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I am thrilled to welcome back a true advocate for the tiny house movement, Lindsay Wood. In this episode, we delve into the opportunities and challenges of living small in California compared to other states, exploring everything from zoning issues to the emerging interest in disaster relief applications for tiny homes. Lindsay shares her insights on finding and creating supportive communities, as well as the intrinsic flexibility and resale potential of tiny homes. We also discuss her project in Daly City aimed at providing urban experiences for potential tiny home enthusiasts. Join us as we uncover valuable tips, resources, and inspiration to help you navigate your own tiny living journey.In this episode:
Join us as we explore the transformative potential of tiny living with Lindsay Wood, the Tiny Home Lady, and Theresa Bradley, founder of Race to Zero Waste. Discover how tiny homes can redefine the American Dream, address the housing crisis, and contribute to environmental sustainability. Our guests from a 2023 interview share insights on the challenges and rewards of downsizing, the intricacies of zoning laws, and the movement's accessibility. Tune in to learn how living with less can lead to a richer life. As house prices escalate, the concept of living in smaller homes has gone viral. Whether fixed to land or portable, the tiny house movement has swept across the US. Yet, what is the day-to-day reality of living the downsized life? Our guests, Lindsay Wood - The Tiny Home Lady [https://www.thetinyhomelady.com/] - and Teresa Bradley from Tiny Green Adventures [https://www.youtube.com/@tinygreenadventure], bring a dose of reality to the challenge, but also the splendor, of living simply with few belongings in a tiny home. Can you really save money by going tiny? Is it a net positive for the environment? And what about zero waste, is that possible? Are tiny homes the way to tackle the housing crisis across the United States? Tiny Homes, although lauded as a green way forward in a world covered in wasteful McMansions and debt enslaving rent payments, must overcome land and building regulations (that in many places) still consider this form of housing either illegal or difficult to approve. We go into all these points and more on this show. For an extended interview and other benefits, become an EcoJustice Radio patron at https://www.patreon.com/ecojusticeradio Lindsay Wood, "The Tiny Home Lady" [https://www.thetinyhomelady.com/] is on a mission to develop 100,000 Tiny Homes as attainable and affordable houses in California and across the US. Lindsay has been investing in Real Estate since 2015 and believes Tiny Homes are a solution to the housing and climate crisis. Lindsay consults and guides people dreaming of going Tiny through The GO TiNY! Academy, GO TiNY! Showcase. Teresa Bradley is the founding Director of Race to Zero Waste [http://racetozerowaste.org] and lives with her partner, daughter and cat who all live a low waste lifestyle while traveling most of the year in a 24-foot Class C Motorhome. She and her partner travel for environmental project work throughout California and showcase their lifestyle on their Instagram & YouTube channel called Tiny Green Adventure [https://www.youtube.com/@tinygreenadventure] . Jessica Aldridge, Co-Host and Producer of EcoJustice Radio, is an environmental educator, community organizer, and 15-year waste industry leader. She is a co-founder of SoCal 350, organizer for ReusableLA, and founded Adventures in Waste. She is a former professor of Recycling and Resource Management at Santa Monica College, and an award recipient of the international 2021 Women in Sustainability Leadership and the 2016 inaugural Waste360, 40 Under 40. More Info/Resources: https://garageshedcarportbuilder.com/tiny-homes-a-big-idea/ Podcast Website: http://ecojusticeradio.org/ Podcast Blog: https://www.wilderutopia.com/category/ecojustice-radio/ Support the Podcast: Patreon https://www.patreon.com/ecojusticeradio PayPal https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=LBGXTRM292TFC&source=url Executive Producer: Jack Eidt Host and Producer: Jessica Aldridge Engineer and Original Music: Blake Quake Beats Episode 172
Join our host Rebecca Hidalgo Rains and tiny home expert Lindsay Wood aka "The Tiny Home Lady" as they dive deep into the unique world of tiny home living.
