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The Green Acre is vital to the Wasteland's survival. The Seedling is vital to the Green Acre. Written by Tilsen Mulalley Created by Tilsen Mulalley Guest Starring Michael Miliken (@michaelmilikenwrites) and Emily Howell (@ittybittyalien) A Podmoth Network Podcast. https://podmoth.network/
"COVID-19 is not just a medical issue. It is also a social justice, economic, and political issue. That makes it hard to figure out how best to share information about it, especially since messages come from a range of communicators—including elected officials, journalists, scientists, physicians, and community leaders—and are delivered to diverse audiences."Such is the foundational position in a recent piece published in Fast Company. Our guests this week, authors Todd Newman and Emily Howell (together with Dominique Broussard), present their insights into the messengers and their messages that constellate to keep us unhealthy.This is a conversation about trust, and it brings with it some extraordinarily difficult questions. Does the public understand the role of public health? Has our model of health broken its promise of healthy communities across racial and economic boundaries? Has the media lived up to its obligation to truth in a public health crisis? Objectively, the answer has to be a resounding no to these and so many more. Which opens to the door to our conversation this week in which we examine the opportunities before us to build trust, to cement community, to broaden the reach of our most critical messages, and to do so clearly. As Natalie so aptly says, "to engage in the production of the public's health is actually a patriotic act." So how do we make it clear that public health truly matters to private lives? Our deep thanks to Todd and Emily for joining us this week. Please visit the link below to read the original article. Thank you for listening, and for sharing with your communities, too. Links & Notes'COVID-19 public health messages have been all over the place — but we can do better' • by Todd Newman, Dominique Broussard, and Emily Howell — Fast Company
"COVID-19 is not just a medical issue. It is also a social justice, economic, and political issue. That makes it hard to figure out how best to share information about it, especially since messages come from a range of communicators—including elected officials, journalists, scientists, physicians, and community leaders—and are delivered to diverse audiences." Such is the foundational position in a recent piece published in Fast Company. Our guests this week, authors Todd Newman and Emily Howell (together with Dominique Broussard), present their insights into the messengers and their messages that constellate to keep us unhealthy. This is a conversation about trust, and it brings with it some extraordinarily difficult questions. Does the public understand the role of public health? Has our model of health broken its promise of healthy communities across racial and economic boundaries? Has the media lived up to its obligation to truth in a public health crisis? Objectively, the answer has to be a resounding no to these and so many more. Which opens to the door to our conversation this week in which we examine the opportunities before us to build trust, to cement community, to broaden the reach of our most critical messages, and to do so clearly. As Natalie so aptly says, "to engage in the production of the public's health is actually a patriotic act." So how do we make it clear that public health truly matters to private lives? Our deep thanks to Todd and Emily for joining us this week. Please visit the link below to read the original article. Thank you for listening, and for sharing with your communities, too. Links & Notes 'COVID-19 public health messages have been all over the place — but we can do better' • by Todd Newman, Dominique Broussard, and Emily Howell — Fast Company
JoLLE Conference Co-chair, Shuang Fu interviews Dr. Emily Howell, Dr. Wendy Barlow, and Dr. Jeanne Dyches | Edited by Saurabh Anand, Communications Editor.
Show Notes No Agenda Episode 1322 - "Dark Fate" "Dark Fate" Direct [link] to the mp3 file ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1322.noagendanotes.com Sign Up for the newsletter Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com The No Agenda News Network- noagendanewsnetwork.com RSS Podcast Feed Experimental IPFS RSS Feed Get the No Agenda News App for your iPhone and iPad Get the NoAgendDroid app for your Android Phone Torrents of each episode via BitLove document.write("Last Modified " + document.lastModified)This page created with the FreedomController Credits "Dark Fate" Executive Producers: Michael Statom Sir Dark Fake Chris Collins Jan Stuurman Sheryl Cox Yuriy Filonov Ben Purcell Mike Bruer Associate Executive Producers: Emily Howell Sir Fauci's Throat Tech Wipe Sir Cal of Lavender Blossoms Sir Scheister, Destroyer of Cones Robert Jakob Richard Garrett Sir Beneden von Juimden Become a member of the 1323 Club, support the show here Titles Sir Ralf, Baron of Neutral-Moresnet -> Earl of Neutral Moresnet and Germany Sir Dark Fake -> Baronet Knights & Dames Anonymous -> Sir Beneden von Juimden Korey Getty -> Sir Fauci's Throat Richard Futter -> Sir Trickles of Greenwich Art By: Parker Paulie End of Show Mixes: Doug Longenecker - Tom Starkweather Matthew Forrest Profe JJ Engineering, Stream Management & Wizardry Mark van Dijk - Systems Master Ryan Bemrose - Program Director NEW: and soon on Netflix: Animated No Agenda Sign Up for the newsletter ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1322.noagendanotes.com New: Directory Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com RSS Podcast Feed Get the No Agenda News App for your iPhone and iPad Get the NoAgendDroid app for your Android Phone No Agenda Lite in opus format NoAgendaTorrents.com has an RSS feed or show torrents document.write("Last Modified " + document.lastModified)This page created with the FreedomController 20008 Keywords
In this conversation, we feature a long-time Rogue member Emily Howell as she tells her story about how running has helped her through a variety of personal challenges. As mentioned in episode 207, Chris will be taking a break from hosting the podcast until January. In his place, fellow Rogue coaches Jennifer Howard-Brown and Ruth England are leading a series of conversations with everyday women who we find incredibly inspiring. For those interested in our new partnership with Green Chef, you can do to GreenChef.com/rogue80 and use code rogue80 for $80 off and free shipping!
