POPULARITY
(NOTAS Y ENLACES DEL CAPÍTULO AQUÍ: https://www.jaimerodriguezdesantiago.com/kaizen/207-toma-de-decisiones-ix-experiencias-transformativas/)Imagina que tienes la oportunidad de convertirte en un vampiro o en una vampiresa. Un rápido e indoloro mordisco y serás para siempre una criatura de la noche. Tu vida sería completamente diferente. Experimentarías todo tipo de nuevas, intensas y reveladoras sensaciones. Lograrías una fuerza, una velocidad y un poder increíbles. Y serías inmortal, a no ser que te diera por tomar el sol. Bueno, y tendrías que beber sangre, eso también. No todo iban a ser ventajas. Supón que todos tus amigos, toda esa gente que conoces con intereses, puntos de vista y vidas similares a la tuya, ya lo han hecho. Ya son vampiros. Y todos te dicen que les encanta. Te describen sus nuevas vidas absolutamente entusiasmados y te animan a que hagas lo mismo. Calman, además, tus temores y te explican que los vampiros modernos no matan humanos, que beben sangre de vaca y de pollo. Dicen cosas como que jamás volverían a ser humanos si pudieran. Que su vida ha adquirido un nuevo significado y un propósito que nunca antes sintieron. Que ahora entienden la realidad de una forma que simplemente no podían concebir cuando eran humanos. Y que su nueva vida es tan increíble, que realmente no te la pueden explicar. Tienes que ser un vampiro para saber cómo se siente.Supongamos también que si dejaras pasar esta oportunidad, no volverías a tener otra nunca. ¿Entonces? ¿Cuál es tu respuesta? ¿Lo harías?Patrocinador del capítulo: informa.es/informaccion ¡Ya están abiertas las inscripciones para la 2ª edición del programa de desarrollo directivo y liderazgo que dirijo en Tramontana! ¿Te interesa? Toda la info aquí: https://www.tramontana.net/desarrollo-directivo-liderazgo¿Te gusta kaizen? Apoya el podcast uniéndote a la Comunidad y accede a contenidos y ventajas exclusivas: https://www.jaimerodriguezdesantiago.com/comunidad-kaizen/
Une scène digne d'un film d'espionnage ou de science-fiction… 15h30 hier après-midi au Liban, des centaines de “bipeurs” qui explosent simultanément, près de 3000 blessés, une douzaine de morts et l'impression d'une descente aux enfers qui n'en finit plus… La tragédie d'un pays, le Liban, marqué par 50 ans de guerre civile, de crises et de violences… La tragédie d'une région, le Proche-Orient, et de ses peuples, quels qu'ils soient, qui la paient au prix fort sous le regard impuissant du reste du monde… Nous allons en débattre ce soir : l'embrasement est-il désormais inévitable ou y a-t-il encore une chance d'y échapper ? Le Hezbollah, bras armé de l'Iran à la frontière nord d'Israël, a-t-il les moyens de riposter ? A-t-il intérêt à le faire, au risque d'entraîner encore plus le Liban dans sa chute ? Enfin Israël peut-il se permettre de mener deux guerres simultanément alors que la bande de Gaza est toujours sous le feu israélien ? On en débat ce mercredi 18 septembre 2024 avec : Denis CHARBIT, Professeur de science politique à l'université ouverte d'Israël, auteur de « Israël , l'impossible état normal », Calman levy, sept 2024Jadd HILAL, Écrivain, docteur et chercheur en littérature et philosophieChristophe AYAD, Grand reporter au Monde, auteur de « Géopolitique du Hezbollah » aux éditions PUF (27/03/2024)Amélie FEREY, Responsable du Laboratoire de recherche sur la défense (LRD), Centre des Études de Sécurité de l'Ifri.Vincent LEMIRE, Historien, auteur de « Histoire de Jérusalem » aux éditions Les Arènes (27/10/22)Alexandra SCHWARTZBROD, Journaliste, directrice adjointe de la rédaction de Libération, ancienne correspondante à Jérusalem (2000-2003),autrice de « Éclats » aux éditions Mercure de France (11/04/2024)
More from CES 2024: SVS demo’d their new Ultra Evolution Series Speakers, Hisense claims their 110″ ULED X TV can hit 10,000 nits, Portrait Displays offers their G1 Pattern Generator for Calman, but their C7 HDR Colorimeter got cancelled, and Filmmaker Mode is coming to Dolby Vision. Tom unexpectedly had to cut out early this week, […] The post AV Rant #896: The Royal Rob appeared first on AV Rant.
Julián Matiz, enviado de Caracol Radio a Ecuador
Aujourd'hui, nous allons parler de la scarification et des tentatives de suicide chez les adolescents. Nous allons explorer les causes profondes de ces comportements, les signes avant-coureurs et la façon dont nous pouvons aider les adolescents à traverser ces moments difficiles. Je vous propose une interview d'Emmanuelle Granier, psychanalyste, pédopsychiatre et auteur. J'espère que cet épisode vous plaira.
Tom had to call in sick this week. So Lee Overstreet is here to pinch hit. Six James Cameron movies are getting Collector’s Edition Ultra HD Blu-ray releases. Portrait Displays has a new, affordable C7 HDR Colorimeter that’s accurate up to 10,000 nits, and new Calman bundles, too. Sonos fixed their Arc and Beam Atmos […] The post AV Rant #888: Everything Has Updates appeared first on AV Rant.
This podcast has been graciously sponsored by JewishPodcasts.fm. There is much overhead to maintain this service so please help us continue our goal of helping Jewish lecturers become podcasters and support us with a donation: https://thechesedfund.com/jewishpodcasts/donate
יתומים נשארנו בלי אב להדריכנו בדרך הישר מתאבלים ומבכים על פּטירת האי גברא רבא יקירא רב ומורה דרך ליובל שנים מלמד תורתנו בנאמנות מסור לתלמידיו באופן מופלגת טפח ועידוד צעירים המשיך ליתן עצות נכונות למבוגרים וישישים בנויות על דברי חז'ל הכניס בכל שיעור התלהבות דקדושה וריתחא דארייתא שמח בחלקו חלק ה להסתופּף בהיכל בית אולפנא דרבנן לוחם מלחמתו של תורה בהצהרת חשיבות חזרתו האיר פניו לכל אדם אהוב על הבריות דבק בחכמים ובספריהם הצנע לכת עניו וחסיד קיבל יסוריו באהבה קדוש במידותיו מורנו רבי קלונימוס קלמן בן ר` ישראל ווינריב זצ'ל ר'ם במכינת נר ישראל ( על שם רשבכה'ג רבי ישראל ליפקין סלנטר זצק'ל זי'ע) תלמיד ראשי הישיבות מדור הקדום מישיבת חפּץ חיים בבולטימור וגדולי הדור שהנהל נר ישראל בזמן פריחתו העמיד דורות מפוארים לתפארת וכל בית ישראל יבכו את השריפה אשר שרף ה The Issur Ben Tzvi Hersh Tshuvos and Poskim Shiur Of the The Yeshiva of Newark@IDT Marked the end of Shiva for A Rebbe of thousands of Students A source of inspiration and a living symbol of the ideal Eved Hashem A Teacher and Guide Who supported and Encouraged students throughout their lives Rav Calman Weinrib Zatzal Roshei Mechinas Ner Yisroel We mourn his passing And offer our condolences to the immediate bereaved His wife,children and grandchildren and present in the midst of their pain and sorrow Hespedim with Appreciation From Students stretching back five decades Who were from his first Talmidim who admired and loved him dearly Rav Dovid Stav Shlita Rabbi of Shoham Yoshev Rosh of the Tzohar organization Rav Moshe Zywica Shlita Senior Rabbinic Coordinator / Director of Operations The Orthodox Union Rav Naphtali Burnstein, Shlita Rabbi of the Young Israel of Greater Cleveland Rav Eli Samber Shlita Head of School-Arie Crown Hebrew Day School,Chicago This podcast has been graciously sponsored by JewishPodcasts.fm. There is much overhead to maintain this service so please help us continue our goal of helping Jewish lecturers become podcasters and support us with a donation: https://thechesedfund.com/jewishpodcasts/donate
Rest and Restore - Tony Calman - 25 June 2023
Aunque puede resultar una gran desconocida, la aromaterapia canina puede ayudar a nuestro "mejor amigo" a mejorar en muchos aspectos de su vida. En este programa conocemos un poco más sobre este tipo de terapia de la mano del educador, Carlos Rives. Además, en la sección "Consulta Veterinaria", hablamos de un proceso tan doloroso como conocer que nuestro peludo padece una enfermedad como la leucemia. Por último, un día más resolvemos dudas legales de la mano de la abogada de derecho animal, Patricia Arévalo.
The Lost Art of Generosity - Tony Calman - 4th June 2023
Good Friday Easter Bible Reading and Sermon - Tony Calman - 7th April 2023
Behold Your King - Week 1 - Tony Calman - 26th March 2023
HVBC Vision 2023 - Kingdom Impact - Week 4 - Tony Calman - 26th February 2023
HVBC Vision 2023 - Kingdom Impact - Week 3 - Tony Calman - 19th February 2023
HVBC Vision 2023 - Kingdom Impact - Week 2 - Tony Calman - 12th February 2023
HVBC Vision 2023 - Kingdom Impact - Week 1 - Tony Calman - 5th February 2023
Prepare For His Coming
El devocional del 16 de Septiembre de 2022 Salmo 104:10-13. 10 Tú haces que los manantiales viertan sus aguas en las cañadas, y que fluyan entre las montañas. 11 De ellas beben todas las bestias del campo; allí los asnos monteses calman su sed. 12 Las aves del cielo anidan junto a las aguas y cantan entre el follaje. 13 Desde Tus altos aposentos riegas las montañas; la tierra se sacia con el fruto de Tu trabajo.
