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This week we have a reminder episode about the Elison of Statesman Club. Cameron Gruenberg is the Divisional Director of Sales & Marketing for Sagora and is over 16 retirement communities including Independent Living, Assisted Living & Memory Care! This conversation is about Elison Independent Living of Statesman Club, a pet friendly community on a little lake in the heart of OKC (behind the Hefner Road post office) at 10401 Vineyard Blvd., Oklahoma City, OK 73120. We will be discussing how the Elison Statesman Club has a long time reputation of being a relationship-oriented community. They involve the residents in different activities and even meal ideas! The community has an indoor swimming pool, and hosts regular town hall forums with the residents along with an in-house Home Care company. There is so much more we will discuss including affordable apartments and tours with a complementary delicious lunch or dinner for an individual or group. We will also be covering a program where you can be involved without moving in! Cameron Gruenberg, Divisional Director of Sales and Marketing at Ellison Independent Living of Statesman Club Cameron Gruenberg: I have been with Sagora for 3 years started out as a Campus Sales Director and have been promoted a couple times to now being the Divisional Director of Sales and Marketing. I've been in senior living for 7 years and healthcare for 16 years. I love working with seniors and their families navigate through the senior living world and find their forever home! I am married with 1 son age 3. I have a passion for disc golf as my main hobby. Love playing with my son and being with my family as much as I can! Website – elisonstatesmanclub.com Facebook: Elison Independent Living of Statesman Club I Oklahoma City (405) 883-4617
Got a story idea for Bloodworks 101? Send us a text message Overcoming a fear of needles can be a daunting task but consider the consequences, if you can do it - you can literally save a life. That's what Bloodworks Northwest donor Yosi Elison thought about when his long-time girlfriend, Melissa Maron finally convinced him to make an appointment and donate blood. But little did he know, that decision to donate would mean he and Melissa would ... well, Bloodworks 101 producer John Yeager takes it from here. Here's an edition of Bloodworks 101 you'll never forget.
As pessoas realmente mudam ou apenas fingem melhorar? Não perde este Debate 93!!!
Inveja é pecado, falta de identidade ou baixa auto estima? Não perde este Debate 93!!!
Pessimismo, pessimistas, esperança e fé são os temas dessa ótima conversa no Debate 93. Não deixe de ouvir!!!
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No passado traí minha esposa e desse erro nasceu uma criança. Devo contar e correr o risco de arruinar meu casamento? Como impedir que um erro do passado destrua meu presente e o meu futuro? Ouça, compartilhe e seja um canal de bênção.
Primo appuntamento di Pillole di Musica con gli artisti incontrati durante la settimana del Festival di Sanremo.In questa puntata le interviste a: Ascanio, La NobileA, Nakay, Elison, Roberto Serafini, Be Klaire, Luk3, Marcolisa, Joshu4 DC, dr.gam, Vincenzo Ferraro, Alberto Scerbo, Francesco Angelucci, Criphia, Dieci100, Lasersight e Nartico
Qual o propósito do sofrimento na vida do cristão? Não perde este Debate 93!!!
Marido e mulher competindo entre si?! Não deixe de ouvir este Debate 93!!!
On Riverton Road is a vivid depiction of a modern-day bull riding champion. Over a three-day period, beginning at a bull riding event in Blackfoot, Idaho, just a scenic drive from Yellowstone National Park, and ending at a rodeo in Prescott, Arizona, Dean Stamper comes out of retirement to ride the greatest bucking bull of all time in an epic showdown. Before he faces the Great Bushwacker, he is forced to face his past,including the overwhelming guilt from his brother's death and his mother's abrupt abandonment.Like most cowboys unafraid to die, Dean lives each day as if it is his last. His journey back to the arena is filled with religious notions and cowboy wisdom fueled by the indelible connection between genuine human experiences and life's beauty and pain. On Riverton Road is an engulfing read that showcases how one's life experiences are perceived differently by those who witness them, and how having an experience and creating one can bear different realities. Dean's passion for what he was made to do make this a western tale you will want to witness first-hand.Jesse Elison grew up in Southeastern Idaho. From an early age, he had a passion for reading and a desire to write books. He studied English and Philosophy at Brigham Young University, where he was inspired by the stories of great writers like Edgar Allan Poe, Henry James, and Willa Cather. His interest in world literature and religions took him to Harvard Divinity School. Then he obtained a law degree from the University of Oregon School of Law.Jesse proves that the best of art shines a light on and reveals the connection between genuine experience and life's beauty and pain. While currently serving as the Vice President of Legal at a heavy haul trucking company based in Atlanta, he continues to explore ideas about the manifold of meaningful experiences by pushing the boundaries of the novel's artistic potential. Get your book today!in the LOOP Podcast hosted by Jordan Jo Hollabaugh, is inspired by the western culture and breakaway roping lifestyle. This podcast highlights the raw, real, truth behind the box of the breakaway roping industry. Bringing you behind the scenes stories of what real life looks like everyday from; breakaway ropers, cowgirls, cowboys, producers, leaders, trailblazers, and the like, all sharing stories of the western culture and lifestyle that they live daily. Get in the LOOP Podcast with Jordan Jo Get the Newsletter at https://www.thebreakawayropingpodcast.com Like us on Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/intheloopbreakaway Tag us on Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/intheloopbreakaway Follow us on TikTok | https://www.tiktok.com/@jordanjo.hollabaugh Watch more on our Youtube Channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjpVQcSSiobXsMiD89OvTvA
AMERICAN GUN: The True Story of the AR-15 by Cameron McWhirter and Zusha Elinson is about the most lethal handheld icon of the 21st century - the AR-15 rifle - which has become the weapon of choice for mass shooters. The same gun, under the name M16, was the gun that was carried by soldiers in Vietnam. Now, that weapon - or even just the silhouette of its barrel and trigger - has come to symbolize freedom for millions of Americans and the essence of evil for millions of others. AMERICAN GUN tells the essential and extraordinary story of the AR-15 for the first time. Jonathan Eig writes, "With hard-core reporting and gripping prose. [t]his is social history at its finest." AMERICAN GUN authors McWhirter and Elison are both journalists at the Wall Street Journal who have covered gun culture and the industry, including mass shootings, for years. They tell the story in three parts. The first is about an iconoclastic engineer with no formal training, Eugene Stoner, who came up with the idea for the gun in his garage workshop in Los Angeles, solving an age-old problem in weapons design - how to make a lightweight, easy to fire gun that essentially powers itself. He then, somewhat heroically, took on the military industrial complex with a small company and ultimately overcame lies and deceit at the top of the government to establish this weapon as by far the better option for the military. The book then moves to the jungles of Vietnam. It tells another part of the story of the AR-15 where the government modified the gun, naming it the M16, which didn't work very well - jamming repeatedly, costing many lives, and causing a major Congressional investigation. In the final part of the book, the terrifying story of how this weapon that has no use in hunting became more and more popular in the civilian market, beginning in the 1970s and accelerating most recently, is told. We meet upstarts and transgressive gun manufacturers as well as video game developers who celebrate the A-15's outlaw mystique in order to promote it. And we see how attempts to ban and restrict it are foiled again and again, even as mass shootings proliferate.
AMERICAN GUN: The True Story of the AR-15 by Cameron McWhirter and Zusha Elinson is about the most lethal handheld icon of the 21st century - the AR-15 rifle - which has become the weapon of choice for mass shooters. The same gun, under the name M16, was the gun that was carried by soldiers in Vietnam. Now, that weapon - or even just the silhouette of its barrel and trigger - has come to symbolize freedom for millions of Americans and the essence of evil for millions of others. AMERICAN GUN tells the essential and extraordinary story of the AR-15 for the first time. Jonathan Eig writes, "With hard-core reporting and gripping prose. [t]his is social history at its finest." AMERICAN GUN authors McWhirter and Elison are both journalists at the Wall Street Journal who have covered gun culture and the industry, including mass shootings, for years. They tell the story in three parts. The first is about an iconoclastic engineer with no formal training, Eugene Stoner, who came up with the idea for the gun in his garage workshop in Los Angeles, solving an age-old problem in weapons design - how to make a lightweight, easy to fire gun that essentially powers itself. He then, somewhat heroically, took on the military industrial complex with a small company and ultimately overcame lies and deceit at the top of the government to establish this weapon as by far the better option for the military. The book then moves to the jungles of Vietnam. It tells another part of the story of the AR-15 where the government modified the gun, naming it the M16, which didn't work very well - jamming repeatedly, costing many lives, and causing a major Congressional investigation. In the final part of the book, the terrifying story of how this weapon that has no use in hunting became more and more popular in the civilian market, beginning in the 1970s and accelerating most recently, is told. We meet upstarts and transgressive gun manufacturers as well as video game developers who celebrate the A-15's outlaw mystique in order to promote it. And we see how attempts to ban and restrict it are foiled again and again, even as mass shootings proliferate. The authors adeptly tell the story in ways that look at technology, business and politics as well as the terrible crime scenes from a variety of perspectives - from witnesses, doctors, victims to the killers themselves. They offer their unique perspective and insight into where the gun debate is today and what can be done about it. As Kirkus Reviews notes in their starred review of AMERICAN GUN, it is a " riveting exploration of the cost of the nation's fascination with an iconic weapon."
