POPULARITY
Ultraaktuellt är tillbaka, nästan på dagen fem år efter det allra första avsnittet. Liksom i premiäravsnittet tar vi upp Transgrancanaria, den här gången med Ida Nilsson som vann Advanced-distansen, och 20-årsjubilerande Skövde 6-timmars, där damerna dominerade på Internationella kvinnodagen, med den längsta distansen sedan 2017, av vinnaren Eleonora Olsmats. Dessutom har Sandra Lundqvist sannolikt sprungit in sig till ännu ett VM i 24-timmars, genom att vinna i finländska Espoo på en distans som bara Maria Jansson har överträffat. Johnny Hällneby är med som bisittare. Och då det är årets första Ultraaktuellt går vi också igenom en hel del annat som har hänt sedan sist. 00:00 Intro 00:52 Introt från premiäravsnittet i mars 2020 01:51 Tillbakablick första avsnittet 05:15 Jennifer Asp intervjuar Stefan Ehrin eftger Transgrancanaria i mars 2020 05:58 Mer tillbakablick 06:46 Konflikt i GOMU - Global Organization of Multi-Day Ultramarathoners 08:29 Camille Herron är tillbaka, men ingen ursäkt 09:32 Rekord och rekordförsök på 48-timmars 10:57 Stian Angermund tillbaka och har delvis fått upprättelse 12:47 Transgrancanaria 15:44 Intervju med Ida Nilsson 22:42 Eftersnack Ida Nilsson 23:42 Extrema vintertävlingar i Sverige 23:50 Clarens sexa i Spine Race Winter 24:40 Arctic Spine Race 25:20 Lapland Arctic Ultra 26:04 Skogs-Ultra Storstenshöjden (SUS) 26:59 Sandsjöbacka Trail 31:10 Snapphaneracet 32:50 Höga Kusten Winter Trail 33:42 Skåne Frozen Trail 35:14 Sörmlands Winter Trail 36:14 Älvdalen Winter Trail 38:11 Borenshill Backyard Ultra, Falsterbo Backyard & Hoppledet 12H Backyard 41:35 Silverticket-tävlingar till lag-VM i backyard ultra utsedda 42:24 Bestig ett berg i Hammarbybacken 43:40 the gax walkaerle noctum 44:33 Karlstad 6-timmars 46:19 Espoo 24-timmars 46:52 Intervju med Sandra Lundqvist 54:02 Eftersnack Sandra Lundqvist 56:09 Skövde 6-timmars 01:01:25 Intervju med Eleonora Olsmats 01:09:01 Eftersnack Eleonora Olsmats 01:11:02 Kommande tävlingar
Outre la vente des oranges, l'événement qui se tient depuis 1962 chaque mois de mars sert également à échanger avec la population et à informer sur les projets de la fondation Terre des hommes. Car les petits montants font déjà une différence: avec 15 francs, un enfant de moins de cinq ans peut par exemple bénéficier de soins médicaux pendant un mois au Burkina Faso. Dans ce pays d'Afrique de l'Ouest, Terre des hommes travaille à l'accès à des soins de santé de qualité pour les mères et leurs enfants. À l'aide d'une application mobile sur tablettes numériques, plus de 20 millions de consultations d'enfants ont ainsi déjà pu être réalisées de manière efficace et économique dans le monde. DEMANDE: Pour la 63e édition de sa traditionnelle vente d'oranges, Terre des hommes recherche, pour des tranches de 2 à 3heures, des vendeurs bénévoles à: - Lausanne et alentours les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Vevey et Clarens les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Neuchâtel et alentours les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Bienne le samedi 8 mars - Courtepin le samedi 15 mars - Morat le samedi 15 mars
Outre la vente des oranges, l'événement qui se tient depuis 1962 chaque mois de mars sert également à échanger avec la population et à informer sur les projets de la fondation Terre des hommes. Car les petits montants font déjà une différence: avec 15 francs, un enfant de moins de cinq ans peut par exemple bénéficier de soins médicaux pendant un mois au Burkina Faso. Dans ce pays d'Afrique de l'Ouest, Terre des hommes travaille à l'accès à des soins de santé de qualité pour les mères et leurs enfants. À l'aide d'une application mobile sur tablettes numériques, plus de 20 millions de consultations d'enfants ont ainsi déjà pu être réalisées de manière efficace et économique dans le monde. DEMANDE: Pour la 63e édition de sa traditionnelle vente d'oranges, Terre des hommes recherche, pour des tranches de 2 à 3heures, des vendeurs bénévoles à: - Lausanne et alentours les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Vevey et Clarens les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Neuchâtel et alentours les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Bienne le samedi 8 mars - Courtepin le samedi 15 mars - Morat le samedi 15 mars
Une des plus grandes actions bénévoles de Suisse, la vente d'oranges de l'organisation de défense des droits de l'enfant Terre des hommes Lausanne, en est à sa 63e édition: les 7 et 8 ainsi que les 14 et 15 mars, plus d'un millier de bénévoles vendront des oranges dans différentes villes suisses. En achetant une orange, les passants font bien plus que renforcer leur apport en vitamine C, ils soutiennent les droits des enfants à travers le monde. Les fonds récoltés par la Fondation Terre des hommes permettront d'offrir aux enfants un environnement sûr où grandir et les moyens de bâtir leur avenir en toute autonomie. DEMANDE: Pour la 63e édition de sa traditionnelle vente d'oranges, Terre des hommes recherche, pour des tranches de 2 à 3heures, des vendeurs bénévoles à: - Lausanne et alentours les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Vevey et Clarens les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Neuchâtel et alentours les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Bienne le samedi 8 mars - Courtepin le samedi 15 mars - Morat le samedi 15 mars
Une des plus grandes actions bénévoles de Suisse, la vente d'oranges de l'organisation de défense des droits de l'enfant Terre des hommes Lausanne, en est à sa 63e édition: les 7 et 8 ainsi que les 14 et 15 mars, plus d'un millier de bénévoles vendront des oranges dans différentes villes suisses. En achetant une orange, les passants font bien plus que renforcer leur apport en vitamine C, ils soutiennent les droits des enfants à travers le monde. Les fonds récoltés par la Fondation Terre des hommes permettront d'offrir aux enfants un environnement sûr où grandir et les moyens de bâtir leur avenir en toute autonomie. DEMANDE: Pour la 63e édition de sa traditionnelle vente d'oranges, Terre des hommes recherche, pour des tranches de 2 à 3heures, des vendeurs bénévoles à: - Lausanne et alentours les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Vevey et Clarens les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Neuchâtel et alentours les vendredi 7 et samedi 8 mars - Bienne le samedi 8 mars - Courtepin le samedi 15 mars - Morat le samedi 15 mars
NOUVEAU - Abonnez-vous à Minuit+ pour profiter de Crimes - Histoires Vraies et de milliers d'histoires vraies sans publicité, d'épisodes en avant-première et en intégralité. Vous aurez accès sans publicité à des dizaines de programmes passionnants comme Espions - Histoires Vraies, Paranormal - Histoires Vraies ou encore Catastrophes - Histoires Vraies.
NOUVEAU - Abonnez-vous à Minuit+ pour profiter de Crimes - Histoires Vraies et de milliers d'histoires vraies sans publicité, d'épisodes en avant-première et en intégralité. Vous aurez accès sans publicité à des dizaines de programmes passionnants comme Espions - Histoires Vraies, Paranormal - Histoires Vraies ou encore Catastrophes - Histoires Vraies.
Cet épisode est réservé aux abonnés Minuit +.Vous souhaitez entendre la suite ? Retrouvez cet épisode en intégralité sur la chaîne Crimes Histoires Vraies l'Intégrale, ainsi que des centaines d'autres histoires et trois épisodes inédits par semaine, sans publicité et avec un mois d'exclusivité. Crimes, Espions, Paranormal, et Catastrophes Histoires Vraies l'Intégrale, sont disponibles dans l'abonnement Minuit +Le drame de Montreux est un de ces faits-divers au baptême compliqué, au nom vague qui signifie peu. La clé de l'affaire échappe à tout le monde, ou presque, et au fond peut-on vraiment parler d'affaire quand la justice n'en retient ni victime, ni coupable, ni partie civile, ni procès ? Il subsiste un mystère, caché dans le pli d'une famille, un secret emporté avec elle au cimetière de Clarens, sous quatre tombes blanches immaculées."Crimes : Histoires vraies" est un podcast Studio Minuit. Minuit est une chaîne de podcast française axée sur la diffusion d'un large catalogue de productions originales grand public. Affaires criminelles, Aventure et Histoire : Minuit raconte dans le détail des centaines d'histoires vraies qui fascinent des centaines de milliers d'auditeurs. Découvrez les autres contenus de Minuit par ici :Paranormal - Histoires vraiesMorts Insolites - Histoires VraiesLes Zéros du Crime - Histoires VraiesCélèbres et Assassinés - Histoires VraiesComparutions Immédiates - Histoires VraiesSherlock Holmes, les enquêtesArsène Lupin, les aventuresSurvivants - Histoires vraiesHistoires Insolites de Trésors - Histoires VraiesCatastrophes - Histoires VraiesSports Insolites Histoires VraiesLes Pires Dictateurs Histoires VraiesConspirations et Complots - Histoires VraiesEspions - Histoires VraiesEscrocs de Légende - Histoires Vraies Hébergé par Audion. Visitez https://www.audion.fm/fr/privacy-policy pour plus d'informations.
Clarens is nie net 'n mooi plek nie, daar gebeur ook mooi dinge! Soos die storie van die Clarens Eagles. . . . toe Jan weer sien was hy nie net die nuwe dominee op die dorp nie, maar ook die afrigter van 'n rugbyspan bestaande uit jongmanne waarvan meeste nog nooit voorheen op 'n rugbyveld was nie . . . Clarens Eagle op FB Kyk uit vir artikel en fotos in Kerkbode
1878. De Russische componist Peter Tsjaikovski zit gevangen in een ongelukkig huwelijk en vlucht weg van zijn vrouw richting Clarens. In alle rust aan het meer van Genève begint Tsjaikovski aan zijn vioolconcerto, met de assistentie van violist en minnaar Iosif Kotek. Drie jaar later werd het werk onspeelbaar verklaard door muzikanten en critici, maar vandaag kan je met dit meesterwerk de Koningin Elisabethwedstrijd winnen. moeilijke woorden: attacca uitvoering: Vadim Repin
Jane Dutton speaks to Travel, and Photographer Blogger, Iga Motylska about the Clarens Craft Beer Fest. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to S7E7 of The Story of Rock and Roll radio Show. This one went out on Rebel Rock Radio at 19h00 on 15 Feb 2024. I was in Clarens with master guitarist Dan Patlansky and a whole lot of guitar maniacs so the show deals with that a bit, but for the main, it is straight down-the-line Rock and Metal, as you would expect. This week's Immortals feature – a track over 7 min that showcases what an artist is all about features the man himself, Mr Dan Patlansky with a track recorded back in 2006 on an album called Real. The track is called Bad Weather Blues and showcases just what a great player he is. Next week I hope to play you a short interview Dan and I are planning regarding his new album Movin' On. The Diabolical challenge this week looked at four bands beginning with the letter ‘G'. The idea is that we have 4 albums and you can only pick one. This week we had: Grand Funk Railroad – We're An American BandGolden Earring – MoontanGreat White – HookedGuns ‘n' Roses – Use Your Illusion II Artists featured: Saxon, Volbeat, Thunder, Burn the Priest, Five Finger Death Punch, KK's Priest, Bon Jovi, Foo Fighters, The Angels, Cold Chisel, Rose Tattoo, Mother Love Bone, Junk Yard, Warrant, Suicide Bombers, Joel Hoekstra's 13, Motörhead, Buckcherry, ACDC, Machine Head, Burning Rain, The Winery Dogs, Green Day, Blink 182, Stone Temple Pilots, Faith No More, Dan Patlansky, Grand Funk Railroad, Golden Earring, Great White, Guns ‘n' Roses, Cadillac Sun, 12th Avenue, Seether, Rammstein, The Pretty Reckless, Arch enemy, Powder Finger. The Story of Rock and Roll. TSORR - Your one-stop shop for Rock
Gert Kruger, direkteur en groepkoördineerder van Augos gesels oor Clarence in die Vrystaat se stelsel wat hulle met Eskom bestuur. Volg RSG Geldsake op Twitter
Die Caledonian-sokkerstadion in Pretoria se multimiljoen-rand opgraderingsprojek sloer. Die gemeenskap en politieke partye soek antwoorde. Ons vind uit hoe die Vrystaatse-dorp, Clarens, dit regkry om beurtkrag vry te spring. Meer as 160 gerehabiliteerde aasvoëls kry 'n nuwe tuiste by die Shamwari-reservaat in die Oos-Kaap. Swede is nog 'n stap nader aan NAVO-lidmaadskap.
