Business People: Erica Larson named president at Pope Design Group

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ARCHITECTURE/ENGINEERING

Erica Larson

Pope Design Group, St. Paul, announced the promotions of Erica Larson to president and Gonzalo Villares to vice president. Larson has been with the firm for 24 years and was promoted to vice president in 2020. Villares joined in 2004 previously was a team manager and director of operations, principal, chief operating officer and managing principal.

EDUCATION

Kinship of the Park Rapids Area, a youth mentorship program serving Hubbard County, announced the appointment of Brandon Mustful as executive director. Mustful most recently served 11 years as executive director of Great River Rescue in Bemidji. … The University of Northwestern – St. Paul, announced it will name its business school in recognition of alumni Dan and Robin Stoltz following the largest single philanthropic commitment in the institution’s 124-year history. Dan Stoltz is chief executive officer of Blaze Credit Union, Falcon Heights.

FINANCIAL SERVICES

Piper Sandler Cos., a Minneapolis-based national investment bank, announced the addition of Stuart M. Essig to its board of directors. Essig previously served as chief executive officer and director of Integra LifeSciences Corp. Kraus-Anderson Insurance, Minneapolis, announced the promotion of Jonathan Diessner to president; Diessner joined the firm in 2009 in property management and most recently was chief operating officer, succeeding his father, Dennis Diessner in that role.

GOVERNMENT

The city of Duluth announced Karla Culhane as interim city administrator, succeeding City Administrator Matt Staehling, who announced plans to step down.

HONORS

Gov. Tim Walz announced the following 2025 recipients of the Governor’s International Trade Award: Intercomp, Medina; Nova-Tech Engineering, Willmar; Purpose Brands, Woodbury; PURIS, Minneapolis, and Philips, Plymouth. The award honors companies that have shown success in exports to foreign markets, as well as foreign-owned companies that have made economic contributions through their investments in Minnesota.

LAW

Fredrikson, Minneapolis, announced that shareholders Cynthia A. Moyer, Laura L. Myers, John Pickerill, Courtney A. H. Thompson and Ann Dunn Wessberg have been named in the 2026 edition of the World Trademark Review 1000: The World’s Leading Trademark Professionals.

MANUFACTURING

Sleep Number Corp., a Minneapolis-based maker and retailer of specialty beds and mattresses, announced a strategic partnership with NFL player Travis Kelce as an investor; Kelce will be featured in Sleep Number’s national advertising campaigns, including new TV commercials and digital content across social platforms and other channels. … 3M Co., Maplewood, announced the election of Neil G. Mitchill, Jr. to its board of directors, effective Feb. 6. Mitchill is the executive vice president and chief financial officer, RTX Corp.

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY

Nuwellis Inc., an Eden Prairie-based developer and provider of bodily fluid management systems, announced the appointment of Carisa Schultz as chief financial officer, effective Feb. 2. Schultz most recently served as vice president of finance at NeueHealth (formerly Bright Health Group).

OPENINGS

The Shoppes at Arbor Lakes, Maple Grove, announced the opening of fashion chain J.Jill, and the pending openings of specialty goods retailer MINISO and eyewear chain Warby Parker.

REAL ESTATE

Twin Cities-based commercial real estate firm Transwestern Real Estate Services announced the addition of brokers Katie Hopp and Joe Buckingham; Hopp, vice president, is transitioning from the Transwestern Asset Services group; associate Buckingham joined the company in January.

RESTAURANTS

French Meadow Bakery & Café, Minneapolis, announced that Marlene Leiva assumed ownership of the Lyndale Avenue location in September 2025; she succeeds founder Lynn Gordon.

SPONSORSHIPS

Fredrikson, a Minneapolis-based law firm, announced its platinum level partnership with the 2026 Special Olympics USA Games, scheduled to take place in Minneapolis this June.

TECHNOLOGY

Livefront, a Minneapolis-based digital consulting firm, announced the appointments of Ed Hoffman as chief growth officer and Trent Sutton as president. Hoffman most recently was senior vice president, North America business operations at Perficient; Sutton was most recently global chief operating officer at Credera. The appointments follow Livefront’s strategic combination with Zeal IT Consultants.

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EMAIL ITEMS to businessnews@pioneerpress.com.

