Podcasts about British English

Forms of the English language used in the United Kingdom

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Latest podcast episodes about British English

The Worm Hole Podcast
131: Nikki May (This Motherless Land)

The Worm Hole Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2025 44:03


Charlie and Nikki May (This Motherless Land) discuss her childhood in Lagos and moving to England, various ways Nikki's story changed over time (quite a lot!), the Nigerian women's relay team of 1992, and the upcoming TV adaptations of both This Motherless Land and Wahala. Please note that there is some swearing in this episode. General references: About the Nigerian Women's Relay team win at the 1992 Olympics Rocks (2019) Nikki made the shortlist of the Nigerian Prize for Literature Books mentioned by name or extensively: Enid Blyton: The Famous Five (series) Jane Austen: Pride And Prejudice Jane Austen: Emma Jane Austen: Mansfield Park Nikki May: Wahala Nikki May: This Motherless Land Release details: recorded 29th July 2025; published 27th October 2025 Where to find Nikki online: Website || Instagram Where to find Charlie online: Website || Instagram || TikTok Discussions 01:50 Being inspired by Jane Austen and Mansfield Park and introducing the way that the book is inspired by Nikki's own life 05:27 Expanding on how this book is inspired by Nikki's childhood in Lagos, Nigeria, and later move to England 08:52 About Nikki's brother, to whom This Motherless Land is dedicated 09:56 Talking about the Ikoyi club in Nigeria Nikki's family was a part of 11:03 The story changed so much during the writing! We discuss a few different areas - Liv, romance, JoJo 16:10 Somewhat like Funke, Nikki changed her name when she moved to England. We also discuss switching between Nigerian English and British English 20:33 Funke's father's grief 23:42 Brief discussion on how Jane Austen's sister couldn't attend her funeral 24:53 Easter eggs - carnation milk, and differences with food between the nations in this context 27:39 Could Liv have been believed about Kate? 29:27 The story beyond the pages and brief info about both This Mother Land's and Wahala's TV adaptations 33:40 Making each book different 35:30 What Nikki is writing at the moment; discussing ageism and the difference between men and women in that context 39:53 About Billy the parrot 41:06 Nikki's dogs and doing a combined dog and plot walk

English, please
Episode 47: The Origins of "American" English

English, please

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2025 9:06


English, please is a podcast designed to help improve your English by listening to clear, intermediate English about many different topics like history, culture, art, music, travel, and language.Episode 47: The Origins of "American" EnglishDiscover how American English began and how it grew apart from British English over time. Learn about some of the people, places, and events that helped shape the language spoken in the United States today. As with all episodes, this one is just the right length for practicing your listening skills in one sitting. This means you can improve your English without needing a lot of time.Episode vocabularyAccess vocabulary words using a podcast player that supports chapters, like Apple Podcasts, Player FM, Overcast. Episode transcriptPodcast website Buy me a coffee to support the showSubscribe to the newsletter for episode updates and occasional English-language content to help you practice! Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

MHG Podcast
294 : Megabonk!

MHG Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2025 28:58


The words ‘Wii', ‘Bonk' & ‘Fanny Pack' are never not funny in British English & we give one of them a right good workout with Megabonk (@megabonk.bsky.social). There's also Snoopy & The Great Mystery Club (@cradlegames.bsky.social) & Yooka-Replaylee (@playtonicgames.com) diverting our tiny minds. SHOWNOTES: 00:10 - Intro 01:31 - Snoopy & The Great Mystery Club (@cradlegames.bsky.social) 08:02 - Megabonk (@megabonk.bsky.social) 18:40 - Yooka-Replaylee (@playtonicgames.com) 28:13 - Outro

English Biz - Radio TOK FM
Business English na poziomie C1? „Dyplomatka” zrobi to lepiej niż niejeden kurs!

English Biz - Radio TOK FM

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2025 15:05


Harvey Specter who? Czas pożegnać „Suits” i zrobić miejsce dla Kate Wyler z „The Diplomat”! W „English Biz” omawiamy najlepsze zwroty z 3. sezonu, przypominamy językowe perełki z poprzednich odcinków i różnice między American a British English. Na koniec quiz ze zwrotem, który może uratować niejedno biznesowe spotkanie. Sprawdźcie się! Zwroty: Walk me through this That's not the hill I'm going to die on Optics matter He's punching above his weight Let's table this It's a bit of a mess This is a disaster to be read in To read the room Before you walk into that meeting, read the room To get someone on board We need London on board before we make a move To take the fall (for something) He took the fall so the administration wouldn't have to To keep someone in the loop Make sure Washington stays in the loop To walk a fine line She's walking a fine line between diplomacy and betrayal That's not the case To take something off my hands In hindsight She hated it from the jump It's going to be a pain point I will draft it Let's not play chicken with me Too on the nose To be on your feet Lay it on me Inflection point A soft body Make-work It will go right down the drain Facts are on the table Run that up the flagpole Quiz: It is going to be a ....... point a) stain b) crane c) hurt d) pain

一席英语·脱口秀:老外来了
“注意安全”不是“Pay attention to safety”,那该咋说?

一席英语·脱口秀:老外来了

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2025 11:06


主播:Flora(中国)+ Erin(美国) 音乐:Breathe我们收到一位粉丝投稿,表示在生活中经常见到奇怪的直白机翻标语,比如“Pay attention to safety”,实际上应该翻译为“Stay Safe”或者“Safety First”,意思是“注意安全”。今天我们就一起来学习六大类地道英文标语,看看生活中那些奇奇怪怪的英文标语到底错在哪儿?为常见“翻车”标语翻译纠错!01. 禁止类标语:No+名词/动词-ing表示禁止做某事,结构为“No”后直接加名词或动词-ing。“No” should be directly followed by a noun or gerund (动名词,就是动词-ing) - don't add “is” or “do” after it!No smoking 禁止吸烟 No parking 禁止停车No photography 禁止拍照02. 警告类标语:Do not+动词“Do not”比“No”稍正式。It is directly followed by an action verb to express a specific behavior (某个具体动作) that should not be done.Do not touch 请勿触摸 Do not climb 请勿攀爬Do not lean 请勿倚靠03. 危险警示类标语:Caution: / Warning:Caution: / Warning:+潜在危险,常见于公共场所或商场。Caution: Wet floor 小心地滑 Caution: Watch your step 小心台阶Caution: Hot surface 高温危险与”Warning“相比,”Caution“比较温和,”Warning“语气更强烈、更紧急。Warning sounds like a police gave you an official notice (官方通知). 所以见到”warning“这样的标志一定要小心了(you'd better be careful)。04. 提醒类标语:Be+形容词提示状态,常见于通知栏。用于温和提醒、告知注意事项的时候。 Be careful / Mind your head 小心碰头 Be patient 请耐心等候Be quiet 保持安静“Be+形容词”结构,用来描述应该保持什么状态,类似于我们提到的“stay safe”。那么“be happy”就是“保持开心”。05. 限制类标语:... Only用于限制特定人群或用途。闲人免进:No enter other people 只有授权人员可以进,就是闲人免进。Authorized Personnel Only 非工作人员禁止入内:No entry for others 非工作人员禁止入内,就是仅限工作人员。Staff Only 仅限出口:Only out ”出“可不是用“out”,而是用“exit”出口这个词。Exit Only 06. 注意类标语:Mind+需要注意的事Mind your head 小心碰头Mind the step 小心台阶Mind the gap 小心站台空隙 “Mind”在这里不是“想”,而是“注意”。This is super common in British English.你可能会在地铁中听到播报:“Mind the gap”,这在其他很多地方也会用到,especially where there's a space between the train and the platform (站台)。07. 标语改错 小心滑倒:Slip Carefully 这个标语的翻译是在说要小心地滑倒、优雅地滑倒(fall with grace)。正确的翻译应该是:Wet Floor / Be careful: Slippery floor 出口:Just get out, don't get in. This one sounds so rude, like get out, don't come back!正确的翻译应该是:Exit Only 你猜对了吗?08. 其他常用易错标语Occupied:(厕所)有人/使用中 You'll see this on restroom doors (厕所的门上) when someone is inside (当有人在里面). 表示厕所被占用了。Out of Order: 暂停使用/故障中This goes on broken equipment (已经损坏的设备) or unavailable facilities (已经无法使用的设施上). 但是这里不是违反规则,而是暂停使用或者故障中。Please Keep off the Grass: 请勿踩踏草坪“Keep off”是避开;“Keep off the grass”就是请勿踩踏草坪。It's common in parks.No Soliciting: 请勿推销或上门宣传“No Soliciting”是一个文化色彩比较浓厚的标语。“Solicit”是“索取、拉客”的意思,“No Soliciting”听上去像是禁止拉客或者禁止乞讨。That's what it seems like but it actually means don't approach a property (物业) to sell goods (进行推销), offer services (提供服务), or request donations (要求捐款).尤其是在美国,人们比较注重privacy(个人隐私),所以在居民区、办公室楼、商铺门口,放一个“No Soliciting”的标语是为了防止陌生人上门打扰。It's basically saying “We don't want door-to-door salespeople here”. 在美国看到这个标志,就相当于说“推销勿扰”。欢迎留言告诉我们:你还见过哪些奇奇怪怪的标语翻译?What are the weird sign translations you've seen?

