Podcasts about beevers

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Best podcasts about beevers

Latest podcast episodes about beevers

Sleep On It
The Sleep Charity: Founder and CEO, Vicki Beevers takes us on a powerful journey through her own story of severe sleep deprivation and ADHD diagnosis.

Sleep On It

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2024 44:19


Vicki Beevers, The Sleep Charity, founder and CEO, shares the origination story and mission of the charity. She also highlights the spectrum and individuality of ADHD and the variety of strategies that can be implemented to improve sleep. The conversation with Vicki is followed by an immersive musical soundscape, composed to help calm your mind. You will be immersed in frequencies proven to bring peace to busy brains. These soundscapes are most effective when listened to on headphones.

Sportsday WA
Mark Beevers - Perth Glory Defender

Sportsday WA

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 12:10


Mark talks about life in Perth, the upcoming A-League, the pre-season so far. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

DMRadio Podcast
The Next Frontier: Why Edge Changes Everything With Kris Beevers, Tony Craythorne , And Saimon Michelson

DMRadio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2022 47:25


Cloud may be the new center of gravity, but the edge really does change everything: architecture, assumptions, workloads, and possibilities. You name it, and edge computing affects the end-to-end workflow of modern business. How can your company take advantage of this exciting new frontier? Check out this episode of DM Radio to find out! Host @eric_kavanagh will interview several guests, including Kris Beevers of NS1, Tony Craythorne of Zadara, and Saimon Michelson of CTERA. They discuss how to deal with the constraints faced by customers out on the edge, the right way to handle moving data, and how AI technology transforms the current business landscape.

School for Startups Radio
October 11, 2022 Faster Net Kris Beevers and Lead from the Heart Mark C. Crowley

School for Startups Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2022


October 11, 2022 Faster Net Kris Beevers and Lead from the Heart Mark C. Crowley

The Tech Blog Writer Podcast
2136: In Conversation With Kris Beevers, NS1 Founder and CEO

The Tech Blog Writer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2022 33:02


Kris Beevers, founder, and CEO of NS1 joins me on Tech Talks Daily. I learn more about how this New York City-based startup delivers smart network control across core network services for over 800 global customers, including Dropbox, Fox, Salesforce, LinkedIn, & eBay. We also talk about the tech startup story behind their success which began as a specialist in DNS, and to quote TechCrunch, took: ‘a slumbering and dreary yet reliable aspect of the Internet and turned it into a strategic moat and an enterprise win'. Kris is a recognized authority on all things DNS, but he also knows a lot about building and deploying high-performance infrastructure globally. He has a Ph.D. in Computer Science. We discuss the impact of outages (including in the summer heatwave) and the importance of multi-cloud or multi-CDNs. We also talk about DDoS attacks, the importance of working with the open source community.

Night of the Living Geeks
Podcastica Episode 262: The Keeper of Traken OR Leave It to Beevers

Night of the Living Geeks

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2022 59:50


Well, this time we finally can mark Season 18 off our checklist (because we reviewed Logopolis a while ago...go check it out) with The Keeper of Traken! If reviewing almost a whole season in one stretch has shown us anything, it's that this season was fraught with issues. But they still put out some good stories (and ultimately gave Tom a satisfying send off). The Keeper of Traken had to not only further the season, but also introduce what would become a new companion and also reintroduce The Master. There are some stumbles, but they mostly stick the landing.

Podcastica
Podcastica Episode 262: The Keeper of Traken OR Leave It to Beevers

Podcastica

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2022 59:50


Well, this time we finally can mark Season 18 off our checklist (because we reviewed Logopolis a while ago...go check it out) with The Keeper of Traken! If reviewing almost a whole season in one stretch has shown us anything, it's that this season was fraught with issues. But they still put out some good stories (and ultimately gave Tom a satisfying send off). The Keeper of Traken had to not only further the season, but also introduce what would become a new companion and also reintroduce The Master. There are some stumbles, but they mostly stick the landing.

Spotlight on the Community
David Beevers and Tish Fleming | San Diego Oasis

Spotlight on the Community

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2022 27:11


Faith In Practice
Why You're A Legalist, feat. Brad Beevers

Faith In Practice

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2022 55:48


Admit it, that title got your attention. We all struggle with legalism, but the trick is nailing down exactly what that means. In today's episode, we feature a very special guest: Jimmy's dad! He has been writing a book on legalism, so we decided to have him on to talk about it. Join us for a very edifying discussion on why we are all legalists, even if we don't know it yet. And for our logical fallacy of the day, Connor and Jimmy get emotional...Website: faithinprac.com Facebook: Faith in Practice Ministries Instagram: faith.in.practiceTwitter: @FaithinPracContact Brad Beevers: brad.beevers@gmail.com

COVID NoiseFilter - Doctors Explain the Latest on COVID-19
Ep. 405 - Interview with Dr. Beevers

COVID NoiseFilter - Doctors Explain the Latest on COVID-19

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2021 10:04


Today, in episode 405, our expert Infectious Disease and Community Medicine doctors discuss the latest on COVID-19. We talk to Dr. Chris Beevers, a professor of psychology at the University of Texas at Austin, about a new depression intervention. As always, join us for all the COVID-19 information you need, explained in clear terms by health experts. Website: NoiseFilter - Complex health topics explained simply (noisefiltershow.com) Animations: NoiseFilter - YouTube Instagram: NoiseFilter (@noisefiltershow) • Instagram photos and videos Facebook: NoiseFilter Show | Facebook TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@noisefiltershow --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/noisefilter/message

Axe & Anvil
Episode 7 - Bryce Hollingsworth and Martin Beevers - Dry Stone Wallers

Axe & Anvil

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 66:09


Bryce and Martin share the old tradition of dry-stacked stone.

stone hollingsworth beevers wallers
Obsessed
Obsessed With Kicking Depression In The Face ft Dr. Beevers

Obsessed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2021 26:11


Dr. Christopher Beevers talks about digital intervention as a treatment option for people who experience depression and other mental challenges. He shares about deprexis®, a digital depression therapy program, and how this web-based software for depression uses techniques similar to what you'd experience with a healthcare provider. Dr. Beevers views most digital interventions as candidates for first-line treatment. They will not replace medication or traditional therapy. But it's just another kind of treatment option that is more accessible to people. He believes a platform like deprexis® is less threatening because people don't have to open up to another human being and worry about being judged. Dr. Christopher Beevers is a Professor (Department of Psychology, the University of Texas at Austin) and Professor and Director of the Institute for Mental Health Research. Dr. Beevers enjoys playing tennis, bike riding, and hiking but not at the same time. What you will learn from this episode: 01:56 - What Dr. Beevers is Obsessed With 04:29 - What You Need to Know About Clinical Depression 06:38 - Deprexis - Digital Intervention 10:03 -  Therapies that Work These Days 13:18 - Dr. Beevers' Backstory 17:05 - Depression Stigma Shift 19:57 - Signs of Depression to Watch Out 21:26 - Lightning Round Resources Mentioned: deprexis® - https://us.deprexis.com Mental health treatment options - https://onemindpsyberguide.org Internet intervention: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/fullarticle/2774861 Guidelines for treatment of Depression: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg90/ifp/chapter/Your-care Learn More About Dr. Christopher G. Beevers: Web Resource: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=p8tW9IwAAAAJ Web Resource: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4480-0902 See What Your Obsessed Girls Are Doing and Send Us Feedback! CROWN AND COMPASS | Linktree -  https://linktr.ee/crownandcompassgirls

