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And So, She Left: Wisdom from Women Beyond the Corporate World
Alina Kravchenko has always loved inventing. Alina defines her entrepreneurial success based on one simple factor: how much creativity she's able to express as a founder. But being raised by a single mom in Ukraine and eventually becoming a single mom herself meant there was no shortage of people who looked down on them both. When she drained her 401K and secured a patent for SwipenSnap, her one-hand applicator for baby ointment, people laughed at her. Until the product landed Alina a spot on Shark Tank and propelled her to launch TonerBum, an ergonomic weight designed specifically for glute workouts. In this conversation, Alina answers questions like: why does she feel so driven to constantly create? How did she persist during times of immense stress as a single mom? And how can we determine our own versions of success as entrepreneurs? Alina talks about:Growing up in UkraineOvercoming immense self-doubtDefining success as a creative personEmbracing falls instead of giving in to failureWhy pursuing wealth will never make you happy How she created both SwipenSnap and TonerBum We have a new website!Visit andsosheleft.com for full episodes, transcripts, an application form to be on the show, a list of upcoming guests and more.Hosted by Katherin Vasilopoulos. Made by Cansulta and Ethan Lee.Music by © Correspondence and © Chris Zabriskie, published by You've Been a Wonderful Laugh Track (ASCAP). Songs used in this episode include: Chris Zabriskie - "Air Hockey Saloon," "There Are Days That I Don't," "The Lower Third Hall of Fame," "Does It Exist or Do I Have to Create It?" "Cylinder Six," "Wonder Cycle," "I Am Running with Temporary Success from a Monstrous Vacuum in Pursuit," "I'm About to Do the Second Hardest Thing I've Ever Done," "Short Song 010923," "Another Version of You." Correspondence - "Harp Routine."Used under the Creative Commons 4.0 International License
And So, She Left: Wisdom from Women Beyond the Corporate World
For most of her career, Erin Schnarr was a workaholic faced with Imposter Syndrome. To tackle the challenges and setbacks of a 25-year career in the corporate tech world, she treated the companies she worked at as if they were her own. Throughout her time at places like Bell, Reader's Digest, and LexisNexis, Erin faced the glass ceiling head-on, watching as male colleagues surpassed her in both pay and position despite her unwavering dedication and hard work. Erin discusses how she tackled her imposter syndrome and overcame insecurities stemming from unexpected layoffs, previous business ventures, and a history of being underestimated. She recounts her decision to pivot away from the corporate world to co-found CompenSage, a game-changing venture that empowers organizations to achieve pay equity. Erin also delves into how her Indigenous heritage (a surprising discovery) became a source of strength and inspiration, the importance of seeking enjoyable work, creating your own luck, and following your passion to find the job you truly want. Learn more about CompenSage. In this episode, we cover:How to find real fulfillment in your job/ventureHow to start on the path to overcoming imposter syndromeThe importance of embracing failure as a learning experienceWhy inspiring others is often the best way to overcome your own insecuritiesThe difference between fulfillment in the corporate world and entrepreneurshipWhy it's important to embrace your cultural heritage as an entrepreneur Quote of the Week:"To get past Imposter Syndrome, you've gotta start being your own advocate. And when you talk to people who are also struggling...you start to [motivate] them, and you motivate yourself." - Erin Schnarr Hosted by Katherin Vasilopoulos. Made by Cansulta and Ethan Lee.Music by © Chris Zabriskie, published by You've Been a Wonderful Laugh Track (ASCAP). Songs used in this episode include: "Air Hockey Saloon," "Cylinder Two," "Cylinder Six," "Remember Trees?," "Short Song 020323," "Short Song 022123." Used under the Creative Commons 4.0 International License
El padre de una amiga cambiará de plano en breve y me pregunta cómo puede decirle adiós por última vez.Más información: https://www.meditacionyosoy.com/como-decir-adios-a-un-padre/---Música: «Cylinder Six» de Chris Zabriskie con licencia Creative Commons: Atribución 4.0Foto: Limor Zellermayer / Unsplash
El poder de la intuición, entrar en contacto con seres afines a uno, descubrir el lugar donde habia el alma.Más información: https://www.meditacionyosoy.com/donde-habita-alma/---Música: «Cylinder Six», de Chris Zabriskie con licencia Creative Commons: Atribución 4.0Foto: Aziz Acharki / Unsplash
