Oy Vey L.A.

Josh Gertler, Chris Joseph

“I have lived here my entire life. I have never seen this city so dirty, so rudderless. Homeless everywhere, crime going up, and there just seems to be a lack of urgency, a lack of any kind of all-hands-on-deck approach to these crises.” - former mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, October 2021 We all want a better, more livable Los Angeles. But what does that mean, exactly? And how do we get there? Join Josh Gertler and Chris Joseph – two native Angelenos – on our new podcast “Oy Vey L.A.” as we interview informed citizens, politicians (and wanna’ be politicians), as well as thought leaders and in-touch members of the local media. We’ll take you on a journey discussing such subjects as local politics, livability issues, housing (affordable and otherwise), and local corruption, a journey that will hopefully illuminate, stimulate and provoke thoughts and solutions. About Josh: Josh is the president and CEO of Consensus, a Los Angeles-based public relations firm founded in 1986. The firm ranks among the largest independently-owned public relations firms in Southern California and the top 100 in the nation. Josh has spent his entire career developing and delivering communications strategies for corporations, governments, brands, projects, places and ideas. Consensus has been pioneering consensus-building approaches and applying them to major issues and challenges since the firm’s founding. He is a member of the board of directors of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, the largest business organization in America’s second largest city, a board member of the Valley Industry and Commerce Association (VICA), and he is active in the Urban Land Institute (ULI). About Chris: Over the last 35 years, Chris has started and managed three environmental consulting businesses, launched two fan-funded music record companies and founded a non-profit charitable foundation. He's also dabbled in philanthropy, book writing, songwriting, and magazine writing. His company, CAJA Environmental Services, is a leading CEQA consulting firm in southern California. Chris is also an odds-defying, stage-three pancreatic cancer survivor and thriver since 2016, as described in his best-selling 2020 book "Life is a Ride: My Unconventional Journey of Cancer Recovery." He is also a co-curator and contributing author to "The Epiphanies Project: Twenty Personal Revelations." Chris' other podcasts include Talking Threadheads, The Epiphanies Project, and Life is a Ride: Overcoming Huge Obstacles in Unconventional Ways. read less
GouvernementGouvernement

Épisodes

Roar Shack and Library Girl: Two Prominent Literary Series in Los Angeles
12-02-2023
Roar Shack and Library Girl: Two Prominent Literary Series in Los Angeles
Oy Vey L.A. is back for our first episode in 2023!  Today we veer from discussing politics and current events to talk with two important thought leaders, both of whom lead long-running reading/literary series in Los Angeles, Susan Hayden and David Rocklin. Susan founded and curates the monthly Library Girl series in Santa Monica; David started and runs the monthly Roar Shack series in Echo Park. More about Susan and David: Susan Hayden is a poet, playwright. novelist and essayist. Her plays have been performed live on KPFK’s Pacifica Performance Showcase and produced at the Met Theatre, Padua Playwrights, The Lost Studio and elsewhere. Her poems and stories have been published in numerous anthologies, including Beat Not Beat (Moon Tide Press), The Black Body(Seven Stories Press) and in the bestselling Los Angeles In the 1970s/Weird Scenes Inside the Goldmine (Rare Bird Books). She was a Finalist in the Inaugural Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award with Penguin Press for her unpublished novel, Cat Stevens Saved My Life. Hayden is the creator and producer of Library Girl, a monthly words and music series now in its 14th year at Ruskin Group Theatre. She lives in Santa Monica, California with her husband, music journalist Steve Hochman. Now You Are A Missing Person, a hybrid memoir, is her first published book. David Rocklin is a novelist living in L.A. His previous two novels were The Luminist (published in the U.S and Italy) and Foreword LGBTQIA award-winning The Night Language. He also hosts and created Roar Shack, a long-running L.A. reading series that has given him high visibility in the lit community and a wonderful platform from which to promote his work. He’s recently written The Write Formula, a writing craft book that will be available in 2023 as part of a virtual and physical retreat that he’s establishing, the latter to take place in Idyllwild, CA.
A Conversation with Jessica Lall of the L.A. Central City Association
30-06-2022
A Conversation with Jessica Lall of the L.A. Central City Association
Jessica Lall of the L.A. Central City Association joins the Oy Vey L.A. podcast to talk about her mayoral run and her thoughts on the June primary election. Jessica also opines on how to successfully address the homelessness problems facing Los Angeles. Jessica Lall is the President and CEO of Central City Association (CCA), a premier advocacy organization committed to enhancing Downtown Los Angeles’ vibrancy and increasing opportunity in the region. CCA members include large employers, cultural institutions, housing developers and service providers. Prior to leading CCA, Jessica was Executive Director for the South Park Business Improvement District in Downtown L.A. and served as Senior Policy Director for former Mayor Villaraigosa. Active in the civic community, Jessica ran for Mayor of Los Angeles in 2021, focusing her campaign on proactive solutions to homelessness. Jessica was named the Barbara Boxer Fellow for USC’s Center for the Political Future where she will teach a course called Local Leadership & Community Systems Change in Fall 2022. Jessica is a graduate of USC and the Coro Fellowship in Public Affairs. She lives in L.A. with her husband and their two-year-old daughter.  ***For the Record: In this episode, during the introduction of our guest, we mentioned that Jessica Lall was the first woman to serve as USC student body president. That statement was incorrect; there were other women who served in that role before Jessica. We apologize for the error.***
The UC Berkeley CEQA Case, with Alex DeGood
14-05-2022
The UC Berkeley CEQA Case, with Alex DeGood
Today's show focuses on one of the reasons it's so hard to build new housing in California. It's a four-letter word. CEQA. That's an acronym that stands for the California Environmental Quality Act or CEQA for short. CEQA was signed in 1970 into law by then-Governor Ronald Reagan. And, in short, the law requires California’s public agencies and local governments to measure the environmental impacts of development projects -- like housing -- or other major land use decisions, and to limit or avoid those impacts when possible. Few other laws have shaped the development landscape of California so dramatically. Today's show examines one of the most recent and most high-profile stories about CEQA and housing that garnered national attention. It's the UC Berkeley case where a neighborhood group called "Save Berkeley’s Neighborhoods" successfully sued UC Berkeley's CEQA document saying the university did not adequately address environmental issues related to increasing student enrollment. A judge agreed and ordered an enrollment cap and, to comply with the judge's order, the university sent thousands of applicants letters saying the university may have to cut enrollment by about 3,050 seats because of this issue. Joining us on the podcast to discuss the court case and the legislation that ensued  is one of the best legal minds in California, Alex DeGood of the firm Cox, Castle and Nicholson. Alex is a land use attorney who handles zoning matters, environmental compliance, and litigation. He represents real estate developers before planning commissions and city councils, advises on permits and regulations, and works with public agency staff and elected officials. Alex has litigated land use cases on behalf of developers and property owners, negotiated settlements in environmental matters, and structured complex land use entitlement projects for industrial, commercial, and educational clients.