbike in Vietnam 57:23 - Marc rode his bicycle 80km to the factory. 01:00:40 - Marc Wants to be in Vietnam 01:01:39 - Thomas lost meaning after separation from his son and seeks calmness and connection with his son in Japan. 01:04:08 - Columbus Ohio is becoming more attractive to Thomas. 01:06:49 - Silicon Valley vs Vietnam according to Marc Mendoza 01:08:09 - Our Favorite Viet Foods Hashtags: #bag #design #manufacturing #madeinvietnam #vietnam #saigon #podcast #designexchange #dxp #postcarry #sefu Sponsors: This episode is brought to you by Séfu, creators of The Switch Bag, the bag that lets you bring your Nintendo Switch with you, everywhere you go! Use code DXP for free shipping and a 15% discount!This episode is also made possible by Pinecast. After weeks of evaluating podcast hosts, we decided to go with Pinecast because you can get unlimited episodes, storage, and bandwidth for only $5 per month. That's a great value and if you use coupon code r-4b5077 you'll get 40% off for 4 months!
'The Goldbergs' actor Kenny Ridwan tells Les what it's like to attend Columbia when your college job is playing Dave Kim on TV. They talk about Kenny's scheduling craziness, his best days on set, and more. Check it out!
2018-10-14 Sermon(Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-10-07 Sermon(Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-09-30 Sermon(Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-09-02 Sermon(Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-08-05 Sermunion (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-07-29 Sermon (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2016-10-16 Sermon(Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-07-08 Sermon(Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-06-17 Sermon: Admire Aspire (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-06-03 Sermon: Faith Principles (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-04-08 Lordship (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-07-09: Soak Up The Son: Truth - Part 1 (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-06-18: Fathers Day (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
Dave Kim
2016-10-09 Sermon (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-10-01: Great for Real (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2016-10-02 Sermon (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2016-11-20 Sermon (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-02-12 Sermunion (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-06-04: HELP (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-06-25: Testing of Faith (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-01-21 Sermon(Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-01-28 Sermon (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2018-02-18: Dream Driven Christianity (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-10-29: Fall Festival - Sermunion(Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-03-19 (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-04-16: Easter Sunday (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-05-14: Mother's Day (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-03-05 Sermon (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2016-12-04 Sermunion (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-04-09 (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2016-10-23 Sermon (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2016-12-11 Sermon (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-03-26 (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
2017-10-15: Great Surprise (Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
Dave Kim
2017-09-10: Great Influence(Dave Kim) by Metro East Ministries
Follow the Deep & Sexy playlist on Spotify: bit.ly/AlexCrPL Deep & Sexy Podcast no.23 - Live recorded at Necker Island. Last week I had the honour to play at sir Richard Branson's own private Island, which is part of the British Virgin islands. After a show in Panama, a show on top of a mountain in Utah with a stunning sunset, these tracks came out of my recordbag on this beautiful island. The environment of a beach, a BIG hot tub, palm trees, cocktails and amazingly smart, intelligent and most of all FUN people I played a 4 hour set (with live on Violin mister Dave Kim and support by legend DJ John Dill) until we took the last boat off of the island at 3:30am. An amazing adventure! I have been in the studio again the last couple of days to be sure that some new tracks will come your way soon! Have fun listening for now and see you soon! Hasta la vista! Free download: Facebook.com/alexcruzofficial