The season 1 finale is here! Ção made a lot of promises during her time in Segurança and now she has to deliver on them before she rides off into the sunset. Additional music from Cylinder Six by Chris Zabriskie
A Mulher dos Cabelos Furta-Cor. Quando Thiago encontra Alessandro na rua em desespero, ele se pergunta como pode ajudá-lo e, principalmente, se pode ajudá-lo. Link para download: https://goo.gl/EUcuK7 Duração: 16min História Original: Jorge Mauro Roteiro: Danilo Vieira Battistini Edição e Mixagem: Danilo Vieira Battistini – Tom Tom Semitom Com as vozes de: Narrador…………………………..André Sauer Thiago……………………………André Sauer Alessandro………………………..Mauro Eduardo Filha Thiago………………………Flávia Narciso Mulher dos Cabelos Furta-Cor……Teca Pinkovai Voz TV……………………………Danilo Battistini Estúdios de Gravação: Centauro Comunicaciones Estúdio de Mixagem: Centauro Comunicaciones Músicas utilizadas (Por ordem de aparição) Lightless Dawn - Kevin MacLeod Wounded - Kevin MacLeod Cylinder Six - Chris Zabskrie Heartbreaking - Kevin MacLeod Cryptic Sorrow - Kevin MacLeod Crossing the Threshold - Kevin MacLeod Contador De Histórias Main Theme - Henrique Fajardo Agradecimentos: Muito obrigado em especial aos Padrinhos e Madrinhas do Contador de Histórias: Ana Carolina Rosalino, Alan Feitoza, Aline Della Paschoa, Andriolli Costa, Carlos Henrique Diniz, Dyemes Emanuel, Emerson, Felipe Raphael Lopes, Natália Angelotti, Glauber Coelho, Maria do Carmo, Cesar Mashima, Bruno Battistini, Lucas Orlandelli, Henrique Fajardo, Tereza Maria, Leandro Correia, Bruno Vicentainer, Luis Otávio, Pedro Gil, Rafael Moran e Jhonatan Vieira. Se você gostou, não esqueça de curtir, comentar e compartilhar! Vocês são o motivo pelo qual esse podcast continua! E se quiser contribuir com o projeto visite: www.padrim.com.br/contadordehistorias e saiba como ajudar! Um muito obrigado e até o próximo! Já disponível para streaming no SoundCloud e também no iTunes ou no seu agregador de podcast de preferência! ___________________________ Twitter - @CDHCast Facebook - www.facebook.com/podcastcontadordehistorias SoundCloud - @contadordehistorias Site - www.contadordehistoriascast.com E-mail - contadordehistorias@tomtomsemitom.com __________ Cylinder Six by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Attribution License. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://chriszabriskie.com/licensing. Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Attribution 3.0 International License. Based on a work at incompetech.com Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/licenses/ or contact artist via email.
A Mulher dos Cabelos Furta-Cor. Quando Thiago encontra Alessandro na rua em desespero, ele se pergunta como pode ajudá-lo e, principalmente, se pode ajudá-lo. Duração: 16minHistória Original: Jorge Mauro Roteiro: Danilo Vieira Battistini Edição e Mixagem: Danilo Vieira Battistini – Contador de HistóriasCom as vozes de: Narrador…………………………..André Sauer Thiago……………………………André Sauer Alessandro………………………..Mauro Eduardo Filha Thiago………………………Flávia Narciso Mulher dos Cabelos Furta-Cor……Teca PinkovaiVoz TV……………………………Danilo Battistini Estúdios de Gravação: Centauro Comunicaciones Estúdio de Mixagem: Centauro Comunicaciones Músicas utilizadas (Por ordem de aparição) Lightless Dawn - Kevin MacLeod Wounded - Kevin MacLeod Cylinder Six - Chris Zabskrie Heartbreaking - Kevin MacLeod Cryptic Sorrow - Kevin MacLeodCrossing the Threshold - Kevin MacLeod Contador De Histórias Main Theme - Henrique Fajardo Agradecimentos:Muito obrigado em especial aos Padrinhos e Madrinhas do Contador de Histórias: Ana Carolina Rosalino, Alan Feitoza, Aline Della Paschoa, Andriolli Costa, Carlos Henrique Diniz, Dyemes Emanuel, Emerson, Felipe Raphael Lopes, Natália Angelotti, Glauber Coelho, Maria do Carmo, Cesar Mashima, Bruno Battistini, Lucas Orlandelli, Henrique Fajardo, Tereza Maria, Leandro Correia, Bruno Vicentainer, Luis Otávio, Pedro Gil, Rafael Moran e Jhonatan Vieira. Se você gostou, não esqueça de curtir, comentar e compartilhar! Vocês são o motivo pelo qual esse podcast continua!__________ Cylinder Six by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Attribution License. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://chriszabriskie.com/licensing. Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Attribution 3.0 International License. Based on a work at incompetech.com Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/licenses/ or contact artist via email.
