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Two men have been found guilty of criminal damage, for the felling of the iconic Sycamore Gap tree in Northumbria. Constance Kampfner sat through the trial, in which the prosecution called what Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers had done, ‘a moronic mission to cause mindless vandalism.' The men were remanded in custody for their own protection after the verdict was announced. This podcast was brought to you thanks to the support of readers of The Times and The Sunday Times. Subscribe today: http://thetimes.com/thestoryGuest: Constance KampfnerHost: Luke Jones Producer: Hannah Varrall and Shabnam Grewal Clips: BBC News, Sky News, Channel 4 News, National Trust .Photo: Getty ImagesGet in touch: thestory@thetimes.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Daniel Graham was raised in a military family and moved every two years for most of his life. He comes from a family of storytellers who love investigation and creativity. He earned his Undergraduate Degree at the University of Florida in Printmaking and a Masters Degree from the University of Georgia also in Printmaking.Between the two programs of formal education Daniel lived in downtown Washington DC and trained as a furniture maker under woodworker Dennis Sitka. He has received numerous grants and awards over the course of his studio practice. His work has been in over 200 exhibitions in 8 countries and is housed in multiple collections including the library of congress.Currently Daniel is a Professor of Art at Georgetown College in Georgetown, Kentucky where he teaches a variety of courses including Sculpture, Printmaking, 3D Design, and Luthiery. He recently shared an exhibition of his musical instruments with Ben Mason at the Pam Miller Downtown Arts Center, Lexington, KY., and gave a demonstration at 21c Museum Hotel in Lexington.
Watch the episode on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5yf2J-3IHng For all of LenDale White & Bo Daniel Graham's official picks, and more football content, head over to www.steadypicks.com
This week on Gresh and Fauria, the guys previewed the start of the Boston Celtics season and their expectations for this season's team. Brian Baldinger, of the NFL Network, joined the show to discuss the current state of the New England Patriots. Finally, former Patriots tight end Daniel Graham called in to share his memories of the 2003 championship season and that season's Week 7 overtime win over the Miami Dolphins.
Former New England Patriots tight end Daniel Graham joined the show to share his memories of the Patriots 2003 championship season and that season's Week 7 overtime win against the Miami Dolphins.
Hour 3 - Before being joined by former New England Patriots tight end Daniel Graham to look back at the 2003 championship season, Fauria discussed his future as a funeral planner. Finally, the guy previewed tonight's Thursday Night Football matchup between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the New Orleans Saints.
What weather! At times like this you forget it can rain so hard; the clouds overturned and emptied like water buckets on the ground before you. You find a step in the porch of the old farmhouse and make yourself comfortable. The rain continues to cascade. Puddles sparkle. Leaves spiral down, caught up in the storm. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We're in Beinn Eighe (Ben Ay) in the Scottish Highlands The mountains this morning are ill-manner; the trails rough, the gullies deep, the mist consuming. Winds elbow by like rushing commuters, and with them they bring rain. But such is the nature of summer in the Scottish Highlands that just as afternoon breaks the skies clear and a new day appears. Jubilant with the sparkling light, you pause by a high loch among even higher peaks to dry off and soak up the scene. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
It's night in a tent on the coast of Pembrokeshire. At some point during the dark hours, you stir. The rain is still falling, and there are layers to its sound. Great marbles of water fall from the beech tree above the tent; the wind throws buckets; then both become consumed by a deluge like no other, a shower so heavy that you could be in the raincloud itself. You're grateful for your warm sleeping bag, and before you know it you've dropped once more into a deep, dreamless sleep. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Email the Plodcast team - and send your sound recordings of the countryside - to: editor@countryfile.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Huddled between the urban brawn of Cardiff, Caerphilly and Newport is small woodland of spruce and birds and dank gullies. There is a stream in this woodland, the kind of you may not even notice, should your mind be elsewhere. Out of view beneath the path, it is the cool air welling up from its jostling waters that first alters you to it. You soon smell it, all earth and minerals, before finally reaching it with sight. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
You spot a shelf of rock at the far end of the moon-shaped bay and make for it, the fine sand giving way to warm, angular, salt-rough ground. The scramble comes almost without thought, your bare feet gripping nimbly to the rock. You soon come to rest in a nook facing back to the shore. Kelp rolls in the mineral-blue waters at your toes; beyond that is the moon beach, your footprints already washed clean by the gently shelving waves. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We're near Loch Maree in western Scotland. You're not sure what woke you first, the light or the birds. Either way, you stir peacefully in your bed, the sun casting half-light across the stone walls of the cottage as the lilts of Scotland's avian world pour in through the open windows. A wood pigeon, a cuckoo, a blackbird. Sparrows in the eaves. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Fergus Collins. Image by Getty Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We're in Wester Ross in the Highlands. The drive to road's end is long and leisurely, the statuesque mountains and island-scattered lochs of Wester Ross giving way to the persuasions of the sea. Tiny ocean inlets, sail boats, seaweed shores. By the time you reach Red Point, you hear the waves calling, and within moments you're sat on the sand, the breaking water pulling all your senses towards it. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ebbw Vale in South Wales holds many secrets, not least within the water-rucked hillsides that feed the valley. On one such slope there is an ancient woodland. At its base a river sparkles beneath a canopy of fresh beech leaves. You cross it and climb steeply, first through trees then heath and grassland. Bluebells bob in the May breeze; a lizard rustles in the warm bracken; streams gurgle in the sun. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Visit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We're in Blawith Fells in the Lake District. he walk up to the tarn felt a little like a dream; the sun-warmed lane rising gently – rhythmically – between trickling brooks and beds of bracken, beyond which rolled the flaxen commonlands of the Blawith Fells. You reach the pool and settle on a tussock of grass beside it. Water trickles and birds sing as Lakeland's higher fells glow to the north in the rare spring sun. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Visit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We are growing increasingly more nervous about how the digital tools around us are able to gain more access to our information and to our lives. Whether we are thinking about simple things like malware and viruses to more complex applications like deep fake technologies and artificial intelligence. Even with my computer science background, I find these topics to be incredibly complex. That is why I have asked Dr. Daniel Graham on the show. Daniel G. Graham is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at The University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia. His research interests include secure embedded systems and networks. Before teaching at UVA, Dr. Graham was a Program Manager at Microsoft in Seattle, Washington. He publishes in IEEE journals relating to sensors and networks. In this episode, we talk about ransomware, malware, ethical hacking, multi-layered threats to our infrastructures, and why we should take a beat and think about how much of our culture we want to digitize into the future. If you want to support our mission to bring civility back to discourse, hit the subscribe button, the like button, and leave a kind comment for me and my guest. The support is always appreciated. // EPISODE LINKS // Guest's website: https://danielggraham.com/ethical-hacking-a-hands-on-guide-to-breaking-in/ // EPISODE OUTLINE // 00:00 Teaser 00:45 Introduction 02:12 Start of conversation 02:32 How did you get into cybersecurity? 07:04 What is ethical hacking? 10:32 Bug bounty hunting 11:44 Is there a strong community who want to help companies find these exploits? 14:39 How does ethical hacking help us defend our infrastructures 24:00 Can you envision a multilayered attack to our infrastructure in the USA? 32:07 How should we look at digital artifacts from a civilization perspective? 37:10 Why should we think of hacking people and not machines? 44:10 Should we be more worried about deep fake technology than we are? 48:46 Why is ransomware so successful? 53:52 Does the celebritization of hackers help or hurt our ability to stay ahead of threats? 59:53 What is one thing that makes you hopeful about the field and one thing that scares you? 1:06:01 Closing thoughts // WEBSITE // Head over to the website to learn more about me and to contact me. https://theneutralgroundpodcast.com/ // EPISODE SUGGESTIONS // 1. ChatGPT, Cheating, Critical Thinking, and the Future of Humanity and AI | Dr. Teo Susnjak #65? - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=99Z6nUr-1Pg&t=0s 2. What we don't hear about incel culture | Drs. Sarah Daly & Shon Reed - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ynYdpuhqjLw&t=43s 3. Why not violence? Dr. Duane Armitage - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ohhht-zwNaU&t=1010s 4. Visual Thinking, Rebuilding the Trades, Animal Consciousness, Training AI | Dr. Temple Grandin - https://youtu.be/P8FvlKD6Y9Q 5. Crisis in Men, Anger and Alienation in boys, What is Going on? | Dr. Robert Tyminski - https://youtu.be/cwFMjuXf5xI Would you like to do your part to help bring civility back to our conversations? We need to get The Neutral Ground message in front of more people, and you can help with just a few keystrokes and some clicks of a mouse. 1) Start by hitting the subscribe button and turning on notifications. 2) Then, hit the like button. 3) Leave a thoughtful/uplifting comment for others to engage with. 4) Watch another video on the channel. 5) Share the channel or a video with someone else on your social media accounts 6) Head over to my website at https://theneutralgroundpodcast.com/ Once on the website, you can actually go to the contact section and leave an audio comment for me to use on the podcast. 7) You can also subscribe to the podcast on any one of the following platforms as well: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music #hacking #hacker #ethicalhacking #deepfake #ai --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/joemeyer/message
The first inklings of spring are stirring in the Rhymney Valley in South Wales. Down at the foot of the dell, where the two streams meet, there is a mossy bank. You lay down your jacket and sit upon it to gaze up at the trees, which soar like skyscrapers into the plain white sky, as spring rain and birdsong spiral down. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Visit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On today's DNVR Buffs Podcast, Jake Schwanitz and RK give their takeaway's from the first week of spring football practice for Deion “Coach Prime” Sanders and the Colorado Buffaloes. Hear from RB coach Gary “Flea” Harrell and RB Charlie Offerdahl after Friday's practice. 2024 four-star TE Carter Nelson had an unofficial visit with Coach Prime and Colorado yesterday. Former Buff legends Phillip Lindsay and Daniel Graham were at practice today and a quick preview for today's women's basketball game between Colorado and Iowa. Score the best seats in the house at Gametime: https://gametime.hnyj8s.net/c/3442941/1441541/10874 Visit https://dkng.co/DNVR to sign up for DraftKings Sportsbook using the code “DNVR” If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/LA/MI/NJ/TN/PA/WV/WY), 1-800-NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/KS/NH), 888-789-7777/visit ccpg.org (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA). 21+ (18+ NH/WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/KS/LA(select parishes)/MI/NH/NJ/ NY/OR/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. $200 in Free bets: New customers only. Min. $5 deposit. Min $5 pregame moneyline bet. $200 issued as eight (8) $25 free bets. Bet must win. Ends 1/8/23 @ 8pm. Risk-Free Stepped Up SGP: 1 Token issued per eligible game. Opt in req. Min $1 bet. Max bet limits apply. Min. 3-leg. Each leg min. -300 odds, total bet +100 odds or longer. Ends at start of final game of the 2022-2023 NBA Season. See eligibility & terms at sportsbook.draftkings.com/basketballterms. When you shop through links in the description, we may earn affiliate commissions Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's a wintry afternoon on the Somerset Levels. In the pre-dusk light, you watch as a thin mist evolves from the reeds and settles on the ice. It's not all ice, there are sections of the surface that have been broken open by the many waterbirds that live in this winter-gold enclave of the Levels. Undeterred by the by the frigid conditions are coots int their scores. Moorhens call, geese clamour, a marsh harrier rises silently from the din. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham. Presented by Hannah Tribe Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Visit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Walking the coast path around Hartland Point after snowfall Winter's cold brings many pleasures. Frost-enshrined thorns, glinting in the light of a low sun; nights so silent you could hear a snowflake drop; the lifting lilt of the robin song through icy dawn air. And snow underfoot, a so sound so evocative of being a child that you become one again… for a short while at least.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham. Presented by Hannah Tribe. Image by Getty.Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.comVisit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We're back on a farm deep in the Devon countryside. At some point in the night you stir, woken by the patter of hail on the slate roof. The barn is old, built hundreds of years before your time, and as the minutes pass by you think of the many stories made, and the many told, within these thick stone walls. It's a comfort – from your warm, cosy bed – and you soon drop back into a deep, dreamless sleep to wake up to clear skies.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewherebeautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham. Presented by Hannah Tribe. Image by Getty. