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Ambition feels very complicated in 2025. On the one hand, hustle culture, 5am wake-ups and 'productivity bros' dominate our social media feeds, yet post-pandemic it seems like many have redefined what constitutes ‘success' through finding purpose, setting boundaries or simply ‘quiet quitting'. So what does ‘making it' even mean anymore? In this special bonus ep, we're unpacking everything from side hustles, the girlboss era and softgirl trends to money anxiety, career disillusionment and Emma Grede's controversial Diary of a CEO interview. Enjoy hunnies and let us know if there's a special topic you'd love for us to tackle!DM @straightuppod or email hello@straightuppodcast.co.uk and please do leave us a review on Apple Podcasts or a rating on Spotify – it really does help keep us going xRecs/ reviews:What We Lose When We're Priced Out of Our Hobbies, AtlanticSide hustles, Zoom waves and the Great Casualisation: how Covid shaped new ways to work, FTI burned out chasing money and hustle culture's standards. Now, I'm taking a 'no shame' approach to my business, Business InsiderEmma Grede on Diary of a CEOSome side hustle ideas to help you with all that money anxiety, The Cut The rise of the side hustle, GuardianMoral Ambition, Rutger Bregman If Books Could Kill podcast on Lean In Careless People by Sarah Wynn-WilliamsThe Psychopath Test by Jon Ronson Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
After the first King's Speech under a Labour government for 15 years, a host of policy experts joins Alain Tolhurst to look at what the first 100 days of a Keir Starmer administration will look like, after the new Prime Minister said his plan for government would "take the brakes off Britain" and put the country on the "path of national renewal". Joining the pod are Harry Quilter-Pinner, interim exec director at think tank IPPR, Ryan Wain, executive director for politics at the Tony Blair Institute, Laura McInerney, education journalist and co-founder of the app Teacher Tapp, Ben Zaranko, senior research economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, and Freddie Poser, executive director at housing campaign group PricedOut. Presented by Alain Tolhurst, produced by Nick Hilton for Podot
Over the past five years, the cost of homeownership has seen a significant increase, making it more challenging for many individuals and families to afford buying a home. Several factors have contributed to this trend:Rising Home Prices: One of the primary drivers of increased homeownership costs is the surge in home prices across many regions. Demand for housing has outpaced supply in numerous areas, leading to bidding wars and inflated prices.Interest Rates: While interest rates remained historically low for several years, they have started to rise in recent times. Higher interest rates mean increased mortgage payments, making homeownership more expensive.Property Taxes: Property taxes have also increased in many areas, driven by rising home values and budgetary needs of local governments. These taxes add to the overall cost of homeownership.Insurance Costs: The cost of homeowners insurance has been on the rise, particularly in regions prone to natural disasters such as hurricanes, wildfires, and floods. Insurance premiums can significantly add to the financial burden of owning a home.Maintenance and Repairs: As homes age, they require more maintenance and repairs. The cost of materials and labor for home improvement projects has increased over the past few years, making it more expensive for homeowners to keep their properties in good condition.Regulatory Costs: Compliance with building codes, zoning regulations, and other legal requirements can add to the cost of homeownership, especially for new construction or renovations.These cumulative increases in homeownership costs have made it increasingly difficult for many people to afford to buy a home. As a result, homeownership rates have stagnated or declined in some areas, particularly among younger generations who may struggle to save for a down payment and qualify for a mortgage in the face of these rising costs. Additionally, the disparity between income growth and housing costs has widened, exacerbating affordability challenges for low- and middle-income households. Overall, the combination of factors contributing to the rising cost of homeownership has made it a significant financial challenge for many individuals and families.In this episode, we explore the issue.(commercial at 9:15)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:The average US house now requires a salary of $106k-a-year - $50k more than in 2020.... how much is needed in YOUR hometown? | Daily Mail Online
Taking a stand. Honolulu's mayor weighs in after months of arguing among rail leadership. What he's now calling for. Maui recovery. Groundwater monitoring will soon take place at the temporary debris site in Olowalu. How this system aims to protect residents. Priced Out of Paradise. We continue our series on the future of living costs in Hawaii. Why there are signs.. it could soon be easier to stay here at home.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Even the music has priced people out. To advertise on our podcast, please reach out to sales@advertisecast.com or visit https://www.advertisecast.com/TheJeffWardShow
Even the music has priced people out. To advertise on our podcast, please reach out to sales@advertisecast.com or visit https://www.advertisecast.com/TheJeffWardShow
Anyone who has supported a loved one in prison knows that commissary prices for basic necessities and food to supplement the poor and scant provided meals inside are high. But how high? Our friends at The Appeal have recently published Locked In, Priced Out, a project that includes a first-of-its-kind database of prison commissary lists from 46 states. To discuss, we are joined by Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg, senior reporter for The Appeal, a worker-led nonprofit news organization. She writes on prison and jail conditions, and wrongful convictions. Read Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg's reporting: https://theappeal.org/locked-in-priced-out-how-much-prison-commissary-prices/ — Subscribe to this podcast: https://plinkhq.com/i/1637968343?to=page Get in touch: lawanddisorder@kpfa.org Follow us on socials @LawAndDis: https://twitter.com/LawAndDis; https://www.instagram.com/lawanddis/ The post The High Cost of Prison Commissary w/ Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg appeared first on KPFA.
Big cities all around America and the world are experiencing housing crises. But London and UK have a particularly acute crisis. How did it get so bad? Freddie Poser is the executive director of Priced Out, the leading pro-housing organization in the UK. He joins the show to talk about the history of the UK's housing crisis, how the UK planning process interferes with new housing, and the politics of building for both the Tories and Labour. To get bonus episodes support us at patreon.com/newliberalpodcast or https://cnliberalism.org/become-a-member Got questions? Send us a note at mailbag@cnliberalism.org. Follow us at: https://twitter.com/CNLiberalism https://cnliberalism.org/ Join a local chapter at https://cnliberalism.org/become-a-member/
In this re-run of Start Here's special series "Priced Out," Brad sets out to understand the invisible market forces that shape American downtowns. More and more American workers are being asked to come back to their offices. But is that because of team-building, or is it about real-estate prices? And, some cities worry that all these empty office buildings will thrust them into an economic “doom loop.” So, how are savvy real estate developers finding ways to take these vacant skyscrapers, and make them profitable assets again? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The cease-fire is off in Gaza, as missiles and rockets begin flying across the border. And, in our final installment of our series “Priced Out,” architects re-envision empty offices as apartments. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Whilst in London this week Sam Stafford recorded an end-of-month ramblechat with Ben Castell, Catriona Riddell, Gilian Macinnes and Nicola Gooch. The conversation takes in all manner of things, including the Levelling Up & Regeneration Act, news of which broke during the recording. They talk about the two part documentary 'Britain's Housing Crisis: What Went Wrong?' and touch too on nutrient neutrality. For the die hard 50 Shades fans there is some strategic planning and housing target chat in there too. A disclaimer though. This episode does feature some singing so consider yourselves warned about that. Some accompanying reading. New laws to speed up planning, build homes and level up https://www.gov.uk/government/news/new-laws-to-speed-up-planning-build-homes-and-level-up Francis Maude's review of Whitehall should lead to cross-party agreement on civil service reform https://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/comment/francis-maudes-review-whitehall Section 106 agreements and unspent developer contributions in England and Wales https://www.hbf.co.uk/news/section-106-report/ Priced Out's manifesto https://www.pricedout.org.uk/manifesto/ Lib Dems members rebuff leadership with vote to keep housebuilding targets https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/sep/25/lib-dems-members-rebuff-leadership-with-vote-to-keep-housebuilding-targets How housing targets are stopping us building enough homes https://longwall.substack.com/p/how-housing-targets-are-stopping Some accompanying viewing. Britain's Housing Crisis: What Went Wrong? https://samuelstafford.blogspot.com/2023/10/britains-housing-crisis-what-went-wrong.htm Some accompanying listening. Episode 90 – No hope? https://pod.co/50-shades-of-planning/no-hope Tell Laura I Love Her by Ray Peterson https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTjQgkHzbTk 50 Shades T-Shirts! If you have listened to Episode 45 of the 50 Shades of Planning you will have heard Clive Betts say that... 'In the Netherlands planning is seen as part of the solution. In the UK, too often, planning is seen as part of the problem'. Sam said in reply that that would look good on a t-shirt and it does. Further details can be found here: http://samuelstafford.blogspot.com/2021/07/50-shades-of-planning-t-shirts.html
