- 47 minutes 8 secondsEpisode 30 - Michael and Marckus
When COVID hit our communities in early 2019, we paused our Lunch at the Mill podcast series to follow proper social distancing protocols. The pandemic certainly took a lot away from us over the past few years, but it also provided some interesting opportunities. In that time, Cook Medical has partnered with other like-minded organizations to work on a unique project that serves as a model for how organizations across all sectors can come together to create positive social change.
The 38th and Sheridan project is a collective of business, not-for-profits, and community partners who are using their expertise and resources to help bring opportunity back to an underserved community in Northeast Indianapolis. These organizations are working alongside the community to build a medical device manufacturing facility that will bring over 100 jobs to the neighborhood, as well as a new full-service grocery store that will bring a much needed food source to the community.
We recorded a special series of virtual podcasts around the 38th and Sheridan project, including interviews with:
- Kent Kramer, president and CEO of Goodwill of Central & Southern Indiana
- Ashley Gurvitz, Chief Executive Officer at United Northeast CDC (ANU/UNEC)
- Keith Graves, District 13 Indianapolis City County Councilor
- Joyce Randolph and James Campbell, Neighborhood association presidents in Northeast Indianapolis
- Tom Guevara, Lecturer and Director at the Indiana University Public Policy Institute
- "Joe the Grocer", Retail Supermarket Consultant
- Michael McFarland and Marckus Williams, owners and operators of the Indy Fresh Market
3 May 2022, 9:00 pm - 30 minutes 30 secondsEpisode 29 - Joseph Welsh
When COVID hit our communities in early 2019, we paused our Lunch at the Mill podcast series to follow proper social distancing protocols. The pandemic certainly took a lot away from us over the past few years, but it also provided some interesting opportunities. In that time, Cook Medical has partnered with other like-minded organizations to work on a unique project that serves as a model for how organizations across all sectors can come together to create positive social change.
The 38th and Sheridan project is a collective of business, not-for-profits, and community partners who are using their expertise and resources to help bring opportunity back to an underserved community in Northeast Indianapolis. These organizations are working alongside the community to build a medical device manufacturing facility that will bring over 100 jobs to the neighborhood, as well as a new full-service grocery store that will bring a much needed food source to the community.
We recorded a special series of virtual podcasts around the 38th and Sheridan project, including interviews with:
- Kent Kramer, president and CEO of Goodwill of Central & Southern Indiana
- Ashley Gurvitz, Chief Executive Officer at United Northeast CDC (ANU/UNEC)
- Keith Graves, District 13 Indianapolis City County Councilor
- Joyce Randolph and James Campbell, Neighborhood association presidents in Northeast Indianapolis
- Tom Guevara, Lecturer and Director at the Indiana University Public Policy Institute
- "Joe the Grocer", Retail Supermarket Consultant
- Michael McFarland and Marckus Williams, owners and operators of the Indy Fresh Market
3 May 2022, 8:00 pm - 46 minutes 40 secondsEpisode 28 - Tom Guevara
When COVID hit our communities in early 2019, we paused our Lunch at the Mill podcast series to follow proper social distancing protocols. The pandemic certainly took a lot away from us over the past few years, but it also provided some interesting opportunities. In that time, Cook Medical has partnered with other like-minded organizations to work on a unique project that serves as a model for how organizations across all sectors can come together to create positive social change.
The 38th and Sheridan project is a collective of business, not-for-profits, and community partners who are using their expertise and resources to help bring opportunity back to an underserved community in Northeast Indianapolis. These organizations are working alongside the community to build a medical device manufacturing facility that will bring over 100 jobs to the neighborhood, as well as a new full-service grocery store that will bring a much needed food source to the community.