Travel: Winter in Vienna is the season for music and fancy balls

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It started like most of my trips do, by coming across a cheap airfare. I’d only been to Vienna once, decades ago, loved it and always meant to go back. But did I really want to go in winter, when it’s bone-chilling cold, even if I could fly there for only $400 roundtrip? I’m a California girl, after all.

The answer was yes, of course it would be worth it. I pondered going for the elaborate Christmas markets for which the city is famous, but it’s too hard to get away in December, what with the holidays and all.

Then, I remembered I’d always wanted to see the famed snow-white Lippizaner stallions at the Spanish Riding School, and I’d read about the hundreds of balls that take place each winter. Plus, Vienna is considered the world’s best city for classical music, and winter is when the scene is in high gear. Not all that surprising, really, considering it’s too cold to do much else.

In fact, my love of grand opera began there some 40 years ago, when my friend and I discovered we could buy standing room tickets for that night’s performance of “Salome” at the box office for the Staatsoper, the Vienna Opera House. We paid the equivalent of 91 cents. The evening was enchanting and unforgettable.

Nowadays, there’s no way I’m standing for three hours, but I’m still cheap, so I paid 16 Euros (around $20) for obstructed view tickets to “The Marriage of Figaro.” Mozart wrote the opera in his house nearby and it premiered in Vienna in 1786. We were in our cheap seats in the third row of a box, so couldn’t see the whole stage, but we saw enough to enjoy the show. It’s definitely worth going to see this Renaissance and Gothic revival palace of music, opened in 1869, even if you’re not an opera fan, but it’s essential to get advance tickets online, although you can still get standing room tickets at the box office on the same day. They’re not 91 cents anymore, but still pretty cheap.

The author, Marla Jo Fisher, at the Vienna Opera House. January 2026. (Photo by Marla Jo Fisher/SCNG)

The author, Marla Jo Fisher, at the Vienna Opera House. January 2026. (Photo by Marla Jo Fisher/SCNG)

Back when we bought our plane tickets in September, I couldn’t stop the ridiculous thoughts of going to a ball. I’m 69 years old — a little long in the tooth to pretend to be Cinderella. I live in T-shirts and mom jeans. I owned nothing that could be worn to a fancy occasion, let alone a ball. But the idea kept growing on me, until finally it popped out, fully grown. I needed to go to a ball. Any ball. No one was inviting me back home, so I clearly needed to go to Vienna.

Luckily, my friend Lori agreed to come with me (She’s weird too).  I went online and bought tickets for 210 Euros each to the Coffee Brewers Ball — supposedly one of the best in the city. (Don’t laugh, coffee is a religion there.) Then, of course, we had to go buy formal evening gowns, shoes, stockings, clutches and gloves. I found The Dress Outlet in the downtown L.A. garment district that had plus size dresses, and scored a silver sequined gown on sale for $59. We also bought enough cold weather clothing to outfit a polar expedition — and we needed it.

On arrival, we checked into the lovely 130-year-old Hotel Kaiserhof, an antique-filled place with a kind, helpful staff.

On our first morning, we headed to the Belvedere Museum, a baroque former palace that retains its grandeur. The acres of gorgeous gardens were frozen in January, but the palace retains its massive crystal chandeliers, painted ceilings, gilt trim and all its imperial splendor.

(Photo by Marla Jo Fisher/SCNG)

Sphinx guards the Belvedere Museum, a former palace, in Vienna, Austria. January 2026. (Photo by Marla Jo Fisher/SCNG)

Our destination was the collection of paintings by Gustav Klimt, including his most famous, “The Kiss.” The artist used real gold in their construction they glow even today. This did not disappoint.

The author, Marla Jo Fisher, at the Vienna Opera House. January 2026. (Photo by Marla Jo Fisher/SCNG)

Close-up of “The Kiss” painting by Gustav Klimt in the Belvedere Museum, Vienna. January 2026. The author, Marla Jo Fisher, at the Vienna Opera House. January 2026. (Photo by Marla Jo Fisher/SCNG)

Afterward, we headed to the Hofburg Palace, where we’d reserved a walking tourof the Imperial Apartments, including the Sisi Museum. Sisi was the nickname of Empress Elisabeth of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. We’d recently watched an engrossing PBS series about her life. In a story that is possibly apocryphal, she was 16 years old when she accompanied her aristocratic Bavarian family to Vienna, where her sister Helene was to meet Emperor Franz Joseph, to whom she was already engaged to be married. But when they arrived, the emperor was so smitten with Sisi that he broke his engagement to her older sister, and married her instead. That was only the beginning of a thoroughly unique life for a royal wife.

