Podcasts about canadian broadcast corporation

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Best podcasts about canadian broadcast corporation

Latest podcast episodes about canadian broadcast corporation

The Garden Question
161 - Embracing the New Perennial Movement in the South - Sarah Carter

The Garden Question

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2024 57:30


Sarah Carter and her team have brought the New Perennial Movement to the south on a large scale. The new Entrance Garden's large sweeps of grasses, perennials, native plants presented in a naturalistic style welcomes you to the Atlanta History Center.The garden has settled in and in this episode Sarah explains thedetails that makes it successful.It is a creation perfect for insects, small mammals, birds andpeople. Sarah Roberts is the Olga C. de Goizueta Vice President of theGoizueta Gardens and Living Collections at the Atlanta History CenterA college internship in curation at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University sparkedSarah's career path in public horticulture.During her undergraduate studies at Berry College, she spent a year on scholarshipin the United Kingdom studying historic gardens as part of her honors degree inHorticulture.The next five years were spent as Curator of Herbaceous Plantsand Outdoor Gardens at the New York BotanicalGarden.She then returned to England, completing a Diploma in GardenDesign from the UK's GardenDesign School.Upon Sarah's return to the US, she began consulting for theAtlanta History Center which led to her current position as Vice President ofGoizueta Gardens.She leads the development, curation and preservation of the33-acre public garden with three historic houses.Sarah has written for numerous publications, been featured onMartha Stewart Radio, the Canadian Broadcast Corporation, GardenSmart TV seriesand the podcast Stuff You Missed in History Class.Time Line00:00 Welcome to The Garden Question Podcast00:42 Spotlight on Sarah Carter: Revolutionizing Southern Gardens02:36 The New Perennial Movement: A Deep Dive05:03 Designing with Nature: The Art of the New Perennial Garden11:33 Innovative Soil and Maintenance Strategies for Sustainable Gardening13:56 Structural Beauty: Crafting Aesthetic and Functional Spaces23:40 The Maintenance Philosophy of New Perennial Gardens31:16 Revolutionizing Soil with Biomass: A Garden Experiment32:29 From Dying Tree to Community Table: A Story of Tree Cycling34:02 Exploring the Atlanta History Center's Gardens42:05 Gardening Insights: From Design Principles to Pest Management44:33 Personal Gardening Journey: Lessons and Memories51:44 Embracing the New Perennial Movement: A Gardener's Vision55:42 Final Thoughts: The Joy of Gardening and Environmental Stewardship

North Star Journey
Lakota vinyl collector revitalizes Indigenous music, language one record at a time

