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In the wake of the UK Supreme Court ruling that the legal definition of woman should be based on biological sex, Nish and Zoë speak to LGBTQ+ activist Ellen Jones, author of "Outrage: Why the fight for LGBTQ+ equality is not yet won and what we can do about it" about the implications for trans people and what we can do about it. They discuss how the campaigning of reactionaries like billionaire author JK Rowling led to the decision that has seen Prime Minister Keir Starmer backflipping on his support for the trans community. Ellen speaks on the dangers of the recent ruling and practical ways to resist and support the trans community. Then, as the Tories flounder ahead of the local elections, Zoë hedges her bets. And we take a look at two shocking attempts to seize the limelight by Liz Truss and Tony Blair. Plus, ahead of the Australian election this weekend, Nish speaks to former Deputy Prime Minister Wayne Swan about how, in the wake of Trump's tariffs and attacks on allies, the commonwealth might be more important than ever and what the US and UK could learn from Australia's compulsory preferential voting system. CHECK OUT THESE DEALS FROM OUR SPONSORS AURA FRAMES https://www.auraframes.com CODE: PSUK SHOPIFY https://www.shopify.co.uk/podsavetheuk Guests: Ellen Jones Wayne Swan Useful links: Outrage: Why the fight for LGBTQ+ equality is not yet won and what we can do about it by Ellen Jones https://www.panmacmillan.com/authors/ellen-jones/outrage/9781035030606 The Good Law Project Crowdfunder to legally challenge the Supreme Court Decision https://goodlawproject.org/crowdfunder/supreme-court-human-rights-for-trans-people/ Compilation of protests against the Supreme Court Decision https://whatthetrans.com/compilation-of-protests-against-the-supreme-court/ Volunteer at your local trans pride - London Trans Pride call for stewards https://www.instagram.com/londontranspride Write to your MP https://transactual.org.uk/change-actions/write-to-your-mp/ Reclaim the framing of UK trans rights https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vTWR6sdj_xWKoOGLmwp0JotSL3NBrYSd1Dy3VZOIIKJKy0Ej6cFPt32IIKan3qCq6fG4lpgrw46ewO0/pub?urp=gmail_link Protect the Dolls T-shirt in support of Trans Lifeline, a US-based charity https://connerives.com/products/pre-order-protect-the-dolls-t-shirt Info on voting in the Australian Election abroad: ALPABROAD.ORG Audio Credits Sky News ITV News Pod Save the UK is a Reduced Listening production for Crooked Media. Contact us via email: PSUK@reducedlistening.co.uk Insta: https://instagram.com/podsavetheuk BlueSky: @podsavetheuk.crooked.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/podsavetheuk TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@podsavetheuk Facebook: https://facebook.com/podsavetheuk Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@PodSavetheUK Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's time for another publisher-centric episode, and it's another stunner—we're heading to Latin America (via Scotland!) to talk about the brilliant Charco Press! We dive into what makes Charco Press such a standout: their dedication to bringing contemporary Latin American literature to English-language readers, their thoughtful support of authors and translators, and, yes, their absolutely gorgeous books.We each share three Charco titles we love and three more we can't wait to get our hands on. There's something for everyone—from the surreal to the political, the tender to the explosive. Plus, we announce the winner of our March giveaway and introduce an amazing new prize for April: a 2025 bundle of Charco Press books! You do not want to miss this one.Join the Mookse and the Gripes on DiscordWe're creating a welcoming space for thoughtful, engaging discussions about great novellas, starting with First Love by Ivan Turgenev in April. Whether you want to share insights, ask questions, or simply follow along, we'd love to have you. The discussion will unfold gradually, so you can read at your own pace and jump in whenever you're ready. It's a great way to connect with fellow readers, explore new works together, and deepen your appreciation for the novella form.For the first book, the schedule will be as follows:* April 6: Start of the book through Section 9* April 9: Section 10 through Section 16* April 13: Section 17 through the endShownotesBooks* On the Calculation of Volume I, by Solvej Balle, translated by Barbara Haveland* The Dresden Files, by Jim Butcher* Fated, by Benedict Jacka* Cursed, by Benedict Jacka* First Love, by Ivan Turgenev* The Wind That Lays Waste, by Selva Almada, translated by Chris Andrews* Dead Girls, by Selva Almada, translated by Annie McDermott* Brickmakers, by Selva Almada, translated by Annie McDermott* Not a River, by Selva Almada, translated by Annie McDermott* Catching Fire: A Translation Diary, by Daniel Hahn* Never Did the Fire, by Diamela Eltit, translated by Daniel Hahn* Homesick, by Jennifer Croft* The Cemetery of Untold Stories, by Julia Alvarez* The Metamorphosis, by Franz Kafka* An Orphan World, by Giuseppe Caputo, translated by Sophie Hughes and Juana Adcock* Dislocations, by Sylvia Malloy, translated by Jennifer Croft* Elena Knows, by Claudia Piñeiro, translated by Frances Riddle* A Little Luck, by Claudia Piñeiro, translated by Frances Riddle* Fish Soup, by Margarita García Robayo, translated by Charlotte Coombe* The Distance Between Us, by Renato Cisneros, translated by Fionn Petch* Time of the Flies, by Claudia Piñeiro, translated by Frances Riddle* Two Sherpas, by Sebastián Martinez Daniell, translated by Jennifer Croft* Trout, Belly Up, by Rodrigo Fuentes, translated by Ellen Jones* Fresh Dirt from the Grave, by Giovanna Rivero, translated by Isabel Adey* The Adventures of China Iron, by Gabriela Cabezón Cámara, translated by Fiona Mackintosh and Iona Macintyre* A Perfect Cemetery, by Federico Falco, translated by Jennifer Croft* Cautery, by Lucía Litmaer, translated by Maureen Shaughnessy* The Delivery, by Margarita García Robayo, translated by Megan McDowell* The Forgery, by Ave Barrera, translated by Ellen Jones and Robin Myers* Restoration, by Ave Barrera, translated by Ellen Jones and Robin Myers* Die, My Love, by Ariana Harwicz, translated by Sarah Moses and Carolina Orloff* Feebleminded, by Ariana Harwicz, translated by Annie McDermott and Carolina Orloff* Tender, by Ariana Harwicz, translated by Annie McDermott and Carolina OrloffOther* The Book Club Review Podcast* Charco Press Website* Episode 74: Canadian Literature, with Jerry Faust* Episode 88: Women in Translation, with Robin MyersThe Mookse and the Gripes Podcast is a bookish conversation hosted by Paul and Trevor. Every other week, we explore a bookish topic and celebrate our love of reading. We're glad you're here, and we hope you'll continue to join us on this literary journey!A huge thank you to those who help make this podcast possible! If you'd like to support us, you can do so via Substack or Patreon. Subscribers receive access to periodic bonus episodes and early access to all new episodes. Plus, each supporter gets their own dedicated feed, allowing them to download episodes a few days before they're released to the public. We'd love for you to check it out! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mookse.substack.com/subscribe
We are here to discuss Season 10, Episode 10, the Hunter Games. Yup we still hate Metatron and just want Claire to make good choices. Liz tells the fate the hitchhikers Mark Matson and Ellen Jones met when they accepted a ride from Albert Brust. Research LinksAlbert Brust 1973 hitch hiking abductions and murder. : r/UnresolvedMysteriesEnter the Brustian Solution, or Why I'll Never Leave New York | ididitforjodieJul 24, 1973, page 18 - Tampa Bay Times at Newspapers.comAug 03, 1973, page 19 - Tampa Bay Times at Newspapers.comJul 23, 1973, page 6 - Tallahassee Democrat at Newspapers.comJul 29, 1973, page 207 - The Miami Herald at Newspapers.comMultiple serial killers are stalking roads & using loopholes to hide under radar as 200 murders unsolved, expert warns | The US Sun
What an opportunity to get involved in Harness Racing. Brett Hogan, Bruce Harpley and Ellen Jones joined me to outline how this wonderful idea will work. To get involved email; riverinaharnessgroup@gmail.com
We are joined by professional purple lesbian Ellen Jones as she tell us about about the movies that have impacted her queer identity - from Lady Penelope to Princess Mia! Find Ellen here: https://ellen-jones.co.uk/ Support us on Patreon at patreon.com/thequeermoviepodcast for as little as $5 per month to gain access to perks like queer movie recommendations, Discord access, and watch-a-longs. Thank you for supporting us! This is a queer movie watch party for your ears, hosted by Rowan Ellis and Jazza John. Join us as we take a look at the queer film canon, one genre at a time. From rom-coms to slashers, contemporary arthouse cinema to comedy classics - Queer Movie Podcast is a celebration of all things queer on the silver screen! New episodes every other Thursday. Find Us on the Internet Super Highway - Twitter: https://twitter.com/QueerMoviePod - Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thequeermoviepodcast - Website: http://www.queermoviepodcast.co.uk/ Production - Hosts: Rowan Ellis and Jazza John
