Advice For Trump, Why We're Awkward, A Stroke of Faith

Advice For Trump, Why We're Awkward, A Stroke of Faith

Top of Mind with Julie Rose

  • May 30, 2017 11:00 pm
  • 1:42:28 mins

Trump White House Family Business Guest: Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Senior Associate Dean for Leadership Studies, Lester Crown Professor of Management Practice, Yale School of Management Trump expert and friend Jeffery Sonnenfeld gives an assessment of President Trump’s leadership. He was at BYU late last week for a conference sponsored by the Wheatley Institution and spoke with us about how Trump’s skills as CEO of a private, family-owned business are translating to the presidency.  Why We’re Awkward Guest: Ty Tashiro, PhD, Psychologist and Author of “Awkward: The Science of Why We’re Socially Awkward and Why That’s Awesome” No one is immune to awkwardness, whether it’s getting a piece of food stuck in your teeth, forgetting the name of a former neighbor, or tripping over your own feet in a room full of people you’re trying to impress. But, for some people, life is a steady stream of awkward moments, and it turns out there is a reason why. But it's okay because awkwardness can be awesome.  Swipe Left? Not So Fast Guest: Jeffrey Hall, PhD, Professor of Communication Studies, University of Kansas Online dating is no longer the taboo thing it used to be. Services like Tinder and Match are now common ways people of all ages find potential partners. But all the swiping and rating of people based on their photos may be ruining our chances of really enjoying the company of a date when we finally meet in person. Discover your flirting style at Jeffrey Hall's website here.   Game of Loans: Rhetoric vs. Reality of Student Debt Guest: Matthew Chingos, PhD, Director of the Education Policy Program, Urban Institute, Co-Author of “Game of Loans: the Rhetoric and Reality of Student Debt” When total student loan debt in America breached the one trillion-dollar threshold a few years back, horror stories of unemployed college graduates crushed by six-figure debt and living with their parents took center stage. While these stories are true, they may not hold the full picture, according to Urban Institute Education Policy analyst Matthew Chingos. In fact, he argues that by fixating on those extreme student debt stories, we’re missing the real problem with student loans in America.  Risks of Going Gluten-Free Guest: Benjamin Lebwohl, MD, Assistant Professor of Epidemiology at Columbia University Even if you don’t have celiac disease, cutting back on your gluten intake might seem like a good idea. After all, most gluten-free food is sold in the health food section at the grocery store and even fast-food joints like Wendy’s now offer no-gluten options. However, it turns out that cutting out gluten if you don’t need to is not as healthy as the blogs and popular press would have you believe.   A Stroke of Faith Guest: Mark Moore, Author of “A Stroke of Faith: A Stroke Survivor’s Story of a Second Chance at Living a Life of Significance” Through hard work, Mark Moore rose from a tough, poor neighborhood in New York City to a leafy, affluent suburb of DC and started a career as a successful technology entrepreneur with a profitable IPO and a major business sale under his belt. Moore was proud to be a self-made man in his 40s and believed that with discipline and effort anything was possible.  So when he suffered two strokes and awoke from a month in an induced coma, his plan was to work himself to a full recovery, but his body – and frankly, God – had other plans.

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