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Trailblaze Season 2 is officially live! My show highlights incredible people from my network with stories of resilience who share both business and personal challenges. Listen for lessons learned through the eyes of leaders who strive to challenge the status quo. This season's guests include Canadian VCs and Dragon's Arlene Dickinson and Michele Romanow, educators Reza Satchu and Dr. Richard Isaacson, serial founder Sabrina Fiorellino, and astronaut Commander Chris Hadfield. All episodes are now available at AnthonyLacavera.com/podcast.
Hour 2 of The FAN Morning Show kicks off with Ben and Brent discussing the Maple Leafs' current special teams woes, who bears the most responsibility for the team's lack of power play production, Mitch Marner's quickness since returning from his high-ankle sprain, and Ilya Samsonov's leash heading into Saturday's Game 4. Later, the guys are joined by Commander Chris Hadfield (24:47), Canadian astronaut and noted Leafs fan, to chat about his Leafs fandom, his assessment of the team's performance through the first three games of their series against Boston, his experience meeting the late Bob Cole, his fantastic tale of descending from space during the Leafs' Game 7 loss to Boston in 2013, and if human civilization will ever walk on Mars. The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Sports & Media or any affiliate.
In a little Christmas gift to the listeners, Steve offers us a little taste of the forthcoming interview with Commander Chris Hadfield, astronaut, musician and author, but most of all an incredibly generous and wonderful individual.Chris performs a song which he wrote and originally recorded whilst he was commander of the International Space Station (ISS), orbiting earth and looking through his window at the 7.8 billion people living on the beautiful blue sphere below him.Episode 7 will feature an interview with Chris about music, exploration, the logistics of recording songs in space, and much more. TUNE IN! Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Chris joined Kane and Derm to give an in-depth chat about his life, his interests, what it's like in space, his new book, and much more! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
For our finale episode Mike gets perspective from a guest who's been somewhere that most of us will never get to go: space!Commander Chris Hadfield is a retired astronaut who flew two Space Shuttle missions and also served as commander of the International Space Station.
In this episode, we speak to renowned Canadian figure Colonel Chris Hadfield. For those who don't know, Chris is a heavily decorated astronaut, engineer, and pilot, and has received many awards, such as the Order of Canada, the Meritorious Service Cross and the NASA Exceptional Service Medal. Colonel Hadfield became a worldwide sensation with his video of David Bowie's "Space Oddity" which was viewed by over 75 million people. He aims to make space more accessible and continues to share the wonders of outer space and science with as many people as possible. Besides his phenomenal professional background, he is also known for his music which he writes and plays on earth and in space! He is also the author of several books, namely An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth, You Are Here, and a children's book, The Darkest Dark. Although Colonel Hadfield has a very different background from previous guests, his 35-year career has afforded him many lessons that apply to life, which he shares in our conversation with him. We learn the importance of goals and why reaching your goals should not define your happiness. Hear ways to overcome fear when facing uncertainty, the value of competence, and why enjoying the road to success is more important than success itself. Find out why sweating the small is essential to success, whether Colonel Hadfield suffers from imposter syndrome, and where true happiness comes from. Tune in and discover the secret to success and happiness in this one-of-a-kind conversation with special guest, Colonel Chris Hadfield! Key Points From This Episode: What motivated Commander Hadfield to take pictures onboard the International Space Station. (0:04:10) He briefly explains the amount of effort that went into taking pictures for his book You Are Here. (0:05:14) What lessons Commander Hadfield learned as an astronaut that he applies to life. (0:06:34) How to keep motivated to achieve your goals with the knowledge that you probably won't achieve them. (0:08:41) Why his goal was becoming an astronaut and not to be an astronaut. (0:11:05) Whether there is a time to reconsider or quit a goal that you have set for yourself. (0:12:46) The best way to prepare for situations with uncertain outcomes. (0:14:51) How to prepare for situations that you cannot prepare or practice for. (0:18:18) Ways to mitigate fear when dealing with risk and uncertainty. (0:20:55) Learn if building competence is different for different people. (0:23:48) Hear the benefits of negative thinking and sweating the small stuff. (0:25:33) Commander Hadfield explains how to prepare for novel situations. (0:29:07) He shares where he thinks life satisfaction comes from. (0:31:49) Find out if Commander Hadfield ever suffers from imposter syndrome. (0:34:14) What life lessons he hopes to impart to his grandchildren. (0:36:09) How Commander Hadfield defines success in his life. (0:38:04) We highlight the main takeaways from our conversation with Commander Hadfield. (0:41:14) Links From Today's Episode: Commander Chris Hadfield — https://chrishadfield.ca/ Commander Chris Hadfield on Twitter — https://twitter.com/Cmdr_Hadfield/ Commander Chris Hadfield on Instagram — https://www.instagram.com/colchrishadfield/ Commander Chris Hadfield on Facebook — https://www.facebook.com/AstronautChrisHadfield Commander Chris Hadfield on LinkedIn — https://www.linkedin.com/in/chris-hadfield/ Commander Chris Hadfield on YouTube — https://www.youtube.com/c/ChrisHadfieldAstronaut/featured A Space Oddity — https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KaOC9danxNo You Are Here — https://www.amazon.com/You-Are-Here-Photographs-International/dp/0316379646 An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth — https://www.amazon.com/Astronauts-Guide-Life-Earth-Determination/ The Darkest Dark — https://www.amazon.com/The-Darkest-Dark/
The Iolar Challenge 2022 was held at Ballyboughal Airfield and organised by the Air Activities team of Scouting Ireland. This year's event was attended by over 120 youth participants who were aged between 12 & 17 years old and hailed from all over Ireland. The event opened for check-in on Friday evening. Everyone camped on-site for the weekend with full catering and even an outdoor cinema which features a message from Commander Chris Hadfield wishing the scouts the best for their event. Chris is a Canadian retired astronaut, engineer, fighter pilot, and musician. In all, over 130 participants were educated in the practicalities of aviation and they had a great opportunity to be bitten by the aviation bug. Ballyboughal Airfield, the Air Activities team and all the volunteers look forward to seeing them progress through their Scouting Ireland Air Skills Badge levels and maybe even taking up a career in the aviation industry in Ireland. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Evan Solomon speaks with Canadian retired astronaut and former commander of the International Space Station Chris Hadfield about Russia pulling out of the ISS after 2024. On today's show: A conversation with Chris Hadfield, Canadian retired astronaut and former commander of the International Space Station. Sheldon Kennedy, victims rights advocate and former NHL player, who is calling for the resignation of Hockey Canada leaders. The War Room political panel with Zain Velji, Tim Powers and David Moscrop. Andre De Grasse, 11x world champion and Olympic gold medallist. He led Canada to gold in the men's 4x100-metre relay at the world track and field championships for the first time since 1997. Dr. Isaac Bogoch, infectious disease physician at the Toronto General Hospital, on understanding monkeypox.
Canadian astronaut Commander Chris Hadfield joined Garry and Tim to give an in-depth account of his incredible career in space, and to explain what life is like in international space stations.
In Wednesday's Ramble Garry and Tim chat about their favourite power tools, the dress code at the AFLW Awards last night, and Garry's trip to TaylorMade yesterday. They then talk about Tiger Woods' potential return at The Masters, and the hype around Carlton in 'Conversation Starters', and Sam Edmund joins them in the studio to provide an update on some out of contract youngsters at Essendon. After spending some time with George Samios in the Wonderful World of Wine, they chatted to Canadian astronaut Commander Chris Hadfield about his incredible career in space. And to finish off, Emily Bates joined the show after winning the AFLW Best and Fairest last night.
On Wednesday morning, Garry and Tim talked about Tiger Woods' now likely return to golf, and the hype surrounding Carlton. They were then joined by Sam Edmund who provided an update on some out of contract Bombers, and following Sam's update they spoke to Commander Chris Hadfield about his fascinating career as an astronaut. And lastly Lions star Emily Bates called in after winning the AFLW Best and Fairest last night.