North Star Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2024 4:16


Justis Brokenrope has collected vinyl by Native musicians for the past decade. Now he shares that music with the digital world. “You can listen to music nowadays without ever touching a CD, a record, or a tape,” said Brokenrope, who is Sicangu Lakota. “It's just so digital and ubiquitous all the time. But to hold the physical thing and then to see yourself represented in that, and to see your community, your people, your family represented in that, I think that's just so important for us.” A self-described shaggy-haired kid, Justis Brokenrope started collecting vinyl records near his hometown in rural Nebraska. As a young musician, he played in punk and metal bands touring the U.S. and Europe. He was in a record store in Providence, R.I., about ten years ago where he found a compilation record consisting of Indigenous North American music, and inspiration struck. “I've heard a lot of powwow music and ceremonial music. But then to know that there were these artists back then, pre-social media, internet, everything, obviously, just in their really, sometimes small and very isolated communities,” explained Brokenrope.“They got a guitar somewhere or traded something for a guitar, and then their music was documented by something like the [Canadian Broadcast Corporation]. And so those records exist. And then that was just like, mind blowing to me,” said Brokenrope. Now, an entire wall of Brokenrope's Minneapolis apartment is dedicated to his record collection. Some of that music is being heard again for the first time. And he says he's collecting for more than the sake of collecting. He wants to re-introduce the music he's found back to Indigenous communities. “A lot of people obviously don't have the time to go dig through a bunch of thrift stores in the Southwest,” said Brokenrope. When he finds those rare records, he posts them to social media. Curated music sets go to YouTube, and photos of album covers are posted to his Instagram page, Wathéča Records. For him, accessibility is a way to build community around music.  He estimates he has a collection of about 300 records by Indigenous artists from various genres— mostly country, folk, rock from the 1960s through the late 80s. “These records can have life again and reach the people that maybe forgot about them or lost their copy. Or those folks who made them have journeyed on, but their kids are still around and remember their dad or mom playing guitar and singing.” Brokenrope says for him artists like Buddy Red Bow, a Lakota country singer who was recording in the 1970s, is one example of the kind connection a person can make through listening. “As someone who works a lot with language to hear him speak or sing a song in Lakota and English and then to hear his dad on the recording as well singing in Lakota or speaking ... it's just so moving and just a beautiful thing to experience.” Translating Analog to Digital Collecting vinyl brings Brokenrope into conversation with a lot of fellow record collectors. It's an opportunity to build a network of people who share his passion. On a January evening, Brokenrope met with a fellow Indigenous collector, David McCloud, who is Anishinaabe from Minegoziibe First Nation in northern Manitoba. “When somebody asks me, ‘How do you collect Indigenous records?'” said McCloud to Brokenrope. “That's years and years of building relationships.” The two compared notes during their virtual meeting about their shared passion. The conversation included their mutual appreciation for music and much more. Both described years spent digging for vinyl and multiple acts of converting analog music to digital as a method of translation between generations. They also talk about the ways Indigenous musicians have busted through the myths of Indigenous people as the vanishing American and the ways artists have subverted stereotypes and found self-expression. “Our people were supposed to disappear,” said McCloud. “If you look at the history of it, since the possibility of recording began, Indigenous people were there, right up until now.” McCloud motioned to his own collection of recordings and shared a piece of wisdom. “You never finish. You never know it all. You're never gonna have it all,” McCloud said. Click here.https://youtube.com/shorts/pzhye1ZzsnM?si=Qx9suBpTUfoKRCfZDJing in the Dakota language On a Friday evening in early March, Brokenrope plays a set of deep cuts inside a St. Paul record store. DJing has become another way Brokenrope shares his love for vinyl.  Music lovers will recognize Link Wray and His Ray Men covering Dylan's “Girl from The North Country.” Fellow collectors may know Karen Dalton's bluesy “Something On Your Mind.” Lots of people will hum along to popular Redbone refrains. The powwow crowd will sing every single word of Keith Secola's “NDN Kars.” And it's the dollar bin gems — the stuff lots of people may have heard years ago or may have never heard before — where his collection shines. Brokenrope's collection reflects years of digging for rare vinyl recordings. In his set, A. Paul Ortega's powerful singing on “Chicago,” Arliene Nofchissey Williams & Carnes Burson performing the bridge on “Go My Son,” and Morris Belknap's “On That Dusty Road To San Carlos,” give listeners a sense of the themes important to Native musicians over decades.  While connecting the tunes during his DJ sets, Brokenrope adds another act of translation. As an educator, Brokenrope has been a part of a growing language movement to revitalize the Dakota language.  He often DJs his sets in the Dakota language. Sharing music of from his collection in Dakota is an invitation to Indigenous people to be in conversation with one another in a digital world. “To be able to use my tribe's language and be able to create more content in it,” he said. “And have that represented more, just felt really in line with the kind of music we're playing.” 