We recorded a special series of virtual podcasts around the 38th and Sheridan project, including interviews with:
- Kent Kramer, president and CEO of Goodwill of Central & Southern Indiana
- Ashley Gurvitz, Chief Executive Officer at United Northeast CDC (ANU/UNEC)
- Keith Graves, District 13 Indianapolis City County Councilor
- Joyce Randolph and James Campbell, Neighborhood association presidents in Northeast Indianapolis
- Tom Guevara, Lecturer and Director at the Indiana University Public Policy Institute
- "Joe the Grocer", Retail Supermarket Consultant
- Michael McFarland and Marckus Williams, owners and operators of the Indy Fresh Market
3 May 2022, 7:00 pm - 52 minutes 21 secondsEpisode 27 - Joyce Randolph and James Campbell
When COVID hit our communities in early 2019, we paused our Lunch at the Mill podcast series to follow proper social distancing protocols. The pandemic certainly took a lot away from us over the past few years, but it also provided some interesting opportunities. In that time, Cook Medical has partnered with other like-minded organizations to work on a unique project that serves as a model for how organizations across all sectors can come together to create positive social change.
The 38th and Sheridan project is a collective of business, not-for-profits, and community partners who are using their expertise and resources to help bring opportunity back to an underserved community in Northeast Indianapolis. These organizations are working alongside the community to build a medical device manufacturing facility that will bring over 100 jobs to the neighborhood, as well as a new full-service grocery store that will bring a much needed food source to the community.
We recorded a special series of virtual podcasts around the 38th and Sheridan project, including interviews with:
- Kent Kramer, president and CEO of Goodwill of Central & Southern Indiana
- Ashley Gurvitz, Chief Executive Officer at United Northeast CDC (ANU/UNEC)
- Keith Graves, District 13 Indianapolis City County Councilor
- Joyce Randolph and James Campbell, Neighborhood association presidents in Northeast Indianapolis
- Tom Guevara, Lecturer and Director at the Indiana University Public Policy Institute
- "Joe the Grocer", Retail Supermarket Consultant
- Michael McFarland and Marckus Williams, owners and operators of the Indy Fresh Market
3 May 2022, 6:00 pm - 50 minutes 18 secondsEpisode 26 - Keith Graves
When COVID hit our communities in early 2019, we paused our Lunch at the Mill podcast series to follow proper social distancing protocols. The pandemic certainly took a lot away from us over the past few years, but it also provided some interesting opportunities. In that time, Cook Medical has partnered with other like-minded organizations to work on a unique project that serves as a model for how organizations across all sectors can come together to create positive social change.
The 38th and Sheridan project is a collective of business, not-for-profits, and community partners who are using their expertise and resources to help bring opportunity back to an underserved community in Northeast Indianapolis. These organizations are working alongside the community to build a medical device manufacturing facility that will bring over 100 jobs to the neighborhood, as well as a new full-service grocery store that will bring a much needed food source to the community.
We recorded a special series of virtual podcasts around the 38th and Sheridan project, including interviews with:
- Kent Kramer, president and CEO of Goodwill of Central & Southern Indiana
- Ashley Gurvitz, Chief Executive Officer at United Northeast CDC (ANU/UNEC)
- Keith Graves, District 13 Indianapolis City County Councilor
- Joyce Randolph and James Campbell, Neighborhood association presidents in Northeast Indianapolis
- Tom Guevara, Lecturer and Director at the Indiana University Public Policy Institute
- "Joe the Grocer", Retail Supermarket Consultant
- Michael McFarland and Marckus Williams, owners and operators of the Indy Fresh Market
3 May 2022, 5:00 pm - 50 minutes 58 secondsEpisode 25 - Ashley Gurvitz
When COVID hit our communities in early 2019, we paused our Lunch at the Mill podcast series to follow proper social distancing protocols. The pandemic certainly took a lot away from us over the past few years, but it also provided some interesting opportunities. In that time, Cook Medical has partnered with other like-minded organizations to work on a unique project that serves as a model for how organizations across all sectors can come together to create positive social change.
The 38th and Sheridan project is a collective of business, not-for-profits, and community partners who are using their expertise and resources to help bring opportunity back to an underserved community in Northeast Indianapolis. These organizations are working alongside the community to build a medical device manufacturing facility that will bring over 100 jobs to the neighborhood, as well as a new full-service grocery store that will bring a much needed food source to the community.