We are super excited to welcome to this week's interview episode...Someone referred to as “the most famous astronaut since Neil Armstrong,” a heavily decorated astronaut, engineer, and pilot who was the first Canadian commander of the International Space Station, it is a pleasure to welcome to the podcast astronaut......Commander Chris Hadfield.Chris is definitely the Topic Expert we needed to speak with!Hear us discuss:Chris' journey to being an astronautWhy the ISS is so importantWhat life on the ISS is like, sleeping, eating, experimentsChris describing his incredible space walks (extravehicular activity)Chris' advice to be an astronautYou will hear how much we enjoyed talking with Chris, plus his fascinating insight of life on the International Space Station.Our research and reading can only take us so far - so from time to time we will interview an expert to ask them questions and hear their real life experience on a topic.Once you have listened we would love to hear your feedback.Follow us @TwoGuysOneTopic on Instagram, Twitter or Facebook.If you are able to leave a quick review on your podcast player that would also be really appreciated.Thanks!Hadfield is also a bestselling author of three books, an acclaimed musician, and the host of two internationally acclaimed television series, including National Geographic's One Strange Rock. Hadfield's latest book The Apollo Murders – a thriller set in space and his first fiction novel – is available now. To purchase a copy of The Apollo Murders, visit https://chrishadfield.ca/books/. Follow Chris on:Facebook - @AstronautChrisHadfieldTwitter - @Cmdr_HadfieldInstagram - @colchrishadfieldTikTok - @cmdr_hadfieldYouTube - https://www.youtube.com/c/ChrisHadfieldAstronaut Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hello 3 Bookers! Let's close off our fourth year of 3 Books by sitting down with Chris Hadfield at his kitchen table. His five-month old puppy New Henry is sniffling and occasionally barking on his lap. Fat snowflakes slowly drift down outside the big window above the shelf full of succulents. And lying between us is a stack of Christmas cards that Chris is signing along with my copy of his brand new bestselling thriller The Apollo Murders … as well, of course, as his three most formative books. Commander Chris Hadfield has lived in outer space for six months. Six months! He was named Top Test Pilot in both the US Air Force and the US Navy and has flown on three space missions, helped build two space stations, and commanded the International Space Station. While hanging out in space Chris wasn't just doing experiments. He was also serving as a global educator. Teaching people through YouTube and social media how to cook in space, sleep in space, and even clip your nails in space. He sent us pictures of Earth from low orbit and helped us see our planet and ourselves in a new light. And while circling Earth over two thousand times — once about every hour and a half, he says — he also made time to create the first ever music video shot in space. You've probably seen his cover of David Bowie's “Space Oddity” which has now been viewed over 100 million times. So: he's an astronaut and a rock star? Yes, but that's not all. Chris has given one of the most popular TED Talks of all time and is also a hugely bestselling author. In 2013 he put out An Astronaut's Guide to Life, one of the most popular memoirs in the past decade and an international bestseller for over five years. He followed that up with a photo book called You are Here and then followed that up with a lovely children's book called The Darkest Dark. And now? Well, never content to rest on his laurels and always interested in exploring new terrain, Chris has just put out his first ever novel. Is there anything Chris Hadfield can't do?? I suppose NASA only selects the most perfect specimens on earth but how does somebody learn how to just … write a novel? How exactly does he think about studying the art and then creating it? What can we all learn from his combined passions for curiosity, self-learning, and self-discipline? Plus, since Chris is one of the most decorated astronauts in the world, we also get to discuss what space travel might look like in our lifetime and our children's lifetimes. Chris will tell us how 70,000 years ago some thought it was foolish to leave Africa … and yet some did. How 18,000 years ago some thought it was foolish to walk over ice to North America … and yet some did. How 50 years ago some thought it was foolish to blast ourselves into outer space … and yet some did. How today and in the near future some will say it's foolish to settle on the moon or Mars … and yet some will. I found this conversation mind-expanding on many levels. It pairs wonderfully well with The Apollo Murders which I hope you'll check out. I'm excited for you to hang out at Chris's kitchen table with us. I'll be in your left ear, Chris will be in your right, and Chris is wondering if you'd like a coffee or a glass of water before we begin? Let's flip the page into Chapter 93 now… What You'll Learn: What is the beauty of writing Christmas cards? What compels an astronaut to write a book? What is the Astronaut's prayer? How do you prepare for space flight? What is the first question writers should ask themselves? Why should all aspiring writers read On Writing by Stephen King? What do the best mystery and thriller writers have in common? What do mazes and writing have in common? What is the future of space flight? What would humans need to survive on Mars? How can we peacefully settle the moon, and further afield, as a species? What do all new settlement ventures have in common? What is the Earth-Moon economic system? Why do astronauts often live well into their nineties? What are the common attributes of an astronaut? Why should we create much more mundane bucket lists? How should we shape our view of the world? You can find show notes and more information by clicking here: https://www.3books.co/chapters/93 Leave us a voicemail. Your message may be included in a future chapter: 1-833-READ-A-LOT. Sign up to receive podcast updates here: https://www.3books.co/email-list 3 Books is a completely insane and totally epic 15-year-long quest to uncover and discuss the 1000 most formative books in the world. Each chapter discusses the 3 most formative books of one of the world's most inspiring people. Sample guests include: Brené Brown, David Sedaris, Malcolm Gladwell, Angie Thomas, Cheryl Strayed, Rich Roll, Soyoung the Variety Store Owner, Derek the Hype Man, Kevin the Bookseller, Vishwas the Uber Driver, Roxane Gay, David Mitchell, Vivek Murthy, Mark Manson, Seth Godin, Judy Blume and Quentin Tarantino. 3 Books is published on the lunar calendar with each of the 333 chapters dropped on the exact minute of every single new moon and every single full moon all the way up to 5:21 am on September 1, 2031. 3 Books is an Apple "Best Of" award-winning show and is 100% non-profit with no ads, no sponsors, no commercials, and no interruptions. 3 Books has 3 clubs including the End of the Podcast Club, the Cover to Cover Club, and the Secret Club, which operates entirely through the mail and is only accessible by calling 1-833-READ-A-LOT. Each chapter is hosted by Neil Pasricha, New York Times bestselling author of The Book of Awesome, The Happiness Equation, Two-Minute Mornings, etc. For more info check out: https://www.3books.co
David Cooper invites Commander Chris Hadfield to talk about his time on the ISS and his new book, The Apollo Murders
Samantha Pickard brings an international outlook to Strut and a vast understanding of the North American and Australian music and entertainment industries. As a thirty-two-year entertainment industry-veteran she contributes a diverse skill set through her years working as a retail buyer, artist manager, promotions and event manager, GM of an entertainment publishing company, in addition to her 15 years leading the public relations, marketing and event team at Strut Entertainment. The road to Canada began when Samantha took on a three-year role in Radio Promotions at Sydney based, Australian music industry trade magazine, The Music Network (TMN). When TMN partnered with Quebec-based music industry heavyweight, Donald Tarlton (aka Donald K Donald), to launch a Canadian version of TMN, The Canadian Music Network (CMN) in 2001, Samantha landed the role of General Manager and relocated to Toronto. Over a five-year span, CMN's in-house publishing arm took on the publication of the JUNO Award and Canadian Country Music Association (CCMA) Awards programs. In that time, Samantha also established the Canadian Entertainment Magazine to service the home entertainment business, the Canadian Entertainment Network Awards as well as an independent event-planning firm, Splash Event Management. Over fifteen years ago Samantha re-launched Splash under the name Strut Entertainment, with an eye to offering a degree of personal attention and customized service other, larger companies couldn't. Event planning is still part of the suite of services Strut provides but owing to the vast network of contacts Samantha has developed in the corporate world and entertainment industry, public relations, social media, marketing, and influencer services – for clients in the entertainment, music, and lifestyle industries – are the driving force of the business. Samantha has executed hundreds of public relations campaigns and events including G'Day Toronto for Tourism Australia, the Rolling Stones 50 Years Tour, Walk Off The Earth, the Taylor Swift Speak Now and RED campaigns, Lauv, Commander Chris Hadfield, The Weeknd, Rush, Hanson, Marianas Trench, Kevin Smith and Jason Mewes, Finneas, Carly Rae Jepsen, Jungle, Girl In Red, Jimmie Allen., Howie D and Nick Carter (Backstreet Boys), Fossil, Dolly Parton, Tim McGraw, The Trews, Dita Von Teese, Cavendish Beach Music Festival, The Glorious Sons, Dan Mangan, The Tea Party, Blue Man Group, So You Think You Can Dance Canada, numerous campaigns for Warner Bros Canada, Gaiam, Universal Music Canada, CIMA, Anthem Entertainment Group, The Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), New Balance Canada and Jabra. A former board member of CARAS (The JUNO Awards) and executive board member of CMAO, Samantha is also a sought-after guest speaker and mentor and has working with companies including Toronto's Centennial College, The SOCAN Foundation, Canadian Public Relations Society, MetalWorks, Music Publishers Canada, Rotmans Commerce Women in Business and for the Urban Music Association, she is also a long-term mentor for Canadas' Music incubator and founder of Strut Social.