The Real News Podcast
In Canada, the strike wave is winning workers real gains

The Real News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2023 130:08


From May 8-12, the 30th Constitutional Convention of the Canadian Labour Congress took place in Montréal. Reporting for Working People and The Real News Network, TRNN Editor-in-Chief Maximillian Alvarez attended the convention and spoke with a number of rank-and-file workers, organizers, and union officers about the state of the labor movement in Canada.In Part 1 of our two-part dispatch from the CLC, we talk to: Emily Leedham, the Prairie Reporter for PressProgress and editor of Shift Work, PressProgress‘ weekly national labour newsletter; Guy Smith, president of the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees; Mary Newman, a journalist and producer for the Canadian Broadcast Corporation and member of the Canadian Media Guild; James Russwurm, a quality assurance tester for Keywords Studios, where workers formed the first union in the video gaming industry and affiliated with UFCW Local 401; Liz Ha, 1st Vice President of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) Local 154, chair of the OPSEU provincial human rights committee, and vice-chair of the OPSEU Coalition of Racialized Workers.Studio Production: Jesse FreestonPost-Production: Jules TaylorJules Taylor, “Working People” Theme SongClick here for additional links/information.Help us continue producing radically independent news and in-depth analysis by following us and becoming a monthly sustainer: Donate: https://therealnews.com/donate-podSign up for our newsletter: https://therealnews.com/newsletter-podLike us on Facebook: https://facebook.com/therealnewsFollow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/therealnews

Working People
2023 Canadian Labour Congress, Part 1 (w/ Emily Leedham, Guy Smith, Mary Newman, James Russwurm, & Liz Ha)

Working People

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2023 130:08


From May 8-12, the 30th Constitutional Convention of the Canadian Labour Congress took place in Montréal. Reporting for Working People and The Real News Network, Max attended the convention and spoke with a number of rank-and-file workers, organizers, and union officers about the state of the labor movement in Canada. In Part 1 of our two-part dispatch from the CLC, we talk to: Emily Leedham, the Prairie Reporter for PressProgress and editor of Shift Work, PressProgress' weekly national labour newsletter; Guy Smith, president of the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees; Mary Newman, a journalist and producer for the Canadian Broadcast Corporation and member of the Canadian Media Guild; James Russwurm, a quality assurance tester for Keywords Studios, where workers formed the first union in the video gaming industry and affiliated with UFCW Local 401; Liz Ha, 1st Vice President of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) Local 154, chair of the OPSEU provincial human rights committee, and vice-chair of the OPSEU Coalition of Racialized Workers. Additional links/info below... Canadian Labour Congress website, Facebook page, and Twitter page Emily's Twitter page and newsletter  PressProgress's website, Facebook page, and Twitter page Guy's AUPE profile page Alberta Union of Provincial Employees website, Facebook page, and Twitter page Mary's Twitter page UFCW Local 401 website, Facebook page, and Twitter page Liz's Twitter page OPSEU Local 154 Facebook page OPSEU Coalition of Racialized Workers website  Emily Leedham, PressProgress, "Public Servants Forced Federal Government to Improve Deal By Going on Strike, Labour Experts Say" Aminah Sheikh, Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung, "The Right Wing is Organizing in Canada. Can The Left Learn to Stop Them?" CBC Radio, "Canada's Video Games Industry Is Getting Its 1st Union. Organizers Hope It's Not the Last" Permanent links below... Working People Patreon page Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show! Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page Featured Music (all songs sourced from the Free Music Archive: freemusicarchive.org) Jules Taylor, "Working People" Theme Song

The Garden Question
075 - New Perennial Movement Goes South - Sarah Roberts

The Garden Question

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022 58:20


Sarah Roberts and her team have brought the New Perennial Movement to the south on a large scale. The new Entrance Garden's large sweeps of grasses, perennials, native plants presented in a naturalistic style welcomes you to the Atlanta History Center.The garden has settled in and in this episode Sarah explains the details that makes it successful.It is a creation perfect for insects, small mammals, birds and people.Sarah Roberts is the Olga C. de Goizueta Vice President of the Goizueta Gardens and Living Collections at the Atlanta History CenterA college internship in curation at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University sparked Sarah's career path in public horticulture.During her undergraduate studies at Berry College, she spent a year on scholarship in  the United Kingdom studying historic gardens as part of her honors degree in Horticulture.The next five years were spent as Curator of Herbaceous Plants and Outdoor Gardens at the New York Botanical Garden.She then returned to England, completing a Diploma in Garden Design from the UK's Garden Design School.Upon Sarah's return to the US, she began consulting for the Atlanta History Center which led to her current position as Vice President of Goizueta Gardens.She leads the development, curation and preservation of the 33-acre public garden with three historic houses.Sarah has written for numerous publications, been featured on Martha Stewart Radio, the Canadian Broadcast Corporation, GardenSmart TV series and the podcast Stuff You Missed in History Class.

