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From now until January 11, Writers Talking - a series of eight conversations from our archives.In his first book, The Skin We're In, journalist and activist Desmond Cole challenged the complacency of people who believe Canada is a post-racial nation. He chronicled one year in the struggle against racism in this country. In March 2020, Desmond Cole joined Lorraine Chisholm in the Coop Radio studios for a lively and engaging conversation about the realities that Black people face every day in Canada.
Somehow Joe & David have managed to secure a spot on Coop Radio. But now they have to record ten professional links for them. That's clearly never going to happen. Follow Chatabix on Twitter & Instagram:twitter.com/chatabix1www.instagram.com/chatabixpodcast/Patreon for early access to our eps: https://www.patreon.com/chatabixCrunchy fresh tees and hoodies: https://chatabixshop.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
2021/11/08配信。 樋口塾生有志による、オンライン&録音による合奏第2弾! 著作権の関係上、合奏はYouTube(下記URL)でお楽しみください♪ ゆるゆる合奏部 第2回発表会 『ドラえもんメドレー』 https://youtu.be/h98BVkn537o ※第1回発表会はこちら ゆるゆる合奏部 第1回発表会 『みんなあつまれ』 https://youtu.be/QT7uNl97bgo 【メンバーのポッドキャスト番組】 ●シュウ 「シュウの放すラジオ」 https://anchor.fm/sakashushu 「シュウっ放し」 https://radiotalk.jp/program/75943 「シュウとショウの未知の理への道のり」 https://anchor.fm/michinori ●Takeru 「OneTalkOnePint」 https://anchor.fm/takerukruk 「OneTalkOneMinute」 https://radiotalk.jp/program/75667 ●らっきー 「石垣ラジオ」 https://anchor.fm/ishigakiradio 「ハルサーのつぶやき」 https://anchor.fm/u3066u3043u3060u306cu30d5 ●つかのま 「つかのまの音声」 https://stand.fm/channels/6054a2912b49b926c83fd0eb ●Cija 「Cija's TABLE TALK」 https://anchor.fm/suni-cija ●バナナ 「永遠の罠」 https://anchor.fm/-31000 ●Mo 「毎日お祝いしよう!」 https://anchor.fm/mo427 ●むらさき 「むらさきの波」 https://anchor.fm/murasakinonami 「COOP RADIO(仮)」 https://anchor.fm/coopradio ●まちゃこ 「RastaCafe」 https://anchor.fm/masako727
This Week on Talk Recovery Radio This week on Talk Recovery Radio CEO of Prodigal Recovery and radio show host of Recovery Hope Mark Marcley joins us followed by Marika Paquin who is an Occupational Therapist, Psychotherapist for the Sensory-Enhanced Yoga Institute. Join us for a full hour on Facebook Live and Coop Radio 100.5fm. Prodigal Recovery We want you to know there is hope, but we don't want to give you false hope. Recovery is difficult, it takes work, determination and a lot of prayer. At Prodigal Recovery, you will see we offer many of the tools necessary to remain drug and alcohol-free. There are, however, many other tools and resources in our community to help ensure your recovery. As an individual, you need to be proactive to implement as much as you can into your schedule to ensure your long-term recovery. Another thing that is very important and I hear repeated often, is the need to have fun. We can help you do that here as well. In addition to 7 large bedrooms with 12 very nice and comfortable beds, here are some of the things we offer other than a well-structured and disciplined home. Website | Facebook Recovering Hope Our new interactive radio show, Recovering Hope, is broadcast every Wednesday evening from 6-7PM on 106.7 FM, The Big Talker. It will air live on the Recovering Hope FB page as well as on bigtalkerfm.com, and be sure to subscribe to the podcast version to catch the show after it airs. We'll cover all aspects of recovery, and hear stories from our community. Tune in! Facebook | Website | YouTube Channel | Spotify Sensory Enhanced Yoga Marika Paquin is an Occupational Therapist, Psychotherapist for the Sensory-Enhanced Yoga Institute. The Sensory-Enhanced Yoga Institute (SEYI) is a professional educational organization that trains yoga instructors, yoga therapists, licensed health professionals, and educators in the evidence informed practices of Sensory-Enhanced Yoga® and also directly serves traumatized and highly stressed populations (such as military veterans, emergency responders, victims of sexual trauma, victims of domestic violence, and students with special needs) through outreach efforts, program development and operation, and research. Sensory-Enhanced Yoga® applies techniques from sensory-based occupational