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The father of Stephen Lawrence has spoken of his son's legacy and the family's enduring heartbreak ahead of what would have been the teenager's 50th birthday.Stephen, a black 18-year-old aspiring architect, was stabbed to death in a racist attack by a group of young white men in April 1993, in Eltham, south London.Evening Standard crime correspondent Anthony France has interviewed Dr Neville Lawrence, who told our journalist the world was robbed of a “special” young man “who loved people for who they are” as he told of son's hope to design the capital's future skyscrapers.In part two, the world's biggest style brands showcase their collections alongside the capital's independent designers at the 40th anniversary of London Fashion Week.Evening Standard Joe Bromley discusses spring/summer 2025 collections appearing at venues around London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, we chat with DevelopHer Taeler Jordan of FTLO Design about her latest project, an Eltham renovation and extension named Napoleon House. We cover the importance of considering the orientation and site implications when choosing a property. She also explains how she dealt with the challenges of a sloping block and incorporated height changes in the design. Taeler emphasises the use of flooring and lighting as key features in the home and discusses the intentional design choices she made to create a cohesive and calming space. She also shares the suppliers and products she used in the project. The conversation concludes with a discussion about the upcoming sale of the house and we wish Taeler the very best! Members can register to attend the house tour here: https://buildhercollective.com.au/event/housetour-taeler-august24 Key suppliers: James Hardie - Oblique Cladding DIY Blinds Royal Oak Flooring Signorino - Silver Travertine Koala - Couch in Snug Globe West - Couch in Main Living Plungie - Pool Wall Shelves in Study - Plank ShelvesSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Step inside an old post office in rural Taranaki and you'd think you were in a grand mansion in Europe. It's been converted into a small luxury hotel, but there's more than meets the eye behind its beautifully refurbished walls.
The OTRNow Radio Program 2024-0063 hours of classic old time radio. The Shadow Of Fu Manchu. May 17, 1939. Program #5. Radio Attractions syndication. Sponsored by: Music fill for local commercial insert. A visit to "Parson Dan" and a scream caused by "The Seven." Greba!. Hanley Stafford, Gale Gordon. 10985. The Shadow Of Fu Manchu. May 19, 1939. Program #6. Radio Attractions syndication. Sponsored by: Music fill for local commercial insert. A visitor to Rev. Eltham's fortress "Redmoat," for what sinister purpose? Gale Gordon appears as Dr. Petrie. Hanley Stafford, Gale Gordon. 43130. Birds Eye Open House. January 03, 1946. NBC net, KFI, Los Angeles aircheck. Sponsored by: Birds Eye, Gaines Dog Food. The first tune is, "Aren't You Glad You're You." Guest Charles Laughton pays a sinister visit to Dinah's house. What happened to the cook and the butler?. Arthur Q. Bryan, Barbara Jo Allen, Charles Laughton, Dinah Shore, Frank Nelson, Harry Von Zell, Howard Harris (writer), The Ken Lane Chorus, Robert Emmett Dolan and His Orchestra, Sid Zelinka (writer), The Four Hits.That's My Pop. July 29, 1945. Program #7. CBS net. Sustaining. Junior, Gertrude and mother-in-law are going to the country for a week. Pop turns the house into a hotel...with entertainment!. Bert Cregar (director), Howard Snyder (writer), Hugh Wedlock Jr. (writer), Milt Gross (writer), Raymond Walburn, Thomas Hanlon (announcer), Verna Felton.The Comic Weekly Man. February 04, 1951. Program #198. Hearst syndication. Sponsored by: Commercials added locally. The first comic read is, "Hopalong Cassidy." "Why is a horse like a lolly-pop?" The little girl to whom the Comic Weekly Man reads the comics, has been reported to be Cecil Roy (despite the name, she was an actress with "a thousand voices"). Pending documentation, her name will remain unlisted in the credits for this program. Lon Clark. The Unexpected. July 11, 1947. Program #1/100. Hamilton-Whitney syndication. "Mercy Killing". Sponsored by: Commercials added locally. The first show of the series. The dates listed for these programs are for the first run on KGER (Long Beach, California) and KECA (Los Angeles). After just killing his wife, a man is somewhat startled to receive a phone call from her. The program was re-used as program #100 on March 26, 1948. Barry Sullivan. The FBI In Peace and War. March 08, 1951. Program #103. CBS net origination, AFRS rebroadcast. "The Big-Time Charlie". Frederick L. Collins (creator), Martin Blaine, Don Briggs, Betty Mandeville (producer, director). The Origin Of Superstition. 1933. Program #1. Broadcasters Program Syndicate/Bruce Eells and Associates syndication. Sponsored by: Commercials added locally. Originally syndicated by Transco. Three soldiers fighting the Boer War fail to heed a native oracle. Never have, "three on a match." The series is possibly titled, "Superstition On The Air." The date is approximate.
Election 24, Episode 28We're trying to collect them all! The political Pokémon challenge continues with four more candidates: Oliver Ryan, Labour, Burnley @OliverRyanUKhttps://www.oliverryan.org.uk/ Sharmen Rahman, Green, Leicester South @sharmen_rhttps://leicester.greenparty.org.uk/ Lauren Edwards, Labour, Rochester and Strood @LaurenREdwardshttps://laurenedwards.uk/ Charlie Davis, Conservative, Eltham and Chislehurst @CharlieJSDavishttps://www.greenwichconservatives.com/people/charlie-davisJust 535 to go...If you are a candidate or know one who'd like to come on the show, email politicalpartypodcast@gmail.comSEE Matt at the Edinburgh Festival in August: Matt Forde The End of an Era Tour Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Plummmmers! Massive week on the pod with Chom signing on, Drapes back out on the park dominating and Buttsy now a girl dad! We also get to call the great man Eddie Ford on who tells us some gold! While Lenny from Eltham returns with some more gold..... Enjoy plums and remember to GET THE KNEES UP! Send us your voice messages here: https://memo.fm/200pluspodcast/ Our new spin off show "The Recovery" is now live, listen and let us know what you think! Produced by Josh Moffitt Proudly supported by Neds 200 PLUS Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/200pluspod/ Sam Draper: www.instagram.com/drvper/ Nick Butler: https://www.instagram.com/nick_butler10/ Charlie Comben: https://www.instagram.com/charliecomben/ Max Lynch: https://www.instagram.com/_maximumlynch_ Clubby Sports: https://www.instagram.com/ClubbySports Producey: https://producey.com/
The Rush Hour Melbourne Catch Up - 105.1 Triple M Melbourne - James Brayshaw and Billy Brownless
Billy kicks off the show with the All Sports Report, then Sophie Garbin and Molly Jovic get some trash talk in before the Vixens face the Mavericks in a Super Netball rivalry game on King's Birthday. Jake from Bacchus Marsh has to prove he's smarter than Billy for some tickets to the footy, and Darce from Eltham has a crack at $10k with Guernsey Cash. JB and Billy look at the three games that intrigue them most this weekend, then Peter Garrett from Midnight Oil joins the show to talk about their new documentary The Hardest Line. Then, Billy finishes the show with a joke about DNA.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, we are joined by Will, a 29-year-old electrician. Growing up in Eltham, a town northeast of Melbourne, Will had a fairly standard childhood. However, beneath the surface of normalcy lay a profound struggle that began at a young age.At just five years old, Will's life was touched by tragedy when his cousin took his own life. This event, coupled with a lack of positive emotional role models in his life, led Will down a path where thoughts of suicide became familiar, almost norm...
