Sinopsis
Detroit news and short interviews from the team at Daily Detroit. New episodes 4-7 times per week. Keep up on the Motor City via podcast.
Episodios
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The Michigan Marijuana Business With Rush Hasan, The Reef
23/03/2019 Duración: 13minThis is a bonus interview edition of your Daily Detroit and this episode is all about cannabis - a potcast, if you will. Marijuana is poised to become a big business opportunity here in Michigan, after voters overwhelmingly voted to grant full legal status to weed last November. Meanwhile, medical marijuana has been legal in Michigan for a decade now, with a new licensing system under way that is reshaping the industry. Weed is estimated to become a $1.7 billion market here in Michigan. On today's show, we speak with Rush Hasan, who runs operations and business development for The Reef, a medical marijuana dispensary on Detroit's east side.
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Inside The Beautiful Brakeman Beer Hall At The Shinola Hotel
21/03/2019 Duración: 12minThe last piece of the new Shinola Hotel will open its doors Monday when The Brakeman starts pouring beers inside its new digs on the corner of John R and Farmer in downtown Detroit. It's part of a new wedge-shaped building that took over a former surface parking lot, and it's an airy, light-filled space, thanks to several garage-door windows that will be able to roll up when the weather warms up. On this episode of the Daily Detroit podcast, spirits advisor Nuri Gocay and I speak with partners Joshua Pickard and Luke Ostrom from New York-based NoHo Hospitality Group, about Detroit's newest beer hall concept. It'll feature a rotating list of Midwestern and Michigan craft beers, a full bar, and fried chicken and other eats from the adjacent Penny Red's. It's definitely a nice addition to a fast up-and-coming corner of downtown. We have a bunch of pictures up on Daily Detroit as well: http://www.dailydetroit.com/2019/03/21/a-look-inside-the-beautiful-brakeman-beer-hall/ Find Daily Detroit and subscribe on Apple
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Speed of the Game Podcast Coming, Coyotes In Detroit Plus 4 Other Things To Know
20/03/2019 Duración: 08minA den of coyotes has taken up residence near downtown Detroit — specifically, in that weird no-man's-land site of the old Brewster housing projects where I-75, I-375 and the spur to Gratiot Avenue converge. The Michigan DNR says not to worry. But if you live nearby in, say, Brush Park, you might want to keep a much closer eye on your pets. Also: Yes, we inaccurately datelined yesterday's episode as a Monday. It brought to mind this classic scene from "Groundhog Day." In other news, Dan Gilbert has a new podcast in the pipeline. It's called "Speed of the Game," and it has a tagline straight from a shoe company ad. Hmmmm….. Also: Ford plans to invest $900 million and create 900 new jobs in the coming years, mostly to build electric vehicles Downriver in Flat Rock The Detroit Regional Chamber is the first big business organization in Michigan to officially endorse Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's plan to "fix the damn roads" "Hamilton" creator Lin-Manuel Miranda surprises show-goers with an appearance at the Fisher Thea
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Detroit Has A Winery Plus 8 Things To Know Around Detroit
19/03/2019 Duración: 13minWelcome to Tuesday, March 19 and the final day of winter, YAY! On the show today, we run down the news that not only does Detroit have a homegrown winery, but Detroit Vineyards aims to open a tasting room in the Stroh's Ice Cream building on Gratiot near Eastern Market this spring. Will wonders never cease? Elsewhere, Beaumont Health is proposing to open a $140 million, 117-bed hospital in Oxford, filing a certificate of need application with the state. That makes Beaumont the latest in a list of big health systems that have tried to win approval for a new hospital in the growth exurbs of northern Oakland County. What else, you ask? Freshman U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Detroit, wants to prohibit auto insurers from using a person's credit history to set insurance rates Tigers pitching ace Michael Fulmer may undergo season-ending Tommy John surgery to reconstruct ligaments in his right elbow Three nonprofits are getting funds to help Detroiters get better jobs A new Mexican bar and restaurant called Peso is set
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Your Chance To Rename The Golden Butthole Plus 9 Things To Know
18/03/2019 Duración: 17minIt's Monday, and your weekend warrior dreams have been dashed. Back to work, automatons! Oh, and the city of Sterling Heights would like the public to help rename (or name) the sculpture it calls the Golden Corridor Icon in the median of Hall Road. There are a ton of prizes on offer for first-, second- and third-place entries, so find more information here. In other news of the absurd, Little Caesars is unveiling a bacon-wrapped deep-dish pizza, ringed with three and a half feet of bacon. Yes, we discuss some real/serious news as well: A former UAW vice president has been charged as part of a wide-ranging federal corruption investigation President Trump wants General Motors and CEO Mary Barra to re-open its Lordstown, Ohio plant, which made the Chevy Cruze until earlier this month Major League Soccer Commissioner Don Garber says the league still can't get behind Detroit's bid for a new franchise because of Ford Field Detroit's Islandview neighborhood is getting some apartments that cost as much as $850,000
