Grief Talk with Audrey featuring Rachel Zeldin on Funeral Planning
Funeral Planning by Grief Talk with Audrey on Blog Talk Radio Rachel Zeldin of Funerals360 (formerly I'm Sorry to Hear) chatted with Audrey Pellicano, the Wise Widow about funeral planning, caskets, the Funeral Rule, and other need-to-know items when planning a funeral. Listen online or download to be an informed funeral onsumer. ...
Continue ReadingWebsite Assists in Funeral Planning. Help at a Sad Time
By Jeff Gelles for the Philadelphia Inquirer Compared with many siblings, Rachel Zeldin's great-uncle Rafe led an adventurous life. He headed west, worked as a musician and as a roadie and hairstylist for jazz groups, and eventually settled in New Mexico. But he never married, had no children, and left ...
Continue ReadingWebsite Offers Options for a Certainty in Life
By Eric Berger / Staff for Jewish Exponent RACHEL ZELDIN had a great uncle whom she describes as "a West Coast hippie" who worked for jazz bands and went on the road with celebrities during his life. That free-spirited nature made for a satisfying existence but didn't include precautions more conventional ...
Continue ReadingPlanning A Funeral? There's A Site for That
By Alyssa Mease/The Times of Trenton After the unexpected death of her uncle two years ago, Rachel Zeldin found herself helping to plan a funeral for the first time. Without any experience, she turned to the internet, which the 27-year-old said she uses to plan everything from dinner out to vacations. ...
Continue ReadingAfterlife planning mouse-click away as consumers go online
By Justine Coyne, Reporter for Pittsburgh Business Times When Pete McQuillin’s father-in-law passed away in December 2011 in Virginia, he received direct cremation estimates from local funeral directors that averaged $4,000 to $5,000. Thinking the price was too high, he went online and found a direct cremation service that bypassed the ...
Continue ReadingHer Idea Is Dead On
By Kate Fratti / Report Bucks County Courier Times Sometimes I get sucked into the criticism of the generation of kids we've raised. Then I meet one who is making his or her way in the world and I'm reassured. Like Rachel Zeldin, 29, a poised and professional Pennsbury grad ...
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