O desespero da gravidez indesejada e o impulso de fazer o aborto são os temas tratados neste Debate 93!!! Não perde!!
Dr. Daniel Fields, Stand with Israel AdvocateRuss Koesterich, Blackrock - Managing Director and Portfolio Manager discusses the economy.Vince Everett Ellison, Author of Crime Inc.: How Democrats Employ Mafia and Ganster Tactics to Gain and Hold PowerMayor Michael "Doc" Rohan of Panama City, FloridaDoug Crosby, Candidate for Bay County Commissioner for District 3
"There's no cookie cutter for being a cowboy... Jesse Elison takes the readers on a memorable trip to bull ridings across the West that I recall well in On Riverton Road." - Wiley Petersen, Former Professional Bull Rider.On Riverton Road is a vivid depiction of a modern-day bull riding champion. Over a three-day period, beginning at a bull riding event in Blackfoot, Idaho, just a scenic drive from Yellowstone National Park, and ending at a rodeo in Prescott, Arizona, Dean Stamper makes a comeback to ride the greatest bucking bull of all time in an epic showdown. Before he faces the Great Bushwacker, he is forced to face his past, including the overwhelming guilt from his brother's death and his mother's abrupt abandonment. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-arena-press/message
Mãe que compete com a filha?! Pais e filhos brigando o tempo todo?? Não deixe de ouvir este Debate 93!!!
É verdade que aquele que não vai a Jesus pelo amor vai pela dor? Quer saber? Aprenda com mais um incrível Debate 93!!!
A paternidade de Deus é o assunto deste Debate 93, que certamente vai abençoar você. Ouça e compartilhe!
O que você encontra quando vasculha os escombros da sua alma? Neste Debate 93, nossos debatedores falam sobre pecado, arrependimento, culpa e perdão! Não perde!!
Somos obrigados a viver ao lado de alguém que não quer mudar e acaba nos prejudicando? Como acreditar na mudança de alguém? Essas e outras perguntas você descobre a resposta ouvindo esse Debate 93 sensacional!
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.03.22.533696v1?rss=1 Authors: Hendrickson, T. J., Reiners, P., Moore, L. A., Perrone, A. J., Alexopoulos, D., Lee, E. G., Styner, M., Kardan, O., Chamberlain, T. A., Mummaneni, A., Caldas, H. A., Bower, B., Stoyell, S., Martin, T., Sung, S., Fair, E., Uriarte-Lopez, J., Rueter, A. R., Rosenberg, M. D., Smyser, C. D., Elison, J. T., Graham, A., Fair, D. A., Feczko, E. Abstract: Objectives: Brain segmentation of infant magnetic resonance (MR) images is vitally important in studying developmental mental health and disease. The infant brain undergoes many changes throughout the first years of postnatal life, making tissue segmentation difficult for most existing algorithms. Here, we introduce a deep neural network BIBSNet (Baby and Infant Brain Segmentation Neural Network), an open-source, community-driven model that relies on data augmentation and a large sample size of manually annotated images to facilitate the production of robust and generalizable brain segmentations. Experimental Design: Included in model training and testing were MR brain images on 84 participants with an age range of 0-8 months (median postmenstrual ages of 13.57 months). Using manually annotated real and synthetic segmentation images, the model was trained using a 10-fold cross-validation procedure. Testing occurred on MRI data processed with the DCAN labs infant-ABCD-BIDS processing pipeline using segmentations produced from gold standard manual annotation, joint-label fusion (JLF), and BIBSNet to assess model performance. Principal Observations: Using group analyses, results suggest that cortical metrics produced using BIBSNet segmentations outperforms JLF segmentations. Additionally, when analyzing individual differences, BIBSNet segmentations perform even better. Conclusions: BIBSNet segmentation shows marked improvement over JLF segmentations across all age groups analyzed. The BIBSNet model is 600x faster compared to JLF and can be easily included in other processing pipelines. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC
É normal querer estar, a qualquer custo, em um relacionamento em que sofremos e somos maltratados? Não perde mais um incrível Debate 93!!!
Como controlar o temperamento e as reações? Este Debate 93 nos dá dicas incríveis!!! Ouça, aprenda e compartilhe!!!
Welcome to the Social-Engineer Podcast: The Doctor Is In Series – where we will discuss understandings and developments in the field of psychology. In today's episode, Chris and Abbie are discussing: Shame. We will talk about how shame helps us, hinders us, why some people can deal with it and why some can't. We'll also discuss various coping strategies and more. [Jan 02, 2023] 00:00 – Intro 00:17 – Dr. Abbie Maroño Intro 00:55 – Intro Links Social-Engineer.com- http://www.social-engineer.com/ Managed Voice Phishing- https://www.social-engineer.com/services/vishing-service/ Managed Email Phishing- https://www.social-engineer.com/services/se-phishing-service/ Adversarial Simulations- https://www.social-engineer.com/services/social-engineering-penetration-test/ Social-Engineer channel on SLACK- https://social-engineering-hq.slack.com/ssb CLUTCH- http://www.pro-rock.com/ org- http://www.innocentlivesfoundation.org/ 03:38 – The topic of the day: Shame 05:44 – Is there a positive side to shame? 07:29 – Directed by beliefs 09:02 – Cultural differences 10:14 – Shame's functionality 11:16 – Societal stigma 12:35 – How shame can hinder 16:36 – Literal shutdown 19:30 – Emotional Blunting 22:15 – Guilt vs Shame: Sense of Self 24:14 – Those who can, cope! 26:54 – When shame is a symptom 28:09 – Finding a support network 30:03 – The "core" of shame 33:45 – The road to Mindfulness 37:20 – Environmental Shame 38:34 – Horrifically fascinating 41:06 – You have to get out there! 43:00 – Tips for our younger listeners 45:25 – Remember Pen Pals? 46:44 – Wrap Up 47:39 – Outro social-engineer.com innocentlivesfoundation.org Find us online: Twitter: https://twitter.com/abbiejmarono LinkedIn: com/in/dr-abbie-maroño-phd-35ab2611a Twitter: https://twitter.com/humanhacker LinkedIn: com/in/christopherhadnagy References: Burkitt, I. (2008). Social selves: Theories of self and society. Sage. Elison, J., Pulos, S., & Lennon, R. (2006). Shame-focused coping: An empirical study of the compass of shame. Social Behavior and Personality: an international journal, 34(2), 161-168. Garey, S. S. (1998). Long-term effects of sibling emotional and physical abuse on adult self-concept and the associated guilt and shame. United States International University. Gilchrist, J. D., Solomon-Krakus, S., Pila, E., Crocker, P., & Sabiston, C. M. (2020). Associations between physical self-concept and anticipated guilt and shame: The moderating role of gender. Sex Roles, 83(11), 763-772. Harper, J. M. (2011). Regulating and coping with shame. Re-constructing emotional spaces: From experience to regulation, 189-206. Hawes, D. J., Helyer, R., Herlianto, E. C., & Willing, J. (2013). Borderline personality features and implicit shame-prone self-concept in middle childhood and early adolescence. Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology, 42(3), 302-308. Kinston, W. (1983). A theoretical context for shame. International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 64, 213-226. Krüger, S., & Rustad, G. C. (2019). Coping with shame in a media-saturated society: Norwegian web-series Skam as transitional object. Television & new media, 20(1), 72-95. Nathanson, D. L. (1987). The many faces of shame. In Partially based on a symposium held in Los Angeles, 1984 for the 137th Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.. The Guilford Press. Rüsch, N., Lieb, K., Göttler, I., Hermann, C., Schramm, E., Richter, H., ... & Bohus, M. (2007). Shame and implicit self-concept in women with borderline personality disorder. American journal of psychiatry, 164(3), 500-508. Scheff, T. J. (2003). Shame in self and society. Symbolic interaction, 26(2), 239-262. Tangney, J. P. (1996). Conceptual and methodological issues in the assessment of shame and guilt. Behaviour research and therapy, 34(9), 741-754. Taylor, P. J., McDonald, J., Smith, M., Nicholson, H., & Forrester, R. (2019). Distinguishing people with current, past, and no history of non-suicidal self-injury: Shame, social comparison, and self-concept integration. Journal of Affective Disorders, 246, 182-188. Taylor, T. F. (2015). The influence of shame on posttrauma disorders: have we failed to see the obvious?. European journal of psychotraumatology, 6(1), 28847.
