POPULARITY
Welcome back to The Movie Draft House! We're wrapping up "Adam, Eve, or Steve Rom Coms" month for February 2024 with our review of the 2010 Amy ADAMs romantic comedy, "Leap Year"! Tune in to find out what we thought of this one and if it is truly a "romantic comedy"...plus it's draft night! IMDB synopsis "Anna Brady plans to travel to Dublin, Ireland to propose to her boyfriend Jeremy on February 29, leap day, because, according to Irish tradition, a man who receives a marriage proposal on a leap day must accept it." Music this month is brought to you by the New Jersey native Troy Doherty with his song "Gemini". He's an pop-rock-soul musician. Catch his music wherever you get yours! Spotify Web Instagram YouTube Follow the podcast across all social media! Twitter Instagram TikTok YouTube
US president Joe Biden accuses Russia of genocide in Ukraine. Plus, Monocle's editor in chief Andrew Tuck on Boris Johnson, Bloomberg's Yuan Potts on business and Anna Brady with the latest art news.
The latest on Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Plus: a look ahead to the French presidential elections, a flick through today's papers, and Anna Brady of ‘The Art Newspaper' explains how the art market is responding to the conflict.
Will the Omicron coronavirus variant force many European nations to implement new lockdowns? Plus: Joe Biden's spending plan hangs in the balance, the day's business headlines and Anna Brady reviews the art market in 2021.
It's the final episode of 2021 and so, as always, it's our review of the year. Joining Ben Luke to look at 2021's biggest stories are three members of The Art Newspaper team: Martin Bailey, a correspondent in London, Anna Brady, art market editor, and Jane Morris, editor-at-large. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week, record-breaking auction sales in New York—are we in a new boom? Anna Brady discusses the big lots in New York over the last two weeks, and what they tell us about the market and the world of collectors. In London, Aimee Dawson visits the Victoria and Albert Museum to hear about Carl Fabergé's shop in London, the subject of a new exhibition, with the show's co-curators Kieran McCarthy and Hanne Faurby. And for this episode's Work of the Week, Martin Bailey, our London correspondent, goes to the Agnew's gallery to talk to Clifford Schorer of Agnew's and Giulia Bartrum, former prints and drawings curator at the British Museum, about Albrecht Dürer's rediscovered drawing Virgin and Child with a Flower on a Grassy Bench, which is about to go on view at Agnew's gallery in London as part of an exhibition, Dürer and His Time. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this week's episode of the ArtTactic Podcast, we chat with Anna Brady, art market editor of The Art Newspaper, about the surging prices for emerging art at auction. First, Anna recaps Frieze Art Fair, the first major art fair in London since the pandemic began. Then, she discusses the Hayward Gallery museum exhibition featuring several emerging UK artists who are experiencing significant commercial success. After, Anna rehashes the major contemporary auctions and addresses how galleries, collectors and artists are responding to the extraordinary prices achieved by emerging artists.
Are leaders in Russia and Belarus intent on forming an ever-closer relationship? Plus: Monocle's Dr Chris Smith on the so-called Delta Plus variant, an update on Italy's local election results and Anna Brady has the very latest art-market news.
What role can Afghanistan's neighbours play in maintaining stability in the region? Plus: Germany's centre-left SPD party emerges as the frontrunner in the country's federal elections, the day's business headlines from Bloomberg and Anna Brady brings us the latest art news.
Today Mike and Christi breakdown the film Leap Year (2010). Amy Adams plays Anna Brady, who plans to travel to Dublin, Ireland, so she can propose to her boyfriend on a leap day. But what happens when she meets Declan along the way? Aside from our regular themes of cinematography and writing we discuss some costuming issues and our dreaded distain for the empty prop coffee cup. Please share if you have noticed this as well. “Sister throwing some Wellies and a pair of jeans, you know, some overalls, a good sweatshirt or coat and hit that Irish landscape, but no pencil skirts in the middle of a cow field.” - Christi Dodge We cover the aspects of this film like: Writing that highlights a character’s eccentricities How this movie is similar to McCabe & Mrs. Miller & Winter’s Bone for Christi Cinematography that highlights the beautiful Irish countryside Use of the color red in sets and costumes A cameo in the film by an Oregonian NEXT WEEK’S FILM: Wild Mountain Thyme (2016) on Amazon Prime Video Subscribe, Rate & Share Your Favorite Episodes! Thanks for tuning into today’s episode of Dodge Movie Podcast with your hosts, Mike and Christi Dodge founders of Dodge Media Productions. If you enjoyed this episode, please head over to Apple Podcasts to subscribe and leave a rating and review. Episode editor: Cameron Dodge Social media manager: Brennan Dodge Don’t forget to visit our website, connect with Christi on Facebook and LinkedIn. To connect with Mike, you can find him on Instagram. Also, feel free to share your favorite episodes of our podcast across social media.
Dr. Avi Cooper sits down with Dr. Anna Brady to discuss her article "Variation in Intensive Care Unit Intubation Practices in Pulmonary Critical Care Medicine Fellowship".
