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Last month, wildfires swept down from the hills around Los Angeles and blazed through entire city neighborhoods. Neary 17,000 buildings were destroyed, including the home of David Brancaccio. Brancaccio, the host of Marketplace Morning Report, is one of tens of thousands of people affected, who now face the uncertainty of recovery. What will insurance cover? Who will help clean up debris? Will they ever recover financially? Will their communities ever be the same? MPR News host Angela Davis talks with Brancaccio about the challenges ahead for him and his neighbors and what it takes to rebuild structures and communities after a massive disaster. Guest: David Brancaccio is the senior editor and host of Marketplace Morning Report, the business and personal finance program from American Public Media that airs weekday mornings on public radio stations across the country. He has received some of the highest honors in broadcast journalism, including a Peabody, an Emmy and the Walter Cronkite Award. He previously hosted the Marketplace evening program and anchored the public television program “Now” on PBS.Subscribe to the MPR News with Angela Davis podcast on: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or RSS.Use the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.
Send us a textIn this episode of Soul of Travel, Season 6: Women's Wisdom + Mindful Travel, presented by @journeywoman_original, Christine hosts a soulful conversation with Mia Taylor, Senior Travel Writer and Associate Editor at TravelPulse.Mia Taylor is a California resident, a lifelong avid traveler, and an award-winning journalist who has worked as a staff writer for some of the country's and the world's top publications including BBC, Parents, Real Simple, Better Homes & Gardens, Fortune, and other major publications. Her work has also appeared in Travel + Leisure, U.S. News and World Report, SF Gate, Westways Magazine, The Boston Globe, and TravelPulse. Mia has an M.A. in Journalism and Media Studies and was a member of a team of reporters who received the 2011 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism. She is also the recipient of nine travel writing awards from the North American Travel Journalists Association. The awards recognized Mia's coverage of sustainable travel and wildlife conservation, including a gold award for her reporting on cruelty to elephants in the travel industry. Mia regularly appears on podcasts, radio shows and television to discuss trending travel topics. She has been a guest multiple times on RM World Travel, and has also appeared on The Weather Channel, among other broadcasts. Christine and Mia discuss:· Mia's areas of focus: sustainability, wildlife conservation, and family travel· Mia's decision to fly less, why that's important to her, and what she considers when she chooses to take that flight· Her journey to understanding animal cruelty in tourism and how we can support change· The Most Influential Women in Travel List by Travel Pulse· Juggling personal and professional demands while maintaining personal well-being
Scott Thuman anchors 7News' 5 p.m., 6 p.m. and 11 p.m. newscasts every weeknight.Whether it's from the anchor desk or out in the field, Scott has been bringing viewers in the Washington, D.C. region fair, in-depth reporting on some of the world's most critical news events for almost two decades.Over the years, his objective coverage has earned him many awards, including multiple Emmys, AP, Murrow, and Telly honors and was an integral part of a group to receive the prestigious Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Television Political Journalism.Scott spent much of the last decade as Chief Political Correspondent at the Sinclair Broadcast Group before returning to 7News in 2024. He's also a weekly contributor to the national show, Full Measure with Sharyl Attkisson.
David Brancaccio fell in love with radio as a teenager in Maine reading the news on a local college radio station and his love for broadcast never ended. For the last ten years, Brancaccio has hosted the Marketplace Morning Report, the business and personal finance program that airs weekday mornings on public radio stations across the country. He's known for stripping the jargon off business news and bringing economic trends to life, with the stories of real people facing everyday challenges. Brancaccio began his business-reporting career at Marketplace as the London bureau chief in 1990 and then hosted the flagship half-hour Marketplace program through the 1990s. He was host and senior editor of public television's news show NOW on PBS before returning to Marketplace in 2010.He has earned some of the highest honors in broadcast journalism, including a Peabody, an Emmy, and the Walter Cronkite Award. MPR News host Angela Davis talks with David Brancaccio about his journalism career, the economy and his surprising connection to Minnesota. Guest: David Brancaccio is the host and senior editor of Marketplace Morning Report, the business and personal finance program from American Public Media that airs every weekday morning on public radio stations across the country. Subscribe to the MPR News with Angela Davis podcast on: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or RSS.Use the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.