Emily Howell is a T.E.S.L. (Teaching English as a Second Language) teacher based out of Taiwan. She moved to Taiwan nearly 10 years ago from Vancouver, Canada. She is currently a permanent resident of Taiwan and identifies herself as a Canadian Immigrant and views Taiwan as her new home. She shares about the rich history of her new country; the political background and relations between Taiwan-China-and the world; her experiences living in Taiwanese culture; how they responded to COVID-19; and much more.
Earlier this month, Ontario’s kids went back to school in a new world of masks and social distancing designed to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. Some parents and educators were concerned the province was rushing back without a clear plan, and braced for what would happen next. NOW culture editor Radheyan Simonpillai and chiropractor Emily Howell -- both parents with school-age children -- join Norm to take stock of things.
Emily Howell drops by the studio to discuss balancing comedy, motherhood, and a frightening diagnosis. Radiating with optimism, Emily tells Ky and Jasmine about how she managed to find the funny through all of the the sharp lefts that life can throw at a person and how she came out on the other side.
Anne McElvoy and Lane Greene continue their look at the role of creativity in today’s society. They visit a London railway station to hear how commuters get their creative juices going by playing pianos in public spaces. Lane looks at how the concept of creativity is being widened to enhance the skills involved in coding or crisis management, and considers the 10,000 hour rule that sustains the belief of the universal creativity lobby. Neuroscientist Miriam Mosing tells Lane that studies of creative twins have shown that a genetic pre-disposition to creativity can’t be wholly eliminated, and Anne talks to AI researcher David Cope who has provided a frightening vision for the future of creativity. His computer generated composer “Emily Howell” can absorb existing styles, and use them to generate her own See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Anne McElvoy and Lane Greene continue their look at the role of creativity in today’s society. They visit a London railway station to hear how commuters get their creative juices going by playing pianos in public spaces. Lane looks at how the concept of creativity is being widened to enhance the skills involved in coding or crisis management, and considers the 10,000 hour rule that sustains the belief of the universal creativity lobby. Neuroscientist Miriam Mosing tells Lane that studies of creative twins have shown that a genetic pre-disposition to creativity can’t be wholly eliminated, and Anne talks to AI researcher David Cope who has provided a frightening vision for the future of creativity. His computer generated composer “Emily Howell” can absorb existing styles, and use them to generate her own See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
You can find Emily Howell's music all over the internet, but a search for the person comes up empty. She plays no concerts, attends no events, has no email address, and not a single photo comes up under a google search. Join Music is Music host Ria Misra as she talks with composer David Cope about who Emily Howell is--and what Emily Howell means for the future of music.
Around the same time Emily Howell was working her way into becoming the first female airline pilot in the U.S., Tag Akesheh was breaking similar barriers in Jordan. Her trials and tribulations would have made quitters of many...but Tag endured. Listen to her inspiring story of fortitude and learn from her advice.
On this day in 1996, the computer Deep Blue stunned chess master Gary Kasparov by beating him in the opening game of their six-game match. On today's "A Classical Day in the Life," we contemplate the music of the game of kings and explore the nonhuman works of the computer composer Emily Howell.
Det fjärde avsnittet av Cocktailpartyeffekten med danska, tandborstar, tandborstar och vackra tår. Och tandborstar. Kristian och William är tillbaka, tillsammans med Cezar som pluggar grafik. Några givande länkar för avsnittet: David Copes hemsidaEtt exempel på vad ett av David Copes program, Emily Howell, kan åstadkommaReal Time Control of Emotional Affect in Algorithmic Music (skriven av Brit Cruise)Ett Youtube-exempel på hur Brit Cruises idé fungerar i praktikenJane McGonigals Wikipedia-sida Avsnittet är lite över en timme långt. Här har ni en länk för nedladdning: Cocktailpartyeffekten - 04.mp3