We are joined by lesbian campaigner Ellen Jones, as she tells us about about the movies that have impacted her queer identity - from Lady Penelope to Princess Mia! Find Ellen here: https://ellen-jones.co.uk/ Support us on Patreon at patreon.com/thequeermoviepodcast for as little as $5 per month to gain access to perks like queer movie recommendations, Discord access, and watch-a-longs. Thank you for supporting us! This is a queer movie watch party for your ears, hosted by Rowan Ellis and Jazza John. Join us as we take a look at the queer film canon, one genre at a time. From rom-coms to slashers, contemporary arthouse cinema to comedy classics - Queer Movie Podcast is a celebration of all things queer on the silver screen! New episodes every other Thursday. Find Us on the Internet Super Highway - Twitter: https://twitter.com/QueerMoviePod - Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thequeermoviepodcast - Website: http://www.queermoviepodcast.co.uk/ Production - Hosts: Rowan Ellis and Jazza John
Mary Ellen Jones (Mej) has had quite a journey through the aviation industry, from her early career in government relations to her transition into sales and her experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic. She shares insights into the challenges, benefits, and surprises of her career, highlighting the fulfillment she found in various roles and the importance of mentorship and adaptability. The conversation covers Mej's experience in the aviation industry, including her transition to working in Asia Pacific and China, the challenges she faced, the importance of reliable childcare, and the impact of assumptions on career decisions. It also delves into Mej's involvement with JetZero, a company developing a blended wing body airplane, and the challenges and opportunities in the aviation industry. The conversation delves into the evolution of aircraft engines, the impact of engine technology on airframe design, and the challenges and opportunities for engine manufacturers in the aviation industry. It also highlights the importance of women in aviation and the critical need for skilled technicians in the industry.
In this episode of the Arts Village People, Sheree talks to one of the Open Studio residents, visual artist and story teller Ellen Jones-Pool about self-belief, taking risks and the effect that art can have on your mental health. As well as some stories from her residency in the village. This episode was recorded in January 2024. Thank you to the Rotorua Civic Arts Trust for funding another 12 episodes of the Arts Village People! Find more episodes of the Arts Village People by visiting the Rotorua Arts Village website (artsvillage.org.nz) or by searching for us on your favourite podcast app! This podcast was produced and edited by Joshua T Davis.
Brittany Graham is joined by Ellen Jones, Dean Atkinson and Jarrod Alchin on Monday's edition of On The Pace.
The game-changing, trailblazing, all-female racing series is back for 2024 with new drivers, top teams and wheel-to-wheel action. The second season of F1 Academy starts this weekend at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix. Katie Osborne and Christian Hewgill find out everything there is to know ahead of the first race. Susie Wolff, who's driving F1 Academy forwards as Managing Director, tells Katie and Christian about the series' mission in 2024 and how it will inspire young women to pursue careers in motorsport. Driver Lia Block is fully focused on making her F1 Academy debut. She tells Christian and Katie why racing with ART Grand Prix and Williams is such a huge opportunity. How will Lia make the switch from winning on rally circuits to racing on Grand Prix tracks, and how will F1 Academy change her career? Here's how to follow F1 Academy in 2024 Watch F1 Academy races live on YouTube Get the latest news on f1academy.com Follow the series on Instagram and X 2024 The F1 race start - with Mick Schumacher + Bernie Collins How Drive to Survive is made - with Exec Producer James Gay-Rees Why F1 pre-season testing matters - with McLaren's Oscar Piastri How new F1 cars come to life - with Aston Martin Technical Director Dan Fallows F1 Explains episodes for International Womens' Day Pit stops - with performance expert, Gemma Fisher DRS - with F1 strategist Ruth Buscombe + aerodynamicist Emel Cankaya The incredible logistics of F1 - with Giorgia Tirabassi from DHL The 2024 F1 calendar - with Ellen Jones, F1 Head of Sustainability Simulators with Dr Diandra Leslie Pelecky Street circuits with F1 strategist Bernie Collins F1 driver fitness with Dr Diandra Leslie Pelecky + Sebastian Vettel's former trainer
Great to catch up with Ellen Jones for a chat today at Riverina Paceway. Ellen and Her husband Blake have been having a terrific run and great to find out a bit more about their stable and how they manage the life balance. Harness Racing NSW
On Christmas Day 1909, Gwen Ellen Jones was murdered by William Murphy in the Welsh town of Holyhead. Anthony and Maddy tell the story with an appearance from Dr Hazel Pierce at the end. The episode was based on Hazel's wonderful work.Hazel is part of the pan-Wales History Points project (https://historypoints.org/). Her first book was about Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury 1473-1541. Her new book is coming next year on the life of Katherine Courtenay, daughter of King Edward IV, and her son and daughter in law, Henry and Gertrude Courtenay, both of whom fell foul of King Henry VIII.Written by Anthony Delaney. Editing and Sound Design by Anisha Deva. Produced by Freddy Chick. Senior Producer is Charlotte Long.Discover the past with exclusive history documentaries and ad-free podcasts presented by world-renowned historians from History Hit. Watch them on your smart TV or on the go with your mobile device. Get 50% off your first 3 months with code AFTERDARK sign up now for your 14-day free trial http://access.historyhit.com/checkout/subscribe/purchase?code=afterdark&plan=monthly
This week (after a very long hiatus, apologies!) Phoebe tells the story of Gwen Ellen Jones who was murdered on Christmas Day 1909. We also fill you in on what we've been up to over the last few months and pay tribute to long time listener Betty; Mum to Dad and Granny to Phoebe who very sadly died in August. Find us on: Instagram - @dadanddaughterdodeath Facebook - Dad and Daughter Do Death Email us at - dadanddaughterdodeath@gmail.com Thank you so much for listening and Merry Christmas!
Mike Castle hosted Ellen Jones (Senior Lecturer in Performance Sport, Programme Director of Sport Physical Education and Health) and Ellie Lewis (Director and Head Coach of Tennis Squad). Ellen's recent article on the narratives of women tennis coaches' careers informed this conversation, where our guests' personal journeys illustrated some of the structural issues discussed in thee paper. Croesawodd Mike Castle Ellen Jones (Uwch Ddarlithydd mewn Perfformiad Chwaraeon, Cyfarwyddwr Rhaglen Chwaraeon, Addysg Gorfforol ac Iechyd) ac Ellie Lewis (Cyfarwyddwr a Phrif Hyfforddwr y Sgwad Tenis). Roedd erthygl ddiweddar Ellen ar yrfa hyfforddwyr Tennis Merched yn sail i'r sgwrs hon, lle'r oedd teithiau personol ein gwestai yn darlunio rhai o'r materion strwythurol a drafodwyd yn y papur. Follow us on Twitter: @thecoachinghubFollow us on Instagram: @thecoachinghubpodWebsite: https://www.cardiffmet.ac.uk/schoolofsport/research/Pages/Sports-Coaching-and-Pedagogy.aspx
Tune into a very exciting episode on the podcast this week with Ellen Jones, Head of ESG at Formula 1, as we chat about the series' sustainability goals, ongoing impact, and the upcoming 2024 calendar.If you enjoyed the episode, don't forget to leave us a 5-star review for a chance to be featured on our Instagram page! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Racing more regionally. New power for the F1 Paddock. Game-changing fuels for F1 cars and, potentially, your car. Big things are happening to help make Formula 1 more sustainable. Christian and Katie ask F1's Head of Sustainability, Ellen Jones, why re-organising the race calendar for 2024 will help reduce the sport's carbon footprint. Ellen also reveals how F1's trialling new ways of reducing the amount of energy used at races and developing a game-changing sustainable fuel with potential to transform the way we all travel in the future. McLaren's CEO, Zak Brown, and Sustainability Director Kim Wilson reveal how Lando Norris' race seat and the lake outside their factory are helping the team cut carbon. We'd love to answer your F1 question. Record or write it, then email it to Why@F1.com Why not listen to another episode? Trophies, travel + 'pace in the car' - Your Questions Answered Your F1 Car Questions Answered by Bernie Collins + Will Buxton Why are F1 wind tunnels top secret? Why do F1 drivers need race engineers? with Alfa Romeo's Zhou Guanyu Why are pit stops so important? Why do F1 teams need simulators? with Aston Martin's Stoffel Vandoorne Why is racing in the rain so difficult? with Mika Hakkinen + Haas race engineer Mark Slade Why are street circuits the ultimate test? with Mika Hakkinen + Bernie Collins Tyres, points + car set-up - Your Questions Answered Why do F1 drivers need to be so fit? with Alexander Rossi + Vettel's former trainer Why does the USA have 3 F1 races in 2023? Why is F1 Sprint such a challenge? with Kevin Magnussen For in-depth interviews with F1's biggest names, listen to F1 Beyond The Grid. For race previews and reviews, head over to F1 Nation.