Rapha presents Life in the Peloton! This week I've got a really cool guest for you on the pod, American Cory Williams. Hailing from South Central L.A. (and weighing in at 65 kilos…). Cory is a hugely successful racer and regular winner on the U.S. criterium scene, as well as a founder of the L39ION of Los Angeles racing team. Growing up in a cycling-mad family (their father, Calman, competed internationally for Belize) Cory and his two brothers, Justin and CJ, spent their youth racing up to four criteriums a week in California. The brothers soon recognised that traditional cycling races and media weren't hitting the mark with an audience who were used to following faster-paced US sports like NFL & NBA. So, instead of just trying to follow the traditional pathways of cycling over in Europe, they set about trying to make the changes they wanted to see in their home country. Starting off by strapping a Go-Pro to Cory's helmet, and filming from inside action-packed criterium races, the brothers soon built a huge following online while also winning big on the road. Since then, things have taken off, the brothers have been dominating the US crit scene, and L39ION of LA has grown to be one of the most popular teams on the planet. The team has one of the coolest kits and most unique vibes out there, and in 2021 through the ‘Into the Lion's Den' crit in Sacramento – started to get involved in organising events. If you haven't seen Cory's videos, they are well worth checking out at nationsnumber1beast on YouTube – they are fun to watch, have some great insight and of course, they are filled with characters you'll love to follow. I had a great chat with Cory about his journey, from the early days of being an outsider – putting his lycra shorts on to go training after school in South Central LA, through his love of film and racing, to breaking down how his team dominate in the races they ride. We also spoke about his current plans to try to create a new race series in the US, as well as his famed love for Zwift. I hope you enjoy the insight! Cheers, Mitch Listen Listen & subscribe to this series on the Life in the Peloton website, at Spotify, Apple Podcasts, GooglePlay, Stitcher, Youtube or your favourite pod app. Show Notes Episode breakdown: 0:00min to 2:45 – Intro to episode 2:45min to 5:53 – Cory's path into cycling 5:53min to 29:43 – L39ION of LA & the US racing scene 29:43 to 31:55 – Talking Zwift, training in LA & the ethos of the team 31:55 to end – Outro . . . Keep up with Cory on Instagram @nationsnumber1beast Find out more about L39ION of LA at l39ionla.com or on Instagram @l39ion.la . . . This episode is brought to you by Rapha, makers of the world's finest cycling clothing & accessories and the worlds largest cycling club, RCC. Find out more about Rapha: their kit, their club, their events and awesome clubhouses at rapha.cc. . . . Keep in touch Find all our episodes, LITP news and merch on our website www.lifeinthepeloton.com Listen on all good podcast apps, and now on Youtube. Follow us on socials: Instagram: @lifeinthepeloton Twitter: @lifeinthepelo Merch Paris-Roubaix Caps are back & available to shop. Get your cap collection growing – jump over to our online shop to grab one now. Shop LITP casual Merch anytime online at our store. From casual caps to mugs, embroidered tees, logo tees, sweaters and much more.. Theme Music The theme music for Life in the Peloton was composed by Pete Shelley, who was lead singer of the punk band Buzzcocks. It was commissioned by the production company behind Channel 4's coverage of the Tour de France in the 1980s and was used as the theme music for the nightly highlights show. Pete died in December 2018. We were given permission by Pete's widow and his manager to continue using the music for the theme tune to Life in the Peloton. To hear more about the music, listen to the Andre Greipel episode of Life in the Peloton. Subscribe Sign up to Life in the Peloton email updates to get the latest episodes and merch news straight to your inbox.
Los mercados estaban tranquilos en comparación con los últimos días, mientras los operadores evalúan las perspectivas. Los futuros subían junto con las acciones europeas, y las bolsas en Asia cerraron en terreno positivo. Los bonos del Tesoro se mantenían mayoritariamente estables, mientras los títulos a dos años caían antes de la venta de hoy.
This episode deals with post traumatic stress disorder and the impact PTSD can have on families. There may be content that is triggering for some.Brett is a veteran police officer in Ontario, Canada who has spent the majority of his career on patrol. One call in particular, followed by a series of similar calls would threaten everything he understood about himself and change his life and that of his family forever. On this episode, and in their recently published book, PTSD Road to Recovery, Brett and his wife Ava share their very personal journey through Brett's battle and recovery from post traumatic stress disorder. We discuss the importance of paying attention to the symptoms; how critical it is to fight for yourself and find the right help; and, Brett and Ava offer advice for other first responder families struggling with unseen injuries. Shimona & Associates Mortgage Consulting Mortgage Broker
Hablamos sobre la calma, tomar decisiones, elegir los problemas, el miedo, pegarse al que sabe, los hábitos y recordamos que cada día nuevo es un milagro. La música es del increíble, generoso y buena onda de Martín Elizalde, que siempre tira para adelante.
Marcio Ehrlich fala do sucesso que há anos o cantor faz nos comerciais. Citados: Banco 24 Horas, Nickelodeon, Amanco, Calman, Crystal, Livelo, Mundial
En este episodio conocerás cómo el ambiente influye en tu estado de ánimo, debido a que hay condiciones a tu alrededor que podrían provocarte la ansiedad. Por tal razón, te enseño la técnica de reestructuración del ambiente, para que tu espacio sea un lugar que propicie la calma, la tranquilidad y la paz. Con estas recomendaciones estarás a un paso más para tomar control de tu ansiedad.
Leadership, Transformation and the Healthcare CEO with Paul D. Vitale
Los alimentos tiene efectos sobre nuestro sistema nervioso, y por lo tanto, podemos escogerlos con intención y propósito. Estas 3 recetas que pueden ser útiles para inducir un estado de calma. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/pilar-benitez51/message
AVexcel - Episode 136 Recorded on April 20, 2021 Hosts: Patrick Norton and Robert Heron The rundown: - Caavo lives - CalMAN's Aurora Color Engine - The new Apple TV 4K - Ted Lasso Season 2 - Shure Aonic 50 review - Bowers & Wilkins PI5 & PI7 headphones - Epson EpiqVision Ultra LS500 on sale - Great gaming headsets - 2021 TV rumors - #askavexcel - Great home theater gear - Your excellent feedback & questions - What we're watching AVexcel is 100% powered by our excellent crew of Patreon supporters - thank you! Visit AVexcel.com for links, show notes, contact info, and more!
CP Media - Kathmandu Coast to Coast Special 4th November 2020 - Kelly Barber & Matt Calman Welcome back to our fifth show in season two as we build toward to the 2021 Kathmandu Coast to Coast. Another great episode to get your heart pumping in preparation for the 'big dance' 1:48 Kelly Barber Kelly has competed in multiple Coast to Coasts and has written a book all about it, “Conquering the Coast to Coast'' by Kelly Barber tells the story of how he found out just where his limits really lay. Having decided that he needed some adventure in his life, Kelly trained for months to transform himself from an out-of-shape average Joe into an athlete capable of taking on the race's grueling triathlon of cycling, running and kayaking. 15:09 Matt Calman Matt recalls his past KC2C's and the mental game that has come along with them. Matt is also the auther of the book 'The Longest Day a compelling story of moving from the depths of depression to competing in one of the toughest endurance races out there. 31:12 Thomasina Loeffen Finally, we check in with Thomasina (Tomo) Loeffen and get the latest update on their teams preparation and progress www.coasttocoast.co.nz www.kathmandu.co.nz www.teamcp.co.nz @teamcpnz https://www.facebook.com/teamcpnz richard@teamcp.co.nz CP MEDIA HOSTS Angus Petrie - @gustric Richard Greer - @ric.greer
In another packed episode, Patrick has not one but two special guests. First he talks to author Craig Calman about his friendship and association with Hal Roach, followed by a conversation with award winning documentary filmmaker, James Forsher, about his forthcoming feature length documentary about the life and career of Hal Roach. There are another two audio blogs, focussing on the next two films in the Laurel & Hardy filmography, namely Sailors Beware! (1927) and Now I'll Tell One (1927). To purchase a copy of Craig Calman's book, 100 Years of Brodies with Hal Roach, click here: https://amzn.to/3kWqu40 For more information and to support James Forsher's forthcoming documentary about Hal Roach, click here: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/hal-roach-documentary#/ To read the blog on Sailors Beware, click here: https://laurel-and-hardy-blog.com/2018/10/03/sailors-beware-1927/ To read the blog on Now I'll Tell One, click here: https://laurel-and-hardy-blog.com/2018/10/15/9-now-ill-tell-one-1927/ For more information about The Laurel & Hardy Blog, click here: https://laurel-and-hardy-blog.com/ To visit The Laurel & Hardy Blog's Amazon Store, click here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/shop/laurelandhardyblog To purchase CDs of the Beau Hunks Orchestra's music contained in these podcasts, click here: https://amzn.to/2CgeCbK To purchase a copy of the Network Blu Ray [Region Free] of Flying Deuces, click here: https://amzn.to/2PYhPjx To purchase a copy of Randy Skretvedt's, Laurel & Hardy: The Magic Behind the Movies, click here: https://amzn.to/2OuR5q2
Dados do Sindicato dos Trabalhadores das Drogarias no Espírito Santo (Sintrafarma), revelam que houve aumento de 20 a 30% na venda de medicamentos contra ansiedade, insônia e depressão durante a pandemia. Essa procura também foi registrada pela filial brasileira da farmacêutica sul-africana, Aspen Pharma, que identificou o aumento de quase 70% nas vendas do fitoterápico Calman. Mas, será que a busca por estes fármacos é desencadeada pela pandemia? No Estetoscópio desta semana,a jornalista Larissa Agnez bate um papo com dois especialistas que falam sobre ansiedade e o crescimento do mercado fitoterápico: a Psiquiatra Giuliana Cividanes e o Diretor de Marketing da Aspen Pharma, Jackson Figueiredo.
¿Hay realmente frases que calman?
