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Densely packed club experience. Read more: https://www.orbmag.com/music/podcast/orb-podcast-078-stefan-goldmann/ @stefangoldmann
Some of the most densely populated places on the planet are found in cities like Mumbai, India, where neighborhoods can be extremely crowded with people living close together in high-rise buildings and narrow streets. Tokyo, Japan, also stands out for its densely packed urban areas and efficient land use. In places like Hong Kong and Singapore, skyscrapers and apartment complexes are common, accommodating large populations in relatively small areas. In some places, a whole village lives on a territory that is smaller than a football field! Credit: AFP News Agency / YouTube Mapmory / Pinterest Great Big Story / YouTube EM Walking Tour / YouTube Animation is created by Bright Side. #brightside ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Music from TheSoul Sound: https://thesoul-sound.com/ Check our Bright Side podcast on Spotify and leave a positive review! https://open.spotify.com/show/0hUkPxD... Subscribe to Bright Side: https://goo.gl/rQTJZz ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Our Social Media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brightside Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brightside.... TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@brightside.of... Stock materials (photos, footages and other): https://www.depositphotos.com https://www.shutterstock.com https://www.eastnews.ru ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- For more videos and articles visit: http://www.brightside.me ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This video is made for entertainment purposes. We do not make any warranties about the completeness, safety and reliability. Any action you take upon the information in this video is strictly at your own risk, and we will not be liable for any damages or losses. It is the viewer's responsibility to use judgement, care and precaution if you plan to replicate. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Advancing Acute MI Care In Densely Populated LMICs: Innovative Standalone Chest Pain Units For Expedited Triage And Timely Management - A Role Model For Global Healthcare Systems
According to a 2022 UN report, there is fresh evidence that the world is moving in reverse, away from the Sustainable Development Goal (SDGs) of ending hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms, by 2030, which is just six years away. The Food and and Agriculture Organisation says attaining the SGD 2 target by 2030 would be difficult, unless agrifood systems are transformed and made more resilient. Densely-populated countries like Singapore have been adopting new technologies to maximise organic production of foods and vegetables using minimum land. In this episode of Mind Your Business, we speak with a pair of “young” farmers, James Yin, CEO & Co-founder, V-plus Agritech and Nelson Tan, CTO & Co-founder, V-plus Agritech, who aim to empower communities and individuals with their smart technology in sustainable farming to reshape agriculture. Presented by Emaad Akhtar This podcast is produced and edited by Anthea Ng (nganthea@sph.com.sg) She produces Mind Your Business, Biz-How-To and Breakfast Special segments on the Breakfast Show. Do contact her for topics: C-Suite, SME, Startups, Sustainability, Property, Intergenerational Family Business, Industry Outlook, Fintech and trending businesses in town. Music credits: pixabay & its talented community of contributors See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
AP correspondent Charles de Ledesma reports on Israel Palestinians-Rafah.
Catalonia has reached a new population record of 8 million residents. The growth has come quicker than ever before - jumping by 1 million inhabitants in just 17 years. And that's despite having some of the lowest fertility rates in the world. So, how does the math add up? Well, there are two main factors at play: people are living longer and there are more foreign-born residents. In this episode, we'll get reactions from a range of people on the street and talk to Albert Esteve, director of the Center for Demographic Studies. The Catalan phrase of the week is: "Entre poc i massa," which translates literally to "between a little and too much," and is used when someone exaggerates. Presented by Lucía Benavides with Lorcan Doherty, Oriol Escudé and Guifré Jordan.
After the Israeli military struck Gaza's largest refugee camp for a second straight day, the UN warned that the strikes on the densely populated residential area "could amount to war crimes". Those attacks came even as the humanitarian situation in Gaza continued to worsen. Sari Bashi, Program Director at Human Rights Watch, joins us on Perspective to share her analysis of the situation.
Erin is live from Israel as troops mass at the border to Gaza with no word of the hostages tonight. Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu makes the case for spitting Hamas out like ISIS. Plus, a retired Israeli general joins to share his incredible story about how he rushed to fight militants hand to hand with a pistol. For daily information on the Israel-Gaza conflict, check out CNN's podcast ‘Tug of War: Attack on Israel' here: https://link.chtbl.com/-lB8n-bJ To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
We're all busy and have a lot on our schedules, and sometimes we only have time for a quick podcast. Come listen to this podcast short as we answer your questions in a short amount of time. Today's podcast short is all about planting seeds densely vs planting at the spacing recommended on the seed packet. More than just germination rates, there are other reasons we like to plant densely!For more information, links mentioned, and more great Homesteading Family content, visit the website here: https://homesteadingfamily.com
This podcast describes past local government efforts to keep hazardous freight rail traffic out of D.C. and illuminates what DC government is doing now to protect D.C. citizens, using current laws and regulations. In 2005, the D.C. Council was blocked by the D.C. Court of Appeals from enforcing legislation that would have stopped rail transport of hazardous freight into DC. In 2007 a government report suggested routing rail freight traffic away from densely populated D.C., but that suggestion was not followed. In this podcast, Michael Somersall, Associate Director of the Rail Safety and Emergency Response Division of D.C.'s Environmental Services Administration describes how this Division enforces current state level and federal rail safety rules and regulations with the goal of protecting District residents and railroad employees from unsafe practices on both freight and passenger trains. Ann Wilcox and Don Resnikoff provided introductory information. Ann is co-chair of the D.C. Bar D.C. Affairs Community. Don Resnikoff, who moderated the podcast, is a member of the D.C. Bar Antitrust and Consumer Law Community. Please note, the positions and opinions expressed by the speakers are strictly their own, and do not necessarily represent the views of their employers, nor those of the D.C. Bar, its Board of Governors or co-sponsoring Communities and organizations. Thank you to our sponsor! LawPay was developed specifically to help law firms streamline billings and collections, providing a simple, secure solution for legal clients to pay their bills. LawPay is the industry leader in legal payments, providing a cost-effective solution for more than 50,000 law firms around the country.
Mars at equinox. Martian clouds. The asteroid belt isn't nearly as dense as shown on TV. Planets don't twinkle--usually.