Sometimes the grind of life can get you down. That’s where I am as we reach spring 2014. The birds are singing again, the walks between childcare and home become a lovely opportunity to be together. Each day a little brighter than the last. But I’m tired. Always tired. I struggle to find my role again in the shifting landscape at work, and the role of work in the shifting landscape of my life. I have a dull ache in a tooth. Later. I’ll deal with it later. Three years. It’s taken me three years to deal with that tooth. I put it off until I couldn’t anymore. It was stupid to leave it, but I have been lucky, again. With the pain in my head came nights of insomnia, a racing heart and anxiety. It was about more than the tooth. It was about the money, the podcast, the moths, the feeling that life was beating me. We moved back home last month to a moth infestation. I don’t know what’s wrong with me that I can’t just rise above it, sort it out. It won’t go away by itself! Just like the tooth. Then, as it is since you came along, in the middle of my little crisis, an oasis. You turn four! During the celebrations, I take my dad aside. Enough of living in denial. It’s a year since I started making this podcast. 20 episodes. I haven’t wanted to let anyone down so I haven’t allowed myself to take a real break, and making this podcast, all alone, is hard. It’s hard work, and it’s emotionally hard. It’s time to rest, take stock, get life under control, live a little, make some money, try to be a better than usual mother, daughter, sister, friend. I’ll read, watch and listen to other people’s stories, and slowly make my way back to ours. With all my heart, passion, energy and focus, the way I started a year ago. Sometimes the grind of life can get you down, and sometimes that means adjusting course. This production is made by me, Sophie Harper, in partnership with Wondery. I’m supported by generous listeners and the Australian Cultural Fund. Thanks to my colleagues, my family, my friends and my daughter for your support, in life and with this podcast. Music from freemusicarchive.org - CC NC License: Protect Me and Global Culture Collision by Candlegravity; Cylinder Six by Chris Zabriskie. Ad music from freemusicarchive.org - CC Commercial License: Drop of Water in the Ocean by Broke For Free. US listeners, support the series and eat well! Hello Fresh is my first sponsor. Sign up at www.hellofresh.com and use the promo code 'noaccident35' to get $35 off your first delivery. Everybody wins! Care.com are our new sponsors! To save 30% off a Premium membership—and receive a $15 credit that you can use toward paying your caregiver, visit care.com/noaccident when you subscribe. We’d like to know more about you, so please help us by filling up a quick survey at wondery.com/survey. It should take less than 5 minutes, and it really helps. Thanks!
Today we’re excited to announce that Radio Film School is now part of the Podcastica network. Think of it as a sort of indie label of 8 (or rather, now, 9) podcasts. To acquaint our new family of Podcastica listeners with the show, and to celebrate the 6-month mark into the season, today we start a 2 part “Best of…” series. In part 1 we’ll cover some of my favorite personal stories told on the show; from father figures to first loves. This episode also includes the moving story of why spoken word artist Marshall Davis Jones changed his famous "Spelling Father" spoken word performance to no longer refer to his dad as a deadbeat. (Powerful stuff! That story alone is worth the price of admission.)In part 2 (later this week), we’ll share some of my favorite guest stories and conversations.Even if you’ve been an avid listener, I am confident you'll enjoy this trip down memory lane as I'll also offer some additional insight into the episodes I highlight. And in today's bonus segment, I finally give the definition of the term "Short Ends" and why I chose that name for the interim episodes.Enjoy!Legally License Music for Your ProductionIf you need to legally license music for your productions, from every genre, look no further than Song Freedom. Click here and use offer code radio for a one-time Standard Gold Level license worth $30.Learn How Stillmotion Tells Emmy Award-winning StoriesStillmotion's Muse Storytelling is the process they use to tell the kind of stories that has helped them garner five Emmys, and go from shooting weddings to shooting the Super Bowl. They've generously offered our listeners a special offer. Details are in the episode.Grow in Your Craft and CareerWe're also supported by YOU, the listeners. Become a Dare Dreamer FM Premium member and gain access to bonus episodes, ebooks, templates, and other resources to help you grow in your craft and career.Music in this Episode"Please Listen Carefully" by Jahzzar. CC BY-SA."Cylinder Six" by Chris Zabriskie. CC BY."A Man with a Golden Soul" by Cullah. CC BY-SA.“Sly and the Family Jones” by Mike Spitz and Phys Edison. CC BY.“12 Lost Love Letters” and “Erik” by Fog Lake. CC BY.Stubborn Love by The Lumineers. Courtesy of Song Freedom. All rights reserved.“Save the Last Dance for Me” by the Drifters. Courtesy of Song Freedom. All rights reserved.“Dancing Machine” by the Jackson 5. Courtesy of Song Freedom. All rights reserved."The Sun is Scheduled to Come Out Tomorrow"Chris Zabriskie. CC BY."Hey Ho" by the Lumineers. Courtesy of Song Freedom. All rights reserved.
