Justin Willman

Justin Willman is a magician/Comedian, recent Critics’ Choice nominee and one of today’s most prolific entertainers.

In 2018, Willman premiered his six-episode magic series on Netflix entitled “Magic For Humans” where the show instantly became one of the most streamed shows on Netflix with clips from the show garnering over 150 million views to date across social media, even sparking a viral meme. Indiewire called Willman the “perfect magician/hybrid prototype with incredible comedic timing,” and Rotten Tomatoes currently has the show listed at an 88% audience approval. Soon after the premiere, Magic for Humans was picked up for a second season which premiered December 4, 2019. Season 3 is streaming now.

In 2018, Willman had a residency aptly called “The Magic Show” at the historic and swanky Roosevelt Hotel in Los Angeles where all shows sold out almost immediately and attracted many of Hollywood’s most well-known names.

The L.A. Times said of Willman to be a "A new breed of magician who's making magic cool again for grown-ups." Playboy Magazine dubbed him "The freshest and funniest magician working today," and Time Out hailed that his show "Has to be seen to be disbelieved.”

Justin has appeared on The Tonight Show, Ellen, Conan, Kelly Clarkson, The Today show, The Late Late Show and has performed live at the White House for the Obama Family.

Willman is also a consultant & writer for film/television productions like America's Got Talent, The Goldbergs and Disney's feature film Magic Camp.

He was born in St. Louis, lives in Los Angeles, and does not own a rabbit.

3 words to describe Nature?

Meditative. Humbling. Itchy.

3 things Nature taught you?

Be humble. We’re small and insignificant in the big picture. Take that as a relief.

Be prepared. Nature is no joke. Don’t underestimate her.

Leave things better than you found them. This applies to everything.

3 most treasured Nature spots?

The Mississippi River banks near Grafton, Illinois. As a kid I spent my summers fishing in the muddy waters. It’s still my happy place.

 The Path of the Gods hike in Italy. I proposed to my wife mid-hike on the roof of an abandon hut overlooking Positano. I’ll never top that one.

 Napali Coast in Kauai. No reason needed, just go.

When you look at the ocean, it makes you feel...?

Home

When you see a forest, it makes you feel...?

Adventurous

When you see a volcano, it makes you feel...?

Vulnerable

When you see a sunrise or sunset, it makes you feel...?

Present

When you hear thunder, it makes you feel...?

Quieted

When you hear the wind howling, it makes you feel...?

Grounded

 Are you an Ocean, Mountain, Forest, or Desert person?

Ocean, 100%. If there’s sand in my car’s floor mats I know I did something right that day.

On a scale of 1 to 10, how important is Nature to your well-being?

10. I need more nature in my life though. The mere act of answering these questions is making me want to get the hell out of dodge.

Share with us a childhood nature memory?

When I was 10 I camped out in the woods behind my house for the first time. I made a campfire all by myself and everything. The next morning I remember the smell of the fire still lingering on my clothes and fingertips. To this day, every time I smell a campfire it takes me back to that moment and makes me feel like a kid again.


Krista Tippett

 

Krista grew up in a small town in Oklahoma, attended Brown University, and became a journalist and diplomat in Cold War Berlin. She lived in Spain and England before seeking a Masters of Divinity at Yale University in the mid-1990s. Emerging from that, she saw a black hole where intelligent conversation about the religious, spiritual, and moral aspects of human life might be. She pitched and piloted her idea for a show for several years before launching Speaking of Faith — later On Being — as a weekly national public radio show in 2003.

In 2014, President Obama awarded Krista the National Humanities Medal at the White House for “thoughtfully delving into the mysteries of human existence. On the air and in print, Ms. Tippett avoids easy answers, embracing complexity and inviting people of ​every background to join her conversation about faith, ethics, and moral wisdom.” Krista is now at work on her next book, Letters to a Young Citizen. Her first book Speaking of Faith, published in 2007, is a memoir of religion in our time, including her move from geopolitical engagement to theology. In 2010, she published Einstein’s God, drawn from her interviews at the intersection of science, medicine, and spiritual inquiry. Krista’s 2016 New York Times best-selling Becoming Wise: An Inquiry into the Mystery and Art of Living opens into the questions and challenges of this century.

 3 words to describe Nature?

Extravagant. Intelligent. Fierce.

3 things Nature taught you?

To get quiet inside

To marvel

To know myself a creature among other creatures

3 most treasured Nature spots?

The highlands and islands of Scotland 

Byron Bay, Australia.

In my hammock under the White Pines in my Minnesota backyard

When you look at the ocean, it makes you feel...?

Liberated from any illusion of significance – pensive, joyous, and free

When you see a forest, it makes you feel...?

Like clambering around in the branches

When you see a volcano, it makes you feel...?

Respectful

When you see a sunrise or sunset, it makes you feel...?