In what is, arguably, the most random episode of Eight or Sixteen ever, Rob and Mark talk about everything from Trypophobia to Mark's new studio plans, Brian Eno, the Roland RD-700 digital piano, Microsoft 365, weird iPads, and Mark's camera-death-defying studio antics. Enjoy. Links Focal Bathys review: https://youtu.be/3BQmhenOI44 Mark's iffy composition: https://twitter.com/mellisreviews/status/1588106201107161091?s=61&t=pzoXOijApvWPssng6338Jg Roli: https://roli.com If you'd like to get in touch with Rob and Mark, you can email them at contact@eightorsixteen.com. Eight or Sixteen is a Mark Ellis Reviews production: https://markellisreviews.com
A Densely Woven Tapestry of Fiction was written and performed by H.R. Owen and Rhys Lawton.Rhys plays Elder Findlay in The Secret of St Kilda, whose second season is on the horizon. He also has roles on the upcoming podcasts Technostress and Ethics Town. For more information, visit rhyslawton.com or follow him @Draull on Twitter. You can learn more about the podcasts mentioned here by following @The Kilda, @TechnostressPod, and @EthicsTownPod on Twitter.Transcript available at www.monstrousagonies.co.uk/post/m-a-presents-a-densely-woven-tapestry-of-fiction.If you'd like to support the show, you can sign up for a monthly pledge at patreon.com/monstrousagonies or make a one-off donation at ko-fi.com/hrowen.Monstrous Agonies will return for Season Three at the start of October. Keep an eye on our social media accounts for updates.The inbox is now closed for your letters and prompts for Season Three. Thank you to everyone who has submitted so far. We are still accepting adverts, however, so send them in by email at submissions@monstrousagonies.co.uk; on Tumblr at Monstrous Agonies; through our Twitter account, @Monstrous_Pod; or through the website at www.monstrousagonies.co.uk----Written and performed by H.R. Owen and Rhys LawtonTheme tune: Dakota by Unheard Music Concepts. Check out their music at unheardmusicconcepts.comAdditional sound by H.R. Owen Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Anglo-Saxon law codes give us a rare glimpse into the lives of ludic aristocrats. Densely populated Wessex was ruled by a hierarchy of beadledoms, made up of lords, bishops, and elites who dabbled in amusements such as carioca and eminencies. The codes forbid anyone from harming an infant, and provide an unusual perspective on aristocratic infant mortality.
People Group Details: https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/12106 Listen to "A Third of Us" podcast with Greg Kelley, produced by the Alliance for the Unreached: https://alliancefortheunreached.org/podcast/ Watch "Stories of Courageous Christians" w/ Mark Kordic https://storiesofcourageouschristians.com/stories-of-courageous-christians
There is a proposal for a twenty-story apartment building in downtown Boise. What are your concerns if Boise becomes more densely populated, is it a political concern? There is a bill in front of the U.S. House to stop Islamaphobia from happening. Is this a role of government? At Caldwell High School everytime they open one of the boy's bathrooms, it is destroyed within 24 hours. What is a good solution? In the wake of the tornado tragedies that happened over the weekend, news is now coming out that employees at the Mayfield candle factory may have been told that if they left they would be fired. (12/14/21)
Densely-populated with lots of turn-over, cities are perhaps the worst place to be in a pandemic. And yet in the latter half of the COVID-19 pandemic, people living in cities have been safer than their rural and suburban counterparts. Abdul explores why cities matter when it comes to public health. Then he speaks with Katrina Forrest, co-Executive Director of the CityHealth initiative and Chrissie Juliano, Executive Director of the Big Cities Health Coalition, to discuss the threats and opportunities facing health in cities. For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/americadissected. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this episode i go back with my origional guest Brian Sanders. Owner of nosetotail.org, host of the Peak Human Podcast and co creator of the Sapien framework and Sapien.org.We go into how to gut your gut heal in order. Then how to lose wight the right way.Stop drinking calories.Avoind the SAD 3 ingredients Processed oilsSugar Processed grains
San Francisco is a densely populated area, thus a highly competitive market, but there are still ways to establish yourself as an oral surgeon if you decide to set up shop there. Today we talk to Dr. Aldrich Sy, a past classmate of Dr. Stucki’s, about his experiences practicing in the San Francisco area and how he has managed to get his name out there and succeed in this tough landscape. For Dr. Sy, San Francisco is a great place to live, and he was prepared to do whatever it took to make headway in the first few years after graduating from residency. After chatting a bit about Dr. Sy’s education and reminiscing about college, we jump right in and hear about the steps he took to start practicing professionally. He talks about receiving an offer from an assistant professor from UCSF to come and join him at his existing practice. We speak about how well this relationship has been going and the importance of trust in maintaining it. From there, Dr. Sy describes all the things he did to start receiving his first few patients, from literally knocking on the doors of other dentists in the area, to giving lectures at medical and dental schools and more – anything to get a foot in the door. The main message we get from Dr. Sy is that as a young oral surgeon hoping to make it in the Bay Area, you need to be willing to leave your ego at the door, be a good person, and give freely of yourself without expecting anything in return. As we discuss today, oral surgeons depend on general dentists for referrals even though they are more qualified, so the better your reputation in these circles, the more you’ll thrive. For some great insights from Dr. Sy about the value of doing good for others when trying to make it in a competitive landscape, tune in today.Key Points From This Episode:An introduction to Dr. Sy: His career ambitions, education, and current practice.How Dr. Sy’s current practice partnership is going and the place of trust in this relationship.What Dr. Sy does in such a densely populated area to keep his practice thriving.Finding a niche, building relationships, giving lectures: How Dr. Sy got his name out there.Oral surgeons depend on general dentists for referrals even though they are more qualified.The need for oral surgeons to swallow their pride while building their early careers.Being a good person and a go-giver to survive in competitive San Francisco.Remembering that you can’t please everybody and not feeling bad for saying no to some referrals.Trying not to squeeze money out of patients and only doing what is necessary to help them.Being generous with one’s phone number and communicating frequently with patients and dentists.How to handle big quantities of follow-ups with patients after surgeries.Being flexible with your plan for how to make it as an oral surgeon.The idea that many surgeons don’t end up having the right personality for San Francisco.Tradeoffs about living in San Francisco: Expenses, lifestyle, tax, and more.Qualified oral surgeons are adaptable due to many being weeded out during residency.Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:Dr. Aldrich SyUCLAUCSFAAOMSThe Go-Giver
This week we're doing another series preview sharing a podcast we enjoy here at The Overhead Wire. Densely Speaking is a podcast by Jeffrey Lin and Greg Shill discussing cities, economics and law. You can subscribe to Densely Speaking wherever you get your podcasts. On this episode! Professor Leah Brooks, economist and Associate Professor of Public Policy and Public Affairs at the George Washington University's Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Affairs, joins the show to discuss Infrastructure Costs, her working paper (joint with Prof. Zachary Liscow, Yale Law School). Jenny Schuetz, a fellow at the Brookings Institution's Metropolitan Policy Program, joins as a guest co-host. Note: The views expressed on the show are those of the participants, and do not necessarily represent the views of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, the Federal Reserve System, or any of the other institutions with which the hosts or guests are affiliated.
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.10.20.340364v1?rss=1 Authors: Hadjiabadi, D. H., Lovett-Barron, M., Raikov, I., Sparks, F., Liao, Z., Baraban, S. C., Leskovec, J., Losonczy, A., Deisseroth, K., Soltesz, I. Abstract: Sixty-five million people suffer from epilepsy and associated cognitive decline worldwide. Therefore, there is urgent need to identify novel mechanisms involved in epileptic network instability. Densely connected 'hub' neurons have been implicated as key controllers of developmental as well as epileptic circuits. While such hub cells are traditionally defined by connection count, how these connections contribute to interictal dynamics is not understood. We performed whole-brain single-cell calcium imaging of the larval zebrafish brain in an acute seizure model. Biologically constrained modeling of cell-cell effective interactions successfully reproduced experimental calcium dynamics and enabled hub identification. Simulated perturbation of single hub neurons in the preseizure state confirmed that such traditional hub cells can exert major influence over global dynamics. Novel higher-order graph analytics revealed that the sensitivity to perturbation is not simply linked to outgoing degrees but rather to overexpression of feedforward motifs surrounding the hub cells that enhance downstream excitation. Model- and species similarity of the key findings was supported by similar results from the hippocampus of chronically epileptic mice. Collectively, these data identify a specific class of high-order hub neuron that is richly involved in feedforward motifs as an attractive new target for seizure control. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
Always remember that Lofi Poli Sci is more than just me, it's the “we”, that we be. Email: lofipolisci@planetmail.com Instagram: lofi_poli_sci_podcast Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lofi-poli-sci-podcast/id1513691477 Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/4Ii0JKbsKEzkO8SA2u3796 Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8xNzg1MjhjYy9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaLg4TOVb7nh4laDatZZ3yQ LinkedIn: Michael Pickering #lofipolisci #lofi #politicalscience #news #worldnews #globalnews #lofiGlobalNews #alwaysHope #podcast #lofipoliscipodcast #TuesdayTop10 #Top10 #Top10Tuesday #PopulationDensity #LeastDenselyPopulatedCountries #Iceland #BeKind #BeHuman #WeAreHuman #LivingTogether #OneWorld #OnePlanet
“10 Most Densely Populated Countries” Always remember that Lofi Poli Sci is more than just me, it's the “we”, that we be. Email: lofipolisci@planetmail.com Instagram: lofi_poli_sci_podcast Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lofi-poli-sci-podcast/id1513691477 Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/4Ii0JKbsKEzkO8SA2u3796 Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8xNzg1MjhjYy9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaLg4TOVb7nh4laDatZZ3yQ LinkedIn: Michael Pickering #lofipolisci #lofi #politicalscience #news #worldnews #globalnews #lofiGlobalNews #alwaysHope #podcast #lofipoliscipodcast #TuesdayTop10 #Top10 #Top10Tuesday #PopulationDensity #MostDenselyPopulatedCountries #Singapore #BeKind #BeHuman #WeAreHuman #LivingTogether #OneWorld #OnePlanet
Our intro episode. The views expressed on the show are those of the participants, and do not necessarily represent the views of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, the Federal Reserve System, or any of the other institutions with which the hosts or guests are affiliated. This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
Almost five and a half months after India reported its first case of coronavirus from Kerala on 30th January, the country has now crossed a dreaded milestone.India reported more than a million COVID-19 infections on 16 July, that have cost 25,000 lives so far, including that of doctors and health workers. This also came with the biggest single-day spike in the number of cases yet.From a few thousand cases before the lockdown, the infection rate has been soaring to almost a 30,000 spike on some days, since the unlocking of commercial activities and relaxation of restrictions, making India the third worst hit country in no time, behind the United States and Brazil.While the Centre on different occasions has claimed that India has flattened the Covid-19 curve to a great extent, that is still largely being disputed by experts. But what does touching a million infection mean for a tightly populated country like India? Tune in to The Big Story!Producer and Host: Shorbori PurkayasthaEditor: Shelly Walia Music: Big Bang FuzzListen to The Big Story podcast on: Apple: https://apple.co/2AYdLIl Saavn: http://bit.ly/2oix78C Google Podcasts: http://bit.ly/2ntMV7S Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2IyLAUQ Deezer: http://bit.ly/2Vrf5Ng Castbox: http://bit.ly/2VqZ9ur
Densely populated living quarters, no full lockdown, and a poor public healthcare system has left Egypt struggling to contain the coronavirus pandemic. There is no open press in Egypt, leaving many of its citizens uninformed and unaware of the severity of the virus outbreak. FOX's Trey Yingst speaks with Amy Hawthorne, the Deputy Director for Research at the Project on Middle East Democracy, on how coronavirus is exacerbating the situation in the Middle East. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Densely populated living quarters, no full lockdown, and a poor public healthcare system has left Egypt struggling to contain the coronavirus pandemic. There is no open press in Egypt, leaving many of its citizens uninformed and unaware of the severity of the virus outbreak. FOX's Trey Yingst speaks with Amy Hawthorne, the Deputy Director for Research at the Project on Middle East Democracy, on how coronavirus is exacerbating the situation in the Middle East.
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.06.07.138941v1?rss=1 Authors: Duan, B., Walker, L. A., Roosien, D. H., Shen, F. Y., Cai, D., Yan, Y. Abstract: Reconstructing neuron morphology is central to uncovering the complexity of the nervous system. That is because the morphology of a neuron essentially provides the physical constraints to its intrinsic electrophysiological properties and its connectivity. Recent advances in imaging technologies generated large quantities of high-resolution 3D images of neurons in the brain. Furthermore, the multispectral labeling technology, Brainbow permits unambiguous differentiation of neighboring neurons in a densely labeled brain, therefore enables for the first time the possibility of studying the connectivity between many neurons from a light microscopy image. However, lack of reliable automated neuron morphology reconstruction makes data analysis the bottleneck of extracting rich informatics in neuroscience. Supervoxel-based neuron segmentation methods have been proposed to solve this problem, however, the use of previous approaches has been impeded by the large numbers of errors which arise in the final segmentation. In this paper, we present a novel unsupervised approach to trace neurons from multispectral Brainbow images, which prevents segmentation errors and tracing continuity errors using two innovations. First, we formulate a Gaussian mixture model-based clustering strategy to improve the separation of segmented color channels that provides accurate skeletonization results for the following steps. Next, a skeleton graph approach is proposed to allow the identification and correction of discontinuities in the neuron tree topology. We find that these innovations allow our approach to outperform current state-of-the-art approaches, which results in more accurate neuron tracing as a tree representation close to human expert annotation. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
In today's bonus episode, the Busty Babes take their own spin on BBC2's Desert Island Discs - The Densely Populated City Playlist! Join the Babes as they talk through their 'Busty Bops', why they hold such importance to them, and how its shaped them into the Babes they are now. Contains explicit content, viewer discretion is advised.
