POPULARITY
In this week's Talking Tech, Etholle is joined by Brian Palmer, founder of Cello Electronics to discuss what's driving Brits to want to return to physical forms of media.
Daniel Clewlow once again fills in for Adam Cox. He speaks to Brian Palmer, CEO and Founder of Cello Electronics. Brian tells us all about the resurgence of physical media and in particular DVDs. He also discusses just how nostalgia-fuelled this re-emergence truly is. https://celloelectronics.com/
In this enlightening episode, you''ll learn how a growing group of funders is thinking about wellbeing – for grantees and themselves. Laura Bacon, strategy lead and facilitator of the Funders and Wellbeing Group, discusses how this new global group of a dozen foundations is working to transform philanthropic culture with regard to wellbeing. Through regular virtual meetings and annual in-person gatherings, the group explores ways to support both individual and organizational wellbeing in the social sector. Their recent retreat in Malaysia highlighted how many nonprofit staff challenges related to wellbeing are universal, from shrinking civic spaces to staff burnout and retention issues.The conversation emphasizes the critical importance of maintaining focus on wellbeing initiatives during challenging times, particularly in the current political climate where social justice work and the nonprofit sector face significant pressures. Laura advocates for funders to be more flexible and generous in their support, while ensuring that wellbeing remains a priority rather than an optional add-on in grantmaking practices.Laura shares her journey from musician to social change advocate, and her extensive experience in philanthropy and wellbeing initiatives. As the former founding director of the Partner Support Program at Luminate (an Omidyar foundation), she established wellbeing stipends for grantee organizations, allowing them to address their staff's needs with maximum flexibility. The program distributed about 71 grants totaling $350,000, which organizations used for various purposes from team retreats to mental health support.Biography:For more than two decades, Laura Bacon has designed programs and led projects and teams to achieve social impact around the world. She's currently an independent consultant, partnering with clients on a host of cool initiatives. One of her roles includes Strategy Lead and Facilitator of the Funders + Wellbeing Group at The Wellbeing Project, where she facilitates peer-learning and convenings among a dozen funders to enhance wellbeing for individuals, organizations, sectors, and communities.Previously, Laura was founding director of the Partner Support program at Luminate, a global philanthropic organization that is part of the Omidyar Group, where she supported over 300 grantee partners to achieve their goals of being more resilient, healthy & inclusive, and well-networked.Before working at Luminate / Omidyar Network, Laura was a White House Fellow focused on clean energy.Resources: laura.m.bacon@gmail.com LinkedIn Funders & Wellbeing Group Website Wellbeing Project website The Wellbeing Project - Global Hearth Summit in Slovenia College course: Personal Choice and Global Transformation Global Values 101, a book based on the above course, edited by Brian Palmer, Kate Holbrook, Ann S. Kim, Anna Portnoy Rights and Dignity Working Group (piloted Wellness stipends - a cross-Omidyar Group initiative) Astraea Lesbian Foundation For Justice (inspiration for wellness stipends) https://astraeafoundation.org - Healing Justice stipend General Service Foundation (inspiration for wellness stipends): https://generalservice.org/whatwefund/healingjustice/ - Fund the People podcast interview with Desiree Flores Priya Parker book “The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters” Deepa Iyer's Social Change Ecosystem Role Map Prospera, the International Network of Women's Funders, doing great work on wellbeing Laura's Blog posts on Partner Support, Coaching Stipend, Wellbeing Stipends: Luminate & Omidyar Group (philanthropy I worked with for 10+ years) * Here's more info about thePartner Support program of which I was the founding director Blogs (first andsecond) about Luminate's wellbeing stipend Luminate's coaching stipend Grantee Perception Reports (2020 and2023) Funders & Wellbeing Group "FundWell" newsletter about our funders' retreat in Malaysia
A Middle Tennessee Business Podcast....subscribe/follow/rate/review at www.mmtbp.comWe meet and work for a lot of managers who show you how to do things wrong. They're typically more self-centered and believe their team is in place to “make them look good”. (That was actually said to us in a staff meeting one time by a brand new manager.) Then there are those managers who show you how to do things the right way. They're the ones who embody what I call #BeThemCentric. They believe it *isn't* about them. It's about the team and providing what the team needs to do their jobs and accomplish their goals for the business. I met Steve Brink while I was working in the Nashville radio industry. To say that he was a huge catalyst for some major changes in my life is a MASSIVE understatement. I credit him for bringing me into the car business in 2013, which profoundly changed my life. He was the General Manager of Crest Honda in Nashville at the time. Steve and his superior, Brian Palmer, who was the General Manager of Crest Cadillac and the Market Manager of Sonic Automotive Nashville, really built teams in both stores that fostered one of the best and healthy cultures I had ever seen.And that says something for the car business where healthy culture building seems to always come last. When my other colleagues in the business heard that I was having Steve on the show, the outpouring of eagerness to reconnect with him was amazing. He's touched a lot of lives and I think he'll touch yours in this episode. Highpoints:Leadership, culture, and the military. (4:03)Leadership, responsibility, and perseverance in the automotive industry. (8:38)Car sales career and industry changes over 20 years. (11:53)Mentorship, growth, and problem-solving in the car sales industry. (20:26)Unhealthy sales tactics in the car industry. (28:18)Starting a business and overcoming challenges with a friend. (53:48)'The importance of skilled labor and vocational training. (1:11:11)Follow Steve:https://monkshomeimprovements.com/https://www.linkedin.com/in/steve-brink-24b7268b/__________________________________________________________________________________________________****SUBSCRIBE/RATE/FOLLOW the Mostly Middle Tennessee Business Podcast:www.mmtbp.comwww.instagram.com/mostlymiddletnbusinespodcastwww.instagram.com/jimmccarthyvosTiktok: @jimmccarthyvos __________________________________________________________Shoutout to Matt Wilson for lending his voice to the new intro of MMTBP.Follow him and his podcast from which I may have borrowed the *mostly* concept:https://linktr.ee/mamwmw___________________________________________________________****You hear Jim mention it on almost every episode, ME vs. WE and how 2023 will be 1943 all over again….order “PENDULUM:How Past Generations Shape Our Present and Predict Our Future”:https://a.co/d/7oKK7Ip__________________________________________________________________________The co-author of Pendulum wrote a myriad of other books and started a non-profit 21st Century Non-Traditional Business School that you should really check out: Wizard Academy - www.wizardacademy.org__________________________________________________________________________Talking about the real problems (and possible solutions) of everyday business owners and professionals in and around Middle Tennessee and beyond...this is the What's Your Problem Podcast!Curious about podcasting? This podcast (and many others) is produced by www.itsyourshow.co#billionaire #business #entrepreneurship #fashion #love #marketing #meme #middle #mindset #motivation #nashville #nashvilletennessee #nashvilletn #nature #podcast #podcasters #podcastersofinstagram #podcasting #podcastlife #podcasts #podcastshow #smallbusiness #tennessee #tennesseelife #carbusiness #automotive #carbusinessculture #businessculture #officecultureCall Incredible Doors! 931-348-DOOR. We're making garage doors in Maury and Wlliamson counties incredible again! www.incredibledoors.com
What might our TV sets be like in the future?Dough is a new series from BBC Radio 4 which looks at the business behind profitable, everyday products and considers how they might evolve in the years to come. In this episode, the entrepreneur Sam White speaks with experts from the world of television manufacturing, including Brian Palmer, who has seen many interesting and amusing changes during his long career in the industry. Brian is now the founder and chief executive officer of Cello Electronics (UK) Ltd which makes televisions at its factory in County Durham. He gives a candid account of some of the ups and downs he has faced, while explaining how his business has always managed to make a profit, despite competition from global rivals. Paul Gray is a Research Director for Consumer Electronics and Devices at the analysts, Omdia. With a background in TV manufacturing, he has considerable knowledge on how the business has changed.Brian and Paul offer their views on game-changing - and pointless - TV innovations before considering where companies are investing their money now. Tom Cheesewright, a technology expert and applied futurist, then offers his predictions on what might be coming beyond the current production pipeline. TVs have come a long way in a relatively short space of time and where they are going next might surprise you!Produced by Jon Douglas. Dough is a BBC Audio North production for BBC Radio 4 and BBC Sounds.Sliced Bread returns for a new batch of investigations in August when Greg Foot will investigate more of the latest so-called wonder products to find out whether they really are the best thing since sliced bread. In the meantime, Dough is available in the Sliced Bread feed on BBC Sounds