Ashley and Brad Show
Ashley and Brad Show - ABS 2025-10-16

Ashley and Brad Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2025 41:40


News; birthdays/events; funny Halloween dilemma; word of the day. News; what do you think about full speed internet on planes?; game: Tim Robbins trivia; Rolling Stones '250 greatest songs of the 21st century so far' list. News; best way to spend a cozy fall day?; game: We Are The World video trivia; Finance Buzz list of things to dispose of properly. News; game: scattergories; House Beautiful list of kitchen items to toss; goodbye/fun facts....Dictionary Day...celebrates the birth of Noah Webster, an American writer who was born in 1758. He grew up on a farm in Connecticut in a typical colonial family. When scholarly young Noah was 16, he set off for Yale. He then wanted to study law but it was too expensive of a career path. Noah chose to go into teaching. As a teacher, in 1801 he set out to define many of the terms that set apart American English from the way the language was spoken in England....correcting English spellings to American English ones. (which is why words like color and honor have no "u" in Amercian English but do in British English.) He published the first dictionary in 1806, which he continued to compile and expand for the next 27 years. 

Grammar Girl Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing
‘Math' versus ‘maths' and other British differences. ‘Spendthrift' means what?

Grammar Girl Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2025 13:22


1122. This week, we look at two subtle but persistent differences between American and British English: why Americans say "math" and Brits say "maths," and why Americans are "in the hospital" while Brits are "in hospital." Then, we look at the historical meaning of the word "spendthrift" and introduce some wonderfully obsolete insults like "dingthrift" and "scrapethrift."The "maths" segment was written by Samantha Enslen, who runs Dragonfly Editorial. You can find her at dragonflyeditorial.com.The "spendthrift" segment was written by Karen Lunde, a career writer and editor. These days, she designs websites for solo business owners who care about both words and visuals. Find her at chanterellemarketingstudio.com.

English and Beyond - Intermediate English Podcast
E57 Perfectly Miserable: The Culture of Optimisation - Advanced English Listening

English and Beyond - Intermediate English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2025 17:37 Transcription Available


Are we becoming obsessed with optimisation?From Greek philosophy to Apple Watches, the idea of “the good life” has shifted from balance and virtue to data, tracking, and biohacking.In this episode of English and Beyond (Advanced), Oliver and César explore the culture of self-optimisation - from sleep divorces to clean eating, from supplements to billionaire blood transfusions.You'll hear natural British English conversation on:Where “healthy living” becomes obsessive control;Why sleep tracking, diets, and fitness apps can be both useful and harmful; andWhether we're chasing perfection or just trying to survive adulthood.

Learn English Through Listening
Why Do Old People Complain About Tech? Ep 828

Learn English Through Listening

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2025 12:30


Do you ever feel frustrated by modern technology and wish things were simpler? You're not alone, and this common feeling is your key to unlocking advanced English (https://adeptenglish.com/english/listening/) skills! In this lesson, you will train your ear to understand authentic, natural-speed English by exploring why both older and younger generations find modern life challenging. We'll explain specific vocabulary like 'built-in obsolescence', 'chatbot', and 'digital content', analyze common complaint phrases used by British English speakers, and discuss the cultural concept of a 'Boomer'. Learning this real-world language is not just interesting, it directly improves your IELTS listening score by familiarizing you with diverse accents and complex topics, while the phrases you learn (https://adeptenglish.com/company/learning-system/) will make your spoken English sound more natural and fluent in any conversation. Watch now and turn your daily frustrations into a powerful English learning opportunity.Improve your English listening skills with 8 new premium episodes every month. All for less than your daily coffee. Subscribe now: Spotify: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/adeptenglish/subscribe Apple Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/learn-english-through-listening/id1134891957Find out more: https://adeptenglish.com/faq/subscription-faq/Follow and subscribe to our podcast and channel for more English listening lessons, IELTS listening practice, and spoken English training to support your journey to fluency.#LearnEnglish #EnglishListening #IELTSListening #EnglishVocabulary #EnglishFluency #Boomer #ModernTechnology

The Good, The Pod and The Ugly
SQUIB GAMES #14: FX

The Good, The Pod and The Ugly

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2025 55:23


Send us a textSPECIAL NOTE: SEASON 15 OF THE GOOD, THE POD AND THE UGLY CELEBRATES THE USE OF THE PRACTICAL AND DIGITAL EFFECT KNOWN AS THE SQUIB. IRL GUN VIOLENCE IS INTOLERABLE AND RENOUNCED BUT... CINEMATIC VIOLENCE WILL BE CELEBRATED IN A WAY THAT MAY DISTURB SOME LISTENERS.  Squib Games Season (S15) continues with an 80's cable classic and special effects extravaganza, the eponymous F/X (1986).   Director Robert Mandel best known for his 1992 drama School Ties had no major studio film to his credit when he was hired to direct the two top tiered Bryans: Aussie sexpot Bryan Brown as the Hollywood special effects guru Roland “Rollie” Tyler, an immigrant framed by crooked law enforcement in an intricate double-fake out murder leaving him a marked man, and Brian Dennehy (returning to the action genre, see First Blood from earlier this season) as Detective Leo McCarthy who plays by his own rulebook and likely soon up for retirement who suspects Rollie might be innocent. Pod favs Diane Venora (Bird, Heat, The Insider) has a minor role as the aspiring actress love interest and Tom Noonan (Manhunter this same year) plays a tall goon. Surprisingly for an action-intrigue movie set in the 1980s, there are a pleasant number of professional women getting the job done, although those who pop most on screen are Rollie's and Det. McCarthy's respective sidekicks.  Mixing reveals on how effects are done in real life with FX in the reality of the movie's world provides a great primer for this season's gun play as well as lets the movie's hero exact lethal revenge without having to hold a gun. Such a fun concept, the premise spawned a sequel five years later starring the two Bryans and five years after that a forty-episode, two-season Canadian TV series starring neither Bry/i/an.  The hosts this ep spitball alternate castings for turning F/X from a action-thriller into a b-movie gorefest; Ken's feels safe to share his big glasses frame fetish; Ryan's presents a theory on why straight women wore out copies of their VHS's; and Thomas gets the opportunity to mention both The Rage: Carrie 2 and Psycho III in nearly the same breath.  Jack, this season's visiting guest host and inspiration for Squib Season, is off again this week on some continental op but will return for next episode with the book report for Miller's Crossing.  Fun final fact: F/X is the first movie since TGTPTU Season 4's Cage/Uncaged to have a forward slash (or a “stroke” for our speakers of British English) in its title. That prior movie, of course, was our first John Woo film covered.  THEME SONG BY: WEIRD A.I.Email: thegoodthepodandtheugly@gmail.comFacebook: https://m.facebook.com/TGTPTUInstagram: https://instagram.com/thegoodthepodandtheugly?igshid=um92md09kjg0Bluesky: @goodpodugly.bsky.socialYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6mI2plrgJu-TB95bbJCW-gLetterboxd (follow us!):Podcast: goodpoduglyKen: Ken KoralRyan: Ryan Tobias

Easy English: Learn English with everyday conversations
75: 10 English Slang Words from Outside the UK

Easy English: Learn English with everyday conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2025 17:38