Andrés Clarens discusses how the CDR industry will spread throughout the US. Paper: Regional implications of carbon dioxide removal in meeting net zero targets for the United States https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/aced18
Skink 'n koppie tee en kry 'n knus kombers - die nuutste episode van #NBBoekhoek is nou beskikbaar. In hierdie episode van ons podsending gesels Michele Meyer met P.P. Fourie oor sy aangrypende roman, Ons skulde. Michele het met Fourie by Die Bôrdienguis gesels en die yskoue aand was perfek gepas vir hulle gesprek oor Ons skulde, 'n boek wat lesers net nie kan neersit nie. Michele en Fourie se gesprek is ewe boeiend. So, maak jouself tuis in jou gunsteling boekhoek en luister gerus. Ons skulde deur P.P. Fourie is by goeie boek- en aanlynwinkels beskikbaar. Waaroor gaan Ons skulde? Emma reis na Clarens om haar man se as te strooi. Terwyl sy by tante Vera tuisgaan, daag 'n geheimsinnige koevert op waarvan die inhoud Vera angsbevange maak. Dit blyk dat sy jaarliks anoniem só gedreig word voordat daar op iets wat vir haar kosbaar is toegeslaan word. Wie koester 'n wrok teen Vera? Waarom? Sal Emma antwoorde vind voordat die teisteraar se wraak toeneem? Met die spannende ontrafeling van 'n skrikwekkende raaisel word temas van skuld, straf, boetedoening en vergifnis ondersoek. Musiek: Kai Engel - Moonlight Reprise Fields Ohio - Anti-Saloon League Midnight Mystery
President Cyril Ramaphosa has been challenged to visit Clarens in the Eastern Free State to be given advice on the implementation of poverty-relief programmes. The invitation comes from Garth Brook - an implementing agent for the past 16 years - who says: “And what we'll do is we'll explain very carefully to Mr. Ramaphosa what it is we need in order for his poverty relief projects to work. It's not difficult and it's very easy work.” Brook's public appeal to the President comes after threats to blacklist him if he spoke out about his latest battles with officialdom. “They have told me that if I talk to you and I report this to you on your programme, I will be blacklisted.” According to Brook, the poorest of the poor are left even poorer by non-payment for projects; interference by municipal officials in projects funded by national government; and exploitation of workers by greedy implementers. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The establishment of the R100-million Dinosaur Interpretive Centre in the Golden Gate Highlands National Park in Clarens in the Free State has been hit by long delays. This has resulted in a huge loss of potential income from visitors, students and researchers from across the world. The Centre was commissioned by the SA National Parks back in 2019 - and the building should have been completed in early 2020 already. MP Sonja Boshoff of the National Council of Provinces has spoken to BizNews about the devastating impact of the delays. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Không có kịch bản viết trước, máy quay đi mượn, kinh phí ban đầu chỉ với 7 triệu đồng, phim tài liệu “Đứa trẻ trong sương” đã ra mắt công chúng vào năm 2022, và tạo dựng được tên tuổi trên trường quốc tế, như được đề cử vào danh sách rút gọn của 15 bộ phim tài liệu xuất sắc nhất Oscar 2023. Xoay quanh nhân vật Má Thị Di, bộ phim kể về tục kéo vợ của người H'mong và những xung đột giữa văn hoá truyền thống và lối sống hiện đại, giữa cách biệt thế thệ và thời đại. Cô bé Di 12 tuổi, xuất hiện ở đầu phim với những tiếng cười ngây thơ, trong trẻo của trẻ thơ, nô đùa cùng chúng bạn, chơi trò “kéo vợ”, tái hiện lại những phong tục của dân tộc H'mong. Trò chơi trẻ con ấy như là “một tấm gương phản chiếu thế giới của người lớn trong mắt của lũ trẻ, nhưng lại không phải thế giới thực của người lớn”, như nhận định của đạo diễn Hà Lệ Diễm. Câu chuyện của cô bé Di 12 tuổi, được mở ra với hình ảnh màn sương trắng từ từ bao phủ, nhẹ nhàng nuốt trọn cả núi rừng, thơ mộng nhưng cũng đầy lo lắng. Đằng sau những “bản sương giăng, đèo mây phủ” đó, là những khung cảnh chân thực về cuộc sống của Di và bản làng H'mong, do chính nữ đạo diễn quay lại trong vòng 3 năm. Hà Lệ Diễm theo chân Di đi hái rau, gánh củi, lên nương, đến trường, làm đèn lồng, nô đùa cùng chúng bạn. Cũng như bao cô gái tuổi mới lớn, Di thường xuyên tranh cãi với cha mẹ. Rồi đến một ngày, Di đã biết yêu. Những năm tháng tuổi thơ ấy đã nhanh chóng bị khuấy đảo, như vội tan biến trong làn sương mù của đại ngàn. Vào mùa xuân, trong dịp Tết cổ truyền của người H'mong, Di gặp Vàng, lúc này cô bé mới 14 tuổi. Di đã đến nhà Vàng và nghĩ chỉ là đến chơi, nhưng lại bị Vàng “bắt vợ”. Hai ngày sau, Di được Vàng chở về nhà và hai bên gia đình bàn chuyện kết hôn cũng như thách cưới, nhưng quyền quyết định cuối cùng là từ hai người trẻ. Cô gái 14 tuổi nhất mực phản kháng, trốn lên trường học. Thầy cô và cán bộ xã đã đến can thiệp khuyên ngăn cuộc tảo hôn này. Vàng đã quyết định “bắt” Di một lần nữa, ngay tại nhà của cô. Thế nhưng, theo tục lệ của người H'mong, bố mẹ, hay những người lớn khác không có quyền can ngăn khi nhà trai đến kéo vợ, chỉ có chị em trong nhà và chính bản thân Di phải là người hành động. Không chỉ khai thác tâm lý nhân vật chính - Má Thị Di, máy quay của đạo diễn cũng cho thấy cuộc đấu tranh nội tâm của người mẹ : một bên phải tuân theo phong tục truyền thống, bên kia thì mong con hạnh phúc. Bởi theo người H'mong, con gái phải được kéo đi thì mới được tôn trọng, và người chồng đầu tiên được cho là người tốt nhất.Bộ phim lên đến cao trào trước hình ảnh Di bị “kéo” đi ngay trước mặt người nhà, không khác gì một vụ bắt cóc giữa ban ngày, chân tay em giẫy giụa, phản đối, kêu cứu thảm thiết. Chỉ còn cách xe máy của Vàng vài mét, chân của Di đã mắc được vào cột và có thêm thời gian trước khi mẹ của Di, bà Say đến. Dường như bà chấp nhận “nhận lại con”, bà kêu hai đứa uống chén rượu chia tay, để Di nói rõ với Vàng là không yêu, không cưới, chấm dứt ý định kéo vợ. Bà chấp nhận việc Di từ chối bị kéo, chẳng khác nào như chứng kiến con gái li dị, qua một đời chồng. “Đứa trẻ trong sương” lần đầu tiên ra mắt công chúng quốc tế vào tháng 11/2021, tại Liên hoan phim tài liệu quốc tế Amsterdam (IDFA). Tại đây, Hà Lệ Diễm đã giành được giải “đạo diễn xuất sắc nhất”. Sau đó, nữ đạo diễn đã mang phim tham dự hơn 100 liên hoan phim lớn nhỏ trên khắp thế giới. Gần đây nhất, “Đứa trẻ trong sương” đã được đề cử vào TOP 15 phim tài liệu xuất sắc trong danh sách rút gọn của giải Oscar danh giá. Phim tài liệu mang tính nhân vănTrong khuôn khổ chương trình Liên hoan phim tài liệu quốc tế lần thứ 45 (REEL 2023), diễn ta tại Paris từ ngày24/03-02/04, bộ phim đã được chiếu tại phòng chiếu phim của bảo tàng Nghệ thuật châu Á Guimet hôm 02/04. Vào liên hoan phim REEL lần thứ 44 (2022), “Đứa trẻ trong sương” đã giành được giải Clarens (Prix Clarens du documentaire humaniste) về phim tài liệu mang tính nhân văn. Sau phần công chiếu là mục thảo luận, bàn tròn nói về tính nhân văn trong phim tài liệu này với sự góp mặt của đạo diễn Hà Lệ Diễm, đại diện sản xuất Trần Phương Thảo và chủ tịch của Hiệp hội Clarens. Cuộc giao lưu, tranh luận nhằm làm sáng tỏ sự can thiệp của đạo diễn trong phim. Phim tài liệu cũng có những thể loại tài liệu khác nhau. Có phim tài liệu thuộc thể loại nhân chủng học, về khoa học, về du lịch, hay mang tính nhân văn. Riêng về phim tài liệu mang tính nhân văn, đó là những thước phim ghi lại mảnh đời thực từ những con người thực, hướng đến việc phơi bày một vấn đề xã hội, có thể là vấn đề chung hoặc của một bộ phận trong xã hội. Phim nêu bật những khó khăn, xung đột mà nhân vật gặp phải và các giải pháp mà họ đưa ra để giải quyết vấn đề. Đó là trường hợp của phim “Đứa trẻ trong sương”. Có mặt tại bàn tròn, ông Robert Thierry, chủ tịch hiệp hội Clarens, chuyên thúc đẩy, hỗ trợ các hoạt động văn hoá, xã hội, mang giá trị nhân văn, nhận định : “chắc chắn rằng ‘Đứa trẻ trong sương' đã bày tỏ những điểm mạnh về tính nhân văn, đó là lòng thương cảm đối với người khác. Sự thấu cảm đó có thể dễ dàng nhận thấy trong bộ phim. Bất cứ lúc nào, chúng ta cũng có thể thấy được mối liên hệ, tình bạn giữa Diễm và Di và gia đình cô bé. Đó là một mối liên hệ chặt chẽ giữa Diễm và thế giới mà đạo diễn đang tìm hiểu, khi băng qua những làn sương mây. Tính nhân văn được thể hiện qua sợi dây thương cảm và góc quan sát rất nhân văn đối với những khoảnh khắc khác nhau trong đời thường của gia đình Di của người H'mong, cũng như mong muốn của đạo điễn, không muốn để Di bị kéo đi, theo những phong tục cổ xưa. Mong muốn ấy đã tạo ra một sức mạnh cho đạo diễn để thực hiện phim, và đó cũng chính là lý do mà hội đồng giám khảo của giải Clarens đã chọn trao giải cho “Đứa trẻ trong sương”. Đạo diễn là "đồng minh" của nhân vật Câu chuyện của cô bé Di, 12 tuổi, cũng giống như số phận của bao cô gái tuổi vị thành niên người H'mong phải đối mặt với tục “bắt vợ”. Theo Alexandre Levray, phụ trách Liên hoan phim quốc tế Amiens, thông qua nhân nhân vật Di, “người ta có thể thấy tuổi thơ của một cô bé, muốn lớn lên theo một cách khác, nhưng lại không có lựa chọn. Bộ phim tài liệu đầu tay của Hà Lệ Diễm, được xây dựng dựa trên sự gần gũi với nhân vật của mình, và đặt câu hỏi về khoảng cách cần có với nhân vật. Điều này khiến chúng ta nhớ đến một số bộ phim của Herzog, đẩy nhân vật đến giới hạn của họ, nhưng ở trong Đứa trẻ trong sương thì ngược lại, nữ đạo diễn trở thành đồng minh của nhân vật”. Quả thật, mối quan hệ giữa Diễm và Di không chỉ là giữa một đạo diễn và nhân vật được quay, mà như hai chị em, hai người bạn. Trong suốt 92 phút, người xem có thể dễ dàng cảm nhận được sự hiện diện của đạo diễn qua những màn đối thoại giữa Diễm và Di trong những câu chuyện đời thường nhất, cho đến những câu thoại ngắn ngủi, đủ để bộc lộ cảm xúc của nhân vật như “Di có chịu lấy chồng không?” - “Không. Di bảo thằng nào kéo Di thằng đó là dở hơi.” Không chỉ Di mà gia đình và bản làng cũng vậy, dường như chẳng ai thấy lạ lẫm, hiếu kỳ hay ngại ngùng trước máy quay, coi đạo diễn và máy quay là một, để cô tự do kể về thế giới của cô bé H'mong bằng nhãn quan riêng của mình. Để tạo được mối quan hệ không có hoặc rất ít khoảng cách đó giữa đạo diễn và nhân vật, tại bàn tròn sau buổi chiếu phim ở bảo tàng Guimet, Hà Lệ Diễm thuật lại nhận định từ bố của Di, ông Phò, người đã hỗ trợ Diễm rất nhiều để tiếp cận với văn hoá H'mong của bản làng : “Mấy ngày đầu mới đến, bố Di chở thẳng ra ruộng trồng lúa cùng mọi người luôn. Tôi cũng vào làm cùng mọi người, làm liên tục hai ba ngày. Bố Di mới thấy là con bé này sống sót được như ở H'mong ở trên Sa Pa. Do vậy, ông ấy để tôi thích làm gì thì làm, thích ở lại nhà thì ở.” Đạo diễn quên đi nhiệm vụ của mình ? Khán giả có thể cảm nhận được sự hiện diện đó rõ hơn khi Di cất tiếng kêu cứu: “Chị Diễm ơi cứu em !”, trong lúc đang vùng vẫy khi bị gia đình nhà trai kéo ra đến cổng. Người xem dường như nín thở cùng đạo diễn, vì bất lực vì căng thẳng, vì lo lắng cho số phận của Di, khi Diễm quay máy quay, hướng về phía mẹ Di và gọi : “Chị ơi..!” Kể về chi tiết này, Hà Lệ Diễm cho biết, cô đã được bố mẹ Di giải thích về việc bố mẹ không được can ngăn, Di phải tự phản kháng và chỉ có anh chị em trong nhà mới được ra kéo Di về và Diễm cũng được coi như anh chị em trong nhà. Cô nói thêm : “Lúc mà mọi người xúm vào kéo Di, Di đã lao vào ôm chân của tôi, và tôi đã phải buông máy quay ra. Tôi đưa tay ra kéo Di. Bình thường tôi rất là khoẻ nhưng không thể nào khoẻ bằng 3 4 người đàn ông. Họ lôi Di ra ngoài cửa luôn. Bà nội Di đã chặn tôi lại, không cho tôi giúp Di. Lúc đó, tôi đã ra chất vấn Vàng: -“Tại sao em lại kéo ? Em đã hứa với chị rồi mà, nhưng Vàng trả lời tỉnh bơ : - “Em có hứa bao giờ đâu”. Lúc tôi cầm máy quay lên, đầu óc tôi trắng xoá, đến lúc Di gọi tên tôi thì tôi giật mình, tôi sợ nhất là Di bị bưng lên xe máy là đi luôn.” Làm phim tài liệu là hoàn toàn chủ quan ? Cảnh kéo vợ cũng chính là phút cao trào, đắt giá nhất trong phim và đặt ra câu hỏi về vị trí của đạo diễn nằm ở đâu, là một người đứng ngoài xem quay lại, hay cũng là một người trong đó ? Việc có quan hệ thân thiết với nhân vật, phải chăng đã khiến đạo diễn quên đi nhiệm vụ của mình, quên đi mất tính khách quan cần có ? Trả lời câu hỏi này, Hà Lệ Diễm nhận định rằng thể loại phim tài liệu mà cô làm là hoàn toàn chủ quan. Trước tiên là từ việc chọn nhân vật chính, góc quay, cho đến lúc dựng phim. Có những người lựa chọn đặt máy quay một chỗ, để mọi chuyện diễn ra tự nhiên. Có những người thì quyết định vác máy đi mọi nơi, theo sát nhân vật, cho thấy sự hiện diện của mình ở đó. Trong vòng 3 năm theo chân Di, nữ đạo diễn cho biết đã nhiều lần khó có thể giữ vững cảm xúc, đã có lúc giận và buồn, bỏ về luôn khi phải chứng kiến những chuyện liên quan đến Di và bố mẹ. Cô nói : “Di có bao nhiêu nỗi buồn, Di đổ lên đầu tôi, bố mẹ Di cũng vậy. Khi làm phim tài liệu, thì bao nhiêu năng lượng tiêu cực của nhân vật cũng ảnh hưởng đến mình rất nhiều”. Có lần Di và Diễm cùng đi xem phim với nhau, khi xem lại những cảnh được quay, cô bé Di đã hỏi đạo diễn, lúc đó chị giận như vậy mà vẫn quay được à ? Cô trả lời : “nếu không quay lại thì làm sao Di có thể xem lại được cảnh lúc đó diễn ra như thế nào”. Trên thực tế, Di đã tự cứu lấy mình. Nữ đạo diễn thuật lại những lời căn dặn của mẹ cô bé, nói với Di “nếu không muốn bị kéo đi, thì phải hết sức vùng vẫy, như một con lợn, đập chân tay xuống đất, còn nếu đồng ý cưới thì cứ thế đi lên xe về nhà họ”. Đó chính là lời giải thích về cảnh Di hết sức bình sinh, kháng cự, trong cảnh đắt giá nhất phim. Khi được hỏi về sự hiện diện của đạo diễn liệu có can thiệp, ảnh hưởng đến quyết định, mong muốn kháng cự, muốn giải thoát khỏi tục kéo vợ của cô bé Di hay không ? Hà Lệ Diễm nhớ lại có lần Di gọi mình đến và hỏi - “theo chị thì em có nên lấy chồng không ?” cô hỏi lại Di -“Sao em bảo em muốn đi học mà giờ lại đổi ý, muốn đi lấy chồng ?” rồi Di bảo - “xong rồi, đi !” Theo nữ đạo diễn sinh năm 1991, thực ra Di đã có quyết định cuối cùng của mình, Di chỉ muốn nghe xem ai đứng về phía mình hay không thôi. Khi mình có mặt ở đó, cầm máy quay, thì không thể coi như vô hình được, “bởi nếu không trả lời cũng là tác động mà trả lời cũng là tác động”. Hiện “Đứa trẻ trong sương” đang được công chiếu tại khắp các rạp trong hệ thống Beta Cinemas, DCINE và Lotte Cinema tại nhiều thành phố lớn ở Việt Nam. Phía nhà sản xuất phim cho biết, đã ghi nhận ít nhất 12 000 lượt xem. Gần 3 năm sau khi đóng máy, Má Thị Di nay đã trưởng thành, cô gái 19 tuổi đã hoàn thành chương trình học phổ thông, kết hôn và sinh con với người mình yêu mà không theo tục lệ kéo vợ. Hiện Di cùng mẹ đang bán qua mạng đồ thổ cẩm do chính mình làm ra.