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Visit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We're sitting beside a log fire in a farmhouse in Devon. There's something at once inconstant and rhythmic about fire. Each flame unlike the next, each ember on its own wild course, yet its heartbeat is as regular as yours. Perhaps that's what lures you in, what comforts you; two beats aligning. Or perhaps the flames reveal a memory inherited from centuries prior. Either way, for those few precious moments, there's nothing but you and the fire.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewherebeautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham. Presented by Fergus Collins. Image by Getty. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Visit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We're at Hartland Quay, Devon. The day is late by the time you reach the Hartland coast and all you can do is run. Breathless, you reach the shore to see the sun sitting low amid a bed of coral clouds. You settle on a rock. A waterfall spills beside you, lit by the winter sun. Waves roll pebbles up and down the beach. The air feels cold on your cheeks.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewherebeautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham. Presented by Hannah Tribe Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Visit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We're at Ham Wall in Somerset for the great starling murmuration. At first they come in small flocks, barely discernible against the winter sky. But as the light begins to fade, their numbers strengthen; a thousand here, two thousand there. They gather like mercury, then split and bind again, growing ever larger until soon there are half a million of them throwing forms across the sky. A strand suddenly breaks free, plummeting into the reedbeds, and the rest follow. The sound absorbs you. Image by Getty.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewherebeautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham. Presented by Hannah Tribe Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Visit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
You wake in the small village of Butterton in the Staffordshire Peak District. With the window of the cottage set ajar, you return to bed, rest your head on the pillow and listen as the village slowly wakes. The brook plays like the wind in the trees, which in turn mimics the brook. Blackbirds trill. A garden gate clunks. A milk truck crosses the ford.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewherebeautiful, wherever you happen to be. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Visit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Come with us to the gentle pasturelands that link the summit of Y Fal with the bustle of Grwyne Fawr far below. Pause a while amid the patchwork of sheep field, farmyard and hedgerow, and a version of bliss envelopes you; a light wind picks hazel leaves from the hedge and sends them down the lane. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audiopostcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewherebeautiful, wherever you happen to be.Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of thecountryside – to: editor@countryfile.com Visit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.com PPA Podcast of the Year 2022 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On the southern flanks of the Usk Valley beneath the damp uplands of Mynydd Llangatwg are the remnants of an old limestone quarry. Paths slink between the stepped hillside, now a miscellany of meadow, scrub and tree. When rain falls, the stunted hazel and oak woods are a joy to be among.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be.Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe.Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.comVisit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.comPPA Podcast of the Year 2022 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
He loved playing basketball Thomas Jefferson High School, but football got him to the University of Colorado where he won the Mackey Award as the nation's best tight end. In 2002, after his stellar college career, Daniel Graham was drafted 21st overall by the New England Patriots where he won two Super Bowls. He tested the free agent market after four years with the Pats and landed back home in Denver with the Broncos. He was a captain, a leader and in October of 2009, he appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated. The next year, the Broncos released him. Two more NFL teams did the same before he hung up the cleats and retired in 2012.
To be in an autumn woodland after rain is a tonic for a great many ills. Perhaps it's the simple joy of the leaves so lustrous with rainwater, or the way the mosses swell like lungs. Or the maybe it's the scent of the Earth – of leaf litter and microbes and fruiting fungi – that seems to connect the ground with the air, and thus you with all of it. It's certain that the streams appear contented.A short walk through woodland brings you to a small waterway, where you pause for a while and breathe it all in.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be.Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Image from Getty.Email the Plodcast team – and send your sound recordings of the countryside – to: editor@countryfile.comVisit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.comPPA Podcast of the Year 2022 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Between the great, lumbering bulk of the Cambrian Mountains and Shropshire's autumn-kissed hills there is a landscape of quiet repute. Here the ground rolls and tilts. Sheep graze the knolls, and between these there are cwms; pinched, deep and green. You make your way into one, leaving the low autumn sun for the coolness of a mossy, earthy woodland. At its bed is a stream, so vibrant and cheerful that not even the end of rain could quell its tune.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be.Recorded by Daniel Graham and presented by Hannah Tribe. Image from Getty.Contact the Plodcast team and send your sound recordings of the countryside to: editor@countryfile.comVisit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.comPPA Podcast of the Year 2022 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Deep in a wooded cwm in Powys, there's a spot down by the brook, half in the trees, half out, where the sunlight falls in ribbons onto the water. You go to it and settle on the pebble bank. Somewhere above, hidden among the broken canopy that staggers up the steep valley, a robin reels out its morning song.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be.Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Image from Graham.Contact the Plodcast team and send your sound recordings of the countryside to: editor@countryfile.comVisit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.comPPA Podcast of the Year 2022 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Russell Crow, Ray Winstone, Jodi May. All reasons to be curious about this movie, as you should be. Cinderella Man exists, could be argued is the best boxing film to date. Russell crow at the top of his game and Prizefighter is Russell crow...NOT at the top of his game, though still a damn fine actor. PRIZEFIGHTER: THE LIFE OF JEM BELCHER, Dir. Daniel Graham ( Grayson 3 / Roger 3 ) Hosted, produced and mixed by Grayson Maxwell and Roger Stillion. Guest Appearance by Cate Marsh. Music by Chad Wall. Quality Assurance by Anthony Emmett. Visit the new Youtube channel, "For the Love of Cinema" to follow and support our short video discussions. Roger wears aviators! Please give a like and subscribe if you enjoy it. Follow the show on Twitter @lovecinemapod and check out the Facebook page for updates. Rate, subscribe and leave a comment or two. Every Little bit helps. Send us an email to fortheloveofcinemapodcast@gmail.com.