Neste Debate 93 você vai aprender sobre a blasfêmia contra o Espírito Santo, e vai ouvir reflexões sobre o racismo e evangelismo. Ouça e compartilhe!
In The OSJ Radio Studio we have Cameron Gruenberg – Regional Director of Sales & Marketing – Sagora Senior Living – and here are just a few of the questions we will be asking Cameron this Saturday 11/19/22 on The Rise & Thrive OSJ Radio Hour! 96.9FM The Eagle
Meg Elison (she/they), author extraordinaire and lover of fat fashion, is here to talk about her latest book Number One Fan (that Sophia read in 24 hours), what it's like to navigate the publishing industry as a fat person, and how fashion forms her rebellion against societal body standards. She also takes us back to her experience with her mom's bariatric surgery and how that radically realigned how she felt about her fat body as a young person.Meg Elison is a Philip K. Dick and Locus award winning author, as well as a Hugo, Nebula, Sturgeon, and Otherwise awards finalist. A prolific short story writer and essayist, Elison has been published in Slate, McSweeney's, Fantasy & Science Fiction, Fangoria, Uncanny, Lightspeed, Nightmare, and many other places. Elison is a high school dropout and a graduate of UC Berkeley.You can connect with Meg on her website and Instagram. And here's her affiliate code for eShaktiSophia chose Pluto Shits on the Universe by Fatimah Asghar to compliment today's episode with Meg. And here's that link Sophia mentions to Fatimah at the slam poetry event.All things Fat Joy:-Instagram-Website-YouTube-TikTok-Facebook-PatreonIf you want more conversations like this one, please rate and review us in your podcast player!And please consider becoming a Patreon supporter of the Fat Joy podcast. For as little as $2 per month, you'll be helping make all of our work possible and enable us to offer an honorarium to expert guests, which is key to centering marginalized voices.Deep thanks for their hard work go to Hi Bird Designs and AR Media for keeping this podcast looking and sounding joyful.
Deus curaria alguém, por misericórdia, ainda que o clamor não tenha sido dirigido a Ele?! Não perde mais este Debate 93!!
Dar testemunho de vida x Ser pedra de tropeço, esse é um aprendizado que você não pode perder. Ouça mais um Debate 93!!!
Aparições demoníacas, perturbações malignas e libertação são os assuntos deste Debate 93, que você não pode perder!!!
Carson Elison is a local photographer. Check out his page on instagram @Caxxson. We talked about photography, anxiety, aliens.
A top lawyer and partner to Uganda's top law firm - Kampala Associated Advocates which has been at the center of the Oil and Gas industry for over twenty years now, Elison is a Cheven scholar with a Masters of Law (LLM) in Oil and Gas Law from the University of Aberdeen. He currently chairs the East African Law Society Oil and Gas Committee. Follow the conversation where he simplifies; Oil landscape in Uganda. Why Uganda is so affected by the oil crisis. How the oil demand and supply work. Who controls or decides the Oil prices. If there is room in the world for oil and clean energy. GOLD: How the oil industry can contribute to a thriving middle-class economy. Follow up with Elison on LinkedIn, and on Twitter @elisonk Find out more about the Podcast Producer/ Host here send inquiries to onuganda@gmail.com or call/ WhatsApp +25678537996. RESOURCES; 1. Register with the National Supplier Database - here 2. National Talent Register - here #petroleumsupplyact #totaloil #refinedoil #tilenga #kingfisher #fiderpipelines #oil #supplychain #globalsecurity #globalcrush #oilprices #volatility #pumpprice #globalmarkets #subsidisedfuel #fuelshortages #oilwells #explorationofoil #production #opentendersystem #oiltech #ECOP #oilinUganda #fosilfuels #energy PODCAST DISCLAIMER. The views and opinions expressed in the episode are those of the guests. They do not represent or reflect the official position of the ON Uganda Podcast, so we do not take responsibility for any ideas expressed by guests during the Podcast episode. You are smart enough, take out what works for you. As of 21.04.22 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/onugandapodcast/message
Decentralized Finance (DeFi) has faced many trials in this crypto bear market: firms collapsing, withdrawals halted and many users are left wondering what will happen to their money entrusted to these DeFi companies.One of the latest crises occurred on Solend, a lending and borrowing protocol on the Solana Network. “Opinionated” hosts Ben Schiller, Danny Nelson and Anna Baydakova discuss Solend and the larger problems facing DeFi with Teddy Woodward, co-founder and CEO of borrowing and lending platform Notional Finance.This show is produced, and announced by Michele Musso with additional production support and editing from Eleanor Pahl. Our theme song is by Elison.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Decentralized Finance (DeFi) has faced many trials in this crypto bear market: firms collapsing, withdrawals halted and many users are left wondering what will happen to their money entrusted to these DeFi companies.One of the latest crises occurred on Solend, a lending and borrowing protocol on the Solana Network. “Opinionated” hosts Ben Schiller, Danny Nelson and Anna Baydakova discuss Solend and the larger problems facing DeFi with Teddy Woodward, co-founder and CEO of borrowing and lending platform Notional Finance.This show is produced, and announced by Michele Musso with additional production support and editing from Eleanor Pahl. Our theme song is by Elison.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
How can NFTs be used for social good?Metagood Chief Operating Officer Amanda Terry and Chairman Bill Tai join Danny Nelson on “Opinionated” to discuss their platform and how it connects communities to social causes with NFTs.This show is produced, edited and announced by Michele Musso with additional production support from Eleanor Pahl. Our theme song is by Elison.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
How can NFTs be used for social good?Metagood Chief Operating Officer Amanda Terry and Chairman Bill Tai join Danny Nelson on “Opinionated” to discuss their platform and how it connects communities to social causes with NFTs.This show is produced, edited and announced by Michele Musso with additional production support from Eleanor Pahl. Our theme song is by Elison.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This is “Consensus Conversations 2022” a week later, moderated by Michele Musso, producer at CoinDesk, with a speaker panel of Features & Opinion Managing Editor Ben Schiller, Chiefs Insights Columnist David Z. Morris and Deputy Editor-in-Chief Zack Seward.They discuss their sessions at Consensus 2022, and what has happened a week later. This show is produced, announced and moderated by Michele Musso . Executive Producer is Jared Schwartz. Our theme song is by Elison.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This episode was presented by the Oak Network.This is “Consensus Conversations 2022” live from Austin, Texas, moderated by Michele Musso, producer at CoinDesk, with a speaker panel of Managing Editor of Markets, Brad Keoun; Chiefs Insights Columnist David Z. Morris; and former Managing Editor of Podcasts, still host of Markets Daily and CEO of 330.ai, Adam B. Levine. They discuss their sessions at Consensus 2022, the recent drop in Ethereum with its merge being pushed back yet again, the financial complexity that is creeping into crypto and the response to Coinbase CEO tweeting ‘You Will Be Fired'.This show is produced, announced and moderated by Michele Musso with additional production support from Mike McCarthy. Our theme song is by Elison.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
