Podcasts about new york see

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Best podcasts about new york see

Latest podcast episodes about new york see

Tony Katz + The Morning News
Tony Katz and the Morning News 3rd Hr 4-25-25

Tony Katz + The Morning News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 25:59


Craig Collins in for Tony Katz Making school board races partisan. Baby rave parties. Married Americans are much more romantic on vacations. Trump first 100 days coming. Scratch and sniff billboard in New York See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tony Katz + The Morning News
Tony Katz and the Morning News Full Show 4-25-25

Tony Katz + The Morning News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 77:04


Craig Collins in for Tony Katz The View doesn’t like the “baby bonus” proposed by Trump. What are women embarrassed by, and men aren’t? WI Gov throws football poorly, and puts it on social media. Trump says we are negotiating with China, despite press reports. Guy in the UK bought car that was stolen from him. Vatican getting ready for the Pope’s funeral. DC Swamp continues to go after Hegseth. Popcorn Moment: Dems eating their own. Liberal woman podcaster rips into Rahm Emanuel. Marketplace: Scared Lawn Rabbit. Kelly Stafford doesn’t understand why NFL draft participants are showing up with women who they’re likely not going to be with for very long. School board races will now be partisan here in Indiana. Baby rave parties. Married Americans are much more romantic on vacations. Trump first 100 days coming. Scratch and sniff billboard in New York See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Silicon Valley Living
California, New York see rise in people losing their jobs | Santa Clara County High's and Low's

Silicon Valley Living

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2025 5:04


Rising Layoffs in California and New York & Current Real Estate TrendsIn this episode, we discuss the rise in layoffs in California and New York, highlighting the contrast with stable national trends and examining the underlying economic pressures in key industries. We also feature a blog article available through the provided link. Additionally, we review the Los Gatos home of the week, explore the current real estate market in Santa Clara County, including notable price reductions and top active sales, and speculate on the upcoming trends for the housing market.California and New York see a rise in people losing their jobsSanta Clara County High's and Low'sLos Gatos Home of the WeekSanta Clara County Price Reductions FREE HOME BUYER CHECKLIST HERE https://abitanogroup.com/HomebuyerchecklistHome Inspection CHECKLIST HERE https://abitanogroup.com/homeinspectionchecklist00:00 Introduction: Job Losses in California and New York00:09 Analyzing the Layoff Trends00:41 Personal Stories and Economic Implications01:08 Industry-Specific Layoffs and Opinions02:27 Real Estate Highlights: Los Gatos Home of the Week04:25 Concluding Thoughts and Future Predictions

The Joe Piscopo Show
7 AM Hour The Joe Piscopo Show 2-15-24

The Joe Piscopo Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2024 54:34


 James Rosen, Newsmax Chief White House Correspondent and the author of "Scalia: Rise to Greatness, 1936-1986"   Topic: Biden's attack on Trump from State Dining Room    Hans von Spakovsky, Manager of the Heritage Foundation's Election Law Reform Initiative and Senior Legal Fellow at the Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies Topic: Trump hush money hearing in New York today   Councilman Joe Borelli, Minority Leader of the New York City Council & the author of "Staten Island in the Nineteenth Century: From Boomtown to Forgotten Borough" Topic: Eric Adams suing social media companies, latest in migrant crisis in New York  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

WBAP Morning News Podcast
NEW YORK CITY PROVIDING ILLEGALS WITH GIFT CARDS!

WBAP Morning News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2024 4:28


It was a big weekend at the border, where governors from multiple states joined our TEXAS governor Abbott to send a message to the White House. The WBAP Morning News also talked about a story out of New York See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

KNBR Podcast
7-3 Andrew Baggarly joins Kerry Crowley to discuss the Giants losing 2 of 3 in New York

KNBR Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2023 19:17


Giants writer for the Athletic Andrew Baggarly joins Kerry Crowley to discuss the Giants losing 2 of 3 in New York See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tolbert, Krueger & Brooks Podcast Podcast
7-3 Andrew Baggarly joins Kerry Crowley to discuss the Giants losing 2 of 3 in New York

Tolbert, Krueger & Brooks Podcast Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2023 19:17


Giants writer for the Athletic Andrew Baggarly joins Kerry Crowley to discuss the Giants losing 2 of 3 in New York See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Conservative Circus w/ James T. Harris
NAACP Crazy Day Three & New York See Migrants as an Opportunity

The Conservative Circus w/ James T. Harris

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2023 137:21


The migrant crisis is pitched as a great opportunity. Democrats push the new "Sin Bill" in San Francisco for reparations!