This week, Mario and Twenty unveil the origin, confirm the meaning, and assess the value of It's The Thought That Counts. Watch as Mario and Twenty are joined by Expression Appraisla Team member Fave and The Neighborhood Publicist Valese Jones to dissect how true it is that the thought is what counts over the actual gift. Valese J, is also known as The Neighborhood Publicist, makes public relations, brand management, marketing and event planning simple for her clients. she is community focused and love working with cause driven brands run by Black and Brown entrepreneurs. You can find her at sincerelynicole.net Fred Noland's specialty is visual storytelling, whether in animation, comics, or illustration. Noland's comics have appeared in the New Yorker, Popula and the East Bay Express. His illustrations have appeared in LA Weekly, Nickelodeon Jr., Xbox Magazine, Revolver, Canoe & Kayak and more. He was the chief artist on the animated short series “Priced Out” which has been shown world-wide. His graphic novel biography about turn-of-the-century champion cyclist Major Taylor is scheduled for release from Drawn & Quarterly in 2023. Fred lives in Oakland, California, where he is an avid but unremarkable cyclist and a proud poppa. You can find him and his work at frednoland.com SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheUnderdog 0:00 It's The Thought That Counts by Illustrator Fred Noland 2:47 Intro 3:19 Roll Call: Taking it one day at a time 4:37 Fave and The Neighborhood Publicist 8:03 That's All I Have To Say About That 11:50 Confirm the Meaning: Macmillan Websters and Dictionary.com 16:30 Unveil The Origin - Henry Van Dyke Jr and "friends" 23:29 Unveil The Origin - The Science of It's The Thought That Counts: Research Says 31:58 Unveil The Origin - Shout out Fred Noland 37:48 Assess The Value 44:07 Dictionary of Misinformation: Crocodile Tears Follow Appraise The Phrase: Official Site: ➡️ https://appraisethephrase.com/ ATP YouTube: ➡️ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhOT41ItFBzpXanbzfT0oQ (Shorts and exclusive clips) Twitter: ➡️ https://twitter.com/TheATPShow Instagram: ➡️ https://www.instagram.com/theappraisethephraseshow TikTok: ➡️ https://www.tiktok.com/@appraisethephrase
Today on Boston Public Radio: We began the show by talking with listeners about the murder of Ana Walshe, and what our obsession with true crime says about us. Art Caplan talked about AI's increasing role in medicine. Caplan is the Drs. William F. and Virginia Connolly Mitty Professor and founding head of the Division of Medical Ethics at NYU School of Medicine in New York City. Liz Neisloss and Prof. Judith Gonyea discussed GBH's latest reporting from “Priced Out,” focusing on older women experiencing homelessness. Neisloss is a reporter for GBH. Gonyea is a professor and Associate Dean of Faculty Affairs at Boston University's School of Social Work and senior fellow in the Institute for Health Systems Innovation & Policy at Boston University. Dan Adams talked about the RMV's new stoned driving curriculum. Adams is the Boston Globe's cannabis reporter and author of “This Week In Weed,” the definitive marijuana newsletter. Corby Kummer shared his thoughts on the systems at work reinforcing the restaurant industry's low wages, and calls to break up the FDA. Kummer is executive director of the Food and Society policy program at the Aspen Institute, a senior editor at The Atlantic and a senior lecturer at the Tufts Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy. Sy Montgomery joined us for this month's edition of “The Afternoon Zoo,” focusing on new research indicating turtles communicate with their eggs before they hatch. Montgomery is a journalist, naturalist, author and a BPR contributor. Her latest book is “The Hawk's Way: Encounters with Fierce Beauty.” We ended the show by talking with listeners about Madonna's international music tour announcement, and double standards for older women in music.
Alissa Quart, the author of several books, including Squeezed: Why Our Families Can't Afford America, offers insights into her in-depth reporting on economic hardship. We discussed the people who now make up the “middle precariat,” those considered middle-class professionals living a precarious economic life, who are just barely making it, underemployed and/or saddled with debt. We discuss how generations are being squeezed, what inequality looks like and how to build a better future. To listen to Alissa's audio series Going for Broke, click here. For more related content in our "Priced Out" series on CNET Money, click here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What is the True Living Cost in America? How do the CPI - Consumer Price Index - and Unemployment Rate fall short of measuring our economic realities? Guest Gene Ludwig is a former Comptroller of the Currency and now chairman of the Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity. LISEP provides a more accurate picture of the economic reality for families through the creation of a cost of living metric called TLC, or TRUE LIVING COST, which factors in housing, food, transportation, healthcare, childcare, technology and other miscellaneous. For more related content in our "Priced Out" series on CNET Money, click here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today on Boston Public Radio: We opened the show by taking calls from our listeners to ask if they are returning to public transit following the grand opening of a new branch on the Green Line. The Medford branch connects Tufts University to downtown Somerville. Washington Post Columnist E.J. Dionne, Jr. discussed some of his latest columns, including his plea to conservative Christians to change their mind on same-sex marriage. He also discussed Senator Kyrsten Sinema's decision to switch her party registration. Stephanie Leydon and Frances Amador of City Life/Vida Urbana discussed the latest installment of "Priced Out,” a GBH News series covering the rising rental costs in Boston, and the tenants organizing for the right to stay housed. Food Policy writer Corby Kummer discusses the return of the restaurant Eastern Standard, free school lunches for children, an angry Olive Garden manager and "Pilk.” Revs. Irene Monroe and Emmett G. Price III talk about the end of Trevor Noah's tenure on "The Daily Show," the release of Brittney Griner, and fractions within the Methodist church over positions on LGBTQ rights. Massachusetts Institute of Technology economist Jon Gruber explained why pedestrian and auto deaths are on the rise in the U.S. despite falling rates globally, and the economic impacts of big cars. Then we ended the show taking our listeners' calls about what they plan on binging during the holiday season as the Golden Globe nominations are released.
Freddie Poser from PricedOut and particle accelerator physicist Luke Dycks join Ben and Mat to discuss the perennial political hot potato that is housing and the NIMBYism that keeps the fire burning. Also it's Ben's birthday and this is what he's chosen to do to celebrate. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today on Boston Public Radio: We began the show by talking with listeners about this year's ballot questions. Art Caplan discussed a recent New York Times piece exposing a number of doctors who admit that they “don't want patients with disabilities.” He also updated us on the latest COVID-19 headlines. Caplan is the Drs. William F. and Virginia Connolly Mitty Professor and founding head of the Division of Medical Ethics at NYU School of Medicine in New York City. Paul English talked about his new social app, “Deets,” which features restaurant reviews from your circle of friends and local influencers. English is a tech entrepreneur and co-founder of Kayak. He's got a new app called Deets, aimed to reinvent the online review. Liz Neisloss and Deborah Winieicz discussed the latest reporting from GBH's housing series “Priced Out,” focusing on mobile home ownership in Mass. Neisloss is a reporter for GBH News. Winiewicz is an advocate for mobile home communities across New England. Deirdre Barrett shared her latest research into how the COVID-19 pandemic has changed how we dream. Barrett is a dream researcher at Harvard University and the author of “Pandemic Dreams” and “The Committee of Sleep,” among other books on dreaming. Richard Blanco highlighted the poetry of writer Sandra Cisneros. Blanco is the 5th Presidential Inaugural Poet in U.S. history, and the first Poet Laureate of Miami-Dade County. His latest book is “How To Love A Country.” We ended the show by opening the phone lines, talking with listeners about the brutal world of online restaurant reviews.
