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Good Standing

Good Standing

By: Good Standing
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Welcome to the Good Standing --ushering in a new era of social impact. Our platform inspires collaboration between volunteers, organizations, and brands to tackle our most pressing challenges. Participants earn digital coupons, unlock badges, and grow through positive action and self-development. Watch stories of change, interviews with leaders, and tips to boost your impact. Whether you're a donor, changemaker, or curious supporter, subscribe to stay inspired and get involved. Let’s make a difference—together!Good Standing Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Good Food Works Founder, Jason Finder, on His "Salad Days" Project Exceeding Great Expectations
    Jun 15 2026

    Jason Finder is the Founder of Good Food Works, the food social enterprise incubator launched out of The Doe Fund, a leading New York City non-profit organization model for solving homelessness and criminal recidivism, perhaps best known for their "Ready, Willing & Able" program. Finder's past work in the community includes serving on Bushwick Food Cooperative’s Board of Directors for six years, with three of them as President. His latest venture is "Salad Days," which brings delicious, nutritious, high-quality, affordable salads (GFW's head chef managed Eleven Madison Park's food truck operation) to low-income communities. The simple, seasonal, affordably-priced, Michelin-worthy salads, are largely subsidized by selling at market price to corporate offices and private clients across the New York City area. Salad Days was incubated in Good Food Works after considerable boots-on-the-ground canvassing in communities across the five boroughs, many of them in so-called "food deserts," to determine their specific wants and needs. On this episode of Good Standing, we discuss breaking through stereotypes and presumptions to instead connect at a deeper human level. In an increasingly uncertain economy, good food, but perhaps more importantly, real access to it, will undoubtedly serve as a core foundational component to the healthy future of the United States. Whether you're a staunch MAHA disciple or lining up for Mayor Mamdani's city-run grocery stores, everybody wants and deserves to eat well and feel good.

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    1 hr and 31 mins
  • The Past, Present, and Future of Affordable Housing, with Edward Poteat
    Jun 2 2026

    Edward Poteat is a born-and-raised, New York-based affordable housing advocate, activist, and developer. He is the founder and President of Carthage Advisors (LLC), a leading creator of workforce and affordable housing across the Tri-State and New York City region, working to expand access to quality affordable housing and economic opportunity. Ed, who named his development firm after the city from which the famed general Hannibal hailed, is focused on addressing the long-standing inequities that have disproportionately impacted Black and Brown communities by leveraging the power of the private market to deliver meaningful, lasting change. A Yale graduate and author, he is also an Adjunct Professor at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (GSAPP), where he teaches graduate courses on affordable housing finance, development, and policy. On this episode of Good Standing, we discuss New York City's debt problems and how Mayor Mamdani could further solve New York's housing issues. General topics are addressed herein, but also, the minutia and often tricky nuance required to bridge complex conversations between what it means to have true empathy for struggling New Yorkers (systemically and/or due to contemporary market forces) and the urgent need to keep NYC from spiraling deeper into debt. From the Marcus Garvey Village project, a massive, recently developed Carthage Advisors endeavor in Harlem, to what Ed would do if afforded a blank check for affordable housing anywhere in the city, this is a brisk primer, courtesy of a real, hands-on expert, for anyone interested in housing in New York City, past, present and future.

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    54 mins
  • Young Weavers in the Sacred Valley of Cusco, Peru, with Robin Kang and Nilda Callañaupa Alvarez
    May 22 2026

    Robin Kang is a multidisciplinary artist, weaver, and energy healer. Her work explores the intersection of ancient wisdom, ecological awareness, and technological innovation. For Kang, weaving serves as a bridge between traditional craft and computational processes, envisioning a balance between technology and organic systems. On this special episode of Good Standing, Robin joins Nilda Callañaupa Alvarez, an Indigenous Quechua weaver, spinner, natural dyer, and knitter from Chinchero in the Cusco region of Peru. Along with other Quechua weavers from Chinchero as well as international supporters, Nilda helped to establish the Centro de Textiles Tradicionales del Cusco (CTTC - Center for Traditional Textiles of Cusco) in 1996 as a nonprofit organization. Since then until the present day, Callañaupa has served as director of the CTTC. She has written four books on Peruvian weaving and has coauthored a third on senior weavers of the Peruvian Andes. Last summer, (July, 2025) Nilda was tapped to consult at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on their pre-Columbian tapestry collection (Art of the Ancient Americas). Coinciding with our companion digital platform (GoodStanding.app), we are offering up authentic, organic textiles made by the Young Weavers on site in Cusco under Nilda's tutelage, in an effort to celebrate (30 years), and to support and raise awareness for CTTC in its mission to preserve its cultural practices and bolster its many special operations in the Sacred Valley. Kang, once more weaving the digital and analogue together into one unique expression, has created custom, artistic coupons for the GS activation, which will act as digital, sharable souvenirs (proof of purchase & support) and will live proudly on user profiles. New Yorkers will be able to pick up their custom textiles in person on June 18th in Manhattan. We will ship goods to those not in NYC. The word "bridge" continues to reappear in all things Good Standing. We can all be a bridge, built in good faith, to bring humanity together as a connected whole, while holding space for unique cultures and their precious, indispensable traditions. We hope you enjoy this episode, and the special sisterhood between Nilda & Robin, which grows stronger with every passing year.

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    52 mins
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