Podcast appearances and mentions of Marc Fisher

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Marc Fisher

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Best podcasts about Marc Fisher

Latest podcast episodes about Marc Fisher

City Cast DC
DC's Hated Top Prosecutor, Local War on Encampments, and Kristi Noem's Stolen Purse

City Cast DC

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 36:58


The Washington Post's Marc Fisher joins our roundup to talk about the controversies around DC's US Attorney nominee, the city's efforts to dismantle homeless encampments, and the very weird theft of Kristi Noem's purse. Plus, a members-only fourth section about the surprising local history of Toys R Us, soon to be a major motion picture.  Get more from City Cast DC when you become a City Cast DC Neighbor. You'll enjoy perks like ad-free listening, invitations to members only events and more. Join now at membership.citycast.fm. Learn more about the sponsors of this April 25th episode: Roda - Use code POD50 for $50 off your first service of $200+. Aura Frames - Get $35-off plus free shipping on the Carver Mat frame with Promo Code CITYCAST The Pew Charitable Trusts Nace Law Group Adams Morgan PorchFest Cozy Earth - Use code COZYDC for 40% off best-selling sheets, towels, pajamas, and more. Interested in advertising with City Cast? Find more info HERE Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Indicator from Planet Money
Dealmaker Don v. Tariff Man Trump

The Indicator from Planet Money

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2025 9:23


Donald Trump grew up learning to make deals. He's also loved tariffs since the 1970s. So are his market-shaking tariffs a bargaining chip? Or are they here permanently? We go all the way back to Trump's childhood to try to figure out if Dealmaker Don or Tariff Man Trump is in charge. Marc Fisher's book with Michael Kranish is Trump, Revealed. Related episodes: What's so bad about a trade deficit? (Apple / Spotify) Why there's no referee for the trade war (Apple / Spotify) Tariffied! We check in on businesses (Apple / Spotify) For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Fact-checking by Tyler Jones. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

The Politics Hour with Kojo Nnamdi
The Politics Hour: Alexandria Mayor Alyia Gaskins talks Old Town tourism and Washington Post's Marc Fisher on Ovechkin

The Politics Hour with Kojo Nnamdi

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 50:28


Alexandria is dealing with the impacts of a shrinking federal workforce on its economy, tax base, and ability to fund even some basic services. Mayor Alyia Gaskins sat down with Kojo and Tom to discuss the local challenges that come with cutting thousands of federal positions. Plus, Mayor Gaskins explained why Alexandria is not a sanctuary city.Washington Capitals legend Alexander Ovechkin broke the long-held NHL scoring record this past weekend. The hockey superstar has played his entire 20-year career in the District, and local fans have bonded with the Russian-born athlete. Washington Post columnist Marc Fisher got behind the mic to talk about the city's special relationship with "Ovi," despite the superstar's uncomfortable relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin.And the Maryland General Assembly wrapped its 90-day session earlier this week with compromises on the budget, immigrant protections, and cuts to the state's massive education reform plan.  Maryland Matters' reporter Will Ford broke down what passed - and what didn't - during the General Assembly's final chaotic days of its 2025 session.Become a member of WAMU: wamu.org/donateSend us questions and comments for guests: kojo@wamu.orgFollow us on Instagram: instagram.com/wamu885Follow us on Bluesky: bsky.app/wamu.org

DT Radio Shows
Love Is The Answer With The CoCreators

DT Radio Shows

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2025 60:00


Loads Of Remixes And Edits of Old Tracks From Back In The Day https://www.facebook.com/TheCocreators https://soundcloud.com/love-vibration-nation https://thecocreatorsmusic.com/ https://www.instagram.com/thecocreatorsmusic ⚡️Like the Show? Click the [Repost] ↻ button so more people can hear it!

Funny In Failure
#272: Dawn Del Russo - Just be you

Funny In Failure

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2025 91:41


Dawn Del Russo is an on air fashion expert, author, lifestylist, consultant, spokesperson and CEO. For 18 years, Dawn has navigated the dynamic world of fashion, gracing screens on hit shows like CBS Morning, Access Hollywood Live, Meredith Vieira, Extra TV, E News!, Fox NY, and New York Live as an on-air fashion & beauty expert. She represents brands Rebecca Minkoff, and Marc Fisher on QVC currently. Her expertise extends beyond TV, with features in Vogue Italia, InStyle, Cosmo, Real Simple, Life & Style, and US Weekly. But her journey doesn't stop there. Dawn is also, an entrepreneur at heart, leading 3 thriving brands: ·        LiveTheGlamour.com: Her popular fashion blog, inspires readers with style tips and industry insights. ·        BellaDawn.com: A fashion boutique transformed into a successful brand consulting company, empowering others to build their dreams. ·        SentialGem.com: Her latest venture, offering luxurious fine gemstone beauty products. Dawn is a testament to the power of following your passion and building something meaningful. Her journey has been filled with exciting opportunities, challenges overcome, and valuable lessons learned. She is passionate about sharing these insights and inspiring others to embrace their unique talents and chase their dreams. We chat about the worst product ever received, integrity and longevity, saying no, starting out in brick and mortar, hustle, letting go, TV segments that don't go ahead, branding and authenticity, asking the deep internal questions, handling rejection and moving forward + plenty more! The video footage of this entire chat is now out as well (one day after release)! So check them out on YouTube under Michael Kahan Check Dawn out on: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dawndelrusso Website: https://www.dawndelrusso.com/ Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@dawndelrusso Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/dawndelrusso ------------------------------------------- Follow @Funny in Failure on Instagram and Facebook https://www.instagram.com/funnyinfailure/ https://www.facebook.com/funnyinfailure/ and @Michael_Kahan on Insta & Twitter to keep up to date with the latest info. https://www.instagram.com/michael_kahan/ https://twitter.com/Michael_Kahan

Apple News Today
Los Angeles County is burning. Here's what you need to know.

Apple News Today

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2025 12:35


On today’s show: What to know about wildfires ravaging Southern California. The Los Angeles Times is tracking all the latest developments. Jimmy Carter’s funeral takes place in Washington today. The New Yorker examines his legacy of honesty. And the Washington Post’s Marc Fisher explains how the former president’s honesty may have been his downfall. For the first time tonight, two Black head coaches will face off in a College Football Playoff semifinal. The Wall Street Journal’s Rachel Bachman lays out why it’s taken so long to get here. Plus, Attorney General Merrick Garland says he’ll release the special counsel’s report on Trump, how to avoid norovirus, and Hoda Kotb of NBC’s ‘Today’ signs off for the last time. Today’s episode was guest-hosted by Gideon Resnick.

Let there be Light - The American Israelite Newspaper Podcast
11/15 Conversations with Co-hosts Ellen Daniel and Holly Wolfson

Let there be Light - The American Israelite Newspaper Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2024 49:30


This week, Ted welcomes co-hosts Ellen Daniel and Holly Wolfson and guest Marc Fisher to the podcast to read and discuss the latest edition of the American Israelite.

Shadow Politics with US Senator Michael D Brown and Maria Sanchez

Shadow Politics with Senator Michael D. Brown What really happened at WaPo? - With Guest, associate editor of The Washington Post, Marc Fisher What happened at The Washington Post? Why no endorsement in 44 years for the 2024 presidential election? Did the billionaires unite from the Los Angeles Times and The Washington Post? What really happened and WHY?! I will have a frank conversation with editor Marc Fisher about these questions and others as we approach the final stage of the most consequential election of the last 50 years. Tune in for this exciting discussion as we see if we can restore our faith in our hometown newspaper!

Katie Couric
Entering the Comfort Zone: Breast Cancer Awareness and Research with Easy Spirit

Katie Couric

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2024 60:43 Transcription Available


In this special live recording of Next Question in New York City at the Paley Center for Media, Katie Couric enters her "Comfort Zone" for a powerful conversation in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, in partnership with comfort footwear brand, Easy Spirit! Katie shares her personal experience as a breast cancer survivor alongside the surgeon who treated her, renowned breast cancer researcher Dr. Lisa Newman. They are joined by Sharon Joseph, CEO of the Boys and Girls Club of Harlem, who is currently undergoing treatment for breast cancer herself. Together, they discuss their personal journeys, the importance of early detection, and the groundbreaking research funded by Marc Fisher's Easy Spirit.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

A Thing or Two with Claire and Erica
Cat Hotels, the Cat's Pajamas, and a Whole Grab Bag

A Thing or Two with Claire and Erica

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2024 51:46


Is anybody looking to start a hummus business?!? Do we have some domain names for you! In addition to our GoDaddy closet sale, we also have a grab bag to discuss, including mouth tape, face shaving, rat poop legal battles, WNBA mascots, and more!   Re: personal catchphrases: the title Long Island Compromise by Taffy Brodesser-Akner got us thinking.    If you want to hear the case for VIO2 mouth tape that converted Claire, check out our Guest Thingies episode with Glynnis MacNicol.    Claire loved getting dermaplaned at Carrie Lindsey Beauty in Brooklyn.    Erica's nightgown journey involves the Skims Fits Everybody and Soft Lounge dresses, while Claire's includes Taleen, Eileen West, Vermont Country Store, and Salter House—if you're chasing the Victorian ghost aesthetic.    For all your LA luxury cat hotel needs: Check out Chats de The, Purrvana, and Cateau Marmont.   WNBA star to stan: Breanna Stewart. US Open player with peak energy: Taylor Townsend.    Want to start ratemyvcs.com? Great, get in touch via 833-632-5463, podcast@athingortwohq.com, @athingortwohq, or our Geneva!   Follow @haagendazs_us on Instagram and let them know in the comments that Claire and Erica sent you!  Slip into your new fall shoes from Marc Fisher and use the code ATHINGORTWO to receive 20% off your purchase. YAY.  

A Thing or Two with Claire and Erica
Okay, So, We're Launching a Romance Company

A Thing or Two with Claire and Erica

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2024 46:01


Some of you Detective Bobs have already caught on to this, but: We're starting something new! It's officially time to give you the scoop on our romantic fiction entertainment company, 831 Stories…and the first book we're publishing, Big Fan by Alexandra Romanoff. It comes out September 10…which means right this second is the perfect time to pre-order it.    Special thanks to Bea and Leah Koch, behind The Ripped Bodice, for kick-starting this journey! Our podcast episode with them from 2019 for a taste.   The authors and titles that made us fall hard for romance include Robinne Lee's The Idea of You, Talia Hibbert (The Brown Sister Series—and our 2021 podcast interview here), Tia Williams's Seven Days in June, Tessa Bailey (start with It Happened One Summer…or our recent chat), Abby Jimenez (loved Yours Truly), Lyla Sage's Rebel Blue Ranch series, and Yulin Kuang's How to End a Love Story.    We also think about what Sanjana Basker shared about romance on the Care So Much podcast all the time.   Sign up for the 831 newsletter, follow 831 on Instagram, and pre-order Big Fan. We cannot WAIT to share it with you.   What was the romance novel that got you into the genre? Tell us at 833-632-5463, podcast@athingortwohq.com, @athingortwohq, or our Geneva!   Show your hair the love with Nutrafol. Take $10 off your first month's subscription with the code ATHINGORTWO. Find your new fall shoes from Marc Fisher and use the code ATHINGORTWO to receive 20% off your purchase. YAY.

