POPULARITY
For millions of Americans, the housing crisis defines the U.S. economy. In the swing state of Nevada, it could soon define the election.Jennifer Medina, who covers politics at The Times, and Carlos Prieto and Clare Toeniskoetter, who are producers on The Daily, traveled there to understand what happens when the promise of the American dream slips away.Guest: Jennifer Medina, a political reporter at The New York Times.Background reading: Why Nevada Latinos are losing faith in the government.A guide to the 2024 polls in Nevada.For more information on today's episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. 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.
Journalist Paola Ramos looked at the rise of far-right Latino voters and what it means for America. She was interviewed by New York Times political reporter Jennifer Medina. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Journalist Paola Ramos looked at the rise of far-right Latino voters and what it means for America. She was interviewed by New York Times political reporter Jennifer Medina. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On the final night of the Democratic National Convention, Vice President Kamala Harris took the stage and formally accepted her party's nomination.After the balloons fell, Astead Herndon and his colleagues Maya King and Jennifer Medina broke down the moments that stood out to them from the night — from people touched by gun violence telling their stories to the way Ms. Harris talked about Israel and the war in Gaza to how she told her own story. Plus, there was the rumored special guest who never materialized. On today's episode:Maya King, a politics reporter for The New York TimesJennifer Medina, a politics reporter for The New York Times
We've got Jennifer Medina joining us tonight! She is a local medium and tarot reader, so we plan on having some discussions on all things paranormal! Tune in and bring your stories and questions! Be sure to get involved in chat!! Check out all things Nonsense and Deep Thoughts at ndtpodcast.com! #psychic #psychicmedium #ghosts #paranormal
In the past few weeks, activists in Michigan have begun calling voters in the state, asking them to protest President Biden's support for the Israeli military campaign in Gaza by not voting for him in the Democratic primary.The activists are attempting to turn their anger over Gaza into a political force, one that could be decisive in a critical swing state where winning in November is likely to be a matter of the slimmest of margins.Jennifer Medina, a political reporter for The Times, explains how the war in Gaza is changing politics in Michigan.Guest: Jennifer Medina, a political reporter for The New York Times.Background reading: Will Biden's Gaza stance hurt him in 2024? Michigan is the first test.The war in Gaza turned this longtime Michigan Democrat against Biden.For more information on today's episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
Nevada is doing things differently this year. Or at least, it tried to.The first presidential nominating contest in the west takes place on Tuesday — and on Thursday.But that's not what state officials were hoping would happen when they decided to move from a caucus to a primary in 2021.Democrats got on board — and President Biden is expected to win that contest handily on Tuesday. On the Republican side, however, things did not go according to plan.A caucus was seen as being beneficial to former President Donald J. Trump, so state party officials — who were aggressively lobbied by the Trump campaign — decided to hold a caucus anyway. The caucus, not the primary, is what will determine which Republican candidate wins Nevada's delegates.Nikki Haley, the last remaining significant challenger to Mr. Trump, opted to run in the primary, not the caucus.So Mr. Trump is effectively in a caucus without a real opponent. And his win is a foregone conclusion.Confused? You're not alone.Today, with our colleague Jennifer Medina, we travel to East Las Vegas to talk to voters about what makes their state so critical — and so confounding — to Republicans and Democrats alike.Do you have a question about the 2024 election? We want to hear from you. Fill out this form or email us a voice memo at therunup@nytimes.com
