Podcasts about lower merion

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Best podcasts about lower merion

Latest podcast episodes about lower merion

Clean and Sober Radio
EPISODE 041125

Clean and Sober Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2025 55:54


On this episode of Clean and Sober Radio, host Gary Hendler and cohost Mark Sigmund were joined by Lower Merion, Pennsylvania, Police Superintendent Andy Block. With nearly 40 years of experience in law enforcement, Superintendent Block brought a wealth of knowledge to the discussion on addiction and how it intersects with policing. The conversation explored how the legalization of marijuana in many states — and the availability of medical marijuana in Pennsylvania—has impacted how officers handle certain infractions. Lower Merion, a suburb of Philadelphia and the ninth most populated municipality in the state, served as the backdrop for this engaging and informative discussion.

Reality Life with Kate Casey
Ep. - 1268 - SPY HIGH

Reality Life with Kate Casey

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2025 26:35


Jody McVeigh-Schultz, director and Paige Bardoshi discuss Spy High, an Amazon Prime docuseries which delves into the 2010 lawsuit filed by then 15-year-old Blake Robbins against his prestigious public school in the suburbs of Philadelphia. Robbins claimed that his school was spying on him, which sparked a wild scandal with alarming digital privacy implications. Digital privacy and the surveillance of children in schools via school-issued devices is a huge hot-button issue today and since Covid especially. Reality Life with Kate Casey What to Watch List: https://katecasey.substack.com Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/katecasey Twitter: https://twitter.com/katecasey Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/katecaseyca Tik Tok: http://www.tiktok.com/itskatecasey Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/113157919338245 Amazon List: https://www.amazon.com/shop/katecasey Like it to Know It: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/katecaseySee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Dom Giordano Program
All Walks of Life

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2025 44:42


12 - Lower Merion SD is getting bashed from all walks of life because they don't understand cultural competency. Are they really downplaying minority students? 1210 - Dom details his driving history. Is driving a Tesla like driving a golf cart? 1215 - Side - famous distinctive facial features 1220 - Your calls on schooling in Lower Merion. 1235 - Congressman Jeff Van Drew joins us. Is he better dressed than Gavin Newsome? Will we be making any cuts to Medicare and other health and wellness services? It's a resounding no! And Jeff can't for the life of him can't understand why Democrats keep promoting a lie. Jeff teases some FBI spending reports that will shock the American public. 1240 - Is the Irish Prime Minister aware of who Rosie O'Donnell is? 1250 - Why are the tariffs our temporary burden to bear?

The Dom Giordano Program
You've Got Something on Your Face (Full Show)

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2025 135:48


12 - Lower Merion SD is getting bashed from all walks of life because they don't understand cultural competency. Are they really downplaying minority students? 1210 - Dom details his driving history. Is driving a Tesla like driving a golf cart? 1215 - Side - famous distinctive facial features 1220 - Your calls on schooling in Lower Merion. 1235 - Congressman Jeff Van Drew joins us. Is he better dressed than Gavin Newsome? Will we be making any cuts to Medicare and other health and wellness services? It's a resounding no! And Jeff can't for the life of him can't understand why Democrats keep promoting a lie. Jeff teases some FBI spending reports that will shock the American public. 1240 - Is the Irish Prime Minister aware of who Rosie O'Donnell is? 1250 - Why are the tariffs our temporary burden to bear? 1 - Economist Dr. EJ Antoni joins us today to discuss the fraud, waste, and abuse of our tax dollars. How does EJ feel about the tariff war Trump has raged on our allies and adversaries? The ‘economists” on The View trashed Elon and Tesla, are they right about their analysis? What is Heritage involved with day to day economic operations of the White House? 120 - Rapper Lil Yachty had some comments on the BLM movement while on Quen Blackwell's show. Your calls. 135 - A famous prisoner got into a fight over a pickleball dispute! Adam Kinzinger has some choice words for Steve Bannon and Gavin Newsom after it was announced that Bannon would be the next guest on Newsom's podcast. Why would Newsom do all this? Your calls. 150 - Which Republican Senators are against the spending bill trying to move forward? 2 - This columnist says we will look back on the Eagles trip to the White House like if they were visiting Hitler. Will the team be in full attendance? 205 - Why would we defend this protestor arrested at Columbia University? 210 - We play some clips that sum up the protestor debate. 215 - Dom's Money Melody! 220 - Larry Krasner and Patrick Dugan met last night, but did Dugan mess up? Should Dom even talk about it? 235 - Did Krasner have a home court advantage last night? Your calls. 240 - We play the now infamous audio between Dugan and Krasner. Dan and Henry spa with Dom over Dugan's Trump rhetoric. 250 - The Lightning Round!

The Franciska Show
Things You Should Know - Jewish Divorce & Beit Din - with Rabbanit Leah Sarna

The Franciska Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2025 42:58


Book Franciska for your event: franciskakay@gmail.com   Navigating Jewish Divorce: In this episode of The Franciska Show, Franciska recaps a recent concert and discusses upcoming events. The main segment features Sarna, sharing insights on Jewish divorce and the Agunah crisis. Sarna details her upbringing in the Orthodox community, her work with the homeless in New Haven, and her academic journey at Yale. She explains the historical context of the Agunah crisis, the role of Batei Din, and her organization's innovative approaches to resolving Jewish divorces. They also discuss coercive control in abusive relationships and the importance of choosing the right Batei Din for divorce proceedings. Sarna emphasizes the need for community support for women in abusive marriages and outlines scenarios where her organization can intervene to prevent get extortion and facilitate fair divorces.   00:00 Introduction and Concert Recap  00:59 Guest Introduction: Sarna's Background 03:19 Discussing Jewish Divorce and Agona Crisis 06:36 Ideal Divorce Process and Challenges 10:09 Choosing the Right Bait Din 16:18 International Perspectives and Collaboration 18:40 Identifying and Addressing Get Extortion  22:39 Choosing the Right Beit Din 22:50 Halacha and Gender Dynamics in Divorce 23:59 Historical Context of the Agunah Crisis 26:56 Coercive Control in Marriages 30:56 Financial Implications of Divorce  32:52 Challenges in Leaving Abusive Relationships 35:45 Strategies for Securing a Get 38:03 Supporting Friends in Troubled Marriages 39:53 Community's Role Post-Get 41:08 Final Thoughts and Reflections   About Our Guest:   Rabbanit Leah Sarna is the Director of Public Education and Media for the International Beit Din and the Spiritual Leader of Kehillat Sha'arei Orah in Lower Merion, PA. An award-winning Jewish educator, she has taught Torah in Orthodox and Jewish communal settings around the world, and she particularly loves empowering women of all ages to feel ownership over the most complex areas of the Torah library. Her written works can be found in The Atlantic, The Washington Post, Lehrhaus and the Jewish Review of Books, and she is currently writing a book of Torah and Halacha relating to pregnancy, birth and the beginning of life. Leah has extensive advanced higher Jewish education and holds a BA in Philosophy & Psychology from Yale University.   lsarna@internationalbeitdin.org     Gett First: https://bethdin.org/the-proper-timing-of-a-get/#:~:text=The%20Beth%20Din%20of%20America,at%20the%20earliest%20possible%20point.   Equitable Division of Assets: https://bethdin.org/equitable-distribution-and-the-enforceability-of-choice-of-law-clauses-in-beit-din/  (they don't name who exactly they are writing this against)  and the attached on how equitable distribution of assets works in Israel.    IBD Links -  internationalbeitdin.org Get Help: https://www.internationalbeitdin.org/get-help/  IBD mailing list: https://lp.constantcontactpages.com/su/n12Pgpa  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/internationalbeitdin/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100071877830319   www.JewishCoffeeHouse.com

Real Estate Investing For Professional Men & Women
Episode 318: Exploring Innovative Strategies for Building Wealth, with Tom Suvansri

Real Estate Investing For Professional Men & Women

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2025 39:46


Born in Lower Merion, raised in Cherry Hill, and a Penn State Grad, Tom adds a ton of value to the Perennial Pride Team as a specialist in advanced insurance strategies and investment analysis. Tom is a tremendous asset for clients looking to take control of their finances due to his analytical strength, his focus on serving clients, and his feeling of responsibility towards others. In addition, Tom has had success within real estate investing through the ownership and management of various rental properties as well as participating in private lending arrangements. Tom currently resides in Stamford, CT, with his wife, Bridget and their two boys, Aidan and Colin. In his free time, Tom loves to read, exercise, play an occasional round of golf, and just enjoy family time. What You Will Learn: Who is Tom Suvansri? What motivated Tom to leave corporate America and pursue real estate? How did Tom learn to build wealth and cash flow? What are the challenges of relying solely on one stream of income? What financial lessons did Tom learn from observing his parents? What foundational principles does Tom believe are essential for wealth building? How can individuals take control of their financial lives away from the banking system? What role does mindset play in financial discipline and consistency? How does the banking system impact individual financial freedom? What alternatives to traditional banking does Tom propose? What are the four rules that financial institutions operate by, according to Tom? What are some core challenges in modern society regarding finance and banking? How can individuals play offense when it comes to building wealth? What is the concept of infinite banking, and how does it work? What advantages does borrowing against a life insurance policy provide? How do wealthy individuals leverage life insurance for wealth building? What is the importance of a discovery phase when working with clients? How does Tom's approach to wealth management incorporate a team of advisors? What are the challenges of a one-size-fits-all approach in financial advising? How can individuals diversify their investments across different asset classes? What role does discipline play in building wealth over time? How can listeners connect with Tom and learn more about his services? Tom shares how everyone can contact him. Additional Resources from Tom Suvansri: Website: http://perennialpride.com/ Email: tom@perennialpride.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tom-suvansri-52309b2/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/perennialpride YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@perennialpride7448 X: https://twitter.com/perennialpride Attention Investors and Agents Are you looking to grow your business? Need to connect with aggressive like-minded people like yourself? We have all the right tools, knowledge, and coaching to positively effect your bottom line. Visit:http://globalinvestoragent.com/join-gia-team to see what we can offer and to schedule your FREE consultation! Our NEW book is out...order yours NOW! Global Investor Agent: How Do You Thrive Not Just Survive in a Market Shift? Get your copy here: https://amzn.to/3SV0khX HEY! You should be in class this coming Monday (MNL). It's Free and packed with actions you should take now! Here's the link to register: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_sNMjT-5DTIakCFO2ronDCg

Philadelphia Community Podcast
What's Going On: Comcast's Sensory Friendly Room, Navigating Senior Living, Narberth Food Bank

Philadelphia Community Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2025 29:36 Transcription Available


Creating Inclusive Spaces for Individuals with AutismFostering equity and accessibility means creating environments where everyone feels welcome. At Comcast, this mission has come to life through the development of a sensory-friendly room—designed to support individuals with autism and sensory sensitivities. Christina Wong, Comcast's Executive Director and Producer of Experiential Content, joins us in studio to share how this initiative was developed in collaboration with partners like the International Board of Credentialing and Continuing Education Standards (IBCCES), The Arc of Philadelphia, and Southpaw Enterprises. Learn more: Comcast Center Campus Accessibility.Navigating Senior Living with ConfidencePlanning for senior living can feel overwhelming, but it's a vital step toward a secure and fulfilling future. Brian Kersey, Marketing & Sales Director at Foulkeways at Gwynedd—a premier continuing care retirement community rooted in Quaker values—joins us to discuss the importance of life planning, the benefits of senior living communities, and how to make informed decisions for yourself or your loved ones. Discover more: www.foulkeways.org.Rethinking Food Insecurity: Hunger in Unexpected PlacesWhen you think of food insecurity, Philadelphia often comes to mind—it's the big city with the highest poverty rate. But hunger exists in places you might not expect, including communities like Narberth and Lower Merion. In this episode, we revisit an insightful conversation with Ben Hearn, Board President of the Narberth Community Food Bank, to discuss the challenges of food insecurity in suburban areas and how the organization is making a difference. Learn more: narberthcommunityfoodbank.orgFollow them: Instagram: @narberth_food_bank | Facebook: Narberth Community Food Bank  

Misconceptions
29. An Unexpected Loss: A Story of Loss and Birth

Misconceptions

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2024 50:49


Jackie, LMSW, earned her Masters in Social Work from the University of Pennsylvania and holds certification in Applied Behavior Analysis from Arcadia University. Passionate about supporting children and their families, she focuses on addressing their social, emotional, and academic needs in the school setting. Jackie specializes in facilitating children's social skills, self-regulation, and executive functioning. Beyond her professional pursuits, she values community and connection, believing strongly in the power of collective support. Jackie welcomes opportunities to create awareness around complex issues facing members of our community. Jackie resides in Lower Merion, PA, with her husband, Stephen, and their three children.      CONNECT DVORA ENTIN: Website: https://www.dvoraentin.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dvoraentin YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@misconceptionspodcast

Dead Rabbit Radio
EP 1351 - The Phantom Plowman: A Prophet From The Past?