Ralph Nader Radio Hour
On Strike/ Out-of-Office

Ralph Nader Radio Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2024 93:34


On today's program Ralph welcomes Kshama Sawant—teacher, activist, organizer, socialist, and former Seattle City Council Member— to talk about the labor movement, her organization Workers Strike Back, and how she achieved so many victories for Seattle's working people. Then, Ralph welcomes the Washington Post's Marc Fisher to discuss his reporting on the "return to office" issue. Kshama Sawant is a teacher, activist, organizer, and socialist. Ms. Sawant helped organize demonstrations for marriage equality, participated in the movement to end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and was a visible presence in the Occupy Movement. She served in Seattle's City Council from 2014 to 2023— defeating a 16-year incumbent Democrat to become the first socialist elected in a major US city in decades. She has taught at Seattle Central Community College, Seattle University, and the University of Washington Tacoma—and she has been an activist in her union, the American Federation of Teachers Local 1789, fighting against budget cuts and tuition hikes. She is co-founder of Workers Strike Back and the host of their news and analysis broadcast On Strike.It should be extremely energizing for anybody on the Left who wants to aim to provide leadership that we actually have a historic shift going on in American working-class consciousness, where there is a willingness to fight back— a real hunger for strategy. I would say that what's overwhelmingly clear to me as somebody who's been a socialist, a Marxist, and an activist for well over a decade, is that what working people are parched for is real leadership that can actually garner the kind of victories that ordinary people are looking for.Kshama SawantBusiness unionism is this idea that the role of the labor leader is to negotiate—to make peace between the bosses and the workers. It's completely wrong. It's exactly the opposite. The role of labor leadership is to organize a fight by mobilizing rank-and-file members against the bosses, with the understanding that the interests of the bosses—the greed of the bosses—is diametrically opposed to the needs of workers. Kshama SawantIf we as working people want to win Medicare for all, we will need mass action— organized independent of the Democrats and Republicans. Kshama SawantMarc Fisher is an associate editor of the Washington Post, where he writes a column on Washington— the city, its suburbs, and the people— and issues of big-city America. For 37 years, Mr. Fisher worked as a reporter and editor across various news sections at the Post, most recently focusing on Donald Trump and major breaking-news events. He previously created and led the Metro staff's enterprise reporting group, spent a decade as local columnist and blogger, served as the paper's special reports editor, wrote about politics and culture for the Style section, worked as Central Europe bureau chief on the Post's Foreign staff, and covered D.C. schools and D.C. politics for the Metro section.Most people who work with their hands are carrying on as they always did. But since COVID, we've seen that offices have emptied out in downtowns across the country. And Washington is particularly hard hit because 15-20% of the workers work for the federal or city governments. So there's been this emptying… out of downtown Washington, which has had an enormous impact on the economy. So this is a multi-level issue and problem. And yet for many— if not most—workers, they don't see it as a problem. They see it as a benefit. Marc FisherIn Case You Haven't Heard with Francesco DeSantisNews 8/14/241. A shocking report from the Libertarian magazine Reason exposes “Operation Rolling Thunder,” an annual “five-day law enforcement blitz,” in which 11 different agencies – ranging from local police departments to the federal Department of Homeland Security – collude to confiscate as much cash as possible on a “20-mile stretch of freeway between Charlotte, North Carolina, and Atlanta, Georgia.” This piece details how officers will fabricate flimsy reasons for pulling drivers over, including “Lighting a cigarette…smelling like cologne, avoiding eye contact, being ‘preoccupied looking for the [car] rental agreement,' and having a cluttered vehicle that appeared to be ‘lived in.'” In 2022, these agencies seized “$194,000 per day or more than $8,000 per hour,” through civil asset forfeiture during this operation. Many of these drivers are never charged with so much as a traffic citation, yet are unable to recover any of their property stolen by the cops.2. Last week, Representative Cori Bush was ousted by an AIPAC-backed primary challenger. An article in Slate details how AIPAC rallied to push the Congresswoman, and fellow Black Lives Matter activist Rep. Jamaal Bowman, out of Congress – outspending both by a margin of 4-1. This piece paints their losses as the death knell of the “George Floyd Era…in Congress,” noting also that no major reforms were passed “Despite broad popular support for legislation to curtail police violence…[and] Democrats…controlling both the House and Senate in 2021 and 2022.” In her concession speech, the Hill reports Bush vowed in no uncertain terms, “AIPAC, I'm coming to tear your kingdom down!” As for Bowman, rumors are now circulating that he will challenge Rep. Ritchie Torres – the “top recipient of AIPAC cash,” according to Track AIPAC – next cycle. Asked about this idea by journalist Ryan Grim, Minnesota Attorney General and former Congressman Keith Ellison said “That'd be a very good thing…I"ll put it like this, none of us own these seats.”3. In related news, a new report in the Intercept exposes the “… ‘Zionists for Don Samuels' WhatsApp Group Raising Big Money to Oust Ilhan Omar.” As this report notes this group contained at least one campaign staffer, Alex Minn – whom the campaign has since severed ties with – and major outside donors despite “Campaign finance laws prohibit[ing] coordination between candidates' campaigns and outside spending groups like super PACs.” One major donor in this group, wealthy entrepreneur Michael Sinensky, wrote “The bottom line is…we need to be supportive…of the alt right Christian Neo Nazis at the moment (like Ukraine) to fight off the socialist, Marxist, anarchists who are supporting radical Islam… Nazis are better than Islamic terrorists.”4. Last week, the Mayor of Nagasaki, Japan held a memorial for those killed in the atomic bombing of that city – and opted not to invite the Israeli ambassador “to avoid possible protests over Israel's war on Gaza,” per Al Jazeera. In response, US Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel announced he would skip the event because this decision had “politicized” the event. The British ambassador to Japan also announced that she would boycott this event due to Israel's exclusion. According to the BBC, “In June, [Nagasaki Mayor Shiro] Suzuki said Nagasaki had sent a letter to the Israeli embassy calling for an ‘immediate ceasefire' in Gaza.”5. Journalist Jessica Burbank reports Palestinian American Actress Sarah Alami has called on SAG-AFTRA to “break their silence on [the] genocide in Gaza.” In a statement, Alami writes “Our union president has helped raise 60 million dollars to fund Israel's army,” and decries that many actors have “been put on Black lists in Hollywood for speaking out against a foreign government.” Alami also linked to SAG-AFTRA Members for Ceasefire, a group agitating for the Guild to take a principled stand against the genocide.6. On Monday, the leaders of France, Germany, and the U.K. issued a joint statement “calling for the immediate resumption of [ceasefire] negotiations,” stressing that “there can be no further delay…the fighting must end now...the people of Gaza need urgent and unfettered delivery and distribution of aid.” In this statement, President Macron, Chancellor Sholz, and Prime Minister Starmer also expressed that they are “deeply concerned by the heightened tensions in the region” and are “united in [their] commitment to de-escalation and regional stability,” ending this statement by writing “No country or nation stands to gain from a further escalation in the Middle East.7. Yet despite such strong words from our European allies, the Biden administration has instead taken measures sure to escalate tensions in the region. On August 9th, Zeteo reported that “The State Department…formally notified Congress of a direct sale of 6,500 joint direct action munitions (JDAM) to Israel.” This shipment, valued at $262 million, was “reportedly delayed in May, as it was…under review…[while the] U.S. sought to prevent Israeli forces from pursuing a major ground invasion in Rafah.” Sarah Leah Whitson, the executive director of Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN), said “It is hard to comprehend how the Biden administration can justify rewarding Israel with new weapons, despite Israel's persistent defiance of every single plea the Biden administration has made urging a modicum of restraint, and despite the very apparent fact that such sales violate black letter U.S. laws prohibiting weapons to gross abusers like Israel.” The very same day, Reuters reported that “The Biden administration…decided to lift a ban on U.S. sales of offensive weapons to Saudi Arabia… reversing a three-year-old policy to pressure the kingdom to wind down the Yemen war.” This move is an unsubtle green-light for the Saudis to recommence their war on the Yemeni Houthis, who have had more success than anticipated in their naval campaign of blockading Israeli ports and attacking American naval vessels in the Red Sea.8. Much like the presidency of Lyndon Johnson, the Biden administration continues to pursue noble goals at home even while participating in human rights atrocities abroad. On Monday, More Perfect Union reported that “Banks, credit card companies, and more will be required to let customers talk to a human by pressing a single button under a new Biden administration proposed rule.” The pro-labor outlet goes on to say that this rule, coming from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau “is part of a campaign to crack down on customer service ‘doom loops,'” and simultaneously “[the Federal Trade Commission] is…considering similar requirements for phone, broadband, and cable companies,” while “[The Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Labor] are calling on health plan providers to make it easier to talk to a customer service agent.” Consumer advocates like Ralph Nader have long railed against the increasing difficulty of talking to real person when one calls corporate customer service lines.9. In more positive news, the UAW reports it has “filed federal labor charges against disgraced billionaires Donald Trump and Elon Musk for their illegal attempts to threaten and intimidate workers who stand up for themselves by engaging in protected concerted activity, such as strikes.” This attempt to threaten and intimidate workers came during a conversation between Trump and Musk on X (formerly Twitter) on Monday. Trump is quoted saying “I mean, I look at what you do…You walk in, you say, You want to quit? They go on strike, I won't mention the name of the company, but they go on strike and you say, That's OK, you're all gone. You're all gone. So, every one of you is gone.” UAW President Shawn Fain commented “When we say Donald Trump is a scab, this is what we mean. When we say Trump stands against everything our union stands for, this is what we mean…Donald Trump will always side against workers standing up for themselves, and he will always side with billionaires like Elon Musk, who is contributing $45 million a month to a Super PAC to get him elected. Both Trump and Musk want working class people to sit down and shut up, and they laugh about it openly. It's disgusting, illegal, and totally predictable from these two clowns.”10. Finally, in an almost unbelievable story from the Miami Herald, “[Former President Donald] Trump flew to campaign events on Jeffrey Epstein's plane last weekend.” Apparently, this plane is now owned by a private plane chartering service, Threshold Aviation Group, and the Trump campaign “confirmed that a decal with the words ‘Trump 2024' was placed on Epstein's old plane for the trip.” As the Herald points out “Trump was in the same social circles as Epstein,” and records show he “flew on Epstein's planes six times from 1993 to 1997.”This has been Francesco DeSantis, with In Case You Haven't Heard. Get full access to Ralph Nader Radio Hour at www.ralphnaderradiohour.com/subscribe

Impromptu
The misery of airline travel might be our fault

Impromptu

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2024 26:15


Airline travel is increasingly exasperating. Any blip, whether it's a weather event or a technical problem, leads to cascading days of delays and cancellations. Why does it all seem so fragile? Charles Lane, Catherine Rampell and Marc Fisher discuss the economics of flying and how customers might be helping drive a race to the bottom. Subscribe to The Washington Post here.

Let there be Light - The American Israelite Newspaper Podcast
7/18 Conversations with Co-hosts Ellen Daniel and Holly Wolfson

Let there be Light - The American Israelite Newspaper Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2024 56:22


This week, Ted welcomes new co-hosts Ellen Daniel and Holly Wolfson and guest Marc Fisher to the podcast to read and discuss the latest edition of the American Israelite.