Autumn and Hunter discuss articles that have helped them understand the war between Israel and Hamas and the fractures it has also revealed in American culture.Resources mentioned in this episode:"Israel's 9/11 - The Need for Moral Clarity" by Bernard Howard & Ivan Mesa, The Gospel Coalition"‘Bothsidesism' About Hamas Is a Moral Failure" by Russell Moore, Christianity Today"The Progressives Who Flunked the Hamas Test" by Helen Lewis, The Atlantic"On Israel, Progressive Jews Feel Abandoned by their Left-Wing Allies" by Jennifer Medina & Lisa Lerer, The New York Times"Israel: From the Six-Day War to the Six-Front War" by Thomas Friedman, The New York Times
Samira ist zurück und beide rekapitulieren die letzten zwei Wochen, insbesondere die existenzielle Krise der Linken in Bezug auf den Angriff der Hamas, die Sehnsucht nach Eindeutigkeit in einem asymmetrischen Krieg, die semantische Verdrängung und Umdeutung, den steigenden Antisemitismus in Deutschland und die Angst der Jüdinnen und Juden. Nahostkonflikt und Ambiguitätstoleranz: Terror benennen, Menschlichkeit beachten, Simone Rafael , Amadeu Antonio Stiftung, https://www.amadeu-antonio-stiftung.de/nahostkonflikt-und-ambiguitaetstoleranz-terror-benennen-menschlichkeit-beachten-105805/ “Mama?“, Lena Niethammer, Zeit, https://www.zeit.de/zeit-magazin/2023/45/angriff-israel-hamas-kibbuz-reim-kinder On Israel, Progressive Jews Feel Abandoned by Their Left-Wing Allies, Jennifer Medina and Lisa Lerer, NYT, https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/20/us/politics/progressive-jews-united-states.html Zur Lüge der Linken, Natan Sznaider, SZ+, https://www.sueddeutsche.de/kultur/natan-sznaider-nahost-linke-krieg-israel-hamas-palaestina-1.6292773 UN-Genozidkonvention, https://www.voelkermordkonvention.de, https://www.voelkermordkonvention.de/voelkermord-eine-begriffsbestimmung-9308/ Krieg in Israel: Was Yuval Noah Harari jetzt fürchtet, Zeit Online, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uAizvjJP7tM “Wie sich Israel im Einklang mit dem Völkerrecht verteidigen soll”, Ronen Steinke https://www.instagram.com/reel/Cy20zleswV1/ Bomben auf Gaza, Aufruf zur Massenflucht, Blockade: Was sagt das Völkerrecht dazu?, Ronen Steinke, SZ, https://www.sueddeutsche.de/politik/israel-hamas-voelkerrecht-zivilbevoelkerung-gazastreifen-gaza-1.6287613 “Wir müssen damit rechnen, dass gezielt Gewalt gegen Juden verübt werden könnte”, Interview von Sven Röbel und Wolf Wiedmann-Schmidt, Spiegel+, https://www.spiegel.de/politik/deutschland/antisemitismus-thomas-haldenwang-sorgt-sich-um-die-sicherheit-von-juedinnen-und-juden-a-9f26e255-1245-44dd-91cb-130452c074ea —---------------------------- PP unterwegs: https://www.contra-word.com/Kuenstler-innen/Piratensender-Powerplay/ 01.11.23 Köln, Comedia 02.11.23 Dortmund, Junkyard 16.11.23 Bremen, Lagerhaus 17.11.23 Hamburg, KENT 18.11.23 Berlin, Columbia Theater 27.11.23 München, Lustspielhaus 29.11.23 Stuttgart, Im Wizemann Studio 30.11.23 Frankfurt, Brotfabrik
¡Bienvenido/a al canal de Vástago Church! "Nos apasiona compartir el amor de Dios y su Palabra con el mundo. A través de este canal, te invitamos a explorar mensajes inspiradores, testimonios poderosos y momentos de adoración profunda. Nuestra meta es que encuentres esperanza, sanidad y propósito en Cristo. ¡Suscríbete y únete a nuestra familia virtual para crecer juntos en la fe y marcar la diferencia en nuestro entorno!". ------------------------------------------------------------ Te invitamos a seguirnos en nuestras redes sociales para estar al tanto de las últimas noticias y contenido inspirador: Instagram: [Vastagochurch] Facebook: [Vastago Church] No te olvides de seguir al Pastor Josue Quezada en sus redes sociales: Instagram: [Josuequezadaa] Facebook: [Josue Quezada] ------------------------------------------------------------ Para dar una aportacion generosa o algún donativo puede hacerlo travez: Ath Movil Business: [Iglesiavastago] Pay Pal: [Vastagochurch] ------------------------------------------------------------ Te invitamos a conectar con la vida de nuestra iglesia y descubrir todo lo que tenemos para ofrecerte. No olvides acceder al enlace y descargar nuestra aplicación para tener acceso completo a todas nuestras funciones y servicios (https://vastagochurch.churchcenter.com/pages/home). En nuestra aplicación, encontrarás: 1. Calendario: Mantente al tanto de todos los eventos y actividades que suceden en nuestra iglesia. Desde servicios y conferencias hasta reuniones especiales, podrás estar informado/a y planificar tu participación. 