Ballpark figure, shift, chur, keener, a double-double, lekker, togs, thongs, jonesin & craic... do you know these English slang words from outside the UK? Interactive Transcript Support Easy English and get interactive transcripts and bonus content for all our episodes: easyenglish.fm/membership Transcript Intro Mitch: [0:25] I'm nervous. Isi: [0:26] Really? Mitch: [0:28] Nervously excited. Isi: [0:30] Mitch is confused, because he doesn't know what's coming up today. Mitch: [0:33] Yeah, I feel like I'm in the hot seat for the first time in a long time. Isi: [0:38] So, yeah, I prepared this topic. Mitch doesn't even know it yet. What I thought, actually, it has a little background story. At the moment we play this game, whenever we are somewhere where people are, where I guess if someone has a different accent to our southern British surroundings, I guess where the people are from. Because I would love to master this, and to bring my English to the next level and know when someone is from Australia, the US, Ireland, or Liverpool. Mitch: [1:18] You're getting really good at it though. You're quite quick. Isi: [1:21] Why did you say though? Wasn't it expected? Actually yesterday, good example, no? Mitch: [1:28] Yeah, I just quizzed you... there was someone behind you and I just quizzed you quickly; do you know where they're from? You're just, like a flash, "Ireland." What part of Ireland? "Republic". Isi: [1:40] I love Ireland. Yeah, so what I thought is, I would like to, a bit, quiz you, if you know slang words from other British English speaking countries or regions, actually countries, I think, only. Yeah, other countries. Would you like to go for that? Support Easy English and get interactive transcripts and bonus content for all our episodes: easyenglish.fm/membership

The Level Up English Podcast
#341 Are You Being Rude in English?

The Level Up English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2025 54:41


As you may know, politeness in English - especially in British English - is a very important thing. Learners often struggle to keep up with the confusing grammar and long sentences, so in this episode, I break down a few key phrases that you can start using today to make your questions and requests sound more polite.I go through each phrase one by one and explain how we use it, give an example anecdote from my own life where I could use it, and also end each section with a question to get you thinking.Show notes page - https://levelupenglish.school/podcast341--------------------Level 3 is now open and ready to join!

Trash Talk... with Count Binface

"It's just not cricket" is a British English idiom meaning something is unfair, dishonest, or goes against the rules of decency or moralitySo what makes cricket the benchmark of decency? To find out our guest this week is Daniel Norcross one of the most recognisable voices on Test Match Special - the BBC's flagship cricket programme. Perhaps not surprisingly this is the longest interview we've done - it turns out a man who is trained to speak endlessly often during a break for rain can, well, speak endlessly. Don't worry though - our human editing team have trimmed it down to the usual Trash Talk length - so if you want to hear Dan's comparison of the cricket off-season to World War 2... you'll have to listen to Test Match Special. Dan really is a legend - and if you don't like cricket this episode is worth listening to for his sheer passion alone. Enjoy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Anglotopia Podcast
Anglotopia Podcast: Episode 65 – Lynne Murphy – The American Linguist Who Has Decoded British English For 25 Years

Anglotopia Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2025 41:43


In this episode of the Anglotopia podcast, host Jonathan Thomas speaks with Lynne Murphy, a linguistics professor and author, about the fascinating differences between British and American English. Lynne shares her journey from the US to the UK, her experiences documenting language differences, and the cultural implications of these variations. They discuss common myths, embarrassing language moments, and the impact of technology on language evolution. Lynne offers insights into navigating linguistic and cultural differences for those moving between the two countries. Links Separated by a Common Language Blog The Prodigal Tongue Book Lynne on Facebook Lynne's Substack Newsletter Lynne's Linktree Takeaways Lynne Murphy has spent over two decades studying language differences between Americans and British people. She started her blog 'Separated by a Common Language' to document her experiences with language differences. The idea that British English is older than American English is a common myth. Both British and American English have their own superiority and inferiority complexes. Language is constantly evolving, and there are always new differences to explore. Lynne's book 'Prodigal Tongue' delves into the history and social forces behind language differences. Cultural perspectives greatly influence how language is perceived and used. Embarrassing language moments can happen when switching between British and American English. Technology and social media are facilitating the exchange of language between the two cultures. Being humble and curious is key to navigating linguistic differences. Soundbites On British superiority complex: "I don't call myself an Anglophile. I know the English too well." On language myths: "British English didn't exist until American English existed. You know, that term came up much later than the term American English because, you know, it wasn't until the British had an opposite side, that they became one thing." On the herb/herb debate: "Where Americans say herb and the British say herb, it's actually older not to say the H... But the British added it back in, in the 19th century." Cultural misunderstanding moment: "My husband said to my goddaughter, 'Get away from me, you slutty child.' So that was embarrassing." [In British English, 'slutty' historically meant sloppy/untidy] On American grammar obsession: "Americans care more about grammar than about things like accent, whereas the British are very attuned to accents." Her daughter's revelation: "When my daughter was two, she said 'daddy says bath and you say bath.' And I said, 'what are you going to say?' And she said, 'bath.' ...she realized that I was wrong. Everybody else was right." On relationship communication: "If I ever say 'sure' to answer a question, I get a lot of pushback... he'll say, 'shall I make chicken for dinner?' I'll say 'sure.' And he'll say, 'all right, I'll make omelets instead.'" On endless discoveries: "I've been here 25 years... This week I blogged about American 'in the fine print' versus British 'in the small print.' I had never noticed that before somebody pointed out to me this week." On language persistence: "For nine years, I did a difference of the day every day [on Twitter] and I hardly ever repeated... there are that many differences to talk about." Advice for expats: "Don't try to use the naughty words because you won't do it right... So many Americans will come over and they'll want to say bloody and wanker. And they will not use them in the right places." Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Language Differences 05:47 The Birth of a Blog 09:41 Exploring the Book's Origins 14:27 Myths and Misconceptions in English 18:17 The Evolution of English Language 20:25 Personal Anecdotes and Language Gaffes 22:15 Navigating Self-Doubt in Communication 23:02 The Evolution of Spelling: Center vs. Centre 25:08 The Divergence of British and American Spellings 26:45 Pronunciation Differences: Vase vs. Vase 27:16 Code-Switching: Adapting Language in Different Contexts 28:18 American Expressions in British English 30:08 Personal Integration: Language and Relationships 32:02 Parenthood and Language Perception 33:32 Appreciating British English: Embracing Differences 34:41 The Impact of Technology on Language Convergence 35:26 Understanding Humor Across Cultures 36:41 Adopting British Cuisine: A Culinary Journey 37:37 Future of Language: Convergence vs. Divergence 38:53 Advice for Navigating Linguistic Differences 41:24 anglotopia-podcast-outro.mp4 YouTube Version

The Voiceover Social
78: Voice Actor Rates - with Louisa Gummer

The Voiceover Social

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2025 56:55


Voice Actor Rates - with Louisa GummerJoin us as we dive deep into one of the most confusing aspects of the voiceover industry with the brilliant Louisa Gummer - voiceover rates! If you've ever scratched your head wondering why VO pricing seems so complicated, or if you've struggled to work out what to charge for a job, this episode is absolutelyessential listening.Louisa brings over twenty years of professional voiceover experience to our conversation, along with her unique background combining trained acting skills, a mathematics degree, and business expertise. You might recognise her warm,authoritative voice from thousands of commercials, corporates, and documentaries - or perhaps you've heard her telling Northern Line passengers where to get off on the London Underground!What We CoverGetting Started We kick off by learning about Louisa's unusualcombination of being a trained actor, with a mathematics degree and a background in business.The Rate Revelation Ever wondered why voiceover rates seem so impossibly complicated? Louisa breaks down the history and reasoning behind our industry's pricing structure, explaining why that £200-for-an-hour's-workmentality is completely missing the point when it comes to broadcast commercials.Working Out What to Charge Louisa shares her top practical tips for calculating rates, helping you understand the factors that should influence your pricing decisions beyond just the time spent in the booth.Negotiation Know-How We tackle that dreaded phrase: "We don't have the budget." Louisa offers invaluable advice on how to handle rate negotiations whilst maintaining your professional worth.Global Perspective How do UK voiceover rates stack up against other international markets? We explore the differences and what that means for British voice talent.Resources and Guidance Finally, we point you towards the best places to get reliable rate guidance so you can price your work confidently. About Louisa GummerLouisa is an award-winning voiceover artist with over two decades in the industry. Her work spans commercials, corporates, documentaries, video games, animation,museum guides, audio dramas, audiobooks, and even announcements from MRI scanners and airplane cockpits! Born in Essex and raised across England and Wales, her neutral British English accent and warm, intelligent delivery havemade her a sought-after voice in the industry.Connect with Louisa·     Louisa's website - https://louisagummer.com/·     Louisa's LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/LouisaGummer/·     Louisa's Instagram - https://louisagummer.com/The Voiceover Social is hosted by Helen Bee and Rob Bee, bringing you insights, tips, and honest conversations about the voiceover industry. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and join our community of voice professionals.For more information about The Voiceover Social visit:⁠⁠⁠⁠The VO Social Website⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Join the VO Social Email List⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠VO Social Events⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠VO Social local groups⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠VO Social Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠VO Social Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠VO Social LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠⁠ About B Double E:Rob Bee and Helen Bee run B Double E - together we help voiceovers to be seen and heard.⁠⁠⁠⁠B Double E website⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠B Double E email list⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠B Double E events⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠B Double E blog⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠B Double E services⁠⁠⁠⁠Podcast sponsored by ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠B Double E⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.Theme tune by Rob Bee.All audio production by Rob Bee.