High above the summertime bustle of Pembrokeshire's south coast, the lanes are quiet. No people here, just wind and hedge and crops for miles. It's now noon, and after several hours of walking you look for a place to rest a while. A corn field beside a reef of yellow and white chamomile catches your eye. Here you sit, the corn stems crowding around you, their leaves rustling against themselves.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be.Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Image from Getty.Contact the Plodcast team and send your sound recordings of the countryside to: editor@countryfile.comVisit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.comPPA Podcast of the Year 2022 Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
It's summer, yet the bruised skies and pulsing winds don't seem to know it. As if blown over by the squalls; a farm gate clunks. After walking the fields, you drop into a deep sunken lane and a version of quiet hits you, the wind no longer on your skin, in your ears. You sit on the grassy, furrowed lane and take breath. Around you now are tall hedgerows of hawthorn and blackberry. A wren sings from a tree above. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be.Recorded by Daniel Graham. Image from Getty.Contact the Plodcast team and send your sound recordings of the countryside to: editor@countryfile.comVisit the Countryfile Magazine website: countryfile.comPPA Podcast of the Year! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Boarding a small passenger ferry at Tenby, you set sail for Caldey Island through a swell that rocks the boat like a toy in the bath. Before long, you reach the holy island. A 1,000-year-old Catholic monastery sits hidden within its wooded heart, but your first instinct is to walk the beach that stretches east from the tiny harbour wall. The sand is soft, warmed by the summer sun, and the breeze gentle. You find a spot to sit, down by the waves.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be.Recorded by Daniel Graham. Image from Getty. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
You're climbing an oak tree and its rough, weathered branches reach down like the arms of an aiding grandfather to pull you up. The coarse, lichen-dusted bark coats your hands, your nostrils fill with the subtle scent of decay and before you know it you've emerged through the dark-leaved canopy to a scene of wind and light. Carmarthenshire's pastoral hills fold out to the west. Cattle on the move. A dog barks. A wren sings. And all the while the wind whips through. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be.Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe. Image from Getty. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
You hear the waves on Eigg's rocky shores, a distant breeze, perhaps. But lazing silently on one of the tiny island's floating in the tiny harbour there a seals; two eiders rise and fall on the turquoise swell, so loyal to one another it's as if they're tethered by an invisible thread. A cloud drifts by; a fishing boat nods. All is silent, save the lapping waves that meet the rocks.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a weekly audio postcard from the countryside to help you relax and transport you somewhere beautiful, wherever you happen to be.Recorded by Daniel Graham. Presented by Hannah Tribe. Produced by Jack Bateman See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Whether we realize it or not, we think of our brains as computers. In neuroscience, the metaphor of the brain as a computer has defined the field for much of the modern era. But as neuroscientists increasingly reevaluate their assumptions about how brains work, we need a new metaphor to help us ask better questions. The computational neuroscientist Daniel Graham offers an innovative paradigm for understanding the brain. He argues that the brain is not like a single computer--it is a communication system, like the internet. Both are networks whose power comes from their flexibility and reliability. The brain and the internet both must route signals throughout their systems, requiring protocols to direct messages from just about any point to any other. But we do not yet understand how the brain manages the dynamic flow of information across its entire network. The internet metaphor can help neuroscience unravel the brain's routing mechanisms by focusing attention on shared design principles and communication strategies that emerge from parallel challenges. Highlighting similarities between brain connectivity and the architecture of the internet can open new avenues of research and help unlock the brain's deepest secrets. An Internet in Your Head presents a clear-eyed and engaging tour of brain science as it stands today and where the new paradigm might take it next. It offers anyone with an interest in brains a transformative new way to conceptualize what goes on inside our heads.Get the book here: https://wellingtonsquarebooks.indiecommerce.com/book/9780231196048
When people describe the brain they often compare it to a computer. In fact, the metaphor of the brain as a computer has defined the field for decades now. And in many ways, it works – the are many respects in which the brain is like a computer. But there are other aspects of the brain which are not captured by the computer metaphor which is why the neuroscientist Daniel Graham is suggesting another paradigm for understanding the brain. In his book An Internet in Your Head: A New Paradigm for How the Brain Works (Columbia UP, 2021), he argues that the brain is a communication system, like the internet. Owen Bennett-Jones is a freelance journalist and writer. A former BBC correspondent and presenter he has been a resident foreign correspondent in Bucharest, Geneva, Islamabad, Hanoi and Beirut. He is recently wrote a history of the Bhutto dynasty which was published by Yale University Press. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
When people describe the brain they often compare it to a computer. In fact, the metaphor of the brain as a computer has defined the field for decades now. And in many ways, it works – the are many respects in which the brain is like a computer. But there are other aspects of the brain which are not captured by the computer metaphor which is why the neuroscientist Daniel Graham is suggesting another paradigm for understanding the brain. In his book An Internet in Your Head: A New Paradigm for How the Brain Works (Columbia UP, 2021), he argues that the brain is a communication system, like the internet. Owen Bennett-Jones is a freelance journalist and writer. A former BBC correspondent and presenter he has been a resident foreign correspondent in Bucharest, Geneva, Islamabad, Hanoi and Beirut. He is recently wrote a history of the Bhutto dynasty which was published by Yale University Press. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