Finances Fondamentales
86 - « Le millionnaire » de Marc Fisher

Finances Fondamentales

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2024 17:00


Dans ce 86e épisode, je fais la synthèse du livre « Le millionnaire » de Marc Fisher publié en 1997 à partir de cinq éléments clés à retenir : 1. Le travail n'est pas tout 2. Passion payante! 3. Penser positivement 4. La règle d'or 5. Rafale des autres leçons!   Abonne-toi pour soutenir mon travail et obtenir un épisode supplémentaire chaque mois : https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/financesfondamentales/subscribe   Je t'invite aussi à suivre la page Facebook « Finances Fondamentales - éducation et investissement » pour avoir accès à l'image synthèse de l'épisode et pour me poser tes questions. Page Facebook : ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100088196588852⁠⁠⁠⁠  Tu pourras également y consulter l'analyse fondamentale des compagnies de la semaine.   Page Instagram du podcast : https://www.instagram.com/finances.fondamentales/?hl=fr   Chaque matin, le balado InfoBref résume l'actualité en 5 minutes: https://spoti.fi/3SiIdme   Gmail: ⁠⁠⁠⁠Financesfondamentales@gmail.com⁠⁠⁠⁠   Clause de non-responsabilité Investir comporte des risques de perte. Ce podcast est uniquement à des fins d'information et ne doit pas être considéré comme un conseil en investissement personnalisé ou être utilisé pour prendre des décisions d'investissement. L'animateur du podcast peut détenir des positions dans les titres discutés. L'animateur du podcast reçoit des paiements de diverses entités pour des publicités. L'inclusion de telles publicités ne constitue ni n'implique une approbation, un parrainage ou une recommandation de ceux-ci, ou toute affiliation avec ceux-ci. Les investissements dans des titres comportent des risques de perte. Toute mention d'un titre particulier et des données de performance associées ne constitue pas une recommandation d'acheter ou de vendre ce titre. Les informations fournies sur le podcast ne sont pas destinées à un investisseur ou à une catégorie d'investisseurs spécifiques et sont fournies uniquement à titre d'information générale. Évidemment, rien sur ce podcast ne doit être considéré comme un conseil financier personnalisé ou une sollicitation d'achat ou de vente de titres. Pour tout conseil spécifique, veuillez consulter un professionnel. L'animateur du podcast ne peut être tenu responsable de vos décisions financières.

The Smerconish Podcast
We are lonely. Is Ryan Seacrest the friend we all need to save our friendships?

The Smerconish Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2024 23:06


A piece in The Washington Post by associate editor Marc Fisher caught Michael's eye because it relates to "The Mingle Project" where Michael is trying to get more people to get out of their bubbles and off of their screens to hang out together more. Listen to his conversation with Marc on the piece "Is Ryan Seacrest our last chance to save a shared national culture?" Original air date 25 June 2024.

Front Burner
The ‘Epstein list' explained

Front Burner

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2024 25:45


Jeffrey Epstein died in a New York prison cell in 2019, before he could stand trial for allegedly running a sex trafficking ring involving underaged girls and dozens of high-profile clients. Now, court documents including names of Epstein's known associates are being unsealed, shedding new light on the nature and scale of his network. Senior Washington Post editor Marc Fisher walks us through the list so far — which includes Prince Andrew, Bill Clinton and Donald Trump — and why further document releases might never fully answer the remaining mysteries. For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.

100 Degrees of Entrepreneurship
Using Creativity to Shake Up the Nonprofit World with Treger Strasberg

100 Degrees of Entrepreneurship

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2024 41:59


Are you looking for fresh ideas to shake up your nonprofit and grow your impact? If so, then you're in luck! Special guest and founder of Humble Design, Treger Strasberg, is sharing all the different ways she's shaking up the nonprofit world like…  how she communicates with her donors, and using empathy, dignity, and creativity as part of her nonprofit's mission. She also dives into how she's been able to grow her nonprofit beyond Detroit to Chicago, Cleveland, Seattle, and San Diego by having set standard operating procedures. Treger also tells us how she's inspiring those outside of her organization to get involved and sharing a huge mindset shift she experienced that completely changed the way she communicates with donors.  About Treger Treger did not set out to create a national nonprofit or fill a hole in the continuum of care for homeless individuals. She did not plan on establishing a system that would help thousands of veterans, women, children, and families to stop the revolving door of homelessness for them. She had no intention of connecting with countless volunteers and supporters who shared her life view of leading with empathy and dignity. She just wanted to help a friend in need. To date, Humble Design has furnished over 3,200 homes for over 9,100 hard-working moms, dads, kids, and veterans exiting homeless shelters. Families who have benefited from the home furnishings from Humble Design have had a 99 percent success rate of remaining in their homes. Humble Design was born out of the belief that families emerging from homelessness deserve to come home each day to a clean, friendly, and dignified home. Treger is honored to have been nominated for two Emmys for the TV show “Welcome Home,” which follows Treger and her husband Rob through the process of changing a family's life through design. She has been awarded ABC World News Person of the Week, Volunteer of the Year in Michigan, Woman of Distinction in California, IIDA Business Innovator, TCH Diversity Award, the Lighthouse Salute America Award, Optimist Club's Ruby Award, Girl Scout of America's One Tough Cookie Award, Make your Marc award by Marc Fisher, and Oakland County Executive's Elite 40 Under 40, and others.   Read the podcast transcript here.   Episode Summary In this episode, you'll learn how Treger Strasberg of Humble Design is shaking up the nonprofit world including:  Diving head first into the nonprofit world (5:55) Changing the nonprofit landscape with creativity (8:30) Providing dignity and empathy to families experiencing homelessness (13:00) Growing your nonprofit's impact and empowering others across the country to help (18:40) The importance of SOPs (Standard Operating Procedures) (23:30) Finding inspiration in the nonprofit world (25:55) Changing the way you communicate with donors (28:00)   Teasers “I didn't want to just stick with any furniture that came my way. I wanted it to be dignified and respectful because she was my friend.”   “Those stories, for me, have opened up my eyes that this is an epidemic in this country that's coming down, whether we like it or not. Ans it is not just drug-addicted, mentally ill individuals who are struggling with being unhoused. One in four individuals in the United States are going to struggle with homelessness at some point in their life.”   “We're still governed by this archaic system that feels frustrating because our minds are living in this one world yet our financial statements are being judged in this other world.”   Resources Visit the Humble Design website: www.humbledesign.org  Connect with Treger on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/treger-strasberg-80020841/    Follow all five Humble Design cities on Instagram:  @humbledesignsandiego @humbledesigndetroit @humbledesignnational @humbledesignchitown @humbledesignseattle @humbledesigncleveland   FREE Finance Routine Checklist: https://100degreesconsulting.com/routine/  Keep up to date with the podcast: @100degreesconsulting Follow Stephanie on Instagram: @stephanie.skry/  Connect with Stephanie on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanieskryzowski/  Visit the podcast page: https://100degreesconsulting.com/shaking-up-the-nonprofit-world    Want more of the podcast? New episodes are released weekly! Find them all plus show notes and exclusive bonus content at 100degreesconsulting.com/podcast. Leave us a review! Click here, scroll to the bottom, tap to rate with five stars, and select “Write a Review.” Let me know what you loved most about this episode! Subscribe to the show so you don't miss a thing!  

Finances Fondamentales
57 – « Voir grand » de Luc Poirier et Marc Fisher

Finances Fondamentales

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2023 19:19


Dans ce 57e épisode, je fais la synthèse du livre « Voir grand : leçons d'affaires, de vie et de liberté » de Luc Poirier et Marc Fisher publié en 2016 à partir de cinq éléments clés à retenir : 1. Leçon #1 – Ouverture et curiosité 2. Leçon #2 – Acheter gros, revendre au détail 3. Leçon #3 – La différence des marchés 4. Leçon #4 – Résilience 5. Leçon #5 – Liberté!   Abonne-toi pour soutenir mon travail et obtenir un épisode supplémentaire chaque mois : ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/financesfondamentales/subscribe⁠⁠⁠⁠   Je t'invite aussi à suivre la page Facebook « Finances Fondamentales - éducation et investissement » pour avoir accès à l'image synthèse de l'épisode et pour me poser tes questions. Page Facebook : ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100088196588852⁠⁠⁠⁠   Tu pourras également y consulter l'analyse fondamentale des compagnies de la semaine, soit : 1) Copart (CPRT); 2) Old Dominion Freight Line (ODFL) et 3) Xpel inc. (XPEL).   Gmail: ⁠⁠⁠⁠Financesfondamentales@gmail.com⁠⁠⁠⁠   Avertissement : Je ne suis pas conseiller financier et mes synthèses sont naturellement teintées par ma subjectivité. Tu dois effectuer tes propres recherches et développer TA littératie financière avant d'investir. Les informations communiquées dans le podcast sont dans un but strictement éducatif et ne constituent pas un conseil d'investissement. Je ne suis pas responsable de tes décisions financières personnelles.

What the Health?
For ACA Plans, It's Time to Shop Around

What the Health?

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 28:46


It's Obamacare open enrollment season, which means that, for people who rely on these plans for coverage, it's time to shop around. With enhanced premium subsidies and cost-sharing assistance, consumers may find savings by switching plans. It is especially important for people who lost their coverage because of the Medicaid unwinding to investigate their options. Many qualify for assistance. Meanwhile, the countdown to Election Day is on, and Ohio's State Issue 1 is grabbing headlines. The closely watched ballot initiative has become a testing ground for abortion-related messaging, which has been rife with misinformation. This week's panelists are Mary Agnes Carey of KFF Health News, Jessie Hellmann of CQ Roll Call, Joanne Kenen of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Politico, and Rachana Pradhan of KFF Health News. Plus, for “extra credit,” the panelists suggest health policy stories they read this week they think you should read, too: Mary Agnes Carey: Stat News' “The Health Care Issue Democrats Can't Solve: Hospital Reform,” by Rachel Cohrs. Jessie Hellmann: The Washington Post's “Drugstore Closures Are Leaving Millions Without Easy Access to a Pharmacy,” by Aaron Gregg and Jaclyn Peiser. Joanne Kenen: The Washington Post's “Older Americans Are Dominating Like Never Before, but What Comes Next?” by Marc Fisher. Rachana Pradhan: The New York Times' “How a Lucrative Surgery Took Off Online and Disfigured Patients,” by Sarah Kliff and Katie Thomas. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Inside Sources with Boyd Matheson
Silence, Fear, and Interconnectedness in Washington DC on 9/11

Inside Sources with Boyd Matheson

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2023 11:16


22 years ago today... terrorists flew two planes into the World Trade Center buildings, the Pentagon, and a field in Pennsylvania. During such an emotional, tragic day... journalists rushed into quiet newsrooms to gather information and tell the stories of that day. Marc Fisher was in the Washington Post's newsroom on 9/11 and joins the show to talk about his experience, the silence on the streets, and the interconnectedness of the American people. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Tony Kornheiser Show
“Press Box Orange Soda”

