Podcasts about burned bridge

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Latest podcast episodes about burned bridge

Time Sink
#136: Yup, That's Definitely a Burned Bridge Right There

Time Sink

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2023 59:10


Don't you just want to see it all burn to the ground, well Reddit's getting its chance. A user created blackout, CEOs caught lying, and a nice calm check-in on how our year is going. All this and more on this week's visit to the Time Sink! Blender Godot Unreal Reddit Apollo App Christian's Article Reddit Blackout List

ceos reddit burned bridge
Brown Table Talk
Stop Telling Us Not to Burn Bridges

Brown Table Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2023 34:16


Welcome to Brown Table Talk! Today, our hosts Dee C. Marshall and Mita Mallick talk about why people should stop telling us not to burn bridges! Tired of being silenced and held back in your professional life? This powerful episode is packed with valuable insights and advice on how to navigate that tricky terrain without burning bridges.  Tune in for juicy stories, insights, and of course some tips on how to defuse and handle the situation. Are you ready? Buckle up! Check Out Our Website! https://www.browntabletalkpodcast.com/ Check out Mita's new book! https://www.amazon.com/Reimagine-Inclusion-Mita-Mallick/dp/1394177097 Connect With Dee and Mita on LinkedIn! Dee C. Marshall Mita Mallick Timestamps: (00:00) - Don't Burn Bridges (08:40) - Burning Bridges (17:28) - Burning Bridges and Proximity (25:10) - Can You Rebuild a Burned Bridge? (28:49) - Thre Tips!

Aim Higher: The podcast with purpose
7 ways to rebuild a burned bridge

Aim Higher: The podcast with purpose

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2023 8:16


In previous episodes of “Aim Higher,” we discussed how to leave a job well, and how, as a manager, you can deal with someone who doesn't. This week, based on a listener's request (“for a friend...”), we'll tackle the thorny problem of how to recover from a bad exit that you now regret. I share 7 tips that can get you through this difficult moment, using it to grow and rebuild trust. It's always better not to burn bridges. But if you do, don't despair—bridges can be rebuilt.  

rebuild aim higher burned bridge
Tunes & Tumblers
Chaz Cardigan and a Burned Bridge (feat. Chaz Cardigan)

Tunes & Tumblers

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2020 56:46


Century Club takes a hiatus this week to bring some classic Tunes & Tumblers magic to your library. Indie pop rising star Chaz Cardigan stops by the pod to discuss his latest EP Holograma and enjoy a smoky take on a PB&J provided by mixologist extraordinaire Pedro. The gang talks everything from TikTok comment wars to monk-tier meditation, and Sun-Ra induced panic attacks. It's almost like the Before Times TM again. Cheers! Listen to Holograma by Chaz Cardigan: https://spoti.fi/3n9fBwk Song #1 - "Not OK!" by Chaz Cardigan: https://spoti.fi/36oqYd3 Song #2 - "Losing Tough" by Chaz Cardigan: https://spoti.fi/3pdL9mA Song #3 - "Live a Little" by Chaz Cardigan: https://spoti.fi/3lhMBlj Chaz Cardigan on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chazcardigan/ Chaz Cardigan on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chazcardigan/?hl=en Chaz Cardigan on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@chazcardigan?lang=en Episode Playlist: https://spoti.fi/3eFRZfG Theme Music by New New Girlfriend: https://www.instagram.com/newnewgirlfriend/ Tunes & Tumblers on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tunesandtumblers Tunes & Tumblers on Twitter: https://twitter.com/tunestumblers Tunes & Tumblers on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tunesandtumblers Tunes & Tumblers on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/10vLD5nSXTNmUVSgzKLjaV?si=uP1U_nhsTYSmGNOK_IX7OA Call the Tunes & Tumblers Hotline: (626) 604-6477 Cover art by Pedro Isaac Chairez: https://www.instagram.com/jimmychristian/

New Books in History
Edith Sheffer, “Burned Bridge: How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain” (Oxford UP, 2011)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2011 65:56


If Edith Sheffer‘s excellent Burned Bridge: How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain (Oxford UP, 2011) has a single lesson, it’s that dividing a country is not as easy as you might think. You don’t just draw a line and tell people that it’s now the “border,” for in order for borders to be borders, they have to be seen as such. Sheffer shows that for quite a number of years after 1945, the Germans in Neustadt and Sonneberg–closely situated towns in, respectively, the American and Soviet zones of occupation–didn’t really know whether the border was a border and, if so, what kind of border it was or should be. “It”–whatever it was–was shifting, lawless, contested, resented, profitable, and sometimes deadly. The Grenze at Burned Bridge was really a kind of anarchical region dividing people who were in no way different from one another but who were compelled to behave as if they were by two occupying powers. The degree to which they were so compelled differed and this made all the difference in the end (the end being 1990, the year of reunification). Years of Nazi propaganda had taught Germans to fear Communist Russians. So when the Soviets arrived in Sonneberg and began to rape and pillage, their fears were realized and they fled. When Soviets (with the help of East German Communists) imposed Stalinism and all that went with it, their fears were doubled and they fled. And when Soviet order reduced once prosperous Sonneberg to a mere economic shadow of Wirtschaftwunder-era Neustadt, their fears were tripled and they fled. For the Soviets and their East German toadies, this “defection” was embarrassing, so they made what was an ill-defined, porous border zone into a militarized, nearly sealed wall. For anyone familiar with Soviet border policy in the 1930s, what they did in Germany is not surprising. What is surprising (at least to me) is the Americans’ and Neustadters’ response to the influx of Easterners, namely, something between ambivalence and hostility. The former wanted order on the border and the latter wanted security from the Eastern “mob.” Both took active measures to keep the Ossis out, all the while issuing pronouncements about the necessity of Wiedervereinigung. The Soviets are responsible for the division of Germany, but, as Edith shows, they had help. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