In conversation with Tamala Edwards, anchor, 6abc Action News morning edition Jonathan Karl is the author of the instant New York Times bestsellers Front Row at the Trump Show and Betrayal, behind-the-scenes accounts of Donald Trump and his allies' unprecedented actions while in office and the chaotic events that followed the 2020 presidential election. The co-anchor of This Week with George Stephanopolous and chief Washington correspondent for ABC News, he has also covered some of D.C.'s most important beats, including four presidential administrations, Capitol Hill, the Pentagon, and the State Department. Karl was the president of the White House Correspondents' Association from 2019 to 2020 and has earned the Walter Cronkite Award for National Individual Achievement, an Emmy Award, and the Everett McKinley Dirksen Award, the highest honor for Congressional reporting. Replete with all new reportage, Tired of Winning examines the ways in which Trump has remolded the Republican Party in his own image, the damage he's left in his wake, and his improbable resurgence. Because you love Author Events, please make a donation to keep our podcasts free for everyone. THANK YOU! (recorded 11/15/2023)
Television titan Gayle King reflects on her and her mama's tight-knit relationship including her upbringing in Turkey and then Maryland. Gayle famously doesn't cook, but she shares not one… but TWO recipes with us. Her mama's traditional Mac & Cheese and her famous Thanksgiving Jello Dessert.Gayle King is a TV personality and broadcast journalist. She's about to host a new, weekly primetime show on CNN with Charles Barkely set to launch this fall. She's received the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism. Before this, she co-hosted CBS's flagship morning program, CBS Mornings beginning in 2012. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
From September 13, 2017: NBC News correspondent Katy Tur talked about her book UNBELIEVABLE: My Front-Row Seat to the Craziest Campaign in American History.ABOUT KATY TUR AND UNBELIEVABLE: My Front-Row Seat to the Craziest Campaign in American HistoryCalled "Disgraceful," "third-rate," and "not nice" by Donald Trump, NBC News Correspondent Katy Tur reported on-and took flak from-the most captivating and volatile presidential candidate in American history. Tur lived out of a suitcase for a year and a half, following Trump around the country, powered by packets of peanut butter and dry shampoo. She visited forty states with the candidate, made over 3,800 live television reports, and tried to endure a gazillion loops of Elton John's "Tiny Dancer" -a Trump rally playlist staple.From day one to day 500, Tur documented Trump's inconsistencies, fact-checked his falsities, and called him out on his lies. In return, Trump repeatedly singled Tur out. He tried to charm her, intimidate her, and shame her. At one point, he got a crowd so riled up against Tur, Secret Service had to walk her to her car.None of it worked. Facts are stubborn. So was Tur. She was part of the first women-led politics team in the history of network news. The Boys on the Bus became the Girls on the Plane. But the circus remained. Through all the long nights, wild scoops, naked chauvinism, dodgy staffers, and fevered debates, no one had a better view than Tur.When Trump became an unexpected presidential success story, Tur became NBC's unexpected darling of political journalism. Ripped from her expat life in London as a foreign correspondent, she lost a lifestyle (and a boyfriend) but joined a family tradition. Tur's parents were the helicopter journalists who filmed the LA riots and OJ Simpson's fleeing White Bronco. They helped invent the live-obsessed news industry that Trump used for his rise.UNBELIEVABLE is Tur's darkly comic, fascinatingly bizarre, and often scary story of what it was like to be on the inside a no-rules world where reporters were spat on, demeaned, and discredited. "During the campaign, whenever anyone asked what it was like to cover Trump my go to answer was 'wild ride,'" she says. "Well, now I can tell you what I really thought. And what really happened when the cameras turned off."Katy Tur is a correspondent for NBC News and an anchor for MSNBC. Tur is the recipient of a 2017 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism. She lives in New York City.