Never Stop Learning
117. it's been the right amount of long w/ Carly!

Never Stop Learning

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2022 106:49


today we dive into the stream with my dear friend, Carly Stasko. A sunny day calls for a sunny chat and a true appreciation for the life that the sun provides to all earthlings. This was truly an effortless conversational exploration of our minds and mining of our experiences to create connection. if you are reading this to see what this episode is about, all I have for you is an affirmation that you have come to the right place. Thanks again to Carly for being a part of this episode. Carlyis a self-titled Imagitator (who agitates imagination) from Toronto, Canada. She is a creator, educator, healer and loving parent who left the city a year ago to live in the woods with her husband and young sons during the pandemic. She's been written about and featured in documentaries for her culture jamming art and activism, worked as a freelance television and radio producer at the Canadian Broadcast Corporation, and spent the last decade as a mentor at the University of Toronto's Integrated Learning and Community Engagement Program where she founded the Dream Job Academy and more recently trained and supported a team of student podcasters called the Storyweavers. Since the pandemic she is helping kids with virtual school, dancing outside every day, creating lots of content on TikTok, and facilitating online workshops. www.intrinsik.net TikTok: @hartsage YouTube: Carlystasko --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/wesonly1/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/wesonly1/support

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KERA's Think
Why we can't stop eating

KERA's Think

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2021 26:10


What if managing our diet is less about fads and more about just enjoying real foods? Mark Schatzker of the Canadian Broadcast Corporation joins host Krys Boyd to discuss his journey into food production and eating habits around the world to discover secrets of health and happiness. His book is called “The End of Craving: Recovering the Lost Wisdom of Eating Well.”

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Never Stop Learning
77. navigating culture & creating connection with Layne and Carly!

Never Stop Learning

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2021 115:15


On today's episode, Layne, Carly, and I discuss our relationships to cultural norms and how we are paving our unique artistic paths. Layne and Carly are two of my FAVORITE people to talk to and this episode is near and dear to my heart. Layne is a visual artist currently based in LA. She makes art, sculpts clay jewelry, and is mega well versed in digital media. She edits the YouTube show Good Mythical Morning. Check out Layne's jewelry here: etsy.com/shop/beebelly Carly Stasko is a self-titled Imagitator (who agitates imagination) from Toronto, Canada. She is a creator, educator, healer, and loving parent who left the city a year and a half ago to live in the woods with her husband and young sons during the pandemic. She's been written about and featured in documentaries for her culture jamming art and activism, worked as a freelance television and radio producer at the Canadian Broadcast Corporation, and spent the last decade as a mentor at the University of Toronto's Integrated Learning and Community Engagement Program where she founded the Dream Job Academy and more recently trained and supported a team of student podcasters called the Storyweavers. Since the pandemic she has been supporting her kids in virtual learning, dancing outside everyday and connecting with nature, and facilitating online workshops focusing on movement, writing, creativity, and mental health. Most recently Carly began studying theatre and media production at the Centre for Indigenous Theatre and compiling creative content for a documentary about healing and hope in times of great challenge. Instagram: Imagitator TikTok: @hartsage Thanks for listening! Find me at linktr.ee/wesonly1 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/wesonly1/message

Never Stop Learning
45. launch it with Carly Stasko!