Dead Rabbit Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2024 65:53


A terrifying ghost/The phantom plowman Fan Art Friday by Jo   I will be speaking LIVE at the Port Gamble Ghost Conference https://www.portgamble.com/upcoming-events/ghost-conference/ November 8th-10th 2024 Port Gamble, WA   Patreon  https://www.patreon.com/user?u=18482113 PayPal Donation Link https://tinyurl.com/mrxe36ph MERCH STORE!!! https://tinyurl.com/y8zam4o2 Amazon Wish List https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/28CIOGSFRUXAD?ref_=wl_share   Help Promote Dead Rabbit! Dual Flyer https://i.imgur.com/OhuoI2v.jpg "As Above" Flyer https://i.imgur.com/yobMtUp.jpg “Alien Flyer” By TVP VT U https://imgur.com/gallery/aPN1Fnw “QR Code Flyer” by Finn https://imgur.com/a/aYYUMAh   Links: EP 146 - The 8 Foot Tall Mummies Of Death Valley (Smithsonian episode) https://deadrabbitradio.libsyn.com/ep-146-the-8-foot-tall-mummies-of-death-valley EP 188 - Is The Smithsonian Destroying Giant Skeletons? (Smithsonian episode) https://deadrabbitradio.libsyn.com/ep-188-is-the-smithsonian-destroying-giant-skeletons EP 376 - The Giant Cannibal Warlords Of Nevada https://deadrabbitradio.libsyn.com/ep-376-the-giant-cannibal-warlords-of-nevada EP 963 - Mormons, Giants, And American Vikings Vs. The Smithsonian! (Giant Nephilim episode) https://deadrabbitradio.libsyn.com/ep-963-mormons-giants-and-american-vikings-vs-the-smithsonian What Creepy Experience or Story Haunts You to This Day? [Serious] (Sexual Assault Grandpa Ghost Lock Bedroom Door story) https://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/1e4yefj/comment/ldl0gvc/ Archive https://archive.ph/LFlHq PHANTOM PLOUGHMAN of Lower Merion, Pennsylvania https://www.phantomsandmonsters.com/2024/09/phantom-ploughman-of-lower-merion.html The Ghostly Signal And The Phantom Plowman https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/62223823?browse=ndp%3Abrowse%2Ftitle%2FB%2Ftitle%2F56%2F1889%2F08%2F17%2Fpage%2F6144511%2Farticle%2F62223823 Unnatural Phenomena: A Guide to the Bizarre Wonders of North America First Edition https://tinyurl.com/dbtdzz24 Inside The ‘Doomsday' Vault https://time.com/doomsday-vault/ How to build a nuclear warning for 10,000 years' time https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20200731-how-to-build-a-nuclear-warning-for-10000-years-time   ------------------------------------------------ Logo Art By Ash Black Opening Song: "Atlantis Attacks" Closing Song: "Bella Royale" Music By Simple Rabbitron 3000 created by Eerbud Thanks to Chris K, Founder Of The Golden Rabbit Brigade Dead Rabbit Archivist Some Weirdo On Twitter AKA Jack Youtube Champ Stewart Meatball The Haunted Mic Arm provided by Chyme Chili Forever Fluffle: Cantillions, Samson Discord Mods: Mason, HotDiggityDane, Carson Foreign Correspondent: Fabio Nerbon http://www.DeadRabbit.com Email: DeadRabbitRadio@gmail.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/DeadRabbitRadio Facebook: www.Facebook.com/DeadRabbitRadio TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@deadrabbitradio Dead Rabbit Radio Subreddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/DeadRabbitRadio/ Paranormal News Subreddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/ParanormalNews/     Mailing Address Jason Carpenter PO Box 1363 Hood River, OR 97031   Paranormal, Conspiracy, and True Crime news as it happens! Jason Carpenter breaks the stories they'll be talking about tomorrow, assuming the world doesn't end today. All Contents Of This Podcast Copyright Jason Carpenter 2018 - 2024

The Dom Giordano Program
One Name Will Loom Large on Election Day (Full Show)

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 135:07


12 - Make up where you're gong to vote, college kids! 1205 - We play audio of TV personalities breaking down Kamala's strategy against Trump in these last remaining weeks. 1210 - Side question - One name 1220 - Your calls from McDonalds. We play audio of black voters in Philadelphia giving their support to Trump and disparaging the Democrats and Kamala Harris. 1235 - Attorney Wally Zimolong joins the program to discuss his lawsuit over the Bucks County ballot harvesting “ice cream truck”. Wally expresses his displeasure with the van going to the local prisons to collect inmates' votes. Why is this van such a threat to our election rules? 1250 - You can't be a citizen if you don't come here legally! Your calls. 1 - David P. Hardy is a distinguished fellow at the Commonwealth Foundation and co-founder of Boys' Latin Charter School. What does he see regarding the tide turning in favor of Trump when it comes to the black man's vote? Why is Kamala's campaign falling so flat down the stretch? Will the vote even reach 500,000 total in Philadelphia? David P. Hardy endorses school choice and the chance for people to choose from a variety of educations. 115 - More from Philadelphia women ripping Kamala Harris. 120 - We play audio of Kamala Harris reacting to the Mark Kelly report of Donald Trump 130 - Lara Trump joins us today. What was it like being on The Breakfast Club this week? How does Lara feel about the momentum Trump has been gaining recently? What does Kamala Harris even have to run on at this point if the American people aren't buying her anymore? Why were people so upset that Trump worked at McDonald's? That's very Kamala Harris of Dom to take Lara's speech. 140 - Watch the Tram Car please, or I'll sue! 150 - Dan Time, Eminem Time. Who did it better? Can we not talk about Emhoff's allegations, but we can talk about Trump's? 2 - Dom responds to comments posted on Lower Merion's Facebook page regarding Hymie's Deli and the fact they recorded an anti-Kamala ad there. We play the ad and take your calls. 215 - Dom's Money Melody! 220 - Winner? 225 - San Jose State continues to play this transgender woman on their teams as their opponents continue to forfeit. 235 - Seth Bluestein is going toe to toe with Elon Musk over homeless people being registered as voters. Who is monitoring these homeless votes? 250 - Lightning Round!

The Dom Giordano Program
Pastrami Sandwich with Extra Drama On Rye

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 40:56


2 - Dom responds to comments posted on Lower Merion's Facebook page regarding Hymie's Deli and the fact they recorded an anti-Kamala ad there. We play the ad and take your calls. 215 - Dom's Money Melody! 220 - Winner? 225 - San Jose State continues to play this transgender woman on their teams as their opponents continue to forfeit. 235 - Seth Bluestein is going toe to toe with Elon Musk over homeless people being registered as voters. Who is monitoring these homeless votes? 250 - Lightning Round!

Post Corona
One Year Since October 7th - with Douglas Murray

Post Corona

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2024 63:28


Visit our website: https://arkmedia.org/ This conversation on YouTube: https://youtu.be/O7F7Pq-XI40 Show Notes: Since October 7th, on this podcast we have tried to present Israel's dilemmas and challenges as Israel responded to a genocidal attack from Gaza and what is now a multi-front war. We have tried to do this by talking to Israelis – Israeli journalists, political figures, historians and other thought leaders, and different people from Israel's civil society. We have tried to provide historical context and perspectives from various actors in the U.S.-Israel relationship from both sides of that relationship. We did not think we would still be recording these episodes – with this focus – for one year. And yet, here we are — approaching the one-year anniversary of October 7, which will be regarded as one of the darkest days in Jewish history (and one of the darkest days in the history of Western Civilization). Most of our episodes have been shaped by weekly and daily news developments. But as we approach the one-year anniversary, we wanted to take a step back, and spend extended time with a few of our previous guests and thought leaders who are not our go-to analysts. We asked each one of them to take a longer horizon perspective, to look back at this past year and the year ahead. In each conversation, we will try to understand the larger lessons these guests have learned as we approach this grim milestone. If you are listening to this episode on a podcast app, please note that this series was filmed in a studio and is also available in video form on our YouTube channel. You can find a link here: [Ilan, insert link]. We begin this series with a conversation with Douglas Murray – war journalist, columnist, and bestselling author. We will be dropping one of these long-form conversations with a different guest each week between now and the first couple weeks after 10/07. LINKS: On Sunday, September 8, Douglas Murray will kick off his first ever US Tour with Live Nation. Long before Oct 7, Douglas was a widely read journalist, bestselling author, and one of the most prescient intellectuals in the world. Since Oct 7, he has also become one of the strongest voices for Israel and the Jewish people. Douglas will be sharing experiences from his time in Israel post October 7, including never before seen footage from his time in Israel. On September 8, he will be at the Parker Playhouse in Fort Lauderdale. On September 10, he'll be at the Fillmore Miami Beach. On September 11, the Warner Theatre in Washington DC. On September 23, The Wiltern in Los Angeles. On September 29, the Beacon Theatre in New York City. And on October 13, Paramount Theatre in Denver. The evening will be filled with great pride for am yisrael and hope for the future. Some shows are sold out or very near sold out. Tickets can be purchased through Live Nation's website: https://shorturl.at/yilaw NEW YORK CITY — September 24 — Join us for the first major live recording of Call Me Back, held at the Streicker Center, co-sponsored by UJA Federation of NY, and featuring Amir Tibon on the official launch date of his book The Gates of Gaza: A Story of Betrayal, Survival, and Hope in Israel's Borderlands. In his new book, Amir tells the gripping story of the Tibon family's ordeal at Kibbutz Nahal Oz on October 7 and the heroic rescue by Amir's father, retired General Noam Tibon. Woven throughout the book is Amir's own expertise as a longtime journalist in Israel and in Washington, the history of Kibbutz Nahal Oz, and the conflict between Israel and Gaza. We are excited to bring this program – with our partners at The Streicker Center and UJA Federation of NY – to the Call Me Back audience. To register, please go to: streicker.nyc/events/tibon-senor PHILADELPHIA-AREA — September 9 — Join us this Monday night in Lower Merion, just outside of Philadelphia, for a discussion about Israel, the Middle East and the U.S.-Israel relationship with combat veteran and national security expert Dave McCormick, who is running for U.S. Senate in Pennsylvania. Dave grew up in Bloomsburg, PA, attended West Point, fought in the Gulf War with the 82nd Airborne, then ran a tech software business in Pittsburgh before becoming CEO of Bridgewater Associates. Dave has emerged as one of the strongest pro-Israel voices and allies of the Jewish community this election cycle; his wife Dina was a deputy national security advisor in the White House and one of the architects of the Abraham Accords. We are going to have a fascinating conversation about his trip to Israel in January, what he's seen on the campaign trail and how his experience as a combat veteran informs his perspective on the war in Israel and America's role in the region. To register, please go to: Dan-and-Dave.eventbrite.com

City Cast Philly
SEPTA's School Safety Plan, Floating Schuylkill Installation & New School Hours

City Cast Philly

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 27:33


It's another midweek news roundup! We're talking about SEPTA's safety plan now that classes are back in session and Mural Arts Philadelphia's floating project coming to the Schuylkill River. Plus, we've got a Philly news quiz. Host Trenae Nuri is joined by Asha Prihar, Hey Philly newsletter editor, and Jos Duncan Asé, founder and CEO of Love Now Media.  Our news roundups are powered by great local journalism:  SEPTA Transit Police plan safety adjustments as Philadelphia students head back to school SEPTA Enhances Safety Measures for New School Year The Schuylkill Is Getting a Floating Observation Deck Called FloatLab Coming in 2026, FloatLab will be a one-of-a-kind, state-of-the-art installation and learning laboratory on the Schuylkill River. Read more about our news quiz (spoilers ahead): Lower Merion's long-debated school start time changes are finally taking effect From rodents to a ribbon-cutting: How a Philadelphia community united to build a school Once a summer staple, Mister Softee ice cream trucks are slowly disappearing from the streets City Cast Philly has a birthday coming up! To celebrate we'll be giving away a branded tote bag to one lucky listener! To enter, give us a call at 215-259-8170 and leave a message about your favorite City Cast Philly episode and something you'd like to see us do next!  Check out more of Jos' work and get updates on the Sept. 12th Love Now Media and Love Now Magazine live event here.  Want some more Philly news? Then make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter Hey Philly. We're also on Twitter and Instagram! Follow us @citycastphilly. Have a question or just want to share some thoughts with the team? Leave us a voicemail at 215-259-8170.  Interested in advertising with City Cast? Find more info here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

B-Ball Radio
S E6: Celebrating Kobe Bryant with an 8-24 special featuring never heard before Black Mamba stories for Kobe Day

B-Ball Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2024 61:30


On this special 8-24 episode of B-Ball Radio celebrating Kobe Bryant, Bobbito and E-New share never heard before Black Mamba stories featuring Bobbito's Lower Merion High School connection and his interviews with Kobe, Kobe's visits to Rucker Park, including the 2010 Nike World Basketball Festival, and Kobe's legendary All the Smoke interview in 2019.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Franciska Show
“Blind Fate” & “Saturday Night Leiv” - with Rivkah Fox

The Franciska Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2024 38:12


Do you enjoy the Franciska Show? Then please consider treating me to a cup of coffee:  https://www.buymeacoffee.com/franciska Email Franciska: franciskakay@gmail.com,I love hearing from you!      Navigating Shidduchim with Rivkah Fox: In this episode of The Franciska Show, Franciska discusses the importance of addressing mental health issues within communities while balancing everyday life. The episode features Rivkah Fox, a full-time matchmaker living in Lower Merion, who shares her unique approach to Shidduchim, the Orthodox dating system.   Rivkah discusses her unconventional methods, including using social media games like 'Saturday Night Leiv' and 'Blind Fate' to make matchmaking more accessible and fun. She also talks about common challenges in the Shidduch process, such as navigating family expectations and the emphasis on compatibility. The episode highlights the importance of community involvement in the matchmaking process and encourages listeners to share knowledge and resources sensitively. Rivkah also touches on her personal experience and the evolving nature of modern matchmaking.   About Our Guest: International matchmaker, Rivkah Fox, has been fortunate to bring together couples from seven different countries. Rivkah holds a Masters of Science in Education (MSED) from the University of Pennsylvania, and outside of matchmaking, lectures about relationships and marriage for the Meor Program at the University of Pennsylvania. Rivkah began BlindFate to revolutionize the formal dating experience by simultaneously engaging her followers while offering singles a more open perspective.   @rivkahfox    Check out: www.JewishCoffeeHouse.com for more Jewish Podcasts on our network.

The Mike Litton Experience
Successful Businessman Dedicates His Life To Helping Others Protect Their Wealth And Family Legacy!

