00:30:51.150 --> 00:31:02.670 00:31:30.150 --> 00:31:44.100 Metro New York. 187 00:46:24.180 --> 00:46:30.750 00:29:36.210 --> 00:29:41.850 Sarah Maslin Nir: which you can purchase in the chat says at bravo's book nook all of those are autographed and if you send them a message I will also personalize it to you, but on the cover of this book is. With his wife, Dr. Maslin, also a psychiatrist, Dr. Nir wrote a number of self-help books on relationships, among them "Loving Men for All the Right Reasons" and "Not Quite Paradise: Making. Sarah Maslin Nir: thing I should really say is that he didn't treat them differently, and I mean treat capital T as a clinician. 00:40:09.090 --> 00:40:16.710 (Part 1)," Reason (October 27, 2015), Jim Epstein, "How The New York Times' Flawed Reporting on Nail Salons Closed Opportunities For Undocumented Immigrants (Part 2)," Reason (October 28, 2015), Jim Epstein, "The New York Times Says Working in Nail Salons Causes Cancer and Miscarriages. 00:12:19.500 --> 00:12:22.200 59 Ari Goldstein: But this is a beautiful watercolor by this young check Jewish boy Peter lowenstein who was deported to terrorising was 22 and. Stephanie Butnick: For sure I love that I mean, I think that that was something that I was really attuned to while I was reading the story, and so you are the child of Holocaust survivor i'm the grandchild we're not that. 00:22:49.530 --> 00:22:56.700 39 248 00:37:48.870 --> 00:37:54.240 00:08:15.240 --> 00:08:30.240 In the article, Pulitzer Prize finalist Sarah Maslin Nir examined how the American flag 'once a unifying symbol' has become a divisive symbol in the United States along political party lines. 231 Language links are at the top of the page across from the title. 38 326 begins with a life-changing event. Sarah Maslin Nir: had been refusing insulin and I sometimes a complete a couple of these stories so she i'm sure she's going to correct me in the in the chat. 00:07:06.180 --> 00:07:11.610 A surprisingly Jewish passion for horses - The Forward 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. 161 00:02:55.710 --> 00:03:06.540 00:03:07.950 --> 00:03:18.990 00:54:35.610 --> 00:54:47.400 Sarah Maslin Nir: I have a secret that for 29 years i've been doing you've been paying me for what I would have done for free and that's how I feel. Sarah Maslin Nir: I just watched your horse save your life. 225 00:07:58.920 --> 00:08:09.120 209 281 316 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. Sarah Maslin Nir: you're allowed to define it yourself and Ralph lauren defined was culture Ralph elections, and so I will just the correct you on on that that small note. 00:56:53.910 --> 00:57:03.270 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. In 2000, Maslin helped found the Jacob Burns Film Center in Pleasantville, New York. 328 52 Sarah Maslin Nir: And that was his reclaiming of those the shifty narrative of the Jew as shifty yes, I feel like a motherfucker pardon my French. 00:03:55.590 --> 00:04:03.840 355 Stephanie Butnick: I love that this is a great next question, which is that you mentioned that you know you look for the horses wherever you go across the world, with your reporting. 17 93 16 00:25:48.300 --> 00:25:55.260 Ive never seen anything like it. 289 00:24:34.200 --> 00:24:39.930 Rebuttal to The NYRB's Article on NYT Nail Salon Series Sarah Maslin Nir Horse Crazy: The Story of a Woman and a World in Love with an Animal Hardcover - Illustrated, August 4, 2020 by Sarah Maslin Nir (Author) 447 ratings See all formats and editions Kindle $13.99 Read with Our Free App Audiobook $0.00 Free with your Audible trial Hardcover 00:35:55.740 --> 00:35:56.220 215 322 00:35:02.400 --> 00:35:11.580 [29][30], In December 2015, the Columbia Journalism Review investigated the effects of Nir's Unvarnished series on nail salon workers and owners, concluding that many nail salon workers were empowered and saw working conditions improved as a result of attention and legal reforms spurred by the reporting. 00:12:02.910 --> 00:12:10.710 00:14:49.530 --> 00:14:55.710 Sarah Maslin Nir: In treating his patients who had that disorder judge them as it being lesser and then his own, and so I think there was something special about my father's ability to treat post traumatic stress and others. When Sarah finally mounts Trendsetter at 13, what does she notice about him that makes him different from other horses? Sarah Maslin Nir: But you know braided together those are the threads that form the tapestry of my life, so thank you for your deep breathe and that great question. 