November 6, 2018

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Stacey And Cardiff Answer To The People

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We love our listeners, and we especially love getting your questions. So today on the show, we answer a few of them — about luxury real estate markets, money and wealth, and our favorite ways to learn about economics and markets.

And as promised on the show, we reference these three articles:

Visual Capitalist

The Credit Suisse Wealth report

Money laundering through Miami real estate

Music by Drop Electric. Find us: Twitter/ Facebook.

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'Crazy Rich Asians' Comes Home, Plus This Week's New Digital HD and VOD Releases

Our resident VOD expert tells you what’s new to rent and/or own this week via various Digital HD providers, such as cable Movies On Demand, FandangoNOW, Amazon, iTunes, Vudu, Google Play and, of course, Netflix.

Cable Movies On Demand: Same-day-as-disc releases, older titles and pretheatrical

BlacKkKlansman (Spike Lee-directed biographical comedy-drama; John David Washington, Adam Driver, Laura Harrier, Topher Grace, Jasper Pääkkönen, Corey Hawkins, Ryan Eggold, Michael Buscemi, Paul Walter Hauser, Ashlie Atkinson, Harry Belafonte; rated R)

Christopher Robin (comedy-fantasy; Ewan McGregor, Hayley Atwell, Jim Cummings, Brad Garrett, Toby Jones, Nick Mohammed, Peter Capaldi, Sophie Okonedo; rated PG)

Incredibles 2 (Pixar animated sequel; voices: Craig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter, Sarah Vowell, Huck Milner, Catherine Keener, Eli Fucile, Bob Odenkirk, Samuel L. Jackson, Isabella Rossellini, Jonathan Banks, Sophia Bush; rated PG)

Papillon (biographical action-drama; Charlie Hunnam, Rami Malek, Roland Møller, Yorick van Wageningen, Tommy Flanagan, Eve Hewson; rated R)

The Miseducation of Cameron Post (romantic drama; Chloë Grace Moretz, Sasha Lane, Forrest Goodluck; not rated)

Gaugin: Voyage to Tahiti (biographical romance; Vincent Cassel, Tuheï Adams, Malik Zidi, Pua-Taï Hikutini, Pernille Bergendorff; not rated)

#Roxy (romantic comedy; Jake Short, Sarah Fisher, BooBoo Stewart, Danny Trejo, Pippa Mackie, Jake Smith, Patricia Zentilli, Carter Thicke, Hannah Duke, Scott Pocha, Jesse Lipscombe, Chris Aanderson; not rated)

Here and Now (drama; Sarah Jessica Parker, Simon Baker, Jacqueline Bisset, Common, Taylor Kinney, Renee Zellweger, Waleed Zuaiter; available 11/9 on cable MOD and in select theaters; rated R)

In a Relationship (romantic comedy; Emma Roberts, Michael Angarano, Dree Hemingway, Patrick Gibson; available 11/9 on cable MOD and in select theaters; not rated)

The Delinquent Season (romantic drama; Cillian Murphy, Catherine Walker, Eva Birthistle, Andrew Scott, Lydia McGuinness; available 11/9 on cable MOD and in select theaters; rated PG-13)

Digital HD: Rent from $4-$7 or own from $13-$20 (HD may cost more than SD). Check with your favorite Digital HD provider to see if the same movies listed above on cable MOD are also available)

FandangoNOW

Crazy Rich Asians (romantic comedy; Constance Wu, Henry Golding, Gemma Chan, Lisa Lu, Awkwafina, Ken Jeong, Michelle Yeoh; available now to download to own—not rent—two weeks before disc; rated PG-13)

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Dog Days (comedy-drama; Nina Dobrev, Vanessa Hudgens, Adam Pally, Eva Longoria, Rob Corddry, Tone Bell, Jon Bass, Michael Cassidy, Thomas Lennon, Tig Notaro, Finn Wolfhard, Ron Jones; available now to download to own—not rent—two weeks before disc; rated PG)

Blindspotting (comedy-drama; Daveed Diggs, Rafael Casal, Janina Gavankar, Jasmine Cephas Jones, Ethan Embry, Tisha Campbell-Martin, Utkarsh Ambudkar, Wayne Knight; available now to download to own—not rent—two weeks before disc; rated R)

Kin (sci-fi thriller; Jack Reynor, Zoë Kravitz, Carrie Coon, Dennis Quaid, James Franco, Myles Truitt; available now to download to own only; rated PG-13)

The Last Sharknado: It’s About Time (sci-fi action-comedy; Ian Ziering, Tara Reid, Vivica A. Fox, Cassandra Scerbo, Charles Hittinger, Jonathan Bennett, Lucia Oskerova, Roxanna Bina, Raine Michaels, Alexandre Ottoni; not rated)

Blood, Sweat and Terrors (action-thriller-horror; John Hannah, Neil Maskell, Paul Sloan, Jamie Birkett, Beau Fowler, Warren Brown, David Leitch; not rated)

Alone We Fight (war; Corbin Bernsen, Johnny Messner, Aidan Bristow, Philip Nathanael, Lara Ducey, Kate Conway; not rated)

Superman: The Movie (superhero action-romance; Marlon Brando, Gene Hackman, Christopher Reeve, Margot Kidder, Ned Beatty, Jackie Cooper, Glenn Ford, Valerie Perrine, Terence Stamp; available now in 4K UHD to coincide with debut on 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray combo pack; rated PG)