Obsessed
Obsessed With Kicking Depression In The Face ft Dr. Beevers

Obsessed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2021 26:10


Dr. Christopher Beevers talks about digital intervention as a treatment option for people who experience depression and other mental challenges. He shares about deprexis®, a digital depression therapy program, and how this web-based software for depression uses techniques similar to what you'd experience with a healthcare provider. Dr. Beevers views most digital interventions as candidates for first-line treatment. They will not replace medication or traditional therapy. But it's just another kind of treatment option that is more accessible to people. He believes a platform like deprexis® is less threatening because people don't have to open up to another human being and worry about being judged. Dr. Christopher Beevers is a Professor (Department of Psychology, the University of Texas at Austin) and Professor and Director of the Institute for Mental Health Research. Dr. Beevers enjoys playing tennis, bike riding, and hiking but not at the same time. What you will learn from this episode: 01:56 - What Dr. Beevers is Obsessed With 04:29 - What You Need to Know About Clinical Depression 06:38 - Deprexis - Digital Intervention 10:03 -  Therapies that Work These Days 13:18 - Dr. Beevers' Backstory 17:05 - Depression Stigma Shift 19:57 - Signs of Depression to Watch Out 21:26 - Lightning Round Resources Mentioned: deprexis® - https://us.deprexis.com Mental health treatment options - https://onemindpsyberguide.org Internet intervention: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/fullarticle/2774861 Guidelines for treatment of Depression: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg90/ifp/chapter/Your-care Learn More About Dr. Christopher G. Beevers: Web Resource: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=p8tW9IwAAAAJ Web Resource: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4480-0902 See What Your Obsessed Girls Are Doing and Send Us Feedback! CROWN AND COMPASS | Linktree -  https://linktr.ee/crownandcompassgirls

Technado from ITProTV
Technado, Ep. 217: NS1's Kris Beevers

Technado from ITProTV

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2021 47:49


NS1 Cofounder and CEO Kris Beevers joined Technado this week where he shared his unique journey from robotics to application traffic automation intelligence solutions. He also shared how edge computing, edge networking, and edge data management work together for application success. In the news, the team discussed the release of Debian 11, Start11 bringing a familiar experience to Windows 11, a new all-Russian PC manufacturer's release, and chip delays hitting 20 weeks. Finally, in ‘Deja News,' they covered another shortage, this time with AT&T residential fiber.

Technado from ITProTV (Audio)
Technado, Ep. 217: NS1's Kris Beevers

Technado from ITProTV (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2021 47:45


NS1 Cofounder and CEO Kris Beevers joined Technado this week where he shared his unique journey from robotics to application traffic automation intelligence solutions. He also shared how edge computing, edge networking, and edge data management work together for application success. In the news, the team discussed the release of Debian 11, Start11 bringing a familiar experience to Windows 11, a new all-Russian PC manufacturer's release, and chip delays hitting 20 weeks. Finally, in ‘Deja News,' they covered another shortage, this time with AT&T residential fiber.

The Totally Football League Show
Burrows for Beevers

The Totally Football League Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2021 59:43


Welcome along to another weekend in the EFL where we saw goals aplenty and few questionable moments. Here to go through all your headlines and big match moments it's Matt Davies Adams, Adrian Clarke, Sam Parkin, and Faye Carruthers. This week: three's a magic number for Bolton, late late goals at London Road bring back Fergie time, and should time be up for Barton? Here's how it sounds: RUNNING ORDER PART 1a - Welcome (01.00) PART 2a - Huddersfield 1-5 Fulham (02.00) PART 2b - Hull 0-3 QPR (07.00) PART 2c - WBA 3-2 Luton (10.00) PART 2d - Posh 2-1 Derby (15.30) PART 2e - The Odds with Paddy Power (21.00) PART 3a - Wimbledon 3-3 Bolton (22.30) PART 3b - MK Dons 1-2 Sunderland (30.00)  PART 3c - Portsmouth 2-0 Crewe (34.00) PART 3d - The Odds with Paddy Power (38.00) PART 4a - Leyton Orient 3-0 Exeter (40.00) PART 4b - Bristol Rovers 0-2 Stevenage (46.00) PART 4c - The Odds with Paddy Power (55.00) PART 5 - Moments of Mirth (51.00) Get yourself an Athletic subscription here Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

My Pocket Psych: The Psychology of the Workplace
Ep 087: Overplayed Strengths with James Beevers

My Pocket Psych: The Psychology of the Workplace

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2021 45:33


Welcome to episode 87, where Richard is joined by fellow occupational psychologist, James Beevers. They take a look at an important workplace topic: our tendency to sometimes overplay our strengths. James outlines his own background and interests, before explaining how overplayed strengths can manifest, and what we can do about it. Many thanks to James for his time and expertise. Resources mentioned in this episode James Beevers on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-beevers-38a9545/ WorkLifePsych.club: https://www.worklifepsych.club

strengths overplayed beevers worklifepsych
Google Cloud Platform Podcast
The Power of Serverless with Aparna Sinha and Philip Beevers

Google Cloud Platform Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2021 42:00


On the show this week, Mark Mirchandani joins Stephanie Wong to talk about serverless computing and the Cloud OnAir Serverless event with our guests. Aparna Sinha and Philip Beevers start the show giving us a thorough definition of serverless infrastructures and how this setup can help clients run efficient and cost-effective projects with easy scalability and observability. Serverless has grown exponentially over the last decade, and Aparna talks about how that trajectory will continue in the future. At its core, the serverless structure allows large enterprise companies to do what they need to do, from analyzing real time information to ensuring dinner is delivered piping hot. Aparna describes the three aspects of next generation serverless, developer centricity, versatility, and built-in best practices, and how Google is using these to empower developers and company employees to create robust projects efficiently and economically. Phil tells us about the experience of using serverless products and the success of the three pillars in Google serverless offerings. Enterprise customers like MediaMarktSaturn and Ikea are taking advantage of the serverless system for e-commerce, data processing, machine learning, and more. Our guests describe client experiences and how customer feedback is used to help improve Google serverless tools. With so many serverless tools available, our guests offer advice on choosing the right products for your project. We also hear all about the upcoming Cloud On Air event and what participants can expect, from product announcements and live demos to thorough reviews of recently added serverless features. Aparna Sinha Aparna Sinha is Director of Product at Google Cloud and the product leader for Serverless Application Development and DevOps. She is passionate about transforming businesses through faster, safer software delivery. Previously, Aparna helped grow Kubernetes into a widely adopted platform across industries. Aparna holds a PhD in Electrical Engineering from Stanford. She is Chair of the Governing Board of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). She lives in Palo Alto with her husband and two kids. Philip Beevers Phil has been at Google for seven years. He currently leads the Serverless Engineering teams and previously ran the Site Reliability Engineering team for Google Cloud and Google’s internal Technical Infrastructure. Phil holds a BA in Mathematics from Oxford University. Cool things of the week The evolution of Kubernetes networking with the GKE Gateway controller blog Network Performance for all of Google Cloud in Performance Dashboard site Go from Database to Dashboard with BigQuery and Looker blog Introducing Open Saves: Open-source cloud-native storage for games blog Interview Cloud Run site Cloud Functions site Serverless Computing site The power of Serverless: Get more done easily site App Engine site Building Serverless Applications with Google Cloud Run book MediaMarktSaturn site Ikea site Airbus site Veolia site Sound Effects Attribution “Fanfare1” by N2P5 of Freesound.org “Banjo Opener” by Simanays of Freesound.org

Underconsumed Knowledge
George Orwell's The Road To Wigan Pier (1937) On Class & Power