Today on Boston Public Radio: We begin the show by asking listeners how they're feeling after the first weekday of the Orange Line shutdown. Anna Deavere Smith offers insights into her revival production of “Twilight: Los Angeles 1992” at A.R.T. Deavere Smith is an actress and playwright. She has starred in shows such as “Inventing Anna,” “Nurse Jackie” and “The West Wing.” Jim Aloisi and Stacy Thompson discusses the Orange Line shutdown, including the merits of some of the alternative options, the plausibility of a 30-day deadline, the possibilities for getting the MBTA out of crisis and the future of electric vehicles. Aloisi is the former Massachusetts transportation secretary, a member of the TransitMatters board and contributor to CommonWealth Magazine. Thompson is executive director of Livable Streets. Imari Paris Jeffries talks about his work at King Boston, and the organization's work to create a living memorial of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Corretta Scott King, “The Embrace,” which will be installed on the Boston Common this year. Jeffries is the executive director of King Boston. Stephanie Leydon and Ellen Shachter discusses the latest from the GBH News series “Priced Out,” including how corporations have disrupted the housing market and the balance between catering to buyers and investors. Leydon is GBH News' director of special projects, and Shachter is Somerville's director of housing stability. Dr. Virginia Sinnott-Stutzman gives some tips about how to keep pets happy in the heat, and answered questions from listeners calling in during another segment of “Ask the Vet.” Sinnott-Stutzman is a senior staff veterinarian at the MSPCA's Angell Animal Medical Center. We end the show by taking calls about whether overplanning vacations makes them less relaxing.
Today on Boston Public Radio: Jon Gruber discusses the latest on inflation, including the potential strategies of the Federal Reserve Bank and why the middle class is being left behind. He also explains the economic impacts of government failure and whether the US is heading in that direction. Gruber is the Ford Professor of Economics at MIT. His latest book is “Jump-Starting America How Breakthrough Science Can Revive Economic Growth and the American Dream.” Then, we ask listeners how they're dealing with rising inflation. Stephanie Leydon and Sarah Betancourt talk about their reporting on housing inflation and scarcity in Massachusetts from their new series “Priced Out,” and share about some of the stories they've looked into so far. Leydon is the Director of Special Projects at GBH. Betancourt is a reporter for GBH News. Then, we take listener calls responding to the housing crisis in Massachusetts. Jared Bowen shares the latest in the Boston arts scene, including Neil Diamond's 'Beautiful Noise' at the Colonial, Michael R. Jackson's “A Strange Loop,” which just premiered on Broadway, the immersive show “Beyond King Tut” at the SoWa Power Station and ProBlak Gibbs' new mural on the Greenway “Breathe Life Together.” Bowen is GBH's executive arts editor and the host of Open Studio. Matt Gertz talks about the link between right-wing media and today's politics, including Fox News' response to the Jan 6th hearings, its relationship to former President Donald Trump and criticism of Pete Buttigieg's recent interview. Gertz is a senior fellow for Media Matters for America, which reports on news from the conservative media landscape. Mitra Kaboli and Ben Riskin preview their new podcast, “Welcome to Provincetown.” They share their inspiration for creating the podcast, and reflect on the stories they tell in it and their own experiences in the town. Kaboli is an audio documentarian, sound designer & artist, who hosts and co-created Welcome to Provincetown. Riskin is the principal of Room Tone, an audio advisory providing strategy consulting, business development, and management services to enterprise and independent podcasters, he co-created Welcome to Provincetown. We end the show by asking listeners what makes summer in New England great.
Nathan Eckersley is diving deep into the biggest political news and current affairs impacting young people. This week he wants your opinions on the future of Boris Johnson's premiership and he is joined by Freddie Poser from the campaign Priced Out to talk about the UK's housing crisis and Boris Johnson's housing speech. On The Nathan Eckersley Podcast, Nathan Eckersley discusses the biggest political news and current affairs and is joined by thought leaders from across the political spectrum for special interviews. The podcast is recorded live from Manchester, UK every Sunday afternoon - to get involved with the show live and have your opinions read out on the podcast, listen to the live broadcast on www.wizardradio.co.uk/listen from 3pm-4pm (UK) every Sunday. DISCLAIMER: Any facts, statistics and news stories mentioned in this episode are true and relevant as of the time it was recorded. All opinions stated on this podcast are representative only of the people they are credited to and are not a representation of any sponsors, advertisers or partners involved in The Nathan Eckersley Podcast, including W!ZARD Studios and Nathan Eckersley. Please do not try to send in a message or opinion whilst listening to this podcast as your message won't be read but you might still be charged. For our Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions, please visit: www.wizardradio.co.uk Spotted a mistake on this podcast? Let us know and we'll try to fix it. Message us using the Contact Form on: www.wizardradio.co.uk/about Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nathan Eckersley is joined by Freddie Poser from the campaign Priced Out to talk about the UK's housing crisis and Boris Johnson's housing speech. Connect with Freddie Poser on Twitter: https://twitter.com/freddie_poser Connect with Priced Out UK on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PricedOutUK DISCLAIMER: Any facts, statistics and news stories mentioned in this episode are true and relevant as of the time it was recorded. All opinions stated on this podcast are representative only of the people they are credited to and are not a representation of any sponsors, advertisers or partners involved in The Nathan Eckersley Podcast, including W!ZARD Studios and Nathan Eckersley. Please do not try to send in a message or opinion whilst listening to this podcast as your message won't be read but you might still be charged. For our Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions, please visit: www.wizardradio.co.uk Spotted a mistake on this podcast? Let us know and we'll try to fix it. Message us using the Contact Form on: www.wizardradio.co.uk/about Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
With everything costing consumers more, it would stand to reason that rent prices would also be on that list. However, the way that the prices for an apartment have skyrocketed in Manhattan (and elsewhere around the country) has reached staggering heights. In Manhattan, you cannot find an apartment for less than 4k. Even then, you are paying way more for the apartment than what it's worth most times. The question is, how long is this sustainable? (commercial at 9:33)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://nypost.com/2022/06/09/median-rent-price-in-manhattan-reaches-4000-for-first-time/
CRYPTO: We are men, so we talk about crypto, especially with people being suicidal over losing everything in LUNA.Karen Vs. Backyard Standup: A "Karen" was unhinged as her shitty neighbors decided to have a stand up comedy show in their backyard.Gas Station Beating: We analyze and breakdown an amazing video of a dude getting beat up at the gas station with a special surprise ending. Also we see a brick to the head, play Stitches and watch Trump dance to it.MESSENGER OF GOD!, DOOMED!, FRIDAY THE 13TH!, THE MAN BEHIND THE MASK!, ALICE COOPER!, I'M GAY!, MATTHEW LIBTARD JIM!, SCREAM!, SYDNEY!, SLC PUNK!, MATTHEW LILLARD!, HOUSE!, ETHAN EMBRY!, CRYPTO!, STOCKS!, FALLING!, COIN!, LUNA!, TERRA!, UST!, STABLE COIN!, REDDIT!, SUICIDE HOTLINE!, LOSE EVERYTHING!, GOTTA ADMIT!, NFTS!, BORED APE YACHT CLUB!, FIRST TWEET!, JACK!, COLLECTIBLES!, TOPP'S!, COLLECTIBLE CARDS!, COMIC BOOKS!, STAR WARS!, VBUCKS!, FORTNITE!, SCAN OF A FART!, LEDGER!, PLATFORM!, ART!, MONEY LAUNDERING!, TAX GUY!, PRINTS!, DO KWON!, SOROS!, BLACKROCK!, CITADEL!, CONSPIRACY!, SELL OFF!, PEG!, LEVERAGE!, MORTGAGE!, DOLLAR STORE!, LOFT BOYS RISE AGAIN!, RENT!, LANDLORD!, KEVIN!, PRICED OUT!, RAISED RENT!, RICH MURPH!, CALIFORNIA!, WALGREENS!, CVS!, STEALING ALCOHOL!, WORST GUY!, FILMING!, KAREN!, BACKYARD STAND UP COMEDY!, DROP DEAD OF A HEART ATTACK!, SLAP!, MICROPHONE!, PA!, VENUE!, ZOOMERS!, SIDE FADE!, POOFY HAIR!, SKANKFEST!, TOO MANY TICKETS!, MATT AND SHANE!, LOUIS CK!, THE PRESIDENTS!, NIXON!, OPPS!, BEAT UP!, GAS STATION!, PUNCHED!, KICKED!, KNOCKED OUT!, SURPRISE ENDING!, FRIEND!, STILL FALLING!, PALETTE CLEANSER!, TRASH BARREL!, HIT BY CAR!, FLYING!, JUMPS THE CURB!, FALL ASLEEP!, BRICK ATTACK!, NBA JAM!, BOOM SHAKALAKA!, HE'S ON FIRE!, STITCHES!, BRICK IN YO FACE!, REMIX!, TRUMP DANCING!, MONTAGE!, MEXICO!You can find the videos from this episode at our Discord RIGHT HERE!
