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Michael Hainey, a respected journalist, editor, and author shares his love story with New York City and the heart behind creating a home for the ones that mean the most to him. As a dear friend of Jeremiah's, he shares what day-to-day life in Greenwich Village looks like for him and his wife through a myriad of personal stories. Ideas of Order, the California Closets podcast, is produced by Rob Schulte at SANDOW DESIGN GROUP and is part of the SURROUND Podcast Network. Discover more shows from SURROUND at surroundpodcasts.com. Follow Ideas of order on Instagram @IdeasOfOrderCaliforniaClosets
Michael Hainey is an author, podcaster, and writer at large at Air Mail. We chat with him from Rome about a dinner at Catch Steak, meditative driving, lunch at Fred Segal, steak n' eggs, when it comes to fashion, I have to be me, college at Notre Dame, Chicago, the metaphorical chicken neck, spending the month in Rome on a writers retreat, waking up at 4:30 am, it's getting harder to curate a world through magazines now, will smart media survive in the future? And we hear about Michael's favorite local New York restaurant. instagram.com/michael_hainey twitter.com/donetodeath twitter.com/themjeans --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/howlonggone/support
This week's episode of our New York City special is something of a departure from our normal service, in that it's much more about storytelling than menswear. You can blame Aleks for this; the chance to quiz Air Mail deputy editor and New York Times bestselling author Michael Hainey on on his extraordinary career was just too much to handle.So, in this conversation Aleks explores Hainey's career, gets his take on ‘finding your voice', and hears Hainey's thoughts on why the best journalists write up what they see, rather than what they think. The pair also chat through Hainey's cathartic experience in writing his extraordinary memoire, After Visiting Friends.If you enjoy listening, don't forget to follow us on Instagram @handcutradio, and leave us a five star review – it boosts us up the podcast charts, and helps other listeners to discover HandCut Radio.---HandCut Radio is produced by Birch, the London based creative office of James Allen. Our theme music is by Joe Boyd.HandCut Radio is proud to be sponsored by Thomas Mason, an historic mill that's been supplying famous designers, shirtmakers and tailors with world class shirting fabrics since 1796.---Show Notes:Michael Hainey — Website | Instagram[10:33] Airmail[10:48] Spy Magazine (defunct)[12:55] Graydon Carter[17:30] Less Than Zero by Bret Easton Ellis[17:31] Bret Easton Ellis[24:10] Adam Rapoport[32:22] L'Etiquette Magazine[40:13] Stephen Glass, ‘Loving Lies' (article)[41:03] Shattered Glass (film)[43:05] Joseph Bullmore[48:29] After Visiting Friends by Michael Hainey (book)
Listen now | Midwesterners like to celebrate commonality, be it actual similarities or those that are imagined. Michael Hainey and I never had to fabricate the connection. It was always apparent that we had much in common beyond the geography of where we grew up. His childhood in Chicago and midwestern roots are well documented in his brilliant book This is a public episode. Get access to private episodes at www.acl.news/subscribe
Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL's Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world whom you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don't want you to know about). This week's guests are Scott Z. Burns, who wrote the screenplay for Contagion and now channels the mind of the coronavirus (19:30), and Reeves Wiedeman, talking about how he discovered a bizarre WeWork-sanctioned film starring Gwyneth Paltrow's cousin (6:50).See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In this week’s episode, Ashley and Mike talk to Scott Z. Burns, the writer of Contagion. They also get the story behind a WeWork-related short film starring Gwyneth Paltrow’s cousin Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL’s Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world whom you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don’t want you to know about). This week’s guests are Scott Z. Burns, who wrote the screenplay for Contagion and now channels the mind of the coronavirus (19:30), and Reeves Wiedeman, talking about how he discovered a bizarre WeWork-related film starring Gwyneth Paltrow’s cousin (6:50). You can listen by clicking Play below. But be sure to subscribe at Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you don’t miss an episode. View on Air Mail
Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL's Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don't want you to know about). This week's guests are AIR MAIL writer at large William D. Cohan, who takes us inside his reporting on Vice Media (7:53), and Duff Lambros, a former Trump-appointed judge (of a beauty pageant, but still!), with some judicious advice for Amy Coney Barrett (18:43). Plus, hear about the 1-percenters who are escaping lockdown (3:08). See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In this week’s podcast, Ashley and Mike look at some bad behavior, from a Hollywood sex scandal to Vice problems Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL’s Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world whom you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don’t want you to know about). This week’s guests are AIR MAIL writer at large William D. Cohan, who takes us inside his reporting on Vice Media (7:51), and Duff Lambros, a former Trump-appointed judge (of a beauty pageant, but still!) with some judicious advice for Amy Coney Barrett (18:41). Plus, hear about the 1-percenters who are escaping lockdown (3:00). You can listen by clicking Play below. But be sure to subscribe at Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you don’t miss an episode. View on Air Mail
