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Listen, Ladies

Maryalice Aymong

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Listen, Ladies is a podcast by ladies, for ladies (and gentlemen) featuring interviews with experts and innovators in a broad range of fields internationally. The podcast highlight current events and issues, breakthroughs in the arts and academic communities, as well as women making an extraordinary impact in their fields. Hosted by journalist and international relations scholar Maryalice Aymong, Listen, Ladies is a division of Women Across Frontiers, a global digital non-profit publication ...
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Missouri State Representative Yolanda Young represents Jackson County, which includes Kansas City, Missouri. On this episode of Listen, Ladies, Rep. Young discusses the impact of Covid-19 from the perspective of her constituents of all ages, as well as the potential for positive change for people of color as advocates push for police reform.…
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New York Times journalist Dionne Searcey joins Listen, Ladies to discuss her new book, In Pursuit of Disobedient Women: A Memoir of Love, Rebellion, and Family, Far Away. The book is a fascinating inside look at what it was like to take on the role of West Africa Bureau Chief for the New York Times. Searcey recounts her conversations with young wom…
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If you hear "community organizer," and know that it was President Obama's first step into bringing people together, but still feel unclear on what the job entails, this is the episode for you. Esther Beard is a community organizer and joins the podcast to discuss her role in helping people learn how they can bring about real and meaningful change i…
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Rakmi Shaiza is the founder of Stitching Change, a social enterprise designed to empower refugee women in the Kansas City area. Shaiza discusses the program's mission to teach valuable skills in creating unique items and developing the financial knowledge to sell the creations. More broadly, Shaiza shares her insights on the challenges facing the w…
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Beth Shott is a criminal investigator with the Investigative Services Branch of the National Parks Service. She joins the podcast amid the government shutdown to discuss the impact on a professional and personal level. In addition, Shott shares her winding path into law enforcement, and views whether women in her field face unique challenges.…
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One year after first joining the podcast, international relations scholar Mayesha Alam returns to discuss her latest reporting on the crisis facing the Rohingya community in Myanmar. While global awareness has wained, the United Nations reports that forced displacement and violence against the Rohingya has led to a refugee population of close to on…
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Mandy Manning was recently honored as the National Teacher of the Year recipient for 2018. During her career as an educator, she has made an incredible impact on young people, many of whom were new to the United States as refugees and immigrants. Manning joins the podcast to discuss what brought her to teaching, what she has learned from her studen…
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Author Susan Quinn joins the podcast to discuss her fascinating book, Eleanor and Hick: The Love Affair That Shaped a First Lady. Quinn's immense research highlights Roosevelt's relationship with Lorena Hickok, whom she initially encountered when Hickok was working as a reporter. Their relationship has been somewhat lost to history, but Quinn bring…
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Hillary Peckham is the co-founder and COO of Etain Health, the first and only all-women founded medical marijuana business in New York. Peckham talks to Listen, Ladies about misconceptions about marijuana, the conditions it can be used to address, and the challenges of running a business focused on a product that is not legal on the federal level.…
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Journalist Emma Margolin joins the podcast to discuss her reporting on the surge in female candidates for local, state, and national political offices. While the expertise and enthusiasm they bring is essential, Emma's feature article for Politico Magazine delves into the often unexpected challenges they confront. This includes threats and intimida…
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Merritt Moore, is a trailblazer in two extremely demanding fields: ballet and quantum physics. On the podcast, she talks to Maryalice about the challenges of pursuing both dreams, why she tried to quit ballet but kept coming back, and how she is working to inspire young girls to think big and outside the box. And an added bonus, Merritt is also com…
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Julie Greene, co-founder and co-director of The Women's Bakery joins the podcast to discuss her organization's approach to providing women in East Africa with the resources and tools to develop small businesses in their communities. By prioritizing health, education, and the economy, The Women's Bakery looks to engage women to independently operate…
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Journalist and friend of the pod, Emma Margolin, joins Maryalice to guest co-host this week's edition. The ladies chat with self-described "natural-born extrovert," Whitnie Narcisse, about her role at First Round, an innovative venture capital firm with a key focus on developing meaningful mentor-mentee relationships. Whitnie shares what she's lear…