therapy practices as well as recent findings from the fields of neurobiology and trauma psychology to address core symptoms of PTSD and related quality of life factors. The program is especially informed by the highly successful treatment protocol used in the Iraq Yoga Study with deployed U.S. military personnel (Stoller et al, 2012), from which the program evolved, as well the specialized expertise of the SEYI faculty. Lynn Stoller, founding President of the Sensory-Enhanced Yoga® Institute, is both a certified yoga therapist and a registered occupational therapist certified in sensory integration (SIPT). Lynn co-developed the treatment protocol used in the Iraq Yoga Study and has continued to build on her original ideas and writings during the course of her work with veterans in her local community, her experiences as a former faculty member of Warriors at Ease, and her intensive studies through Joseph LePage's Integrative Yoga Therapy program. Several additional faculty members contribute enormously to the expertise of the program. Some discovered the great healing power of yoga and meditation during the course of their own personal journeys and struggles, and all have achieved a high level of specialized education and expertise in the subject. All are registered yoga teachers or certified yoga therapists, and most are also licensed professional health care providers. Two are very highly accomplished and decorated military veterans. We also have a certified special education teacher and occupational therapist who will co-lead the institute's S.M.Y.L.E.™ (Sensory and Mindfulness-based Yoga for Learning Environments) program. Please click here to read the bios of our highly talented faculty. Facebook | Website Marika Paquin Marika has been working as an occupational therapist with motor vehicle accident claimants since 1993, with a focus on clients with mild-to-moderate acquired brain injury, who have musculoskeletal, neurological, cognitive and/or psychosocial issues, including Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. She has been working with Canadian veterans since 2010, with a focus on physical disability, mental health and PTSD. Marika has been using principals of yoga in treatment for many years. She initially trained as a Hatha Yoga teacher through Sivananda, and went on to do trainings focusing on using yoga in physical and mental health rehabilitation, such as Structural Yoga Therapy, Warriors at Ease, Yoga of the Heart, Veterans Yoga Project, and Mindful Resilience. Marika consults about Mental Health Occupational Therapy and Sensory Enhanced Yoga® in the treatment of PTSD traumatized veterans and soldiers in Ukraine. She is part of a group that has facilitated Occupational Therapy education in Ukraine. Marika serves as a faculty member of the Sensory-Enhanced Yoga® Institute.
Tenants are artists. What makes some forms of culture attractive to real estate and developer interests? Does the support of art by real estate make Vancouver a culturally vibrant city? First, we hear from Alice, an artist and tenant at The Belvedere building in Vancouver's Mount Pleasant neighbourhood, who organized with her neighbours to fight round after round of profit motivated evictions. If you live or work in Mount Pleasant, you've probably noticed the large amount of murals going up around the neighbourhood — there's even one on the Belvedere. Mural Fest is one of many art projects backed by developers. Helena and Sydney talk a little bit about the organization and some other protests that artists and anti-displacement activists have had against Mural Fest donor and large scale developer Westbank. We then play footage from a radio segment that aired on Coop Radio 100.5 FM covering the Rave Against Renovictions, where artists held a rally outside Mural Fest donor, developer and Lululemon founder Chip Wilson's house. These were in response to recent evictions of artist spaces by Wilson's company Low Tide Properties. Helena speaks with artist and organizer Tascha Speck about the event. Episode Credits: Produced by Helena Krobath and Sydney Ball. “Rave Against Renovictions” originally aired on Vancouver Co-op Radio. Thanks to VIVO Media Arts Centre, BC Arts Council, Vancouver Tenants Union organizers, and tenants who shared their stories