The British English Podcast
Bonus Ep 82 - British Work Etiquette: 5 Things You Should Never Do

The British English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2025 27:38


FREE PDF Lesson Pack – https://bit.ly/BonusEp82_FREE_PDF_Lesson Join my next group lesson on Zoom (The Academy) – https://thebritishenglishpodcast.com/academy Check out Rob's podcast - The Business English Podcast ⏱ Timestamps 00:00 Highlights 00:37 Intro 1:40 5 Awkward Scenarios in Business 3:30 FREE Vocabulary PDF 4:41 5 Awkward Scenarios in Business 21:19 Reminder of FREE Vocabulary PDF I'll be honest—before I started teaching English, I didn't realise how many odd little phrases we use in British English that just don't appear in textbooks. Words like “dunnit” or “the Watford Gap” sound totally normal to us… but leave learners totally confused! So in this lesson, I'm sharing 10 brilliant British phrases that every B1-level learner should know. These expressions are the real deal—stuff you'll hear in the pub, on TV, or when you're out with British friends.

The Business English Podcast
3 Vital Insights into British Business English [with Charlie from The British English Podcast] • BEP 140

The Business English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2025 21:02


The British English Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/24VJZTZKP8ONYKCTTeVxQK?si=2a1266fbd37f4eb6In this episode, Rob welcomes Charlie from The British English Podcast to discuss the nuances of British Business English. They delve into the importance of small talk, formality in professional settings, and incorporating linguistic flair into conversations. The discussion highlights cultural differences between British and American communication styles and offers practical tips for non-native speakers to enhance their business English skills. Tune in to gain insights from Charlie's extensive experience and learn how to effectively navigate professional interactions in the UK.00:00 Introduction and Guest Welcome00:22 Discussing the British English Podcast02:02 The Importance of Small Talk in British Culture10:39 Formality in British Business English14:19 Linguistic Flair in Professional Scenarios19:58 Conclusion and Final Thoughts

Mastering Portrait Photography Podcast
EP165 AI Won't Take Your Job. But Another Photographer Using It Just Might.

Mastering Portrait Photography Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2025 69:07


This one starts with a dodgy lane choice, a Starbucks coffee, and a misjudged underpass. As always. I'm back in the Land Rover — which might be its final podcast outing before it finds a new home — and today's episode is a rambling, reflective road trip through customer service, creative resilience, and the rapidly growing presence of AI in our industry. The day started badly. Cold shower (thanks British Gas), broken editing software, and a head full of terabytes. But it ended with a reminder of why kindness, craftsmanship, and conversation still matter. A haircut from someone I've known for 18 years. A deep chat with the owner of Michel Engineering while he lovingly took apart my ancient-but-beautiful record deck — the very same design featured in A Clockwork Orange and owned by Steve Jobs, no less. And then... a disappointing interaction with a distracted barista and a headset-wearing drive-thru operator. Same building, worlds apart. Customer service, it turns out, is alive and well — just not always where you'd expect it. But the main theme of this episode is AI. Not the doom-and-gloom kind, but the real stuff: the tools I'm already using, how they're reshaping our workflows, and how they might be reshaping entire economies. It's not AI that's coming for your job — it's the photographer who learns to harness it. We talk about: AI tools I already use (like EVOTO, Imagine AI, ChatGPT, and XCi) Using AI as a teaching assistant, sub-editor, and productivity coach The real-world implications of AI-generated ads, coding layoffs, and what it means for creatives Plans for a new AI section on masteringportraitphotography.com And if you hang in there until the end, I'll tell you about a girl named Dory, a gutsy 12-year-old contortionist, and the new edition of Mastering Portrait Photography — complete with fresh images, a decade of stories, and a very special launch offer. So pop on your headphones, admire the wheat fields if you've got them, and come along for the ride. Spoiler: there's C3PO's eye in here too. Yes, really.  

Stuff That Interests Me
You Would Be the Chancellor Who Sold Britain's Bitcoin

Stuff That Interests Me

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2025 5:38


(I am sending this week's commentary early this week due to travel)Dear Chancellor,Me again.I am the author of Bitcoin: The Future of Money? (2014), generally agreed to the first book on bitcoin from a recognised publisher.I write with regard to the proposed sale of the UK's bitcoin. Since bitcoin was first introduced in 2009 - invented in reaction to the loose monetary policies of the Global Financial Crisis - bank bail outs, quantitative easing, zero interest policies etc - and the economic injustices they created, the protocol has grown from nothing to a market cap above $2 trillion. A whole new economy has emerged around the technology where none previously existed, providing countless opportunities for individuals, entrepreneurs and nations alike.Initially the domain of a few coders, it is now finding mass adoption at the corporate and even national level. The US is recognizing the digital asset's importance, as it introduces its Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, while China, according to estimates, holds 190,000 coins.Initially, the UK was at the heart of the Bitcoin story. Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous inventor, wrote in British English, cited UK media, and many early meetups and conferences took place here. Chancellors George Osborne and Rishi Sunak both expressed their desire for the UK to become a global hub for this emerging technology. But the FCA took an opposing view and made it increasingly difficult for UK citizens to participate, so that we have now fallen behind.Opinion about bitcoin is divided. Those who use the technology regularly believe it is not just likely, but inevitable, that it will become the world's dominant monetary network. Many others – typically the older generation, economists or legacy finance – dismiss it as a bubble, often without having tested the tech in any meaningful way.Whichever side of the debate you fall on, the fact that Bitcoin has become the most desired digital asset in the world is indisputable.Among the many features that make bitcoin unique is that its supply is finite. With its estimated 61,000 confiscated bitcoins, the UK has been gifted an extraordinary opportunity. We now hold roughly 0.3% of total supply.I understand that politics demands a focus on the short term – the next Budget, the next election – but I urge you to approach your decision with long-term vision. Please consult with people who regularly use the technology. Do not make this decision based solely on advice from people who never use bitcoin. Take Bulgaria, for example. In 2017, it sold all of its seized bitcoin to cover a short-term budget gap. Those coins today would be worth enough to eliminate the country's entire national debt. From a strategic perspective, the UK's bitcoin holdings represent a once-in-a-generation opportunity. As fiat currencies decline in purchasing power and the global economy moves toward digital and AI-driven systems, this asset could help Britain re-establish itself as an economic superpower with significant geopolitical leverage and monetary independence.An opportunity of this kind is not to be thrown away lightly.Once those coins are sold, we will never be able to buy them back.If bitcoin becomes a hundred trillion dollar network – as some project – the UK's share could prove transformational. That may sound fanciful today, but every surprise in bitcoin's history has been to the upside.There is also your personal political legacy to consider.You would be the Chancellor who sold Britain's bitcoin.That will be how people remember you – just as Gordon Brown, for all else he did, is remembered primarily for needlessly selling Britain's gold at the bottom of the market. For the rest of your life, every timebBitcoin rises in price, people will look at what you sold our coins for and say: “This is how much she lost us.” You are consigning yourself to that fate.Do you want that to be your legacy?So once again, I implore you: take advice from people who understand this technology and its potential. Don't just listen to nocoiners.If you sell bitcoin for fiat you are swapping a superior asset for an inferior one. It is that simple.The trade might bring short-term benefit, but it does nothing to address the underlying structural issues facing this country. If, however, you hold on to the bitcoin – and understand how to integrate it into policy – perhaps create a UK Strategic Reserve - you may find it solves many of our problems.As bitcoiners often say, “bitcoin fixes this.”I hope you read and consider this letter with an open-mind.Yours sincerely,Dominic FrisbyAuthor of Bitcoin: The Future of Money?Writer of The Flying Frisby newsletterPS Please like, share - all that stuff. Thank you! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.theflyingfrisby.com/subscribe

The British English Podcast
IELTS Ep 4 - IELTS Speaking Band 5 vs 7 vs 9 (With Real Examples & Tips!)

