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Hosts Vanessa Toholka and Jo Eaton speak with Rose Bishop about her Melbourne Fringe Festival show 'two stories about going on the internet', and chatted to Fenella Kernebone who is the Head of Programming at SXSW in Sydney on the headlining events of the conference.
Having grown sick to the eye teeth of Sales holding forth on the circle of keys, diminished ninths and cello fingering, Crabb has granted permission to post this special bonus episode, in which Sales speaks to a live audience at the ACO, in conversation with Fenella Kernebone, about her love of music.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Renowned environmental scientist, Professor Emma Johnston AO, the co-chief author of the 2021 Australian State of Environment Report and the University's Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) is joined by her co-authors to discuss key findings of the report and what is in store for our environment and wellbeing. The extreme weather events from the past few years have shown that our future depends on healthy rivers, forests, soils and seas, which is why it is crucial to understand exactly what is at stake. The State of the Environment (SOE) report, a five-yearly independent review, commissioned by the Australian Government, is a critical piece in the puzzle. Its independent analysis from a team of scientific experts, offers a clear framework on how to address the myriad environmental issues we face and the projected future of our environment. Professor Johnston is one of Australia's most distinguished environmental scientists, an elected fellow of both the Australian Academy of Science (AAS) and the Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering (ATSE). She also co-hosts the television series, Coast Australia, exploring the country's coastline. Also joining the conversation will be SOE co-authors Dr Terri Janke, a Wuthathi/Meriam woman and an international authority on Indigenous cultural and intellectual property; the chair of the Western Australian Biodiversity Science Institute, leading environmental scientist, Dr Ian Cresswell; and Dr Sarah Hill, CEO of the Western Parkland City Authority. Moderated by Sydney Ideas Head of Programming, Fenella Kernebone. The 2021 SOE report is the first to include Indigenous co-authors and is the first to have a chapter explicitly focused on Extreme Events (bushfires, floods, heatwaves, droughts, storms). This Sydney Ideas event was held on Thursday 21 July, 2022 at the Charles Perkins Centre Auditorium, University of Sydney. To view the event page please go to this link: https://bit.ly/3PVt3C6
Globally and at home, artists are engaging with the reckoning happening around race and colonisation. But where do recent migrants and refugees to Australia fit into the dialogue? Artist James Nguyen is a multidisciplinary artist who enlists his family and friends into his work. Plus, Fenella Kernebone on the special Thing that compels her to tell stories of art and design. And the Soul Fury exhibition showcases 16 women artists of Islamic heritage, at the peak of their powers.
Globally and at home, artists are engaging with the reckoning happening around race and colonisation. But where do recent migrants and refugees to Australia fit into the dialogue? Artist James Nguyen is a multidisciplinary artist who enlists his family and friends into his work. Plus, Fenella Kernebone on the special Thing that compels her to tell stories of art and design. And the Soul Fury exhibition showcases 16 women artists of Islamic heritage, at the peak of their powers.
Many of us spend years building up our skills and climbing the career ladder. When we earn more money, does it make us happier? Perhaps the ancient Greeks were right – living a virtuous life is the key to feeling good. What about positive thinking and gratitude, do they work?
Many of us spend years building up our skills and climbing the career ladder. When we earn more money, does it make us happier? Perhaps the ancient Greeks were right – living a virtuous life is the key to feeling good. What about positive thinking and gratitude, do they work?
If you've booked a Covid vaccination online, it's likely that artificial intelligence helped find you the nearest and soonest appointment. It's one of many ways AI makes our lives easier. But it's long been known that AI is also dangerous. So, how can its benefits be better balanced against its harms? AI expert Kate Crawford urges us to look behind the technology. She's speaking to Fenella Kernebone from Sydney Ideas.
If you've booked a Covid vaccination online, it's likely that artificial intelligence helped find you the nearest and soonest appointment. It's one of many ways AI makes our lives easier. But it's long been known that AI is also dangerous. So, how can its benefits be better balanced against its harms? AI expert Kate Crawford urges us to look behind the technology. She's speaking to Fenella Kernebone from Sydney Ideas.
Hear from Kate Crawford, Honorary Professor at the University of Sydney and one of the world's foremost scholars on the social and political implications of artificial intelligence. Timed for the Australian launch of her new book, 'Atlas of AI: Power, Politics, and the Planetary Costs of Artificial Intelligence', Kate speaks with Fenella Kernebone to explore how artificial intelligence is not objective or neutral but a technology of extraction. Hailed in Nature as an essential read, Kate's book "exposes the dark side of AI success" by taking us on a journey that uncovers how planetary computation is fueling a shift toward undemocratic governance and increased inequity. For further links and resources, including a transcript for this podcast, visit our website: https://bit.ly/3yLBV4P This conversation was recorded on 6 July, 2021.