Never Stop Learning

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2021 82:36


Today, Carly and I talk about our ideas and experiences with life coaching and the ways we process our life experiences after the fact, that is crucial to the integration of newfound lessons and insights. there is no doubt in my mind that a lot of collaboration is in the future for us. we are in launching mode. Carly Stasko is a self-titled Imagitator (who agitates imagination) from Toronto, Canada. She is a creator, educator, healer and loving parent who left the city a year ago to live in the woods with her husband and young sons during the pandemic. She's been written about and featured in documentaries for her culture jamming art and activism, worked as a freelance television and radio producer at the Canadian Broadcast Corporation, and spent the last decade as a mentor at the University of Toronto's Integrated Learning and Community Engagement Program where she founded the Dream Job Academy and more recently trained and supported a team of student podcasters called the Storyweavers. Since the pandemic she is helping kids with virtual school, dancing outside everyday, creating lots of content on TikTok, and facilitating online workshops. www.intrinsik.net TikTok: @hartsage YouTube: Carlystasko https://linktr.ee/wesonly1 thanks for listening! click my linktree or find me on any of the platforms below. Instagram: @wesonly1 Soundcloud: @wesonly1 TikTok: @wesonly1 Youtube: Wes Carlson please reach out on Instagram if you or anyone you know would like to be a guest on the podcast :)

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Never Stop Learning
27. bringing wisdom with Carly Stasko!

Never Stop Learning

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2021 115:14


day27/365 Carly and I create an interwoven patchwork quilt of stories, ideas, insights, rituals, self-awareness tactics, newfound friendship, and artistic vision in this glorious episode. It is one of the most enjoyable and meaningful conversations i've had on the podcast thus far, and I will certainly be having Carly on again in the future. Carly Stasko is a self-titled Imagitator (who agitates imagination) from Toronto, Canada. She is a creator, educator, healer and loving parent who left the city a year ago to live in the woods with her husband and young sons during the pandemic. She's been written about and featured in documentaries for her culture jamming art and activism, worked as a freelance television and radio producer at the Canadian Broadcast Corporation, and spent the last decade as a mentor at the University of Toronto's Integrated Learning and Community Engagement Program where she founded the Dream Job Academy and more recently trained and supported a team of student podcasters called the Storyweavers. Since the pandemic she is helping kids with virtual school, dancing outside everyday, creating lots of content on TikTok, and facilitating online workshops. www.intrinsik.net TikTok: @hartsage YouTube: Carlystasko Thanks for listening! find me on any of the platforms below. Instagram/TikTok/Soundcloud: @wesonly1 Youtube: Wes Carlson Please reach out on Instagram if you or anyone you know would like to be a guest on the podcast :)

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Past Present
Episode 277: RuPaul and the History of Drag

Past Present

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2021 41:57


In this episode, Natalia, Neil, and Niki discuss the cultural influence of RuPaul’s Drag Race. Support Past Present on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pastpresentpodcast Here are some links and references mentioned during this week’s show:  Reality show RuPaul’s Drag Race has just wrapped its thirteenth season. Niki and Natalia drew on Simon Doonan’s book Drag: The Complete Story. Natalia also referred to this Vulture article on the history of drag and this New Yorker profile of “female impersonator” Joseph Touchette. She also discussed the episode of Worn Stories featuring Doonan discussing his 1980s aerobics spandex.    In our regular closing feature, What’s Making History: Natalia discussed the ill-fated Chippendales skit, “The Politician,” viewable on her Instagram account. Neil shared Peter Knegt’s Canadian Broadcast Corporation column, “The Fruit Machine: Why Every Canadian Should Know About This Country’s Gay Purge.” Niki recommended the “Pets Are People” episode of This Day Pod, featuring Anne-Helen Peterson.

Bill Murphy's  RedZone Podcast | World Class IT Security
#208 The Inside Truth About Cybercrime & Risk Management - How to Protect Your Business with Mark Sangster, Cybersecurity Author & Security Strategist at eSentire Inc.