What might our TV sets be like in the future?Dough is a new series from BBC Radio 4 which looks at the business behind profitable, everyday products and considers how they might evolve in the years to come. In this episode, the entrepreneur Sam White speaks with experts from the world of television manufacturing, including Brian Palmer, who has seen many interesting and amusing changes during his long career in the industry. Brian is now the founder and chief executive officer of Cello Electronics (UK) Ltd which makes televisions at its factory in County Durham. He gives a candid account of some of the ups and downs he has faced, while explaining how his business has always managed to make a profit, despite competition from global rivals. Paul Gray is a Research Director for Consumer Electronics and Devices at the analysts, Omdia. With a background in TV manufacturing, he has considerable knowledge on how the business has changed.Brian and Paul offer their views on game-changing - and pointless - TV innovations before considering where companies are investing their money now. Tom Cheesewright, a technology expert and applied futurist, then offers his predictions on what might be coming beyond the current production pipeline. TVs have come a long way in a relatively short space of time and where they are going next might surprise you!Produced by Jon Douglas. Dough is a BBC Audio North production for BBC Radio 4 and BBC Sounds.Sliced Bread returns for a new batch of investigations in August when Greg Foot will investigate more of the latest so-called wonder products to find out whether they really are the best thing since sliced bread. In the meantime, Dough is available in the Sliced Bread feed on BBC Sounds
It took two years, after holdups from Turkey and Hungary, but Sweden has officially joined NATO. A move not everyone in Sweden is super psyched about. But this country's history isn't quite so peaceful as it might seem. So, can a peace-loving nation with a war-loving legacy keep the peace… when someone starts a war in its backyard? And how does feminist foreign policy really play out when defense is center stage? GUESTS: Dr. Patrik Höglund, historian and maritime archaeologist; Dr. Brian Palmer, Senior Lecturer/Associate Professor, Uppsala University; Dr. Annick Wibben, Professor of Gender, Peace & Security at the Swedish Defence University; Margot Wallström, former Foreign Minister of Sweden ADDITIONAL RESOURCES: Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, New World Encyclopedia The Vasa Museum Vrak - Museum of Wrecks Speech by Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock at the Conference on Shaping Feminist Foreign Policy, Federal Foreign Office of Germany Handbook on Sweden's Feminist Foreign Policy, Government of Sweden Sweden ends weapons deal with Saudi Arabia, Associated Press
This season on Things That Go Boom, we're on a mission to figure out this new thing spreading like wildfire across the world: feminist foreign policy. But to even begin to understand what it is and where it's going, we had to start in the place where it failed. We're calling this season, “The F Word.” And on this episode and the next, we take a deep look at the chasm that caused Sweden's feminist foreign policy to break in two. And we ask: If this thing can't succeed in Sweden, can it succeed at all? GUESTS: Dr. Brian Palmer, Senior Lecturer/Associate Professor, Uppsala University; Dr. Elin Bjarnegård, Professor, Uppsala University; Margot Wallström, former Foreign Minister of Sweden ADDITIONAL RESOURCES: Antigone's Diary becomes a mural when youth in the suburb of Husby tell about their lives, Stockholm University Handbook on Sweden's Feminist Foreign Policy, Government of Sweden Sweden's New Government Abandons Feminist Foreign Policy, Human Rights Watch Jantelagen: Why Swedes won't talk about wealth, BBC Special thanks to all of our guests, including our anonymous panel participants and Dr. Brian Palmer who went above and beyond to help our team understand and connect with folks in and around Stockholm.
We got interviews from Brandon Powell, Derrick Mein, Able Spires, Gianna Santo, Brian Palmer, Ashley Casperson, and Jonathan Roberts on the Caribbean Cup and a host of other topics, while in attendance at Vero Beach Clay Shooting Sports, for the 2024 Caribbean Classic! A quick glance back at the last sentence, and there is no need for introduction of these fine people! We sat down with each of them to get their take on the event, shooting, strategies for this time of year, what's coming next, and a whole lot more! We were then joined by none other than Anthony Matarese Jr. for a Questions for the Coaches segment. Anyone who knows who Anthony is, knows that they are getting some of the best information available. So tune in and listen up!- Elite Shotguns - https://elite-shotguns.com- Fiocchi USA - https://fiocchiusa.com- Rhino Chokes - https://rhinochokes.com- OtoPro Hearing Service - https://otoprotechnologies.com- RE Ranger - https://www.reranger.com (10% Discount = DEADPAIR)- Atlas Traps - https://www.atlastraps.com- Dawn Grant -https://dawngrant.com. Dead Pair Promo- https://dawngrant.com/pages/dead-pair-promo- Vero Beach Clay Shooting - https://verobeachclayshooting.com- Scorechaser - https://scorechaser.com/- Chad Roberts - email- bpsipro@gmail.com The Dead Pair Podcast - https://thedeadpair.com FACEBOOK- https://www.facebook.com/Thedeadpair. INSTAGRAM- https://www.instagram.com/thedeadpairpodcast/YOUTUBE- https://youtube.com/channel/UCO1ePh4I-2D0EABDbKxEgoQ
Episode Summary:The Federal Writers' Project set out to create a series of books that held up a mirror to America, and chronicled communities that had long been ignored. Howard University professor Sterling Brown led the agency's effort to document African American history in a series of books. In Virginia, chemistry professor Roscoe Lewis led a small team to produce the first book in that national series, titled The Negro in Virginia. Lewis recruited a dozen Black writers and researchers across the state for a pioneering effort that recorded interviews with nearly 300 formerly enslaved people. They navigated a backlash from state editors and local officials. Against all odds, their book on Black life became a national Book-of-the-Month Club selection, and a milestone on the path to the Civil Rights movement.Speakers:Audrey Davis, historianJulian Hayter, historianGregg Kimball, historianKiki Petrosino, poetLinks and Resources:Photo essay about East End Cemetery by Kiki Petrosino and Brian Palmer in VQR“Unmarked” documentaryVirginia Humanities Q&A with David A. TaylorWashington Post article on Roscoe Lewis and The Negro in VirginiaAlexandria Black History MuseumReading List:The Negro in Virginia (Library of Virginia)White Blood by Kiki PetrosinoLong Past Slavery: Representing Race in the Federal Writers' Project by Catherine A. StewartTo Walk About in Freedom by Carole EmbertonThe Dream is Lost by Julian Hayter Credits:Host: Chris HaleyDirector: Andrea KalinProducers: Andrea Kalin, David A. Taylor, James MirabelloWriter: David A. TaylorEditors: Ethan Oser and Julie ChalhoubStory Editor: Michael MayAdditional Voices: Skip Coblyn, Sherry Carter-Brownell, Robert Mirabello, James Mirabello and Danielle NanceFeaturing music and archival material from:Pond5Library of Congress National Archives For additional content, visit peoplesrecorder.info or follow us on social media: @peoplesrecorderProduced with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities and Virginia Humanities. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hidden beneath the foliage at East End Cemetery are gravestones split in half, sunken into the earth and grave markers divorced from the bodies they honor. The Richmond cemetery is littered with fallen trees and debris. East End is not the only cemetery to find this fate. Historically Black and African American cemeteries across Virginia have been neglected for years. The tide is just now starting to turn. Brian Palmer is the founder of Friends of East End, an all-volunteer nonprofit established in 2017 that works to restore and maintain East End Cemetery. Manual labor, like pulling up vines and...Article LinkSupport the show
The Independent Newspaper for Islay and Jura, the Ileach, was founded in 1973. To mark the occasion, Glen Roberts sat down with current editor Brian Palmer and past editor Calum Murray to discuss all things Ileach, and in particular the role of this publication in the local community. The Ileach is published fortnightly, with print editions of the Ileach available on Islay and Jura, and through UK and worldwide subscriptions by post. Electronic (pdf) subscriptions are also available. More information at ileach.co.uk .