The Mike Litton Experience

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2024 54:57


Tom Suvansri was born in Lower Merion, Pennsylvania and raised in Cherry Hill, New Jersey.  He loved playing sports growing up. Football was his favorite sport. He attended Penn State and figured out that his future was in finance in corporate america. He worked at Pfizer Pharmaceuticals for over 20 years. He learned through real […]

Philadelphia Community Podcast
What's going On: Google/Community College of Philadelphia Partnership, Eluna, Narberth Food Bank

Philadelphia Community Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2024 29:26 Transcription Available


There's an exciting partnership just announced between Community College and Google that will give students access to certificate programs that offering skills training that could lead to life sustaining careers in tech. I speak to Rob Magliaro who  is the Ecosystem Partnerships Lead at Grow with Google. More information, including how to register for courses, is available here.Google Career Certificates AI Essentials Google Employer Consortium  Eluna Network –offers support for children, teens and families impacted by grief, addiction, and related mental health issues. I speak to Sarah Behm, Assistant Director, Resource Center, Eluna Network. Website: https://elunanetwork.org/ ·        Facebook: Eluna ·        Twitter: @ElunaNetwork ·        LinkedIn: Eluna Network ·        Instagram: @elunanetwork  First – hunger knows no boundaries and I speak to the head of an organization that provides hunger relief to the food insecure in Lower Merion. I talk with Ben Hearn, Board President of the Narberth Community Food Bank. https://narberthcommunityfoodbank.org/ Instagram handle: narberth_food_bank | Facebook: Narberth Community Food Bank  

Philadelphia Community Podcast
What's Going On Spotlight: Narberth Community Food Bank

Philadelphia Community Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2024 9:10 Transcription Available


Hunger knows no boundaries and I speak to the head of an organization that provides hunger relief to the food insecure in Lower Merion. I talk with Ben Hearn, Board President of the Narberth Community Food Bank.https://narberthcommunityfoodbank.org/ Instagram handle: narberth_food_bank Facebook: Narberth Community Food Bank  

Misconceptions
10. Infertility and the Challenges of Mikva

Misconceptions

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2024 39:41


When Infertility is experienced by a religious couple, the process of Mikvah (laws of family purity) can become incredibly complicated. Listen to Carly Chodosh, a licensed therapist and sex therapist and Mikvah Director explore the complexities of this personal and private space. About Carly Chodosh Carly Chodosh LCSW, CST, PMH-C is a psychotherapist and Mikvah Director in Lower Merion, PA. Currently, Carly is the only dual-certified sex therapist (through AASECT) and perinatal mental health therapist (PMH-C) in the Orthodox Jewish world. In addition to working with individuals and couples, Carly provides continuing education and training for new and developing Mikvaos around the world, as well as continuing education for Kallah Teachers, Yoetzot, and Rebbetzins around the intersection of halachic practice and mental health.   * * * *** CONNECT WITH ME: Website: https://www.dvoraentin.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dvoraentin YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@misconceptionspodcast

The Franciska Show
Panel: How Much Do We Need To Know To Feel? with Shoshanna Keats-Jaskoll, Carly Chodosh and Avital Chizhik-Goldschmidt

The Franciska Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2024 59:55


About Our Panelists: Carly Chodosh, MSS, LSW is a licensed social worker and therapist who lives in the Lower Merion suburb of Philadelphia, where she also serves as the Director of the Lower Merion Community Mikvah. Carly has advanced training in sexual dysfunction as well as perinatal mental health, and works to provide holistic support to the individuals and couples she treats. https://www.instagram.com/carlodosh/  Avital Chizhik-Goldschmidt is a journalist, rebbetzin and mother. Her work has appeared in the Atlantic, New York Times, Foreign Policy, The New Republic, Vox, Vogue, Salon, Glamour, Business Insider, Los Angeles Review of Books, Jewish Review of Books, and Religion & Politics, among others. Previously, she was an editor at the Forward and a reporter for Haaretz. She has taught journalism at Yeshiva University's Stern College for Women, and is an adjunct at Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. Connect with her on Twitter and Instagram. avital@thealtneu.org   Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll is an accidental activist. Born and raised in Lakewood, New Jersey, she now lives in Israel where she co-founded a business with her sisters that specializes in messaging for businesses and nonprofits. Shoshanna co-founded Chochmat Nashim, an organization fighting extremism and raising the voice of Jewish women. Focused on the erasure and marginalization of women, Shoshanna's articles, podcasts and lectures raise awareness of the danger of extremism and how the community can fight it. She has spoken in Knesset committee meetings and held protests outside the religious court, demanding justice for women. Her work on behalf of women in Judaism, stopping the spread of religious extremism, and current events in Israel has appeared in the Jerusalem Post, the Times of Israel, Tablet, Washington Examiner and more. She speaks internationally on the importance of a moderate and healthy community, how to be an effective activist, and life in Israel. Shoshanna and her family love trekking the Israeli countryside, and she enjoys chocolate, schug, and Speyside Scotch Whiskey. https://twitter.com/skjask/status/1394398982915469312 https://www.instagram.com/shoshanna_keats_jaskoll?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igsh=ZDNlZDc0MzIxNw== https://www.chochmatnashim.org/   POSITIVE ACCOUNTS TO FOLLOW: @evebarlow @leekern @lahavharkov @@davidhazony @shanimor @einatwilf @IsraelWarRoom · Would you like to be a SPONSOR? Would you like to join the Whatsapp Discussion Group? Reach out about new sponsorship opportunities for your brand & organizations - franciskakay@gmail.com Check out www.JewishCoffeeHouse.com for more Jewish Podcasts on our network.

In The Paint Show
Ep. 180 - Kobe's HS to Lakers Journey: The Plan & Its Roadblocks!

In The Paint Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2024 87:37


On Episode 180 of the Ballislife In The Paint Show, hosts Ronnie Flores, Ani Umana and Chelsea Hopkins go hard on the one-year plan that was hatched for the late, great Kobe Bryant to turn pro out of high school with special guest Gary Charles, who was part of the small circle that knew of the plans for the 17-year wunderkind from Lower Merion High School (Ardmore, Pa.). Before bringing on Gary Charles for his exclusive and unique insight on the plan to get Bryant to the L.A. Lakers via a trade with the Charlotte Hornets, the ITP Crew give their instant reaction to the Super Bowl (and Usher's halftime performance) and dish on comments from WNBA great Sheryl Swoopes on Iowa's Caitlin Clark regarding her adjustment once she gets to the W. Was Swoopes on point, out of line or partially correct? Chelsea goes in. Charles then spends 40 minutes breaking down the plan to get Kobe from Lower Merion to the NBA, even though he was a wing guard and academically eligible for any college in the country. That was unheard of at the time. Charles goes "In The Paint" on meeting Kobe through his father Joe "Jellybean" Bryant, what Kobe was like as a rising junior at ABCD Camp, the keys to hatching the plan for him to turn pro, and the occurrences that could have foiled Team Bryant's plan to keep him from Nike and keep other NBA teams drafting higher than Charlotte from realizing he should be their pick. What would have happened in Lower Merion would have traveled to Los Angeles for a MLK Showcase game vs. Schea Cotton and St John Bosco? Why taking R & B singer Brandy to the prom was potentially worrisome? What if Tim Thomas would have went straight pro out of high school instead of going to Villanova? What if the New Jersey Nets would have went for Kobe at No. 8 instead of Kerry Kittles? Charles, a longtime grassroots basketball coach and event director, also gives some insight on a Plan B if the Charlotte move didn't happen and what transpired leading up to draft day. The ITP crew then close this special episode with their reactions to the interview and some media references helpful to learn more background information on Kobe's unique path. Kobe's prep-to-pro journey hasn't been told in this manner, so make sure to tune in to Episode 180 from start to finish! Also make sure to check out our ITP Overtime shorts for more info, insight and behind the scenes stories! (0:00) - Intro (1:24) - Mahomes Chasing Brady: NFL's Future (2:01) - Super Bowl Halftime Show Reaction! (3:54) - Intro To Kobe Bryant's Plan To Go Pro (5:32) - Sheryl Swoopes on Caitlin Clark: Chelsea's Dish! (10:28) - Ani & Ron's Dish on Swoopes' Caitlin Comments (18:56) - Announcers Cheering On Greats? (23:28) - Kobe Bryant's Statue: Instant Reaction (25:48) - Gary Charles (Grassroots Czar) Interview (30:51) - Charles: Kobe As Rising Junior (32:36) - Charles: Realizing Kobe's The One (37:59) - Charles: Keys To Hatching HS-To-Pro Plan (43:57) - Charles: Close Calls That Could Foil The Plan! (49:41) - Charles: Plan B If Charlotte Deal Changes! (53:07) - L.A. Kobe Game That Never Happens (59:06) - Charles: Shielding Kobe From Nike (1:00:47) - Charles: Leading Up Draft Day! (1:08:24) - Chelsea & Ani's Reaction To Kobe Plan (1:13:52) - Ron's Experience With Kobe's Timeline (1:17:54) - Ani & Chelsea's Dish on Finding The One (1:22:54) - More Media References To Kobe's Journey Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Family Proclamations
Won't Someone Think of the Children (with Adam Benforado)