Underconsumed Knowledge

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2021 51:04


Orwell explains in 1937 the disposition of the typical “socialist” living in England, and why it is so many people become averse to socialism because of these people alone, comprised of bourgeois intellectuals who have no actual affinity for the working classes, and working-class scribblers who work their way into the intellectual literati but are so hostile to everything that it seems they just want to burn it all down.  Orwell questions, what is it these people, these “Socialists”, really want?  When they seem to have no love for their fellow man.  He suggests that, for many of them, socialism is a way to institute control on society, to implement order amongst those who do not share their cultural values.  Orwell begins with descriptions of working conditions for miners in Industrial England, whom he went to live among and observe; it sounds like very difficult and back-breaking work, indeed, and their living conditions do not sound so great; many went without luxuries such as sheets, taken for granted across the world today for many years now.  In the second part of the book, he gets to the meat on class and the reigning economic order of things; though I believe his beliefs that central planning and “socialism” are not the answer, he thoroughly explains issues of class, and why it is that socialism so quickly morphs into Fascism.  He explains how the average socialist does not see what socialism would actually be as truly revolutionary – which, it is, in theory.  The socialist, whether he is of proletarian origin or middle-class, imagines a World much like the existing one, except one maybe with less poverty, but still having the pub down the street, and the corner store selling all the wares you would want.  In England, the bourgeois classes would disdain someone more “conservative”, who spoke of the superiority of England to other nations; but those same people would speak of the superiority of their own region in England to the other regions as if it were nothing.  He outlines how little actual commitment to the idea of brotherhood and love for one another there is amongst the ranks of socialists, hateful men such as George Bernard Shaw who disdain the non-intellectual classes, and whose “radical” ideas “change to their opposite” at the first sight of “reality.”  He explains the typical middle-class socialist as a 1937-era stereotypical Ultimate frisbee-playing type hippie, a “Sandal-wearer” who wants to go around doing yoga and ordering others about.  As Dostoevsky points out, the normal human response to such a person is to give them the middle finger and to tell them to pound sand.  If you look beyond the fact that Owell was not an economist, his argument is really that we ought to love our fellow man, which is in essence his argument for socialism.  His illustration of class difference points out the inherent fact that humans have values.  These value judgments are made from the conservative religious classes to the woke vegan-cheese eating, Prius driving classes.  Orwell really argues for the need for mutual toleration, at the very least. * “A thousand influences constantly press a working man down into a passive role.  He does not act, he is acted upon.  He feels himself the slave of mysterious authority and has a firm conviction that “they” will never allow him to do this, that and the other.  Once when I was hop-picking I asked the sweated pickers (they earn something under sixpence an hour) why they did not form a union.  I was told immediately that “they” would never allow it.  Who were “they” ? I asked.  Nobody seemed to know; but evidently “they” were omnipotent.” * “A person of bourgeois origin goes through life with some expectation of getting what he wants... “educated” people tend to come to the front... their “education” is generally quite useless in itself, but they are accustomed to a certain amount of deference and consequently have the cheek necessary to a commander. That they will come to the front seems to be taken for granted...” * Thus, expectations of what ones role in society is inevitably has a role on how someone acts in it.  Whether or not one is willing to try and buck authority has less to do with being educated, and more to do with ones mindset.  This parallels some of the points made by Malcolm Gladwell in Outliars about children who learn to “come to the front” and insert themselves in situations that will further their interests. * "Talking once with a miner I asked him when the housing shortage first became acute in his district; he answered, ‘When we were told about it,' meaning that till recently people's standards were so low that they took almost any degree of overcrowding for granted.  He added that when he was a child his family had slept eleven in a room and thought nothing of it, and that later, when he was grown-up, he and his wife had lived in one of the old-style back to back houses in which you not only had to walk a couple of hundred yards to the lavatory but often had to wait in a queue when you got there, the lavatory being shared by thirty-six people...” * On efforts to try to alleviate these conditions, there are premonitions of Arnade's Dignity. “...are definitely fine buildings.  But there is something ruthless and soulless about the whole business.  Take, for instance, the restrictions with which you are burdened in a Corporation house.  You are not allowed to keep your house and garden as you want them—in some estates there is even a regulation that every garden must have the same kind of hedge.  you are not allowed to keep poultry or pigeon.  The Yorkshire miners are fond of keeping homer pigeons...”  Thus, you can take the help, but it is a bargain with the devil where you can no longer determine how your own life is lived. * Of his time spent with the miners, who were of a different class and culture than him, “I cannot end this chapter without remarking on the extraordinary courtesy and good nature with which I was received everywhere.  I did not go alone—I always had some local friend among the unemployed to show me round—but even so, it is an impertinence to go poking into strangers' houses and asking to see the cracks in the bedroom wall.  Yet everyone was astonishingly patient and seemed to understand almost without explanation why I was questioning them and what I wanted to see.  If any unauthorized person walked into my house and began asking me whether the roof leaked and whether I was much troubled by bugs and what I thought of my landlord, I should probably tell him to go to hell.”  I think this mirrors experiences of traveling in the Midwest, of people who are extremely nice and generally welcoming, despite what is depicted in the media about their politics and thoughts. * On anonymity and the city, “Until you break the law nobody will take any notice of you, and you can go to pieces as you could not possibly do in a place where you had neighbours who knew you.” * “...you can't command the spirit of hope in which anything has got to be created, with that dull evil cloud of unemployment hanging over you...” * “It is a deadly thing to see a skilled man running to seed, year after year, in utter, hopeless idleness.  It ought not to be impossible to give him the chance of using his hands and making furniture and so forth for his own home...” * “But no human being finds it easy to regard himself as a statistical unit.  So long as Bert Jones across the street is still at work, Alf Smith is bound to feel himself dishonoured and a failure.  Hence that frightful feeling of impotence and despair which is almost the worst evil of unemployment—far worse than any hardship, worst than the demoralisation of enforced idleness...” * “A human being is primarily a bag for putting food into; the other functions and faculties may be more godlike, but in point of time they come afterwards.  A man dies and is buried, and all his words and actions are forgotten, but the food he has eaten lives after him in the sound or rotten bones of his children.  I think it could be plausibly argued that changes of diet are more important than changes of dynasty or even of religion.  The Great War, for instance, could never have happened if tinned food had not been invented.  And the history of the past four hundred years in England would have been immensely different if it had not been for the introduction of root-crops and various other vegetables... and... non-alcoholic drinks... and... distilled liquors.” * “The ordinary human being would sooner starve than live on brown bread and raw carrots.  And the peculiar evil is this, that the less money you have, the less inclined you feel to spend it on wholesome food... when you are unemployed, which is to say, when you are... bored and miserable, you don't want to eat dull wholesome food.  You want something a little bit “tasty.””  When you have nothing else, you can at least have food that you enjoy. * “There exists in England a curious cult of Northernness, a sort of Northern snobbishness.  A yorkshireman in the South will always take care to let you know that he regards you as an inferior... the North... is ‘real' life...”* “Here you have an interesting example of the Northern cult. Not only are you and I and everyone else in the South of England written off as "fat and sluggish," but even water, when it gets north of a certain latitude, ceases to be H2O and becomes something mystically superior. But the interest of this passage is that its writer is an extremely intelligent man of " advanced " opinions who would have nothing but contempt for nationalism in its ordinary form. Put to him some such proposition as "One Britisher is worth three foreigners," and he would repudiate it with horror. But when it is a question of North versus South, he is quite ready to generalise” * You have Americans who denounce people who are Patriotic, who denounce those who think that there are too many immigrants coming and taking the jobs, or whatever it is.  But those same Americans, those "citizens of the World", are just as prejudiced against non-"multiculturalists."  You don't see woke hipsters looking to saddle up with a can of Bud to watch some NASCAR and praise Jesus.  They think that they are better, that their values are better, that everyone should go get an education and stop living in Indiana.  So, each class of society has prejudice, it takes different forms.  There is an inherently antagonistic relationship between the classes because each thinks its way of living is the right way.  In a Democracy, in theory, we say that you are free to determine how to live for yourself. * “To be working class, the notion of staying at school till you are nearly grown-up seems merely contemptible and unmanly... there is much in the middle-class life that looks sickly and debilitating when you see it from a working-class angle.”  