00:26:26.820 --> 00:26:32.820 00:08:09.450 --> 00:08:14.760 Sarah Maslin Nir: And having a stunning revelation that I saw an etching from the 1800s it's called the horse dealer and it is a man selling horses, to a very posh German crowd and he has payout. 309 Stephanie Butnick: And already, thank you for having us both here tonight, and to the Museum of Jewish heritage, always a pleasure to be part of your programming. On View The Holocaust: What Hate Can Do, On View The Garden of Stones by Andy Goldsworthy, On View Survivors: Faces of Life After the Holocaust, Coming Soon Courage to Act: Rescue in Denmark, Museum of Jewish Heritage Holocaust Curriculum, Curriculum Guides for Frequently Assigned Books, Museum of Jewish Heritage A Living Memorial to the Holocaust. Sarah Maslin Nir: isn't that interesting I wasn't there I didn't belong and and even even and that's the fiction of identity right that identity is a construct here, I was not only was I there, I was the best of the best and I disappeared, because I didn't believe it. 00:33:57.510 --> 00:33:58.080 We have estimated Sarah Maslin Nir's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets. 00:15:30.210 --> 00:15:43.740 00:42:11.280 --> 00:42:19.530 34 Recommended for readers 8 to 12 years. Sarah Maslin Nir: You better thank that horse for saving your life, and I said I did, and I do. 99 00:29:42.690 --> 00:29:51.120 Sarah Maslin Nir has been a staff reporter for The New York Times since August 2011. Sarah Maslin Nir: Is tattered family had been impressed into hard Labor on a German farm by Nazi sympathizer and farmers who believed they were harboring Polish refugees not Jews. 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. Current reporter, former columnist for The New York Times. Sarah Maslin Nir: And that connection ISM is deeply powerful there's one other way that you connect with them that you don't connect with. And so I found myself notebook in hand interviewing the keepers of the street horses of Senegal West Africa as the animal slept in corrals have parked cars. web 2 days ago books children s book author sarah maslin nir embarks on an unconventional book tour reading from barn to barn the new york times reporter is touring with her second horse themed . Sarah Maslin Nir (@SarahMaslinNir) / Twitter Sarah Maslin Nir: sense of being out of place an outsider in a world that didn't belong to her, I was convinced I couldn't possibly compete, this is the best. 124 Sarah Maslin Nir: None they don't have catastrophic breakdown in Europe, because they have much more stringent drugging rules, and we have crazy. She sent him almost a dozen stories in one night and . Ari Goldstein: Video clip to introduce us to Sarah and to her horse so i'll put it up on the screen in just a moment and then, when the video is done stephanie feel free to dive into the discussion welcome everyone, and thanks again for being here. 00:42:20.310 --> 00:42:36.600 Facebook gives people the power to share and makes the world more open and connected. Sarah Maslin Nir: There was a two year old in the field and a four year old and I said Francesca you know Bam is decades old how, how do you have these horses. 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. She currently covers breaking news for the paper’s Metro section. 174 Sarah Maslin Nir: You know, he said that's what you are, you know and, and so I was loaded with intergenerational trauma that it doesn't really matter what reality is it's it's a perception issue. 00:21:46.110 --> 00:21:58.020 108 107 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. Sarah Maslin Nir: Interesting response to when we have these bubbles of outrage on different fronts throughout coronavirus i'm not sure anybody knows. 64 221 172 00:50:10.890 --> 00:50:15.180 A New York Times writer and Pulitzer finalist allegedly nearly killed her best friend in a car crash, by swerving down the . 