250 38 359 Nail Techs Say NYT 's Nail Salon Expos Made Working - Jezebel 00:32:48.570 --> 00:32:58.590 00:23:33.810 --> 00:23:38.760 Sarah Maslin Nir: In terms of the electric connection with courses in the book I begin I say when ever anyone asked me why do I love them, I would say, because horses. 19 Sarah Maslin Nir: Basically conscripted them as my dad is private it was slave Labor and the family actually. Sarah Maslin Nir: I was like What do you mean and it turns out, yes she's been going back to do all this stuff with the horses and smoke philistinism. One day, Trendys life would become linked to Sarahs but neither of them knew that yet. Sarah is already obsessed with horses, and takes as many riding lessons as she can, but while Trendy is struggling to stand for the first time Sarah is muddling through something different and no less challenging: trying to spell. 241 170 142 Stephanie Butnick: I love that story, and the first thing that I was thinking when I read it was you must have been so mortified as a. 00:23:56.010 --> 00:24:01.020 301 00:33:58.800 --> 00:34:07.230 Share this Article: Horses have always been the salvation of Sarah Maslin Nir, who grew up having "the conversations with horses I longed to have with my family." She felt like an outcast both at home and at her tony Upper East Side prep school, where, she says, "my accomplishments with horses . 00:49:22.920 --> 00:49:30.840 00:26:07.590 --> 00:26:13.860 00:11:33.450 --> 00:11:50.160 00:13:11.250 --> 00:13:21.990 He has used this safety protocol for the past 14 months. 00:39:09.960 --> 00:39:19.320 356 292 00:53:45.900 --> 00:53:54.510 00:49:07.290 --> 00:49:18.960 92 Sarah Maslin Nir: By comparison, I don't feel like a real person that someone who wasn't forged in the fires of war, who didn't have needs as Adam mystic is survival. 178 What has Sarah learned from her teachers about how to ride, how to sense a horses mood and fears? 00:55:03.390 --> 00:55:08.430 About the author Sarah Maslin Nir is a Pulitzer Prize-nominated New York Times reporter and the author of Horse Crazy: The Story of a Woman and a World in Love with an Animal. Sarah Maslin Nir: I love this question and it's great because I was going to try to find a funky segue to this and, just like wing it but i'm going to use this one for it so on the cover of my book. Janet R. Maslin (born August 12, 1949) is an American journalist, best known as a film and literary critic for The New York Times. Throughout her career, Maslin Nir has carried the stories of her family with herincluding her father, Yehuda Nir, who survived the Holocaust in Poland and became a prominent psychiatrist who specialized in treating trauma among New York Citys Hasidic Jews. 00:29:13.440 --> 00:29:24.660 215 Sarah Maslin Nir's "The Flying Horse" | WAMC Their owners must carry them or use a service elevator. 54 49 148 41 Stephanie Butnick: it's so interesting because there's so many just different stories of identity and how we see ourselves how we worry or. Sarah Maslin Nir: It was really fascinating you're exactly right he had a practice at 93 park avenue on 79th and park and he also had really the picture from a couple different hasidic. 15 Sarah Maslin Nir: For the New York Times you don't write the word I, or we ever so this was a struggle to tell my story that actually initially in a. 00:30:14.700 --> 00:30:25.500 Stephanie Butnick: riding horses it all seems very genteel on and then at home, you have your father, who is you who to near this. 00:54:17.880 --> 00:54:24.330 00:26:44.430 --> 00:26:54.510 91 likes, 2 comments - Horse Illustrated (@horseillustrated) on Instagram: "New York Times reporter and Pulitzer Prize finalist Sarah Maslin Nir delivers a powerfully . 00:16:57.060 --> 00:17:10.860 Her mother, Bonnie Maslin, was a noted psychologist who appeared on TV shows such as "Oprah." Stephanie Butnick: Many don't make it, but those that do are exhausted in your death over those are not the ones the highest officer select they wait for the various courses that will go back and help save one another that's ready. 00:51:35.190 --> 00:51:45.300 Sarah Maslin Nir graduated from Columbia University in 2005, majoring in political science and philosophy. Sarah Maslin Nir: And that became how they met, but for my mother being adopted. Sarah Maslin Nir: Jewish if we were X men, you know that's our that's our superpower my dad has a really fascinating story. Sarah Maslin Nir: These horses and she's very posh English woman and she said why don't you come see come for the weekend, like no questions asked so I show up at her farm. 00:47:57.450 --> 00:48:03.570 Another Berkshires-based author, Donaldson Brown, begins her novel, "Because I Loved You," with a young girl racing off on the back of her beloved steed in an effort to keep the horse that her mother has sold. 00:14:49.530 --> 00:14:55.710 00:34:47.310 --> 00:34:53.220 00:55:09.720 --> 00:55:15.270 128 abc children s book author sarah maslin nir embarks on an suspect identified manhunt ongoing after 5 killed at texas home a california woman is found guilty of lying to police that a couple. Stephanie Butnick: My name is Sarah maslin near and i'm the author of course crazy, this is stellar maslin near and we are going to read a little bit from my upcoming book, I hope you enjoy. 