POPULARITY
Right before hoping on stage at PagerDuty on Tour London, Andy Slater joins us to chat about automation and how at Specsavers they scaled from 0 to over 1000 automated runbooks
Daily #88 | Andy Slater from The Barmy Article fanzine joins Ed to discus the Manchester United Women's team. They review the team's recent performances, highlighting a solid win over Aston Villa, a surprising defeat to Liverpool, and the overall positive trend following the winter break. They delve into fan sentiments, the impact of key player departures, current team dynamics, and the role and future of manager Mark Skinner. Andy is optimistic on upcoming fixtures and the potential growth of the team's fan base. 00:00 Introduction 00:44 Season Overview 03:56 Financial Aspects and Ownership 06:48 Team Structure and Recruitment 09:51 Sponsor Message 11:20 Player Impact 15:23 Defensive Strength 17:08 Crowd Growth and Fan Base 20:43 Season Run-In 23:42 Managerial Performance 29:51 Stadium and Atmosphere 32:37 Conclusion Sponsor NQAT is brought to you in association with NordVPN, and you can take advantage of our
Episode SummaryThis podcast episode performs a sound-media meditation on a live event based on a collection of printed scholarly articles. In May 2023 a triple-issue of English Studies in Canada (ESC) was published on the topic of “New Sonic Approaches in Literary Studies.” Edited by Jason Camlot and Katherine McLeod. The issue, designed to explore how sound, literature, and critical methodologies intersect, included thirteen scholarly articles, and an interdisciplinary forum on the place of listening as a methodology in a wide range of scholarly and artistic fields.As the editors considered what kind of “launch” would be best suited to this issue, they felt it should build on the printed scholarship, but also take it further – respond to it, sound it, and perform it. They asked, “What would this journal issue sound like as a chorus or collage of voices?” They proceeded to organize an event to enact the idea of sounding and performing a scholarly collection as a kind of poetic reading of criticism. Each contributor was invited to select an excerpt to perform, and the performances unfolded in sequence within the 4th Space research showcase venue at Concordia University, and through the virtual participation of some contributors on Zoom. The performance event was also the object of an experiment in the multi-track recording of a spoken word event, with microphones of different kinds situated throughout 4th Space, and even outside the venue itself.The eight tracks of audio resulting from that recording session serve as the raw material, the bed tracks, for a podcast that playfully explores the affordances of sound design for the presentation of scholarly research about literary audio. Some of the simple yet profound possibilities of working in sound to think and argue about sound that are explored here are those of amplitude (playing with the relative loudness of sounds), temporality (the movement and mixing of historically-situated times), speed (the movement of sounds in time), space (the relationship of sounds to the places they happened), noise (the sounds we are supposed not to want to hear), intelligibility (the intention of sounding for meaning), positionality (from where and to whom one is sounding), timbre (the textural quality of sounds and what they do), among many others. The goal of this production has not been to deliver the content of the journal as one might grasp it from the print journal (read the special issue for that!), but to emphasize the possibilities and features of sound, sometimes apposite and sometimes in opposition to the intention and circumstances of the intended message. Archival voices and sounds haunt, taunt and disrupt the planned “Sounding New Sonic Approaches” event. Parallel temporal situations compete with each other. Time is sped and stretched. Speech and vocal timbre are mimicked and mutated by an occasional soundtrack scored for monotonic analogue synths. One mode of meaning is lost, while the potential for new kinds of meaning and feeling-making in sonic scholarly production are amplified for the listener's consideration and pleasure.In-person and online performers: Jason Camlot, Katherine McLeod, Annie Murray, Michael O'Discoll, Mathieu Aubin, Julia Polyck-O'Neill, Jason Wiens, Klara du Plessis, Kandice Sharren, Kelly Baron, Nina Sun Eidsheim, Juliette Bellocq, Kim Fox, Reem Elmaghraby, Daniel Martin, Kristen Smith, Kristin Moriah, Mara Mills, Andy Slater, and Ellen Waterman.Live Recording Event produced by Jason Camlot, Katherine McLeod, James Healey, and Douglas Moffat.Podcast and Sound Design by Jason Camlot.
-New Miami (FL) QB Carson Beck transferred from Georgia this offseason, and is rumored to be making $4 million this year---but he had some bad luck this week-Radio host Andy Slater reported that Beck had “both his Mercedes AND Lamborghini” stolen overnight 2 days ago, as well as an SUV owned by his girlfriend, Hanna Cavinder. That sucks to lose that but also is pretty telling of just how well off some of these athletes are now in college…Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy