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Look, I'm not happy about this either but it had to be done. A big fat 2 hour podcast about Nanette. It had to be done, and now that it's done we can finally stop talking about Nanette. Except that we can't. And we never will. Nanette is life. My bullshit aside, my guests are great. Peter Moskowitz is a writer who published a fantastic piece in The Outline entitled "The Nanette Problem" in which they dissect the set from a queer radical perspective. Luisa Diez is the only sane person in New York comedy. She's an anthropologist and comedy booker who watches us like we're animals which, let's be honest, is giving us too much credit. To top it all off, Anders Lee is back from debuting his one man show, Dummy, at the Edinburgh fringe festival in Scotland. Strap on a space helmet, fuckers, this is the future of comedy. @PodDamnAmerica @feraljokes @andersleehere @ptrmsk @luisadieznuts https://theoutline.com/post/5962/the-nanette-problem-hannah-gadsby-netflix-review?zd=1&zi=cgndryt3 http://www.vulture.com/2018/07/bill-maher-hannah-gadsby-stand-up-comedy.html and as always, BONUS EPS at patreon.com/PodDamnAmerica just subscribe and smash that RSS feed link into your podcast app of choice for the secret feed!
There's a problem with 'Nanette' – comedy is at its best when it helps audiences understand their relationship to trauma, not when it makes them feel comfortable. Today's story "The 'Nanette' problem" by Peter Moskowitz → https://theoutline.com/post/5962/the-nanette-problem-hannah-gadsby-netflix-review?utm_source=topic_culture&zd=1&zi=mq7kv7ad Credits Today you heard from Peter Moskowitz. We're hosted and produced by James T. Green. Our theme is by John Lagomarsino. If you're interested in pitching a story to the Dispatch? Email james.green@theoutline.com. Find the Dispatch on Twitter, @OutlineDispatch. Find Peter on Twitter, @ptrmsk. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Peter Moskowitz concludes our series by sharing insights from his latest book, How to Kill a City: Gentrification, Inequality and the Fight for the Neighborhood.
Peter Moskowitz concludes our series by sharing insights from his latest book, How to Kill a City: Gentrification, Inequality and the Fight for the Neighborhood.
If you want to support the show and receive access to tons of bonus content, subscribe on our Patreon page for as little as $5 a month. Also, don't forget to subscribe, rate, and review the show on iTunes. We can't do this show without your support!!! On this episode, Roqayah and Kumars are joined by two guests, both of whom have been on DYA before. First we have Peter Moskowitz, a journalist and the author of the book How To Kill A City, which explores the gentrification of US cities. Peter recently wrote a piece for The Outline called "Protest fatigue syndrome: What to do when activism burns you out" that combines research and reporting with discussion of Peter's own personal battle against burnout. Peter shares their story, picking up where we left off when we last spoke to them in the wake of Heather Heyer's murder in Charlottesville. We learn how Peter was able to overcome protest fatigue through self-care and reprioritizing the unglamorous day-to-day work of community organizing over the spectacle of street protests. To help provide some expertise on this topic, we are also joined by Megan Clapp, a Ph.D. candidate in clinical psychology whose work focuses on trauma, anxiety, and depression, with an emphasis on LGBTQ issues. Megan discusses how shame and trauma contribute to burnout and shares some helpful tools for keeping us healthy, happy, and fighting. You can follow Peter on twitter at @ptrmsk. Follow Megan at @MemeVVitch. Also, don't forget to check out Megan's blog. Listen to Megan's first appearance on our show. Check out Peter's past appearances (1 and 2) as well. A transcript for this episode will be provided upon request. Please send an email to deleteuracct @ gmail to get a copy sent to you when it is completed.
This week on the Heartland Labor Forum: How can we grow and improve our cities without the threat of gentrification? This week, we talk to Peter Moskowitz about his book […] The post Peter Moscowitz, How to Kill a City and Jonathan Rosenblum, Beyond $15 appeared first on KKFI.
Show #168 | Guests: Paul Madonna, creator of All Over Coffee, and journalist Peter Moskowitz. | Show Summary: The irony can’t be missed when an artist acclaimed for his loving depictions of San Francisco gets evicted from his home in the town that made his name. That’s what happened to Paul Madonna, creator of the San Francisco Chronicle’s All Over Coffee. Meanwhile, across the country, journalist Peter Moskowitz was unearthing the political and market machinations accelerating the gentrification of New York, New Orleans, Detroit, and San Francisco. Beyond describing the epidemic that’s uprooting families and small businesses, Moskowitz details how to put a stop to it.
Peter Moskowitz is the Senior Business Development Specialist at Sierra H Broadcasting by day. At night he becomes one of the biggest foodie's you'll ever meet. Peter and Skyler go into what makes a great restaurant, how much better your experience can be when you let the chef be in charge, and where to get the best burger in Phoenix.
Peter joins us to discuss his new book, "How to Kill a City: Gentrification, Inequality, and the Fight for the Neighborhood." How the popular media description of gentrification focuses too much on the individual. Gentrification as a symptom of inequality. How and why Manhattan was turned from a manufacturing hub to a real estate and office space center. The racist and anti-socialist development of suburbs in postwar America. Redlining. The 1970s as an intentional low point for cities. The subsequent takeover of cities by developers. Follow Peter: @ptrmsk