What's been going on in Austin, Texas?“Opinionated” hosts Ben Schiller and Danny Nelson are joined by Adam B. Levine to discuss the many panels and experiences underway at Consensus 2022. From the prevalence of the phrase “It's time to build” to discourse on preserving evidence of war crimes on the blockchain, Consensus has ignited conversations in all aspects of the crypto industry. This show is produced, and announced by Michele Musso with additional production support from Eleanor Pahl and edited by Mike McCarthy. Our theme song is by Elison.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
What's been going on in Austin, Texas?“Opinionated” hosts Ben Schiller and Danny Nelson are joined by Adam B. Levine to discuss the many panels and experiences underway at Consensus 2022. From the prevalence of the phrase “It's time to build” to discourse on preserving evidence of war crimes on the blockchain, Consensus has ignited conversations in all aspects of the crypto industry. This show is produced, and announced by Michele Musso with additional production support from Eleanor Pahl and edited by Mike McCarthy. Our theme song is by Elison. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This episode was presented by the Oak Network.This is “Consensus Conversations 2022” live from Austin, Texas, moderated by Michele Musso, producer at CoinDesk, with a speaker panel of Ben Schiller, managing editor, features & opinion; Chiefs Insights Columnist David Z. Morris; and former Managing Editor of Podcasts, still host of Markets Daily and CEO of 330.ai, Adam B. Levine. They discuss the experience of Consensus 2022, recent markets, inflation, the changes within the crypto space and what to expect moving forward. This show is produced and moderated by Michele Musso . Our Executive Producer is Jared Schwartz with additional production support from Mike McCarthy. Our theme song is by Elison.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Co-writing and film-making is a tricky business in Hollywood today which is why Leslie spoke with the team of writer/filmmaker Jacob Withers and writer/director/editor/composer Justin Norman. Jacob has over a decade of writing experience and four years of filmmaking experience. During those four years Jacob has worked on several short films, including seven award-winning shorts: Admission, winner of Best Film at the 48 Hour Film Project Des Moines (2018); Subtext, Runner Up Best Film at the 48 Hour Film Project Des Moines (2019); Cope, Runner Up Best film at the 48 Hour Film Project Kansas City (2019); A Negotiation, winner of Best Director and Best Score at the 48 Hour Film Project Kansas City (2020); Be Happy, winner of Best Film and Best Writing at the 48 Hour Film Project Minneapolis (2021); Flour & Eggs, winner of Best Writing at the 48 Hour Film Project Milwaukee (2021); and Enjoy Your Evening, winner of Best Director at the Great Canadian Comedy Film Festival. He has also co-written five feature screenplays, including Roy of Sealand, which scored in the top 4.8% of entries on The Black List, and TubeLords, which was awarded a $50,000 grant from the Iowa Arts Council. He worked as a director of photography for the Elison music video “Hopes + Horoscopes” and the interactive film-based video game, In Lukewarm Blood. He also has experience as an editor, sound editor (Welcome to a Better You and TubeLords), and sound recordist.Justin is a Des Moines-based award-winning writer, director, videographer, editor, producer, animator, actor, visual effects artist, and music composer with a decade of film experience creating advertisements, narrative short films, television pilots, and documentaries. As an editor, he has won seven Best Editing awards in competitions across four states in three different genres: comedy, drama, and documentary. As a director and producer, he has helmed over 60 short films, a feature documentary, and a comedy TV pilot. In 2020, he won a Greenlight Grant from the Iowa Arts Council, won the 2021 Best Director award from the Great Canadian Comedy Film Festival, and won the 2018 Best Director award from the 48 Hour Film Project.As a videographer, he has shot footage for more than 70 productions, including advertisements, documentaries, narratives, and television series, including the 2020 PBS series American Portrait, the award-winning 2019 documentary The Happiness Machine, and the 2021 Frontmen series which aired in the UK.He has written more than 60 produced short films and co-written five feature screenplays and two television pilots. His 2020 dramedy, Roy of Sealand, was ranked in the top 4.8% of all scripts on The Black List, and was featured as one of the top 10 scripts of the week.
The band Elison calls in to talk about how no matter what age you are it's never to late to start doing what you love. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dinerdiscussions/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dinerdiscussions/support
En gymnasieelev går till attack efter dådet är två kvinnliga lärare döda. Hör allt vi hittills vet om de misstänkta morden på Malmö latinskola. Elev attackerade två lärare på Malmö latinskolaSent på eftermiddagen, när de flesta andra elever på Malmö latinskola gått hem, går en 18-årig man till attack mot två lärare. De skadade, två kvinnor i 50-årsåldern, förs till sjukhus, men deras liv går inte att rädda.Mannen, som också är elev på skolan, grips och misstänks för mord.Erkänner till sin advokat18-åringens advokat Anders Elison säger att mannen erkänner att han dödat kvinnorna. Elison deltog på tisdagseftermiddagen vid ett förhör med 18-åringen. Gärningsmannen har berättat i detalj vad som har hänt.Reportrar: Petra Haupt, Samuel Larsson, Marita Johansen, Assar Afzelius, Erik Adell och Susanna Hållbus.Programledare: Marcus NilssonProducent: Julia Juhlin Karlsson och Dennis Jörnmark
It's a brand new band for a brand new year. That's right, the boys are finally checking out the debut single, "Meet Me Halfway," from midwestern indie rockers Elison. It's sweet, it's twangy, it's everything PR needs to start throwing 'bows. Rad!
Renae and Jeremiah finish up a classic apple taste test before scouring every inch of episode 5 of Michelle's Bachelorette season. We discuss anteaters, Taylor Swift and her application to bachelor nation, and we are blessed to hear Renae's Viking war cry. We explore state slogans, the difference between centaurs and minotaurs, and enjoy that refreshing moment when Renae is proven wrong. Be sure to check out the outro song "Meet Me Halfway" by fellow pod listener and current leader of the fantasy Bachelorette league, Elison (aka Marissa). Find it on Spotify, Bandcamp, and wherever else you stream music!
Há 20 anos, Elison Frassini e sua família escolheram a cidade de Lauro Müller para fixar residência. Naturais de Lindóia do Sul, no meio-oeste catarinense, tiveram a oportunidade de residir em várias cidades devido a profissão do pai, que era do ramo de construção civil. Logo que chegou em Lauro Müller, adaptou-se à realidade da cidade tranquila e construiu novas amizades que o ajudaram a tomar gosto pelo violão, o primeiro instrumento musical que teve contato. Hoje em dia, Elisson é cantor e compositor Cristão e vem se dedicando à plataforma YouTube para apresentar suas composições autorais, covers, além de evangelizar através de pregações. Na edição #70 do Bate Papo, que foi ao ar nesta quinta-feira, dia 28, Frassini falou da influência que a música pode ter na vida das crianças. “Certos conteúdos afetam diretamente o desenvolvimento de uma criança, por exemplo. Ela tem acesso a palavras que são inadequadas para a idade e ainda não tem maturidade suficiente para interpretar. É cientificamente comprovado que a música interfere na vida do ser humano”, comentou Frassini.