Thus, the two different approaches to life and living. * “This scene is still reduplicated in a majority of English homes... Its happiness depends mainly upon one question—whether Father is in work.  But notice that the picture I have called up, of a working-class family sitting round the coal fire... belongs only to our own moment... and could not belong either to the future or the past.  Skip forward two hundred years into the Utopian future... In that age when there is no manual labour and everyone is ‘educated,'... The furniture will be made of rubber, glass and steel.  If there are still such things as evening papers there will certainly be no racing news in them, for gambling will be meaningless in a world where there is no poverty and the horse will have vanished from the face of the earth.  Dogs, too, will have been suppressed on grounds of hygiene.  And there won't be so many children, either, if the birth-controllers have their way... Curiously enough it is not the triumphs of modern engineering, nor the radio... but the memory of working-class interiors... that reminds me that our age has not been altogether a bad one to live in.”  Thus, everything that defines happiness and the meaning of life for the working classes is what the classes of progress want to kill.  Progress says, your life is meaningless. * “To me in my early boyhood, to nearly all children of families like mind, “common” people seemed almost sub-human.  They had coarse faces, hideous accents and gross manners, they hated everyone who was not like themselves, and if they got half a chance they would insult you in brutal ways.  That was our view of them, and though it was false it was understandable.  For one must remember that before the war there was much more overt class-hatred in England... in those days you were likely to be insulted simply for looking like a member of the upper classes... the time when it was impossible for a well-dressed person to walk through a slum street without being hooted at...”  This, the inherent antagonism between the classes. * “If you treat people as the English working class have been treated during the past two centuries, you must expect them to resent it.  On the other hand the children of shaby-genteel families could not be blamed if they grew up with a hatred of the working class, typified for them by prowling gangs...” * “I have dwelt on these subjects because they are vitally important.  To get rid of class-distinctions you have got to start by understanding how one class appears when seen through the eyes of another... snobbishness is bound up with a species of idealism...” * “Suggest to the average unthinking person of gentle birth who is struggling to keep up appearances on four or five hundred a year that he is a member of an exploiting parasite class, and he will think you are mad...In his eyes the workers are not a submerged race of slaves, they are a sinister flood creeping upwards to engulf himself and his friends and his family and to sweep all culture and all decency out of existence.  Hence that queer watchful anxiety lest the working class shall grow too prosperous... for miners to buy a motor-car, even one car between four or five of them, is a monstrosity, a sort of crime against nature.”  The poor man of middle-class origin fears for the middle class who wants to sweep away everything that is dear to him, his meaningless learning and culture. * “Look at any bourgeois Socialist... he idealises the proletariat, but it is remarkable how little his habits resemble theirs.  Perhaps once, out of sheer bravado, he has... [sat] indoors with his cap on, or even [drank] his tea out of the saucer... I have listened by the hour to [bourgeois Socialist] tirades against their own class, and yet never, not even once, have I met one who had picked up proletarian table-manners... Why should a man who thinks all virtue resides in the proletariat still take such pains to drink his soup silently? It can only be because in his heart he feels that proletarian manners are disgusting.  So you see he is still responding to the training of his childhood, when he was taught to hate, fear, and despise the working class.”  The working class “smells” indeed. * “In the war the young had been sacrificed and the old had behaved in a way which, even at this distance of time, is horrible to contemplate; they had been sternly patriotic in safe places while their sons went down like swathes of hay before the German machine guns. Moreover, the war had been conducted mainly by old men... by 1918 everyone under forty was in a bad temper with his elders... a general revolt against orthodoxy and authority... The dominance of ‘old men' was held to be responsible for every evil known to humanity, and every accepted institution... was derided merely because ‘old men' were in favour of it. For several years it was all the fashion to be a ‘Bolshie'... England was full of half-baked antinomian opinions. Pacifism, internationalism, humanitarianism of all kinds, feminism, free love, divorce-reform, atheism, birth-control—things like these were getting a better hearing than they would get in normal times... At that time we all thought of ourselves as enlightened creatures of a new age, casting off the orthodoxy that had been forced upon us by those detested ‘old men'. We retained, basically, the snobbish outlook of our class, we took it for granted that we could continue to draw our dividends or tumble into soft jobs, but also it seemed natural to us to be ‘agin the Government'.”  Thus, the ebb and flow of left to right, and the lack of actual, genuine revolutionary spirit amongst the so-thought progressive classes.   * Of his own insolence and class-bias as the protector of the 1% but disdainer of the 90%, “So to the shock-absorbers of the bourgeoisie, such as myself, ‘common people' still appeared brutal and repulsive. Looking back upon that period, I seem to have spent half the time in denouncing the capitalist system and the other half in raging over the insolence of bus-conductors" * Of smelling the sweat of other soldiers, “All I knew was that it was lower-class sweat that I was smelling, and the thought of it made me sick.” * On the wrongness of foreign occupation, “...no modem man, in his heart of hearts, believes that it is right to invade a foreign country and hold the population down by force. Foreign oppression is a much more obvious, understandable evil than economic oppression... people who live on unearned dividends without a single qualm of conscience, see clearly enough that it is wrong to go and lord it in a foreign country where you are not wanted. The result is that every Anglo-Indian is haunted by a sense of guilt... All over India there are Englishmen who secretly loathe the system of which they are part..” * On the inhumanity of prisons and capital punishment, “I had begun to have an indescribable loathing of the whole machinery of so-called justice... It needs very insensitive people to administer it. The wretched prisoners squatting in the reeking cages of the lock-ups... the women and children howling when their menfolk were led away under arrest—things like these are beyond bearing when you are in any way directly responsible for them. I watched a man hanged once; it seemed to me worse than a thousand murders... the worst criminal who ever walked is morally superior to a hanging judge.”  * "… I worked out an anarchistic theory that all government is evil, that the punishment always does more harm than the crime and that people can be trusted to behave decently if only you will let them alone. This of course was sentimental nonsense. I see now as I did not see then, that it is always necessary to protect peaceful people from violence. In any state of society where crime can be profitable you have got to have a harsh criminal law and administer it ruthlessly; the alternative is Al Capone. But the feeling that punishment is evil arises inescapably in those who have to administer it.” * “I had reduced everything to the simple theory that the oppressed are always right and the oppressors are always wrong: a mistaken theory, but the natural result of being one of the oppressors yourself” regarding his feelings in Colonial Burma * “I had carried my hatred of oppression to extraordinary lengths.  At that time failure seemed to me to be the only virtue.  Every suspicion of self-advancement, even to ‘succeed' in life to the extent of making a few hundreds a year, seemed to me spiritually ugly, a species of bullying.” * On the inescapable nature of class difference, echoes Dostoevsky in Dead House.  “I washed at the kitchen sink, I shared bedrooms with miners, drank beer with them, played darts with them, talked to them by the hour together. But though I was among them, and I hope and trust they did not find me a nuisance, I was not one of them, and they knew it even better than I did. However much you like them, however interesting you find their conversation, there is always that accursed itch of class-difference... It is not a question of dislike or distaste, only of difference, but it is enough to make real intimacy impossible... I found that it needed tactful manoeuvrings to prevent them from calling me ‘sir'; and all of them... softened their northern accents for my benefit. I liked them and hoped they liked me; but I went among them as a foreigner, and both of us were aware of it.” * Of the sentimentalist (John Galsworthy) vs. Reality... “But is it so certain that he really wants it overthrown? On the contrary, in his fight against an immovable tyranny he is upheld by the consciousness that it is immovable. When things happen unexpectedly and the world-order which he has known begins to crumble, he feels somewhat differently about it... This is the inevitable fate of the sentimentalist. All his opinions change into their opposites at the first brush of reality.”  Another version of this same quote, “...the opinions of the sentimentalist change into their opposites at the first touch of reality.” * “For in the last resort, the only important question is. Do you want the British Empire to hold together or do you want it to disintegrate?” The answer for man, maybe most, is no; the status quo is just fine. * “The alternative is to throw the Empire overboard and reduce England to a cold and unimportant little island where we should all have to work very hard and live mainly on herrings and potatoes. That is the very last thing that any left-winger wants. Yet the left-winger continues to feel that he has no moral responsibility for imperialism. He is perfectly ready to accept the products of Empire and to save his soul by sneering at the people who hold the Empire together.”