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BY SCHNEPS MEDIA
The weekly Power Women
podcast has featured Judge
Judy, Pat DiMango of “Hot
Bench,” Julie Menin and
other women who have
achieved success.
This week, host Victoria
Schneps-Yunis interviews
Seema Hingorani — the
founder and chief investment
offi cer of SevenStep
Capital, and the founder and
chairwoman of Girls Who
Invest, a do-good organization
dedicated to increasing
the number of women in
portfolio management and
leadership positions within
the asset-management industry
— on an all-new episode.
During the podcast, Hingorani
— an honoree at
Schneps Media’s upcoming
“WOW: Women of Wall
Street” event — discusses
her parents’ unique immigrant
story, growing up in a
high-achieving family, and
how she helps women get involved
in investing.
Hingorani also tells Schneps
Yunis about what inspired
her to start Girls Who
Invest, which she formed
after noticing a dearth of
women in positions within
investment companies.
“I didn’t realize how bad
it was,” she said.
Schneps Media’s Power
Women podcast shares notable
women’s secrets to
success. Full episodes are
available at SchnepsBroadcasting.
com.
Oft-overlooked local doctor blazed
trail for black female physicians
BY MOSES JEFFERSON
Let’s hear it for the girls!
Brooklyn Paper Radio this
week took a page from its sister
podcast Power Women, dedicating
its latest episode to those
females whose contributions to
Kings County truly made it the
city’s better borough.
Co-hosts Anthony Rotunno
and Johnny Kunen recognized
the culmination of another
Women’s History Month by inviting
Brooklyn Historical Society
curator Erin Wuebker on
the show to fi ll them in on an
upcoming exhibition she is putting
together for the cultural
center, which will showcase
the life and legacy of a littleknown
local doctor who blazed
the trail for future female physicians
when she started practicing
in the County of Kings
in the 19th century.
Susan Smith McKinney
Steward — who lived in
a neighborhood locals then
called Weeksville, and now
call Crown Heights — upended
convention by becoming
New York State’s fi rst
black female doctor, and the
country’s third, according to
Wubker, who said history has
often failed to give the pioneering
physician the recognition
she deserves.
The 1847-born Steward
treated borough women and
children, a focus Wuebker said
was largely due to societal conventions
of her time. Her career
will be featured as part of the
curator’s forthcoming “Taking
Care of Brooklyn” exhibition,
which will explore the history
of care and public health in the
borough when it opens at the
Historical Society in May.
But the show didn’t exclusively
spotlight ladies — the
hosts also welcomed a gent
poised to make his own mark
on Kings County as the incoming
editor-in-chief of Brooklyn
Paper, and Schneps Media’s
other local newspapers.
Zach Gewelb, who previously
ran our sister
TimesLedger newspapers published
in Queens, this week
took the reins atop our company’s
Brooklyn editorial operation,
succeeding Rotunno,
who gave a heartfelt thanks to
those colleagues, readers, and
listeners who inspired him
during his almost two years
with the borough’s numberone
news source.
To learn more about the Paper’s
future, and the borough’s
medical past, you’ll have to
tune in to the show — which
will, of course, go on under
Gewelb, but may take a week
or two to return to the airwaves
as he settles in.
Brooklyn Paper Radio, recorded
at our studio Downtown,
debuts new episodes every
Tuesday, and can be found,
as always, on BrooklynPaper.
com, iTunes , and Stitcher .
/3guysfrombrooklyn.com