On this week's Richard Crouse Show Podcast we meet Commander Chris Hadfield, the first Canadian to walk in space and served as commander of the International Space Station. Now, on earth, the astronaut and bestselling author, is turning to fiction for the first time. James Cameron, director of “Avatar” and “Titanic,” called Hadfield's new book “The Apollo Murders,” “Nail-biting. I couldn't put it down,” he said. The new thriller is set in 1973. In this alternative history the Cold War is still burning hot and is now being projected into space with the Soviets building an orbiting spy station while looking to mine the moon for precious radioactive minerals. With Apollo 18 (the real Apollo missions ended at 17) the U.S. is out to frustrate these plans. It may be that the Soviets are one step ahead though, as they already have someone inside the Apollo program. Hadfield is also the author of the memoir An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth, the children's book The Darkest Dark, which was illustrated by the Fan Brothers, and the photo book You Are Here: Around the World in 92 Minutes. Commander Chris Hadfield joins me via Zoom from Las Vegas to talk about his new book The Apollo Murders. Then, Katherine Ryan is a Canadian who moved to England in 2007 with a boyfriend who wanted to start a comedy career in the UK. His comedy career didn't take off, but hers did, and now Brits know and love her from the many panel shows she's appeared on, her wildly popular no-filter podcast Telling Everybody Everything or her Netflix comedy-drama The Duchess. She also has a new series, Backstage with Katherine Ryan, which will showcase live stand-up sets from beloved and emerging comedians. It's slated to premiere on Amazon Prime in 2022. She's known for being hilariously herself in a non-apologetic way, so it doesn't comes as a surprise that her latest project, a memoir that details her rise to U.K. fame and her Canadian life before that as a Hooters waiter and Ryerson student, and before that her life in Sarnia, is called The Audacity.
Our favourite Canadian returns to the podcast this week, it's astronaut Commander Chris Hadfield. Chris has just released his first ever work of fiction, a historical thriller titled The Apollo Murders. He joins Robin, and guest co-host Helen Czerski, to talk about his favourite thrillers, what it was like moving into the world of fiction, making sure the space science was accurate and the future of human spaceflight itself. Around 10 extra minutes of chat this week for Patreon supporters so sign up at patreon.com/bookshambles
William Shatner, aka Captain Kirk, is going into space for real. He's swapping the Starship Enterprise for Jeff Bezos's space travel company, Blue Origin. Fellow Canadian and astronaut Commander Chris Hadfield tells us what he can expect. Also, the latest on gas prices and why the rise is such a problem for British steel companies. Gareth Stace of UK Steel explains what he wants the government to do. And chilled meats are back on the menu as the UK and EU face off over Northern Ireland. Today's Newscast was made by Alison Gee with producers Alix Pickles and Georgia Coan. The studio manager was Emma Crowe. The editor is Jonathan Aspinwall.
Commander Chris Hadfield is arguably Canada's most famous astronaut. There's even been times when he's been our most famous Canadian, like when he produced a viral video singing David Bowie's "Space Oddity" on the International Space Station, seen by hundreds of millions of people. A veteran of multiple missions to space with the Canadian Space Agency, NASA and the Russian Space Program, he was the first Canadian to do a space walk, was commander of the International Space Station and he spent five years as the NASA representative to the Russian Space Program based in Moscow, becoming a fluent Russian speaker in the process. It's fair to say that Chris Hadfield knows a thing or two about space, and when it came time for him to write his first ever novel, he turned to the cosmos and the heyday of the space race, during the Apollo Missions to the moon in the 1960's and '70's. “The Apollo Murders,” is a classic cold war-era spy thriller, it comes out in October 2021. In this fascinating conversation we discuss the moments in his own career that inspired a novel that now has leading Hollywood figures like James Cameron and Ryan Reynolds exploring turning it into a film.
Gainin' Fast on Memphis: The Podcast | Show NotesEpisode 97: We Welcome in Astronaut and Commander of the International Space Station Chris Hadfield. As a kid who wasn't told to Reach for the Stars, well Chris did just that. He was inspired by the Apollo 11 Moon Landing and never looked back. Chris is one of the hardest working, motivated, and passionate people I have ever had the pleasure of researching for this show. I can't wait to hear all about his Journey From Space to Inspiration. Show Links: https://www.gaininfastonmemphis.com/https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/gainin-fast-on-memphis/id1489564658https://www.facebook.com/GAININFASTONMEMPHIShttps://www.youtube.com/c/GaininFastOnMemphishttps://www.instagram.com/fastonmemphis_podcast/ Sponsor Links:https://www.arlorevolution.com/https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCxvVcUtdBCgLMUdip7P3Hghttps://www.facebook.com/ArtOnAHigherWire/Guest Links: https://chrishadfield.ca/ https://www.facebook.com/AstronautChrisHadfieldhttps://www.instagram.com/colchrishadfield/https://www.youtube.com/c/ChrisHadfieldAstronautHelp support the show, our Patreon is what keeps the show going, we have tiers starting as low as $1, going all the way up to Show Sponsorships.Find your tier today!https://www.patreon.com/GaininFastOnMemphisSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/GaininFastOnMemphis)
Commander Chris Hadfield went through intensive training to become an astronaut, but there were still many decisions to be made whilst in space. Here, Chris shares with Eshaan the importance of trusting your own judgement.Ninetwentynine is a Fiverr.com podcast. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Ruth speaks to International Space Station commander, Chris Hadfield
Ruth speaks to International Space Station commander, Chris Hadfield
[Egy tematikába nem illeszkedő ismétlés csak ha már a zűr témájánál járunk.]Hetedik rész, amelyben Gábor nem tudja palástolni a Nemzetközi Űrállomás iránti lelkesedését, Geri Marsra utazós valóságshowról számol be, András Farkas Bertalant kiált, és amelyből megtudjuk, hogy Krisztiánnak anno nem tetszett az Egy úr az űrből című sorozat. A felvétel az adás vége felé egy pillanatra megszakad, de ez már-már elvárható egy az űrállomásról szóló podcast-tól.Szóba kerülnek:1. – TávolbalátásElső rész, amelyben a Beszélő kockák elemerengenek a TV jelenén és jövőjén, felemlegetik múltját.http://beszelokockak.hu/2013/04/02/1-tavolbalatas/Puli space technologies“We aim to demonstrate our abilities by landing a self-made probe on the Moon by 2015 and thus complete the Google Lunar X PRIZE challenge.”http://www.pulispace.com/The Tech Aboard the International Space Station“... It’s the responsibility of just two guys to maintain the uptime of the Space Station’s IT, and they have given CNET an in-depth interview to explain what tech’s aboard, how it works, and whether Windows viruses are a threat to the astronauts. ...”http://science.slashdot.org/story/09/11/03/1842247/the-tech-aboard-the-international-space-stationCapability Maturity ModelThe Capability Maturity Model (CMM) is a development model created after study of data collected from organizations that contracted with the U.S. Department of Defense, who funded the research.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capability_Maturity_ModelTHEY WRITE THE RIGHT STUFFAS THE 120-TON SPACE SHUTTLE SITS SURROUNDED BY ALMOST 4 MILLION POUNDS OF ROCKET FUEL, EXHALING NOXIOUS FUMES, VISIBLY IMPATIENT TO DEFY GRAVITY, ITS ON-BOARD COMPUTERS TAKE COMMAND.http://www.fastcompany.com/28121/they-write-right-stuffNASA TVhttp://www.nasa.gov/ntvNASAtelevision a YouTube-onhttp://www.youtube.com/user/NASAtelevisionDeparting Space Station Commander Provides Tour of Orbital Laboratoryhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doN4t5NKW-kStation Commander Shares Science with Studentshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUIa685ETgoZero-G Guitar: Re-Learning How To Play In Spacehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLRunqi1mDMSpace OddityA revised version of David Bowie’s Space Oddity, recorded by Commander Chris Hadfield on board the International Space Station.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KaOC9danxNoChris Hadfield Returns to Earthhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KxOp_Rd8_cAA Nemzetközi Űrállomást bele kéne lőni az óceánbahttp://cink.hu/a-nemzetkozi-urallomast-bele-kene-loni-az-oceanba-505214759Űrséta a Beszélő kockák Facebook oldalonhttps://www.facebook.com/BeszeloKockak/posts/157829857729098A 35. legénység visszatérése a Beszélő kockák Facebook oldalonhttps://www.facebook.com/BeszeloKockak/posts/158606064318144Mars Onehttp://applicants.mars-one.com/Elindult az űrbe a Tévémaci (1980)“Az útipoggyászban egyébként olyan tárgyak kaptak helyet, mint a budapesti felszabadulási emlékmű kicsinyített mása, a Magyar Népköztársaság alkotmánya és a lenini Békedekrétum, egy dobozka föld és természetesen a Tévémaci bábfigurája, akivel Farkas Bertalan fenntartózkodásának egyik estéjén együtt mondott esti mesét a magyar gyerekeknek.”http://www.hir24.hu/idogep/2010/05/26/elindult-az-urbe-a-tevemaci-1980/Egy úr az űrbőlhttp://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egy_%C3%BAr_az_%C5%B1rb%C5%91lMork And Mindy TV Show Opening Theme Season One 1978http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EbEBErvW-Uc
Commander Chris Hadfield shared some inspirational advice on how to survive lockdown, his admiration for Cork's Adam King and his favourite space movies. The 745 Secret Sound Jackpot is now worth €5400 and there's a new addition to the Foley's.
