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Pierre Bleuse hat seine Mutter bereits vor seiner Geburt singen gehört Der Vater ist Komponist, der Bruder Cellist, die Schwester Pianistin - ein Musikhaushalt, wie er klingender nicht sein könnte. Pierre Bleuse wird zuerst Geiger und dann zieht es ihn zum Dirigieren. Zur Dirigentenlegende Jorma Panula. Heute leitet Bleuse das auf neue Musik spezailisierte Ensemble Intercontemporain und das Sinfonieorchester im dänischen Odense. Mit lebenden KomponistInnen zu sprechen: das hilft. Aber auch mit den verstorbenen. Mit manchen von ihnen ist Bleuse sogar per Du. Ausserdem im Musikmagazin: (1'03) Ein zaghafter Vorausblick auf das zukünftige Menuhin Festival Gstaad mit dessen designiertem Leiter Daniel Hope (11'57) Mit dem Geiger Augustin Hadelich quer durch die USA und mit dem Buchautor Björn Gottstein quer durch 80 Jahre Musikgeschichte, neueste Musikgeschichte (32'46) Der Dirigent Pierre Bleuse im Kaffeegespräch (49'50) Barbara Schirmer und die Bäume, ein neues Projekt der innovativen Hackbrettspielerin: "Baumsy"
Wie schreibt man ein Buch über Neue Musik? Wir bringt man ihre zahlreichen Strömungen, Stile, Schulen und Seitenwege in eine lesbare Form? Björn Gottstein hat es versucht und eine „kurze Geschichte der Neuen Musik“ geschrieben: „Der Klang der Gegenwart“. Michael Rebhahn über ein Lesebuch, aus dem Kenner und Liebhaber gleichermaßen Gewinn ziehen können.
WegeBedarf - Der BestBuddyPodcast für Deine persönliche unternehmerische Freiheit
Gelungene Nachfolge. Eine der größten Herausforderungen im UnternehmerLeben. Am Ende des aktiven UnternehmerSein will man ja den geschaffenen Wert seines Lebenswerk gerne realisieren und in gute Hände übergeben. 600.000 BabyBoomer stehen gerade vor dieser Herausforderung. Die allermeisten sind kaum bis gar nicht angemessen vorbereitet. 2vor3 Übergaben scheitern - völlig unnötig, wenn man früh genug und systematisch beginnt Benjamin Gottstein ist CEO der Succeed-UnternehmensBeratung. Mit einem beleuchten wir wichtige Erfolgsfaktoren für eine gelungene Nachfolge - unter anderem auch das Loslassen des Inhaber mit der 1TageWoche, der Aufbau eine zweiten Führungsebene, die das operative Tagesgeschäft stabil souverän beherrschen und natürlich auch die Frage, was die Unternehmer erfüllend in ihrem aktiven Unruhestand tun wollen.
Emerald Downs concluded the 2023 season on a high note last Sunday, September 17, and Joe and Vince recap the action that decided several season-ending honors including Slew's Tiz Whiz earning his second consecutive Horse of the Meeting title. Thanks to all who made the year memorable – the fans and handicappers, the horsemen and their grooms, EmD staff and officials and, of course the horses! Trainer Tom Wenzel joins Joe and Vince and speaks to his great season that ended on a very high note. Closing day, Slew's Tiz Whiz took the Muckleshoot Tribal Classic and Miner League won the Gottstein Futurity. Wenzel tied a record in earning his third consecutive Gottstein, all for owner George Todaro. Bill McMeans won three straight Gottsteins at Longacres, 1970-72. Wenzel had seven stakes wins to lead all trainers. EmD open seven days a week for full card simulcasting.
