Podcast appearances and mentions of christy coleman

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Best podcasts about christy coleman

Latest podcast episodes about christy coleman

Olive You Whole
041: Pioneering Clean Beauty with Christy Coleman, Former Chief Artistic Officer at Beautycounter

Olive You Whole

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2022 46:48


If you love makeup but you're not paying attention to what really goes on underneath your skin, then you better be. Our skin is the largest organ of the body and so we have to take care of it. There's no other reason more obvious than that.    In today's episode, clean beauty pioneer Christy Coleman shares her story and journey to clean beauty. Christy held so many hats and titles at Beautycounter until she ended up being a Chief Artistic Officer.    A makeup artist by trade and an aesthetician by profession, Christy started out doing makeup at a very young age. She was fortunate to travel all over the world doing what she loves. But she had to move back to Texas to take care of his father who was diagnosed with ALS. It wasn't until she lost her dad that she began searching for a purpose and deeper meaning in life.    Hear her story as she talks about how she made a full switch into clean beauty, why it's so so important to her, and how she's jumping through some of the hurdles.    In this episode, you will hear: Her love of makeup since she was young Exercising your creative muscle Why she made the full switch to a cleaner makeup kit Her first experience using clean makeup Christy's story of how she got started with Beautycounter The impact of clean beauty on the environment   Subscribe and Review Have you subscribed to our podcast? We'd love for you to subscribe if you haven't yet.  We'd love it even more if you could drop a review or 5-star rating over on Apple Podcasts. Simply select “Ratings and Reviews” and “Write a Review” then a quick line with your favorite part of the episode. It only takes a second and it helps spread the word about the podcast.   Supporting Resources: Not just a Pretty Face Book - https://amzn.to/3fHXwa1 (affiliate) Inconvenient Truth Movie - https://amzn.to/3SHJX9h (affiliate) www.Beautycounter.com/carolinefausel  www.ChristyColeman.com  www.Instagram.com/christycoleman   Episode Credits If you like this podcast and are thinking of creating your own, consider talking to my producer, Emerald City Productions. They helped me grow and produce the podcast you are listening to right now. Find out more at https://emeraldcitypro.com Let them know I sent you.

Reframing History
1. When I Say History...

Reframing History

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 40:49


We need a more productive public conversation about history. But how do we get on the same page? How do we promote an understanding of history that is inclusive and builds trust in the process of nuanced historical research? In this episode, hosts Christy Coleman and Jason Steinhauer break down the research and strategies in the Making History Matter report. Public historian Lacey Wilson shares her experiences developing a not-so-traditional historic house tour and how visitors reacted. Then AASLH President & CEO John Dichtl and FrameWorks Institute Lead Researcher Theresa Miller go through the research and recommendations step by step. You can learn more about the Reframing History initiative, download the report, and access transcripts for this podcast at AASLH.org/reframing history. Reframing History is produced by Better Lemon Creative Audio for the American Association for State and Local History. 

Reframing History
Trailer: Reframing History

Reframing History

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2022 3:00


COMING SOON: As the public debates around history grow louder, it seems there's a gap between how history practitioners understand their work and what the public thinks history is. We need a more productive public conversation about history. But how do we get on the same page? Over the course of this series, we'll be speaking to historians, history communicators, and educators from around the country about the language we use to communicate history to the public. Hosted by Christy Coleman and Jason Steinhauer, this six-part series delves deep into a new, research-backed communication framework developed by FrameWorks Institute in partnership with the American Association for State and Local History, the National Council on Public History, and the Organization for American History. Reframing History is produced by Better Lemon Creative Audio for AASLH.Our guests on this series are (in order of appearance): Lacey Wilson, John Dichtl, Theresa L. Miller, William Convery, Stacey Watson, Sam Wineburg, Hasan Kwame Jeffries, Heather Bruegl, Estevan Rael-Galvez, Susan Ferentions, Niya Bates, Eric Liu, Melanie Adams, Caroline Klibanoff, Steve Murray, and Jennifer Ortiz. Download the report and learn more about this research project at https://aaslh.org/reframing-history/

Leading By History
S3 Ep. 13 - It's More than Just an Act: Living History and Reenactments in the K-12 Classroom (Feat. Christy Coleman)

Leading By History

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2021 48:33


In this episode of the Leading By History podcast, host Ma'asehyahu Isra-Ul speaks with public historian and Executive Director of the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation - Christy Coleman. The discussion is centered in Living History and the complicated role that historical reenactments play in historical education. Should classroom simulations address the historical realities of slavery and racism or should it be left "to the professionals" (in that space)? What exactly is a historical reenactment and how does this work translate into a K-12 classroom? If you are looking to find understanding and clarity on the "Dos and Don'ts" of reenactments and simulations - this is the show you need to access. Pull out your smart device and take notes because this will provide just the insight you need. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/leadingbyhistory/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/leadingbyhistory/support

Good Morning, RVA!
Good morning, RVA: 1,345↗️ • 16↘️; school reopening is complicated; and police reform updates

Good Morning, RVA!