Bangladesh is about the size of Iowa, but it has 50 times as many people. That extremely high population density makes containing coronavirus a huge challenge -- as does the recent influx of a million refugees from neighboring Myanmar. Special correspondent Fred de Sam Lazaro reports on how one non-governmental group is trying to tackle the problem. It's part of his series Agents for Change.
Is the U.S. Ready to Reopen? Across the country, states are starting to relax restrictions put in place because of COVID-19, even as the death toll surpasses 67,000. Biden Responds to Sexual Assault Allegations After Weeks of Silence It’s been one month since Tara Reade, a former Senate staffer, publicly accused Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden of sexually assaulting her in 1993. Why COVID-19 is So Deadly in Long-Term Care Facilities More than 16,000 residents and staff of long-term care facilities have died in the U.S. of COVID-19. Navajo Nation is Being Hit Hard By COVID-19 Densely populated states like New York and New Jersey have been hit hard by COVID-19, the area with the third highest infection rate in the country is Navajo Nation.
Is the U.S. Ready to Reopen? Across the country, states are starting to relax restrictions put in place because of COVID-19, even as the death toll surpasses 67,000. Biden Responds to Sexual Assault Allegations After Weeks of Silence It’s been one month since Tara Reade, a former Senate staffer, publicly accused Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden of sexually assaulting her in 1993. Why COVID-19 is So Deadly in Long-Term Care Facilities More than 16,000 residents and staff of long-term care facilities have died in the U.S. of COVID-19. Navajo Nation is Being Hit Hard By COVID-19 Densely populated states like New York and New Jersey have been hit hard by COVID-19, the area with the third highest infection rate in the country is Navajo Nation.
The Do One Better! Podcast – Philanthropy, Sustainability and Social Entrepreneurship
COVID-19 in crisis settings and the power of play. CEO of Right To Play, Kevin Frey, joins Alberto Lidji to discuss how they’re preparing for the pandemic in 52 refugee camps across 22 countries. This episode looks at Right To Play’s work and how it impacts lives in diverse ways – we frame the whole conversation within the coronavirus context and the challenges for their workforce and beneficiaries alike. Right To Play is an international organisation that was founded in 2000 by Johann Olav Koss – a former Norwegian Olympian. They’re working in 22 countries – mainly in Africa, Middle East and Asia – and reach over 22 million children every year. They work in 52 different refugee camps and have extensive experience in crisis settings. Kevin and Right To Play Internatiponal are based in Toronto, Canada, and the organisation has offices in many countries, from New York and London, to Amsterdam, Norway, Sweden and Germany. They use all forms of play, from gamified learning to music, sports, arts and more. We hear of the organisation’s trajectory, from 2000 until today. Over the years, they have secured impressive government and foundation partners. They work closely with the LEGO Foundation and the IKEA Foundation, and have collaborated with the governments of Canada, UK, Switzerland and Germany, to name a few. They have also entered into a high-profile partnership with Liverpool Football Club and have Right To Play’s logo featured on Liverpool's kit for Champions League games. When asked about COVID-19 and his concerns of how this pandemic will impact their work, Kevin notes that they have concerns about preparing their staff in the Global South for what’s coming and protecting their beneficiaries – the millions of children who they reach every year. The dynamics on the ground in many of the countries and settings where they work present real challenges. Densely populated areas, refugee camps, poor water sanitation, poor access to healthcare etc – the list is lengthy. This will impact local communities in many different ways and at Right To Play they’re not only doing pre-emptive work on hand washing and social distancing but are also paying much attention to providing psycho-social support for the trauma that will ensue post-pandemic. Mental health and wellbeing are key considerations beyond the direct viral impact of the novel coronavirus and COVID-19. Interestingly, Right To Play learned much from when they were doing charitable work in Liberia back in 2014 during the Ebola outbreak. They hope that in countries that have coped with Ebola, there will be experience, expertise and insight that will help them better prepare for the imminent challenges of this crisis. We hear how ‘play’ is a means to an end. Through play, they manage to improve children's lives across many areas, including quality education, gender equality, peaceful communities, health and wellbeing, and child protection – it’s a holistic set of objectives and play is merely a means to achieve this. Kevin notes that Right To Play’s name can be misleading since they don’t actually exist to defend children’s right to play – rather, play is just the mechanism that they use to drive these really important changes in kids’ lives. It’s a powerful force in children’s lives. Play can convene children so they come out to whatever programmes you’re running and to teach them active experiential gamified learning – there is very strong research that shows this is how kids learn best. Impact is at the core of their activities and they’re incorporating RCTs (randomised control trials) wherever possible into their programme design. We hear how building local capacity is key to Right To Play’s model. RTP employees don’t work directly with children. Instead, they always train local partners to run those programmes on the front lines. They train and engage with diverse stakeholders, from community organisations and teachers to prison guards in children’s correctional facilities. Historically, Right To Play were keen to enter whatever countries they had funding for. Today, however, RTP tries to go deep into the countries where they have an existing presence. That being said, they have recently announced with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada a joint partnership bringing Right To Play to Senegal. This is an exciting addition to the work Right To Play is already doing in Mali, Jordan, Thailand, Mozambique, Burundi, Pakistan, Ghana and several other countries. When asked about what success looks like in the next 10 years, Kevin remarks that: It’s not about achieving some headline number. Rather, they want to continue to serve more and more children in the run up 2030 -- the target year for the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). They want to get to more kids to protect, to educate and to empower them. They’d like to engage with other international organisations that may already be working at large scale across 50 or 100 countries; they’d like to explore how such global organisations can become delivery and distribution partners for the evidence-based work Right To Play is offering. Scale and reaching more kids really matters. Kevin’s key takeaway: Speaking within a COVID-19 context, Kevin notes that leaders can get hit by these crises that you never see coming and you can be stunned and left wondering what do I do next. But he notes that it is precisely when the world is changing super rapidly like this that actually new opportunities are emerging – opportunities to serve new populations, or born out of necessity, to invent new and disruptive ways to innovate and to deliver impact. New opportunities to get into relationships with people that up until now you hadn’t been talking to. There are huge opportunities to leapfrog on strategy, on delivery methodologies, on organisational structure. Ask yourself, how can I make this crisis a force for really progressive and positive change for our organisation. Visit Lidji.org for guest bios, episode notes and useful links. Please subscribe to this podcast and share widely -- thank you!