In this week’s podcast, the Barefoot Contessa, Ina Garten, brings Ashley and Mike some comforting (and tasty) ideas Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL’s Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don’t want you to know about). This week’s guest, Ina Garten—the Barefoot Contessa—shares her thoughts on something we all need more of right now: comfort food (20:58). Plus, hear about the woman who had the most powerful men in Paris wrapped around her finger (05:46), as well as the 40th anniversary of a New York hot spot (30:13). It’s a conversation that’s not to be missed. You can listen by clicking Play below. But be sure to subscribe at Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you don’t miss an episode. View on Air Mail
Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL's Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don't want you to know about). This week's guest, Ina Garten—the Barefoot Contessa—shares her thoughts on something we all need more of right now: comfort food. Plus, hear about the woman who had the most powerful men in Paris wrapped around her finger, as well as the 40th anniversary of a New York hot spot. It's a conversation that's not to be missed. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In this week’s podcast, Graydon joins Mike and Ashley for a discussion of what’s left of Trump’s brain Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL’s Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don’t want you to know about). This week’s guest is air mail’s founder and co-editor, Graydon Carter, who shares his insights on a man he’s known for more than 30 years: Donald Trump (11:20). Plus, hear about 1-percenters behaving badly (01:53) as well as the new show to hate-watch (06:00). It’s an episode that’s not to be missed. You can listen by clicking Play below. But be sure to subscribe at Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you don’t miss an episode. View on Air Mail
Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL's Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don't want you to know about). This week's guest is AIR MAIL's founder and co-editor, Graydon Carter, who shares his insights on a man he's known for more than 30 years: Donald Trump (11:20). Plus, hear about 1-percenters behaving badly (01:53) as well as the new show to hate-watch (06:00). It's an episode that's not to be missed.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL's Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don't want you to know about). And we talk with friends of AIR MAIL. This week's guest is chef Daniel Boulud, who tells us how he got his acclaimed restaurant Daniel open for indoor dining. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
A new podcast from AIR MAIL featuring spirited chat about the week’s top stories Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL’s Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don’t want you to know about). And we talk with friends of Air Mail. This week’s guest is chef Daniel Boulud, who tells us how he got his acclaimed restaurant Daniel open for indoor dining. You can listen by clicking Play below. But be sure to subscribe at Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you don’t miss an episode. View on Air Mail
Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL's Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don't want you to know about). And we talk with friends of AIR MAIL—writers, artists, and style-setters. This week, AIR MAIL's co-editor Alessandra Stanley shares a humorous encounter with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. So listen in every Saturday as Morning Meeting brings you what's new and exciting from the world of AIR MAIL.AIR MAIL articles mentioned during the show:Magisterial MeghanIs Serge Gainsbourg #Annulé?Toulouse-Lautrec's Family Is ShortchangedTattle TalesLust in TranslationToast of the TownSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Spirited chat about this week’s top stories Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL’s Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don’t want you to know about). And we talk with friends of AIR MAIL—writers, artists, and style-setters. This week, air mail’s co-editor Alessandra Stanley shares a humorous encounter with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. So listen in every Saturday as Morning Meeting brings you what’s new and exciting from the world of AIR MAIL. View on Air Mail
Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL's Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don't want you to know about). And we talk with friends of AIR MAIL—writers, artists, and style-setters. This week Douglas McGrath shares his conversation with Nick Pileggi about the 30th anniversary of Goodfellas. So listen in every Saturday as Morning Meeting brings you what's new and exciting from the world of AIR MAIL.AIR MAIL articles mentioned during the show:The View From Here by John LahrI Know Those Guys by Douglas McGrathHer Royal Deepness by Ted HellerDiary Dearest by Stuart HeritageBooty Call by Adam SageMembers Only by Michael OdellThe Way We Live Now by Nicholas Hellen and Grant TuckerSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Spirited chat about this week’s top stories Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL’s Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don’t want you to know about). And we talk with friends of AIR MAIL—writers, artists, and style-setters. This week Douglas McGrath shares his conversation with Nick Pileggi about the 30th anniversary of Goodfellas. So listen in every Saturday as Morning Meeting brings you what’s new and exciting from the world of AIR MAIL. View on Air Mail