After touring the excessively grand Imperial Apartments, I felt my little tract house at home was a little lacking. But then I don’t need dozens of servants to take care of it.

The author, Marla Jo Fisher, at the Vienna Opera House. January 2026. (Photo by Marla Jo Fisher/SCNG)

Ballgown owned by Empress Elisabeth (Sisi) of Austria. January 2026. The author, Marla Jo Fisher, at the Vienna Opera House. January 2026. (Photo by Marla Jo Fisher/SCNG)

Our next big adventure was visiting the Spanish Riding School, which has been famous for its pure white “dancing” Lippizaner stallions for hundreds of years. The name dates back to a former emperor, a Habsburg from Spain, who brought his horses with him. The first mention of a riding arena on the site dates back to 1565. And, to this day, they are meticulously trained from colts to perform spectacular feats of dressage, including some who can lift their front legs and seem to prance off the ground.

For horse lovers, it’s a breathtaking treat to see them. After the performance, we took a guided tour of their stables, where the equines are treated like the stars they truly are. Each horse has its own rider, who trains it from a young age and stays with the horse until it retires. We got a look at their fancy show tack, including bridles and saddles, and learned about their lives. We weren’t allowed to pet them, which I understand because strangers could make them sick, but it was hard to keep my hands in my pockets. The tour was supposed to last an hour but actually was only 37 minutes, which was annoying, but still worthwhile.

The author, Marla Jo Fisher, at the Vienna Opera House. January 2026. (Photo by Marla Jo Fisher/SCNG)

A Lippizan stallion looks out of his stall at the Spanish Riding School, Vienna. January 2026. The author, Marla Jo Fisher, at the Vienna Opera House. January 2026. (Photo by Marla Jo Fisher/SCNG)

And then there were the balls. I was able to get press tickets to see the annual Vienna Philharmonic Ball, which is one of the most sought-after and prestigious in the city. Tickets go on sale in January. This year, the 100-year-old event sold out in only 80 minutes, according to the ball director, Paul Halwax.

Each year, workers remove all the seating from the elegant, gilded Musikverein — the concert hall where the famed Vienna Philharmonic plays — and turn it into a ballroom that can hold some 2,600 people. And we felt like we encountered all of them, as the elegantly attired guests were crammed cheek-to-jowl in the huge space. In addition to the main ballroom, there were bars and other places to hear music and dance the night away, and I mean that literally. Vienna balls generally start around 9 p.m. with a processional of white-clad debutantes dancing, and then continue all night until 4:30 or 5 a.m. punctuated by special events such as ballet or opera performances.  Afterward, attendees ignore their sore feet and head out to get traditional Vienna sausages for breakfast before going home.

The most elegant balls, like the Philharmonic, are unyielding about their dress codes: White tie and tails for men and long evening gowns for ladies. Some balls allow tuxedos as well. People who turn up underdressed are turned away with regrets. Every year, some ladies show up in short cocktail dresses, and are sometimes irate at being refused entry, even though every venue, often even the tickets themselves, describe the dress code in advance. The Philharmonic ball, ever solicitous of its elite guests, provides seamstresses, hairdressers and cosmeticians on site for emergency repairs.

(Copyright: Wiener Philharmoniker/Richard Schuster)

Debutantes at the Vienna Philharmonic Ball, January 2026. (Copyright: Wiener Philharmoniker/Richard Schuster)

Vienna is known as the city of balls, and some 400 are held annually, sponsored by trade associations or other groups. The official ball season starts on Nov. 11 at 11:11 a.m. Most of the balls are held in carnival season of January and February, ending by Ash Wednesday, but there are some outliers at other times as well. Generally, anyone can buy a ticket to a ball, but be warned that they typically sell out.

