Podcasts about episode twenty seven

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Latest podcast episodes about episode twenty seven

Cerebral Women Art Talks Podcast
Philemona Williamson

Cerebral Women Art Talks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2020 35:51


Episode Twenty-Seven features narrative painter Philemona Williamson. She’s exhibited her work for over 25 years at the June Kelly Gallery in NYC and recently, at her mid-career retrospective at the Montclair Art Museum in NJ. Her narrative paintings deal with gender, race and adolescence. Philemona is the recipient of numerous awards and residencies including the Joan Mitchell Foundation, Pollock Krasner, National Endowment For The Arts, New York Foundation For The Arts and Millay Colony. Her work has been shown in solo and group exhibitions throughout the USA and abroad, She is represented in numerous private and public collections, including The Montclair Art Museum; The Kalamazoo Art Institute The Mint Museum of Art; Smith College Museum of Art; Hampton University Museum; Sheldon Art Museum; Mott-Warsh Art Collection, and AT&T. Her public work is part of the MTA Arts For Transit Program, the MTA Poetry In Motion and — for the NYC School Authority — a mosaic mural in the Glenwood Campus School. She currently teaches painting at Pratt Institute and Hunter College in NYC. Philemona also created a series of paintings for the children’s book “Lubaya’s Quiet Roar” coming out in October from Penguin Random House. Please review links below. https://www.philemonawilliamson.com/ http://www.junekellygallery.com/williamson/ http://origin.www.annazorinagallery.com/exhibitions/sit-still-self-portraits-in-the-age-of-distraction/slideshow?view=slider#26 https://www.montclairartmuseum.org/exhibition/philemona-williamson-metaphorical-narratives https://baristanet.com/2020/06/look-inside-the-artists-studio-as-montclair-art-museum-launches-mam-conversations-series/ http://web.mta.info/mta/aft/permanentart/permart.html?agency=nyct&line=L&artist=1&station=3

Page Turn the Largo Public Library Podcast

Hello and welcome to Episode Twenty Seven of Page Turn: the Largo Public Library Podcast. I'm your host, Hannah! If you enjoy the podcast subscribe, tell a friend, or write us a review! The Spanish Language Book Review begins at 15:57 and ends 19:40 at The English Language Transcript can be found below But as always we start with Reader's Advisory! The Reader's Advisory for Episode Twenty Seven is Boy Swallows Universe by Trent Dalton. If you like Boy Swallows Universe you should also check out: Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls by T Kira Madden, The Lost Man by Jane Harper, and How it Feels to Float by Helena Fox. My personal favorite Goodreads list Boy Swallows Universe is on is Big Fat Books Worth the Effort. Today’s Library Tidbit is about Reader's Advisory. I figured two years in I could let everyone in on my super secret formula for doing reader’s advisory. First off what is reader’s advisory? Reader’s advisory is pairing readers with materials they might be interested in! Doing reader’s advisory for yourself is a bit different than how I do reader’s advisory for patrons, how I do it for this podcast, and how I train staff members in doing reader’s advisory. I’m going to do a reader’s advisory for myself for one of my favorite science fiction fantasy series, Binti , Binti: Home , and Binti: Night Masquerade by Nnedi Okorafor. The first step of reader’s advisory for the series is to head to our databases and log into NoveList with my library card. Once I’ve pulled up the information about the title I would check out the information available to me about the title. NoveList calls these appeal factors. Now depending on why I liked a book will change which appeal factors I pay attention to for the book. After playing around with the appeal factors and read-a-likes on NoveList and Goodreads I put holds on A Memory Called Empire by Arkady Martine, How Long Till Black History Month by N. K. Jemisin, and The Deep by Rivers Solomon. If you'd rather a library staff member pick out some suggestions for you, or if you aren't having any luck finding your next read yourself fill out the Reader's Advisory Form to get a list of suggestions. And now it's time for Book Traveler, with Victor: Intro: Welcome to a new edition of Book Traveler. My name is Victor and I am a librarian at the Largo Public Library. Today I'm going to talk to you about a book we have in the Spanish collection titled To Kill A Mockingbird (Graphic Novel) Harper Lee and Fred Fordham. Synopsis: A haunting portrait of race and class, innocence and injustice, hypocrisy and heroism, tradition and transformation in the Deep South of the 1930s, Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird remains as important today as it was upon its initial publication in 1960, during the turbulent years of the Civil Rights movement. Now, this most beloved and acclaimed novel is reborn for a new age as a gorgeous graphic novel. Scout, Jem, Boo Radley, Atticus Finch, and the small town of Maycomb, Alabama, are all captured in vivid and moving illustrations by artist Fred Fordham. Enduring in vision, Harper Lee’s timeless novel illuminates the complexities of human nature and the depths of the human heart with humor, unwavering honesty, and a tender, nostalgic beauty. Lifetime admirers and new readers alike will be touched by this special visual edition that joins the ranks of the graphic novel adaptations of A Wrinkle in Time and The Alchemist. Opinion: To Kill a Mockingbird was first published in 1960 and Harper Lee was immediately awarded the Pulitzer Prize. Since then, the novel has very positive praise and it is part of the list of great classics of American literature. The novel tells us the story of a town located in Alabama, during the Great Depression after 1929. The narrator is Scout, a six-year-old girl who explains, with the innocence of her age, the situation of injustice, racism,

