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Good Beer Hunting

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Oct 14, 2023 • 52min

EP-382 The Value of Community — Discussing GBH’s Compound Interest Series

Every successful small business owner has to raise the bar if they’re going to compete. And for many, that means raising money, too. In this special episode, we’re talking about a series of articles that has appeared on Good Beer Hunting called “Compound Interest.” The stories written by Jerard Fagerberg are profiles devoted to founders who aligned their growth, fundraising, and community—and who keep their numbers up as they keep craft beer flowing. The stories are told in collaboration with SMBX, a marketplace for issuing and buying small business bonds. In this episode we bring you a collection of GBH writers, including Jerard, Sightlines reporter Kate Bernot, and publisher Michael Kiser. We’ll talk about the origins of this series, why these stories matter, and the unique people and ideas Jerard has come across as he’s reported for Compound Interest over the past year. Take a look behind the curtain to learn more about GBH storytelling and finding stories that resonate from business leader to readers and listeners like you. 
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Oct 11, 2023 • 40min

SL-036 Running On Empty

For years now, practically any industry has dealt with the threat of burnout. It was a problem before the COVID pandemic, became a bigger issue during 2020 and 2021, and has lingered since, as people try to find work-life balance that helps them find time to feel relaxed, recharged, or just happy. The challenges related to burnout are particularly harsh in hospitality, where staff at your favorite bar, restaurant, or brewery have to deal with high-pressure situations, unruly guests, long hours, and more. If you’re one of the millions of people who’ve watched the TV show, “The Bear,” and the chaos-inducing stories of restaurant staff, you’re also familiar with what can lead to burnout and its consequences. In this episode of our podcast, Good Beer Hunting reporter and community editor Stephanie Grant takes us along for a series of conversations to better understand how burnout impacts people who work in beer. The causes are common—it’s those intense work environments and sometimes low pay—and we hope that hearing stories from those who’ve faced burnout and who are trying to combat it gives you a deeper understanding of how burnout impacts people. You may have experienced burnout yourself at some point. You probably know someone who has. So, let’s learn a little bit more about what this issue is, why it needs to be addressed, and how we can better understand it.  
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Oct 7, 2023 • 55min

SM-010 The Rise and Fall of the 1970s' Biggest Kegger

What does it take to throw a party for ten thousand of your closest friends? A party that brings famous music acts from all over the country to your stage? A party with unlimited beer. And more than that, a party that brings in serious cash for a good cause. With enough planning, funding, and support from your community, you might pull it off. But to throw a party like that eight times in a row, you need more. You need the right historical moment. From 1972-1979, students at the University of Montana at Missoula threw the biggest kegger the Treasure State had ever seen. Known colloquially as the Aber Day Kegger, it was an outdoor concert bash fueled by up to a thousand beer kegs…and an unofficial substance or two. It drew in young music fans from all over Montana, the Pacific Northwest, and as far away as Los Angeles. The kegger helped more than one music group on their way to stardom. And most importantly, the organizers raised tens of thousands for the university library and local causes. They also irritated a large swathe of Missoulians who looked at the kegger and saw only youthful impropriety, drunk driving, and a stain on a good university's reputation. Ultimately, the party couldn't last forever. But the rise and fall of the Aber Day Kegger was decided in more places than Missoula's proverbial town square. Its fate was the product of a surging youth drinking culture, shifting minimum drinking age laws, predatory beer marketing practices, some old-fashioned greed, and–for a moment there–a national boycott movement. Shifts in these winds made the kegger possible, and they unmade it just as readily.  
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Sep 30, 2023 • 55min

EP-381 Eno Sarris of The Athletic

This is a special edition of the podcast where we let you peer behind the curtain. Our guest, baseball writer and beer enthusiast Eno Sarris, is the subject of a profile you can read on Good Beer Hunting. As part of the reporting for that story, I recorded one of our interviews to share with you—it’s a way for you to hear from Eno more of what makes him the person he is today, as well as gain a better understanding for some of the ideas and themes you read about in the piece itself. Eno is one of the leading journalists covering baseball today, currently for The Athletic. His skill set is unique in the way he uses statistical analysis to tell stories about players and the sport, and it’s the same kind of thinking that put him in a unique position with beer. During the 2010s, he was a lead writer for a website, BeerGraphs, a beer-focused spin-off of FanGraphs, a renowned baseball publication. But along with his bonafides and expertise in baseball and beer, he’s also a charming and interesting person. In this conversation you’ll hear about his upbringing in Jamaica, Germany, and the U.S., and how baseball was central to the way he connected with others. You’ll also get a sense of how and why beer became part of his passion and career. We recorded this chat during the summer in the midst of the baseball season, so some of the references to All-Star players will be time-stamped to that moment. But the ideas and stories Eno shares are evergreen, and will help you appreciate him and his work even more.  
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Sep 29, 2023 • 37min