For this trip, I had to break my cardinal cheapskate rule of never paying to check a bag at the airport, because bringing an evening gown (actually two, because I bought one for the opera as well)- was impossible in my tiny carry-on bag.

Keep this in mind, though: Regular tickets only get you in the door, to watch and dance. If you want a place to sit, you need to reserve a seat at a table. This will cost considerably more, but it’s well worth it when your tootsies are sore and you need a break. Waiters are also on hand to bring food and drink, at additional cost. Champagne is by far the most popular option. Tickets for table seats are often for sale before regular tickets. There are typically also fancy boxes for sale, with as you can imagine, higher prices.

Being cheapskates, we didn’t have seats, so by 1:30 a.m. our dogs were barking. But, surprisingly, the fairy tale atmosphere was so enchanting that I didn’t even feel tired, but our bodies couldn’t take any more.

The following night, we repeated the magical experience, this time in the Hofburg Palace. The Coffeehouse Owners Ball is so vast that it takes over all the ballrooms in the palace. With more space, it was less crowded than the night before, so cooler. The orchestra in the main ballroom, which accomodated thousands of dancers, played waltzes and also other dances, even sedate rock ‘n’ roll. Other smaller ballrooms offered more dancing, including sambas, tangos, swing and more. Later in the evening, a jazz club and disco opened. The entire place remained buzzing until the wee hours, but again we had to reluctantly leave as our aching feet disappointed us.

Coffee Brewers Ball in Vienna, January 2026, in the Hofburg Palace. (Photo by Marla Jo Fisher/SCNG)

Incidentally, Vienna was the first place I ever drank real, delicious dark roast coffee all those years ago, long before it became popular in the U.S. In fact, the aromatic beverage is practically a sacrament in Vienna, which is why there’s a ball dedicated to it. The menu at our hotel breakfast offered us nine different varieties, with lattes, espressos and other drinks with which I wasn’t acquainted.

The next day, after two balls in a row, I scarcely got out of my comfy hotel bed except to get downstairs in time for free breakfast. I’m old, after all. Even in my sleep, I was still humming the waltzes I’d heard. In fact, I’m still humming them to this day.

When I planned this adventure, I presumed it would be a once-in-a-lifetime experience. But now, I’m even considering doing it again. The balls were so grand and overwhelmingly beautiful. The winter season in January means no crowds at any tourist attraction. We walked right into museums that have long lines in the summer.

But brrrr…it’s so darn cold! There’s no lingering strolls and window shopping, at least not for these weenie California girls. And Vienna is a city of beautiful gardens, all of which were cold and dead in January.

This is something I must contemplate further, although I know I’ll be back to Vienna again, and hopefully soon. It is a magical place.

If you go:

What’s in a name? Vienna is the city’s English name, but it’s called Wien (pronounced veen) in German. Also note that nearly all Austrian tourism websites have a toggle at the top that will allow you to translate them into English.
Spanish Riding School: Make sure you have advance reservations to see the stallions. Buy tickets here: srs.at/en
Music: The main opera house is the Wiener Staatsoper, a spectacular palace of music that has performances of various types most every night. wiener-staatsoper.at, The other main opera house is the Volksoper Wien, which hosts operas, operettas and musicals. volksoper.at There are too many music venues to list here, but the most famous is the Vienna Philharmonic, one of the world’s greatest orchestras, which performs at the Musikverein.
Balls: Vienna is known as the city of balls, and its estimated that some 400 are held annually. Generally, anyone can buy a ticket to a ball, which does not include seating. Tickets are already on sale for next January’s Coffeehouse Owners Ball. at kaffeesiederball.at.
Museums: Vienna has a dizzying number of museums, including spectacular former palaces. You can also visit the homes of famous people, including Mozart, Beethoven, Haydn, Strauss and Sigmund Freud.
Where to stay: We liked the mid-priced boutique Hotel Kaiserhof, which has an elevator, bar, room service, breakfast buffet and friendly staff. It’s located in the Fourth District, close to public transportation and the historic attractions in the First District. hotel-kaiserhof.at/wien

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Accessible walks bring the joys of birding to people with mobility and other limitations

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By ANITA SNOW

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Wearing an oxygen pack on her back for her COPD, Marcia OBara is leading a group of nature enthusiasts on a mission to see birds. They carry walking sticks on the flat trails, moving at their own pace, without pressure or competition and enjoying a sense of community.

