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Recorded on the ground in Sharm El-Sheikh as negotiations got to the pointy end of things at COP27, your intrepid hosts ditch the usual format in this very special episode of Let Me Sum Up.Listen in as we dive into all things COP27: the hot button issues in the negotiations, the vibe on the ground and around the pavilions, Team Australia's presence at this COP (coffee diplomacy included) as well as our personal highlights across an incredibly packed couple of weeks full of speeches, events and launches of papers! So many papers! Don't worry Summer-upperers, we've got material to keep this pod going in perpetuity. Frankie's One More Thing was a look ahead at future COPs! COP28 next year will be in Dubai, UAE, and early insights from the presidency have energy transition, finance for adaptation and inclusivity from a gender and youth lens are key thematics. Following Dubai we are looking at Eastern Europe in 2024 (Prague anyone?) and Brazil in 2025 before a potential Australian COP31 in 2026! Tennant's One More Thing was to promote a new avenue of Let Me Sum Up *cough* propaganda *cough* CONTENT! If you were following along on our socials the last couple of weeks you will have seen us slaving away to bring you content and daily video reports on the goings on. These are now all available on our shiny new Youtube channel where you can binge watch them all over again and see cameos from legends like Anna Freeman, Matt Kean, Jojo Rouse, Richie Merzian, Darren Miller and Krista Singleton-Cambage.Luke's One More Thing is to ask all of YOU, dear Summer-upperers, for your vote on what climate-related movie we should watch and discuss for our very first holiday special and last episode of the year before the X-mas break. Should it be Soylent Green, The Day After Tomorrow or Don't Look Up? Make your vote count RIGHT HERE.And that's a wrap on COP27 from us in Sharm El-Sheikh Summer-Upperers! We shall see you next time and until then, please keep tweeting your thoughts to us at @LukeMenzel, @TennantReed and @FrankieMuskovic and if you would like to weave some golden threads through our back catalogue, give us your feelpinions or suggest papers to read we are always here for that - hit us up at mailbag@letmesumup.net.
In today's episode, I sit face to face with Win Lee of Lee, Hill & Johnston Insurors (he is also fiancé of our previous guest, Anna Freeman!) to talk about insurance, risk management, and the human element that fuels his passion for the job. For any business-owner or startup, having the right insuror is super, super important. Win Lee is here to help!Find more about Lee, Hill & Johnston Insurors & Win Lee here:https://lhjins.com/https://www.facebook.com/LeeHillandJohnstonInsurors/https://www.instagram.com/leehilljohnstoninsurors/?hl=enhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/winfield-lee-722800126Follow UKnowAdamTsang on Social! https://www.adamtsang.comhttps://www.instagram.com/uknowadamtsang/ https://www.facebook.com/uknowadamtsang/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/uknowadamtsang/ https://open.spotify.com/show/3Z4FPVzEh3M9dBQ5YWMhAH?si=gec-DJCjSoiplCDM1veFWw
Hello! In need of a style change? Today's guest, Anna Freeman, can help you out! After a trial period of running an online-based boutique, Anna has taken the major step of transitioning to a brick and mortar store. Named Dish & Lily (more about the name in the podcast!), it is located in Statesboro's own Woodlands Square. Listen and find out what what trials she had to overcome, and what mindset is needed, to make the dream of owning a fashion store come true!Find more about Dish & Lily here:https://dishandlily.comhttps://www.facebook.com/DishandLilyStatesborohttps://www.instagram.com/dishandlilystatesboro/?hl=enfaFollow UKnowAdamTsang on Social! https://www.adamtsang.comhttps://www.instagram.com/uknowadamtsang/ https://www.facebook.com/uknowadamtsang/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/uknowadamtsang/ https://open.spotify.com/show/3Z4FPVzEh3M9dBQ5YWMhAH?si=gec-DJCjSoiplCDM1veFWw
Did you know that in the UK alone, over 26 million people are feeling stressed right now because of their finances? In this interview Anna Freeman, founder and CEO of ZavFit, explains to Pedro, Head of Ecosystem of Vesuvio Labs, why a healthy money mindset is a crucial dimension of personal wellbeing and is consistently overlooked as an issue by the health and finance sectors.
