Good People with Kelsey Timmerman KelseyTimmerman
-
- 社会/文化
Explore what it means to be good by listening to everyday heroes, philanthropists, altruists, and do-gooders. Hosted by NYT’s bestselling author Kelsey Timmerman and his friend Jay Moorman.
-
34: The Problem with Diet Culture
Americans associate a piece of chocolate cake with guilt. The French associate it with joy. American culture has a broken relationship with food, how we talk about food, diet culture, weight, and health.
Kelsey and Jay are joined by Claire Moorman (Jay's daughter!) to help us sort it all out. Claire is a registered dietician who helps people have a healthy relationship with food. -
33: Community Foundations to the Rescue
Giving shouldn't be transactional, it should be transformational. Kelly Shrock, president of the Community Foundation of Muncie & Delaware County, joins Kelsey and Jay to share info on community foundations and Donor Advised Funds.
Does Jay hoard his money at Gringot's? Does Kelsey know anything about the tax code? Why is 1 out of every 9 community foundations located in Indiana?
Kelly brings the answers for all of our questions. -
33: Pam Mandel
Pam Mandel left suburbia for a lifetime of travel when she was only 17. She writes about her early travel days in her new memoir THE SAME RIVER TWICE.
Pam joined Kelsey and Jay to chat about hitchhiking, travel, questioning intentions while doing good, the time she went to the airport to help a refugee, founding a nonprofit, and, of course, jamming in a ukelele rock band. -
32: Soccer in the Wake of Civil War
Seren Fryatt didn't want to tape ankles the rest of her life. She quit her job to volunteer internationally with Mercy Ships. In Liberia she was recruited to play professional soccer. She saw what the sport meant to the women on her team and its potential to be a force of positive change. Eventually she founded L.A.C.E.S., an NGO that works to create a sustainable, replicable model of community development using sports as a tool to reach at-risk youth and empower their local communities.
-
31: Eric Henry (Entrepreneur, Farmer, Candidate, Local Citizen)
Eric Henry’s T-shirt business and North Carolina community were turned upside down by NAFTA. Ever since, he’s focused on the triple bottom line: people, planet, and profit. Eric is a champion for his community, cooperatives, chickens, electric cars, local economies, farmers, and now he’s seeking to represent all of these interests in the North Carolina House of Representatives.
-
30: Muncie Not Mercury (Part 2)
In the summer of 2019, a violinist stood up at a city council meeting in Muncie, Indiana, and expressed concern over a factory that was coming to town. A local reporter wrote a story about the meeting. That story was passed around to concerned citizens who started asking questions. A few weeks later more than 1,000 people showed up at the courthouse protesting the Waelz Sustainable Products factory. A factory that would likely be the #1 polluter of airborne Mercury in the nation. Ultimately the billion-dollar corporation left town.