Many of us have dealt at sometime in our life with depression, anxiety, burnout or stress. Many of us know what it's like to fight on a daily basis with the black dog. In this very candid and honest interview with Author Matt Calman we dive deep into the how depression and mental health struggles can catch anyone of us out and how we can courageously fight our way back to health and happiness. Matt used the challenge of the Coast to Coast to work through the demons in his mind and the importance of having a physical challenge and goal when dealing with derailed emotions. His book "The Longest Day" chronicles the ups the downs of his journey back to health culminating in the successful finishing of the ultimate challenge NZ's Coast to Coast multisport race The infamous Coast to Coast is a multisport competition held annually in New Zealand. It is run from the west coast to the east coast of the South Island, and features running, cycling and kayaking elements over a total of 243 kilometres (151 mi). It starts in Kumara Beach and traditionally finished in the Christchurch suburb of Sumner, but since 2015 finishes in New Brighton. You can find out more about Matts book at https://www.allenandunwin.com/browse/books/other-books/The-Longest-Day-Matt-Calman-9781988547305 We would like to thank our sponsors for this show: For more information on Lisa Tamati's programs, books and documentaries please visit www.lisatamati.com For Lisa's online run training coaching go to https://www.lisatamati.com/page/runni... Join hundreds of athletes from all over the world and all levels smashing their running goals while staying healthy in mind and body. Lisa's Epigenetics Testing Program https://www.lisatamati.com/page/epigenetics/ measurement and lifestyle stress data, that can all be captured from the comfort of your own home For Lisa's Mental Toughness online course visit: https://www.lisatamati.com/page/mindsetuniversity/ For Lisa's free weekly Podcast "Pushing the Limits" subscribe on iTunes or your favorite podcast app or visit the website https://www.lisatamati.com/page/podcast/ Lisa's third book has just been released. It's titled "Relentless - How A Mother And Daughter Defied The Odds" Visit: https://relentlessbook.lisatamati.com/ for more Information ABOUT THE BOOK: When extreme endurance athlete, Lisa Tamati, was confronted with the hardest challenge of her life, she fought with everything she had. Her beloved mother, Isobel, had suffered a huge aneurysm and stroke and was left with massive brain damage; she was like a baby in a woman's body. The prognosis was dire. There was very little hope that she would ever have any quality of life again. But Lisa is a fighter and stubborn. She absolutely refused to accept the words of the medical fraternity and instead decided that she was going to get her mother back or die trying. This book tells of the horrors, despair, hope, love, and incredible experiences and insights of that journey. It shares the difficulties of going against a medical system that has major problems and limitations. Amongst the darkest times were moments of great laughter and joy. Relentless will not only take the reader on a journey from despair to hope and joy, but it also provides information on the treatments used, expert advice and key principles to overcoming obstacles and winning in all of life's challenges. It will inspire and guide anyone who wants to achieve their goals in life, overcome massive obstacles or limiting beliefs. It's for those who are facing terrible odds, for those who can't see light at the end of the tunnel. It's about courage, self-belief, and mental toughness. And it's also about vulnerability... it's real, raw, and genuine. This is not just a story about the love and dedication between a mother and a daughter. It is about beating the odds, never giving up hope, doing whatever it takes, and what it means to go 'all in'. Isobel's miraculous recovery is a true tale of what can be accomplished when love is the motivating factor and when being relentless is the only option. Here's What NY Times Best Selling author and Nobel Prize Winner Author says of The Book: "There is nothing more powerful than overcoming physical illness when doctors don't have answers and the odds are stacked against you. This is a fiercely inspiring journey of a mother and daughter that never give up. It's a powerful example for all of us." —Dr. Bill Andrews, Nobel Prize Winner, author of Curing Aging and Telomere Lengthening. "A hero is someone that refuses to let anything stand in her way, and Lisa Tamati is such an individual. Faced with the insurmountable challenge of bringing her ailing mother back to health, Lisa harnessed a deeper strength to overcome impossible odds. Her story is gritty, genuine and raw, but ultimately uplifting and endearing. If you want to harness the power of hope and conviction to overcome the obstacles in your life, Lisa's inspiring story will show you the path." —Dean Karnazes, New York Times best selling author and Extreme Endurance Athlete. Transcript of the Podcast: Speaker 1: (00:01) Welcome to pushing the limits, the show that helps you reach your full potential with your host, Lisa [inaudible], brought to you by Lisatamati.com. Speaker 2: (00:12) Today I have another special interview with a very lovely friend Matt Calman. Now met is a journalist and he is the author of the longest day and matt shares his journey today through a very bad depression and coming back and using the coast to coast is his journey back to health. So it's a very, very interesting and insightful and really real interview, which I'm very pleased to bring you before we get over to matt just want to remind you my book relentless is now out in available on all the platforms, on audio books, on eBooks, on Amazon, on Kindle. You can find out all about about it at relentlessbook.lisatamati.com. That's relentlessbook.lisatamati.com I'd also like a word to all the runners out there. If you've been sitting on the fence about joining our online run training club running hot now's a good time to do it during the covid crisis, we have made a special so that it's more affordable for people. Speaker 2: (01:14) We have a 12 week excess membership excess for 49 us dollars at the moment for 12 weeks and get access to all of our programs from 5k up to a hundred miles. And we have a very holistic run training approach. So if you've never run before, this is your first time that you have having a go at it or whether you're doing your hundredth a hundred kilometer race. We'd love to talk to you and help you build a very structured plan and a holistic approach based on our five pillars, which are the running, the mobility, the strength and nutrition and the mindset. So check that out. That's on my website, at lisatamati.com. Now, before I go, please do give the show a rating and review. I really, really appreciate that on iTunes if you could. It really helps the show get exposure. And I love to hear your feedback of any of the episodes have really touched a chord with you. Or if you've found great help with this, please share it with your networks and also write to me and let me know. Really, really appreciate it right now over to matt Calman Speaker 3: (02:17) Well, Hey everybody, welcome back to the show. This is Lisa Tammany here and I am with matt Calman. Matt, how you doing? Good, thanks Lisa. Thank you for having me on. Oh, it's very, very exciting to have you met as a fellow New Zealand author. and, as I said, you don't know. He has written the book the longest stay recently, very recently telling his life story. And I'm going to share my story. I'm going to share his story with us. There. It is the longest life as I was watching on YouTube. I must grab a book met you know, really excited to delve into your story a little bit today and your backgrounds and how this book came about and your, your history. So give us a bit of a rundown on who you are and where you come from and your family and so on. And then it still haven't your story. Speaker 4: (03:03) Well, I'm, I'm 43 now. I was born and mastered them and it's very small town Amsterdam. Then my dad worked there as an insurance man then got transferred to Christchurch when I was about three years old. So like, yeah, I don't, I didn't know, I don't know Amsterdam then very well, but I had the roots there, a lot of friends there, and then we put down some roots in Christchurch and that's where I grow up. So I spent all the way through to my sort of early twenties and Christchurch. And then I met my wife, ah, when I was 19 and she was 17. She was just finishing up high school, took it to the bowl. And you pretty early on actually throw me and I know that she was going to be the ones who may, yeah, but a fairy tale really. Speaker 4: (03:52) Yeah, yeah, yeah. And so we're still dealing. We've got a couple of daughters now teen and nearly seven two girls and I've been, I'm at home with them for the last nine years. So when my, when my first, our first daughter was about seven months old I left my job as a journalist. I've been a journalist for a few years of the dominion post. I was living in Wilmington at that time with my wife's where she started her legal career. She's now a partner at a, at a sort of a good sized law firm and Christchurch. And we're living, you know, living the dream. But yeah, it's a, it certainly hasn't been a straight road life pays its ups and dances. You know, Lisa, I've read your book and I read about all your ups and downs and yeah, pretty inspiring stuff. Speaker 3: (04:48) Oh, thanks man. Yeah. And I'm keen to Delvin zoo story because you know, I love, I love people who share, they are the real stuff, the, the stuff that isn't perhaps pretty in the stuff that isn't glamorous, the difficult times. And your, your story is certainly inspiring. So let's start with where it all went wrong. You know, cause this sounds like a fairy tale. You meet your beautiful wife, you, your kids and lost going. Great. We did it all. We did things start to go wrong for you. Speaker 4: (05:15) Let's see. In Congress thing about all of us about depression, about how it doesn't discriminate it, it touches people who've had wonderful life like I've had. Well, and it touches people who struggled. It doesn't, yeah, it's not really about how good your lifers. Yes, from the outside, my life was perfect. Two beautiful children, amazing wife. We don't want for anything. We were pretty comfortable financially. Live in a lovely house in Christ, in a leafy suburb internally for probably it had been years, you know, it was like a tap dropping, slowly dropping, dropping, dropping and building up on this internal struggle I was having with Myla identity with my direction in life. There were a number of factors. There was, there was some sort of, at the time I had my breakdown and at the end of April, 2017 come off the back of a very stressful situation with, with someone who had kind of lied to us and taken the money and not a lot of money, but I took it very personally coming out of the back of that I had had some panic attacks like the year before, my first major panic attack was off the back of a situation. Speaker 4: (06:32) When I started to realize that things weren't right. And so I've been, I've been in hindsight dealing with depression and anxiety, social anxiety for most of my life. So before I knew what to call it, because I'd always, you know, I compared myself with other people and you look at the worst case scenario, the worst of the worst person who has suffered terrible mental illness and there's a full range. You're somewhere on, everyone's somewhere on the spectrum. So I never thought that I really had a problem with, with the time to, to fix or to try and address. So for years, this tape dropped and dropped and dropped. But it finally got to the point where I reached my breaking point and, and that's where the book really kind of begins. You know, I, this is, this was where my life kind of fell apart and I was diagnosed with depression, something that one, and for New Zealand as well experienced in the lifetimes. It's very, very common. We don't talk about it, but from the time I had my breakdown, that was when I started to she and to reach out and actually address it properly. Yup. Speaker 3: (07:42) And I mean, this is, this is, you know, like we do sometimes think that because I didn't, you know, love through the most horrific thing. The four don't have a right to be depressed in any way. And that's really a dangerous thing what you say, because then you don't address it. You don't know. Look out front. And you know, having had depression myself and having it rock bottom a number of times in my life I can totally relate to this feeling. So what actually had of it? How did it manifest itself when it really crashed? And this is what usually happens, you have a big crash. Speaker 4: (08:19) Well, basically I had been building out for months, weeks and months really seriously to the point where I was, I was desperate and feeling you really love myself. I was really irritable. Which is, which was a number one symptom and, and nightly mean like does anger where it's a rational, you don't really know what it's about, where it's coming from. And so like I was snapping it feeling really bad and apologizing straight away. And then, Mmm, in rhino it was sort of aware that things were about off, but she didn't, I, I mainly had it from everyone around me and I was just feeling internalizing everything. I was feeling all this mental strain, a lot of it, very subconscious. And it was just building up on me, building up and when it really crashed my, my