Sasha Kutabah Sarago is a proud Wadjanbarra Yidinji, Jirrbal and African-American woman. Sasha’s traditional Country spans from Atherton Tablelands, Daintree to Tully, known as the Bama (Rainforest People) of Far North Queensland. A former model, Sasha grew frustrated by the invisibility of women of colour in fashion and media. Tired of importing overseas publications to see reflections of herself, Sasha had an epiphany. In 2011, Sasha founded Ascension, Australia’s first Indigenous and ethnic women’s lifestyle magazine. https://ascensionmag.com/ Last year, Sasha graced the stage for TEDxSydney 2020, where she shared her story on how she re-claimed her femininity and Aboriginality by redefining beauty. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zDMxAlTitgc&ab_channel=TEDxTalks This podcast, hosted by Fenella Kernebone explores the concept of beauty through the eyes of a first nations woman. An inspiring conversation with Sasha Kutabah Sarago.
From international policy to the nuance of consent, survivor, writer and former coordinator of a rape crisis centre, Sohaila Abdulali finds ways to talk about the difficult question of rape. At All About Women 2019 she spoke with Fenella Kernebone about her 2018 work of nonfiction What We Talk About When We Talk About Rape. Please note that this podcast contains discussion of rape and sexual assault.
Our understanding of gender and sexuality is often limited to narrow labels. But what happens when we desire beyond borders? Renowned German philosopher and journalist Carolin Emcke's book, How We Desire, explores the way norms restrict us. Her conversation with Fenella Kernebone at All About Women reflects on this attachment to clear and defined lines.
In the face of the looming climate crisis it’s hard not to feel overwhelmed and helpless. Cinnamon Nippard grabs her keep-cup and has a chat to people who are doing what they can from picking up plastic on remote beaches, to caring for wildlife, and making their own homes more sustainable.Produced by Cinnamon NippardLearn more about the interviewees and their work…Michael Mobbs - environmental consultant, author and former environmental lawyer:sustainablehouse.com.auDaniela Osiander - conservationist, massage therapist and naturopath: tonikahealth.com.auLucky Roland - surfer, barista and #everydaygreenie: luckyroland.liveOriginal music by Kent SutherlandAdditional sound clips…Zombie growl from craziwolf at FreesoundZombie sequence from iSaria at FreesoundAlarm clock by jackjames and tomknevitt at FreesoundABC news grab about flying foxes and the heatwave from ABC news AustraliaThanks to Sam Loy, Fenella Kernebone, Mic Cavazzini, and May Jasper for editorial advice.+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +Human/Ordinary is produced in Melbourne and Sydney by Sam Loy, Mic Cavazzini, Cinnamon Nippard and May JasperScore a t-shirt and ad-free episodes by subscribing at pozible.com/profile/humanordinary-podcastFor more on the show...Website: humanordinary.comFacebook: facebook.com/humanordinarypodcastTwitter: @humanordinarypcPlanet Broadcasting: planetbroadcasting.comCheck out About Face here: aboutfacepodcast.comSponsors and promo codes...Indochino: indochino.com (promo code - HUMAN) See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Recorded in 2018, The Motherload was a discussion about contemporary parenting. It featured feminist icon and media commentator, Clementine Ford; Afro-Caribbean Australian writer and slam poet, Maxine Beneba Clarke; and social researcher, Dr Rebecca Huntley untangling the rules, regulations and ridiculousness of parenting. With chair Fenella Kernebone, this panel of experts (and mothers) discussed how we might dismantle the seemingly intractable gender norms that tether femininity to domesticity.
Disabled people are skilled at harnessing the intuitive creativity cultivated by navigating a world not built for them. Join Liz Jackson as she reveals how this insight offers opportunities for design and innovation. Liz Jackson was with Fenella Kernebone at ANTIDOTE 2018. More talks at sydneyoperahouse.com/ideas
Fenella Kernebone leads a conversation about ethics in architecture with Professor Flora Samuel, Shaun Carter, Laura Harding and Dr Simon Longstaff AO - highlights from Sydney Architecture Festival 2018.