When people describe the brain they often compare it to a computer. In fact, the metaphor of the brain as a computer has defined the field for decades now. And in many ways, it works – the are many respects in which the brain is like a computer. But there are other aspects of the brain which are not captured by the computer metaphor which is why the neuroscientist Daniel Graham is suggesting another paradigm for understanding the brain. In his book An Internet in Your Head: A New Paradigm for How the Brain Works (Columbia UP, 2021), he argues that the brain is a communication system, like the internet. Owen Bennett-Jones is a freelance journalist and writer. A former BBC correspondent and presenter he has been a resident foreign correspondent in Bucharest, Geneva, Islamabad, Hanoi and Beirut. He is recently wrote a history of the Bhutto dynasty which was published by Yale University Press. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/science
When people describe the brain they often compare it to a computer. In fact, the metaphor of the brain as a computer has defined the field for decades now. And in many ways, it works – the are many respects in which the brain is like a computer. But there are other aspects of the brain which are not captured by the computer metaphor which is why the neuroscientist Daniel Graham is suggesting another paradigm for understanding the brain. In his book An Internet in Your Head: A New Paradigm for How the Brain Works (Columbia UP, 2021), he argues that the brain is a communication system, like the internet. Owen Bennett-Jones is a freelance journalist and writer. A former BBC correspondent and presenter he has been a resident foreign correspondent in Bucharest, Geneva, Islamabad, Hanoi and Beirut. He is recently wrote a history of the Bhutto dynasty which was published by Yale University Press. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/psychology
When people describe the brain they often compare it to a computer. In fact, the metaphor of the brain as a computer has defined the field for decades now. And in many ways, it works – the are many respects in which the brain is like a computer. But there are other aspects of the brain which are not captured by the computer metaphor which is why the neuroscientist Daniel Graham is suggesting another paradigm for understanding the brain. In his book An Internet in Your Head: A New Paradigm for How the Brain Works (Columbia UP, 2021), he argues that the brain is a communication system, like the internet. Owen Bennett-Jones is a freelance journalist and writer. A former BBC correspondent and presenter he has been a resident foreign correspondent in Bucharest, Geneva, Islamabad, Hanoi and Beirut. He is recently wrote a history of the Bhutto dynasty which was published by Yale University Press. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/neuroscience
When people describe the brain they often compare it to a computer. In fact, the metaphor of the brain as a computer has defined the field for decades now. And in many ways, it works – the are many respects in which the brain is like a computer. But there are other aspects of the brain which are not captured by the computer metaphor which is why the neuroscientist Daniel Graham is suggesting another paradigm for understanding the brain. In his book An Internet in Your Head: A New Paradigm for How the Brain Works (Columbia UP, 2021), he argues that the brain is a communication system, like the internet. Owen Bennett-Jones is a freelance journalist and writer. A former BBC correspondent and presenter he has been a resident foreign correspondent in Bucharest, Geneva, Islamabad, Hanoi and Beirut. He is recently wrote a history of the Bhutto dynasty which was published by Yale University Press.
When people describe the brain they often compare it to a computer. In fact, the metaphor of the brain as a computer has defined the field for decades now. And in many ways, it works – the are many respects in which the brain is like a computer. But there are other aspects of the brain which are not captured by the computer metaphor which is why the neuroscientist Daniel Graham is suggesting another paradigm for understanding the brain. In his book An Internet in Your Head: A New Paradigm for How the Brain Works (Columbia UP, 2021), he argues that the brain is a communication system, like the internet. Owen Bennett-Jones is a freelance journalist and writer. A former BBC correspondent and presenter he has been a resident foreign correspondent in Bucharest, Geneva, Islamabad, Hanoi and Beirut. He is recently wrote a history of the Bhutto dynasty which was published by Yale University Press. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Be charmed and relaxed by a few minutes on a blissful shore in Arisaig, Scotland. The road to the Isles squeezes between Lochaber's high mountains like a burn in spate, bending this way and that past stone byres and pine woods and tortuous lochs. It's not long before the road delivers its promise. Islands. Eigg and Rum, and the hazy, elevated profile of Skye. Yet despite the drama of the horizon, it's the peace and humility of the foreshore that tempts the senses. The lapping waves, the piping oystercatchers, and the scent of crushed bladderwrack and seashells, and driftwood drying in the sun.Recorded by Daniel Graham and presented by Hannah Tribe. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It's an hour after dawn when the sun finally rises above the head of the valley. There's an eagerness to the light, keen to get going after its slow start, and within moments the entire valley – the trees, the river and the banks of snow-white blackthorn – is a cauldron of light and life. Birdsong bubbles from the woods, the conversation of herons and their newly hatched young staccato from the melodious tones of wrens, great tits, and blackbirds.Recorded by Daniel Graham and presented by Hannah Tribe. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It hadn't rained for a week, but just as the garden was beginning to show its thirst, a single drop falls. Then two more. The sky releases a long, slow rumble then spills open like a long-held breath finally being freed. The sound of the rain is most satisfying down by the pond, somewhere to sit a while and enjoy the gentle patter of the year's first spring shower. Recorded by Daniel Graham, presented by Hannah Tribe See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