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Residential Recycling Is Being Dumped In Landfills, Faces A Crisis
15/03/2019 Duración: 14minOn a recent episode of this podcast, I went on a brief side rant praising my local Meijer store for accepting plastic bags for recycling and had a minor freak-out over the looming global environmental crisis over our increasingly all-plastic everything. That caught the attention of Joe Munem, a Daily Detroit podcast listener who works as director of government affairs and public relations with GFL Environmental USA, a trash hauler and recycling service. He wrote us to say that municipal recycling programs have some very tough choices to make in the wake of official government actions by the People's Republic of China, halfway around the world. It's so bad, he said, that the city of Westland recently notified residents it has begun landfilling all the recyclable materials people put in their bins. We had Munem drop by the Detroit Shipping Co. studio of Podcast Detroit, for some insight into the looming crisis facing residential recycling programs across the country. It's a fascinating discussion, and you can l
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A Shipping Container Home In Ferndale Lists For $450k Plus The Measles Are Back
15/03/2019 Duración: 18minThere's a new house in a modest neighborhood of northeast Ferndale, made of shipping containers, that is listing for $450,000. Is Ferndale about to become like Midtown Detroit? Oh, SNAP! Also on today's show, we discuss the new measles case identified in Oakland County, and we speak with Dr. Nicholas Gilpin, an infectious disease specialist and chief medical officer at Beaumont Hospital in Grosse Pointe, for more about the virus. Elsewhere: Michael Bloomberg joins Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in announcing a $10 million grant to combat the opioid epidemic in Michigan. We run down a host of road-construction news, ranging from the I-75 reconstruction project in Oakland County to a slew of projects in Macomb County. The Detroit News uncovers new details about the FBI investigation into Taylor Mayor Rick Sollars. Macomb County Public Works officials have identified two unknown substances fouling the Bear Creek drain near 11 Mile and Mound roads. And Customs officials seized 10 pounds of meth during a search of a car tr
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How We Could Do Better With 313Day Plus 7 Things To Know Around Detroit
13/03/2019 Duración: 13minIt's March 13, or written another way, 3/13, or #313Day. It's become quite a thing locally on social media. And it's become, in Jer's words, "a meme holiday." Although it's good to spread positivity, it could be a lot better. He's got a different proposal to try and infuse some more action into it. We talk about it on the podcast. There's lots of real news we cover on today's show, as well: Ford is issuing pink slip to salaried workers in Dearborn Fiat Chrysler is recalling some 860,000 vehicles that don't meet federal emissions standards City Airport is getting its main runway replaced, which would seem to put rumors of redevelopment to rest The Foundation Hotel faces a lawsuit alleging racial discrimination, now a group of Trump supporters says it's on the wrong end of discrimination by the hotel We circle back to the fact the Masonic Temple inked a deal with AEG Detroit vs. Everybody is teaming up with Adidas for a new line of sneakers and apparel And Anthology Coffee is moving to Eastern Market Thanks f
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Detroit Is Apparently Too Boring For NFL Free Agents Plus 6 Things To Know
12/03/2019 Duración: 14min"Weather and sex are huge factors." That's the, uh, money quote from a Sports Illustrated piece about the best and worst NFL cities as perceived by free agents. Detroit fares poorly, ranking in the bottom five for NFL cities, dinged for its dysfunctional locker room but also because we're seen as having boring nightlife. We discuss. A second white Detroit police officer has lost his job in the wake of the release of a Snapchat video mocking a black motorist. The video showed a 23-year-old woman walking after a traffic stop with captions including "What black girl magic looks like" … and "Celebrating Black History Month." The officers were also heard making disparaging verbal comments in the video. President Trump has released his budget proposal for fiscal 2020, and it once again does not reflect well on the Great Lakes. Trump's budget would slash $270 million in funding from the $300 million Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, virtually wiping it out. But the proposal doesn't have much chance of passing. We
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Meet Detroit's New Nature Center At Palmer Park With Jac Kyle