Bill Murphy's RedZone Podcast | World Class IT Security

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2021 52:03


In Episode #208, I talk with Mark Sangster. Mark is the VP & Industry Security Strategist at eSentire Inc., an award-winning speaker, and the author of the new book, “No Safe Harbor: The Inside Truth About Cybercrime―and How To Protect Your Business.”   As a CIO and Business IT Leader here are some wins you will get by listening: How remote work and employees bringing their office home have created new hurdles for IT leaders to deal with. (18:30) The root causes of cyberattacks and how bad actors are able to carry out such attacks as ransomware. (7:00) Why cybersecurity is not just an IT problem to fix and why it’s a business risk to manage. (4:00) Why enterprises should create a risk registry to rank the risks they face. (21:00) Why compliance is not the same as security or privacy. (33:00) Why some companies are ill-prepared for cyberattacks and the importance of having measures in place to protect your data. (12:00) Why complacency and a “set it and forget it” mentality are dangerous things for a company to have when it comes to cybersecurity. (15:30) How much easier it is for a bad actor to virtually rob a bank rather than physically. (40:00) The reputational hit that companies take after data breaches and cyberattacks. (26:30) Why modern compliance often lags behind other aspects of the business. (37:00)   Mark Sangster is the Principal Evangelist and VP of Industry Security Strategist for eSentire Inc based in Ontario, Canada. He is an award-winning speaker at international conferences and on prestigious stages, including the Harvard Law School, and an author on various cybersecurity subjects.     Mark has a fascinating perspective on shifting risk trends, and his work has influenced industry thought-leaders. He is the go-to expert on data breaches, and his work has been featured in The Wall Street Journal and the Canadian Broadcast Corporation. Mark also hosts the Cyber Insider Podcast. He interviews experts from across various industries to explore data breach litigation, cyber insurance claims, crisis communication, the rise of gray zone threats, and the risks of interconnected technology.    He is a contributing author to several leading industry publications (CSO magazine, SC Magazine, LegalTech News), an invited speaker at 40+ conferences a year, and a regular guest on many well-respected podcasts.    His most recent book, No Safe Harbor: The Inside Truth About Cybercrime―and How To Protect Your Business , tells the story of cybercrimes and cyber-attacks that never made the headlines but are equally important for companies to understand what they need to do to protect themselves.     How to connect with Mark Sangster: Mark Sangster’s LinkedIn Mark Sangster’s Twitter Mark Sangster’s Website   Books referenced in podcast: No Safe Harbor: The Inside Truth About Cybercrime―and How To Protect Your Business  1st Edition, By Mark Sangster, Published by Page Two, 2020.  The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right 1st Edition, By Atul Gawande, Published by Picador, 2011.    Articles referenced in podcast: The Fifty-Nine-Story Crisis, The New Yorker Magazine, 1995.    Transcript: You can go to the show notes to get more information about this interview and what we discussed in this episode. Click Here to download the full transcript.   About Bill Murphy: Bill Murphy is a world-renowned IT Security Expert dedicated to your success as an IT business leader. Follow Bill on LinkedIn and Twitter. If you are interested in learning more about RedZone and our security expertise in particular related to Cloud and Email Security Kill Chain Strategy, Techniques, and Tactics you can email myteam@redzonetech.net.

Pilots The Podcast
Episode 012: Schitt’s Creek – “Our Cup Runneth Over” (CBC/Netflix)

Pilots The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2020 57:25


This week TV addicts Schmee and Riker review the pilot of Schitt's Creek, "Our Cup Runneth Over" (CBC/Netflix) and discuss how well it did in defining the genre/conventions of the show, introducing its characters, how well it informed the series plot, and how well it hooked us to watch more! Follow us and let us know what you think! Twitter: @PilotsThePod Facebook: www.facebook.com/PilotsThePodcast Check out our website at www.PilotsThePodcast.com.

GDP - The Global Development Primer
It's Well Beyond Viruses: The Face of Global Digital Security Threats in post-Pandemic World .