Full show notes here: https://moderndirectseller.com/episode153/. This week, the Modern Direct Seller Podcast is all about tech! Brian Palmer is the CEO of Think Box HQ, which specializes in bringing emerging and innovative technologies to direct sales companies, and he joined us to share some of the work they've been doing behind the scenes. Listen in to learn what conversations are happening at the corporate level, how new tech will benefit consultants and consumers, and what we might expect to see on the horizon to keep direct sales moving forward. Time-based notes: 1:26 Brian Palmer introduction 5:16 Tech at the corporate level 8:56 Recent consumer technology 10:18 Using tech to stay relevant 15:32 Direct sales tech on the horizon 18:07 Tech for customer experiences 22:08 Brian's favorite tech tool 23:41 Brian's favorite office supply Connect with Brian on LinkedIn, and learn more about Think Box HQ at www.ThinkBoxHQ.com! Sign up to receive real-time coaching, community-focused support, fresh sale strategies, and a much, much more at ModernDirectSellerAcademy.com.
We are joined on the phone by Amy Bean of Ranger Performance Eyewear to discuss the new Ultimate light RIACT AI lenses! The New Ultimate light lens was made for really bright conditions, but listen in as we discuss the benefits of this lens, plus we address the large elephant in the room with the prescription RIACT's! Brian Palmer of Elite shotguns joins us in studio along with one of his proteges, Marshall and his father, who were in town for the SCTP Nationals at the Cardinal Center. Along with a tourney talk, our in studio guests, and Amy Bean, we bring you some good info in this episode!- Elite Shotguns - https://elite-shotguns.com- Fiocchi USA - https://fiocchiusa.com- BAREPELT - https://barepelt.com- Rhino Chokes - https://rhinochokes.com- OtoPro Hearing Service - https://otoprotechnologies.com- RE Ranger - https://www.reranger.com (10% Discount = DEADPAIR)- Dawn Grant -https://dawngrant.com. Dead Pair Promo- https://dawngrant.com/pages/dead-pair-promo- ATLAS TRAPS - https://www.atlastraps.com- White Flyer Targets - https://whiteflyer.com- Vero Beach Clay Shooting - https://verobeachclayshooting.com- Chad Roberts - email- bpsipro@gmail.com-Dead Pair coffee - https://daltonanddeucellc.com/products/latin-american-blend?selling_plan=688883892541The Dead Pair Podcast - https://thedeadpair.com FACEBOOK- https://www.facebook.com/Thedeadpair. INSTAGRAM- https://www.instagram.com/thedeadpairpodcast/YOUTUBE- https://youtube.com/channel/UCO1ePh4I-2D0EABDbKxEgoQ
A large stockpile of the potentially explosive ammonium nitrate is being stored in the small Waikato town of Te Kowhai, without resource consent. Ammonium nitrate is the chemical that caused a major explosion in Beirut in 2020, when it was stored incorrectly. While the risk of it exploding has been assessed as "low", the storage of up to 349 tonnes of the material has alarmed the local community. Within just two kilometres of the site is a school, a childcare centre and a retirement village. It's also very close to a major gas pipeline. The Waikato Times has reported the material is owned by Australian company Orica, but is transported and stored in New Zealand by Move Logistics. It's now stored on a property owned by local company The Lummys Block Limited -- without resource consent -- the application has since been lodged and is sitting with the Waikato District Council. Kathryn speaks with Brian Palmer, chair of the Te Kowhai Community Group and Stephen Darby who owns the local childcare centre.