Judy Woodruff is not done asking questions. A decorated and respected journalist, she anchored the PBS NewsHour for 15 years until she stepped down in 2022. Now, at age 79, she is traveling the country to answer: what is at the root of the division and disconnection our country faces today? And how do we fix that? To understand across different perspectives requires the ability to listen. At 79, Judy has honed this skill. In the decades Judy spent reporting on Americans and our politics (starting when Jimmy Carter declared his run for president) as well as raising her three children, she has seen enormous change in how people relate to one another. In this episode, we hear her views on the value of really listening to others and having respect, even when we might not agree with or understand, someone. (03:15) Judy Woodruff's interest in divisiveness in America (12:05) How have political divisions evolved during Judy's career? (17:13) How Judy became a journalist (22:12) Where did Judy find support in an era when few women were in journalism? (26:16) The role of her mother (33:08) How can we keep family and friends centered when work takes us away? (34:45) How does Judy define success? (36:57) The balance of success, creating meaning, and parenting (44:36) Why listening and respect is essential to Judy's work. (46:54) How does Judy handle difficult interviews? (51:58) Where does Judy find respite when she needs a break? (55:37) Is Judy hopeful about the world? (57:50) Is there someone Judy hasn't interviewed whom she'd love to? (58:08) Judy shares a funny on-set moment We'd love to hear from you! Send us a note at housecalls@hhs.gov with your feedback & ideas. Judy Woodruff, Journalist Twitter: @judywoodruff Instagram: @judywoodruffpbs About Judy Woodruff Broadcast journalist Judy Woodruff is the Senior Correspondent for the PBS NewsHour, after serving for 11 years as its Anchor and Managing Editor. During 2023 and 2024, she is undertaking a reporting project, “America at a Crossroads,” to better understand the country's political divide. She has covered politics and other news for more than four decades at CNN, NBC, and PBS. The recipient of numerous awards, including the Peabody Journalistic Integrity Award, the Poynter Medal, an Emmy for Lifetime Achievement, and the Radcliffe Medal, she and the late Gwen Ifill were together awarded Arizona State University's Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism after Woodruff and Ifill were named co-anchors of the PBS NewsHour in 2013, marking the first time an American national news broadcast would be co-anchored by two women. For 12 years, Woodruff served as anchor and senior correspondent for CNN, where her duties included anchoring the weekday program, Inside Politics. At PBS from 1983 to 1993, she was the chief Washington correspondent for The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour. From 1984-1990, she also anchored PBS' award-winning weekly documentary series, Frontline with Judy Woodruff. In 2011, Woodruff was the principal reporter for the PBS documentary “Nancy Reagan: The Role of a Lifetime”. And in 2007, she completed an extensive project for PBS and other news outlets on the views of young Americans called “Generation Next: Speak Up. Be Heard”. At NBC News, Woodruff was White House correspondent from 1977 to 1982. For one year after that she served as NBC's Today show chief Washington correspondent. She wrote the book, “This is Judy Woodruff at the White House,” published in 1982 by Addison-Wesley. Woodruff is a founding co-chair of the International Women's Media Foundation, an organization dedicated to promoting and encouraging women in communication industries worldwide. Woodruff is a graduate of Duke University, where she is a trustee emerita. She lives in Washington, DC, with her husband, journalist Al Hunt, and they are the parents of three children.
Richard Wiese is a world-class explorer, the longest-serving President of The Explorers Club (EC) and Executive Producer and Host of ABC and PBS multiple Emmy-winning program, Born to Explore. As President of The Explorers Club he developed and negotiated multi-year partnerships with Rolex, Microsoft and Discovery to name a few. Discovery's is EC's first multi-million dollar grant program. During his tenure he established the first annual Global Exploration Summit in partnership with Portugal, often referred to as the Davos of Exploration. He is the founder of The Explorers Club 50 - “Fifty people who are changing the world, that the world needs to know about”, as well as the organization's first Diversity and Inclusion program. He appointed the EC first African American Woman board director, and the first woman Chair of Ethics & Governance. He organized the first symposium for LGQT in Exploration. He also negotiated a three-book deal with Crowne/Random House. As a journalist, he has received numerous honors, including 14 Day-Time Emmy Nominations ( 2 wins), a Genesis Award, an Associated Press Folio Award, the Walter Cronkite Award and a Golden Halo Advertising Award for Best Environmental/Wildlife Campaign. Wiese has traveled to all seven continents. He has tagged jaguars in the Yucatan jungles, led an expedition to the Northern Territory of Australia to probe the Aboriginal myth of the Rainbow Serpent, co-discovered 202 new forms of life in the first microbial survey of Central Park in NYC, and founded the Central Park “Bio Blitz”: 24 hour, cataloging of all life forms in the park. He was a team member of the largest medical expedition ever conducted on Mt. Everest, achieved the first ascent of an unclimbed mountain in Alaska, discovered 29 new life forms on Mt. Kilimanjaro in Africa, and cross country skied to the North Pole. In the hottest place on earth Ethiopia and attempted to extract fragments of DNA from molten lava to look for evidence of microbial life in conditions never thought able to support life. In 2006 the American Museum of Natural History Expeditions named Wiese an Explorer in residence. He was honored at the 2005 Boy Scout National Jamboree, where he addressed 90,000 people and had a camp named after him. By invitation of King Mohammad VI, he was the U.S. representative to the Moussem de Tan Tan, a gathering of 45,000 nomadic Arabs in Morocco, and he received a Special lifetime achievement award by the Science Museum of Long Island. Wiese's father Richard Wiese Sr, was the first to solo the Pacific Ocean in an airplane. Show Sponsor: www.LaShamanaFaby.com