2. Ofrenda y Diezma: A través de nuestra aplicación, podrás realizar tus ofrendas y diezmos de manera sencilla y segura. Contribuye al sostenimiento de nuestra iglesia y apoya nuestras labores y proyectos. 3. Grupos pequeños: Únete a nuestros grupos pequeños y forma parte de una comunidad comprometida en crecer espiritualmente juntos/as. Encuentra personas con intereses similares y disfruta de momentos de compañerismo, estudio bíblico y apoyo mutuo. 4. Conexión con nuestra comunidad: En Vástago Church, valoramos la importancia de la comunidad y el compromiso de crecer juntos. A través de nuestra aplicación, podrás conectarte con otros miembros de la iglesia, intercambiar ideas, hacer preguntas y fortalecer tus relaciones en un ambiente de amor y respeto. 5. ¡Y mucho más! Explora nuestra aplicación y descubre todas las sorpresas y recursos que tenemos preparados para ti. Desde materiales de estudio bíblico hasta contenidos solo en la aplicación, estamos comprometidos en brindarte herramientas para fortalecer tu fe y crecimiento espiritual. No pierdas más tiempo y comienza a disfrutar de todos los beneficios que Vástago Church tiene para ti. Únete a nosotros en YouTube, descarga nuestra aplicación y forma parte de nuestra comunidad de fe vibrante y acogedora. ¡Te esperamos con los brazos abiertos! #mujerdeflujodesangre #manto #jairo
In the special presentation of the In The Thick political podcast produced by Futuro Media, Maria and Julio are joined by Jennifer Medina, a national politics reporter for The New York Times. They break down recent polling on Latino and Latina voters, including Futuro Media's first-ever political poll. They also discuss the issues that actually matter to Latino and Latina voters, and what both parties are missing in their outreach. And, they get into Jennifer's reporting on the rise of right-wing, conservative Latina candidates running on GOP platforms. To subscribe to In The Thick, click here. Photo credit: AP Photo/Morry Gash
Maria and Julio are joined by Jennifer Medina, a national politics reporter for The New York Times. They break down recent polling on Latino and Latina voters, including Futuro Media's first-ever political poll. They also discuss the issues that actually matter to Latino and Latina voters, and what both parties are missing in their outreach. And, they get into Jennifer's reporting on the rise of right-wing, conservative Latina candidates running on GOP platforms. ITT Staff Picks: Jennifer Medina writes about the challenges Nevada Senator Catherine Cortez Masto — who is the first ever Latina senator — is facing in her bid for re-election, as Democrats learn that “demographics alone are not destiny,” in this piece for The New York Times. Suzanne Gamboa reports from historically Democratic South Texas on the highly contested congressional races where Latina Republicans are leading, for NBC News. “America's political parties, and their candidates' campaigns, often shoot themselves in the foot by thinking that Latino and Hispanic voters have very different priorities when compared to the average American voter,” writes Christian Paz in this analysis for Vox. Photo credit: AP Photo/Morry Gash
In this special collaboration with Latino USA, Maria and Julio are joined by Sonja Diaz, founding director of the Latino Policy & Politics Institute at UCLA, and Jazmine Ulloa, national politics reporter for the New York Times, to talk about the complexity of Latino voters ahead of the midterm elections. They get into what they are hearing from voters on the ground, and the key races we should be keeping an eye on. ITT Staff Picks: Suzanne Gamboa writes about the “erosion of Latino voter support” for Republicans following the overturn of Roe v. Wade, for NBC Latino. In this piece for The Atlantic, Ronald Brownstein examines whether we're seeing a lasting realignment of Latinos toward the Republican Party. “But what is most striking is that Ms. Flores won by shunning moderates, embracing the far right and wearing her support for Donald J. Trump on her sleeve — more Marjorie Taylor Greene than Kay Bailey Hutchison,” writes Jennifer Medina in this piece for The New York Times. Photo credit: AP Photo/Eric Gray, File