Check out Jenny's website here: https://www.jennygottstein.com/homeGrab a copy of our BOOK here: http://winningtheweek.com/ SUBSCRIBE to our podcast on the platform of your choice! Spotify: http://spoti.fi/3pNtPVe Apple Podcasts: http://apple.co/3tiIpWW Or subscribe to our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/LifehackBootcamp Time stamps:0:00 - Jenny's background3:35 - Background on Sparkle Zone7:01 - What is the Sparkle Zone?13:20 - An unexpected example of a mission statement17:01 - Making your life's purpose sparkle22:59 - Why this exercise is SO potent25:00 - Balancing your buckets is vital29:25 - Final thoughts- Check out our FREE masterclass all about How To Plan The Perfect Week In 30 Minutes Flat: https://bit.ly/3eEZ9AQ Check out our website: https://lifehackmethod.com/ How To Win Your Week - Every Week [BLOG]: https://lifehackmethod.com/2021/07/23/how-to-win-your-week-every-week/ How To FINISH What You Start: https://youtu.be/TE-cMqZJ_Vo
Why does video content work better than the other platforms?How does video establish your authority and the credibility of your business?How can we produce content that effectively reaches and satisfies our target audience?Today, we discuss How to Write the Best Script for Videos.Watch it on YouTube: https://youtu.be/LOMs339PL8gNothing delivers the authority of a speaker like speaking to somebody face to face than a video since it allows us to do that on every social media platform nowadays. However, presenting our brand online can be much more difficult now than it was when social media platforms were first starting to emerge. People can quickly scroll down and ignore our content once they see its incapability to satisfy their needs. Hence, as businesspersons, we must recognize the power of the title and first sentence we present to the world that establishes a hook between what we offer and the needs of our audience.Moreover, it is crucial to have a thorough understanding of the audience that you seek to connect with, from the names they express down to the terminologies within their core understanding. Thus, to succeed in your brand marketing, you must attend this primary stage. And we must also practice being more inclusive with our content rather than exclusive, such as using jargon. Hence, we should consult people with varied backgrounds or areas of competence with the proper approach to reach more individuals. They will likely respond positively and engage with your business offer and services.Show highlights:Maslow's Hierarchy of NeedsWho is your audience?Make a promiseTell them! One thing.The call to action!Grab & hold the audience's attentionLearn script formulas5 steps to write & create a successful videoAbout our Speaker: Helen Gottstein is an Executive communication trainer, public speaking with confidence & clarity. Her job is to get you heard and take you from anxious to excited in a single bound. Helen works to package your stories, boost your public speaking presence and deliver both warmth and super-smart messaging to the audiences you want to persuade. It's all about understanding the role that respects for yourself and your audience play. Hellen offers practical, immediately applicable, hands-on presentation skills training for teams and individual executives in Hebrew and English. She works with companies worldwide, helping people to deliver their ideas, expertise, and skills. Hence, they get the clients, investments, and partnerships they aim to connect with.Find out more about Hellen: Website: https://www.loudandcleartraining.com/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/helen-gottstein-1597747/Facebook: https://web.facebook.com/publicspeakisrael/Twitter: https://twitter.com/timesofisraelBIGVU, the powerful Video, Captioning & Teleprompter App:BIGVU 7 days Trial: https://desk.bigvu.tv/register?utm_so...iOS: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/bigvu-v...Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/de...Website: https://bigvu.tv/-------------------Made Possible by BIGVU - a TV studio pro in your pocket. BIGVU transforms photos, video shoots, and tweets into stunning video sequences that captivate your audience.Learn more about BIGVU:Website: https://bigvu.tvTeleprompter: https://bigvu.tv/teleprompter-app.htmlCaptions: https://bigvu.tv/automatic-captions.htmlGreen Screen: https://bigvu.tv/create/replace-green-screenConnect with us via:https://thevideopresentershow.bigvu.tvhttps://www.instagram.com/bigvu.makerhttps://www.facebook.com/socialvideocreatorhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/bigvuhttps://twitter.com/videoinspire
Study referenced at 17:15 - https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21300943/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/psychology-is/support
Johnny Gottstein of Gott Professional Insurance Services shares how working through adversity helped him build a company with a unique niche.