A day of rain has left the river running high and fast. The path on the bank is muddy. The air dank and cold. It could be deepest winter, if not for the riot of dusk birdsong spilling down from the trees beside the track. Gulls, blackbirds, wrens, great tits, and at one point a buzzard. There's something about chatter of a heron – perched on his huge nest in the trees – that brings the greatest joy. Recorded by Daniel Graham and presented by Hannah Tribe. BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a gentle postcard from the British countryside each week that allows you a soothing few minutes escape into the wild, wherever you are. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Be soothed by the gentle rise and fall of waves. On the north coast of Devon, where the high cliffs of Hartland plunge into the Atlantic Ocean, is the small village of Buck's Mills. The road in is steep and winding, flanked with white-washed cottages and banks of deep-green ferns and bare trees. You have to walk the final stretch down to the sea, but it's worth it. Winter beaches are quiet, and down here, among the boulders and churning waves, there isn't a soul in sight.BBC Countryfile Magazine's Sound Escapes are a gentle postcard from the British countryside each week that allows you a soothing few minutes escape into the wild, wherever you are. Recorded by Daniel Graham and presented by Hannah Tribe. Image from Getty See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This conversation with Daniel Graham from CarFinance 247 was so interesting and technical. His approach to his role is different and we definitely learned what sets apart a good CTO. "The culture that's important for me it's that I've tried to turn this tech team into one that owns its own platform and they can self-motivate themselves - they make their choices and we rationalise about them but they are in charge of how they do things. (...) For me, it's having a clear mission for them all and making them feel empowered that they can influence that mission and they know I've got their backs as well so I won't let them be pulled around by crazy business requirements." Music: https://www.purple-planet.com Podcast powered by Chroma Recruitment and 360insights
Social Chain (a pioneer in the creation, development and scaling of social media brands) Acquired His Marketing Agency.I invited Daniel Graham, the Founder & CEO of Mint Performance Marketing to Talk All About the Acquisition & More.In this interview we cover a ton of interesting ground on agency acquisitions, which are a very popular and great way to scale your agency.When you buy an agency, you're often acquiring EBIDTA, talent, and clients.Daniel talks about how long the process took, what he would've done differently, what services he things have legs, and so much more.More about Daniel's Agency and make sure to follow Daniel on Twitter:Mint Performance Marketing (https://www.mint-performancemarketing) is a full-service performance marketing agency. we help disruptive dtc/ecommerce brands accelerate growth with cutting edge strategies across creative, influencers, paid media, email & sms.You can follow Daniel on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/foodog85
Welcome to Sound Escapes – your chance to relax to the sounds of nature no matter how busy you are. In this episode, we take you to Bickley Wood on the River Avon the outskirts of Bristol where bluebells are freshly in bloom. A gentle rain is falling. Recorded by Daniel Graham and presented by Hannah Tribe See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Sydney hardcore outfit Arteries have recently dropped their crushing new album Outdoor Claustrophobic, a monumental slab of metal that gets better with each listen.For this album, the band elected to go more back to the basics to create a more accessible listening experience, a goal that Arteries have managed to smash out of the ballpark.Guitarists Braithe Selby and Daniel Graham joined HEAVY for a chat about the new album and the process behind it. "We were just going for a balls to the wall, as low and heavy and crushing as possible,” Graham enthused. “With our previous release it was quite self-indulgent and with this one, we wanted to do something that was a bit more 4/4 (laughs) in rhythm and be a bit groovier.”"We all got together and”, Selby continued “... it was more of a review process of what we wanted to play and we all decided to go straight for the ticket. We all decided on a direction that we all loved but at the end of the day, we want to play music that we love and we wanna hear. It's more a direction that naturally occurred and naturally evolved over time. We got together and worked together more as a band and cohesive unit and it's really what we are going for.” "We also tried to keep it the lower range of the neck and not go over the third fret,” Graham laughed. “There's plenty of bass bins in there - I think there's about 69 in there."When pressed about how they think debut album This Will Destroy Us became self-indulgent Selby is quick to explain."I guess we didn't really sit down and...,” he measured “we just kind of went for it. We knew what we wanted to do but after releasing that... you kind of look back at things and think 'we could tweak this or we could tweak that' and I guess make us a lot happier as a band by working together more. A more focused thing than writing whatever.""I think from a live perspective as well This Will Destroy Us had a lot of crazy time signatures and as heavily influenced by Dillenger Escape Plan,” Graham added, “and when we would play a show unless you knew the song and had been listening to it you had no idea what you were listening to and so the crowd reaction in some cases was non-existent. We just wanted to write something that the whole crowd could get into even if you haven't heard us before."In the full interview, Daniel and Braithe talk us through the album a bit more, discuss the latest single “Under The Influence” and it’s awesome film clip, hint at future plans, outline how COVID impacted Arteries and more.
Welcome to our latest Sound Escape, a chance to relax to the calming sounds of nature. In this episode, it is dusk on a flood-swollen River Avon on the outskirts of Bristol and the melodies of robins and song thrushes soothe the watery twilight. So sit back and be transported into the soundscapes of early spring. Recorded by Daniel Graham and presented by Hannah Tribe. Photo credit: Geograph See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It's our Big Game show with chef Brother Luck! If you wanna see the chicken wings and the pulled pork sandwich that chef Brother beat Bobby Flay with, then tune into this show! Chef Brother is coming up from Colorado Springs where he spends most of his time at his restaurants Four by Brother Luck and Lucky Dumpling developing their amazing menus and playing a huge roll in the local community! Juan Padró continues as guest host of the show and his co-host for this one will get you amped up for the big game! Ryan Harris, former Bronco and Super football Bowl Champion, color analyst for Notre Dame football and host of Masters of the Midday on Altitude Sports Radio is in studio and talking football and football food! If that's not enough for you, how about former New England Patriot and Bronco tight end Daniel Graham?! Yes sir he's on the show too, and he has a handful of those "football rings". Let's find out what food Daniel needs for the big game! "Where Juan Eats" is really catching fire, and why not, Juan is visiting some of the best places to eat in the city! This episode with Juan and co-host with the most Kendra Anderson took a little visit to.....