* Of the propensity for words to attempt as a substitute for action, “Hence the temptation to believe that it [class difference] can be shouted out of existence with a few scoutmasterish bellows of goodwill... Let's pal up and get our shoulders to the wheel and remember that we're all equal...” * “For me to get outside the class bracket I have got to suppress not merely my private snobbishness, but most of my other tastes and prejudices as well.  I have got to alter myself so completely that at the end I should hardly be recognisable...”  People have standards, and this is to be human. * “For it is not easy to crash your way into the literary intelligentsia if you happen to be a decent human being... being the life and soul of cocktail parties and kissing the bums of verminous little lions” * “I have pointed out that the left-wing opinions of the average ‘intellectual' are mainly spurious. From pure imitativeness he jeers at things which in fact he believes in... It is only when you meet someone of a different culture from yourself that you begin to realise what your own beliefs really are... This at any rate is what he says,... the bourgeoisie are ‘dead' (a favourite word of abuse nowadays and very effective because meaningless), bourgeois culture is bankrupt, bourgeois “values” are despicable, and so on...” * On trying to break down class barriers, “If you secretly think of yourself as a gentleman and as such the superior of the greengrocer's errand boy, it is far better to say so than to tell lies about it.  Ultimately you have got to drop your snobbishness, but it is fatal to pretend to drop it before you are really ready to do so.” * “Any Socialist, he probably felt, could be counted on to have something eccentric about him... I have here a prospectus from another summer school which states its terms per week and then asks me to say ‘whether my diet is ordinary or vegetarian'. They take it for granted, you see, that it is necessary to ask this question. This kind of thing is by itself sufficient to alienate plenty of decent people. And their instinct is perfectly sound, for the food-crank is by definition a person willing to cut himself off from human society in hopes of adding five years on to the life of his carcase; that is, a person but of touch with common humanity.” * On how “socialist” literature is incomprehensible to normal people, “You can see the same tendency in Socialist literature, which, even when it is not openly written de haut en bos, is always completely removed from the working class in idiom and manner of thought... As for the technical jargon of the Communists, it is as far removed from the common speech as the language of a mathematical textbook.” * “…no genuine working man grasps the deeper implications of Socialism. Often, in my opinion, he is a truer Socialist than the orthodox Marxist, because he does remember, what the other so often forgets, that Socialism means justice and common decency... His vision of the Socialist future is a vision of present society with the worst abuses left out, and with interest centering round the same things as at present—family life, the pub, football, and local politics.” * Of Orthodoxy, “One of the analogies between Communism and Roman Catholicism is that only the ‘educated' are completely orthodox. The most immediately striking thing about the English Roman Catholics—I don't mean the real Catholics, I mean the converts… is their intense self-consciousness. Apparently they never think, certainly they never write, about anything but the fact that they are Roman Catholics; this single fact and the self-praise resulting from it form the entire stock-in-trade of the Catholic literary man.  But the really interesting thing about these people is the way in which they have worked out the supposed implications of orthodoxy until the tiniest details of life are involved. Even the liquids you drink, apparently, can be orthodox or heretical; hence the campaigns…  against tea and in favour of beer... tea-drinking' is ‘pagan', while beer-drinking is ‘Christian', and coffee is ‘the puritan's opium'... [W]hat I am interested in here is the attitude of mind that can make even food and drink an occasion for religious intolerance. A working-class Catholic would never be so absurdly consistent as that. He does not spend his time in brooding on the fact that he is a Roman Catholic, and he is not particularly conscious of being different from his non-Catholic neighbours. Tell an Irish dock-labourer in the slums of Liverpool that his cup of tea is ‘pagan', and he will call you a fool... It is only the ‘educated' man, especially the literary man, who knows how to be a bigot.” * “The underlying motive of many Socialists, I believe, is simply a hypertrophied sense of order. The present state of affairs offends them not because it causes misery, still less because it makes freedom impossible, but because it is untidy; what they desire, basically, is to reduce the world to something resembling a chessboard… Take the plays of a lifelong Socialist like Shaw.  How much understanding or even awareness of working class life do they display?  Shaw himself declares that you can only bring a working man on the stage ‘as an object of compassion… At best his attitude to the working class is the sniggering Punch attitude... he finds them merely contemptible and disgusting.  Poverty and, what is more, the habits of mind created by poverty, are something to be abolished from above, by violence if necessary; perhaps even preferably by violence.  Hence his worship of “Great” men and appetite for dictatorships...” * “The truth is that, to many people calling themselves Socialists, revolution does not mean a movement of the masses with which they hope to associate themselves; it means a set of reforms which ‘we', the clever ones, are going to impose upon ‘them', the Lower Orders.” * “The ordinary man may not flinch from a dictatorship of the proletariat, if you offer it tactfully; offer him a dictatorship of the prigs, and he gets ready to fight.” * “This, then, is the superficial aspect of the ordinary man's recoil from Socialism... The whole thing amounts to a kind of malaise produced by dislike of individual Socialists... Is it childish to be influenced by that kind of thing? Is it silly? Is it even contemptible? It is all that, but the point is that it happens, and therefore it is important to keep it in mind.”* “Work, you see, is done ‘to provide us with leisure'. Leisure for what? Leisure to become more like Mr Beevers, presumably.” Regarding the disdain for work of progressives, and the love of the machine. (John Beevers, World Without Faith). * “The truth is that many of the qualities we admire in human beings can only function in opposition to some kind of disaster, pain or difficulty...” * “The truth is that when a human being is not eating, drinking, sleeping, making love, talking, playing games, or merely lounging about—and these things will not fill up a lifetime—he needs work and usually looks for it, though he may not call it work. Above the level of a third- or fourth-grade moron, life has got to be lived largely in terms of effort. For man is not, as the vulgarer hedonists seem to suppose, a kind of walking stomach; he has also got a hand, an eye, and a brain. Cease to use your hands, and you have lopped off a huge chunk of your consciousness...” * “The nomad who walks or rides, with his baggage stowed on a camel or an ox-cart, may suffer every kind of discomfort, but at least he is living while he is traveling; whereas for the passenger in an express train or a luxury liner his journey is an interregnum, a kind of temporary death.”  A good analogy for cycling vs. Cars. * “They [Socialists] have never made it sufficiently clear that the essential aims of Socialism are justice and liberty. With their eyes glued to economic facts, they have proceeded on the assumption that man has no soul, and explicitly or implicitly they have set up the goal of a materialistic Utopia. As a result Fascism has been able to play upon every instinct that revolts against hedonism and a cheap conception of ‘progress'. It has been able to pose as the upholder of the European tradition, and to appeal to Christian belief, to patriotism, and to the military virtue...”  The Socialist and Communist seek to dismiss all those things which normal men hold dear, and tell them they are not men, and that what they desire in their soul is wrong or false. * On Fascism, a good analysis that could be applied to modern China, “...it is quite easy to imagine a world-society, economically collectivist—that is, with the profit principle eliminated—but with all political, military, and educational power in the hands of a small caste of rulers and their bravos. That or something like it is the objective of Fascism. And that, of course, is the slave-state, or rather the slave-world; it would probably be a stable form of society, and the chances are, considering the enormous wealth of the world if scientifically exploited, that the slaves would be well-fed and contented. It is usual to speak of the Fascist objective as the ‘beehive state', which does a grave injustice to bees. A world of rabbits ruled by stoats would be nearer the mark. It is against this beastly possibility that we have got to combine.” * On accepting the blessings of your Orthodox leaders vs. Actually evaluating something on its merits, “an incensed reader wrote to say, ‘Dear Comrade, we don't want to hear about these bourgeois writers like Shakespeare. Can't you give us something a bit more proletarian?' etc., etc. The editor's reply was simple. ‘If you will turn to the index of Marx's Capital,' he wrote, ‘you will find that Shakespeare is mentioned several times.' And please notice that this was enough to silence the objector. Once Shakespeare had received the benediction of Marx, he became respectable. That is the mentality that drives ordinary sensible people away from the Socialist movement.” * Orwell wonders of his status in society as a relatively poor writer, “Economically I belong to the working class, but it is almost impossible for me to think of myself as anything but a member of the bourgeoisie. And supposing I had to take sides, whom should I side with, the upper class which is trying to squeeze me out of existence, or the working class whose manners are not my manners” * “But if you are constantly bullying me about my ‘bourgeois ideology', if you give me to understand that in some subtle way I. am an inferior person because I have never worked with my hands, you will only succeed in antagonizing me. For you are telling me either that I am inherently useless or that I ought to alter myself in some way that is beyond my power.”  Echoing Dostoevsky and how progressives antagonize the people whom they should be trying to persuade.  This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit underconsumed.substack.com