Today I'm so excited to have Brian Sanders on the show! He is the filmmaker behind the feature-length documentary Food Lies and host of the Peak Human podcast. He graduated from UCLA with a degree in Mechanical Engineering but then found a passion for health and fitness. Brian is currently working as a Health Coach and is the co-founder of the health, media, and technology company SAPIEN. Brian and I talk about his documentary Food Lies, and we both express our thoughts on what it takes to nourish our bodies. It's always awesome talking to like-minded people and I love hearing their opinions on things so I will save that for the podcast I hope you have the opportunity to listen! Brian can be found at: Sapien.com Instagram.com/food.lies Please check him out on YouTube @ Food Lies As always I can be found on Instagram @conniebegonnie For inquiries or comments on the show I can be contacted at TheFitFarmingFoodMom.com or TheFitFarmingFoodMom@yahoo.com Please don't forget to subscribe and leave a review. That's the easiest way I can keep making sure the podcast is published every week. Thanks for listening! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thefitfarmingfoodmom/support
Has England’s green and pleasant land all of a sudden become England’s green and overcrowded land? With the nation’s ever-increasing population and the double whammy that people are now living longer, this means as each year goes by, there is an ever-growing strain on public services and in particular my favourite topic – housing. It’s no wonder some people are saying things are at crisis point when it comes to infrastructure (like roads, schooling etc) and in particular housing. I hear it all the time, people complaining that Leicester looks like a building site and, we are packing people in like sardines into our Leicester homes. Yet I wanted to find out exactly what the truth was. Want to know more? If you would like more information about buying, selling, letting a home in Leicester and Leicestershire, please feel free to drop me a line @ luke.stclair@knightsbridge-estates.co.uk or call me 07917 899 495.
BARC - The British Automobile Racing Club Audio News and Interviews
[[:encoded, "BARC Championship Awards Evening"]]
https://www.patreon.com/FarEastAdventureTravel If you enjoy my podcasts, videos, and take part in livestreams becoming a patron supports future projects and continued travel inspiration from Asia. Visit my Patreon page to see all of the offers.YouTube:http://www.youtube.com/c/JohnSaboefareastadventuretravelCrowdfunder-$500 Total needed for Gimbal, and various small accessories that will help produce better video and open up phone/skype access for podcast listeners and livestream followers $10, $25, $50 or more would be awesome! http://paypal.me/JohnASaboeContinuing my food series from Taiwan with a walk through the Huangshi Traditional Morning Market near Banqiao in New Taipei City. Picturing Taipei City and New Taipei City as a giant doughnut can help picture the area geographically. New Taipei is the doughnut, Taipei the doughnut hole. New Taipei is really the largest city in Taiwan with a population over 4.5 million making it one of the most densely populated places on the planet. Getting a little ways away from Taipei proper and into these corners of Northern Taiwan definitely can give you a more rounded perspective of the people, food, and culture of the region. *Buddhists* and Garlic, Onions etc. First off to answer someone's question as to why some Buddhists refrain from eating garlic and onions, actually there are a total of 5 pungent roots that some Buddhists do not eat, garlic, onion, chives, green onions, and leeks. It's believed that uncooked they cause distemper, cooked they act as an aphrodisiac.
Dina Zielinski from NY Genome talks about storing data using DNA – not traditional hard drives – and it's amazing what nature can do that human engineering (until now) can not. Losing data stored on flash drives, hard disks, USBs and on computer servers may become a thing of the past with DNA storage. At NY genome, Dina has successfully managed to encode and decode data stored onto a strand of DNA. Incredible, but true. This project has the possibility of storing 215,000 times more data in 1 gram of DNA, compared to a 1 Terabyte Hard Disk. Unfortunately, the process is not ready for commercial use, and encoding costing roughly $7,000. Decoding plus reading the data costing about $2,000, and a $9k price tag isn't viable. Will DNA storage ever be cost effective and retrievable quickly? That is for you to decide but don't forget how the first computer was even larger than the room you are in right now. The future holds great secrets for us to explore so stay in the know about future tech at futuretechpodcast.com. Make sure to review, subscribe and like us on Facebook and Twitter.