This week on Talk Recovery Radio This week on Talk Recovery Radio Dr. Daniel Barton joins the show to talk about The Nashville Ketamine Centre and ketamine infusion therapy, on the second half of the show Dr. Sheila Forman talks about the question "Do you use Food to Cope?" on Coop Radio 100.5fm and on Facebook Live. Dr. Daniel Barton My name is Daniel Barton and I come from a long line of “Bartons” that have cared for the mental health needs of Nashvillians for over 3 decades. My father is a psychiatrist and educator, and one of the three founders of Alive Hospice. My mother is a clinical social worker, marital therapist, who along with a few colleagues, was responsible for bringing the mediation movement to the state of Tennessee. My brother practices psychiatry in Nashville as well. I am honored to carry on this tradition by sitting on the frontier of a new and exciting chapter in psychiatry and being one of the few psychiatrists in the state to offer ketamine therapy for patients in the Nashville community and beyond. Nashville Ketamine Centre About The Nashville Ketamine Center: The Nashville Ketamine Center offers cutting edge ketamine infusion therapy for those dealing with treatment resistant depression of both unipolar and bipolar depression. Ketamine offers fast relief of symptoms for those that have been suffering for too long. We treat patients in the comfortable and calming environment of our Nashville, Tennessee office. We also serve the communities of our neighboring cities of Memphis, Chattanooga, and Knoxville as well as the nearby states of Georgia, Alabama, Kentucky, and Mississippi. Website | Facebook Dr. Sheila Forman Are you tired of gaining and losing the same pounds? Are you weary of starting yet another diet? Would you like a chance to change your relationship with food using a new approach based on both science and age-old wisdom? If yes, it's time for you to learn the art of mindful eating. Mindful eating does not focus on weight loss per se, but rather on becoming more aware of patterns of inappropriate eating, and provides tools for making sustainable changes in these patterns. It is a non-diet approach, designed to increase mindful awareness of experiences related to eating and to decrease mindlessness and unhealthy habits. Based on a foundation of daily mindful meditation, our mindfulness-based eating program, TAME Your Appetite: The Art of Mindful Eating, teaches you a new way of relating to yourself, your food, your eating and your body. You will learn to balance your eating and experience true culinary delight and satisfaction. As a result, you will find that you choose quality over quantity, enjoy food more, eat less, and end the cycle of deprivation, overeating, and guilt. As you gradually shift away from your current eating habits into healthy mindful ones, TAME Your Appetite becomes your path to peace with food and freedom from emotional overeating. You will go from policing yourself to honoring yourself. From mindlessly reacting to mindfully responding. Weight loss is an inevitable by-product of naturally eating less food, which happens as you become more mindful of your choices, sense of fullness and taste satisfaction. By creating new day-to-day patterns of eating less food and sustaining these new patterns indefinitely into the future, your body will find its natural right weight. In time your weight will reflect what is right for you. So, if you are tired of yet another round of diets, make a commitment to mindful-based eating and once and for all, TAME Your Appetite. Facebook | Twitter | Website
Along with the latest news, today David talks to Don Larson, of the CRAB Water for Life Society, and host of Main + Hastings show on Coop Radio, about CRAB Park's DTES history amidst the ongoing legal fallout from the homeless camp there.
Today, David talks to Don Larson, of the CRAB Water for Life Society, and host of Main + Hastings show on Coop Radio, about CRAB Park's DTES history amidst the ongoing legal fallout from the homeless camp there.