Rightsizing Your American Dream with Lindsay Wood EPISODE SUMMARY: Welcome to Episode 20 where we are discussing how and why we may need to right size the old idea of the American Dream that was handed down to us. In this world based on achievement and commercialism, how do we live with less? This is a concept we will be addressing today with my special guest Lindsay Wood aka The Tiny Home Lady. This is a fascinating conversation about the mindset of tiny home living and how it can help to accomplish the American dream of homeownership. As you know, when you shift your mindset on something, everything starts to change in your life. Find out how less can actually be more in this exciting episode. Lindsay Wood Bio: Lindsay Wood, "The Tiny Home Lady" is on a mission to develop 100,000 attainable sustainable Tiny Homes across the US. As a Real Estate Investor and Green MBA Lindsay believes attainable, sustainable Tiny Homes are a solution to the housing and climate crisis. Lindsay is the creator of the GO TiNY! Academy, guiding buyers, investors on the path to GO TiNY! She offers GO TiNY! VIP Tours at Tiny Home events so people can get answers to their Tiny Home questions. Her GO TiNY! Showcase connects innovative companies with builders and buyers looking to get the best products and services in the industry. Lindsay has been featured live on FOX KTVU, and KUSI TV, CBS and in articles on Business Insider, East Bay Times, Tiny House Lifestyle Podcast, and Press Democrat among others. Find out more at www.TheTinyHomeLady.com Learn More about Carrie here: https://carrierowan.com/
As house prices escalate, the concept of living in smaller homes has gone viral. Whether fixed to land or portable, the tiny house movement has swept across the US. Yet, what is the day-to-day reality of living the downsized life? Our guests this week, Lindsay Wood - The Tiny Home Lady [https://www.thetinyhomelady.com/] - and Teresa Bradley from Tiny Green Adventures [https://www.youtube.com/@tinygreenadventure3464], bring a dose of reality to the challenge, but also the splendor, of living simply with few belongings in a tiny home. Can you really save money by going tiny? Is it a net positive for the environment? And what about zero waste, is that possible? Are tiny homes the way to tackle the housing crisis across the United States? Tiny Homes, although lauded as a green way forward in a world covered in wasteful McMansions and debt enslaving rent payments, must overcome land and building regulations (that in many places) still consider this form of housing either illegal or difficult to approve. We go into all these points and more on this show. For an extended interview and other benefits, become an EcoJustice Radio patron at https://www.patreon.com/posts/tiny-home-lady-81679651 Lindsay Wood, "The Tiny Home Lady" [https://www.thetinyhomelady.com/] is on a mission to develop 100,000 Tiny Homes as attainable and affordable houses in California and across the US. Lindsay has been investing in Real Estate since 2015 and believes Tiny Homes are a solution to the housing and climate crisis. Lindsay consults and guides people dreaming of going Tiny through The GO TiNY! Academy, GO TiNY! Showcase and the GO TiNY! VIP Tours [https://www.youtube.com/@GOTINYTV] . Teresa Bradley is the founding Director of Race to Zero Waste [http://racetozerowaste.org] and lives with her partner, daughter and cat who all live a low waste lifestyle while traveling most of the year in a 24-foot Class C Motorhome. She and her partner travel for environmental project work throughout California and showcase their lifestyle on their Instagram & YouTube channel called Tiny Green Adventure [https://www.youtube.com/@tinygreenadventure3464] . Jessica Aldridge, Co-Host and Producer of EcoJustice Radio, is an environmental educator, community organizer, and 15-year waste industry leader. She is a co-founder of SoCal 350, organizer for ReusableLA, and founded Adventures in Waste. She is a former professor of Recycling and Resource Management at Santa Monica College, and an award recipient of the international 2021 Women in Sustainability Leadership and the 2016 inaugural Waste360, 40 Under 40. More Info/Resources: https://www.thetinyhomelady.com/press.html https://garageshedcarportbuilder.com/tiny-homes-a-big-idea/ Podcast Website: http://ecojusticeradio.org/ Podcast Blog: https://www.wilderutopia.com/category/ecojustice-radio/ Support the Podcast: Patreon https://www.patreon.com/ecojusticeradio PayPal https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=LBGXTRM292TFC&source=url Executive Producer: Jack Eidt Host and Producer: Jessica Aldridge Engineer and Original Music: Blake Quake Beats Episode 172 Photo credit: The Tiny Home Lady
November 14, 2022, Sarah Reith — A discussion about establishing regulations for tiny homes on wheels led to a call for more regulations, more freedom, and more flexibility in housing at last week's Board of Supervisors meeting. After the Board updated the building code, as it's required to do every three years, supervisors turned their attention to recommendations for moveable tiny homes, which would be licensed and registered with the DMV but also required to meet the standards of stick-built homes, including sanitation hookups and water supply, fire agency requirements, and building permits. Lindsay Wood, the “tiny home lady,” made her case, saying that tiny homes are catching on all over the state as a solution to several persistent economic woes. She told the Board she had had her own tiny home built in Ukiah, and that she is working on