Who are the people and the organisations that have had the most influence over planning during the past couple of years? One could make a case for Jack Airey and Policy Exchange. Airey, who joined Localis having graduated in geography, became Head of Housing at Policy Exchange before being appointed Downing Street's special adviser on housing and planning. In the spirit of Dominic Cummings' shake-up of government apparatus, the attraction of Airey could have been his Policy Exchange paper called ‘Rethinking the Planning System for the 21st Century', some of which found it's way into the albeit now seemingly-jettisoned ‘Planning for the Future' White Paper. One could also make a case for Nicholas Boys-Smith and Create Streets. Boys-Smith, a history graduate, desk officer in the Conservative Research Department and banker, founded Create Streets in 2013; was a co-chair of the Build Better, Build Beautiful Commission; and was appointed by the previous Secretary of State as chair of an ‘Office for Place'. Conspicuously neither are planners... Could a case be made for present planning policy being influenced by Think Tanks to a degree not seen since the simplified planning promoted by right-leaning Think Tanks like the Centre for Policy Studies in the 1980s? Either way, it is a reminder of the influence of Think Tanks on the planning policy agenda, which makes it a topic worthy of conversation on a town planning-based podcast. Why and how do Think Tanks do what they do? Where do policy ideas come from? And how do bright ideas get turned into actual policy? Sam Stafford puts these questions to Samuel Hughes (@SCP_Hughes), Research Fellow at the University of Oxford and Senior Follow at Policy Exchange; Anya Martin (@AnyaMartin8), Director at PricedOut and a researcher in the social housing sector; and Matthew Lesh (@matthewlesh), Head of Public Policy at the IEA. Some accompanying reading. 'Rethinking the Planning System for the 21st Century' by Jack Airey https://policyexchange.org.uk/publication/rethinking-the-planning-system-for-the-21st-century/ ‘Beware of ‘Policy Intern Brain' – the source of so many bad ideas' by Anya Martin https://capx.co/beware-of-policy-intern-brain-the-source-of-so-many-bad-ideas/ ‘Build me up, level up: popular homebuilding while boosting local communities' by Matthew Lesh https://www.adamsmith.org/research/build-me-up-level-up ‘Strong Suburbs' by Samuel Hughes and Ben Southwood https://policyexchange.org.uk/publication/strong-suburbs/ ‘Living Tradition' by Samuel Hughes https://www.createstreets.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/Living-Tradition.pdf ‘Learning from History' by Ben Southwood https://www.createstreets.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Tottenham-Paper-1.9.pdf ‘The Green Noose: An analysis of Green Belts and proposals for reform' by Tom Papworth https://www.adamsmith.org/news/press-release-free-up-3-7-percent-of-londons-green-belt-to-build-one-million-new-homes-says-new-report ‘A place in the sun' by Anya Martin https://www.worksinprogress.co/issue/a-place-in-the-sun/ ‘Housing Politics in the United Kingdom' by Brian Lund https://policy.bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/housing-politics-in-the-united-kingdom Some accompanying listening. Wah Wah (Think Tank) by Happy Mondays https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FyERDM7cbSo Some accompanying viewing. How policy is formulated in Westminster (Part 2 - Please see episode 55 for Part 1) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZXpeH28MpM 50 Shades T-Shirts! If you have listened to Episode 45 of the 50 Shades of Planning Podcast you will have heard Clive Betts say that... 'In the Netherlands planning is seen as part of the solution. In the UK, too often, planning is seen as part of the problem'. Sam said in reply that that would look good on a t-shirt and it does. Further details can be found here: http://samuelstafford.blogspot.com/2021/07/50-shades-of-planning-t-shirts.html
Come celebrate the holiday AND nursing with Jamie and Sarah as they discuss bringing out the best in nurses!
On #PropertyMatters iPropertyRadio.com this week host Carol Tallon speaks to Anya Martin, housing advocate with PricedOut UK and London YIMBY about affordable housing, flawed policymaking, NIMBY-ism, the dangers of polarising different solution providers and the potential power of communities. Also, in the interview repeated references are made to research undertaken by Anya into international housing policies that appear to be having a positive effect, particularly in Australia's New South Wales. You can read Anya's article in full here: https://worksinprogress.co/issue/a-place-in-the-sun/ Watch back: https://youtu.be/vmo5JbjKC0g
Chapter 1: “Priced Out” is a new three part series on housing affordability challenges for young people. Guest: Anne Gaviola, Senior Digital Broadcast Journalist, Global News. Chapter 2: Would you be comfortable getting on a Cruise? Guest: Raji Sohal, CKNW Contributor Chapter 3: With restaurants set to return to indoor dining, what are restaurants doing to be ready for opening day? Guest: Ian Tostenson, President, BC Restaurant and Food Association. Chapter 4: Cruise ships bound for Alaska this summer might soon be bypassing B.C., that is until federal travel restrictions ease up in Canada. The U.S. Senate passed a bill on May 13, The Alaska Tourism Recovery Act, to allow ships to travel directly between the State of Washington and Alaska. Guest: Walt Judas, CEO of Tourism Industry Association of BC Chapter 5: Vancouver police say they are investigating a spike in thefts from construction sites on the city’s west side. At least seven construction sites have been targeted this year, police said. In one case, thieves got away with more than $10,000 in plywood Guest: Terry Sunderland, UBC Professor in the Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences. Chapter 6: A joint campaign is underway with the BC SPCA, the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs, infectious disease specialists, the Fur-Bearers, and Humane Society International/Canada regarding the government’s failure to take action on the issue of COVID transmission on fur farms in B.C. Guest: BC SPCA Chief Scientific Officer. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Insider podcast host Ryan Pfeil talks to Vickie Aldous about her recent story "Priced Out," which focuses on manufactured home tenants displaced by the Almeda fire and the significantly higher costs for new units they are faced with.
Regional news and weather then Keith Porter interviews Teresa Dietrich about Priced Out! Women, Children and Housing, a town hall happening on Thursday, March 11th from 2 to 3:30 p.m.