GPI/THM Poker Podcast Network
First Flag - Joe Beevers - Episode 16 - GPITHM Podcast Network

GPI/THM Poker Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2021 47:24


On this episode of First Flag, Roland is joined by Joe Beevers. One of the four men responsible for the creation of The Hendon Mob, Joe talks about WSOP flags, how winning the Irish Open was a seminal moment of his career and share stories from his life in poker.

It's A Duck Blur: Let's Get Dangerous (A Darkwing Duck/Ducktales Podcast)
The Sooty Show - Sooty's Christmas Party (with Fabian Lapham & Ashleigh Beevers)

It's A Duck Blur: Let's Get Dangerous (A Darkwing Duck/Ducktales Podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2021 78:08


Ho ho ho Jingle Babes! We're back! It's 2021 and Christmas needs saving again! Luckily we're up to the task. Especially when joined by animator Ashleigh Beevers (https://www.instagram.com/mustashleigh/ ) and writer/voice actor Fabian Lapham (https://www.instagram.com/the_count_of_monte_chrisco/ )! We start the year off with The Sooty Show, a British kids show where a dude lives in a sharehouse with a magic crime-solving bear, neurotic dog and a gaslighting, homophobic panda.   Watch along with us https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cj9ToJoWD3E&t=513s&ab_channel=TheSooteriesChannel   Recommendations The World In Six Songs by Daniel Levitan The Guest List by Lucy Foley WandaVision Promising Young Women ---------------------------------------------- Maybe give us the gift of a few dollars to our Patreon account: https://www.patreon.com/itsaduckblur There's heaps of cool monthly bonuses for those that join!  Our other podcast: Greased Enlightening Buy Sarah's art at: www.redbubble.com/people/itsaduckblur/shop AND here's Sarah's very cool Etsy store: https://www.etsy.com/shop/sarahbaggsmisc Email us on: itsaduckblurpodcast@gmail.com Please rate and review 'Sarah & Michael Save Christmas' on iTunes or Stitcher. It helps other people find the show. For more Michael, follow him on Twitter: @meandmyeasel For more Sarah, follow her on Twitter: @why_in_the_heck OR her podcast Sperging Out  

Founder Real Talk
Kris Beevers, Co-founder & CEO of NS1, on Building Software and a Deeply Technical Team

Founder Real Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2020 38:57


Kris Beevers is the Co-founder and CEO of NS1, the leader in modern application and access networking. Kris is a recognized authority on global application delivery and DNS. He joins the show from his new, aptly named boat, Social Distance. Early on, when he was in the process of choosing his co-founders, Kris sought out people who he had a strong and respectful personal relationship with. As the business has grown, the roles of the leadership team have morphed, changed, and become better defined. Now as CEO, Kris considers his job to be hiring great people and letting them run. One thing he wishes he knew during his series A fundraise was that most investors are more interested in investing in the team rather than the product. They want to know you have a great team that will hustle for success. Glenn and Kris also discuss the important impact hiring a COO had on the business and Kris recommends hyper-communication and swift decision making as tools for success during these times.

Life on the Upcycle Podcast
7: Maintaining Mental and Environmental Wellness During  A Pandemic

Life on the Upcycle Podcast

Play Episode Play 30 sec Highlight Listen Later Apr 13, 2020 30:49


Did you know that several research articles have observed a link in air pollution and mental illnesses (such as depression, dementia, anxiety, and suicide)? I sure didn't! In this episode, I had the pleasure of speaking with Michelle Borunda, a licensed clinical social worker from Fort Worth, Texas. Michelle works with adolescents and adults on life transitions, anxiety, trauma, and many other mental health obstacles. Michelle and I talk about the mental health challenges of social distancing and sheltering in place. She gives us all relatable tips on how to support healthcare workers, how to compartmentalize work and home life, ideas on how to talk to children about the coronavirus, and positive ways to take care of your mental health. She also describes symptoms of anxiety and depression, and how and where to reach out for help. If you're thinking about suicide, are worried about a friend or loved one, or would like emotional support, the Lifeline Network is available 24/7 across the United States at 1800-273-8255 or www.sucidepreventionlifeline.org. Social Up With Us! Instagram @lifeontheupcycleLife on the Upcycle Facebook PageLife on the Upcycle Facebook Community PageLife on the Upcycle Website Reports and articles discussed in the intro:C. Brokamp, J.R. Strawn, A.F. Beck, and P. Ryan, Pediatric Psychiatric Emergency Department Utilization and Fine Particulate Matter: A Case-Crossover Study. Environmental Health Perspectives, 127 (9)(2019). S. Roberts, L, Arseneault, B. Barratt, S. Beevers, A. Danese, C.L. Odgers, T.E. Moffitt, A. Reuben, F.J. Kelly, H.L. Fisher, Exploration of NO2 and PM2.5 air pollution and mental health problems using high-resolution data in London-based children from a UK longitudinal cohort study. Psychiatry Research, 272 pp 8-17. Nicole Pajar, 'How To Support People In Health Care Working During Coronavirus,' HuffPost.

Talking Who To You
Episode 134 - The Diary Of River Song Vol 5: The Bekdel Test / Animal Instinct

Talking Who To You

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2020 63:28


We're back flicking through the pages of River Song's diary this week as Kev and JG tackle her fifth outing for Big Finish. But we're not doing it alone, as we have a returning guest star materialising the shape of Alasdair Wilkins! With this being an all-Master outing, how will the redoubtable River get on when she encounters the force of chaos that is Missy? Can she cope with the decayed Beevers version of the character? And perhaps most importantly of all, just how fabulous will she be? www.jgmcquarrie.scot https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/debating-doctor-who/id898944714

Golden Point
International Women's Day special with Caitlin Beevers and Adam Cuthbertson

Golden Point

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2020 66:06


Jenna Brooks and Steve Owen are in the hotseat for this special edition of the Golden Point, celebrating women in rugby league.England internatonal Caitlin Beevers is one of the guests, talking about her playing career with Leeds Rhinos' Women's Super League team and her refereeing ambitions.Rhinos forward Adam Cuthbertson joins her as well, talking about how he got involved with coaching the club's women's team and the success they have enjoyed in the past two years.There is also a preview of Barrie McDermott's interview with Manchester City Women footballer and huge rugby league fan Gemma Bonner.

england international women's day rhinos golden point beevers steve owen adam cuthbertson
The New Stack Podcast
Chaos Engineering w/ Kris Beevers

The New Stack Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2020 37:05


Read more https://thenewstack.io/ In this episode of The New Stack Makers, we talk to Kris Beevers about the importance of the traffic manager role and so much more as we look ahead to this year in enterprise tech. Seven years ago, Beevers co-founded NS1, the networking automation company or, as he calls it, “the system of record for many, many of the key domains and the applications on the Internet today.” He says that each of us interacts with NS1 dozens of times a day, like when we are connecting on LinkedIn or sharing files on DropBox. NS1 sits at the base of this new traffic management stack, steering that traffic across our increasingly complex and distributed systems. This stack also includes content networking delivery networks (CDN), load-balancing tooling, edge networking footprints, Service Mesh, service discovery, and egress optimization. This new role isn't just about measuring if traffic is working correctly, but really understanding both your users and systems to know how traffic is reaching the application, if you're using the right networking providers and venders, and if you're choosing data centers, clouds and CDNs effectively. This new traffic management role sits at the heart of greater site reliability engineering trends like chaos engineering and progressive delivery. It's about using your tooling stack to understand how your whole tooling reacts to prepare for the worst.

#AUnitedCity
#AUnitedCity Podcast Five - Our Christmas Special ft. Mark Beevers and Niall Mason

#AUnitedCity

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2019 45:02


Episode five is here and on this very special festive-themed episode we are joined in the studio by club captain Mark Beevers and "the oldest 22-year-old known to man" - Niall Mason. Mark and Niall discuss the squads Christmas Party fancy dress choices and we discover what the defensive duo would buy Marcus Maddison, Christy Pym, and Ivan Toney for Christmas. If you have any feedback or want to get involved in the podcast, please email media@theposh.com.

#AUnitedCity
#AUnitedCity Podcast Three - Aaron McLean, Tommy Robson and Mark Beevers

#AUnitedCity

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2019 45:59


Welcome to #AUnitedCity - the official Peterborough United Podcast. On our third episode we are joined in the studio by Aaron McLean who discusses what made him come back to the club in a coaching capacity and how he is finding it back at The Posh before taking on our new missing players feature. We also hear from club legend Tommy Robson after his sad diagnosis with Motor Neurone disease. Club captain Mark Beevers then chats to us about his perfect dinner party and why the Cheesecake Factory is his location of choice. If you have any feedback or want to get involved in the podcast, please email media@theposh.com.

The Chip Race
The Chip Race - Season 10 Episode 2 - Joe Beevers, Dylan Linde, Maria Konnikova and Tambet Kask.