Family Proclamations

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2024 80:49


One hundred years ago, a bright new age for children was dawning in America. Child labor laws were being passed, public education was spreading, and more. But Adam Benforado says America stopped short in its revolution of children's rights. Today, more than eleven million American children live in poverty. We deny young people any political power, while we fail to act on the issues that matter most to them: racism, inequality, and climate change. That's why Adam is calling for a new revolution for kids. He joins us to discuss his book, A Minor Revolution: How Prioritizing Kids Benefits Us All.   About the Guest Adam Benforado is a professor of law at the Drexel University Kline School of Law and the New York Times best-selling author of A Minor Revolution: How Prioritizing Kids Benefits Us All and Unfair: The New Science of Criminal Injustice. His research, teaching, and advocacy is focused on children's rights and criminal justice. A graduate of Yale College and Harvard Law School, he served as a clerk on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and an attorney at Jenner & Block in Washington, D.C. He has published numerous scholarly articles. His popular writing has appeared in The New York Times, Washington Post, Scientific American, Slate, and The Atlantic. He lives in Philadelphia with his wife and children.   Transcript ADAM BENFORADO: If you're an architect, if you're a plumber, if you are a judge on an immigration court, I want you to think about what your job would look like if you put children first. The reason to do this is because this is good for all of us. It's not just good for kids. It's good for people who don't even like children at all. This is the best path forward as a society, because we all pay the costs of that inattention and those harms that come to kids. BLAIR HODGES: That's Adam Benforado and he's calling for a revolution in the way we all think about childhood. Which is gonna sound a little weird if you think kids today have it easier than ever. And it's true. I mean, they have some luxuries I couldn't even dream of as a kid—like I had to wait until Saturday morning to watch my favorite cartoons. Even then, I had to make the difficult choice between Muppet Babies or Ninja Turtles because they were on at the same time on a different channel. As a parent, Adam Benforado says he cheers for many improvements, but as a professor of law at Drexel University, he says the way children are treated by the courts in the US, economic limits they face, their lack of voting power, their poor access to health care, things like this make kids as vulnerable in America as they've been in 100 years. He wants that to change, not just because it would be better for kids. He says it would be better for everyone. But could the world's major challenges with health, climate change, and public safety really be easier to address by changing the way we treat kids? Adam Benforado says yes, that's why he wrote the book, A Minor Revolution: How Prioritizing Kids Benefits Us All, and he's here to talk about it right now. There's no one right way to be a family and every kind of family has something we can learn from. I'm Blair Hodges, and this is Family Proclamations.   LIFELONG INTEREST IN CHILDREN'S RIGHTS (2:15)   BLAIR HODGES: Adam Benforado, welcome to Family Proclamations. ADAM BENFORADO: Great to be with you. BLAIR HODGES: We're talking about your book, A Minor Revolution. And this is about children's rights. I wondered what got you interested in focusing on the legal rights of children. Your background is in law. So talk a little bit about why the rights of children became your focus. ADAM BENFORADO: So I think for me this is really a lifelong project. I think the seeds of this really come from my own childhood. I was really lucky to be born into a family with two really loving, supportive parents who spent a lot of time encouraging me and helping me be independent. But I think all around me, throughout my childhood, I saw a lot of abuse and, honestly, subjugation of children. And it really bothered me, starting when I was in elementary school, seeing the way kids were treated as, you know, not second-class citizens but as just, like, non-entities, I mean, not even like human beings. I think I was also aware of broader forces. I think I was really aware of the impact of wealth. I had a 1,200 square foot house and in my early elementary years I felt like the rich kid. And then I went to a kind of wealthy neighborhood in fourth grade where one of my friend's fathers got a limousine for the fourth-grade birthday party. And suddenly, I was like, “Oh my gosh! Actually my parents have like a beat-up VW Beetle.” And I'm like, “I'm not wealthy, like, I'm actually kind of worried about what my friends might think of my wealth, my family's wealth.” I think I was someone who really thought that I should vote when I was like in sixth grade. I didn't understand, you know, maybe I don't know as much as this other person. But I did know about the world. I have things I care about. Why shouldn't I have a say? I have a say in a whole bunch of other areas of my life. My parents listened when we were discussing things like what we should have for dinner, or whatever. I think it was those interactions and observations which informed my sense of and desire to write about some of the injustices I saw. And I think that carried me to law school, and certainly informed the questions I was interested in looking into, and certainly the way I taught. And in terms of coming to children's rights, the type of legal scholars usually sort of fall into these two camps of either being like general human rights—people who kind of focus over time on children's rights—or they are like practitioners who are working in the child welfare system, and then they come in with this particular angle. And it's funny because honestly, I was writing about all these different topics—like I started out writing about the role of corporations in society, and I teach criminal law. And in each of these subjects I look at things through the lens of children. So I'm very interested in, you know, how corporations manipulate kids to use them as weapons against their parents. I'm very interested in criminal law on juvenile justice issues— BLAIR HODGES: Are you talking about breakfast cereal commercials and toy commercials? [laughter] ADAM BENFORADO: Yes, yes. [laughter] BLAIR HODGES: Like how stores put all the candy and toys right by the checkout so you have to pass through there with your kids. ADAM BENFORADO: Oh, yeah. And that's something now, as a father—I think the cool thing about this project is, the seeds of this project started when I was a kid, but now I'm seeing it from a different perspective. I have two kids and, I tell you, right before I was writing this book, I had this experience with my daughter in Whole Foods. It's one of these times when we've got to go to the grocery store, there's no food, and my daughter looks up in front of the egg aisle, and there's this giant giraffe that costs $100, you know? And my daughter just breaks down, like lying on the ground, sobbing. And I'm like, “What are you doing?” BLAIR HODGES: It's pretty genius really. ADAM BENFORADO: And here's the kicker, one of the Amazon shoppers passing through comes up, looks at me, and goes, “Spoiled.” She shakes her head. And I was like, “Oh my god, this is a set up! This is just like this giant trap.” And what's brilliant about it is that no parents are gonna buy the hundred-dollar giraffe. You're coming in for eggs. But you know, what you might do to stop the embarrassment is buy the ten-dollar little plushie, stuffed animal, just to get out of that awkward social situation. BLAIR HODGES: That's right. I wonder, do you remember an example—you mentioned when you were in elementary school you saw children being treated not even as citizens at all. Do you remember anything in particular that stood out to you? You said you wanted to vote in sixth grade, as an example. Is there anything else like, “Wow, why are we kids being treated like this?” ADAM BENFORADO: Yeah, I mean, I thought about it in many circumstances. In elementary school, learning that my good friend's father spanked him and being like, my friend is really, he's a really smart, really nice person. We're no different. And he messes up in little, tiny ways. But everyone messes up. Adults mess up all the time and no one hits them. And then moving on from that to becoming a law professor and being like, wow, not suddenly being like, “Oh, this all makes sense.” But actually, wait a second, it's criminal law that you can't hit a prisoner. Like someone who's a murderer or rapist, it's prohibited under the Constitution from formally beating people as a punishment. And yet the legal minds, the geniuses, who are on our courts have said, “It's actually okay, it's constitutionally permissible. Kids are different.” And I think the answer to that today is because we don't see kids the way we see adults. We don't see them as full citizens. And I think there were a lot of moments like that. I think the bullying that I saw in junior high school, you know, again, that's what kids do. But what was so frustrating to me was the treating of this by adults, you know. The gym teacher, the math teacher, who saw the same terrible abuse. Like the kids who face this must carry those scars to this day. And doing nothing. There were all these instances where kids end up protected from things they don't need protecting from, where they can actually be empowered. And then actually, on the flip side, exposed to real harms that we could do something about, you know? There were adults who could easily have done things and didn't. And I think that all of those little observations, I kind of filed them back in my mind. And moments of censorship. So, you know, I remember a moment from Junior year—I got into this Governor's School down in Virginia, went away for a month, and it was like, the first time in my life that I was feeling like getting treated as an adult. Like it was all independent. They had college professors teaching this stuff. And you know what? I did all the reading, I read all the poetry. I did all the history. I did it all because I was like, “This is interesting, and I want to be engaged in these conversations.” And I felt this whole month, treated as an adult. And then at the final little party thing—and over the course of the term, there were people at Governor's School who were musicians, and I played in rock bands. So I formed this little band called “Beans and Franks” and we wrote some songs. And I'm about to go up to perform. The band gets to perform at the last thing, and the head of Governor's School comes up to me and is like, “Okay, I'm gonna need to review the lyrics.” And I was like, “What?” Like, I'm 17 years old, like, I've been listening to—Everyone here has heard everything already. Like, you've been treating me like an adult for a month. And now you want to review the lyrics? What? And I thought through like, there aren't even any offensive lyrics. But okay, I'll go through this song that I've written. And there was one line, which I think it was something like—again, it's embarrassing to even say, it was just stupid—It was like, “Smooth like a rubber, bounce it back to your mother.” [laughter] And he's like, “No, no. You cannot do that.” And honestly, as a 17-year-old boy I wrote a few songs with more offensive lyrics. [laughter] BLAIR HODGES: Yeah, you were like, “We were going easy on y'all here.” ADAM BENFORADO: Yes! I was like, “Hey, I've actually cleaned this up for the Governor's School performance.” And it was like, you can't perform this. I just was like, how do you expect me to be prepared to be a member of society? I'm going off to college in a year, and it soured everything else. It was like all the other stuff. You want to control me. You're happy when I'm getting A's in my classes and doing what you say. But as soon as I show some real independence, that's when you're like, “No, you're nothing. I'm the decider.” And it's interesting, I teach this course called The Rights of Children, and actually have my students think back to moments from their childhood. And what I have observed, which is so interesting, is how fresh these incidents are. Like a student, who was now 27 years old, writing about that moment at the eighth-grade dance, where she was going into a strict Catholic school, and they had always had the same dress code. The girls got to wear off the shoulder dresses and the new principal changed it but she organized a petition and had all the teachers sign it, and the principal wouldn't even meet with them. Wouldn't even meet. And she's carried that to law school. She's writing about it just as if it happened yesterday. And I think it's these things that all of us carry, we sort of often kind of later justify it as a rite of passage that everyone should go through as opposed to, “No, that's wrong. And I'm going to change that for the next generation. I want them to experience something different than what I experienced.” As opposed to, “Yeah, it's just part of the experience. You're brutalized and then you get to brutalize when you're an adult, and so it's fair.”   AMERICA'S CHILD WELFARE MOVEMENT 100 YEARS AGO (12:39)   BLAIR HODGES: To get to this point where dress codes and things are the main concern, you actually take us back in time to talk about some of the reforms that happened a century ago. Your book starts back in 1906. There's this Spokane Press article. Here's a quote from it. It says, “When your children are swinging in the hammock, or playing at the park, stop and give a thought to the pale-faced factory boys and girls of the metropolis.” They're painting this picture of child labor and distinguishing between more privileged kids and kids that are basically laborers at this time. What was happening at the turn of the century, what was the child's rights movement like back then? ADAM BENFORADO: So I wanted to open the book with this broader historical context in part because this was this miraculous moment a little over a hundred years ago where, coming out of the horrors of the Industrial Revolution, Americans—and these are really everyday Americans, across the country—came together and said we need to do something about the plight of children. And we need to do something, not simply because this is unfair to kids, but because we are setting ourselves up for failure as a nation. So when we fail to invest in the education of, you know, five to 15-year-olds, that's setting us up to fail in the decades ahead. So people came together—reformers who were often kind of lumped together as this child saver progressive movement, came together to demand changes: building of better public schools, mandatory public education, pushing for health and even things like drug safety measures, building playgrounds, investing in and creating an entirely new juvenile justice system based on rehabilitation rather than punishment. I chose to go back and just pick up kind of a random paper from 1906 to show just how much this energy was pushing into every area of life. So this is a little four-page paper from Washington State. And literally every page has like three different articles about child-focused reforms. And I think what was miraculous was just how much was done. By 1912 President Taft had created the first federal agency focused on the whole child, this Children's Bureau. And the idea, I think, coming out of this was, certainly in the decades ahead, we are going to see this bright new age for children across the country. And unfortunately, I think what we have seen over the course of the 20th century and then into the last couple of decades, is not simply kind of slowing to a trudge, but in some cases, even backtracking on some things. So you started with this example of child labor, this excerpt from this article. Well, what have we seen over just the last couple of months? Exposés in the New York Times about young people working in terrible labor conditions. Working the overnight shifts, just as those kids were laboring in 1906. And the reasons that are given to justify it are just the same as were given in 1906: “It's an economic necessity, coming out of the pandemic, we've had changes in the job market. We actually need to roll back job protections in our state. Businesses can't compete unless we let 15-year-olds continue to work.” BLAIR HODGES: Or like “families need the money, like this is actually good for families.” Instead of looking at how when people aren't being paid living wages, “Oh, let's make their children work.” ADAM BENFORADO: It's something that I think, you know, we see a little bit in fiction even. I'm halfway through a new book called Demon Copperhead—really great if any listeners are looking for a new summer read—but it traces actually kind of the effects of the child welfare system, but also the fact that kids are picking tobacco in our fields. One of the historical examples that's in this 1906 newspaper is the plight of kids rolling cigarettes in factories in New York City. Okay, well, they may not be doing that in New York City anymore. But down in North Carolina, kids today are picking tobacco in a hundred-degree heat. And they're getting nicotine poisoning, just like kids did a hundred years ago. And often it's the most vulnerable kids. It's migrant kids. It's kids whose parents are desperate for cash. And we're turning our back on them. In a way, unfortunately, I think this is a real indictment of the status quo. I think we're turning our backs more than people did 120 years ago. I think the child labor movement was going in the right direction. There was a lot of work that they ultimately, you know— Some of these child labor laws from a hundred years ago, there were exemptions for farm workers. But they were making a lot of progress. Here? Look at the last couple of months. We're backtracking. In a lot of areas we're repealing labor protections, virtually. BLAIR HODGES: We'll talk about some of the reasons you think that's happening as we go. Just to set the table as we get into some of the rights you're arguing for, I want to point out that your book is not making philosophical arguments, you're arguing about pragmatic benefits. ADAM BENFORADO: Yeah, I think that's one of the things that probably sets this book, and I think my approach, apart from some other rights scholars and rights advocates is I'm not simply arguing that this is a good thing to do for kids, right? It's not “natural rights.” I think that's usually where people start is like, even if there were no benefit to the rest of us, this is the good thing to do. That's how we tend to think about rights. And I absolutely believe that is true for children. But I think that's never going to get us where we want to be. I think we need to make the strong case for why actually putting children first benefits all of us. And that's because so many social problems are best addressed if you focus on interventions, rehab, in childhood. Ultimately, as a society, you always have to pay for things like crime, underemployment, poor health. The question is simply: Are you going to pay pennies on those preventative early interventions? Or are you going to pay many dollars on the backend when problems have already metastasized and hardened? It's a choice. Again, do you want to pay for school lunches for all kids? Or do you want to have kids who can't pay attention in school and don't graduate, and then you have a labor force who is underperforming and underemployed? You're gonna have to pay for that triple bypass. There's no free option. And so really, this is also I think, an answer to those critics who are worried that somehow this is a zero-sum game—that if you invest in kids, somehow you harm older Americans. No! When you invest in kids, you have healthier old people, you have old people who actually have more in their retirement account so they can take care of themselves. So what is the best pathway for us as a society? Invest in kids. I think that's the core takeaway for the book.   