May is Maternal Mental Health Awareness month. Regular listeners know how much importance Allison places on maternal wellness. Today, we are looking at maternal wellness from yet another angle. For this episode, Allison is joined by Kayce Hodos, a maternal mental health therapist and coach. Allison and Kayce are discussing proactive steps you can take to support a new mom's mental health during her pregnancy and after the baby is born. They discuss why a new mom's mental health is just as important as her physical health, what can be done during pregnancy to prepare for a mentally healthy postpartum, the many ways new parents can find support, the role a partner can play, how to enlist friends and family to help in ways that suit the new mom the best, and much more. Resources for maternal mental health: Postpartum.net National maternal mental health hotline: Call or text 1-833-9-HELP4MOMS or visit the website Find Kayce on Instagram or on her website Listen to previous episodes mentioned: Episode 29. My Postpartum Anxiety Story Episode 30. How to Keep Reaching for the Light with Britt Davis Episode 31. Sleep Makes Such a Difference with Caroline Vasquez Episode 32. Where Did I Go with Ellen Jones and Holly Kennedy Episode 82. A Husband's Perspective on the Postpartum Journey Click here to watch or listen on YouTube Enjoying How Long ‘Til Bedtime? Please consider rating and reviewing the show. This helps Allison support more parents. Click here, scroll to the bottom, rate the podcast, and select “Write a Review.” And if you're a Spotify listener, you can now leave reviews on Spotify by clicking here. Also, if you subscribe to the show, you won't miss any episodes! Connect with Allison: Instagram Facebook Website YouTube
Last May, in recognition of Maternal Mental Health Awareness month, we shared several very personal stories of postpartum anxiety and depression across four episodes of How Long ‘Til Bedtime. As we discussed then, it is believed that 1 in 5 new moms experience some level of perinatal mood or anxiety disorder. And when a new mom experiences postpartum anxiety or depression, her partner is 50% more likely to also experience anxiety or depression. So this year, as a follow up, we wanted to share a slightly different perspective on this very important topic. We have three men chiming in for today's episode. Mike Vasquez and Todd Kennedy are married to women who shared their postpartum struggles with us in those episodes last May. And Alex Grant is the husband of a member of Allison's Sleep Tight community. Allison asked Mike, Todd and Alex some questions about their own personal adjustment to parenthood and their experience of having a partner struggle with postpartum anxiety or depression. Listen to previous episodes mentioned: Episode 15. How Newborn Moms Can Get 4-5 Hours of Sleep Episode 29. My Postpartum Anxiety Story Episode 30. How to Keep Reaching for the Light with Britt Davis Episode 31. Sleep Makes Such a Difference with Caroline Vasquez Episode 32. Where Did I Go with Ellen Jones and Holly Kennedy Enjoying How Long ‘Til Bedtime? Please consider rating and reviewing the show. This helps Allison support more parents. Click here, scroll to the bottom, rate the podcast, and select “Write a Review.” And if you're a Spotify listener, you can now leave reviews on Spotify by clicking here. Also, if you subscribe to the show, you won't miss any episodes! Connect with Allison: Instagram Facebook Website YouTube
Join us for worship this Sunday, February 5, Holy Eucharist, Rite II with music. The Rev. Philip DeVaul as Celebrant and the Rev. Melanie Slane as Preacher. Ellen Jones on the organ and the Church of the Redeemer choir. This worship service is also available live at 9:00 am on Sunday, and as a video following that at https://www.redeemer-cincy.org/online-worship/
Join us for worship this Sunday, January 29, Holy Eucharist, Rite II with music. The Rev. Melanie Slane as Celebrant and the Rev. Philip DeVaul as Preacher. Ellen Jones on the organ and the Church of the Redeemer choir. This worship service is also available live at 9:00 am on Sunday, and as a video following that at https://www.redeemer-cincy.org/online-worship/
Leanne Norman is a Professor of Sport and Sociocultural Studies and Director of the Research Centre for Social Justice in Sport and Society at Leeds Beckett University. Her research utilises a critical sociological lens to examine sport organisational and coaching cultures to address gender equity and diversity within sport coaching workforces.Ellen Jones is a lecturer and the academic lead for all tennis performance modules and the Performance Director of Tennis at Cardiff Metropolitan University.They join me to discuss a paper that they had written that explained some of the challenges faced my both male and female coaches who had experienced mental health issues and burnout linked to the dominant 'performance narrative' that has become so prevalent across sport. Here is a link to the paper - https://t.co/Kl6I4mNq7ZI hope you enjoyStuart
We recently marked the one year anniversary of How Long ‘Til Bedtime. Cue the confetti! Thank you all for listening in and coming along this journey with us. Stay tuned for many more practical solutions as we head into our second year. Throughout our first year, we invited many guests to share their expertise with us. After each interview, Allison asked each of them some rapid-fire questions unrelated to their area of expertise. Today's episode is a compilation of all the great “bonus answers” they shared with us. Our twelve guests will share their best parenting advice, book and podcast recommendations, and advice on how parents can take good care of themselves. Links to all our guest interviews from our first year: Helping Your Picky Eater with Alisha Grogan Orthodontics Can Improve More Than Just Your Smile with Dr. Andrew Glassick Baby Gifts and Registries with Ashley Sharp Choosing a Sunscreen with Bev Sidders How to Keep Reaching for the Light with Britt Davis Sleep Makes Such a Difference with Caroline Vasquez Where Did I Go with Ellen Jones and Holly Kennedy Exploring Pediatric Dentistry with Dr. Jo Cronly Taking the Stress Out of Family Photos with Leah O'Connell Parenting Anxious Toddlers and Preschoolers with Natasha Daniels Every Breastfeeding & Feeding Journey is Unique with Dr. Stephanie Grice Enjoying How Long ‘Til Bedtime? Please consider rating and reviewing the show. This helps Allison support more parents. Click here, scroll to the bottom, rate the podcast, and select “Write a Review.” And if you're a Spotify listener, you can now leave reviews on Spotify by clicking here. Also, if you subscribe to the show, you won't miss any episodes! Connect with us on Instagram: https://instagram.com/sleepandwellnesscoach Connect with us on Facebook: https://facebook.com/SleepandWellnessCoach
Del libro Puertas demasiado pequeñas (Charco Press, 2022), traducido con el título The Forgery (Charco Press, 2022), hoy tenemos una lectura a tres voces con su autora, la escritora mexicana Ave Barrera y sus traductoras Ellen Jones y Robin Myers. Los invitamos a escucha y leer el texto completo. "Leyendo literatura en 3 minutos" es una declaración por una escritura más allá de las fronteras. From Puertas demasiado pequeñas (Charco Press, 2022), translated to The Forgery (Charco Press, 2022), today we have a reading in three voices with its autor, Mexican writer Ave Barrera and translators Ellen Jones and Robin Myers. We invite you to listen and read the text in Spanish and English. "Reading literature in 3 minutes" is a utterance of a writing beyond all borders.