The British English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2025 28:51


Click here for the FREE PDF Lesson Pack In this episode, Charlie helps you improve your British English and boost your IELTS Speaking score by focusing on Part 3 of the speaking exam using the topic of education. You'll hear three model answers — Band 5, Band 7, and Band 9 — to the same question, followed by a breakdown of what makes each one different and how you can level up your own speaking skills. Expect practical tips, natural British expressions, and insights into how examiners really assess fluency, grammar, and vocabulary.

To Fluency Podcast: English with Jack
20 Common English Phrases to Use in Conversation (Making Plans)

To Fluency Podcast: English with Jack

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2025 11:22


In this English listening‑practice lesson we're focusing on how to invite someone, make plans, and set dates — from a quick coffee to a full night out. You'll master natural phrases for casual and formal invitations, learn how to suggest activities without sounding pushy, and discover polite ways to check someone's availability. By the end, you'll have new vocabulary, better listening skills, and the confidence to set up plans like a native speaker!

Carioca Connection: Brazilian Portuguese Conversation.
Brazilian Portuguese Slang in the English Countryside

Carioca Connection: Brazilian Portuguese Conversation.

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2025 16:51 Transcription Available


In this episode of Carioca Connection, Alexia and Foster take us on a journey through their recent vacation to the English countryside. They share stories of reconnecting with childhood friends, exploring the picturesque landscapes near Oxford, and embracing the charming quirks of British culture. Tune in as they discuss the joys and challenges of traveling, the beauty of nature in England, and the nostalgic feeling of revisiting a beloved country. As always, this episode is packed with real-life Brazilian Portuguese expressions and cultural insights that you won't find in textbooks. Enjoy!E agora em português…

Learn English Through Listening
Are RED UK Phone Boxes Useless Now? Learn English Ep 816

Learn English Through Listening

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2025 11:51


Did you know that over 3,000 iconic red telephone boxes in the UK no longer have phones inside? They are being converted into mini libraries, cake shops, even storing life-saving defibrillators!Welcome to Adept English, the podcast https://open.spotify.com/show/7ixeOS7ezPTZSaISIx2TTw where you learn real British English through fascinating cultural stories. Today we're exploring how these symbols of the UK, those bright red telephone boxes—have been given surprising new purposes. You'll pick up essential vocabulary, like 'stained glass' or 'honesty box', while discovering quirky, uplifting tales from villages across Britain."Innovation is taking two things that already exist and putting them together in a new way." Tom FrestonIf you like this podcast then you will love Course One Activate Your Listening, which includes 5 hours of 'Listen & Learn' material. It's like the podcasts but more in depth. Find out more here: https://adeptenglish.com/language-courses/course-one-activate-your-listening/This English https://adeptenglish.com/language-courses/ lesson is perfect if you're at an intermediate (B1+) level and want to improve your English listening https://adeptenglish.com/english/listening/ skills with clear, natural speech.

The British English Podcast
IELTS Ep 3 - Sound Fluent When Talking About Hobbies – Part 1 Practice

The British English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2025 21:08


In this episode, Charlie helps you improve your British English by focusing on how to talk about hobbies and free time naturally—both for everyday conversation and, more specifically, for Part 1 of the IELTS Speaking exam. You'll hear model answers, learn useful expressions, and get tips to sound more fluent and confident when discussing your interests. Download - ⁠How to use idioms in IELTS FREE ebook/audiobook⁠ Learn about Charlie's ⁠IELTS Speaking Course Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Guy Perryman Interviews
Nadia McKechnie - Narrator / Writer

Guy Perryman Interviews

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2025 20:46


A conversation with Nadia McKechnie – British narrator and writer based in Tokyo chatting about her new book [London Girl Stella's One Year Dialogue - Story 2] published in May 2025 chockablock full of bonkers British English expressions – so, sit back with a cuppa and find out more about Nadia and Stella's life experiences. 

Learn English Through Listening
Understand Tricky British English: Idioms & Grammar Explained | Rule 6/7

Learn English Through Listening

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2025 10:11


Confused by tricky British English like silent letters, idioms & slang? Adept English Rule 6 (The Helping Hand) simplifies difficult grammar & pronunciation. Understand English better & speak with confidence!➡️ Get the FREE transcript & MP3 audio download for this lesson: https://adeptenglish.com/7rules/rule-6/Read along, review key vocabulary, and listen offline!#BritishEnglish #EnglishIdioms #TrickyEnglish #AdeptEnglish #Rule6 #LearnEnglish

The British English Podcast
Bonus Ep 81 - Emma's 5 Brilliant Things | Ft. Pronunciation with Emma

The British English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2025 30:07


Charlie welcomes Emma from Pronunciation with Emma back on the show to share her five “brilliant things” — from the oddly specific to the surprisingly relatable. Along the way, they reflect on British culture, personality quirks, and the small moments that make life feel just right. A cosy listen for learners who enjoy natural, unscripted British English.

Stuff That Interests Me
The Coming Corporate Bitcoin Stampede and How to Play It.

Stuff That Interests Me

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2025 6:48


This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.theflyingfrisby.comPlease do not share, copy, reproduce or distribute any part of this report without my express permission. Thank you.Many thanks to all the new subscribers who have joined this week, both paid and unpaid. I put this video of my recent North Sea Oil piece up on YouTube, X et al and it generated something of a flurry.So welcome. I hope you both enjoy and benefit from The Flying Frisby.Before we get started I just wanted to note that Comstock Lode seems to be catching a nice tail wind, which is good. Enjoy the ride. The AGM is later today for the keener of you out there.But we are looking at bitcoin today, and exploring an alternative way to invest in it.I'm going through one of those phases where I feel like I don't own enough bitcoin.So I've bought more.And I've bought it in my SIPP - UK-speak for my retirement account.I'll explain how in a second.Let's just have a quick look at the bitcoin price, and note that we are once again breaking out to new highs.I know it feels like you are late to the bitcoin story, and yes we all wish we bought it at $10, when we first heard about it. But we didn't. We are where we are, and this story is a long way from being over.The next chapter in the odyssey is corporate adoption, and that story is just getting started.I explained the bitcoin corporate treasury model a fortnight ago here, and I've made the article freely available to all, so please take a look, but the TLDR is this.Following a template set by billionaire genius Michael Saylor, more and more companies are converting their treasuries to bitcoin as a means to store value and escape currency debasement. Not only that, they are issuing paper—stock, debt, convertible notes—and using the capital raised to buy more bitcoin. In effect, they are creating fiat money from nothing—it is a debt-based system, after all—and using it to buy a finite digital resource (one that, of course, cannot be created through debt).Many are scratching their heads and saying, “How can this be? It's not possible! It's a bubble.”What Saylor is actually doing, among other things, is exposing the flaws of debt-based fiat currency. There are now some 70 companies employing this strategy. This will eventually be a stampede, which I urge you to front-run. Corporations have much deeper pockets than private investors, meaning this latest cycle in bitcoin's mass adoption could become a mega mania.Shareholders welcome dilution if it means more bitcoin. The problem of corporate dilution has been flipped on its head. Once, if a company issued 20% more stock, you would expect the stock to fall by a concomitant amount to reflect the dilution. But if you're using paper to buy bitcoin, the reverse applies. You can't dilute enough. The purpose of a bitcoin treasury company is to acquire as much bitcoin as possible on behalf of all shareholders, by whatever means.Here is a case in point.Japanese hotel company Metaplanet (3350:TYO) had a small chain of low-budget hotels across Southeast Asia. Covid decimated the business, and it never fully recovered.A year ago, seeking a new direction, CEO Simon Gerovich began copying the Saylor model and started using his cash flow to buy bitcoin, then he began issuing debt. Since spring 2024, when the company began its strategy, the stock has risen thousands of percent from below ¥20 to north of ¥1,000. Last year, it was one of the best-performing companies in the world, if not the best. How about this for a chart?In the time that bitcoin has risen 60%, Metaplanet has risen more than 7,000%. (Saylor's Strategy (NASDAQ:MSTR) has also outperformed bitcoin. Bitcoin treasury companies give you gearing).With its crap currency and suppressed bond yields, bitcoin is an obvious place for Japanese investors to put their capital, except the government has got in the way.As with the UK, dumb regulations make it very hard for Japanese investors to buy bitcoin directly. (This came as a result of Mt. Gox, the first bitcoin exchange, which went bust after being hacked in 2013-14). To give you an idea how ponderous things are, to register with a bitcoin exchange in Japan , regulators demand you get a letter by snail mail to verify your address. Nuts.What's more, when the Japanese sell, they must pay capital gains tax at 55%.But Metaplanet is a Tokyo-listed company, so investors are buying that instead in their retirement accounts and via their brokers. Far less hassle. Just as, back in 2023, I urged UK readers to buy Strategy as a way to play bitcoin (we are up around 1,000%), Metaplanet has become Japan's bitcoin vehicle—indeed, much of Asia's.For several days in a row, the company has gone limit-up, and trading has been halted. The mother of all short squeezes seems to be taking place. It's the most shorted stock in all of Japan - and the short sellers are struggling to cover.This bubble has, quite literally, been caused by state regulation. We wouldn't be in this situation if it was easy to buy bitcoin. It's enough to make you a libertarian. It's amazing that both Japan and the UK were at the vanguard in bitcoin's early days. Satoshi Nakamoto had a Japanese name and used British English. Now we are both retarded (in both the old sense of the word and the new).How to profit from the maniaIn the UK, Avis-listed The Smarter Web Company (ISIN: GB00BPJHZ015) is now following suit, as several readers have pointed out to me (thank you). It's gone from 5p to 45p in a month. Currently, The Smarter Web Company has a market cap of £72 million, while it holds only £3 million in bitcoin (rounded numbers). Insane, you might think. Probably.Bitcoin Treasury Companies are outperforming bitcoin. They are the new sh*tcoins. So which bitcoin treasury company have I gone for?Here is how I am playing all this.