00:43:45.450 --> 00:44:01.920 00:04:55.830 --> 00:05:04.350 Sarah Maslin Nir's "Horse Crazy" is half autobiography, half horse tales that remind readers all equestrians have one commonality: a love of horses. Stephanie Butnick: The side of being like no we're cutting and that's great and we're different and that's power, I mean, how did you sort of reconcile that was that something that you should have came to appreciate more as you grew up. [6][7] She became a trainee reporter in 2011 and worked as a rewrite reporter for late-night news, during which time she camped out overnight at Zuccotti Park with the Occupy Wall Street protesters,[8] and later reported on the dismantling of the camp. Sarah Maslin Nir: On his baptismal certificate forged by a family friend and so in this posh life, I felt like I was living with my own forged identity and that's something that I unpack in the book really the book was a. 00:50:27.300 --> 00:50:37.740 Search. 31 253 175 00:04:47.250 --> 00:04:55.080 Stephanie Butnick: How much of that I won't do that send a sense of otherness last I mean Do you still feel that I mean to me there's a difference of like the connection with the horses and then like the wider horse world which, as you described. She is also a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism (2009). Sarah Maslin Nir: And yet he felt that they had a exact parallel experiences just in their own insular world, as did his secular patients, because what we were all looking for including me was mastery and where I found a sense of mastery was in penetrating the horse world. 51 Sarah Maslin Nir: Believe it or not, I had a job as a spa reviewer briefly, I know, tough work if you can get it, and I was reviewing a spot in Rajasthan when I wrote these horses I snuck away to write these horses, with a capital remember. 143 Sarah Maslin Nir: What being able to live meant to my father, but also in just a father's love for a daughter, I was convinced I hadn't won and my dad was convinced, I had without knowing anything about these animals and so that to me encapsulates what horses became to my family. 74 318 00:48:16.740 --> 00:48:26.490 Stephanie Butnick: How much of that as a as a child of you know, several you know thinkers in this way, I mean. Sarah Maslin Nir: And in the early days American horse racing people ran the horses, they owned with the humans, they owned on their backs, and that is how it was done, they purchase leads from West Africa and save people from West Africa for their horsemanship skills. 145 Sarah Maslin Nir: hey I wish i'd included this in my book, it sounds amazing, but it does bring me to a topic that I address in the book, I will pivot on what I do know about that. Sarah Maslin Nir: You know, it will make see is what makes you wedged yourself into a career at the New York Times, because you know it's another victory lap against the Nazis, I once was telling a friend, we were at pace. 00:32:16.770 --> 00:32:22.440 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. 257 "It's an unusual horse book in that it's my coming of age story through the lens of the horses . 00:51:09.270 --> 00:51:16.290 Sarah Maslin Nir: Well, first of all it's important to identify that it's patently false I come from, tremendous privilege, you know my my parents both had. 259 00:46:31.170 --> 00:46:40.710 00:40:56.970 --> 00:40:57.270 00:56:31.140 --> 00:56:41.820 Stephanie Butnick: As you're living your happy life that he wanted for you right the life that he worked hard and your mother with her to create for you, because that was the sign of a winning right. New York Times reporter Sarah Maslin Nir's provocatively titled May 12 article, " Perfect Nails, Poisoned Workers ," opens at a salon in Ridgewood, Queens. 262 261 Sarah Maslin Nir: And so the the pushing this of the Jews don't let them say no first have been tropes of my journalism career and every every moment of my waking life. 00:55:22.140 --> 00:55:30.210 Sarah Maslin Nir: In Israel, after linked Israel post war and he ended up. 266 00:22:57.150 --> 00:23:10.350 192 Sarah Maslin Nir's Profile | The New York Times Journalist - Muck Rack 207 Book Review: The Flying Horse, by Sarah Maslin Nir - New York Times 156 The Museum of Jewish Heritage is able to fulfill its mission thanks to the generous support of patrons, members, and museum visitors. Sarah Maslin Nir: We were all happy, except for the horse, who was having a hard time adjusting to her first job and so throughout his life, the scent, of course, is considered freedom. Sarah Maslin Nir: So a horse racing while we unpack. 00:20:11.130 --> 00:20:19.950 Sarah Maslin Nir: And I think my father specialty of post traumatic stress disorder in his practice, he was a pioneer of post traumatic stress disorder now it's a watchword, but when he was starting it wasn't the thing. 