Als Mariam Clarens Mutter Nahid Taghavi 2020 im Iran verhaftet wird, erlebt die Tochter einen Wendepunkt im Leben. Die Kölnerin, die eigentlich nichts mit ihrem Geburtsland zu tun haben wollte, wird unfreiwillig zur Aktivistin.
S6E10 kicked off live on Rebel Rock Radio at 19h00 on 9 Mar 2023. It was great to be back in Benoni after last week's sojourn to Clarens and we celebrated hard. First up was Motörhead and a track off Inferno called ‘In the Year of the Wolf'. From there some classic Led Zep and a track by Michael Monroe co-written by Lemmy called 'The Fine Art of Debauchery'. We had some Def Leppard and some Black Sabbath to keep the big names in the mix and then turned left into the world of Stoner Rock and Queens of the Stone Age. From there we hit some USA Punk with Ramones and The Distillers. This week's elevator speech came from a quick chat I had with Chris Kennedy of Punkfontein and he told us about the new track being released called ‘The Leviathan', we played it, and it's fully cool. We stayed in that zone with Blink 182 and The Killers with a track off Sam's Town called This River Is Wild. I vote The Killers the band most in need of a slap round the head. Such a good album and then nothing. From there it was back to ‘80s metal courtesy of W.A.S.P. and a track called ‘The Rock Rolls On'. This week's Immortals was a track by James Reyne featuring a wailing emotionally charged solo by Jef Scott and especially dedicated to my mate Fanie Marais who loved this album and would have been 72 this week. RIP buddy. From there we heard a brand new track from Bily Squier who, as far as I know, hasn't released anything for 25 years. The track is called ‘Harder On A Woman' and it sounds just like you would expect, well done Billy, welcome back. The Ultimate Challenge this week looked at 4 albums from 2005. Avenged Sevenfold – City of Evil, Foo Fighter – In Your Honor, System of a Down – Violent Pornography, and Audioslave - Out of Exile. Once again there was no clear winner and everyone changed their minds at least once. The brand new track by Deadline called 'My Sweet apocalypse' is really good, over 7 min long it is one of the best tracks these SA metal giants have released. We ended with Iron Maiden and The Halo Effect with tracks called 'Tears of a Clown' and 'Gateways'. Artists Featured: Motörhead, Led Zeppelin, Michael Monroe, Hell Fire, Def Leppard, Black Sabbath, Queens of the Stone Age, The Distillers, Ramones, Metallica, Crossbone Skully, David Bowie, The Rolling Stones, Ugly Kid Joe, Airbourne, Punkfontein (Feat Meel Vignetting), Blink 182, The Killers, W.A.S.P., Sebastian Bach, Sophie Lloyd (Feat Matthew K. Heafy), James Reyne, System of a Down, Foo Fighters, Audioslave, Avenged Sevenfold, Dave Hause, Bush, Anti-Nowhere League, Iggy Pop, Deadline, Iron Maiden, The Halo Effect. The Story of Rock and Roll. TSORR - Your one-stop shop for Rock
It is that time of year again, Dan Patlansky's guitar weekend down in Clarens. This episode went out on Rebel rock Radio on 2 March 2023 at 19h00. It was a bit messy, but messy is good, let me know if you disagree. We kicked off with Fokofpolisiekar and their classic rock anthem, ‘Hemel Op Die Platteland, and followed up in quick succession with Airbourne, Grand Funk Railroad, and Mötley Crüe. We heard from the ladies pretty early in the show, two stellar guitarists Sophie Lloyd and Laura Cox showing the way. From there we checked out some Queen of Queen II and the opening tracks of My Chemical Romances masterpiece The Black Parade. We broke radio rules and played Nickelback with no problem at all, I love Nickelback, I think Chad Kroeger is a phenomenal songwriter and has a golden voice. I think the hate is coming from people piling on because others don't like them. Be your own person and admit that there is nothing wrong with Nickelback
Terminus, tout le monde descend; mais quelle belle semaine à bord des bus bleus de Clarens… Invitée: Angela Schlegel, présidente des VMCV (entreprise suisse de transports en commun, Vevey-Montreux-Chillon-Villeneuve (VMCV). Manifestation: cette année 2022 marque une date anniversaire de la première ligne de train destinée au transport de voyageurs entre Zurich et Baden inaugurée le 7 août 1847. Les transports publics suisse fêtes leur 175 ans. Les Dicodeurs et dicodeuses: Laurence Bisang, Marc Donnet-Monay, Pascal Vincent, Frédérci Gérard, Sabine Carron, Sandrine Viglino (claviers), Jean-Claude Gailly (réalisation), Julien Carrera et Stéphane Tornare (technique), Gérard Mermet et Jean-Luc Sudan (production), Anouk Wehrli (attachée de production).
En plus de faire de la moto, elle a le permis de trolleybus lʹinvitée de la semaine et directrice des transports public de Clarens et région… Invitée: Angela Schlegel, présidente des VMCV (entreprise suisse de transports en commun, Vevey-Montreux-Chillon-Villeneuve (VMCV). Manifestation: cette année 2022 marque une date anniversaire de la première ligne de train destinée au transport de voyageurs entre Zurich et Baden inaugurée le 7 août 1847. Les transports publics suisse fêtes leur 175 ans. Les Dicodeurs et dicodeuses: Laurence Bisang, Marc Donnet-Monay, Pascal Vincent, Frédérci Gérard, Sabine Carron, Sandrine Viglino (claviers), Jean-Claude Gailly (réalisation), Julien Carrera et Stéphane Tornare (technique), Gérard Mermet et Jean-Luc Sudan (production), Anouk Wehrli (attachée de production).
Attention, lʹinvitée est venue avec sa copine avocate qui veille au bon déroulement de lʹémission. Invitée: Angela Schlegel, présidente des VMCV (entreprise suisse de transports en commun, Vevey-Montreux-Chillon-Villeneuve (VMCV). Manifestation: cette année 2022 marque une date anniversaire de la première ligne de train destinée au transport de voyageurs entre Zurich et Baden inaugurée le 7 août 1847. Les transports publics suisse fêtes leur 175 ans. Les Dicodeurs et dicodeuses: Laurence Bisang, Marc Donnet-Monay, Pascal Vincent, Frédérci Gérard, Sabine Carron, Sandrine Viglino (claviers), Jean-Claude Gailly (réalisation), Julien Carrera et Stéphane Tornare (technique), Gérard Mermet et Jean-Luc Sudan (production), Anouk Wehrli (attachée de production).
Validez votre titre de transport pour une une heure d'émission à bord de la cafétéria des chauffeuses et chauffeurs des bus VMCV. Invitée: Angela Schlegel, présidente des VMCV (entreprise suisse de transports en commun, Vevey-Montreux-Chillon-Villeneuve (VMCV). Manifestation: cette année 2022 marque une date anniversaire de la première ligne de train destinée au transport de voyageurs entre Zurich et Baden inaugurée le 7 août 1847. Les transports publics suisse fêtes leur 175 ans. Les Dicodeurs et dicodeuses: Laurence Bisang, Marc Donnet-Monay, Pascal Vincent, Frédérci Gérard, Sabine Carron, Sandrine Viglino (claviers), Jean-Claude Gailly (réalisation), Julien Carrera et Stéphane Tornare (technique), Gérard Mermet et Jean-Luc Sudan (production), Anouk Wehrli (attachée de production).
En voiture Angela, les Dicodeurs prennent lʹabonnement de bus toute la semaine en compagnie d'Angela Schlegel, la directrice des transports publics de Clarens. Invitée: Angela Schlegel, présidente des VMCV (entreprise suisse de transports en commun, Vevey-Montreux-Chillon-Villeneuve (VMCV). Manifestation: cette année 2022 marque une date anniversaire de la première ligne de train destinée au transport de voyageurs entre Zurich et Baden inaugurée le 7 août 1847. Les transports publics suisse fêtes leur 175 ans. Les Dicodeurs et dicodeuses: Laurence Bisang, Marc Donnet-Monay, Pascal Vincent, Frédérci Gérard, Sabine Carron, Sandrine Viglino (claviers), Jean-Claude Gailly (réalisation), Julien Carrera et Stéphane Tornare (technique), Gérard Mermet et Jean-Luc Sudan (production), Anouk Wehrli (attachée de production).
Episode 20 of Season 5 aired on Rebel Rock Radio on Thursday 19 May at 19h00. It was great to be back behind the mic after two hectic weeks in Clarens and then Cape Town. The show kicked off with hair metal heavyweights Slaughter and a track called 'Shake This Place'. That was the general intention from the start. From there we checked out the two Mot's, Mötley Crüe and Mott the Hoople, with 'Angela' and 'One of the Boys' respectively.We went to Australia with The Screaming Jets and James Reyne and then to Germany with Accept and a delightful love song called 'Bucket Full of Hate'. The show had a great mix and even featured a track from prog heavyweights Dream Theatre. We had metal from Satan with 'My Own God', as well as more from Cancer Bats off their latest release Psychic Jailbreak. The South African stuff came from Jasper Dan, Prime Circle, and Durban's very own Roland Suttie with his latest Theo Crous release titled 'There Was a Boy'. By request, we slipped in The Uninvited and a track called 'Fixman' making a long overdue appearance. It's a track of great relevance today with the immortal line "When the bullies go to war". There was a bit of Gary Numan and Transvision Vamp and another track from Roger Kaye with Blue Scream titled 'Weak at the Knees. We also checked out 12th Avenue and gave a big shout-out to frontman Mark Haze who I saw in Tableview last weekend. the good news is that Mark is rocking and sounding better than ever. He has without a doubt one of the best voices in the world and it's wonderful to see a guy so talented. As we said at the gig, he plays guitar as easily as breathing. We finished off with the Admas Family, Ryan, and Big brother Bryan, lol, just a little joke. Artists featured: Slaughter, Mötley Crüe, Mott the Hoople, Def Leppard, Bad Company, The Screaming Jets, James Reyne, Metallica, Satan, Accept, Dream Theatre, Fate Warning, Dark Tranquility, The Rolling Stones, Gov't Mule, Jasper Dan, Roland Suttie, Prime Circle, Gary Numan & Tubeway Army, Transvision Vamp, Halestorm, Cancer Bats, Motörhead, Avenged Sevenfold, The Gaslight Anthem, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, 12th Avenue, Blue Scream, The Uninvited, AMH, Green Day, UK Subs, Pride & Glory, Slayer, Trivium, Megadeth, Kid Rock, Ryan Adams, Bryan Adams
Aujourd'hui, je pars à la rencontre de Benjamin Clarens et Yann Martin, les co-fondateurs de l'agence CUT architectures. Retail, hôtellerie, bureaux, rénovation d'appartements, ils développent depuis 2008 des projets aux échelles variées. D'un studio pour un particulier à un hôtel de 1000 chambres, en passant par un bar karaoké, ils aiment proposer des concepts nets, sans jamais se reposer sur les tendances. C'est ce qu'ils évoquent avec le nom CUT : trancher avec les idées reçues. Dans cet épisode, on a discuté de leurs débuts, de la pratique de l'architecture à l'étranger, de la scène majeure des Pays Bas pour Benjamin aux contraintes de climat en Finlande pour Yann, et des bonnes pratiques qu'ils ont conservées aujourd'hui : avoir une véritable idée derrière un projet et pas seulement une approche purement pragmatique, ne pas s'interdire de travailler du mobilier, de travailler des échelles qui ne sont a priori pas celles de l'architecte. Ce fut l'occasion aussi de revenir sur la création de l'agence, de leur premier projet de jardin à Chaumont sur Loire, qui leur a donné le goût des matériaux, à leur premier gros chantier pour les cafés Coutume, qui leur a permis par la suite de décrocher les restaurants PNY et de travailler aujourd'hui de plus en plus à l'étranger, notamment au Japon. Le projet qu'ils préfèrent ? Celui qu'ils n'ont pas fait. Plus il y a de contraintes, mieux c'est. _____ Pour prolonger l'épisode : Site Internet de CUT : http://www.cut-architectures.com/ Compte Instagram de CUT : https://www.instagram.com/cutarchitectures/ ______ FOOD - Benjamin : Café du coin, rue Camille Desmoulins (Paris) - Yann : tous les restaurants de Soba au Japon ART - Yann : Teshima Art Museum, sur les îles de Naoshima et Techima - Benjamin : König Galerie, ancienne église brutalise convertie en galerie d'art, à Berlin VOYAGE - Yann : voyageur urbain, aime se perdre dans une ville, notamment au Japon - Benjamin : la Catalogne, pour son architecture et la proximité avec la mer A VISIONNER - Benjamin & Yann : Bienvenue à Gattaca, d'Andrew Niccol A LIRE - Benjamin : La Grande Arche, de Laurence Cossé - Yann : Trilogie Sphères (Bulles, Globes, Ecumes) de Peter Sloterdijk ______ Retrouvez toute l'actualité du podcast sur https://www.instagram.com/journalurbain/ ou en vous abonnant a la newsletter sur https://podcast.ausha.co/journalurbain
S5E18 went out on Rebel Rock Radio on 5 May 2022. I was in Clarens on a Guitar Clinic with SA Blues Maestro Dan Patlansky. The show featured a fair amount of blues as you would expect, 'Hounds Loose' from Dan Patlansky and Rrude Mood' from Stevie Ray Vaughan. I haven't got a gap to write this one up so I will post it and fix it later.....or not, if anyone cares about these write ups let me know. Artists featured: Dire Straits, John Mellencamp, Jimmy Barnes, Judas Priest, Iced Earth, Megadeth, Tokyo Blade. Iron Maiden, Motörhead, Bad Company, Walking Papers, Dan Patlansky, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Leslie West, Def Leppard, Girl, Dream Widow, Foo Fighters, Running Wild, Onslaught, Pantera, Rammstein, George Thorogood & The Destroyers, Mötley Crüe, L.A. Cobra, Nirvana, Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Cult, ACDC, Saxon, Scorpions, Doro, Sitkovsky, System of a Down, Five Finger Death Punch, Cancer Bats, Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen, Roan Van As, Halestorm.