11/03/2019 Duración: 11minIt's been a looooooooooonnnnnng winter, comrades. So your intrepid Daily Detroit team was intrigued to see a new sign outside the former Palmer Park Golf Course HQ announcing that something called the Detroit Exploration and Nature Center was coming to our favorite local park. On this episode, we stop by the still-nascent nature center and walk deep into the heart of the Detroit wilderness with naturalist Jac Kyle, a recreation instructor with the city of Detroit's Parks and Recreation department. Kyle has been working in Rouge Park, where the city last year resurrected its overnight group camping program at Scout Hollow. She talks about what she and the city are envisioning for programming at Palmer Park, which features a mature hardwood forest book-ended by the former golf course meadows. Palmer Park has a rich history that dates back to the 19th century, and today, it boasts a surprising array of wildlife, from wild turkey and fox to raccoons and opossum. So join us for a little walk in the wintry woods an
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March Detroit Food & Restaurant Roundup
11/03/2019 Duración: 31minThough it's still technically winter, it's never too early to look ahead to springtime. And in Detroit, the pace of restaurant openings is continuing apace. On this episode, Daily Detroit's Man About Town, Devon O'Reilly, joins us to rap about all the latest restaurant news in town. For starters, there's a lot of Detroit-style pizza coming, with Shield's Pizza coming to the Maccabees Building in the Cultural Center, Buddy's headed downtown and newcomer Michigan & Trumbull headed closer to its ancestral home of Corktown from Pittsburgh, according to Eater Detroit. Devon and I also compare tasting notes on Mootz Pizzeria, the newest addition to the Z Garage/Belt Alley, which is serving up New York-style 'za. We also discuss the emerging mini-district between the Shinola Hotel, its new restaurant San Morello, the Element Detroit hotel in the Metropolitan Building, the Brakeman beer hall and Queens Bar. And we head uptown to spend some time discussing what's happening on the Livernois Avenue of Fashion distri
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Detroit's Coding And Development Job Skills Gap With TechElevator's Anthony Hughes
07/03/2019 Duración: 10minToday we're talking about the skills gap in Metro Detroit when it comes to coding and development. Our conversation today is with TechElevator's CEO Anthony Hughes. His company has job training centers in Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus and are opening up right here. We go over what skillsets are actually in demand (like Java and .NET), what it takes to get a job in these fields, and my skepticism of some training programs. The interview was recorded at Automation Alley in Troy. For more information, you can learn more at https://www.techelevator.com/
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H&M Is Coming To Detroit Plus We'll Serve You Soup At The Empty Bowls Fundraiser
06/03/2019 Duración: 18minHappy Hump Day, errrrybody. Today's episode features a series of conversations. There's big news for downtown Detroit's emerging retail shopping scene, as fashionable Swedish retailer H&M is planning to open a store on Woodward Avenue this fall. Daily Detroit's retail maven, Shianne Nocerini, joins Jer to talk about it. Jer then talks with me all about Mayor Mike Duggan's State of the City address last night. I update you on medical marijuana. Dispensaries operating under temporary licenses will now have a hard March 31 deadline to get licensed or face closure. Plus a few other things to know about this industry. Finally, Shi and Jer talk about Empty Bowls Detroit, which is this Friday night at Shed 5 in Eastern Market. The annual event raises money for Cass Community Services. Those two will be serving up hot soup from local restaurants at the event, so if you are there, be sure to stop by and say hi. Find Daily Detroit wherever you get your favorite podcasts. Don't forget to leave us a review on Apple
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Whitmer Unveils Plan To Fix The Damn Roads, Plus A Local Makes The Voice
05/03/2019 Duración: 18minGovernor Gretchen Whitmer today released her first proposed budget before a joint meeting of House and Senate appropriations committee members, and she's targeting investments to three problem areas for Michigan: roads, K-12 schools and contamination threats to drinking water resources. In a nutshell, the governor proposes to raise gasoline taxes in three installments of 15 cents to an extra 45 cents by October 2020. To pay for it, she'd undo some of the tax reforms championed by Gov. Rick Snyder, her predecessor. It's a big pill to swallow, but there can be no doubting that Michigan has racked up a massive bill all these years of kicking the can down the road. On today's show, we also run down some of her other proposals, including boosting funding for K-12 schools and creating a free community college program for Michigan high-school graduates. There's news about a new demolition contract for Joe Louis Arena, with the wrecking ball arriving this spring. A new $30 million skilled-trades training center is pl
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The Return Of WLLZ And District Detroit WTF?