This week for Made in NZ we head to Eltham in Taranaki where the Carac Group was formed and specialises in making TrackGrips. We speak to Sonia Kiser, CEO about their unique products which are sought after all over the world.
who killed 16 year old Jane Clouson ?The police knew who had done it,the public thought they knew who had done it ! all the evidence seemed to point to one man .....but did he do it?join me as we take a trip to eltham a borough of london in 1871, to find out !!!!firstly a big help in bringing out this story to the book on the crime "pretty Jane and the viper of kidbrooke lane" byPaul Thomas Murphy an absolutely brilliant account of everything to do with the murder ,please get this book if you want to find out more about this fascinating crime!!!also thanks to the following......https://londonnewsonline.co.uk/lifestyle/memories/jane-was-16-pregnant-and-brutally-murderedhttps://prettyjaneandtheviper-.tumblr.comhttps://katdevitt.com/2022/08/29/the-tragic-murder-of-jane-maria-clousonhttps://www.fobic.org.ukhttps://runner500.wordpress.com/tag/edmund-pookhttps://www.oldbaileyonline.org/recordt18710710-561and a special thank you to jonathan segev for the continued use of his composition "cursed lullaby"
Comedy writer Declan Fay is Tony's Speakola guest. Declan was the co-writer of Ronny Chieng International Student and the hilarious Crossbread podcast, about a Christian rap duo who hit the big time, but don't happen to be Christians (stars Megan Washington and Chris Ryan). Declan was head writer for this year's AACTA Awards, and has been part of writers' rooms for Rove, Dirty Laundry Live, Problems and You're Skitting Me. His The Sweetest Plum podcast with Chris Kennett was one of Australia's pioneering comedy podcasts, and ran for many years. He also speaks regularly in schools via Booked Out Speakers Agency, who also represent Tony for school visits. Join Speakola's mailing list and Substack Join Tony's personal writing Substack Donate to Speakola to keep us going! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
He was born Leslie Townes Hope on May 29th, 1903 in Eltham, England. The fifth of seven sons, his parents were William Henry Hope, a stonemason from Somerset, and Welsh mother Avis, a light opera singer who later worked as a cleaner. The family eventually moved to Bristol for a time before emigrating to the U.S. aboard the SS Philadelphia, passing through Ellis Island on March 30th, 1908, before settling in Cleveland, Ohio. He earned pocket money by singing, dancing, and performing, winning a prize in 1915 for his impersonation of Charlie Chaplin. In December 1920, Hope and his brothers became U.S. citizens when their British parents became naturalized Americans. The next year, he was assisting his brother with the electric company when a horrific accident crushed his face. The reconstruction of which led to his distinctive appearance. In the 1920s Hope formed a dance act called the "Dancemedians" with George Byrne and the Hilton Sisters, conjoined twins who performed a tap-dancing routine on the vaudeville circuit. He acted in a double with Byrne, eventually making his way to New York. The act flopped, pushing Hope to strike out on his own, changing his first name to Bob in 1929. He spent five years on the Vaudeville circuit, failing an RKO screen test in 1930, but he broke out on Broadway, first in Ballyhoo of 1932, and then opposite Tamara Drasin and Fred MacMurray in Roberta, which played two-hundred ninety-four times between November of 1933 and July of 1934. Meanwhile in 1932, he appeared on Major Bowes' Capitol Family Hour and later on Rudy Vallee's Fleischmann Yeast Hour on June 3rd, 1933 alongside Jimmy Wallington. In 1933 he married his vaudeville partner Grace Troxell. They divorced the next year and Hope was soon with another performer, Dolores Reade. Though they spent the rest of their lives together, and Hope was notoriously unfaithful, a legal record of their marriage is vague at best. The couple would eventually adopt four children. In 1934 Hope signed a six-short contract with Educational Pictures. Radio soon followed. By then, he'd developed performing chops so strong, he could sing, dance, or act in any number of ways. On Friday January 4th, 1935 over NBC's Blue Network, he debuted in The Intimate Review. This first series was short-lived: ratings were mediocre, but Hope found his first radio foil, comedienne Patricia Wilder, who, with her thick southern accent, went by Honey Chile. The Intimate Review went off the air in April, but on September 14th, 1935, Hope was back on radio over CBS with The Atlantic Family. While he was on for CBS in 1936, Hope starred on Broadway in Ziegfeld's Follies with Fanny Brice; and in Cole Porter's Red, Hot, and Blue, with Ethel Merman and Jimmy Durante. The next May 9th, 1937, Hope was back on radio for NBC's Blue Network on Sundays at 9PM with The Rippling Rhythm Revue. During this run Paramount beckoned: The Big Broadcast of 1938 was to begin filming, and Hope was offered a part. He moved to Hollywood, continuing his monologues by transcontinental wire. The Rippling Rhythm Revue was canceled in September, but three months later Hope joined The Dick Powell Variety Show on December 29th, 1937. The Big Broadcast of 1938 was released on February 11th, and suddenly, Hope was a huge star. On Tuesday, September 27th, 1938 at 10PM, The Pepsodent Show took to the air. That first season, Hope's 15.4 rating was good enough for twelfth overall. In 1939 he was up to 23.1 and fifth. In 1941 his rating was 26.6 and fourth, and finally in 1942 his Crossley rating cracked thirty points, while his Hooper cracked forty. Hope soon began a five year run as radio's top comedian.