Steve chats with astronaut and musician Commander Chris Hadfield about making music in space, what to do if you break a guitar string whilst in orbit and how Chris' extraordinary career has always involved music. Chris ends the episode by playing his beautiful 'space carol' "Jewel in the Night".Stay safe and have fun, quaranteam. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
What if I told you that it's possible to find grace and flow in the middle of chaos? What if I said you could learn how to dance in liminal space and be a rock star, a liminal kind of rockstar. It's all about releasing expectation and connecting to the things that matter the most. Music by Terry Hughes Links: S1E9 COVID-19 A Ritual for Flow Upside Down & Inside Out OK Go - Upside Down & Inside Out BTS - How We Did It Full Transcript We're nearing the end of the year. It's been 9-12 months in the COVID space, depending on what part of the world you're in. And we're not done. What if I told you that it's possible to find grace and flow in the middle of chaos? What if I said you could learn how to dance in liminal space and be a rock star, a liminal kind of rockstar. It's all about releasing expectation and connecting to the things that matter the most. This is Shame Piñata. I’m Colleen Thomas. Welcome to Shame Piñata, where we talk about creating rites of passage for real-life transitions. I've been thinking a lot lately about peace and grace and COVID sanity. I was struck by something I heard from recently from Dietician and Chef Alicia Connor. She said, "Let go of the past. Accept the now. Hang tight." There's so much wisdom in that. Because we can't go back. Even though we might be wishing with every fiber of our being for restrictions to be lifted and life to go back to normal, really, there's no going back. We've come so far in this weird COVID journey that we know things will never be the same. They'll just be new and different at best. Today we're going to break down Alicia's statement and spend some time reflecting on each part of it. We'll look at what letting go can mean, both in terms of COVID and in terms of regular life. We'll explore the now, with all of its discomfort and liminality. And we'll talk about what hanging tight in the strangeness of that now can be like, and how we can find our balance there. As we move toward the end of the calendar year and those of us in the northern hemisphere deepen into the winter season, the stage is set to support us in a natural process of letting go. Winter is a wonderful teacher for rest and hibernation, releasing what's ready to fall away with the leaves and rest beneath the snow. At the same time the winter holidays focus us on light, life and connection, the earth grows quiet. If we create some time to sit in the quiet, maybe even in the darkness which begins so early now, and notice what's ready to be released, we may find old things, old beliefs, old hurts, hard feelings that are still hanging around from old relationships, bits and bobs we haven't forgiven others for (or forgiven ourselves for). And we might even find some deeper things like old blankets of shame we've walked around in for years, or things we've carried that maybe aren’t even ours. Letting go can mean many things. Letting go can mean honoring ourselves for holding these things, honoring the people at the other end of cords, grudges or miscommunications. Letting go can mean laying some things down, letting them drop into the earth. Releasing attachments. It can also mean releasing expectations. Expectations for a return to normalcy, expectations for simple answers to the complexity of our world today. It can mean allowing the mandala of this moment to exist, all things existing at the same time in the same place. Happy things, joyful things, sad things, heart-wrenching things... all woven together as part of the whole. Letting go is important for our mental health, our nervous systems, and our basic ability to cope with change. Releasing any rigidity in our body, our mind, and our heart can help us soften and flow with what actually is. But as we've been exploring this season on Shame Piñata, being in the now is not always comfortable or fun or even doable. We may find, when we try to quiet our mind or body that we're quickly distracted by thoughts or sensations. Similar distractions may pop up when we learn of some new scary fact or hear a hard story. Our nervous systems protect us. It strives to keep us in balance and to block out overwhelm, at least mine does. Sometimes if something is just too much, or there's been too much intensity for too long, I kind of leave the room. My eyes glaze over. The person I'm with knows I'm not really listening anymore. I'm just beyond my tolerance level at that moment. This is normal. Especially now. I'd love it if we could give ourselves permission, and give others around us permission, to stop for a moment when we pop a nervous system fuse and take a break. Maybe take a breath. Because resistance to overwhelm is actually a healthy and sane response to a crazy situation. The thing about the now is that it's sort of timeless, right? It's "this now moment", which makes it both a single moment and all time and space at once. How do we make sense of a long string of "this now moments"? We can get kind of lost. It all can become sort of gelatinous. Most of us are used to a schedule or a rhythm of events.... this could be daily... this could be annual. We're used to making sense of things through life rhythms. Summer travel plans, weekly health routines, a daily schedule of meeting or other events. Liminality itself can be kind of brutal. Marking time, floating... it's almost like we're treading water while we hang out waiting to see how things will land. I was thinking about navigating liminality and an image popped in my head from a music video by the band OKGO. Stick with me here because I know this is a bit of a jump. If you haven't seen the OKGO video for Upside Down & Inside Out, you need to. Not only because it will help illustrate my point, but also because it's an amazing video. It's the only music video I've ever seen that was filmed in zero gravity, excepting of course Commander Chris Hadfield singing Space Oddity on the International Space Station. When I think of liminality, I see the OKGO band members swimming around the inside of a plane as it flies in parabolas in the skies over Moscow. The video was filmed on a jet plane that was flying up and down in great sweeps called parabolas. Each parabola gave the band 27 seconds of weightlessness to perform a piece of their zero g choreography. They filmed the video in one take as the plane completed 8 parabolas, pausing in place in between weightless peaks and then cutting out the paused sections. The video was directed by lead singer Damian Kulash and his sister Trish Sie. In one of the many behind the scenes videos, the two spoke about the process the band went through in learning to move around in a zero gravity environment. Damian said, "Most people's response to weightlessness is just to start swimming," to which Trish added, "It takes some time to train your body not to flail around. Kicking and paddling when you're in the air is not the same as kicking and paddling in water. You just look panicked." And there are many frames of the band members kicking and flailing around, looking pretty uncomfortable in their first test flights. But by the time they filmed the video, they had found their way around and learned how to glide here or push off that thing to head over there. They were doing complex choreography in periods which bridged the divide from double gravity into weightlessness. They moved almost as efficiently as the aerial dancers they brought in as flight attendants. I share this image with you to illustrate that it takes some time to find our grace and flow in liminality. We're not born to it. We're used the reliable gravity of our everyday lives. When that basic force is gone, we can feel lost within the task of simply moving from point A to point B. But once we get it, we can do it. We can even find grace in liminality. And as song says, "Gravity's just a habit that you're pretty sure you can't break." So here we are hanging tight. In this moment. And now in this moment. How can we support ourselves in keeping on going as the moments go by? Here's a simple ritual sketch you might try out and adapt in any way that support your current situation. So first we might take a deep breath and sit with the concept of centering. What does centering feel like today? What is center? Where is center? And then we might ground down into the earth and allow our bodies to land and quiet a bit. As we sit in the stillness, we can begin to notice any energetic cords we are connected to, cords that others may have placed on us, cords we may have put out into the world to keep track of things or to keep our balance. Things we love. Things we fear. Things we're attached to. We can notice those and let them dissolve, connecting instead to ourselves and to the earth, growing a bit heavier as we connect again down. Amongst the cords we may find expectations or attachments to outcomes. Rigid expectations we might have for ourselves or for others. Rigidity. Need. Attachment. We can play with releasing those, just play, and see what it feels like to be floating safely in the now. Then we might call to mind a place where we feel safe and good. Maybe a place we've been, or a place we've seen pictures of. A place where there are no worries. A place where we can vision and dream for a bit. And in this place we can ask ourselves, "What's important? What do I know in my core? What's one thing that really matters to me?" and see what comes. And as images arise, we can quietly let them wash over us. Things we love. Things that matter. Things that define us because of our unwavering connection to them. Timeless things. True things. Core things. And we can welcome these things into our consciousness and thank them for being part of our life and our heart. And then we might make sure we're still connected to the good earth, take a few deep breaths, and return to the room where we can do some journaling about how to create more connection to those things on a daily basis. How to let them become our anchors during this floaty, liminal time while we're still paddling around in zero gravity. We can't go back. And there's no forward to go to yet. So for now, we wait. And we float, and we Zoom, and we knit or bake, and wash our hands, and wear masks and make thoughtful choices. There's kind of really just the now. There is simultaneously no return to what was, to the life we had before COVID, and no next life yet. Let go of the past. Accept the now. Hang tight. Our music is by Terry Hughes. Be sure to subscribe on your favorite podcast player to make sure you're notified when new episodes are released. Learn more at shamepinata.com. I’m Colleen Thomas. Thanks for listening.
Episode 6, we put on our crowns with Imperial City Brew House (https://www.imperialcitybrew.com/). A brewery that focuses on brewing with premium ingredients and is owned/operated by a group of friends. We discuss two beers, the first is the Goodbye Gravity made in honour of Commander Chris Hadfield and the second is a fan favourite: Milkshake IPA. Imperial started off with its fair share of struggles but has found success through instilling a sense of community into their pints. Finally, the episode will finish with a discussion around how we became a podcast, where the idea came from and where we see this going. Instagram: CraftBeerConns - YouTube/Untappd: Craft Beer Connoisseurs Feel free to throw us a comment, like and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to your podcasts!