I am lucky enough to have translators Ellen Jones and Robin Myers to talk about The Forgery by Ave Barrera Mentioned in this episode; Charco Press SouthWest Review Movie Marathon by Ave Barrera (Translated by Robin Myers) Salt Crystals by Cristina Bendek (Translated by Robin Myers) Trout, Belly Up by Rodrigo Fuentes (Translated by Ellen Jones) Juan Rulfo Find Ellen Jones online Website Twitter: @ellen_c_jones Find Robin Myers online Website Twitter: @robin_ep_myers Support the show via Patreon Social Media links Email: losttranslationspod@gmail.com Twitter: @translationspod Instagram: translationspod Litsy: @translationspod Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/translationspod/ Produced by Mccauliflower.
Today we close out our four-part series dedicated to maternal mental health. Allison is joined by two friends, Ellen Jones and Holly Kennedy, who share Allison's passion for helping new moms and have created a maternal coaching business called Mother Tree Wellness. They share the challenges they faced in their own personal postpartum journeys and offer concrete advice for moms navigating this major life transition. Ellen and Holly share simple strategies moms can use to orient themselves to motherhood, find their sense of self again after giving birth and use the anchor points in their routines and relationships to find the peace and joy in this new phase of their life. They clarify what exactly maternal coaching is, who can benefit from this service and what other resources are available to new moms. They also provide specific guidance on how partners and those in the new mom's support network can lend support. Learn more about Ellen and Holly at www.mothertreewellnessgroup.com or https://www.instagram.com/mothertreemoms More help is available at Postpartum.net Enjoying How Long ‘Til Bedtime? Please consider rating and reviewing the show. This helps Allison support more parents. Click here, scroll to the bottom, rate the podcast, and select “Write a Review.” And if you're a Spotify listener, you can now leave reviews on Spotify by clicking here. Also, if you subscribe to the show, you won't miss any episodes! Connect with us on Instagram: https://instagram.com/sleepandwellnesscoach Connect with us on Facebook: https://facebook.com/SleepandWellnessCoach
Good morning and welcome back to another episode of the pod! Social Impact Investing is an emerging area of investment that aims to provide financial returns and also have a clear positive impact on society. In this episode we are joined by Andrew Thorburn and Ellen Jones from For Purpose Investment Partners, who discuss what social impact investing is, what the industry is like in Australia and what the challenges are in maintaining both a profit and a purpose focus. They explain the exciting growth prospects of the industry and the potential it has in addressing some of the most serious social issues in Australia and globally. Finally we hear about their impressive careers and any advice they may have for students looking to enter the industry. Show your support for BoW Talks by subscribing on Apple Podcasts or following on Spotify. Alternatively you can leave a review on Apple Podcasts. Looking to join Banking on Women? Connect with us on Instagram, LinkedIn or visit our website. Looking to collaborate on a BoW Talks episode? Say hi at podcast.director@bankingonwomen.org.au Guest Recommendations: Good Future - John Treadgold (podcast) Listenable - Dylan Alcott and Angus O'Loughlin (podcast) Happiest Man on Earth - Eddie Jaku (book) Just Mercy - based on true story of Walter McMillian (movie) Open - Andre Agassi (book)
In Literature in Motion: Translating Multilingualism Across the Americas (Columbia University Press, 2022), Ellen C. Jones centers not just translation but multilingualism as both an artistic practice and scholarly lens through which to examine the production and reception of literature across the Americas. Focusing on writers who use mixed language forms such as “Spanglish,” “Portunhol,” and “Frenglish,” she shows how these authors and their translators use multilingualism to disrupt binaries and hierarchies in language, gender, and literary production itself. In this episode of NBN, Ellen Jones discusses the complex relationship and perceived tensions between translation and multilingualism, the sociopolitical forces that have shaped the status of multilingualism within the United States, her experience translating Susana Chávez-Silverman's multilingual writing, multilingualism as queer practice in Giannina Braschi's Yo-Yo Boing! and Tess O'Dwyer's English-only translation of Yo-Yo Boing!, indigenous multilingualism in Wilson Bueno's Mar Paraguayo and its public life as an art exhibition by Andrew Forster in collaboration with translator Erín Moure, the collaborative joy of editing special issues on multilingualism for the literary journal Asymptote, and more. Tune in to learn about all this and more! Ellen C. Jones is a literary translator, writer, and editor based in Mexico City. Jennifer Gayoung Lee is a writer and data analyst based in New York City. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/latino-studies
In Literature in Motion: Translating Multilingualism Across the Americas (Columbia University Press, 2022), Ellen C. Jones centers not just translation but multilingualism as both an artistic practice and scholarly lens through which to examine the production and reception of literature across the Americas. Focusing on writers who use mixed language forms such as “Spanglish,” “Portunhol,” and “Frenglish,” she shows how these authors and their translators use multilingualism to disrupt binaries and hierarchies in language, gender, and literary production itself. In this episode of NBN, Ellen Jones discusses the complex relationship and perceived tensions between translation and multilingualism, the sociopolitical forces that have shaped the status of multilingualism within the United States, her experience translating Susana Chávez-Silverman's multilingual writing, multilingualism as queer practice in Giannina Braschi's Yo-Yo Boing! and Tess O'Dwyer's English-only translation of Yo-Yo Boing!, indigenous multilingualism in Wilson Bueno's Mar Paraguayo and its public life as an art exhibition by Andrew Forster in collaboration with translator Erín Moure, the collaborative joy of editing special issues on multilingualism for the literary journal Asymptote, and more. Tune in to learn about all this and more! Ellen C. Jones is a literary translator, writer, and editor based in Mexico City. Jennifer Gayoung Lee is a writer and data analyst based in New York City. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
In Literature in Motion: Translating Multilingualism Across the Americas (Columbia University Press, 2022), Ellen C. Jones centers not just translation but multilingualism as both an artistic practice and scholarly lens through which to examine the production and reception of literature across the Americas. Focusing on writers who use mixed language forms such as “Spanglish,” “Portunhol,” and “Frenglish,” she shows how these authors and their translators use multilingualism to disrupt binaries and hierarchies in language, gender, and literary production itself. In this episode of NBN, Ellen Jones discusses the complex relationship and perceived tensions between translation and multilingualism, the sociopolitical forces that have shaped the status of multilingualism within the United States, her experience translating Susana Chávez-Silverman's multilingual writing, multilingualism as queer practice in Giannina Braschi's Yo-Yo Boing! and Tess O'Dwyer's English-only translation of Yo-Yo Boing!, indigenous multilingualism in Wilson Bueno's Mar Paraguayo and its public life as an art exhibition by Andrew Forster in collaboration with translator Erín Moure, the collaborative joy of editing special issues on multilingualism for the literary journal Asymptote, and more. Tune in to learn about all this and more! Ellen C. Jones is a literary translator, writer, and editor based in Mexico City. Jennifer Gayoung Lee is a writer and data analyst based in New York City. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/latin-american-studies
In Literature in Motion: Translating Multilingualism Across the Americas (Columbia University Press, 2022), Ellen C. Jones centers not just translation but multilingualism as both an artistic practice and scholarly lens through which to examine the production and reception of literature across the Americas. Focusing on writers who use mixed language forms such as “Spanglish,” “Portunhol,” and “Frenglish,” she shows how these authors and their translators use multilingualism to disrupt binaries and hierarchies in language, gender, and literary production itself. In this episode of NBN, Ellen Jones discusses the complex relationship and perceived tensions between translation and multilingualism, the sociopolitical forces that have shaped the status of multilingualism within the United States, her experience translating Susana Chávez-Silverman's multilingual writing, multilingualism as queer practice in Giannina Braschi's Yo-Yo Boing! and Tess O'Dwyer's English-only translation of Yo-Yo Boing!, indigenous multilingualism in Wilson Bueno's Mar Paraguayo and its public life as an art exhibition by Andrew Forster in collaboration with translator Erín Moure, the collaborative joy of editing special issues on multilingualism for the literary journal Asymptote, and more. Tune in to learn about all this and more! Ellen C. Jones is a literary translator, writer, and editor based in Mexico City. Jennifer Gayoung Lee is a writer and data analyst based in New York City. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literary-studies