The Tony Kornheiser Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 61:50


Tony opens the show by talking about a round of golf that started out well, but didn't end so well, and he also talks about an encounter he and Chessie had with some raccoons. Buster Olney calls in to discuss the merits (or lack thereof) of oat milk ice cream, and he also talks about the red hot Reds, Shohei Ohtani, and how the new rules are holding up. Marc Fisher phones in to discuss the missing submersible that was looking at the wreck of the Titanic and how the rescue efforts are going, and Tony closes out the show by opening up the Mailbag. Songs : MindRipp “Hollow Inside” ; “Wish” To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

SANEKDJ
SANEKDJ - #МАЙ26.05.2023 #25

SANEKDJ

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2023 90:03


SANEKDJ в iTunes. itunes.apple.com/ru/podcast/sanekdj/id1178349865 vk.com/sanekdjs promodj.com/sanek.dj bananastreet.ru/sanekdj ok.ru/sanekdjs t.me/sanekdj СЛУШАЙ! КАЧАЙ! ДЕЛИСЬ! ПЛЕЙЛИСТ: Andrey Keyton, Casey - Addicted (Remix) 20 Fingers - Short Dick Man (Remix) Max Freeze - French Girl (Original Mix) Power Francers - Pompo Nelle Casse (Remix) Space Shifters - California (Original Mix) The Black Eyed Peas - My Humps (Remix) Tove Lo - Cool Girl (Remix) Generik - So High (Remix) Styline - Rose (Extended Mix) Kyoto, STIRO - Bam Bam (Remix) Fergie - London Bridge (Remix) Nirvana - Smells Like Teen Spirit (Remix) Natema - Everybody Does (Dub Edit) Eric Prydz - Call On Me (Remix) Adam Foster, Erykah - Steppin' Frey, Earstrip - With U MCB 77 - Rock'n'Roll (Original Mix) R.E.M. - Losing My Religion (Remix) Ben Delay - Rock & Roll (Original Mix) Kungs, Cookin On 3 Burners - This Girl (Remix) Tiësto & Sneaky Sound System - I Will Be Here (Remix) Vincent Vega & Manuel Baccano - You Can't Change Me (Remix) Natema - Save The Day (Original Mix) Croatia Squad - Going South (Original Mix) Daft Punk, The Weeknd - Starboy (Remix) Felix Cartal - Something To Live For (Remix) Jason Derulo - Get Ugly (Remix) Lookee, Sway Gray, Stéfane - Call on Me Fifth Harmony - Worth It (Remix) Javi Mula - Come On (Remix) Pasha Lee, Ruler - Ice Baby (Remix) Luca Debonaire, Lukas Newbert - Strangers (Original Mix) MANA, Offbeat Orchestra - Everybody Needs Somebody (Club Edit) Miike Snow - Genghis Khan (Remix) MBNN - Listen To This (Original Mix) HardBeats - Baby Girl (Original Mix) Maxx Play, Aristina - Deep Down (Remix) Platinum Doug - Take It Off (Original Mix) Dido - Thank You (Remix) Mind Electric - Praise You (Remix) DJ Dan - People Come Together (Original Mix) Kwabs - Walk (Remix) Lissat, Voltaxx, Marc Fisher, Vanessa Ekpenyong - Can't Get Enough (Remix) Croatia Squad - Make You Hustle (Original Club Mix) Danny Tenaglia - Music Is The Answer (Edit Dub) Ben Delay, Alexandra Prince - The Boy Is Mine (Alternative Mix) Vinne - Move (Original Mix) Kid Massive, DJ Sign, Corey Andrew - Ride The Rhythm (Original Mix) Format B, Pleasurekraft feat. Chris the Voice - Coltrane P.Diddy, Keyshia Cole - Last Night (Remix) Andrey Keyton, Casey - Addicted (Remix) 20 Fingers - Short Dick Man (Remix) Max Freeze - French Girl (Original Mix) Power Francers - Pompo Nelle Casse (Remix) Space Shifters - California (Original Mix) The Black Eyed Peas - My Humps (Remix) Tove Lo - Cool Girl (Remix) Generik - So High (Remix) Styline - Rose (Extended Mix) Kyoto, STIRO - Bam Bam (Remix) Fergie - London Bridge (Remix) Nirvana - Smells Like Teen Spirit (Remix) Natema - Everybody Does (Dub Edit) Eric Prydz - Call On Me (Remix) Adam Foster, Erykah - Steppin' Frey, Earstrip - With U MCB 77 - Rock'n'Roll (Original Mix) R.E.M. - Losing My Religion (Remix) Ben Delay - Rock & Roll (Original Mix) Kungs, Cookin On 3 Burners - This Girl (Remix) Tiësto & Sneaky Sound System - I Will Be Here (Remix) Vincent Vega & Manuel Baccano - You Can't Change Me (Remix) Natema - Save The Day (Original Mix) Croatia Squad - Going South (Original Mix) Daft Punk, The Weeknd - Starboy (Remix) Felix Cartal - Something To Live For (Remix) Jason Derulo - Get Ugly (Remix) Lookee, Sway Gray, Stéfane - Call on Me Fifth Harmony - Worth It (Remix) Javi Mula - Come On (Remix) Pasha Lee, Ruler - Ice Baby (Remix) Luca Debonaire, Lukas Newbert - Strangers (Original Mix) MANA, Offbeat Orchestra - Everybody Needs Somebody (Club Edit) Miike Snow - Genghis Khan (Remix) MBNN - Listen To This (Original Mix) HardBeats - Baby Girl (Original Mix) Maxx Play, Aristina - Deep Down (Remix) Platinum Doug - Take It Off (Original Mix) Dido - Thank You (Remix) Mind Electric - Praise You (Remix) DJ Dan - People Come Together (Original Mix) Kwabs - Walk (Remix) Lissat, Voltaxx, Marc Fisher, Vanessa Ekpenyong - Can't Get Enough (Remix) Croatia Squad - Make You Hustle (Original Club Mix) Danny Tenaglia - Music Is The Answer (Edit Dub) Ben Delay, Alexandra Prince - The Boy Is Mine (Alternative Mix) Vinne - Move (Original Mix) Kid Massive, DJ Sign, Corey Andrew - Ride The Rhythm (Original Mix) Format B, Pleasurekraft feat. Chris the Voice - Coltrane P.Diddy, Keyshia Cole - Last Night (Remix)

SANEKDJ
SANEKDJ - #МАЙ20.05.2023 #23

SANEKDJ

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2023 62:40


SANEKDJ в iTunes. itunes.apple.com/ru/podcast/sanekdj/id1178349865 vk.com/sanekdjs promodj.com/sanek.dj bananastreet.ru/sanekdj ok.ru/sanekdjs t.me/sanekdj СЛУШАЙ! КАЧАЙ! ДЕЛИСЬ! ПЛЕЙЛИСТ: Frey, Earstrip - With U Kwabs - Walk (Remix) Lissat, Voltaxx, Marc Fisher, Vanessa Ekpenyong - Can't Get Enough (Remix) MCB 77 - Dangerous Game Nopopstar - I Don't Feel (Remix) Nirvana - Smells Like Teen Spirit (Remix) Andruss - Going Down (Remix) Callypso - Let's Go (Original Mix) Gabriel F - Don't stop The Music (Remix) Adam Foster, Erykah - Steppin' AcidLow & ROVIIC - Double Tme (Original Mix) SHAED & ZAYN - Trampoline (Remix) DJ Dan - People Come Together (Original Mix) A.V.H - Great Spirit (Remix) Chocolate Puma, Pep, Rash - The Stars Are Mine (Extended Mix) Croatia Squad - Prepare for the Night (Original Club Mix) Tujamo - Make U Love Me (Original Mix) Tiësto & Sneaky Sound System - I Will Be Here (Remix) DJ Trueno - Sexy Back X Satisfa ction X Destination Calabrie David Guetta, Anne-Marie, Coi Leray - Baby Don't Hurt Me (Remix) Max Freeze - French Girl (Original Mix) Ale Zuber - Dodonkey Cool Keedz & Zucchi - Sail (Remix) Дима Билан - Держи (Remix) Daft Punk, The Weeknd - Starboy (Remix) Frey, Earstrip - With U Kwabs - Walk (Remix) Lissat, Voltaxx, Marc Fisher, Vanessa Ekpenyong - Can't Get Enough (Remix) MCB 77 - Dangerous Game Nopopstar - I Don't Feel (Remix) Nirvana - Smells Like Teen Spirit (Remix) Andruss - Going Down (Remix) Callypso - Let's Go (Original Mix) Gabriel F - Don't stop The Music (Remix) Adam Foster, Erykah - Steppin' AcidLow & ROVIIC - Double Tme (Original Mix) SHAED & ZAYN - Trampoline (Remix) DJ Dan - People Come Together (Original Mix) A.V.H - Great Spirit (Remix) Chocolate Puma, Pep, Rash - The Stars Are Mine (Extended Mix) Croatia Squad - Prepare for the Night (Original Club Mix) Tujamo - Make U Love Me (Original Mix) Tiësto & Sneaky Sound System - I Will Be Here (Remix) DJ Trueno - Sexy Back X Satisfa ction X Destination Calabrie David Guetta, Anne-Marie, Coi Leray - Baby Don't Hurt Me (Remix) Max Freeze - French Girl (Original Mix) Ale Zuber - Dodonkey Cool Keedz & Zucchi - Sail (Remix) Дима Билан - Держи (Remix) Daft Punk, The Weeknd - Starboy (Remix)

The Tony Kornheiser Show
“Loaded with Aprons”

The Tony Kornheiser Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2023 55:33


Tony opens the show by talking about the Nats, cooking, and also about Matt Fitzpatrick's win at the RBC Heritage. Michael Wilbon calls in to talk about the first games of the NBA playoffs, Marc Fisher phones in to talk about how he and Liz Clarke put together their story for the Washington Post about the disintegration of the fans base for the WFT under Dan Snyder, and Tony closes out the show by opening up the Mailbag. Songs : Fumo Landas Walsh “Trending Now” ; Ava Zora “Again” To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Grant and Danny
Marc Fisher joins G&D, When did Snyder break your fandom?, Double Play

Grant and Danny

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2023 41:15


4.17.23 Hour 21:00- Marc Fisher, Washington Post Senior Editor, joins G&D to discuss a story he had over the weekend regarding the new owners, and Dan Snyder selling the Commanders. 23:10- Since Dan Snyder has probably tinted your relationship with the Commanders, when was the moment that you knew you were done with him? 34:00- What's going on in our lives that has nothing to do with sports? 

Grant and Danny
Marc Fisher joins G&D

Grant and Danny

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2023 21:59


Marc Fisher, Washington Post Senior Editor, joins G&D to discuss a story he had over the weekend regarding the new owners, and Dan Snyder selling the Commanders.

What The Franklin Podcast
What The Franklin - Episode 3 With Chip Franklin and TruthOrFiction.com's Brooke Binkowski, The Washington Post's Marc Fisher and Comedian Chris Titus

What The Franklin Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 41:24


Brooke Binkowski talks with Chip about tracking lies across the internet, while Marc Fisher and Chip debate Trump's legal future. Comedian Chris Titus and Chip discuss Dave Chappelle and the woke culture, and Chris shares big news about a new show. More about Chip Website: https://chipfranklin.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/chipfranklin Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thechipfranklin/ Chip Franklin is an award-winning writer, talk show host, filmmaker, comedian, and musician. A twenty five-year veteran of talk radio, Chip's also been awarded the National Murrow Award for writing and overall excellence. In addition, Franklin has been honored by The New York Festival for his unconventional coverage of The Democratic and Republican conventions and received more than 30 AP awards for writing and broadcasting. Chip has written for Steve Allen, Jay Leno, and even renowned physicist Stephen Hawking. Hosting talk radio shows in Washington DC, Baltimore, Atlanta, Chicago, San Diego, and most recently San Francisco, Chip appears regularly on ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, the BBC and CNN.