The small eastern Free State town on the foothills of the Maluti mountains had its first annual Clarens Arts Festival at the end of April 2022. Tshepo Lesole was there. For 4 days starting from Friday April 30th, tourists, locals and art fanatics had a great time with exhibitions of sculptures, fine art, music, photography and workshops for creative development of local children.
Vanessa is a major social justice and cannabis activist and founder of the holistic cannabis organisation Neked in Clarens. Vanessa has struggled throughout her life with various mental health issues and cancers and has used a combination of psilocybin, cannabis, sound medicine and art therapy to heal herself. Thank you so much to Vanessa for being on this podcast and for your advocacy and courage in the plant medicine sphere. Here's what we cover in this episode: * The havoc that the pharmaceutical industry wreaked on Vanessa's physical, mental, emotional and spiritual wellbeing * How psilocybin mushrooms helped Vanessa completely wean herself off of pharmaceutical drugs and heal from her trauma * Traumatisation during the pandemic and the increasingly imperative role of plant medicine * The magic mushroom as the most forgiving, understanding and all-encompassing mother * How Vanessa healed her cervical cancer using cannabis and psilocybin mushrooms * Intuitive dosing and the importance of dosage * How mushrooms can change your life - the importance of intention * Acknowledging, respecting and embracing the spiritual experience of plant medicines * How plant medicine facilitates deeper connection in partnerships * Official announcement of South Africa's first full cannabis experience hosted by Neked on the weekend of Human Right's Day 2022 Find out more about Neked here - https://neked.co.za
S4E42 aired on Rebel Rock Radio on 21 Oct 2021. I was in Clarens with my band the Bunk Girls Motorcycle Club on a guitar clinic with the most amazing Dan Patlansky so the episode felt a bit different from normal. Having people around changes what you play and consequently, it's the first show that doesn't have something really heavy, no Slipknot, No Trivium, no Killswotch, sorry about that. We kicked off in the usual way with some upbeat rock and roll from Buckcherry of the new album Hellbound, Avenged Sevenfold's 'Girl I Know' off Diamonds in the Rough. We stayed raucous for about an hour and then got into the Neil Young, Springsteen phase before going really bluesy with the ladies, Larkin Po 9making a TSORR debut) and the wonderful Samantha Fish with a track called Down in the Swamp. There was a nice stretch of SA music with Dan Patlansky and Albert Frost, two of the finest players around. We paid special attention to Dan's tone and the fact that it is a product of a relentless lifelong search to get the right sound. I then did something weird and played pretty much every band that the haters love to hate in a row. I don't plan these things it just worked out like that. All in all, I don't know what I think of this one, let's see what you think, comments as always are welcome, you can find The Story of Rock and Roll's Facebook page if you have anything to say about it. Peace. Artists featured: Buckcherry, Avenged Sevenfold, Godsmack, Halestorm, Warrior Soul, Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Black Stone Cherry, Massive Wagons, Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen, Larkin Po, Samantha Fish, The Who, Jimi Hendrix, Megadeth, Hellfighter, ACDC, Kiss, Rush, Springbok Nude Girls, Bed On Bricks, Dan Patlansky, Albert Frost, Hinder, Nickelback, Def Leppard, Greta Van Fleet, Supertramp, Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band, John Mellencamp, Kid Rock, L7, Marilyn Manson, Matthew Good Band, The Wildhearts, The Damned, Foo Fighters, Mötley Crüe
SUR LE FEU - EPISODE 4 - SPECIAL SANTÉ MENTALE « C'est un impensé total, quand on voit les gens dormir en bibli... » - Pauline, de l'association Bulle Cette semaine, épisode spécial sur la santé mentale chez les étudiant.e.s !! Notre revue de l'actualité du campus, nationale et internationale sera donc assortie des interviews de 3 étudiantes. D'abord, Pauline, coprésidente de l'association la Bulle, initiative étudiante qui a pour objectif d'installer une salle de repos à Sciences Po. Ensuite Romane, qui représente les étudiant.e.s vacataires relais santé. Enfin Anaïs, responsale du pôle évènementiel de l'association Stimuli, l'association de la santé mentale à Sciences Po. Comme d'habitude on revient sur l'actualité du campus, avec : Le débat des partis politiques ce jeudi 14 octobre de 19h15 à 21h dans l'amphi Leroy-Beaulieu (27) organisé par Sciences Po TV et Les Engagés - ANNULÉ Ce jeudi 14 octobre : Le Saunafterwork à la Panic Room (101 rue Amelot) organisé par Soundsystems de 20h a 2h. Ce vendredi 15 octobre : La conférence sur "Paris sous Napoléon" de Sciences Poléon, salle Jeannie de Clarens, de 17h à 18h30. Ce samedi 16 octobre : Aller au Festival du Kimchi dans le 15ème avec Ramen-toi, l'association d'amitié franco-nippo-coréenne de Sciences Po. Ce lundi 18 octobre : La conférence "China's Cyber and Digital Policy: Is China a digital authoritarian country?" de Sciences Po Cyber Security Association, de 17h à 18h. Google Form 4 évènements organisé en octobre et novembre par le BDA, avec pour commencer la 1ère séance de leur Sciences Po Cinéma Club au Christine Cinéma Club le 20 octobre au soir. Le jeudi 28 octobre : Beats Across Borders au Punk Paradise de 19h30 à 2h00, organisé par Sciences Po Refugee Help. Le communiqué de Chafia On revient ensuite sur l'actualité nationale avec la mort d'Hubert Germain, le prix du Gazole, la pédophilie dans l'Eglise, la conférence France 2030 de Macron, et enfin Xavier Bertrand et le destin de la droite. Ensuite, on évoque l'actualité internationale avec l'actualité politique de la Pologne, de l'Autriche et de l'Italie.
De la musique ancienne résonnera dans les murs du château du Châtelard à Clarens ce dimanche
Det har varit en av historiens största ultrahelger. För första gången snackar vi ryska i podden, med litauern Aleksandr “Sania” Sorokin som slog Yiannis Kouros omöjliga världsrekord på 24-timmars. På UTMB, där Courtney Dauwalter gjorde en osannolikt bra insats, blev fantastiska Mimmi Kotka trea. Samma placering fick Petter Engdahl i ett stjärnfyllt fält på OCC. Och så har det förstås varit många tävlingar i Sverige, där 21-åriga Ebba Ganslandt tog många fina skalper i Idre Fjällmaraton 1:16 Stöd Ultraaktuellt 1:38 Aleksandr Sorokin krossade det omöjliga världsrekordet på 24-timmars 10:38 Intervju med Aleksandr Sorokin 29:30 Eftersnack Sorokin 30:32 Finlay Wild näst snabbaste tiden på klassiska Bob Graham Round 31:16 Kullamannens framflyttade 2020-upplaga på Hallandsåsen 35:29 Clarens överlägsen i Hovfjället Trail Run 36:34 Lerigt och kuperat i S:t Hans Extreme 6h 38:48 Åldern vann i frontyard-originalet av Stockholm Gerillalöpare 41:42 35 av 36 sprang ultra i Frykstahöjdens Backyard Ultra 42:37 Kvinnlig dubbelseger i Lomma Backyard Ultra 43:41 Högklassigt i Idre Fjällmaraton 49:27 Intervju med Ebba Ganslandt 56:01 Eftersnack Ebba 56:58 85-kilometersdistansen 59:01 UTMB-veckan 1:03:14 Intervju med Petter Engdahl 1:13:54 Eftersnack Petter 1:14:24 Mer om UTMB-veckan
La séquence proposée par Emilie Gasc fête aujourd'hui son 400e portrait. Suivez-nous sur Instagram: @humansofsuisse
Elizabeth Molina: [00:00:00] Hello, my beautiful people, welcome back. You know what day it is, it is Wednesday, happy hump day today. We have an amazing person on the podcast today, as usual, and I am so glad to call her a friend. Her name is January Old. She is the founder of Clean Skin Care Company January Labs. She is a licensed institution. Her products initially captured the attention of celebrity makeup artists and as deficient as she grew into an internationally recognized line of high performance products that can be found at Beauty Neiman Marcus direct online and at a host of retailers around the world, January Labs is celebrated by beauty editors on the pages of Cosmopolitan, Vogue, Birdie's coverture, women's health and New Beauty, among others, for its simplicity, effectiveness and accessibility. Welcome, January. Did I miss anything while introducing you today? January Olds: [00:01:00] No. Perfect. Elizabeth Molina: [00:01:05] Awesome. So I am so excited to have you on today. I'm so excited. We had a little chat earlier. It was I was like, I should have hit record. We were having such a great conversation. So, January, we know you own a beauty brand. Let's not let's just not kid ourselves here. January Olds: [00:01:23] Well, first of all, thank you so much for having me. I'm so excited to talk to you. And I love learning about your story. So I already feel so connected. Elizabeth Molina: [00:01:33] Thank you. Thank you. So you are in the skincare business, right. And your company promises that less is more. I love that motto. I live by that motto. Can you explain what that means to us and how your products accomplish that? Like what does that less is more mentality before I get into all the other things. But I just really wanted to kind of like, surprise you with that question. January Olds: [00:01:58] I love it. Yes. I mean, I think of beauty. Everyone loves consuming more because it's fun and there's new products. And there's but when I set out to develop my line, I my past was working for a company called Clarens, which I'm sure you know of, and epicurean, that's my past. And both wines had huge product lines. I mean, there was one cleansers for different skin types. And and when I set out to make my line, I really wanted to simplify things. We're dealing with skin. My perspective is when you're using the right ingredients, you can really use one product to solve a multiple multitude of problems with this good. So ingredients I love to work with lactic acid, salicylic acid, great for pigmentation, fine lines, texture. So when I say let's there's more, it's using one product to kind of combat different things that your skin is struggling with. So if you have hormonal breakouts, you're probably having aging or fine lines or things like you want to address as well. And the beauty is when things are formulated the correct way, you can kind of target all of those things. So the idea of having 10 products and a regimen is just not how I live my life, even though I'm in this world and I do consume a lot of it's usually four to five products tonight. If that maybe it might just be one product. What your product should be working hard for you. And that's really what I've set out to do. Formula formulation has everything. A lot of brands, we're all working with the same ingredients, but it's just how you formulate. Elizabeth Molina: [00:03:45] Oh, I love that. I love that. Especially like I think that is just so appropriate for like 2021 in 2020 with the pandemic and everything. And like less is more. And like we're seeing the skin trends of like skin minimalism and just like people getting more aware of like what's in their product, how is it formulated, is it working for me? I love that you say that, like your products need to be working hard for you, and I never heard that before. January Olds: [00:04:11] I'm a licensed aesthetician as well. So it's interesting. Certain things just do not change in skin care. There are certain ingredients that regardless, there's new technology coming out, there's just certain ingredients that work well. But the other thing is how your products are formulated, what ingredients you put in it. That's always just been something that's really, really important to me. When I work for the other companies I worked for, I loved their product line, so I still do. I just think that we don't need such a huge selection. You know, somebody who has oily skin can use my cleanser, but somebody who is dry, dehydrated and even rosacea can use the same exact cleanser. So when it comes to simplifying, it's making the selection easy on the customer. But the formulas are more complex. But we kind of handle that for you. So I've noticed and even when I recommend products to people, I'm like I try to to start with, I'm like such a minimalist, I'm not wanting products. I want something like a 12 hour cleanser and then maybe our night cream. And as they start to develop with one, their skin really evolves and you're able to pinpoint really what works for you, because I don't love the idea of just, you know, layering 20 serum's and then switching it off. And, you know, if you're not really able to target what's working, you don't really know. You know, I'm sure you're well, tons of products sent to you all the time. And you're just kind of switching it up a little bit. Yes. I really just find it's so nuance. You know, every skin is so different for everyone. So you need to just kind of work with something for a while, not over to it. I usually give people a skin care make under. Oh, I love that. Yeah. Elizabeth Molina: [00:05:58] January, I think we cut we're going to be new BFFs. I'm also a licensed aesthetician and even I myself get overwhelmed with products and ingredients and formulations. And I'm thinking to myself, if I am getting confused, what about the people who are like not in the industry and like they are like what is a or what is a serum, what is a tonic? What is in essence what are these things right. Like do I need them all? How do I layer them on sunscreen. Oh my God. And so like I love the concept that less is more. And I really this is the first time I've heard anyone say, let your ingredients work hard for you, like I think you should, like, trademarked that or something like that. January Olds: [00:06:40] Well, thank you. Yeah. You know. Caroline Pirogues, I'm sure you've heard of her. She's an incredible blogger and she's an author now. Her book, I think it's a book on skincare. I can't remember the exact name, Elizabeth Molina: [00:07:38] But it's OK. We'll all get it and link it to show note. Janaury Olds: [00:07:42] Yes, it's that book is so precise and on point. I love her. She's incredible. But if somebody is confused, just get that book. It's also in an audio book. So if you just want to listen to it in her or her, she just really simplifies things. You know, it's it really doesn't have to be confusing. I think that there's a lot of people using sales tactics and like, oh, this is dirty and this is bad and this is just it. That's all gimmicky things to sell products, in my opinion. And I think that nobody's setting out there to make products that are unhealthy for you or that are going to eventually kill you. So it's that that that book has really helped direct people and basically, you know, cleansing, using that acid, a good toner moisturizer. It really clarifies things. I go to that book a lot on things that I might have forgotten through the years. I mean, I've been in that situation for like 20 years. I'm aging myself here. Elizabeth Molina: [00:08:46] Ok, so let's let's take it back a little bit. Let's go back to the name of your brand. It's your name. Yeah. Does that get confusing sometimes or do you feel like because it is your name that it is you like? I know a lot of people always struggle when they have a brand, like you said my name. Is it not my name? Am I tied to the brand like what I do like does that also reflect on the brand or what the brand does? Does that reflect on me? Like, I would love to get your perspective on that, because that is your name. January Olds: [00:09:16] Yes, it is. It's funny. When I was thinking of naming the line, I wanted to go something really obscure that didn't really make sense. What's floating around me is like blue bead or blue shop not. I'm like, this is not. And it's all about simplicity. But what is me is the name Jan. I'm born in November, so that's good to know on a score. Yeah. I'm just you know, I'm born in November, so my name is already kind of unusual. And when I ask my mom, she's like, you just looked like a January. So what's it. That's where I get I'm also six one. So it's really hard to blend in. When you're six one and your name's Jan, you're like, oh, that was someone else. That wasn't me. So there's no way yet to get around that. So my name has always been such a huge part of my, you know, even ordering coffee. Were you born in January? Why is your name Jan? Literally every day of my life. Yeah. I mean, it's it's a big part of who I am. So when naming my brand, it had to be January and then Labs comes in because that's really the idea that they work, that they kind of the idea of using products that are geared in nature, but also scientific. And they have so it just was born January Labs. I feel like January is a little more of like a clean, fresh start. It's all about new beginnings. And then Labs gives you the feeling of trust. It's something that's formulated correctly and it just works. Elizabeth Molina: [00:10:52] It can be challenging when your name is on the label sometimes. And like maybe like, you know, maybe it's your identity, the brand. Are you separate from the brand? Are you like, what if you do something and it doesn't like like I said, like, what if you like, become a pilot and you're like, oh, well, Jan Labs is a pilot now. January Olds: [00:11:10] I love what I do. I love my products. I feel like I'm really offering something to the world that helps. I, I feel like, you know, one thing I love is just getting feedback from customers are noticing. People have ordered for the last five years and they continue to order and they you know, so it's extremely rewarding. So I do feel very tied to the name and I am proud of it. You know, who knows what will happen in the future as part you know, a lot of brands get acquired and they have someone's name and then they run into trouble like, oh, is this you know, most important thing to me is the integrity of the ingredients, the integrity of the product continuing that. And that will always be a lot because my name is on there. And also my line is really a reflection of what I use, what's worked for me. Everything that we create has a purpose. And it's really only because I use it and I see results and I love it. I use every single one of my products. I rarely deviate and try another line. If I was in the business, I'm like, no, but it really it's just I love you here. I match a match today. This is my night cravenness, my