Vudu

Crazy Rich Asians, Dog Days, Blindspotting, Kin, The Last Sharknado: It’s About Time, Alone We Fight, Superman: The Movie

iTunes

Crazy Rich Asians, Dog Days, Blindspotting, Kin, The Last Sharknado: It’s About Time, Alone We Fight, Superman: The Movie and Blood, Sweat and Terrors

Amazon

Crazy Rich Asians, Dog Days, Blindspotting, Kin, The Last Sharknado: It’s About Time, Superman: The Movie and Blood, Sweat and Terrors

Google Play

Crazy Rich Asians, Dog Days, Blindspotting, Kin, The Last Sharknado: It’s About Time, Alone We Fight, Superman: The Movie and Blood, Sweat and Terrors

Netflix Watch Instantly: $8.99 per month for unlimited streaming

Highlights New This Week:

Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End, Into the Forest, The Sea of Trees, Outlaw King, Westside, Super Drags, Medal of Honor

Follow Robert B. DeSalvo @zuulboy

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Luring More Women To Fishing In The Upper Great Lakes

Kristy Taylor baits her hook while fishing on the Two Hearted River in Michigan. She’s part of a steelhead fishing class put on by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources in an effort to inspire more women to fish.

Morgan Springer/Interlochen Public Radio


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Morgan Springer/Interlochen Public Radio

The percentage of Americans who fish is in decline and that decline has had an impact on conservation projects, because hunting and fishing licenses help fund everything from habitat restoration to clean water programs.

So there are efforts to lure more anglers to the sport — and those efforts seem to be working, as more and more young women are taking up fishing.

Recently, a whole band of women spread out along the bank of the Two Hearted River in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. They were part of a steelhead fishing class put on by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources called Becoming an Outdoors Woman (BOW). The goal is to inspire women to fish.

Kristy Taylor was part of the class. She stood on the bank of the river on a cold, bleak morning.

Female anglers stand along the Two Hearted River, watching as a class instructor demonstrates casting.

Morgan Springer/Interlochen Public Radio


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Morgan Springer/Interlochen Public Radio

Instructor Katie Urban stood right by Taylor as she cast her line into the Two Hearted. “Whip it,” Urban said, just before Taylor cast.

They were tracking a fish. It was swimming close to surface, leaving a swirl of water behind it as it moved slowly.

“You see it?” Urban asked. “Alright she’s coming back to this side; she’s going to that pocket.”

The fish moved towards them, then disappeared and resurfaced farther down the river.

“Yes, go,” Urban told Taylor.

They took off running, scrambling up the dunes, the dark-stained Two Hearted River like a ribbon of tar below them.

More younger women drawn to fishing

In 2016, about 14 percent of Americans fished, and most of them were men. But a recent study on the Upper Great Lakes indicates female participation is on the rise. It found that fishing license sales increased among female anglers by about 4.5 percent between 2000 and 2015. That’s an additional 43,000 female anglers.

Richelle Winkler is the principal investigator on that study and an associate professor at Michigan Technological University. She says younger women in particular are getting involved.

“Young women today are about two times more likely than women born in 1960 to buy a fishing license,” says Winkler.

Winkler and Ph.D student Erin Burkett based the findings on the number of fishing licenses sold in Minnesota, Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana and Illinois.

Michelle Zellar, Michigan’s BOW coordinator, confirms that more women are drawn to fishing.

“We have a waiting list for every program we do,” she says.

Winkler says it’s not clear yet why more women are fishing. She’s looking into it, but for now, she has a hunch.

“I think it’s part of a broader cultural pattern of the world opening up a bit to women’s participation in activities that have traditionally been seen as more masculine,” she says.

Winkler says that’s particularly true for women born after 1980.

Kristy Taylor was born in 1981; she’s 37. She says she learned to fish when she was about five or six.

“My parents divorced when I was really young,” says Taylor. “So whenever I would be with my dad, that was the activity he knew best. So he would take my sister and I both to go fishing.”

But not all the new fisherwomen are young. Ellen Rice — another class participant — is 63 and fishing for the first time. She had a completely different experience growing up.

“The men went out fishing and hunting and the women — we just never thought about it,” say Rice.

She says even if she’d tried to fish, she wouldn’t have known how, and male anglers wouldn’t have shown her.

Richelle Winkler of Michigan Tech says new anglers like Taylor and Rice, who purchase state fishing and hunting licenses, are essential for conservation.

“Habitat restoration programs that keep our water clean and that keep invasive species in check — all of those kinds of programs are funded by fishing license sales,” says Winkler.

If more women keep fishing, Winkler says angler participation could stabilize. But she says that probably won’t stop the decline in conservation money, because hunting participation is in serious decline with no signs of changing.

Taylor says fishing for her is about being in nature; it’s also empowering.

“You’re in charge of your pole,” she says. “You’re in charge of your bait. You’re in charge of your casts. And when you catch a fish, it’s then your doing.”

Catching dinner?

When Kristy Taylor got to her new spot on the Two Hearted, a man at a campsite across the river spotted the fish she’d been chasing. He got out his fishing rod, lit a cigarette and cast for the fish.

“No,” Taylor whispered.

The bait landed right on the fish, but the fish turned away.

“She’s runnin’ from him,” said Urban. “Yeah, she doesn’t like that.”

Then the fish came right to the shore by Taylor, and she lightly tossed her bait sack filled with bright red coho salmon eggs in front of the fish. No interest there either.

In the end, Taylor didn’t catch a fish. All she hooked was some dark, wet sticks.

“I’ve got salad to go with dinner,” she joked.

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