american americans germany german nazis soviet grenze soviets iron curtain wiedervereinigung east german neustadt stalinism oxford up sonneberg ossis sheffer easterners edith sheffer burned bridge burned bridge how east west germans made east german communists wirtschaftwunder neustadters
New Books in German Studies
Edith Sheffer, “Burned Bridge: How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain” (Oxford UP, 2011)

New Books in German Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2011 65:56


If Edith Sheffer‘s excellent Burned Bridge: How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain (Oxford UP, 2011) has a single lesson, it’s that dividing a country is not as easy as you might think. You don’t just draw a line and tell people that it’s now the “border,” for in order for borders to be borders, they have to be seen as such. Sheffer shows that for quite a number of years after 1945, the Germans in Neustadt and Sonneberg–closely situated towns in, respectively, the American and Soviet zones of occupation–didn’t really know whether the border was a border and, if so, what kind of border it was or should be. “It”–whatever it was–was shifting, lawless, contested, resented, profitable, and sometimes deadly. The Grenze at Burned Bridge was really a kind of anarchical region dividing people who were in no way different from one another but who were compelled to behave as if they were by two occupying powers. The degree to which they were so compelled differed and this made all the difference in the end (the end being 1990, the year of reunification). Years of Nazi propaganda had taught Germans to fear Communist Russians. So when the Soviets arrived in Sonneberg and began to rape and pillage, their fears were realized and they fled. When Soviets (with the help of East German Communists) imposed Stalinism and all that went with it, their fears were doubled and they fled. And when Soviet order reduced once prosperous Sonneberg to a mere economic shadow of Wirtschaftwunder-era Neustadt, their fears were tripled and they fled. For the Soviets and their East German toadies, this “defection” was embarrassing, so they made what was an ill-defined, porous border zone into a militarized, nearly sealed wall. For anyone familiar with Soviet border policy in the 1930s, what they did in Germany is not surprising. What is surprising (at least to me) is the Americans’ and Neustadters’ response to the influx of Easterners, namely, something between ambivalence and hostility. The former wanted order on the border and the latter wanted security from the Eastern “mob.” Both took active measures to keep the Ossis out, all the while issuing pronouncements about the necessity of Wiedervereinigung. The Soviets are responsible for the division of Germany, but, as Edith shows, they had help. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

american americans germany german nazis soviet grenze soviets iron curtain wiedervereinigung east german neustadt stalinism oxford up sonneberg ossis sheffer easterners edith sheffer burned bridge burned bridge how east west germans made east german communists wirtschaftwunder neustadters
New Books in European Studies
Edith Sheffer, “Burned Bridge: How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain” (Oxford UP, 2011)

New Books in European Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2011 65:30


If Edith Sheffer‘s excellent Burned Bridge: How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain (Oxford UP, 2011) has a single lesson, it’s that dividing a country is not as easy as you might think. You don’t just draw a line and tell people that it’s now the “border,” for in order for borders to be borders, they have to be seen as such. Sheffer shows that for quite a number of years after 1945, the Germans in Neustadt and Sonneberg–closely situated towns in, respectively, the American and Soviet zones of occupation–didn’t really know whether the border was a border and, if so, what kind of border it was or should be. “It”–whatever it was–was shifting, lawless, contested, resented, profitable, and sometimes deadly. The Grenze at Burned Bridge was really a kind of anarchical region dividing people who were in no way different from one another but who were compelled to behave as if they were by two occupying powers. The degree to which they were so compelled differed and this made all the difference in the end (the end being 1990, the year of reunification). Years of Nazi propaganda had taught Germans to fear Communist Russians. So when the Soviets arrived in Sonneberg and began to rape and pillage, their fears were realized and they fled. When Soviets (with the help of East German Communists) imposed Stalinism and all that went with it, their fears were doubled and they fled. And when Soviet order reduced once prosperous Sonneberg to a mere economic shadow of Wirtschaftwunder-era Neustadt, their fears were tripled and they fled. For the Soviets and their East German toadies, this “defection” was embarrassing, so they made what was an ill-defined, porous border zone into a militarized, nearly sealed wall. For anyone familiar with Soviet border policy in the 1930s, what they did in Germany is not surprising. What is surprising (at least to me) is the Americans’ and Neustadters’ response to the influx of Easterners, namely, something between ambivalence and hostility. The former wanted order on the border and the latter wanted security from the Eastern “mob.” Both took active measures to keep the Ossis out, all the while issuing pronouncements about the necessity of Wiedervereinigung. The Soviets are responsible for the division of Germany, but, as Edith shows, they had help. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

american americans germany german nazis soviet grenze soviets iron curtain wiedervereinigung east german neustadt stalinism oxford up sonneberg ossis sheffer easterners edith sheffer burned bridge burned bridge how east west germans made east german communists wirtschaftwunder neustadters
New Books Network
Edith Sheffer, “Burned Bridge: How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain” (Oxford UP, 2011)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2011 65:56