"Peter Katz ( @PeterKatzmusic) is an JUNO Award, Canadian Screen Award and 2-time Canadian Folk Music Award-nominated singer-songwriter who has spent the past 10+ years touring internationally. He has sold out premiere venues around the world and his latest release ‘We Are The Reckoning' was hailed by CBC Radio host Tom Power as: “one of the most heartfelt, beautiful and vulnerable records of the year… an astonishing record”. Peter's music has been featured on several TV shows and movies like Lethal Weapon, Reign, Sign Sealed and Delivered, Felicity, For Your Consideration, Hello Goodbye, Alias, Heartland and more, as well as on CBC Television's 2016 Rio Olympics / Paralympics coverage. He has shared the stage and studio with the likes of Academy Award Winner Glen Hansard (Once, The Frames) and legendary icon Garth Hudson (The Band). Peter is also a 4-time TEDx fellow and gifted public speaker, being called on to give keynote talks to everyone from the 4000 delegates at the International Aeronautical Federation Conference (alongside Commander Chris Hadfield and Cirque du Soleil), to countless companies and organizations like Bell, Xerox, Royal Lepage, RBC, The Canadian Securities Establishment, The C-Suite Network and more. " Please visit www.peterkatz.com or www.peterkatzspeaks.com or follow along @peterkatzmusic on all socials #TheESpotwithCamille #CamilleKauer #PeterKatz #JunoAward --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/camillekauer/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/camillekauer/support
Welcome to episode 170 of the EdTech Situation Room from March 25, 2020, where technology news meets educational analysis. This week Jason Neiffer (@techsavvyteach) and Wesley Fryer (@wfryer) welcomed Eric Langhorst (@elanghorst) back as a special guest. Topics for the show included ongoing impacts of COVID-19 on schools, teachers and students, new product announcements from Apple, a discussion on whether or not home workers should leave smart speakers turned on, and more. Helpful and practical suggestions for remote teaching / online teaching for K-12 as well as university instructors / faculty from Carl Hooker (@mrhooker) and Jose Bowen (@josebowen) were highlighted. Geeks of the Week included Masterclass courses (including an AMAZING one about Space by Commander Chris Hadfield, Virtual Learning Leadership Alliance resources for remote teaching during the COVID-19 crisis, the CloudReady from Neverware ChromeOS operating system (free for home use.) Additional Geeks of the Week were an ongoing blog post series about educational technology and COVID-19 by Wes, Google Nest WiFi, and an upcoming free webinar on "Protecting Yourself and Your Family Online." Peggy George (@pgeorge) shared some excellent links during our show as well, including a new daily email newsletter with 10 helpful covid19EDU links (nuzzel.com/pgeorge). Access archived MP3 audio and smaller 360P video archives of this and past shows on edtechSR.com. Our show was live streamed and archived simultaneously on YouTube Live as well as our Facebook Live page via StreamYard.com. Please follow us on Twitter @edtechSR for updates, and join us LIVE on Wednesday nights (normally) if you can at 10 pm Eastern / 9 pm Central / 8 pm Mountain / 7 pm Pacific or 3 am UTC. All shownotes are available on http://edtechSR.com/links.
Today, it's all about being prepared for what might come and the advice of Commander Chris Hadfield in his book 'An Astronaut's Guide To Life On Earth' - which is on my recommend list if you find yourself with any free time lately. :) Also, exercises today and writing postcards to lovely people.Support: bit.ly/SharkeyPatreon See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Lynda Steele Show - Continued COVID19 Pandemic Coverage In this episode, we talk about your employment rights, we chat with Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart, talk about how the homeless might be dealing with this, and more. Remember to wash your hands, self-isolate and stay home at all costs if you are sick. Even if you aren't sick, unless it is essential, stay home. The Lynda Steele Full Show podcast includes all the individual segments that can be found on the Lynda Steele Show page, digitally stitched together for your convenience. Listen live online at globalnews.ca/radio/cknw/ 2-6 PM! Follow the team on Twitter: Lynda Steele @steeletalk On Air Contributor Eric Chapman @EricIncredible Lead Producer @Alan_Regan Technical / Content Producer @AmirsDoingitAll (Feel free to give me feedback on the podcast too!)
If there's anyone who knows anything about being isolated, it's Chris Hadfield. You must listen to this. Chris Hadfield is the first Canadian Astronaut to walk in space
This week on The Children's Hour, hear our chat with astronaut Christina Koch who is aboard the International Space Station recorded live at the University of New Mexico with an audience of over 600 students. This was a rare and out of this world opportunity for students to engage with NASA astronauts, space experts and other space enthusiasts in an interactive atmosphere. Astronaut Christina Koch, photo courtesy of NASA The Kids Crew also spoke with UNM Biologist David Hanson about his experiments on the ISS learning about photosynthesis in space. We were joined on stage by Kennedy Space Center scientist Kurt Leucht, who's working on NASA's future plans to live on Mars and the Moon. Plus we spoke with NASA researcher and New Mexico biologist Jacob Torres, who's green chile plants are heading to the ISS in the spring of 2020. Finally, is there life on Mars? Professor Newsom from UNM's Mars Space Laboratory tells us what they are finding with the Mars Rover. Learn more about NASA, and use their many curriculum modules for kids. Find more info here. Check out the unedited full video interview with Christina Koch, courtesy of NASA Stem Engagement: https://youtu.be/ucuUywOC9zg It's a jam packed show! With music by Michael Franti & Spearhead, David Tobocman, Commander Chris Hadfield, and Billy Bragg doing Woody Guthrie.
If you need advice for the best way to move house, predict the weather or take a selfie, Randall Munroe, the creator of the webcomic xkcd, can’t help you.But if you’re willing to get creative, Randall’s book How To: Absurd Scientific Advice for Common Real-World Problems (£16.99, John Murray Press) will show you the worst ways to solve your problems, with some help from tennis star Serena Williams and astronaut Commander Chris Hadfield along the way.In this episode of the Science Focus Podcast, Randall talks to online assistant Sara Rigby about why the worst solution to a problem can be the most interesting.Subscribe to the Science Focus Podcast on these services: Acast, iTunes, Stitcher, RSS, OvercastLet us know what you think of the episode with a review or a comment wherever you listen to your podcasts.Listen to more episodes of the Science Focus Podcast:Bill Bryson: What should we know about how our bodies work?Jim Al-Khalili: Why should we care about science and scientists?Dr Tilly Blyth: How has art influenced science?Gretchen McCulloch: How has the internet affected how we communicate?Richard Dawkins: Can we live in a world without religion?Are Generation Z our only hope for the future? – John Higgs See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Trigger Warning: Abuse (while discussing case law)On this weeks episode we discuss 2001: A Space Odyssey (1969), learn about Flag States, self defence laws, and mutiny. Mostly We make a lot of jokes and get distracted by my alleged feud with Canadian Astronaut Chris Hadfield.Check out Peter Watts' book Blindsight available here: https://www.rifters.com/real/Blindsight.htm Portion of Commander Chris Hadfield's cover of SPACE ODDITY. Writers. Bowie. Publisher. ESSEX MUSIC INTERNATIONAL, INC.Theme Song by Greg MelchinSpace Lawyers is a Copyright of Adam Norton and Greg Melchin 2017.Corrections: #1 I misspoke; culpable homicide that is not murder (did not intend the death) is manslaughter; Culpable homicide that is murder (intended death) is either second or first degree depending on the state or countries’ criminal laws. #2 Self defence by a computer should not be conflated with battered women's syndrome as there are obvious sociocultural and legal differences; I apologize for trivializing that reality.