We stop off in Cork for this weeks Local Selection, as we hand the controls over to 1/3 of the Elision collective, Dave O'Neill, as he provides us with an hour of Wednesday afternoon power. There's nothing we love more than hearing from DJs around the country, which is what the Local Selection series aims to do. The Elison collective have been on our radar for quite a while as both promoters and consistently solid DJs, so this mix from resident Dave O'Neil is a great addition to our evergrowing series. Dave is a Resident DJ of the Cork based collective Elision alongside Jack Devine and Fionn O Regan where they hold a residency in Dali. With Elision, Dave has been on the same bill as the likes of Bas Mooy, Dj Seinfeld, Ayarcana, Sunil Sharpe, Jamie Behan, Doug Cooney, Theologue and Offtrack to name a few, as well as making appearances at Mass Festival and Trax. He has recently finished studying DJ skills and music production in B.I.F.E under the guidance of Irish legends Sunil Sharpe, Defekt and Doug Cooney and is now furthering his education in B.I.F.E studying music production. With a track list featuring the some of the best in the business, mixed with complete ease buy the Cork DJ and producer. Dj Surgeles - the stories Robert Hood - Black Technician (UR Mad Mike remix) David Löhlein - Ilyane Kaiser - Time moves slow Binny - Balance of power Dj Surgeles - Calculation of the solar system (Diego Amura remix) Doug Cooney - Show up (Versho remix) LSD - Process 1 Jeroen Search - Escape Velocity Ross Hillier & Lex Gorrie - Anxiety Attack (Jonas Koop remix) Ben pest & Imogen - Gramalkin Alexander Kowalski - Emtec (British Murder Boys remix) AINT.S - 477 David Löhlein - Aiken Phara - great Attractor Mathys Lenne - High Hills Cari Lekebusch - Solossreid James Ruskin - Mutate and Survive Mathys Lenne - 002.4 (Hard Dimension) Phara - Road to Manilla D.dan - mutant future Offtrack - Movement Controller British Murder Boys - Father Love us Exium - solid mechanics British Murder boys - Hate is such a strong word Pfirter & Grindvik - Speed Ben pest - there’s a party inside my mouth Terrence Dixon - rotation (delay mix) This is an hour of the tough stuff to give your Wednesday afternoon a serious wake up. This bangs. DAVE O'NEILL -------------------- SC: @david-o-neill-4 FB: www.facebook.com/DONeill.music Four Four Magazine --------------------------- FB: www.facebook.com/FOURFOURDANCE/ IG: www.instagram.com/fourfourmagazine/ Web: www.fourfourmag.com/
For many, the onset of the coronavirus pandemic was terrifying. Descriptions of the outbreak in Europe and Asia led to panic buying and sheltering in place here at home. But, as time passed and people became acclimatized to life with masks and social distancing, many of those same people who were terrified at the outset began to let their guard down and take unnecessary risks.In this episode of Choiceology with Katy Milkman, we look at a peculiar inconsistency around how we perceive risk and rare events.Jeff Elison is a professor and an avid rock climber. Jeff tells the story of a fateful climb on a beautiful sunny day just outside of Alamosa, Colorado. Jeff normally climbs with friends, but on this particular day, none of his regular partners were available. Early in his climbing career, Jeff might have balked at a solo climb, but as a veteran, he felt confident that he could manage the familiar climb safely. But then, he slipped and fell. …Jeff Elison is a professor of psychology at Adams State University. He is also the author of the book Vertical Mind: Psychological Approaches for Optimal Rock Climbing.Next, Ido Erev joins Katy to explain how we often overweight rare events when we make decisions based on a description and underweight rare events when we make decisions from experience. You’ll hear about his research identifying this phenomenon, as well as several personal anecdotes demonstrating how all of us fall prey to these miscalculations from time to time.Ido Erev is a psychologist, professor, and vice dean of the MBA program at the Technion–Israel Institute of Technology.Finally, Katy discusses strategies to mitigate the downsides of the description-experience gap in risky choice and ways to leverage the fact that we often underweight rare opportunities as well.Choiceology is an original podcast from Charles Schwab. For more on the series, visit schwab.com/podcast.If you enjoy the show, please leave a ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ rating or review on Apple Podcasts.Important DisclosuresAll expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market conditions.The comments, views, and opinions expressed in the presentation are those of the speakers and do not necessarily represent the views of Charles Schwab.All corporate names are for illustrative purposes only and are not a recommendation, offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy any security.Data contained herein from third-party providers is obtained from what are considered reliable sources. However, its accuracy, completeness or reliability cannot be guaranteed.Investing involves risk, including loss of principal.The book, How to Change: The Science of Getting from Where You Are to Where You Want to Be, is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. (CS&Co.). Schwab has not reviewed the book and makes no representations about its content.Apple Podcasts and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries.Google Podcasts and the Google Podcasts logo are trademarks of Google LLC.Spotify and the Spotify logo are registered trademarks of Spotify AB.(0421-1BBF)
In part two of our focus on SCERA legend Jerry Elison, you'll learn more of what Jerry was like in his personal and family life - most delightfully his sense of humor ad the joy he found in simple things. Bonus treat: Listen at the end to hear Jerry tell a hilarious story in his own words. Guests: Adam Robertson, Lesa Pulham, April Berlin, and Chase Elison Hosts: Quin Swallow and Rachael Gibson Enjoy these favorite photos of Jerry!
Jared Aka Prominent JA interviews Co-Founders of Elison & Co., Philicia Mesa, and Jazmine McCarthur. During this interview, we discuss how these two best friends created an online women's boutique while working a corporate 9 -5 job and dealing with the early stages of motherhood. Tune in to see how these two women managed to start a women's fitness brand that allows women to feel comfortable in their own skin while feeling stylish. Special Guest: Philicia Mesa and Jazmine McCarthur Business Instagram: @Elisonitfits Edited by: Me Music: Ky Kiddy (Still Waiting)
Hoje, com o Pr. Elison da PIB de Santa Cruz, aprendemos que, assim como Zaqueu superou os obstáculos para ver Jesus, nós podemos também. è preciso ter força, fé e coragem para enfrentar os obstáculos. Porém, mais do que superá-los, é muito bom ter as mãos estendidas de Jesus em nossa direção para nos ajudar.
Jerry Elison was supposed to be around forever. That was the plan every time one of his shows closed and his casts and friends looked ahead to what he would do next. When he passed away in December 2019, it hardly seemed real. Even though we miss Jerry, his impact on the arts in our community and in the lives of people was VERY real. This is Part 1 of 2 on the magic and love brought to our neighborhood by The Legendary Jerry Elison. Hosts: Quin Swallow and Rachael Gibson Guests: Adam Robertson, Lesa Pulham, April Berlin and Chase Elison Jerry adds his touch in the SCERA scene shop Jerry and Lesa Pulham Jerry with his grandson, Chase Elison
Join Olivia Leonard as she speaks with UAlbany professor Oliver Elison Timm about how climate change has affected the Capital Region, as well as the health of those in the area. The global climate crisis has been an ongoing phenomenon and as a community, there are several things we can do to combat the progression posed by global warming. Listen to learn more about the importance of environmental conservation and the fight against global warming.
Dating di Indo beda ga sih sama di luar negeri? Kali ini gw duduk sama Mia (yes, lagi...) dan Elison buat ngobrolin tentang cerita dan pengalaman mereka. Dua orang ini ternyata punya pandangan yg slightly berbeda di beberapa sub-topik tertentu, tapi bottom line sih ini ngakak dan seru parah! Ini 2 orang sengklek2 gaes. Dengerin aja kalo ga percaya. Buruan! Anyways, hope you like it yah! If you do, please give a heads-up and show some love by sharing it around, it means a lot! Yang mau kepoin Insta mereka, @miaoenoto @elisonkoenaifi. Dan tentunya ga ketinggalan to always let me know whatever you think of this episode over DM di Instagram @andreas.wx or email di a26.saerdna@gmail.com. Roast me, I dare you! Ha! As always guys, stay happy and keep hustling yo! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/llmbydre/message
Welcome to Community Connections with Jeff Newgard! As the President & CEO of Bank of Idaho, I am fascinated with authentic and real conversations and establishing long term relationships. This video series is my opportunity to do just that - connect with local business owners and leaders to hear their stories. My personal mantra is, “People Bank With People.” Today’s guest is Vicki Elison, Owner of KV INC. KV Inc. Utilities is a corporation headquartered here in Idaho, since 1984. In this episode, you'll hear how Vicki, a woman born with grit, faced and overcame economic and societal challenges in her career in construction. During her early childhood years, Vicki's father had given her a lot of responsibilities and these early experiences from herding cattle to handling money at a young age helped shape her into the woman she is today. Vicki's father made the biggest impression on her and would often say, you can do anything you want to do; you just have to do it. Her father instilled in her the self-confidence that she can do it, which prepared her for the challenges to come. Listen and enjoy Vicki Elison's story. Check out our conversation on YouTube: https://youtu.be/hRSgrN7bJmY Equal Housing Lender, Member FDIC.