favorite product online, and yet I started using that for two years before it was even created because I wasn't able to create that guy. You know, everything has been done so organically. I've I've grown this company, so I have a lot of time to test things, to see that they work, see that there's a purpose for them. The cool thing about not being owned and being privately owned is you don't have this pressure to make mootness. Everything that I offer, I don't want to overwhelm the customer. I want to recommend things because it's something that's really useful that they can use and use indefinitely. Your skin really evolves with the product. I do feel very attached in a very good way to know Elizabeth Molina: [00:13:11] What a great answer. And, you know, that's actually you bring up a great point about kind of like, you know, like artists and singers, like they have like that one hit. And then the label is like, you need to do the next one. And then the pressure is on like a mic and it's going to be the next hit, like, am I going to bomb it? So like, I love that you mentioned that because I don't know. For me, it just tells me that the your brand has more not that other brands don't, because I love a lot of brands, including yours, but the integrity. Right. Like you, you're like, no, this is what I stand for. That's what I love. And I don't have the pressure to, like, you know, come out with, like, SPF lip balm because it's like trendy because it's trendy right now. Right. So I love that. So let's let's take it back a little more like I feel like I'm going through a journey with you. We spoke about your creams. We spoke about your name of the brand. I want to know how you got into the beauty space. And I know we've touched about it a little bit. And if you're OK to share with it, I would I would love for you to. And if not, that that's totally fine. But just talking about beauty and how you got here and what that means to you. January Olds: [00:14:16] Absolutely. I mean, there's two different directions that question. And what I I love your story. I just thought of it and I got chills again. I am so in awe of you. So that's number one. Thank you. And I loved that. We talked about things we did because one half of me usually when answering this question, I'm like when I was a kid, I always loved skin care, which I did. I was always giving my girl facials. I was like 12, making yogurt marks and avocado masks. And I just always had an affinity to beauty. But, you know, this is something I've never talked about publicly. But in my high school years, I actually was sexually assaulted. I was raped by a teacher and it really turned my life. I went to a very small, private school. I had never had I had never kissed a boy. I had never I was very innocent. I was very behind that incident. I mean, it was the story is very long. That's a whole other podcast or maybe a few. Elizabeth Molina: [00:15:18] But Part two will have a part two. January Olds: [00:15:20] That's a whole history. You know, for a year I was groomed by this person and then this had been happening to several people. But I came forward about it. And, you know, back then, coming forward is not the way it is now. You know, it wasn't really safe with my family. I'm so blessed to have an incredible father, an incredible mother. And I had so much support in my in my home. But I left the school. I you know, it was insane. I was doing crank calls I was getting and I'm like, why do I even do this? Why did come forward with this? And really, the reason I did is I have a ten year old sister who are ten. You're a ten year younger sister who actually went to the same school, was a prep school that went from preschool to high school. And I saw her playing one day. And I'm like, if this person is still here when my sister is here, I. I couldn't allow that. I have never talked about this. So I like actually getting emotional. Right. No, go for it. Elizabeth Molina: [00:16:23] Listen, this is a I mean, I've January Olds: [00:16:25] Talked about it just not in this sort of world. Elizabeth Molina: [00:16:28] Well, thank you for sharing because I know that this can be helpful for people and for yourself and just let it out. You are in a safe place and we will just we just, you know, whatever you feel comfortable sharing. And we we will be honoring that little January after you're done with the story. January Olds: [00:16:45] I would love a little January. Thank you. Know, I so anyway, this occurs in my life and since my life on a completely different trajectory. And, you know, it manifests itself in a few different ways, like eating disorders and self-hate. And, you know, and I was in therapy, I would say, you know, I have a very supportive family, so but just my whole direction in life changed. And I have to say, I mean, I it was when I got my job with a company called Epicure, and you didn't say. My life, it was the one thing where I'm like, I love this, I am good at this, I saw value in myself, albeit I was still dealing with underlining issues. I wasn't completely healed. That happened later in life. You know, it's all part of the journey. It's funny because you you look at your life in retrospect and it's like how it would have been nicer if I didn't have to go through all that ugliness. You know, like the the after the way I treated myself, the way the relationships I was the the crazed. I mean, I was crazy. I was I was just unhealed. So I would write, you know, I, I and I say this obviously I think I was I was just such a completely different person. I was unhealed person now in my life. I think when people come to talk to me about, oh, how can I look better? I'm like, let's start from the inside out. January Olds: [00:18:18] Yeah. Was it really at that point? It's just ageless, you know, when you find that love from within. So really, my life changed so much at the age of 15. And then, you know, I feel like I spent 15 years repairing that and getting to the point where I am now. And, you know, a lot of that healing still happens. When I had my company when I first started, I was still dealing with a lot and I was able to really overcome a lot. And I'm still on that journey. So really, as we were talking earlier, you know, you start a company with one intention in mind. And, you know, when I first started, Jan laughs It's like this is what I know I'm going to make product. And you saw it. People are going to buy it, you know, as simple as that. Now, I'm like, these products are a piece of who I am. It's what I love. But there's so much more. And there's so many ways I would like to really be of service to women, young men, anyone who needs healing, because that's where the beauty really comes from. And that's really my mission. If I could spend my whole day talking to people and helping them and giving them tools to get through trauma to get the healing done, that would be a life. Elizabeth Molina: [00:19:36] But first of all, I want to take a second to honor the fifteen year old Jan, who was brave enough to come forward and put a stop to it and possibly even help stop other girls and maybe boys from having to go through that experience. So I just want to take a second to honor you and to honor the 15 year old who is so brave because especially like you said back then and even today, it is so hard because we're young. You are you know, there is a grooming process. You know, it doesn't happen overnight. Unfortunately, like, there are things that you may feel about yourself. Like you said, you spoke about a little bit about the eating disorder and not feeling good enough. And this is a common theme with people who have experienced this. And we try our best to overcome it. We try to learn many skills because we want people to see that we are good enough that they're not. There's nothing wrong with us, that we are complete and whole. And so a lot of us find refuge in different things, whether it's art, whether it's beauty, whether it is playing an instrument, whether something right. Elizabeth Molina: [00:20:42] Sometimes if we're lucky and others, unfortunately, you know, go a different route. And so, like this healing process that you spoke about, I just want to say I know that it was horrible what happened to you. And I know that you said that you spent 15 years healing and you're probably still healing because we're all healing every day. There's always something that comes up. And I just want to say thank you and honor you for that, because if you were not able to put in the work, you wouldn't be where you are here today helping other people heal and impact them in, even though it may sound silly to some with with a cream or a product or even you talking and having your one on one conversations, because guys, Jan is very hands on with her company. She is like sending voice messages to people and she's like really hands on. So like, I am kind of telling people, damn her, she's going to have you back. January Olds: [00:21:34] Yes. No, I like my favorite. I we started it in quarantine and then I just start continually, you know, I had a lot more time on my hands. So I like let's see what's going on. So I would spend fifteen minutes with customers and then, you know, I really became addicted to it. I loved it. And so I still do that. I don't have as much time now, but I have a schedule and people can book the time, even if it's a couple weeks of a wait. And it's it's great because, you know, it also goes into a big thing right now, sustainability with packaging. And I feel like that's all over the place because the first thing that I'm most interested in is. The stability of the actual filler in the bottle. So when it comes to packaging and how to be sustainable, I'm like, well, at least I can get the right product to the person they're not going to over consume, so we're going to use it up. So I'm like, that's kind of an area where I can really control that. January Olds: [00:22:41] And I've talked to people where, you know, I'm like, you know, we'll send you a sample of this or something to use or, you know, like a little we have these little mini sizes, too. It's not about like selling, selling, selling. It's getting the right product because if someone finds the right acid for them, they're not going to buy five of them and throw away the rest, the rest of the bottles. And so I just think, you know, there's an even on clubhouse, there's so many conversations about sustainable packaging. And I'm like, we as the founders need to be mindful about actually explaining the product properly. And it's not a one size fits all. So and I even love this. Somebody sends an email, they all get to me and I just send them a, you know, a three to four minute voice back explaining exactly how to use the product. And our return rate is so low just because of this. But it's also kind of our mission to eliminate overconsumption. So it's kind of helping in a few areas. Elizabeth Molina: [00:23:43] No, I love that. And I love that you're thinking about sustainability. And like, that is one thing that people don't think about. You think about the packaging, you think about the shipping, you think about where it's being sourced. Are you getting your ingredients from overseas? Are so many different things to say. We can have like 10 podcasts like sustainability. Like if you can go, it gets really deep, like insanely deep with January Olds: [00:24:04] Ingredients, you know, like clean beauty. And, you know, if I have another person, ask me, are your products chemical from like Ponson possible? You know, everything is chemical. If people are really concerned about what they're using, just use on your skin, you know, maybe not five serum's or because those all have more and more ingredients if you're just using a little bit less and of course, using performance ingredients, working a little bit more, you're using less, you're using less weight, you're consuming less. I mean, I think 2020 is really a time of becoming a minimalist, a minimalist with things with, you know, now I'm like, do I really need a fancy car? Do I need to buy more clothes? You know, like it's it's not it doesn't feel as good as it used Elizabeth Molina: [00:24:56] To ride you spoke about. And not just you, but I feel like the whole world is heading this way, like it doesn't even feel good to buy, like, new things. And even myself, like, do I really need that car anymore? Like, I don't know about that. Right. So like all these questions that are arising for you, for me and I'm sure for our listeners and everyone, is this whole thing about getting the right products, buying things that you actually need. You don't need fifty dresses and thirty like silver shoes. Right. That was the thing of the past. And so we talk or we're talking about skin care. You and I, I think, have the same kind of mentality. That beauty not only is a lifesaver for so many and a beautiful outlet because skin is the largest organ on your body. And so like to neglect that is, I don't know for me, kind of the best word I can say. It's funny just to be like nice. I live foolish just to say that. Right. And like the part of the reason why, like I'm thinking, why isn't skin care part of health care? Because our body does absorb so much and we think about beauty in a holistic way. And it's not just what you put on your face. It's also about like eating well. Right. And the you I think you have the same values of there are so many different components to beauty and wellness and just shining from the inside out and like being the skin minimalism and having your products work for you, having your food work for you. Just I feel like that's is that is that correct? January Olds: [00:26:28] Am I seeing correctly when I get on calls with people and we go over their skin, if they're breaking out, I'm like, what is your diet like? You know, and I don't want to be a killjoy. I mean, I break out if I have dairy and I will eat Barata, because it's worth a break. So I. To avoid these things for life and, you know, like wine is great and all these things are great, but it's all about balance. And, you know, I think the probably the worst thing you can consume is sugar. And there are so many ways to, you know, make it kind of fun, you know, like do a 30 day, you know, sugar and just do it for your own mental state. And then you start to see how good you feel, how you know, as I get older, I'm in my 40s now. So everything is like immediate. It's like, oh, I can tell that I have a little too much sugar so that when she starts to see how clear your mind is, you know, sugar is also associated with so many diseases that, you know, and also keeping your body more alkaline and having. January Olds: [00:27:39] But really, I think the best way to get there is to have a really strong morning routine. So that's what I always tell everyone to do, because that's like where the self love comes and all of that. And then you feel like treating yourself a little bit better. I think it's good to start out the morning strong with a lot of affirmations and a lot of positive self talk. And even like saying when you put your feet on the ground coming out of bed, like, thank you for supporting me, but today is a great day and just kind of shouting it and you're just kind of, well, you're ready for the day. So little things like that can really help redirect you. So you're not kind of falling into, you know, like a hole. But every morning I like to have a cookie with my coffee or whatever you're like. I don't think I need that. I have a little bit more of a boost today, if that means, you Elizabeth Molina: [00:28:32] Know, it does make sense. So I'm actually going to ask you if you're OK, like, can you share with us your morning routine? January Olds: [00:28:38] I love? First of all, I'm kind of annoying because I wake up like five thirty or six every morning now and I wake up and I'm like, hey, yeah, it's a little bit annoying, but I love it. I wake up in a great mood, but I do need coffee. So every morning when I wake up, I do actually say today is a great day. I say it out loud. It's just, you know, especially if I wake up going off, I feel thank you. So I just have to say that and then I journal first thing in the morning. It's my favorite thing to do. And I have different prompts. Sometimes I just freestyle, but really I just write an affirmation. And, you know, right now in my life, I really would love partnership. So every morning I write, I'm attracting my perfect partner and it gives you the sense of excitement for the unknown. And I love feeling excited. It's one of those, you know, that I think being excited about something and something you don't know, like I like surprises and I like so after I write an affirmation, I usually write a couple of things. I'm thankful for a couple things that I love about myself in the beginning. This is hard and I'm like, I love that my hair's shiny. I what you kind of go on and on and it's, you know, in a in a fun way. January Olds: [00:30:03] And then how you want to feel, I think is such a big thing. I mean, for me, journaling is not a little thing. It's it's a very thing. And you can really set the course for the day you want to have. And I think that's so fascinating that our brains, you know, if we're putting this out there, our brains are looking for evidence for all of that be true. So it's it goes beyond manifesting. It just is. You know, we're living in a time now where it's not like, oh, I'm going to manifest this for my business. It's like, no, you've got to get in the frequency of that being. Now, that's not something you're waiting for. It's something that you're hoping comes about. And once it comes, you're going to have the feeling of you're going to be in that frequency. You've got to be in that field, in that feeling and in the feeling of love. If you want love and the feeling of abundance, if you want your company to be abundant or, you know, abundant in friends and family, all of that. So I think really getting in that feeling every morning is the most important thing I always work out. January Olds: [00:31:11] I even if I do a little something, but I, I love hiking, so I often go hiking up like 7:00 a.m. for a couple hours. And fortunately I have like a crazy friend who wakes up early with me and we go and she was like an Olympic runner. So I will, you know, behind her. Yeah I know it's but