Join me and Katy Tur as we discuss his new memoir, Rough Draft, a memorizing account of her lived experience growing up the daughter of famous journalists and charting her own path from local news, to weather chaser, to NBC national correspondent, to anchoring her own show, Katy Tur Reports, on MSNBC. Guest Katy Tur Katy Tur is the anchor of Katy Tur Reports on MSNBC, a correspondent for NBC News, and the author of the New York Times bestseller Unbelievable. Tur is the recipient of a 2017 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism. She lives in New York City. Host Michael Zeldin Michael Zeldin is a well-known and highly-regarded TV and radio analyst/commentator. He has covered many high-profile matters, including the Clinton impeachment proceedings, the Gore v. Bush court challenges, Special Counsel Robert Muller's investigation of interference in the 2016 presidential election, and the Trump impeachment proceedings. In 2019, Michael was a Resident Fellow at the Institute of Politics at the Harvard Kennedy School, where he taught a study group on Independent Investigations of Presidents. Previously, Michael was a federal prosecutor with the U.S. Department of Justice. He also served as Deputy Independent/ Independent Counsel, investigating allegations of tampering with presidential candidate Bill Clinton's passport files, and as Deputy Chief Counsel to the U.S. House of Representatives, Foreign Affairs Committee, October Surprise Task Force, investigating the handling of the American hostage situation in Iran. Michael is a prolific writer and has published Op-ed pieces for CNN.com, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Hill, The Washington Times, and The Washington Post. Follow Michael on Twitter: @michaelzeldin Subscribe to the Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/that-said-with-michael-zeldin/id1548483720
Join me and Katy Tur as we discuss his new memoir, Rough Draft, a memorizing account of her lived experience growing up the daughter of famous journalists and charting her own path from local news, to weather chaser, to NBC national correspondent, to anchoring her own show, Katy Tur Reports, on MSNBC. Guest Katy Tur Katy Tur is the anchor of Katy Tur Reports on MSNBC, a correspondent for NBC News, and the author of the New York Times bestseller Unbelievable. Tur is the recipient of a 2017 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism. She lives in New York City. Host Michael Zeldin Michael Zeldin is a well-known and highly-regarded TV and radio analyst/commentator. He has covered many high-profile matters, including the Clinton impeachment proceedings, the Gore v. Bush court challenges, Special Counsel Robert Muller's investigation of interference in the 2016 presidential election, and the Trump impeachment proceedings. In 2019, Michael was a Resident Fellow at the Institute of Politics at the Harvard Kennedy School, where he taught a study group on Independent Investigations of Presidents. Previously, Michael was a federal prosecutor with the U.S. Department of Justice. He also served as Deputy Independent/ Independent Counsel, investigating allegations of tampering with presidential candidate Bill Clinton's passport files, and as Deputy Chief Counsel to the U.S. House of Representatives, Foreign Affairs Committee, October Surprise Task Force, investigating the handling of the American hostage situation in Iran. Michael is a prolific writer and has published Op-ed pieces for CNN.com, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Hill, The Washington Times, and The Washington Post. Follow Michael on Twitter: @michaelzeldin Subscribe to the Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/that-said-with-michael-zeldin/id1548483720
Award-winning journalist Katie Couric discusses her recent book "Going There", the fast-paced, emotional, riveting story of a thoroughly modern woman, whose journey took her from humble origins to superstardom. Katie Couric is a New York Times best-selling author and a co-founder of Stand Up To Cancer. Since its launch in 2008, Stand Up To Cancer has raised more than $600 million to support cutting edge collaborative science, and its research has contributed to nine new FDA approved therapies. In 2017, she founded Katie Couric Media (KCM), which has developed a number of media projects, including a daily newsletter, a podcast, digital video series and several documentaries. Previous documentaries produced by KCM include: America Inside Out with Katie Couric, a six-part series for National Geographic; Gender Revolution: A Journey with Katie Couric, for National Geographic; Under the Gun, which aired on EPIX; and Fed Up, available on iTunes, Amazon and YouTube. Couric was also the executive producer of Unbelievable on Netflix and is developing other scripted projects. Couric was the first woman to solo anchor a network evening newscast, serving as anchor and managing editor of the CBS Evening News from 2006 to 2011, following 15-years as co-anchor of NBC's Today show. She also hosted a syndicated show and served as the Yahoo Global News Anchor until 2017. Most recently, Couric was the first guest host of the iconic game show Jeopardy!. She has won a duPont-Columbia, a Peabody, two Edward R. Murrows, a Walter Cronkite Award, and multiple Emmys. She was twice named one of Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People and was Glamour Magazine's Woman of the Year three times. Katie has received numerous awards for her cancer advocacy work, honored by both the Harvard and Columbia schools of public health, the American Cancer Society and The American Association of Cancer Researchers. Get the book here: https://goo.gle/2ZpzVCW. For more information on Katie, please visit https://katiecouric.com/. For more information on Stand Up To Cancer, please visit https://standuptocancer.org/. To watch the video of this event, please visit https://g.co/talksatgoogle/goingthere.