04/03/2019 Duración: 22minOn today's show, we have some fun discussing the return of the WLLZ call letters to Detroit's FM airwaves, and by listener request we talk about the elephant in the room, the so-called District Detroit, in the wake of the big story that ran over the weekend in Crain's. First up is a new Patronicity campaign to help restore Hamtramck Stadium, which hosted Detroit's various Negro Leagues baseball teams during the 1930s. Hometown rock star Jack White ponied up $10,000 to jump-start the campaign, which seeks to raise $50,000 to restore the playing field and install signage. Elsewhere: Former Detroit Red Wing and NHL Hall-of-Famer Ted Lindsay has died. In addition to winning four Stanley Cups with Detroit, he played a big role in helping players to form a labor union. Detroit's Wheels is back after IHeartMedia converted 106.7 over to the revered call letters WLLZ, giving it a classic rock format that frankly sounds different than the old classic-rock format of old. The Detroit Economic Development Corp. is looking
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Meet Detroit's Winter Beach
02/03/2019 Duración: 10minYes, there's a "beach" you'll be able to visit in Detroit through the middle of April. The Beach Detroit is located in 1001 Woodward, and it's a fanciful experience. Sven and Jer chat with Alex Mustonen of Snarkitecture, the creative group brought in to create the beach. Snarkitecture is a New York-based collaborative design practice established to investigate the boundaries between disciplines. The name is drawn from Lewis Carroll's The Hunting of The Snark, a poem describing the "impossible voyage of an improbable crew to find an inconceivable creature." In its search for the unknown, Snarkitecture creates work that includes large-scale projects, installations and objects. The worked with the local Library Street Collective to make this project happen. Time at the beach is free, but tickets are encouraged. You can go to TheBeachDetroit.com to book ahead of time and get more details. Thanks for listening and don't forget to tell a friend about the show.
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What's The Vision For Detroit In 2030?
01/03/2019 Duración: 12minWe spent the day at the Detroit Regional Chamber's Detroit Policy Conference. Though we'll be sharing more of the interviews in their entirety in future episodes of the podcast, we asked six different leaders of different kinds what their vision for Detroit is for 2030. Our guests include: Lieutenant Governor Garlin Gilchrist II IT in the D's Bob Waltenspiel Rush Hasan, Business Development for The Reef, one of Michigan's largest dispensaries Glenn Stevens, Executive Director of MICHAuto Courtney Smith, Founder of the Detroit Phoenix Center Governor Gretchen Whitmer Thanks for listening! Be sure if you like the show to subscribe free wherever fine podcasts are found.
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5 Things To Know In Detroit Plus Dinner And A Chat At The Rattlesnake
28/02/2019 Duración: 26minWe recorded today's episode at The Rattlesnake, which is joining as a sponsor of your Daily Detroit. We have some more tasty more details on the new Buddy's location in downtown Detroit. Elsewhere, we discuss Campbell Soup Company's planned sale of Ferndale's Garden Fresh to a company based in Quebec, Canada. Co-founder Jack Aronson had bid to buy back his old company, but couldn't seal the deal. We also cover the Big News out of Sterling Heights, that a Target is closing down. How big, you ask? Big enough that the mayor, Michael C. Taylor, issued a statement about it. Two other news bits: Developers opened a new $7.2 million affordable housing in a handsome old multi-unit apartment building in Detroit's North End And Meijer has announced a new program to encourage people to safely discard unused or expired prescription drugs at pharmacy locations We then speak with the Rattlesnake's Executive Chef Jeff Lanctot all about the venerable riverfront institution and its participation in Detroit Restaurant Week,
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New Jeep Plant And Buddy's Pizza In Detroit, Plus 7 Other Things To Know
26/02/2019 Duración: 10minAnother day, another truckbed-full of news in Detroit. Fiat Chrysler made arguably the biggest splash with its announcement that it plans to invest $4.5 billion in five Detroit-area plants and create nearly 6,500 jobs. Central to that is plans to convert the Mack Avenue Engine Complex on Detroit's east side to an assembly plant to build the next-generation Jeep Grand Cherokee and a yet-to-be-named three-row Jeep SUV. If all goes according to plan, construction could begin by mid-year. Forbes will hold its Under 30 Summit in Detroit for three years, starting this fall State environmental regulators have issued a violation against the Marathon Oil Refinery in Southwest Detroit after residents complained of foul odors The Detroit Public Schools Community District is reclaiming three of its buildings from charter schools, and a fourth from a church, Chalkbeat Detroit reports City Council President Brenda Jones has ordered a draft ordinance that would prohibit the construction of any more bike lanes in Detroit wi
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Shinola At The Oscars, A New Detroit Bodega And 7 Things To Know
25/02/2019 Duración: 16minA Hollywood film director makes a giant splash at the Oscar Awards when he says Shinola is "saving Detroit" and the interweb asplodes. We talk about what that ridiculous, off-the-cuff comment means about the city and its nascent comeback. There's a lot more news to be had on today's episode. We also discuss that Medium blog post announcing a new bodega — that's essentially New York City parlance for "party store" — for the hard-hit Russell Woods neighborhood on Detroit's west side. It'll reportedly be part of a larger development, and the post ends with the hashtag, #MakeTheHoodGreatAgain. Also on today's show: Notorious Detroit landlord Dennis Keffalinos has the building that formerly housed El Zocalo on Bagley Avenue in Mexicantown – DetNews The Canadian government aims to waive tolls for cyclists using the Gordie Howe International Bridge – CBC The Fonz is coming to Motor City Comic Con Dearborn gets a nod as one of the top suburban, uh, suburbs in the country in which to eat – Thrillist Detroit City FC w