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Drew Philp went to Ethiopia to report on the front lines of what was likely a genocide that largely went ignored. His story, "There Will Be No Mercy," is for The Atavist Magazine.Pre-order The Front RunnerSponsor: The Power of Narrative Conference. Use CNF15 at checkout for a 15% discount.Newsletter: Rage Against the AlgorithmShow notes: brendanomeara.comSupport: Patreon.com/cnfpod
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Jules cleans their feet in Los Angeles, California. To offer your own advice, call Zak @ 844-935-BEST Morning Zesting with Drew Philp - https://bestadvice.show/episodes/2020424_morning-zesting-with-drew-philp/ Restarting Your Day with Ken Haddad - https://bestadvice.show/episodes/2020513_restarting-your-day-with-ken-haddad/ TRANSCRIPT: Sound of faucet turning on. JULES: Hi Zak, my name is Jules. I live in LA and my advice is to wash your feet because they often get forgotten and I thought in the shower when you would stand in the shower, your feet would get all washed but they just got neglected because they just had running soap and water all over it. So, give a little more attention to your feet. At the end of the long day, I like to just wash my feet in the bath to get all of the gunk off. Um, and it feels really good once you do it and you get in between the toes. It's something that's so easy to forget and feels so nice to do. ZAK: If you like Jules' advice, you might want to check out a few other episodes that are shower and bath related. There's Morning Zesting with Drew Philp and there's Restarting Your Day with Ken Haddad. KEN: I've discovered a new kind of coffee in the middle of the day and it's something that I'm calling the lunch-hour-shower. ZAK: Both of those episodes are linked to in our show notes. If you have some advice, call me at 844-935-BEST. I'm gonna go clean my feet.
Drew Philp is the author of A $500 House in Detroit: Rebuilding An Abandoned Home and an American City. His morning ritual was inspired by this article from Men's Health. So much of this show is going to originate with your hard-earned advice. To contribute please call me (Zak) at 844-935-BEST. Leave your name and your advice, followed by your email address in case I have any follow-up questions. Regarding your advice. I'm not particularly interested in platitudes and truisms. I'm after specific, odd, uplifting, effective, real tips from you about how you make it through your days.
It’s easy to feel helpless as each new day breeds more uncertainty. The Best Advice Show exists as a daily reminder that there are weird, delightful and effective ways to survive and thrive in this world. In every episode of the show, a different contributor offers their own personal take on what they do to make their life better, healthier, saner and more liveable. The voices you heard in this trailer are Drew Philp, Sara Brooke Curtis, Hanif Abrurraqib, Shira Heisler and Judy Jelly.
Happy New Year! We all take time every January to figure out how we can make a difference. In this first edition of POLICYSMART for 2019, we introduce you to someone who took one stone, dropped it in the larger pool, and created positive energy to change a city. Listen to our discussion with Drew Philp as he describes what he chose to do to help the city of Detroit. ADDITIONAL LINKS: A $500 House in Detroit, the book Drew Philp on The Guardian
Cities are symbols of hope and opportunity. But today, overcrowding and gentrification are hurting their most vulnerable residents. This hour, TED speakers explore how we can build more humane cities. Guests include architects Liz Ogbu and Vishaan Chakrabarti, writer OluTimehin Adegbeye, former Albuquerque Mayor Richard Berry, and journalist Drew Philp.
In 2009, journalist and screenwriter Drew Philp bought a ruined house in Detroit for $500. In the years that followed, as he gutted the interior and removed the heaps of garbage crowding the rooms, he didn't just learn how to repair a house -- he learned how to build a community. In a tribute to the city he loves, Philp tells us about "radical neighborliness" and makes the case that we have "the power to create the world anew together and to do it ourselves when our governments refuse." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
지난 2009년, 저널리스트이자 극작가인 드류 필프는 디트로이트에 있는 어느 폐가를 500달러에 구입했습니다. 이후 몇 년 간 그는 내부 장식을 덜어내고 방 안을 가득 채운 쓰레기를 제거하는 과정에서 집을 보수하는 것 이상의 지역 공동체를 만들어가는 지혜를 얻었습니다. 그가 사랑하는 이 도시에 대한 찬사의 의미로서, 필프는 "급진적 이읏 공동체 의식"을 이야기하며, 정부가 외면할 때 우리 스스로 주변 환경을 재건하는 힘을 보여준 사례를 소개합니다.
Em 2009, o jornalista e roteirista Drew Philip comprou uma casa destruída por US$ 500 em Detroit. Nos anos seguintes, quando limpou o interior e removeu as pilhas de lixo que enchiam os cômodos da casa, ele não aprendeu apenas como consertar uma casa, mas como construir uma comunidade. Em um tributo à cidade que ele ama, Philip nos conta sobre "vizinhança radical" e argumenta que temos "o poder de criar o mundo juntos novamente e fazê-lo nós mesmos quando nossos governos se recusarem."
En el 2009, el periodista y guionista Drew Philp compró una casa en ruinas en Detroit por US$500. Durante los años siguientes, mientras limpiaba el interior y removía los montones de basura apilada en los cuartos, no solo aprendió como reparar una casa: aprendió como construir una comunidad. En un tributo a la ciudad que ama, Philp nos habla sobre la “vecindad radical”, y plantea que tenemos “el poder de crear el mundo de nuevo, juntos, y de hacerlo nosotros mismos cuando nuestros gobiernos se rehúsan”.
In 2009, journalist and screenwriter Drew Philp bought a ruined house in Detroit for $500. In the years that followed, as he gutted the interior and removed the heaps of garbage crowding the rooms, he didn't just learn how to repair a house -- he learned how to build a community. In a tribute to the city he loves, Philp tells us about "radical neighborliness" and makes the case that we have "the power to create the world anew together and to do it ourselves when our governments refuse."
Martin talks to author Drew Philp about his new book: A $500 House in Detroit: Rebuilding an Abandoned Home and an American City. Drew Philp, an idealistic college student from a working-class Michigan family, decides to live where he can make a difference. He sets his sights on Detroit, the failed metropolis of abandoned buildings, widespread poverty, and rampant crime. Arriving with no job, no friends, and no money, Philp buys a ramshackle house for five hundred dollars in the east side neighborhood known as Poletown. The roomy Queen Anne he now owns is little more than a clapboard shell on a crumbling brick foundation, missing windows, heat, water, electricity, and a functional roof. A $500 House in Detroit is Philp’s raw and earnest account of rebuilding everything but the frame of his house, nail by nail and room by room. We witness his concept of Detroit shift, expand, and evolve as his plan to save the city gives way to a life forged from political meaning, personal connection, and collective purpose. As he assimilates into the community of Detroiters around him, Philp guides readers through the city’s vibrant history and engages in urgent conversations about gentrification, racial tensions, and class warfare. Part social history, part brash generational statement, part comeback story, A $500 House in Detroit “shines in its depiction of the radical neighborliness of ordinary people in desperate circumstances. This is an unforgettable, intimate account of the tentative revival of an American city and a glimpse at a new way forward for generations to come. Martin’s interview with Drew Philp was recorded on May 23, 2017.