developing a company to build more in the area. “The Ukiah High School is actively building two tiny homes,” through a Career Technical Education program, she said. “We have a lot of opportunities to train our youth and also house more people, offering workforce housing, agriculture housing, and so much more, so that people like myself, who grew up here since 1980, can actually afford to live here.” Supervisor Glenn McGourty asked Planning and Building Director Julia Krog about the current state of tiny home regulations in the county. She told him it is permissible to build a tiny home that is not on wheels, “as long as you meet building code standards.” “So this is just a portable version of a tiny home,” he surmised. “That's correct,” she replied. “Right now you are only able to use things like recreational vehicles that are built on a chassis for movement for temporary uses.” But a recommendation that tiny homes be situated on a concrete or asphalt pad drew criticism from Supervisor Dan Gjerde as well as environmental consultants who spoke about the need for a grading ordinance. Gjerde, who has long been an advocate for additional dwelling units and affordable housing policies, asked that the regulations not establish permanent concrete foundations as the default standard. And he expressed some skepticism about the whole idea. “We don't really want to see a bunch of asphalt or concrete placed where it's not needed,” he said. “And you know, these tiny homes may be here today, gone tomorrow. Who's to say how long they'll stay on a piece of property. It could be something of a fad.” He went further, explaining that he was concerned about the possibility of tiny homes affecting the character of the neighborhood, particularly if there was not a more conventional house on the property as a primary residence. “If in 2022, or 2023, we suddenly say, well, you know, for decades you've needed to build a stick-built house on a foundation, but beginning now, a neighboring vacant property could have nothing on it more than a tiny home, especially when you're talking smaller parcels in more suburban conditions, I think it really could be out of character with the rest of the neighborhood,” he said. Supervisor Ted Williams leaped in with a defense of personal liberties and the environment. “I'm weighing consistency, what people expect in a neighborhood, with government intruding on an individual's right to live in a small house,” he argued. “And imagine a neighborhood where all parcels on all sides are developed with 2500 square foot houses. And somebody decides they want to live in a 300 square foot house. Maybe that's all they can afford. Maybe that's all the resources they want to use. I don't know if it's government's job to say no, you have to build a large house. What's wrong with somebody choosing to live in a very minimalist, I mean if we all did that, we would have less of a climate impact.” Gjerde worried that residents of tiny homes would spend most of their time outdoors, possibly making noise that would disturb the neighbors. McGourty took the opportunity to point out the lack of a noise ordinance. “Noise is noise,” he pointed out. “And I have neighbors who live two miles from me, but their big diesel pump is right next door to me. I think that we should have standards for noise in Mendocino County that don't exceed 55 decibels at the property line, which is kind of standard in a lot of communities, and that would address the issue in the end.” Two environmental consultants who had hoped to speak about a presentation on riparian and wetlands protections added their concerns about creating a policy that they thought could lead to unregulated grading. That item was rescheduled, but Estelle Clifton and Heather Morrison warned of possible environmental damage if tiny homes are allowed under a ministerial permit, an “over the counter” authorization that's granted to projects that meet local zoning requirements. Clifton introduced herself as a biological consultant and registered professional forester who has worked in the county for 20 years. “When the county as the lead agency grants permission to bulldoze habitats,” she said, “as the lead agency, the county is responsible for that action. And in other counties, where they ministerially grant such allowances, they do have a checklist that guarantees certain protections are adhered to. For it to be a ministerial process, there has to be real evidence that there really is an exemption from environmental damage.” Krog said some applicants would need a grading permit, but there's not currently a grading ordinance. “They would have to go through the standard grading permit with our office, if they trigger a grading permit,” she said. “It really depends on the amount of cubic yards that they're moving. And in order to trigger a grading permit with our office, it's a pretty substantial amount of cubic yards that you do need to move.” She added that before her tenure, the county “did work on a grading permit at one time. I understand that that got shelved at a certain point, and there are several boxes that relate to it, but I don't believe it's ever come back.” Ultimately, Krog expects the tiny home ordinance by itself will be minimal. It's the deferred discussion about environmental protections that could change the housing landscape. “If you treat these like we do all other structures, it really is the status quo,” she said. “Creating regulations related to stream and wetland and riparian corridors would really change the way that development occurs within this county.”