Tenants are artists. What makes some forms of culture attractive to real estate and developer interests? Does the support of art by real estate make Vancouver a culturally vibrant city? First, we hear from Alice, an artist and tenant at The Belvedere building in Vancouver’s Mount Pleasant neighbourhood, who organized with her neighbours to fight round after round of profit motivated evictions. If you live or work in Mount Pleasant, you’ve probably noticed the large amount of murals going up around the neighbourhood — there’s even one on the Belvedere. Mural Fest is one of many art projects backed by developers. Helena and Sydney talk a little bit about the organization and some other protests that artists and anti-displacement activists have had against Mural Fest donor and large scale developer Westbank. We then play footage from a radio segment that aired on Coop Radio 100.5 FM covering the Rave Against Renovictions, where artists held a rally outside Mural Fest donor, developer and Lululemon founder Chip Wilson’s house. These were in response to recent evictions of artist spaces by Wilson’s company Low Tide Properties. Helena speaks with artist and organizer Tascha Speck about the event. Episode Credits: Produced by Helena Krobath and Sydney Ball. “Rave Against Renovictions” originally aired on Vancouver Co-op Radio. Thanks to VIVO Media Arts Centre, BC Arts Council, Vancouver Tenants Union organizers, and tenants who shared their stories
Interview clip from CFRO The Pulse, your independent reporting from Vancouver's front lines - weekdays from 7-8 am, on Vancouver Co-op Radio 100.5fm, and at thepulse.coopradio.org. Reporters and co-hosts: David P. Ball and Meixi Tan(Produced by Laurence Gatinel and Bryan McKinnon. Theme song 'Iodine' used by generous permission of Hannah Epperson: hannahepperson.ca)
The Price Talks team hosted its first public podcast recording, held in front of a live library audience in the District of North Vancouver on June 26, 2019.We’ve lobbed quite a bit of criticism at the North Shore generally over the past eight months, regarding recent decisions about housing, transportation and the public realm, but felt it was time to actually hear from residents.Joining Gord for the discussion were:Dominica Babicki, formerly Energy Manager with the District, currently completing her PhD in geography focusing on issues related to related to energy, buildings and climate change. A lifelong resident of the Edgemont neighbourhood, mother of teens, and part-time caregiver to both parents.Justin Scott was born and raised in Deep Cove, went to Cap U, and is starting a new career in marketing. He currently lives in an apartment in West Vancouver, and is considering his long-term housing situation.Victor Schwartzman is a Brooklyn native who came to Vancouver via a decades-long stop in Winnipeg. He currently serves on DNV’s Community Services Advisory Committee, hosts and produces Soapbox Radio and World Poetry Cafe on Coop Radio 100.5 FM, and in renting in a social housing complex in Parkgate.Special thanks to Lynn Valley Town Centre resident, and community planner and facilitator, Steven Petersson for MC’ing and providing invaluable support throughout the evening.Our sincere gratitude to everyone who attended the evening — a diverse and attentive crowd, with lots of participation and free-flowing discussion. We hope to do this again.Last but not least, thank you to Meghan and her team at the Lynn Valley Branch of North Vancouver District Public Library. What a perfect facility, in a beautiful community — paradise tucked into the side of a mountain. Read more »
Jo Dworschak is an award winning storyteller, broadcaster, comedian and writer. She’s also the first woman to produce a monthly show at The Rio Theatre and founded Vancouver’s first weekly storytelling show. Deb Williams of The Flame and Mom’s the Word says “Jo’s a fun and feisty host with confidence and humour.” She’s also a 2017 graduate of Simon Fraser University’s Writer’s Studio. In 2015 she was a finalist for BC’s Funniest Female and won Best Solo Show for Oh Man at the Montana Fringe Festival. Hosting is her first love, from comedy, music to fundraisers. Every Wednesday you can find her hosting Weekly Stories 7pm at the Drive Coffee Bar. Every Thursday you can hear her on Coop Radio’s LGBTQ show Out and About in Canada 7pm on 100.5fm Facebook: www.facebook.com/StoryStoryLie/ Web: www.markhughescomedy.com Twitter: @PTT604 Facebook: www.facebook.com/PTT604/ Patreon: www.patreon.com/markhughescomic
Jami Macarty joins Kevin and Pam for a chat about...POETRY
Bernice Lever joins for a visit to talk about poetry and peace and activism and breaking ground as a female downhill skier.
Nationally known spoken word poet, Johnny MacRae joins to talk about his CD Mouth Music and to promote his feature at UBC Slam.
Betsy Warland is our guest and discusses their new book, Oscar of Between: A Memoir of Identity and Ideas, with discussion of Virginia Woolf's Orlando.
Fauzia Rafique reads from her new book and shares a couple poems from it as well. .
Kevin and Pam host poet, teacher and event organizer, Aidan Chafe as he reads from his new chapbook.
Miranda Pearson has a new book and joins Pam Bentley and RC Weslowski to read from it.
Karenza joins Pam Bentley and RC Weslowski to share some poems and an old story from her past.
Rob Taylor joins Pamela Bentley and Kevin Spenst to discuss his new book.
Candie Tanaka joins us to talk about Mashed Poetics and the Dominion Reading Series and share some poems.
Baba Brinkman joins us to talk about his new Rap Guide show about Climate Change.
Kay joins us just before their trip to Flagstaff, Arizona, for the Individual World Poetry Slam.
Out West promoting his new book, our guest today Henry Beissel.
More Vancouver Fringe Fun with our guest Leslie Stark.