ISOLATED PARENTING (20:09)   BLAIR HODGES: Right. And I want people to see that, because this isn't a book for parents, per se, this is a book for all people. And the other point is, everyone's been a child, whether you end up having kids later on, we've all been children, we've all experienced that. And the way children are raised in our society affects everybody, not just parents. And so this isn't a book about parenting. ADAM BENFORADO: That's a great point. And I think, unfortunately, kids and kid's issues and children's rights in this country, have been framed only as a parent's issue. And that's part of that story, that historical story of like, what happened to those early child savers, those early progressives? And one of the answers is over the course of the 20th century, we lost this vision of investing in and empowering kids as a societal endeavor and it shifted to this idea that, “No, raising up kids is solely the work of individual parents.” BLAIR HODGES: It's “Don't Tread on Me” parenting. ADAM BENFORADO: Yeah. It's atomized. So what has happened over the course of the 20th century, this was coming from popular culture. But I think it was also coming from our elite institutions. The Supreme Court is coming out with really these groundbreaking opinions, saying parents are ultimately in possession of a fundamental right to decide the destinies of their children in all of the important matters, whether that's religion, whether that's schooling, whether that's medical care. And one of the consequences of that is this incredible weight which is placed on all parents' shoulders. Now, it's entirely up to you whether your kid sinks or swims. You actually have to be the ultimate decider on everything. You're the one who's asked to decide, now, is my kid going to learn about race history? Not the school. The school isn't going to teach them about these defining historical moments, because they're scared, they don't want the protests and the pushback. And the textbooks are being removed, these references of well, “We've got to leave out the Holocaust. Slavery, let's take that out. We'll leave this, take that. We're not taking a position. It's just up to individual parents to make these decisions.” So suddenly, parents, you have to be a historian. Well, suddenly, you actually have to decide on medical care, too. Don't just take the vaccine schedule from the doctor. No, you do your own research. Oh, you want to protect your kid from, you know, lead and asbestos? Well, you do the research. I will tell you as a parent, it is exhausting. It explains one of the reasons why parent burnout and unhappiness is so high in this country, as opposed to some of the studies that have been done comparatively, parents who have nothing, who face incredible odds in Africa, are much, much, much happier as parents. Why? Because it's a collective endeavor. They don't have to do everything. They're not alone in these struggles. And unfortunately, I think that's the rub of the whole parents' rights movement is, okay, you get to decide, but being a parent, raising kids is so hard. You face so much.   THE EARLY YEARS: A RIGHT TO ATTACHMENT (23:34)   BLAIR HODGES: And there's less and less social support. We'll talk about this in a later part of the interview about early childhood and the “Right to Investment.” But let's start with “The Right to Attachment.” So in the book you've laid out these particular rights for kids, and you kind of rolled them out according to developmental stages of where children are at. You're following the best research on childhood development. In the first years, the “right to attachment” is what you highlight in here. And one of the things some of these earlier child advocates had wrong was the idea that parents shouldn't baby their babies, that they shouldn't coddle them, they should maintain a kind of detachment from them. And then there was this fascinating monkey experiment listeners might have heard of, I think I heard about it as an undergraduate, where they had these monkeys and they had a mother that was like, just this wire cage that would give them milk. And then also a monkey that was like covered in fabric and it was comfortable. And then the baby monkeys would go to the milk mom and eat, but then they would always go back to the comfortable mom, and that's who they would bond with. So the argument became secure bonds, warm bonds, loving experiences, more nurturing-type experiences are important. And you had a big scientific shift here away from this detached parenting style to close parenting, and you're arguing for more of that for kids. ADAM BENFORADO: Yeah, and I argue, hey, this research has continued and now is incredibly robust on the value of early attachment with a primary caregiver. It's actually been supplemented by work even showing intergenerational effects, in the context of these monkeys. If you engage in that early deprivation, it actually can have intergenerational effects on the future monkey offspring. Now, I think we look at the state of the research and then we look at what society has done in response. Well, what society has done in response is work in incredible ways, severing the bonds and failing to support bonds that I think we could really seriously strengthen. What are some examples of that? Well, we're the only wealthy, advanced nation who does not have paid mandatory supported care leave for the parents and adoptive parents of young kids. And again, as I said, that sets us up for failure as a nation. But so many parents go back to work after just a couple of days at home with their kids. And that doesn't make economic sense. More often the argument is, you know, “Economically we can't have businesses giving people six months off.” And everywhere else in the world, they say, “We can't not do that. It's economically stupid not to do that. We're going to just pay more money on the backend if we do that.” Now, I think we obviously can make a lot of progress by really simple guarantees to new parents in terms of care leave. But I think we also have to think about some of the ways we really sever bonds carelessly. One of the biggest ones, I think, is our criminal justice system. Millions of kids have or have had a parent locked up during their childhoods, and that has horrible repercussions downline. Often it's not locked up in prison, it's actually pretrial in jail. What happens to a mom accused of, you know, some theft or a drug crime, when she's waiting trial? Well, trials in the United States take a long time. Bail might be $1,000 or $2,000. For a poor parent, they may not have that. So what happens as a result of that? A single mom is taken out—those three kids are put into foster care. We all pay for that. We pay for locking up the mom pretrial. We pay for those kids going into the foster system. And we pay the lifelong costs of our non-functional child welfare system as well. So we do it there. We do it at the border. Obviously, there was a lot of controversy over the last few years about child separation policies. But we also do it with our child welfare system when it comes to poverty. So how do we deal with parental poverty? Do we help parents? No, what we do is, we take kids away from their parents. A police officer is called, a child welfare worker is called, goes into a house and finds no food in the refrigerator— BLAIR HODGES: An empty fridge, yeah. ADAM BENFORADO: Finds roaches, finds peeling lead paint. What do we do? Do we get that mother into good, stable housing? Do we give her money for food? Do we feed the kids at school? No, what we do is we say, “You're a bad mom, you failed. You're an abomination.” And we take the kids away and often put them in worse circumstances. And if we were guided by that research, that robust set of research on the value of attachment, we would make very, very different choices. We would say, “You know what? This isn't about the mom, ultimately.” And I say this to audiences when I talk, look, sometimes folks are filled with anger at parents who have, in their view, failed to meet their responsibilities. That's an area where I think I'm going to disagree with all the people in which I see these as situational constraints on parents, but let's actually set that to the side. If you want to hate that mom, and think that she's a bad person, go ahead and do that. Let's focus on the kids though. Because we need to do what's best for those kids. Right? And I will tell you, taking kids away from parents who love them, and are poor, is setting us up for failure as a nation. And I think that if we can get into that mindset whenever there's anger at the parents like, “Why should we pay for public school breakfasts and lunches? It's these parents, these deadbeat parents that we're incentivizing.” It's like, hey, there's a kid who is not eating lunch. Focus on the kid. Leave the parents aside. You want to vilify the parents? Okay. I think that's the wrong approach. But let's at least agree that the kid should eat a healthy meal every day.   EARLY CHILDHOOD: THE RIGHT TO INVESTMENT (29:46)   BLAIR HODGES: This is where it connects to the next chapter on early childhood, “The Right to Investment,” and you're arguing that children deserve a right to investment in good schools, in their quality of health care, in the housing they have available to them, in mentorship. You introduce us in this chapter to Harold, this is a Black man from Philadelphia, and what his story suggests about the right to investment. He's an interesting example because he's someone the system did sort of invest in. But as you know, they would put him in particular programs, help him get schooling and things, but as a Black man, he witnessed this and saw himself sort of, as he kind of won the lottery. ADAM BENFORADO: Yeah, he describes himself as a unicorn. BLAIR HODGES: Yeah, a ton of other Black kids didn't get these kinds of investments. And so he's like, wait a minute, the system is doing this on an individual level, a kind of band-aid solution, but not changing the overall system. Harold had mixed feelings about how he was invested in. ADAM BENFORADO: I think this was one of the most powerful interviews I did. It was just eye opening, in some ways for both of us in this conversation. But he remarked early on about this defining moment in his childhood where his parents, they'd just gotten kicked out of their house, and they were basically are homeless. And they're in downtown Philadelphia, where I currently live, standing on a street corner. He's six years old. He's just trying to figure out like, what are they going to do? Like, where are they gonna sleep, get food, all this stuff. They're on a street corner. And he said he just saw a white guy with his briefcase and like, everything about it was just so perfect. There's the Rolex and everything, that perfect suit and all this stuff. And he said, this was the first moment when he was like, “How is it that we're in the same city on the same day, and my family has nothing? And this person has everything? How is that?” I think there was this innocence and also profound insight in that moment of like, wait a sec, all of us walk by this all the time. We're the country with the most billionaires in the world. And we also have, like, one in six or seven kids living below the poverty line. Like that's like 11 million kids. We have, like 700 billionaires. And our Fortune 500 Companies made something like $16 trillion in revenue. We have like 11 million kids living in poverty. And again, that's not simply a moral abomination. That's setting us up for economic and social failure in the years ahead. And I think, as you point out, one of the really fascinating things about Harold's account of his life is that he was being held up as he moved through childhood as a success story, right? So the local news wanted to do a profile, and it's like, this is great. The kid from the ghetto has made it out against the odds. And he was like, “You are telling a story about your own failure, because there was me, but then there were all of my classmates, who you neglected.” He struggled with this, honestly. It's like, “Why me?” BLAIR HODGES: It's a survivor's guilt. ADAM BENFORADO: Yeah, it was. It was very much a sense of like, “Wait, why me, though?” Like, why is it that we only invest in the diamonds in the rough? And we even see this, I think, in some academic work on inequality, is this idea of like, we need to figure out the diamonds in the rough. And I think my argument, certainly Harold's insight is, no, we need to help all children, not just the ones who end up at Harvard, or Wharton, or who end up being inventors. All of these kids could benefit from our investment. But we see that both in early childhood and we see that at the end, even some of the debates about—you know, we can talk about this later—but student loan forgiveness and all that. We need to invest in kids also who do not go to college. And I think even liberals get really worked up about like, “Hey, we need to pay for college.” Well, some people aren't going to go to college. And we really heavily subsidize, even without any actions by Biden, we really heavily subsidize people going to college. We do virtually nothing for kids who aren't. And that sets us up, again, for failure as a nation.   LATE CHILDHOOD: A RIGHT TO COMMUNITY (34:15)   BLAIR HODGES: It's a rising tide lifts all boats kind of approach, right? So again, in this chapter, “Right to Investment,” you're looking at ways early education can be better invested in, health care opportunities, housing, as I mentioned. So those are just some of the areas you talk about in “Right to Investment.” Let's look at the next chapter on late childhood. And this is where you talk about “A Right to Community.” We've touched on this a little bit already. This is where you really emphasize the parental rights movement and what that's done. You introduce us to an extreme example here of how dedication to parental rights can lead to trauma and abuse. This is an Amish family who basically gifted their children to this predatory abuser. And as parents, they could just make these kinds of decisions that put their children at extreme risk. You talk about how this is similar to, or connected to homeschooling—not that you're condemning homeschooling. But you're connecting it to these other issues where parents have control over their children's relationships, over how their education is, how their healthcare and medical care is. And parents get the final say in a lot of these things. Tell us about how that connects to this “Right to Community.” ADAM BENFORADO: I chose this example, ready to acknowledge it's an extreme example, of literally gifting your daughters to a predator and thinking that was actually a completely legitimate thing to do. And I argue that comes from our culture, which really treats children as property. And in some ways—again I like to trace history here, if you go back to ancient Roman republic, coming across into the early modern period in England, and then being brought over to the colonies, this consistent idea of kids belonging to their parents, and their labor belongs to their parents, and their bodies belong to their parents, and then tracing the effects of that. BLAIR HODGES: I was shocked by the custody thing. You point out that the word “custody” is used for prisoners who are in custody, property as in custody, and custody of children. It's a property thing. ADAM BENFORADO: Yeah. And I think it's something that works out just fine for a lot of kids whose parents make good decisions and you know, it's fine, they often love you very much, they try to make good decisions. The problem is if you don't have those good parents under the law in the United States, you honestly can be completely isolated from all of the advances in medical care, from all of the knowledge we have accrued over thousands of years, from all of the valuable social connections. Your parents really can keep you locked on their compound with no access to education, with no access to medicine, with no access to human contact, legally, in the United States. And so the extreme example is to say, wait a second, those kids don't simply have rights as human beings, but we all will pay the consequences when those kids grow up with those depravations. We will pay the moral consequences; we will pay the economic and social consequences of that. I argue we need to stop thinking about kids as belonging to their parents and more think about ways we can cultivate this sense of belonging. And that's not to say that parents don't have a role as, not gatekeepers, but sort of facilitators of these exchanges. I certainly do that a lot with my kids, talking to them about the information that they're receiving, protecting them from certain things, and certainly facilitating access to relationships and medical care. But I think the idea that this is all on parents' shoulders is really bad for kids who face these depravations. And it's bad for all of us. I think when kids don't learn about the history of this country, I think that's bad for all of us.   PARENTAL RIGHTS AND CHILDREN'S VOICES (38:25)   BLAIR HODGES: You talk about how this cuts across into medical care—when it comes to COVID, for example, vaccines. Some parents want to have the right to refuse vaccines for their children. And how that can be a health risk, or the right to refuse medical care for children is a big issue. ADAM BENFORADO: I mean, I think one of the things that really surprises even some criminal law students is some of the legal regimes which have been instituted across the United States which actually protect parents who choose prayer over adopting the most basic medical care to treat preventable conditions. And the fact that actually, you know, in a number of states—I look at Idaho in particular. I mean, there are kids who are dying of things that we have known how to treat for decades, because their parents don't believe in it. And again, we could have conversations about, you know, what if a 16-year-old kid wants to refuse medical care for a genuinely held religious belief? But that's not really the question. I mean, this is really when a 12-year-old is desperate to go to the doctor because she has a ruptured esophagus and her parents say no. Or a kid who has a broken arm and the bone's poking out and the family doesn't take them to the emergency room to treat these easily addressed medical conditions. And again, I think we have a reason to intervene for those kids, but I think we have a reason to intervene on behalf of all of us. It's not good for any of us when kids are suffering and carry the weight of these treatable childhood conditions later in life. BLAIR HODGES: It's tricky, this chapter, because I think parental rights, as you point out, are sacrosanct across the political spectrum. This is an issue that conservatives and liberals and everybody in between is kind of united on, this idea that parents should make the choice and sort of be in charge of all these things. ADAM BENFORADO: It's really interesting. I think the Republican party has decided that parents' rights may be their pathway back to the White House and capturing State Houses. There was certainly success with both in Virginia and in Florida with politicizing parents' rights, and the response of a number of leading progressives, including political folks has been, “Okay, we need a matching liberal parents' rights movement.” So if Republicans are saying parents have a right to know every single school book and read every sentence of every lesson plan and to protect their kids from learning about gay people or whatever, then liberals step up like, “No, I have a right to allow my kid to read this book. I have a right as a parent to have my kid learn in school that gay people exist or have a bathroom that anyone can use.” And personally, I'm like, wait a second, progressives. As a parent, I share the concern when I learned about censorship in my school library, and I get upset too. But let's talk about kids' rights. Like I want to talk about it and frame it around, hey, high school students, maybe they should have a say about what they're learning about the history of race in the United States. I want to stop using kids as props, like you know when DeSantis comes out and signs a bill. That's the only time we actually see kids. And guess what? I want to hear from them. And I think that's the path forward for liberals is, like, let's actually involve kids in these questions. You brought up one of the examples of the vaccines. And again, I think parents have a lot to weigh in here. What is frustrating though, the story I give is of this teenager who this is in the earlier days of the pandemic, who wants to get vaccinated because she just wants to be with her friends. She wants to be allowed to engage with this public life. And she's like, “Hey Mom, this is what I want.” And her mom's just like, “No.” It's like a 16-year-old kid who wants medical care. That, to me, it's like crazy that the kid has no voice in that situation. And the same thing of like, why is it that a 17-year-old should have no say in the books they're reading in English class? That's not preparing them to be successful citizens. And none of this is to say that parents shouldn't have rights. I think parents absolutely should have rights. It's just the kid should have rights too. And I think the conversation would be a lot more enriched; I think we'd make better decisions on a lot of these things about a lot of these things. It's not to say that there aren't dangerous things or there's not inappropriate material. I think there are inappropriate things. I think there are things that are really harmful to kids, and upsetting. I certainly was upset by some of the books and things that I read. But I think an approach that says the only people who have a valid opinion here are adults, is just the wrong approach.   BLAIR HODGES: So that's what you're trying to get readers to do is like think about how younger folks can be involved in this decision making and their voices can be heard.   ADAM BENFORADO: Right, be part of the community.   