00:50:27.300 --> 00:50:37.740 331 Nir was a Finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for "Unvarnished," her more than yearlong investigation into New York City's nail salon industry that documented the exploitative labor practices and health issues manicurists face. 65 Sarah Maslin Nir, author of the memoir "Horse Crazy," joined us to tell us about her new book, "The Flying Horse." the first in a series of fictional middle-grade novels inspired by real horses . Sarah Maslin Nir: A real connection to that in both groups or ratio from the equestrian story. Sarah Maslin Nir: Ralph lauren's real name is Ralph lifshitz and he's a Jew from New York, just like me and that to me spoke that identity that belonging is what you make it that it is a construct and. Sarah Maslin Nir: They would leash excuse me put their dog on the leash they would leash that dog just because I was walking up to them on a horse so horses are a great weapon of intimidation and have always been. Stephanie Butnick: So someone was asking if you heard the story about the Cossacks and how they select their horses, they take the hurt into a dangerously wild river and force them across. 140 00:57:03.690 --> 00:57:19.350 249 [18] The independent NYT Public Editor also reported that she had previously corresponded with Bernstein and looked into his complaints, and expressed her belief that the story's reporting was sound. 00:13:24.150 --> 00:13:33.030 Ari Goldstein: Our host this evening is the wonderful stephanie buttoning who's a granddaughter of Holocaust survivors herself, in addition to being deputy editor of tablet magazine and host of the leading Jewish podcast unorthodox. Sarah Maslin Nir: And I was telling him about some success of having some book and something, and he turned to me said, Sarah I know the name of your future memoir if you ever write it, I was like what is it, he said hitler's worst nightmare. Sarah Maslin Nir: And so, in the book I ended up writing with the black cowboys across Texas, and a post man has spent his life savings to create the Museum of the black cowboy. 00:07:19.110 --> 00:07:27.450 Sarah Maslin Nir: And my days on. 00:24:05.580 --> 00:24:06.990 In July 2015, Unvarnished's claims of widespread "astonishingly low" wages were challenged by former New York Times reporter Richard Bernstein, in the New York Review of Books. 79 Sarah Maslin Nir: They don't sleep standing up, but they do spend most of their life standing up and it's, certainly when they go down the jump up, so I thought he had died. 255 13 256 318 327 Ari Goldstein: by Sarah by stephanie. 85 258 00:33:51.030 --> 00:33:57.060 Sarah Maslin Nir: The last day of the war was spent at that, far from my father. 298 Nir was a Finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for "Unvarnished," her more than yearlong investigation into New York City's nail salon industry that documented the exploitative labor practices and health issues manicurists face. Ari Goldstein: We hope all of you will stay involved in the museum and join us for upcoming programs and events or events calendar is also in the zoom chat and, of course. 00:48:03.930 --> 00:48:16.110 Many girls grow up reading a book (for me it was Silver Birch, by Dorothy Lyons) in which the heroine longs for a horse, finds one, tames it and makes a connection that is much more solid and fun than those she has with her schoolmates. 00:44:05.040 --> 00:44:14.580 She currently covers breaking news for the papers Metro section. Illustrated by Laylie Frazier. 00:51:25.590 --> 00:51:34.560 Stephanie Butnick: But there's a lot in here, as you say about about that your family and about particular your dad and so. 207 00:53:24.810 --> 00:53:32.610 00:08:55.080 --> 00:09:11.550 Sarah Maslin Nir, 32, got her start at The New York Times in 2009 after she stayed up for 24 hours straight to cold pitch one of the editors. New York, NY, US View. 346 Sarah Maslin Nir: cashmere and john first, and I think a large part of my desire to penetrate and belong in that world was to pass. 147 161 00:56:18.120 --> 00:56:30.600 00:03:29.430 --> 00:03:38.580 [9][10], In May 2015, Nir's "Unvarnished" expos on the working conditions of manicurists in New York City and elsewhere[11] and the health hazards to which they are exposed[12] attracted wide attention, resulting in emergency workplace enforcement actions by New York governor Andrew Cuomo.[13]. 00:05:04.770 --> 00:05:13.530 319 159 Sarah Maslin Nir: The great horse whisperer I profile in this book Monte Roberts of the movie the horse whisperer is based on him says for system, and one thing. 00:48:40.530 --> 00:48:55.290 Stephanie Butnick: You on screen you saw your love of horses we're going to get to all of that, I want to sort of start at the beginning. 237 Sarah Maslin Nir: Take a look at her, she looks like the you know Las Vegas last but they don't see it, because they feel her jewishness right the gestalt and so you know we all put on different identities and. Sarah Maslin Nir: I don't me I don't need, which is her Hebrew school Hebrew what she thinks means you know, Sir, Sir, it means a little something closer, as we know, to my leads. 