The writer Anna Freeman speaks to Sheyi Thomas, who runs an escape room in Dalston. Anna delves into the world of escape rooms and explores how creating the experience of escape for people in a safe and cathartic way can be useful when facing our own fears. Producer for BBC Audio in Bristol: Caitlin Hobbs
In this episode of One to One, writer Anna Freeman speaks to escape artist Miranda Allen. Together they explore their mutual love of escapes as a concept, and the delicate balance of peril and catharsis that makes Miranda's work so compelling. Producer for BBC Audio in Bristol: Caitlin Hobbs
In this episode of One to One, the writer Anna Freeman speaks to Brian Robson. In 1962, Brian was so desperate to return home to the UK from Australia, that he hatched a plan to mail himself home in a crate. He became the first person in history to fly for nearly five days in a crate across the Pacific Ocean; an incredibly dangerous feat. Anna hears how behind this daring tale was a young man willing to risk his life, just to make it home. Producer for BBC Audio in Bristol: Caitlin Hobbs
Money is one of the biggest stressors in the world — and one that we don't talk about nearly as much as we should in the wellness space. The conversation is about so much more than money, savings and spending rates. It hinges on, not just about how much you make, but how your approach to personal finance impacts your mental wellness. Skyler Hubler and Cecelia Girr are both dynamic researchers from https://tbwa.com/ (TBWA), one of the most influential advertising agencies in the world with clients such as Apple, Gatorade, McDonalds, Hilton, and more. For the Global Wellness Summit 2021 Wellness Trends, they spoke on the topic they called “Money Out Loud.” They share how the age of transparency and authenticity — driven largely by millennials — is affecting attitudes about money on a larger scale. In the second part of this episode, we talk to someone on the front lines of the trend of financial wellness, Anna Freeman, who's launching the very first health tech company focused on money fitness, https://zavfit.com/ (ZavFit). In our chat with her, we learn why true personal wellness requires being financially fit as well. Thank You To Our Podcast Sponsor This season's sponsor is the wellness-forward skincare line, Murad. Murad Skincare's innovative sponsorship for this season includes conversations with three of the dynamic medical and social influencers who are also Guest Editors of Murad's new wellness publication, Well Connected, including Dr. Zion Ko (@drzionko); The Optimism Doc, Dr. Deepika Chopra (@drdeepikachopra); and intersectional feminist and self-love advocate, Candace Reels (@candacereels). Resources https://tbwa.com/ (tbwa.com) https://zavfit.com/ (zavfit.com) https://www.refinery29.com/en-us/money-diary (Refinery29's Money Diaries) https://www.murad.com/ (murad.com) https://www.globalwellnesssummit.com/trends-2021/ (Global Wellness Trends Mid-Year Report: The Future of Wellness 2021) https://www.globalwellnesssummit.com/2021-global-wellness-summit/ (Global Wellness Summit 2021 in Tel Aviv, Israel) Hosted by https://www.swellpublicrelations.com/ (Kim Marshall) Produced by http://crate.media/ (Crate Media)
CW: Medical malpractice, alcohol, ableism Written and directed by Marina McCready. It was performed by Laura Moss, James Rodgers, Bethany Murray, Marina McCready, Mojola Akinyemi, Thomas Rosenberg and Katrina Rose. This episode was edited by Emily Beck. Thank you to everyone who made this show happen, especially Louise Dai, Anna Freeman, Kit Treadwell, George Jones, Jasper Cresdee-Hyde, Emily Beck, Ella Pound, Molly Ghinn and Jess Hoskins. And finally, thank you for listening to our show. Take care of yourselves and don't forget to eat the rich. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bubbleburstadc Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bubbleburst Twitter: https://twitter.com/burst_podcast
Get ready for a mental reset in this wonderful interview with Anna Freeman. After leaving her City career behind, Anna worked with multiple start-ups before launching her own. Having identified money fitness as a crucial aspect of health and wellbeing, but one that is overlooked by both the health and finance sectors, Anna launched ZavFit in 2017 to fill the gap. Join me and Anna as we chart her journey from City professional and competitive international athlete to founder and changemaker, and talk about how we can all learn to "trust the process" of personal and professional growth however it unfolds.Check out ZavFit at: www.zavfit.comAnd for more great Entreprenora content, please follow us on Instagram at @Entreprenora_official or come visit us at www.entreprenora.co.ukThink bigger. Lead better. Live bolder.