NEW: Spirited chat about this week’s top stories Welcome to Morning Meeting, where Air Mail’s Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don’t want you to know about). And we talk with friends of Air Mail—writers, thought leaders, and style-setters, such as André Leon Talley, who this week tells us about the new way of Fashion Week. So listen in every Saturday as Morning Meeting brings you what’s new and exciting from the world of Air Mail. View on Air Mail
Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL's Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don't want you to know about). And we talk with friends of AIR MAIL—writers, reporters, and style-setters, such as André Leon Talley, who this week tells us about the new way of Fashion Week. So listen in every Saturday as Morning Meeting brings you what's new and exciting from the world of AIR MAIL. AIR MAIL articles mentioned during the show:Lights Out by André Leon TalleyCall Girl by Hannah EvansPlanes Have Changed While You Were Away by Charles BremnerHave You Seen the News? by Ashley BakerBlack and White and Read All over the South by Sam KashnerOedipus Vex by Kim WillsherSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Welcome to Morning Meeting, where AIR MAIL's Ashley Baker and Michael Hainey take you inside the stories people are talking about this week—and tip you off to the ones the editors are talking about for next week. We cover the people shaping your world that you want to know more about (and more often the stuff they don't want you to know about). And we talk with friends of AIR MAIL—writers, reporters, and style-setters. So listen in every Saturday as Morning Meeting brings you what's new and exciting from the world of AIR MAIL. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Even as a young child, Michael Hainey could sense that there was more to the story of his father’s death. But it wasn’t until he stumbled upon a small detail in an obituary—that his father died “after visiting friends”—that he began to understand the lengths those friends went to protect his father’s reputation, and to protect his family from the truth. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
This week's episode features highlights of a panel from the 2019 BIO Conference, “Fact and Speculation,” with moderator James McGrath Morris and panelists Gretchen Holbrook Gerzina, Michael Hainey, and Stacy […]
This week, Aleks sits down with an old friend, prominent street style photographer, Jamie Ferguson, better known on Instagram as @JKF_MAN.Jamie’s been shooting menswear for five years, following a few years spent as an actor, and a few more working in fashion marketing. Today, he’s known for his compelling editorial and street style photography, shooting for a wide array of independent brands that make, in his own words, ‘interesting, wearable clothes.’He talks to Aleks about his career path, plus what’s hot and what’s not in menswear today. He also explores the challenges of creating striking visuals in a market that’s obsessed with throwaway digital content, and highlights some brands that he rates for their originality.Listen in if you’re interested in discovering men’s style brands that are cutting through the noise on social media today.---HandCut Radio is produced in collaboration with Birch, a London and New York based creative agency. Our theme music is by Joe Boyd.---Show NotesJamie Ferguson — Instagram[01:43] Drake’s[04:20] GQ UK[04:25] Esquire UK[06:04] The Sartorialist[06:18] Pitti Uomo, Florence[08:32] DAKS[10:48] MRKET, New York[12:29] Drake’s AW16 Lookbook with Jason Jules[20:57] David Gandy on HandCut Radio[24:27] Stoffa, New York[24:35] Stoffa ‘House of Cards’ Campaign[25:46] Beige Habilleur, Paris[26:11] Husbands, Paris[28:01] Glen Allsop, Eidos FW16 Lookbook[28:16] BODE, New York[35:32] Ethan Newton, Brycelands[36:46] Ethan’s plum cords[38:49] George Cortina[38:52] Andy Spade[38:53] Michael Hainey on Blamo![39:29] Unbuttoned — G. Bruce Boyer’s Life In Clothes, Podcast
My guest this week is the author and editor Michael Hainey.Michael is the Executive Director of Editorial at Esquire, before that he served as deputy editor at GQ for over 15 years.Michael and I spoke about his early life working under Graydon Carter, the importance of hard work, and how we all long to be known and share our stories.Follow Michael on TwitterAfter Visiting Friends
Tess Barker, Johnny Pemberton, Lou Sanders and Dan Tetsell join host, Dave Holmes to talk heat waves, Pokémon and summer jams. Plus the teams are challenged to take down beloved children's characters from the opposing nation. Tess Barker wants to plug her own MaxFun podcast Lady to Lady and recommends the classic novel Moby Dick. Johnny Pemberton wants to plug his upcoming TV show Son of Zorn and recommends Mr Robot. Lou Sanders wants to plug her Edinburgh Fringe show What's That Lady Doing? and recommends British comedian Patrick Turpin, the BBC show Mum, and Burning Love. Dan Tetsell wants to plug The Wipers Times which he's performing in at The Watermill Theatre in Newbury during September and October. Dan recommendsThe Scotch Whisky Experience and Edinburgh Castle as alternatives to seeing live arts at this year's Edinburgh Fringe. Dave Holmes is on Twitter @DaveHolmes and hosts his live quiz show, The Friday Forty at LA’s Meltdown Theatre on the second Friday of every month. Dave's new book Party of One is out now. Dave would like to recommend After Visiting Friends by Michael Hainey. You can let us know what you think of International Waters and suggest guests through our Facebook group or on Twitter. Written by Sarah Morgan and Riley Silverman. Recorded at GuiltFreePost in London by John Purcell Shackleton and at MaxFunHQ in Los Angeles. Produced by Jennifer Marmor and Colin Anderson.