The British English Podcast
Bonus Ep 80 - My 5 Brilliant Things | Ft. Harry

The British English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2025 30:13


Marvins world
Beijing and New york comedian Tony Chou

Marvins world

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2025 55:16


An interview podcast giving the inside scoop of what happens in comedy scenes across the globe and dedicated to speaking to the mavericks in the comedy world. In this episode we speak to Touring comedian from Beijing, co-host of award-winning Chinese late night talk show,comedy club owner, Tony Chou. Here is an overview of what we discussed:[[01:44]] Des Bishop starting a comedy club and doing English comedy in Beijing [[03:05]][[04:32]] The mandarin speaking scene is taking off [[09:29]][[09:29]] Why is NYC better than the UK and my experience in Killtony [[19:06]][[24:15]] British English and American English [[28:48]][[30:30]] Work culture in china and you get reported by your audience in China [[37:07]][[37:07]] Doing something good for China but being cancelled [[40:36]][[41:01]] When you do badly in Asia and the west [[47:52]]If you would like to know more on the podcast, you can reach us on our linktree https://linktr.ee/thecomediansparadise and if you want to know more on Tony, you can reach him on Instagram at tonychoucomedy.You can follow this podcast on Youtube at https://bit.ly/41LWDAq, Spotify at https://spoti.fi/3oLrmyU and Apple podcasts at https://apple.co/3LEkr3E.

Stuff That Interests Me
Bitcoin's Corporate Revolution: How Michael Saylor Is Reshaping Finance

Stuff That Interests Me

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2025 7:58


Fun fact: the only countries that own more bitcoin than the UK are the US (which own 207,000) and China (194,000). The UK has 61,000 bitcoin - worth almost $6 billion.They are mostly seized bitcoin, a lucky legacy from the early days when the UK was at the heart of bitcoin's evolution. (Remember Satoshi Nakamoto wrote in British English, the Times was referenced in the Genesis block, and many of the early conferences and meet-ups happened here). The FCA, in its wisdom, put a stop to all that, and so we fell behind.The stupidest thing our Chancellor can do, even with the parlous state of the national finances, is to sell those bitcoin. History would look back on her as an even greater fool than Gordon Brown for selling the national gold.This legacy has given the UK an extraordinary advantage in the global arms race that is bitcoin adoption. We would be mad to spurn it.Meanwhile, something extraordinary is taking place in the corporate world of bitcoin adoption, and I think it is going to accelerate rapidly very soon.It is being spearheaded by Michael Saylor, Chairman and Founder of Strategy (NASDAQ:MSTR).I recommended MicroStrategy, as it used to be called, to readers back in August 2023, largely because it was a means to get bitcoin exposure via your broker. You wouldn't have to jump through all the hoops of buying bitcoin through exchanges, which the FCA has made so difficult.It has been a big win for readers, having more than 12x'd since we tipped it, outperforming bitcoin by a considerable margin. (Bear in mind it has undergone a 10-for-1 stock split since that article.)You really should upgrade your subscription :)Strategy now has some 555,450 bitcoin, meaning it has more bitcoin than any other publicly traded company in the world (excluding the ETFs, which now hold 1.35 million). Note again: there will only ever be 21 million bitcoins - rather less if you discount the 2.5 million that have likely been lost, and the 1.3 million that Satoshi never touched and probably never will).Saylor is also the world's most articulate and charismatic proponent of bitcoin. The man is a genius, and I do not use that word lightly. He has turned Strategy from a quiet, business intelligence software firm, which traded sideways for 20 years with a market cap less than $2 billion, into one of the most talked-about and traded stocks in North America with a market cap north of $100 billion. Options traders love it.His method for doing so - extraordinarily bold at the time, though now it looks easy - was brilliantly simple. He bought bitcoin. He was worried about the erosion of the value of the corporate treasury due to inflation and currency debasement. he started slowly. Then, in buying bitcoin and using it, as tends to happen, he caught the bitcoin bug. He started issuing paper - stock, debt, convertible notes - and bought more bitcoin. Just last week he bought another 1,895 bitcoin, funding the purchase with sales of common and preferred stock.In effect, he is creating money out of (almost) nothing and using it to buy the hardest money in the history of mankind. (Sorry, goldbugs - and you know I'm on your team - but bitcoin is harder money, because the supply is more finite).In doing so, he has enabled many of his investors to retire early.But he has also set in motion something quite extraordinary.Other companies are starting to follow his model. I'm surprised more haven't, but it takes extraordinary courage and vision to do what he did, as demonstrated by the fact that more companies haven't copied him. They're too cautious. Even with him having blazed the trail and shown the way.I think there's a very good chance Strategy becomes a trillion dollar company, while Michael Saylor becomes the world's richest man.To call the pre-bitcoin Strategy a zombie company is harsh, but it was not really going anywhere. Interestingly, it is zombie or near-zombie companies with large treasuries that are most likely to follow the Saylor model. Their need for a new direction is greater.Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) recently gave Saylor 5 minutes - 5 minutes! - to pitch his model to them, and duly ignored it. It is their loss. But Microsoft is Microsoft. At the moment, it doesn't need bitcoin, and it doesn't need to take the risk.GameStop (NYSE: GME), on the other hand, is a different matter. Remember GameStop from 2021 and all those memes during lockdown? The video game retailer had more than 3,000 outlets, and its business model was considered defunct. People buy games online now. But some private investors noted that the short position exceeded 100% of the issued shares of the company, and started buying. The ensuing short squeeze sent the stock from $17 to north of $500, and, it is said, almost broke Wall Street. (Not quite, but you get the point).The problem is GameStop's business model is somewhat defunct. This year, it closed over 400 stores. This week, it sold its Canadian outlets.But the company has about $4.7 billion in cash, low debt, and just raised another $1.5 billion, it announced.What does it do now?Bitcoin is the answer.We don't yet know how much it has bought, but its earnings call is on June 6, so perhaps we can expect an announcement then.The Japanese company Metaplanet (3350:TYO) is doing something similar. Formerly a zombie hotel company, now known as the “Asian MicroStrategy,” it has bought some 5,555 bitcoin. It bought another 555 this week after it issued its 13th set of bonds. The stock rose 40% on the news. Since spring 2024, when the company began its strategy, the stock has gone from below ¥20 to north of ¥600.The same thing is happening as happened to Saylor. Initially, the company bought it as a hedge against currency debasement. It discovered it was onto something. Now it is doing all it can to issue paper - bonds, warrants, stock, you name it - and use the proceeds to buy bitcoin.Perhaps GameStop will make a similar discovery.A year ago, Semler Scientific (NYSE: SMLR), which provides technology products and services for healthcare providers, made its first purchase of bitcoin: 581. It couldn't stop accumulating. Now it has 3,467 bitcoin.Sol Strategies (CA:HODL), my old company, is doing something similar for Solana, having just announced a $500 million convertible note. This company had a market cap of barely C$20 million a few months ago.What started as a trickle is starting to flow. The more companies that do this, the bigger the rush is going to get. Corporations are changing they way they store capital. They are changing the capital they store.The implications for how corporates hold their treasuries are one thing. The implications for fiat money are extraordinary. Issue debt - ie create money - and buy hard digital assets with it. This is going to be a big, big theme in the next few years.If you enjoyed this article, please like it, share it, all that stuff :) This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.theflyingfrisby.com/subscribe