“If somebody came up and dared us or said, ‘You're life depends on running 26 miles today.' That either one of us or both of us could do it and we'd probably do it together.” Recorded live at Claimstake Brewing in Rancho Cordova, California during Global Running Day. Luis wanders around and has running and beer conversations with Clint Welch, Javier Macias-Salazar, Francis Macias-Salazar, Dalia Robles Ramirez, Abel Rodriguez, Robert Cathey, Derrick Booth, Mike Ryan, Philip Crimmins, Brian Park, Brian Palmer, and more. Support Road Dog Podcast by: 1. Joining the Patreon Community: https://www.patreon.com/roaddogpodcast 2. Subscribe to the podcast on whatever platform you listen on. https://claimstakebrewing.square.site Corremos Sacramento Run Club IG: @CorremosSacramento FB: @CorremosSacramento Heylo@CorremosSacramento Corremossacramento@gmail.com Founders/Leaders Javier Macias-Salazar 916-387-5572 Francis Macias-Salazar 559-908-9031 Dalia Robles Ramirez 559-741-6781 Abel Rodriguez Black Men Run Club Robert Cathey 916-768-4261 Robert.cathey@blackmenrun.com Derrick Booth 530-680-9291 Docderrickbooth@gmail.com Claimstake Owner and CIM Streak Runner Mike Ryan mdennisryan@msn.com Philip Crimmins is at fcrimmins@gmail.com Brian Park / photographer Briane.w.park@gmail.com Sloppymooserunningclub@gmail.com ***GO SLEEVES: https://gokinesiologysleeves.com ***HAMMER NUTRITION show code: Roaddoglistener15 Listeners get a special 15% off at https://www.hammernutrition.com DRYMAX show code: Roaddog2020 Listeners get a special 15% off at https://www.drymaxsports.com/products/ Allwedoisrun.com Luis Escobar (Host) Contact: luis@roaddogpodcast.com Luis Instagram Kevin Lyons (Producer) Contact: kevin@roaddogpodcast.com yesandvideo.com Music: Slow Burn by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Original RDP Photo: Photography by Kaori Peters kaoriphoto.com Road Dog Podcast Adventure With Luis Escobar www.roaddogpodcast.com
So you just paid $95 to shoot 100 registered targets. Why does it cost that much? Where does that money go? Why does the cost for registered tournaments keep increasing? We ask all those questions and much more! We are joined by Brian Palmer of Vero Beach Clay Shooting Sports, and Mike Boire of the Greater Houston Sports Club, which are 2 people that are experts in holding tournaments. We ask them all the hard questions, and they give us honest and direct answers! We also have Cory Kruse on the phone to answer your burning questions in this Questions for the Coaches segment!!! - Greater Houston Sports Club - https://greaterhoustonsportsclub.com/- Elite Shotguns - https://elite-shotguns.com- Fiocchi USA - https://fiocchiusa.com- BAREPELT - https://barepelt.com- Rhino Chokes - https://rhinochokes.com- OtoPro Hearing Service - https://otoprotechnologies.com- RE Ranger - https://www.reranger.com (10% Discount = DEADPAIR)- Dawn Grant -https://dawngrant.com. Dead Pair Promo- https://dawngrant.com/pages/dead-pair-promo- ATLAS TRAPS - https://www.atlastraps.com- White Flyer Targets - https://whiteflyer.com- Vero Beach Clay Shooting - https://verobeachclayshooting.com- Chad Roberts - email- bpsipro@gmail.com-Dead Pair coffee - https://daltonanddeucellc.com/products/latin-american-blend?selling_plan=688883892541The Dead Pair Podcast - https://thedeadpair.com FACEBOOK- https://www.facebook.com/Thedeadpair. INSTAGRAM- https://www.instagram.com/thedeadpairpodcast/YOUTUBE- https://youtube.com/channel/UCO1ePh4I-2D0EABDbKxEgoQ
We often think of cemeteries as separate worlds unto themselves. But people buried at Confederate graveyards were surely connected to people at the African burial grounds, and the cemeteries reveal the intimacy of their connections. Ryan Smith and his students have been transformed by tending to cemeteries over the past 20 years. And: After Pearl Harbor, the United States Navy needed land for bases and training. Former William & Mary PHd student Travis Harris says the African American neighborhood of Magruder near Yorktown, Virginia was just one of the many mostly black communities forced out to make way for U.S. military bases. Later in the show: Award-winning journalist Brian Palmer grew up hearing about Magruder, his father's boyhood neighborhood that was bulldozed to make way for a US Naval base. An old picture led Brian and his wife Erin Palmer back to Magruder and across the state tracking where his ancestor was enslaved. After moving to Richmond, the couple got involved in restoring a cemetery where Brian has more ancestors.
Marquette University Political Scientist Brian Palmer-Rubin has a new book that examines the connections and disconnections between economics and politics in Mexico and how the varied governing institutions within the federated system structure levels of inequality. Palmer-Rubin's book, Evading the Patronage Trap: Interest Representation in Mexico (U Michigan Press, 2022) examines organizations as they interact with individuals and with government in the push and pull of politics and as advocates for particular interests. This model, which is essentially a story about organizations and how they work, is not, per se, specific to Mexico; there are similar examples of this kind of interaction and engagement in Brazil, in India, and elsewhere. The organizations at the heart of this research are not political parties, but instead they are conglomerates of individuals or smaller associations with particular interests—specifically economic policy and implementation—that often want policy reforms or policy outcomes from the local, regional, or national government. Parties play a role in this dynamic, but they are not the whole story. Palmer-Rubin spent significant time doing field work in a variety of rural locations, interviewing individuals, political and party actors, members of different kinds of associations, and government officials. This research fleshes out the examples and case studies at the center of the research. There have been improvements in politics and economics in Mexico since the 1990s, and this period of transition provides the historical context to explore both the patronage and the programmatic models that have evolved over the decades following the transition period. Evading the Patronage Trap focuses on the differences between rural organizations that often represent individual farms and farmers, and mid-level business organizations that represent economic and business interests. These differing types of organizations also align, a bit, with the various political parties in Mexico. The research explores how organizations and associations sustain collective action, mobilize their respective members, and how they interact with, sometimes collaboratively, sometimes antagonistically, political parties and governmental institutions in efforts to breakdown structural and economic inequities. Lilly J. Goren is a professor of political science at Carroll University in Waukesha, WI. She is co-editor of The Politics of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (University Press of Kansas, 2022), as well as co-editor of the award winning book, Women and the White House: Gender, Popular Culture, and Presidential Politics (University Press of Kentucky, 2012), Email her comments at lgoren@carrollu.edu or tweet to @gorenlj. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Marquette University Political Scientist Brian Palmer-Rubin has a new book that examines the connections and disconnections between economics and politics in Mexico and how the varied governing institutions within the federated system structure levels of inequality. Palmer-Rubin's book, Evading the Patronage Trap: Interest Representation in Mexico (U Michigan Press, 2022) examines organizations as they interact with individuals and with government in the push and pull of politics and as advocates for particular interests. This model, which is essentially a story about organizations and how they work, is not, per se, specific to Mexico; there are similar examples of this kind of interaction and engagement in Brazil, in India, and elsewhere. The organizations at the heart of this research are not political parties, but instead they are conglomerates of individuals or smaller associations with particular interests—specifically economic policy and implementation—that often want policy reforms or policy outcomes from the local, regional, or national government. Parties play a role in this dynamic, but they are not the whole story. Palmer-Rubin spent significant time doing field work in a variety of rural locations, interviewing individuals, political and party actors, members of different kinds of associations, and government officials. This research fleshes out the examples and case studies at the center of the research. There have been improvements in politics and economics in Mexico since the 1990s, and this period of transition provides the historical context to explore both the patronage and the programmatic models that have evolved over the decades following the transition period. Evading the Patronage Trap focuses on the differences between rural organizations that often represent individual farms and farmers, and mid-level business organizations that represent economic and business interests. These differing types of organizations also align, a bit, with the various political parties in Mexico. The research explores how organizations and associations sustain collective action, mobilize their respective members, and how they interact with, sometimes collaboratively, sometimes antagonistically, political parties and governmental institutions in efforts to breakdown structural and economic inequities. Lilly J. Goren is a professor of political science at Carroll University in Waukesha, WI. She is co-editor of The Politics of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (University Press of Kansas, 2022), as well as co-editor of the award winning book, Women and the White House: Gender, Popular Culture, and Presidential Politics (University Press of Kentucky, 2012), Email her comments at lgoren@carrollu.edu or tweet to @gorenlj. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/latin-american-studies