Commander Chris Hadfield joined Derringer this morning to talk all things Space and to promote "ELEVATE" Canada's Tech Festival happening here in Toronto Sept. 20th -26th. The Daily Derringer Podcast --Friday, Aug 9th 2019 Check out more full episodes at Q107.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Celebrating 50 years since we first walked on the moon. Andrew Smith reveals the stories of what the moon walkers did next in a brand new reissue of ‘Moondust” (Starts at 2.08) Robert Kirkwood explores the works of fact and fiction inspired by space exploration. (21.15) Commander Chris Hadfield reflects on his time as an astronaut. (34.43) And we return to Andrew Smith for the Books of his Life (46.15)
Successful Living Show Guest: Commander Chris Hadfield
This week, Michael and James start off by chatting about Commander Chris Hadfield and the ins and outs of tanning before debuting their majestic new segment “Royal Wedding Tips.” Then, unconventional Toronto priest Father Darren Springer stops by to offer Michael some constructive criticism and bond with James. Support The Landlord and Tenant Podmess Brought to you By: The Sonar Network
Commander Chris Hadfield joined Dan to talk all about his trips into space and his brand new kids book The Darkest Dark! Dan put some of your questions about space to him and just had to ask him about that super famous music video he filmed while on the International Space Station! Plus, Marina Ventura is finding out all about weather, we find out about awesome scanners that can read ancient Egyptian codes, and we discover the answer to why we sometimes get the feeling of butterflies in our tummies!how many stars are in the galaxy? Join Fun Kids Podcasts+: https://funkidslive.com/plusSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
If you combine crushing it on your socials with posts from outer space and also being an astronaut with a perfect mustache, you get Commander Chris Hadfield. The astronaut that other astronauts look at and think, "Now that's an astronaut!" Adam sat down with the man who famously sang 'Ground control to Major Tom' from the International Space Station and to ask, how does shaving work in space to maintain such a perfect mustache? As well as some other important space related questions. Connect with Adam Spencer at: https://twitter.com/adambspencer Find LiSTNR on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LiSTNRau/ Follow LiSTNR on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/listnrau/ Follow LiSTNR Australia on Twitter: https://twitter.com/listnrau Download the LiSTNR app from the Apple and Google Play app stores. Or go to listnr.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
After Led Zeppelin was voted the best live band, according to a new poll -- we're talking about our favourite concerts and the best performances we've seen. We have a story that might make you rethink using Airbnb services. Ryan tells us what he wanted to be growing up. And astronaut Chris Hadfield drops by the studio to talk space! Definitely Derringer for Thursday October 12, 2017 For more Derringer click here. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
How will we engineer our way off this planet and into the future? Commander Chris Hadfield and co-host Scott Adsit explore the options with biorobotics engineer Katherine Pratt, mechanical engineer Suveen Mathaudu, Maeve Higgins, and, via holographic projection, Stephen Hawking. NOTE: StarTalk All-Access subscribers can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free: https://www.startalkradio.net/all-access/startalk-live-from-future-con-engineering-the-future-part-1/
The Show Notes Barenaked Ladies Intro My CV Doing God’s Work Ask George - Copyright? from Blake in Colorado - Condolences? from Scott - Earworm? from Donovan W. Wanting Social Interaction Religious Moron of the Week - Metropolitan Kornily from Bill Dowling NECSS is next week! Rupert McClannahan’s Indestructible Bastards - Navy SEAL Senior Chief Mike Day PFA at Weyerbacher Brewery on Saturday Show close ................................... Mentioned in the Show Philadelphia Funk Authority at Weyerbacher Brewery Saturday June 24th 1-6 (PFA plays 2 to 6) 905 Line Street, Easton, PA 18042 Geo's grief talk: "Unbelief and Grief: Thinking critically about loss and mourning" From Ms. Info, a favorite moment in music history: Chris Hadfield and Barenaked Ladies and the Wexford Gleeks “I.S.S. (Is Somebody Singing)” I.S.S. Commander Chris Hadfield joins The Barenaked Ladies and the Wexford Gleeks in the first space-to-earth musical collaboration. The song, "I.S.S. (Is Somebody Singing) was commissioned by CBCMusic.ca and The Coalition for Music Education with the Canadian Space Agency to celebrate music education in schools across Canada. ................................... Geologic Podcast Patronage Subscribe and information on subscription levels. ................................... Sign up for the mailing list: Write to Geo! A reminder that the portal to the Geologic Universe is at GeorgeHrab.com. Thanks to Joseph at Pixel + Spoke. Score more data from the Geologic Universe! Get George's Non-Coloring Book at Lulu, both as and E-BOOK and PRINT editions. Check out Geo's wiki page thanks to Tim Farley. Have a comment on the show, a Religious Moron tip, or a question for Ask George? Drop George a line and write to Geo's Mom, too!
Commander Chris Hadfield (check out our full episode with him here) was the first Canadian to walk in space, but the experience went far from smoothly. In this Minisode Monday, he explains how he went temporarily blind but still managed to finish the task before him -- and what we on Earth might learn from his ordeal. The Cheat Sheet: Humans didn't evolve in zero gravity; you can never overtrain for life in orbit. If you can't navigate to the bathroom in the middle of the night, imagine trying to build a robot in space without being able to see. When something goes wrong, an astronaut must heed the immortal words of Douglas Adams: "Don't panic." We could all learn from what Chris Hadfield did when he found himself blind in space. What would you do if you were in his astroboots? To learn more about social dynamics and productivity hacks, take the Art of Charm Challenge by clicking here, or text CHARMED to 33444. Also be sure to check out our Social Capital Intensive here! Let us know about how you put today's Minisode Monday into practice! Tweet with @TheArtofCharm in your response or write to Jordan directly: jordan@theartofcharm.com (he actually reads everything)! Does your business have an Internet presence? Now save a whopping 50% on new webhosting packages here with HostGator by using coupon code CHARM! Listen to The Art of Charm, Forbes Network, and hundreds of your favorite podcasts with the free PodcastOne app (on iOS and Android) here! Find out more about the team who makes The Art of Charm podcast here! Show notes at https://theartofcharm.com/podcast-episodes/minisode-monday-58-chris-hadfield-boss-space/ HELP US SPREAD THE WORD! If you dig the show, please subscribe in iTunes and write us a review! This is what helps us stand out from the crowd and help people find the credible advice they need. Review the show in iTunes! We rely on it! http://www.theartofcharm.com/mobilereview Stay Charming!
Learn about how Roman and prehistoric worlds are within reach just beneath Britain's surface. Then hear Commander Chris Hadfield describe what he's captured in his photos of our planet, taken from 250 miles away. And listeners share highlights of their travels in Israel and Palestine. For more information on Travel with Rick Steves - including episode descriptions, program archives and related details - visit www.ricksteves.com.
We talk to Canadian astronaut Commander Chris Hadfield and his son Evan Hadfield about their recent exploration into the Arctic and Greenland on the legendary icebreaker, Kapitan Khlebnikov.
On this week's Dad's Hour, Mick was joined by our resident Dads Iain and Che and we thought we'd put their knowledge to the test on kids TV. We quizzed the Dad's to see how much they knew about children's TV shows through the decades. Mick was also joined by special guest and out of this world Dad, Commander Chris Hadfield! He was telling us about the children's book he has wrote and what it's like being a Dad from afar.
Commander Chris Hadfield joined Dan to talk all about his trips into space and his brand new kids book The Darkest Dark! Dan put some of your questions about space to him and just had to ask him about that super famous music video he filmed while on the International Space Station!
On This Edition of the Zoomer Week in Review:Libby is joined by Commander Chris Hadfield to talk about his time on the International Space Station and his new book "An Astronaut's Guide To Life On Earth".Plus, we'll hear excerpts from a panel discussion about our health care system that took place during the 6th Annual ZoomerLife Conference.
Phil, TJ, Augie, Drew, and Chris had the opportunity to speak with Canadian astronaut, pilot and engineer Commander Chris Hadfield about his experiences in space, and asked him a few questions about the past, present, and future of space exploration. A transcript of this episode is available here n http://www.csh.rit.edu/~tj/chrisHadfieldInterviewTranscript.txt
Phil, TJ, Augie, Drew, and Chris had the opportunity to speak with Canadian astronaut, pilot and engineer Commander Chris Hadfield about his experiences in space, and asked him a few questions about the past, present, and future of space exploration. A transcript of this episode is available here n https://www.csh.rit.edu/~tj/chrisHadfieldInterviewTranscript.txt
This week, we're beyond thrilled to bring you Commander Chris Hadfield: retired NASA astronaut, first Canadian to walk in space, phenomenally engaging speaker, and YouTube sensation. We were incredibly privileged to get some time with Chris and chat about the importance of grit and determination (in the face of seemingly impossible odds), the overview effect, how the Journey to Mars can be the next generation's moon landing, becoming a pop culture celebrity while in space, and his upcoming video series for kids.