3News Now with Stephanie Haney
Where A $1 Million Winning Mega Millions Ticket Was Sold In Ohio, Browns Ask For New Logo Designs

3News Now with Stephanie Haney

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 14:22


Wednessday, April 19, 2023: College and K-12 classes resume in Akron as officials and community members continue to react to a grand jury declining to indict the 8 officers who shot and killed Jayland Walker in June. Plus, we share details on a man being charged for a quadruple murder from 2019, why an 89-year-old man was arrested in Kirtland, and 2 people who died in a private plane crash in Central Ohio. In health news, we look at new birthing suites in a Northeast Ohio hospital and the Cleveland Clinic's new mask policy. In the sports world, we recap the Cavaliers win over the New York Knicks as the NBA playoffs continue, what the Browns are asking fans to submit for a possible new logo, and the good news that Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin just got. Otherwise, we share where a new millionaire bought their winning lottery in Ohio, and more on 3News Daily with Stephanie Haney. Watch the Legally Speaking special on the 4 criminal investigations into former President Donald Trump here: https://youtu.be/8RzDfmaSrxo Connect with Stephanie Haney here: http://twitter.com/_StephanieHaney http://instagram.com/_StephanieHaney http://facebook.com/thestephaniehaney Read more here: Winning $1 million Mega Millions ticket sold at Circle K in Northeast Ohio as $20 million jackpot hits in New York: See all the prizes sold in Ohio https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/lottery/winning-mega-millions-numbers-tuesday-april-18-drawing-20-million-jackpot-ohio-lottery/95-1d27aae1-173d-4bb1-b83c-548cf60cbb5b Westlake Police looking to identify suspects accused of stealing $3,000 worth of sunglasses https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/crime/westlake-police-looking-identify-suspects-accused-of-stealing-3000-worth-sunglasses/95-8cf84202-6430-485e-a65e-d775e3f03662

Midday
Julie Otsuka's 'The Swimmers': A tale of lost routines, lost memory

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2023 48:31


(This conversation was originally broadcast on March 15, 2023) Tom's guest on this archive edition of Midday is the award-winning author, Julie Otsuka. She has published three critically acclaimed novels. Her first, When the Emperor Was Divine was published in 2002, and over the past 20 years, it has been chosen by more than 60 colleges and universities as a “campus reads” book, in which everyone at those institutions reads and discusses it. In 2022, that same book was banned by the Muskego-Norway school district in Wisconsin, which deemed it inappropriate for high-school sophomores. When Tom spoke with Julie Otsuka in March, she was preparing to come to Baltimore to deliver the keynote address at the 2023 Loyola University MD Humanities Symposium. Her March 16 talk was entitled, An American Story: War, Memory and Erasure, in which she talked about her family's experience in internment camps during the second world war, and the importance of keeping those memories and those important stories alive. The launching point for her talk was her first novel, When the Emperor Was Divine.  Julie Otsuka's second novel is about Japanese “picture brides,” who came to America in the early 20th century to wed men they had never met in person. It's called The Buddha in the Attic, and it won the 2012 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, and it was a finalist for the National Book Award. Her latest novel, published last year, is called The Swimmers.  The story concerns a group of people who swim at a community pool regularly, and what happens when that pool develops a crack that no one can seem to explain. It's also about dementia, and the complicated relationship between a mother and her daughter. And it's about multitudes more. The American Library Association awarded it the 2023 Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction. Julie Otsuka is an artist who writes with power, elegance, and compassion, and The Swimmers is a book that many readers have found to be gripping and wondrous in every way. Julie Otsuka joined Tom on Zoom from New York…See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Midday
'Rebel With a Clause': Ellen Jovin's grammar lifeline for word nerds

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2022 36:17


Now, we turn to a grammarian who has written a terrific book that recounts her experience at the Grammar Table, a pop-up resource about grammar questions she set up at a card table in the park near her Manhattan apartment in 2018, and which she has since carried to all 50 states. The book is called Rebel With a Clause:  Tales and Tips from a Roving Grammarian.  We're delighted that the book's author, Ellen Jovin, is with us, and that we're setting up the Grammar Table, virtually, here on Midday.  So, word-nerds, let's hear from you! What are your questions about grammar and usage? How do you handle the Oxford comma? Are you a single-spacer or a double-spacer in-between sentences? And most importantly, how do feel about or my personal favorite: the distinction between the restrictive and nonrestrictive appositive? Ellen Jovin joins us on Zoom, from New York…See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Midday
'Confidence Man': NYT's Maggie Haberman on Donald Trump's rise

