Episodios

  • Sustainable Style: Sarah Teresinski on Upcycling for Stylish Home Decor
    Nov 5 2025

    When Sarah Teresinski was a single mom, she couldn’t afford the beautiful little dresses she saw in stores for her daughter. So she decided to teach herself how to sew. That simple decision sparked a movement — and eventually, Redeux Style, where Sarah transforms old, unused items into something new and beautiful. Today, she helps people see the potential in what they already have or what they might find at the thrift stores — proving that sustainable can be stylish too.

    “If everyone who follows me did just one upcycle a year, we could keep 60,000 pounds of waste out of landfills — that’s 5,600 garbage trucks saved.”

    Hear Sarah talk about:

    • How teaching herself to sew turned into a full-time creative business
    • What it was like to face criticism early on — and why it fueled her mission
    • The difference between fast fashion, fast furniture, and true sustainable style
    • Her viral ceiling fan upcycle that caught the attention of The Drew Barrymore Show and Architectural Digest
    • How small, beautiful changes can make a big impact — for your home and the planet

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • Find Sarah on TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook
    • See Sarah's appearance on The Drew Barrymore Show
    • United Nations Fashion & Lifestyle Network
    • Sarah's placemat upcycle
    • Sarah's fan blade upcycle
    • Fire starter upcycle
    • 15 ways to use silica packets
    • Organizing a pantry on a budget
    • Sarah's friend Dan the Organizer Man


    Support This Show:

    • Follow Tell Me What It’s Like in your favorite podcast app
    • Leave a rating & review — it helps others find the show
    • Share the episode and tag @RaineMediaCo on social media


    Más Menos
    42 m
  • The Woman Who Changed Chess: Susan Polgar on Becoming a Grandmaster
    Oct 29 2025

    Susan Polgar’s father believed geniuses weren’t born, they were made. So when his three-year-old daughter found an old chess set in their Budapest apartment, he saw an opportunity to prove it. Susan quickly learned the game, but soon realized the real challenge: convincing the world that girls could play just as well as boys - which she did by becoming the first woman to earn the Grandmaster title under the same standards as men. In this episode, she shares how she rewrote the gender norms of chess, overcame deeply rooted sexism, and helped redefine what young girls believe they can achieve.


    "You need to set a goal. And in this case, you need to set the highest goal possible. So even if we fall short somewhat, we still get further than if we set a lower goal."
    Hear Susan talk about:
    • How, at six, she decided to specialize in chess (and not math)
    • The sexism she faced as a young girl rising in a male-dominated field
    • Why her grandmother's words shaped her sense of perseverance
    • What came after winning world championships
    • The lessons chess teaches about focus, decision-making, and resilience

    Mentioned in this episode:
    • Rebel Queen: The Cold War, Misogyny, and the Making of a Grandmaster by Susan Polgar
    • The Susan Polgar Foundation - scholarships, training, and outreach for young chess players
    • Introduction: Learn Chess in 30 Minutes (first instructional video for beginners)

    Support This Show:

    • Follow Tell Me What It’s Like in your favorite podcast app
    • Leave a rating & review — it helps others find the show
    • Share the episode and tag @RaineMediaCo on social media


    Más Menos
    38 m
  • Becoming Wise in the Age of AI: Jeff Burningham on What It Means to Be Human
    Oct 22 2025

    After decades of chasing success as a tech entrepreneur, venture capitalist, and even a candidate for Utah governor, Jeff Burningham found himself questioning what it all meant.

    When the governor’s race ended in 2020, Jeff finally had space to pause—and that pause changed everything. It led him to write The Last Book Written by a Human, a deeply personal reflection on consciousness, connection, and wisdom in an age increasingly defined by artificial intelligence.

    “As our machines become smarter, we have to become wiser.”
    Hear Jeff talk about:
    • What it was like to step back from chasing success and re-evaluate what matters
    • Why he believes AI is a mirror showing us who we are
    • The four stages he sees as part of every human and technological evolution: disruption, reflection, transformation, and evolution
    • Why slowing down might be the most human thing we can do

    Mentioned in this episode:
    • The Last Book Written by a Human by Jeff Burningham
    • Read more about Jeff
    • The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle

    Support This Show:

    • Follow Tell Me What It’s Like in your favorite podcast app
    • Leave a rating & review — it helps others find the show
    • Share the episode and tag @RaineMediaCo on social media


    Más Menos
    40 m
  • Growing Up Millennial: Charlie Wells on What Shaped a Generation
    Oct 15 2025

    Journalist Charlie Wells is a Millennial — and by now, something of an expert on the Millennial generation, too. In his debut book, What Happened to Millennials: In Defense of a Generation, he shares the stories of five people whose lives reveal what it’s really been like to grow up Millennial — through the early optimism, the crises that shaped us, and all the change we’ve weathered along the way.

    "We're adults and we've overcome a lot of obstacles as this group of people. It's okay to celebrate that."