Tina and Hillary cover the murder of Alderman Ben Lewis and US House Rep. Henry Cuellar. Tina's Story Alderman Ben Lewis was a rising star in Chicago political circles. BUT when he's found dead in his office, it begins a decades long mystery that remains unsolved today. Hillary's Story Democratic congressman Henry Cuellar has voted alongside conservatives on issues like abortion. BUT an FBI raid and a progressive political challenger, Jessica Cisneros, could end his reign in Laredo, Texas. Sources Tina's Story ABC 7 50 years later, alderman murder still open case (https://abc7chicago.com/archive/8965861/) The Chicago Tribune The cold-case murder of ‘Big Cat' Ben Lewis, the 24th Ward's first black alderman (https://www.chicagotribune.com/opinion/commentary/ct-perspec-flashback-ben-lewis-24th-ward-black-alderman-murder-020319-story.html)—by Ron Grossman Lewis RD. ? It's a Name with a Past (https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1993-09-14-9309140245-story.html)--by Robert Davis Murder of city official unsolved after 56 years (https://pressreader.com/article/281857234791842)--by Ron Grossman via Press Reader The New York Times 5,000 Attend Funeral Service For Slain Chicago Alderman (https://www.nytimes.com/1963/03/05/archives/5000-attend-funeral-service-for-slain-chicago-alderman-mayor-daley.html)—by Austin C. Wehrwein ProPublica The Murder Chicago Didn't Want to Solve (https://www.propublica.org/article/ben-lewis-murder)—by Mick Dumke Retreats from Oblivian Blog “HEADLINE: CITY MOURNS SLAIN POL, CHICAGO STYLE” (https://retreatsfromoblivion.wordpress.com/2022/03/23/fiction-city-mourns-slain-pol-chicago-style-by-david-hagerty/)--by Mark Rica, Chicago Daily News Wikipedia Benjamin F. Lewis (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_F._Lewis) Photos Alderman Ben Lewis (https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/5/52/Benjamin_F._Lewis.png?20190328035840)--from Southern Illinosian via Fair Use Motorcade for Lewis's Funeral (https://img.assets-d.propublica.org/v5/images/20210225-motorcade.jpg?crop=focalpoint&fit=crop&fp-x=0.5&fp-y=0.5&h=1600&q=80&w=1600&s=1224c0f12b62548ba8334970bb797be4)--from Chicago Sun Times, Chicago History Museum via ProPublica Officer Outside where Lewis was Found (https://img.assets-d.propublica.org/v5/images/20210225-police-door.jpg?crop=focalpoint&fit=crop&fp-x=0.5&fp-y=0.5&h=804&q=80&w=800&s=0800d1c3a570cb321984f8d5d9328843)--from Chicago Sun Times, Chicago History Museum via ProPublica Hillary's Story CNN Henry Cuellar is a political institution in South Texas. An FBI raid and a second challenge by progressive Jessica Cisneros could topple him (https://www.cnn.com/2022/02/19/politics/henry-cuellar-jessica-cisneros-texas-28-primary-rematch/index.html)--by Eric Bradner and Rachel Janfaza Insider Top House Democrat James Clyburn defends campaigning for Rep. Henry Cuellar, the lone anti-abortion lawmaker in his caucus (https://www.businessinsider.com/pelosi-clyburn-campaigning-for-anti-abortion-democrat-henry-cuellar-texas-2022-5)--by Brent D. Griffiths The Intercept HOUSE MAJORITY WHIP JIM CLYBURN STUMPS FOR ANTI-ABORTION REP. HENRY CUELLAR (https://theintercept.com/2022/05/04/texas-roe-democrats-henry-cuellar-jessica-cisneros/)--by Akela Lacy NBC News FBI raid on Rep. Henry Cuellar's Texas home, office said to be tied to Azerbaijan (https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/fbi-raid-us-rep-henry-cuellars-texas-home-office-said-tied-azerbaijan-rcna13005)--by Michael Kosnar Rep. Cuellar attacked on his anti-abortion stance by opponent Jessica Cisneros in Texas Democratic runoff (https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2022-election/rep-cuellar-attacked-anti-abortion-stance-opponent-cisneros-texas-demo-rcna27251)--by Rebecca Shabad, Garrett Haake, and Haley Talbot The New York Times For South Texas Democrats, an Intraparty Test of Abortion Politics (https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/07/us/politics/cuellar-cisneros-abortion-politics.html)--by James Dobbins, Jennifer Medina, and Katie Glueck Pew Research Center 8 key findings about Catholics and abortion (https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/10/20/8-key-findings-about-catholics-and-abortion/)--by