00:10:48.000 --> 00:10:54.720 41 She was promoted to staff reporter covering Queens for the Metro section in May, 2013. In the decade i've worked for the New York Times i've reported across the country and around the world, and as soon as I file each story I do one thing, before I had home I searched for the horses. 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: There are two lessons in that right what courses meant what living well meant. Stephanie Butnick: I wonder if you could tell us a little bit about that, and whether he thought about these patients as being different are facing different issues and how you sort of solve those two worlds in your own your own upbringing oh. 00:55:09.720 --> 00:55:15.270 I met Meeka Brown in a park."I'm one,"she said &fears being a target now. 00:10:55.530 --> 00:11:03.930 345 00:03:20.130 --> 00:03:28.170 00:24:05.580 --> 00:24:06.990 Sarah Maslin Nir: And I was telling him about some success of having some book and something, and he turned to me said, Sarah I know the name of your future memoir if you ever write it, I was like what is it, he said hitler's worst nightmare. 00:01:27.000 --> 00:01:33.840 Why do I love horses that's because the answer is always been because horses. 77 00:30:05.370 --> 00:30:14.490 00:27:45.330 --> 00:27:52.890 Born and raised in Manhattan, Sarah is a true New Yorker. 00:33:21.450 --> 00:33:31.710 00:20:36.270 --> 00:20:46.650 162 272 197 65 79 00:39:19.800 --> 00:39:27.270 192 00:13:46.230 --> 00:13:54.750 The Museum of Jewish Heritage is able to fulfill its mission thanks to the generous support of patrons, members, and museum visitors. 46 Their reasons differ: Conservatives argue that the word, coined about 20 years ago as an . 00:29:51.780 --> 00:30:05.190 00:44:15.120 --> 00:44:21.900 Sarah Maslin Nir: devastating beginnings in this world my grandfather was murdered by the German so. 263 00:37:11.340 --> 00:37:23.250 Sarah Maslin Nir: I didn't find that I belonged in horses, I found that I was compelled to belong, and I think part of why I felt so compelled to belong is because I did it is because I had the dad with the funny accent I had you know the. 00:37:24.030 --> 00:37:31.020 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. 00:08:30.840 --> 00:08:44.520 00:31:30.150 --> 00:31:44.100 312 00:52:08.550 --> 00:52:19.530 00:02:10.860 --> 00:02:21.240 She currently covers breaking news for the papers Metro section. 00:32:48.570 --> 00:32:58.590 00:13:11.250 --> 00:13:21.990 219 00:26:16.530 --> 00:26:26.280 54 Sarah Maslin Nir: As intrinsically American and yet Native Americans only learned to ride them and 15th century so it's. Sarah Maslin Nir: And so my mom was deeply impressed with my dad's figuring this out, you know he'd been called in, for what they thought was a suicidal child and he sorted out, and she heard this you know seven times little bit accent. 255 00:57:20.880 --> 00:57:21.990 But did you know that since the age of two, Sarah has also been a dedicated horsewoman? Stephanie Butnick: My name is Sarah maslin near and i'm the author of course crazy, this is stellar maslin near and we are going to read a little bit from my upcoming book, I hope you enjoy. (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. 00:01:46.200 --> 00:01:58.560 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. 168 130 Stephanie Butnick: we're pretty close in age, you and I, so you, but you have a much closer connection obviously to your father's story. 00:04:12.690 --> 00:04:17.880 00:49:31.020 --> 00:49:42.240 214 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. 258 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. Full Episode Wednesday, Sep 21 33 As a New York Times staff reporter for the last decade, Sarah Maslin Nir has seen a lot. 00:32:09.090 --> 00:32:15.960 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. She covered New York City's nightlife for the Times from 2010 until the end of 2011, as the paper's "Nocturnalist" columnist, once attending 25 parties in five days. 143 281 00:40:56.970 --> 00:40:57.270 Stephanie Butnick: What it's like as a child to feel that what your father went through with such a young age, I mean, how do you sort of deal with that weight. 00:16:45.900 --> 00:16:56.670 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. 00:03:29.430 --> 00:03:38.580 222 265 00:34:29.790 --> 00:34:39.750 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. Sarah Maslin Nir: So I became a reporter, because I was born a reporter in that. $1 Million - $5 Million. 136 254 [24][25][26] In November 2015, the NYT public editor concluded that the expos's "findings, and the language used to express them, should have been dialed back in some instances substantially" and recommended that "The Times write further follow-up stories, including some that re-examine its original findings and that take on the criticism from salon owners and others not defensively but with an open mind. We have estimated Sarah Maslin Nir's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets. 208 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. 