Since the first time someone told a story around a campfire a lot has changed about how we tell stories to one another. In this first episode of Lumina, Fenella Kernebone talks to two creatives rethinking the way we tell stories; Tea Uglow, Creative director at Google’s Creative Lab in Sydney and Mikaela Jade, CEO and founder of augmented reality company InDigital. Both think screens are just a stepping stone on the way to a world full of interactive stories we can barely conceive of yet. Lumina is a podcast about how tech innovations challenge and shape the way we share stories, produced for the Australian Film Television and Radio School (AFTRS) by Audiocraft. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Coming Soon - Lumina, a podcast from the Australian Film Television and Radio School A six-part series on how tech innovations challenge and shape the way we share stories. Hosted by Fenella Kernebone, former presenter at ABC RN and Triple J, current head of curation at TEDx Sydney. Lumina is produced by Audiocraft. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Bill speaks to author and film critic Adrian Martin about how a childhood interest in science fiction fanzines lead him towards a rich and varied life in film culture, from teaching film at age 19 and working as a freelance film/arts critic to writing books, co-editing online journals like Rouge and collaborating with fellow critic Cristina Álvarez López on audiovisual essays. Topics include: writing techniques and outfoxing subeditors, progressive rock, specializing in certain films/filmmakers, audio commentaries, Bill Krohn, discussing troublesome directors, early 1980s Melbourne film culture, Josef Von Sternberg and experiencing premonitions in dreams concerning PLANET OF THE APES. Visit Adrian Martin’s official site, Film Critic: Adrian Martin: Film Critic: Adrian Martin Support Adrian Martin’s site via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/adrianmartin Watch an interview with Cristina Álvarez López and Adrian Martin on their audio-visual essays: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYVywxnfMwI Watch a discussion led by Peter Mares, critics Adrian Martin, Mel Campbell and Fenella Kernebone and filmmaker Gillian Armstrong about the place of the film critic in our cultural landscape. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-ZurWD9cMk Watch THEN HE KISSED ME, a Cristina Álvarez López/Adrian Martin audiovisual essay on TWIN PEAKS - THE RETURN: https://mubi.com/notebook/posts/video-essay-twin-peaks-the-return-then-he-kissed-me Watch STRANGULATION BLUES, a Cristina Álvarez López/Adrian Martin audiovisual essay on BAD TIMING: https://filmschoolrejects.com/great-sounds-bad-timing/ Watch WOMAN IN A LANDSCAPE, , a Cristina Álvarez López/Adrian Martin audiovisual essay on Barbara Loden’s WANDA https://vimeo.com/161556412 Visit Adrian Martin’s Mubi author page: https://mubi.com/notebook/posts/author/254 Read Adrian Martin on PURPLE RAIN: http://www.filmcritic.com.au/reviews/p/purple_rain.html Visit Senses Of Cinema: http://sensesofcinema.com/ Visit Rouge: http://www.rouge.com.au/ Visit Lola Journal: http://www.lolajournal.com/ Visit Screening The Past: http://www.screeningthepast.com/ Read essays by Bill Krohn: http://sensesofcinema.com/author/bill-krohn/
A Sydney Ideas event for Innovation Week 2018, bringing together medical researchers focusing around both ends of the demographic spectrum - youth mental health and dementia and art practitioners to consider these question and more. Featuring Associate Professor Elizabeth Scott, Professor Sharon Naismith, Gill Nicol, Samantha Meers AO, Bernadette Harvey and Fenella Kernebone (moderator). A Sydney Ideas event for Innovation Week held at the University of Sydney on Wednesday August 1 2018. https://sydney.edu.au/news-opinion/sydney-ideas/2018/art-and-neuroplasticity-are-they-linked.html TIMESTAMPS Introductions: 0:00 – 3:35 Liz Scott: 3:40 – 14:10 Sharon Naismith: 14:23 – 28:55 Gill Nicol: 29:15 – 39:30 Bernadette Harvey: 39:55 – 48:40 Samantha Meers: 49:05 – 56:04 Panel discussion: 56:20 – 1:12:30 Audience Q&A: 1:12:55 to end
Fenella Kernebone is the Head of Curation for TEDxSydney, responsible for leading the programming for what has become one of the most significant TEDx events in the world. She also curates the youth program, TEDxYouth@Sydney and TEDxSydney Salons. Fenella manages a team of over 20 curators and producers dedicated to spreading great ideas and strong stories in fields including science, technology, arts, business, and design. Fenella is also a noted television and radio presenter and producer, MC, interviewer and writer with a distinguished career working in arts, music, design, and culture. She started as the host for the TEDxSydney Livestream for three years before becoming Head of Curation. She’s one of 250 volunteers at this massive event. This episode is perfect for any organizer who’s deeply involved in curation, as she goes into all the tips and tricks, as well as how to manage the process in depth. This episode is a must listen for anyone that’s trying to figure out where to find speakers, and how to keep getting amazing speakers year over year. I was particularly keen on learning about their FAST IDEAS concept. All attendees are encouraged to participate and get their idea on stage. There’s a separate team that works with them to get to 8-10 finalists who get a thirty-second spot on the red circle, with the audience voting by applause for who the winner is.
Shelter Hacks: Art & Architecture conversation curated by Penny Craswell featuring special guest panellists: Timothy Horton, Registrar, NSW Architects Registration Board, and Hugo Moline & Heidi Axelsen, architect-artist duo and creators of Owner Occupy (SCAF Project 28). Moderated by noted TV and radio presenter Fenella Kernebone. Recorded at Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF), 16 September 2015, in association with SCAF Project 27, Sack and Reicher + Muller with Eyal Zur: Sway, and SCAF Project 28, Hugo Moline and Heidi Axelson: Owner Occupy.
Today the interviewer interviews the interviewer: Fenella Kernebone brought her music expertise and good yarns to Out of the Box! We discussed her new podcast Trackwork, which unpacks one track per show - the samples, the ideas, the stories - with musicians like Fishing, PVT & Caitlin Park.