daughters that had their cousins around for a sleepover extra. Speaker 4: (09:15) And so, Oh, it was under a bit of a bit of pressure there and I wasn't feeling good in myself. And I kind of had a boat, an outburst in front of all the kids in the kitchen over breakfast. I went upstairs and I was just sort of sliding back on my bed, really searching for what was going on, a real, I was feeling very desperate. And then, and then I looked over and I saw a vision and I'm actually in my bedroom now, so I looked over at the on suite away and a version of myself hanging in the doorway. No. Did well flashed into my, I w it wasn't, it wasn't even in my mind, it was like Alison nation. There was signs of it and a real that it just scared me straight. It gave me a white to, to the real problem that was there was head name. Speaker 4: (10:07) And I, it was, it was very frightening. Mmm. They fleshed up and then it was gone. You know, very quickly, and I described this in the book and that was the moment I reached out. I already had a and they haven't used for help. I've been seeing a counselor for, for the panic attacks I'd had the year before, but I got through that sort of put the bandaid on there, which was great, but hadn't really dealt with the main thing, which was this depression that was coming. Yep. And so I reached out for here and cold out for my wife and from there moment there was, there was no more facade of, of being okay. And it'll come down and it was just relating, Speaker 3: (10:52) No. How was that for a man on an eye? Like, you know, woman generally have a, a slightly perhaps easier time or sharing their emotions and how was it for a, you know, good Kay, we broke two to open up about something like this and you know, even to write about this afterwards is, is it quite, you know, like difficult and how's it been? How's it been received? Speaker 4: (11:15) I think for me it maybe was a little bit easier for me than for maybe other men who don't have an outlet. Yeah. I'd been a writer, you know, for a long time in June, freelance for a long time. I've been writing a blog about my life at home with the children in the early days. The ups and downs of life in a really honest blog about parenting and which was pretty entertaining to people were in serious, you know, I touched on some serious topics of miscarriage and grief and the stresses of being a parent and, and the identity of being a, being in the workplace and then coming home and not having that anymore. And then when I gave up alcohol in 2016 my blog, I'd started blogging and The signs, Diane is, is a good friend of mine, a lot of Dane has written books about her sobriety and, and keeps up the website living sober, which I joined. Speaker 4: (12:09) I'd done an article for drug foundation on her. And she inspired me to one of the people that really inspired me to give up drinking and, and just say, you know, get rid of that depressant. Yes. It's like they had a way basically taking that away rule the mental health staff to the four that was already bubbling away. I no longer had alcohol to kind of put the bandaid on the problem. I had to deal with it. So this is a very common thing that people would give up. Alcohol, I have to kind of deal with life in the war and without, without that thing, help them. So yeah, so like probably losing sight of the questionnaire, which often happens with me when I go on and on. But I have been blogging about, I've been doing this daily blog on those pseudonyms. Speaker 4: (12:54) So man, three, six, five. And actually if you, if you Google sideman three, six, five, the blogs are start up online. I, I blog for a year, the first year of sobriety that about seven, six, seven months and it became a blog about more about depression and about, about the struggles I was having. Wising up to that stuff. I'd already had the panic attack and that started writing about that. And then they know I, you know, I had my big crash and I stopped writing for a period of probably at least a week or a week and a half. We are obviously just trying to get through and getting through each moment really. And I wasn't able really to do anything. You know, I was, I was stripped back and control. I couldn't drive. I couldn't do much more than lie on the couch and just try and get, you know, get through the day. Speaker 4: (13:43) And so when I started riding again, I reentered the blog. Mmm. Talking about the depression. So being open about it, it already happened. So I win. You know, I decided to write the book, you know, I knew, I knew that writing as honestly as possible, it was really important. So you don't just talk in generalities and let people fill in the gaps. Oh, I've got my experience. I'm not an expert on depression, but I'm an expert on my own depression. And in that way, there's this universality of it. No, I mean everyone has a very unique experience in different ways that they can coping and get stroller. But I, I put my roadmap down in the book to help out other people you know, build their own roadmap. So Speaker 3: (14:27) You've come through this time and I know that you know, and it's moving to the part of the story where, you know, it's called the longest day for a reason. Speaker 4: (14:38) What happened there also in February, 2018. So I'm sort of, I'm throw the worst part of the depression, the, the railway early days when I'm getting on the medication, you know, I'm getting back to functioning and, and my, my heat's clear and the fog is lifting and I'm starting to look for the challenge, the next thing that I can do because basically you guys stripped all responsibility. I just stopped. I was a big being at home. It was actually easier for me and I don't know how people who work do this. Rhino, he was able to take all that pressure off me and I could just work on my recovery. And so then I was looking for the next thing to actually do the next challenge. And my friends were finishing the coast to coast, which is a rice that goes from the West coast, New Zealand tomorrow, serpentine beach. Speaker 4: (15:27) And then it goes all the way across the country over the big mountain. And then you're on down the road down the why man and then you're cycling correct across J 70 case last bike ride into this terrible kid, went on the straightest route and use the longest straightest road in New Zealand. CFA arrived and you're finishing it and you brought in a new youth Sumner that can the day speed do any, it was one of the famous Cathy lunch, all these famous famous people writing Curry, Sam Klein as the Legion, the rice in the moment, four time winner and the most iconic race and captured it beautifully between one side of the country and the other, my friends were finishing and I decided to go out for the first time either to see the finish of this race. I've lived in Christchurch most of my life, always been kind of kept divided by this rice, nivo bean physically there, this is the mistake I made. Speaker 4: (16:12) I go into the race, you go to this race and you get drawn into the rice and you get inspired by all these amazing people. No half of them don't look like acting like that prepared within an inch of their lives. And I are all finishing this rice. You see what it means to them you see on their faces but the struggle. Yeah, the joy, the hardship that the just getting over all these little struggles along the way to get across the Island. And it's, it's not, it's not a sure thing. You start this race and you don't know what's going to happen. You can prepare for everything, but it gets, stuff gets chucked in you. And this is just like as a metaphor for life, this race. So I've seen my friends Spanish, I see Sam clot actually finish. You finished about half an hour before my friends cause the one day people, you even do it in two days or one day. Speaker 4: (17:02) People, we don't know that was raised the two day people start on the second day and sorry, the one night people start on the second day of the rice. I winner in the late people, I pass a lot of the highly end of the two day field, so the flower people. And so I stay in class one time. I say the winner of the rice, I say my friends finish. I see them embraced by their families. They run the last bit of the kids and I'm like, I want to buy the of this. I'm going to. So I decided, I left, I left the race and I'm biking back to my house, 10 Ks away. And so, and as I was biking home I already knew I was going to sign up in 2019 and just would be the vehicle I would use to prep does doing things differently in my life to approach challenges differently because a lot of my problems had been, I've been so hard on myself. The things that are tried or not tried, I'd mainly been a spectator on the sidelines of my own life. Wanting to do some of these things and thinking, no, that's not for may because God, I know I couldn't do that and I decided, right. All right, I'm going to do it. If my friends can do this, I can do this. Speaker 4: (18:14) I mainly knew that this was the vehicle for my book because I'd always wanted to ride. Speaker 3: (18:19) Yes. This well in sport, you know, like, I mean, you know, I've got different, but some of stories really. Speaker 4: (18:31) No, I'm not. I'm Lisa, the late on sort of a, I would, NASA, I'm on a little bit higher than a weekend warrior. But well, no, kind of just hanging under there at a late level. Speaker 3: (18:42) Yeah. Well that's the funny thing Matt. I'm totally not a late and never have been. Oh, hold on. Ever done his work for 25 years at something and got, you know, halfway good at it. Speaker 4: (18:55) It doesn't matter though, isn't it? Yeah, it's the price you say, Speaker 3: (18:58) But, but you know, like as far as ability and like, you know, you put me in a race with you. If I had to go for a jog for you with you, you'd be like off I cry. That like, come on. All right. My husband does it every day. You know, I like, I'm slow. But that doesn't matter. Right. It's, it's the journey that you go on on the inside. That's really what's important. And your, your story actually reminds me of Charlie angle's story a little bit, except he was much more extreme metallic. Charlie is he's the one at random right across the Sahara and he's legend. Widowed in, in, in his story was well, much more alcohol and drugs. So he, yeah, he took, yeah. Now stories to the other end of crazy, but on both ends. Speaker 3: (19:46) But, but this, this, this, the same reason nights through so many of our lives. And when we take up a sport that is hugely challenging, whether it's the coast of ghosts or deer Valley or doing something crazy, it is the hardest thing you've ever done, but at the same time as the best, most rewarding experience. And it changes your perception of who you are. I mean, I, I remember even like when I met my husband at the beginning he was coming to me for running coaching and you know, he wanted to do this charity of running 27 case in full BA. He's a firefighter and full caps, you know, the yellow plastic suits with full BA for charity. And he wanted to know about running in the heat. So who better to ask, right? Speaker 3: (20:32) Teach teacher may touch him in any, any does it. And it goes, it raises lots of money. Awesome. And he, he always thought that ultra marathon runners had to be special types of people with super talents. And he started when he started to get to know me to realize, hang on, there's nothing special about this church. She's just funny. And it realized that, hang on, I could probably do this. And then his life, you know, he's gone on to do lots of ultras and so on. And this story of head over and over and over and over again because we sit ourselves, limitations of what we're capable of, don't we? And we, and we think we can overcome them. And you saw in your friends, so you considered perhaps equals to you that they could do this and therefore that was a gateway for you to Speaker 4: (21:17) Absolutely. And I think also like, you know, really on our mind, I knew that I wasn't going to be able to do the coast to coast until the end, you know, so I turned up. So yeah, so it's not like it's not 243 kilometers across a mountain and across the country and down the river. It's a million States. And so you just start walking towards her and then why it's all that process stuff. So, and there was also a massive antidote to the depression as like depression really does. I mean, they say that old saying goes a depression lives in the past and regrets and the things that you've done and things you're holding on. So anxiety lives in the future and worries about what's going to happen up here. And I had both of those things going on. So, so the coast to coast and training, like you know, you've got to be in the moment. Speaker 4: (22:04) You described this many times Googling down evens pass at 70 Ks an hour on your bike. There's potholes all over the place. It's very much you should, you really need a P in the moment. So, so the poster goes, training draws the past and in the future into the present in the end. So, so you are, you are just soaking up that experience. Like in the past when I trained, I would off be beating myself up about God. I wish I was better and and, and I'd have pain in my body. I some thought, I wish I wasn't hurting and all the stuff, you know, and, and I'd be just fixated on this little rigid small goal of I have to run a certain time in my half marathon. I've always wanted to break an hour, an hour and a half so I could consider myself a good runner. Speaker 4: (22:50) I was like, well, okay, a lot of people would have killed to do, do my best time of, of