EARLY ADOLESCENCE: THE RIGHT TO BE A KID (43:45)   BLAIR HODGES: Let's talk about the next chapter: “The Right to Be a Kid.” This is framed around early adolescence. And this really zooms in on the criminal justice system, a passion of yours, and the ways childhood can be erased there. You include the story of a man who was convicted of murder when he was a teenager, and how he was tried as an adult even though he was a teenager, despite what we know about brain development, about the ability of him to make decisions, or what it was like to be an adolescent and make that kind of decision. What did that story do for you in this chapter? ADAM BENFORADO: My last book, Unfair, was about injustice in our criminal justice system and it focused on different biases and things that come into every stage of the normal criminal case. I was very familiar with wrongful convictions and sort of the injustice that can come from that. And this conversation I had with this now middle-aged man, I talked to him when he was in his forties, reflecting back. I think it really reveals a different type of injustice. So this man, Ghani, is very forthright about the fact that he did the crime. He killed another boy when he was an adolescent. And yet I think the justice story doesn't stop there. What was so profoundly unjust about this was failing to understand what brought this young man to commit this atrocious act. And he readily acknowledges the harm that came from that and the failure to understand that people change. That, yeah, the person who is fifteen is not the same person as the person who is 45. And the harshness of giving up on someone and condemning someone for what they do, anything that they do, when they're fifteen. This young man was given, in Pennsylvania, life without the possibility of parole. He was basically condemned—“You are going to live in a box until you die”—at age fifteen or sixteen. We are a country that prohibits cruel and unusual punishment. It's right there in the eighth amendment. And yet, we said to this young man—who basically was a prisoner of a drug gang locked in a crack house, dealing crack through the mail slot—“We've given up and we're gonna put you in a box, nine-by-seven box, until you die decades in the future.” And it was only because the Supreme Court changed the legal landscape that he was eventually released, when the Supreme Court said actually someone who commits a crime before age eighteen cannot get a mandatory sentence of life without the possibility of parole. He was released decades later. And what I want us to realize in this chapter is that children have a right to remain a kid, to enjoy that halo of childhood, even when they make terrible mistakes. And that's hard for us. But I think if you look at the data from what comes out of psychology and neuroscience, you start to see what adolescence is. It's a necessary step. But it's a challenging one. It's one where our brains are developed in certain ways, but not in others. And so we can make mistakes. And what we need to do as a society is try to allow for those mistakes, that's part of growing up, in ways that are less devastating, to prevent young men from joining drug gangs and killing people, but also that mitigate the harm of treating one mistake—again, a very bad mistake—as a reason to condemn an individual for the rest of their life. And I go back to some of the mistakes I made, that luckily did not have life or death consequences.   CHILDHOOD AND RACISM (47:44)   BLAIR HODGES: Same. But you and me are both white guys, too. You talk about how that makes a difference—how racist this system often is, people being prosecuted as adults. ADAM BENFORADO: I mean, I think about one of the smartest guys I know, I met him my first day at Harvard Law School, he grew up in Pennsylvania. And we were talking early in the first semester of law school about an experience he had. And, again, he was just the most charming, brilliant guy, went to Harvard undergrad. And he was coming home, I think it was Pottstown, one day from football practice, and he had all his football gear in a bag over his shoulder. And I think he'd already gotten in early at Harvard. He's running home because he's late. And he's the nicest guy. He's probably running home to get home early for, you know, dinner or something. Cops pull up, chase him down, throw him up against the chain link, because there's been a burglary. And in that moment, that could have been it. That could have been it. That experience never, ever happened to me as a kid, and the simple answer is, I have white skin. Did I run with bags? Was I wearing hoodies? Yes, all of those things were true of me. We could go back to my poor fashion choices as a teenager. All those things are true, but that never happened to me. And that aligns with the research that shows how young Black kids do not enjoy that halo of childhood. They are “adultified” very early on, and that has consequences where, you know, misbehaving at school. White kids— BLAIR HODGES: Are more likely to be suspended. More likely to have repercussions. ADAM BENFORADO: Yeah, and then if it's a more serious thing, intervention of the police. And once you're into the police system, you get a lot harsher treatment. And this is true of girls too, right? So we see, actually, it can be a real problem with girls who have been sexually trafficked. A white girl is treated as a victim. Black girls? Well, you're a prostitute. And that means how the police treat you, that means how even courts will treat you, and I think we need to really think hard about ways we can ensure all children are treated as kids. BLAIR HODGES: Yeah, you talk about like these juvenile courts where kids are involved in the process. ADAM BENFORADO: To me, that's one of the ways that we can move forward, is getting back to that early 20th century idea that, hey, kids are different, and we should really focus on rehabilitation and on diverting kids to a different system that's focused on kids are changeable, they make mistakes, they may need to have changes in their lives. And we can do that because kids are really malleable in this period. And I think that's one of the reasons I throw my support behind diversion programs and some of the cool new ideas to try to make interventions on kids whose lives are starting to go down paths that can lead to very serious consequences.   LATE ADOLESCENCE: THE RIGHT TO BE HEARD (50:43)   BLAIR HODGES: In your “Right to Be Heard” chapter you talk about actual court systems where juveniles get to be part of the process, judging their peers. It's a real jury of their peers. ADAM BENFORADO: In this next chapter the focus here—If the previous chapter was on ways that I think we “adultify” kids in circumstances and treat them as adults in circumstances where they're ill-prepared for that and we really need to protect them, this is a chapter about other ways in which we infantilize kids when they actually really have the ability to do a lot more than we give them credit. And again, I am driven by the psychology neuroscience literature here. I think there's this really interesting thing. We tend to think about the brain as this balloon that kind of just gets bigger and bigger and bigger over the course of development. But what we now know is different areas of the brain mature at different rates. And that, actually, areas of the brain that focus more on the  old cognition moments develop much faster than those that are involved in that kind of control of impulses— BLAIR HODGES: Assessing risk— ADAM BENFORADO: Yes, risk, and dealing with peer pressure. Yeah, those are later developing things really into people's 20s. There's a really strong argument that we actually need to figure out ways to empower kids much earlier. So I focus, yes, on the ability of kids to serve as jurors, but I also focus on extending the right to vote to young people and allowing young people to run for office, serve on school boards. And I think this is supported, certainly, by the mind sciences research. But I also think it's likely to lead to much better outcomes for us as a society. Sometimes when I talk to audiences about this, I have someone raise their hand and it's like, “Oh, well, this is going to distort the system, you're taking power away from adults.” And I'm like, the current system is biased. We are making decisions which are too old-focus and too conservative. One of the things we know from the psychology of literature, is that sometimes as people get older, they make much more conservative decisions on things, they're too risk averse. And while risk aversion can be beneficial, under certain circumstances, it actually can be the most dangerous thing you can do, particularly when things are rapidly changing and you have new problems. I often get the pushback when I talk about this, “Well, okay, maybe that's true that kids actually do have the capacity to deal with these things, but they don't have the life experience.” And I'm like, “What do you think are the most pressing issues today?” Okay, well, it's like, you know, how to regulate social media, and trans rights, and racial justice, and climate change. I stop them like, okay, hold that thought. Let's think about the average 15-year-old. Okay, so social media. They are on TikTok. They know so much more than my octogenarian father-in-law. Trans rights: my octogenarian father-in-law, he doesn't have any trans friends or gay friends. Racial justice: the youngest generation is the most diverse multicultural generation America has ever seen. Let's talk about climate change. Well, that 85-year-old is going to be long dead as the worst effects of climate change ravage the United States. That 15-year-old is going to be living through those floods and forest fires, and the civil unrest around the world that is coming down the pipeline and has no ability to choose the leaders who will make decisions today that will affect them for the rest of their life. And I think, again, that's not democracy. Democracy is about people who have a stake in the decisions, political decisions, having a say in those decisions. BLAIR HODGES: Right. And so you talk about extending the franchise to young people, like at least local elections or school boards. And I don't find you to be an absolutist in the sense of saying, like, here's this fundamental right, they need to just have every, you know—You seem to be willing to negotiate and willing to talk about how this unfolds. ADAM BENFORADO: I think there are many different pathways here. One of the things we're seeing around the world is lowering the voting age to sixteen. Over the last several decades we've had more and more countries— BLAIR HODGES: It's been proposed here, hasn't it? Didn't you say someone's proposed it in the US? ADAM BENFORADO: It's been voted on in the House. We are seeing more municipalities, we have a handful now of municipalities where 16-year-olds can vote. But we have a number of countries—and these are like, you know, it's like Austria and Brazil. I mean, these are big countries. BLAIR HODGES: I didn't know any of this until I read your book. I don't understand how I missed it. I listen to NPR. I'm an avid news reader. I don't know how I missed it. ADAM BENFORADO: It's a really interesting phenomenon. And I think what we've seen is all the horrors, the fears of like, this is going to destroy society, don't happen. And I think what we will see, in my opinion, as we extend this right, we're gonna see a lot more engagement. And I think this, in some ways, a solution out of some of the gridlock. I think bringing in new voices and new voters is a great way to actually move forward on some of these intractable problems we have. I think young people can actually help us move away from this period of political polarization, in part because I think young people are more changeable and are less doctrinaire on a lot of these issues. I interviewed this young man who, because of a loophole in the law, ran for governor in Kansas. And what I think was just fascinating about talking to him was, he was running as a Republican. But one of the issues where he was just different was gun control. And that's because he was like, “Hey, I go to a public school. And this is something I'm really worried about, school shootings.” BLAIR HODGES: And he's been through drills. Getting under his desk and stuff. ADAM BENFORADO: He's like, “I'm in favor of sensible gun control.” One of the people who interviewed him on TV was like, well, that doesn't align with the party. And he was like, “Yeah, I'm proud of that.” Old people running for office on the Republican platform would never say that. He would say that because he actually believes it. And I think that's on the liberal side, too. I think there are issues where some young new Democrats may not toe the party line on something. And you know what? I personally am comfortable with that. I think we need to break out. BLAIR HODGES: I think that's why it won't happen, though. [laughs] Because the people that get to make the decision about letting it happen are gonna do the calculus of, will this help me politically, yes or no? And that's the question they'll ask in order to make it legal. ADAM BENFORADO: I think young people have got to stop asking and start demanding. I wrote a piece in Rolling Stone a couple of weeks ago, where I said, it was after the latest gun shooting, and I was like, you know, it's great. The March for Lives folks, and all these folks out being politically active. But my argument is: stop marching to try to get adults to act on gun control or act on climate change and get out there marching for the right to vote. The adults are not going to save you. You need to exercise that protest power to demand power. Because until you have power, those in power are not going to listen to you. And so, again, I think this is something—I'm optimistic. I think this is something where we're going to see a lot of changes in my lifetime. This is one of the areas I'm most excited about is lowering the voting age. BLAIR HODGES: Well, you have my hope. And, you know, I'd love to see it. But time will tell. ADAM BENFORADO: We can talk more on the show in twenty years. [laughter]   ON THE CUSP OF ADULTHOOD: THE RIGHT TO START FRESH (58:36)   BLAIR HODGES:  Wow. Cool. All right. We're talking with Adam Benforado about the book, A Minor Revolution: How Prioritizing Kids Benefits Us All. And Adam also mentioned the book Unfair: The New Science of Criminal Injustice. That's also a great one. Adam is a professor of law at the Drexel University Klein School of Law. All right, let's talk about on the cusp of adulthood, this is “The Right to Start Fresh.” This chapter has a lot to say about how economic conditions are harder for younger folks today than they were even just a few decades ago. People are economically less well-off right now. The economy is looking harder, wages are stagnating, inflation is happening, college debt is ballooning. But back in the 50s, or 60s, there might be a guy who could marry his partner and be the sole breadwinner and have kids and buy a house really early and do all these things. These opportunities aren't on the table anymore. So this chapter talks about trying to get younger people off on the right foot at this cusp of adulthood when it comes to job choice, when it comes to mobility, when it comes to inheritance. ADAM BENFORADO: I think this really focuses on the popular perception that childhood maybe is tough because you belong to someone else, but once you become an adult suddenly the shackles are off, and you're free. The world is your oyster, and especially in America, you are the freest of the free. BLAIR HODGES: You've got bootstraps, you can pull ‘em. ADAM BENFORADO: Yep. Live where you want, control your destiny, do what you want, marry who you want. And what I look at is all of the ways we actually have locked young people in. We've already determined the trajectory of their life before they even get to that. And so I look at the ways how we capitalize, or fail to capitalize, people's professional development. We could make a decision as a society that, hey, you're a future worker in the United States of America and so we will pay for your training and your education until you are finished and you're ready to work. That's the bargain that we make. But instead, we say, no, no, no, no, you who have no money will self-finance your education, to the tune of $100,000, $150,000 and you will pay that off for the rest of your life. Maybe actually, you'll do it by joining the military and paying it off that way. But somehow, you're gonna start life in the red. And actually, I had this moment, I think I cut it out of the book, but it was actually right before I went to law school. I finished undergrad, I got into law school, and I wasn't quite ready to go and I took a deferment for a year and I went over—my then girlfriend, her parents had bought this 16th century farmhouse outside of London. And I was like, “I'm gonna go and kind of work renovating this house.” And there were some professional builders who were also doing things that year. And I remember being out and I was cleaning off bricks to fix up this like rental with this guy. And we started talking. It's like, hey, so you're going to law school? Oh, you're going to Harvard? And he was like, “So how much is that going to cost?” And I was like, “I don't even really know. I think it's like, you know, $50,000 or $60,000 a year.” And he suddenly was like, “Adam, you cannot do this. Let me tell you, I'm 50 years old. Like, there's so many things that come up in life. People get sick, you know, you get someone pregnant. You can't start life in the red. That's madness.” Honestly, I had gotten into law school. Everyone up to that moment had just been like, “This is the best thing. Everything's great. Of course, everyone goes into debt.” And that was the only person who was like, this is crazy, what a stupid system, because of the things life throws at you. And the truth is, he was speaking the truth. It is mad to put people down, you know, to have the weight of hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt to start out life. And it's particularly unfair, as I point out to do this, based on sort of the different economic situations people find themselves in. One of the areas I focus on is not simply how we lock people in with that, but also how we lock them in geographically. Because coming out of college, you cannot take that job in San Francisco unless you already have existing family wealth. Why? Think about how much money you need. You need the money for the first and last month's rent and the security deposit. And that means you need like $8,000 starting out. A lot of young people who are from poor families, they can get the job, they went to the good college and can get the job, but they cannot move there. And that's really different, I think from previous generations. It wasn't just a myth, the idea that you move where the opportunity was, that was a reality in America, right? You move where the jobs are. “Go West, young man.” People really did do that. But they cannot do that now. And again, that's bad for America. We need workers where the jobs are. We don't need workers stagnating in areas of the country where there are no jobs. We need them moving out to the Bay Area where the jobs are, that increases our GDP. But they cannot do that, based on the choices, and a lot of those choices are things that seem to have nothing to do with young people. They seem to be things like zoning laws. Like okay, it makes sense that any new construction in the city needs to have parking. Well, what does that do that limits housing for those young people, and that means that they do not move there? And that keeps those houses for those older people, skyrocketing property values. But you think about, you know, some of the rules about licensing. So many jobs now, you know, it's like, farmer, hairdresser, you have to have special licenses. And again, that also prevents— BLAIR HODGES: Which are state-dependent too, right? ADAM BENFORADO: Yes. And geographic mobility, even things like, traditionally, law licenses. What is the main reason we have these state bars, I am very skeptical that it's to protect the public. I think it's to protect the monopoly lawyers have in each of these states to prevent new entrants into the market. And I think that hurts all of us. And so I want to focus on ways we can make young people freer at the start of life. Let's stop with different legal regimes that lock in things for old people and think more about ways we can free up young people, because that's going to be best for us as a country. BLAIR HODGES: You talked about inheritance and dead hand laws when it comes to that as well, the right of older folks to be able to lock in wealth in particular ways. ADAM BENFORADO: So I give this example—I really love art and I'm lucky enough to live really near one of the most amazing art collections in the world, which is housed at the Barnes Foundation in downtown Philadelphia. It has an amazing post-Impressionist collection. And one of the funniest things is, or the amazing thing is, thousands of people now visit every year, and that might never have come to be had the law originally been followed. So this guy Barnes, who made basically trillions of dollars in gonorrhea treatments around the turn of the century and bought up all this art, he stipulated in his will that this collection of art was going to be housed in his house out in Lower Merion. And that, you know, only a certain number of people could visit every week and all these rules. And that's how it would have been for all eternity if he had left enough money to preserve it in that way. But the fact of the matter is, he didn't. He didn't leave enough money. And so to the court system, this amazing collection was moved to downtown Philadelphia. It was placed in this, in my opinion, much better space. And now thousands and thousands more Americans and people around the world get to see this groundbreaking work. I think this is an area where we need to focus more on the benefits to living than the rights of the dead. And this is actually not a new notion. I have this wonderful quote from Thomas Jefferson in the book in which he said the same thing. And he was fighting down in