Maywood is one of the most densely populated areas in Vancouver, yet it's being targeted for increased density in the Metrotown Development Plan. Guest: Craig Jones, PhD Candidate, Department of Geography, University of British Columbia
Shelter in Place (Europa Editions) Set in the Pacific Northwest in the jittery, jacked-up early 1990s, Shelter in Place, by one of America’s most thrillingly defiant contemporary authors, is a stylish literary novel about the hereditary nature of mental illness, the fleeting intensity of youth, the obligations of family, and the dramatic consequences of love. Joseph March, a twenty-one year-old working class kid from Seattle, has just graduated college, has fallen in love with the fiercely independent Tess Wolff, and his future beckons, unencumbered, limitless, magnificent. Joe’s life implodes when he starts to suffer the symptoms of bipolar disorder, and, not long after, his mother kills a man she’s never met with a hammer. Later, spurred on by his mother’s example and her growing fame, Tess enlists Joe in a secret, violent plan that will forever change their lives. Maksik sings of modern America’s battered soul and of the lacerating emotions that make us human. Magnetic and masterfully told, Shelter in Place is about the things in life we are willing to die for, and those we’re willing to kill for. Praise for Shelter in Place “Shelter in Place is a magnificent novel. Alexander Maksik charts the legacy of violence and the limits of justice with grace, power, and clarity.”—Anthony Marra, author of A Constellation of Vital Phenomena “Unsettling and honest, a remarkably insightful portrait of mental illness, Shelter in Place is elegiac, savage and mournful, a beautifully written novel about the echoes of our actions, of love and its consequences.”—Aminatta Forna, author of The Hired Man “Shelter In Place is a love story like none I’ve ever read before…Densely ruminative, and bracingly unromantic, the ballad of Tess, Joe, and his parents tests the brutal outer-limits of patriarchy, the bleak realities of untreated mental illness, and the nature of loyalty in a world where every woman is out for herself. And every man, as well.”—Kate Bolick, author of Spinster: Making a Life of One’s Own “An unsettling and beautiful exploration of mental illness, love, violence, family and sexual politics. Maksik’s artful story outruns all sorts of received ideas and cliched narratives...You’ll be haunted by it in the best possible way.”—Katie Roiphe, author of The Violet Hour “On every page we’re reminded of the paradox of how mysterious, thorny, and delicate family relationships can be.”—Kirkus Reviews Alexander Maksik is the author of the novels You Deserve Nothing and A Marker to Measure Drift, which was a New York Times Book Review Notable Book of 2013, as well as finalist for both the William Saroyan International Prize for Writing and Le Prix du Meilleur Livre Étranger. His writing has appeared in The Pushcart Prize Anthology, Best American Nonrequired Reading, Harper's, Tin House, Harvard Review, The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, and Narrative Magazine, among other publications. He is a contributing editor at Condé Nast Traveler, and his work has been translated into more than a dozen languages. He is the recipient of a Pushcart Prize as well as fellowships from the Truman Capote Literary Trust and The Corporation of Yaddo. Marisa Silver is the author of the novel Mary Coin, a New York Times bestseller and winner of the Southern California Independent Bookseller’s Award. She is also the author of The God of War (a Los Angeles Times Book Prize finalist); No Direction Home; and two story collections, Alone with You and Babe in Paradise (a New York Times Notable Book and Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year). Silver’s fiction has won the O. Henry Award and been included in The Best American Short Stories, The O. Henry Prize Stories, and other anthologies. She lives in Los Angeles.
Nathan is sick, so UBK tackles a TON of questions for your listening pleasure! Densely packed with gems… - Mixing Questions! Mud! Reverb! - Analog! PreAmps, Distortion, and Summing! - Production! Audio Perspective for Video, What!? - Randomness! Too Many Corey's? Too Much Muzak? Too Many Cows to Find a Job?! - Business! Clients! Changing Arrangements! This Week's Plugin Winner is…Imtiaz Ahmed! …and, much—well actually, that's a lot. What more do you want!?
Aaron Mahnke is the creator, writer and narrator of the LORE podcast. Lore explores real life scary stories, examining disturbing historical events and how they intertwine with folklore and the origins of superstition, all delivered in an engaging, creepy narrative. Densely packed with atmosphere and ideas, Lore brings to life very human stories with decidedly bizarre circumstances. Launched in early 2015, Lore rocketed to popularity and the top of the iTunes Podcast charts, and is now Aaron’s full-time job, displacing his web design business as primary source of income.
EPISODE SUMMARY Multistory buildings are often considered the final frontier of organics recycling – and it's easy to see why. Densely populated with little space, there are a number of challenges to tackle when setting up a program. In episode two, we pick off where we left off in episode one and continue to explore these... Read more »
This week, the gang faces the normally unusual problem of having too many people! But amidst all the vocal trampling we still managed to talk about Titanfall, Civilisation: Beyond Earth, Evolve and a bunch of other stuff probably. That is, when we weren't trying to solve who ruined Christmas with murder.
The Cigar of the Week is the Epifania by El Primer Mundo. An interview with Sean Williams of El Primer Mundo is rebroadcast. The cigar featured in the What's My Band segment of the show, the Ashton Aged Maduro #40, was suggested by Jeff Curtis. Bob and Dale respond to emails from Dan Crouch and David Dennis . Enter January's Palio contest by sending a photo of you or your friends enjoying a cigar to theshow@cigarmedia.tv. (Don't forget to include your mailing address and type "Palio" on the subject line.) To see the contest pictures, click on the Contest icon on the www.cigarmedia.tv home page. Remember you must re-enter each month to be eligible to win. The January contest winner will be announced on the February 3rd show. Check out the live show! Go to http://www.cigarmedia.tv/live/ where the show is broadcast live most Friday evenings at 9 PM EST. Join us on February 3rd for the Panacea Cigars Cyber Herf. Panacea is promoting a live cyber herf with Dogwatch on Feb. 3rd when the Panacea Azul Cameroon is the Cigar of the week. Click here for the invitation from Panacea. You won't want to miss the live version of show #365 on February 10th. In honor of having a show for listeners to download on every day of the year, Bob, Dale, Liz and Craig Schneider will be giving out sampler packs of some of their favorite cigars. But you must be in the chatroom during the live show to win so be sure to tune in on February 10th. Cigar of the Week - Epifania by El Primer Mundo Epifania is the Spanish translation for Epiphany. The wrapper is Ecuadorian but it’s a totally different one from the Liga Miami (also made by El Primer Mundo) and is from a different farm. Both binders are Nicaraguan. Filler is Nicaraguan