With the housing market booming, how is there a housing crisis at the bottom end of the property ladder? COVID-19 has had a dramatic effect on the housing market, despite there being a recession, house prices have been going up and more properties have been changing hands than anyone could ever have imagined. But for people looking to get their first home, things have been harder than ever. To explain why housing market analyst, Neal Hudson, talks through the change in behaviour; Anya Martin, head of policy at PricedOut, and social mobility commissioner Saeed Archer show the effects that this will have on society. Jake from Southampton also tells his story about living in the midst of the cladding crisis. In response to the podcast, a spokesperson from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said:"Our priority is to make more homes safer, faster - and that's why we're providing £1.6 billion to speed up the removal of unsafe cladding, targeted where it is needed most. We're already seeing progress - almost 80% of buildings with unsafe ACM cladding have completed or are in the process of remediation, rising to 97% in the social housing sector. We're developing a longer-term financial solution to help protect leaseholders from unaffordable remediation costs. Building owners should meet remediation costs without passing them on to leaseholders wherever possible.The Government is helping a new generation to take their first step on the housing ladder with schemes including Help to Buy and Right to Buy helping almost 649,000 people to purchase a home since 2010.We're investing £11.5 billion in our new Affordable Homes Programme - the biggest investment in a decade - to deliver up to 180,000 new affordable homes across the country.Our new Shared Ownership scheme is also making it easier to buy a home, while our First Homes scheme will offer a 30% discount on the price of a new home with councils able to prioritise these homes for key workers including nurses and teachers."Credits:Daily podcast team:Podcast producer - Annie JoycePodcast producer - Nicola EyersPodcast producer - Emma WoodhouseInterviews producers - Oli FosterArchive - Simon WindsorArchive - Rob FellowesMusic - Steven Wheeler
Discover common practices that persist in the hospital wards despite no proven benefit! We review how potassium replacement goals should not drive you bananas, extra oxygen should not give you comfort, and how you should maybe calm down with antipsychotics for delirium. Join returning guests: high-value care specialist Dr. Lenny Feldman (@DocLennyF, Johns Hopkins) and tweetorialist Dr. Tony Breu (@tony_breu, Harvard) as they walk us through round 3 of “Things We Do for No ReasonTM. SHM members can claim CME-MOC credit at https://www.shmlearningportal.org/curbsiders (CME goes live at 0900 ET on the episode’s release date). Note: The planners and faculty for this activity have no relevant relationships or conflicts to disclose. Show Notes | Subscribe | Spotify | Swag! | Top Picks | Mailing List | thecurbsiders@gmail.com Credits Written and Produced by: Burton H. Shen MD, Justin Berk, MD MPH MBA Infographic: Cover Art: Hosts: Justin Berk MD MPH MBA; Stuart Brigham MD; Matthew Watto MD, FACP; Paul Williams MD, FaCP Editor: Matthew Watto MD, FACP (written materials); Clair Morgan of Nodderly.com (audio) Guest: Lenny Feldman MD, Tony Breu MD Sponsors The Society of Hospital Medicine Hospital Medicine 2020 (HM20) is the Society of Hospital Medicine’s Annual Conference April 15th through the 18th in sunny San Diego. Don’t miss the largest hospital medicine meeting. Register now at https://shmannualconference.org/ and use the code CURBSIDERS to receive a $50 discount. Primary Care Internal Medicine of Ithaca Join a well established practice in beautiful upstate New York near the finger lakes and wine country! You'll have flexible hours and the ability to take the time you need with patients! Contact Dr. Ann Costello arcostello@gmail.com to find out more about this incredible opportunity to join the team at Primary Care Internal Medicine of Ithaca https://www.primarycareinternalmedicineofithaca.com/. Time Stamps 00:00 Sponsors -SHM’s Annual Conference, HM20 (use code CURBSIDERS) and Primary Care Internal Medicine of Ithaca (email: arcostello@gmail.com) 00:38 Intro, disclaimer, guest bio 02:10 Guest one-liners 03:35 Picks of the Week*: Knives Out (film), Priced Out by Uwe E. Reinhardt; Crisis in the Red Zone by Richard Preston; CardioNerds podcast; Outbreak (film); Teaching Physiology on the Fly (faculty development course) 07:55 Sponsors -SHM’s Annual Conference, HM20 (use code CURBSIDERS) and Primary Care Internal Medicine of Ithaca (email: arcostello@gmail.com) 09:30 Case of Eric Lokay; Repleting potassium. Is it necessary to “buff the lytes” 20:30 Pathophysiology of hypokalemia; Final recommendations on potassium repletion 24:30 Supplemental oxygen; pO2 vs total oxygen content; Oxygen, vasoconstriction and potential harms 30:33 Evidence of harm from supplemental O2 35:00 Tony’s recommendations for use of supplemental O2 41:55 Case of delirium; Definition and diagnosis 46:20 Can we prevent delirium? Melatonin and ramelteon 50:33 Should we use antipsychotics? Benzodiazepines?; What should we do instead? 58:25 Take home points, Outro and a terrible pun *The Curbsiders participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising commissions by linking to Amazon. Simply put, if you click on our Amazon.com links and buy something we earn a (very) small commission, yet you don’t pay any extra. Disclosures Dr. Feldman and Dr. Breu report no relevant financial disclosures. The Curbsiders report no relevant financial disclosures. Citation Feldman L, Breu T, Shen BH, Berk JL, Williams PN, Brigham SK, Watto MF. “#195 TWDFNRTM 3: Potassium, Oxygen, and antipsychotics”. The Curbsiders Internal Medicine Podcast. https://thecurbsiders.com/episode-list. February 17, 2020.
Priced Out is a NextGen Marin Podcast In this episode, Kevin Calderon and Dylan Panahy from NextGen Marin talk to Omar Carrera, CEO of the Canal Alliance, about some of the largest issues he sees in the East San Rafael, especially in relation to housing, transportation and technology. The Canal Alliance is a nonprofit organization that aims to break the generational cycle of poverty for Latino immigrants and their families by lifting barriers to their success. More information can be found on their website at: canalalliance.org Social Media: https://www.facebook.com/CanalAlliance.SanRafael/ https://twitter.com/canalalliance https://www.instagram.com/canalalliance/ https://www.youtube.com/user/canalalliance https://www.linkedin.com/company/canal-alliance/ Music: "Both of Us" by Idealism idealismus.co/ Permissions granted courtesy of Lassi "idealism" Kotamaki.