Your Favorite Thing with Wells & Brandi
Popeless and Perspiring in Costa Rica

Your Favorite Thing with Wells & Brandi

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2025 49:28


We are hard-wired and sweating profusely this week YFT fam. Wells is in Costa Rica bartending for the stars while also worrying about unstable internet and the lack of streaming options. How do you say Game of Thrones en espanol?? So…your hosts take the extra time this week to dive deeper into the goss from the last week on planet earth. Brandi joins post-wedding and post-hangover, having crushed an unprepared Maid of Honor speech—proof you never let the truth get in the way of a good story. They dive into Ozempic rumors, horse genetics, whether we need another pope (can we get a millennial one?), and debate the worthiness of a genie wish—$50 trillion vs. a good sandwich. British English is bollocks, Ozzy Osborne is retiring (and apparently still alive), and Wells' Spanish just might just be improving… adios, amigos! Favorite things mentioned: Walton Goggins Freaks Out Mobland Game of Thrones (but in Spanish!) Under the Sea by Wells Adams Thanks to our awesome sponsors for supporting this episode!  Mood: Get 20% off your first order at Mood.com/YFT with promo code YFT. Hungryroot: For a limited time get 40% off your first box PLUS get a free item in every box for life. Go to Hungryroot.com/yft and use code yft. Happy Mammoth: For a limited time get 15% off on your entire first order at happymammoth.com and use the code YFT. Prolon: Visit ProlonLife.com/YFT to claim your 15% discount sitewide plus a $40 bonus gift when you subscribe to their 5-Day Program! Quince: Treat your closet to a little summer glow-up with Quince. Go to Quince.com/yft for free shipping on your order and 365 day returns. Article: Article is offering our listeners $50 off your first purchase of $100 or more. Visit Article.com/yft and the discount will be automatically applied at checkout.  Skims: Shop the SKIMS Ultimate Bra Collection and more at SKIMS.com. Apostrophe: Apostrophe: Get your first visit for only $5 at Apostrophe.com/YFT when you use our code: YFT. Don't forget to rate, review, and follow Your Favorite Podcast! Plus, keep up with us between episodes on our Instagram pages, @yftpodcast @wellsadams and @brandicyrus and be sure to leave us a voicemail with your fave things at 858-630-1856!  This podcast is brought to you by Podcast Nation.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Your Favorite Thing with Wells & Brandi
Popeless and Perspiring in Costa Rica

Your Favorite Thing with Wells & Brandi

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2025 55:53


We are hard-wired and sweating profusely this week YFT fam. Wells is in Costa Rica bartending for the stars while also worrying about unstable internet and the lack of streaming options. How do you say Game of Thrones en espanol?? So…your hosts take the extra time this week to dive deeper into the goss from the last week on planet earth. Brandi joins post-wedding and post-hangover, having crushed an unprepared Maid of Honor speech—proof you never let the truth get in the way of a good story. They dive into Ozempic rumors, horse genetics, whether we need another pope (can we get a millennial one?), and debate the worthiness of a genie wish—$50 trillion vs. a good sandwich. British English is bollocks, Ozzy Osborne is retiring (and apparently still alive), and Wells' Spanish just might just be improving… adios, amigos! Favorite things mentioned: Walton Goggins Freaks Out Mobland Game of Thrones (but in Spanish!) Under the Sea by Wells Adams Thanks to our awesome sponsors for supporting this episode!  Mood: Get 20% off your first order at Mood.com/YFT with promo code YFT. Hungryroot: For a limited time get 40% off your first box PLUS get a free item in every box for life. Go to Hungryroot.com/yft and use code yft. Happy Mammoth: For a limited time get 15% off on your entire first order at happymammoth.com and use the code YFT. Prolon: Visit ProlonLife.com/YFT to claim your 15% discount sitewide plus a $40 bonus gift when you subscribe to their 5-Day Program! Quince: Treat your closet to a little summer glow-up with Quince. Go to Quince.com/yft for free shipping on your order and 365 day returns. Article: Article is offering our listeners $50 off your first purchase of $100 or more. Visit Article.com/yft and the discount will be automatically applied at checkout.  Skims: Shop the SKIMS Ultimate Bra Collection and more at SKIMS.com. Apostrophe: Apostrophe: Get your first visit for only $5 at Apostrophe.com/YFT when you use our code: YFT. Don't forget to rate, review, and follow Your Favorite Podcast! Plus, keep up with us between episodes on our Instagram pages, @yftpodcast @wellsadams and @brandicyrus and be sure to leave us a voicemail with your fave things at 858-630-1856!  This podcast is brought to you by Podcast Nation.

Learn English Through Listening
English Listening-London Life With Gen Z Trends Ep 809

Learn English Through Listening

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2025 15:15


In today's British English listening https://adeptenglish.com/english/listening/ practice: Did you know that nearly half of Gen Z workers in the UK would rather travel the world than work a traditional 9-to-5 job? Or that London commuters have invented a new word 'bare backers' to shame people who dare to look around on the Tube? Welcome to Adept English, the podcast https://open.spotify.com/show/7ixeOS7ezPTZSaISIx2TTw where you learn real, modern English through fascinating stories about culture, work, and life in the UK.

The British English Podcast
Bonus #79 - British Pub Walking Tour: London Edition

The British English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2025 28:12


The British English Podcast
S4/E8 - What's a Typical British Childhood Anyway? A Chat with Lorena from English with Parker

The British English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2025 28:13


Global News Podcast
Anti-Trump protests in all 50 US states

Global News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2025 33:31


Protesters across the US have taken to the streets in a show of defiance against Donald Trump's policies. Also: what's so compelling about jazz, and is British English slang being adopted across the Atlantic?

Luke's ENGLISH Podcast - Learn British English with Luke Thompson
929. Sarah Donnelly: The Only American In Paris

Luke's ENGLISH Podcast - Learn British English with Luke Thompson

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2025 81:20


Sarah Donnelly comes back onto LEP to catch up and to tell us about her stand-up special, now available to watch on YouTube, and to do a British English vs American English pronunciation quiz.Sarah's show is called The Only American in Paris and we discuss some of the themes of the show - the real experience of being a US citizen living in Paris, the Netflix show Emily in Paris, cultural differences, learning French, plus a pronunciation quiz to help you compare UK and US English.