The Nikki Medoro Show
Episode #24 - November 17., 2022

The Nikki Medoro Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2022 119:48


LA has a new mayor, Feinstein passes on being #3 and what can we expect from a Republican House? Chief congressional correspondent David Lightman will join us. Marc Fisher, senior editor of The Washington Post will discuss whether a divided government make progress. Fodor's tells you where NOT to go, the World Cup has a drinking problem, There's a fentanyl vaccine AND shortage. Is Elon creating more legal problems? Plus asparagus pee ends celebrity relationship.

Repurpose Your Career | Career Pivot | Careers for the 2nd Half of Life | Career Change | Baby Boomer
Is the Pandemic Over?A Look at our Divided World with WaPo Editor Marc Fisher #296

Repurpose Your Career | Career Pivot | Careers for the 2nd Half of Life | Career Change | Baby Boomer

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2022 36:38


Description: In this episode, I am speaking with Marc Fisher a Senior Editor from the Washington Post. Marc wrote a fascinating article called Is the pandemic over? Pre-covid activities Americans are (and are not) resuming. Biden says the pandemic is over — and when it comes to casinos, concerts and cosmetic procedures, Americans seem to agree. For theater, therapy and funerals though, not so much. I think you will find our discussion about how divided we are quite fascinating. We are all making individual decisions based on our risk tolerance. I liked Marc's analogy of a triage nurse making decisions on who gets treated next. As we decide whether to travel on a plane, go to a wedding, go into the office or go to the movies, we are making individual decisions about how much risk we are willing to take. When one person may look at going to the movie as safe, others may look at it as extremely risky. This is a fascinating topic and discussion. Here is a  bit of Marc's bio from the Washington Post website: Marc Fisher, a senior editor of The Washington Post, reports and writes on a wide range of topics. He has been the enterprise editor, local columnist and Berlin bureau chief, among other positions, for over 30 years at the paper. Fisher wrote several Post articles that won the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting in 2016 and the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2014. Fisher previously wrote The Post's local column and a blog, “Raw Fisher.” Earlier, he was the paper's special reports editor, wrote about politics and culture for the Style section, served as Central Europe bureau chief on The Post's Foreign staff, and covered D.C. schools and D.C. politics for the Metro section, where he was also an assistant city editor. This episode is sponsored by Career Pivot. Check out the Career Pivot Community, and be sure to pick up my latest book, Repurpose Your Career: A Practical Guide for the 2nd Half of Life Third Edition. For the full show notes and resources mentioned in the episode click here.

Beck and Call
60. A Fun Wedding Weekend in Fredericksburg!

Beck and Call

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2022 48:46


In this week's episode, Merritt shares a detailed recap of her weekend in Fredericksburg, Texas to celebrate her assistant Liza's wedding! From where she ate in town, to what she wore and the best details from the wedding, you get the inside scoop. Merritt also shares a new dark comedy series she's enjoying (plus another all time favorite show featuring an actress that stars in both!), two new movies and two new book reviews. In the Beck & Call segment, Merritt answers listener questions about keeping your home smelling fresh when you have a dog, wondering about the "what ifs" of relationships past, and how to pull away from a friendship that is no longer serving you. Call into the hotline at 214-620-0473 or email info@beckandcallpodcast.com to submit your questions! THANK YOU TO THIS WEEK'S SPONSOR, MARC FISHER! Head to MarcFisherFootwear.com and enjoy 20% off your entire purchase when you enter code BECK20 at checkout! MENTIONED IN THE EPISODE: Rooftop at Restoration Hardware, Sister, The Charles, Eatzi's, J. Rae's, The Trueheart Hotel, AirBnB Listing, Vaudeville, 78624 Bar, Sage, Hill & Vine, Hidden Hideaway, Carol Hicks Bolton, The Fredericksburg Honey Company, Stuart Weitzman Platform Sandals, Boot Ranch, Blue Rhythm Band, Czech Stop, Bad Sisters on Apple TV, Catastrophe on Amazon, Wedding Season on Netflix, The School of Good and Evil on Netflix, The Housemaid by Freida McFadden, The Cage by Bonni Kistler.

Beck and Call
59. Influencing, Reality TV and Adaptive Fashion with Venita Aspen!

Beck and Call

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2022 63:37


In this week's episode, Merritt chats with model, fashion influencer, and reality TV breakout star, Venita Aspen! We discuss how she got into the fashion industry, her experience being on Bravo's Southern Charm, and her upcoming adaptive fashion marketplace, Fair Standard! You'll also discover her #1 must-have skincare product, her favorite restaurants in Charleston and New York, and so much more!. Follow Venita on Instagram @VenitaAspen and check out her fashion blog, VenitaAspen.com! At the top of the episode, Merritt recaps her week and shares a few new TV show, movie and audiobook recs! In the Beck & Call segment, she answers listener questions about how to best support podcasters and influencers you love to follow during the holiday season, what her style evolution into luxury fashion looked like, and shoes she would recommend for a trip to London in December! Call into the Beck & Call hotline at 214-620-0473 or email info@beckandcallpodcast.com to submit your questions. No topic is off limits and I love variety! THANK YOU TO THIS WEEK'S SPONSOR, ATHLETIC GREENS! Enjoy a free one year supply of immune supporting Vitamin D and five free travel packs with your first order of AG1 - all you have to do is visit AthleticGreens.com/beckandcall! MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Odelay, Roadrunner Ranch, Brunello Cucinelli x Neiman Marcus, The Teak Room, Catherine Called Birdie on Amazon Prime, The Watcher on Netflix, Let The Right One In on Showtime, Rings of Power on Amazon Prime, House of the Dragon on HBOMAX, Reminders of Him by Colleen Hoover, The Housemaid by Freida McFadden, Avene Thermal Spring Water Spray, The Ordinary, Saint Theo's, Stuart Weitzman, Marc Fisher, Veja, Sam Edelman, Rag & Bone, Vince.

Inspired Minds
Marc Fisher

Inspired Minds

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2022 53:40 Transcription Available


Pulitzer Prize-winner Marc Fisher is a Senior Editor at The Washington Post, and reports and writes on a wide range of topics. Most recently, he wrote "Trump Revealed," a biography of Donald Trump. He previously was The Post's Enterprise Editor, leading a team of writers creating narrative journalism and experimenting with new forms of storytelling for digital and print editions of the newspaper.  His books include "Trump Revealed: An American Journey of Ambition, Ego, Money, and Power," a wide-ranging examination of Donald Trump's public and private lives to date, and "Something in the Air," a sweeping, anecdotal account of the great sounds and voices of radio and how it became a bonding agent for a generation of American youth.

Des si et des rais
ÉP. 533 - L'heure du conte : La femme qui aimait trop

Des si et des rais

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2022 69:18


Vous l'avez réclamé à grands cris, nous vous l'offrons avec grand plaisir: un épisode COMPLET présentant une lecture de « La femme qui aimait trop », cette biographie-fiction mettant en vedette le petit rocker complètement cuiré Billy Spade et sa conjointe Erica qui doit subir les frasques de celui qui a éternellement les culottes aux chevilles. Et pour porter les mots parfois confus de l'auteur Marc Fisher, l'équipe de Des si et des rais fera une lecture en équipe sous la direction du célèbre Etienne Forest, grand connaisseur du Fisher-verse. De plus, ce sera (peut-être) le grand retour de Mariane ! Des Si et Des Rais : LE rendez-vous des amateurs de grande littérature! Avec: Linda Bouchard, Mariane Desbiens, Etienne Forest, Nicolas Fournier-Larocque et Mathieu Niquette. Date d'enregistrement : 27 août 2022 Patreon.com/DesSiEtDesRais Facebook.com/DesSiEtDesRais

CNN Tonight
Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon agrees to testify at last minute

CNN Tonight

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2022 40:45


On the eve of the seventh January 6 Committee public hearing, former Trump adviser Steve Bannon agrees to testify, with prosecutors calling the move a last minute attempt to avoid accountability. CNN Political Commentator Jonah Goldberg and The Washington Post's Marc Fisher join CNN Tonight to discuss the questions Bannon will be expected to answer, including details of his phone conversation with Trump on the night before the Capitol riot. Janet Napolitano was the Homeland Security Secretary under President Obama. She joins to discuss the DHS watchdog's warning that the Department is falling behind on tackling domestic terrorism. Plus, Trump's connections to far-right and political extremist groups - does the January 6 Committee have enough evidence to make the connection? Hosted by Laura Coates. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy

Don Lemon Tonight
Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon agrees to testify at last minute

Don Lemon Tonight

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2022 40:45


On the eve of the seventh January 6 Committee public hearing, former Trump adviser Steve Bannon agrees to testify, with prosecutors calling the move a last minute attempt to avoid accountability. CNN Political Commentator Jonah Goldberg and The Washington Post's Marc Fisher join CNN Tonight to discuss the questions Bannon will be expected to answer, including details of his phone conversation with Trump on the night before the Capitol riot.Janet Napolitano was the Homeland Security Secretary under President Obama. She joins to discuss the DHS watchdog's warning that the Department is falling behind on tackling domestic terrorism. Plus, Trump's connections to far-right and political extremist groups - does the January 6 Committee have enough evidence to make the connection?Hosted by Laura Coates.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy

The Michael Medved Show
Ep. 813 - Guest: Marc Fisher

The Michael Medved Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2022 39:35


This is an abbreviated version of The Michael Medved Show. To get the full program, plus premium content, become a subscriber at MichaelMedved.com

marc fisher michael medved show
The John Rothmann Show Podcast
Chris Merrill: Gunshots vs fireworks. Do you feel safe?

The John Rothmann Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2022 38:43


Is it time to ban fireworks? Marc Fisher's article: ‘Nothing feels safe:' Americans are divided, anxious and quick to panic In deadly assaults and harmless bursts of celebratory explosives, a divided nation demonstrated this holiday weekend just how anxious and jittery it has become, as the perennial flare of fireworks saluting American freedom reminded all too many people instead of the anger, violence and social isolation of the past few years. Oakland police say they located five Athletics' fans at the Coliseum struck by bullet fragments from what appeared to be celebratory gunfire occurring throughout the city. "These appear to be bullet fragments that may have come from guns being fired in another location," said Oakland Police Chief LeRonne Armstrong who continued saying, "as far as a mile away where those bullets could have been fired from." See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

KGO 810 Podcast
Chris Merrill: Gunshots vs fireworks. Do you feel safe?

KGO 810 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2022 38:43


Is it time to ban fireworks? Marc Fisher's article: ‘Nothing feels safe:' Americans are divided, anxious and quick to panic In deadly assaults and harmless bursts of celebratory explosives, a divided nation demonstrated this holiday weekend just how anxious and jittery it has become, as the perennial flare of fireworks saluting American freedom reminded all too many people instead of the anger, violence and social isolation of the past few years. Oakland police say they located five Athletics' fans at the Coliseum struck by bullet fragments from what appeared to be celebratory gunfire occurring throughout the city. "These appear to be bullet fragments that may have come from guns being fired in another location," said Oakland Police Chief LeRonne Armstrong who continued saying, "as far as a mile away where those bullets could have been fired from." See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Post Reports
How do you punish a mass shooter?

