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    Let's Go Michigan!

    Join Jeff Sloan, Kristin Kujawa, and Mark Pastoria covering issues & stories - from business to lifestyle, events & culture - that celebrate our great state of Michigan.
    en60 Episodes

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    Episodes (60)

    Michigan Tourism and the Missing Winter

    Michigan Tourism and the Missing Winter
    Rose White, MLive: "Unseasonably warm weather, little snowfall and muddy trails have hollowed out the winter tourism industry across the Upper Peninsula. This crisis has devastated the small communities that rely on a thick blanket of snow to keep the economy humming. Although visitor numbers peak in summer, winter plays a vital role in tiding businesses over between shoulder seasons."

    Temporal Conversations: Small Talk, Lost Winters, and the Spring Break Mirage

    Temporal Conversations: Small Talk, Lost Winters, and the Spring Break Mirage
    FULL EPISODE aired on WJR 760AM Radio: Jeff Sloan, Kristin Kujawa, and Mark Pastoria highlight Michigan schools making the top envied list, the pros and cons of daylight savings time, and the new standard for spring break vacations. (07:49) Rose White, MLive, The UP tourism reckons with warm weather (19:31) Allie Volpe, Vox, The art of mastering small talk.

    A Love/Hate Relationship: Potatoes, Exercise, Fast Food

    A Love/Hate Relationship: Potatoes, Exercise, Fast Food
    FULL EPISODE aired on WJR Radio 760AM: Jeff Sloan, Kristin Kujawa, Mark Pastoria talk about health in many formats: Potato chips and the importance to the MI economy, Exercise, supplements, Detroit style pizza, and mental health and the stamina to live a year in a Mars simulator. Rose White, MLive, Michigan's potato industry and Jamie Ducharme, Time, Why you don't want to exercise, join the show.

    Michigan's Potato Industry

    Michigan's Potato Industry
    Rose White, MLive, "Plucked from the dirt, most MI potatoes are sliced, peeled, fried, salted and turned into chips. As the 8th largest producer of potatoes in the country, MI plays a “critically important” role in the chip industry. About 70% of the MI-grown spuds become chips for brands like Frito Lay, Herr’s, Utz Snacks, Better Made Snack Foods and Great Lakes Potato Chip Co."

    Your Brain Doesn't Want You to Exercise

    Your Brain Doesn't Want You to Exercise
    Jamie Ducharme, Time, "Why is it so tough to get people to do something so good for and accessible to them? Physical limitations and health problems are certainly a factor for many people. Modern life deserves much of the blame, too, with long, sedentary work days and infrastructure that often makes it easier to hop in the car than walk or bike somewhere. But research suggests there’s another obstacle that affects all of us: our brains don’t want us to exercise."

    Unseasonable Weather a Challenge for Fruit Farmers

    Unseasonable Weather a Challenge for Fruit Farmers
    Janelle D James, BridgeMI: Fluctuating temperatures can be particularly troubling for fruit farmers who rely on cold temperatures to help the trees “sleep” during the winter. If temperatures are consistently too warm, crops can start to bud too early, putting the flower at risk of freezing and jeopardizing spring and summer fruit production when the temperatures drop again.

    The State of the Environment, the Climate, and the American Dream

    The State of the Environment, the Climate, and the American Dream
    FULL EPISODE aired on WJR 760AM radio: Jeff Sloan, Kristin Kujawa, and Mark Pastoria promote volunteering for the Greening of Detroit, feral goldfish in our lakes and the city in MI with the best tasting water. Also (09:18) Benji Jones, Vox, The Earth is Getting Greener! Hooray? (16:34) Juliana Kaplan, Business Insider, DINKs are living the new American dream (26:34) Janelle D James, BridgeMI, Unseasonably warm weather a challenge for fruit farmers in MI. Wrapping up: what your Detroit suburb says about you.

    DINKs are Living the New American Dream

    DINKs are Living the New American Dream
    Juliana Kaplan, Business Insider: The costs of rearing a child have skyrocketed. Raising a kid could cost parents upward of $26,000 this year. Being a DINK has always been a way to save money, but as the stigma around the choice to be child-free has faded, more Americans see being a DINK as the key to a new American dream of financial stability, freedom of choice, and a comfortable retirement.

    LinkedIn Love Connections & Elderly Music Milestones

    LinkedIn Love Connections & Elderly Music Milestones
    FULL EPISODE aired on WJR 760AM radio:Jeff Sloan, Kristin Kujawa and Mark Pastoria kick off the show with lexicon updates, Ann Arbor Adventures, Detroit Driving Dilemmas, and Historical highlights. (10:55) Kelli Korducki, Business Insider, LinkedIn isn't just for jobs anymore. It's a dating app too. (19:38) Paula Gardner, Bridge MI, Elderly Instruments, celebrates 52 years in business. They finish out the show discussing hobby hunting "How-Tos".

    Economics: Ski Resorts & the Detroit Lions

    Economics: Ski Resorts & the Detroit Lions
    FULL EPISODE aired on WJR Radio 760AM Detroit: Jeff, Kristin, and Mark recap and put a little perspective on this weeks news as well as speak with (08:45) Mark Dent, The Hustle, Powder and profits of ski resorts and (21:03) Dustin Walsh, Crain's Detroit, Can the Detroit Lions win really line our pockets. They wrap up the show discusses the new trend of bosses sending their employees to charm school.

    How Your Job Affects Your Health

    How Your Job Affects Your Health
    Jamie Ducharme, Time Magazine, If you’re trying to improve your health, the first stop is likely to be your doctor’s office. But your own office may have nearly as much influence on well-being, according to a growing body of research that suggests your job can affect everything from mental health to risk of cardiovascular disease and how long you live.