The investigation into the illegal promotion of the drug Zyprexa by the US justice department resulted in the largest sum for both a corporate whistleblower claim and the largest criminal fine ever imposed by the US upon a single company. On today's podcast we welcome Jim Gottstein, famous for subpoenaing and releasing the Zyprexa papers.The Zyprexa Papers Paperback - Jim GottsteinIf you are in a crisis or think you have an emergency, call your doctor or 911. If you're considering suicide, call 1-800-273-TALK to speak with a skilled trained counselor.RADICALLY GENUINE PODCASTRadically Genuine Podcast Website Twitter: Roger K. McFillin, Psy.D., ABPPInstagram @radgenpodTikTok @radgenpodRadGenPodcast@gmail.comADDITIONAL RESOURCES4:30 - Eli Lilly Said to Play Down Risk of Top Pill - The New York Times5:00 - Eli Lilly and Company Agrees to Pay $1.415 Billion to Resolve Allegations of Off-label Promotion of Zyprexa11:00 - Mad in America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and the Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally Ill: Whitaker, Robert12:00 - Law Project for Psychiatric Rights20:00 - Olanzapine (Zyprexa) | NAMI: National Alliance on Mental Illness37:00 - The Psychiatric Drugging of Children & Elderly44:00 - PsychRights: Lucy Booth: Psychiatric "help" - The Doctor was Fooled or Complicit54:00 - Why is the FDA Funded in Part by the Companies It Regulates? - UConn Today.54:40 - Federal Register :: Revised Draft Guidance for Industry on Distributing Scientific and Medical Publications on Unapproved New Uses-Recommended Practices; Availability59:00 - A Strategic Approach to Mental Health System Change1:02:30 - California COVID misinformation bill targets doctors spreading false information
1,6 Milliarden Franken Verlust meldet die Credit Suisse fürs zweite Quartal. Die Führung der Bank reagiert nun mit einem neuen Sparprogramm und Anpassungen in der Strategie. Nach nur zweieinhalb Jahren an der CS-Spitze ist Konzernchef Thomas Gottstein schon wieder weg. Weitere Themen: (05:37) CS-Chef Gottstein stolpert über eigene Ziele (11:34) «Die Taliban haben viel versprochen, aber wenig gehalten» (18:11) UNO-Menschenrechtskommissarin: Ein «unmögliches Amt» (22:56) US-Inflation: «Es ist schlimm, Benzin ist so teuer» (26:22) Seco: Die Schaltzentrale der Schweizer Wirtschaftspolitik (30:02) Interview mit Seco-Chefin Marie-Gabrielle Ineichen-Fleisch
Informationen, Hintergründe und Meinungen zum tagesaktuellen Geschehen - in Zürich, der Schweiz und international. Kompakt, schnell, aktuell.
The 10 year anniversary at FSAS!!! cheresh_n_ja on youtube: youtube.com/channel/UC1koTD-VwEdVYW0INxuBcxQ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/freie-schule-anne-sophie/message
Psychiatric rights continues to be a contentious issue as psychiatric drugging and other controversial treatments continue to be used in alarmingly increasing rates. This strikes a particularly painful chord for Jim Gottstein, who had personally experienced how abusive the psychiatric health system can be. Not long after his personal experience, he went on to become an advocate for people being subjected to involuntary commitment and forced drugging by launching litigation campaigns. He documents one particularly compelling story of how he helped one individual go through these hearings in his book, The Zyprexa Papers. Jim joins Timothy J. Hayes, Psy.D. to explain in detail how he fought and won that landmark case. Tune in and take part in this conversation that opens our eyes to the realities of the psychiatric system and big pharma and how a few brave voices are fighting back.Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share!Here's How »Join the On Your Mind Community today:journeysdream.orgTwitterInstagramFacebookYouTube
Jenny Gottstein & Olivia Vagelos, experiential designers at IDEO, share juicy details and stories that show how just about any experience can be made better with a bit of intentional design.
Wer heute von Mutationen spricht, der meint mutierte Viren. Aber der Begriff ist natürlich viel weitläufiger und auch nicht immer so negativ gemeint. Denn Mutationen sind ja zunächst einmal Veränderungen. Die Akademie Schloss Solitude hat einen Forschungscluster ins Leben gerufen, der sich der Mutation widmet und an der Künstler und Wissenschaftler gemeinsam mitwirken. Björn Gottstein stellt das Projekt vor.
Am Abend des 12. Oktober wurde bekannt gegeben, dass die Donaueschinger Musiktage 2020 ausfallen werden. Das Festival hätte schon drei Tage später, am 15. Oktober beginnen müssen. Die kurzfristige Absage ist für alle Beteiligten umso schmerzhafter, sagt Festivalleiter Björn Gottstein. Wie es zu der Absage kam, was hinter den Kulissen passierte und was jetzt ansteht, erzählt Gottstein im Gespräch.
My conversation with Helen Gottstein, CEO of Loud & Clear Communication takes us on a journey on how best to present yourself, your story and your business. The power of presentation is even more important in today's world of Zoom and Microsoft Teams. Listen to Helen to learn how to bring your best presenting self to business. We cover all this and more in the first episode of 'Coffee with Curtis'.