Liberated from the Newtonian straitjacket of clocks and calendars while utterly present to time as rhythm and pattern and passage and mystery.

When you hear thunder, it makes you feel...?

Happy to have no option but to hunker down indoors (if I can)

When you hear the wind howling, it makes you feel...?

Giddily spooked

Are you an Ocean, Mountain, Forest, or Desert person?

Ocean, also Valley

On a scale of 1 to 10, how important is Nature to your well-being?

10, though I am not always faithful to that truth

Share with us a childhood nature memory?

I grew up in central Oklahoma, where we kept the natural world at bay. I was never taught the names of the trees or flowers that grew on our semi-desert, oil-rich land. We were drilled only to watch out for the things that bite and blister, and they were legion: poison oak and poison ivy, black widow spiders and scorpions, water moccasins, rattlesnakes. We were forbidden to explore the wilderness that was rapidly being consigned to memory all around our manicured housing estate.

And yet, if you ask me about the happiest days of my childhood, my mind goes to expeditions through as yet unconquered woody areas nearby. It goes to tadpoles and turtles discovered with furtive awe. I can still see those tadpoles, feel them swimming in cold creek water through my splayed fingers. A rapt attention settles all the way through my body in their presence. I know how memory works, that I am reconstructing all these sensations from fragments scattered across my brain. But I feel my breathing slow before the mystery of minute creaturely life observable. Amazed.

Wrapped up in these memories, too, is a dawning tension between their smallness and my relative giant size; their fragility and my power – to scoop them up, starve or orphan them, literally kill them with my amazement. And the power instead to forego dominance, and take care with my delight.

We turned up home at the end of long summer days sunburned and freckled and festooned with pink rashes from the poison ivy we wandered into and tangled with after all. We’re covered with feasting blood ticks, fat and purple with our blood, and all manner of worms. Other worms were gifted from our dogs, who ran leash-less and half wild in those days and were officially what we were allowed to befriend from the wild.

They would occasionally disappear for days at a time. We would wash and pick them clean when they returned mangy and exhilarated. We would vicariously absorb their effusive abandon.


H.E. Maguy Maccario Doyle

Her Excellency Maguy Maccario Doyle is Monaco’s Ambassador to the United States and Canada. She was appointed by His Serene Highness Prince Albert II on November 12, 2013 and presented her letters of credence to President Obama at The White House on December 3, 2013.
She also serves as the Principality’s Ambassador to Canada having presented her credentials to Canada’s Governor General, H.E. David Johnston, in December 2014, and as the Principality’s Permanent Observer to the Organization of American States (OAS).

Ambassador Maccario Doyle is the vice president of the Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation (for the environment) and the president of the US chapter of the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation (launched in May 2016 in California). She was Monaco’s long-serving consul general in New York as well as the director of the Monaco Government Tourist Office for North America. In June 2017, Ambassador Maccario Doyle was appointed to the board of Grace-Penn Medicine: a new strategic alliance between Penn Medicine and Monaco's Princess Grace Hospital.

A committed advocate for children and women’s issues and a tireless worker on behalf of charitable and philanthropic endeavors, she is a long-standing member of both the Professional Advisory Board and the International Professional Advisory Board of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.

In recognition for her services to the Principality of Monaco and the Princely Family, she was presented by His Serene Highness Prince Rainier III of Monaco in 1996, with the prestigious “Chevalier de l’Ordre de Saint-Charles” distinction.

3 words to describe Nature? 

Nurturing. Rejuvenating. All-powerful.

3 things Nature taught you? 

Never take things for granted.

Seasons come and go.

Be prepared for (good and not-so-good) surprises.

3 most treasured Nature spots? 

New Mexico’s wilderness

Half Moon Bay’s (CA) majestic coastline

Monaco’s Mediterranean  magnificence

When you look at the ocean, it makes you feel...? 

At home

When you see a forest, it makes you feel...? 

Like going for a walk.

When you see a volcano, it makes you feel...? 

I never saw a volcano eruption in person, except in films : The power of a mountain coming to life – I saw dormant and extinct volcanoes and it felt like a lunar landscape.

When you see a sunrise or sunset, it makes you feel...? 

Serene and happy to have made it through another night/day!

When you hear thunder, it makes you feel...? 

Like seeking out an umbrella.

When you hear the wind howling, it makes you feel...? 

Music to my ears… and of course like making sure the windows are properly closed!

Are you an Ocean, Mountain, Forest, or Desert person? 

All of the above

On a scale of 1 to 10, how important is Nature to your well-being? 

When one really thinks about how all-encompassing Nature is in our daily lives, it is pretty much a 10.

Share with us a childhood nature memory? 

My parents would never buy me a pet. So I decided as a small girl to collect snails from around my garden near Monaco. But to my great disappointment found out they are asexual. No mama. No papa! See what I mean about Nature’s surprises!