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2020


Good morning, RVA! It’s 66 °F, and we’ve got hurricane remnants moving through the region today. Expect temperatures to stay right about where they are, rain, and some real-deal wind this afternoon. Stay safe!Water coolerAs of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 1,345↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 16↘️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 136↗️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 53, Henrico: 48, and Richmond: 35). Since this pandemic began, 422 people have died in the Richmond region. The COVID Tracking Project has an interesting post up about the widening gap between hospitalizations and deaths in America as a result of COVID-19. Many, many people are still dying each day (1,025 yesterday), but, compared to the dark, New York-driven spring, fewer people who are hospitalized do end up dying. From the post: “This pattern in the data we compile is borne out by a recent finding that in one large New York healthcare system, patients hospitalized with COVID-19 had a greater than 25 percent chance of dying at the beginning of the pandemic. By August, COVID-19 patients admitted to the same hospital system had a less than eight percent chance of dying.” That same study credits new treatments and less burden on hospitals for keeping folks alive…and the fact that hospitalizations are up among younger people who are just more likely to survive. Positives and negatives.Make sure you take time to read this great piece by Kate Master in the Virginia Mercury about school reopening. Masters lays out how confusing and stressful these decisions are for local school boards who, ultimately, have full authority to make whatever reopening decisions they want. Part of that stress comes from a lack of data (which we’re slowly starting to piece together), part of it from a lack of statewide mandates from the Governor, and part of it from a federal government that’s often up to no good. A lot of things I write about are complicated, but school reopening is complicated.Related: In a press briefing yesterday, Richmond Public Schools Superintendent Jason Kamras said: “With increasing infection rates and the direction things seem to be heading, not just locally, but nationally, I am not optimistic, at this point, that we would be able to come back in person…We will continue to track the data, seek input from our families, and from our teachers. But, the number one priority is the health and safety of our students, our staff, and our families. So we’ll be watching this very, very closely.” Kamras goes on to say “Richmond is not Henrico and it is not Chesterfield…We are very different places.” which I think just perfectly illustrates everything Kate Masters wrote in her piece linked above.Yesterday, the Governor signed into law a dozen or so bills focused on police reform. You can read his press release—which amazingly contains direct links to LIS (that’s the State’s bill tracking website) for each and every bill that he signed. Gotta love that! As per always, I’m bad at state government, so I don’t know which of these bills should have gone further and which are solid, progressive reforms. I will point out, though, HB 5055 and SB 5035 which “permit civilian review boards the authority to issue subpoenas and make binding disciplinary decisions.” Hopefully these new laws will clear up any of the legal gray area we had locally about the power of the Civilian Review Board Richmond (and maybe Henrico!) is trying to stand up. Speaking of, I wonder what’s up with our Civilian Review Board Task Force…Quick follow up: RPD did end up arresting and charging four people at this week’s march in solidarity with folks in Philly. Police charged one person with “obstructing free passage,” another with “obstruction of justice, carrying a concealed weapon and pedestrian in the roadway,” a third with “inciting a riot and throwing a missile at an occupied vehicle,” and the fourth with “assault on a law enforcement officer.” I wish it were easier to track these charges and see if anything comes of them. I get names and mugshots emailed to me instantly, but I never hear if these charges are dropped, people are convicted, or what. Related, and more seriously, I’d like this information for murder suspects, too.One final police-related bit of follow up, the Richmond Times-Dispatch has an editorial calling for the RPD’s newly-formed External Advisory Committee to release the names of its members and open its meetings up to the media. I wrote similar things earlier this week, but, after hearing from a member of the committee, I think I may have been too flip. While I do think that the Richmond Police Department have burnt up too much public trust over the past few months to allow this committee to remain unnamed, I deeply appreciate how much work a volunteer committee like this is for regular folks. It’s possible to appreciate and value the people who want to get involved and make Richmond a better, safer place, while simultaneously recognizing that, in this particular situation, those people should probably be willing to be part of a truly public-facing group.Today at 2:00 PM, ChamberRVA will host a Shared Values Summit featuring Bill Martin from the Valentine, Christy Coleman previously from the American Civil War Museum and now the ED of the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation, prolific Richmond artist Hamilton Glass, and the president and vice president of the Tulsa Regional Chamber of Commerce (who will talk about their work in reparations for the Tulsa massacre). This is a solid group of folks and might could be a good way to spend your rainy afternoon. Tickets are $25.Heads up: If you’d planned on heading over to the Richmond and Henrico Health District’s community testing event today, it is canceled on account of hurricane remnants. However! If you need a COVID-19 test you should get one, and you can check out this big list of places offering them—to folks with or without insurance.Via /r/rva: “In honor of the upcoming election, my fiancé made (Abigail) Spamburgers and (Nick) Fritos. Don’t forget to vote!”This morning’s longreadThe Vast Bay Leaf ConspiracyThis definitely seems like something I’d have already shared as a longread before, but a quick Google suggests that I have not! Even if I have, I’m happy to share it again because what even are bay leaves??What does a bay leaf taste like? Nothing. What does a bay leaf smell like? Nothing. What does a bay leaf look like? A leaf. How does a bay leaf behave? It behaves as a leaf would, if you took a leaf from the tree outside of your apartment building and put it into your soup. People say, “Boil a bay leaf in some water and then taste the water if you want to know what a bay leaf tastes like.” No.If you’d like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the ol’ Patreon.