When it comes to running a successful podiatry business, it is vital to find your passion, surround yourself with the right team, and develop a mindset of success by associating with like-minded positive people. Drs Peyman & Viedra Elison are a dynamic podiatry team that own Fixing Feet Institute in Surprise, Arizona. I recently spent three days with them in Tempe, Arizona at Business Black Ops, which is a high-level mastermind group. I've wanted to get them on the Podiatry Legends Podcast for some time, so while I had them together in Arizona, I thought this was the perfect opportunity to capture their thought of podiatry business success. On this episode we discuss: Choosing to live in different states to pursue their podiatry careers. Working on an Indian Reservation in Arizona and how this has shaped Viedra's career and passion for diabetes and limb salvage. Peyman's passion for paediatric biomechanics, foot deformities and peripheral nerve surgery. Associates and culture problems - "Some people are just not trainable". Why continuing medical education is essential, but if you want to grow a successful business and life, you've got to attend business and marketing events. You need a positive mindset to bring it all together. Viedra's Tip: In the early part of your career, focus on your education, not your location. You need to get out of your comfort zone. Peyman's Tip: Find a niche market, something you enjoy and hone in on it. And if you feel you're in a rut, start hanging out with new people. If you have any questions about this podcast, please email me at tf@tysonfranklin.com One-On-One Coaching If your podiatry business needs help to develop marketing strategies or business systems, the most efficient way to do this is with one-on-one coaching. Please email me and let's see where I can you. Newsletter & Events If you'd like to be kept up to date with my EVENTS, please sign up to my NEWSLETTER. I promise not to spam you with daily emails telling you how great I am. Podiatry Legends Facebook Page I have set up a Podiatry Legends Facebook page, where I post additional small business tips, information regarding podiatry events and conferences around the world. Check it out: Podiatry Legends Facebook Page. It's No Secret with Dr T. Podcast If you like marketing and small business, please take a look at my other podcast; It's No Secret with Dr T., and you may also enjoy Episode 185: Having A Positive Mindset with Somnath Sikdar & Lonnie Beck Order My Book It's No Secret There's Money In Podiatry. In Australia, you can order directly from my website or online, but if you live overseas, I would suggest Amazon or the Book Depository. Tell Your Podiatry Friends If you enjoy listening to Podiatry Legends, please tell all your podiatry friends, and please feel free to leave a REVIEW on iTunes, or wherever you like to listen to podcasts. If you enjoyed this episode you might also enjoy: 028: The Definition of Success in Podiatry with Craig Schooth
William Elison's The Neighborhood of Gods: The Sacred and the Visible at the Margins of Mumbai(University of Chicago Press, 2018) explores how slum residents, tribal people, and members of other marginalized groups use religious icons to mark urban spaces in Mumbai. Interestingly, not all of Elison's interview subjects identify as Hindu, which bolsters has argument that sacred space in Mumbai is created by visual and somatic practices performed across religious boundaries. Join as as we discuss Elison's rich fieldwork in the streets, slums, and movie studios of Mumbai. For information on your host Raj Balkaran’s background, see rajbalkaran.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
William Elison's The Neighborhood of Gods: The Sacred and the Visible at the Margins of Mumbai(University of Chicago Press, 2018) explores how slum residents, tribal people, and members of other marginalized groups use religious icons to mark urban spaces in Mumbai. Interestingly, not all of Elison's interview subjects identify as Hindu, which bolsters has argument that sacred space in Mumbai is created by visual and somatic practices performed across religious boundaries. Join as as we discuss Elison's rich fieldwork in the streets, slums, and movie studios of Mumbai. For information on your host Raj Balkaran’s background, see rajbalkaran.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
William Elison's The Neighborhood of Gods: The Sacred and the Visible at the Margins of Mumbai(University of Chicago Press, 2018) explores how slum residents, tribal people, and members of other marginalized groups use religious icons to mark urban spaces in Mumbai. Interestingly, not all of Elison's interview subjects identify as Hindu, which bolsters has argument that sacred space in Mumbai is created by visual and somatic practices performed across religious boundaries. Join as as we discuss Elison's rich fieldwork in the streets, slums, and movie studios of Mumbai. For information on your host Raj Balkaran’s background, see rajbalkaran.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
William Elison's The Neighborhood of Gods: The Sacred and the Visible at the Margins of Mumbai(University of Chicago Press, 2018) explores how slum residents, tribal people, and members of other marginalized groups use religious icons to mark urban spaces in Mumbai. Interestingly, not all of Elison's interview subjects identify as Hindu, which bolsters has argument that sacred space in Mumbai is created by visual and somatic practices performed across religious boundaries. Join as as we discuss Elison's rich fieldwork in the streets, slums, and movie studios of Mumbai. For information on your host Raj Balkaran’s background, see rajbalkaran.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
William Elison's The Neighborhood of Gods: The Sacred and the Visible at the Margins of Mumbai(University of Chicago Press, 2018) explores how slum residents, tribal people, and members of other marginalized groups use religious icons to mark urban spaces in Mumbai. Interestingly, not all of Elison's interview subjects identify as Hindu, which bolsters has argument that sacred space in Mumbai is created by visual and somatic practices performed across religious boundaries. Join as as we discuss Elison's rich fieldwork in the streets, slums, and movie studios of Mumbai. For information on your host Raj Balkaran’s background, see rajbalkaran.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
William Elison's The Neighborhood of Gods: The Sacred and the Visible at the Margins of Mumbai(University of Chicago Press, 2018) explores how slum residents, tribal people, and members of other marginalized groups use religious icons to mark urban spaces in Mumbai. Interestingly, not all of Elison's interview subjects identify as Hindu, which bolsters has argument that sacred space in Mumbai is created by visual and somatic practices performed across religious boundaries. Join as as we discuss Elison's rich fieldwork in the streets, slums, and movie studios of Mumbai. For information on your host Raj Balkaran’s background, see rajbalkaran.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Meg Elison’s The Book of Flora (47North, 2019) trilogy is as much about gender as it is about surviving the apocalypse. The first installment, the Philip K. Dick Award-winning The Book of the Unnamed Midwife, set the tone with a pandemic that destroyed civilization, leaving behind 10 men for every woman. To avoid rape and enslavement in this male-dominated landscape, the eponymous midwife must present herself as a man to survive. In the next volume, The Books of Etta, set a century later, gender remains fraught but the rules have changed. The midwife’s legacy lives on in the town of Nowhere, where women are decision-makers and leaders. In this evolved world, Etta is allowed to choose the traditionally male job of raider, although she must still pretend to be a man to travel across a sparsely populated Midwest. Fortunately, this isn’t as heavy a lift for Etta as it had been for the midwife since Etta prefers to be called Eddie and identifies as male. The notion of choice is one that Elison takes a step further in the trilogy’s latest and final installment, The Book of Flora. Born male, Flora was neutered as a young boy by a slaver, and, as an adult, identifies as female. Although she doesn’t always find acceptance among the communities she encounters, she refuses to hide her gender identity even when traveling alone, preferring the risk of being female to hiding who she is. “As the world goes from absolute chaos to small pockets of … a more peaceful existence for women, I thought the most gendered person in the series, Flora, was the right person to come to something like peace,” Elison says. Set in a still dangerous world, The Book of Flora is nonetheless a riot of humanity, full of characters representing marginalized voices and communities incubating new cultures and norms. There’s even a hint of an evolutionary leap that may one day make gender obsolete. “I was really interested in books like Gulliver's Travels, but also in the idea of, after the loss of national media and immediate communications, how different our societies would immediately become: we'd have these little pockets of culture where every town would have its own urban legends and every town might have its own religion and every town might have its own courtship rituals. So that that gave me a real opportunity to get weird and I got really weird with it, and it was extremely fun.” Rob Wolf is the author of The Alternate Universe and The Escape. He worked for a decade as a journalist, writing on a wide range of topics from medicine to justice reform. He now serves as director of communications at a non-profit dedicated to justice reform. You can follow him on Twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Meg Elison’s The Book of Flora (47North, 2019) trilogy is as much about gender as it is about surviving the apocalypse. The first installment, the Philip K. Dick Award-winning The Book of the Unnamed Midwife, set the tone with a pandemic that destroyed civilization, leaving behind 10 men for every woman. To avoid rape and enslavement in this male-dominated landscape, the eponymous midwife must present herself as a man to survive. In the next volume, The Books of Etta, set a century later, gender remains fraught but the rules have changed. The midwife’s legacy lives on in the town of Nowhere, where women are decision-makers and leaders. In this evolved world, Etta is allowed to choose the traditionally male job of raider, although she must still pretend to be a man to travel across a sparsely populated Midwest. Fortunately, this isn’t as heavy a lift for Etta as it had been for the midwife since Etta prefers to be called Eddie and identifies as male. The notion of choice is one that Elison takes a step further in the trilogy’s latest and final installment, The Book of Flora. Born male, Flora was neutered as a young boy by a slaver, and, as an adult, identifies as female. Although she doesn’t always find acceptance among the communities she encounters, she refuses to hide her gender identity even when traveling alone, preferring the risk of being female to hiding who she is. “As the world goes from absolute chaos to small pockets of … a more peaceful existence for women, I thought the most gendered person in the series, Flora, was the right person to come to something like peace,” Elison says. Set in a still dangerous world, The Book of Flora is nonetheless a riot of humanity, full of characters representing marginalized voices and communities incubating new cultures and norms. There’s even a hint of an evolutionary leap that may one day make gender obsolete. “I was really interested in books like Gulliver's Travels, but also in the idea of, after the loss of national media and immediate communications, how different our societies would immediately become: we'd have these little pockets of culture where every town would have its own urban legends and every town might have its own religion and every town might have its own courtship rituals. So that that gave me a real opportunity to get weird and I got really weird with it, and it was extremely fun.” Rob Wolf is the author of The Alternate Universe and The Escape. He worked for a decade as a journalist, writing on a wide range of topics from medicine to justice reform. He now serves as director of communications at a non-profit dedicated to justice reform. You can follow him on Twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Meg Elison’s The Book of Flora (47North, 2019) trilogy is as much about gender as it is about surviving the apocalypse. The first installment, the Philip K. Dick Award-winning The Book of the Unnamed Midwife, set the tone with a pandemic that destroyed civilization, leaving behind 10 men for every woman. To avoid rape and enslavement in this male-dominated landscape, the eponymous midwife must present herself as a man to survive. In the next volume, The Books of Etta, set a century later, gender remains fraught but the rules have changed. The midwife’s legacy lives on in the town of Nowhere, where women are decision-makers and leaders. In this evolved world, Etta is allowed to choose the traditionally male job of raider, although she must still pretend to be a man to travel across a sparsely populated Midwest. Fortunately, this isn’t as heavy a lift for Etta as it had been for the midwife since Etta prefers to be called Eddie and identifies as male. The notion of choice is one that Elison takes a step further in the trilogy’s latest and final installment, The Book of Flora. Born male, Flora was neutered as a young boy by a slaver, and, as an adult, identifies as female. Although she doesn’t always find acceptance among the communities she encounters, she refuses to hide her gender identity even when traveling alone, preferring the risk of being female to hiding who she is. “As the world goes from absolute chaos to small pockets of … a more peaceful existence for women, I thought the most gendered person in the series, Flora, was the right person to come to something like peace,” Elison says. Set in a still dangerous world, The Book of Flora is nonetheless a riot of humanity, full of characters representing marginalized voices and communities incubating new cultures and norms. There’s even a hint of an evolutionary leap that may one day make gender obsolete. “I was really interested in books like Gulliver's Travels, but also in the idea of, after the loss of national media and immediate communications, how different our societies would immediately become: we'd have these little pockets of culture where every town would have its own urban legends and every town might have its own religion and every town might have its own courtship rituals. So that that gave me a real opportunity to get weird and I got really weird with it, and it was extremely fun.” Rob Wolf is the author of The Alternate Universe and The Escape. He worked for a decade as a journalist, writing on a wide range of topics from medicine to justice reform. He now serves as director of communications at a non-profit dedicated to justice reform. You can follow him on Twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We're posting this episode just after Veterans' Day, so it is a particular pleasure that it features good work by and for veterans. Our own Charlie (The Spaniard) speaks to another: Charlie Elison of the Travis Manion Foundation, whose stated mission is to ”empower veterans and families of fallen heroes to develop character in future generations.” In particular, Charlie E highlights mentoring programs that help inspire youth to serve their families and communities in a variety of ways.