This is Birding for Every BODY, one of numerous such excursions offered each month by the nonprofit Tucson Bird Alliance with Arizona’s Pima County.

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It’s part of a growing national movement to help people with physical and other limitations experience birding and nature in general.

“It’s an opportunity for people to get out and see birds without pressure, no matter how long it takes or how many birds we see,” said OBara, a retired nurse who has been leading the accessible outings for three years. She said disabled people often cannot keep up on traditional outings, especially when competitive birders are focused on checking off a list of the greatest possible number of species.

For her accessible walks, OBara ensures that all trails are easily traversable, and bathrooms are open and large enough to accommodate mobility scooters and wheelchairs. She checks on the availability of drinking water, shade and benches. Once a walk gets underway, OBara checks to ensure everyone is keeping up, then modulates the pace as needed.

“I used to work in rehab, so I usually know what people need,” OBara said.

While the outings are open to those with wheelchairs and mobility scooters, people who use those devices rarely attend the walks, OBara said, perhaps because they don’t think they’ll be able to keep up.

“But we’d encourage them to come,” OBara said.

Enjoying nature and community

On one of several walks she led in February at Tucson-area parks, OBara pointed out a phainopepla, a slender, crested bird perched on a mesquite tree that adores the bright red berries of desert mistletoe clumped on the branches. Quacking mallards and other ducks swam in ponds or pecked the ground.

“It’s nice to just be outside and not think of anything else,” said Rhea Guertin, a retired Rhode Island snowbird who spends four months in Tucson each winter. She used a walking pole for stability.

“I’m just slow,” she explained.

Group leader Marcia OBara checks the landscape for birds during an accessible birding walk at Feliz Paseos Park in Tucson, Ariz., on Feb. 4, 2026. (Anita Snow via AP)

Evelyn Spitzer, a retired Tucson-area teacher, used a walking pole for her heart condition and the lingering effects of a recent surgery.

The organized effort to share birding with people with limitations goes back at least to 2018, when retired Texas teacher Virginia Rose founded the nonprofit Birdability. Rose has used a wheelchair since suffering a spinal injury at age 14.

Retired Tucson area teacher Evelyn Spitzer pauses during an accessible birding walk at Feliz Paseos Park in Tucson, Ariz., on Feb. 4, 2026. (Anita Snow via AP)

On smooth trails or from the back deck

“Our vision is that birding be truly for everybody and every BODY, regardless of disability,” said Cat Fribley, Birdability’s executive director. She said participants’ limitations include mobility issues, blindness or low vision, chronic illness, intellectual or developmental disabilities, mental illness. Some are neurodivergent, deaf, hard of hearing or have other health concerns.

Fribley, who has a mobility scooter for multiple disabilities, said she can go five or six miles while birding on the accessible paths in her residential community in Iowa City, Iowa.

An accessible dirt path leading to a nature and birding trail appears at Feliz Paseos Park in Tucson, Ariz., on Feb. 4, 2026. (Anita Snow via AP)

“In the winter, I bird on my back deck with my coffee,” she said.

Other examples of accessible birding include watching from a car, from a canoe on a river, or simply through a kitchen window, advocates said.

Maps and apps

Birdability has helped compile a crowdsourced map of accessible birding locations nationwide in partnership with the National Audubon Society, and offers advice to able-bodied birders on how to be more welcoming and inclusive.

A Phainopepla perching on the branch of a mesquite tree is photographed during an accessible walk for people with limitations at Agua Caliente Park in Tucson, Ariz., on Feb. 13, 2026. (Anita Snow. via AP)

The group’s website has many other resources and adaptive devices, such as car-window mounts for cameras, and apps that blind people and others can use to identify and record birdsong.

Occupational therapist Freya McGregor recommends binocular harnesses, which are strapped around the back and chest, saying they’re easier on the shoulders and neck than binoculars that hang around the neck.

McGregor — who has a permanent knee injury — runs Access Birding, which trains nature organizations such as state parks and local Audubon chapters on making trails accessible.