Post Reports

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2022 30:08 Very Popular


Today on “Post Reports,” we talk about the chaos and terror at July Fourth celebrations over the holiday weekend. Then, we break down a big decision point for the Justice Department on whether to seek the death penalty in another recent mass shooting. Read more:In Highland Park, Ill., a holiday parade became a scene of horror as a gunman opened fire on the crowd. At other celebrations in cities nationwide, the booming sounds of fireworks were apparently mistaken for gunshots, sending scores of revelers fleeing for cover. “I think a big piece of what we saw on Monday is this loss of trust over the last several years,” reporter Marc Fisher said.The rise of mass shootings in America has brought up so many complicated and sad questions: How are we supposed to live in a society where we have to be so fearful? What will it take to prevent these shootings from happening? And how do we punish the people who perpetrate unthinkable acts of violence?Today, we are diving into that last question, in an interview with our colleague David Nakamura. In the aftermath of the mass shooting in Buffalo, the Biden administration must decide whether to pursue the death penalty for the 18-year-old suspect. When he visited Buffalo last month, Attorney General Merrick Garland assured survivors and victims' families that a full investigation was taking place. It's a “death penalty eligible crime,” Garland said in a news conference. But this Justice Department is conflicted — civil rights advocates have long opposed capital punishment, saying that it is inhumane and disproportionately used against racial minorities.

