284 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. Sarah Maslin Nir: religious group you read many, particularly women, is when a patient struggled with finding a sense of mastery what does it mean to master the world when your radio or is it.
Some Republicans want to ban 'Latinx.' These Latino Democrats agree. Sarah Maslin Nir: Being able to connect with someone over Jewish identity was so important right my mom has long blonde hair green eyes she's ethnically Irish and but what brought her to my dad was their jewishness. 190 00:55:56.700 --> 00:56:08.850 00:19:57.060 --> 00:20:02.850 You may have seen the name, Sarah Maslin Nir, graced across the pages of the "New York Times" reporting stories from breaking news to exposs. Stephanie Butnick: You grew up between what seems like two realities you lived on the upper East side you ended up you attended, you know upper crust all girls private school there's the House in the hamptons the horse. 247 76 00:01:59.070 --> 00:02:06.360 It was at Spa Jolie, the downtown day spa where she worked in early 2015, that Colon, a former nail salon owner and longtime manicurist, met Sarah Maslin Nir, the New York Times reporter who wrote an expos, published in May, that upended New York's nail industry. Stephanie Butnick: I know the combination of two parents, both in the biz one you know with all costs background, but you know what was so interesting to me is. 357 00:40:27.930 --> 00:40:34.140 325 258 Q. 279 Sarah Maslin Nir: I don't know if you ever get over it right and a good, healthy dose of imposter syndrome is what makes you work real hard. 00:32:30.990 --> 00:32:41.310 Sarah Maslin Nir: Horses went extinct in the American continent about 10,000 years ago and they were reintroduced. 228 In August 2020, Nir published Horse Crazy[14] which explores why so many peopleincluding herselfare obsessed with horses. As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Then he saved her life. Sarah Maslin Nir: They are in the same way that they are extensions of the human body they're also. 305 He then pulls on a pair of goggles. 00:30:26.040 --> 00:30:40.590 00:22:29.640 --> 00:22:37.230 74 Sarah Maslin Nir: On the other side of the mountains for to have these structures that existed east of them and black people have. $1 Million - $5 Million. 359 00:53:55.110 --> 00:54:08.100 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. 00:24:34.200 --> 00:24:39.930 Sarah Maslin Nir: got real sick real quick, I mean how foolish now looking back, but it was a fascinating experience and another thing i've been on the forefront of this year. 98 00:54:35.610 --> 00:54:47.400 Sarah Maslin Nir: like this and and I realized that I am trendies heard and justin the way, as he wouldn't hurt another member of his herd he had taken pains to avoid me and I was being too too staunch in my desire to not see that and, as she walked away, she said. 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. 104 Sarah Maslin Nir has been a staff reporter for The New York Times since August 2011. 00:50:48.450 --> 00:50:58.320 00:12:37.860 --> 00:12:46.530 36 | Cameron Kids | $16.99 | Ages 8 to 12, Galloping Through a Horse Crazy Middle Grade Novel, https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/24/books/review/sarah-maslin-nir-the-flying-horse.html. 00:34:29.790 --> 00:34:39.750 Sarah Maslin Nir: To prevent them from taking these stealing these bloodlines of lipizzaner horses so that's a really fascinating book but look horses our time tied to a military might. 9 Sarah Maslin Nir: Thank you so much. 00:17:27.750 --> 00:17:32.880 Sarah Maslin Nir: That, yes, we had horses in the family, Sarah we had a subversive like World War one era polak in the family who would gather up. 00:39:56.070 --> 00:40:08.160
Book Review: 'Horse Crazy' | HORSE NATION 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 . 00:07:29.520 --> 00:07:49.680 Sarah Maslin Nir: And my days on. She saddled up for the first time at age 2, and more .
Sarah Maslin Nir - The New York Times 20
Only In New York | Museum of the City of New York 290 [15] These allegations were criticized by Niall O'Dowd and other Irish-American community leaders, who stated that the assertions amounted to a "clichd stereotyping" of the neighborhood by Nir.[16]. 00:16:57.060 --> 00:17:10.860 00:11:04.290 --> 00:11:18.810 Sarah Maslin Nir: When after the war he had really a fifth grade education, because he spent the whole time hiding in plain sight with various jobs, he got a high school equivalency degree. 00:08:15.240 --> 00:08:30.240 Sarah Maslin Nir: On in the belly of a Spanish galleon by Spanish copies to doors, and yet they became completely adopted by Native Americans, and we think of them. 00:20:27.540 --> 00:20:35.610 220 00:10:48.000 --> 00:10:54.720 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. Stephanie Butnick: So this brings us to our first audience question, which is a nice and they said we how did you become a reporter, and why the New York Times. 160 Ari Goldstein: Thank you, both again, thank you to our audience and you can order the sarah's book at the link in the zoom chat we love to support local bookstores here in New York.