Mom Enough: Parenting tips, research-based advice + a few personal confessions!
In the early months of life, a child grows and learns by leaps and bounds, making sense of language, emotions, social interactions and countless other aspects of the world around them. Between six months and one year there is a particular burst of development that is a veritable “social revolution.” But, as groundbreaking research is showing, children later diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) show observable differences from their typically developing peers by one year of age. Yet far too often these children don’t receive intervention until years later. Professor Jed Elison from the U of M’s Institute of Child Development is one of the researchers leading the charge to improve the lives of children with ASD through early identification of autism and early intervention. In this week’s Mom Enough show, he calls us all to become informed, advocate for services and reduce the stigma of ASD. What new information did you hear in this Mom Enough discussion about early identification of autism? If signs of ASD are observable as early as 12 months, why do you think the average age at which Minnesota children with ASD get service is 4.9 years? What can you do to help change that? For the Elison Lab, click here. For autism resources, click here.
Born into a world where men vastly outnumber women, Etta is expected to choose between two roles: mother or midwife. And yet the protagonist of Meg Elison‘s eponymous second novel chooses a third: raider, a job that allows her to roam a sparsely populated Midwest, witnessing the myriad ways people have figured out how to survive. The Book of Etta is among this year’s nominees for the Philip K. Dick Award, following in the footsteps of its predecessor, The Book of the Unnamed Midwife, which earned Elison the Philip K. Dick Award in 2015. In Midwife, Elison explored the dangers of being female in the aftermath of an apocalyptic illness that killed more women than men and rendered childbirth nearly always fatal. Etta is set a century later. The midwife is now revered as the founder of Etta’s hometown, Nowhere, and the midwife’s diary is a bible of sorts, the subject of study and interpretation. Thanks to the midwife’s influence, women wield power in Nowhere. They are the leaders and decision-makers, and family life is organized into Hives, with one woman free to choose multiple partners. And yet even in a town where women are safe and respected, Etta feels out of place. She is most at ease on the road, where she assumes a male guise, calling herself Eddy. In her lone travels, of course, it is safer to pretend to be a man. But Eddy is more than mere disguise. Over time, Etta realizes that Eddy is a true expression of her identity. “People like Etta often grow up feeling that the strictures imposed on them because of their assumed gender don’t suit them at all,” Elison explains in her New Books interview. “In Etta, I get to react to a lot of the gender roles that are imposed on women. … and explore what it looks like to pursue your own individual destiny.” The Book of Etta has many layers. It is an adventure story, as its hero looks for useful relics among the ruins. It is a rescue story, as Etta/Eddy seeks to free women trapped in bondage. And it’s a story about memory and the power of writing, as reflected in the biblical resonance of Elison’s titles. “I was really drawn to the idea of people without books, people without the ability to print books… People who don’t have books will come to rely on diaries,” Elison says. Rob Wolf is the author of The Alternate Universe. He worked for a decade as a journalist, writing on a wide range of topics from science to justice reform. He now serves as director of communications at a think tank in New York City. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Born into a world where men vastly outnumber women, Etta is expected to choose between two roles: mother or midwife. And yet the protagonist of Meg Elison‘s eponymous second novel chooses a third: raider, a job that allows her to roam a sparsely populated Midwest, witnessing the myriad ways people have figured out how to survive. The Book of Etta is among this year’s nominees for the Philip K. Dick Award, following in the footsteps of its predecessor, The Book of the Unnamed Midwife, which earned Elison the Philip K. Dick Award in 2015. In Midwife, Elison explored the dangers of being female in the aftermath of an apocalyptic illness that killed more women than men and rendered childbirth nearly always fatal. Etta is set a century later. The midwife is now revered as the founder of Etta’s hometown, Nowhere, and the midwife’s diary is a bible of sorts, the subject of study and interpretation. Thanks to the midwife’s influence, women wield power in Nowhere. They are the leaders and decision-makers, and family life is organized into Hives, with one woman free to choose multiple partners. And yet even in a town where women are safe and respected, Etta feels out of place. She is most at ease on the road, where she assumes a male guise, calling herself Eddy. In her lone travels, of course, it is safer to pretend to be a man. But Eddy is more than mere disguise. Over time, Etta realizes that Eddy is a true expression of her identity. “People like Etta often grow up feeling that the strictures imposed on them because of their assumed gender don’t suit them at all,” Elison explains in her New Books interview. “In Etta, I get to react to a lot of the gender roles that are imposed on women. … and explore what it looks like to pursue your own individual destiny.” The Book of Etta has many layers. It is an adventure story, as its hero looks for useful relics among the ruins. It is a rescue story, as Etta/Eddy seeks to free women trapped in bondage. And it’s a story about memory and the power of writing, as reflected in the biblical resonance of Elison’s titles. “I was really drawn to the idea of people without books, people without the ability to print books… People who don’t have books will come to rely on diaries,” Elison says. Rob Wolf is the author of The Alternate Universe. He worked for a decade as a journalist, writing on a wide range of topics from science to justice reform. He now serves as director of communications at a think tank in New York City. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Born into a world where men vastly outnumber women, Etta is expected to choose between two roles: mother or midwife. And yet the protagonist of Meg Elison‘s eponymous second novel chooses a third: raider, a job that allows her to roam a sparsely populated Midwest, witnessing the myriad ways people have figured out how to survive. The Book of Etta is among this year’s nominees for the Philip K. Dick Award, following in the footsteps of its predecessor, The Book of the Unnamed Midwife, which earned Elison the Philip K. Dick Award in 2015. In Midwife, Elison explored the dangers of being female in the aftermath of an apocalyptic illness that killed more women than men and rendered childbirth nearly always fatal. Etta is set a century later. The midwife is now revered as the founder of Etta’s hometown, Nowhere, and the midwife’s diary is a bible of sorts, the subject of study and interpretation. Thanks to the midwife’s influence, women wield power in Nowhere. They are the leaders and decision-makers, and family life is organized into Hives, with one woman free to choose multiple partners. And yet even in a town where women are safe and respected, Etta feels out of place. She is most at ease on the road, where she assumes a male guise, calling herself Eddy. In her lone travels, of course, it is safer to pretend to be a man. But Eddy is more than mere disguise. Over time, Etta realizes that Eddy is a true expression of her identity. “People like Etta often grow up feeling that the strictures imposed on them because of their assumed gender don’t suit them at all,” Elison explains in her New Books interview. “In Etta, I get to react to a lot of the gender roles that are imposed on women. … and explore what it looks like to pursue your own individual destiny.” The Book of Etta has many layers. It is an adventure story, as its hero looks for useful relics among the ruins. It is a rescue story, as Etta/Eddy seeks to free women trapped in bondage. And it’s a story about memory and the power of writing, as reflected in the biblical resonance of Elison’s titles. “I was really drawn to the idea of people without books, people without the ability to print books… People who don’t have books will come to rely on diaries,” Elison says. Rob Wolf is the author of The Alternate Universe. He worked for a decade as a journalist, writing on a wide range of topics from science to justice reform. He now serves as director of communications at a think tank in New York City. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ex Mormon Files - 273 - Mark Elison by The Ex-Mormon Files
Ex Mormon Files - 272 - Rachel Elison by The Ex-Mormon Files
Bethany Elison, Don's Cousin, Hurricane Irma, Florida, Fred On Demand, On Demand