About this time every year, people start creating grand plans for New Year's Resolutions. It certainly is a great time to start thinking about healthcare-related goals. That check-up you've been putting off? Don't let 2020 slip by without doing it. Trying to ignore the pain in your knee? It is time to fix the problem.From newborns to great-grandparents, it is important to be health-conscious and mindful that every decision will affect you later in life. Toddlers start learning nutrition and exercise habits, and develop their perception of doctors as scary or as important. From the teenage years into the 30s, people tend to think of themselves as healthy and avoid going to the hospital. But heart attacks don't just happen for no reason. The signs and causes start early, in the 20s and 30s, and meeting with providers often can help to catch problems and adjust course early. As people age, it becomes even more important to communicate often with providers, schedule screenings even if it is unlikely you have the disease being tested, and stay ahead of health problems as much as possible.The guests for this episode of the Pulse include Dr. John Ibrahim, internal medicine physician in the Family Health Clinic, and Anna Freeman, APRN, nurse practitioner in the Family Health Clinic who focuses on pediatrics. Together, they discuss important health objectives for each age group and the importance of seeking primary care regularly.Learn more by visiting www.perrymemorial.org/podcast
An original short work for radio by the author of The Fair Fight and Five Days of Fog.
Click here to buy: https://adbl.co/2u0R8jv 'My mum always said, a fistful of rings is as good as a knuckleduster' As the Great Smog falls over London in 1952, Florrie Palmer has a choice to make. Will she stay with the Cutters, a gang of female criminals who have terrorized London for years and are led by her own mother? Or leave it all behind to make a safer, duller life with the man she loves? And what will she do if she's too crooked to go straight, and too good to go bad? Over the next five days, Florrie will have to find her own path and the courage to stumble along it - in a fog so thick that she can't see her own feet. Following the last days of a crumbling female gang in post-war London, this is a story of family, of love, of finding your way, and of deciphering a route through the greyest areas of morality. Read by Clare Corbett (p) Orion Publishing Group 2018
This week, we present two stories about communicating science, whether it's through journalism or over a fragile Skype connection. Part 1: Science journalist Judith Stone worries about causing conflict when she writes about cultural differences aboard the International Space Station. Part 2: Nurse Anna Freeman is frustrated by the limits of technology when she attempts to advise a Syrian hospital over a shaky Skype connection. Judith Stone is the author of Light Elements: Essays on Science from Gravity to Levity, a collection of her award-winning columns from Discover magazine. Her book When She Was White: The True Story of a Family Divided by Race was named one of the Washington Post’s annual top 100 books. Her work has appeared in the anthologies Mysteries of Life and the Universe: New Essays from America’s Finest Writers on Science and Life’s a Stitch: The Best of Contemporary Women’s Humor, as well as in The New York Times Magazine; Smithsonian; O, The Oprah Magazine and many other publications. She was on the founding board of The Moth, and is currently an instructor in The Moth’s community outreach program. During the Late Cretaceous Epoch, she was a member of The Second City touring company. Anna Freeman is a nurse and quality improvement specialist at Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders. She has worked in humanitarian response in ten countries over the past ten years, focusing on refugee health, infectious disease, and quality of care. Anna is an excellent dancer, an enthusiastic fumbler in any foreign language, and one of the world’s worst surfers. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Amanda and Jenn discuss Civil War reads, diverse middle-grade books, reading slumps, and more in this week's episode of Get Booked. This episode is sponsored by City of Brass by S.A. Chakraborty and Weregirl & Chimera by C.D. Bell. Bookstore giveaway! Questions 1. Dear Amanda and Jenn, I am a middle school English teacher and I have a student looking for a book recommendations. She has read To Kill a Mockingbird, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, The Giver, and Would You Reach Me and enjoyed them all. She seems to like books that tackle serious social issues as well as science fiction. Our school library is a little outdated and doesn't offer much in the way of books with diverse characters, so I'd like to direct her to something more current and with diverse characters. Thanks in advance. I love the podcast! --Rebecca 2. Hey Amanda and Jenn! I'm having baby #3 in December, and I'm looking for books to read on my e-reader during the middle-of-the-night feedings. I somehow missed this reading opportunity with my first baby, but with baby #2 a few years ago I read so much! Including at least one of Ruth Reichl's memoirs, Molly Wizenberg's Delancey and Homemade Life, but also a bit of romance, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, and some other novels. I'm open to fiction, non-fiction, genre, etc. The main guidelines are: *fairly easy reads - no complex character lists and maps, and nothing too literary or high-minded. *conducive to reading in short bursts - easy to dip in and out of. Nothing so page-turner-y that I'll stay up even longer. Short chapters or frequent text breaks are a bonus, but not required. *nothing scary, dark, bloody, gory, etc... i.e. nothing where the jacket says (or could say) "chilling" or "haunting" *cozy and charming, but not cheesy *definitely no sick or dying kids/babies/children/moms, or disasters/apocalypses/tragedies *available as ebook (Kindle) So, what books can you suggest for me to read in the middle of the night as I nurse my new baby? --Betsy 3. I am looking for books about the Civil War for my father's 60th birthday. My mother is taking him on a trip to Gettysburg and I want to give him some books that will go along with his trip. He prefers non-fiction and has already read and enjoyed Killer Angels. I was going to get him a copy of Liar, Temptress, Soldier, Spy - but was hoping that you might have some other great recommendations! Thank you! Love the podcast! --Erin 4. Hi, Next year I am starting a feminist book club called SFF Fems that will read Science Fiction and Fantasy books by female authors only, with an emphasis on marginalised and own voice authors. Do you have any recommendations that would fit this criteria and make for great discussion at a book club meeting? Thanks so much --Tori 5. I'm trying to find books for my eleven year old daughter Cathy to read, but I'm a bit stumped. She's a voracious reader, and well above a usual eleven year old's reading level (this, just to be clear, isn't me being some annoying mom who likes to talk about how special my daughter is. She just happens to be ahead in reading.). She's read and loved Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, and the Percy Jackson novels. She just read my copy of the Mists of Avalon and now has an obsession with arthurian legend. She loves history, and knights, and all that fun stuff, but I'm having a bit of trouble finding books for her. She's been reading some adult books on her own, and I'm very lax about what she's allowed to read and watch (the evidence being that I gave her The Mists of Avalon), and am not concerned about things being "appropriate" for her. We have a very open relationship and she comes to me with questions, we discuss what she's read, and honestly we are a very liberal family. However I would like to find her some age appropriate books as well, because I think it's important for her to read about characters her age to relate to. Everything we've been looking for together either doesn't interest her, or she finds condescending. Any ideas? I think some historical fiction would be good, but I just don't know what