Aly Cook, mayoral candidate for Tasman, discussing climate and local government with Lindsay Wood of Resilienz Ltd.
Richard Osmaston, mayoral candidate for Tasman and Nelson, discussing climate and local government with Lindsay Wood of Resilienz Ltd.
Tim King, mayoral candidate for Tasman, discussing climate and local government with Lindsay Wood of Resilienz Ltd.
Rohan O'Neill-Stevens, mayoral candidate for Nelson, discussing climate and local government with Lindsay Wood of Resilienz Ltd.
Mike Harvey, mayoral candidate for Tasman, discussing climate and local government with Lindsay Wood of Resilienz Ltd.
Aly Cook, mayoral candidate for Tasman, discussing climate and local government with Lindsay Wood of Resilienz Ltd.
Matt Lawrey, mayoral candidate for Nelson, discussing climate and local government with Lindsay Wood of Resilienz Ltd.
Lindsay Wood, The Tiny Home Lady, and our very own tiny guru, Allison Shea, share their vast knowledge of tiny homes! They discuss their personal tiny journeys, how to travel with your tiny house, tiny home legality and parking, building, financing, and so much more. You cannot skip this article if you are planning on going tiny!! Show Notes: https://www.tinyhometours.com/post/all-things-tiny Sign up for our newsletter: bit.ly/THT-Newsletter Coloring Book: www.tinyhometours.com/coloring-book
Kiwi truck drivers are being asked for their thoughts on how we can address climate change in a new competition. Lindsay Wood, director of the climate change consultancy group Resilienz, tells Jesse Mulligan about it.
Beautiful and full of loving life, Lindsay from @wood_brain shares with us on the podcast all her smiles. From her long experience working at Trader Joe's, how many hours a day she nurtures her plants, and her growth with working brands and growing her YouTube. Listen as Linsday motivates and genuinely builds other makers up. We know why she is so loved. Enjoy this weeks episode and thank you from Tiff @nightcarverdesigns and Nickole @repnmyhood for your continued support. We appreciate and love this maker community that we get to know each week. Please make sure to follow @behindthemakerpodcast on Instagram and subscribe to us on YouTube where you can catch every episode each Sunday morning. Sending all the love back to each of you! Makers mentioned in the episode are: @nobadtides @rachel_metz @purposebuilt.co @pinebarrenpalletworks @themakershappyhour @thebarefootforge @anneofalltrades @wilker_dos @_callmemabie_ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/behindthemakerpodcast/message
Lindsay Wood is an evangelist for tiny living, and these days she’s as busy as ever. As the pandemic has put economic pressure on a large swath of the country, tiny houses are being increasingly seen as a solution to housing affordability and inequality. But there are some big legal hurdles to get over before we get there, and in this interview, Lindsay helps us explore them.Full Show Notes and Images: https://www.thetinyhouse.net/lindsay-wood-2In This Episode:Could tiny homes be included in the eviction moratorium?Lindsay's affordable housing investment planNew legislation in CA that's great for ADU ownersWhy the ordinances in CA can help legalize tiny homes elsewhereThe reasons that many cities have not allowed tiny housesAdditional expenses that are necessary to ready a site for tiny house parkingAlternatives to trailersThe difference between 'traditional affordable housing' and 'tiny house affordable housing'What is THIA doing to help with the housing crisis?This Week's Sponsor: Let’s face it, most Tiny House dwellers want their homes to be small, but not uncomfortable. That means reliable, unlimited, hot water. Precision Temp’s propane-fired hot water heaters reliably provide unlimited hot water, and they’re specifically designed with tiny homes in mind. In fact, the NSP 550 model was installed in my own tiny home, and the reason I chose it was because it did not require a large hole in the side of my home like other RV hot water heaters. Instead, it mounts discreetly through the floor of the tiny house and works quietly and reliably. With their patented VariFlame technology, these are the only gas-fired tankless water heaters approved by RVIA and are ANS certified. Features such as cold weather and wind protection, precise electronic temperature control, and onboard diagnostics are standard. With higher efficiency and 55,000 BTUs of power, these units produce far more hot water than traditional water heaters. And since they don't come on unless you want hot water (or to protect against freezing), you may find that you use as little as half the propane or natural gas as before. So go ahead and take that long, hot shower! Precisiontemp is offering listeners of the Tiny House Lifestyle Podcast $100 off plus free shipping using the coupon code THLP. Head over to PrecisionTemp.com and use the coupon code THLP for $100 off any order plus free shipping. That website again is PrecisionTemp.com, coupon code THLP. Thank you so much to PrecisionTemp for sponsoring our show!