an hour, 31, whatever it was. And so, you know, I'd never quite made that. And maybe one day it doesn't matter to me now it's, it's really more about the duty because like the, all that time I spent or writing myself and being so hard on myself, and then I wouldn't reach the goal and then I would be like, Oh, there's just another reason why I'm not good enough. Yeah. You know, you know, a lot of people think like this and like, I thought like this all my life. Yeah. The first thing the first thing I had to fix, Mmm. When I was recovering from the, from my breakdown, well, it was my relationship with myself. So you're like, you know, you're talk about you need to lock yourself. Speaker 4: (23:37) That is really important. But to really truly like yourself and say, Oh, my K is so powerful. Mmm. And it does just the mindset tweak. It's just a shift in mindset to the point of, Mmm. From that moment on, you don't hear about all that external stuff. You don't hear about missing up, you don't care about falling out of your boat. So from that point on, once I've fixed my relationship with myself and I, and I went into this training, Mmm. Like a fraud. If I'd been the old man, I would have fallen out of my diet and I would have packed it all up and said, fuck it. I'm not going to do it. I'll, sorry. Sorry. Did y'all eat a data and, and carried me through the year because I'm embracing making mistakes and knowing that it was all a learning process and nothing's perfect. Speaker 4: (24:28) And my race, my two races, I edit coast to coast. Neither of them were perfect. I loved every minute of both races. The one, the one which is encapsulated in the book and then the one that I did this year earlier this year the best experiences of my life because you know, I've, I've now gained this massive community of people. Oh, I'm so connected now to hundreds and hundreds of people that do this race. It's opened my life up instead of like me going, God, I wish, I wish I had more friends. So I wish that I hadn't with deep friendships in my life, all that stuff was there all along, but he still wasn't being a very good friend to myself. I didn't feel I deserved it. Now that I'm, that I know that I'm okay, I realize that and I'm embracing that, but everything else has just improved. So I still struggle with depression and fate. Speaker 4: (25:19) Two days ago I really crushed again, like it had been building up subconsciously. My, my lockdown experience has been like a dream can be to a lot of people's and like kids have been so wonderful, but yeah, but I haven't, I need this space. I need the aligned time. And I need the time to just risk that, you know, when the kids are at school, if I'm not doing well, yup. You know, I say it's okay for me to risk cause I need to do that or there's certain strategies I've put in place and I haven't been able to do that. So that boat up to the point where it just all came out and, and, and I was like the irritability and the anger and the just feeling side low and just the brain fog was bad. And, but I've been here before. I lived experience, I know passes in the news today I signed up and did a yoga class and 9:00 AM to just get my day rolling in the right way and, and just yeah, like in street, like your home, I'm homeschooling. I'm not a teacher. Speaker 3: (26:18) You're not alone in this panel. I think there are many linear, many parents now they going, hell yeah, I get you. Speaker 4: (26:25) So you'd be a stay. It doesn't matter. Really the bigger picture is that you're okay. Yeah. And that everyone's happy. Speaker 3: (26:32) You know what? And what I find powerful about data to say, sometimes people write about, you've written a book, I've written three books. People think you've got it all together now you've written about it in a year together and you're, you're on top of it. And nothing could be further from the truth. We are all on a journey and as you said before, there's a spectrum and there's a, you know, we're all improving our mental health and I've been doing a lot of study lately on functional genomics and looking at genes and your predisposition to certain ways of you know, how long adrenaline stays in your body, how fast the dopamine mean is take, is processed, all of these chemical things and actually have an influence, which I'd love to talk to you about actually separately. I'll, I'll on that topic. When you, once you start to understand your genes, I think that all and what you can do to, to help support that that will be a really another great thing to, to, to have in your toolkit. Speaker 3: (27:24) But we need talkative. This isn't talking about like every time I go through a horrible experience and hard times, I really have a little bit more then I can use it. It can, it can either break me and there've been things that have nearly broken me and where I thought I was broken. And that was that. But you know, I managed to stand up. And then when you do stand back up, you've got another tool that you've been able to overcome. And this is why [inaudible] this story is so powerful and I really encourage people to go and get the book the longest day. Mine's on its way. And I'm looking forward to diving into it and into the story. And it really, if, if this, if this interview you guys sitting out there listening to this, if this is the reason I did with you, what's Matt saying? Speaker 3: (28:12) And you think that this could help you know, ground. Grab that book the longest day, shake it out, see what Mets all about and, and see if, if there's something in there for you that can help you. We write these books because we're just sharing Ella stories and we're not experts necessarily, but the, the value lies in the [inaudible] okay. In being open sharing honestly. Yeah. And giving other people a new perspective on the crap that they're going to, cause sometimes you cannot see the forest for the trees when you're in the middle of it. And another thing is, yeah, Speaker 4: (28:49) That your experiences as, as you need better does really quite universal. And the more you share about what's happening for you, then then you're giving other people permission. Feel connected. But also to share about, back to you, like, so you get back what you reflect out. And I, I've, I've seen it, what's going on with me with a lot of people, perfect strangers in a way, within 20 seconds of meeting a perfect stranger. I've gotten really good at being able to just sorta segue into a real deep conversation. And it's really one voice because, okay, we're, we're all, we're all sort of wandering around the planet aimlessly and then we collide with each other and we can make these really kind of amazing connections. And you don't have to be the best friend or the person you'd leave them. You might never see them again. But if I felt quite special way and then Speaker 3: (29:40) You feel and Speaker 4: (29:42) Going around being, I mean we have to do with our professional hats on and network and song be a certain way and so on. Well I don't have to, cause I'm sad I'm gay so I'm the most unprofessional person. Speaker 3: (29:52) But this is a thing and this is why I think we buy some, you know, we both kept them of our own ship cause I don't go to work either. I work my ass off but I wasn't going to work is that I can be who I am and that is the most precious thing to me and I can be the real person and not the person that, you know, people want me to be, you know, at least my son. You can just be you and [inaudible] and you can connect and this is what the other are that sport does. And when you're out doing the, the either coast to coast or an ultra marathon somewhere, you go through so much shit and that period of time and so much hardship and so much pain and so much doubts and so much whatever and the preparation and everything that the person that's running next to you or your crew or whatever the case may be, that going through it with you and they're experiencing. Speaker 3: (30:40) And that creates a bond that can, that is better than what the normal bottoms when you just go to have coffee with your friends, you know, and it's like, you know, when soldiers go to war together and they come back, they have a bond that I don't think we as outside people can ever actually understand because they've wrapped together and there is a beauty in this, even though it can be hard at the time. There is a beauty in that as well. And having those deep connections with other humans is a real human need. And you know, we, we sort of sometimes think we can be lone wolfs and we can, I mean, I used to definitely try and be the lone Wolf and I don't need everybody and and it was only because I was hurting, you know, it was only cause I didn't have that connection that I really sought needed. And you do dumb things in, you know ma, I know you've got a, an appointment to get to and I've got another coaching session to do. I would really like to continue this conversation, you know, maybe in a second or a little bit later on because I think it needs to be really explored so we can people buy the book, where can they find out about you and your blog and all the other work that you're doing that. Speaker 4: (31:49) So, so the book is published by element on one. I just hear from them that that wall are not fulfilling orders at the moment, but when it starts back up again, you can order it. Online. You just, you just Google the longest day met Kellman at all. They all know at links pop up, you can get it for Kindle on Amazon and for a reader on ebooks.com. Which was another instant way to be able to read it in the lockdown. A lot of people have done that yet. Speaker 3: (32:19) ebooks. And do you have a website met that you personally have? Speaker 4: (32:24) Yes, mattcalman.com so MA, T, T, C A L M A N . com l and he's a lengthier actually to to buy the book. And you sit on my photos. thats from my racing in falling out a client days, which Speaker 3: (32:40) Will continue. I wouldn't even, I had a certain one, one of those rice ones you haven't loved until you said. That's nice. Good. Thank you so much for sharing your wisdom today. I really appreciate it. It's been an honor to have you on and to meet another fellow author, you know, doing, doing cool stuff in the world. So thank you very much for your time. Thanks so much. Been great. Speaker 1: (33:08) That's it this week for pushing the limits. Be sure to write, review, and share with your friends and head over and visit Lisa and her team at lisatamati.com.
Matt Calman's most consistent tool for dealing with problems throughout his life was alcohol. But it got to the stage where he was no longer willing to put up with the dark side of his drinking. So he quit. But the problems that had been simmering away for most of his life merely came to a head. It led to a major depressive phase with panic attacks and thoughts of suicide. Finally Matt began the slow climb to rebuild himself. He was ready to find something. It just happened to be the Coast to Coast Multisport World Championships, the toughest endurance race in New Zealand....Const Bryan and Matt and talk his new book, his journey, and what Matt has planned next !
Análisis con Gonzalo Escribano, profesor del programa de Energía y Cambio climático del Real Instituto Elcano
Today we have a special JIMMY RANTS on The LLVLC Show for you. Jimmy is on his much deserved six-month sabbatical so we are bringing you some of the best content from Jimmy’s daily show JIMMY RANTS. Be sure to bookmark JimmyRants.com and dig through all of the content there during Jimmy’s time away. Paid advertisement “How many people take a statin thinking that they are preventing heart disease when we now know that statins actually removing heart healthy CoQ10.” Jimmy Moore Paid advertisement There’s no denying the advocates for a low-carb, high-fat, ketogenic diet are under major attack right now from the mainstream powers that be. The meteoric rise in popularity of nutritional health plans like Paleo, real food, Whole30, and keto in recent years is making a lot of people in the pharmaceutical drug industry very uncomfortable. In the UK, one of the ways they try to discredit doctors and other medical professionals from speaking out about topics like cholesterol and medications intended to lower cholesterol like statins is to spread lies and innuendo about what their position is on the subject. That’s exactly what happened in two recent Daily Mail articles written by health editor Barney Calman you can read below. Statin deniers are putting patients’ lives at risk, says Health Secretary Matt Hancock as he condemns doctors who cast doubt on their effectiveness: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6764823/Doctors-peddle-myths-effectiveness-statins-putting-lives-risk-says-Minister.html AND There is a special place in hell for the doctors who claim statins don’t work, says BARNEY CALMAN: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-6764363/There-special-place-hell-doctors-claim-statins-dont-work-says-BARNEY-CALMAN.html The three UK keto leaders that were targeted in these hit pieces by Calman include Dr. Zoe Harcombe, Dr. Malcolm Kendrick, and Dr. Aseem Maholtra. As someone who is very familiar with all three of these incredible champions of the low-carb message in Great Britain, health podcaster and international bestselling author of KETO CLARITY Jimmy Moore has quite a bit to say about what is transpiring across the pond with outright untruths and distortions of the facts. Watch to hear Jimmy read Dr. Maholtra’s letter to the editor of The Daily Mail demanding a public apology and retraction in this video.