Marquette University Political Scientist Brian Palmer-Rubin has a new book that examines the connections and disconnections between economics and politics in Mexico and how the varied governing institutions within the federated system structure levels of inequality. Palmer-Rubin's book, Evading the Patronage Trap: Interest Representation in Mexico (U Michigan Press, 2022) examines organizations as they interact with individuals and with government in the push and pull of politics and as advocates for particular interests. This model, which is essentially a story about organizations and how they work, is not, per se, specific to Mexico; there are similar examples of this kind of interaction and engagement in Brazil, in India, and elsewhere. The organizations at the heart of this research are not political parties, but instead they are conglomerates of individuals or smaller associations with particular interests—specifically economic policy and implementation—that often want policy reforms or policy outcomes from the local, regional, or national government. Parties play a role in this dynamic, but they are not the whole story. Palmer-Rubin spent significant time doing field work in a variety of rural locations, interviewing individuals, political and party actors, members of different kinds of associations, and government officials. This research fleshes out the examples and case studies at the center of the research. There have been improvements in politics and economics in Mexico since the 1990s, and this period of transition provides the historical context to explore both the patronage and the programmatic models that have evolved over the decades following the transition period. Evading the Patronage Trap focuses on the differences between rural organizations that often represent individual farms and farmers, and mid-level business organizations that represent economic and business interests. These differing types of organizations also align, a bit, with the various political parties in Mexico. The research explores how organizations and associations sustain collective action, mobilize their respective members, and how they interact with, sometimes collaboratively, sometimes antagonistically, political parties and governmental institutions in efforts to breakdown structural and economic inequities. Lilly J. Goren is a professor of political science at Carroll University in Waukesha, WI. She is co-editor of The Politics of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (University Press of Kansas, 2022), as well as co-editor of the award winning book, Women and the White House: Gender, Popular Culture, and Presidential Politics (University Press of Kentucky, 2012), Email her comments at lgoren@carrollu.edu or tweet to @gorenlj. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/political-science
Marquette University Political Scientist Brian Palmer-Rubin has a new book that examines the connections and disconnections between economics and politics in Mexico and how the varied governing institutions within the federated system structure levels of inequality. Palmer-Rubin's book, Evading the Patronage Trap: Interest Representation in Mexico (U Michigan Press, 2022) examines organizations as they interact with individuals and with government in the push and pull of politics and as advocates for particular interests. This model, which is essentially a story about organizations and how they work, is not, per se, specific to Mexico; there are similar examples of this kind of interaction and engagement in Brazil, in India, and elsewhere. The organizations at the heart of this research are not political parties, but instead they are conglomerates of individuals or smaller associations with particular interests—specifically economic policy and implementation—that often want policy reforms or policy outcomes from the local, regional, or national government. Parties play a role in this dynamic, but they are not the whole story. Palmer-Rubin spent significant time doing field work in a variety of rural locations, interviewing individuals, political and party actors, members of different kinds of associations, and government officials. This research fleshes out the examples and case studies at the center of the research. There have been improvements in politics and economics in Mexico since the 1990s, and this period of transition provides the historical context to explore both the patronage and the programmatic models that have evolved over the decades following the transition period. Evading the Patronage Trap focuses on the differences between rural organizations that often represent individual farms and farmers, and mid-level business organizations that represent economic and business interests. These differing types of organizations also align, a bit, with the various political parties in Mexico. The research explores how organizations and associations sustain collective action, mobilize their respective members, and how they interact with, sometimes collaboratively, sometimes antagonistically, political parties and governmental institutions in efforts to breakdown structural and economic inequities. Lilly J. Goren is a professor of political science at Carroll University in Waukesha, WI. She is co-editor of The Politics of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (University Press of Kansas, 2022), as well as co-editor of the award winning book, Women and the White House: Gender, Popular Culture, and Presidential Politics (University Press of Kentucky, 2012), Email her comments at lgoren@carrollu.edu or tweet to @gorenlj. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology
Marquette University Political Scientist Brian Palmer-Rubin has a new book that examines the connections and disconnections between economics and politics in Mexico and how the varied governing institutions within the federated system structure levels of inequality. Palmer-Rubin's book, Evading the Patronage Trap: Interest Representation in Mexico (U Michigan Press, 2022) examines organizations as they interact with individuals and with government in the push and pull of politics and as advocates for particular interests. This model, which is essentially a story about organizations and how they work, is not, per se, specific to Mexico; there are similar examples of this kind of interaction and engagement in Brazil, in India, and elsewhere. The organizations at the heart of this research are not political parties, but instead they are conglomerates of individuals or smaller associations with particular interests—specifically economic policy and implementation—that often want policy reforms or policy outcomes from the local, regional, or national government. Parties play a role in this dynamic, but they are not the whole story. Palmer-Rubin spent significant time doing field work in a variety of rural locations, interviewing individuals, political and party actors, members of different kinds of associations, and government officials. This research fleshes out the examples and case studies at the center of the research. There have been improvements in politics and economics in Mexico since the 1990s, and this period of transition provides the historical context to explore both the patronage and the programmatic models that have evolved over the decades following the transition period. Evading the Patronage Trap focuses on the differences between rural organizations that often represent individual farms and farmers, and mid-level business organizations that represent economic and business interests. These differing types of organizations also align, a bit, with the various political parties in Mexico. The research explores how organizations and associations sustain collective action, mobilize their respective members, and how they interact with, sometimes collaboratively, sometimes antagonistically, political parties and governmental institutions in efforts to breakdown structural and economic inequities. Lilly J. Goren is a professor of political science at Carroll University in Waukesha, WI. She is co-editor of The Politics of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (University Press of Kansas, 2022), as well as co-editor of the award winning book, Women and the White House: Gender, Popular Culture, and Presidential Politics (University Press of Kentucky, 2012), Email her comments at lgoren@carrollu.edu or tweet to @gorenlj. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/public-policy