-- T L D R --- In this episode I sat down with Lindsay Wood and reflected on the past as a former Mixer Partner and how she'll have to continue her career on Twitch. Don't forget to leave a review and share with everyone you know! --- W H O A R E W E --- Welcome to The Creators Club, hosted by designer/creator Segneri. On this podcast you will find conversations from a wide variety of content creators, youtubers, streamers and much more. Some of them you may have not heard of but their creative process and ideology is still something you can learn and grow from. So sit back, relax and get ready to learn from the newest member of The Creators Club. *Intro music by @peteza on Twitter* --- L I N K S --- @HazelStyxx on all social media Twitter: @hazelstyxx Twitch: @hazelstyxx --- S O C I A L M E D I A --- Twitch: @segneri Twitter: @_segneri_ YouTube: @segneri Podcast YouTube: @The Creators Club Discord: @Studio96 Website: https://segneri.co/ Instagram: @_segneri_ Email: josh@segneri.co --- G E A R --- Links below are affiliated links and help support me at not extra cost to you Mic: Rode Podmic Boom Arm: RODE PSA 1 XLR Cable: Mogami Gold STUDIO-06 Audio Interface: Go XLR Mini Headset: Beyerdynamic DT 990 Pro 250 ohm Dac/Amp: Schiit Fulla 2 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thecreatorsclub/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thecreatorsclub/support
This concludes our three part conversation with Lindsay Wood on counter conditioning. In Part 1 we began with the basics of counter conditioning which means we began with classical conditioning. In her work at shelters, that’s where Lindsay had begun, but she has been expanding her understanding of those protocols by looking at them more through an operant lens. In Part 3 we continue this exploration of counter conditioning by exploring a series of related subjects. Following these threads takes us to a deeper, more robust understanding of counter conditioning.
Last week we began a conversation with Lindsay Wood Brown. Lindsay is a member of the Clicker Expo faculty. She is a board-certified applied animal behaviorist (ACAAB) with a master's degree in animal behavior. She is a Karen Pryor Academy (KPA) course developer and has served as a KPA faculty member since 2012. Lindsay consults for animal shelters across the country. She previously served as the Director of Operations for Lynchburg Humane Society in Virginia and as the Director of Animal Training and Behavior for the Humane Society of Boulder Valley in Boulder, Colorado. The shelter work means for certain protocols Lindsay has seen hundreds of case histories. That’s the experience we wanted to draw on in this discussion of counter conditioning. At the end of part one we were stressing how important it is to adapt any of the protocols you read about to the individual you are working with. We pick up there as we look at counter conditioning from an operant perspective.
Lindsay Wood Brown joins us for a conversation on counter conditioning. Dominique starts us off by describing the situation she has with her easily distracted dog. The behavior she’s dealing with is something many of us have to contend with - whether it is a dog or a horse who is exhibiting the behavior. In this conversation we begin with the basics - what is counter conditioning? Lindsay describes how she would have talked about it earlier in her career. She then brings us forward to her current understanding of these procedures. The shift takes her from classical conditioning to operant. The change helps her to refine the procedures and gives her a systematic strategy to progress with an animal.