Force Insensitive - A Star Wars Podcast
Episode Twenty Seven: Gungan Waterproofing

Force Insensitive - A Star Wars Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2020 111:28


Don your wetsuit and underwater breathing helmet, we’re submerging ourselves deep into The Clone Wars this week. We start out by going down a rabbit hole of the unintentional Wookiee, followed up by the Adventures of Chum Solo, all while longingly staring at Kit Fisto’s incredible underwater physique! It’s all scored by the hottest Death Metal band this side of Otoh Gunga, Gungan Attack! We also manage to somehow squeeze in some Mandalorian Season Two news, talk about SWG Legends and so much more! Turn up your headphones, dial back your sensibilities, and join the wretched hive of scum and villainy as we take the low road to resistance on Episode Twenty Seven of Force Insensitive!Send Email/Voicemail: mailto:forceinsensitive@gmail.comStart your own podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=386Use our Amazon link: http://amzn.to/2CTdZzKFB Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ForceInsensitive/Twitter: http://twitter.com/ForceNSensitiveFacebook: http://facebook.com/ForceInsensitiveInstagram: http://instagram.com/ForceInsensitive

J & Lazy N Ramble On...
about failed goals, time loops, "The Goop Lab for Men Experience", and science!

J & Lazy N Ramble On...

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2020 77:06


Episode (Twenty) Seven! Monthly goal(s) check-in: Jeff: Slight pushback on submission-ready novel completion by end of 2020. Read one (fiction) book in January, out of 24 for 2020 (six of which need to be fiction). So, reading TLDR: 1:24 & 1:6. Nic: Weight on 2020.01.01 = 349.1# Weight on 2020.02.01 = 342.4# So, -6.7# of -100# for 2020, short of the necessary -8.33#/month. 0 of 2 books read per month. 0 of 4 page layouts per month. Did not start practicing guitar. Our music is "Back to the Grind" by Billie Stevens. Podcast logo by Lazy N & Micah Myers. You can find J & Lazy N Ramble On... at Anchor.fm and Spotify, or subscribe wherever you currently subscribe to podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Castbox, &tc. We now have merch! Check out our wares at TeePublic. You can also support us at Patreon, follow us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook, leave us a voice message, or email us at jandlazyn@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Ms. Demeanor & Ms. Conduct: The Podcast

Episode Twenty Seven of Ms. Demeanor & Ms. Conduct. A light hearted look at all things mysterious in Canada. Tales of murder, mystery, conspiracy, cults & much more. Miss & Misters, this week the girls have on two special guests to bring you double the stories. Jena takes a look at the Krever Inquiry, Canadas worst ever preventable public health disaster. Ellen tells us of the first American serial killer family, The Bloody Benders. Amara is back for another hometown with the Perth Mint Swindle and Kennedy takes a deep dive into Carl Tanzler and his “corpse bride.”

Strange Pleasures Radiolab
S1E27 - Episode Twenty-Seven of Strange Pleasures Radio Lab: Part One of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

Strange Pleasures Radiolab

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2019 34:24


Welcome to Episode Twenty-Seven of Strange Pleasures Radio Lab. Your daily audio story podcast available through iTunes, Spotify and YouTube.Each day I will narrate a well known story in it's entirety. As a writer I will also include some narration of my own books that can be purchased through the Amazon Kindle Store, or through the Amazon Prime Kindle Unlimited subscription program.Today I will be narrating Part One of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley.YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8MoqBN8-vdAsaoYBZX32OA?viewas=subscriber?subconfirmation=1HOME WEBSITE https://strange-pleasures-radiolab.pinecast.co/SPOTIFY https://open.spotify.com/show/6x2VOcohjOKeJ8ZIJpvi8rAMAZON AUTHOR PAGE https://www.amazon.co.uk/Robert-Knight/e/B07WH3QCML/ref=dpbylinecontpopebooks_1ITUNES https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/strange-pleasures-radiolab/id1476208251STRANGE PLEASURES VIDEO LAB: gaming channel with new content daily https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0wqchZzHfwHTUdfnc5s6ggSupport Strange Pleasures Radiolab by donating to their Tip Jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/strange-pleasures-radiolabFind out more at https://strange-pleasures-radiolab.pinecast.coThis podcast is powered by Pinecast.