In Literature in Motion: Translating Multilingualism Across the Americas (Columbia University Press, 2022), Ellen C. Jones centers not just translation but multilingualism as both an artistic practice and scholarly lens through which to examine the production and reception of literature across the Americas. Focusing on writers who use mixed language forms such as “Spanglish,” “Portunhol,” and “Frenglish,” she shows how these authors and their translators use multilingualism to disrupt binaries and hierarchies in language, gender, and literary production itself. In this episode of NBN, Ellen Jones discusses the complex relationship and perceived tensions between translation and multilingualism, the sociopolitical forces that have shaped the status of multilingualism within the United States, her experience translating Susana Chávez-Silverman's multilingual writing, multilingualism as queer practice in Giannina Braschi's Yo-Yo Boing! and Tess O'Dwyer's English-only translation of Yo-Yo Boing!, indigenous multilingualism in Wilson Bueno's Mar Paraguayo and its public life as an art exhibition by Andrew Forster in collaboration with translator Erín Moure, the collaborative joy of editing special issues on multilingualism for the literary journal Asymptote, and more. Tune in to learn about all this and more! Ellen C. Jones is a literary translator, writer, and editor based in Mexico City. Jennifer Gayoung Lee is a writer and data analyst based in New York City. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/caribbean-studies
In Literature in Motion: Translating Multilingualism Across the Americas (Columbia University Press, 2022), Ellen C. Jones centers not just translation but multilingualism as both an artistic practice and scholarly lens through which to examine the production and reception of literature across the Americas. Focusing on writers who use mixed language forms such as “Spanglish,” “Portunhol,” and “Frenglish,” she shows how these authors and their translators use multilingualism to disrupt binaries and hierarchies in language, gender, and literary production itself. In this episode of NBN, Ellen Jones discusses the complex relationship and perceived tensions between translation and multilingualism, the sociopolitical forces that have shaped the status of multilingualism within the United States, her experience translating Susana Chávez-Silverman's multilingual writing, multilingualism as queer practice in Giannina Braschi's Yo-Yo Boing! and Tess O'Dwyer's English-only translation of Yo-Yo Boing!, indigenous multilingualism in Wilson Bueno's Mar Paraguayo and its public life as an art exhibition by Andrew Forster in collaboration with translator Erín Moure, the collaborative joy of editing special issues on multilingualism for the literary journal Asymptote, and more. Tune in to learn about all this and more! Ellen C. Jones is a literary translator, writer, and editor based in Mexico City. Jennifer Gayoung Lee is a writer and data analyst based in New York City. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies
In Literature in Motion: Translating Multilingualism Across the Americas (Columbia University Press, 2022), Ellen C. Jones centers not just translation but multilingualism as both an artistic practice and scholarly lens through which to examine the production and reception of literature across the Americas. Focusing on writers who use mixed language forms such as “Spanglish,” “Portunhol,” and “Frenglish,” she shows how these authors and their translators use multilingualism to disrupt binaries and hierarchies in language, gender, and literary production itself. In this episode of NBN, Ellen Jones discusses the complex relationship and perceived tensions between translation and multilingualism, the sociopolitical forces that have shaped the status of multilingualism within the United States, her experience translating Susana Chávez-Silverman's multilingual writing, multilingualism as queer practice in Giannina Braschi's Yo-Yo Boing! and Tess O'Dwyer's English-only translation of Yo-Yo Boing!, indigenous multilingualism in Wilson Bueno's Mar Paraguayo and its public life as an art exhibition by Andrew Forster in collaboration with translator Erín Moure, the collaborative joy of editing special issues on multilingualism for the literary journal Asymptote, and more. Tune in to learn about all this and more! Ellen C. Jones is a literary translator, writer, and editor based in Mexico City. Jennifer Gayoung Lee is a writer and data analyst based in New York City. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/language
In Literature in Motion: Translating Multilingualism Across the Americas (Columbia University Press, 2022), Ellen C. Jones centers not just translation but multilingualism as both an artistic practice and scholarly lens through which to examine the production and reception of literature across the Americas. Focusing on writers who use mixed language forms such as “Spanglish,” “Portunhol,” and “Frenglish,” she shows how these authors and their translators use multilingualism to disrupt binaries and hierarchies in language, gender, and literary production itself. In this episode of NBN, Ellen Jones discusses the complex relationship and perceived tensions between translation and multilingualism, the sociopolitical forces that have shaped the status of multilingualism within the United States, her experience translating Susana Chávez-Silverman's multilingual writing, multilingualism as queer practice in Giannina Braschi's Yo-Yo Boing! and Tess O'Dwyer's English-only translation of Yo-Yo Boing!, indigenous multilingualism in Wilson Bueno's Mar Paraguayo and its public life as an art exhibition by Andrew Forster in collaboration with translator Erín Moure, the collaborative joy of editing special issues on multilingualism for the literary journal Asymptote, and more. Tune in to learn about all this and more! Ellen C. Jones is a literary translator, writer, and editor based in Mexico City. Jennifer Gayoung Lee is a writer and data analyst based in New York City.
Media Storm presented by Mathilda Mallinson and Helena Wadia.Warning: Some swearingDisabled workers are over twice as likely to be unemployed as non-disabled workers — even not counting those who are ‘economically inactive' due to health or other reasons. Countless testimonies point to ableism at every stage of the employment game, from applying to jobs to being made redundant. And yet legally-speaking, there is almost no trace of disability discrimination in UK workplaces, with only 72 disability employment tribunals happening in the latest published annual period (2019-20).If not for discrimination, why are disabled people struggling disproportionately to access work? And if there is discrimination, why is no one paying for it?This week, we dig up the canyon of workplace ableism that has been buried in confidential settlements, or faced no reckoning at all. We look at the myriad of ways that ableism manifests in workplaces, and the loopholes and limitations of the law designed to prevent it.Joining us in the studio are two very special guests: Triple Cripples podcast host Jumoke Abdullahi and campaigner-consultant Ellen Jones. We discuss the mainstream media's coverage of disability, and how the Covid-19 pandemic cast an uncomfortable light on society's valuation of different people's lives.The episode is hosted by Mathilda Mallinson (@mathildamall) and Helena Wadia (@helenawadia), with Helena Da Silva Merron and Maria Kalinowska as researchers.Guests:Keryn Seal @KerynSeal4 Izzy Jani-Friend @isabellejanifriend Emma Vogelmann @emma.vogelmann @disabilitylawservice @scopecharity @emma_vogelmann @DSL_Law @scope Roxanne Steel @roxannesteelofficial Maria Kalinowska @m.a.kamera Jumoke Abdullahi @jayonlife @herroyalj @triplecripplesEllen Jones @ellen__jones Sources:Disabled and non-disabled employment rates, UK (calculated from the most recent quarterly data, for October-December 2021): https://bit.ly/36GtoY7 Disability Employment Tribunals - number and amounts awarded: https://bit.ly/3D9Nwy3 - these give annual figures only for the year 2019-2020; we were unable to access more recent figures due to the handling of that data being moved to new case managements systems within the government, and therefore being delayed in publication (as detailed here: https://bit.ly/3iA05Jn)Reasonable adjustments explained: https://bit.ly/3L9DcJ9 Access to Work provisions: https://bit.ly/3577Vaj Disabled people in employment in the UK: https://bit.ly/37YXtTuPIP cuts: https://bit.ly/3Dbegyk ‘Economically inactive' populations, UK (calculated from the most recent quarterly data, for October-December 2021): https://bit.ly/3wzRA9C Disability representation in UK TV industry: https://bit.ly/3wwfB1e Get in touch by following the show on social media @mediastormpod or emailing us mediastormpodcast@gmail.comMusic by Samfire @soundofsamfire. Artwork by Simba Baylon @simbalenciaga.Media Storm is brought to you by the house of The Guilty Feminist and is part of the Acast Creator Network. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Is only work experience in law firms relevant to a training contract application? Graduate Recruitment partner Emily Holdstock and trainees Ellen Jones, Candice Johnson and Joe May join podcast host Miri Stickland to discuss how work and volunteering experience in other sectors can also be a huge asset.