In conversation with Tamala Edwards, anchor, 6ABC Action News morning edition Jonathan Karl is the author of Front Row at the Trump Show, an instant New York Times bestseller that peered behind the scenes into President Trump and his allies' unprecedented actions. The chief White House correspondent and chief Washington correspondent for ABC News, Karl has written extensively about Trump's presidency., Karl has also covered some of D.C.'s most important beats, including four presidential administrations, Capitol Hill, the Pentagon, and the State Department. He was the president of the White House Correspondents' Association from 2019 to 2020 and has earned the Walter Cronkite Award for National Individual Achievement, an Emmy Award, and the Everett McKinley Dirksen Award, the highest honor for Congressional reporting. In Betrayal, Karl recounts the chaotic events that followed the 2020 presidential election and the former president's stunning downfall. (recorded 11/22/2021)
Meelya Gordon Memorial Lecture Renowned for his ''ability to combine high thinking with a shrewd capacity to understand day-to-day American politics,'' (The Economist) Pulitzer Prize winner George Will has written a nationally syndicated column at The Washington Post for the past 45 years. His many books include The Conservative Sensibility, Men at Work: The Craft of Baseball, and One Man's America: The Pleasures and Provocations of Our Singular Nation. Will is the winner of the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism, two Silurian Awards for editorial writing, and the Order of Lincoln award from his home state of Illinois. In American Happiness and Discontents, Will addresses such varied topics as American socialists, anti-capitalist conservatives, drug policy, the criminal justice system, climatology, the Coronavirus, the First Amendment, the composition of the federal judiciary, the morality of watching football, and so much more. (recorded 11/1/2021)
Sometimes life throws us curve-balls and we don't think we will ever be able to bounce back. This happened to Mia Taylor and with strength and a lot of support, she found a way to overcome a gap. Through a journey to better understand herself, she gave herself permission to step away and come back when the time was right.. Join Cooper and Mary while they visit with Mia Taylor and discuss her story and our belief that a gap is not a negative! Mia has interviewed some amazing people and through the many conversations, she has learned most from those who are making a difference in this world and living their lives with grace and poise and dignity. Mia Taylor is an award-winning journalist whose two-decade long career has included receiving nine awards from the North American Travel Journalists Association for coverage of wildlife conservation, sustainable travel, and climate change. She was also among a team of KPBS reporters who received the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism in 2011. Her career highlights include working as a staff writer for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the San Diego-Union Tribune, and now for one of the largest magazine publishers in the country, Meredith Corporation, where she writes about personal finance for four of their leading titles: Better Homes & Gardens; Real Simple; Parents; and Health magazines. Mia specializes in writing about women and personal finance, and specifically the challenges single parents face. Her work has also appeared in TravelAge West, The Boston Globe, Westways Magazine and on MSN Money and MSN Travel. Mia is also currently writing her first book titled: Single Moms Saving the World: Success Stories in Business Leadership, Social Activism, and Personal Finance. Ready to invest in your career? Learn more about the Career Transformation Academy! * Access to a scientific-based assessment * A learning path specifically for your skills gap * Premiere monthly course training videos * Monthly live group coaching sessions * Access to a private community of career women like yourself * Signature worksheets, action guides, and E-Books For helpful articles and resources about change, confidence and careers, please visit www.sweetbutfearless.com. Join our Successful Women's Network Facebook Group to join other women who are on the rise and aspiring to be the most successful version of themselves! https://www.facebook.com/groups/successfulwomensnetwork
Jonathan Karl, ABC's chief White House correspondent and author of "Front Row at the Trump Show," offers revealing insights into Donald Trumps relationship with the news media and the administration's impact on democratic norms. Jonathan Karl is ABC News Chief White House Correspondent. He is also the former President of the White House Correspondents' Association and author of the book "Front Row at the Trump Show". Karl has broad experience covering U.S. politics, foreign policy and the military, and has reported from more than 30 countries. He has contributed to various ABC News programs, including Good Morning America and Nightline. His reporting drives news cycles and has been recognized with some of the most prestigious honors in journalism, including the Walter Cronkite Award for National Individual Achievement and the National Press Foundation's Everett McKinley Dirksen Award, the highest honor for Congressional reporting.