'¿Qué Onda?' es un remanso de paz, un jardín idílico donde la complicidad entre Alan Queipo y José Fajardo contagia de alegría y vitalismo a sus fieles oyentes. Hasta ahora. En este episodio nuestros locutores se quitan las caretas y se enzarzan en un tormentoso debate. El motivo no es otro que el reggaetón en España. La Tiguerita, Kaydy Cain, One Path, Bea Pelea y Florentino van desfilando entre abucheos y aplausos. Las aguas se calman cuando llegan a Perú, protagonista tanto de la feria BIME como del próximo sarao de Chico Trópico y de SALPICA, un evento que se celebra este fin de semana en Madrid con la colaboración de Gladys Palmera. Por si no fuera suficiente, se habla del regreso de Soda Stéreo y de la mejor fiesta a la que se puede ir ahora mismo en España: Dembooty x Brrrrrap con Tayhana.
Confessions of a Bad Mother, The Teenage Years is Stephanie Calman's realisation that her really rather nice children were growing up faster than advertised and not only would they be witheringly more clever than their parents but then they would have the temerity to leave home. Don't worry, the nest isn't entirely empty: Stephanie can always conjure the stroppy, sulking teenager she was. @Calperson @picadorbooks @panmacmillan #Author #RadioGorgeous #Lifestyle
This week we catch up with mental health writer Michelle Thomas about her debut book My Shit Therapist. Frances Ridout, director of the Legal Advice Centre at Queen Mary University London, pops by to tell us about the work she’s doing to help victims of image-based sexual abuse. There’s a sneaky taster of this week’s Sunday Chops with the absolute smasher that is Susan Calman, who's talking to Mick about her book Sunny Side Up.There’s peak Trump, good news/bad news over at Nike, and some Nigey nonsense in the Bush Telegraph, leopard print barnets and football fever in Jenny off the Blocks, and Dunleavy Does Dystopia watches Demolition Man. Be well. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Jimmy battles misinformation and mendacity about Statins in reporting by the UK tabloid The Daily Mail in this Jimmy Rant episode of The Livin' La Vida Low-Carb Show. Today we have a special Jimmy Rants on The LLVLC Show for you. Jimmy and Christine are traveling so we are bringing you some of the best content from Jimmy’s daily show Jimmy Rants. Want to keep up with the very latest in nutrition news? Follow Jimmy at JimmyRants.com for all of the archives and links to his social media where you can engage live with the content. There's no denying the advocates for a low-carb, high-fat, ketogenic diet are under major attack right now from the mainstream powers that be. The meteoric rise in popularity of nutritional health plans like Paleo, real food, Whole30, and keto in recent years is making a lot of people in the pharmaceutical drug industry very uncomfortable. In the UK, one of the ways they try to discredit doctors and other medical professionals from speaking out about topics like cholesterol and medications intended to lower cholesterol like statins is to spread lies and innuendo about what their position is on the subject. That's exactly what happened in two recent Daily Mail articles written by health editor Barney Calman you can read below. Statin deniers are putting patients' lives at risk, says Health Secretary Matt Hancock as he condemns doctors who cast doubt on their effectiveness: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6764823/Doctors-peddle-myths-effectiveness-statins-putting-lives-risk-says-Minister.html AND There is a special place in hell for the doctors who claim statins don't work, says BARNEY CALMAN: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-6764363/There-special-place-hell-doctors-claim-statins-dont-work-says-BARNEY-CALMAN.html The three UK keto leaders that were targeted in these hit pieces by Calman include Dr. Zoe Harcombe, Dr. Malcolm Kendrick, and Dr. Aseem Maholtra. As someone who is very familiar with all three of these incredible champions of the low-carb message in Great Britain, health podcaster and international bestselling author of KETO CLARITY Jimmy Moore has quite a bit to say about what is transpiring across the pond with outright untruths and distortions of the facts. Listen in to hear Jimmy read Dr. Maholtra's letter to the editor of The Daily Mail demanding a public apology and retraction in this episode. For more JIMMY RANTS, check out all of his past episodes at JIMMYRANTS.com. “Seventy five percent of people don't take a statin anymore because people are tired of the side effects and tired of the statistical games the drug companies are playing with people's health.” — Jimmy Moore
There's no denying the advocates for a low-carb, high-fat, ketogenic diet are under major attack right now from the mainstream powers that be. The meteoric rise in popularity of nutritional health plans like Paleo, real food, Whole30, and keto in recent years is making a lot of people in the pharmaceutical drug industry very uncomfortable. In the UK, one of the ways they try to discredit doctors and other medical professionals from speaking out about topics like cholesterol and medications intended to lower cholesterol like statins is to spread lies and innuendo about what their position is on the subject. That's exactly what happened in two recent Daily Mail articles written by health editor Barney Calman you can read below. Statin deniers are putting patients' lives at risk, says Health Secretary Matt Hancock as he condemns doctors who cast doubt on their effectiveness: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti... AND There is a special place in hell for the doctors who claim statins don't work, says BARNEY CALMAN: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/ar... The three UK keto leaders that were targeted in these hit pieces by Calman include Dr. Zoe Harcombe, Dr. Malcolm Kendrick, and Dr. Aseem Maholtra. As someone who is very familiar with all three of these incredible champions of the low-carb message in Great Britain, health podcaster and international bestselling author of KETO CLARITY Jimmy Moore has quite a bit to say about what is transpiring across the pond with outright untruths and distortions of the facts. Watch to hear Jimmy read Dr. Maholtra's letter to the editor of The Daily Mail demanding a public apology and retraction in this video. Follow the live JIMMY RANTS episodes on his YouTube Live channel (http://www.youtube.com/livinlowcarbman), his Facebook Live channel (https://www.facebook.com/livinlowcarbman), and his Instagram Live channel (http://www.instagram.com/livinlowcarbman) airing daily (rotating around these various formats) and the rest of his work at http://www.LLVLC.com. And for more JIMMY RANTS, check out all of his past episodes at http://www.JimmyRants.com.
Recorded on December 8, 2017 Hosts: Patrick Norton and Robert Heron The rundown: - Amazon Prime comes to Apple TV - Best Dolby Vision Blu-ray players - Ohm configuration with amps/speakers - Post Black Friday bargains - Chris' great Schiit Audio - THX vs SMPTE viewing distances - OLED model differences - New color metric for CalMAN - Convincing a loved one to upgrade - Your excellent feedback & questions AVexcel is 100% powered by our awesome crew of Patreon supporters - thank you! Visit AVexcel.com for links, show notes, contact info, and more!
Never miss another interview! Join Devin here: http://bit.ly/joindevin. Read the full Forbes article and watch the interview here: http://bit.ly/2hIK4VN. “We have grown far too tolerant of businesses not acting in alignment with the public good,” said Derek Fetzer, director of Johnson and Johnson’s CaringCrowd crowdfunding site for global health. “Shouldn’t all business, all entrepreneurship be for the public good?” “The spirit of social entrepreneurs is crucial in solving global health challenges, and has been a driving force in uncovering innovative solutions to tackle the ever-changing global health landscape,” Carol Pandak, PolioPlus director for Rotary International, said. (I am a member of Rotary and once wrote an article for the Rotarian Magazine.) Pandak noted that global health issues hold a unique space on the plant. “It could be easy to diagnose many global health challenges as problems of individual regions and nations.” After all, it has been decades since anyone in the Americas got polio. Read the full Forbes article and watch the interview here: http://bit.ly/2hIK4VN. Check out my free webinar where I share the secrets of successful nonprofit crowdfunding at http://crowdfundingforsocialgood.org.
In this episode of In Conversation…, Mickey Noonan and Sarah Millican chat with Susan Calman, Emma Samms and Rae Earl about Strictly, glitter all over the shop, uppers and downers of the arse, what 10cc is a measurement of and the cheering properties – or not – of a Mr Potato Head . Recorded at the Cheltenham Comedy Festival on September 18, 2017. #TeamCalman All of our podcasts are available on iTunes and Acast, as well as other hosting sites. ADMIN! Just a quick reminder to please rate, review and subscribe to ALL our podcasts on iTunes, including previous In Conversations, our podzine, and fortnightly geek girl celebration Strong Female Leads. You can keep up with all our articles, news and reviews by following @StandardIssueUK on Twitter and find us on Facebook and Instagram. Or visit www.standardissuemagazine.com for an archive of ace. Thanks to Jen Offord for organising the event and Maddie Hickish for pressing record and editing. Our In Conversation theme music was composed and recorded by Barry Hilton. All rights reserved. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week, comedian Kate McCabe gives us her possible POTUS wishlist in the wake of Oprah Winfrey 2020 rumours; Strictly smasher Susan Calman chats about being Greta Garbo among other things in a sneak peek at our forthcoming Cheltenham gigcast; and Mickey talks to our very own Sarah Millican about her brand new book How To Be Champion. Plus all your usual favourites, our Jen is chatting big changes ahead in women’s football and Hannah “does” Disney’s 101 Dalmatians. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Exclusive revelations: Piff The Magic Dragon’s dog and Game of Thrones. Ed at Last’s new firstminute.com awards. Bob Slayer’s new immensely-long show. Why coming second is better. What exactly ARE the increasingly prestigious Malcolm Hardee Comedy Awards? Do funnier comedians die younger? Plus cunning stunts at the Edinburgh Fringe by Malcolm Hardee, Barry Ferns & Mark Borkowski. http://www.grouchyclub.co.uk You can also download this audio podcast from iTunes https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/grouchy-clubs-mostly-about/id977279883 John Fleming posts occasional blogs at: http://blog.thejohnfleming.com
Highlights from Standard Issue In Conversation at Glasgow Comedy Festival 2016. Our Editor Mickey Noonan wrangles a panel of brilliant, smart and hilarious women as they talk about feminism, gravy and hammers. Featuring Sarah Millican, Jo Caulfield and Susan Calman. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Cartoonist, writer and gallery owner Mel Calman talks to Professor Anthony Clare about the influences on his life. Psychiatrist Dr Anthony Clare's in depth interviews with prominent people from different walks of life. Born in Dublin, author Anthony held a doctorate in medicine, a master's degree in philosophy and was a fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists. After becoming a regular on BBC Radio 4's Stop the Week in the 1980s, he became Britain's best-known psychiatrist and earned his own vehicle, In the Psychiatrist's Chair. Starting in 1982, this series ran until 2001 and also transferred to TV. Anthony Clare died suddenly in Paris aged 64 in 2007. First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in August 1991.