Dalia Fahmy Politico After an FBI raid, ‘King of Laredo' runs on his laurels (https://www.politico.com/news/2022/02/22/henry-cuellar-king-of-laredo-texas-00010461)--by Sarah Ferris Cisneros calls out House Democratic leadership for supporting anti-abortion Cuellar (https://www.politico.com/news/2022/05/04/cisneros-calls-out-house-democrat-leadership-for-supporting-anti-abortion-cuellar-00030124)--by Marissa Martinez Rolling Stone Nancy Pelosi Says Anti-Choice Democrats Are Fine as Long as … Their Votes Don't Matter (https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/nancy-pelosi-henry-ceuller-support-1352290/)--by William Vaillancourt San Antonio Express-News Sex discrimination lawsuit surfaces in Texas Rep. Henry Cuellar's re-election race (https://www.expressnews.com/news/legislature/article/Sex-discrimination-lawsuit-Texas-Rep-Henry-Cuellar-17166871.php)--by Benjamin Wermund The Soapbox House Democrats Are Backing Abortion Foe Henry Cuellar at the Worst Possible Moment (https://newrepublic.com/article/166455/henry-cuellar-cisneros-midterms-2022)--by Alex Shephard The Texas Tribune After FBI raid, U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar says investigation will prove “no wrongdoing on my part” (https://www.texastribune.org/2022/01/25/henry-cuellar-texas-fbi/)--by Patrick Svitek United States Congress Henry Cuellar Biography (https://cuellar.house.gov/biography/) Photos Henry Cuellar (https://www.politico.com/dims4/default/7f973ce/2147483647/strip/true/crop/4474x2982+0+0/resize/1260x840!/quality/90/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fstatic.politico.com%2F2b%2Fed%2F949d2fa846b7bf40d4512fee0ba8%2Felection-2022-abortion-texas-03463.jpg)--by Eric Gay via Politico Pelosi with Henry Cuellar (https://thumbnails.texastribune.org/4kQ7hRT77Dz6KsJ3bIhRzUiHLcM=/1550x1038/smart/filters:format(webp):quality(75)/https://static.texastribune.org/media/files/126aea931f8ba4a2a8799b04b1416d75/_JER6533.jpg)--by Robin Jerstad via Texas Tribune Jessica Cisneros (https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2022-election/rep-cuellar-attacked-anti-abortion-stance-opponent-cisneros-texas-demo-rcna27251)--screenshot via NBC News Catholics support legal abortion (https://www.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/ft_2020.10.20_abortion_01.png?resize=1400,1332)--graph via Pew Research Center
Welcome to the third episode of explorando las voces Latinas! Today I have a special guest Jennifer Medina; a student, writer, journalist, and DACA recipient. We sat down to have an honest conversation about what it's like to be a dreamer in the United States. We talked college life, generational trauma, Latino parents, and so much more! Hope you enjoy!
On today's podcast we present an exclusive conversation with Eric Siddall vice president of the ADDA the professional association for Deputy District Attorneys of Los Angeles county. Siddall joins me to discuss the first year of Los Angeles district attorney George Gascons term in office. In a November New York Times article entitled He's Remaking Criminal Justice in L.A. But How Far Is Too Far? Emily Bazelon and Jennifer Medina compare the tenures of reform oriented prosecutors Kim Fox in Chicago and Larry Krasner in Philadelphia to George Gascón's experience here in Los Angeles. Both Fox and Krasner won reelection even as the murder rates in their cities climbed significantly. According to Bazelon and Medina, "Their victories showed that district attorneys could stand for progressive change and survive a rise in violent crime." But those elections differed somewhat from Gascón's situation in Los Angeles, as he faces a second effort to recall him: "They suggested the political wisdom of making careful case-by-case decisions about releasing people who have committed serious acts of violence."
LA city officials are responding to a rise in violent crime, and news headlines are painting a dramatic picture. But what are the real numbers versus public perception, and how does that play into the politics of crime? LA District Attorney George Gascón is facing a lot of resistance and a second recall attempt. There's no evidence that his policies are tied to any rise in crime, but if some voters think that's the truth, the recall will succeed, says The New York Times' Jennifer Medina.