Jon Marks & Ike Reese
Top 5 at 5 with Dan Wilson: People who attended Lower Merion High School

Jon Marks & Ike Reese

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2024 21:20


Coffee Talk With John Papaloni
236. From Lower Merion to Wall Street: Mastering Money Moves with Tom Suvansri, the Penn State Prodigy!

Coffee Talk With John Papaloni

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2024 43:54


From Lower Merion to Wall Street: Mastering Money Moves with Tom Suvansri, the Penn State Prodigy! Born in Lower Merion, raised in Cherry Hill, and a Penn State Grad, Tom adds a ton of value to the Perennial Pride Team as a specialist in advanced insurance strategies and investment analysis. Tom is a tremendous asset for clients looking to take control of their finances due to his analytical strength, his focus on serving clients, and his feeling of responsibility towards others. In addition, Tom has had success within real estate investing through the ownership and management of various rental properties as well as participating in private lending arrangements. Tom currently resides in Stamford, CT, with his wife, Bridget and their two boys, Aidan and Colin. In his free time, Tom loves to read, exercise, play an occasional round of golf, and just enjoy family time.

Oral Arguments for the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
Jennifer Binder Le Pape v. Lower Merion School Dsitrict

Oral Arguments for the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2024 31:00


Jennifer Binder Le Pape v. Lower Merion School Dsitrict

Rabbi Meir Riber
Chanuka Shmooze 5784 - (Given at Lower Merion Kollel)

Rabbi Meir Riber

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2023 34:14


Fresh 24 With Marc Zumoff
Episode 20 | John Lucas

Fresh 24 With Marc Zumoff

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2023 38:45


NBA LIFER JOHN LUCAS! Former Philadelphia 76ers Head Coach joins the show. Coach Lucas recalls the big transition era for the Sixers. Coach recalls scouting a young Kobe Bryant at Lower Merion, having open runs, and much more. Lucas opens up on addiction and mental health and how he's made positive changes. He tells the real stories of his addiction, how it kicked him out of the NBA but how he was able to make the return. And Lucas talks about coaching today's game with the Houston Rockets. The first overall pick in the 1976 NBA Draft by the Houston Rockets. Lucas enjoyed a successful playing career, spending 14 seasons in the NBA and playing for a number of teams, including the Golden State Warriors, Washington Bullets, San Antonio Spurs, Milwaukee Bucks, and Seattle SuperSonics. DraftKings Sportsbook Offer: Bet $5 on basketball and get $150 instantly in bonus bets with code ZUMOFF at ⁠⁠⁠https://sportsbook.draftkings.com⁠⁠⁠ with code ZUMOFF! Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/fresh-24-with-marc-zumoff/id1679614878 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/51J6xRWwoeXEFLkzZiY1a3?si=ecc77c6663db44d9 YouTube: ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@fresh24withmarczumoff⁠ Instagram: ⁠https://www.instagram.com/fresh24withmarczumoff/⁠ Twitter: ⁠https://twitter.com/Fresh24Zumoff

The People of Penn State
Episode 42 — Dr. Khalid N. Mumin, Pennsylvania Secretary of Education

The People of Penn State

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2023 46:10


On today's episode of The People of Penn State, we're pleased to be joined by Pennsylvania Secretary of Education, Dr. Khalid N. Mumin. For over 25 years, Dr. Mumin has served in various capacities as a teacher, dean of students, principal and central administrator. Most recently, Dr. Mumin served as the Superintendent of Schools at Lower Merion School District. Prior to Lower Merion, he was the Superintendent of Reading School District for seven years. Beginning as a Secondary English teacher in Scotland, Pennsylvania, in 1997, Dr. Mumin rose through the leadership ranks of the education system in Pennsylvania. Dr. Mumin is committed to promoting and sustaining student achievement, equity and access to educational programming for all students, as well as creating plans that are fiscally responsible. Dr. Mumin is also the author of the book "Problem Child: Leading Students Living in Poverty Towards Infinite Possibilities of Success."He earned a Doctor of Education in Educational Leadership from the University of Pennsylvania, a Master of Education in Teaching & Curriculum from Pennsylvania State University, a Bachelor of Arts in Secondary English Education from Shippensburg University, and an Associate of Arts in English from Northeastern Christian Junior College.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Follow Dr.  Mumin on Twitter. Learn more about the Penn State Alumni Association: alumni.psu.edu. Follow the Penn State Alumni Association on:FacebookTwitterInstagramLinkedIn----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------0:00 — Intro0:50 — Welcoming Dr. Khalid N. Mumin to the show2:21 — How Dr. Mumin and Paul first got connected3:24 — Dr. Mumin's Penn State story 7:15 — Ad Read - Penn State Alumni Association Travel Program8:05 — Where a passion for education for began for Dr. Mumin13:26 — The importance of educators who care about their students15:23 — Career path in education 21:10 — Dr. Mumin's vision for education in Pennsylvania 24:15 — The commonalities amongst Pennsylvania schools in how they can improve 29:11 — Authoring a book34:33 — Being recognized as the 2021 Superintendent Of The Year 37:06 — Lightning Round Q&A, including a tidbit on Dr. Mumin's friendship with former NBA star Rasheed Wallace 44:25 — Outro  

Fresh 24 With Marc Zumoff
Episode 12 | Mike Jackson

Fresh 24 With Marc Zumoff

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 44:04


Philadelphia native, Hollywood success story Mike Jackson joins Fresh 24 With Marc Zumoff. Jackson, Co-Founder of Get Lifted Film Co. with Penn graduate John Legend and Ty Stiklorius, shares some amazing stories of his Philly days. Lower Merion graduate, Mike Jackson talks his Sixers connection, still sitting court side at Philadelphia 76ers games whenever he gets the chance. Who is the next Philly-born Hollywood star does Jackson want to work with next? All covered in this episode! Follow along on YouTube and all social media platforms. New episodes will be released every Wednesday! Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/fresh-24-with-marc-zumoff/id1679614878 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/51J6xRWwoeXEFLkzZiY1a3?si=ecc77c6663db44d9 YouTube: ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@fresh24withmarczumoff⁠ Instagram: ⁠https://www.instagram.com/fresh24withmarczumoff/⁠ Twitter: ⁠https://twitter.com/Fresh24Zumoff

The Dom Giordano Program
Lower Merion Considering Ban of Firearm Sales Near Schools

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2023 42:49


In today's second hour, Dom leads off the Dom Giordano Program by telling of a new initiative in Lower Merion to ban the sale of firearms near school properties. Dom tells that there's only one gun store in the town currently, and this edict wouldn't effect it, but he still stands against it. Producer Dan hops in again as ‘Dan the Red' to argue why he's on favor of it, asking what if it were a marijuana dispensary we were talking about instead. Then, after taking some calls on the topic, Dom returns to national politics, telling why he supports the new angle by Donald Trump on abortion that is a bit less radical than DeSantis's 6-week abortion ban, explaining how the best path to advance pro-Life ideology is not through lambasting voters with radical ideologies. Then, Neal Zoren joins the Dom Giordano Program to tell us what's worth watching over the weekend, and also explaining why we may be seeing a theater renaissance after the success of Amazon Prime's AIR, which tells the story of the Jordan brand. (Photo by Getty Images)

Out d'Coup Podcast
Friday Politics Roundup | House GOP goes after the poor and climate; gun violence; Rutgers strike; Lower Merion restricts guns; satellite crashes; Starship goes boom

Out d'Coup Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2023 87:40


GOP House Leader Kevin McCarthy announced his party's demands in the latest round of public hostage-taking around the nation's debt ceiling. McCarthy and House republicans are calling for massive cuts to social programs, the elimination of the student-loan debt forgiveness plan, new work requirements for welfare recipients, cuts funds for improving the IRS, repeals green energy programs and incentives, and takes back any unspent COVID funds.  It seems that flooding our communities with guns and stoking fear, hate, and misinformation on conservative media is producing a new form of gun violence. This week, several young people were shot - and some killed - as they accidentally knocked on the wrong door or mistakenly got into the wrong car. This is the culture of vigilantism that conservatives funded by the NRA and the gun industry have been grooming us for.  In Liberty, MO, Ralph Yarl, a 16 year old African American kid, who was going to pick up his sister, but knocked on the wrong door. He was nearly killed. In Fort Edward, NY, Kaylin Gillis, a 20 year old white woman, was looking for a friend's house and mistakenly drove up the wrong driveway. She was shot and killed. In Elgin, Texas, Two competitive cheerleaders, Heather Roth and Payton Washington, were shot after mistakenly getting into the wrong car. Roth suffered a grazing wound while Washington was sent to a hospital in critical condition.  According to new reporting in Politico, the Rutgers University faculty unions are considering getting back on the picket lines because the administration is dragging its feet in finalizing their “framework deal” that led the unions to suspend their historic weeklong strike. It was the first strike by faculty in Rutgers's 257 year history.  The strike won historic victories on wages and job security for adjunct faculty. At the same time, graduate student workers and workers at Rutgers Biomedical Health were still expressing concerns about the deal as several key issues about their working conditions remained to be hammered out.  After a gun store opened up near several schools in Lower Merion, PA, the township's board of commissioners unanimously passed a new ordinance that limits where guns can be sold in the township. Starting immediately, firearms businesses can no longer operate within 1,000 feet of public schools, they cannot operate out of homes, can only operate in commercially zoned areas, and they must follow new safety regulations. Commissioner Dan Bernheim said if the new ordinance “moves the needle ever so slightly…that's the right thing to do.” On Wednesday night an old, 660 pound satellite came crashing down to Earth in a part of the Sahara desert, near the Sudan-Egypt border.  And SpaceX's first test flight of its massive Starship rocket exploded a few minutes after launch.   

The Dom Giordano Program
Bruce Springsteen Comes To Town, Dan Seems Thrilled

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2023 43:35


Full Hour | In today's second hour, Dom welcomes John S. Iushewitz, FOP Lodge 28 President representing Lower Merion police officers, onto the Dom Giordano Program after an incident made headline news involving an officer in the department. Back on January 8th, a woman was driving in Bala Cynwyd when officer Charles Murphy attempted to pull her over for tailgating a truck. The driver initially resisted arrest, escalating into Murphy pulling and deploying his Taser on the individual. This has prompted a 10-day suspension, which has caused controversy, with some saying the punishment is too light while others, including FOP Lodge 28, believe the punishment is too much for an Officer just trying to do his job. John takes us inside the incident and explains why he believes that the punishment is unwarranted for the incident at hand. Then, Dom welcomes in former  back onto the Dom Giordano Program for a discussion on the national Republican party as we gear up for another Presidential election. Rothfus, a strong proponent of Ron DeSantis, tells us all about the Florida Governor's deep connection with Pennsylvania. Then, Dom and Rothfus discuss the changing dynamics of the Republican Party, with each offering up their strategy that they believe Republicans need to employ to secure a win in the future. (Photo by Jemal Countess/Getty Images)

The Dom Giordano Program
Lower Merion FOP Pres. on Punishment of Officer Who Tased Driver

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2023 13:02


In today's second hour, Dom welcomes John S. Iushewitz, FOP Lodge 28 President representing Lower Merion police officers, onto the Dom Giordano Program after an incident made headline news involving an officer in the department. Back on January 8th, a woman was driving in Bala Cynwyd when officer Charles Murphy attempted to pull her over for tailgating a truck. The driver initially resisted arrest, escalating into Murphy pulling and deploying his Taser on the individual. This has prompted a 10-day suspension, which has caused controversy, with some saying the punishment is too light while others, including FOP Lodge 28, believe the punishment is too much for an Officer just trying to do his job. John takes us inside the incident and explains why he believes that the punishment is unwarranted for the incident at hand. (Photo by Getty Images)

City Cast Philly
Dead Pigeons, Lost Luggage, and Taser Incident Repercussions

City Cast Philly

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 22:01


It's the Friday news roundup! In today's episode, host Trenae Nuri is joined by senior reporter for Philadelphia Magazine Victor Fiorillo and city editor at the Philadelphia Tribune Sharyn Flanagan, to discuss a call for an independent investigation into the taser incident involving a Lower Merion police officer and a Black woman, sightings of disembodied pigeons around the city, and how a Philly restaurant saved a traveler's lost luggage.  Our Friday news roundups are powered by great local journalism:  OK, What's Up With All the Disembodied Pigeons on Philly Streets? The Craziest Lost Luggage Story You Will Read This Week Lower Merion Residents Call For Independent Investigation After Police Use Taser During Traffic Stop Want some more Philly news? Then make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter. We're also on Twitter and Instagram! Follow us @citycastphilly. Have a question or just want to share some thoughts with the team? Leave us a voicemail at 215-259-8170.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Dom Giordano Program
Dr. Elana Fishbein on Lower Merion Trans Teacher Video That Sparks Concern

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2022 9:54


Dom welcomes Dr. Elana Fishbein, Founder of No Left Turn in Education, back onto the Dom Giordano Program to discuss some information she's received and reported upon showing a Special Education teacher in the Lower Merion School District showing off a slideshow that tells of their transgender experience. After the clip went viral on social media, concerned parents reached out to No Left Turn in Education, who then filed a Right-to-Know request asking for the lesson plans taught by the teacher. After the district denied the request, the State's Office of Open Records told the district to release the plans, causing the district to sue to try and overturn the ruling. Fishbein explains why she and the parents are concerned with the material, and explain what they help to determine by acquiring the teacher's lesson plans.

The Dom Giordano Program
CB from Lower Merion Argues In Favor of Krasner

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2022 5:22


Dom Giordano takes a call from a CB of Lower Merion, who tries arguing that the constitution is very clear about due process, arguing why she's in favor of the decision by State lawmakers to not recommend impeachment for Philadelphia DA Larry Krasner. (Photo by Getty Images)

The Dom Giordano Program
What's Next For Progressives? Cancelling Halloween

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2022 42:24


Full Hour | In today's third hour, Dom discussing the Nation's Report Card, which reflects huge negative trends due to lockdowns related to Coronavirus, revealing that we've had the largest-ever drop in math scores. This leads Dom to take aim at liberal school officials, also bringing to the table the decision by Lower Merion to cancel Halloween festivities due to questions around equality. Then, Dom spends the remainder of the hour talking about both the failure to impeach Larry Krasner and the upcoming debate between John Fetterman and Dr. Mehmet Oz. (Photo by Getty Images)

Get Your Life Together
#Foodie | Ep. 73 w/ Lower Merion Foodie

Get Your Life Together

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 51:26


Support the show

The Dom Giordano Program
Lower Merion Hates Halloween!