December 4, 2014 - Read the full Your Mark on the World article and watch the interview here: http://bit.ly/1yOKyro. Subscribe to this podcast on iTunes by clicking here: http://bit.ly/ymotwitunes or on Stitcher by clicking here: http://bit.ly/ymotwstitcher. Engineering World Health, often abbreviated EWH, is working to “improve health care deliverty in the developing world,” according to CEO Leslie Calman. She explains, “ Engineering World Health (EWH) is a non-profit organization that brings engineering students, professionals, and healthcare providers together to collaborate on the development and utilization of biomedical equipment in the developing world.” “Our Web site serves as a hub to share ideas and develop collaborative relationships that are then brought to fruition in country, where engineering students repair lifesaving medical equipment to facilities in need and train Biomedical Engineering Technicians to repair and maintain that equipment,” she concludes.
If you’re a colorist with an interest in color checking or calibrating all the displays in your studio — including your reference monitor, client displays, projectors, and periodically updating those 3D display correction LUTs — then you’re going to want to know that CalMAN 5.3 now provides a way to use DaVinci Resolve as a pattern generator. In fact, there is a dedicated version of CalMAN just for Resolve users. When you use a WiFi connection with Calman 5.3 interfacing to Resolve, the patterns that Resolve generates come up on all the displays you have video connections to in your studio. Here’s a quick picture I took in my studio. It's not a beauty shot but you get the idea. Well you'll need to see this picture at tomparish.com). I get a kind of smug satisfaction knowing I can put up the same pattern on all displays and then check or calibrate each one directly from SpectraCal's CalMAN software anytime I want.
GabeeN (HU) - NightVision Techno PODCAST 55 Pt. 2 Bio: GABEEN[Gábor Bacsárdi] was born on the 13th of July in 1988 in Szekesfehervar, Hungary. He has actually never learnt playing on any ins t rume nt .Back in a few years, regarding music, his biggest influence was his brother /Xilinox aka The Bee/, because of him, he had to keep follow up on the yearly evented Mayday andLoveparade videos. Keep sneaking on his brother he`s learnt the basics of how to produce music. As his sound wasn`t the most proper in the beginning, he only presented his tunesto his friends, but in 2005 he started to care about it more seriously. It has taken quite a while to be able to find his own style, therefore at the very beginning he started with hard techno.His first official release came out on a Hengarian label so called Survival Records which unfortunatelly does not exist by now, than his next release followed on Audio Exit Records which can still be proud of thier nowadays activities. after his first successes in Hungary, he`s tried to focus his attention over the boarder in order to make his name more remarkable. From the year of 2009, he simultaneously getting requests for albums and remixes. His most recent tracks already appeared on Blind Spot Music/UK/,Plastiq /DE/,Inmaterial Audio /ESP/Ketra/IT/,Naked Lunch/POR/We Call it Hard/DE/,Heaven to Hell/DE/,Gobsmacked/DE/,Inmaterial audio/ESP/ just to mention a few of them. Some more informations about him and all of his releses so far, can be found over here: http://www.beatport.com/#artist/gabeen/98167 In the summer of 2010, one of GabeeN`s tune was played by famous Dave Clarke on White Noise radio show. Ever since Gabeen was played by Dave many times. Same year in corporation with his friend, Calman, they created the legendary party athem with the title of Showdown. This tune of theirs has made it`s way right on the toplist of an online records store, beside names like Carl Craig,Marcel Dettmann,Lucy,Robert Hood,Alan Fitzpatrik...in 2010, Gabben met Dr. Hoffmann (BLIND SPOT) and made their first collaboration track, furthermore they carried on working together. In january 2011, with his friend`s, Tosi`s help, Gabeen had a chance to run his own radio show on Fnoob radio which he named as "The Gates of Hell". On his show, there has already been some big names played, such as: Kuniaki Takenaga,Patrik DSP,Oliver Kucera,Sceptical C,Marco Bailey...in fabruary, 2011 Gabeen was invited to a club in his hometown and taken opportunity to play after Takaaki Itoh, to present himself with an hour liveset mash towards the public. He already had gigs in clubs and radios in Budapest / Durer- kert,Kashmir,Blog, Tilos Rádió/ and also in Dunaujvaros at Synopsis parties. In his hometown, Szekesfehervar he quite often peformes with his brother(Bacsardi Brothers formation) on smaller festivals like TechnOpen and Showdown parties and Time Machine /Alba Bar/. Abroad-wise, not so long ago, he had a chance to perfom on a Techno Beaty party in Prague,Subland in Berlin,Club Finca in Stuttgart. His music are sophisticate and genuine which are focused on dark noises, often broken rhythms accompanied with hard basslines. Artist whom already supported his works: Dave Clarke,Heiko Laux,Lucy,Xhin,Speedy J,Inigo Kennedy,A.Paul,Vegim,Gayle San,Industrialyzer,Gary Beck,Lars Klein,Tommy Four Seven,Submerge,M_nus Records and many others. Tracklist: 01. Hans Bouffmyhre - Remaining 02. Kriss Overlake - Mind Control Slavery 03. Mita - Not Your Business 04. Claudio Petrioni & Out Noise - The Factory of Alcoholic 05. Paralytic - After A Great Night in Frankfurt (Paul Begge remix) 06. Xhei - Isolator 07. Robert Natus - Blue VisioEx 08. Hackler & Kuch - Z6 (Deh Noizer remix) 09. GabeeN & Dolby D - Abiogenesis 10. GabeeN & Dolby D - GD 3.0 11. Sync Therapy - Methanisor (J-T Kyrke remix) 12. Virgil Enzinger - Odic Force (GabeeN & Dr Hoffmann remix) 13. Tekoff - Varsovie (Michael Schwarz remix) 14. Mark Broom - One Three O Total Time: 1:00:54 More info: GabeeN on BeatPort: http://www.beatport.com/artist/gabeen/98167 GabeeN on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/gabeenlive GabeeN on Discogs: http://www.discogs.com/artist/955879-GabeeN NightVision Techno PODCAST on SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/nightvisiontechnopodcast NightVision Techno PODCAST on Digitally Imported: http://www.di.fm/undergroundtechno NightVision Techno PODCAST on Art Style Techno: http://artstyletechno.hu/nightvision-techno-podcast/ NightVision Techno PODCAST on MixLR: http://mixlr.com/nightvision-techno-podcast/ NightVision Techno PODCAST on iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/hu/podcast/nightvision-techno-podcast/id472942249 NightVision Techno PODCAST on TuneIn: http://tunein.com/radio/NightVision-Techno-Podcast-p534346/ NightVision Techno PODCAST on MIXCLOUD and DIRECT LINK: http://www.mixcloud.com/nightvision_techno_podcast/ NightVision Techno PODCAST on FB: http://www.facebook.com/nightvisiontechno NightVision Techno PODCAST on YOUTUBE: http://www.youtube.com/nightvisiontechno E-mail: nightvisiontechnopodcast@t-online.hu
Mixed by Calman
In this interview Derek Smith provides a technical history of the evolution of display calibration software for attached monitors on PCs and MACs. Derek covers in detail the older style monitor calibration techniques that use ICC, Direct Display Control and 1D LUTs (inside a computer graphics hardware) and how all three of these technologies are managed at the same time in Calman RGB to produce faster more accurate results. At TomParish.com I’ve included a transcript of the entire conversation so you can go back and read Derek’s explanation of how Calman RGB works, why their approach is different and how it provides a significant improvement in accuracy and speed as well as vastly simplifying the user interface experience. Let’s face it we don’t want to use these tools we just want to use our displays knowing they are calibrated as close as possible to REC709 so we can get on with our creative uses of color, yes! Listen into to learn more.
Banging Techno sets 066 >>GabeeN & Tosi www.bangingtechnosets.com GabeeN http://www.facebook.com/gabeenlive http://www.myspace.com/gabeentech http://www.soundcloud.com/gabeen http://www.discogs.com/artist/GabeeN GABEEN[Gábor Bacsárdi] was born on the 13th of July in 1988 in Szekesfehervar, Hungary. From the year of 2009, he simultaneously getting requests for albums and remixes. His most recent tracks already appeared on Blind Spot Music/UK/,Plastiq /DE/,Inmaterial Audio /ESP/Ketra/IT/,Naked Lunch/POR/We Call it Hard/DE/,Heaven to Hell/DE/,Gobsmacked/DE/,Inmaterial audio/ESP/ just to mention a few of them. Some more informations about him and all of his releses so far, can be found over here: http://www.beatport.com/#artist/gabeen/98167 In the summer of 2010, one of GabeeN`s tune was played by famous Dave Clarke on White Noise radio show. Ever since Gabeen was played by Dave many times. Same year in corporation with his friend, Calman, they created the legendary party athem with the title of Showdown. This tune of theirs has made it`s way right on the toplist of an online records store, beside names like Carl Craig,Marcel Dettmann,Lucy,Robert Hood,Alan Fitzpatrik...in 2010, Gabben met Dr. Hoffmann (BLIND SPOT) and made their first collaboration track, furthermore they carried on working together. In january 2011, with his friend`s, Tosi`s help, Gabeen had a chance to run his own radio show on Fnoob radio which he named as "The Gates of Hell". On his show, there has already been some big names played, such as: Kuniaki Takenaga,Patrik DSP,Oliver Kucera,Sceptical C,Marco Bailey...in fabruary, 2011 Gabeen was invited to a club in his hometown and taken opportunity to play after Takaaki Itoh, to present himself with an hour liveset mash towards the public. He already had gigs in clubs and radios in Budapest / Durer- kert,Kashmir,Blog, Tilos Rádió/ and also in Dunaujvaros at Synopsis parties. In his hometown, Szekesfehervar he quite often peformes with his brother(Bacsardi Brothers formation) on smaller festivals like TechnOpen and Showdown parties and Time Machine /Alba Bar/. Abroad-wise, not so long ago, he had a chance to perfom on a Techno Beaty party in Prague,Subland in Berlin,Club Finca in Stuttgart. His music are sophisticate and genuine which are focused on dark noises, often broken rhythms accompanied with hard basslines. Artist whom already supported his works: Dave Clarke,Heiko Laux,Lucy,Xhin,Speedy J,Inigo Kennedy,A.Paul,Vegim,Gayle San,Industrialyzer,Gary Beck,Lars Klein,Tommy Four Seven,Submerge,M_nus Records and many others. _______________ Tosi http://www.facebook.com/Tosifunk http://soundcloud.com/tosifunk/ http://www.residentadvisor.net/dj/tosi http://www.youtube.com/user/Tosifunkable http://www.mixcloud.com/tosifunk/ http://twitter.com/#!/tosifunk http://www.beatport.com/artist/tosi/152241 BIO: Tosi is an underground DJ from Hungary who tries to embrace all technologies and always looks for heavy authentic sounds around the world. Born in 1978, he became part of the underground movement around 1995 and started DJing around 1997. During that time he was addicted to vinyl until 2002 when he radically switched his equipment to digital stuff only. Tosi played in clubs all over Europe and works for many radio stations to bring some fresh new steel sounds into popular shows. He is currently working with a few international producers on a new wave of sound. Email: tosifunk@hotmail.com _______________ BANGING TECHNO sets Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/BangingTechnoSets soundcloud: http://soundcloud.com/bangingtechno-sets youtube: http://www.youtube.com/user/BangingTechnosets1
RHEFP 2013 #5: Susan Calman and Lee Camp - Like Syphoning Petrol. Rich is worried about the loss of his lucky street shoe and that his huge fame will mean he can't walk the streets any more, but Susan Calman is on hand to bring him down to earth with a bump (almost literally). In a highly-charged and flirtatious third date a few lines are crossed, mostly involving lactation. Find out where to see Calman nude, why the pair spent a cold December day in a flower shop together, how to play solo Kick The Can and how plans are progressing for the (surely) prize-winning Herring and Calman Live Sex Show are going. With way too many mentions of Stewart Lee and all the latest Doctor Who news. Plus stand-up from Lee Camp.