BONUS EPISODE 15: Insights from Producing a Dance Show & Navigating a Freelance Dance Career in St. Louis, MO with Laura Roth Laura Roth studied modern dance at Southeast Missouri State University and, since 2013, has been dancing professionally in St. Louis, MO. She has performed the work of choreographers such as Lindsay Hawkins, Robert Poe, Mariko Kumanomido, Leah Robertson, Vance Baldwin, Ashley McQueen, Keli Hermes, Diana Barrios, Jenny Battenberg, and Jennifer Medina. In addition to company concerts, Laura has danced in festivals throughout the region including Dance St. Louis' Spring to Dance, Kansas City's Fringe Festival, City in Motion's Modern Night at the Folly, Karlovsky & Company's Dine on Dance, and National Dance Week St. Louis. Having grown up performing in and choreographing musical theatre productions in and around her hometown of Jacksonville, IL, she has been thrilled to have opportunities to choreograph musicals in the St. Louis area. She has also had the pleasure of teaching year-long courses and master classes with several performing arts organizations. Laura recently returned to her alma mater, SEMO, for a four-day residency during which she set a piece of choreography on the Freshmen BFA Dance students and taught master classes. Continue reading for highlights from Laura's career. More on Laura can be found at https://www.laurarothdance.com/ or @laurarothdance on IG https://www.instagram.com/laurarothdance/?hl=en Don't forget to follow us on IG and Facebook @dancetipsdaily! Stay up to date with DTD & Subscribe to the once a month newsletter at www.dancetipsdaily.com Like what you heard? Give us a 5 star rating or share with a friend to help us keep bringing well rounded & grounded dance content to you! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dance-tips-daily/support
¿Para que nos sirve la astrología en nuestras vidas? Acá te contamos como este instrumento de cosmovisión nos ayuda a la posibilidad de entendernos mejor en este largo camino del autoconocimiento. Para todos aquellos curiosos, aquí Jennifer nos explica acerca de los signos, la capacidad de potenciar nuestros dones y talentos, y qué tenemos que aprender a trabajar acorde a nuestro signo para fluir mejor en la vida.
En août 2020, le candidat démocrate à l’élection présidentielle américaine Joe Biden annonce que Kamala Harris sera sa colistière. Ancienne procureure générale de Californie et sénatrice depuis 2017, elle est la première femme noire à prétendre au poste suprême de numéro 2 de l’Admnistration. Critiquée pour avoir participé à la politique de répression dure à l’égard de la criminalité mais revendiquant des positions progressistes, Kamala Harris est un personnage complexe et contradictoire qui a également dû essuyer les assauts du sexisme et racisme durant toute sa carrière. À l’occasion des élections présidentielles américaines qui se tiendront le 3 novembre 2020, Clémentine et Kaoutar reviennent sur le parcours et les ambitions de cette femme politique, peut-ête promise au poste de vice-présidente des États-Unis. Références entendues dans l’épisode : Glenn Thrush, Jennifer Medina, “California Republican Party Admits It Placed Misleading Ballot Boxes Around State”, New York Times, octobre 2020. Mehar Gujral, “Willfully Mispronouncing Sen. Kamala Harris' Name Tells South Asian-Americans We Don't Belong”, Teen Vogue, octobre 2020. Robin Givhan, “Kamala Harris grew up in a mostly white world. Then she went to a black university in a black city.”, The Washington Post, octobre 2020. Back on track est un programme d’aide pour les personnes ayant été condamnées pour des infractions routières en Ontario. Il est pensé pour aider les personnes à séparer la conduite de la boisson et de la drogue. Le Truancy Program est une loi votée en 2011 qui autorise les procureurs à poursuivre les parents pour délit si leurs enfants manquent 10 pourcent de l’année scolaire sans raison valable. Benjamin Wallace-Wells, “Kamala Harris Gives New Meaning to the Biden Campaign”, The New Yorker, août 2020. Nicole Narea, “A post-debate focus group of undecided voters suggests that Kamala Harris faces an uphill battle”, Vox, octobre 2020. Reportage de CNN, “Who is Kamala Harris ? A look at her background and career in politics”, août 2020. Gilles Vandal, “Le ticket Biden-Harris: un partenariat idéal”, La Tribune, octobre 2020. Iman Sultan, “Kamala Harris Presents a Political Paradox for South Asian Voters”, Bitch Media, octobre 2020. Quoi de Meuf est une émission de Nouvelles Écoutes, cet épisode est conçu par Clémentine Gallot et présenté avec Kaoutar Harchi. Mixage Laurie Galligani. Générique réalisé par Aurore Meyer Mahieu. Prise de son, montage et coordination Ashley Tola.