The Chip Race

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2019 86:31


This week Dara and David come to you from the Unibet Open Malta with another sick line-up of poker guests. Irish Open Champion Joe Beevers is in the house. WPT Five Diamond champion and poker author Dylan Linde stops by. Poker pro and bestselling author Maria Konnikova joins them for strategy corner. Unibet Open Photographer Tambet Kask shares all the tricks of his trade. Plus, Ian has a round up of the stories and results from around the poker globe.

The Chip Race
The Chip Race - Season 10 Episode 2 - Joe Beevers, Dylan Linde, Maria Konnikova and Tambet Kask.

The Chip Race

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2019 86:31


This week Dara and David come to you from the Unibet Open Malta with another sick line-up of poker guests. Irish Open Champion Joe Beevers is in the house. WPT Five Diamond champion and poker author Dylan Linde stops by. Poker pro and bestselling author Maria Konnikova joins them for strategy corner. Unibet Open Photographer Tambet Kask shares all the tricks of his trade. Plus, Ian has a round up of the stories and results from around the poker globe.

SportSpiel
SportSpiel Episode 39: Caitlin Beevers

SportSpiel

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2019 71:44


Alasdair Hooper and Will Moulton are joined by Rugby League official and Leeds Rhinos' star Caitlin Beevers (https://twitter.com/CaitlinBeevers1) on episode 39 of SportSpiel. Feature Interview On our feature interview section (4:29) Will speaks to Caitlin who has already achieved so much at the age of 17. As part of Leeds Rhinos she already has two consecutive Challenge Cup victories - in 2018 and 2019 - and she has also been selected as part of the England squad for the Downer World Cup Nines in Sydney and the historic trip to Papua New Guinea. But Caitlin is no stranger to history having become the first female to ever referee a Rugby League game at Wembley Stadium last year.  This is a game-changing athlete paving the way for other girls in her sport.  Part Two Alasdair and Will present the news round-up (34:20) as they go through some of the important headlines that caught their eyes, including the latest in the Caster Semenya case, the conclusion of the Women's Ashes and the possibility of a female British and Irish Lions team.  In our discussion topic this week (51:00) we look at gambling advertising after the introduction of a voluntary ban during pre-watershed live sporting action was introduced. We debate the effects it will have and ask if we're treating gambling addiction as seriously as we should be. Lastly we hold the latest round of Ask Alasdair (1:05:47) where Will asks Alasdair, and then the listeners, a sports trivia question. Messages Follow us on Twitter - https://twitter.com/SportSpielPod?lang=en Like us on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/SportSpielPod/ Follow us on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/sportspielpod/ Get in touch: sportspielpod@gmail.com Visit our website: sportspielonline.com Credits Image credit: With thanks to Caitlin Beevers Music: Otis McDonald

The Inspiration North Podcast
#4 Chris Beevers - Use Your Success as a Force for Good

The Inspiration North Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2019 21:25


Here's what you'll learn in this episode: His experiences of moving from a global company to a start up in a new sector. He describes how his success has been driven by relationships. It's never too early to help your child explore the world of work.   Chris is a Yorkshireman by birth and is now an adopted Northumbrian living in Alnwick. Husband of 10 years to Helen and dad to Lyla & Theo (and latterly their dog Ziggy). He graduated from Newcastle University and started working life in the corporate world with Procter & Gamble. He's currently part of the senior management team in a fast-growing SME recruitment business, Jackson Hogg. Also, he is a non-exec director of a start-up and a trustee of the PIE Project charity (Primary Inspiration through Enterprise). Chris is passionate about the North East and achieving success through having a positive impact on the people, businesses and community around him.   Key Resources: Inspiration North Website - www.inspirationnorth.com Inspiration North Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/inspirationnorth Inspiration North Twitter - https://twitter.com/Inspirationorth Inspiration North Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/inspiration_north/   Chris at work - www.jacksonhogg.com The PIE project - www.pieproject.org Chris on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chrisbeevers/

It's A Duck Blur: Let's Get Dangerous (A Darkwing Duck/Ducktales Podcast)
Blurry Christmas- The Nanny 'Oy To The World' (with Ashleigh Beevers & Fabian Lapham)

It's A Duck Blur: Let's Get Dangerous (A Darkwing Duck/Ducktales Podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2018 92:33


Oy, Oy, Oy! Blurry Christmas to you all! On the third day of Christmas your favourite podcast sent to you, Ashleigh Beevers and Fabian Lapham, the doyens of the Australian animation world! And this time we're reviewing the true classic made by a real life mench, The Nanny's 'Oy To The World'! Hellllooooooo! CHRISTMAS PRESENT COMPETITION- Want to win an awesome DW inspired Christmas gift from us? All you have to film/record yourself telling someone about ‘It’s A Duck Blur’ and email/tweet/FB us the results. Spread the word of IADBCLGD while you spread Christmas cheer AND WIN BIG!  ------------------------------------------------ Maybe donate a few dollars to our Patreon account: https://www.patreon.com/itsaduckblur There's heaps of cool gifts and bonuses for those that join! Come and see our website: www.itsaduckblur.com Buy our merch at: www.redbubble.com/people/itsaduckblur/shop AND here's Sarah's very cool Etsy store: https://www.etsy.com/shop/sarahbaggsmisc Email us on: itsaduckblurpodcast@gmail.com Please rate and review 'It's A Duck Blur: Let's Get Dangerous' on iTunes or Stitcher. It helps other people find the show. For more Michael, follow him on Twitter: @meandmyeasel For more Sarah, follow her on Twitter: @why_in_the_heck OR her podcast Sperging Out For more Michael AND Sarah listen to Pop Quiz Hot Shot with Michael Williams, also available on iTunes, Stitcher and where all good podcasts are sold.  

Bobby Beevers's Racing Round-Up with Jim McGrath
2: Bobby Beevers Racing Round Up with Jim McGrath

Bobby Beevers's Racing Round-Up with Jim McGrath

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2018 40:25


On this week's show, Jim gives his tips for Lingfield and Dubai and his 2 horses to follow from the South, Peter Niven talks Clever Cookie, Bill Farnsworth on Musselburgh and Dawn Goodfellow chats about Middleham Open Day

south dubai racing musselburgh beevers jim mcgrath
It's A Duck Blur: Let's Get Dangerous (A Darkwing Duck/Ducktales Podcast)
14. Trading Faces (with Ashleigh Beevers and Fabian Lapham)

It's A Duck Blur: Let's Get Dangerous (A Darkwing Duck/Ducktales Podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2018 100:48


Hello there. We got our good friends and animation industry megastars, Ashleigh Beevers and Fabian Lapham, to come around to our house again to talk all things Darkwing Duck, Australian kids TV, Harry Potter fansite poachers, eyelashes, kids in trenchcoats and much more. Ashleigh's art website: http://www.ashleighbeeversart.com/ Suspect Moustache YT's channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2TkDxmzxTdY Maybe donate a few dollars to our Patreon account: https://www.patreon.com/itsaduckblur There's heaps of cool gifts and bonuses to those that join! Come and see our website: www.itsaduckblur.com Buy our merch at: www.redbubble.com/people/itsaduckblur/shop Email us on: itsaduckblurpodcast@gmail.com Please rate and review 'It's A Duck Blur: Let's Get Dangerous' on iTunes or Stitcher. It helps other people find the show. For more Michael, follow him on Twitter: @meandmyeasel For more Sarah, follow her on Twitter: @why_in_the_heck OR her podcast Sperging Out For more Michael AND Sarah listen to Pop Quiz Hot Shot with Michael Williams, also available on iTunes, Stitcher and where all good podcasts are sold.  