Red Moon Radio
Red Moon Radio EPISODE 27: Lake of Fire

Red Moon Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2018 76:34


Episode Twenty-Seven of Red Moon Radio features an interview with Austin, Texas-based band Lake of Fire! It's the first live interview with a band for the podcast and loads of fun. We talk about the band's sound and their new album, Crater – out on Fishbum Records – the "psych" label in music today, and their first visit to Canada! LAKE OF FIRE – CRATER – CRATER (2018) INTERVIEW WITH STEVEN, DYLAN, RENO & NOLAN OF LAKE OF FIRE GUEST SET FROM LAKE OF FIRE – Cindy Lee – The Miracle of the Rose – Act of Tenderness (Feb 2018) GUEST SET FROM LAKE OF FIRE – Jan Hammer Group – Don’t You Know – Melodies (1977) GUEST SET FROM LAKE OF FIRE – Marbled Eye – Leisure – Promo Tape 2018 GUEST SET FROM LAKE OF FIRE – Temple of Angels – Lex Talionis – Temple of Angels (2017) GUEST SET FROM LAKE OF FIRE – Ennio Morricone – Ninna Nanna Per Adulteri – Cuore di Mamma (Mother’s Heart) (1969) LAKE OF FIRE – CRATER – SPACE IS SAFE (2018) LAKE OF FIRE – CRATER – ENYA’S CASTLE (2018) LAKE OF FIRE – BORN TO BURN – HOLD ME (2016) LAKE OF FIRE – BORN TO BURN – LORD EYE (2016) LAKE OF FIRE – CRATER – MERCY OF THE WORM (2018) LAKE OF FIRE – CRATER – NIGHT FLIGHT (2018) LAKE OF FIRE – CRATER – JULIE (2018) Follow LAKE OF FIRE on Facebook, Instagram, Bandcamp and other social media, and check out FISHBUM RECORDS on Bandcamp for more amazing bands! SOCIAL MEDIA Facebook https://www.facebook.com/lagodefuegotx/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/lake_of_fire_atx/ MUSIC Bandcamp https://lakeoffireatx.bandcamp.com/ Spotify https://open.spotify.com/artist/1EL6uAhntIvKz6AyuEGQqg/ Fishbum Records https://fishbumrecords.bandcamp.com/ If you enjoyed the show, show your support by following Red Moon Radio on Twitter, Facebook, and subscribe to the show through Google Play, iTunes, or find us on Stitcher, or here, on PodOmatic. You can also find us with the other music junkies on www.50thirdand3rd.com!

Lotsa Pasta
Episode Twenty-Seven: Return of the (Peach Tea)Dream Team

Lotsa Pasta

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2017 56:31


Episode Twenty-Seven features Episode Fifteen guests back again, Terry the Tickler and A Bunch of Baby Ducks, with host Captain Death(since episode 15), telling lots of stories and talking about cum for a little bit. Oh. We also do a MadLib. It's terrible. Your Last Breath(7:02)The Pill(11:19)The Squirming Man(20:06)Birthmarks(27:15)We Danced(29:29)Who or What are the Shadow People?(34:30)5 Minutes(42:00)Trollpasta Madlib: The Killer(43:57)The Legend of FingerGuy(49:17)Mailbox(52:20)CHECK THE YOUTUBE for EPs! SUBSCRIBE @https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxoqIN-fkfdlmGEjWujypxwFeaturing wonderful ambient music from our fam in Sweden: CryoChamber, givin' us all the ooky-spooky tunage. Follow: @cryo-chamberThank you!"Are You Afraid of the Dark Theme Song," "Spooky Skeletons REMIX," and "You Reposted in the Wrong Neighborhood" are not my songs. Credit and All rights are reserved by the owners

Hairy London Podcast - Moonlight Makers

Episode Twenty Seven of Hairy London

Multiple Sclerosis Discovery: The Podcast of the MS Discovery Forum
Multiple Sclerosis Discovery -- Episode 27 with Dr. Brenda Banwell