and Dominican and ihe cigar is finished with a triple capped. I will be releasing two more sizes this year, a robusto and a special size. This cigar is made in at El Titan de Bronze in Little Havana on Calle Ocho, Miami. MSRP around $10. Size: 6 x 52 Wrapper: Ecuador Binder: Nicaragua ( dual Nicaraguan binders) Filler: Dominican Republic, Nicaragua What else have you been smokin' Dale? Hoyo de Monterrey Excalibur Cameroon - Galahad (6.75” x 47) & Lancelot (7.25” x 54) - The “other” cigar from what used to be the 1066 line. A few weeks ago I smoked a couple Excalibur Dark Knights, this week I smoked a couple sizes of the Excalibur Cameroon line. Rolled in Honduras with fillers from the big 3 and a Connecticut Broadleaf binder under that delicate Cameroon wrapper, this cigar gives up lots of spice, leather and sweet grass flavors. I prefer the Dark Knight’s savory blend, but the Cameroon is a nice change occasionally. Vegas Robaina Unicos - 156mm x 52 - In the chat room last week, someone was smoking this cigar, and I had to go dig one out my humidor this week. In my book this is close to being the perfect piramide vitola. Subtle sweetness and leather aromas on the darkish wrapper, followed by lots of earthy and mocha flavors in the creamy, full bodied smoke. Not a power cigar, but full of bold complexities. Densely filled, makes lots of aromatic smoke and the ash holds on tight. What else have you been smokin' Bob? La Flor Dominicana Chisel, 6 x 54 - For those who remember a La Flor Dominicana cigar sampler that had a Chisel with a Cameroon wrapper, Litto Gomez decided to release it as its own limited-edition brand in December 2011. Origin: Dominican Republic, Wrapper: Maduro, Qty in Box: 10, Size: 6 x 54 . "We did a Chisel sampler that had one cigar with a Cameroon wrapper and it was very popular. A lot of requests came from retailers and consumers, but I didn't want to go into regular production with it, so I made only 500 boxes for December," Gomez said. The Cameroon Chisel is actually blended off La Flor Dominicana's Cameroon Cabinet line and although it isn't intended to be as full bodied as the Double Ligero Chisel, it isn't supposed to mild either. They come in boxes of 20 and retail for $8 each Royal Nicaraguan Robustos by Jesus Fuego - Sumatra (Natural-5x50) and Oscuro (Maduro-5x50) - This is J. Fuego’s first inexpensive bundled cigar. Bundles of 20 range in price from $43 to $49 depending on the size: Belicoso, (6x52); Churchill (7x52); Grande (6x60); or Robusto (5x50). Wrapper: Ecuador; Filler: Honduras; Binder: Honduras and Nicaragua What's My Band?- This week's unbanded, the Ashton Aged Maduro #40 was suggested by listener Jeff Curtis. Palio Cutter Contest: The winner of the December Silver Palio cutter was Tim Banic. For January's contest, we are looking for photos of you and your friends enjoying cigars (all the better if they happen to be Esencias, but it will not affect your chances of winning). Send your entry to theshow@cigarmedia.tv. Please include your mailing address with your entry and type "Palio" on the subject line. Don't forget, you must re-enter the contest every month to be eligible to win. January's prize will be a black Palio cutter and will be announced on the February 3rd show. Do you have a suggestion for the unbanded cigar of the week? Every week Bob and Dale include an “unbanded cigar” segment in their show in which they smoke a cigar without any markings and give their honest opinions. Bob then opens a sealed envelope and discovers the cigar’s name and manufacturer. If you have suggestions for the "What's My Band?" segment, please send them to liz@cigarmedia.tv. Do you have a Cigar Review or a comment about the show? If you call and leave a cigar review or comment on the herfline and it is played on the show, you will receive a DogWatch Cigar Radio patch! You can reach the Herfline at 321-594-4373 - or cigar.radio on Skype. You can also send email to theshow@cigarmedia.tv. Music provided by the Figurados and The Surfonics. Please visit our sponsors and let them know you heard about them from DogWatch! Black Dog Coffee: http://www.blackdogcoffee.net/ Cigar Tourism: http://cigartourism.com/ Cigar Journal: http://www.cigarjournal.co/ Cuban Cigar Creation App: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cuban-cigar-creation/id441057146?mt=8 DogWatch Cigar Radio iTunes App: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/dogwatch-cigar-radio-weekly/id338128296?mt=8&ign-mpt=uo%3D6 DogWatch Cigar Radio Android App: http://www.appbrain.com/app/dogwatch-cigar-radio/tv.wizzard.android.dogwatchsocialclub850 Duque Cigars: http://duquecigars.com/ Esencia Cigars: http://www.esenciacigar.com/ La Palina: http://www.lapalinacigars.com/ La Tradicion Cubana: http://www.tradicion.com/ Miami Cigar and Company: http://www.miamicigarandcompany.com/ Mobile Stogie Pro App: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mobile-stogie-by-cigar-research/id395661756?mt=8 Mobile Stogie Ref App: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mobile-stogie-reference/id431376892?mt=8 Monte Pascoal Cigars: http://www.montepascoalcigars.com/ Palio Cigar Cutters:http://paliocutters.com/ Primer Mundo Cigars: http://www.primermundocigars.com Scotch Pro App: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/scotch-pro/id457390580?mt=8 Vanderburgh Humidors: www.vanderburghhumidors.com
Recorded January 16, 2012 Intro: All I Want - The Offspring (Zach pick) Videogames The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Devil Inside www.thenerdlist.com The Hunger Games Brian Gets Denied Zach and the Horse Carriage Prostitutes and Hipster Glasses Brian the Hypeman Soap and Brian's Blood Blister PO Box, Doodyhead Voicemails College back in the 1800s, Fear and Loathing Valentine's Day Leave us a 5 star iTunes review Tell your friends Outro: Chair - Big Deal (Zach pick) Leave voicemails at: 206-350-6300 Email us for our P.O. Box address www.facebook.com/nicemanpodcast www.twitter.com/nicemanpodcast www.nicemanpodcast.com nicemanpodcast@gmail.com
Bob and Dale are joined by Craig Schneider in this week's show. They answer another newbie question from Liz about what causes a cigar to burn unevenly. Listener Dan Crouch recommends a couple of value cigars. David Zulch, one of the winners of a 5-pack of La Tradicion Cubana cigars in last month's contest, writes in to thank DWCR and Luis Sanchez. The Cigar of the Week, the Xen by Nish Patel, was provided by Duque Cigar Company in Indialantic, Florida. The cigar featured in the What's My Band segment of the show, the Perdomo Patriarch Maduro Epicure, was suggested by listener Jeff Curtis. Enter November's Silver Palio Cutter Contest by sending a photo of you or your friends enjoying a cigar to theshow@cigarmedia.tv. (Don't forget to include your mailing address and type "Palio" on the subject line.) To see the contest pictures, click on the Contest icon on the www.cigarmedia.tv home page. Remember you must re-enter each month to be eligible to win. Check out the live show! Go to http://www.cigarmedia.tv/live/ where the show is broadcast live most Friday evenings at 9 PM EDT. Cigar of the Week - The Xen by Nish Patel brought to us by Duque Cigars (http://www.duquecigars.com/, 410 5th Avenue Indialantic, FL) XEN is a box pressed cigar with an Ecuador Connecticut wrapper, Nicaragua binder and a “secret” filler. Sizes: Short