Caregiving is near and dear to me and also my guest on this episode of the podcast. Unfortunately, this will most likely impact your life if it has not already. Karla Hult, Alzheimer's advocate and reporter for KARE 11 (Twin Cities NBC affiliate) joins us to share her personal journey caring for her father as he battled and ultimately lost his battle with Alzheimer's. Since the diagnosis of her father she has been dedicated to bringing awareness to the disease that impacts more lives than that of breast cancer. Karla recently put together a journalistic piece highlighting her family's journey with Alzheimer's. You can view this piece: KARE 11 Alzheimer's Special Report with Karla HultMore than 5 million people of all ages live with this disease that does not have a cure. 13.8 million people will be diagnosed with Alzheimer's by 2050 according to the Alzheimer's Association. $244 BILLION worth of care is provided by families and other unpaid caregivers. Statistical Source: https://www.alz.org/alzheimers-dementia/facts-figuresKarla Hult loves living and reporting in her home state of Minnesota. She’s forever inspired by the character and courage of the people she meets on most every story.Karla attended St. Olaf College, where she graduated magna cum laude with a double major in English and Political Science. At St. Olaf, she was also inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa National Honor Society. She later graduated with a Master’s of International Affairs from Columbia University in New York, where she also earned a writing fellowship.Karla worked as a newspaper reporter before embarking on her television journalism career. She returned to her home state for a reporting job at WCCO-TV before deciding to cross the street to her “T.V. home” at KARE 11.At KARE, Karla has received multiple awards, including the prestigious Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Political Journalism. But she remains most proud of her advocacy work against Alzheimer’s Disease and for refugees.When Karla is not working, advocating or traveling the world, she and her husband Gary are busy raising their two daughters.You can follow Karla on Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn.Find out more about Forethought Planning: www.forethoughtplanning.comFollow Forethought Planning on social media:FacebookLinkedInYouTube channelScore our free Wealth Assessment tool on our website.Securities offered through LPL Financial, a member of FINRA/SIPC. Advisory services offered through Advisors' Pride, a SEC registered investment advisor. LPL Financial, Advisors' Pride, Forethought Planning and the guests of Thrive For[e]ward podcast are separate and unaffiliated parties. Karla Hult and KARE 11 are not affiliated with Forethought Planning, Advisor's Pride, or LPL Financial. The views expressed here are those of the participants, and not those of Forethought Planning, Advisor's Pride, or LPL financial. The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. LPL Financial and Forethought Planning do not offer legal services. #caregiving #alzheimers #longtermcare #loveones #lifetransitions
You could say that in every dark cloud there is a silver lining…. COVID, as you know, has wreaked havoc on human life and the economy, around the world and in the US. In this episode we welcome back a guest who visited us in April for our HEROES OF THE QUARANTINE CULTURE episode. David Brancaccio, is HOST AND SENIOR EDITOR OF MARKETPLACE MORNING REPORT ON PUBLIC RADIO.Anyone who has a page dedicated to him in Wikipedia is SOMEBODY! Here’s here to talk all things economy with us today, wrapped inside a tasty combination of stories about model rockets and S’MORES. Yes, the perfect s’more is on tap for today....David is a journalist, tv and radio host, reporter and storyteller….his website is www.brancaccio.com David, as many of you know, keeps the pulse on business innovation and the economy, politics, human rights, national security, the environment, health care, and science policy. In 2007, David won a national Emmy for coverage of a public health story in Kenya. In 2009, he won a Walter Cronkite Award for excellence in television political coverage.Today David is going to explain what the economy looks like leading into the election on November 3rd. He uses four letters of the alphabet to explain it: V, W, U and K....go figure.Music for today's episode was found on the free music archive. The Vivisectors can be found at www.thevivisectors.com For more information on me and how to contact me, visit www.eyesopenproductions.comSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user)
Jonathan Karl is the chief White House correspondent and chief Washington correspondent for ABC News and the president of the White House Correspondents’ Association (2019-2020). He has reported from the White House during the administrations of four presidents and thirteen press secretaries and covered every major beat in Washington, including Capitol Hill, the Pentagon, and the State Department. Karl also has a long history of reporting on Donald Trump, beginning in the early 1990s, when he was reporter with The New York Post, and including Trump’s first network interview of the 2016 presidential campaign cycle. Karl has won numerous awards, including the Walter Cronkite Award for National Individual Achievement and the National Press Foundation’s Everett McKinley Dirksen Award, the highest honor for Congressional reporting. According to the Tyndall Report, Karl was the single most used network correspondent for the first two years of the Trump presidency, logging nearly 400 minutes of air time in 2017 on the World News Tonight broadcast alone. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome back to FOTW! To kick off our first-ever summer season, we’re excited today to bring you a conversation with Michelle Jaconi, an executive producer at the Washington Post, former Hoya, and member of GU Politics’ advisory board. At the Post, she runs the creative video team, where she has spearheaded the Post’s success on Tik Tok and other programming. Previously, Jaconi worked at CNN and with NBC’s Meet the Press, where she earned multiple awards including the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Media a Peabody for CNN’s coverage of the Arab Spring, and back to back Emmy Awards for presidential election nights, at two different networks.