W wyniku tej zbrodni rodzice stracili syna, a cała Anglia zwątpiła w uczciwość policji. W kwietniu 1993 roku młodociany gang zamordował na tle rasowym nastoletniego Stephena Lawrence'a. Przez ponad 20 lat zabójstwo, do którego doszło w Eltham, pozostawało nierozwiązane. Sprawę udało się doprowadzić do końca wyłącznie dzięki determinacji rodziny Stephena. Makabryczne przestępstwa, tragiczne wypadki i trwające latami dochodzenia… Te zbrodnie wstrząsnęły Anglią! W każdym z odcinków podcastu poznamy wstrząsające historie, którymi żyła kiedyś cała Anglia. Większość z nich jest spowita aurą tajemnicy aż po dziś. Nowe odcinki w każdy czwartek, o 18.00. Słuchaj „Najgorszych zbrodni Anglii” i pozostałych podcastów na naszym YouTube, Spotify, Apple Music i Google Podcasts.
The final episode of the calendar year saw Russ and Pete eke out one final non league MDS as they met up with Russ's Darlo-supporting mate Andy Black before attending the Isthmian League South East Division match between hosts Cray Valley Paper Mills and their visitors Sittingbourne Town, whereupon they made a new friend in player's dad Peter Hope. Remaining in the Eltham area post match for a few further libations, R&P then reviewed the highly entertaining nee bonkers! midweek win over Spuds, a result which had rounded 2023 off just nicely! Stand or fall! UTA! Viva Non-League football! Happy New Year all!! @BrightonRockPod brightonrockpodcast@gmail.com Part of the Sport Social Podcast Network that can be found in all their glory at this rather suitable address: www.sport-social.co.uk Please follow us for automatic downloads of new episodes and if you want to make us really happy please rate us five stars on Apple and any other platforms that provide the opportunity to do so! Why not write a review while you are at it?! ;0). All this helps our rankings and improves our chances of getting exciting guests onto the show. Also we are now on Patreon, so if you happen to be inclined to extreme acts of generosity we'd greatly appreciate any monthly donations, great or small, to help us run the pod as well as we can. Go to www.patreon.com/BrightonRockPod for details and to sign up. NB Our content will remain freely accessible to all listeners regardless. Humble thanks! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ashley James is a garden designer and horticulturist based in the Yarra Valley, Victoria, on the lands of the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people. He started working in the industry when he was just 14 years old, alongside his dad. He started his own business aged 23 and went against the grain, focusing on soft-landscaping and design, when all the cool kids were doing landscape construction. He went on to study horticulture, and now works on everything from vineyards, to large wedding and function venues, urban spaces, country estates and cottage gardens. Ashley's known for his beautiful, romantic gardens that weave traditional design principles with naturalistic plantings. Ashley's aim is to create a dream garden for each client. He is an absolute plant and flower die hard, and is a self-professed Plants Man. He and his work has been featured on The Block, Better Homes and Gardens and Country House Facelift, while a stunning Eltham garden project was written up on the Design Files. If he isn't busy enough, Ashley continues to create his dream garden at his own home that he shares with his wife Bianca and three children, and he's the newest columnist for Home Beautiful, providing amazing gardening advice and inspo. We're drinking Latta Rattlesnake We're talking about Winespeake in Daylesford on Instagram here. Dimity's amazing stall at Cygnet Garden Market - Check her out on @TinyFarmTas Edna Walling We're also talking lemons, seaweed and how hard gardening is. We're reading The Age of Seeds - How Plants Hacked Time and Why our Future Depends On It by Fiona McMillan-Webster Visit us at @avantgardeners.podcast and www.avant-gardeners.com
Hi all, Don't you love meeting people that are only here to do good in the world, my next guest Sarah McCall from Organic Fix is defiantly here to educate and help us all eat and feel better. Organic Fix in Eltham is a specialty store with a mission to inspire people to eat organic food and ethically manufactured/sourced products. They are a ‘community hub of wellness' where people can buy things that will make them feel better, helping people start or continue their own journeys in reducing chemical and fast food consumption. You'll love the story of Sarah and how she's turned her passion into her story. Hope you enjoy this as much as I did creating it for you. Nik Xx Organic Fix Website: https://organicfix.com.au/ Address: 937 Main Road Eltham VIC 3095 Phone: (03) 9424 1861Email: orders@organicfix.com.auOpening Hours: Mon: Closed Tue - Fri: 9am - 5pm Sat - Sun: 9am - 2pmSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of the Data Malarkey podcast, data storyteller Sam Knowles meets Professor Angela Gallop, CBE, the forensic scientists' forensic scientist. Over the past four decades, the teams she's led have solved some of the most complex, difficult, and intransigent cold cases in British criminal history: Rachel Nickell on Wimbledon Common, Roberto Calvi under Blackfriars Bridge, and Damilola Taylor in Peckham. And perhaps most notoriously of all, Stephen Lawrence, stabbed by a gang of racist thugs on the streets of Eltham. The details of how Angela and her teams cracked these cases – often bringing pioneering new techniques into play – are recorded in (ahem!) forensic detail in all manner of media. They're in Angela's 2019 book When the Dogs Don't Bark, her 2022 book How to Solve a Crime, and in any number of TV documentaries and specials. Most recently, this included the three-part ITV1 series, Cold Case Forensics, in February of this year. Not to mention Angela's appearance on the legend that is BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs last November. Links below. Our conversation was recorded remotely, via the medium of Riverside.fm, on Friday 15 September 2023. Thanks to Joe Hickey for production support. Podcast artwork by Shatter Media. Voice over by Samantha Boffin. Angela tells us how her interest in solving crime was perhaps first kindled by the lurid stories in the now-defunct British tabloid Sunday newspaper, The News of the World, and her love of science was enflamed by an inspirational, sixth-form biology teacher at school “just in the nick of time”. This passion for working things out combined with an intense sense of natural justice saw forensic science take over her life after she joined the Home Office Forensic Science Service in 1974. As her skills developed and as she founded and scaled some of the country's first and most successful private forensic science businesses, Angela became an international expert in blood and other bodily fluids – who they could and couldn't have come from, and the patterns they make and leave behind at crime scenes. Forensics cover so many different areas in “offences against the person” – bodily fluids, of course, but also weapons, clothing – textiles, fibres, and fragments – toxicology, drugs, footwear, documents, and firearms. Increasingly, criminals leave digital traces of their activity, but the biggest single development in Angela's long and stellar career has been the rise to prominence of DNA evidence. In perhaps the most memorable, moving, and intricate part of our discussion, Angela details how – after repeated examination and failures to identify the killers – she and her team unpicked the evidence that led to prosecution in the Stephen Lawrence case. Angela also maintains that real forensics is much more subtle, time-consuming, interesting, and collegiate than the CSI TV drama series are ever able to portray. EXTERNAL LINKS Angela's books https://www.waterstones.com/author/professor-angela-gallop/4009171 A ‘Long Read' on Angela's career, from The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/science/2022/mar/24/queen-of-crime-solving-angela-gallop-forensic-science Angela on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs from 4 November 2022 https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001dmpl 2023 ITV1 series Cold Case Forensics covering how Angela and her team cracked the Rachel Nickell, Lynette White, and Stephen Lawrence cases https://www.itv.com/watch/cold-case-forensics/10a1535/10a1535a0002 -- To find out how you rank as a data storyteller, complete our data storytelling scorecard at https://data-storytelling.scoreapp.com. It takes just two minutes, and we'll send you your own personalised scorecard which tells you what kind of data storyteller you are.