Chris Hadfield - Lessons From An Astronaut - Part 1 of 2. FREE FULL EPISODE: http://londonrealacademy.com/episodes/ Chris Hadfield is a retired Canadian astronaut who was the first Canadian to walk in space. An engineer and former Royal Canadian Air Force fighter pilot, Chris Hadfield has flown two space shuttle missions and served as commander of the International Space Station. Chris, who was raised on a farm in southern Ontario, was inspired as a child when he watched the Apollo 11 Moon landing on TV. He attended high school in Oakville and Milton and earned his glider pilot licence as a member of the Royal Canadian Air Cadets. He joined the Canadian Armed Forces and earned an engineering degree at Royal Military College. While in the military he learned to fly various types of aircraft and eventually became a test pilot and flew several experimental planes. As part of an exchange program with the United States Navy and United States Air Force, he obtained a master's degree in aviation systems at the University of Tennessee Space Institute. In 1992, he was accepted into the Canadian astronaut program by the Canadian Space Agency. He first flew in space aboard STS-74 in November 1995 as a mission specialist. During the mission he visited the Russian space station Mir. In April 2001 he flew again on STS-100 and visited the International Space Station (ISS), where he walked in space and helped to install the Canadarm2. In December 2012 he flew for a third time aboard Soyuz TMA-07M and joined Expedition 34 on the ISS. He was a member of this expedition until March 2013 when he became the commander of the ISS as part of Expedition 35. He was responsible for a crew of five astronauts and helped to run dozens of scientific experiments dealing with the impact of low gravity on human biology. During the mission he also gained popularity by chronicling life aboard the space station and taking pictures of the earth and posting them through Twitter, Facebook, Google+, and Tumblr to a large following of people around the world. He was a guest on television news and talk shows and gained popularity by playing the International Space Station's guitar in space. His mission ended in May 2013 when he returned to earth. Shortly after returning, he announced his retirement, capping a 35-year career as a military pilot and an astronaut. Chris Hadfield's website: http://chrishadfield.ca/ Chris Hadfield on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Cmdr_Hadfield SUBSCRIBE ON YOUTUBE: http://bit.ly/SubscribeToLondonReal LONDON REAL TV: http://www.londonreal.tv MUSIC: A revised version of David Bowie's Space Oddity, recorded by Commander Chris Hadfield on board the International Space Station. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KaOC9danxNo Composition: “SPACE ODDITY” Written by David Bowie Published by Onward Music Limited From the album “Space Sessions: Songs From a Tin Can.” Available everywhere now. CD/LP: http://www.smarturl.it/SpaceSessionsPhys Download: http://www.smarturl.it/SpaceSessionsDL Stream: http://www.smarturl.it/SpaceSesionsStrm David Bowie's Original Space Oddity: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYMCLz5PQVw
Kirsty Young's castaway is Chris Hadfield. He was the first Canadian commander of the International Space Station and took part in three space missions spending a total of 166 days orbiting the Earth. He has spent over 14 hours doing two space walks. He flew his first eight day mission into space in 1995 during which he visited the Russian space station Mir. In 2001 he paid his first visit to the International Space Station to help install Canadarm2, a robot arm helping to build the station which was launched three years previously. In 2012 he began his final five month stay in space on board the ISS. It was on this mission that his videos of life in space - including a film of him singing David Bowie's Space Oddity and accompanying himself on guitar - led to him enjoying a huge following on social media. Chris was born in 1959 in Ontario, the second of five children: his father was a pilot and the family lived on a farm. He mapped out his future career aged nine when he watched Neil Armstrong become the first person to walk on the moon in 1969. In pursuit of his dream Chris first become an Air Cadet, then attended military college, becoming a fighter pilot and then a test pilot, as well as an aeronautical engineer. He finally achieved his ambition of becoming an astronaut in 1992. He went onto become the Chief of Robotics at the NASA Astronaut Office and Chief of International Space Station Operations at the Johnson Space Centre in Houston, Texas. Following his final space mission, Chris retired from the Canadian Space Agency in July 2013. Amongst the awards he's received are the military Meritorious Service Cross, NASA's Exceptional Service Medal and the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Medal. Producer: Cathy Drysdale.
Two times shuttle captain, and with 6 months on the ISS, Commander Chris Hadfield is best qualified to pass on his advice to Major Tim Peake about the science and life in general on the International Space Station. Polar bears walk further Polar bears are having to walk further to stay in the same place. As ice melts in the Arctic, the thin ice is blown around by the wind, making it harder for polar bears to stick to their traditional hunting grounds. Elephant Deterrent By combining a seismic element to the infrasound of recordings of elephant alarm calls, researchers hope to finally develop an audio deterrent to keep marauding elephants from destroying farmland in Africa. Tracking air pollution from space The US space agency satellite, Aura has been tracking trends in emissions of nitrogen oxides for over a decade. It's seen big falls in the pollutant in the US and Europe, while at the same time recording significant increases in some developing nations, such as China and Bangladesh. Air pollution Even if the air pollution trends are getting better in the West, the picture is still very complicated. Not least in London, where nitrogen oxides are still at dangerous levels. Added to this is a rise in smoke pollution from the increasing number of wood burning stoves in the city. Human Evolution Gallery at the Natural History Museum A new gallery of Human Evolution at the Natural History Museum opens on Friday 18th December. Adam gets a sneak preview with Professor Chris Stringer and Dr Louise Humphrey. Spanning 7 million years of evolution, the gallery brings together key fossils and recent evidence such as a reconstructed skull and hand of Homo naledi. It builds up a picture of where we come from and what makes us human. And the picture is far more complex than previously thought, with multiple species living at the same time.
Commander Chris Hadfield tells Michael how he recorded Space Oddity for Songs from a Tin Can amid the whir of the International Space Station and if teen hormones drove him to learn guitar. Chicago leads the nominations for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. We’ve got the voting link for you to fix this obvious mistake. And Erhmagherd! The girl behind the famous goosebumps meme speaks to Vanity Fair about the viral sensation. Plus — how you can join us live on location, win a pair of headphones from Parrot — and why your smartphone isn’t to blame for your sleepless nights. The post Spaceman Spiff appeared first on The Geeks and Beats Podcast with Alan Cross and Michael Hainsworth.
Adam, Will, and Norm discuss the events of Comic-Con 2015 and are joined by Commander Chris Hadfield to discuss one of Adam's Incognito costume walks.
When Neil Armstrong made his first steps on the moon on 21 July 1969, he was watched by over 500million people. Many stayed up through the night to witness it, and those who were children at the time often recall being woken up to see the momentous occasion. Today, numerous scientists, engineers, writers and others cite witnessing the moon landings as an inspiring moment that influenced their choice of career. While achieved by Americans, the positive reaction was international – there was a sense that what had been achieved was on behalf of all mankind, and had opened up a sense of unlimited possibilities. But it is the moon landings’ backdrop of the Cold War space race that perhaps dominates how we view them today. Increasingly, we are given to viewing the Apollo missions as political, with dubious scientific merit – certainly, at least, some argue that the money could have been better spent on less glamorous but more worthy missions like probes or telescopes. Those who are even less charitable see the moon landings as a colossal vanity project, wasting millions that could have been spent alleviating problems here on Earth. Today, the worth of manned space missions is under discussion again, with the Chinese Chang’e 3 lander seen as the start of a push to place taikonauts on the moon within a decade. India has followed suit, making its own plans for a manned landing. The Americans, too, have begun to talk again about returning to the lunar surface. More generally, manned spaceflight seems to be coming back into fashion, as exemplified by the rise to celebrity status of Canadian astronaut Commander Chris Hadfield. Are we witnessing the return of the space race? Are these plans any more than just propaganda missions, aimed at projecting the power of rising countries like India and China? Do the missions have enough scientific merit, and should we celebrate them even if the benefits are slight? Should we have gone to the moon in the first place, or should we have been focusing on more earthly concerns? Speakers Professor Ian Crawford professor of planetary science and astrobiology, Birkbeck College, University of London Ashley Dove-Jay PhD researcher, University of Bristol; programme member on NASA/ESA-related projects David Perks principal, East London Science School; author, What is science education for?; co-author, Sir Richard Sykes Review of school examinations and A defence of subject-based education Dr Jill Stuart visiting fellow, London School of Economics; editor-in-chief, Space Policy Will Whitehorn chairman, Transport Systems Catapult and Speed Communications; former president, Virgin Galactic Chair Craig Fairnington online resources manager, Institute of Ideas
Look at the world in a whole new light: Hear about a view that's "out of this world" as astronaut Commander Chris Hadfield describes the photos he took of Mother Earth from 250 miles away, and what they revealed. We also explore how the Roman and pre-historic worlds are within reach when you dig a little beneath the surface in Britain. And listeners share the highlights of their travels in the Holy Land. For more information on Travel with Rick Steves - including episode descriptions, program archives and related details - visit www.ricksteves.com.
