Tags / housing

Tagged with “housing” (13) activity chart

  1. 283: Remember Me – This American Life

    Stories about people who are remembered very differently than they’d wished. The ghost of a kindly, distinguished philanthropist supposedly plays pranks on guests at a Ramada hotel in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. A dying mother makes a tape for her developmentally disabled daughter, hoping she’ll watch it someday, knowing she might not.

    PROLOGUE Host Ira Glass talks to Laura Mayer, editor of the New Trier Township High School yearbook, about the renegade student who jumps into as many club photos as he can. And contributing editor Jack Hitt explains how this impulse—to be remembered as someone you’re not—can be traced back to Benjamin Franklin. It turns out even the man who invented bifocals padded his resume for history. The key on the kite story, for instance? Probably not true.

    ACT ONE – Thinking Inside The Box. David Wilcox tells the story of how his mother, who was dying of lung cancer, made a short videotape for his sister, who is severely developmentally disabled. She hoped the tape would become a daily part of her daughter’s life, like the other music and movies she liked to play, that she would watch it and remember her mother. But she also knew her daughter might never even see it. And we hear two stories from people who recorded their own memories in a booth in Grand Central Station in New York, as part of the StoryCorps project. The first is Don "Moses" Lerman, a champion eater who’s thought a lot about what he’ll be remembered for. The second is Ronald Ruiz, a bus driver, who’s never forgotten one of his passengers. StoryCorps funders include the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, National Public Radio, the Ford Foundation and the Open Society Institute.

    ACT TWO – Where’s Walter? Starlee Kine rents a room at a Ramada hotel in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, where a ghost supposedly plays pranks on the guests and staff. The ghost’s name is Walter, for Walter Schroeder, the guy who originally built the hotel in the 1920s. It turns out Walter was a successful businessman and a kindly philanthropist who threw great dinner parties. So why would he bother haunting a Ramada? Starlee originally wrote and read a version of this story for The Little Gray Books Lecture Series. And…two more stories about remembering, from StoryCorps. The first is a conversation between Ralph Tremonte and and Donald Weiss, who were in mental institutions together as kids, and are reunited after 40 years. The second is Brad Skow talking to his mother, Mary Lou Maher, who gave him up for adoption when she was 17.

    ACT THREE – Giving Up The Ghosts. Writer Shalom Auslander reads his short story about how he decided to start forgetting the dead, even though his job required him to remember. Shalom’s most recent book is Hope: A Tragedy.

    —Huffduffed by lucasoldaini 6 months ago

  2. E098 – Tammy Strobel & Logan Smith: Rural Happiness | The Sprocket Podcast

    —Huffduffed by lurkeck 7 months ago

  3. [Interview PART I] Barry Ritholtz, CEO, Director of Equity Research, Fusion IQ, Author, Bailout Nation, The Big Picture Blog

    http://thehousinghelix.blogs.millersamuel.com/2011/10/05/interview-barry-ritholtz-ceo-director-of-equity-research-fusion-iq-author-bailout-nation-the-big-picture-blog-2/

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    —Huffduffed by kevinpacheco one year ago

  4. Background Briefing - 4 September 2011 - Nowhere to live

    Rents are rising even in country towns, and more people are forced into caravan parks, the back rooms of old pubs - or the river bank - even with young children. It can happen to anyone. It will get worse. Various attempts to create more places for people to live at cheap rent are not meeting the need. Reporter Anita Barraud.

    Further Information:
    National Housing Affordability Agreement – http://www.fahcsia.gov.au/sa/housing/progserv/affordability/affordablehousing/Pages/default.aspx

    National Rental Affordability Scheme – http://www.environment.gov.au/housing/nras/index.html

    The National Housing Supply Council – http://www.nhsc.org.au/default.html
    The drivers of housing supply and demand in rural and regional centres – http://www.ahuri.edu.au/publications/projects/p40586

    Change and disadvantage in Regional Victoria reports 2011 – http://www.dpcd.vic.gov.au/home/publications-and-research/urban-and-regional-research/Regional-Victoria/chnage-and-disadvantge-in-regional-victoria

    http://www.abc.net.au/rn/backgroundbriefing/stories/2011/3305380.htm

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one year ago

  5. China's exploding population spurs world’s largest water diversion project and lots of questions marks | WBEZ

    http://www.wbez.org/episode-segments/2011-07-14/chinas-exploding-population-spurs-world’s-largest-water-diversion-projec

    —Huffduffed by samuelwade one year ago

  6. Long history of a short river: The Maribyrnong

    The Maribyrnong is a short river, only 50 km from tip to toe, but it has a long history.

    The Maribyrnong river valley in Melbourne has been home to the Marin Balug people of the Kulin nation for some 40,000 years and bears many signs of their presence.

    It was also a major channel for the European occupation of Port Phillip, first as a pathway to the Western District for sheep-owners and their stock, then as a source of bluestone and sand for the growing city and a dumping ground for its noxious wastes.

    Jenny Lee’s walking tour starts above the bend in the river that is the site of the now-defunct Commonwealth Explosives Factory, and takes in sites of Indigenous settlement, industry around the river and the current McMansion invasion.

    The tour goes for 27 minutes and has 9 stops.

