Madeline
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I think hospitals have some of the dispensers too, that it's probably like two by three. You can put it on the countertop and you can get ones that make just ice or ice and water. And then it like dispenses it for you too.
Well, we deal with customs bringing some in that we import, but yeah, like the actual ice machines, but not ice.
Well, we deal with customs bringing some in that we import, but yeah, like the actual ice machines, but not ice.
Yes. Thank you.
Yes. Thank you.
Thanks. You too.
Thanks. You too.
Hi, In the Dark listeners, it's Madeline. Our team is hard at work at a new story. But in the meantime, I thought you'd be interested in hearing this episode from the New Yorker Radio Hour. It's an interview with one of my favorite writers at the New Yorker, Rachel Aviv, talking with New Yorker editor David Remnick about her latest astounding story. It's about the writer Alice Munro.
Hi, In the Dark listeners, it's Madeline. Our team is hard at work at a new story. But in the meantime, I thought you'd be interested in hearing this episode from the New Yorker Radio Hour. It's an interview with one of my favorite writers at the New Yorker, Rachel Aviv, talking with New Yorker editor David Remnick about her latest astounding story. It's about the writer Alice Munro.
Alice Munro is one of the most acclaimed short story writers of our time. She won the Nobel Prize in Literature. The New Yorker published more than 50 of her stories. But after Munro died, her daughter Andrea Skinner came forward with a shocking revelation. Andrea revealed that she had been sexually abused as a child by her mother's husband.
Alice Munro is one of the most acclaimed short story writers of our time. She won the Nobel Prize in Literature. The New Yorker published more than 50 of her stories. But after Munro died, her daughter Andrea Skinner came forward with a shocking revelation. Andrea revealed that she had been sexually abused as a child by her mother's husband.
And she revealed that her mother, the famed writer Alice Munro, upon learning of the abuse, chose to remain with her husband. In this episode of the New Yorker Radio Hour, Rachel Aviv takes us through her reporting, including her reexamination of several of Monroe's short stories, stories that now appear to have been fictionalizing the secret story of her own family.
And she revealed that her mother, the famed writer Alice Munro, upon learning of the abuse, chose to remain with her husband. In this episode of the New Yorker Radio Hour, Rachel Aviv takes us through her reporting, including her reexamination of several of Monroe's short stories, stories that now appear to have been fictionalizing the secret story of her own family.
Keep listening for the full episode and be sure to follow the New Yorker Radio Hour wherever you get your podcasts.
Keep listening for the full episode and be sure to follow the New Yorker Radio Hour wherever you get your podcasts.
Madeline.
Madeline.
Hi, thank you so much. I was actually just calling because I currently live with my boyfriend at his parents' house. We've lived here for about two years, and we are getting engaged this year, and we're running out. Obviously, we don't want to be engaged or even married living here. We've been doing the snowball effect for a little bit, but it's still in the process.
Hi, thank you so much. I was actually just calling because I currently live with my boyfriend at his parents' house. We've lived here for about two years, and we are getting engaged this year, and we're running out. Obviously, we don't want to be engaged or even married living here. We've been doing the snowball effect for a little bit, but it's still in the process.
Hi, thank you so much. I was actually just calling because I currently live with my boyfriend at his parents' house. We've lived here for about two years, and we are getting engaged this year, and we're running out. Obviously, we don't want to be engaged or even married living here. We've been doing the snowball effect for a little bit, but it's still in the process.