This week, Aimee continues our gathered and scattered series by speaking about what it means to be a scattered church. Message recorded Sunday, October 15, in our Eltham 10:30 meeting.
Welcome to Episode 132 of The Numbers Game. Today we're joined by Spiro Drossos, Managing Director of Barry Plant Eastern Group. We discuss Melbourne's evolving property market, the effects of interest rate hikes, and the vital role of client relationships. Spiro also shares insights on team training and the leap from being a salesperson to a business owner. About our Guest Spiros Drossos: Spiro Drossos is the Managing Director of Barry Plant Eastern Group and a three-time winner of Victoria's Salesperson of the Year Award. He leads offices in Manningham, Eltham, Whitehorse, and Ivanhoe. A proven leader in the Australian real estate industry, Spiro has set multiple sales records and has led his team to numerous accolades, including being the Number 1 office in the Barry Plant Group 13 times since 2008.On this episode, we discuss:The loosening real estate market in Melbourne and its implicationsThe impact of interest rate hikes on property investors in MelbourneImportance of building relationships and personalised service in real estateStrategies for effective training and development for real estate agentsTransitioning from a salesperson to a business owner: mindset shifts and delegationRole of technology and databases in modern real estate businessThe significance of likability and capability in building client relationshipsManaging and retaining high-performing sales agents: challenges and strategiesSuccessful integration strategies for acquisitions and mergersTailoring training programs to different levels of experience and skillMaintaining a work-life balance and setting boundaries as a business leaderThe constant need for growth, improvement, and continuous learning in real estateConnect with Spiro Drossos on LinkedIn or you can visit their websiteCheck out the free resources from Inovayt here.Send us an email: hello@thenumbersgamepodcast.com.auThe Numbers Game is brought to you by Future Advisory & Inovayt.Hosts:Nick ReillyJason RobinsonMartin VidakovicThis podcast is produced by VIDPOD.
Ahead of appearing at our live episode recording at The London podcast festival at Kings Place, Kings Cross, this Friday the 8th September. Show regular Topher Taylor dragged his ass north of the river and dropped into our sketchy London studio in Tottenham. Normally Graeme and Topher catchup remotely but today they've blocked out some time to get in depth ahead of Topher joining G in front of a live studio audience on Friday. Toper is talking about being beaten up growing up in queer in Eltham, how the "groomers" smear being used against LGBTQ+people online makes us feel. Also what does he have planned for the live show? Topher's lining up an OUTCAST UK take-over of the Clone Zone socials to help us out. TICKETS FOR THE LIVE SHOW ON FRIDAY 8TH SEPTEMBER ARE LESS THAN £10 - PLAYOUTCASTUK.COM HAS THE LINK TO BOOK. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/outcastuk/message
Join Nicholas Sacco and Josh Ward on Edition 23 of the NFNL Podcast as we... - Speak to Eltham senior men's coach Tim Bongetti ahead of his side's enormous second semi-final against Diamond Creek. - Review all senior competition's, including last Sunday's senior women's Grand Finals and Friday's first night of winter netball Grand Finals. - Preview this week's senior men's finals.
Join Nicholas Sacco and Josh Ward on Edition 20 of the NFNL Podcast as we... - Speak to coach of the Darebin 1 side Maddie Webster, as the Falcons sealed a top four spot in the top flight following an upset win over Eltham. - Review and preview all three senior men's and senior women's competitions.