If Edith Sheffer‘s excellent Burned Bridge: How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain (Oxford UP, 2011) has a single lesson, it’s that dividing a country is not as easy as you might think. You don’t just draw a line and tell people that it’s now the “border,” for in order for borders to be borders, they have to be seen as such. Sheffer shows that for quite a number of years after 1945, the Germans in Neustadt and Sonneberg–closely situated towns in, respectively, the American and Soviet zones of occupation–didn’t really know whether the border was a border and, if so, what kind of border it was or should be. “It”–whatever it was–was shifting, lawless, contested, resented, profitable, and sometimes deadly. The Grenze at Burned Bridge was really a kind of anarchical region dividing people who were in no way different from one another but who were compelled to behave as if they were by two occupying powers. The degree to which they were so compelled differed and this made all the difference in the end (the end being 1990, the year of reunification). Years of Nazi propaganda had taught Germans to fear Communist Russians. So when the Soviets arrived in Sonneberg and began to rape and pillage, their fears were realized and they fled. When Soviets (with the help of East German Communists) imposed Stalinism and all that went with it, their fears were doubled and they fled. And when Soviet order reduced once prosperous Sonneberg to a mere economic shadow of Wirtschaftwunder-era Neustadt, their fears were tripled and they fled. For the Soviets and their East German toadies, this “defection” was embarrassing, so they made what was an ill-defined, porous border zone into a militarized, nearly sealed wall. For anyone familiar with Soviet border policy in the 1930s, what they did in Germany is not surprising. What is surprising (at least to me) is the Americans’ and Neustadters’ response to the influx of Easterners, namely, something between ambivalence and hostility. The former wanted order on the border and the latter wanted security from the Eastern “mob.” Both took active measures to keep the Ossis out, all the while issuing pronouncements about the necessity of Wiedervereinigung. The Soviets are responsible for the division of Germany, but, as Edith shows, they had help. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

american americans germany german nazis soviet grenze soviets iron curtain wiedervereinigung east german neustadt stalinism oxford up sonneberg ossis sheffer easterners edith sheffer burned bridge burned bridge how east west germans made east german communists wirtschaftwunder neustadters
In Conversation: An OUP Podcast
Edith Sheffer, “Burned Bridge: How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain” (Oxford UP, 2011)

In Conversation: An OUP Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2011 65:56


If Edith Sheffer‘s excellent Burned Bridge: How East and West Germans Made the Iron Curtain (Oxford UP, 2011) has a single lesson, it's that dividing a country is not as easy as you might think. You don't just draw a line and tell people that it's now the “border,” for in order for borders to be borders, they have to be seen as such. Sheffer shows that for quite a number of years after 1945, the Germans in Neustadt and Sonneberg–closely situated towns in, respectively, the American and Soviet zones of occupation–didn't really know whether the border was a border and, if so, what kind of border it was or should be. “It”–whatever it was–was shifting, lawless, contested, resented, profitable, and sometimes deadly. The Grenze at Burned Bridge was really a kind of anarchical region dividing people who were in no way different from one another but who were compelled to behave as if they were by two occupying powers. The degree to which they were so compelled differed and this made all the difference in the end (the end being 1990, the year of reunification). Years of Nazi propaganda had taught Germans to fear Communist Russians. So when the Soviets arrived in Sonneberg and began to rape and pillage, their fears were realized and they fled. When Soviets (with the help of East German Communists) imposed Stalinism and all that went with it, their fears were doubled and they fled. And when Soviet order reduced once prosperous Sonneberg to a mere economic shadow of Wirtschaftwunder-era Neustadt, their fears were tripled and they fled. For the Soviets and their East German toadies, this “defection” was embarrassing, so they made what was an ill-defined, porous border zone into a militarized, nearly sealed wall. For anyone familiar with Soviet border policy in the 1930s, what they did in Germany is not surprising. What is surprising (at least to me) is the Americans' and Neustadters' response to the influx of Easterners, namely, something between ambivalence and hostility. The former wanted order on the border and the latter wanted security from the Eastern “mob.” Both took active measures to keep the Ossis out, all the while issuing pronouncements about the necessity of Wiedervereinigung. The Soviets are responsible for the division of Germany, but, as Edith shows, they had help.

american americans germany german nazis soviet grenze soviets iron curtain wiedervereinigung east german neustadt stalinism oxford up sonneberg ossis sheffer easterners edith sheffer burned bridge burned bridge how east west germans made east german communists wirtschaftwunder neustadters