I Made it in San Diego by Voice of San Diego
A Grueling Game of Farmers Market Musical Chairs

I Made it in San Diego by Voice of San Diego

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2018 13:40


Brian Beevers is the man behind the farmers markets in Clairemont, Serra Mesa and at Horton Plaza. He's also got a farmers market-inspired shop called Simply Local in North Park that sells goods made by San Diegans. Becoming one of the region's biggest purveyors of local products, though, wasn't easy. The success of a farmers market relies heavily on finding — and keeping — the right locations. That means Beevers' businesses over the years have often fallen victim to the whims of landowners. In a new episode of I Made it in San Diego, a podcast about the people behind the region’s businesses, Lisa Halverstadt talks to Beevers about his ongoing struggle to open farmers markets and sustain the interest. “I've always known that I am at the mercy of the land owners, and it's something that you just have to kind of live with every day, that you just don't know for sure when somebody just might pull the plug on you," Beevers said.

vosdpodcastnetwork201707
A Grueling Game of Farmers Market Musical Chairs

vosdpodcastnetwork201707

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2018 13:40


Brian Beevers is the man behind the farmers markets in Clairemont, Serra Mesa and at Horton Plaza. He's also got a farmers market-inspired shop called Simply Local in North Park that sells goods made by San Diegans. Becoming one of the region's biggest purveyors of local products, though, wasn't easy. The success of a farmers market relies heavily on finding — and keeping — the right locations. That means Beevers' businesses over the years have often fallen victim to the whims of landowners. In a new episode of I Made it in San Diego, a podcast about the people behind the region's businesses, Lisa Halverstadt talks to Beevers about his ongoing struggle to open farmers markets and sustain the interest. “I've always known that I am at the mercy of the land owners, and it's something that you just have to kind of live with every day, that you just don't know for sure when somebody just might pull the plug on you," Beevers said. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Brewing Community Live!
Brewing Community LIVE - Ep 16 - Ian Power, Douglas Jay Boyd & Marc Beevers

Brewing Community Live!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2017 58:44


We have a great chat with three local musicians about Tyler's music scene, how to be a successful musician, recording, writing processes and more.

Proper Sport Daily
Tim Easterby talks to Bobby Beevers

Proper Sport Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2017 1:26


After a double on the day of the first fixture of the Go Racing In Yorkshire summer festival, trainer Tim Easterby talks to Bobby Beevers about his success.

beevers
VI Talk
#C2SV17 Alstrom Syndrome, With Kerry Leeson-Beevers & her son Kion

VI Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2017 10:22


It's A Duck Blur: Let's Get Dangerous (A Darkwing Duck/Ducktales Podcast)
48. Double 0 Duck (with Fabian Lapham & Ashleigh Beevers)

It's A Duck Blur: Let's Get Dangerous (A Darkwing Duck/Ducktales Podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2016 86:58


Join dynamic Austalian husband and wife team, Michael and Sarah as they watch every single episode of the classic 1987 Disney series DuckTales and then talk about them for your auditory pleasure. This week they are joinned by writer/director Fabian Lapham and animator/illustrator Ashleigh Beevers! 48. Double 0 Duck What would a James Bond movie look like is Launchpad was cast in the role of Bond? What's the hardest food to draw? What's our favourite AC/DC song? Does anyone else remember 'I'd Rather Do It With Madonna'? What's Michael's opinion of Henry's Cat? All these questions are answered! Please rate and review 'It's A Duck Blur' on iTunes. It helps other people find the show. For more Michael, follow him on Twitter: @meandmyeasel For more Sarah, follow her on Twitter: @why_in_the_heck OR at her blog cookbookresolution.com For more Michael AND Sarah listen to 'Pop Quiz Hot Shot with Michael Williams', also available on iTunes, Stitcher and where all good podcasts are sold.

Doctor Who: Who's He? Podcast
Who's He? Podcast #138 You don't have to put on the red light

Doctor Who: Who's He? Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2013 30:02


The 50th anniversary celebrations have begun!!  In this special episode we review the anniversary offering from Big Finish in the form their multi Doctor story Light At The End.  Will this story improve upon previous multi Doctor stories or will it be another jumbled mess attempting to cram in as many continuity references as humanly possible?  Never fear though as Phil and Paul give your their usual forthright opinion and Phil makes a complete balls up of explaining the plot! However, you must bear one thing in mind!  This review does contain spoilers, so if you haven't listened to Light At The End you have been warned!!

Doctor Who: Tin Dog Podcast
TDP 257: Big Finish Fourth Doctor Audio review 1.5 and 1.6

Doctor Who: Tin Dog Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2012 10:15


979. A legendary giant white worm is sought after by the Doctor, Leela and the Master.Cast    The Doctor - Tom Baker    Leela - Louise Jameson    The Master - Geoffrey Beevers    Colonel Spindleton - Michael Cochrane    Demesne Furze - Rachael StirlingContinuity    Geoffrey Beevers played the Master, alongside Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor, in the 1981 television story The Keeper of Traken.    The Fourth Doctor also encountered the Master in The Deadly Assassin and Tom Baker's last television story, Logopolis.    The version of the Master that Beevers plays has an emaciated, corpse-like appearance. This was first seen in The Deadly Assassin, although in that story, the Master was played by Peter Pratt.    For the Doctor and the Master, Trail of the White Worm takes place between The Deadly Assassin and The Keeper of Traken.    The Doctor notices that the Master looks different, less emaciated, reflecting the differences in appearance in The Deadly Assassin and The Keeper of Traken. This may have been a result of the aborted rejuvenation at the end of The Deadly Assassin.    Beevers previously reprised the role of the Master in two Big Finish audios, Dust Breeding and Master, both with the Seventh Doctor. In those dramas, the Master had reverted to his former deteriorated state, after losing the form he gained at the end of The Keeper of Traken.The Kraal attempt to invade the Earth, while the Doctor is trapped on their irradiated home world, Oseidon.Cast    The Doctor - Tom Baker    Leela - Louise Jameson    The Master - Geoffrey Beevers    Colonel Spindleton - Michael Cochrane    Marshal Grimnal / Captain Clarke - Dan Starkey    Tyngworg / Warner / UNIT R/T Operator - John BanksContinuity    The Kraals were in the 1975 Fourth Doctor television story, The Android Invasion. That story also featured UNIT.    This is the first use of Kraals by Big Finish Productions.    The Doctor and Leela encounter the Master again in the third season of Fourth Doctor adventures, due to be released in 2014.[2]External links

Terrible Awful Show
Ep.23 - ILoveBabySpice82086 (Series Finale)

Terrible Awful Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2012 76:10


Description: In this, our final episode, we say farewell with another edition of our favorite game. Amby tells of her time overseeing Vader getting defeated by children. We answer the question of if The Angry Beavers can lay waste to Adventure Time's Abracadaniel and our show gets one final Who Would Win champion. Show Notes : Hosts This Week Cody Coleman Nikki Wright Matt Cruea Amber Leigh Dylan Frisbie CALENDAR Monthly Observances - March : National Cheerleader Safety month. April : National STD Month Weekly Observances - March : Root Canal Awareness Week (25-31) April : Hate Week (4-10) Daily Observances - March : Texas Loves the Children Day (29), Mule Day (29th-4/1) April : April Fools Day (1), St. Stupid Day (1) Info On St. Stupid Day More Info On St. Stupid Day Video Games - March 31 : Dragons Vs. Unicorns (PC/MAC), Face-Plant Adventures (X360), Skullgirls (X360), Dust: An Elysian Tail (X360) April 3 : Devil May Cry HD Collection (PS3/X360), Kinect Star Wars (X360 Kinect) April 4 : I Am Alive (Playstation Move) April 6 : Xenoblade Chronicles (Wii) Movies - March 30 : Mirror Mirror/Wrath of the Titans April 4 : Titanic in 3D April 6 : American Reunion SEGMENT/GAME OF THE WEEK The Totally Not Copywritten Game of I Can Name that Sound Before You Can Dylan : 12 Nikki : 12 Cody : 13 Amby : 4 WHO WOULD WIN BATTLES Ermac (Mortal Kombat) Vs. Principle Sunhat AKA Chuck Greene (Dead Rising 2) Dr. Donatello (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles) Vs. 100 bats with rabies (Amby's Brain) The Angry Beavers (The Angry Beavers)Vs. Abracadaniel (Adventure Time) Gaston (Beauty and the Beast) Vs. Rumplestilkskin (Once Upon a Time) FINAL CHAMPION BATTLE! - Billy the Blue Power Ranger (Mighty Morphin Power Rangers) (With that Gun in Unreal Tournament that is like a tiny nuke) Vs. Krillin (DBZ) (with an unlimited supply of heavy duty rubber bands) Vs. Wolverine (Xmen) (The Mormon Bible) | in A house full of ghosts that keep telling the fighters' secrets very loudly and annoyinglyRunning time: 1:16:10Part of the Ydoc Nameloc Interactive Network