I feel like always work out with someone who's better, who's worth it. Then you will get there or I'll do like tickets and all of that. But then it's funny because everyone talks about meditation and like. Last year, I was a huge public speaker, like four hours a day. I was very into it and this year I really haven't been meditating at all. And I do think, you know, your morning routines changed a little bit and never to beat yourself up, just going to go like that's not the season I'm in. Right. I'm not into meditating, but I am into working out. I am into journaling. I am into, like, affirmations of that and just, you know, waking up and having a healthy meal and just getting to work. But try to keep your phone away from you as long as you can. I've taught myself like no one needs me at five, 30. I so like so I need to look. Elizabeth Molina: [00:32:26] So, yeah, that's a good morning routine. I ask for two reasons because I'm sure that the listeners want to hear, but I'm also preparing myself. So when I do visit you, I know what to expect. Well, it's January Olds: [00:32:37] Got to be I have someone like coming to the guest room like, hello, here's your coffee at six a.m.. Let's go. Elizabeth Molina: [00:32:44] Ok, wow. So now we know and I love the affirmations and even like writing about your, like, things that you love about yourself. I love that. I'm going to try it and see because it's so hard to, like, give yourself. January Olds: [00:32:56] I often finish the journal, I, I write quite a quite a bit in the morning and I just kind of let it flow. There's no real structure, but a lot of times I just end up with I Love You January and just hear even just saying not right now. I'm like, oh, you know, like we there are so many like even just going like this or going like this is so nurturing to yourself or saying the words like, I love you or even, you know, if I have like, negative self talk often I do not know if I'm pronouncing that right, but it's the. I'm sorry. Forgive me. Thank you. I love you. And yes, it immediately negates any you know, like I think the biggest problem for me in my life, which was amplified from doing something. I know we spoke a little bit about this before. I've done a lot of plant medicine ceremonies and things like that. And it really amplified the negative self talk I've had, even though I wasn't even aware of it. We go through our lives just kind of having our brain guide us. January Olds: [00:34:03] And when you sit back and go, wow, those are that's a thought I've entertained for an hour now, instead of just cutting it off from the beginning and saying, no, you're not welcome here, go away, that doesn't even matter. But when something comes up, like maybe something that I'm ashamed of or something I can't control that. I'm sorry. Forgive me. Thank you. I love you. Is the best way to just extract it. It's kind of like when your hug gratitude kind of gets rid of what inadequacy or unworthiness of you, if you replace that with gratitude, like negates the flow of forgiving yourself. And I mean, it's probably one of the more pivotal things that you can do by just giving yourself such a huge thing. We don't need we don't need maybe a sorry from someone who's done wrong to you. We just need to give it to ourselves. So we have all of the tools within us. We have the power within us to heal. And that's that's really where my passion is, where. Elizabeth Molina: [00:35:09] No, I love that. I love that because I feel like it just connects back to to you and beauty and to like the message that you want to share. And it just it's just really nice to get to know you and for people to get to hear you, the person behind the brand. And they know that you are a little bit like introvert, extrovert. We spoke about this a little bit. And this is like probably I don't know how many podcasts you've done. I hope you said this is like January Olds: [00:35:33] Your first one, really. And it's so I. I love chatting with you because, like, your story and stuff like, you know, it's so sad when you hear that most women have struggled, but I immediately felt so comfortable with you. And I appreciate your you just have the best energy. Elizabeth Molina: [00:35:51] So we just have so much fun talking. But so I want to know before I get into the beauty circle, we spoke about holistic health and wellness and we talked about morning routine and how like to do one thing. I feel like it's like start your morning. Right. Even if you're feeling like a little cruddy, it's going to be amazing. Just cut that off like you said. Just cut it off. Like cut off that thought said the day. Right. And so I love that you said that. So, you know, I have a tool called The Beauty Circle and the Beauty Circle. I have ten categories that I have identified to be in my opinion. I mean, anyone could disagree. Obviously, this is a free country, a free world. Two thoughts. But I believe that these are things that kind of help you live a holistic, beautiful life. And I don't mean like beautiful, like hair, makeup, lashes and nails, like beautiful. Like you feel good about yourself when. Energy is good when you're in the state of love and not fear so that you can be able to stand up for yourself to set boundaries just to love and other people. So in this category, Jan, that you had you had an opportunity to check out, where do you think that you excel in and where do you think that you could use a little bit of extra love? January Olds: [00:37:03] I feel like the internal stuff is really where I strive. I you can have, like, drinking a lot of water and things like that. And I believe the health aspect, the I actually it's so weird. I actually feel like I'm this is going against everything we've talked about. But there's so many things as I get older I start to kind of care about like oh my hair or my nails or in. Sometimes I feel like where I'm struggling nowadays is really getting out of my workout clothes and taking part in the way I look physically. OK, and I know that goes against all of it, but I, I, I feel like that's something I'm struggling with. I think that it's OK to go. Wow. Every day I want to walk out of this house feeling good and really honoring my body by putting the best out there, you know, like it was actually nice to do podcasting and do camera. I'm like, I'm going to wash my hair and get right. But that's how I really want to be exposing myself to the world anyway. Like feeling my voice and really feeling good, being a woman and being OK, like I'm going to wear mascara and put makeup on. And so I oddly like that's an area I've kind of I don't put myself first in that regard and I don't really do as much self care as I probably should do. January Olds: [00:38:30] I never get paid. Sholes I never and I mean, I do. I give them to myself. I know internal health is so important. I've, you know, struggled in the past. So it's like finding that right. That correct balance between not being overly obsessive but being healthy, you know. Oh, right. Carbs are bad or, you know, having some fried food is not going to work. So for me, I had to do the reverse itself off the hook and give myself a little bit more leeway so that because that's part of beauty to just loving yourself enough. Like if you and I went out to eat and you had a bunch of French fries, I wouldn't be like, Are you sure you want to eat that? Those are the areas that I'm wanting to focus a little more on now that I have the backing that I do now. I have a lot of the education as far as spirituality goes, the healing, the self love, which I think is just such a huge aspect. And not by going, yeah, you know, there's little there's a little Jan in here and she matters this older Jan can handle anything, but she I got to take care of well, Elizabeth Molina: [00:39:47] But no, seriously. You guys have to watch the video. Jan looks amazing. She is glowing from the inside and out. She has done a lot of work on herself and that that reflects on her like she is vibrating really like there's no filter on here. Like you can totally come and see her. She just is glowing. From all I know, she just walked out. But still, I could understand why your mom named you Jan, by the way, not because, like, you look like I don't know what a Jan looks like. You you look like in January, but I could see how January is like start of a new year, like just like uplifting and happy. And just like that kind of reminds me of you. And so, like, that's so cool that she saw that, like when you were born, she's like, you look like January Olds: [00:40:32] My siblings all have very normal names. So I just Elizabeth Molina: [00:40:38] That was my next question. Like, do you have a favorite sister? January Olds: [00:40:42] Were all named after them? No, no. We're all very, very normal names. Elizabeth Molina: [00:40:48] I want to go back a little bit and ask you before is a podcast is coming to an end. And it's so sad for me because, like, I would love to have you for ten hours, but that's not fair. But we will do more for sure. That's not even a question. This is so good. OK, Jan, so one of my last question before I open up ragtime because I love ragtime, this is where you get to shine, share anything new that you're doing, working on anything you want to talk about? I like to ask my guests to share one thing that they would have told themselves when they were younger. Like if you went today, like January today went back to like the fifteen, sixteen year old girl. Janie, what would you have told her today that she needed to hear? Like, what does that message? January Olds: [00:41:36] I don't know that I would tell her anything because I really just it's all part of a master plan. You know, it's. Hard to see people suffer or in pain or and often when I talk to my friends and they're crying on the phone, I'm like, Oh, I'm so sorry you feel this way. Like, you don't want to take that away from them because pain is good. I believe that's one thing my dad told me growing up I would be upset about. Some things like pain is good. That's when you learn. I never understood that until later in life. And I realized it is our biggest gift, you know. So I think I would probably if I had to tell her something, I would just say it's all going to be worth it. So that's kind of where I'm at my life right now, because it's just I feel like it's almost like a new book is happening. You know, it's not just a new chapter. It's like there's a whole new ballgame and it's starting now. You know, I think that's one thing from 2020 I've learned is that old way of life, the old way of thinking. You know, I'm on discovering things with a sword, right. I'm dropping that off. So I think I would just tell her, like, hang in there. It's all worth it. Enjoy the ride and it's going to get tough. But just hang in there. And oddly, that's kind of what I have done. And also, I would tell myself, don't dye your hair blonde. Just. Not my 20s, it was not a good look and cut it like a bob, that was my worst mistake, so Elizabeth Molina: [00:43:17] I can see that. Yeah, well, Jan, it's time for breaktime, so January Olds: [00:43:23] I like all of it. You know, I think I go probably in this area. I'm really excited right now. When I moved, I recently moved out of L.A. and I have become and I think this is how we became connected in Somerville. And I have started a room on club house called the Blue Room. And we really she's in the same place as me as far as like being of service to women and really helping uplift them, help them their careers, help them with self-love, help them in any way we really can. And so I'm excited about that. And really just everything that's bringing new contacts and leading people that are really elevating, I feel like all of these entrepreneurs keep coming into my life. So I'm like very excited about that. I'm excited about where this will lead me as far as how I can really be of service, really. The other thing I'm excited about, I have like three products in the pipeline. I don't know when to start, when to start producing them, but I'm very excited about them. And I just I don't know. I'm probably sounding a little boring right now. I don't have anything to brag about, just that I love life. I'm excited about what's coming. And, you know, Elizabeth Molina: [00:44:51] You know, just three products and like, helping tons of women, you know, find their purpose and feel heard and seen. No, I'm just doing nothing, you know, just thought. Jan. January Olds: [00:45:03] Yeah. No complaints here. I'm excited about what's coming. And I, I really I'm such a huge fan of Club House. It's been incredible with just the people I'm meeting. That's how we met. It's it's really brought a lot to my life. Elizabeth Molina: [00:45:22] So same we have the same sentiments. Yeah. Clubhouses actually I think pretty magical because it's so different. I know we're ending, but I just wanted to say like it's so different than like an Instagram when you look at a picture or video and like it's so curated and then a clubhouse, like, you can't curate your voice, you can curate your energy, you can't curate your vibe, you can't curate what you're going to say, like either, you know, are you double January Olds: [00:45:47] Someone's sincerity through the phone? I mean, that's why I like our boom room that we started. We started the gratitude room where our club is called the Bluebird. But what it's like very but one of the rooms is about gratitude and intention heading for the week. And there are so many people I mean, there's been magical things in there of just people like I'm trying to find something to be grateful for and I can't. And just of the people in the room coming together to why stop her bring that person up? I think that's what we need right now. It's it's such a cool shift happening in the world of people, you know, being vulnerable. No. One, which is often difficult. I think I kept myself so protected throughout so many years. And now I'd like to sleep with vulnerability. And you won't lose, you know. No. And that's where I think that comes through on clubhouse. It's so funny. I was talking to someone like Clubhouse is the social media built for me because I always said people voice notes and I'm like, this is like a voice. Nothing. I never and I also I'm not like a huge fan of posting things on Instagram. I'm like, oh, you know, it's not strong. And when you have a brand, you want to do it. So now like clubhouse, I just talk and sames. Elizabeth Molina: [00:47:15] Well, the same thing for me, by the way, because if you ever look at my post sometimes like it's spelled wrong, people are like correcting me. And I'm like, oh, like I want to post. But like I have a major anxiety about texting and like getting the right message across. But on clubhouse, I could just speak away my thoughts and feelings and and like there is no error in my typing because I'm typing January Olds: [00:47:39] This practice speaking. Don't worry about that, whatever. Elizabeth Molina: [00:47:44] So I'm just I'm just confirming to you that clubhouse is so great because it's so easy. You could be cooking, cleaning on a peloton. You can be like on a hike and you like, you know, time to speak. And you could be like in a conference room the next second. And so, like, that's just so cool. Like we met on there. And I think I probably was like maybe mopping my floors. And you came on, you're like, I'm new to clubhouse. I'm like, oh, that's jadi Larry I need to connect with. And so, like in real life, I wouldn't have been mopping my floors and like, connecting with Jan. January Olds: [00:48:14] I know I've done a couple of times where I'm like, when you talk and you're kind of out of breath. But I always tell people I'm like, I'm on my pillow talk right now because otherwise I'm like, I just don't want them to think I'm doing anything else. But what we found is probably not all right, actually. Could be good for business. I don't know. Elizabeth Molina: [00:48:34] We'll never know. I don't think you want to test it out. Oh, well, thank you so much for being on here. And so how can people connect with you? How can people find you? Please share January Olds: [00:48:46] With Instagram. We have a link to and you can schedule if you want to do assume or if you want to put more dates on there as we speak. You can also email at Jan LOPSA, come or go on our website and I'm very much involved. So if anyone needs to get in touch with me directly, wants to or anything or skin or, you know, anything, I reach out, I, I really I'm not just saying that about helping people. It's it's really, you know, anyone resonated with what I my story or might need guidance in that area, even non-smoking related. I'm sitting there, I'm like. What you. Yeah, no, I, I just feel like there, like you said earlier, there are no mistakes. Everything they just have to surrender to the flow of life. And I know that, you know, whatever you put out there is what's coming back. That's what's meant for you. Elizabeth Molina: [00:49:57] So totally in life is not happening to you. It is happening for you. I am such a firm believer in that. And with that, we are going to be closing. Jan, thank you so much for being here, for opening your home up to me. But yeah. Yeah. And so thank you again for coming. I definitely do not doubt that we will have a part two, three and four. Who knows. Right. But thank you so much. Thank you. Bye. Thank you so much for listening to what Jan and I have to contribute. I am so excited that a lot of you got to hear who was behind the brand. And we know a little bit more about Jan and her journey to beauty and her journey to get here and how beauty really saved her life. So I am so excited for everyone to kind of get their hands on this podcast. And if you found value, please subscribe. Write the podcast. But most importantly, share this with someone who you think would get benefit if, you know, five people share a copy link and text them right now because sharing is caring. Also, I would highly encourage you because it would make my day if you wrote a review and rated us. And if you want to screenshot that to me, I can totally post that up on my Sociales. I would love to do that. Of course, with your permission, I don't do it without you letting me, but until next time. See you next Wednesday. Have an amazing weekend. Bye, guys.