CL-132 Luck, Poetry, and Baseball—How Eno Sarris Changed The Game

There’s a certain magic to baseball, filled with myths, heroes, and the power to make people feel that anything is possible. It’s no wonder it’s called America’s greatest pastime, or why players like Babe Ruth, Jackie Robinson, and Mickey Mantle are household names, familiar even to those who don’t closely follow the sport. But sometimes it’s those off the field who are the myth makers, the legend builders, and the magicians keeping our hearts aligned to the game, which is, of course, much more than just a game.  For his first feature in several years, Bryan Roth, Good Beer Hunting’s managing editor, news editor and podcast co-host, pens a sprawling account of Eno Sarris, the iconic writer and baseball analyst known for his sharp statistical study as well as his unflagging optimism and convivial attitude, punctuated often with a smile and a laugh. Bryan spoke to around a dozen sources for the piece, each clamoring to sing Sarris’ praises as both a gifted analyst and profoundly pleasant human being.  With so many people eager to chime in with so many nice things to say, I wondered—do people love the person, or the personality? Turns out, they are one and the same, and it’s that very lack of pretension that has endeared Sarris to the hearts of readers and listeners around the world. (Plus, he drinks beer. What’s not to like?)  In this episode, we’ll talk about both baseball and beer, how Sarris has unequivocally changed both for the better, and how our personal connections to the sport and the beverage continue to inform, surprise, and delight. Whether you’re a baseball fan or not, this is a story about hope and how positivity maybe can change the world.  
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Sep 24, 2023 • 51min

EP-380 Mandy Naglich, Author and Certified Taster

Author and Certified Taster Mandy Naglich discusses the power of flavor and sensory experience. Topics include becoming a 'Taster', supertasters, expanding notions of flavor, craft beer, cider, and chocolate, and the impact of taste and smell on individuals and culture.
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Sep 16, 2023 • 48min

EP-379 LP O’Brien of LP Drinks

LP O'Brien, winner of Drink Masters, discusses her career in bartending, cocktail creation, and hospitality roles. They talk about the impact of the show, LP's consulting company LP Drinks, partnerships with other businesses, and the power of saying yes and no. They also touch on kindness in the hospitality industry, the overlap between taking care of others and oneself, progress in the beer industry, proactive self-care, and striking a balance in drink creation.
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Sep 2, 2023 • 48min

EP-378 LaTreace Harris of The Beery Godmother

Beer is a treasure trove for anyone who wants to be a lifelong learner. From a historical perspective alone, there are thousands of years of brewing to discover and explore. If you ever get bored of that, you can switch to incredible discoveries around yeast and hop varieties. There’s a wealth of knowledge to be had for anyone, and it can be particularly useful by breweries as a way to educate customers and strengthen those relationships in the process. But how can breweries pass on that information in a fun and compelling way? Beer education consultant LaTreace Harris, also known as The Beery Godmother, believes that in order to stand out, breweries need deliberate and well-crafted beer education programs. What those programs look like will be as unique as each brewery, but as you'll hear in our conversation, LaTreace walks us through the key components of what she thinks are best practices. We also talk about her series, Beer Fact Fridays, where every week she shares a snippet of beer knowledge on Instagram, and LaTreace shares about her own process for continuing beer education and what she's currently studying.
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Aug 31, 2023 • 35min

CL-131 Life, Death & Lagers — Resilience in the Deep South

The American South means a lot of things, to a lot of people. But one thing is for certain—there’s no place like it in the world.  For his first feature in Good Beer Hunting, freelance journalist Owen Racer wrote about this place, its people, and how beer fits into it all. During a year as a resident of New Orleans, Owen tapped into the food and drink scene, researching its illustrious history, shared traumas, and steps towards the future, often through the unexpected lens of beer. In our conversation, he discusses why Lager is so specifically tied to both the culture and the climate of the Gulf Coast, what misconceptions beer still faces in the area, and the hurdles that have held the beverage back, until now. In this episode, Owen and I talk about his process and emotional connection of reporting as an outsider and temporary resident of an area beloved by many and misunderstood by even more. You’ll hear about the surprises he faced, the Southern hospitality he felt, and, of course, the beers he drank. Let’s hear about his year on the Gulf, and how it changed him for years to come.  
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Aug 26, 2023 • 29min

Strong Feelings in collaboration with National Black Brewers Association

This episode is a special one for us. It brings together voices of people who were in Nashville for the 2023 Craft Brewers Conference as a spiritual sequel to a 2018 episode we called "Strong Feelings." Our goal then and now is simple: To capture the feelings of a particular moment in the beer industry and encourage people to share ideas, inspiration, and what they think matters—or maybe needs to change. To help with creating this episode, I was joined by Kate Bernot at a bottle share party hosted by the National Black Brewers Association. We partnered with two board members from the association to chat with attendees and gather their thoughts and feelings: Jon Renthrope, CEO and brewmaster of New Orleans' Cajun Fire Brewing and Alisa Bowens-Mercado, owner of New Haven, Connecticut's Rhythm Brewing. Over the course of the night, each of us took turns with the microphone, engaging with people and their strong feelings about topics that ranged from how to attract new customers to craft beer, discussing the people who represent the future of craft beer, who they admire, and more. Consider this as a beer version of speed dating. Each person picked a card at random that had a topic to talk about—which you'll hear—and then shared their response. What came of it all offers us a unique moment in time with perspectives that tell the story of craft beer in spring 2023. Along with the responses, you'll also hear the voice of Kate Bernot, who will share excerpts from a Sightlines story about the National Black Brewers Association. Combined, the live voices from the NB2A’s party and Kate’s reporting will give you a sense of place and importance of the organization and what it can achieve. First, we’ll turn it over to some of the people from the bottle share. This is Strong Feelings, made in collaboration with Jon Renthrope, Alisa Bowens-Mercado, and the National Black Brewers Association.

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