A sign for the Feliz Paseos trailhead is displayed at the park in Tucson, Ariz., on Feb. 4, 2026. (Anita Snow via AP)

Birding by ear

Birding “really brings you joy,” said Jerry Berrier, a 73-year-old Massachusetts birder who has been blind since birth. “There is happiness from being out in nature.”

Berrier got hooked as a college student when he learned to identify a huge number of bird calls and songs to satisfy the lab requirement for a biology class. He later taught blind and blind-deaf people how to negotiate the use of laptops and cellphones at the Perkins School for the Blind in Watertown, Massachusetts.

A pair of Mallard ducks appear at Agua Caliente Park in Tucson, Ariz., during an accessible birding outing for people with limitations on Feb. 13, 2026. (Anita Snow via AP)

He captures avian songs and calls for his website, www.birdblind.org, to help blind bird enthusiasts record and share their own. Last year, he launched the “Any Bird, Any Body” podcast with his friend, Gary Haritz.

Berrier also helped organize the first national bird-a-thon for blind enthusiasts in the U.S. It drew several hundred participants last year, who reported the birdcalls they heard over 24 hours. The event goes international this year on May 3-4.

House finches are photographed during an accessible walk for people with limitations at Canoa Ranch, Ariz., outside Tucson, on Feb. 18, 2026. (Anita Sno via AP)

“We encourage people to reach out to local organizations to help blind people with the bird-a-thon, he said. “A disability can be very isolating.”

Anita Snow wrote for The Associated Press for more than 35 years before retiring a year ago. When she’s not birding, she writes freelance articles from her home in Tucson, Arizona.

This smoky lentil sloppy joes packs in the plant-based protein and demands napkins

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By ROBIN ARZON

This recipe is from the “I Love Sandwiches” chapter in my cookbook “Eat to Hustle.” The chapter is basically my love letter to road-trip food made healthier — inspired by fast-food classics, gas-station gems, and deli-counter staples that I thought I’d never get to eat again after going vegan.

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My versions hit just as hard, especially because they’re loaded with plant-based protein, so your body enjoys them just as much as you do.

Traditional sloppy joes are way too sweet and ketchup-y for my taste. I like to think my version is a little more refined — still hearty and meaty from the lentils, with a smoky, savory sauce that’s just the right amount of tangy. Serve the hearty filling on high-protein buns and watch them disappear.

Napkins definitely required.

This cookbook cover image released by Voracious shows “Eat to Hustle” by Robin Arzón. (Voracious via AP)

Lentil Sloppy Joes

Servings: 4 sandwiches

2 tablespoons avocado oil

Ingredients

½ medium white onion, diced

½ green bell pepper, seeded and diced

2 garlic cloves, minced

1 (15-ounce) can tomato sauce

2 tablespoons coconut sugar

2 tablespoons vegan Worcestershire sauce or coconut aminos

1 tablespoon chili powder

1 teaspoon kosher salt

1 teaspoon smoked paprika

½ teaspoon red pepper flakes

½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

2 cups cooked lentils

4 high-protein burger buns, such as Hero

Directions

This image released by Voracious shows a recipe for lentil sloppy joes from the cookbook “Eat to Hustle” by Robin Arzón. (Voracious via AP)

Preheat the oven to 200°F. In a large skillet, heat the avocado oil over medium heat. When the oil is shimmering, add the onion, bell pepper and garlic. Cook, stirring often, until the pepper is soft, about 4 minutes.

Stir in the tomato sauce, coconut sugar, Worcestershire sauce, chili powder, salt, paprika, red pepper and black pepper. Let the mixture come to a simmer, then stir in the lentils to coat. Simmer until the lentils are warmed through and the sauce is thickened, about 5 minutes.

While the lentils are simmering, split the burger buns and arrange on the oven rack to toast. Divide the sloppy joes mixture among the toasted buns and serve immediately.

Robin Arzón is head instructor and vice president of fitness and programming at Peloton. She’s also a bestselling author. She lives in New York City with her husband, Drew, and their children Athena Amelia and Atlas Sage.

Excerpted from “Eat to Hustle” by Robin Arzón. Copyright (copyright) 2026 by Robin Arzón. Used with permission of Voracious, an imprint of Little, Brown and Company. New York, NY. All rights reserved.