GDP - The Global Development Primer

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2020 29:10


In 1993 the Canadian Broadcast Corporation ran a brief clip about how something called "The Internet" was connecting millions to talk about sports scores, recipes, philosophy and gossip. In the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, almost everyone depended upon the internet in order to get through it. The deep dependency on cyber technology and connectivity raises security concerns. As Mark Raymond shares with GDP, these concerns are far more concerning than the idea of sinister hackers and henchmen unleashing the next virus. Mark Raymond (@MRaymondonIR) is the Wick Cary Assistant Professor of International Security and the Director of the Cyber Governance and Policy Center at the University of Oklahoma. He is the author of Social Practices of Rule-Making in World Politics (New York: Oxford University Press, 2019). His work appears in various academic journals including International Theory, the Journal of Global Security Studies, Strategic Studies Quarterly, The Cyber Defense Review, the UC Davis Law Review, and the Georgetown Journal of International Affairs. He was a Senior Advisor with the United States Cyberspace Solarium Commission, and has testified before the United Nations Commission on Science and Technology for Development, and participated in the Internet Governance Forum. Follow Dr. Bob on Twitter: @ProfessorHuish

שימו לב
1. העשירייה פירושים מוזרים לשמות של מדינות

שימו לב

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2019 22:43


     ? כיצד ספרד הפכה להיות 'ארץ השפנים', איזו מדינה נקראת על שם בית קטן  בעולם ישנן מדינות רבות עם שמות מגוונים מאוד. הפרק הקרוב נצא למסע בעקבות המשמעיות הקונקו והמוזרות ביותר של המשרד!   תודה רבה לנטלי ריווין קריינית הרצף     ביבליוגרפיה נבחרת-     בנגלדש-   Robinson, Rowan (1995). The great book of hemp. Inner Traditions. p. 107.    מולדובה-  Frederick Kellogg (1990). A history of Romanian historical writing. C. Schlacks.   בחריין-  Encyclopedia of Islam, Vol. I. "Bahrayn", p. 941. E.J. Brill (Leiden), 1960.   בהוטן-  Chakravarti, Balaram (1979). A Cultural History of Bhutan. 1. Hilltop. p. 7. Retrieved 1 September 2011.   פינלנד- Grünthal, Riho. "The Finnic Ethnonyms". Finno-Ugrian Society.   הונדורס- "British Honduras". Encyclopædia Britannica. 12. New York: The Britannica Publishing Company. 1892. Retrieved 25 October 2010.   קנדה-  "Canada: A People's History – The birth of Quebec". Canadian Broadcast Corporation. 2001. Retrieved 26 August 2006.   פפואה- Jason Macleod (2015). Merdeka and the Morning Star: Civil Resistance in West Papua. University of Queensland Press   ספרד- Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Spain" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.  'אל תשכחו לעשות לייק לדף של- ' עושה רוח  

Coffee Pods with Holly Ransom
Coffee Pod #28: Fairness, Fake News and Fun with Emmy Award Winning Journalist Ann Medina

Coffee Pods with Holly Ransom

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2018 34:38


Website: IWForum Welcome to the second instalment of our special podcast series with IWF, the International Women's Forum. Our guest this week is Ann Medina, an Emmy Award winning broadcast journalist, in fact one of the world's most highly respected and renowned journalists, and an expert advisor in communications and technology. She began her TV career in Chicago, becoming a network producer at NBC, before moving to Canada, where she worked for the Canadian Broadcast Corporation. She then joined The Journal, and became its senior foreign correspondent, focusing on stories in the Middle East in particular. She was actually the Beirut Bureau's chief for CBC's The National during that really critical period in '83 and '84. She's moderated election debates, she was President of the Canadian TV and Film Academy. The list goes on and on. This is a really insightful and engaging podcast, and a challenging one at times too. We're going to pick up the Me Too and Time's Up conversation. We're going to focus on the lessons learned from time on the ground in war zones covering significant conflict. We're going to unpack the art of effective communication. We're going to talk about the importance of being open and not thinking that you know. Enjoy. Click here to read the transcript See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Renegade Talk Radio
State of Trump Subway Oven Roasted Chicken