Sarah Maslin Nir Wikipedia Republished // WIKI 2 Ari Goldstein: You can order the book at the link in the zoom chat it's from sarah's local retailer here in New York so every copy they sell is personally signed. Sarah Maslin Nir: So I needed one of these when I got back I had. 00:19:13.470 --> 00:19:26.760 [1] The story generated both extensive regulatory changes and extensive criticism. 00:12:19.500 --> 00:12:22.200 192 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. Stephanie Butnick: How much of that as a as a child of you know, several you know thinkers in this way, I mean. 358 Sarah Maslin Nir: And yet there was one lady who had a dozen of them in martha's vineyard and so for the book, I called her up and I was like, how do you have. 138 Stephanie Butnick: Wait what what what does that mean, so this is, of course, about your wonderful memoir and reporting book horse crazy but it's also a surprisingly perfect encapsulation of. Its response that anybody has ever felt the ineluctable tug of their big amber eyes, in which you see something much more than your own reflection, or who knows the piece of their shattering wildness immediately understands because horses answer enough. 00:41:34.320 --> 00:41:49.500 274 253 00:36:15.570 --> 00:36:32.340 00:50:38.010 --> 00:50:48.180 Sarah Maslin Nir: to him as to me horses were freedom on April 28 1945 my father was 15. 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. Sarah Maslin Nir: Viewed throughout history and art is extensions of the phallus and the way that you dominate people it is for aeons been on horseback so it makes a lot of sense. 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. 353 Sarah Maslin Nir: been entirely removed from the American equestrian story, and that means they're removed from American identity right because that pioneer era i'm the daughter of an immigrant, but it still feels like my birthright as an American you know the cowboy heritage of the cowboy narrative. 295 Sarah Maslin Nir: And he had been impressed into hard Labor on a Polish farm the family believed that he and his mother and sister were Polish refugees not Jewish and so.
Review: 'The Flying Horse' is a refreshing horse-lovers' book for 72 00:14:57.810 --> 00:15:08.160 Sarah Maslin Nirs 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 The New York Times, shared in her 2020 memoir Horse Crazy. In 2016, the Dutch warmblood Trendsetter, whom she had purchased a week after her fathers death two years earlier, stumbled and pitched forward while she was riding him in a competition. Sarah Maslin Nir: The how you know the semen smuggling, the what the more worried horses, but she didn't give me the why why Francesca Kelly and English socialite become the steward in her mind if these animals and and traveled endlessly back to India, and she said to me. Sarah Maslin Nir is a staff reporter for The New York Times. Stephanie Butnick: You sort of, say, to your father, at one point, like that you haven't been through yourself what he had been through and you sort of you know, or a little bit. Sarah Maslin Nir: horse dealers in the old country they were forced out of many other jobs but being forced dealers, is when they could have actually until about World War Two when they were edicts removing them from the marketplaces. 00:46:24.180 --> 00:46:30.750 00:09:39.930 --> 00:09:52.020 Ari Goldstein: Sarah Muslim near has been in New York Times reporter staff reporter, for the last decade. Sarah Maslin Nir: She said I was directly behind you when he flipped and he was only coming down on top of you, he felt on the left and you felt the left and he was only coming down on top of you.
Instagram 170 People Like Sarah Nir .
Online Library Broken A Love Story Horses Humans And Redemption On The 307 00:25:31.140 --> 00:25:31.530 [1] The story generated both extensive . 361 178 00:22:11.370 --> 00:22:17.550 00:50:27.300 --> 00:50:37.740 91 likes, 2 comments - Horse Illustrated (@horseillustrated) on Instagram: "New York Times reporter and Pulitzer Prize finalist Sarah Maslin Nir delivers a powerfully . 222 00:02:55.710 --> 00:03:06.540 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. (Part 3)," Reason (October 29, 2015), "New Questions on Nail Salon Investigation, and a Times Response", "Backed by Nail Salon Owners, a New York Legislator Now Fights Reforms", "The New York Times Publishes Another Misleading Story About Nail Salons", "Nailed by the Times, Queens assemblyman wages war for reputation", "The everyday effects of The New York Times' nail salon expos", "Front Page Awards Winners Announced - Newswomen's Club of New York", https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sarah_Maslin_Nir&oldid=1102941378, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism alumni, Short description is different from Wikidata, Articles with unsourced statements from April 2017, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 3.0, This page was last edited on 7 August 2022, at 18:17. 335 Her style is conversational and often amusing: Right now, Trendy was getting a vibe. 00:27:10.650 --> 00:27:19.620 94 00:25:18.450 --> 00:25:31.080 00:53:45.900 --> 00:53:54.510 241 Sarah Huckabee Sanders of Arkansas, who barred "Latinx" from state documents as her first official act. Sarah Maslin Nir: But at one point, the relationship he figured out that his student wasn't refusing insulin because he had a death wish it's because he.
Sarah Maslin Nir (@SarahMaslinNir) / Twitter Why do I love horses that's because the answer is always been because horses. Sarah Maslin Nir: And she said no, and I have known it I had seen it we had locked eyes, as we fell and I knew it. 00:24:05.580 --> 00:24:06.990 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. Ms. Nir was a finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for a yearlong investigation into New York . 186 Sarah Maslin Nir: it's called a phone and, believe it or not, a rings and you can call people you don't have to text people you listen, can you believe it you don't have to tweet at them or email them when you want to work somewhere.
BITS & BYTES: What it takes to write a novel talk; Postactivism 26 Stephanie Butnick: Thanks so much Ari and wow Sarah that was quite an entrance I like that whole special video just for us.
New York Times Craps On Fourth Of July, Says Flag Is 'Alienating' Sarah Maslin Nir: But she's actually going been going back to stop that first safari died that she met in 1995 having a love affair that's broke both their marriages and spanned decades. Sarah Maslin Nir: And so, somebody realized that at the show grounds and people came running because they thought he die and we put a rope around his ankle and flip them over, on the other side, and he got right up. But did you know that since the age of two, Sarah has also been a dedicated horsewoman? New York Times reporter Sarah Maslin Nir's provocatively titled May 12 article, " Perfect Nails, Poisoned Workers ," opens at a salon in Ridgewood, Queens.