On this episode we are joined by Daniel Graham from Divine Clarity - our mentor on this intuitive journey-we discuss why an intuitive circle is so helpful to each persons development of intuitive skills. There is also a bunch about mediumship and random tangents on other intuitive stuff!!
This is a Q & A episode in two parts. The first part is an abbreviated version of my ‘Ask Me Anything” call with Daniel Graham, a podcast listener from Queenstown, New Zealand. We discuss why I still believe lithium is the best investment among battery raw materials, Tesla, range anxiety, the market for newly designed LFP batteries, lithium metal, ponder if DLE's potential will be realized or if the industry will have to rely on existing technology for the foreseeable future. I give my thoughts on lithium projects on both sides of the Andes, the importance of project teams and I respond to a “personal question”. In Part II, I answer the question of why even major producers struggle making high percentages of battery quality material. I define the lithium “last mile” problem and answer specific questions about SQM and Standard Lithium. Finally, I discuss why the growth of LFP won't make life easier for producers as far as quality is concerned. The podcast can be found on the Global Lithium website: www.globallithium.net, Anchor, Spotify, Apple Podcast and other major podcast outlets. To ask a question, leave a comment or to submit your name for the next "Ask Me Anything" drawing, please go to www.globallithium.net/contact
In this episode of the HYPECAST we talk to Daniel Graham, digital marketing OG and founder of Mint Marketing Agency, a leading digital growth agency based out of LA. From being one of the first employees at MySpace, to leading digital strategies for some of the biggest brands we know today, including Toyota and Adidas, Daniel has amassed a wealth of knowledge in leading brands to success using online platforms. He now uses this experience to drive incredible results for his own clients at Mint Marketing Agency. We have been fortunate enough to connect with Daniel and now work with him on various projects of our own. We would recommend Daniel and his agency to anyone looking for a digital partner and anyone looking to expand into international markets. In this episode, we talked all things digital. What the landscape looks like right now, how brands should be thinking about digital marketing and what the future holds for brands post COVID-19. We hope you enjoy the episode! If you want to connect with Daniel, see his details below: https://www.mint-marketingagency.com/ https://www.instagram.com/mr_daniel_james/
A conversation with Goodwill’s Daniel Graham, Mount Vernon Goodwill Center Manager. Talking about job training and upcoming job training workshops.
The JAMCast welcomes Kyle Mclean, a tricking legend and stunt double for Jason Statham and Jeremy Renner. Learn about his life beginning as a tricker in Houston alongside Sesshoumaru & 3rd Coast Alliance, his move to Los Angeles in order to pursue being a professional tricker and stuntman, and the amazing opportunities he has had over the last few years performing on some of the biggest Hollywood blockbuster film and TV franchises. The JAMCast is a weekly podcast hosted by Professional Stunt Coordinator Travis Wong, interviewing influential figures in the movement world. From world champion athletes to Hollywood stunt doubles, the aim is to provide a unique perspective into the minds of those so well known for using their bodies. www.TheJamcast.comFOR FULL VIDEOS OF EACH EPISODE: https://youtube.com/JoiningAllMovementALL AUDIO LINKS:https://TheJAMCast.comSPECIAL GUEST: Kyle Mclean | @Mcleaner710HOST: Travis Wong | @TheTravisWongPRODUCTION ENGINEER: Connor Simon | @Connor.SimonSPONSOR: Inner West Hemp | @InnerWestHempFOLLOW US ONLINE: https://TheJAMCast.comTWITTER: https://twitter.com/JAMovementINSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/JAMovementYOUTUBE: https://youtube.com/JoiningAllMovementFACEBOOK: https://facebook.com/JoiningAllMovement
The JAMCast welcomes Daniel Graham, a professional stuntman and tricking legend who was the stunt double for Black Panther in the blockbuster Hollywood film. Learn about his life growing up as a martial artist, his discovery of tricking and the path he took to creating moves and becoming a top tier athlete, and the transition he has made in recent years of becoming a working stuntman and proud father.The JAMCast is a weekly podcast hosted by Professional Stunt Coordinator Travis Wong, interviewing influential figures in the movement world. From world champion athletes to Hollywood stunt doubles, the aim is to provide a unique perspective into the minds of those so well known for using their bodies. www.TheJamcast.comFOR FULL VIDEOS OF EACH EPISODE: https://youtube.com/JoiningAllMovementALL AUDIO LINKS:https://TheJAMCast.comSPECIAL GUEST: Daniel Graham | @DanielGraham85HOST: Travis Wong | @TheTravisWongPRODUCTION ENGINEER: Connor Simon | @Connor.SimonFOLLOW US ONLINE:https://TheJAMCast.comTWITTER: https://twitter.com/JAMovementINSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/JAMovementYOUTUBE: https://youtube.com/JoiningAllMovementFACEBOOK: https://facebook.com/JoiningAllMovement
This week on Mel Tucker's Inside Zone, the Buffs head coach and Voice of the Buffs, Mark Johnson, talk with Buffs great, Daniel Graham, about winning the Mackey Award, 62-36, and what's better then winning a Super Bowl!