On the 9th of February, 1918, Nellie Trew walked across Eltham Common and was never seen alive again. Scotland Yard Detective, Francis Carlin solved the crime and this is his account of the case. Twitter: the historical crimes and criminals podcast email: thehistoricalcrimespodcast@yahoo.com Francis Carlin: Reminiscences of a Scotland Yard Detective (1927)
In this episode of Ben & Harry's DMs... DMs from Alex from Essendon, Bailey from Caulfield Nth, Belinda from Pascoe Vale, Erin from Ivanhoe, Joel from Carisbrook, Margy from Box Hill, Abby from Eltham, Zali from Narroma & Imogen from Watsonia Get involved in the show by DMing Ben & Harry on Instagram: (https://www.instagram.com/benandharrypodcast/) Make sure you start the voicemail with your name & suburb! ...and follow us on TikTok (https://www.tiktok.com/@benandharrypodcast) Host: Will Ralston, Executive Producer: Michael James, Audio engineer: Chris Marsh, Social media: Ethan Meldrum -------------- New episode every Wednesday! Subscribe on LiSTNR: https://www.listnr.com/podcasts/ben-and-harry Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://link.chtbl.com/BenandHarryApplePodcasts Subscribe on Spotify: https://link.chtbl.com/BenandHarrySpotifySubscribe See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Got a question for the trio? https://forms.zohopublic.com/propertyplanningaustralia/form/GotaquestionforthePropertyTrio/formperma/zYCQAxzE_24CVlDafP1ozyzwtmB-8m1iCNtCTgDvHXMDave hosts this episode and opens by suggesting that appraising property requires a delicate balance of art and science.Appraising a property: How do we discount or add on a premium when something noteworthy is impacting the property positively or negatively?How do we apportion a premium or a discount when a feature is a stand out or a significant detractor? And how do we know how much to apply to the premium or discount? Dave quizzes both Mike and Cate how they tackle this very question.Dave delves into positive attributes first.Notable designers or architects, and Cate shares a reference to Eltham's Alistair KnoxNew works/extension/renovationMike shares the different methods of valuing, from recent comparable sales analyses to the summation method. Cate discusses the importance of comparing apples with apples when it comes to attributes, such as isolating specific zones when selecting recent sales.Quiet courtTrain station within 200-500mAttractive zoning (ie. growth zone vs standard, residential zoning)North facing rearGreat viewsUltra wide block (from a development point of view)Ideal floorplan (let's use cottages as an example)Heritage signfiicanceDave then moves to the detractors.Properties in serious need of repairSouth facing rearChallenging zoningDave sheds light on some of the lending challenges that buyers will face with some of these negative attributes, in particular, challenging planning zones and tight internal floor areas.Main roadsHigh voltage power linesTrain linesUgly surrounds (ie. industrial buildings)Tough overlays (ie flood, bushfire)Bank lending policy issues, ie. floor areaSignificant strata fees or high special leviesBrick crackingObvious problematic neighboursFlight pathsDevelopment sites next door/over the back fence that could threaten privacy and natural lightRestrictive covenantsHouses with sordid historiesCompulsory acquisition possibilityEasements in awkward spotsHow do the Trio suggest buyers can apply a discount or a premium when a property is impacted by any of these? Should buyers a rule of thumb percentage value-change for any of these?Cate's answer may surprise our listeners... tune in to find out.Mike discusses the difference between Quantity Surveyor due diligence and Buyers Agent due diligence, but he does need to take into account some attributes such as poor quality soil, flood or fire overlays, and restrictive covenants when generating reports.And lastly, Cate shares how buyers tend to approach compromised properties and the risks of selecting bad quality off-markets. Not forgetting Pete's famous analogy, Cate cites his bad bag of apples quote.And our gold nuggets…… Mike Mortlock's gold nugget: Mike is struck by the exhaustive list that Cate shared in this episode and he implores buyers to catalogue the list each time they check out a property.Cate Bakos's gold nugget: "When you buy a bargain, you sell a bargain."Show notes: https://www.propertytrio.com.au/2023/07/31/valuing-uniqueness-appraising-property-with-special-attributes/
The Met Police has named a major new suspect in the murder of 18-year-old Stephen Lawrence in 1993. He was assaulted and killed in a racist attack by six white teenagers in Eltham. Thirty years since the fatal attack, only two of his killers have faced justice. Our Crime Reporter John Dunne reveals what we know about the new suspect Matthew White and our Home Affairs Editor Martin Bentham shares his analysis into how the Met's reputation is being hit again. In this episode:Why has it taken two decades for the Met to chase this lead?What do we know about Matthew White?The Met police officers being investigated for potentially committing criminal misconduct How does this latest update to the case impact the Met's reputation?Can the Met regain some support from this case?Follow us on Twitter here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Todd Morris, Chris Sermeno and Michael Thompson with a big edition of the NBL1 South Podcast. The boys discussed how close it is on the men's side of the table and the numbers from Lucas Barker from Frankston. They discussed Geelong, Mount Gambier, Keilor, Eltham, Kilsyth and Dandenong in greater detail. On the women's side, they spoke about Chloe Bibby and previewed the big game between Bendigo and Waverley coming up this weekend. They also discussed Diamond Valley. Movers & Shakers plus previewed a big round nine of hoops coming up. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Joel here - apologies for the delay in getting this one up - but you can listen on the Tinfoil Tales feed at https://redcircle.com/shows/tinfoil-talesIf you get it from them directly you help get them up the podcast charts (dunno where you go after number 1 though tbh) and generally help them along. But they're family to us and we will keep it here as long as they want to live at home. This episode is great. Really nice and optimistic which is a real change for what we tend to push out. The community really banded together and told the cookers where to go. This one will brighten your day so if you're feeling a bit defeated, chuck this on for a nice warm hug from the girls. It's a great listen. Enjoy. ------------In this episode of Tinfoil Tales SOS and Sandee have an unscripted chat giving you an update on all that has happened around the Drag Queen Story Hour drama in Victoria recently, and the response to it.This is a brief update special on this important topic, the following links are provided for more information:Full interview with Felicity Marlowe on Rach and Dean's morning show on joy.org.au radio:https://joy.org.au/joybreakfast/?powerpress_pinw=582-podcastGo to Rainbow Community Angels Facebook page:https://www.facebook.com/rainbowcommunityangels?mibextid=LQQJ4dDonate to the Rainbow Community Angels GoFundMe here:https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-fund-the-rainbow-community-angels?mibextid=Zxz2cZCheck out this legend's encounter with neo-Nazis on Twitter:https://twitter.com/seanbedlam/status/1657596509935001600?s=46Follow us on Twitter:http://twitter.com/SOS149http://twitter.com/sunnysandeel
In this episode of Tinfoil Tales SOS and Sandee have an unscripted chat giving you an update on all that has happened around the Drag Queen Story Hour drama in Victoria recently, and the response to it.This is a brief update special on this important topic, the following links are provided for more information:Full interview with Felicity Marlowe on Rach and Dean's morning show on joy.org.au radio: https://joy.org.au/joybreakfast/?powerpress_pinw=582-podcastGo to Rainbow Community Angels Facebook page:https://www.facebook.com/rainbowcommunityangels?mibextid=LQQJ4dDonate to the Rainbow Community Angels GoFundMe here:https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-fund-the-rainbow-community-angels?mibextid=Zxz2cZCheck out this legend's encounter with neo-Nazis on Twitter: https://twitter.com/seanbedlam/status/1657596509935001600?s=46Follow SOS and Sandee on twitter/X at:https://twitter.com/SOS149https://twitter.com/sunnysandeelOur podcast episodes will always be free, but join our Patreon community for exclusive News and Views, links and to REALLY go down the rabbit hole with us!https://www.patreon.com/TinfoilTales936
Join Nicholas Sacco and Josh Ward on Edition 9 of the NFNL Podcast as we... - Speak to Diamond Creek senior men's coach Andrew Tranquilli after his side defeated the previously unbeaten Eltham. - Chat to Eltham senior women's coach Darren Cardamone following the Panthers impressive start to life in the top flight in our women's competition. - Review and preview all three senior men's and senior women's competitions.