to look for. Thanks! --Jenna 6. Hi guys! I love the podcast and I'm so glad you're doing the show weekly now, it's my Friday treat to listen to you on the bus. I am in such a reading slump at the moment and I'm really hoping you can help. I had such a good reading year last year but since January, nothing is clicking with me. Could you suggest some books for getting out of a slump? I'm open to any genre, except horror (because I'm a wimp). If it helps, some books that I loved in 2015 were Spinster by Kate Bolick, Being Mortal by Atul Gawande, A Fair Fight by Anna Freeman and The Queen of the Tearling. --Cat 7. Hello there! Not sure if you have already answered a question similar to this, but I figured I'd go ahead and ask anyway. I am a huge fan of The Gilmore Girls, and I was wondering if you guys know of any books that give the same overall feeling as the show. The fast-paced language, the quirky characters and small town feeling, intelligent women, etc. I am open to any and all genres! Thanks in advance! --Raven Books Discussed Wolf-speaker (Immortals #2) by Tamora Pierce Get in Trouble by Kelly Link Weapons of Math Destruction by Cathy O'Neil Tijuana Book of the Dead by Luis Alberto Urrea Furthermore by Tahereh Mafi The Lotterys Plus One by Emma Donoghue (the review on Book Riot) The Pioneer Woman by Ree Drummond Take the Lead by Alexis Daria The Passing of the Armies by Joshua Chamberlain Battle Cry of Freedom by James McPherson (rec’d by Ta-Nehisi Coates) The Bloodprint by Ausma Zehanat Khan An Unkindness of Ghosts by Rivers Solomon No Good Deed by Kara Connolly Seeds of America trilogy (Chains #1) by Laurie Halse Anderson My Life in Middlemarch by Rebecca Mead 27 Hours by Tristina Wright Talking as Fast as I Can by Lauren Graham Young Jane Young by Gabrielle Zevin
Anna Freeman on IndieFeed Performance Poetry. Show number 1551.
Heute habe ich das erste englischsprachige Interview für euch: Die bezaubernde Autorin Julie Cohen, deren Buch „All unsere Träume“ ich bereits in Episode 39 für euch besprochen habe, hat sich meinen Fragen gestellt. Wir sprechen größtenteils über „All unsere Träume“ alias „Dear Thing“, in dem es um ein Paar geht, das sich verzweifelt ein Kind wünscht, und das in der besten Freundin des Mannes eine Leihmutter findet. Leider ist diese beste Freundin heimlich verliebt in den Kindesvater…da sorgt eine Schwangerschaft nicht gerade für eine Entspannung der Lage! Julie sähe am liebsten Katee Sackhoff aus Battlestar Galactica in der Rolle der Romily (die beste Freundin, die sich als Leihmutter zur Verfügung stellt), Mark Ruffalo als Ben (der Kindesvater) und Paul Bettany als Jarvis (Romilys Ex). Sie fand alle Szenen im Buch mit Posey, der Tochter von Romily, am einfachsten zu schreiben, und fand es am schwierigsten, Ben, den Kindesvater, sympathisch rüberzubringen. Ihr nächstes Buch, „Where love lies“, das wohl dieses Jahr noch im Diana Verlag erscheint, handelt von einer Frau, die auf einmal ständig einen wundervollen Geruch in der Nase hat, den sie mit ihrem Ex in Verbindung bringt. Und obwohl sie eigentlich glücklich verheiratet ist, verfällt sie der Versuchung dieses Geruchs… Julie Cohen liest am liebsten im Sommer auf ihrem hauseigenen Pier, denn sie wohnt an einem Fluss. Empfehlen kann sie „Der Seidenspinner“ von Robert Galbraith alias Joanne K. Rowling sowie „Einfach unvergesslich“ von Rowan Coleman. Momentan liest sie „The fair fight“ von Anna Freeman. Besucht Julie Cohen auf ihrer Website, http://www.julie-cohen.com/, für mehr Infos zu ihren nächsten Büchern. Sie ist auch sehr aktiv in sozialen Medien, besonders auf twitter (https://twitter.com/julie_cohen) und Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/julie.cohen.author). Besucht Podcast bücherreich auf FACEBOOK unter http://www.facebook.de/Podcastbuecherreich und verratet mir, wie ihr das englische Interview findet. Mehr davon? Eure Ilana P.S.: Dies ist ein privater Buch-Podcast, in dem ausschließlich meine private Meinung kundgetan wird. Entschuldigt bitte, dass die Tonqualität leider nicht auf dem üblichen Niveau ist, da das Interview via Skype geführt und aufgenommen wurde.