The reality for the independent post-production house is we’re all Dropboxing (I guess it's a verb now) files back and forth to create or finish out a project, and the problem is that everybody's displays show slightly different colors. We’re all working on a different color interpretation of the files. Talk about confusion for the colorist who has the final task of making it all play together! Up next is a discovery of how SpectraCal is bringing order to the hodge-podge of displays which have such differences in color calibration – in our studios, in our digital creative community, and used by our clients. We need more than just a single reference monitor; we need all of our displays to be more closely aligned. Most of us don't need perfection – just assurance we're close – and if we're way out then we need a way to get those displays adjusted. The difficulty is figuring out quickly which displays need attention, and how to fix the problem so there is greater consistency or alignment of colors when working with graphics and videos. To help us understand this better, I arranged a conversation with Derek Smith of SpectraCal, the leading developer of video calibration software. This interview runs long; however, if you have an interest in this topic you will want to listen to everything Derek Smith says. I sure did. Questions – Derek, you are one of those rare people who have the creative and competitive drive to solve some very difficult problems dealing with display technologies and the challenge of color calibration. What was your inspiration for creating SpectraCal? And give us a brief summary of where CalMAN 5 is these days. – What are your observations of changes in the display technology – consumer and professional – over the last 10 years? – What kind of trends are you seeing in the video production industry these days – particularly the needs of smaller, independent digital creatives? – What is SpectraCal doing to make it easier for video post-production groups to calibrate all of their displays? – What changes do you think will occur in the next 12-24 months in display technology? – What about the 4k trend? What sort of new challenges are there with the coming 4k displays? – One of the new developments for DaVinci Resolve coming soon is the ability to add DCP renders for theatrical releases. This will mean a huge increase in indie films available in theaters. Though most colorists work with a color reference display, how does one calibrate a theater projector? This is more of a geek question.
GabeeN (HU) - NightVision Techno Podcast 2 Pt. 2 BIO: GABEEN[Gábor Bacsárdi] was born on the 13th of July in 1988 in Szekesfehervar, Hungary. He has actually never learnt playing on any ins t rume nt .Back in a few years, regarding music, his biggest influence was his brother /Xilinox aka The Bee/, because of him, he had to keep follow up on the yearly evented Mayday andLoveparade videos. Keep sneaking on his brother he`s learnt the basics of how to produce music. As his sound wasn`t the most proper in the beginning, he only presented his tunesto his friends, but in 2005 he started to care about it more seriously. It has taken quite a while to be able to find his own style, therefore at the very beginning he started with hard techno.His first official release came out on a Hengarian label so called Survival Records which unfortunatelly does not exist by now, than his next release followed on Audio Exit Records which can still be proud of thier nowadays activities. after his first successes in Hungary, he`s tried to focus his attention over the boarder in order to make his name more remarkable. From the year of 2009, he simultaneously getting requests for albums and remixes. His most recent tracks already appeared on Blind Spot Music/UK/,Plastiq /DE/,Inmaterial Audio /ESP/Ketra/IT/,Naked Lunch/POR/We Call it Hard/DE/,Heaven to Hell/DE/,Gobsmacked/DE/,Inmaterial audio/ESP/ just to mention a few of them. Some more informations about him and all of his releses so far, can be found over here: http://www.beatport.com/#artist/gabeen/98167 In the summer of 2010, one of GabeeN`s tune was played by famous Dave Clarke on White Noise radio show. Ever since Gabeen was played by Dave many times. Same year in corporation with his friend, Calman, they created the legendary party athem with the title of Showdown. This tune of theirs has made it`s way right on the toplist of an online records store, beside names like Carl Craig,Marcel Dettmann,Lucy,Robert Hood,Alan Fitzpatrik...in 2010, Gabben met Dr. Hoffmann (BLIND SPOT) and made their first collaboration track, furthermore they carried on working together. In january 2011, with his friend`s, Tosi`s help, Gabeen had a chance to run his own radio show on Fnoob radio which he named as "The Gates of Hell". On his show, there has already been some big names played, such as: Kuniaki Takenaga,Patrik DSP,Oliver Kucera,Sceptical C,Marco Bailey...in fabruary, 2011 Gabeen was invited to a club in his hometown and taken opportunity to play after Takaaki Itoh, to present himself with an hour liveset mash towards the public. He already had gigs in clubs and radios in Budapest / Durer- kert,Kashmir,Blog, Tilos Rádió/ and also in Dunaujvaros at Synopsis parties. In his hometown, Szekesfehervar he quite often peformes with his brother(Bacsardi Brothers formation) on smaller festivals like TechnOpen and Showdown parties and Time Machine /Alba Bar/. Abroad-wise, not so long ago, he had a chance to perfom on a Techno Beaty party in Prague,Subland in Berlin,Club Finca in Stuttgart. His music are sophisticate and genuine which are focused on dark noises, often broken rhythms accompanied with hard basslines. Artist whom already supported his works: Dave Clarke,Heiko Laux,Lucy,Xhin,Speedy J,Inigo Kennedy,A.Paul,Vegim,Gayle San,Industrialyzer,Gary Beck,Lars Klein,Tommy Four Seven,Submerge,M_nus Records and many others. Tracklist: 01. A-Brothers - 5g 02. Emptyset - Avichi (Monoloc remix) 03. Michael Schwarz - Demeter 04. Spark Taberner - Coast 05. Niereich vs Hackler and Kuch - Bombing Lessons 06. Tony Montana and Darkatek - DNA (Ryuji Takeuchi remix) 07. A-Brothers - Basement Rocker (Dave The Drummer remix) 08. Kuniaki Takenaga - Mother Earth (Takaaki Itoh remix) 09. Oscar Mulero - Canal 10. i1 Ambivalent - The Disobediant one V1 11. Ben Sims - Smoke Machine 12. A.Paul - Elementar 13. Revelation of Noise - Blackout Signal (Vegim remix) 14. Andreas Florin - Berlin Mitte (Luis Ruiz remix) 15. James Ruskin - Solution Total time: 1:01:39 More info: NightVision Techno PODCAST on iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/hu/podcast/nightvision-techno-podcast/id472942249 NightVision Techno PODCAST on MIXCLOUD and DIRECT LINK: http://www.mixcloud.com/nightvision_techno_podcast/ NightVision Techno PODCAST on FB: http://www.facebook.com/nightvisiontechno NightVision Techno PODCAST on YOUTUBE: http://www.youtube.com/nightvisiontechno E-mail: nightvisiontechnopodcast@t-online.hu
We go TransAtlantic this week! Amy and Lucio keep it warm back in London while Baylen goes back to his roots in Tennessee! Scottish comic superstar Susan Calman chats with A&L ahead of her shows at Soho Theatre and Baylen goes to his hometown gay bar & bumps into International internet sensation Chris Crocker who talks about what it's like being out and famous in the American South. Plus all the news from Gay Star News.
New Breed Of The Blind Spot 037 | Calmannn01, Locked Groove - Stucture 02, Advanced Human - Boiler (Raiz remix) 03, On/Off - Aker 04, Tomy DeClerque - It's up to you 05, Nicole Moudaber - Watcha playin 06, Jon Rundell - Remember you 07, Scouts In Bondage - State of having (Gabeen & Dr Hoffmann remix) 08, Scan Mode & Issie Nixon - Del reves (Ben Sims remix) 09, Bekkou - Hi lite (Dj Misjah remix) 10, Ben Sims - Bite this 11, Calman - Robotszem 12, Underworld - Moaner
Thatswecalltechno016-Calman by Thatswecalltechno Podcast on MixcloudTracklist:01. Ralf - Böse02. Pascal FEOS - Straight Ahead03. Pascal Mollin - Page One04. Eigenes Rezept - Numb (Brian Burger Rmx)05. Sian & Psycatron - Dichotomy (Samuel L Session Rmx)06. Doryk - When I Fail Apart07. Paul Mac & Mark Broom - I Don't Know08. Ben Sims - New Blood (Robert Hood Rmx)09. Psyk - Track 310. Gabeen - Fucking Noise (Vegim Silent Rmx)11. Joseph Capriati & Adam Beyer - Rubicon12. Truncate - Pad Mode13. Mark Broom - M2814. Donor - EM1 (Silent Servant Rmx)15. Laurent Garnier - Our Futur feat. The LBS crew (Detroit Rmx)Download
Peter MacMahon, George Kerevan and Lesley met and recorded this podcast on Wednesday lunchtime as the tragic events in Cumbria were unfolding. They concentrated on the rise of Danny Alexander, Calman, the tallest MP and the troubles of Israel and BP.
Lesley’s guests on Riddoch Questions this week are: Councillor Ewan Aitken, former leader of Edinburgh city council; Mark Perryman, editor of the book ‘Breaking up Britain: Four Nations after a Union’; and Christine Grahame MSP. They discussed the stories making the headlines this week, including the Calman Commission, the Digital Britain report, the de-selection of Labour MP Jim Devine and the SNP’s long-awaiting school building programme. Mike Russell, the Scottish Government's Culture Minister joins in to give a view of Calman.