306 Sarah Maslin Nir: You know what's really funny and we're kosher Jews from New York City and my mom is like really Julie and then every once a while and I tell someone she's adopted they're like wait that doesn't make sense they go look at my mom. 00:27:37.380 --> 00:27:45.240 00:39:19.800 --> 00:39:27.270 350 Sarah Maslin Nir: He took the trope of the greedy Shylock and made him into a subversive war hero right he's a he's a peace activists and my father described himself as very cunning the Germans couldn't kill me could murder me because I was too cunning. All Rights Reserved. 296 272 But she added, being committed to a psych ward saved her in the past. "The Flying Horse" Book 1 of Once Upon A . Stephanie Butnick: start with you just telling us a little bit about both of those worlds, which both seem pretty intense in their own ways and how you navigated between them, you know the privilege, on one hand and what must have felt like this looming sense of trauma at home. 00:53:24.810 --> 00:53:32.610 342 Kudos to Sarah Maslin Nir for shedding light on the working conditions faced by nail salon workers in her recent two-part New York Times expos "Perfect Nails . 00:56:43.170 --> 00:56:44.250 00:47:43.110 --> 00:47:49.110 133 217 Sarah Maslin Nir: And that became how they met, but for my mother being adopted. 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 . 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. 222 00:50:58.860 --> 00:51:01.350 00:46:13.440 --> 00:46:22.560 57 276 63 00:51:16.740 --> 00:51:25.230 129 177 Sarah Maslin Nir: life and limb, but of identity, so I worked actually in Harlem for a black cowboy and I had never even known, there was a thing as a black cowboy. 256 00:24:22.800 --> 00:24:33.510 NY Times sued over horror car crash | Page Six 282 33 87 308 00:13:33.450 --> 00:13:43.170 104 00:38:05.310 --> 00:38:16.200 00:33:51.030 --> 00:33:57.060 Their daughter, Sarah Maslin Nir, studied at GW before transferring to Columbia University. 181 Stephanie Butnick: The Labor abuses in within the nail salon world and, more recently, which was a pulitzer prize finalist. And i've quizzed Indian soldiers about the indigenous battle horses I charge through quality in Rochester for my entire life i've sought out horses endlessly. Stephanie Butnick: wow someone is asking an interesting question, which is what do you make of the fact that there are so many images of Nazis on horseback I did not know that is that a thing. 00:12:58.860 --> 00:13:10.860 00:32:48.570 --> 00:32:58.590 Stephanie Butnick: More recently, you were really on the front lines of a coven last year, and so I was wondering if you could tell us a little bit about. In August 2020, Nir published Horse Crazy[14] which explores why so many peopleincluding herselfare obsessed with horses. Sarah Maslin Nir: it's very, very formal my dad's or looks up the stairs and he was like that lady just called me Lord. 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: 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. 00:13:11.250 --> 00:13:21.990 Anyone can read what you share. 00:57:19.770 --> 00:57:20.820 00:22:11.370 --> 00:22:17.550 00:26:14.640 --> 00:26:16.230 A Look at Sarah Maslin Nir's Book Horse Crazy - Horse Illustrated 330 70 00:17:27.750 --> 00:17:32.880 Only In New York | Museum of the City of New York One of them ran on April 2, 2014, in the World Journal; another on April 17, 2014; and another on April 18, 2014. 295 Born and raised in Manhattan, Sarah is a true New Yorker. Stephanie Butnick: we'll get to your questions as well, I know you probably have a lot of them, you know I want to get back to the intergenerational trauma if you don't mind. Sarah Maslin Nir: The day my father ship and just when I found him and he's very, very special to me and he's very disinclined to expend energy I call him a ficus he's like a potted plant of a horse that's what he wants to stay still. Salary in 2020. 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. 00:03:20.130 --> 00:03:28.170 00:26:16.530 --> 00:26:26.280 Sarah Maslin Nir: In the book and address it head on and i'm not sure where I come down on you know I don't believe that riding horses as a dance. Ari Goldstein: It says new book is horse crazy the story of a woman in a world in love with an animal which traces her lifelong obsession with horses and offers a window into the lesser known corners of the equestrian world. Full Episode Wednesday, Sep 21 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: asked to be inducted into Yad Vashem after saying that they have protected choose and my father controversially at the time, fought against it said. 00:55:09.720 --> 00:55:15.270 This transcription was created automatically during a live program so may contain inaccurate transcriptions of some words. 