Marquette University Political Scientist Brian Palmer-Rubin has a new book that examines the connections and disconnections between economics and politics in Mexico and how the varied governing institutions within the federated system structure levels of inequality. Palmer-Rubin's book, Evading the Patronage Trap: Interest Representation in Mexico (U Michigan Press, 2022) examines organizations as they interact with individuals and with government in the push and pull of politics and as advocates for particular interests. This model, which is essentially a story about organizations and how they work, is not, per se, specific to Mexico; there are similar examples of this kind of interaction and engagement in Brazil, in India, and elsewhere. The organizations at the heart of this research are not political parties, but instead they are conglomerates of individuals or smaller associations with particular interests—specifically economic policy and implementation—that often want policy reforms or policy outcomes from the local, regional, or national government. Parties play a role in this dynamic, but they are not the whole story. Palmer-Rubin spent significant time doing field work in a variety of rural locations, interviewing individuals, political and party actors, members of different kinds of associations, and government officials. This research fleshes out the examples and case studies at the center of the research. There have been improvements in politics and economics in Mexico since the 1990s, and this period of transition provides the historical context to explore both the patronage and the programmatic models that have evolved over the decades following the transition period. Evading the Patronage Trap focuses on the differences between rural organizations that often represent individual farms and farmers, and mid-level business organizations that represent economic and business interests. These differing types of organizations also align, a bit, with the various political parties in Mexico. The research explores how organizations and associations sustain collective action, mobilize their respective members, and how they interact with, sometimes collaboratively, sometimes antagonistically, political parties and governmental institutions in efforts to breakdown structural and economic inequities. Lilly J. Goren is a professor of political science at Carroll University in Waukesha, WI. She is co-editor of The Politics of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (University Press of Kansas, 2022), as well as co-editor of the award winning book, Women and the White House: Gender, Popular Culture, and Presidential Politics (University Press of Kentucky, 2012), Email her comments at lgoren@carrollu.edu or tweet to @gorenlj. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We have some big news for everyone! We address the news first, then we dive right into Fiocchi USA! First, we have a Tourney Talk, brought to you by Scorechaser. Directly following, we announce some big news for The Dead Pair Podcast, and what it means to our listeners! This news brings in our guests, Brian Palmer and Aaron Willoughby. Not to be outdone, We have Fiocchi USA reps Holly Hammond and Christian Hogg to answer some of your burning questions, how are things going with shot shell market in the US, and what the current climate is of Fiocchi USA. This is a jam packed episode and we could not be more excited to share this info with you!!!- Elite Shotguns - https://elite-shotguns.com- Fiocchi USA - https://fiocchiusa.com- OtoPro Hearing Service- https://otoprotechnologies.com- BAREPELT- https://barepelt.com- White Flyer Targets - https://whiteflyer.com- RE Ranger- https://www.reranger.com (10% Discount = DEADPAIR)- Dawn Grant -https://dawngrant.com. Dead Pair Promo- https://dawngrant.com/pages/dead-pair-promo- NEGRINI CASES- https://negrinicases.com/the-dead-pair/- Rhino Chokes - https://rhinochokes.com- ATLAS TRAPS- https://www.atlastraps.com- Vero Beach Clay Shooting- https://verobeachclayshooting.com- Chad Roberts-email- bpsipro@gmail.comThe Dead Pair Podcast - https://thedeadpair.com FACEBOOK- https://www.facebook.com/Thedeadpair. INSTAGRAM- https://www.instagram.com/thedeadpairpodcast/YOUTUBE- https://youtube.com/channel/UCO1ePh4I-2D0EABDbKxEgoQ
This week Alex's Yaya-ism is about the perils of giving knives and Anthony GETS TIPSY about Celebrity bookings. They are joined by Brian Palmer (Senior Vice President of the National Speakers Bureau) Anthony recently a graduate of the SDSU Masters in Event Management had the pleasure of being mentored by Brian Palmer for the last 18 months. Bollotta-FIDE digs into how he makes an impact on the event industry based on the success of his event contributions. They get into the importance of follow through with volunteer responsibilities and taking advantage of your network of referrals. Find out about how Brian finds balance between his work and personal life and the importance of the simple act of determining a client's goal for a speaker. Stop reading, start listening. ENJOY. LEAVE A 5 STAR REVIEW and COMMENT HERE!Bollotta-FIDE could use your help.Please answer this survey: https://stats.blubrry.com/s-85335/getting_started/Submit ASK ANTHONY questions on the form at www.bollotta.com/podcastFollow @BollottaEntertainment on Instagram
Då och då bevittnar vi saker som får det att knyta sig i magen, när man märker att något inte står rätt till men inte kan vara hundra procent säker. Hur ska man göra för våga dryfta sin oro när insatsen kanske är så hög som en vänskap, sitt arbete eller bara förnedring till allmän beskådan? Det kan vara oförklarliga blåmärken, personlighetsförändring och isolering. Vissa av de situationer som kan vara svåra att agera i handlar om när man misstänker att någon utsätts för våld i nära relation. Ett klassiskt råd till någon som ska ta upp en sådan här oro med någon närstående är att utgå från sig själv, säger psykologen Anna Bennich. Säga att jag är lite orolig för dig, jag känner inte igen dig längre istället för att gå på och säga att du borde lämna din partner!, det kan snarare få personen att bli mer isolerad. Anna Bennich menar också att en viktig sak att förmedla till en närstående som man misstänker far illa är att visa att man står kvar, oavsett. Man tar sig inte ur en våldsam relation på egen hand, och då är det jätteviktigt att man känner att man har någon att ringa som bryr sig. Även om det kan ta väldigt lång tid från det att man säger ifrån till att personen faktiskt lämnar, säger hon. Gäster i programmet: Anna Bennich, psykolog, Brian Palmer, socialantropolog vid Uppsala universitet, Per Bauhn, filosof och Andreas Wedeen, psykolog som skrivit böcker om rättshaveristiskt beteende. Programledare: Ulrika Hjalmarson NeidemanProducent: Alice Lööf
This Is Islay in conversation with Brian Palmer, a big wheel in the Islay cycling world, a drummer, and also full-time editor of the Ileach, Islay's own award-winning newspaper. How did he join the Ileach (many years ago) and how does he balance the editorial and commercial sides of running a newspaper. This Is Islay is a volunteer-led podcast celebrating the people, places, events and connections which shape Islay and Jura. Brian Palmer was interviewed by Jolyon Thurgood with Glen Roberts in the recording studios at Islay High School (many thanks), in June 2022.
Premiere Speakers CEO Shawn Hanks sits down with National Speakers Bureau Senior Vice President Brian Palmer to reflect on his 50 years in the speaking industry. Brian answers questions on how the speaking world has changed over the years, his first booking, and advice to speakers to make a great event. You can learn more about Brian Palmer by visiting: https://nationalspeakers.com/ Beyond Speaking is hosted by Brian Lord and produced by Eric Woodie
This is a special episode. We'll be joined by Shifa Rahman and Brian Palmer of the Convict Leasing and Labor Project and Savannah Eldrige of the Abolish Slavery National Network. The mission of the Convict Leasing and Labor Project is to expose the history and ongoing impact of the convict leasing system and its connection to modern prison slavery while restoring the dignity of all victims of forced labor and their descendants. CLLP aims to lead a national conversation on the history and impact of forced labor, including chattel slavery, convict leasing, and the modern crisis of mass incarceration. The Sugar Land 95 are the 95 African-American individuals unearthed during a construction in Sugar Land, Texas, 30 miles southwest of Houston. Archaeologists found evidence that the 95 individuals belonged to the state of Texas' convict leasing system and were buried in the unmarked gravesite. The first bone was found in February 2018, by a backhoe operator clawing through the dirt on land owned by the Fort Bend Independent School District. By the summer, the remains of 94 men and one woman, all African-American victims of convict leasing, had been recovered on the future site of a career and technical education center. Ranging in age from 14 to 70, the inmates had muscular builds but were malnourished, their bones misshapen from back-breaking, repetitive labor. They were buried in plain pine boxes sometime between 1878 and 1911. CLLP has been at the forefront of the fight to preserve the Sugar Land 95's burial ground and ensure they are properly memorialized. As always, we'll have powerful music, clips, and we'll bring the ancestors words back to life for a new generation with our Bridging The Gap segment.
On this Episode of OB Talkwire, i chat on riverside with my former coach about his Division one college football experience, Cleveland Browns, hardest stadiums to play in, our kicking days in high school and many more!!