Steve Larkin in from the U.K. joins us to talk about his Vancouver Fringe Festival Show "Fat Sex" and perform some poems from the show.
Pam is back from her travels and we talk about poetry from the U.S. South as well as Gord Downie's work.
Wrapping up her Western Canadian tour with a couple shows in Vancouver and a guest spot on our program we welcome Ashley Elizabeth Best
Pam interviews Carolyn Smart, the 2016 Fred Cogswell Award 2nd place winner and Kingston Ontario poet. She reads from her new book of poetry Careen on the infamous Bonnie and Clyde
Interviews and readings with Daniel Zomparelli and Dina del Bucchia of Poetry is Dead Magazine, and Can't Lit Poscast, on Wax Poetic CFRO 100.5,
Wax Poetic New Years 2016 Tickle Trunk Miscellaneous, CFRO FM 100.5
Vancouver City Council, under the direction of the ruling Vision Vancouver party, wants to remove two remnants of the never fully realized inner city highway system in the downtown core. But, in the process, two long-standing community gardens are threatened with demolition. In this documentary, Green for All or Green for Some, Peter Driftmier explores the debate around the removal of the viaducts through the twin lenses of gentrification and environmental sustainability.As of April 2013, city staff have yet to come back to council with final recommendations on the removal of the viaducts. In recent months, the Strathcona Residents Association has expressed serious concerns about the possibility of increased traffic volume on Prior Street, and community groups in the Downtown Eastside have also expressed similar concerns regarding increased traffic along Hastings Street.This documentary was originally produced for Redeye on Vancouver?s Coop Radio 100.5 FM and aired in Fall 2012. Peter Driftmier is a producer with the Redeye Collective, and we are pleased to bring you this documentary.
Judy Rebick is a long-time activist, writer, broadcaster and founding publisher of rabble.ca. Not only has she been part of social movements for years, she has written and taught extensively on the topic. She's been an avid participant and analyst of the Idle No More movement in Canada. And she recently joined rabble.ca editor Derrick O'Keefe, who hosts a program called W2 Media Mornings on Coop Radio 100.5FM in Vancouver. Here's part of their conversation. Union of B.C. Indian Chief's Grand Chief Stewart Phillip also appeared on the program, and Jahanzeb Hussain took on some of that interview. Political Science professor David McNally has monsters on the mind. In his new book Monsters of the Market Zombies, Vampires, and Global Capitalism (published by Haymarked) McNally draws on popular culture, folklore and literature to better account for our understanding of capitalism and labour. Whatever you do, don't turn out the lights when listen in to his conversation with Ali Mustafa. Madeline Schwartz wrote a piece for Dissent Magazine entitled Opportunity Costs: The True Price of Internships. In the article, she said that a feminist perspective is needed to understand internships. Then Rabble.ca podcast Feminist Current called her up. Here is Madeline Schwartz in conversation with Feminist Current host Meghan Murphy. Human trafficking is recognized as a modern day version of slavery. It has a tremendous impact on the poor. But human trafficking affects all of us, not just the people directly involved. Lila Shahani made that point as part of a lecture about human trafficking in a Phillipine, Canadian, and Global Context at the University of British Columbia this month. Shahani is the Assistant Secretary at the National Anti-Poverty Commission and the Human Development & Poverty Reduction Cabinet Cluster of the Philippine Government. Remember to please support shows like this at: rabble.ca/donate.
Listen to my interview with Loren Spagnuolo on Coop Radio 102.7FM. Find out more about the radio station at www.drishtipoint.ca.