For 10 years, Higher Standards Academy was just Jerilyn Kass. She was independently doing the work of the entire business—teaching SAT prep to college-bound students—and growing slowly but steadily. For a while, slow and steady worked for her. But comfort soon grew into impatience, and she realized faster growth would take an outside perspective so she could see and focus on the areas of her business she was neglecting. With the help of her Coach, Rachel Clark, Jerilyn grew revenues by 40%, hired a team of people she loves working with, took her first almost completely unplugged vacation, and now feels like the leader of her business for the first time. Music: "Let's Start at the Beginning" by Lee Rosevere is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ Music: "Cylinder Six" by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under CC BY 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Today we start our journey to find that elusive creature known as one's signature style. What exactly does it mean for a filmmaker, or any artist for that matter, to have a signature style? How does he or she get one? How do they develop it? Why should we care? Today we start in earnest the core topic for this first season of Radio Film School. Everything beforehand has been building up and preparing us for this journey. And we have some very inspiring interviews to start us off.Award-winning filmmaking Kevin Shahinian, renown for his Bollywood-style wedding films and Hollywood-calibre production values, provides incredible and poignant insight into the style question from a sophisticated point of view. I have a discussion with Film Riot host Ryan Connolly about his style (and whether or not he thinks he has one). And "Legends of the Knight" director Brett Culp rounds us off with some sage advice on how to develop one's personal style.In the bonus segment post-credits, I FINALLY get around to discussing with JD how it was he that prompted me to pursue filmmaking full-time as a profession.Music in this EpisodeWe have some more great use of Song Freedom songs. Tune it to find out how you can get a FREE Song Freedom song license.Music from today's episode was curated from the Free Music Archive and Song Freedom. Click here to see the Song Freedom mixtape for this episode (All rights reserved). In order of appearance:"Save the Last Dance for Me" by the Drifters"Dancing Machine" by the Jackson 5"Party Rock Anthem" by LMFAO"Early News" by Dream City Orchestra"Forever Young" by Bob DylanFree Music Archive Songs used:"Please Listen Carefully" by Jahzzar. CC-BY-SA."Let's Start at the Beginning" by Lee Rosevere. CC-BY-SA."transcanada" by Fog Lake. CC-BY."The Last Slice of Pecan Pie" by Josh Woodward. CC-BY."Low Horizon" by Kai Engel. CC-BY."Divider", "Cylinder Six" and "Pick Up a Convict on Alcatraz" by Chris Zabriskie. CC-BY."Datpiff" by The Good Lawdz. CC-BY-SA.PhotosGo to today's blog post to check out old photos of yours truly.
Modern Stories Mix episode 5 features a tale of longing and mystery from Danny Artese, co-host of A Very Special Episode and avid reader of '80s-era YA fiction. For more information about Danny and about this podcast, please visit the show page. The outro music, “Cylinder Six,” was composed and performed by Chris Zabriskie.
In a loft in downtown Los Angeles, artist Moses Storm is currently exhibiting The Modern Millennial, a hybrid between performance art and interactive theater. Displaying his work at and living in the loft full-time, Moses is presenting an uncensored look at the modern-day millennial by giving visitors unfettered access to every aspect of his life. Intrigued by the project from the time Moses first launched his Kickstarter campaign to fund it, Jen goes to see the exhibit and talk with Moses about the piece now that it's open to the public. If you're enjoying PrePopCulture, please rate/review it on iTunes, and like it on Facebook! You can also follow PrePopCulture on Twitter. Want to suggest a topic for an episode? Email prepopculture@gmail.com! Show notes: Follow Moses on Twitter Check out The Modern Millennial, which was funded on Kickstarter Watch Terminally Chill Birthday Music: Alps by Motorama is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (aka Music Sharing) License. Cylinder Six, I Am Running with Temporary Success from a Monstrous Vacuum in Pursuit, and Oxygen Garden by Chris Zabriskie used under a Creative Commons Attribution License Future Paths by 8 Bit Weapon is licensed under an Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License