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2022 3:05


Dom Giordano tells that Lower Merion has set forth a new edict banning Halloween parades from their school district, citing public safety and 'lack of inclusion' concerns. (Photo by Getty Images)

Tigers Radio Network - Marple Newtown Football
9-9-21 Lower Merion at Marple Newtown

Tigers Radio Network - Marple Newtown Football

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2022 150:31


The Tigers Radio Network proudly presents live coverage of the Marple Newtown Tigers vs. the Lower Merion Aces from the campus of Marple Newtown High School in Newtown Square, PA.... The post Full audio archive of Lower Merion at Marple Newtown from Friday, 9-9-22 appeared first on Marple Newtown Football.

Curious Kid Podcast
Curious About Languages

Curious Kid Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2022 18:34 Transcription Available Very Popular


In episode 196, we get curious about languages for Felix of Sevenoaks, England, Vivian, Lyza, and Jack of Lower Merion, Pennsylvania, Greybear of Eugene, Oregon, Ellie of Sydney, Australia, and Riley of Dalyellup, Western Australia.  How many languages exist?  Why can't we all just speak the same language?  How were languages invented?  Learn amazing facts about lots of different languages with us.  Visit the Curious Kid Podcast Website - http://www.curiouskidpodcast.com Send Us An E-mail - curiouskidpodcast@gmail.comLeave Us A Voicemail - 856-425-2324Support Us On Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/CuriouskidpodcastShop Curious Kid Podcast Merchandise - http://tee.pub/lic/fqXchg3wUVUFollow Us On Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/curiouskidpod/Follow Us On Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/curiouskidpodcast/Follow Us On Twitter - https://twitter.com/CuriousKidPodGet 10% Off Fairy Tales Hair Care Camp Essentials With Coupon Code CKP10 - https://fairytaleshaircare.com/pages/all-collections?utm_campaign=backtocamp&utm_medium=podcast&utm_source=curiouskidpodcast&utm_content=ckp10

Sports Cannabis
THE HALFTIME REPORT

Sports Cannabis

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2022 0:35


Sports Cannabis is Excited to Announce the Launch of our New Show The Halftime Report, Hosted by former NCAA Champion, TEDx Speaker, Author and Cannabis Advocate; D-Rey Episode 1 Coming Soon… New Show. New Guests. New Themes. One Mission. #SPORTSCANNABIS #BREAKTHESTIGMA NCAA Champion, TEDx speaker, entrepreneur, author and cannabis advocate, Darryl Reynolds a.k.a D-Rey is moving the Sports Cannabis conversation forward, pushing for change and normalization. D-Rey played high school basketball for Lower Merion and was immediately recognized for his defense, rebounding, dominating the post and had an unstoppable offensive game with an ability to drain buckets at will. After making a name for himself at Lower Merion High School, Reynolds moved to Villanova, posting an amazing career and winning a NCAA Championship with the Wildcats in 2016. Shortly after graduating Villanova, D-Rey took his talents to the NBA summer league before heading to Poland to play Professional Basketball. After sustaining a career ending injury D-Rey shifted his attention from basketball to helping others as a thought leader, writer, producer and cannabis advocate. In late 2021, D-Rey released “What If the World Stopped Complaining About Mondays” which made waves across North America and today is a lead advocate for the Sports Cannabis community. Read More : https://sportscannabis.ca/2022/04/20/... Follow, Subscribe : HTR : https://www.instagram.com/thehalftime... D-REY : https://www.instagram.com/reythedirector Sports Cannabis : https://www.instagram.com/sportscannabis WWW.SPORTSCANNABIS.CA

Voice Report
Roman Catholics Daniel Skillings, Khalil Farmer and Xzayvier Brown

Voice Report

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2022 6:19


The Trio talk Roman win and matchup with Lower Merion in the PIAA 6A Semifinals

Locked On Lakers - Daily Podcast On The Los Angeles Lakers
Interview: Kobe Bryant's Origin Story, and How His Childhood Shaped the Future Laker Legend.

Locked On Lakers - Daily Podcast On The Los Angeles Lakers

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2022 39:12


Kobe Bryant remains among the most fascinating and widely discussed athletes of the modern era. His storied career has been examined, re-examined, and re-examined yet again countless times, and that's not changing anytime soon. But while the broad strokes of his life before the NBA - rabid basketball fandom as a toddler, formative years in Italy, dominance at Lower Merion High School before "taking (his) talents to the NBA" - have also been widely discussed, relatively speaking, less has been told about it compared to his twenty seasons with the Lakers, or even his life and death after basketball.As such, that makes Mike Sielski's new book, "The Rise: Kobe Bryant and the Pursuit of Immortality" a fascinating must-read for Kobe fans. Sielski attended a nearby high school while Kobe was a freshman, and gained a unique perspective of what it was like to watch a legend in the making. He later went on to write for the Philadelphia Inquirer, and became the ideal person to document Kobe's formative years, his effect on the Lower Merion and Philadelphia communities, and how that childhood was instrumental in shaping an all-time great. Even if you think you already know everything about Kobe, this interview and the book offer lots of great new details.Hosts: Andy and Brian KamenetzkySEGMENT ONE: Why did Sielski decide to focus a book on Kobe's childhood?SEGMENT TWO: How Kobe's upbringing both fueled his love for basketball, but also a permanent sense of "otherness," and never quite belonging anywhere.SEGMENT THREE: The many ways Kobe was, even as a teenager, incredibly calculating and quite ahead of his time.Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!PrizePicksCheck out PrizePicks.com and use promo code: “NBA” or go to your app store and download the app today. PrizePicks is daily fantasy made easy!Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnlineBetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts!Rock AutoAmazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you.TrueBillDon't fall for subscription scams. Start cancelling today at Truebill.com/LOCKEDONNBA. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

I Am Kobe
The Bond That Broke

I Am Kobe

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2022 46:59


2001 was the year that Jeremy Treatman's relationship with Kobe Bryant changed, because Kobe's relationship with his family changed. 2001 was the year that Kobe married his wife, Vanessa, which led to a falling out between him and his parents, Joe and Pam. There's been a lot of speculation about why the Bryant family fractured as it did. From what I gathered in talking to people who knew Kobe well back then, the problem came down to this: Kobe felt like he was ready to move fully into adulthood, to get married, and his parents thought he was too young. Jeremy's relationship with Kobe evolved in the same way. He hadn't been close just to Kobe. He had been tight with the entire Bryant clan. If there wasn't a clean break between him and Kobe as Kobe moved on from Lower Merion and progressed in his pro career, there was certainly more distance between them.  It had been nearly 30 years since Jeremy met Kobe. It had been 25 years since he was there on the Lower Merion Aces' sideline, celebrating a state championship with Kobe. But that special period of time was fresh in his memory. Kobe had been dead for a year-and-a-half, but he was alive in Jeremy's mind and heart. Pre-order Mike Sielski's related book: “The Rise: Kobe Bryant and the Pursuit of Immortality" (1/11/22): TheRiseOfKobeBook.com Join the conversation about “I Am Kobe” on social media: on Twitter and Instagram: @diversionpods Our theme music is “Create Yourself” by Grover Braam feat. Justin Starling: Listen to Create Yourself on Spotify Cover photo © Eileen Blass – USA TODAY NETWORK “I Am Kobe” is a production of Diversion Podcasts in association with iHeartRadio. This season is written and hosted by Mike Sielski. Produced by Jacob Bronstein and directed by Mark Francis. Story editing by Jacob Bronstein with editorial direction from Scott Waxman. Editing, mixing, and sound design by Mark Francis. Production Assistant: Stephen Tompkins. Music Supervisor: Scott Velasquez for Frisson Sync. Executive Producers: Mark Francis and Scott Waxman.  Thanks to Oren Rosenbaum, Susan Canavan, and Jeremy Treatman. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

I Am Kobe
Phenom of Philly

I Am Kobe

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2021 39:59


High school basketball coach Gregg Downer created a staff of assistants for the purpose of coaching Kobe Bryant. Downer knew what he had in Kobe, and he knew what kind of attention Kobe would draw from opponents, from the media, from everywhere. So he did a really smart, really innovative thing: He brought on four assistants, and each coach would have his own specialized role. Pre-order Mike Sielski's related book: “The Rise: Kobe Bryant and the Pursuit of Immortality" (1/11/22): TheRiseOfKobeBook.com Join the conversation about “I Am Kobe” on social media: on Twitter and Instagram: @diversionpods Our theme music is “Create Yourself” by Grover Braam feat. Justin Starling: Listen to Create Yourself on Spotify Mike Egan, who had been a college coach in Delaware, was already on board as Lower Merion's defensive coordinator. Downer's older brother, Drew, had a way of talking to people, even teenagers, that put them at ease, so he would be the team's amateur sports psychologist. Jimmy Kieserman was 26 at the time, had played Division I ball at Miami University and at Rider, and had played professionally in Israel. He was quick. He was tough. He could dunk. And he saw a news report about Kobe one night, and he called up Gregg and volunteered to help in any way he could. He became Kobe's foil, guarding and harassing him every day at practice. Jeremy Treatman would be the team's media-relations coordinator. He'd take care of all the interview requests, the reporters, the outside noise. And Gregg would oversee the whole operation. All this because of one 17-year-old kid. Because of Kobe. Cover photo © Eileen Blass – USA TODAY NETWORK “I Am Kobe” is a production of Diversion Podcasts in association with iHeartRadio. This season is written and hosted by Mike Sielski. Produced by Jacob Bronstein and directed by Mark Francis. Story editing by Jacob Bronstein with editorial direction from Scott Waxman. Editing, mixing, and sound design by Mark Francis. Production Assistant: Stephen Tompkins. Music Supervisor: Scott Velasquez for Frisson Sync. Executive Producers: Mark Francis and Scott Waxman.  Thanks to Oren Rosenbaum, Susan Canavan, and Jeremy Treatman. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

I Am Kobe
A Young Man in Lower Merion

I Am Kobe

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2021 34:51


Kobe Bryant wasn't quite flashing The Mamba Mentality yet. He was 13 years old and he was jumping into the middle of the school year at Bala Cynwyd Middle School. Then after a few more months, boom, he was heading to Lower Merion, a public high school in the suburbs just outside Philadelphia, a school where about 10 percent of the students were Black. Pre-order Mike Sielski's related book: “The Rise: Kobe Bryant and the Pursuit of Immortality" (1/11/22): TheRiseOfKobeBook.com Join the conversation about “I Am Kobe” on social media: on Twitter and Instagram: @diversionpods Our theme music is “Create Yourself” by Grover Braam feat. Justin Starling: Listen to Create Yourself on Spotify Joe Bryant got a job at Akiba Hebrew Academy, a Jewish day school on the Main Line. You might have heard of Akiba, or at least some of its alumni. Jake Tapper, from CNN, went there, and so did the best-selling author and media personality Mitch Albom. Joe Bryant was the girls basketball coach there, but it wasn't like Akiba's players were all ticketed to play for UConn or Baylor someday. These girls were just learning the game, trying to master its fundamentals, and Joe was happy to teach them that and a few other things. He'd have the players practice dribbling behind their backs and between their legs, stuff that to him was just fun. That's kind of what the job was to Joe: just fun. He'd even bring Kobe to practice from time to time, and it was there where both Joe and Kobe Bryant met Jeremy Treatman, the man who would become their friend and confidant, for the first time. It's a rare thing to have a genuine epiphany, to be able to pinpoint the instant when you know you've uncovered something or come across someone who will be famous or special in some way. There's a story about a man named Jon Landau, who was a music critic and became an influential record producer. In 1974, Landau went to a concert for an up-and-coming band at the Harvard Square Theater in Massachusetts, Afterward, he wrote this, "I saw my rock and roll past flash before my eyes. I saw something else: I saw rock and roll's future, and its name is Bruce Springsteen." Well, Jeremy Treatman had just had his Bruce Springsteen moment. He saw the future of basketball, and its name was Kobe Bryant. Cover photo © Eileen Blass – USA TODAY NETWORK “I Am Kobe” is a production of Diversion Podcasts in association with iHeartRadio. This season is written and hosted by Mike Sielski. Produced by Jacob Bronstein and directed by Mark Francis. Story editing by Jacob Bronstein with editorial direction from Scott Waxman. Editing, mixing, and sound design by Mark Francis. Production Assistant: Stephen Tompkins. Music Supervisor: Scott Velasquez for Frisson Sync. Executive Producers: Mark Francis and Scott Waxman.  Thanks to Oren Rosenbaum, Susan Canavan, and Jeremy Treatman. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tigers Radio Network - Marple Newtown Football
10-9-21 Marple Newtown at Lower Merion

Tigers Radio Network - Marple Newtown Football

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2021 137:27


Dave DiPasqua, Steve Reynolds, Erik Kelling, and Larry O'Connor of the Tigers Radio Network provide complete coverage of the Marple Newtown Tigers vs. Lower Merion Aces from the campus of... The post Full Audio Archive of Marple Newtown at Lower Merion from Friday, 10-9-21 appeared first on Marple Newtown Football.

In The Den
Gregg Downer, Lower Merion High School | The Lion's Den Podcast

In The Den

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2020 19:34


Lance Bachmann is sitting down with Gregg Downer, legendary Lower Merion HS basketball coach, and the man who mentored Kobe Bryant both on and off the court before his time in the NBA.  Keep Up With The Lion's Den on Social Media:► Twitter: https://twitter.com/Lancebachmann► Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lancebachmann/► Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Lancebachmanndigital/► Website: https://digitallion.com/1SEO:► Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/1seodigital/► Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/1seodigitalagency► Twitter: https://twitter.com/1SEODigital► Website: https://1seo.com/

Convex Visions
CV #7 Stay Tuned With D.Rey

Convex Visions

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2020 40:44


Darryl Reynolds is a guy who has been instrumental to the Villanova program, whether he was a leader and the cornerstone of a national championship team, or a mentor, shaper, and influencer as a coach for a separate national championship run. Darryl has had the privilege to walk the same halls at Lower Merion as one of the greatest basketball players ever, Kobe Bryant. Darryl knew that attaining the mamba's playing abilities may have an insurmountable task, so he focused on a more capable task, being who Kobe was off the floor. The character that he developed as a result has provided him with a myriad of opportunities and positioned him in the presence of pillars like Jay Wright and Larry Brown to name a couple, and finally his media presence on “Stay Tuned Network" has allowed him to entertain and educate the people who follow his work.