Are there unwritten rules you need to follow in training contract interviews? Partner Katherine Ekers and trainees Ellen Jones and Cameron Turnbull join podcast host Miri Stickland to discuss what to wear and whether to eat the biscuits offered!
Jenny asked previous podcast guests to chat about their top reads of the year, whether or not they were published in 2021. Jenny also chimes in with her own obscure categories. Please enjoy hearing from Tina, Tom, Lindy, Trish, Andrew, Kim, Jeff, Elizabeth, Audrey, Scott, Robin, Mina, Emily, Chris, Nadine, and Ross. Download or listen via this link: Reading Envy 236: Best Reads of 2021 Subscribe to the podcast via this link: FeedburnerOr subscribe via Apple Podcasts by clicking: SubscribeOr listen through TuneIn Or listen on Google Play Or listen via StitcherOr listen through Spotify Or listen through Google Podcasts Books discussed:(duplicates removed) Four Hundred Souls: A Community History of African America, 1619-2019 edited by Ibram x. Kendo and Keisha N. BlaineBroken Horses written and read by Brandi CarlileSeveral People are Typing by Calvin KasulkeWhen the Light of the World was Subdued edited by Joy HarjoBraiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall KimmererThe Murderbot Diaries series by Martha WellsXeni by Rebekah WeatherspoonAct Your Age, Eve Brown by Talia HibbertThe Love Hypothesis by Ali HazelwoodAmerican Dreamer by Adriana Herrera, narrated by Sean ChristenFight Night by Miriam ToewsNervous Conditions trilogy by Tsitsi Dangarembga The Secret Lives of Church Ladies by Deeshaw Philyaw, read by Janina EdwardsExhalation: Stories by Ted ChiangSeasonal Quartet by Ali SmithHow to Be Both by Ali SmithMaddAddam trilogy by Margaret AtwoodBarkskins by Annie ProulxSigns for Lost Children by Sarah Moss Tidal Zone by Sarah MossLadivine by Marie Ndiaye To Cook a Bear by Mikael NiemiKindred by Octavia ButlerThe Heart's Invisible Furies by John BoyneThe Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V.E. SchwabMexican Gothic by Sylvia Moreno-GarciaSummer Sons by Lee Mandelo Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir Hidden Wyndham: Life, Love, Letters by Amy BinnsChasing New Horizons: Inside the Epic First Mission to Pluto by Alan Stern and David GrinspoonDune by Frank HerbertOne Long River of Song by Bryan DoyleInk Knows No Borders: Poems of the Immigrant and Refugee Experience edited by Patrice Vecchione and Alyssa RaymondRazorblade Tears by S.A. CosbyBlacktop Wasteland by S.A. Cosby Sparrow Envy by J. Drew LanhamHome is not a Country by Safia ElhilloMoon of the Crusted Snow by Waubgeshig RiceCutting for Stone by Abraham VergheseWretchedness by Andrzej TichyThe Twilight Zone by Nona FernandezPeach Blossom Paradise by Ge FeiThe Love Songs of W.E.B. DuBois by Honoree JeffersSummer Brother by Jaap Robben; translateld by David DohertyNjal's Saga by AnonymousBrood by Jackie PollenNobody Ever Talks About Anything But the End: A Memoir by Lizi LevineNancy by Bruno Lloret; translated by Ellen JonesShadow King by Maaza MengisteShuggie Bain by Douglas StuartThe Overstory by Richard PowersCloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony DoerrCity of Brass by S.A. ChakrabortyThe Actual Star by Monica ByrneBewilderment by Richard PowersThe Galaxy and the Ground Within by Becky ChambersA Psalm for the Wild Built by Becky Chambers O Beautiful by Jung YunWhile Justice Sleeps by Stacey Abrams, narrated by Adenrele OjoShelter by Jung YunMy Dark Vanessa by Kate Elizabeth RussellLove and Saffron by Kim FayShadow Life by Hiromi Goto and Ann Xu Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts by Rebecca Hall and Hugo MartinezThe Chosen and the Beautiful by Nghi VoThe Seed Keeper by Diane WilsonOpen Water by Caleb Azumah NelsonGreat Circle by Maggie ShipsteadTelephone by Percival EverettWhen We Cease to Understand the World by Benjamín Labatut; translated by Adrian West; read by Adam Barr To Calais in Ordinary Time by James MeekThe Anarchy: The East India Company, Corporate Violence, and the Pillage of an Empire by William DalrympleA Spare Life by Lidija Dimkovska, translated by Christina E. KramerMud Sweeter than Honey: Voices of Communist Albania by Margo Rejmer, translated by Antonio Lloyd-JonesSovietistan: Travels in Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan by Erika Flatland, translated by Kari DicksonRelated episodes: Episode 046 - Books for Your Kitty Party (The Best of 2015) with Libby Young and many other guestsEpisode 075 - After the Year We've Had (Best of 2016)Episode 105 - Best Reads of 2017 Episode 139 - Stocking Stuffer (Best Reads of 2018) Episode 176 - Best of 2019Episode 209 - Best Reads of 2020Episode 210 - Reading Goals 2021Stalk me online:Jenny at GoodreadsJenny on TwitterJenny is @readingenvy on Instagram and Litsy All links to books are through Bookshop.org, where I am an affiliate. I wanted more money to go to the actual publishers and authors. I link to Amazon when a book is not listed with Bookshop.
Today I have Ellen Jones, DeliveringWithEllen, on the show. Ellen is a on-demand delivery driver who lives in Henderson, Nevada. In our interview we discuss many different topics, of course including her experiences on the delivery apps, but we also get into the life behind the scenes of Independent Contractors. Ellen has worked all 4 of the major delivery platforms: starting with Postmates, then DoorDash, then UberEats, and just recently GrubHub. Here are some of the topics we discuss: 1) Ellen's entry into the delivery space. 2) Being a teacher during the pandemic. 3) Balancing family, work, and fitting in Gig work. 4) Driver safety. 5) Key-wording videos to NOT be "click bait". 6) Ellens way of approaching accepting orders, then asking viewers their thoughts on the orders she took. 7) Ride Along Videos. 8) Is Live Streaming in her future? 9) UberEats new EXTREME NO transparency method, what it is & why they did this. 10) Delivery slowing down in many markets. 11) Be on all the platforms you can. 12) Independent Contractor status a must. 13) Knowing your PERSONAL VALUE! 14) Back to teaching, but still a weekend warrior on Delivery platforms. 15) Right now is a time you can land jobs you have only thought of before. & more.... join us for the conversation! READY... SET.... RODEO! Ellen's Links YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlxayE4pxKNeM-UHTJli9g Instagram: https://instagram.com/deliveringwithellen Make sure to sign up to be a Curri Driver below: https://drivecurri.app.link/fom2uFMcCib Sign up for PARA: https://withpara.com/
In episode #14 we hear on the ropes own World Champion Chelsea Stevens talk to 3x World Champion and CrossFit Games Athlete 'Ellen Jones'. Ellen is the first ever female 'World Champion' to win all 3 categories at the IWWF World Water Ski Racing Championships winning Junior Girls in 2015, Formula 2 Women's in 2017 and Open Women's in 2019. A beauty on the bank and a beast on the water!