Melissa and Aaron Jacobson are trying to live as sustainably as possible on their small property perching ontop a hill outside of Eltham, Taranaki and plan to turn their way of life into a full-time business.
Georgia makes her third appearance on our show to tell us about her new ventures and plans for 2023! Support the show
More than 100 years after an Eltham woman sent tonnes of gingernuts to Kiwi troops fighting in the First World War, a couple running a local B&B aims to do the same for Ukraine. Using the same century-old recipe, they've been baking up a storm for a New Zealand aid agency headed back to Ukraine this week. Samuel Wat reports.
James is looking at Psalm 18 this week as part of the "Songs that Shaped Us" series. Message recorded Sunday, September 25th, in our Eltham 10:30 meeting.
Our next 3 battles all take place in Virginia and that is good news for the Confederates. They take 2 out of the 3 battles featured in this episode with the other being inconclusive. First up, it's the battle of Eltham's Landing fought on May 7th. 1862 followed by the battle of McDowell the very next day. We finish up the episode with the battle of Drewry's Bluff on May 15th.Email us at bangdangpodcast@gmail.com to let us know how we are doing and tell us what more you want to hear from us or what we need to do to improve. Feedback from our listeners is always something we welcome!
This week, James begins a new series called Songs that Shaped Us by delving into Psalm 1. Message recorded Sunday, September 4th, in our Eltham 10:30 meeting.
This week, James continues the series on the gifts to the church as he talks about the eldership. Message recorded on Sunday, July 3rd, in our Eltham 10:30 meeting.
Episode 15 of the NFNL Podcast for the 2022 season.In this episode:Nicholas Sacco and Josh Ward discuss the results and talking points from all the senior men's and women's action.Eltham senior men's coach Robert Hyde joins us as his top of the table Panthers prepare for a crucial clash against top five rival Diamond Creek.Senior women's coach of the Fitzroy Stars in Lisa Roper chats in as the league celebrates NAIDOC Week and Sir Douglas Nicholls Round.
In this weeks program Chris chats to Paul Schofield from Eltham Bike Lanes about not fit for purpose changes to Fitzsimmons Lane in Eltham, ongoing campaigning, communication and construction issues with pedestrian and cycling provision in Melbournes north west suburbs.Local news includes Yarra Bicycle Users Group achieving 154% of our 3CR radiothon target thanks to our magnificent listeners, what's happening with Future Mobility at EuroBike 2022, Boroondara Bicycle User Group needing assistance to get their bicycle strategy passed by Boroondara Council and new protected intersections for cyclists on Gipps Street, Abbotsford.
Episode 12 of the NFNL Podcast for the 2022 season.In this episode:Nicholas Sacco previews this weekend's upcoming action in all of the senior men's and women's competitions.Coaches of NFNL sides in last weekend's Metro Junior Development Series, Adam Sevas and Ari Sciacca update us on the program's successful weekend.We speak to Eltham senior women's coach Darren Cardamone ahead of the final five home and away game in the NFNL senior women's competition.
We're heading to Taranaki today - where an Eltham woman's video cooking lessons for her grandkids have become an online hit. The local library began sharing Annitta Johnson-Pulham's tutorials - and now she's getting recognition within her community. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode Sez chats with Sam Andrew about her Melbourne International Comedy Festival Show with Mel O'Brien. Shit talking on this ep includes The spirit of Tasmania, a hag in Eltham, some shade towards WAAPA and of course some sneaky musical theatre references. If you liked the poddy make sure to leave us a review/rating! If you want to get in contact with us email sez@ampel.com.au VIDEO VERSION OF THE PODDY INSTAGRAM TIKTOK For more info on Sam and her content - https://www.instagram.com/samanthandrew/ Have you checked out https://www.scentbox.com.au yet? Sign up to a monthly subscription and get your choice from 850 different fragrances delivered to your door! Use the code SEZ35 to get 35% off your first month. If you are interested in sponsoring "Bevz with Sez", reach out to our Director of Media and Partnerships Lauren Deighton at lauren@ampel.com.au The podcast would like to acknowledge the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin nation who are the traditional custodians of the land on which we recorded this episode. It is, and always will be, Aboriginal land and we pay our respects to elders past, present and emerging. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week, Jon talks about a community that is not slothful in zeal but fervently serves the Lord. Message recorded Sunday, May 29th, in our Eltham 10:30 meeting.
This week, James continues to explore why we struggle to use spiritual gifts to encourage one another in our spheres of influence and in the broader life of the church. Message recorded Sunday May 15th, in our Eltham 10:30 meeting.
Episode 59 discusses the battles of Williamsburg, Eltham's Landing, and McDowell. https://cwweeklypod.wixsite.com/my-site Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/CWweeklypod Venmo: @Timothy-Patrick-48 --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/civil-war-weekly/support
Thoroughly enjoyed my chat with Sheila Laxon ONZM who's now training in tandem with her partner John Symons on the Sunshine Coast.Welsh born Sheila was riding ponies on the family farm at age three, a precursor to a fascinating life with horses. She begins by recalling her first meeting with John Symons when she brought Ethereal over for the 2001 Victorian spring carnival. Sheila says John was training a pretty good two year old colt at the time who would go on to spectacular racetrack and stud success. She talks of life on the Sunshine Coast and a Magic Millions Country Cup success. Welsh born Sheila recalls her early childhood in Pontypridd where she learned to ride bareback. She looks back on early experience with the Ted Long stables at Eltham and a subsequent job with John Dunlop at the Duke Of Norfolk's famous Arundel training centre. Sheila remembers her world trip at age 18 and her fascination with NZ racing. On returning to NZ later she was able to gain an amateur jockey's licence. She was a winner at her very first ride. Sheila has never forgotten the first time she met Laurie Laxon. She wasn't overly impressed. Sheila talks of her marriage to Laurie and the arrival of a son and daughter. She was also step mother to Laurie's two children from a previous marriage. Today she's a grandmother nine times over. She has vivid memories of the giant mare Empire Rose. The talented horsewoman still shudders when she looks back on a sickening fall at Gisborne and the long road back. On a more pleasant theme she recalls having the job of breaking in and educating Ethereal. She pleaded with owner Sir Peter Vela to allow her to train the future multiple Gr 1 winner. Sheila recaps her exciting journey with Ethereal and pays tribute to jockey Scott Seamer. She talks of the burgeoning relationship with John Symons and a horror accident at Macedon Lodge destined to put her in a wheelchair for many months. Sheila nominates a few horses to watch from her current team. This is a lovely trip down memory lane with Sheila Laxon who in 2002 was appointed an officer of the New Zealand Order Of Merit for her services to racing.