    Hear Charlie talk about:

    • Why he wanted to explore what it’s really been like to grow up as a Millennial
    • How he chose the five people whose lives he shares in the book
    • How major moments like 9/11 and the rise of the internet shaped Millennial identity
    • The nostalgia objects — from Tamagotchis to AIM screen names — that connect us across divides
    • Why he feels proud of Millennials, and what he hopes we carry forward into the next chapter of adulthood

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • What Happened to Millennials: In Defense of a Generation by Charlie Wells
    • Charlie Wells on Instagram and X (Twitter)

    Support this show:

    • Follow Tell Me What It’s Like in your favorite podcast app
    • Leave a rating and review
    • Share on social media and tag @rainemediaco

    Más Menos
    35 m
  • Creating a Walking Shoe for Women: Cori Burns on Filling the Fitness Shoe Gap
    Oct 8 2025

    Cori Burns had always loved running, but eventually pregnancy pushed her to walking for exercise. She found she loved it, but quickly realized there weren't any shoes made for women who walked for fitness. So, she set out to create them herself.

    In 2023 she launched Raesyn, a technical shoe company making shoes “for women who walk to sweat.” Cori shares how she spotted a gap in the shoe industry, what went into designing a shoe for women who walk for exercise, and the determination it took to turn her idea into Raesyn.

    “I wanted something that made me feel effortless in my motion forward. It’s a different movement than running – it’s constant ground contact. So I thought to myself, there's truly a gap in the market."

    Hear Cori talk about:

    • What makes walking for exercise different from running
    • When she noticed there was a need for walking shoes
    • What she looked for in the ideal women’s walking shoe
    • The process to get from prototype to a shoe ready for market

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • Raesyn Shoes — Cori’s footwear brand
    • Girls Who Walk Baltimore, the walking group Cori mentioned
    • Cori’s walking workouts and Substack

    Support this show:

    • Follow Tell Me What It’s Like in your favorite podcast app
    • Leave a rating and review
    • Share on social media and tag @rainemediaco

    Más Menos
    35 m
  • Fighting Forest Fires: Linda Strader on Breaking Barriers in the U.S. Forest Service
    Oct 1 2025

    When Linda Strader joined a US Forest Service fire crew in the 1970s, she didn’t know how rare it was for women to do that kind of work - she just wanted an interesting job. But she quickly realized she was stepping into a world that didn’t necessarily welcome her. In this episode, Linda shares what it was like to be one of the first women on a fire crew, the discrimination she faced, and why she loved the work enough to keep coming back for seven seasons.

    "I wasn't trying to prove anything to them. I just wanted to be accepted as part of the crew. And working twice as hard, I had hoped, would mean that they would accept me."

    Hear Linda talk about:

    • What a fire crew actually does beyond just battling flames
    • How she got the job with no idea women weren’t “allowed”
    • The hostility she faced from many coworkers and supervisors
    • The physical and emotional toll of working to prove herself again and again
    • Why she loved the job regardless of the hardships

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • Learn more about Linda's work on her website
    • Linda's memoir, Summers of Fire: A Memoir of Adventure, Love and Courage by Linda Strader
    • U.S. Forest Service
    • Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
    • Read more information about the Federal Women’s Program
    • Learn more about the Catalina Hotshots

    Support this show:

    • Follow in your favorite podcast app
    • Leave a rating and review
    • Share on social and tag @rainemediaco

    Más Menos
    42 m
  • Teaching Modern Manners: Jennifer Daniel on Etiquette and Kindness
    Sep 24 2025

    When Jennifer Daniel landed her first job after college, she quickly realized she didn’t quite know how to navigate the world of business meetings with confidence. That led her to the Protocol School of Washington and, eventually, to founding her own etiquette business, Polished Peyton Etiquette Essentials. For nearly 25 years, she’s been teaching children, young professionals, and executives the skills they need to succeed - with etiquette as a foundation for confidence and kindness.

    "Etiquette seems like such an awful snobby word. And maybe long, long, long ago it was. I do not think it is now.”

    Hear Jennifer talk about:

    • How she found her way from a resort job to opening her own etiquette and protocol school
    • The difference between etiquette and protocol, and why both matter in business and social life
    • Why young professionals often struggle with communication in the age of smartphones
    • How etiquette classes can build confidence and relational skills, not just table manners
    • Why kindness is the most important rule of all

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • Polished Peyton Etiquette Essentials
    • The Protocol School of Washington

    Support this pod:

    • Follow in your favorite podcast app
    • Leave a rating and review in your app
    • Share on social media and tag @rainemediaco

    Más Menos
    41 m
  • Leaving It All Behind: Valerie Russell on Starting a Business Abroad
    Sep 17 2025

    Valerie Russell spent a decade in criminal justice. She worked as a corrections officer, a narcotics investigator, even on the 9/11 Human Recovery Project. But one day, she realized she wanted something entirely different. She sold everything, moved to Guatemala with just a backpack, and built a thriving travel agency from scratch.

    "I got rid of everything that I owned, basically sold it all on a weekend, my pajamas through Facebook marketplace. And I packed up and came just with a backpack."

    Hear Valerie talk about:

    • The book that inspired her to walk away from law enforcement to start a new life abroad
    • What it was like to arrive in Guatemala alone, not knowing anyone
    • How she grew Due South Travels into a successful business without advertising
    • Why she feels like she lives in paradise
    • The importance of resilience, community, and creativity in building a life abroad

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • Due South Travels, Valerie's travel agency in Guatemala
    • The 4-Hour Workweek by Tim Ferriss, the book that inspired her

    Support this show:

    • Follow in your favorite podcast app
    • Leave a rating and review
    • Share on social media and tag @rainemediaco

    Más Menos
    39 m