Clarens Renois a Politician for Haiti presses to build confidence in the Place that he calls home Clarens is strongly against Violence on a whole Clarens Renois was so positive on the movement of the People of Haiti and from his statement s that he makes in this interview shows that he is definitely not holding back on charity and support in every way. Clarens Renois is BossTALK 101 "APPROVED" #Haiti #ClarensRenois #Nonviolence Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... Spotify Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/0yD2UzY...
Driving to Clarens recently Michael Avery was struck by the varied condition of the roads he drove on. From the excellently maintained but tolled N3 to the potholed death traps of the rural Free State there is a clear and growing disconnect between roads under different government authorities, and how they are funded and maintained. It almost goes without saying that the South African transport network plays a major role in the economy of the country and the well-being of society. This requires an integrated transport planning framework that meets clear strategic objectives for industrial development with links to distribution zones, promoting transport corridors for passengers and freight as well as promoting tourism. However, in 2014, the road maintenance backlog was reported as being R197-billion. Recent studies estimate it to be over R400-billion. To talk about where rubber hits when it comes to the state of the country’s road stock and how to improve it Avery was joined by Basil Jonsson, operations director, SA Road Federation, Saied Solomons, CEO, Southern African Bitumen Association, and Wayne Duvenage the CEO of the Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse.
Dr Julio Volcy, pasteur titulaire de l'eglise rendez-vous christ.
Dr Julio Volcy, Pasteur titulaire de l'église rendez-vous christ!
This week's episode is another special one! We "sit down" with Clarens Cheridieu, who runs a lot of the operations and behind-the-scenes work at Loudoun United, about a very special player's journey to our club. Last year, Kairou Amoustapha agreed to terms with Loudoun just before finding out the world was going into lockdown. Without any easy way to make the trip from the country of Niger to Loudoun County, Kairou was left with a decision to make. He could either wait out the quarantine and lockdown, which might see him miss a substantial part of the USL Championship Season... or he could take on a rather daring trip across multiple countries, and many days, to get here. Clarens supported him on the phone throughout the trip and comes on the show to tell his story. Thanks as always for tuning in to the show! We thought what better way to celebrate Kairou's re-signing with the club ahead of the 2021 Season than to tell this epic story from last year. We hope you enjoy and remember to follow us on social media (Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook) to keep up to date on all things related to the Podcast. And if you haven't already, hit that subscribe button to follow along! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app (https://anchor.fm/app)
Com és i què necessita el nostre amic caní, a The Dogs Club, amb Marta Bastías i Laura Gómez. Cada dimecres, a les 21h. podcast recorded with enacast.com
As I ran the mountainous Clarens-Golden Gate road, I forced myself to keep pushing up the hill. But eventually I realized that it's ok to pause and take a breath, and gather some strength to carry on. Don't forget to do the same in life!
The highlight of our time away was a tough hike up the mountains in the Golden Gate National Park. When people came past us at a speed, we started to get down on ourselves for being so slow. But then we remembered - why compare? Don't let other people's achievements get you down. God made you to be YOU, nobody else!
Clarens is filled with shops - how tempted we were to buy all sorts of little things! Of course, there's nothing wrong with buying nice things, but let's remember that Jesus taught us to be on our guard when it comes to spending. Life is so much more than stuff.
As we walked down to the river on De Molen Farm we were accompanied by two joyful dogs whose enthusiasm was infectious! Let's remember that the joy of the Lord is our strength today.
Vi pratar med Miranda Kvist om hur corona påverkat trail-löpning, resor och ultratävlingar. Och så får vi veta vem Clarens är, han som kom tvåa i en tävling som inte var en tävling eftersom tävlingen Kullamannan inte blev av. https://ultramarathon.se/
We witnessed an amazing thunderstorm at De Molen Farm in Clarens last week! Amazed at God, we also remembered just how badly the country needs rain. The God of thunder and lightning will provide... let's rise up and pray for Him to do so.
Nouvelle playlist pour l’automne avec des morceaux à dormir debout. 1ère de cordée Yma Sumac, dite la reine de l’exotisme.La petite Perita naît dans les années 1920, dans une famille descendante de la grande lignée royale inca. En dépit de vives protestations de son père, l’enfant sera chanteuse et vocalisera l’Amérique du Sud sur 4 octaves et demie. Une intégrale de 4 Cd vient de sortir avec des enregistrements datant de 1943 à 1959. Attention, la 1ère partie de cette émission est ultra kistch. Dans le titre Jivaro, Yma Sumac raconte la légende d’une tribu amazonienne les Jivaros, nom donné par les Espagnols qui veut dire sauvage ou barbare, comme pour les Berbères, et qui avaient la particularité de réduire les têtes de leurs adversaires à la taille d’une balle de tennis. Et belles découvertes ! Playlist :- Yma Sumac Jivaro Cd Queen of Exotica / Frémeaux- Léo Clarens et ses Rythmes Orientaux Cha cha au Harem Cd Cha cha au Harem / Born Bad Rd- Orchestra Baobab Dée Moo Wóor Cd Specialist in all styles / World Circuit 2002- Davy Sicard La Kaz Jilo Cd Bal Kabar / Davy Sicard prod 2020. - Baco Africa Unite (reprise Bob Marley) Cd Rocking My Roots / Baco Music- Christine Salem Gerye Cd Mersi / Blue Fanal- Bachar Mar-Khalifé_Christophe Jnoun Cd On Off / Balcoon- Sophie Hunger Liquid Air Cd Halluzinationen / Supermoon- Nesrine Rimitti Cd Nesrine / Act- Osloob Mamnou Cd Dawayer / L’Autre Distribution. - Idris Ackamoor & The Pyramids Dogon mysteries Cd Shaman / Strut Rd- Dédé St Prix Ou Ké Touvé Cd Koktel Chouval Bwa / Aztec Musique.
Mix #1 Cha Cha en Suisse Chuks Ejelonu / Revelation (Ibo) / Monte CristoLéo Clarens et Ses Rythmes Orientaux / Cha cha au harem / Born BadBaharat / The egyptian / BatovGuess What / Al Khawarizmi / Les Disques Bongo Joe L'Oreille Hardie : une collaboration qu'on aurait pas imaginé, mais qui fonctionne à merveilleKlub Des Loosers feat. Alexis Fugain / Comme eux / Ombrage Editions Mix #2 Hotel & Coup de Tête & Eurovision Misha Panfilov & Shawn Lee / Voodoo you love / Funk NightAjda Pekkan / Viens dans ma vie / PhilipsPierre Bachelet / Coup de tête (générique de fin) / Le Pop ClubErlend Øye / Price / Bubbles L'info du 20h : Le Roi des Batards, un Lion à 2 têtes (Saycet & Laurent Garnier) pour une B.O. cosmiqueSaycet / Chromatic bird / Electron'y'pop Mix #3 Phénakisticope dans la Jungle Jungle By Night / Hangmat (Bruxas remix) / New DawnDjango Django / Spirals / Because Music Le Scopyterche : hommage éternel à l'ami Duterche, grand collectionneur de 45 tours jamais obsolètesAlice Dona / C'est pas prudent (DJ Suspect & Son Of A Pitch edit) / Off Mix #4 Nettoyage console Covid New York Community Choir / I'll Keep My Light In My Window / Groove Line Records
On this episode of Intersections in Public Service we talk with three UVA researchers; Jay Furhman, Andres Clarens, and the Cooper Center's own Bill Shobe about a research paper that they have just published in the highly renowned scientific journal called Nature: Climate Change. In their research, they explore variations and outcomes of how Direct Air Capture and other carbon reducing methods could be used on a large scale. Read their research here on Nature: Climate Change Host/Editor: Claire Downey Guests: Bill Shobe, Andres Clarens, Jay Fuhrman Music Credits: Air Hockey Saloon by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under an Attribution License. http://chriszabriskie.com/licensing
As South Africa enters its fourth month of lockdown, the weather is turning bitterly cold. Regular distributions are out of the question but our volunteers at Knit-a-Square have found ways to hand out blankets, beanies, hand-warmers and toys to the children in spite of the restrictions. In this episode, Leanne interviews Bongi about her visit to an orphanage in central Johannesburg. Then she chats to Athelé ahead of her trip to Clarens in the Free State, and follows that up with a report on how that trip went. All in all, this is an episode full of cultural contrasts and scenic detail. Show host: Leanne Hunt. Email address: leanne@knit-a-square.com Theme music: "Mr. Sunny Face" by Wayne Jones. [Youtube Audio Library] © Creative Commons Licence. Production and editing: Natali Williams, LIME Virtual Business Support. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Steve Oliver, sharing from Clarens, South Africa, teaches from Joshua 3: 1-6 on how we can venture into the future with the promises of God.
Cette semaine, en cette période particulière de confinement, je vous emmène faire une petite marche au grand air à Clarens, en Suisse, avec Nicolas Bogaerts. Nicolas est un journaliste bien connu en Belgique. Il a officié et officie toujours pour de nombreux médias belges, que ce soit en presse écrite ou en radio, à la RTBF. Ses thématiques de prédilection sont l’histoire, qu’il a étudié, la musique, le cinéma mais aussi la culture de la route qu’il explore pour le mook "Roaditude", la revue francophone de la route, pour lequel il écrit depuis quelques années déjà. Ce que peu de gens savent néanmoins c’est qu’il est aussi, peut-être et avant tout, un marcheur dans sa plus pure et sa plus simple tradition. Marcheur de bitume, de chemin de traverse, de montagne... Marcher, comme un moyen de locomotion, d’évasion, de contemplation... On en parle avec lui dans cet épisode. Et, surprise! Vous découvrirez ci-dessous une petite sélection " "Printemps 2020" d'ouvrages à propos de la marche, chaleureusement recommandée par Nicolas. - Tomas Espedal, “Marcher (Ou l’art de mener une vie déréglée et poétique)”, Babel, 2012 - Antoine de Baecque, “Une Histoire de la Marche”, Perrin, 2016 - Henry D. Thoreau, “Balades”, Editions Denoël, 2005 - Henry D. Thoreau, “Journal”, Editions Le Mot et le Reste, 2014 - Pascal Picq, “La Marche”, Editions Autrement, 2015 - Michea Jacobi, “Walking Class Heroes”, Le Tripode, 2019 - Gustave Roud, “Petit traité de la marche en plaine”, Fario, 2019 - Erling Kagge, “Pas à pas. Faites de la marche un art!”, Flammarion, 2018 Bonne balade, belle écoute et agréable lecture à vous!
ENJEUX SUR RFM DIMANCHE 02 FEVRIER 2020 - AMBASSADEUR DE FRANCE EN HAITI JOSE GOMEZ - CLARENS RENOIS
INTERVIEW DU JOUR SUR RFM MERCREDI 29 JANVIER 2020 -LINE BALTHAZAR -CLARENS RENOIS - GARRY DESROSIERS - MARIE YOLENE GILLES- (KPC)
We got a chance to have a chat with Juels from the band Goodluck, just was about the band itself, new projects they are working on and the upcoming Lush festival in Clarens.
Guest speaker, Topsy Mokena joins us from Clarens, South Africa. As part of Regions Beyond, Topsy shares about what it means to live out God's love for the poor.