It’s the final episode of 2020 and so, as we always do as the year comes to an end, we’re reviewing the last 12 months in the art world. And what a year it’s been. Host Ben Luke was joined by three of The Art Newspaper’s correspondents on the frontline reporting the huge events of the year and their effects on the art world. Anna Brady is our art market editor, Louisa Buck is our contemporary art correspondent, and Gareth Harris is our chief contributing editor. Inevitably, as we tackled the year’s events, two major global events dominated the discussions: the coronavirus pandemic and the death of George Floyd, Black Lives Matter and the fight for racial justice. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Tara Brady & Darryl Jones review new films. Enola Holmes, Tesla & Monsoon, The PwC Wexford Festival Opera emerging artists 2020, Anna Brady & Rory Dunne join Seán Rocks for a studio 8 session, William Burroughs: the Cult of Rock 'n Roll, Peter Murphy reviews Casey Rae's new book on American author who was a key figure in the Beat movement.
This week, in our last episode of this series, we look at the top exhibitions you can see this summer in the UK, Europe and the US, with Anna Brady and Gareth Harris joining Ben Luke in London, and Helen Stoilas, Nancy Kenney and Jillian Steinhauer in New York. We also reflect on the anxieties and ethics of visiting galleries as Covid-19 remains widespread.And we have our usual Work of the Week, this time chosen by the artist Hassan Hajjaj, who looks at an album cover, Doctor Alimantado’s 1978 debut The Best Dressed Chicken in Town, and discusses how it influenced his own photography. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode Dr. Graham Carlos sits down with Drs. Anna Brady and Deepak Pradhan to explore how COVID-19 has changed teaching strategies and discuss best practice with respect to asynchronous and distance learning techniques.
This week would have been so-called "gigaweek", with the major auctions of Impressionist, Modern and contemporary art in New York. The events have, of course, been postponed. But are collectors buying art online instead? An explosion of digital initiatives and online galleries or viewing rooms followed the cancellation of fairs and the closure of auction houses and galleries over recent months due to the coronavirus. So this week, we’re looking at the implications of going digital for the art market.We talk to Scott Reyburn, who writes on the art market for The New York Times as well as The Art Newspaper, and our art market editors Anna Brady and Margaret Carrigan take us through some of the initiatives including their experience of the viewing room for Frieze New York. Also this week, in the latest in our Lonely Work series, exploring art behind closed doors in museums… Rebecca Salter, the president of the Royal Academy in London, tells us about Cemetery (1900-02) by the Belgian artist Léon Spilliaert, and gives us an update on the RAs exhibition programme.UPDATE: A new version of this episode was uploaded on 21 May to rectify an incorrect statement made by Scott Reyburn that the Frieze Viewing Rooms were only accessible to VIPs. After the initial VIP days, the Viewing Rooms were in fact open to all from 8-15 May. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We discuss the present and future of the art market, first with Rachel Pownall, a Professor of Finance at Maastricht University School of Business and Economics, in the Netherlands, who specialises in the art market, and then with our market editors, Anna Brady and Margaret Carrigan. And in the latest in our series of lonely works, focusing on artworks behind the doors of museums that have closed due to the coronavirus, we talk to the artist Sean Scully about Matisse's 1915-16 painting The Moroccans, in the Museum of Modern Art in New York. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Rusty and Anna Brady pastor The Remnant in Longview, Texas. Join us as Pastor Rusty brings a timely word at our 9AM service on having Faith in God.
Anna Brady, a third-year law student at the University of Oregon, discusses her work with Utah Diné Bikéyah, a Native American organization that developed the proposal for the now-threatened Bears Ears National Monument.
We talk Titian, Constable, Veneziano, Wright of Derby, Van Dyck and, yes, Leonardo, with art historian Bendor Grosvenor. And our deputy art market editor Anna Brady gets Judd Tully’s views on Miami’s annual art fair. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
“It’s all about the potential.” Anna Brady-Estevez, Ph.D., Maybe you have a great idea or new app you developed that you're itching to bring to life. Maybe you have a friend who does… Or, maybe you’re an entrepreneur who is running out of funds and fears not being able to continue. If this rings a bell, listen up. This podcast provides vital information about a federal grant program you can apply for. There’s no guarantee you’ll be approved, but you certainly won’t get it if you do not apply. It’s called the Small Business Innovation Research – or SBIR – grants (or STTRs). About half a dozen federal agencies offer them, all with different criteria. The SBIR program we’re talking about today is from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and has an open agenda, focused on the potential of the technology to make a big positive societal impact if it succeeds. So, grab your laptop or pen and paper – however you take notes – and listen to Anna Brady-Estevez of the National Science Foundation’s SBIR program tell Green Connections Radio host Joan Michelson what you need to know to apply: What the NSF SBIR funds. What “societal impact” and potential for commercialization mean for the NSF SBIR program. Examples of energy technologies they have funded – though all technologies can apply. How teams can drive innovative thinking that enhances the potential for success. Why communication skills matter – as an entrepreneur, an employee, an executive, or in any role. To learn more about Anna Brady-Estevez and the NSF SBIR program, and about Green Connections Radio, go to www.greenconnectionsradio.com. Thanks for subscribing on iTunes or iHeartRadio and leaving us a review! Also, ask to join our Private Facebook Group and share your insights! Join our mailing list to stay up to date on the top podcasts! Email us: info@greenconnectionsradio.com or reach us on Twitter @joanmichelson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode we speak with Lester Fancois and Anna Brady their new documentary, GameLoading. GameLoading: Rise of the Indies is a film that follows several different independent figures and discusses the challenges and reward of making games. For more information, checkout the links below.