This one is about the heroes...well, two at least. Both of them would say PHOOEY, I'm no hero... So, let's just say it’s about how people are getting by. Specifically, it's about the small business owners, faced with the gut wrenching decisions they have to make when faced with going out of business, laying off employees...survival.This Heroes of the Quarantine Culture on Baker Street with Thom Pollard welcomes two incredible individuals on the front line of the economy. Peter Dunn is President of Topdrawer, a Japanese-American company with over a dozens stores in the US and Japan which sells “tools for nomads,” including minimalist canvas backpacks and carry bags, portable speakers, eyeglasses, Bento boxes; anything and everything you might need while traveling. Please visit https://topdrawershop.com/ Peter had to make some gut-wrenching decisions when the COVID-19 stay at home orders swept across the land. When he made the decision to temporarily close the stories, he shut down 90% of their business. Peter shares how he mobilized quickly so that Topdrawer can survive.David Brancaccio, our second guest, needs little introduction. I mean, the guy has a page in Wikipedia! David and I traveled to India a little over a decade ago to document the dramatic changes taking place on the Ganges River. We trekked to the source of the Ganges, to the mouth of the Gangotri Glacier, to learn that climatologists estimate the glacier will disappear in 50 years (that was ten years ago). David, as many of you know, is host and senior editor of Marketplace Morning Report. He keeps the pulse on business innovation and the economy, politics, human rights, national security, the environment, health care, and science policy. In 2007, David won a national Emmy for coverage of a public health story in Kenya. In 2009, he won a Walter Cronkite Award for excellence in television political coverage. The music for this episode was found on the Free Music Archive, including the Blue Dot Sessions with Fjell: https://www.sessions.blue/ and also the music of Miller and Sasser http://millerandsasser.com/ Please visit https://topdrawershop.com/ for more about the brand.Please feel free to visit http://eyesopenproductions.com for more information about Thom. Click ‘Contact’ and sign up for his mailing list.
Scott Pelley has been a journalist for nearly five decades. He is the most awarded correspondent in the history of 60 Minutes, and he is the former anchor of the CBS Evening News. His work has been recognized with three duPont-Columbia Awards, three Peabody Awards, the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism, and 37 Emmy Awards. In his memoir, Truth Worth Telling: A Reporter’s Search for Meaning in the Stories of Our Time, Pelley recounts the best and worst of his career - stories from 9/11 as he encounters extraordinary heroism, insight to the military fighting in the Middle East and the families they left behind, and the grieving mothers and fathers of Sandy Hook. He gives behind-the-scenes looks at interviews with world-famous people, from Bruce Springsteen to Donald Trump, and examines both the impulse to serve and the arrogance that can sully a leader’s ethical perspective.
Last Month, we lost best-selling author, iconic reporter and journalistic pioneer Mary Martha Corinne Morrison Claiborne Roberts, "Cokie" to her family, friends, colleagues and the tens of millions of Americans who read her column or watched and listened to her every week on NPR and ABC News.Originally from New Orleans, Louisiana, she learned politics at an early age. Both her father and her mother served for decades in the United States Congress. An award winning political reporter and analyst, Cokie Roberts, along with Eleanor Clift, NPR's Linda Wertheimer and Nina Totenberg transformed the male dominated world of Washington political journalism.An Emmy Award winner, Cokie Roberts also earned other honors, including the Edward R. Murrow Award, the Everett McKinley Dirksen Award for coverage of Congress and the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism. In 2000, she was inducted into the Broadcasting and Cable Hall of Fame.With all the impeachment news weren’t able to properly pay tribute to her life and legacy.And so, this week, to honor groundbreaking journalist Cokie Roberts, we put her 2013 commencement address at LSU into the Words Matter Library. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week Walo and Chris had the pleasure to speak to Lilia Luciano. Lilia is an award-winning television investigative journalist, filmmaker and public speaker. She is the investigative reporter at ABC 10 in Sacramento and was the chief investigative correspondent on Discovery Channel's Border Live. In 2019 she was awarded a Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism as a special commendation for enterprise for her four-part documentary series, Puerto Rico Rises, which she directed and produced for ABC Sacramento, and they discussed what's going on in Puerto Rico.