    YOUR TOUR GUIDE JENNY LEE Jenny Lee became an editor by accident in 1982, when she began working on a multi-author history of Australia (A People’s History of Australia, 4 vols, 1988). She edited the literary and cultural quarterly Meanjin from 1987 to 1994. Jenny has been co-ordinator of the postgraduate Publishing and Communications program at the University of Melbourne since 2003. She is deputy chair of the OL Society, which publishes Overland literary journal.

    Her book Making Modern Melbourne was launched at the 2008 Melbourne Writers Festival and was a Top 10 bestseller on the first weekend of the festival. Making Modern Melbourne charts the city’s story from illegal village to modern metropolis.

    CREDITS This tour is recorded and edited by Jane Curtis, produced by Community Radio 3CR, and funded by the Office of Public Records Local History grant program. http://peoplestour.net/2010/02/long-history-of-a-short-river-the-maribyrnong/

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one year ago

  7. Business Daily - China’s empty homes

    China is preparing new measures to attack rising inflation. It has already tried to slow down its galloping economy by cutting back bank lending and bringing in measures to deflate the bubble in property prices. Millions of middle class Chinese have gambled on buying new apartments. It’s even reported that speculators are hoarding a large number of properties to fuel price rises. Fears have been raised that as a result, millions of homes lie empty across China, in what is a parody of healthy economic growth. The BBC’s business editor Robert Peston reports from Inner Mongolia on China’s ghost towns. Plus leading behavioural economist Professor Dan Ariely of MIT in the US, explains the brain science of why humans are willing to lose money to gain revenge. And our technology correspondent Jeremy Wagstaff examines the global habit of ‘miscalls’ - the way people use phone calls which never connect to communicate with their loved ones or business contacts.

    —Huffduffed by consequently 2 years ago

  8. Business Daily - China’s empty homes

    China is preparing new measures to attack rising inflation. It has already tried to slow down its galloping economy by cutting back bank lending and bringing in measures to deflate the bubble in property prices. Millions of middle class Chinese have gambled on buying new apartments. It’s even reported that speculators are hoarding a large number of properties to fuel price rises. Fears have been raised that as a result, millions of homes lie empty across China, in what is a parody of healthy economic growth. The BBC’s business editor Robert Peston reports from Inner Mongolia on China’s ghost towns. Plus leading behavioural economist Professor Dan Ariely of MIT in the US, explains the brain science of why humans are willing to lose money to gain revenge. And our technology correspondent Jeremy Wagstaff examines the global habit of ‘miscalls’ - the way people use phone calls which never connect to communicate with their loved ones or business contacts.

    —Huffduffed by KurtL 2 years ago

  9. The Fresh Air Interview: Gretchen Morgenson - ‘Untangling The Complex Foreclosure Mess’ : NPR

    "Attorneys general in all 50 states are investigating improper foreclosure procedures that may cause sweeping consequences for the banks and institutions that bought mortgage-backed securities during the housing boom — and affect the cases of thousands of homeowners facing eviction.

    Since the housing bust two years ago, when millions of homeowners fell behind on their loans, the foreclosure industry has grown into a multibillion-dollar business. To deal with the thousands of defaulted loans needing to be processed, banks relied on thousands of temporary employees who often had little experience and training to handle the foreclosure paperwork.

    This resulted in many mistakes being made throughout the foreclosure process. Reports of sloppy documentation — including the questionable notarization of documents, the loss of key paperwork needed to begin foreclosure proceedings and missing paperwork on original mortgages — temporarily halted foreclosure proceedings across much of the country in early October. It also triggered at least five separate federal investigations into the ways mortgage lenders have handled foreclosures.

    On today’s Fresh Air, Gretchen Morgenson, who covers the world financial markets for The New York Times, untangles the complex foreclosure mess and explains the flawed paperwork trail that has led to the reexamination of hundreds of thousands of foreclosure cases."

    From http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=130835119&sc=tumblr&cc=freshair#

    —Huffduffed by tiffehr 2 years ago

  10. FutureCast: Re-imagining the Suburbs

    On December 17th 2009 Jerry Michalski hosted IFTF’s second FutureCast with Eric Corey Freed, Allison Arieff, and June Williamson to discus the changing suburban landscape.

    Eric Corey Freed is director of Urban Re:vision, founder of organicARCHITECT, and author of numerous books including Green Building for Dummies. He is a leader in green buildings and socially responsible design. Freed is also a judge for Reburbia, a design competition dedicated to re-envisioning the suburbs.

    Allison Arieff writes the "By Design: column for the NY Times and is Food and Shelter Ambassador for GOOD. She is former Senior Content Lead for IDEO and continues to consult on media, sustainability, and design for organizations including Urban Revision. She was Editor in Chief of Dwell from 2002-2006, as well as their founding Senior Editor. In addition, she is author books Prefab and Trailer Travel: A Visual History of Mobile America.

    June Williamson is a professor of architecture at New York City College and co-author of Retrofitting Suburbia: Urban Design Solutions for Redesigning Suburbs, a guidebook for redesigning and redeveloping suburban cities to meet our current demographic, technological, and economic needs.

    http://www.iftf.org/node/3230

    —Huffduffed by kevinpacheco 3 years ago

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