00:18:56.640 --> 00:19:12.420 Stephanie Butnick: Your father's psychiatric practice also presented its own sort of duality you know the upper East side elites that you write about the future, you don't write about them, but that that idea that that was part of his practice but also these hasidic Jews of brooklyn and so. 354 24 16 00:37:11.340 --> 00:37:23.250 Sarah Maslin Nir: How could I possibly be real and how could I have the right to not only any happiness, but any suffering when you know even a sunny day can feel like something undeserved when you haven't been through what your dearest family member has. 00:21:58.590 --> 00:22:11.100 12 131 00:31:23.580 --> 00:31:29.790 The everyday effects of The New York Times ' nail salon expos A New York Times staff reporter profiles horses and horse lovers across the . 97 She covered the escape of two inmates from the Clinton Correctional Facility; camped out overnight at Zuccotti Park with Occupy Wall Street protesters; attended 25 parties over five days; and conducted a sweeping investigation into New York Citys nail salon industry, for which she was a 2016 Pulitzer Prize finalist. 61 00:54:09.000 --> 00:54:17.220 Sarah Maslin Nir: I felt self conscious putting these things to paper, as I say, in the book. Sarah Maslin Nir: So I became a reporter, because I was born a reporter in that. Stephanie Butnick: You think that's new that's really, really fascinating I want to shift a little bit before I completely turn turn turn over to the audience but. 132 Sarah Maslin Nir: Thank you for your wonderful questions I love how your mind went and thank you for your deep engagement with the book. 188 00:15:43.980 --> 00:15:50.730 77 Ms. Nir and her team came across the ad several times going through Chinese newspapers last spring. 27 Ari Goldstein: ended up being deported to our show to He was killed he entrusted his body work to. The storm, plus a new moon, pushed water from Lake Erie into Buffalo, and threatened more flooding on the South Shore of Long Island. And then, midair, he flipped himself, a spectator told her. As seen in: The New York Times, UOL, MSN, MSN Canada, MSN India, MSN South Africa, MSN UK, O Globo, The New York Times en Espaol, Bad Deck Breakdowns, Estado and more. Sarah Maslin Nir: or outside the country because at the time you couldn't operate on cadavers within the confines of the State of Israel or it wasn't an answer with state and my dad goes congratulations. Sarah Maslin Nir: And stephanie we both know everything Pearl is better right a pigtail is better than pointy tail curly Fries better than a French right. 280 Sarah Maslin Nir: My father was almost murdered, as he would say he was a nine year old boy you out with it 80 million Germans trying to murder him so he viewed his life as a tremendous victory lap my mother was abandoned at birth she's adopted and. [1] She served as a Times film critic from 1977 to 1999 and as a book critic from 2000 to 2015. Sarah Maslin Nir: And that is a really something I wish i'd included in the book, I only learned it later and one of the lenses, to which I tell that story and the times recently was cheryl white. A surprisingly Jewish passion for horses - The Forward 00:19:46.050 --> 00:19:56.430 70 She is also a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism (2009). A delightful journey and summer 2020 must-read for equestrians everywhere! Sarah Maslin Nir: I. 98 00:22:49.530 --> 00:22:56.700 Sarah Maslin Nir: Although it made me perhaps feel inferior insecure about my own place in the world, I think it also made me compassionate having that legacy and my family. Sarah Maslin Nir's "The Flying Horse," the first in a series of middle grade novels based on "real horses and the people who love them," was inspired by an experience Nir, a reporter at . 00:52:04.620 --> 00:52:07.770 [28] Shortly afterward, Reason and Crain's New York Business published stories refuting those allegations. 101 Sarah Maslin Nir: So here's trendy these are his little legs here is a flower pot and his legs were wrapped around it, and he couldn't scramble them and flip himself over and get up. Review by Alice Cary. 224 New York Times Craps On Fourth Of July, Says Flag Is 'Alienating' In August 2020, Nir published Horse Crazy[14] which explores why so many peopleincluding herselfare obsessed with horses. Book Review: 'Horse Crazy' | HORSE NATION Sarah Maslin Nir: and. Sarah Maslin Nir: And it's a tautology that's an absolutely satisfying answer for a horse lover there's something about how they move how they look how they feel and yet. 32 Colon, who previously suffered from sarcoidosis, a disease that her doctor . 336 Sarah Maslin Nir: That, too, with two willing participants, but I believe it's a conversation with a creature that's been bred for millennia, to have to be that conversationalist with us, but I think we owe them a tremendous ethic of care and just stories like that there are.
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