D-M, Nat and Shahan dive into another busy week for Bristol City Women; from the 3-0 midweek loss against Champions League contenders Manchester City to the 1-1 draw against relegation playmates Tottenham Hotspur. We discuss the squad changes in both games (and the commentary in them), Ellen Jones living rent free in Sam Mewis' head, wonder where Charlie Wellings is (Bradley Stoke? Stoke on Trent? Somewhere on the River Trent?) and highlight Abi Harrison, Sophie Baggaley, and our Brecon Beacon at the back, Gemma Evans. We look ahead to yet another 'relegation six-pointer' next Sunday, this time against Birmingham City. Special thanks to the contributions Jayne Comer @blueberry1894 of Manchester City Women FC Official Supporters Club @MCWFC_OSC and Finley Chung @finleychung10 of Lillywhite Corner Podcast @LillywhitesPod Follow us, rate us, subscribe to us: Twitter @BCVixenCast Instagram @bcvixencast Facebook @bcv1xencast More links: linktr.ee/bcvixencast Thanks for listening! Vixens ‘Til We Die --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bcvixencast/message
In this episode Keara gives us the low down on a brutal murder in Ottawa, Ontario. *TW: contains mentions of domestic violence and abuse Listen for more information, and to find out exactly what happened! Sources: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Donna_Jones https://ottawasun.com/2013/06/07/monster-mark-slowly-killed-donna-jones https://murderpedia.org/male.H/h/hutt-mark.htm Follow us on Instagram @murdervibespodcast, Twitter @murdervibespod and email us any personal stories, case suggestions or any questions at murdervibespodcast@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
S2 Ep08 2020-9-13 Thespis Script Club - Joshua Harmon's Admissions with Neil Shurley and Ellen Jones Bruce and Melanie along with guests Ellen Jones and Neil Shurley discuss the play Admissions by Joshua Harmon. https://www.concordtheatricals.com/p/64327/admissions
Self-esteem is mysterious, fleeting and vital to every decision we make. Sophie Duker, Heidi Regan and Ned Sedgwick are joined by activist and writer Ellen Jones to talk all things imposter syndrome, confidence, self-worth and yoyo tricks. Sophie tackles your inner (non-existent) fraudster, Heidi ponders the mysteries of confidence, Ned shows off his jingle making skills and Steve Ali puts a listener's dilemma into perspective. Co-created by Deborah Frances-White for The Spontaneity Shop and BBC Radio 4. Produced by Al Riddell. Music by Mark Hodge and Omahrose, produced by Nick Sheldon.
Deborah talks to Ellen Jones See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week, Angela covers the story of severe domestic abuse victim, Donna Ellen Jones, by her husband Mark Hutt. Special Guest: Amanda NEW EPISODE EVERY THURSDAY If you like what I do, please review this and let me know. You can find me on: iTunes, Google Play Music,Stitcher, Spotify, TuneIn Radio, CastBox, and Youtube Review it, email me, give me all the love (or don't, I'm not your boss)!
LGBT Education is set to become compulsory in all schools in England by 2020. Yet some say this should be taught by parents, or that their religious rights are being infringed. Natasha and Keon hash it out with Ellen Jones, an award winning campaigner & writer. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this Queeratives episodes we talk to EMA Award winner and activist Ellen Jones about her work advocating for LGBTQ+ rights, mental health, and autism, and the journey she's been on to get where she is now. We also recorded an episode for Ellen's podcast Never Read The Comments which you can check out here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/never-read-the-comments/id1399909357?mt=2 Here is were you can find Ellen out there on the internet: Twitter: @ellen_jones Instagram: @ellen_jones Youtube: www.youtube.com/ellenjones Website: www.ellen-jones.co.uk Podcast: @nvrreadcomments This weeks Queer Recommends are: Inheritance Play: www.inheritanceplay.com Leopard Print Elephant https://www.instagram.com/leopardprintelephant/?hl=en Hello My Name Is Wednesday https://www.instagram.com/hellomynameiswednesday/?hl=en Follow the podcast on Twitter @nobodydiespod Follow A @ameliofaitduski Follow Siobhan @Siobhan_Speaks
S1 Ep17 2019-1-17 Thespis Interviews Ellen Jones, Director of Doubt: A Parable Bruce interviews Ellen Jones, director of Doubt: A Parable opening at Centre Stage in Greenville. Plus, show listings for the Upstate of SC.
CONTENT WARNING: Eating disorders The Guilty Feminist Presented by Deborah Frances-White and Jessica Fostekew Episode 114: Work-Life Balance with special guests Sophie Duker, Catherine Bohart and Ellen Jones Recorded 28 May 2018 at Kings Place in London. Released 10 September. Music by Mark Hodge and produced by Nick Sheldon. Photo by Grace Gelder Verity PCOS Donate today at www.verity-pcos.org.uk Help Refugees Emergency Appeal Page https://www.gofundme.com/emergency-support-for-rwc More about Deborah Frances-White http://deborahfrances-white.com https://twitter.com/DeborahFW https://www.virago.co.uk/the-guilty-feminist-book More about Jessica Fostekew http://jessicafostekew.com https://twitter.com/jessicafostekew https://www.acast.com/hoovering More about Sophie Duker https://www.facebook.com/wackycomedyclub https://twitter.com/sophiedukebox More about Catherine Bohart http://www.catherinebohart.com https://twitter.com/catherinebohart More about Ellen Jones https://twitter.com/ellen__jones http://youtube.com/ellenjones https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/never-read-the-comments/id1399909357?mt=2 For more information about this and other episodes… visit www.guiltyfeminist.com tweet us www.twitter.com/guiltfempod like our Facebook page www.facebook.com/guiltyfeminist check out our Instagram www.instagram.com/theguiltyfeminist or join our mailing list www.eepurl.com/bRfSPT The Negotiations special episode of the podcast is now available to purchase. http://guiltyfeminist.com/product/include-yourself-podcast/ Guilty Feminist jewellery by Road From Damascus https://www.road-from-damascus.co.uk/collections Come to a live recording! 17 September at Northern Stage, Newcastle. Tickets on sale now. 22 September at Kings Place in London. Tickets on sale now. 1 October at Vicar Street in Dublin. Tickets on sale now. 7 October in Manchester. Tickets on sale now. 10 October at the Barbican in London. Tickets on sale now. 20 October at the Liverpool Playhouse. Tickets on sale now. 22 October at Kings Place in London. Tickets on sale now. 19 November at Kings Place in London. Tickets on sale now. Leave us a review and rate us on Apple Podcasts!
The Guilty Feminist Presented by Deborah Frances-White and Rosie Jones Episode 106: Image with special guests Kemah Bob and Ellen Jones Recorded 1 June 2018 at the Belly Theatre on London’s South Bank. Released 16 July. The Guilty Feminist theme composed by Mark Hodge and produced by Nick Sheldon. More about Deborah Frances-White http://deborahfrances-white.com https://twitter.com/DeborahFW https://www.virago.co.uk/the-guilty-feminist-book More about Rosie Jones https://twitter.com/josierones https://www.pleasance.co.uk/event/rosie-jones-fifteen-minutes More about Kemah Bob https://twitter.com/kemahsvoice https://bishandbob.com/ More about Ellen Jones https://twitter.com/ellen__jones https://www.youtube.com/ellenjones For more information about this and other episodes… visit guiltyfeminist.com tweet us twitter.com/guiltfempod like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/guiltyfeminist check out our Instagram instagram.com/theguiltyfeminist or join our mailing list eepurl.com/bRfSPT The Negotiations special episode of the podcast is now available to purchase. http://guiltyfeminist.com/product/include-yourself-podcast/ Come to a live recording! 23 July at Kings Place. Tickets on sale now. 31 July at the BFI. Tickets on sale now. 25-26 August at the Edinburgh Fringe. Tickets on sale now. 17 September at Northern Stage, Newcastle. Tickets on sale now. 10 October at the Barbican. Tickets on sale now. 20 October at the Liverpool Playhouse. Tickets on sale now. Leave us a review and rate us on Apple Podcasts!
On the next edition of Another View on Health, hear the inspiring yet cautionary story of Ellen Jones, a woman who may soon face surgery to implant a defibrillator so she can stay alive. Ellen suffers from heart disease, but it took years to diagnose because she was physically active, ate a healthy diet, and drank plenty of water. Heart disease is the number one killer in women though it's known as the "silent disease". Co-host and cardiologist Dr. Keith Newby will share the latest in research and treatment in heart disease. Join us for the next Another View, Friday, February 24 at noon on 89.5 WHRV-FM or stream us live on this blog!
Revolution: Russian Art 1917-32 is an exhibition at the Royal Academy where the title tells you what to expect but what surprises and delights lie in wait for visitors? Dan Gillespie Sells - lead songwriter with pop group The Feeling - has written a musical: Everybody's Talking About Jamie. Opening at Sheffield's Crucible Theatre, it's about a northern working class lad who decides to escape his humdrum life by adopting a drag persona. A bit like Billy Elliott in a dress? Moonlight is the Oscar-touted film looking at the experience of a gay African American boy growing up to become a man and his struggle with identity fulfilment and happiness Emily Ruskovich's novel Idaho tells the story of how violence within a family wrenches it apart, through multiple perspectives and timeshifts. BBC TV has adapted Len Deighton's novel SS-GB; what would the UK have been like, if we'd lost The Battle Of Britain and Nazis had taken over in 1941? Tom Sutcliffe's guests are Helen Lewis, Ellen Jones and Cahal Dallat. The producer is Oliver Jones.