We recorded a special series of virtual podcasts around the 38th and Sheridan project, including interviews with:
- Kent Kramer, president and CEO of Goodwill of Central & Southern Indiana
- Ashley Gurvitz, Chief Executive Officer at United Northeast CDC (ANU/UNEC)
- Keith Graves, District 13 Indianapolis City County Councilor
- Joyce Randolph and James Campbell, Neighborhood association presidents in Northeast Indianapolis
- Tom Guevara, Lecturer and Director at the Indiana University Public Policy Institute
- "Joe the Grocer", Retail Supermarket Consultant
- Michael McFarland and Marckus Williams, owners and operators of the Indy Fresh Market
3 May 2022, 4:00 pm - 52 minutes 12 secondsEpisode 24 - Kent KramerWhen COVID hit our communities in early 2019, we paused our Lunch at the Mill podcast series to follow proper social distancing protocols. The pandemic certainly took a lot away from us over the past few years, but it also provided some interesting opportunities. In that time, Cook Medical has partnered with other like-minded organizations to work on a unique project that serves as a model for how organizations across all sectors can come together to create positive social change. The 38th and Sheridan project is a collective of business, not-for-profits, and community partners who are using their expertise and resources to help bring opportunity back to an underserved community in Northeast Indianapolis. These organizations are working alongside the community to build a medical device manufacturing facility that will bring over 100 jobs to the neighborhood, as well as a new full-service grocery store that will bring a much needed food source to the community.
We recorded a special series of virtual podcasts around the 38th and Sheridan project, including interviews with:
- Kent Kramer, president and CEO of Goodwill of Central & Southern Indiana
- Ashley Gurvitz, Chief Executive Officer at United Northeast CDC (ANU/UNEC)
- Keith Graves, District 13 Indianapolis City County Councilor
- Joyce Randolph and James Campbell, Neighborhood association presidents in Northeast Indianapolis
- Tom Guevara, Lecturer and Director at the Indiana University Public Policy Institute
- "Joe the Grocer", Retail Supermarket Consultant
- Michael McFarland and Marckus Williams, owners and operators of the Indy Fresh Market
3 May 2022, 2:00 pm - 56 minutes 46 secondsEpisode 23 - Erika OliphantThe prosecuting attorney is one of the hardest positions in government. This elected role has prosecutorial discretion, which means they have the power to make decisions about whether or not to file charges against a citizen. Erika Oliphant is currently seeking her second term as Monroe County's Prosecuting Attorney in 2022 and in this pre-COVID episode of LATM, Pete talks with her about how she navigates ethical decision-making and gets her perspective on current community issues.28 April 2022, 3:38 pm
- 1 hour 10 minutesEpisode 22 - Michael Koryta
Why would a New York Times best-selling author sit alone in a dark cave for an hour? What does an executive producer for a movie really do? And can you be happy and still make good art? In this episode, Pete sits down with his long-time friend—and author of So Cold the River—Michael Koryta to discuss these questions and more over lunch from DeAngelo's. They also discuss Michael's newest novel, The Chill, published under the name Scott Carson.
6 March 2020, 2:34 pm - 55 minutes 37 secondsEpisode 21 - Shawn Gibbs
Coronavirus has been dominating the news lately and you may be wondering, what exactly is coronavirus? And how worried should you be about it? In a special breakfast edition of the podcast, Pete sits down to discuss the potential pandemic with Shawn Gibbs, the Executive Associate Dean and Professor of Environmental Health at the IU School of Public Health. Pete learns more about how viruses like this spread and what precautions government officials take in an effort to keep people well.
25 February 2020, 10:19 pm - 53 minutes 38 secondsEpisode 20 - Audi and Ivy (Siosi Design)
Somewhere in the heart of Bloomington is a woodworking studio that handcrafts one-of-a-kind furniture that you'll never find in the big box stores. Siosi Design has gained an incredible following through social media and takes pride in their relationships with clients, including once delivering a table through a fifth story window in Tribeca. In our 20th episode, Pete sits down with Audi Culver and Ivy Siosi to learn about the art of woodworking, how they got started in this niche industry, and their plans for the future.
21 February 2020, 2:35 am - More Episodes? Get the App