Two Washington Cup races and the Gottstein highlight week #15 at Emerald Downs. The Muckleshoot Tribal Classic pits full brothers Papa's Golden Boy and Gold Crusher meeting for the first time while Alittlelesstalk is a strong favorite to take her fourth local stakes victory in the Filly & Mare. Spectacular juvenile Dutton headlines the Gottstein's ten-horse field. Breeder-owner-author Tim Floyd is a guest interview. Floyd is connected with top racemare Alittlelesstalk and second-time starter Myuddermamasapaint in the Gottstein. Also interviewed is Papa's Golden Boy co-owner Jeff Lusk, speaking to their speedster's development and chances for Muckleshoot victory. Preview, recap, stats, trivia and selections.
Die Donaueschinger Musiktage finden 2020 in einer veränderten Form statt. Der Vorverkauf läuft bereits. Björn Gottstein, SWR-Redakteur und Künstlerischer Leiter der Musiktage, spricht im SWR2 Musikgespräch über den aktuellen Stand der Planungen.
Vom 15.-18. Oktober sollen die Donaueschinger Musiktage 2020 stattfinden. Der künstlerische Leiter und SWR-Redakteur Björn Gottstein berichtet live im Gespräch mit Moderator Jörg Lengersdorf vom aktuellen Stand der Planung. Die eigentlich vorgesehene Programmvorstellung wurde vom heutigen Tag auf den 1. September verschoben.
Jim Gottstein's legal education was interrupted by a psychological breakdown, but he managed to get back on his feet without becoming a lifetime drug consumer, completed his legal education at Harvard Law School, and turned his attention to helping others. So it was no surprise when internal Eli Lilly documents on the antipsychotic Zyprexa (Olanzapine) were sent to him. But the drug company did not like this and dragged him into a long drawn-out court battle to get him to close the barn door after the horses had fled (Jim had forwarded the documents to others, and not all of them returned and destroyed them). In this discussion, and in his book, “The Zyprexa Papers”, Jim also describes how he fought against the forced drugging of psychiatric patients in his home state of Alaska. Another long, drawn-out battle, with some successes, some failures. For more on Jim's work see: http://gottsteinlaw.com and http://psychrights.org
“I was deeply impressed. They managed much bigger volumes than in any normal period, and we were really very proud and still are very proud how our fixed income and equity traders managed these challenges, because it was certainly not an easy environment.” Thomas Gottstein became CEO of Credit Suisse on February 14, 2020. Within three weeks, the world had changed, and he found himself leading the storied firm through the uncharted waters of a pandemic. Moreover, Credit Suisse took a leading role in developing and executing its nation's rescue package. Gottstein, a 20-year veteran of Credit Suisse, understands the occasion to which his industry must rise: “Since the financial crisis, there were a lot of negative comments about the role of banks….This crisis has helped us to emphasize the important role banks can play in supporting the broader economy and supporting private individuals, corporates, or institutions in times of crisis.”