The Removers (Scribner) Join us tonight for a moving memoir about how working with the dead breathed life back into a young man in Philadelphia, while also repairing the long-strained relationship he had with his father. As a teenager, Andrew watched helplessly as his father went from proud literature professor to university outcast in the face of charges of sexual harassment. The allegations created a cavernous rift between father and son, particularly as Andrew begins to have sexual experiences himself. His late teens and early 20's are a wayward existence studded with girls, beer, music, and, occasionally but never consistently, college. Andrew's father, his pride decimated by the rejection of the university life that once invigorated the whole Meredith family, has had to find work as a “remover,” the name for the unseen, unsung men who take away the bodies of those who die at home. Shiftless and broke, Andrew becomes a remover alongside his father. At first, they share a low-grade shock about their circumstances: how did we wind up here? How do we get out? But together they also must tackle more practical questions—like how to carry a 500-pound corpse down winding stairs—and Andrew begins to learn that simple competence is the best way to navigate adulthood. Eventually, Andrew begins to see his father not through the lens of a wronged and resentful child, but as a sympathetic, imperfect man who loves his family despite his flaws—and the chip on his shoulder starts to lose its weight. The Removers is dark, vulnerable, and deeply moving. Praise for The Removers “Andrew Meredith writes with the eye of a poet and the heart of a man transformed. The Removers brims with moments of unforgettable beauty and raw honesty.”—Michael Hainey, author of After Visiting Friends “You might be forgiven, at first, if you believe that the book in your hands is about creatures from another planet (We are nobodies. We are men made to be forgotten. We are paid to be invisible.). Prepare yourself—as you wander more deeply into this brightly-lit, finely wrought nightmare, the mirrors start appearing. Sex and death might propel the story forward, but by the end Andrew Meredith peels back the night to reveal what we are made of. The removers are not only among us, they are us. A tour-de-force whispered from the shadows.”—Nick Flynn, author of Another Bullshit Night in Suck City “The Removers is for anyone whose adolescence has taken too long, whose hands need useful work, or who wants to put his family grudges away and get on with the rewards of adult life—such as the wicked laughs and the sweet, tender, singing prose of this wonderful book.”—Salvatore Scibona, author of The End “The Removers is angry and forgiving, sometimes hideous, tough, emotionally compelling, and important. Andrew Meredith comes of age, struggles, and survives in the disintegrating blue-collar environs of Philadelphia. This book can unlock doors. Get your hands on it right away.”—William Kittredge, author of Hole in the Sky Andrew Meredith has been awarded fellowships from the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown and from Yaddo. He received an MFA in Fiction from UNC-Greensboro. The Removers is his first book.
The great French novelist Andre Malraux once wrote that “man is not what he thinks he is, he is what he hides.” Certainly the secrets we all keep as individuals and as families place a heavy burden on us. Too often we think we are keeping secrets, when all we really are doing is hiding truth them from ourselves. For a long time this was Michael Hainey story, as he knew that someday he had to find out what really happened with respect to his fathers death. He was only six at the time, by years later he would know that something was not right about what he had been told. As he approached his fathers age, when he died, he would work hard to uncover that secret and in so doing free himself, his mother and his brother.He lays out his story in this memoir After Visiting Friends: A Son's Story. My conversation with Michael Hainey: var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www."); document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E")); try { var pageTracker = _gat._getTracker("UA-6296941-2"); pageTracker._trackPageview(); } catch(err) {}
Michael Hainey never really understood how his father had died when he was just a kid. And when he grew up, he realized there were a lot of holes in the story he'd been told. Eventually, he decided to track down the truth -- but it wasn't easy to find, and he wasn't sure what to do with it when he found it.