Despite the odds, Meg Elison did it. First, she finished the book she wanted to write. Second, she found a publisher–without an agent. Third, she won the Philip K. Dick Award for Distinguished Science Fiction, a stunning achievement for a first-time author with a small, independent press. The Book of the Unnamed Midwife (Sybaritic Press, 2014) is set in the American West after an epidemic has killed all but a fraction of humanity. Among the survivors, men vastly outnumber women, setting in motion a desperate journey of survival for the eponymous midwife. To avoid the serial rape and enslavement that threatens all females in this male-dominated landscape, the midwife sheds her name and even her sexuality, presenting herself as a man and continuously changing her moniker to suit the circumstance. Communication falls apart too quickly for anyone to even know the name or nature of the illness that’s destroyed civilization and made childbirth a fatal event for female survivors. The midwife’s focus is on giving the few women she meets the hard-won power to prevent pregnancy. “I think the thing I wanted to come across most strongly was to explode notions of gender… And to really think about what your options would be like if you, like your grandmother, had no control over when you had children or how or by whom,” Elison says in her New Books interview. Elison was raised on stories about the apocalypse–the fire and brimstone kind. “I grew up in some pretty crazy evangelical churches, and they hammered on us about the end of days and the Book of Revelation, and it gave me nightmares, and it made always think about the fact that the end was nigh and that it was going to be bad, and I think that stuck with me my whole life even though I shed the ideological parts of it.” For the midwife, the apocalypse poses threats both dramatic and mundane. When not searching for food and a safe place to spend the night, she must negotiate the frustrating reality of spending time with people she doesn’t like. “I started thinking about what it would be like if the only people you could find were people you couldn’t stand, if they just irritated in you every way,” Elison says. “There’s nothing wrong with them and they’re not unsafe, you just don’t like being there. So I wanted to make a character who had to make choices between feeling safe in a group of people and feeling pissed off all the time.” Elison is grateful for the editors at Sybaritic Press, who published her unagented manuscript. “They’re very good editors and publishers,” she says. But inevitably, she’s had to do a lot of marketing herself. “It’s good because I’ve learned a lot about the business doing that and it’s not good because no one listens to a writer on her own.” Fortunately, the Philip K. Dick Award has made finding readers a whole lot easier. The award “has opened a lot of doors,” she says. Related links: * An article in the Los Angeles Review of Books explores the book’s treatment of “Gender and the Apocalypse.” [Note: the article has spoilers]. * Meg Elison shares her thoughts on her blog. Rob Wolf is the author of The Alternate Universe and Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Despite the odds, Meg Elison did it. First, she finished the book she wanted to write. Second, she found a publisher–without an agent. Third, she won the Philip K. Dick Award for Distinguished Science Fiction, a stunning achievement for a first-time author with a small, independent press. The Book of the Unnamed Midwife (Sybaritic Press, 2014) is set in the American West after an epidemic has killed all but a fraction of humanity. Among the survivors, men vastly outnumber women, setting in motion a desperate journey of survival for the eponymous midwife. To avoid the serial rape and enslavement that threatens all females in this male-dominated landscape, the midwife sheds her name and even her sexuality, presenting herself as a man and continuously changing her moniker to suit the circumstance. Communication falls apart too quickly for anyone to even know the name or nature of the illness that’s destroyed civilization and made childbirth a fatal event for female survivors. The midwife’s focus is on giving the few women she meets the hard-won power to prevent pregnancy. “I think the thing I wanted to come across most strongly was to explode notions of gender… And to really think about what your options would be like if you, like your grandmother, had no control over when you had children or how or by whom,” Elison says in her New Books interview. Elison was raised on stories about the apocalypse–the fire and brimstone kind. “I grew up in some pretty crazy evangelical churches, and they hammered on us about the end of days and the Book of Revelation, and it gave me nightmares, and it made always think about the fact that the end was nigh and that it was going to be bad, and I think that stuck with me my whole life even though I shed the ideological parts of it.” For the midwife, the apocalypse poses threats both dramatic and mundane. When not searching for food and a safe place to spend the night, she must negotiate the frustrating reality of spending time with people she doesn’t like. “I started thinking about what it would be like if the only people you could find were people you couldn’t stand, if they just irritated in you every way,” Elison says. “There’s nothing wrong with them and they’re not unsafe, you just don’t like being there. So I wanted to make a character who had to make choices between feeling safe in a group of people and feeling pissed off all the time.” Elison is grateful for the editors at Sybaritic Press, who published her unagented manuscript. “They’re very good editors and publishers,” she says. But inevitably, she’s had to do a lot of marketing herself. “It’s good because I’ve learned a lot about the business doing that and it’s not good because no one listens to a writer on her own.” Fortunately, the Philip K. Dick Award has made finding readers a whole lot easier. The award “has opened a lot of doors,” she says. Related links: * An article in the Los Angeles Review of Books explores the book’s treatment of “Gender and the Apocalypse.” [Note: the article has spoilers]. * Meg Elison shares her thoughts on her blog. Rob Wolf is the author of The Alternate Universe and Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Despite the odds, Meg Elison did it. First, she finished the book she wanted to write. Second, she found a publisher–without an agent. Third, she won the Philip K. Dick Award for Distinguished Science Fiction, a stunning achievement for a first-time author with a small, independent press. The Book of the Unnamed Midwife (Sybaritic Press, 2014) is set in the American West after an epidemic has killed all but a fraction of humanity. Among the survivors, men vastly outnumber women, setting in motion a desperate journey of survival for the eponymous midwife. To avoid the serial rape and enslavement that threatens all females in this male-dominated landscape, the midwife sheds her name and even her sexuality, presenting herself as a man and continuously changing her moniker to suit the circumstance. Communication falls apart too quickly for anyone to even know the name or nature of the illness that’s destroyed civilization and made childbirth a fatal event for female survivors. The midwife’s focus is on giving the few women she meets the hard-won power to prevent pregnancy. “I think the thing I wanted to come across most strongly was to explode notions of gender… And to really think about what your options would be like if you, like your grandmother, had no control over when you had children or how or by whom,” Elison says in her New Books interview. Elison was raised on stories about the apocalypse–the fire and brimstone kind. “I grew up in some pretty crazy evangelical churches, and they hammered on us about the end of days and the Book of Revelation, and it gave me nightmares, and it made always think about the fact that the end was nigh and that it was going to be bad, and I think that stuck with me my whole life even though I shed the ideological parts of it.” For the midwife, the apocalypse poses threats both dramatic and mundane. When not searching for food and a safe place to spend the night, she must negotiate the frustrating reality of spending time with people she doesn’t like. “I started thinking about what it would be like if the only people you could find were people you couldn’t stand, if they just irritated in you every way,” Elison says. “There’s nothing wrong with them and they’re not unsafe, you just don’t like being there. So I wanted to make a character who had to make choices between feeling safe in a group of people and feeling pissed off all the time.” Elison is grateful for the editors at Sybaritic Press, who published her unagented manuscript. “They’re very good editors and publishers,” she says. But inevitably, she’s had to do a lot of marketing herself. “It’s good because I’ve learned a lot about the business doing that and it’s not good because no one listens to a writer on her own.” Fortunately, the Philip K. Dick Award has made finding readers a whole lot easier. The award “has opened a lot of doors,” she says. Related links: * An article in the Los Angeles Review of Books explores the book’s treatment of “Gender and the Apocalypse.” [Note: the article has spoilers]. * Meg Elison shares her thoughts on her blog. Rob Wolf is the author of The Alternate Universe and Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode, we go over the Kyrie Elison from the Missa de Angelis. Don’t forget to download the music. I have a few recorded and almost ready to go. Enjoy the new website and leave your feedback! Kyrie Elison (PDF) English … Continue reading →