Join Cheri as she talks with film maker Mary Ellen Jones about the sometimes big leaps we take when we are really ready to create! Join us by phone or come into the chat room and join the discussion! Ask questions and make comments! Mary Ellen Jones, Writer/Producer/Director, Filmmaker, The Teacher and the Student Short film Co-Author, “20 Inspiriing Women Share Their Life Secrets (And Save You Years of Struggle!) Mary Ellen has been working in television production since 1983. She was a staff Unit Manager at Fox Television for four and a half years where she oversaw many shows including: Mama's Family, Gimme a Break, Small Wonder, 227, Soul Train and Hour Magazine. She moved on to freelance producing in 1987, associate producing and line producing the following series and show: Soul Train, New Attitude, Fresh Prince of Bel Air, Thea, The Wayans Bros.,The Army Show and Moesha (also a director). She served as Executive in Charge of Production for Roughing It New England a reality show for NESN. She is a Multi-Camera UPM, Director and Associate Director member of the Directors Guild of America. Her current project,The Teacher and the Student was co-written, co- produced with fellow Michigander Nicole Wallace and directed by Mary Ellen. She is currently submitting the film to festivals across the country and internationally. Mary Ellen serves on many arts and culture organization boards in Northeast Michigan and is currently working on a regional project called The Lake Huron Discovery Tour...marketing the Sunrise Side of Michigan to outsiders utilizing the U.S. 23 Heritage Route website.
Short presentation by Dr Jason Gaiger (Ruskin School) followed by discussion. This seminar launched the Languages of Criticism project which brings together experts in literature, film, visual art and music to pursue a comparative investigation of criticism’s practices, their intellectual basis, and the potential for re-grounding and enriching them. We used examples from a variety of art forms to initiate questions regarding the creative possibilities of criticism. Among those present were Céline Sabiron, Ben Morgan, Mohamed-Salah Omri, Emma Ben Ayoun, Bryony Skelton, James Bond, Kamile Vaupsaite, Ellen Jones, Giovanni Mezzano, Xiaofan Amy Li, G. Lawson Conquer, Mia Cuthbertson, Junting Huang, Rafe Hampson, Joseph Jenner, Gail Trimble, Scott Newman, Julia Bray, James Grant, Robert Chard, Simon Palfrey, Philippe Roussin, Laurent Châtel, Emily Troscianko, Natasha Ryan, Charlie Louth, David Bowe, Lucy Russell, Jane Hiddleston, Marie Isabel Matthews-Schlinzly, Anita Paz, Harriet Wragg, Benedict Morrison, Kate Leadbetter, Katerina Virvidaki, Sarah Leyla Puells A, Thomas Toles, Lianjiang Yu, Carole Bourne-Taylor Andrew Klevan, University Lecturer in Film Studies, played a clip from The Magnificent Ambersons, read out a passage of criticism about it, and then explained why he felt the passage of criticism had value, paying attention especially to its style. Matthew Reynolds, a lecturer in the English Faculty, explored the borderline between perception and invention in literary criticism, discussing in particular Keats’s ‘On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer’ and a passages by Ali Smith and William Empson. Jason Gaiger, Head of the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, conducted a thought experiment in which works from Tate Modern were given away to people to keep in their homes. He asked what role criticism can play when a work’s context and situation are more significant than its intrinsic qualities. Martyn Harry, composer and lecturer in the Music Faculty, explored how pieces of music can themselves function as works of criticism Discussion probed many of the arguments made in the talks and raised new points, such as the relation between criticism and translation, and between criticism and commentary, and the different practices that might be thought of as criticism in different cultures.
Short presentation by Dr Martyn Harry (Music) followed by discussion. This seminar launched the Languages of Criticism project which brings together experts in literature, film, visual art and music to pursue a comparative investigation of criticism’s practices, their intellectual basis, and the potential for re-grounding and enriching them. We used examples from a variety of art forms to initiate questions regarding the creative possibilities of criticism. Among those present were Céline Sabiron, Ben Morgan, Mohamed-Salah Omri, Emma Ben Ayoun, Bryony Skelton, James Bond, Kamile Vaupsaite, Ellen Jones, Giovanni Mezzano, Xiaofan Amy Li, G. Lawson Conquer, Mia Cuthbertson, Junting Huang, Rafe Hampson, Joseph Jenner, Gail Trimble, Scott Newman, Julia Bray, James Grant, Robert Chard, Simon Palfrey, Philippe Roussin, Laurent Châtel, Emily Troscianko, Natasha Ryan, Charlie Louth, David Bowe, Lucy Russell, Jane Hiddleston, Marie Isabel Matthews-Schlinzly, Anita Paz, Harriet Wragg, Benedict Morrison, Kate Leadbetter, Katerina Virvidaki, Sarah Leyla Puells A, Thomas Toles, Lianjiang Yu, Carole Bourne-Taylor Andrew Klevan, University Lecturer in Film Studies, played a clip from The Magnificent Ambersons, read out a passage of criticism about it, and then explained why he felt the passage of criticism had value, paying attention especially to its style. Matthew Reynolds, a lecturer in the English Faculty, explored the borderline between perception and invention in literary criticism, discussing in particular Keats’s ‘On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer’ and a passages by Ali Smith and William Empson. Jason Gaiger, Head of the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, conducted a thought experiment in which works from Tate Modern were given away to people to keep in their homes. He asked what role criticism can play when a work’s context and situation are more significant than its intrinsic qualities. Martyn Harry, composer and lecturer in the Music Faculty, explored how pieces of music can themselves function as works of criticism Discussion probed many of the arguments made in the talks and raised new points, such as the relation between criticism and translation, and between criticism and commentary, and the different practices that might be thought of as criticism in different cultures.
Short presentation by Andrew Klevan, followed by discussion. This seminar launched the Languages of Criticism project which brings together experts in literature, film, visual art and music to pursue a comparative investigation of criticism’s practices, their intellectual basis, and the potential for re-grounding and enriching them. We used examples from a variety of art forms to initiate questions regarding the creative possibilities of criticism. Among those present were Céline Sabiron, Ben Morgan, Mohamed-Salah Omri, Emma Ben Ayoun, Bryony Skelton, James Bond, Kamile Vaupsaite, Ellen Jones, Giovanni Mezzano, Xiaofan Amy Li, G. Lawson Conquer, Mia Cuthbertson, Junting Huang, Rafe Hampson, Joseph Jenner, Gail Trimble, Scott Newman, Julia Bray, James Grant, Robert Chard, Simon Palfrey, Philippe Roussin, Laurent Châtel, Emily Troscianko, Natasha Ryan, Charlie Louth, David Bowe, Lucy Russell, Jane Hiddleston, Marie Isabel Matthews-Schlinzly, Anita Paz, Harriet Wragg, Benedict Morrison, Kate Leadbetter, Katerina Virvidaki, Sarah Leyla Puells A, Thomas Toles, Lianjiang Yu, Carole Bourne-Taylor Andrew Klevan, University Lecturer in Film Studies, played a clip from The Magnificent Ambersons, read out a passage of criticism about it, and then explained why he felt the passage of criticism had value, paying attention especially to its style. Matthew Reynolds, a lecturer in the English Faculty, explored the borderline between perception and invention in literary criticism, discussing in particular Keats’s ‘On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer’ and a passages by Ali Smith and William Empson. Jason Gaiger, Head of the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, conducted a thought experiment in which works from Tate Modern were given away to people to keep in their homes. He asked what role criticism can play when a work’s context and situation are more significant than its intrinsic qualities. Martyn Harry, composer and lecturer in the Music Faculty, explored how pieces of music can themselves function as works of criticism Discussion probed many of the arguments made in the talks and raised new points, such as the relation between criticism and translation, and between criticism and commentary, and the different practices that might be thought of as criticism in different cultures.
Warning Fictions and the chemistry of fear.