Whether you are looking for a beach trip, a train journey or a large scale adventure, this is the time to start booking for 2024. New York Times editor and photographer Stephen Hiltner joins to highlight some picks from the new feature “52 Places to Go in 2024,” and we’ll take listener calls about their plans for 2024 trips.As we head into the long weekend, you may have more leisure time to spend with your kids, your partner, or just yourself! Winter in New York gets a bad rap when compared to other seasons, so we’re taking the opportunity to shout-out all the ways to have winter fun in our city and surrounding area. All Of It producers join to give their recommendations, and we take your calls. Abigail Echo-Hawk, the director of the Urban Indian Health Institute, shares updates on her longstanding work to gather data on missing and murdered Indigenous women, and discusses how accurate metrics can help Native communities access resources. Plus, she explains some of the obstacles to actually gathering that data from indigenous communities, and the real, material costs when marginalized people are under-counted.Writer Erika Howsare talks about her new book, The Age of Deer: Trouble and Kinship with our Wildest Neighbors, which explores the complicated relationship between urban environments and an animal that’s considered a symbol of wildlife as much as it is a problematic pest and a danger to drivers.
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