Radio legend and prolific Monona resident Lindsay Wood Davis is our guest for episode ten where we learn about our love of real estate near water, and how not to get soaked. We look at the lightning real estate lessons learned as Lindsay may have navigated more real estate moves that any man in Monona to date. Lindsay talks about his love of the lakes, love of being local and why you need to consider your neighbors first. Lindsay joins In The 608 hosts Ben Anton and Adam Elliott, where we also talk about the seasonality of real estate and the importance of good neighbords. Get advice on improving your home with the "Top Of The Hour Tip". Get up to date local real estate trends and advice for buyers and sellers with the "MARKet Update" from Rachel Whaley of Lauer Realty Group. Get the bigger picture of the economy as it relates to the national real estate market with Phil Plourd's and Phil’s Phone-in that looks beyond the 608." Episode 10 - October 2019.
Lindsay and her husband Eric were not expecting to build their tiny home themselves. In fact, they hired a builder expecting the house to be finished for them. Part way through the build, their builder went out of business and they were left with the shell of a 33-foot Gooseneck tiny house on wheels. In this episode, we'll learn what happened from there, Lindsay's tips for working with builders to make sure you don't end up in the same situation that she did, and what Experience Tiny Homes is doing to spread the love for the tiny house movement. The post What Happens When Your Builder Goes Bankrupt with Lindsay Wood from Experience Tiny Homes – #070 appeared first on The Tiny House.
This episode is special because one of my digital marketing friends came to town and my wife and I got to tour her tiny home! There wasn't a great signal out there so it does jump cut a little bit during the beginning. You can check out the video version of this by going to www.facebook.com/brimomorales. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/brittany-morales4/support
Lindsay Wood Brown Bio Lindsay Wood Brown is a board-certified Associate Applied Animal Behaviourist (ACAAB) with a master’s degree in Animal Behavior. She specializes in finding solutions for behavioural challenges and consults for animal shelters on the design and implementation of behavior programs, effective behavior modification methods, and the development of robust operational strategies to achieve behavioral health for animals within the shelter environment. Lindsay teaches seminars and workshops around the country and serves as a faculty member for Karen Pryor Academy and Clicker Expo. She offers coaching and 1:1 mentorship opportunity for behavior consultants. Lindsay has a long history of leadership and building high functioning teams within animal shelters. She served as the Director of Operations for Lynchburg Humane Society (LHS), an open-admission animal shelter located in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. Her role at Lynchburg Humane included the oversight of all shelter operations, with a strong focus on behavior and behavior modification to increase the number of animal lives saved and successfully rehomed. Lindsay served for 8 years as the Director of Animal Training and Behavior for the Humane Society of Boulder Valley in Boulder, Colorado. She developed Boulder Humane’s Training and Behavior Department, including their comprehensive behavior modification program, which focuses on rehabilitating dogs with specific behavior conditions, including resource-guarding, fearful behavior, body-handling sensitivities, separation anxiety, and dog-dog aggression. Lindsay also developed the Humane Society of Boulder Valley’s curricula for a wide array of positive reinforcement, clicker training classes for community members.
In this conversation, Lindsay Wood Brown and I attempt to unpack the concept of the Conditioned Emotional Response (CER) as applies to dog training. In addition to running through (and utterly confusing ourselves with) the terminology of the conditioned stimulus and unconditioned stimulus, etc, we also talk about practical application. For the full show notes, visit: https://wonderpupstraining.com/podcast/36/
In test episode 4 of Nor Cal News Now, Mike Richman and Aaron Haar talk about news then bring in Lindsay Wood to talk about her work with Friends of the River and the situation with water in Northern California. Every week writer and publisher Mike Richman and Democratic political consultant Aaron Haar talk about the news, goings on and political events in Northern California from a distinctly progressive perspective. You can follow the show at https://twitter.com/norcalnewsnow Or join us on Facebook at: https://facebook.com/norcalnewsnow
The Boom Show Podcast Episode 009 is live on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, and Archive.org! You can also find us on Facebook. As always a big thanks to Overcoast Music for co-hosting and recording the show! This episode we have Lindsay Wood from the fantastic The Answer Brewpub, a local craft beer brewery and restaurant, owned by same […]
Kate's off in distant places, so the format gets shaken up a bit this week. In lieu of the usual Week in TV, Simon invites Adam Kempenaar of Filmspotting fame and Justine Smith of the Sound on Sight film podcast to discuss the first season of HBO's Girls, which ended this past weekend with ... The post The Televerse #42: Girls Season Wrapup with Adam Kempenaar and Justine Smith/Twin Peaks with Lindsay Wood appeared first on PopOptiq.