Jonathan Karl is ABC News chief Washington correspondent and chief White House correspondent. He regularly contributes to all broadcasts, including “Good Morning America,” “World News Tonight with David Muir” and “Nightline.” In addition, he hosts a weekly podcast “Powerhouse Politics.”Karl has broad experience covering U.S. politics, foreign policy and the military, and has reported from more than 30 countries. His reporting drives news cycles and has been recognized with some of the most prestigious honors in journalism, including being named The Tyndall Report’s most used reporter in 2017 with 374 minutes on-air – more than any other network reporter – for breaking stories on the Russian election meddling probe and Obamacare replacement. He is also one of the few journalists to win the Joan Shorenstein Barone Award for excellence in Washington-based reporting twice, in 2010 and 2015; the 2013 Walter Cronkite Award for National Individual Achievement; and an Emmy® Award for his coverage of the 2009 Inauguration of President Barack Obama. In 2001, he won the National Press Foundation's Everett McKinley Dirksen Award, the highest honor for Congressional reporting.More about Jon KarlDave SwansonWebsiteBook Goat Wrestling Perseverance Clothes Free Chapter of my Bestselling Book? Social MediaFacebook InstagramTwitter LinkedInCoaching Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/GWPPodcast)
Chase Guttman is a Three-time recipient and first American to win Young Travel Photographer Award, named by Instagram as a rising star, and won the Walter Cronkite Award in 2017. And he's just 22! There is so much more ahead for Chase as he is starting to niche down even further into the drone world. The author of “The Handbook of Drone Photography”, a book that dives into Drones, has allowed him to venture into the speaking world and starting his own business “Heightened Visions, LLC”. There is so much photography and industry knowledge, its an episode for anyone that wants to get involved with photography. Check out Chase's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chaseguttman/ Check out Chase's Website: www.chaseguttman.com Follow us on our socials! https://www.instagram.com/getchogrindup/ https://www.facebook.com/GetChoGrindUp/ https://twitter.com/GetChoGrindUp Check out our new website! https://www.getchogrindup.com/younganddumbpodcast
In conversation with longtime broadcaster and journalist, Tracey Matisak. The anchorman for Noticiero Univision for more than 30 years, eight-time Emmy-winning broadcaster and columnist Jorge Ramos is one of America's most popular and influential journalists. His 10 bestselling books include The Other Face of America, No Borders: A Journalist's Search for Home, and A Country for All: An Immigrant Manifesto. His weekly column is carried by dozens of newspapers across the U.S. and Latin America. Ramos's many honors include the Walter Cronkite Award and The Gabriel García Márquez Prize. In Stranger, the legendary journalist draws from hard data and personal experience to respond to the Trump administration's controversial remarks and policies directed toward Latino-indeed all-immigrants to this country. Watch the video here. (recorded 3/2/2018)
For 510 days, NBC News Correspondent Katy Tur reported on Republican Nominee Donald Trump. She visited forty states with the candidate and made over 3,800 live television reports. Over the course of the year and a half, Trump taunted Tur incessantly, transforming her into a prominent figure in the presidential campaign. As Tur was singled out, colleagues rallied around her and thousands tweeted their support with #ImWithTur. Katy Tur—who recently received a Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence—joins the Brennan Center and Irin Carmon, co-author of Notorious R.B.G., to reflect on her unexpected time in the spotlight and the fascinating, highly controversial world of the 2016 Trump Campaign.
Bob Schieffer has been a reporter for more than half a century and a part of CBS News for 46 years. He is one of the few reporters on Capitol Hill to have covered all four of the major beats: The Pentagon, the U.S. State Department, the Congress, and the White House. He has interviewed every president since Richard Nixon and nearly every candidate who has sought the Oval Office. Schieffer has also moderated three debates for the Presidential Commission on Debates in 2004, 2008, and 2012. He anchored the Saturday edition of the “CBS Evening News” for 23 years, became the network’s chief Washington D.C. correspondent in 1982, and was named the anchor and moderator of “Face the Nation” in 1991. In March 2005 Schieffer served as interim anchor of “The CBS Evening News” until August 2006. Schieffer has won virtually every award in broadcast journalism, including: eight Emmys, the Overseas Press Club Award, the Paul White Award, the Edward R. Murrow Award, and the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence. He was inducted into the National Academy of Arts and Sciences Hall of Fame and was named a living legend by the Library of Congress. Schieffer was born in Austin, Texas and grew up in Fort Worth where he graduated from Texas Christian University. He served three years in the U.S. Air Force. Prior to joining CBS in 1969 he was a reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram where he was the first reporter from a Texas newspaper to report from Vietnam.