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2022 25:23


Tom's first guest today is New York Times White House correspondent and CNN analyst Maggie Haberman. She began her career in the mid-1990s covering New York politics for the New York Post and the Daily News.  She has known Donald Trump and many of those in his orbit since then, and when Trump was elected U.S. president, her reporting was essential reading for anyone interested in understanding the chaotic tenure of the 45th president. In 2018, that reporting led to a Pulitzer Prize for her and a team of Times colleagues. She and others at the Times were finalists for Pulitzers in 2021 and again this year. Her new book is a number one best-seller. It's called Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America.  It was released two weeks ago, months, even years after several very thoughtful books about the Trump Presidency, and a bunch of less-than thoughtful books by journalists and family members. Tom believes this one was worth the wait. Haberman reports that Trump's political instincts were shaped early in a career in which scandal and acclaim were never distant. Her account is a comprehensive, insightful study of where and how Trump developed his attitude, his world view, and his political tactics. We're delighted to welcome Maggie Haberman to the show to talk it about it. She joins us on Zoom from New York…See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Midday
'What's Mine and Yours': Naima Coster's tale of race & two families

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2022 23:45


Joining Tom now is Naima Coster, the author of the New York Times best seller, What's Mine and Yours, which has been chosen by Maryland Humanities as this year's One Maryland One Book. That's a program in which Marylanders all over the state read the same book, and have the opportunity to talk about it with other readers, and with the author. Naima Coster's novel explores the dynamics of family and community, and the divisions that course through the lives of sisters and their circle in a story that pivots from North Carolina to California, France, and elsewhere. Ms. Coster will be appearing throughout the state next week, beginning this Sunday afternoon, when she'll talk about What's Mine and Yours at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture. Naima Coster joins us today on Zoom from New York…See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Midday
'The Big Lie': Jonathan Lemire on the plot that's wrecked US politics

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2022 48:38


In the 2022 US elections across the country, more than 160 Republican primary candidates for offices up and down the ballot are election deniers who have embraced Donald Trump's malicious fiction about the 2020 Presidential contest. On Monday (Aug 1), the Brennan Center for Justice in New York reported that 12 election denier candidates in swing states with secretary of state races this year have raised $7.3 million dollars for their campaigns. Overall, more than twice as much money has been raised in this cycle than was raised in 2018.These campaigns are premised in the deliberate fallacy that elections in America are rigged, a fallacy perpetrated by Donald Trump over the last several years. Tom's guest for the hour today is a seasoned Washington reporter and author who has covered Mr. Trump for the Associated Press, POLITICO and MSNBC. Jonathan Lemire has written a terrific new book that examines the origins and the legacy of Donald Trump's prevarication. It's called The Big Lie: Election Chaos, Political Opportunism, and the State of American Politics After 2020.  Jonathan Lemire is the host of Way Too Early on MSNBC, and the White House Bureau Chief for POLITICO.  He joins us on our digital line from New York…See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Midday
Paul McCartney's 'The Lyrics': our talk with editor, poet Paul Muldoon

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2022 48:32


(This conversation was originally broadcast on January 7, 2022) We begin with the familiar opening bars of Yesterday, the song that Rolling Stone Magazine called “the best song of the 20th century.” It's been covered and recorded by thousands of artists, and it is universally loved. Paul McCartney wrote it in 1965, when he was 23 and in the middle of his stint with The Beatles. Sir Paul turns 80 on June 18th, and he's still writing, recording and performing. (His current concert tour brings him to Camden Yards in Baltimore on June 12th.) In a writing career that began in 1956, McCartney has written or co-written more than 400 songs. The lyrics to 154 of them, from Beatles-era classics to songs he's written in the decades since, are included in The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present, a two-volume set of books published last summer in which McCartney offers context and back stories for each of the songs. Welcome to Midday. Today on this encore presentation of our show, Tom's guest is the wonderful poet Paul Muldoon, who was tapped by Paul McCartney to help him with the book. Muldoon wrote an introduction, and edited conversations with McCartney into the essays that accompany each song. Paul Muldoon is perfectly positioned to curate such a collection. He is a song lyricist himself, and a member of a band called Rogue Oliphant. He even teaches a course in songwriting at Princeton University, where he's been on the faculty for 35 years. He is also the author of 14 poetry collections and the winner of the Pulitzer Prize. His latest collection is called Howdie-Skelp. He and Tom talk about that book as well, later in the program. Paul Muldoon joined us on Zoom from New York… See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Things Fall Apart
112: Keep Hope Alive w/ Deborah Meier