Good Morning, RVA!
Good morning, RVA: 1,152 • 57; Dominion implosion; and racism

Good Morning, RVA!

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2020


Good morning, RVA! It’s 72 °F, and today you can expect temperatures in the 80s, more humidity, and more scattered storms. This weekend’s weather looks lovely, though.Water coolerAs of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 1,152 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealthand 57 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 134 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 68, Henrico: 45, and Richmond: 21). Since this pandemic began, 188 people have died in the Richmond region. Those 57 statewide deaths reported yesterday are an all-time high, a dozen more than the previous day’s all-time high, and just a lot of people. I’m really trying to not treat these numbers like they are sports scores, but remember what they represent. Also, I’m not sure where, why, who, or if I typo’d the data, but I think Henrico reported 12 new deaths yesterday? That feels…shocking. Since Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield are now all fully into Phase One of the Governor’s plan for recovery, I thought it’d be useful to look at the percent positivity graphs for each locality. While the Governor has not announced what sort of metrics he’ll look at before deciding to move everyone into Phase Two (or really even defined the practicals of Phase Two), I think it’s safe to guess that he’s not looking for “steadily increasing percent positivity” or “shockingly high percent positivity.” Of note from the Governor’s presser yesterday, he extended the state of emergency indefinitely, says the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Mel Leonor. This is important as it continues to give cover for local officials who want to use their state-of-emergency powers during the ongoing coronacrisis.Remember! As of today, face coverings/masks are required. I mean, personally, I feel like if you can stay home, you should, but if you must leave to grab some groceries, restock on some quarantine supplies, or take the bus to work you need to have something over your face keeping your gross virus droplets to yourself. It doesn’t even have to be a fancy Etsy mask made from a striking print; a plain ol' bandana meets the requirements.If I remember correctly, all the way back in March, UVA announced that they’d stop in-person classes before any other institution of higher learning in the Commonwealth. March seems so long ago, so I could be making that up. Regardless, they’ve now announced their fall semester plans, which gives us a look at how colleges and universities are thinking about moving forward. Of note: UVA plans on students returning—like actually returning—to class on August 25th, assuming health officials allow it. Additionally, “large classes will remain online all semester, as will classes taught by faculty who have health concerns. Classes offered in-person, with the exception of some practicums, will also be available remotely, since some students will not be able to return to Grounds. Most students will have the option to remain home in the fall and participate in classes remotely.” The University also plans on finishing up the semester by Thanksgiving. I imagine we’ll see similar announcements from our local universities soon.The Virginia Employment Commission has posted their regularly-scheduled data dump, and, for the first time since the middle of March, there were fewer total people filing for unemployment insurance than the previous week. Both the number of new claimants and number of continued claimants went down. Whatever the rate of increase/decrease, hundreds of thousands of people remain unemployed in Virginia.Tomorrow at 7:00 AM, crews will set off explosives (implosives?) to implode the old Dominion Tower. Officials have been super clear that they don’t want lookie-loos crowding the streets watching the force of science crumble one of our skyline’s tallest buidlings into dust, and, to that end, will stream the implosion over on their Facebook. However, and this is not advice!, this particular building is visible from much of the south side of the river. So if you must lookie-loo, I’m sure you can think up some nice spots to do sufficiently far away from the action and sufficiently distanced from other folks with the same idea.Northsiders: Today you can order dinner (or supper, I suppose) from Lunch. Supper. and safely pick it up at The Pickup Spot (3001 Seminary Ave). Pickups run from 5:30–6:30 PM, and make