Multiple Sclerosis Discovery: The Podcast of the MS Discovery Forum

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2015 12:29


[intro music]   Hello, and welcome to Episode Twenty-Seven of Multiple Sclerosis Discovery, the podcast of the MS Discovery Forum. I’m your host, Dan Keller.   This week’s podcast features an interview with Dr. Brenda Banwell about a new journal on multiple sclerosis and related disorders, of which she is a co-editor-in-chief. But to begin, here’s a brief summary of some of the latest developments on the MS Discovery Forum at msdiscovery.org.   This week we published two stories related to articles published in the December 2014 issue of JAMA Neurology. The first article is about the interim results of the Halt MS trial. In this phase 2 clinical trial, physicians performed autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplants on 24 patients with relapsing-remitting MS. In other words, the team obliterated the patients’ existing immune systems and attempted to hit the reset button by infusing the patients’ own stem cells. Three years after the treatment, 78% of patients showed no signs of disease activity, significantly higher than similar studies using conventional MS treatments. However, not everyone is popping the champagne yet. Some are concerned that the treatment may not have been aggressive enough to eradicate the patients’ entire immune systems, and it will be only a matter of time before some patients start showing signs of disease activity once more. Others are concerned that the treatment was unnecessarily intense and risky, suggesting safer methods of stem cell transplant would be effective in resetting the immune system.   Halt MS is one of the trials using a new primary outcome measure called “no evidence of disease activity” or NEDA for short. NEDA is basically a fancy way of saying “remission”; that is, no relapses, no disability progression, and no new lesions on MRI. NEDA sets a new treatment standard for patients and their doctors, reflecting the hope of a new generation of disease-modifying therapies.   But is NEDA really a feasible clinical care target? Our second story this week takes a look at this issue with the first real-world cohort study. Researchers asked how many people with relapsing-remitting MS maintained NEDA status seven years after diagnosis. While that goal remained elusive for all but 8% of patients, NEDA status at two years was highly predictive of no disease progression at seven years. Many questions remain about NEDA. But in an editorial accompanying the study, researchers suggest that NEDA is still a worthy, albeit very ambitious, goal.   What do you think? Let us know on the discussion forums at msdiscovery.org/forums/discussion.   [transition music]   Now to the interview. Dr. Brenda Banwell is Professor of Neurology and Pediatrics at the Perelman School of Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania and is chief of the Division of Neurology at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. We met to talk about a fairly new journal called Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders, of which she is one of the co-editors-in-chief.   [Interview]   Interviewer – Dan Keller I’m here at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia with Dr. Banwell, and someone from the public affairs office is here with us. I’m just wondering why did you see a need for a new journal?   Interviewee – Brenda Banwell At the time that we launched Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders, there were journals focused solely on multiple sclerosis and journals on neurology broadly, but not one that focused specifically on multiple sclerosis and the various and increasing number of demyelinating disorders of the central nervous system that are being recognized. So Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders was meant to be a home for sometimes comparisons, sometimes new insights, and certainly thoughtful reflection on the scope and breadth of demyelinating disorders in the central nervous system in adults and in children.   MSDF Is there a certain amount of waiting, or it’s just the volume of papers that you get in that determines the mix between multiple sclerosis and other demyelinating disorders?   Dr. Banwell Really it’s actually the quality of the papers we receive that drive the selection into the journal. To date, we have been blessed to receive some very interesting manuscripts, some of which relate to multiple sclerosis but many others relate to neuromyelitis optica, which is one of the disorders we were interested in; in antibody-associated encephalopathies; in patient perceptions of demyelinating disease, which is from the area that I think is very interesting and relevant; and then even some basic science, manuscripts that have looked at mechanisms of the immune system targeting the central nervous system.   MSDF Is there a particular editorial philosophy?   Dr. Banwell I guess the one my co-editors and I would say that we’re looking for manuscripts that push the envelope a little bit in terms of hypothesis generation. We like to see a thoughtful reflection on where the next step needs to be in the papers that we accept. And we’re not at all uncomfortable with being a little bit provocative in terms of perhaps people broaching new hypotheses as long as those hypotheses are well defended and can generate the next step of research.   MSDF So it sounds like you’re also delving into basic science, or at least early clinical studies here, too?   Dr. Banwell We’ll delve into it. We are not a basic science journal, so we would not pretend to be Cell or Nature or any of those sorts of journals. But certainly many of the manuscripts that we’ve accepted have discussed potential hypotheses based on basic science research and how that might tie to the clinical picture.   MSDF One question that always arises with a new journal is why should people want to publish in this journal as opposed to some of the more established ones?   