Things Fall Apart

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2022 38:00


Today's guest is Deborah Meier, who really needs no introduction for advocates of progressive education. Meier is the founder of the modern small schools movement, that aims to reorganize larger schools into smaller, democratic ones. She was founder and director of Central Park East, a Dewey-inspired progressive school in East Harlem, New York City. She also opened Central Park East II, River East, and the Central Park East Secondary School the same neighborhood. This led her to establish a network of similarly minded schools in New York City, and eventually founding Mission Hill School in Boston.Meier is an advocate of democratic, progressive, public schools who has served on the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards, National Academy of Education, The Nation, Dissent, and more. She is a recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship, as well as the author of multiple books including the recently co-authored These Schools Belong to You and Me: Why We Can't Afford to Abandon our Public Schools. Meier is a huge inspiration to us at Human Restoration Project and we frequently draw on her work in our materials and advocacy.In this podcast, Meier and I talk about building a coalition of schools, educators, families, and community members to build and protect a progressive public education, discussing the importance of building a public education system that strengthens and models a democracy.GUESTSDeborah Meier, founding director of Central Park East and Mission Hill School, as well as various progressive democratic public schools, and author of various works including co-authoring These Schools Belong to You and Me: Why We Can't Afford to Abandon our Public SchoolsRESOURCESDeborah Meier's websiteThese Schools Belong to You and Me: Why We Can't Afford to Abandon our Public SchoolsThe Power of Their Ideas: Lessons for America from a Small School in HarlemSUPPORT THE MOVEMENT TO END GUN VIOLENCEMarch for Our Lives 2022 National Rally (June 11th, 2022)Donate: March for Our LivesDonate: EverytownDonate: Moms Demand ActionDonate: Sandy Hook PromiseDonate: GoFundMe - Uvalde, TexasDonate: GoFundMe - Buffalo, New York See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

#MenschMahler - Die Podcast Kolumne - podcast eins GmbH

220518PCVon Bäumen, Kindern und Alten. Mensch Mahler am 18.05.2022Für mich gibt es drei Merkmale, um den Zivilisationsstand eines Volkes zu ermitteln:1. Wie es mit seinen Bäumen umgeht2. Wie es mit seinen Kindern und alten Leute verfährt3. Wie es zu seiner Sprache steht.Ich trete also für Respekt vor der Hilflosigkeit ein; und die Sprache ist vielleicht das Hilfsbedürftigste. Erwin Chargaff hat das gesagt, er wurde 1905 in Czernowitz in der Ukraine geboren und ist 2002 in New York gestorben. Dann schauen wir mal:Wie gehen wir mit unseren Bäumen um? Übel würde ich sagen. Derzeit ist der Wald notleidend, die Klimakrise setzt ihm gewaltig zu. Wie verfahren wir mit unseren Kindern? Zu wenig Kita-Plätze, zu wenig Förderung, zu viel digitaler Mist – das ist auch keine vorzeigbare SituationWie behandeln wir mit unseren Alten? Pflegenotstand, Altersarmut und Alterseinsamkeit. Es ist zum Heulen. Das hilfsbedürftigste ist die Sprache, sagt Chargaff. Denn mit der Sprache fängt alles an. Verroht ist sie und zynisch. Respektvoll spricht Gott durch seine Profeten – gerade über Schutzbedürftige. Zum Beispiel Sacharja:„So spricht Gott: Es sollen hinfort wieder sitzen auf den Plätzen Jerusalems alte Männer und Frauen, jeder mit seinem Stock in der Hand vor hohem Alter, und die Plätze sollen voll sein von Knaben und Mädchen, die dort spielen. So spricht Gott: Erscheint dies auch unmöglich in den Augen derer, die in dieser Zeit übriggeblieben sind von diesem Volk, sollte es darum auch unmöglich erscheinen in meinen Augen?“Bleibt zu ergänzen dass die Alten und die Kinder unter gesunden, gut gewachsenen Bäumen sitzen und spielen. : 11. August 1905, Czernowitz, UkraineVerstorben: 20. Juni 2002, Manhattan, New York See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Midday
'Chasing History': Carl Bernstein on his consequential life in journalism