The Clarens Beer Fest is probably the most popular beer event in South Africa and a pilgrimage every beer lover must take. I walked around with Steve from Shackletons Brewery,Continue reading#BT 062: The Craziness of Clarens Beer Fest
Helen Squirrell is a member of our CoachParry Online Training Club and has been on one of our sub 3:30 marathon programs, she managed to get a substitution entry to Comrades and has decided to take the plunge into doing the Big C this year. Markus gives her some advice on how to adjust her paces and training from the marathon to Comrades training. Helen lives in Clarens which is at a high altitude and is very hilly and so they also discuss some ideas around adjusting training for altitude, hills and time trials not on flat routes. Markus also gives some great advice on how to adjust training programs when you do training on both road and trail to ensure you are still getting in enough mileage. Brad also shares another Success Story from another member in our community who has previously been on one of our podcasts, so be sure to tune in to that for some extra inspiration! We also want to hear your success story - you can share this with us by using #BiogenJourney on any of the socials and you could stand a chance to win 3 months access to the CoachParry Online Training Club. This week's winner is Millicent Shai! Welcome to the team Millicent, looking forward to helping you to that sub4 marathon! Read More · www.CoachParry.com
TalkFEED — Helen Squirrell is a member of our CoachParry Online Training Club and has been on one of our sub 3:30 marathon programs, she managed to get a substitution entry to Comrades and has decided to take the plunge into doing the Big C this year. Markus gives her some advice on how to adjust her paces and training from the marathon to Comrades training. Helen lives in Clarens which is at a high altitude and is very hilly and so they also discuss some ideas around adjusting training for altitude, hills and time trials not on flat routes. Markus also gives some great advice on how to adjust training programs when you do training on both road and trail to ensure you are still getting in enough mileage. Brad also shares another Success Story from another member in our community who has previously been on one of our podcasts, so be sure to tune in to that for some extra inspiration! We also want to hear your success story - you can share this with us by using #BiogenJourney on any of the socials and you could stand a chance to win 3 months access to the CoachParry Online Training Club. This week's winner is Millicent Shai! Welcome to the team Millicent, looking forward to helping you to that sub4 marathon! Read More
La permanence info-conseil migration, à Clarens, s'apprête à être inaugurée
Un nouvel EMS a ouvert ses portes à Clarens, il accueillera plusieurs type de résidents, dont des hirondelles
Une permanence info-conseil migration a ouvert ses portes à Clarens
Vitaly Bespalov wrote fake news at a Russian troll farm. He tells us the real story of what he found. Also: Boston author, Louie Cronin, on how she lost her Boston accent; we meet a professional accent coach who can teach you to impersonate anybody; we find out why the US military tried to erase the story of Donald Nichols, an Air Force officer who played an outsize role in the Korean War; plus we remember World War II spy hero Jeannie Rousseau de Clarens. (Image: The Internet Research Agency, or IRA, in St. Petersburg, Russia. Credit: PRI’s The World)
Die boksgemeenskap het verslae gereageer op die nuus dat die Suid-Afrikaanse boksafrigter, Nick Du Randt, Vrydag is in 'n motorfietsongeluk in die Vrystaat oorlede is. Hy was die president van die Crusaders Motorfietsklub, en het teen 'n motor gebots tussen Bethlehem en Clarens. Hy was 53 jaar oud. Du Randt het 95 Suid-Afrikaanse kampioene in al 17 gewigsklasse opgelewer, 38 wêreldkampioene en 27 internasionale kampioene, insluitend Thulani Sugarboy Malinga en Philip Ndou, wat Floyd Mayweather in 2003 geveg het. Sy vriend en ook 'n boksafrigter, Gert Strydom, het met Vincent Mofokeng gepraat.
La loge maçonnique Evolutia de Clarens célèbre les 300 ans de la Franc-Maçonnerie moderne avec une journée portes ouvertes
This stand-alone podcast is a short discussion of Ariel Schulman’s and Henry Joost’s 2016 epidemic horror film Viral. The film stars Analeigh Tipton (Warm Bodies), Sofia Black D’Elia (Project Almanac), and Travis Tope (The Town That Dreaded Sundown [2014]) and follows two sisters’ attempt to survive both the impending apocalypse and lethal military intervention. This podcast looks at how this specific kind of epidemic horror functions in the broader landscape of the genre, and what the possible significance is for specific types of disease vectors in cinema. For more on bugs in horror, see my blog post here. To help support to my blog/podcast, you can find my Patreon here. References and Further Reading Benshoff, Harry M. Monsters in the Closet: Homosexuality and the Horror Film. Manchester: Manchester UP, 1997. Print. Clarens, Carlos. An Illustrated History of the Horror Film. New York: Putnam, 1979. Print. Cornea, Christine. Science Fiction Cinema: Between Fantasy and Reality. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers UP, 2007. Print. Creed, Barbara. The Monstrous-Feminine: Film, Feminism, Psychoanalysis. London: Routledge, 1993. Print. Douglas, Mary. Purity and Danger: An Analysis of Concepts of Pollution and Taboo. New York, NY: Routledge, 2015. Print. Eliade, Mircea, and Ana Cartianu. Mystic Stories: The Sacred and the Profane. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1992. Print. King, Stephen. Danse Macabre. London: Hodder, 2012. Print. 117. Kristeva, Julia, and Leon S. Roudiez. Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection. New York: Columbia UP, 1982. Print. Magistrale, Tony. Abject Terrors: Surveying the Modern and Postmodern Horror Film. New York: Peter Lang, 2007. Print. Skal, David J. The Monster Show: A Cultural History of Horror. New York: Norton, 1993. Print. Subissati, Andrea. When There’s No More Room in Hell: The Sociology of the Living Dead. Saarbrücken, Germany: LAP Lambert Academic, 2010. Print. Waller, Gregory A., ed. American Horrors: Essays on the Modern American Horror Film. Chicago: U of Illinois, 1987. Print. Yacowar, Maurice. “The Bug in the Rug: Notes on the Disaster Genre” in Film Genre Reader III. Ed. Keith Barry Grant.. Austin, TX: U of Texas, 2003. Print. 281. Duologue by Javolenus © copyright 2012 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial (3.0) license. Ft: audiotechnica Author: Geneveive Newman
Niche Radio — It's a great Tuesday on #HangoutWithHeather as always, and Heather has loads to share as usual... Heather recaps on her experiences at #UltraSA2017 this weekend - the highs and lows of this massive dance festival, as well as an update on The Green Craft Beer Festival - whose organisers have chosen to postpone the event due to scheduled rain - but don't worry, a mini event will still take place this Saturday 4th march. Heather shares more about the #TMSA17 winners Deidre Engelbrecht and Dean Alberts - and where they are headed after winning the prestigious @TopModelSA competition. @TsogoSun has secured some of the top SA wines on auction - if you love good wine make sure to head on over to one of the hotels and enjoy some very rare and amazing wines (some of them only 60 bottles were made!) #TsogoWine If you are looking for a great dinner spot - and a complimentary bottle of wine to add to that - do make sure you book at @ArbourCafe in the gorgeous courtyard. @LushFestival 2.0 is heading your way over the Easter holidays - do make sure you have your tickets booked for this annual festival in Clarens - great to escape from the city, do some camping and enjoy some local and international music. Heather is also looking forward to #TheGents - as musical tribute show to artists that left us too soon, but live on through their music. The show is taking place in May @GoldReefCitySA 's Lyric Theatre and promises to be a show not to be missed. #JoziWineRoute launches it's first edition tomorrow in Parkhurst - basically an amble around and drink wine - nothing wrong with that, so do make sure you have your tickets booked! If you have an event coming up near you that you would like Heather to talk about, please do drop her an email on heather@heatherhook.com T: heatherlhook F: www.facebook.com/heatherlhook I: heatherlouisehook W: www.heatherhook.com
Royal Music Paris - Good Night with Me (Original Mix) The BossHoss - Jolene (Vinylsurfer Deep Edit) POOLCLVB - Waiting For You (Original mix) Boscida und Farcher - Rainbow Skies (Original mix) Slowz - Morning Lights feat. Clarens (5 Reasons Remix) Vastrev & Stoto - Matter Of Time (Original Mix) Mike R - Dont Want Nobody Else (Original Mix) Claborg - It's OK (Original mix) Ladies On Mars - Funky Style (Original Mix) Desusino Boys - Indigo (Original Mix) Babert - War (Original Mix) Birdee - Can't Fight the Feeling (Roisto Remix)al l bo - Walls Of Tears (Yeckah Remix)
Our practice as a 4 hands design studio started in 2005 and CUT architectures was founded in 2008. CUT, 3 letters standing for our aim to contrast deeply with a conventionalist architectural practice and the expected positions and trends. Breaking the boundaries between architecture, urbanism, interior design & art we are taking the inherent qualities of every of these elds in order to initiate inspiring hybrid projects. We don’t make hierarchical distinctions between an art installation, a piece of furniture, a shop, a at, a set design, a house or a building and put the same effort with the same process: we rst fetch materials, inspirations and references to legitimate our choices, we then search for the optimal plan layout and the most effective section to implement the chosen material(s). This process is key to a project for us in order to be able to create, reinterpret, divert and innovate. Completed projects by CUT architectures include Café Coutume (rue de Babylone, Institut Finlandais, Aoyama, Osaka, and Futakotamagawa), PNY (Fbg St Denis, Oberkampf and Haut Marais) and Le Syndicat (Fbg St Denis), etc. www.cut-architectures.com
In this edition of TalkCentral, your hosts Duncan McLeod and Regardt van der Berg talk about the new Africa-1 cable system, Vumatel raising more funding, MTN's Nigerian headache and long-serving MP Dene Smuts passing away. Podcast website
Entrevista que realiza nuestro corresponsal, Mauricio Fernández, a Clarens y Migueru, autores del libro ¡Dame tu Fuerza Pegaso! de Ediciones Diábolo Siguenos en: · www.universosaintseiya.com · usspodcast@gmail.com · www.facebook.com/universosaintseiya · @universosaintse · http://youtube.com/universosaintseiya · +34 653 65 83 21 (WhatsApp)
La playlist de l'émission : Pond "Outside is the right side" Pond "Elvis’ Flaming Star" Viet Cong "Continental Shelf" Viet Cong "Silhouette" Motorama "Dispersed Energy" Motorama "Heavy Wave" The Dodos "Competition" The Dodos "Goodbyes and endings" Clarens "trust" Clarens "pray" Juan trip "eve-e-dance"
Accidentado ha sido el penúltimo programa del Universo Saint Seiya de esta temporada, que trae consigo los siguientes contenidos: [COSPLAY ORIGINAL] -Ultimas Noticias Camiseta Shiryu del Dragón V1 -Desglosando el Juego de Mesa de Oliver y Benji -Sorteo Juego de Mesa Oliver y Benji [MANGA] -Next Dimension Capítulo Especial en la Shukan Shonen Champion de Junio -Especial de Saint Seiya en la Champion Red nº 20 -Portada Saintia Sho Vol 2. -Spoilers Lost Canvas Gaiden Defteros Capítulo 4 -Imágenes Fotos de Exhibición 40 Aniversario de Kurumada en Tokio [MERCHANDISING] -Caja de Seiya de Sagitario Myth Cloth Omega -Giganto de Cíclope Kakaxiliu -Folei Gordon de Minotauro, Lune de Balrog y Markino de Esqueleto -Fotos de Libra EX Galactic Nébula con rostro de Gembu -Niobe de Deep de Kakaxiliu -Set de efectos Dragones de Rozan de LC Models -Saint Seiya Sugo-waza Party Battle para Android en Japón -Nuevas Cruzade´s y Galaxy´s Cards de Omega -Portada del 2ª BR Box de la serie Clásica -Ultimo DVD Alquiler de Omega [SAINT SEIYA LEYENDA DEL SANTUARIO] -Poster Oficial para Latinoamérica -CD OST de la película incluirá tarjetas de regalo -Nuevas Cruzade´s y Galaxy´s Cards de Leyenda del Santuario -Platos Ramen de Takumen inspirados en la película -Estreno en Chile el 2 de Octubre -Estreno de la Película en Francia confirmado por Toei Europa. Tras el anuncio del Estreno en Italia, será el próximo España? -Vídeo 3 Insignias Clothstones -Comentarios Generales sobre los Spoilers de la película del preestreno al que acudieron de Enciclopedia Saint Seiya -Responsables de Selecta Visión (Javi Puertas y Manu Guerrero) se reúnen con la voz oficial de Caballeros del Zodiaco en España, Joaquín Paz, junto con Clarens y Dante, miembros importantes de la comunidad saintseiyera, para hablar del futuro de Saint Seiya en España [EL RINCÓN DE LOS OYENTES] -Comentarios de los Oyentes -Ganadores del Sorteo Selfie -Nuevo Sorteo de Packs de Selecta Visión Aunque sea más tarde de lo habitual, no desesperéis, ¡¡¡que ya estamos aquí!!!
Extracto estraído del programa número 28 donde entrevistamos a nuestro compañero Clarens quien nos dará una opinión subjetiva y personal del juego de la PS3, Saint Seiya: Batalla por el Santuario. Pero no sólo eso, sino que el Universo Saint Seiya fue invitado a las oficinas de Namco Bandai en Madrid (España) para probar el juego y pudo hablar con uno de los responsables del mismo que no es otro que David Castaño, quien nos concedió una entrevista en exclusiva para el USS. Gracias a Silvia Martín, responsable de prensa de Namco Bandai por portarse tan bien con este humilde podcast. Escucha el programa entero en: www.universosaintseiya.com Web de Namco Bandai: www.es.namcobandaigames.eu/
Casi dos horas de duración dura esta edición del Universo Saint Seiya con los siguientes contenidos: NOTICIAS - Último capítulo del Lost Canvas Gaiden de Manigoldo donde os adelantamos el siguiente - Primera impresión de los dvd's del Lost Canvas de México - Pegasus Seiya EX - Bandai Collector y los gastos de envío gratuítos - Selecta Visión os invita a probar el juego de la PS3 - Rumores sobre el enemigo principal de Saint Seiya Omega: ¿Es Ares? ¿Seguro? CORRESPONSALES - Nuestro oyente Hawlsemon nos hará una review de las dos temporadas del Lost Canvas que han surgido en México por parte de VideoMax CONCURSO - Decimos quienes son los ganadores de los concursos de: Audio, Video y Personaje Misterioso SECCIÓN - Homenaje al Maestro Cristal ENTREVSITA - Entrevistamos a Clarens quien nos hablará del juego de la PS3, Saint Seiya: Batalla por el Santuario. Pero no sólo eso, sino que el Universo Saint Seiya fue invitado a las oficinas de Namco Bandai en Madrid (España) para probar el juego y pudo hablar con uno de los responsables del juego que no es otro que David Castaño quien nos concedió una entrevista en exclusiva para el podcast. Gracias a Silvia Martín, responsable de prensa de Namco Bandai por portarse tan bien con este humilde podcast. TOMAS FALSAS - A vosotros os llega la versión definitiva, pero no todo es tan fácil. A continuación os mostramos algunas de las Tomas Falsas del programa. Espero las disfruteis. Recordad, esto es el Universo Saint Seiya y en este preciso instante... ¡¡Comenzamos!!