210-972-1842: Text "Hive" to get added to weekly meetings, text "course" to learn how to make 6 figures on one land deal. Sign up at hivemindcrm.io Follow Us On YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbulcrC4WbOy5Fzu0eWzNVQ/?sub_confirmation=1 Follow Us On Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hivemindcrm/ Follow Us On TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hivemindcrm?lang=en Join The FB Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/137799891494707 Help support the show https://anchor.fm/hivemindcrm/support --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/hivemindcrm/support
In this episode, SilverCloud's Senior Digital Health Scientist Dr. Jorge Palacios chats with Dr. Brian Palmer, Vice President of Mental Health and Addiction, Allina Health about how an integrated and coordinated care system combined with digital health can help to serve the growing needs of the community. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This episode features Dr. Brian Palmer, Psychiatrist at Allina Health. Here, he discusses the long-term effects of the pandemic on the mental health of adolescents, the advantages of telehealth for behavioral health, the need to better integrate health systems, and more.
This episode features Dr. Brian Palmer, Psychiatrist at Allina Health. Here, he discusses the long-term effects of the pandemic on the mental health of adolescents, the advantages of telehealth for behavioral health, the need to better integrate health systems, and more.
Brian Palmer is SVP of National Speakers Bureau. Over forty years ago Brian's father, John Palmer, founded National Speakers Bureau because he wanted to provide knowledgeable, ethical and creatively thoughtful options to those people charged with finding the right speakers for their audiences. In 2018 NSB became a division of Premiere Speakers Bureau where Brian continues to help his customers capture the hearts and minds of those important to them. Brian and his jazz violinist wife of 28 years, Paula, have two kids who are working hard, being good and enjoying their 20s.Brian graduated from Drake University with a BA in Speech Communications, and earned an MBA from Lake Forest Graduate School of Management. To learn more about National Speakers Bureau, go to www.nationalspeakers.comTo reach Brian: Brian@Nationalspeakers.com or 847.281.3574 ***************************************************************************If you'd like to talk to Terry McDougall about coaching or being a guest on Marketing Mambo, here's how you can reach her:https://www.terrybmcdougall.comhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/terrybmcdougallTerry@Terrybmcdougall.comHer book Winning the Game of Work: Career Happiness and Success on Your Own Terms is available at Amazon.
Melissa Vaughn speaks with Brian Palmer, a descendant and volunteer with Friends of East End Cemetery, a non-profit organization working to restore, preserve, and archive the lives interred in this and neighboring Evergreen Cemetery, both historic African American burial grounds located in Richmond, VA. This piece is part of KCRW's 24 Hour Radio Race.
What does Scarlett Johansson and Disney have to do with the future of the film industry? In time where the future of what we love in films can change by the stroke of a pen, having someone of her caliber to stand up is something inspiring. Fear Street 1994 is the first stop on our journey through the newly created StineVerse (MCU for RL Stine) and what a bloody thrill fest it is. We talk about and break down the first movie in this 3 part Trilogy by Director Leigh Janiak which explores the bloody history of Shadyside and the Witch Sarah Fier. We talk about the photography direction and story direction the film goes through and even some Easter eggs that we picked up on/ They guys also cover: Cannes Film Festival award winning director Shahrbanoo Sadat made it out of Kabul Afghanistan alive, and is in route to France! The Witcher Season 2 Starts December 17th! The Witcher Nightmare of the Wolf is out NOW on Netflix! - Find out what we think about this one And so much more Come join the family on our Reddit r/UncoveredCinema Post memes, get updates, join the conversation around the upcoming film featured in the following weeks podcast Credits Hosted by: Brian (@brdpro) and Will (@WillhooverTV) Created by: Brian Palmer, Will Hoover Directed by: Jailene Jimenez Branding by: Azeemanjum @idesigngfx Business Inquiries: uncoveredcinema@gmail.com Check out our socials and join in on the conversation: @uncoveredcinema
Does Warner Brothers and DC Deserve a second chance with the NEW The Suicide Squad? Are Idris Elba and Margot Robbie able to carry the film and do they even need to? The guys take a watch and discuss their opinions on the new direction the DC Cinematic Universe has taken. Will talks about his thoughts on the fall of Afghanistan and his time spent in the country as a US Army soldier...and so much more on this week's episode of Uncovered Cinema Podcast! Lebron James needed a Stunt double but Margot Robbie didn't? find out why Malice at the Palace Uncovered film of the week Breaking down the impressive visuals of The Suicide Squad And so much more Come join the family on our Reddit r/UncoveredCinema Post memes, get updates, join the conversation around the upcoming film featured in the following weeks podcast Credits Hosted by: Brian (@brdpro) and Will (@WillhooverTV) Created by: Brian Palmer, Will Hoover Directed by: Jailene Jimenez Branding by: Azeemanjum @idesigngfx Website Business Inquiries: uncoveredcinema@gmail.com Check out our socials and join in on the conversation: @uncoveredcinema
25 years have passed since Michael Jordan has graced the silver screen with Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck in the 1996 classic Space Jam, but was the wait worth it? Stepping in as the new generational legend Lebron James has big shoes to fill, and the guys discuss; if he is able to fill them, and does he do enough to warrant that honor. The guys discuss how Lola Bunny's Boobs went on vacation, the changing of the space jam universe and what that means for the toons. The guys also talk about Real Steel 2 With Hugh Jackman The future of Movies and VR Movies Netflix and their impact on the Film industry And so much more Come join the family on our Reddit r/UncoveredCinema Post memes, get updates, join the conversation around the upcoming film featured in the following weeks podcast Credits Hosted by: Brian (@brdpro) and Will (@WillhooverTV) Created by: Brian Palmer, Will Hoover Directed by: Jailene Jimenez Branding by: Azeemanjum @idesigngfx, Website Business Inquiries: uncoveredcinema@gmail.com Check out our socials and join in on the conversation: @uncoveredcinema
When ambition and duty tangle, which one is the victor? Would you give up your dream job, your one ambition in life, because you were living a lie? Greed inside the human heart is something mankind has fought with for all of time, and two popes tackle that very topic in an interesting way. Join Brian and Will as they discuss the way the film portrays the catholic church and the pope, as well as; Tech Corner: Speaking on some differences between LED and Tungsten Lights Chinese documentary on the protests in Hong Kong And so much more Come join the family on our Reddit r/UncoveredCinema Post memes, get updates, join the conversation around the upcoming film featured in the following weeks podcast Credits Hosted by: Brian (@brdpro) and Will (@WillhooverTV) Created by: Brian Palmer, Will Hoover Directed by: Jailene Jimenez Branding by: Azeemanjum @idesigngfx Business Inquiries: uncoveredcinema@gmail.com Check out our socials and join in on the conversation: @uncoveredcinema
If you were given a chance to change your family's future, to go from dirt poor to filthy rich, would you take it? This week the guys explore the creepy and scary side of Bollywood with Tumbbad on Prime Video. They dive into the differences of the horror scene in Bollywood compared to Hollywood, and discuss the real consequences of greed. and ask the question, when is enough, enough? They guys also cover: The next 2 entries into the 2018 Halloween reboot; 7th Transformers Movie - Rise of the beast and who you should expect to see; Snow White for the new Disney live action film has finally been cast, and we got the deets; And so much more... Come join the family on our Reddit and our Socials (Facebook, twitter, Instagram, TikTok) r/UncoveredCinema and @UncoveredCinema Post memes, get updates, join the conversation around the upcoming film featured in the following weeks podcast Credits Hosted by: Brian (@brdpro) and Will (@WillhooverTV) Created by: Brian Palmer, Will Hoover Directed by: Jailene Jimenez Branding by: Azeemanjum @idesigngfx Business Inquiries: uncoveredcinema@gmail.com Check out our socials and join in on the conversation: @uncoveredcinema
On this industry insight episode of the History of Advertising Podcast, we are looking at the rise of the internet, and how it's affected adland. With contributions from Rory Sutherland, Judie Lannon, Martin Boase, Dave Trott, and Brian Palmer.