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2022 27:10


Tom's first guest today is the legendary reporter and author Carl Bernstein, who, with his Washington Postcolleague, Bob Woodward, broke the story of the Watergate break-in, which led to the resignation of Richard Nixon and the birth of modern investigative journalism. Bernstein has written two memoirs about that iconic story, and a book about his parents' encounters with McCarthyism during the 1950s. His latest book is an homage to newspapers, and a poignant reflection on how he came to love the craft of journalism and the art of storytelling. The book chronicles Bernstein's start in the newspaper business as a precocious 16-year-old copyboy at the Washington Star, and the subsequent five years in which he met people who left an indelible mark on his approach to reporting, and in which he acquired the nascent skills he would hone in a career that has spanned more than 60 years. The book is a terrific read, and an important testament to the value of journalism written by people who are deeply connected to the communities they cover. It's called Chasing History: A Kid in the Newsroom.  Carl Bernstein joins us on Zoom from New York… See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Midday
Paul McCartney's 'The Lyrics': A talk with editor/poet Paul Muldoon

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2022 46:04


(The original broadcast of this program featured musical examples of Paul McCartney's work. Due to copyright laws, we could not include them on this Webpost or on Midday's podcast. The audio we've posted contains the complete conversation between Tom Hall and Paul Muldoon.) Rolling Stone Magazine called Paul McCartney's"Yesterday" “the best song of the 20th century.” It's been covered and recorded by thousands of artists, and it is universally loved. Paul McCartney wrote it in 1965, when he was 23 and in the middle of his stint with The Beatles. Sir Paul turns 80 in June, and he's still writing, recording and performing. In a writing career that began in 1956, McCartney has written or co-written more than 400 songs. The lyrics to 154 of them are included in The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present, a new, two-volume set of books that place the words to the songs next to McCartney's back stories for each of them. Today on Midday, Tom's guest is the wonderful poet Paul Muldoon. Muldoon was tapped by Paul McCartney to help him with the book. Muldoon wrote an introduction, and edited conversations with McCartney into the essays that accompany each song. Paul Muldoon is perfectly positioned to curate such a collection. He is a song lyricist himself, and a member of a band called Rogue Oliphant. He even teaches a course in songwriting at Princeton University, where he's been on the faculty for 35 years. He is also the author of 14 poetry collections and the winner of the Pulitzer Prize. His latest collection is called Howdie-Skelp. We'll talk about that book as well later in the program. Paul Muldoon joins us on Zoom from New York… See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Unused Substitutes

With two wins since our last show, the Rowdies have retaken their spot on top of the division and the league and we are 100% here for it! The guys talk about the wins, the table, and the impact that injuries and suspensions will have this weekend at home against New York See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

twin rowdies new york see
Midday
Annette Gordon-Reed's New Ode To The Emancipation Celebration

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2021 49:30


On June 19th, 1865, Major General Gordon Granger issued General Order No. 3 in Galveston, TX, declaring that all slaves were free, two months after General Robert E Lee had surrendered to Gen. Ulysses S Grant in Appomattox, VA. Tom's guest on this archive edition of Midday is the author and historian Annette Gordon Reed. She has written a beautiful peroration about the meaning of the holiday that marks the anniversary of that event. It is at once an homage to her home state of Texas, and a wholly original and fascinating exploration of how history and legend and myth all shape what we learn when we're young, how our understanding evolves as we grow older, and how social dynamics inform the evolution of societal understanding as well. Professor Reed writes with erudition and grace, authority and humility, weaving a touching personal memoir into the stark reality of a harsh historical record. The book is called On Juneteenth. Annette Gordon Reed and Tom spoke about it on June 11th. Because the interview was pre-recorded, we couldn't take any calls or comments. Annette Gordon Reed joined Tom from her home in New York… See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mississippi Arts Hour
The Mississippi Arts Hour | Alexis McGrigg

Mississippi Arts Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2021 44:48


Mississippi Arts Commission Executive Director Sarah Story talks with Jackson-based visual artist Alexis McGrigg. They discuss her influences from the Mississippi School for the Arts, her journey from undergraduate painting to the graduate painting level, and McGrigg’s current exhibitions which reach from Mississippi to New York See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

arts mississippi mississippi school mississippi arts new york see
880 Extras
Special Report: The State of Black New York