This episode contains strong language. In the last decade, elections have tightened in Arizona, a traditionally Republican stronghold, as Democrats gain ground.According to polls, Joe Biden is leading in the state — partly because of white suburban women moving away from President Trump, but also because of efforts to activate the Latino vote.Will that turn states like Arizona blue? And do enough Hispanic voters actually want Mr. Biden as president?To gauge the atmosphere, Jennifer Medina, a national politics reporter for The New York Times, spoke to Democratic activists and Trump supporters in Arizona.Guests: Jennifer Medina, a national politics reporter for The Times.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily Background reading: Though a majority of Latino voters favors Democrats, Hispanic men are a small but enduring part of Trump’s base. Those supporters see him as forceful, unapologetic and a symbol of economic success.If Joe Biden wins Arizona, he would be only the second Democratic presidential candidate to have done so since 1952. But the state has been trending more friendly to the party for years.
This episode contains strong language. In the last decade, elections have tightened in Arizona, a traditionally Republican stronghold, as Democrats gain ground.According to polls, Joe Biden is leading in the state — partly because of white suburban women moving away from President Trump, but also because of efforts to activate the Latino vote.Will that turn states like Arizona blue? And do enough Hispanic voters actually want Mr. Biden as president?To gauge the atmosphere, Jennifer Medina, a national politics reporter for The New York Times, spoke to Democratic activists and Trump supporters in Arizona.Guests: Jennifer Medina, a national politics reporter for The Times.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily Background reading: Though a majority of Latino voters favors Democrats, Hispanic men are a small but enduring part of Trump’s base. Those supporters see him as forceful, unapologetic and a symbol of economic success.If Joe Biden wins Arizona, he would be only the second Democratic presidential candidate to have done so since 1952. But the state has been trending more friendly to the party for years.
The Democratic and Republican conventions are finally over but most of the major credible pollsters are waiting for the dust to settle before tracking public opinion of both presidential candidates. The critical message pushed by the RNC this week was that Trump kept the promises he made to voters, but is that a real policy agenda moving into his second term? Is Biden’s “nice guy,” “Build Back Better” strategy winning over wobbly Republican voters? Do conventions even affect voters’ perceptions of candidates all that much? “I don’t know that anything unexpected or dramatic came out of the last two weeks, and I doubt that to the extent there are persuadable voters, a lot of them are spending eight hours of their life in front of the tv each week watching this,” said Republican pollster Kristen Soltis Anderson on today’s episode. “I would highly suspect you had more hardcore Democrats hate-watching the Republican Convention than you did genuinely persuadable voters in the middle.” Tune in to hear Sarah and Steve chat with Anderson—co-founder of Echelon Insights and columnist at the Washington Examiner—for a conversation about the historical importance of conventions in moving the needle for presidential candidates in the polls. Show Notes: -Pew Research Center’s American Trends Panel, Alice Johnson’s speech at the Republican National Convention, “The ‘Rage Moms’ Democrats Are Counting On” by Lisa Lerer and Jennifer Medina in the New York Times, Donald Trump’s RNC acceptance speech See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Greetings from our USB microphones! In this episode, we discuss ICE’s recent rule prohibiting international students from staying in the U.S. if their colleges go fully online. We also dig into questions of cross-race solidarity in the Black Lives Matter movement, especially regarding Latinx/brown communities. Finally, we answer our first sampling of listener questions. As always, thank you for listening and subscribing. Please spread the word and continue to send feedback via Twitter (@ttsgpod) or email (timetosaygoodbyepod@gmail.com)! 5:09 – How would the ICE crackdown on international students work? Who is the real target (psst China), and what are the broader economic implications for universities and college towns? (i.e., Whither Stonybrook, NY’s glorious Chinese food?) 28:22 – Jennifer Medina wrote a provocative story in the New York Times on Latinx participation in the BLM movement and questions of fit: “Latinos Back Black Lives Matter Protests. They Want Change for Themselves, Too.” Can a focused movement be inclusive? How do we stand up for one another? Do we need to complicate the Black-white paradigm of race in America?53:39 – We attempt to answer very smart questions about our episode on tankie-ism and alternatives to American and Chinese imperialism, how we should actually address anti-black racism in the Asian diaspora (see our post from a few weeks ago), and what a rewriting of Asian-American history (from Chinese Exclusion to Grace Lee Boggs, Yuri Kochiyama, and Vincent Chin) might entail. Thanks to listeners Carlo, Michelle, Chung-chieh, and Sam for their questions. And apols to everyone whose messages we didn’t get to tackle.Please share and subscribe to support us! Get on the email list at goodbye.substack.com
A contentious debate and another primary state. The government response to coronavirus. Plus, President Trump's visit to India. The news roundtable is here. Jennifer Medina, Rep. Jim Clyburn and Seung Min Kim join David Folkenflik.