Well, we are back sooner than expected. That's because Nikki Williams, the focus of our documentary Priced Out (2017) and our first film NorthEast Passage (2002) has returned to Portland. If you saw Priced Out the documentary, you know that Nikki moved to Dallas, Texas (spoiler alert) at the end of the film is a quest to find a "healthy black community." What she found there is the discussion we had with her in EP 15? What has changed since then. She is joined, this time, by her daughter Bri, also featured in both films. Get ready for a real treat as Nikki has lost none of her no-nonsense, fool-slapping straight talk about race, class, Red State racism and trifling Portlanders. More from Priced Out: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Cutting Through the Matrix with Alan Watt Podcast (.xml Format)
--{ "Electro-Elect: Culture and Morality, Proffered with Profanity, From Egos Sour, Craving Power, Utopic Insanity." © Alan Watt }-- Money Controls the World - Cecil Rhodes, Round Tables, Royal Institute for International Affairs, Council on Foreign Relations, Trilateral Commission - Dividing the World into Three Regions - Hegelian Dialectic to Push the Agenda Through - Bloodless Revolutions, Cultural, Sexual; Planned Long Ago - You wouldn't Recognize the World in Thirty Years - Rudyard Kipling - The New Managerial Class of the System, Made into Multi-Millionaires, Arrogant and Cocky, Told They Rule the World through Algorithms - H.G. Wells; Part of a Class of People Who Saw the World as a Place to Be Shaped and Ruled - The People are Cannon Fodder for those Who Own an Empire - Eliminating any Voice that is Off the Path of the Authorized Truth, Until You're Left with Only Counterintelligence - WWII BBC Radio Propaganda about Imminent Threat from Germany - Hitler, Aim Propaganda at Women who Demand to Be Kept Safe; Government then Overrules the Husband; Aim it at the Woman, the Child Will Follow the Woman and the Man Must Therefore Follow the Child - Bertrand Russell, Brass Bands and Emotions - Conspiracy Theorists the New Danger to the Planet - 2008 Financial Crash; Money Heaven - Social and Cultural Attachments to International Loans - Hillary Clinton - Agenda for the 21st Century, The Millennium Project, Sustainability, Population Control - Agenda 21, No Private Ownership of Property - Canada, Priced Out of the Housing Market - Public-Private Partnerships, International Landlords, Real Estate Agents - Marrying Affordability to Sustainability, Mixed Income Housing Outside Minneapolis - Brave New World - NAFTA - Dissolving of National Borders - Arrogant Strutters, Those Who Think They're Near the Top of this System - Chamath Palihapitiya, Venture Capitalist, Former VP at Facebook - Palihapitiya Urges Others to Use Their Money to Create a Good, Proper Culture for the People with Algorithms and Behavioural Modification Techniques - Former Facebook VP says Social Media is Destroying Society with ‘Dopamine-Driven Feedback Loops' - Facebook Could Soon be Snooping on Your Encrypted WhatsApp Messages Under Plans to Moderate Content on the Platform - Former Google Engineer Says Google Will Try to Prevent Trump's Reelection - Monsanto's “Rain of Death” on Canada's Forests - First Human-Monkey Chimera Raises Concern among Scientists - Jeffrey Epstein - Intelligence Operations - Censorship Meeting, was Public Ready to See Intergenerational Sex - Contamination, a Term from the Communist Era for Contact with another Culture - American Indian Ghost Dance - Boris Johnson - Priti Patel, Secret Meetings with Israel, Erosion of Public Trust - Remember to Donate and Order Books at www.cuttingthroughthematrix.com. *Title and Dialogue Copyrighted Alan Watt - Aug. 4, 2019 (Exempting Music and Literary Quotes)
Portland, Ore. and Long Beach Calif, are similar and at the same time very different. Portland is known as the "whitest city in America" while Long Beach has long been the country’s most diverse. The two mid-sized, West Coast cities have historically had no rent control and no restrictions on landlord evictions. When the housing boom hit in 2015, both cities saw waves of mass eviction as investment poured in. Since then, Portland and Oregon have led the nation in grassroots housing reforms. Can Long Beach follow suit? We talk with advocates, activists, and locals in this short audio documentary, the third part in our three-part series on Long Beach. Our other two Long Beach showsEP 34: The Tough Latina and the Racist Landlord: Tales from Long Beach, Calif. https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/episodes/EP-34-The-Tough-Latina-and-the-Racist-Landlord-Tales-from-Long-Beach--Calif--occasional-series-e3rekq EP 16: The Battle for Rent Control in Long Beach, Calif. https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/episodes/EP-16-The-Battle-for-Rent-Control-in-Long-Beach--Calif-e2b17q Also referenced EP 14. Detroit: The fall of Capitalism, Democracy, and The Return of the Kings. https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/episodes/EP-14--Detroit-The-fall-of-Capitalism--Democracy--and-The-Return-of-the-Kings-e2b17b More from Priced Out: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Seventeen years ago, Cornelius Swart released a documentary depicting the early stages of gentrification in the Albina community. Long-time residents of the community Bri Williams and her mother Nikki Williams were subjects in the film. Swart’s documentary “Priced Out” revisits Bri Williams and the community to see how gentrification has grown and evolved. “Priced Out” is showing Tuesday night on OPB TV. Today we listen back to a conversation with Williams and Swart.
Listen in to our first ever Priced Out Podcast debate! Meg Hanson is a data activist and historic preservation advocate. Michael Andersen is a Senior Researcher at Sightlines Institute. We've interviewed both of these excellent folks on the show in the past (see below). Today's edition is a grudge match debate about a City of Portland and statewide proposal to end single family housing as we know it. These two proposals are controversial. These types of homes and these types of neighborhoods have been the foundation of the American Dream for generations. Portland's Residential Infill Strategy would eliminate the single-family housing zone in the vast majority of the city, allowing for duplexes, threeplexs, and quads as the lowest available zone. House Bill 2001 would roll out a ban on single family zoning across the entire state. Would such moves help to provide more housing and lower costs? Would outlawing single-family zones wind up displacing even more vulnerable people and bulldozing historic and popular neighborhoods? Listen in Listen to Meg’s Interview about Fighting Gentrification with Historic Preservation https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/episodes/EP-23-Fighting-Gentrification--with-Historic-Preservation-e2jfmj Listen to Michael’s Interview about Zoning and Portland’s Residential Infill Strategy https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/episodes/EP-10-What-is-Zoning--And-the-Residential-Infill-Strategy-e2b15i NY Times article on the move to outlaw single family zoning. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/06/18/upshot/cities-across-america-question-single-family-zoning.html?fbclid=IwAR2pvrg5s34z9gdDoAWkZeUmR69Rrdx1INtGkVRBPelvpzzp7h4vAePkIo8 More from Priced Out: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
This is a short episode, as we gear up for the release of an audio documentary on Long Beach, California. Cornelius talks about the upcoming Oregon Public Broadcasting premiere of Priced Out the documentary, some local screenings and throws shade on the OTHER "Priced Out." Andru talks about his son's graduation. And no one talks about the X-Men. OPB Broadcast [Portland Channel 10} Premiere of Priced Out, July 2nd, 9 pm OPB rebroadcast, July 4, 2 am More from Priced Out: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
This episode is part of a new occasional series we're calling Getting to Know You. Andru and Cornelius talk about the issues from their own personal experience. Andru was a homeless outreach worker in Tulsa for many years and Cornelius is from a part of NJ that has recently been lauded for "ending homelessness" or achieving what is called "functional zero." The two talk about what functional zero means, the flaws with counting unhoused populations and their philosophy on interacting with homeless neighbors. More from Priced Out: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
This episode is a panel discussion for the Society of Applied Anthropology with podcast co-host Cornelius Swart and activist, and entrepreneur Stephen Green. Stephen was featured in Priced Out, the documentary, and was the interviewed on a previous podcast [EP: 32] about black business and the black middle class’s role in gentrification. At the panel, he talked about reframing the discussion on gentrification in Portland. Stephen stated that the black community is growing in metro Portland, just not in the old black neighborhood. With that growth comes challenges but also opportunities. More from Priced Out: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Cynthia Macias grew up in the black and Latino neighborhoods of Long Beach, California. It was an idyllic "hood" growing up. But as an adult, she led a harrowing and heartbreaking life filled with domestic violence and housing discrimination. But Cynthia became a fighter and a housing activist instead of a victim. By the time she was confronted with a stunning race-based eviction, Cynthia was prepared to become a racist landlord's worst nightmare. Join us for a very personal edition of the Priced Out Podcast, as we listen to the pain, the struggles and the victories of one Long Beach resident who has finally had enough. More on Housing Long Beach http://www.housinglb.org/ More from Priced Out: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