880 Extras

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2021 3:12


Mack Rosenberg on small businesses in New York  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

special report new york see black new york
The Truth Prescription
Adrion Porter: Using Professional Branding Expertise to Create the Best You

The Truth Prescription

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2019 71:28


Good People,Adrion Porter joins us for this week’s episode of The Truth Prescription. Adrion is a brand strategist, speaker, and consultant with a wealth of experience. Prior to starting his own brand strategy and consulting firm (AP & Company), he held top positions at Cartoon Network, HBO and Citigroup. Adrion is also the host of the podcast, GenXAmplified, a personal growth and leadership show that focuses on GenXers who are at a crossroads in their careers. Adrion shares his personal and professional truths about not taking life for granted, living it to the fullest and the importance of cultivating a vision for your life. One of my mottos is: One Life to Live. This episode is full of gems on how we can make this one life, the best lifeHost: Dr. Seku GathersGuest: Adrion PorterResources:Mindset - Carol DweckAdrion Porter - WebsiteAdrion Porter - LinkedIn@adrionporter - IG@adrionporter - TwitterGenXAmplified - PodcastTime Stamps:[8:13] Personal Truth: Adrion has a number of truths - he attributes this to constant growth and evolution; the more we learn, the more the truth reveals itself. He narrows his professional truth down to a recent revelation. Within the past 5 years, he’s experienced a number of large life events, some positive and some marked with sadness. Within a short amount of time, a number of his friends and family members passed away. Those losses taught him the value of ensuring that he takes life seriously and doesn’t take it for granted. He also learned the value of making sure that you become the best of who you are and being good to people. [20:47] Professional Truth: Adrion talks to us about tuning into his life purpose and the evolution that led to its discovery. He studied marketing in school because he enjoyed it, it was a passion - one that eventually evolved into others. At this stage in his life and in his career, he realizes that he’s always been driven to help people become the best of who they are. As he’s gotten older, he started asking himself “ am I happy? Am I living my purpose? Am I doing what I’m meant to do?” He’s tuned in to his purpose in life, helping others amplify and turn up the volume of their best selves.[30:15] Adrion breaks down the methodology that he created. It outlines the 5 core areas that he believes are the habits and actions taken by people with powerful brands; whether that's a CEO, parent, community leader, church leader, etc. It’s someone who, Adrion says “when people think about them, when they’re not around, they have a great feeling. They’re empowered.”5 Point Roadmap to Career, Professional and Personal Development:B uildR efineA mplifyN utureD edicate[41:38] We talk about legacy - how important it is to think about what we leave behind and making sure that we do today is “affecting change that will make an impact when we’re gone.” Adrion points out that we have such an opportunity, now, being in this information/social age. It’s made it possible for us to leave something behind for our generations to come. He talks about how my great-great-great-great grandchildren will be able to tap into these doss of truth and that ability to archive is important to understand, especially when thinking about the intention behind what we put out into the world. It comes down to the question, how can we create value? Adrion says that legacy is all about immediate and lasting value that’s, either, archived in content or in someone’s memory[51:28] Yes or BSMonetary wealth is about creating value?Millennials are smarter than GenXers?Adrion Porter will not work for a corporation again?Instagram is the best platform for brand promotion?Your income is determined by the income of your 5 closest friends?Adrion Porter uses brand strategy in his role as husband?Atlanta has more opportunities for people of color than New York? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Sidewalk Talk Show
GUS DAPPERTON Interview- Viral music video, existential crisis

Sidewalk Talk Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2019 26:20


Wrote a children's book, growing up in New York See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Sidewalk Talk Show
PRELOW (Matt)- working with rappers, going to NYU

Sidewalk Talk Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2019 15:51


Living in New York See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

living rappers new york see
Behind the Markets Podcast
Behind the Markets Podcast: Martin Fridson, Ben Lavine, & Brad Krom

Behind the Markets Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2017 54:09


Guests: Martin Fridson - Chief Investment Officer at Lehmann Livian Fridson Advisors Ben Lavine - Chief Investment Officer for 3D Asset Management Brad Krom - a fixed income strategist for WisdomTree in New York See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Behind the Markets Podcast
Behind The Markets Podcast: Brian Wesbury & Brad Krom

Behind the Markets Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2017 54:07


Guests: Brian Wesbury - Chief Economist at First Trust Advisors Brad Krom - a fixed income strategist for WisdomTree in New York See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.