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 19, 2025 is: juggernaut • JUG-er-nawt • noun A juggernaut is something (such as a force, campaign, or movement) that is extremely large and powerful and cannot be stopped. // The team is a juggernaut this year, winning more games than any team before it has. See the entry > Examples: "[Judd] Apatow talked about the box office success of 'Wicked,' the Universal musical that became a juggernaut over the holiday season and has been an awards darling ..." — Cynthia Littleton, Variety, 8 Feb. 2025 Did you know? In the early 14th century, Franciscan missionary Friar Odoric brought to Europe the story of an enormous carriage that carried an image of the Hindu god Vishnu (whose title was Jagannāth, literally, "lord of the world") through the streets of India in religious processions. Odoric reported that some worshippers deliberately allowed themselves to be crushed beneath the vehicle's wheels as a sacrifice to Vishnu. That story was likely an exaggeration or misinterpretation of actual events, but it spread throughout Europe. The tale caught the imagination of English listeners, and they began using juggernaut to refer to any massive vehicle (such as a steam locomotive) and to any other enormous entity with powerful crushing capabilities. While the word is still used sometimes in British English to refer to a very large, heavy truck (also called a "juggernaut lorry"), juggernaut is more commonly used figuratively for a relentless force, entity, campaign, or movement, as in "a political/economic/cultural juggernaut."

The Newest Olympian
167 | The Son of Neptune Ch. 29–30 w/ Phoebe Corde & Emily Garber (LIVE in Hartford!)

The Newest Olympian

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2025 110:52


When in Connecticut, you gotta get the Connecticut-born podcasters on the show! Emily and Phoebe from Monster Donut return to cover some more chapters from The Son of Neptune! ALSO THERE IS A SPECIAL GUEST FOR THE Q&A!Topics include: Amazon's disruption, Inter-CT rivalries, Dark Connecticut, Claire's, Jane Austen (North Anger Abby?), corny jokes, Charon's range, Jason Stratham, British English, Cerberos, Team Hazel's Mom, Bushnell, high school crushes, Detective Nico di Angelo, Supernatural, The Mirror of the Erised, Seattle, Ship of Theseus, sample sales, self-help books, Hylla, prepositions, The Dark Knight Rises, Room on the Broom, Batman vs. Superman, Dunkin', Connecticut stereotypes, UCONN, Poo Poo Point, pizza, The Speaker Prophecy, and more! NEW MERCH! "I took Latin in high school" notebooks and "My very legal PDF" pins! www.thenewestolympian.com/merchTNO TOUR: www.thenewestolympian.com/live  — Find The Newest Olympian Online —• Website: www.thenewestolympian.com• Patreon: www.thenewestolympian.com/patreon• Instagram: www.instagram.com/newestolympian• Bluesky: bsky.app/profile/newestolympian.bsky.social• Facebook: www.facebook.com/newestolympian• Reddit: www.reddit.com/r/thenewestolympian• Twitter: www.twitter.com/newestolympian• Merch: www.thenewestolympian.com/merch — Production —• Creator, Host, Producer, Social Media, Web Design: Mike Schubert• Editor: Sherry Guo• Music: Bettina Campomanes and Brandon Grugle• Art: Jessica E. Boyd — About The Show —Has the Percy Jackson series been slept on by society? Join Mike Schubert as he journeys through the Riordanverse for the first time with the help of longtime PJO fans to cover the plot, take stabs at what happens next, and nerd out over the Greek mythology throughout. Whether you're looking for an excuse to finally read these books, or want to re-read an old favorite with a digital book club, grab your blue chocolate chip cookies and listen along. New episodes release on Mondays wherever you get your podcasts!

The British English Podcast
IELTS Ep 2 - Talking about travel in British English

The British English Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 20:56


In this episode, Charlie focuses on how to talk about travel in British English to improve your general fluency but more specifically your IELTS speaking score in part 3 of the speaking exam. Download - How to use idioms in IELTS FREE ebook/audiobook Learn about Charlie's IELTS Speaking Course Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Speak Better English with Harry
Speak Better English with Harry | Episode 524

Speak Better English with Harry

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2025 12:03


This episode will help you sound more fluent and confident in conversations. Most English learners say the same thing when they need food, but native speakers have many natural ways to express hunger. This English lesson is great for students who already know some English and want to improve their vocabulary.You'll learn practical phrases used in British English, including polite alternatives and common slang. These expressions will also help with IELTS, TOEFL, and CAE exam preparation. Improve your vocabulary and make your English sound more natural.Share Your ThoughtsSupport the showAdvanced English lessons on my YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/learnenglishwithharry Learn English with HarryOnline courses start from only €7.99. Click to enrol today https://www.englishlessonviaskype.com/online-learning-courses/ and improve your English speaking skills, grammar and vocabulary.

Thinking in English
329. Why Is American English Different to British English? (English Vocabulary Lesson)

Thinking in English

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2025 19:19


Download ELSA for free + get 7 days membership for free: https://bit.ly/ELSAxTHINKINGINENGLISH Get exclusive ELSA discounts: https://elsaspeak.com/inf/promo-code-thinking-in-english/?promocode=THINK85 Today I want to discuss Noah Webster, the man who played a major role in creating American English. We'll talk about his life and motivations, his famous dictionary, and some of the words and spellings he changed. I'll end by discussing whether there is a correct form of “English.” TRANSCRIPT - https://thinkinginenglish.blog/2025/02/17/329-why-is-american-english-different-to-british-english-english-vocabulary-lesson/ My Links AD Free Main Episodes - https://open.spotify.com/show/6gSPOxNCijMq2hTJW8tyx4?si=e7e195bbfae84b6b ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Patreon - ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.patreon.com/thinkinginenglish⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Thinking in English Bonus Podcast - ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.patreon.com/collection/10513⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ NEW YOUTUBE Channel!!! - ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/@thinkinginenglishpodcast⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠INSTAGRAM - thinkinginenglishpodcast (⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/thinkinginenglishpodcast/⁠⁠⁠⁠) ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Blog - ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.thinkinginenglish.blog⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Vocabulary Standardisation (Noun): The process of making things conform to a standard. Identity (Noun): The qualities and beliefs that make a person or group different from others. Adopt (Verb): To start using a particular method or idea. Reflect (Verb): To show or represent something. Simplify (Verb): To make something easier to understand. Convention (Noun): A traditional or widely accepted way of doing something. ⁠ Borough by Blue Dot Sessions Contact advertising@airwavemedia.com to advertise on Thinking in English. Thinking in English is part of the Airwave Media podcast network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

You're Saying It Wrong
Canadian English

You're Saying It Wrong

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2025 29:23


We've tackled the differences between American and British English, but let's not forget Canadians also have a language of their own.

The English We Speak
The English We Speak: Mooch

The English We Speak

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 2:46


An informal British English word that means to wander or stroll around casually.TRANSCRIPT Find a full transcript for this episode ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/the-english-we-speak_2025/ep-250113FIND BBC LEARNING ENGLISH HERE: Visit our website ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish Follow us ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/followusSUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER: ✔️ https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/newslettersLIKE PODCASTS? Try some of our other popular podcasts including: ✔️ Learning English for Work ✔️ Learning English from the News ✔️ Learning English StoriesThey're all available by searching in your podcast app.

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for October 23, 2024 is: palaver • puh-LAV-er • noun Palaver is an informal word that usually refers to unimportant or meaningless talk. It can also refer to misleading or deceptive speech, or to a conference or discussion. In British English the word is sometimes used as a synonym of fuss to refer to unnecessary excitement about something. // Enough of this palaver. We have more important things to discuss. See the entry > Examples: "Henry [Thoreau] was working at his journal, as he usually did for a part of each day. He was reading Chaucer and liking it. A couple of days later, on Monday, January 3, he made popcorn, which he playfully called 'cerealious blossoms' because they were 'only a more rapid blossoming of the seed under a greater than July heat.' On Wednesday, January 5, as early clouds gave way to midday sun, he praised manual labor as 'the best method to remove palaver from one's style.' Maybe he took his own advice about palaver. We hear no more from him about cerealious blossoms." — Robert D. Richardson, Three Roads Back: How Emerson, Thoreau, and William James Responded to the Greatest Losses of Their Lives, 2023 Did you know? Let's talk about palaver. Though the word comes from Portuguese, it likely entered English by way of the West African coast in the 18th century. Portuguese sailors there used their word palavra, which in general use means "speech" or "word," as a term for discussions with the native people they encountered. English sailors applied palaver for the same, and then brought the word back to their own shores. The Portuguese word comes ultimately from the Late Latin noun parabola, meaning "speech" or "parable." If Portuguese isn't in your wheelhouse, perhaps you'll recognize the influence of Latin parabola on other tongues: the Spanish palabra, for instance, means "word," and the French parler means "to speak."