We are mid-season here at Priced Out and your hosts Andru and Cornelius what to hear what city you think we should be covering. Andru and Cornelius talk about their recent travels and the gentrification that they've seen in a bunch of places including Cartagena, Colombia, Kansas City, Missouri, and Vancouver, British Colombia. Listen in and see what they saw happening in those places. In Colombia, where Cornelius' mother was born, Cartagena has transformed from a third-world city into a resort town with almost no full-time domestic residents, virtually overnight. In Kansas City, Andru returned to his childhood stomping ground and found Brad Pitt, of all people, had taken up shop and was fighting gentrification. In British Colombia, Cornelius found the slums of Gastown and Chinatown full of homelessness, drug addiction, boarded-up buildings, and extremely expensive rent! Those are just a few stories a future Priced Out Podcast could pursue. Tell us which one you like best. Or, if there's a city you think we should cover (your city?) let us know. Get ahold of us at pricedoutmovie@gmail.com or through any of our social networks. More about Priced Out here: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Stephen Green is featured in our documentary Priced Out, but not nearly enough. Born in a suburb of Portland, Stephen moved into the heart of Oregon's black community when he started a family. An economist, venture capitalist and activist, Stephen has worked in both government and in the private sector. He oversaw property acquisition for the City of Portland during some of the most volatile years of gentrification in the black community. He is also on a committee that distributes funds from Portland's largest affordable housing bond. He serves on the board of the city's premiere black community organization (Self Enhancement Inc.). And he helped create the nation's first nonprofit brewpub. The black community is far more broadly defined than simply a neighborhood for Stephen. He also sees wealth creation, rather than social justice, as the most vital challenge in charting an equitable future for Portland and the nation's African American community. Listen in as Stephen talks about the emerging role that the black middle class will come to play in urban America and all the things that Priced Out the documentary failed to cover. Stephen Green's Ted Talk: https://youtu.be/abKBA9RvQ0I More about Priced Out here: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Cluj-Napoca is a historic city of about 300,000 residents in northeast Romania. The city is considered the unofficial capital of Transylvania and it contains the country’s largest free university. Since the fall of communism in the 1990s, Romania's housing stock has been re-privatized. That's created the first generation of renters in 50 years while at the same time little rent regulation and low-cost housing have been put in place. Recently, a new mayor has pushed free-market reforms, tax breaks and zoning changes in a bid to make Cluj-Napoca into the hipster, tech-hub of Romania. The result has been skyrocketing rents and displacement of the region’s students, renters, and Roma (gypsy) population. Sound familiar? It’s gentrification with a post-communist twist. Cornelius speaks with tenant organizers Vlad Muresan of the Cluj Tenants Union for an amazing look at how global capital puts the pinch on working people around the world. If you have ideas that can help people in Cluj, please reach out to Muresan via the groups Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/chiriasicluj/ More about Priced Out here: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Join us for a live recording of a panel discussion about the threat by a mass transit project poses to the working class, and minority residents of Tigard, Oregon. Tigard is a suburb immediately to the southwest of Portland. There is a large streetcar project (known as light rail) planned for the area. As viewers of Priced Out (the documentary) know, that fifteen years ago local government built a light rail system that caused massive displacement of black and other residents in North Portland. The City of Portland anticipated that the project would create gentrification and promised to build 2,000 units of affordable housing to offset displacement. But 15 years later the city had only produced about 500 units. Priced Out producer Cornelius Swart, the Regional Arts and Culture Council, Unite Oregon, the Fair Housing Council of Oregon and City of Tigard teamed up to sponsor a screening and discussion aimed at engaging the residents of Tigard, and helping them avoid the mistakes of the past. Find us at: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
After a five-year struggle, [documented in part in Priced Out (the documentary)] housing activists are getting the impossible. The Oregon Legislature is poised to be the first in the nation to impose rent control on an entire state. Coming on the heels of a housing crisis that scorched Portland and other cities with double-digit rent increases, many see rent control as a massive win for stabilizing working-class renters. Or is it? Housing activist and founder of Portland Tenants United, Margot Black, talks to us about what is in the bill and why she thinks it doesn’t go far enough. She also says what voters can do to help. Margot's recommended link to the Oregon Housing Alliance HERE. If you are fancy and have a WSJ subscription (we don't) you can read about Oregon rent control and why it's all Margot's fault HERE. Find us at: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Housing was the main issue on the agenda for the latest episode of The Floor Is Yours; joining Femi to discuss the issue was writer Emma Burnell, Labour's housing spokesman in the London Assembly Tom Copley, and Rueben Young, director of PricedOut. Also joining the show was Labour activist George Aylett, who was on the phone from Hull to discuss the level of political debate on Twitter as well as housing.
Happy Holidays from the #PricedOut #podcast. We're wrapping up Season 1 and our first year as a podcast. It's been awesome and thank you for your support. In this conversation between Andru and Cornelius, Andru unwraps a present! Cornelius begs. Andru talks about black comic books. And we promise we will look/sound less janky next year. We also preview our other major podcast goals for 2019. Last but not least, Cornelius goes off on Qualified Opportunity Zones. Next year, Trump will turn the 900 lb gorilla of gentrification into Godzilla, as the Federal Government gets into the gentrification game. That said, some black leaders are optimistic. Listen and find out more. PS- please subscribe to our YouTube channel. Two more subscribers and we can get a custom URL! Or better yet, support the podcast on Anchor.Fm. (see link below) https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast https://www.pricedoutmovie.com https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
NLA Podcast Episode 3 PricedOut by NLA
We talk with Michelle Lewis about the emotional and psychological impacts of gentrification and displacement known as Root Shock. Lewis is a mental health counselor who works specifically with the African American community in Portland, Ore. She was featured in our documentary Priced Out. In the film, she talked about losing her home in the subprime mortgage crisis and the challenges of living in a far-flung neighborhood that was often hostile to black residents. Lewis updates us on her recent experiences with gentrification and talks about how her black clients must often choose their battles carefully when they feel confronted by a racist exchange. The discussion gets personal as our hosts weigh in on their own experiences and thoughts. Find Us At www.pricedoutmovie.com/ www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX twitter.com/pricedoutusa www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Bank of England Governor is reported to be preparing for a 30% fall in house prices in the event of a 'hard Brexit'. I'm joined by Ruben from PricedOut to discuss what he really said and what the implications might be IF prices were to crash.
We get into the weeds of neighborhood history once again with Fred Stewart, Portland's most controversial black activist. He grew up in Northeast Portland and has been a realtor in the neighborhood since the drug war days. In this the second part of two interviews, Fred talks about when he got into real estate during the depths of the 1980s Drug War, what it took to sell a house in the "ghetto", tax revolts, how he got around redlining and why he bought a strip club from a white man who called him " Fred Shit." In Part 1 of this interview, Fred covers redlining, urban renewal and the heyday of Portland's black neighborhoods. Fred has a deep history with Northeast Portland and is featured in Priced Out the movie. This is part of the "Cut Out" where we explore more from the people and POVs that were left out of the documentary Priced Out. Part 1 of Fred Stewart https://anchor.fm/dashboard/episode/e2b183 Find us at: www.pricedoutmovie.com/ www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX twitter.com/pricedoutusa www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
On this episode of Priced Out: The Podcast Andru flies solo as he shares clips from the SEI Q&A. Self Enhancement Inc screened Priced Out: The Documentary back in February as part of their film series. We know Priced Out: The Documentary can bring up a lot of raw emotions and the Q&A session allows a safe place for people to process those emotions. Listen in on this episode but be sure to catch the next screening of Priced Out and join in on the conversation too. SEI https://www.selfenhancement.org/ Priced Out: The Documentary https://www.pricedoutmovie.com/ https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAc9cZ46uY8p-T5Mbv0T1QA/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
This edition of the Priced Out we have an hour-long show packed with conversations about housing and the upcoming election in Oregon. We talk with Rachel Monahan, housing and City Hall Reporter for the Willamette Week. We talk about Portland's housing relocation fee, landlords in the legislature and the primary battle of Democrat Rod Monroe. Part 2 of our conversation with Alissa Keny-Guyer, talking about Rod Monroe and Republican Julie Parrish. (NOTE: Julie Parrish's office did not respond to a request for an interview). Lastly, we talk with Portland City Hall candidate Andrea Valderrama about her views and solutions to the city's housing crisis. Valderama is currently senior policy advisor for Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler and sits on the David Douglas School District board. https://www.facebook.com/Valderrama4Pdx/ More about the other candidates running for Position 3 on Portland City Council. https://www.pricedoutmovie.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