On this weeks program Chris and Steve chat about IPCC Mitigation of Climate Change report and Streetsblog: International Climate Report Demands ‘Systemic' Changes to Transportation and Urban Planning, in relation to Moving Forward: Yarra City Councils draft Transport Strategy and changing Yarra's road space use for people choosing to commute by bike or foot, food deliveries, ongoing e-scooter trials, cargo bikes, e-bikes and increasing throughput with public transport.Survey closes Monday 25 April 2022 and takes less than five minutes to complete: https://yoursayyarra.com.au/movingforwardLocal news includes idle chatter about tubeless tyres, upcoming Eltham memorial service for much loved frame builder Ewen Gellie on 3 May, Gellie Annual Memorial Ride planned for 2023 and good news for Creswick & surrounds with Mountain bike trail works underway in Hepburn
Eltham, England, 1871: A young woman is brutally attacked in a darkened lane. The police are hard-pressed to find both her identity and that of her attacker--and even when they're successful, they screw it all up. Check out Short Story, Short Podcast for more of Kristy's dulcet tones. Contact and Support: Patreon Facebook Instagram Twitter MERCH Amazon Wishlist Email: oldtimeycrimey@gmail.com Sources: Pretty Jane and the Viper of Kidbrooke Lane: A true story of Victorian Law and Disorder by Paul Thomas Murphy Wikipedia: 1871 in the UK National Archives UK Shooting Victoria website by Paul Thomas Murphy Lisha Vidler on Yesterday's Thimble: Sewing & Costuming Music: Evil Plan by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3725-evil-plan License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Imagine outsourcing childcare to a nest of ants? This may not be the best idea for humans but a certain insect is making it work. Now the Eltham copper butterfly's amazing use of surrogate ant parents has attracted human fans who are using a song to try to save it from extinction
So far we've talked about the big why of Christ's heavenly church, and the local purposes that this generates for us as members of that cosmic gathering (i.e. to ‘build' that gathering by joining together in apostolic ministry).But what about the actual physical church meetings that many of us are keen to get back to? What have we learned that can guide us in that task?That's the focus of the third installment in this mini-series on ‘Essential Services'. I'm also glad to introduce a guest co-author into this post. As I was in the middle of writing this series, my friend and colleague at Reach Australia, Andrew Heard, sent me a draft of something that he had been writing along a similar line. It had so much good stuff in it, and was so similar to the direction I was heading, that we decided to collaborate on this final post in the series. (The bits in plain text are mine; the sections in italics are Andrew's.)So—given all that we have said so far (particularly from Ephesians), what is the rationale or purpose of actually gathering together in physical, local assemblies? Interestingly, when we look in Ephesians (or elsewhere) for a link between the heavenly gathering and its earthly counterpart, we don't find the kind of explicit connection we might expect—something useful for pastors to exhort their people with like: “Because you belong to the heavenly church, make sure that you join a good earthly, local church and go every week!” In fact, in Ephesians, as in much of the New Testament, the importance of actually meeting getting in local gatherings is not so much an application or conclusion as a baseline presupposition. Of course we gather together, because what else would we do—as members of the new household of God, the body of Christ, the new humanity? The heavenly church of Christ is like a homing beacon that calls its earthly members together in local assemblies—all of us belonging to that cosmic body of Christ, delighted to be unified together in him, and seeking together to grow and fortify his body through the apostolic ministry of word and prayer. The physical gathering of believers around Christ and his word in a particular place at a particular time is the visible expression of an invisible reality that is at the very heart of God's purposes. He brings peace to us by reconciling us to himself, but at the same time he brings peace to the various groups that have been hostile to one another, that by his grace we might together be ‘one new man'. In Christ, we are all one—all sinners saved by grace to share the same standing before him, and with each other.This is true spiritually in the heavenly assembly, and is understood to be true by faith. But it is given visible expression here on earth when sinners actually get up out of their houses, go to a common place, and stand shoulder to shoulder with other people they used to be alienated from—the Gentile actually standing together with the Jew—and both declaring and rejoicing that Jesus Christ is Lord. Without physically gathering we simply can't give expression to this. We might hold this thought in our heads as we watch a centralized stream or video clip, knowing that others who are different from me are watching the same stream. But it is a pale thing in comparison to actually standing with those same people in a common space. It is this reality, of being gathered physically with one another, that brings glory to God in the heavenly realms as the forces of evil look on and see the victory of God in gathering people from all nations, tribes and tongues. This was God's purpose from all eternity, though it was kept hidden for generations past. But now, through the church (the physically gathered assembly) the universe is made to see that God has won the victory. Why do we go to church? It's not actually about us. It is about the glory of Christ that we gather—that we might show the universe that he is Lord and that he has won. We haven't been doing this while streaming content to our lounge-rooms on Sundays. We haven't been churching. But we are now moving into a phase when we can church again, and it is imperative that Christians seize this opportunity to come back together, even though it may be lame and limited in various ways for some time. Non-churching Christians deeply offend their God. They deny the very thing his Son died to create—the reality of a new, unified humanity, gathered together around him, giving testimony to the universe of God's manifold wisdom and power. As astute readers may notice, Andrew reads Eph 3:10 a little differently from me—he takes it as a reference to the earthly gathering (which it may well be; see my post last week for more on this). I entirely agree, however, with the point he is making. The physical assembly of Christians, in loving unity with one another in Christ, is a powerful testimony or proclamation of the power of the gospel. 1 Cor 11:17-34 makes this point, as Paul lays into the feisty, factionalized Corinthians for their appalling Lord's Supper etiquette. The divisive bun fight that their meals had become was a travesty of the loving, unified fellowship that the Lord had died to create. This is why their meal couldn't even be classed as a ‘Lord's Supper' in Paul's book—it was supposed to be a remembrance and proclamation of the power of Christ's death to save sinful people and draw them together in unity and love (vv. 23-26). The physical, shoulder-to-shoulder reality of Christ's people fellowshipping together proclaims the power of the cross. So what of our various online gatherings and simulations then? How do they fit in? Our reflections on the primacy of heavenly church help to answer this. Jesus is building his heavenly church (H-church) through the apostolic ministry that is happening here on earth. This ministry takes place within regular, local physical gatherings (L-churches), but it takes place outside the L-church as well. We see this in the New Testament—the roving bands of apostolic evangelists; the work of Timothy, Tychicus, Titus and others as go-betweens, carrying Paul's letters and extending his ministry between and among the churches; the collection for the saints in Jerusalem; the ministry of Priscilla and Aquila in mentoring Apollos; and so on. This continues today. Apostolic ministry that builds the H-church proceeds in