sure you order ahead. This is a clever use of that particularly property on the corner of Brookland Park Boulevard and Chamberlayne, and I’m hoping coronatimes will get other folks thinking more intentionally about how we can start using our City’s spaces to serve its people.Protests over the murder of George Floyd by a White police officer continued in Minneapolis and spread to Louisville where Breonna Taylor was shot and killed by a police officer this past March. For folks—particularly most of the audience of this email—confused, upset, and struggling with what to do, Christy Coleman has this advice for White allies: “Calling our white allies…you’re needed now!! Time for you to tap in and get to work, because we’re tired of explaining this while processing ongoing trauma.” Next, I want to quote at length from RPS Superintendent Jason Kamras’s most recent email: “Before diving into today’s updates, I want to acknowledge the additional pain that is coursing through our community right now as a result of George Floyd’s harrowing death at the hands of a white Minneapolis police officer. The similarity to the Eric Garner case, down to both men’s cries—”I can’t breath“—is chilling, to say the very least. Nearly 35% of RPS students are African-American young men. The America that they will experience over the course of their lives is fraught with racist prejudices—held consciously or not—that dehumanize them and make deaths like Mr. Floyd’s not just possible, but common. We must change that. Our responsibility as educators is so much more than just teaching reading and math. It’s about preparing our young people with the knowledge, skills, and social capital they’ll need to construct a better, more just world—and doing whatever we can as adults to pave the way for them. Towards that end, I’d like to make a request of my fellow white members of the RPS community: If you haven’t already done so, please discuss Mr. Floyd’s death—and the long history of racialized violence that precedes it—with your children. Yes, it may be difficult. But families of color don’t have much choice when it comes to “the talk”—it’s literally a matter of life and death for them. For the entire RPS Family, here’s a set of resources for talking with young people about race, racism, and racialized violence from the Center for Racial Justice in Education. Finally, to everyone who is processing this tragedy with great pain, please know that your RPS family stands with you—and always will.”This morning’s longreadHow Many Black People Can You Mourn In One Week?Hannah Giorgis wrote this piece for BuzzFeed News four years ago.To be black in America is to exist in haunting, mundane proximity to death at all moments. There is no reprieve, no mute, no block, no unfollow that can loosen us from its shadow. And yet, we must live. We must carry on as though nothing is wrong, as though video of our death is not both the trailer and feature film. This is normal, in the way the ache of a migraine pulses painful but familiar. You feel numb, or you don’t, or you swing back and forth in the breeze. There is no protocol, and yet there is a convention. Tweet. Text. Act. Speak. Stay silent. Does it really matter anyway? I have written too many versions of this, too many reminders that we too bleed when bullet-ridden, too many justifications for the sanctity of human life for a people whose humanity has always been conditional. I am tired of begging. I am tired of bearing witness.If you’d like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the ol’ Patreon.

The Randy Wilson Podcast
Christy Coleman | Episode 21

The Randy Wilson Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2019 51:15


Christy Coleman joins the podcast today along with co-host Dr. Tiffany Jana. Christy is the CEO of the Civil War Museum.

ceo civil war museum tiffany jana christy coleman
Another View The Radio Show Podcast
Another View History Lesson - The Civil War

Another View The Radio Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2019 54:00


It's the war that literally divided our country and 150 years later its impact lingers and not always in a positive way. There is much debate about how we memorialize the Civil War and the Confederacy - should we change the name of public buildings named after Civil War heroes? What about confederate statues, should they stay or go? And will we ever solve the race issue in this country? These are weighty topics that we discuss with Christy Coleman, CEO of the American Civil War Museum. It's an Another View history lesson you won't soon forget!