We are delighted to have an amazing individual as our guest for today! Brian Palmer, the former President of the International Association of Speakers Bureau is joining us! Brian has had a vast amount of experience with booking speakers over the last forty years. He is with us today to talk about what he and his clients look for when recruiting speakers, to give some great advice about what you could do to convince him that you should be the next speaker he books, and share his experience after selling his company. We hope that you enjoy today's conversation! Brian Palmer's bio Brian Palmer is the Senior Vice President of the National Speakers Bureau, a division of the Premiere Speakers Bureau of Nashville. Brian started to work with his father at NSB after finishing college in 1980. After spending 38 years there and having bought the company from his family, he decided on a new path and sold the firm. He continues to work for the firm, helping professionals to plan effective gatherings. Along the way, Brian has been involved in the meeting industry as President of the International Association of Speakers Bureaus, on MPI's International Board, and as President of Chicago's MPI chapter. In that time, Brian has also been given some industry awards. MPI presented him with their International Supplier of the Year Award, the National Speakers Association gave him their Meeting Partner of the Year Award, and the International Association of Speakers Bureaus presented him with the John Palmer award, named for his father. Brian and his wife of 30 years live in the suburbs of Chicago. Brian's father Brian's father was in the entertainment business as a bandleader. When he got tired of traveling, he started the National Speakers Bureau. Getting into the business of speakers Brian was a freshman in high school when his father started NSB, and he used to work there, stuffing envelopes and licking stamps, in his spare time. He continued working there part-time throughout high school and college, and in 1980, he began working there full-time. Selecting speakers Brian explains that there is no strict formula for how he goes about selecting the speakers he represents. He relies on his gut to a certain degree when he hears a speech that could be of interest to his customers and falls within the realm of the market he serves, which is mainly corporations and business-related associations. What Brian Palmer looks for in the speakers he selects The way that speakers interact with Brian Palmer gives him an idea of how they might interact with their customers. He looks for people who deliver interesting talks and interact well with his customers and the audience. What happens before the speech is critical in the run-up to the presentation. If Brian does not think those things will be right, he will not be interested in booking that speaker. Politically-oriented speakers Currently, people are less apt to hire speakers to appear at events for fear of them offending their audience in some way. Some people are okay with hearing views divergent from their own. But there are often people at the extremes who do not want to consider any ideas they disagree with. So there are a lot fewer politically-oriented speeches booked in the business realm currently. You cannot please everyone Brian has found that no matter how good a speech is, there is always someone unhappy about it. Brian's secret to selecting the right kind of speakers The way that people react to Brian's suggestion of some small adjustment to their presentation is one of his secrets to selecting the right kind of speakers. If they are unwilling to consider feedback, he is a lot less interested in booking them. Something Brian Palmer looks for in a speaker One of the things Brian Palmer looks for is the recognition that the most important person in the room is not the speaker but the audience. Well-refined presentations Although Brian does a bit of coaching, he prefers it when people's presentations and shows have been well-refined by the time they get to him. He is not interested in booking rookies because NSB is a large entity with a brand to uphold. He prefers to book people with experience and who are prepared for things that might not go right. Having your things in order When you contact a large speakers bureau in the US, you need to have things in order. Speakers should consider using resources to prepare themselves. The National Speakers Association has many educational seminars and products to help speakers understand how to put an offering together. People get anxious about spending a lot of money on speakers People get anxious about spending a lot of money on speakers because they want to be sure that the speaker will reflect well on them and their meeting. So, Brian advocates for people having a discipline for their selection process and their speaker preparation process, to make sure that the people they hire do what they want to get done. Staying in the industry Brian was interested in remaining in the events business and industry after he sold his business. He wanted to go about it differently, however. So his business coach suggested that he should find someone to work with, with a similar philosophy and business approach. People in the lecture business Brian focused on people in the lecture business with whom he thought he would want to do business. He approached someone at Premiere Speakers Bureau who liked his idea, and things moved very fast from there. A lot of their negotiations had to do with the finer points and with what Brian's role was going to be. Brian found that the way the transaction worked was decidedly fair. A lawyer He hired a lawyer to help him with the business transaction, and he feels happy with the way things have worked out. Business advice from Brian Palmer Brian Palmer's advice is for you to do business with somebody you would want to spend some time with, not someone you would want to run away from. Connect with Eric On LinkedIn On Facebook On Instagram On Website Resources: Book mentioned: The Wealthy Speaker 2.0: The Proven Formula for Building Your Successful Speaking Business by Jane E. Atkinson The National Speakers Association has many educational seminars and products to help speakers to understand how to put an offering together.
“A director must be a policeman, a midwife, a psychoanalyst, a sycophant and a bastard.” On this episode of the history of advertising podcast, we are taking a closer look at the policemen, midwives, psychoanalysts and sycophantic bastards – as we look at the role that the director plays in bringing TV ads together. Contributions from Sir Alan Parker, Hugh Hudson, Brian Palmer, and Jeremy Bullmore.
Starting with the first TV ad ever broadcast in the UK, we continue our look at the rise of commercial TV in the UK. We see how the medium evolved from its uninspiring beginnings, when directors and writers started focusing on producing ads that were just as good as the TV shows themselves. Contributions from Sir Alan Parker, Brian Palmer, and Jeremy Bullmore.
On this episode of the History of Advertising Podcast we look at how commercial TV came into being as a medium, the effect that it had on the world of advertising, and why it was initially seen as being too vulgar for the British. Contributions from Brian Palmer, Jeremy Bullmore, and Rory Sutherland.
Episode 20 features Brian Palmer, Golf Course Superintendent at the new, and world famous Tara Iti Golf Club. Brian's career started as a youngster working for his father in New York. Stops at Merion Golf Club and Shore Acres led the way to an around the globe venture to New Zealand! Now growing fine fescues on one of the world's newest and recognized links, Brian provides unique insight into the variables, technique, and the adventure itself!
The Peabody Awards announced winners in radio and podcasting this week, among them Type Investigations and Reveal for their "Monumental Lies" episode. After filing 175 open records requests to track public spending on Confederate memorials and organizations, reporters Brian Palmer and Seth Freed Wessler found that more than $40 million in state and federal funds have been spent on the maintenance and expansion of such monuments and sites over the past decade.
Wanna Host Your Own Podcast?Click here to see how my friends at Podetize can helpPurchase John's new bookThe Sale Is in the TaleJohn Livesay, The Pitch WhispererShare The ShowDid you enjoy the show? I'd love it if you subscribed today and left us a 5-star review!Click this linkClick on the 'Subscribe' button below the artworkGo to the 'Ratings and Reviews' sectionClick on 'Write a Review'Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share!Here's How »Join The Successful Pitch community today:JohnLivesay.comJohn Livesay FacebookJohn Livesay TwitterJohn Livesay LinkedInJohn Livesay YouTube