all manner of ways and places outside the L-church—particularly in evangelism, but also in the various ways in which Christians build and encourage each other when not in church together (as this article is hopefully doing at this very moment). This helps make sense of our recent strange experience of ‘virtual church'. We instinctively feel that these online meetings partake of something real and helpful—we have been in touch with each other, shared the word together in various ways, and prayed for each other. We have been building each other as members of the H-church in the best ways we can through the word and prayer, much like separated friends writing regular letters to each other. But we have not been together as the L-church. We haven't been L-churching (as Andrew suggests above). We haven't actually been singing, praying, reading or listening together, despite the occasional breezy exhortation to the contrary (‘now let's all raise our voices together as we watch this youtube clip …'). I suspect that the more we have marketed our online simulations as ‘church', the harder it will be to persuade people off their couches and out of their trackies and back to the reality of L-church gathering. But doing so is vital, especially because the local church gathering is such a powerful context for Christian perseverance and growth.Our physical gatherings have a power to them that has to do with our physical reality as humans. We are more than brains on sticks. We are embodied. We are relational. We have hearts and minds and affections. When we get ourselves up and out of the house, and gather together with our fellow-believers at a particular time and place for an orderly, well-structured meeting together—we gain far more than we usually appreciate. We need to help our people see the critical but often intangible benefits of church together. There is a ‘one another' ministry that takes place in a million small things that can only happen because we are together physically. We see each other, stand with each other, sit quietly with each other and listen, confess together, sing together. I am helped to grow by these million intangibles. We also need to help our people appreciate the urgency of this in the context of the spiritual battle of the last day. We are far more vulnerable than we appreciate. We need each other more than we realise. It may be that this will motivate some people return to church—because they know they need the support of others, or because they want to start serving others again, and encouraging and building them through the tangible and intangible things we do. However, we shouldn't underestimate the virus of selfishness that has spread along with covid19. Many of us have loved having permission to stay in and do life privately. It will be hard to help people get past this. Doing life with just me and my family is beautiful. It feels right and good. Many will fight hard against adding ‘work' and ‘service' back into their lives. But godliness requires it. In terms of the practicalities of heading ‘back to church', many churches are already experimenting with various formats and staged approaches to ‘relaunching'. If we are to think our way from principles to practice, how can the various ideas we've brought to the surface help us? Speaking personally, my inclination is definitely at the get-back-together-NOW end of the spectrum. Do whatever it takes; just get going. However, my natural enthusiasm probably needs tempering. If the problem with our ‘virtual gatherings' is that they haven't been able to express the rich reality of our physical gatherings—with all the intangibles that they contain—it's worth pausing before we start back with a form of physical gathering in which many of those rich realities are actually excluded. Is the restricted form of gathering that is now open to us—where we sit three seats apart, and can't eat together, sing together, or even hang around and mingle together afterwards—a good model of church to launch back with? I fear that we are in danger of re-starting church in a way that models the wrong paradigm—where church is just the delivery of information to people who arrive, sit a distance from each other, listen and leave with minimal interaction. Would we do better to wait a few more weeks (or even months) so that our re-start actually gives expression to the very thing we want our physical church gatherings to be? I suspect so. In fact, I think we would benefit from thinking like church planters do when they are launching a new public meeting. When a small core planting team starts a new church meeting, they rarely just throw together a group, put them in a building and start church. They think carefully about each phase. They start smaller, as a launch group, and get some momentum and energy happening before they throw open the doors to a larger group. Might this be an approach for re-launching our churches post-covid? We may do better to begin with a smaller start-up group—a group we invite because of their capacity to deal with the struggles and challenges of a new format; a smaller group that could establish or re-establish the right culture or vibe—one that wasn't just about us and our needs, but about loving others, and reaching out to others, to build the heavenly church of Jesus. There is much more to say of course, and I look forward to your questions, comments and suggestions about what ‘getting back to church' is looking like for you. Two particularly good questions came in after last week's post—one about the importance of the local congregation in our theology of church; and another about what to do when ‘apostolic ministry' doesn't work. I'll get back to those next week.PSAs well as being friends for decades, Andrew and I serve together on the Reach Australia Management Committee. Reach Australia has been putting together some resources to help church leaders think through their plans for re-opening; just head over to the ‘Relaunch Australia' site to get hold of these. Alternatively, get in touch with Scott Sanders (scott@reachaustralia.com.au) about the Reach Australia Development Program (a new learning cohort is starting in October 2020).As promised, here are some more details about the launch of the ‘partnership' option for this newsletter on July 14 (next Tuesday). From that date on, you'll have the option of becoming a partner in my writing ministry—both the work I do here at The Payneful Truth and further afield. It's a pretty simply partnership—for my part, I'll keep writing stuff and sending it to you each week; plus I'll send out some bonus Payneful Extra material around once a month, and also give you the inside track on books and resources that I publish. For your part, you chip in something to support me in doing all that—and as a bonus, if you could pray for me from time to time that would be wonderful as well! You can contribute in three modes, depending on what's convenient for you: * A Monthly Partner: $7 a month* An Annual Partner: $70 a year * A Lifetime Partner (sounds a bit like marriage!): $700 to keep getting all this stuff in perpetuity, until I keel over or Jesus returns. If you're not up for the commitment of partnership that's totally fine of course; you can remain a free subscriber. I'll keep sending you a free edition of The Payneful Truth every three weeks or so. If you really want to keep receiving the articles every week but aren't in a position to become a partner—just let me know via email (tonyjpayne@me.com), and I'll sort it out. I don't want anyone to miss out because of their circumstances. So when next week's email arrives (on July 14):* If you want continue as a free subscriber, no need to do anything. You'll automatically go onto the ‘free list' that gets The Payneful Truth every three weeks or so; * If you want to become a partner, just click the ‘Join' button; it will take you to the website, where you enter your email address, click join, and follow the options from there (for monthly, annual or lifetime). This week's image is of the local congregation I was first part of with Mum and Dad—the good folk of St Mark's Eltham, pictured here after their final service together in the late 80s. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.twoways.news/subscribe