The Will To Change: Uncovering True Stories of Diversity & Inclusion
E76: Behind the Curtain: How to Look Deeper, Discover New Truths, & Revise History

The Will To Change: Uncovering True Stories of Diversity & Inclusion

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2019 58:46


Christy Coleman, CEO of the American Civil War Museum, joins the program to discuss her own diversity story and how it led her to her current work. Discover the history of the museum and the work that they are doing to challenge existing narratives and tell stories from multiple perspectives. Christy also shares practices and ideas for creative a diverse talent pipeline, and how to create an organizational culture that supports and values all employees.

ceo history discover truths deeper behind the curtain revise american civil war museum christy coleman
Factually! with Adam Conover
Skewed Civil War Stories with Christy Coleman

Factually! with Adam Conover

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2019 66:20


Public historian and CEO of the American Civil War Museum, Christy Coleman, joins Adam this week to discuss skewed stories from the Civil War and their influence in history, the real success story of reconstruction and what else we’re missing in history. This episode is sponsored by KiwiCo (www.kiwico.com/FACTUALLY), Blinkist (www.blinkist.com/FACTUALLY), and The Great Courses Plus (www.thegreatcoursesplus.com/FACTUALLY).

Leading By History
Ep. 17 - To Freedom! The Journey of an Agent of Change (w/ CEO of the American Civil War Museum - Christy Coleman)

Leading By History

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2019 63:05


In this special, extended episode of Leading By History, Specialist Ma'asehyahu Isra-Ul sits down with CEO Christy Coleman to discuss her journey from childhood optimist to being one of the most influential agents of change with regard to America's Civil War narrative. Intriguing and informative, this interview is one long overdue. If you are looking to not only understand the new direction of the ACWM but also the seemingly provocative figure behind its most recent transformation, sit back, grab a cup of tea and listen to history at work! You don't want to miss any part of this extended show... --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/leadingbyhistory/support

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Today, Explained
Race runs through it

Today, Explained

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2019 18:29


Virginia: birthplace of American democracy and American slavery, first state to elect a black governor and maybe the first to have a governor with a KKK costume on his yearbook page. Christy Coleman from the American Civil War Museum in Richmond explains the duality of Old Dominion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

american race richmond runs kkk old dominion american civil war museum christy coleman
Common Ground
#78: Christy Coleman: How Shall We Remember?

Common Ground

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2018 66:45


This week, we hear from Christy Coleman, CEO of the American Civil War Museum in Richmond, Virginia. Coleman is a public historian. As you’ll hear in her lecture, her work is to take the findings, the interpretations, of academic historians and bring them to life for the public—as she says, to make the work relevant to contemporary audiences. She says in her talk that, inevitably, new generations will make new meanings of past events: Baby Boomers will understand the causes and significance of the Civil War differently than will millennials. In her talk, Coleman addresses some of these changes. She starts by considering the ways in which the causes of the civil war have been vastly misunderstood: she helps make sense of that old refrain you used to always hear from self-appointed civil war buffs, that the war was really about states rights after all. Coleman addresses that reading, and then talks about her work at the civil war museum.

Uncivil
The Takedown

Uncivil

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2017 38:38


We sat down with Nikole Hannah-Jones of the New York Times Magazine, Al Letson of Reveal, and Christy Coleman of the American Civil War Museum to talk about how they take down Civil War myths. For more Uncivil, visit our website: uncivil.show

Take Out With Ashley and Robyn
Episode 12 with guest Christy Coleman

Take Out With Ashley and Robyn

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2016 43:57


Since Beautycounter launched in 2013, Christy Coleman has served as Head of Creative Design. A fashion and celebrity makeup artist with over 30 years of experience, Christy develops the company’s collection of safer personal care products and cosmetics, while ensuring each one meets the highest performance standards. Her work has appeared in Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, and Vanity Fair and in advertising campaigns for Ralph Lauren, Tommy Hilfiger, and Victoria’s Secret. She also counts Alessandra Ambrosio, Connie Britton, Miranda Kerr, and many more among her high-profile clients. In 2007, Christy made a groundbreaking commitment to use safer products—and in the process, became one of the first makeup artists to pioneer this approach to better beauty. After years of research and experimentation with safer skin care and cosmetics, Christy was ready to help set a new precedent in the industry when founder Gregg Renfrew tapped her to join Beautycounter.