Dr. Banwell Well, I think like any new journal, we have a lot of opportunity to accept manuscripts. We have very quickly gotten to the point where we have a very high caliber of manuscripts, which I think speaks to the interest in the field, so the journals that are arguably in competition with us are also now increasingly receiving high quality manuscripts as well. And I think overall it reminds us that there is actually quite a bit of research going on in multiple sclerosis and related disorders, and therefore there’s room for several journals in the field at this time.   MSDF Is it now being indexed in PubMed?   Dr. Banwell We have applied for indexing and we’ll hope to hear very shortly.   MSDF Is there any problem or have you faced any barriers?   Dr. Banwell No barriers. It’s just that you have to have a certain number of manuscripts published, you have to show that the manuscripts are of high quality, and you have to have been in the field long enough to actually have enough publications for them to judge the quality of what we’re doing.   MSDF I see that you have co-editors-in-chief. Who are your colleagues in this?   Dr. Banwell So there’s Dr. Chris Hawkes and Dr. Gavin Giovannoni from England, and Dr. Fred Lublin from the United States.   MSDF Anything else important to add about the new journal or the things that it’s come out with lately?   Dr. Banwell Well, we have a lay review author as well, and we do hope to increase some scholarly input from the lay public over time. Certainly we’re interested in maintaining the sort of price we put on novelty and in encouraging people to submit work that is perhaps looking at a new angle in the field. I think the related disorders aspect of our journal is an important component, both of the title and also of the concept. We are particularly interested in some of the emerging disorders that we now realize are potentially, if not multiple sclerosis, certainly in the field of immune-directed responses in the central nervous system. So I think that aspect of our journal speaks to an area of the field that might not have been previously quite so well captured in the existing journals.   MSDF Does this journal lend itself to a more global approach to demyelinating diseases, since it’s multiple sclerosis and related disorders as opposed to just looking at MS as an isolated condition?   Dr. Banwell Certainly in concept, yes. I think in fairness to the other journals that I think are all excellent and also in the field, we are not the only ones that are broadening the scope. And I think that speaks to the discoveries. So with the identification in 2004 of the aquaporin-4 antibody, and then subsequent to that really compelling evidence that the aquaporin-4 neuromyelitis optica story broadened and recognized a very specific subgroup of patients, that is also happening with other antibodies potentially, and there’s some emerging information about, for example, NMDA receptor encephalitis and other disorders that weren’t really recognized as such a few years ago. Our journal is prioritizing this type of sort of patient base and diagnostic categories, but so too are other journals that are also excellent in the field. So I think in fairness, everyone is recognizing that there’s more to the story.   MSDF Is the NMDA antibody story with the catatonia?   Dr. Banwell So NMDA receptor encephalitis is a disorder actually discovered by Josep Dalmau at Penn, so very near and dear to our heart here. The patients present sometimes with psychotic features, they can become quite catatonic. There’s been some lay publications on that. “Brain on Fire” was a book written by a survivor of NMDA receptor encephalitis. In children we certainly see – and in adults, but certainly in children – we see a number of patients present with severe seizures and then with abnormalities of movement. When these patients present they can be catastrophically ill, often in intensive care unit. Over time as the patients recover, miraculously it seems because it really does appear to be quite miraculous, the patients can have a full recovery. So it is a disorder that’s extremely important to recognize and can be misdiagnosed quite easily as an infectious encephalitis, as initially other psychiatric disorders, and in some patients as a really severe form of epilepsy, all of which it is, but it has a better overarching diagnosis. And making the diagnosis certainly gives hope in terms of long-term prognosis, and we do use specific therapies for the patients with the diagnosis.   MSDF Very good, I appreciate it. Thanks.   Dr. Banwell My pleasure.   [transition music]   Thank you for listening to Episode Twenty-Seven of Multiple Sclerosis Discovery. This podcast was produced by the MS Discovery Forum, MSDF, the premier source of independent news and information on MS research. MSDF’s executive editor is Robert Finn. Msdiscovery.org is part of the non-profit Accelerated Cure Project for Multiple Sclerosis. Robert McBurney is our President and CEO, and Hollie Schmidt is vice president of scientific operations.   Msdiscovery.org aims to focus attention on what is known and not yet known about the causes of MS and related conditions, their pathological mechanisms, and potential ways to intervene. By communicating this information in a way that builds bridges among different disciplines, we hope to open new routes toward significant clinical advances.   We’re interested in your opinions. Please join the discussion on one of our online forums or send comments, criticisms, and suggestions to editor@msdiscovery.org.    [outro music]  

Sundays Supplement
Ep 27: Due To Technical Difficulties

Sundays Supplement

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2008 10:15


A shorter stint this week:Episode Twenty SevenTechnical difficulties prevented a full length show, so instead take a moment to enjoy some deleted scenes from previous episodes. But check back next week for a full length bonanza.