Robusto: 4 x 54; Robusto: 5 x 50; Toro: 6 x 52; and Torpedo: 6 1/8 x 52. What else have you been smokin' Craig? Pedro Martin Gold - A typical Connecticut looking wrapper with a unique looking blend of tobacco viewed from the foot. Very different color ligero & seco. Deep spicy prelight but medium bodied, ‘soft’ flavored smoke. Unique orange-zest taste. A nice approachable, yet complex, blend for a mild strengthed cigar. What else have you been smokin' Dale? Pedro Martin Ruby Torpedo -Spicy, clean and bright! Not as much richness or depth as the Corojo What else have you been smokin' Bob? Pedro Martin Corojo 6x60 - Deliberate draw, full flavored cedar, leather with a touch of spice. Dry finish. This is a lot of cigar. Densely packed, great burn. The last third developes some strong nicotine flavors. Unfortunately, the cigar in this size becomes drier as you smoke it - to the point I had to just stop. Torano 1916 Cameroon - Smooth as a baby’s bottom and loaded with easygoing flavors of cedar, leather and spice. A delightfully light smoke with flavor. Chinnock Cellars Terroir - A nice medium bodied smoke that goes well with other things like wine, cheese and chocolate. However, the cigar does not stand out on its own and becomes a bit boring after awhile. What's My Band?- This week's unbanded, the Perdomo Patriarch Maduro Epicure, was suggested by listener Jeff Curtis. Bob: Very barnyard on the prelight aroma (I liked it); mottled wrapper. Loved the first rush of flavors and an easy draw. Great cedar and bitter chocolate flavors. Throughout, the cigar delivers lots of flavors very consistently. I am enjoying this cigar very much so I hope its an inexpensive one! Craig: Smells like Nicaragua; the pilon that’s just about ready to be sorted. Deep dark & woody. Lighting reveals a lot of pent up strength. It goes well with my Tanzanian Blackdog Coffee and almost overpowers my underworked palate. Coffee, cedar & BITTER cocoa dominate this enjoyable smoke. Reminiscent of a Pepin smoke but slightly more refined. Perhaps a Jamie Garcia offering or even a new Illusione Maduro. I like this full bodied cigar. Palio Cutter Contest: The winner of the November Burl Palio cutter was Craig Rich. For December's contest, we are looking for photos of you and your friends enjoying cigars (all the better if they happen to be Esencias, but it will not affect your chances of winning). Send your entry to theshow@cigarmedia.tv. Please include your mailing address with your entry and type "Palio" on the subject line. Don't forget, you must re-enter the contest every month to be eligible to win. December's prize will be a silver Palio cutter. Do you have a suggestion for the unbanded cigar of the week? Every week Bob and Dale include an “unbanded cigar” segment in their show in which they smoke a cigar without any markings and give their honest opinions. Bob then opens a sealed envelope and discovers the cigar’s name and manufacturer. If you have suggestions for the "What's My Band?" segment, please send them to liz@cigarmedia.tv. Do you have a Cigar Review? If you call and leave a cigar review on the herfline and it is played on the show, you will receive a DogWatch Cigar Radio patch! You can reach the Herfline at 321-594-4373 - or cigar.radio on Skype. You can also send email to theshow@cigarmedia.tv. Music provided by the Figurados and The Surfonics. Please visit our sponsors and let them know you heard about them from DogWatch! Black Dog Coffee: http://www.blackdogcoffee.net/ Cigar Tourism: http://cigartourism.com/ Cuban Cigar Creation App: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cuban-cigar-creation/id441057146?mt=8 DogWatch Cigar Radio iTunes App: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/dogwatch-cigar-radio-weekly/id338128296?mt=8&ign-mpt=uo%3D6 DogWatch Cigar Radio Android App: http://www.appbrain.com/app/dogwatch-cigar-radio/tv.wizzard.android.dogwatchsocialclub850 Duque Cigars: http://duquecigars.com/ Esencia Cigars: http://www.esenciacigar.com/ La Palina: http://www.lapalinacigars.com/ La Tradicion Cubana: http://www.tradicion.com/ Miami Cigar and Company: http://www.miamicigarandcompany.com/ Mobile Stogie Pro App: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mobile-stogie-by-cigar-research/id395661756?mt=8 Mobile Stogie Ref App: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mobile-stogie-reference/id431376892?mt=8 Monte Pascoal Cigars: http://www.montepascoalcigars.com/ Palio Cigar Cutters:http://paliocutters.com/ Primer Mundo Cigars: http://www.primermundocigars.com Scotch Pro App: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/scotch-pro/id457390580?mt=8 Stogie Boys: http://www.stogieboys.com/ and www.facebook.com/stogieboyscigars Vanderburgh Humidors: www.vanderburghhumidors.com
We were hugely impressed by Don Orgone’s multi-layered mix ‘The Power Move‘ back in September – and we’re proud to present, exclusively to Inna Riddim, Don Orgone’s latest mix ‘Magic’. Densely packed and intricate, Don Orgone shifts between roots reggae, dubstep and hiphop in a unique blend. Dim the lights, boost the volume, bun up […] The post Outta Riddim [04] : Don Orgone – ‘Magic’ appeared first on Inna Riddim.
The University of Arizona Museum of Art presents "Jenny Schmid: The Vistas of Gender Utopia," an exhibition marking this exciting emerging printmaker’s first comprehensive solo museum presentation and monograph publication. Schmid will offer a lecture on her work on Sept. 18 at 4 p.m. and a book signing and opening reception will follow from 5 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Schmid’s “Gender Utopia” project explores notions of gender and liberty through images that fuse Old Master print precedents with a hip contemporary sensibility. Critical yet humorous, Schmid’s work is luxuriantly colored, exquisitely wrought, and iconographically rich. Her prints quote from Europe’s Medieval and Renaissance print precedents, the medium’s traditions of social satire and arch political caricature (including Breugel, Hogarth, Goya and Daumier), contemporary journalism and sociology, feminist scholarship, graphic novels and various strains of popular culture – visual, musical and literary. Densely packed with symbols and language, the work traces the distant past to the immediate present with a wry humor that carries the sharp poke of contemporary critique. Sept. 18, 2008.
"Jenny Schmid: The Vistas of Gender Utopia," was an exhibition at the University of Arizona Museum of Art marking this exciting emerging printmaker’s first comprehensive solo museum presentation and monograph publication. Schmid’s “Gender Utopia” project explores notions of gender and liberty through images that fuse Old Master print precedents with a hip contemporary sensibility. Critical yet humorous, Schmid’s work is luxuriantly colored, exquisitely wrought, and iconographically rich. Her prints quote from Europe’s Medieval and Renaissance print precedents, the medium’s traditions of social satire and arch political caricature (including Breugel, Hogarth, Goya and Daumier), contemporary journalism and sociology, feminist scholarship, graphic novels and various strains of popular culture – visual, musical and literary. Densely packed with symbols and language, the work traces the distant past to the immediate present with a wry humor that carries the sharp poke of contemporary critique. Sept. 2008.