Discover CircRes
April 2022 Discover Circ Res

Discover CircRes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 26:32


This month on Episode 35 of Discover CircRes, host Cynthia St. Hilaire highlights two original research articles featured in the April 1 issue of Circulation Research, as well as highlights from the Stroke and Neurocognitive Impairment Compendium in the April 15th issue.  This episode also features a conversation with Dr Shubing Chen and Dr Yuling Han from Weill Cornell Medical College to discuss their study, SARS-CoV-2 Infection Induces Ferroptosis of Sinoatrial Node Pacemaker Cells.   Article highlights:   Pabel, et al. Effects of Atrial Fibrillation on the Ventricle   Pattarabanjird, et al. P62-Mediated B1b Cell Atheroprotection   Iadecola, et al. Introduction to the Compendium on Stroke and Neurocognitive Impairment   Cindy St. Hilaire:        Hi and welcome to Discover CircRes, the podcast of the American Heart Association's Journal, Circulation Research. I'm your host, Dr Cindy St. Hilaire, from the Vascular Medicine Institute at the University of Pittsburgh. And today I'm going to be highlighting articles from our April issues of Circulation Research.                                     I'll also speak with Dr Shubing Chen and Dr Yuling Han from Weill Cornell Medical College, and they're with me to discuss their study, SARS-CoV-2 infection induces ferroptosis of Sinoatrial node pacemaker cells.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        The first article I want to share is titled, Effects of Atrial Fibrillation on the Human Ventricle. The first author is Steffen Pabel and the corresponding author is Samuel Sossalla and they're from Regensburg University. Atrial fibrillation, or AFib, is the most common form of heart arrhythmia. Patients with AFib may experience shortness of breath, dizziness and weakness. And they're also at risk for more life-threatening complications, such as clot-induced stroke and heart failure. Focusing on heart failure, this study investigated how disruptions to rhythm in the atria might lead to changes in the ventricular myocardium. The team studied ventricular muscle tissue from 24 patients with AFib and 31 without AFib. While the levels of fibrosis were equivalent in ventricular myocytes from both the AFib and the non AFib patients, other cellular features were distinct. For example, patients with AFib had reduced systolic calcium release, prolonged action potential duration and increased oxidative stress, compared with the non AFib patient controls. These differences were largely recapitulated in ventricular myocytes derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells that had been electrically stimulated to either mimic AFib or normal sinus rhythm. The results indicate that AFib affects the ventricles just as well as the atria and might therefore be best studied and treated with the whole heart in mind.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        The second article I want to share is titled B-1b Cells Possess Unique bHLH-Driven P62-Dependent Self-Renewal and Atheroprotection. The first author is Tanyaporn Pattarabanjird and the corresponding author is Colleen McNamara, from the University of Virginia.   Atherosclerosis is a complex and dynamic chronic inflammatory condition. However, not all immune cells exacerbate this disease. Some immune cells are actively dampening the inflammation. B-1 cells are such cells that do this, and they produce IgM antibodies that bind cholesterol, preventing its uptake into macrophages and therefore limiting macrophage driven inflammatory responses. Increased number of B1 cells, therefore, might be atheroprotective. In mice, deletion of the transcription factor ID3 leads to a boost in B-1 cell IgM production.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        In this work the authors investigated the molecular mechanism underlying this effect and found that upon deletion of ID3 in mice B-1b cells, the level of P62 protein was increased. B-1b cell proliferation was found to be dependent on P62 and over expression of P62 in mouse B-1b cells increased cell numbers, raised plasma IgM levels and importantly, ameliorated diet-induced atherosclerosis in animals. The team went on to show that people with an ID3 mutation had an unusually high level of serum IgM and B-1b cell P62. This suggests that results from mice may hold true for humans, and if so, could inform the development of immunomodulatory treatments for atherosclerosis.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        So the April 15th issue of Circulation Research is our Stroke And Neurocognitive Impairment Compendium. The last Circulation Research Compendium on Stroke was published about five years ago. In this year Dr Costantino Iadecola, Dr Mark Fisher and Dr Ralph Sacco focused this update on advances made over the past five years, with a focus on topics that were not addressed in the previous compendium, that best reflect the leading edge of basic in clinical science related to cerebral vascular diseases. Seemant Chaturvedi, Brian Mac Grory and colleagues provide an overview of preventative strategies according to stroke mechanism, including stroke of unknown cause. And the challenges of stroke prevention with antithrombotic therapy and subjects with increased hemorrhage risk are also considered.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        Stéphanie Debette and Hugh Markus provide an account of the most recent developments in the genetics of cerebrovascular diseases. The gut microbiota is another factor that has recently been linked to stroke risk and Pedram Honarpisheh, Louise McCullough and colleagues provide a comprehensive overview of the microbiology and the microbiota, and the influence that stroke risk factors exert on its composition and homeostatic relationship with mucosal surfaces. Karin Hochrainer and Wei Yang provide a systematic review of the large amount of data and stroke proteomic from animal models and human patients. Matthias Endres and colleagues cover the dramatic effect that innate and adaptive immunity exert on stroke risk and on acute brain damage and post stroke sequelae, such as post-stroke cognitive impairment and depression.                                     Cindy St. Hilaire:        Manuela De Michele, Alexander Merkler and colleagues discuss the cerebral vascular diseases that have emerged as a frequent manifestation of the maladaptive immune response to severe SARS-CoV-2 infection. Jessica Magid-Bernstein and Lauren Sansing review the current concepts on epidemiology, risk factors in etiology, clinical features, as well as the medical and surgical interventions for cerebral hemorrhage. Yunyun Xiong and Marc Fisher cover the progress that has been achieved in the treatment of acute ischemic stroke and Natalie Rost and Martin Dichgans and colleagues address the long term impact of stroke on cognitive function, which is becoming a significant healthcare challenge in the world's aging population.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        So today I have Dr Shubing Chen and Yuling Han from Weill Cornell Medical College. And they're with me to discuss their study SARS-CoV-2 infection induces ferroptosis of Sinoatrial node pacemaker cells. And this article is in our April 1st issue of Circulation Research. So thank you both for joining me today.   Shubing Chen:             Thank you. It's really nice to join the program, and it's really a great honor.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        It's a really great article. I'm so excited to talk about. So there's a lot of research happening regarding SARS-CoV-2 virus and the patients who are infected and have COVID-19. And this paper is focusing on the impact of viral infection on the heart and specifically on the sinoatrial node, which is the primary cardiac pacemaker that keeps our hearts beating. So I was wondering if you could tell us what led you to focus on this particular aspect of COVID-19 symptoms, and also how early in the pandemic did you start this?   Shubing Chen:             Yeah, so we started working on SARS-CoV-2 through back to early 2020 when very unfortunately, New York City was a pandemic center and we had a lot of patients in the hospital unit, and also postdoc students working very hard in the lab. So that's the time we start working on SARS-CoV-2. And I was trained as a stem cell biologist. And what we're really interest is to set up a platform to basically understand which type of cells can be infected by SARS-CoV-2 and if they can, how they respond to SARS-CoV-2 infection. Not only for SARS-CoV-2, we sent it as like a viral infection platform, but SARS-CoV-2 is one of the virus we study now. And it's kind of very surprising. We have a pretty broad platform. We have a lung organoid, we have colon organoids, we have pancreas, we have cardiomyocytes, pacemaker cells. And as expected, we see lung can be infected like colon and because patient had GI tract, liver can be infected, but very surprisingly we see very high cardiomyocytes infection as well as pacemakers.                                       So as we'll know that still big controversy in the field, whether we can detect SARS-CoV-2 like viral protein or viral RA in the heart, in particular, cardiomyocytes. But I think now everyone agree that the cardiomyocytes really can be very well infected actually. Because it's very difficult to get the pacemaker tissue and the sinoatrial tissue from the COVID patient. So we collaborate with Dr Ben Andora's lab at NYU to get this hamster model. So we basically take SA tissue from hamster and then other colleagues basically did the section imaging, and we confirm that the hC4 polymerase cells can be infected by SARS-CoV-2. And at that time we start to learn a more clinical studies they report the COVID patient, they develop arrhythmia, or some other problem, not only with cardiomyocyte, as well as the conduction system. So at that time, that's the time that we say maybe we should do something on the pacemaker and focus on that. So that's how the project was developed.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        That is so interesting. And so I know humans infected, like you just said with SARS-CoV-2, they can develop arrhythmias. What's that timeframe? Is there a common timeframe that this happens? Does it normally happen very close to the infection or only in later stage? What's that window of when these arrhythmias are happening?   Shubing Chen:             At least based on the clinical study we show right now, actually the patient can develop acute arrhythmia. So it can be very soon after they developed symptom for COVID.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        Wow. That's amazing. So you mentioned this, your study utilized a hamster model, which you actually don't see a lot of. Most studies use a lot of rats or most studies I'm familiar with, especially in Circulation Research, they use more rats or more mouse models. So what advantages does that hamster model have and why were you interested in using it?   Shubing Chen:             Yeah, that's actually really specific for SARS-CoV-2. As SARS-CoV-2 mainly use ACE2 as a key entry factor to enter the cells. Of course, there's additional receptor, like neutrophils is one. Like all this enzyme involved, but human and mouse ACE2, they have very different structure. So the SARS-CoV-2 virus combine with human ACE2 very well but not mouse ACE2. So from the beginning, the rat and mouse was not used as a very good model to study SARS-CoV-2 infection. Of course there are other models, like knockin human ACE2 in the mouse and also like ACE2 transgenic mice. That's how different mouse model use. But hamster you don't need any modification, but they are very promising to SARS-CoV-2 infection. And so that's a reason we decide to use that as an animal model to basically run in parallel with our human stem cell model.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        We joke in my lab, mice are not little humans, but it's really true in a lot of cases, they're beautiful models in so many ways, but then when they don't work, they really don't work.   Shubing Chen:             Yeah. Before COVID every time when we try to talk about our human stem cell, derived cells, organoids as a disease model. People always ask, why do you want to work on human organoids? Right? It's that we have all these beautiful animal models like as you mentioned, mouse or rats, that's very broadly used. And we have to find different reasons. And now when we start working on SARS-CoV-2, which is very clear example, that mouse are not identical to human. Yeah.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        Yeah. That's great. I love finding additional models to use that are the best one for the question. So in order to investigate, I guess kind of the mechanism of how this was happening in the SAN cells, the sinoatrial node cells, you had to develop a new differentiation protocol that took the human embryonic stem cells, I think it was the H9 line you used, and essentially differentiate that cell line into a sinoatrial node-like cell. So I was wondering if you could tell us a little bit about A) how did you figure out that protocol and B) how does it work?   Shubing Chen:             So it's actually a long story to cell line.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        We can condense it. Let's get-   Shubing Chen:             At least based on the clinical study we show right now, actually the patient can. Let's condense it. But it's as you can imagine, we did not develop this cell line only for this particular project. Actually, we start working on this cell line back to maybe six, seven years ago. The first postdoc we have who basically knockin the mCherry, Myh6. Which basically label the atrial cardiomyocytes. And another postdoc, Zanir, he basically put a GFP in the SARS2 locus. So now we have this duel reporter line we can visualize the SA nodal cells. And we really spend a lot of time on that because we think that unfortunately in our hand, there is not really no good antibody for SARS2. We think it's very, very important that you can see these cells. So after developing these lines and because my lab run a lot of chemical screening, where we run Zanir, we run several chemical screening to develop the protocol.                                       And Jialing Zhu, another postdoc in the lab, also pick up the project to further develop the protocol. And there is several years' work. We do have this good protocol to make pretty efficiently to make the cells. And it's not only our work. I want to say that. For example, Dr Sean Wu from Stanford, they did this beautiful study on the single cell RNC mouse conduction system and Dr Gordon Keller and many other labs also basically published protocol in the field. We are very excited about this duel reporter line. I think they gave us a lot of new opportunity and we are very happy to share this line. Yeah. So if anyone in the field are interested in that, just contact us.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        Yeah. Anyone listening. That's great. So were you surprised to find the entry factors that SARS-CoV-2 uses to get into a cell, were you surprised to find them on these sinoatrial node cells? And I guess in the context of comparing these particular cells to other cells in the heart, are those entry factors higher in the sinoatrial node cells?   Shubing Chen:             So it can be either surprised or not surprised let's say this way. So because one, we see the cardiomyocytes that can be infected, we were kind of surprised. And then we find actually several type of cells in the heart can be infected, like endothelial cells. I will say that the ACE2 expression of like ACE2 aminophenol in pacemaker cell, it's not significantly higher than cardiomyocytes. So we are not really saying, or seeing that SA nodal cells are more permissive to SARS-CoV-2 infections compared to cardiomyocytes, even in the petri dish, but they can be infected.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        So you found SARS-CoV-2 infection in these sinoatrial nodal cells induces a process called ferroptosis. So Yuling, I was wondering if you could tell us what is ferroptosis and what is it doing in these pacemaker cells?   Yuling Han:                 For the ferroptosis, they was surprised so far that its by the RA sequencing of the SARS-CoV-2 infection make our cells. And the first process is mainly caused by the-   Shubing Chen:             Error in iron.   Yuling Han:                 Yes. So more intake of the iron error and induced the RA's pathway and caused the cell deaths. So by our RA sequencing, we found the key factor involved in ferroptosis pathway is the GPS score was checked after the SARS-CoV-2 infection. So we focused on the ferroptosis pathway and found other key factors or checked after the infection makes in the pacemaker cells.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        What is the ferroptosis doing that disrupts the SNA cells?   Shubing Chen:             Ferroptosis is a type of cell death mechanism. So eventually it will cause cell death. And we think something that is really surprising, but we think it's very interesting, is we only see ferroptosis in the SARS-CoV-2 infected general atrial cells. So SA cells, we actually, as Yuling mentioned, when we develop this platform, we see different type of cell can be affected. And we are very curious what happened. So we see that we run a sequence on each individual cells we can see infection and along, we can see cell death like apoptosis in cardiomyocytes. We see apoptosis and only in SA nodal cells, we actually see the ferroptosis pathway as we come up.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        Why do you think that is in that cell type versus in another? Do you have any ideas about why?   Shubing Chen:             No, we don't have any idea yet to be honest, but we are working on that. But at least I think that it gave us some clue that we really need to use different type of whole cells to study the whole cell response. Because traditionally when we study viral infection and when we see lung, we always say, oh, the cell died. It's fairly simple. But now if we really study the details and we think it's maybe over simplified way to think about how cells can respond to viral infection, not only to SARS-CoV-2 infection. So it gives us the motivation, very strong motivation to now really study how different host tissues response to viral infection.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        I thought that was really interesting, not all cell death is the same.   Shubing Chen:             Yeah. And another thing is kind of a little bit surprising is we actually did a very careful comparison between the SA nodal cells and the cardiomyocyte. We only see ferroptosis come up as SA nodal cell, but not cardiomyocyte. Again, we don't understand why as maybe some host factor that is specific, we're working on that.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        So in addition to working out this mechanism of what is going wrong when these cells are infected with the virus, you also used this embryonic stem cell like tool for a drug screen. So can you walk us through that process in terms of what you did to do that? Did you focus in on one specific type of drugs or was it just kind of an unbiased screen?   Yuling Han:                 For the sinoatrial pacemaker cells, we focus on the antiviral drugs screening. And we also did several other projects, like lot of night or some neuron cells. For the [they did drug screening to find some drugs to inhibit the SARS-CoV-2 entry. And for the dominic neuron, we found SARS-CoV-2 infection can cause neuro cells synapses. So we focus on the synapses associated drug screening, but for the pacemaker cells, they only did the antiviral drug screen.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        And you came up with two drugs that you wrote about in the paper, deferoxamine and imatinib. So what are the mechanisms of action of those drugs? Are they targeting the same thing or are they targeting slightly different things?   Yuling Han:                 For the imatinib, we also found this drug inhibit SARS-CoV-2 entry and we did several other screenings, like the lung organoids and neuro cells. We also found this drugs. And the six drug, the mechanism is kept and the spec protein of SARS-CoV-2. And this was found by several other groups and published some paper this year. And we found this in 2020 maybe. And we published this paper before and we found this mechanism. And for another drug, we checked the RA sequencing data of SARS-CoV-2 affect the peacemaker cells. And we did several run of RA sequencing. And we compared the key factors, involved in SARS-CoV-2 entry. Several key factors like CTSL and like TMPS2 and among several run of RA sequencing. We only found the drug can decrease the expression of CTSL. So we also did PTR immunostaining, and then we found the drug decrease the expression level of CTSL.   Shubing Chen:             Yeah. So actually the other drug, it's also an antiferroptosis drug. So we did the mechanism study and it's very nice to see, we also identify the drug from an unbiased chemical screen. And for the chemical screening, we actually have a pretty large platform and we have around 1200 FDA approved drugs. We have like a 2000 anatrofin amino acid that signal pathway regulators for most of the SARS-CoV-2 screening, as you did mention, we have multiple screening platform. We focus on FDA approved drug. So it's more like for the drug repurposing and for other screening we also write larger skills.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        So we got a mechanism, we got a super specific cell type and we now have some drugs. So what are the translational implications of these findings? And I guess I'm thinking about that in terms of the time course of when a patient gets infected, has symptoms, has arrhythmia, like where could you possibly target this ferroptosis pathway? Meaning if someone already is exhibiting AFib as a result of the infection, is that actually too late? Or can you start to treat it to reverse it or prevent it from getting worse? Like what do you see as a therapeutic potential for using these drugs?   Shubing Chen:             That's a very good question. I will say this way, I think when we identify all these drugs, it's very, very exciting. But for antiviral drug development perspective, we definitely want a drug that show broader spectrum. So for COVID patient, of course we want to protect their heart, but we also want to protect their lungs.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        Exactly. Protect everything.   Shubing Chen:             Exactly. Exactly. So for the real drug that can clinical use, I think the lack of broad spectrum antiviral drug, I think that will be the way to go for drug development and for the cardioprotective respective. So if the patient do have very severe cardio symptom, particularly like arrhythmia symptom, I think that can be considered. But I don't want to really say this is the drug to treat the COVID patient. I don't think that's a way to go, particularly for ferroptosis is a cell type. This is a phenotype, very specific for the pacemaker. And I think for us, as a basic scientist, is very, very important that we understand the biology and we can identify these normal chemical tools that we can manipulate the system that can facilitate the future drug development.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        So do you think your findings and I mean findings at multiple levels, that a viral infection can induce apoptosis in one cell, but ferroptosis in another cell, but also the findings of viral infection in general, sufficient enough to drives sinoatrial node cell dysfunction. Do you think this is specific to SARS-CoV-2 and corona viruses or do you think this is something that is more broad with other viruses that maybe we just haven't recognized possibly because we don't have the tools yet?   Shubing Chen:            That's a great question. I will say some other type of virus can also infect heart, at least cardiomyocyte, like a Coxsackie virus, regular virus three. And there's actually a lot of study on the viral infection on the cardiomyocytes. And for us, the most exciting part is we really have now in serious, limited starting materials to get these pacemaker cells. Like I SA nodal cells. So we can use this as a platform to study how other virus infect, how the viral infection in general cause cell dysfunction. Because in the study we also do the calcium blocks assay, we can monitor their beating and then we can do RN-seq to monitor their transcription changes. Because this we have this still reporting system, we can purify cells, we can even run larger scale, like epigenetic level, how they change. So that's a very useful tool to study how cell responds to viral infection. I'm very excited about that.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        That's great. Well, Dr Chen and Dr Han, thank you so much for joining me today. Congratulations on a beautiful story. And I look forward to hearing more out all these different organoid and cell models you have.   Shubing Chen:            Cindy, thank you. Thank you for so much for having us.   Cindy St. Hilaire:        That's it for the highlights from the April issues of Circulation Research. Thank you for listening. Please check out the CircRes Facebook page and follow us on Twitter and Instagram with the handle @CircRes and #DiscoverCircRes. Thank you to our guests, Dr Shubing Chen and Dr Yuling Han. This podcast was produced by Ishara Rantikac edited by Melissa Stoner and supported by the editorial team of Circulation Research. Some of the copy text for highlighted articles was provided by Ruth Williams. I'm your host, Dr Cindy St. Hilaire, and this is Discover CircRes, you're on the go source for the most exciting discoveries in basic cardiovascular research. This program is copyright of the American Heart Association, 2022. The opinions expressed by speakers in this podcast are their own and not necessarily those of the editors or of the American heart Association. For more our information visit ahajournals.org.  

