Read/Listen/Watch List for Week of July 5, 2025

Read

The housing market’s new deal-breaker is likely to get worse before it gets better (Albany Business Review)

Mapped: The Income a Family Needs to Be Middle Class, by State (Visual Capitalist)

Feudalism is Our Future (Atlantic Monthly)

Charted: Productivity Gains from Using AI (Visual Capitalist)

Young Republicans are fueling the GOP’s generational divide on Israel (Washington Post)

Why many new apartment developments don’t pencil out (Multifamily Dive)

New apartments set to offer skybox view of stadium in Holly Springs (News & Observer)

The Grandfathers Fighting on Ukraine’s Front Lines (The Wall Street Journal)

Local and national partners join forces for $40 million Winston-Salem apartment development (Triad Business Journal)

NC’s rural hospitals at risk as Tillis rejects Medicaid cuts in Senate’s version of ‘big, beautiful bill (Triad Business Journal)

Ranked: The Largest U.S. Companies by Revenue in 2025 (Visual Capitalist)

Data: In Rural America, Mobile Homes are Heat Traps (Planetizen)

If You’re Using ChatGPT for Any of These 11 Things, Stop Immediately (Cnet)

Listen/Watch

Tillis Shreds Big Beautiful Bill in First Senate Floor Speech Since Announcing Retirement (Forbes Breaking News on YouTube)

Read/Listen/Watch List for Week of June 28, 2025

Read

Breaking Down Iran’s Oil Exports by Country (Visual Capitalist)

After Lahaina burned, an experiment in housing the most vulnerable (Washington Post)

Costco is changing store hours across NC. Who gets early shopping access? (News & Observer)

The 50 best airports in America, ranked (Washington Post)

After their teens died, this couple made a phone booth for anyone coping with loss (Washington Post)

Aviation boom in Triad fuels community college expansion to meet workforce demand (Triad Business Journal)

HUD to move to Virginia as Trump seeks to ‘right-size’ federal presence in D.C. (Washington Post)

Triad mayors discuss housing options as area sees unprecedented growth (Fox8 WGHP)

Greensboro planning commission rejects high-density apartment project amid neighborhood concerns (Triad Business Journal $)

Triad universities grapple with $3.7M in frozen research grants amid policy uncertainty (Triad Business Journal $)

If Trump dismantles FEMA, could the state and non-profits handle NC disaster relief? (The News & Observer)

Stewardship isn’t what it used to be in N.C. (Longleaf Politics)

With Housing Affordability, A Community Thrives (WilmingtonBiz)

Listen

Living Colour: Tiny Desk Concert (NPR)

Get ready for a few months in the Southern summer broiler (WFAE)

SouthBound #197: Georgann Eubanks (WFAE)

Watch

I-Banker by Day, Pro Wrestler by Night: The Real-Life Heel Turn of J.P. Lehman (Pablo Torre Finds Out)

Inside the AI Tool Used by DOGE to Review Veterans Affairs Contracts (ProPublica Youtube)

Reading/Listen/Watch List Week of June 21, 2025

Read

The most Dad thing you did in the last year (Ryan Nanni’s Bluesky Social thread)

‘The essential ingredient is openness’: Curtis Sittenfeld on the deep joy of midlife friendship (The Guardian)

Durham grants $1.5M loan to housing authority in ‘crisis.’ How it will be used (The News & Observer)

Western North Carolina’s 60+ wineries have largely reopened but are facing fewer visitors and steep repair bills; ‘We’re here – come visit’ (The Charlotte Ledger)

Recovery Failure: Why we struggle to rebuild for the next storm (NPR)

Landlords owed thousands, as Housing Authority continues to have trouble paying tenants rent (ABC11)

Apartment developer sees muted impact from tariffs so far (Multifamily Dive)

Housing is unaffordable – does anyone care enough to fix it? (The Carolina Journal)

How the potential end of Energy Star could affect apartment operators (Multifamily Dive)

Mapped: The Most and Least Expensive U.S. State (Visual Capitalist)

U.S. must face claims over pandemic ban on residential evictions (Reuters)

What if federal hurricane relief dries up in Western North Carolina? Here are some lessons from history. (North Carolina Rabbit Hole)

Why the costs of child care shouldn’t be borne alone (EdNC)

Listen

From Pandemic Pivots to Political Power – The New Blueprint for Apartment Associations (The Associated)

Watch

Social Media, Connection & Career Growth in Multifamily with Alexis, Bill, and Marcie (Be Amazing Podcast/YouTube)

More Than Housing: The People Powering Multifamily Guest Jon, Chiccorra, & Bryan (Be Amazing Podcast/YouTube)

Rescue Brew contest transforms animals into NoDa Brewing mascots for a good cause (WCNC)

The Before: Final Prep for Hardwood Floor Installation

The hardwood floors are scheduled to be installed beginning January 30, so the past weekend was spent making final preparations. That included: removing the chair lift from the staircase, removing the carpet/padding/carpet tack strips from the stairs, making sure the floors were clean, and screwing down the subfloor to minimize squeaking. Let’s just say my back, shoulders, forearms, and hands are paying the price for a LOT of labor.

Morning Beers and a Little Known Hero

Two things I read this week that are definitely worth sharing:

Atlas Obscura’s piece on the three London pubs that still open for breakfast, and yes you can have a beer with your bacon and eggs. Here’s my favorite factoid from the article:

…drinking before work is fairly taboo in Britain, and most people wait until at least lunchtime. Back in the day, though, workmen would easily drink six to eight pints of beer every day, says Jennings. For what else could they drink? The water often came from sewage-ridden sources such as the River Thames, and there were no soft drinks. Tea and coffee eventually arrived, but they were expensive, foreign imports and, even once they became more common, subject to heavy taxation. “So people drank beer with their meals during the day. That lasted well into the 19th century for many people,” says Jennings.

The second piece that really caught my attention was this article from North Carolina Rabbit Hole about the man who led the team that disarmed two hydrogen bombs that accidentally fell near Goldsboro, NC in 1961. Here’s the opening paragraph:

On a cold wet day in January 1961, Lt. Jack ReVelle climbed out of a muddy hole in the ground, holding a rough, gray sphere the size of a volleyball against his chest. For the better part of a week, he and his crew had been digging in the swampy ground outside of Goldsboro, North Carolina. It had been raining and snowing, and the hole had grown to be larger than a football field. Jack was just 25 years old, but he was in charge. When he and his men finally found what they were looking for, Jack was the one who got to climb up the ladder and bring it out.

I definitely recommend reading the rest of the article to learn about a man who did something extraordinary, and yet no one knew about it for 50 years.