'Tis the season for reality shows; Jeopardy; Commander Chris Hadfield; Sergei Chaban; How to create a cracking speech; What you can and can't do; Three nifty social media updates; An interview with Rebecca Morgan; Music from Jim Boggia
Radio Dale: Music, Musicians and the Canadian Music Industry
The Song of the Summer is the golden ticket, the mountain peak, the World Cup (topical) of the music industry. To have the Song of the Summer is basically saying "Your song is the most successful, memorable, and obnoxiously overplayed song of the year." Last year, 'Blurred Lines' edged out 'Get Lucky,' and the year before Carly Rae was #1 with 'Call Me Maybe.' We offer our predictions for the 2014 Song of the Summer for three genres: Pop, Rock and Country! Radio Dale is the podcast about music, musicians and the Canadian music industry from our unique perspective at the Dale Speaking offices. We help bring indie and established acts to radio, and spread the word online, as well as develop their careers in today's ever-changing music business. This podcast gives away some of our best information for free, and serves as the 'radio show' that broadcast the ideas, observations and insights we discover every day working with Canadian and International artists. THE EPISODE: THIS WEEK IN MUSIC HISTORY: ...Haggard born! Discovered and shared from thisdayinmusic.com WHO CHARTED! ...FRANCE! ROO'S 60 SECOND TIP: ...Teasing your Single: Song of the Summer Edition FEATURED SONG: Its not often that we can say "This week's artist co-wrote this song after he came back to Earth." But in today's case, it's true! Our feature is Emm Gryner and Commander Chris Hadfield's lovely and catchy duet, So Easy! ROUNDTABLE: Who will top the charts in Pop, Rock and Country this year? Amber, Roo and India talk about our choices (with snippets of the songs). We go all over the place...safe, in left field, and even Norway! Listen to hear our selections, and tell us what you think! ---- THE MUSIC: Emm Gryner & Chris Hadfield - So Easy (Feature) Web: http://emmgryner.com Polite Fiction - Come A Little Closer (Intro) Web: http://politefiction.bandcamp.com Gloryhound - Let You Down Again (behind This Week In Music History) Web: http://gloryhoundband.com Toob - Sweet Harmony (behind This Week On The Charts) Soundcloud: http://soundcloud.com/toob-music Elise LeGrow - No Good Woman (First segment of opening theme) RADIO DALE LOGOS courtesy of /r/picrequests on Reddit. This version came from Tracy Mapes, a fantastic designer and artist who is always happy to help with pic requests! Check their stuff at reddit.com/u/Tracy_Mapes --- Subscribe to Radio Dale on iTunes, Stitcher and Podomatic! iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/radio…=4&at=11lsGu Android (RSS): http://dalespeaking.podomatic.com/rss2.xml Podomatic: http://dalespeaking.podomatic.com FIND RADIO DALE & DALE SPEAKING ONLINE: Web: dalespeaking.com Twitter: http://twitter.com/dale_speaking Facebook: http://facebook.com/dalespeaking Email: radiodale@dalespeaking.com (please include the Episode Number in the subject line!) Please review and rate us on iTunes or wherever you consume this podcast so we can reach more independent musicians!
Commander Chris Hadfield, the singing astronaut who spent five months in space at the International Space Station earlier this year, talks to Victoria Derbyshire.
Commander Chris Hadfield discusses all things space with Chris and Matt! He talks about living on the International Space Station for 6 months, how he started using social media to promote space programs, and making music videos in space!
Kobo Writing Life Director Mark Lefebvre interviews Terry Fallis, multi-award winning author of The Best Laid Plans, The High Road and Up and Down. Mark and Terry talk about: • How they met when Mark was a bookseller at McMaster University's bookstore, and Terry, a former McMaster student self-published The Best Laid Plans in 2007. • Mark's comparison of Terry's writing to John Irving • How Terry applied his knowledge of politics and engineering to create the characters of Daniel and Angus (the main characters from The Best Laid Plans and The High Road) • Terry's original nativity when venturing into the realm of self-publishing back in 2006/2007 • How Terry used podcasting to gain a worldwide audience for The Best Laid Plans and was the first Canadian to follow in the footsteps of such podcasting pioneers as Scott Sigler • Mark's original reluctance as a bricks and mortar bookseller to carry The Best Laid Plans or even read this satirical novel of Canadian politics, but how, after a single page, Terry's prose won him over • How, feeling “up” from the McMaster Bookstore launch event led to Fallis deciding to submit The Best Laid Plans to the Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour (which Terry won and which led to his book deal with McClelland and Stewart) • How Terry is thrilled to have Beverly Slopen as his agent and Douglas Gibson as his editor & publisher • Winning November 2010's CBC Canada Reads for the Essential Canadian Novel of the Decade • The importance of local community bookstores and the great relationships that Terry has forged with so many amazing Canadian bookstores (Canadian Booksellers Association honoured Terry with the CBC Libris Author of the Year Award in 2013 • CBC's creation of The Best Laid Plans miniseries (and having lunch with the fictional Angus McClintock in Ottawa during filming) - (which will begin airing January 2014) • Terry's use of humour and heartfelt moments in The Best Laid Plans and The High Road • Terry's membership in the “Write What You Know” club – and how he takes advantage of that by writing about things he already knows a lot about (public relations, politics, etc) rather than spending more time doing research • How Terry's latest novel Up & Down seemed to almost predict the incredible manner by which Commander Chris Hadfield captured the hearts and minds of people who again became interested in the space program. • A bit of insight into Terry's forthcoming (spring 2014) novel No Relation – about a writer with the unfortunate name of Ernest Hemmingway (although spelled differently) who is trying to leave the family business to pursue a writing career • How Terry manages to write novels while working full-time • The importance of writing detailed outlines (each outline approximately 65 page long) and how, when you know that much about the story the efficiency of getting the manuscript completed in about 4 months • How, despite the detailed outlining, how at least half of the comedic moments and humour comes to Terry during the actual writing process • Terry's creative/musical family and the dinnertime family tradition which included the goal of trying to tell a story that would make his stone-faced father laugh • The importance of being true to one's own writing and one's own personality • How there are likely some fine manuscripts sitting in publisher slush piles right now and the opportunities authors have to creating bold new opportunities For this episode's side-bar note, Mark reflects back on Terry's journey into publishing and how he and authors like Scott Sigler used podcasting as a way to help find an audience for his novel. Mark mentions the website Podiobooks.com and using programs such as GarageBand (MAC) or Audacity for creating the audio files. OTHER LINKS/RESOURCES - Terry's books at Kobo: http://store.kobobooks.com/en-ca/Search?Query=terry+fallis - Terry Fallis website - http://terryfallis.com/ - Terry's page for Up and Down - http://terryfallis.com/up-and-down/ - Terry's podcast page for The Best Laid Plans - http://terryfallis.com/the-best-laid-plans/tblp-podcast/ - Terry's Video “An Unorthodox Journey to the published land” - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-_zmv0MICU - Scrivener (http://www.literatureandlatte.com/scrivener.php) - Podiobooks (http://podiobooks.com/)
This week, YouTube launches subscription channels, Amazon mints its own digital currency, BlackBerry messaging comes to iOS & Android, the Tesla S gets the highest praise, and all the latest from Google's I/O developer conference. What We're Playing With Andy: Fez, Google Glass Dwayne: Bioshock Infinite Tosin: Pebble watch Headlines YouTube begins paid subscription pilot Biometric Database of All Adult Americans Hidden in Immigration Reform Amazon launches virtual currency Coins Microsoft drops the Blue codename, confirms Windows 8.1 will be a free upgrade available later this year Audible Book of the Week Star Trek: The Eugenics Wars: The Rise and Fall of Khan Noonien Singh By Greg Cox Sign up at AudibleTrial.com/TheDrillDown Music Break: Surprise Attack from "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan" by James Horner Hot Topic: Google I/O Conference The best of Google's I/O 2013 keynote Google takes on Spotify with Google Play Music All Access subscription service, priced at $9.99 per month Cross-platform Google Play games services unveiled with cloud saving, achievements and multiplayer Google to Sell Its Own Version of Samsung's Galaxy S4 New Google+: Stream, Hangouts, and Photos Next-gen Google Maps brings better imagery, tailored results, and more Google Introduces Conversational Search For The Desktop With “Hotwording,” Prompting It With “OK Google” Larry Page wants to 'set aside a part of the world' for unregulated experimentation Music Break: Major Tom (Völlig losgelöst) by Peter Schilling Final Word BlackBerry bringing BBM to Android and iOS this summer Consumer Reports: The Tesla Model S is our top-scoring car, ever Viral Video of the Week Space Oddity, recorded by Commander Chris Hadfield on board the International Space Station Outro: Space Oddity by David Bowie Subscribe! The Drill Down on iTunes (Subscribe now!) Add us on Stitcher! The Drill Down on Facebook The Drill Down on Twitter Geeks Of Doom's The Drill Down is a roundtable-style audio podcast where we discuss the most important issues of the week, in tech and on the web and how they affect us all. Hosts are Geeks of Doom contributor Andrew Sorcini (Mr. BabyMan), marketing research analyst Dwayne De Freitas, and Startup Digest CTO Christopher Burnor. Occasionally joining them is Box tech consultant Tosin Onafowokan.
#188: What is Shazam? Have you used it? Checking on Music, FIlms, Extra content from advertisers, and so much more - I chat to one of the team at Shazam about this amazing app... Also, Commander Chris Hadfield does more amazing stuff in space - including singing a David Bowie song. Samsung tests 5G mobile speeds and your calls this week on Mobile phone dramas and wireless internet.
#188: What is Shazam? Have you used it? Checking on Music, FIlms, Extra content from advertisers, and so much more - I chat to one of the team at Shazam about this amazing app... Also, Commander Chris Hadfield does more amazing stuff in space - including singing a David Bowie song. Samsung tests 5G mobile speeds and your calls this week on Mobile phone dramas and wireless internet.
#188: What is Shazam? Have you used it? Checking on Music, FIlms, Extra content from advertisers, and so much more - I chat to one of the team at Shazam about this amazing app... Also, Commander Chris Hadfield does more amazing stuff in space - including singing a David Bowie song. Samsung tests 5G mobile speeds and your calls this week on Mobile phone dramas and wireless internet.