This week on the Priced Out Podcast we discuss how filmmakers portray the character of a gentrifying community. The discussion was at NW Documentary in Portland, Oregon, after the screening of a film about gentrification in Detroit entitled Last Days of Chinatown. https://www.facebook.com/events/58403... The discussion is with Last Days director Nicole MacDonald as well as Sika Stanton, co-director of The Numbers, a short film about East Portland, and Priced Out director Cornelius Swart. Priced Out: The Documentary https://www.pricedoutmovie.com/ The Numbers https://oregonhumanities.org/this-lan... NW Documentary https://nwdocumentary.org/ More on Nicole MacDonald http://www.ncolemacdonald.com/ And the Last Days of Chinatown https://hyperallergic.com/438298/nico... Priced Out: The Documentary https://www.pricedoutmovie.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Episode 11 of Priced Out the Podcast is about the great city of St. Louis, MO. The city is a wonderful place with great people and a lot of new potential. There is new energy and growth going on, but the city has a long and troubling past and continues to be challenged by vast poverty, discrimination and neglect. We talk with two residents Rebeca Carlos, host of the podcast Explain to Me and artist and community activist Kevin Hopkins. We talk about the city's deep history of segregation, the Delmar Divide, the Riots of 1916, the poverty and abandonment of East Louis Louis and North St. Louis White Flight in Spanish Lakes and speculate if big property owners are playing games and driving down land values like they have done in Detroit. We also talk about the early signs of gentrification or "revitalization" in the Delmar Loop, Benton Park, South City the Grove and elsewhere. https://www.pricedoutmovie.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
This week on the Priced Out podcast, a live recording of Cornelius Swart at Turn On, an annual lecture series sponsored the real estate branding and marketing firm 1000 Watt. The company brings in hundreds of their real estate clients from across the nation, include companies like Berkshire Hathaway, to wine them and dine them and treat them to two days of presentations from artists, industry leaders and interesting people. To Swart's surprise, company lead Marc Davidson invited him to talk about gentrification. Here is the unedited presentation. Priced Out: The Documentary https://www.pricedoutmovie.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Today is the first part in a new series called LEFT OUT of Priced Out. We are going to cover a lot of issues, points of view, and stories that were not included in our 2017 documentary on gentrification Priced Out. In Episode 13, we are going to roll back, beyond Priced Out, to our first film, the 2002 gentrification documentary, NorthEast Passage: The Inner City and the American Dream. In that film, we watched Nikki Williams work with her neighbors and police to close down the drug houses on her block. But the film never asks the people in the “drug houses” what their view was. Today we hope to correct that with a truly fascinating talk with Rahsaan Muhamaad, a man who grew up in the black neighborhoods of Portland during the 1980s. He knew of Nikki and he knew the “trap houses” on her block because he was running drugs at the time. He describes the experiences of being in a “gang” in Portland before California gangsters started to move into town. https://www.pricedoutmovie.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
It’s been three years since Nikki Williams wrapped up her last interview for the documentary Priced Out. At that time, she had just moved to Dallas, Texas. She was fed up with Portland, Oregon, and what she called its “color blind“ and “passive-aggressive” racism. She was emotionally devastated by how her black community had been “obliterated” by gentrification. She sold her house and moved to Dallas in search of a new black community. She wanted to live in a neighborhood where people looked like her, where people would treat her daughter and grandson with respect and dignity. So, what’s happened since then? Did she find a healthy black community? Did she become a gentrifier? What are the racial dynamics in Dallas like? Are they any better? Find more information about Nikki and the two films we’ve produced about her at https://www.pricedoutmovie.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Fred Stewart may be Portland's most controversial black activist. He grew up in Northeast Portland and has been a realtor in the neighborhood since the drug war days. He's twice run unsuccessfully for Portland City Council. His views are unconventional, and his style is confrontational. He claims to be a Democrat who continually blasts "white liberals" on everything from gun control (there's too much of it) to their inability to do more for blacks in Oregon (maybe the GOP would be better?). Fred has a deep history with Northeast Portland and is featured in Priced Out the movie. In this first of two parts (nonconsecutive) Fred talks about growing up in the neighborhood, crime, black business opportunities and challenges and people who made it big when the property values in the community started to climb. Part of the "Cut Out" series of POVS that were not adequately represented in the documentary Priced Out due to time limitations. https://www.pricedoutmovie.com/ https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
This edition of Priced Out: The Podcast is a discussion about the journalism behind the making of Priced Out (the documentary). Topics ranged from dealing with controversial sources, navigating government "obfuscation" and storylines in which both the government and the voters themselves are partially to blame. The talk was recorded at Migration Brewing Company in Northeast Portland and was sponsored by the local chapters of the Society of Professional Journalists, the Online News Association and Solutions Journalism. The Q&A was moderated by Sara Roth, an investigative web-based reporter for KGW NewsChannel8. The event featured sever long clips from the film. #pricedout #gentrification #pdx https://www.pricedoutmovie.com/ https://www.facebook.com/spjoregon/ https://www.facebook.com/onapdx/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
Welcome to the first episode of Priced Out: The Podcast about Gentrification. Hosted by Andru Morgan and documentary filmmaker Cornelius Swart the director of Priced Out: Gentrification in Portland, Oregon. In today's Podcast, we will discuss gentrification in Portland Oregon as well as the film and what to expect next from Priced Out. https://www.pricedoutmovie.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast/support
In this episode, we talk to Angela Prigge, who has been a hospitality worker in Hawaii, on the island of Kauai, for 18 years. Angela has lived in Hawaii her whole life, and we talk about her love for her home and her deep family roots there. We talk about how Angela’s grandparents moved to Hawaii from the Philippines, how her father and grandfather worked and lived on sugar plantations. We talk about Angela’s memories of the bakery her mom worked at in Kauai, and we talk about how her parents instilled in her, from a young age, an appreciation for the necessity and power of unions. We also discuss what it was like to witness firsthand the major changes that have happened to Hawaii’s economy, as farming and small businesses gave way to a tourism and hospitality industry that has come to dominate life on the islands. We talk about the ongoing struggles for workers who can hardly afford to live in Hawaii, which has the highest cost of living out of any state in the U.S. And we talk about how Angela, who is on the executive board of her union, UNITE HERE Local 5, and her coworkers are banding together to fight not only for better wages and fair treatment, but for a more dignified and enjoyable life—one that doesn’t completely revolve around work and bills. Additional links/info below... UNITE HERE Local 5’s website Hawaii News Now ongoing series, “Priced Out of Paradise” Jed Smith, Stab Magazine, “Priced Out of Paradise: The Reality of Gentrification on the North Shore” Cultural Survival Quarterly, Issue 24-1, “Problems in Paradise: Sovereignty in the Pacific” Featured Music (all songs sourced from the Free Music Archive) - Lobo Loco, "Malte Junior - Hall" - Ayla Nereo, “Waves” - We Is Shore Dedicated, “Home” - Monplaisir, “First”
Episode 5 - Health, Housing And Mental Illness In this episode of Priced Out, Joey and Bree hear from reporter Anh Gray about how the housing situation is impacting the health of the community. Then Bree has a story on mental illness, talking to one mother looking for her son.
Episode 2 - Senior Living In The Housing Crunch In this week's episode of Priced Out, we take a look at how the housing crunch affects seniors with our reporter Anh Gray. She looks at one of the senior centers in Reno, where she talks to employees as well as seniors about their living situation. Joey then debriefs Anh about her experience.
PDXISH welcomes the Producer and Director of "Priced Out" Cornelius Swart, a film about gentrification in Portland, Oregon. "Priced Out" project’s director and producer, Swart co-produced the first film, Northeast Passage, with Spencer Wolf. Since then Swart has established himself as a reporter with a deep knowledge of the community. He published a community newspaper and hyperlocal website that covered St. Johns, North, and Northeast Portland, called the The Portland Sentinel, for five years. Since then he has worked on staff at the state’s largest newspaper, The Oregonian, the state’s largest television station, KGW NewsChannel 8, and as Director of Content during the startup of the web-based news platform GoLocalPDX.com.
A chance to summarise the changes made in yesterdays Autumn Statement to Stamp Duty Land Tax ahead of a discussion the Jeremy had with the head of Priced Out! and the National Landlords Association. This introduction at the top of the program would usually be done by someone from the BBC Business Unit but they were all covering the story elsewhere (or on their Christmas lunch?).