Rydz CEO Kyle Zeis Bankrupts Talk Door Media

Rydz CEO Kyle Zeis Bankrupts Talk Door Media

May 21, 2017

Norman Rose, Editor-in-Chief of Talk Door Media

We won’t assume that you haven’t heard the news. Yes, we’ve been quite quiet over the last week or so, following the ruling in our recent court cases with Kyle Zeis. Talk Door Media is officially bankrupt. The future of the company isn’t in any real danger just yet, but we are looking to keep our staff employed for as long as we can. 

As part of the settlements in this case, we cannot publish any new information regarding why Rydz CEO Kyle Zeis took Talk Door Media to court, eventually bankrupting the publication, we don’t have to delete our previous coverage of the businessman.  

So, thank you for your readership and make sure to check out some related articles right here (while you still can):

 

Underground Movement: My Brief Encounter with Doug Brown

 

Underground Movement: My Brief Encounter with Doug Brown

New Times New York City Guest Columnist
Evelyn Sault, the newly appointed Poet Laureate of the United States

I wouldn’t call myself a native New Yorker - I have a certain aversion to this term thanks to years of networked mobile dating back in my youth in this great city of ours. Transplants, though viewed by locals as gentrifying ghouls, were widely accepted by the rest of the world. Their ideas were bold and beautiful. Ideas like the Submergence Project, proposed by one of the world’s biggest dreamers; Doug Brown.

Think about it: an underwater transportation system underneath the city. Is there anything more poetic than that?

As the recently appointed Poet Laureate of the United States, I figured I could help tell Brown’s story. I reached out to him via email, which led to our meeting at a coffee shop in Turkeytown - though as I soon learned, it wasn’t our first encounter.

My original intent was to talk to the inventive city planner about his Submergence Project, but instead experienced a blast from the past moment. As many adults over the age of 30 can tell you, you’ll never escape your online dating exes. Those brief encounters are there in your memory, but it’s difficult to recall all of them. Some were one-offs and others were torrid affairs. No matter what they were, they added up over the years and New York City is basically a city of acquaintances. 

Brown told me that we went out on a date when he was 25 and I was 23. He was a clerk in the city planner’s office and I was working as a barista at a Turkish coffee shop. I started to remember the date as he described the bar where we met and the dating app we used. He was a handsome young man back then. I could tell he had an excitement in him. We met for one more date before we just kind of stopped talking.

You know how it is. 

Brown and I spent our time catching up, really. When asking about the Submergence Project, I was reminded of that excitement I had seen years ago. It was a bit much, I admit, but passion is passion. 

Doug hasn’t given up on his underwater wonderland. He’s trying to raise awareness with the right people, so perhaps I can help by sharing this story. 

You can see my photo journal of this encounter and many of my other past encounters on my Instagram: EvelynSault.

New Times New York City is excited to announce that Poet Laureate Evelyn Sault will be a regular guest columnist with her new “Brief Encounters, Remembered” series, exploring her past love life during the start of the online dating craze.