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Luisa Kislinger is a former career diplomat of the Venezuelan Foreign Services, and the founder and director of the women's NGO "Mujeres en Linea." Luisa joins the podcast to discuss the current economic and political situation unfolding in Venezuela, and how the lives of everyday citizens are affected. Former UN Ambassador Samantha Power tweeted t…
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The New York Times' West Africa bureau chief joins the podcast for an insightful interview centered on her reporting in Nigeria. Dionne Searcey has spoken to numerous young women who managed to escape the horrors of Boko Haram, and are now working to overcome challenges and pursue their ambitions. Dionne's work gives voice to girls and women who ha…
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Happy 2018! NYU Scholar Jorge Mora joins Listen, Ladies to talk about his groundbreaking project to bring healthcare services and raise awareness about the importance of health literacy in his home country, Ecuador. His perspectives and experience are highly relevant in the broader conversation about global health and access to care across socio-ec…
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Author Liza Jessie Petersen joins the podcast to discuss her experiences as a pre-GED teacher to young men embroiled in the criminal justice system. In her book, All Day: A Year of Love and Survival Teaching Incarcerated Kids at Rikers Island, Petersen shares insights on the daily lives of her students, her mission to instill them with information …
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Guest co-host Kelly Kern joins the podcast this week to help raise awareness of the ongoing and tragic humanitarian crisis unfolding in Myanmar, which has led to over 600,000 refugees flooding into Bangladesh in recent months. Our guest, international relations scholar research and policy professional, Mayesha Alam, shares her insights and knowledg…
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Bloomberg Businessweek writer Claire Vernon Suddath joins the podcast to talk about her article, "My Big House: My family once enslaved people. What do I do about that?" Through a deep dive into her own family's connections to the Civil War era, Suddath raises important questions about how slavery and the entrenched racism of that period still affe…
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We welcome Briana Mawby to Listen, Ladies. She is the 2017 Hillary Rodham Clinton Research Fellow at the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace, and Security. Briana's research focuses on Nepal in the aftermath of the 2015 earthquake, particularly the incredible contributions made by Nepali women as the country recovers, even while they face signifi…
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Mariam Jalabi is Director of the Syrian National Coalition's office at the United Nations, the largest political opposition group of the Syrian Revolution. Jalabi joins the podcast to discuss the current landscape of the crisis in Syria, and the advocacy movement working to ensure that women play a crucial role in a peace process and transition. Pr…
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The new documentary, Served Like A Girl, is an eye-opening look at the incredible contributions and challenges experienced by female members of the military, including homelessness and inadequate family support services. After confronting these obstacles firsthand, Major Jaspen Boothe took action to support others in her situation. The documentary …
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Maryalice and Julia spoke with Sarah Lane, a Principal Dancer with the American Ballet Theater, about her accomplishments as a dancer, her struggles with confidence and self-esteem, and her fondness for ice cream. And, instead of the usual chatter, the ladies sat down with Kaitlyn Tiffany, Culture Reporter at the The Verge for a summer pop culture …
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If you thought the movie Contact was all sci-fi fantasy, think again! In this episode, Julia and Maryalice talk to a top notch science journalist about the real-life pioneer that was the inspiration for Jodie Foster's character in the 1997 film. Sarah Scoles has a new book all about that inspiring astronomer, Jill Tarter, and the challenges she fac…
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Julia and Maryalice talk to Zoe LePage, the founder of Exhale to Inhale. What started as a college project and a hunch about the profound effects of yoga, has expanded to a growing organization committed to bringing yoga classes to survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault. Also, a discussion about Amelia Earhart standing up to The New York…
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Maryalice & Julia get the inside scoop on the new documentary, "Losing Sight of Shore," which follows six ambitious women in their record-setting journey across the Pacific Ocean. They speak to director Sarah Moshman and Natalia Cohen, one of the women who put her life on hold for the more than 8,000 mile test of mental and physical strength. We re…
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Julia and Maryalice chat with Lisa Bonos, editor of the Washington Post's Solo-ish column. There's something for everyone in this one: the politics of dating, when politics overlap with dating, and some genuine evidence for the cultural relevance of The Bachelorette. Plus, the ladies get pumped about summer movie season, which is kicking off with s…
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The ladies have partnered with UN Women for an exciting episode about indigenous women and girls. Maryalice and Julia discussed colonialism, climate change, and women being their own forces for change with Beatrice Duncan and Tarcila Rivera Zea: two women fighting for the rights of indigenous peoples. Plus, the book club decision, why Americans are…
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