49 00:17:45.330 --> 00:17:53.820 12 Stephanie Butnick: that's that's that's fascinating um. This programs original recording transcript is below. 00:31:23.580 --> 00:31:29.790 That's pretty far from the farm, so to speak, yet she's managed to uphold a competitive career in . 180 Sarah Maslin Nir: and afterwards been checked up by an emt and I had actually ended up crashing vertebrae but I was still able to walk but just from the back to the fall and a woman came up to me and she said. Amazon.com: Sarah Maslin Nir: books, biography, latest update Sarah Maslin Nir's "The Flying Horse" | WAMC Acclaimed journalist and avid equestrian Sarah Maslin Nir is one of them; she began riding horses when she was just two years old and hasn't stopped since. Sarah Maslin Nir: devastating beginnings in this world my grandfather was murdered by the German so. 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. Sarah Maslin Nir: The first, winner of the first ever conducted Derby was a black man and the trainer of that horse was and emancipated slaves. 00:33:40.110 --> 00:33:50.010 356 00:01:59.070 --> 00:02:06.360 Sarah Maslin Nir: safari ride with her husband across India, she has become obsessed with these horses and she's been to India for 20 years. $16.99. 00:43:20.190 --> 00:43:28.950 00:07:19.110 --> 00:07:27.450 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. Sarah Maslin Nir: Because I don't want to be taken as soft I want to be seen as disciplined and, but there is something that transpires between two bodies that are connected. 00:23:33.810 --> 00:23:38.760 160 Given the inherent danger of horseback riding (which Nir knows firsthand, having written in Horse Crazy about the sometimes scary injuries she has suffered), what I miss in The Flying Horse is the how-to. 37 00:41:50.700 --> 00:41:51.150 Sarah Maslin Nir: And he had a big watch word stephanie which was mastery he felt everybody was seeking to master themselves to master the world, and when you're from a very close perhaps anachronistic. 40 Stephanie Butnick: To reverse it right to subvert it exactly so, can you tell the story of how your parents man, I found it so delightful interesting. [21][22] (A fifth protest was also held a year later after at the "NYT" offices in response to a new rule instituted by Governor Cuomo in response to the article requiring all nail salons in New York State to have ventilation systems, the first such rule in the country.) 216 Bernstein, whose wife owns two nail salons, asserted that such wages were inconsistent with his personal experience, and were not evidenced by ads in the Chinese-language papers cited by the story. There was no way he was falling anywhere but on top of you. Horse Crazy - BookPage 224 00:30:26.040 --> 00:30:40.590 Stephanie Butnick: In the Q amp a because i'm going to ask Sarah a few more but i'm going to turn it over to all of you and ask your you don't ask yourself i'll ask them to turn your camera on or anything but. 341 Audio Recording: Unvarnished Podcast - New America Sarah Maslin Nir: My father, however, knowing nothing about horses, we did all day at the side of the ring his bald head crisping in the sun. 210 In Sarah Maslin Nirs The Flying Horse, a young equestrian and her trusty steed jump back in time. Sarah Maslin Nir: But I really beg borrow and steal my way in I have this magical little device which actually all of us have. Western New York is still digging out from a punishing holiday blizzard that has taken nearly 30 lives. Sarah Maslin Nir: trundled in and he took that second place ribbon from the judge and put it on his chest and turned to him and raised up his hands and said I defeated Hitler. 2,212 Followers, 3,895 Following, 849 Posts - See Instagram photos and videos from HorseCrazy (@horsecrazythebook) In September and October 2015, hundreds of nail salon owners and workers protested at the NYT offices several times, in response to the story and the ensuing New York State crackdown. 265 132 219 323 Sarah Maslin Nir: Really really sobering your coverage so it's been a fascinating year to report from the Center of the storm which on both fronts, which has been New York City.
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