99 . 00:54:09.000 --> 00:54:17.220 298 00:38:05.310 --> 00:38:16.200 00:25:32.580 --> 00:25:41.490 As a New York Times staff reporter for the last decade, Sarah Maslin Nir has seen a lot. 323 98 Ari Goldstein: by Sarah by stephanie. 2016, etc.) 274 00:11:20.820 --> 00:11:32.700 Sarah Maslin Nir: yeah so I I write about that self consciousness, because even as I sat down to write this first of all, as a reporter. Sarah Maslin Nir: There is something deeper packed into them, and particularly in America if come to symbolize American spirit they've come to symbolize our our. Maslin Nirs latest project is Horse Crazy: The Story of a Woman and a World in Love with an Animal, a new book that traces her lifelong obsession with horses and provides a window into the lesser-known corners of the equestrian world. 213 "It's an unusual horse book in that it's my coming of age story through the lens of the horses . 84 00:20:27.540 --> 00:20:35.610 00:50:48.450 --> 00:50:58.320 00:15:20.820 --> 00:15:29.550 Sarah Maslin Nir: And i'm 59th street of fifth avenue among the central park carriage horses and the scent of his remembered liberation when he drove to the stables to pick me up from doing chores or riding horses, my father would roll down the window and close his eyes. New York Times staff reporter and author Sarah Maslin Nir adores horses. Many girls grow up reading a book (for me it was Silver Birch, by Dorothy Lyons) in which the heroine longs for a horse, finds one, tames it and makes a connection that is much more solid and fun than those she has with her schoolmates. 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. 202 351 261 273 But before that successful writing career, she was a . 103 Sarah Maslin Nir: i'll explain that, in a second and tell them about fresh horses for you come to this farm and buy fresh cavalry mounts and right before they got there, he would put. 229 Sarah Maslin Nir: absorbed the messaging from his family of druggies use needles to well and he was afraid to be seen as a druggie for using his insulin. 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. A New York Times writer and Pulitzer finalist allegedly nearly killed her best friend in a car crash, by swerving down the . Sarah Maslin Nir: By comparison, I don't feel like a real person that someone who wasn't forged in the fires of war, who didn't have needs as Adam mystic is survival. Stephanie Butnick: Right, Edmond J. Safra Plaza36 Battery PlaceNew York, NY 10280. 00:48:27.600 --> 00:48:39.930 Stephanie Butnick: So someone was asking if you heard the story about the Cossacks and how they select their horses, they take the hurt into a dangerously wild river and force them across. 00:08:09.450 --> 00:08:14.760 216 00:20:21.210 --> 00:20:25.650 289 00:47:12.390 --> 00:47:18.240 00:51:02.400 --> 00:51:06.690 206 Sarah Maslin Nir: You better thank that horse for saving your life, and I said I did, and I do. 00:35:45.000 --> 00:35:54.660 139 00:41:05.610 --> 00:41:12.480 00:52:37.110 --> 00:52:46.170 Stephanie Butnick: So i'm so glad to be here tonight and to be here with you, the title of tonight's talk is a great title it's horse crazy and the Holocaust, which, I imagine, is what drew all of our attendees in tonight, they said. 61 00:32:22.680 --> 00:32:30.450 192 pages. In Connecticut, some Democratic lawmakers want to prohibit the use of the gender-neutral term in official government documents. 00:42:38.340 --> 00:42:46.560 00:55:47.580 --> 00:55:52.410 Stephanie Butnick: that's so funny I mean, I still wonder how that how that was to grow up with, because I feel like there's this age where you're a young girl you're growing up and all you want to do is fit in with the ashley's and the charlotte's. 186 00:11:04.290 --> 00:11:18.810 Sarah Maslin Nir: Still, maybe not work from home era, but soon back will be back at our desks and next to everyone at their desk is a landline phone. 00:36:33.600 --> 00:36:45.330 70 280 00:57:23.880 --> 00:57:24.390 Ive never seen anything like it. READ IT "The Flying Horse" by Sarah Maslin Nir. 00:21:58.590 --> 00:22:11.100 178 Their daughter, Sarah Maslin Nir, studied at GW before transferring to Columbia University. 324 Anyone can read what you share. 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. 332 00:53:33.480 --> 00:53:45.000 00:47:57.450 --> 00:48:03.570 Ms. Nir was a finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for a yearlong investigation into New York . Ari Goldstein: we're glad that you guys are here with us to explore her background and story. 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: Initial iteration book I didn't include it, I wanted to be an almanac of course crazies and Simon and Schuster said no, we think it's your story too so so that was a challenge.
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