In two days, in two cities — El Paso and Dayton, Ohio — two mass shootings have left at least 29 people dead. We look at two stories from one of those shootings. Guests: Simon Romero, a national correspondent for The New York Times, and Jennifer Medina, who is covering the 2020 presidential campaign, spoke with us from El Paso. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.Background reading: The back-to-back bursts of gun violence left a nation stunned and shaken.The shooting rampage in El Paso was the deadliest anti-Latino attack in modern American history. It is being investigated as domestic terrorism.The Democratic presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke, who represented El Paso for years in Congress, said that President Trump had “a lot to do with what happened.”
The U.S. announced new asylum rules this week, making asylum seekers who have passed through another country first ineligible to claim asylum at the U.S. southern border. Sam looks at how recent attacks on four Democratic congresswomen of color falls in line with President Trump's reelection strategy. Plus, why millions of people have responded to a Facebook event to "storm Area 51" and "see them aliens." Sam is joined in the studio by New York Times national correspondent Jennifer Medina and NPR correspondent Kirk Siegler.
The “Mexicanism” of Los Angeles, wrote Mexican poet and onetime L.A. resident Octavio Paz, “floats, never quite existing, never quite vanishing.” L.A.’s historical connections to Mexico and the rest of Latin America are well known, and its human connections—in a city of immigrants and their progeny—are obvious. Mexicans and Central Americans in particular have shaped Angeleno identity for generations. But how Latin American is L.A. really? Comedian and art collector Cheech Marin, Univision anchor León Krauze, and The New York Times national correspondent Jennifer Medina, and moderator Gregory Rodriguez, Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of Zócalo Public Square, joined in a Zócalo/Getty “Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA” panel discussion, “Is L.A. Really Part of Latin America?” to examine the bridges and walls between Los Angeles and the world to its south.
Alex and Dan sit down for a late night brunch at Taix in Echo Park with their guest, Jennifer Medina. She is a photographer, musician and all around savant. They discuss New York vs Los Angeles, her Venezuelan origins, Floridian theme parks, childhood disappointments, first kiss, Eyes Wide Wall Street, Instagram photography, ElimiDate, stinky pasta and much more. You can explore deeper into Jennifer's beautiful world through the following: jennifermedinaar.com jennifersvisualdiary.com soundcloud.com/lulannie soundcloud.com/dreamgirlband @lulannie
Support The Recovery Warrior Show on Patreon! www.patreon.com/recoverywarriorshow Get your 2016 Dream Map Calendar Combo Use the discount code WARRIOR to get 10% off your order :-) http://shop.recoverywarriors.com/products/combo-set-2016-calendar-warrior-workbook-ebook Show Notes: https://www.recoverywarriors.com/jennifer-medina/ Competitive, driven, determined and perfectionistic. These characteristics make for an excellent athlete, but also can lead to an eating disorder. The can pressure to perform at a high level as a student athlete can be detrimental to one's health as it was for Jennifer Medina. Now pursuing her Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor (LPCC), Jennifer helps student athletes struggling with eating disorders and body image issues make better decisions for their health. If you are a male with an eating disorder that is or has been an athlete at the college level NBC would like to interview you! Please reach out to Kevin Nious (Kevin.Nious@nbcuni.com) if you are interested in sharing your story and continuing the media coverage that Jennifer was a part of on eating disorders in the college athlete population. What You'll Learn: Why athletes are at risk of developing an eating disorder • What are the main characteristics that define an athlete • How the identity of being an athlete can feed into having an eating disorder • Why it is essential that coaches understand how to handle a player with eating disorder • How Jennifer overcame her struggle with eating disorders as a student athlete • How humor helped Jennifer deal with loss and change
Washington Post columnist Harold Meyerson talks with New York Times reporter Jennifer Medina about the past, present, and future of American unions, and their relationship with the American left. Labor is struggling to stay relevant, but by bringing in people who aren't in unions and by forming alliances with other organizations, the movement can again have power in American politics.
8 AM - Sam Armstrong can now escape from his bed; Retail madness!; NY Times correspondent Jennifer Medina reports on national money pouring into a Los Angeles school board election.