On Feb 08th, 2010, Native American Singer song writer and 2009 NAMMY ARTIST OF THE YEAR at the 11th Annual Native American Music Awards, Jan Michael Looking Wolf along with CEO of Spirit Wind Records, Donald Black Fox were guests on Hidden From History radio show, which was heard on COOP Radio 102.7 FM out of Vancouver Canada, with guest host Reginald Angus Argue.During the show the conversation both Donald and Jan talk about their Breakin Free Project, which has Jan Michael Looking Wolf and his band traveling to many different Reservations throughout the US and talking and singing about drug and alcohol prevention for native youthJan Michael Looking Wolf also talked about what had inspired him to write a song about addictions, and how he had lost family members to the demons of addiction.Jan Michael Looking Wolf also talked about a serious illness that he had faced in his own life, and how he had been able to recover from it and pull inspiration off of it.Donald Black Fox talked about his many years of being addicted to drugs and alcohol and how he has been sober for over twenty four years now.Donald Black Fox also talked about other projects that his record company is involved with, in regards to helping raise money for the homeless in the US, and helping to raise for to help battered females get much needed help.Donald Black Fox's website is http://www.spiritwindrecords.us/Jan Michael Looking Wolf's website is http://www.lookingwolf.com/
In January 2006, Deconstructing Dinner was launched to fill a gap not nearly satisfied by Canada's mainstream media. But the subject matter of Deconstructing Dinner is frequently covered by other independent radio stations across the country. This broadcast will highlight four programs from campus and community radio stations that have explored how our food choices impact ourselves, our communities and the planet. In doing so, we hope to showcase the importance of independent media and the diversity of content that can be found within. Featured Programs "Redeye" - Vancouver Co-operative Radio CFRO, (Vancouver, BC) - Redeye is a 3-hour radio program broadcast live every Saturday morning on Vancouver Cooperative Radio, CFRO 102.7FM. It is produced by an independent media collective at the studios of Coop Radio in Vancouver's downtown Eastside. The show has been on the air for over 30 years, providing high-quality public affairs and arts programming to listeners looking for a progressive take on current events. Clip Jason Mark - Farmer and author based in San Francisco California. Interviewed by Peter Royce. Urban farms in Havana supply all the fresh fruit and vegetables the city's residents need. Cuba made the transition to small-scale, local, organic production following the break-up of the Soviet Union. The crisis Cuba continues to respond to, is a glimpse into the very crisis that Canadians may very well face in the near or distant future. Aired: 04.14.07 "Alert!" - University of Manitoba CJUM - (Winnipeg, MB) - Broadcast every Friday at 11 AM on 101.5 UMFM in Winnipeg, Alert radio brings you all kinds of leading-edge information they think you want to hear. The show covers politics, economics, issues of social and environmental justice; features interviews, commentaries, profiles of people in the news; has features on music, media, the arts; as well as special shows dedicated to new ideas or significant events. Clip Mustafa Koc - Former Chair of Food Secure Canada and Founding Coordinator of Ryerson University's Centre for Studies in Food Security (Toronto). Interviewed by Andre Clement. Health Canada's new Food Guide was recently released, Mustafa Koc speaks about the corporate influence on the creation of the guide. Aired: 03.02.07 "The Friday Morning After" - McGill University CKUT - (Montreal, QC) - CKUT 90.3 FM McGill Radio Inc. is a non-profit campus community radio station that provides alternative music, news and spoken word programming to the city of Montreal and surrounding areas. CKUT is made up of over 200 volunteers who work closely with a staff of coordinators. The Friday Morning After is a weekly public affairs program airing every Friday morning from 7-8am, and is produced by a collective of volunteers. Clip Alka Chandna - Senior Researcher, PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) - Norfolk, VA. Interviewed by Joe Broadhurst. This segment looks deeper into the massive Menu Foods pet food recall. While the mainstream media reports on only a few deaths as a result of the recall, thousands of pets are said to have died from the tainted food. Alka Chandna speaks about Menu Foods' past and an unregulated industry where everyone has blood on their hands. Did Menu Foods hold back the recall so two weeks of evidence could be thrown away by consumers? Aired: 03.30.07 "You Are What You Eat" - Queen's University CFRC - (Kingston, ON) - CFRC provides innovative and alternative radio programming that enriches and challenges the academic and cultural life of the University and Kingston community. Tune into You Are What You Eat when Sayyida Jaffer explores nutrition, culture and politics and how they relate to food. Clip On March 22, 2007, Queen's University's Studies in National and International Development program hosted a panel of experts on the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program (SAWP). The event was titled "The Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program in Canada: Route to Mutual Development or Recipe for Migrant Exploitation?". with Ken Forth, Chairman of the Foreign Agricultural Resource Management Service (Lynden, ON). Stan Raper, United Food and Commercial Workers union (UFCW) (Toronto, ON). Dr. Leigh Binford, Universidad Autonoma de Puebla, Mexico. Aired: 03.29.07