Renegade Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2017 37:05


Oscar meltdown: 'La La Land' mistakenly named best picture, 'Moonlight' really wins Oscars this year, which saw its ratings drop Donald Trump set to make his 'biggest speech yet' in joint address to Congress. Millennial bowel cancer crisis: Young people are four times more likely to develop the disease than previous generations - due to their terrible diets If you think that chicken sandwich you ordered at Subway did not fully taste like fowl, you may have been right. According to a Canadian study, a DNA test showed only half of Subway’s oven-roasted patty is made with real chicken. Subway was among five fast-food restaurants whose chicken the Canadian Broadcast Corporation had tested. The results showed the Oven Roasted Chicken patties averaged 53.6 percent chicken DNA while the Sweet Onion Chicken Teriyaki strips. Richie and Sammy Renegade Nation always Remember Marla Keppler Co Founder Renegade Talk Radio

Mixed Mental Arts
Ep218 - Mixed Mental Arts: Interview: The Dorito Effect

Mixed Mental Arts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2016 69:25


In the wake of The Depression and World War II, it's understandable that the focus of North America's agricultural system became producing as many calories as cheaply as possible. And so, competitions were held like the Chicken of Tomorrow contest which aimed to produce chickens that grew more quickly and were in every way better suited to industrial production. The one thing that wasn't a priority was flavor. The result was that even by the 1960s Julia Child was warning that American chickens for all their impressive size were beginning to taste like teddy bear stuffing. This it turns out isn't some trivial concern. In fact, it may be the driving force behind why Americans overeat. Given how much of the human genome is devoted to tasting (with flavor sensors not just in your nose and tongue but also in your gut), it would be incredibly strange if flavor was something trivial. In fact, more of your genome is devoted to flavor than is devoted to your genitals which gives you a sense of just how evolutionarily important it must be. As Mark Schatzker, the author of The Dorito Effect, explains in this episode explains, flavor is the signal our bodies detect as a proxy for nutrition. The Dorito is the perfect way to mess up that signaling. You take a corn chip that is full of carbs and pretty much nothing else and you wrap it in massive amounts of flavor. You eat and eat and eat but you never get the nutrition you need. Once you pop, you can't stop isn't just a campaign slogan; it's a warning label. Doritos, Pringles and other junk food are perfectly engineered to make you overeat. And this is where the mixed mental arts element of this all comes in. Culture is driving these choices. Doritos, Pringles and other junk food are an American invention. And while obesity is a problem everywhere, it is particularly a problem in America. And, however much Americans might try and rationalize this behavior based on cost or practicality, it actually doesn't make any sense. There are varieties of chicken (La Belle Rouge) and tomato (those belonging to Harry Klee) that produce commercially viable quantities while still being much more flavorful. The costs? Obesity costs the US $190 billion a year. That's 21% of US Healthcare costs. There are no good reasons why Americans shouldn't have chickens that are as delicious as French chickens and tomatoes that are as flavorful as Italian tomatoes. More flavor. Less overeating. Less obesity. Lower taxes from healthcare savings. What's not to love? Expect to see a forthcoming blogpost that expands on this at mixedmentalarts.club. Featured Links The Geography of Thought Guest Information GUEST NAME: Mark Schatzker GUEST BIO: Mark Schatzker is an award-winning writer based in Toronto. He is a radio columnist for the Canadian Broadcast Corporation and a frequent contributor to the Globe and Mail, Condé Nast Traveler, and Bloomberg Pursuits. He is the author of The Dorito Effect: The Surprising New Truth About Food and Flavor and Steak: One Man’s Search for the World’s Tastiest Piece of Beef. Guest Links WEBSITE: http://www.markschatzker.com/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/markschatzker Guest Promotions The Dorito Effect

American Family Farmer
Mark Schatzker on The Dorito Effect

American Family Farmer

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2015 20:50


Mark Schatzker, an award-winning writer, radio columnist for the Canadian Broadcast Corporation and frequent contributor to the Globe and Mail, Conde Nast Traveler, and Bloomberg Pursuits, talks about his book "The Dorito Effect: The Surprising New Truth About Food and Flavor and Steak: One Man 19s Search for the World 19s Tastiest Piece of Beef."