A discussion about Goodwill and their Job Training and Education Center with Daniel Graham, Mount Vernon Goodwill Center Manager.
Daniel Graham,Gerente del Centro de Capacitación de Goodwill Mount Vernon,Wa. -Elena Huizar Supervisora de Alcance Comunitario,trabaja por la oficina del Procurador del estado en la División de Protección al Consumidor,con el tema Estafas Telefónicas y su modus operandi.
Bear Wood, part of Bristol's Wild Place is the location of a surprising new project where bears, wolves, lynx and wolverines will be allowed to roam free in a vast enclosure of deciduous woodland as would once have done in Britain's ancient past. Our own Daniel Graham explored the new attraction in the company of Will and others from the Wild Place project. And don't forget to visit our website countryfile.com for everything you want to know and more about the British countryside. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Matt McChesney and Bobby Pesavento host a pre-Nebraska super podcast. Gary Barnett, Daniel Graham, Sean Tufts and Mike Pritchard all appear on the show. Leave your thoughts and questions in the comment section below and Henry will talk about them on Thursday's podcast!
In this episode of McChesney Unchained, Matt McChesney is joined by an all-star cast of former Buff's legends reminiscing on some of the greatest moments of the CU-Nebraska rivalry. From coach Gary Barnett to Daniel Graham, Mike Pritchard, and Bobby Pesavento, the guys share their unique insights on the past and present of this great rivalry.
Digital/social marketer Daniel Graham shares his story of how he moved from England to Los Angeles to pursue his dream of running his own agency, now known as Mint Marketing Agency. Graham reflects back to how he went from working at MySpace to leading global digital and social strategies with other online digital services for brands including Adidas, Toyota, and Redbull. Support the show (http://www.patreon.com/theparablespodcast.com)
In this season Cornerstone is focusing on one of the great, though often overlooked, themes of Scripture, Exile. The prevalence of exile as a theme, across the span of Scripture is significant: in Genesis 3 the first humans are exiled from the garden. We also read in Scripture about Abraham’s descendants being exiled in Egypt. And of course the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah are carried into exile by the Assyrians and the Babylonians. In recent times scholars like N.T. Wright have helped us to see that in Jesus’ time there was a conception of the Jews being exiled in the Promised Land, because of the occupying presence of Rome. Even though exile is such an important theme it is not difficult to imagine why it is not much focused upon in Christian culture – nobody wants to be in exile. Exile is hard. But throughout the story of God and His people, even in exile God is always doing something. Numerous commentators are observing how the church in the Western world, once at the centre, is now being pushed to the margins of society. Could it be that the church is going into an exile of sorts? If so, what might this mean for us as Christians? How would we go about being the people of God in such circumstance? We hope you’ll be blessed as we explore some possible answers to these questions together.
In this episode, Daniel Graham dissects the capabilities of data lakes and compares it to data warehouses. He talks about the primary use cases of data lakes and how they are vital for big data ecosystems. He then goes on to explain the role of data warehouses which are still responsible for timely and accurate data but don't have a central role anymore. In the end, both Wayne Eckerson and Dan Graham settle on a common definition for modern data architectures. Daniel Graham has more than 30 years in IT, consulting, research, and product marketing, with almost 30 years at leading database management companies. Dan was a Strategy Director in IBM’s Global BI Solutions division and General Manager of Teradata’s high-end server divisions. During his tenure as a product marketer, Dan has been responsible for MPP data management systems, data warehouses, and data lakes, and most recently, the Internet of Things and streaming systems.
Ep 33 - Daniel Graham & Rolltad Returns by Freeballin Podcast
Les, Shawn and Doug interview Daniel Graham in hour No. 1 on his career at CU as he's being inducted into the CU Hall of Fame. The guys also react to today's practice and the demotion comments of Paxton Lynch from Vance Joseph.
It's all about tight ends -- past and present. We start by catching up with Jeff Heuerman (0:37) to find out why OC Bill Musgrave thought he was the fastest player on the field Tuesday. At 6:37, it's on to backup Matt LaCosse, who scored a TD last Saturday, but almost lost the ball in the lights. Finally, Marc Stout and Ray Crockett visit with former Broncos team captain Daniel Graham (17:02).
And so it begins. Wisconsin Notes is a podcast birthed out of a love for storytelling and the uncommon interview. No two episodes will be the same as we change hosts, guests, episode lengths and topics. Today's intro is a small glimpse into the main characters involved: Daniel Graham, Laura Green, Bojan Mandaric, and Brogan Graham.
Daniel Graham from the Alberta Financial Services Corporation(AFSC) provides a quick update on insurance coverage
If you only know the name of a grandparent, then how do you go back three or four generations to find their slave ancestors? Konnetta Alexander shares touching stories of finding her slave ancestors going back three and four generations. With inspiration from journal entries of an Antebellum, slave account book written by slaveholder Daniel Graham, the lives of unrelated slaves provides documentation of slave life from which Konnetta uses as her guidebook to find and document slaves. While making national presentations about the life of Matila Graham, house slave, Konnetta tells the story of every house slave! Calling out the last names of her slave ancestors: Clark, Miller, Moorman, Peay, Prince, Quinn and Ramsey. Join in as discoveries unfold in Finding Our Slaves. With 20+ years of genealogy digging, Konnetta has three projects: researching family, transcribing and making public excerpts of the slave journal, and performing interpretative presentations about the lives of Free Persons of Color and Slaves. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration, is an annual participant of MAAGI (Mid-Western African American Genealogy Institute), and member of several historical societies. The focus of Konnetta’s genealogy research is finding, documenting and personalizing slaves, whether family nor not.