The HussyCast
Edging the Break

The HussyCast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2022 99:33


For your continued aural pleasure, please enjoy tracks by: Adam Reevis, Blond:ish, Bryan Jones, C Rod & DVK, CEV's, Copy Paste Soul, David Tort, Davos, Della, Disko Junkie, DJ Sneak, Doorly, DZRT FRST, Eskuche, FreedomB, Horse Meat Disco, Jeff Service, Joeski, The Keith Thomson Project, Lisa & Voltaxx, Loco & Jam, Luca Debonaire, Marc Fisher, Max Chapman, Mike Newman, Moose & Squirrel, Raffa Fl, Röyksopp, Ruben Mandolini, Sebb Junior, Simion, Stanny Abram, Tough Love, Tourist, Zaak and The Tribe of Good from: Cyberdelic, Defected Records, Freakin303, HardCutz Records, Llama Farm Recordings, Material Series, Milk & Sugar Recordings, Omeyla, PornoStar Records, Sub T M, Subcommittee Recordings, Tasty Recordings, Toolroom, Treasured Grooves and Z Records Please support the artists and labels who make these mixes possible. Much love, Beat Hussy

In House Warrior
The Ukraine, The GOP and Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson With Marc Fisher, a Senior Editor of The Washington Post With Host Richard Levick of LEVICK

In House Warrior

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2022 51:13


The Ukraine, The GOP and Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson With Marc Fisher, a Senior Editor of The Washington Post With Host Richard Levick of LEVICK: Marc Fisher, a senior editor of The Washington Post speaks with host Richard Levick of LEVICK about two pressing issues – the trap the GOP laid for itself, abandoning its seven-decades long rock solid position on Russia – then the Soviet Union — as America's chief enemy, untrustworthy and anti-freedom and instead has embraced Donald Trump and “America First” rhetoric and his policies of stepping back from NATO and other U.S. alliances with Western democracies. He also delves deeply into the remarkable history of U.S. Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson and how, throughout her entire life, found a path between confrontation and compromise.

In House Warrior
The Ukraine, The GOP and Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson With Marc Fisher, a Senior Editor of The Washington Post With Host Richard Levick of LEVICK

In House Warrior

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 45:03


The Ukraine, The GOP and Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson With Marc Fisher, a Senior Editor of The Washington Post With Host Richard Levick of LEVICK: Marc Fisher, a senior editor of The Washington Post speaks with host Richard Levick of LEVICK about two pressing issues – the trap the GOP laid for itself, abandoning its seven-decades long rock solid position on Russia – then the Soviet Union — as America's chief enemy, untrustworthy and anti-freedom and instead has embraced Donald Trump and “America First” rhetoric and his policies of stepping back from NATO and other U.S. alliances with Western democracies. He also delves deeply into the remarkable history of U.S. Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson and how, throughout her entire life, found a path between confrontation and compromise.

The Darya Rose Show
How can we know what is true in the news? With Dr. Stephanie Edgerly and Peter Slevin

The Darya Rose Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2021 53:55


Stephanie Edgerly (PhD., University of Wisconsin-Madison) is an associate professor with a specialization in audience insight at Northwestern University. She is also director of research at the Medill School of Journalism, and a faculty associate at Northwestern's Institute for Policy Research. Dr. Edgerly's research explores how features of new media alter the way people consume news and the impact on political engagement. She is the 2020 recipient of the Walder Award for research excellence at Northwestern, and a speaker in the U.S. State Department's Bureau of International Information Programs as an expert in journalism. She has traveled to Belgium, Denmark, China, the UK, Greece, and the Philippines to talk with government officials, journalists, and students about issues related to fake news, news media trust, and news literacy. Peter Slevin is a Chicago-based contributing writer for The New Yorker who focuses on politics. He has written recently about the power of Republican disinformation in Iowa and progressive reactions to President Biden's agenda. He spent a decade on the Washington Post's national staff, as well as seven years as the Miami Herald's European correspondent. Slevin is the author of “Michelle Obama: A Life,” which was a finalist for the 2016 PEN/Jacqueline Bograd Weld Award for Biography. He teaches at Northwestern University, where he is a professor at the Medill School of Journalism.Twitter:  @stephedgerly      @peterdslevinSpotlight movieWhy The New York Times Is Retiring The Term Op-Ed Media bias chart All Sides politifact.comfactcheck.orgWashington Post Fact CheckerDeep Throat in Watergate  Pizzagate: From rumor, to hashtag, to gunfire in D.C.  by Marc Fisher

Heimskviður
53 | Er Biden að vinna? Kosningarnar sögulegu og stjórnartíð Trumps

Heimskviður

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2020


Heimskviður vikunnar eru helgaðar nýafstöðnum forsetakosningum í Bandaríkjunum. Þó úrslitin liggi ekki fyrir þegar þátturinn er tekinn upp, er um margt að ræða. Þótt flestir séu sammála um að kosningarnar á þriðjudag séu fordæmalausar rétt eins og síðustu mánuðir má ekki gleyma því að sagan á það til að endurtaka sig. Margir hafa rifjað upp kosningarnar árið 2000 enda er óhætt að segja að þar hafi allt hafi farið í bál og brand líkt og nú. Þá voru kosningarnar mjög tvísýnar og niðurstöðurnar vógu salt allt þar til endurtalning fór fram sem síðan fór fyrir dómstóla. Það var ekki fyrr en að hæstiréttur skarst í leikinn að George Bush var réttkjörinn forseti fram yfir Al Gore. Fólk úr lagateymi Bush á sínum tíma er nú komið í valdamiklar stöður innan stjórnkerfisins og fari það svo að niðurstöður kosninganna á þriðjudag fari í hart sjáum við líklega skuggann af hinum örlagaríku aldamótakosningum. Er Trump búinn að vera að skipuleggja þessa fléttu í tvö ár? Jóhannes Ólafsson leitast við að svara þeirri spurningu. Donald Trump hefur verið einn umdeildasti forseti Bandaríkjanna fyrr og síðar. Það virðist þó ekki hafa komið niður á vinsældum hans ef marka má stuðning við hann í embætti. Ingvar Þór Björnsson flytur í þættinum sinn fyrsta Heimskviðupistil og ræðir við Marc Fisher, ritstjóra hjá The Washington Post, um forsetatíð Donalds Trump sem hefur einkennst af átökum og sundrungu. Fisher segir Trump hafa verið forseta fyrir þann hóp sem kaus hann - en aðra ekki. Hann hafi ekki gert neitt til að sameina þjóðina. Heimskviður er fréttaskýringaþáttur sem fjallar á ítarlegan og lifandi hátt um heimsmálin, um allt það sem ekki gerist á Íslandi. Ritstjórar þáttarins eru Guðmundur Björn Þorbjörnsson og Birta Björnsdóttir.

Heimskviður
53 | Er Biden að vinna? Kosningarnar sögulegu og stjórnartíð Trumps

Heimskviður

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2020 50:00


Heimskviður vikunnar eru helgaðar nýafstöðnum forsetakosningum í Bandaríkjunum. Þó úrslitin liggi ekki fyrir þegar þátturinn er tekinn upp, er um margt að ræða. Þótt flestir séu sammála um að kosningarnar á þriðjudag séu fordæmalausar rétt eins og síðustu mánuðir má ekki gleyma því að sagan á það til að endurtaka sig. Margir hafa rifjað upp kosningarnar árið 2000 enda er óhætt að segja að þar hafi allt hafi farið í bál og brand líkt og nú. Þá voru kosningarnar mjög tvísýnar og niðurstöðurnar vógu salt allt þar til endurtalning fór fram sem síðan fór fyrir dómstóla. Það var ekki fyrr en að hæstiréttur skarst í leikinn að George Bush var réttkjörinn forseti fram yfir Al Gore. Fólk úr lagateymi Bush á sínum tíma er nú komið í valdamiklar stöður innan stjórnkerfisins og fari það svo að niðurstöður kosninganna á þriðjudag fari í hart sjáum við líklega skuggann af hinum örlagaríku aldamótakosningum. Er Trump búinn að vera að skipuleggja þessa fléttu í tvö ár? Jóhannes Ólafsson leitast við að svara þeirri spurningu. Donald Trump hefur verið einn umdeildasti forseti Bandaríkjanna fyrr og síðar. Það virðist þó ekki hafa komið niður á vinsældum hans ef marka má stuðning við hann í embætti. Ingvar Þór Björnsson flytur í þættinum sinn fyrsta Heimskviðupistil og ræðir við Marc Fisher, ritstjóra hjá The Washington Post, um forsetatíð Donalds Trump sem hefur einkennst af átökum og sundrungu. Fisher segir Trump hafa verið forseta fyrir þann hóp sem kaus hann - en aðra ekki. Hann hafi ekki gert neitt til að sameina þjóðina. Heimskviður er fréttaskýringaþáttur sem fjallar á ítarlegan og lifandi hátt um heimsmálin, um allt það sem ekki gerist á Íslandi. Ritstjórar þáttarins eru Guðmundur Björn Þorbjörnsson og Birta Björnsdóttir.

Respecting Religion
S1, Ep. 08: Religious freedom in the age of coronavirus

Respecting Religion

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2020 42:02


As the coronavirus changes everything – including the topics for this podcast series – Amanda Tyler and Holly Hollman review how religious freedom principles are coming into focus. They talk about three principles that are part of many conversations during this time: the essential nature of religion for many people (04:53), why the government does not have to treat religious organizations differently when it comes to health and safety (12:00), and why the government should not fund religion (19:55). In the third segment, Amanda and Holly talk about what they are doing – and being inspired by – during this week that marks the beginning of Passover and the advent of Easter. Segment 1: Religion is essential, but the government doesn't have to treat religious organizations differently when it comes to health and safety. (starting at 00:40) The front-page Washington Post story that Holly and Amanda mentioned is from April 5, titled “Coronavirus creates conflict for churches, where gatherings can be dangerous but also provide solace.” It was written by Scott Wilson, Michelle Boorstein, Arelis R. Hernández and Lori Rozsa. Amanda read a message on COVID-19 from Timothy Stewart, the president of the Progressive National Baptist Convention. Read the entire statement at this link.   Segment 2: Government should not fund religion. (starting at 19:55) Holly and Amanda discussed the Espinoza case on government funding of religion during episode 2 of this podcast series. Holly mentioned the 2017 Trinity Lutheran case about funding a church playground. Learn more and read BJC's brief at BJConline.org/TrinityLutheran. For more information and frequently asked questions about the regulations and guidelines of the CARES Act from the Small Business Association, visit this link.   Segment 3: Where did we see religion respected in the world around us? Passover and Easter week (starting at 32:14) Holly mentioned the article by Marc Fisher in the Washington Post titled “Flushing out the true cause of the global toilet paper shortage amid coronavirus pandemic.” Amanda is using this matzo ball soup recipe from The New York Times.

The Mike O'Meara Show
Interview: Marc Fisher Of The Washington Post

The Mike O'Meara Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2016 20:33


A special Interview with Marc Fisher from The Washington Post discussing accusations that Donald Trump pretended to be his publicist during a 1991 interview.

The Mike O'Meara Show
#1526: Is It Really Trump?

The Mike O'Meara Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2016 80:10


Today... we speak to Marc Fisher from the Washington Post about Donald Trump allegedly pretending to be his spokesman during a past interview. Plus... a new intern, a new food debacle at Oscar's mom's house and where is RoFo?