Big pharmaceutical company Eli Lily was hiding the truth about the harms caused by their antipsychotic medication called Zyprexa -- until lawyer Jim Gottstein got a hold of the evidence and shared it with the New York Times. You will not be surprised to hear that Eli Lily’s lawyers went after Jim hard with criminal charges to destroy his career, his livelihood and his freedom. In my interview with Jim about his personal experience with the mental health system, and his legal career focused on mental health, I ask him why he’s exposing big pharma deceit now in his new book The Zyprexa Papers. Jim also tells about his personal experience with psychosis when he was over worked and under slept, and woke suddenly one night and thought he was being chased by the devil. Jim threw himself out a 2nd story window to escape. Fortunately, Jim is also skydiver, and knew how to roll his landing without injury. But it was Jim’s lived experience in the mental health system that prepared him for legal battles representing clients about mental health issues. Jim’s lived experience with the mental health system is priceless, adds value to a good legal defense, and cannot be taught in law school. Jim also tells the story of how he became the lawyer to expose Eli Lily’s lies about the safety of their Zyprexa medication and the impact that had on his life and career. Jim became a leader in the psychiatric survivor community, founding patient organizations including PsychRights.org - and providing his legal services pro bono to clients who didn’t want to be forced to take medications. In The Zyprexa Papers, Jim gives a riveting first-hand account of what really happened, including new details about how a small group of psychiatric survivors spread the Zyprexa Papers on the Internet untraceably. All of this within a gripping, plain-language explanation of complex legal maneuvering and his battles on behalf of Bill Bigley, the psychiatric patient whose ordeal made possible the exposure of the Zyprexa Papers. The Zyprexa Papers included hundreds of internal Eli Lilly documents and emails that showed company officials knew their best-selling drug was severely harming people while scarcely helping anyone. Release of the papers exposed the abuses of the drug industry besides the harm that Zyprexa was doing. The series of front page stories in "The New York Times" could have saved tens of thousands of lives according to Jim's estimate. The public benefits greatly from Jim’s efforts, not only because of the life-saving information he released, but also because he’s a courageous model for other people to follow in exposing the predatory practices in the pharmaceutical industry. SHOW NOTES: 0:06:00 Jim was born in Anchorage Alaska in 1953 - it was a nice place to grow up - he was a pretty normal boy, he got to play little league, walk around town, ride bikes - when Jim was born Anchorage only had about 25,000 people, but now it is close to 400,000 0:07:00 Jim went to the University of Oregon to study business and to get a degree in finance, but one of the required courses was business law, and he didn't miss a question the entire term - he thought it may be a bette fit for him, so he took advanced business law and then decided to go to law school 0:08:00 Jim didn't do well enought in high school to get into any 'good' schools, and wanted to keep his options open by doing well in college - his 1st term was okay with a lot of Bs - Jim decided he had too much free time so increased his number of courses - the next term he got all As with one B 0:09:00 By over loading his courses, he graduated in 3 years - in his last term he needed 10 hours of anything to graduate, so he took 10 hours of teaching sky diving 0:10:00 Jim got his pilot's license when he was 17 - and then went to Harvard for law school 0:11:00 Jim's mom got him a job for lawyer Bob Goldberg, son of Justice Arthur Goldberg who was on the US Supreme Court - Bob had to move to Alaska to escape his father's shadow - Bob represented some of the Native groups 0:12:00 After a few years, Jim opened his own law practice and also decided to run for the State Senate, had traveled to Europe and Israel so was jet lagged and not getting enough sleep and Jim had a psychotic break - Jim had gone to his father's place to sleep but woke at 1am and thought the devil was coming for him - he was on the 2nd floor of the house and looked out the window 0:13:00 Jim thought he could jump far enough to miss the pavement and land on the grass - he jumped out the window and did a rolling landing parachute jump and ran across the street to the school parking lot but thought the devil was still chasing so kept looking over his shoulder - he was put in a straight jacket and hauled off to the Alasks Psychiatric Institute and they pumped him full of something that put him to sleep 0:14:00 Jim has always counted on his mind to accomplish what he set out to do and what was going on - so it was a shock that his mind could become completely unreliable - JIm remembers waking in the hospital and the male nurse asking Jim what day it was 0:15:00 Jim asked how long he'd been asleep - so the nurse noted that Jim wasn't oriented to time - so that was the start of the Alice in Wonderland experience of being in a psychiatric hospital - Jim was given Melaril , he told them he didn't want the psych med thorazine - thorazine was the first of the neuropleptic drugs for people with schizophrenia - it blocks about 80% of the dopamine, so they are basically chemical lobotomies 0:16:00 Jim knew he didn't want to have a 'committed involuntarily' label, so he signed himself in for treatment, but it was hardly voluntary - Jim's fiancee said he was still campaigning in the psych ward, handing out baseball caps, so Jim was pretty out of it - but was doing better and released after 30 days - Jim's not sure the medication did much for him 0:17:00 Jim's father connected Jim with a psychiatrist in New Rochelle, New York and he diagnosed Jim with biploar disorder - but the psych hospital had diagnosed him with atypical psychosis - Jim didn't find that psychiatrist very helpful - then Jim's mother connected him with another psychiatrist, Robert Alberts, who had been a Japanese prisoner of war - Jim says Robert was a wonderful person and told Jim that any one who misses enough sleep will become psychotic - and that Jim needed to manage that - Jim credits Robert with saving Jim from being made permanently mentally health by the mental health system because Jim had that he would never practice law again 0:18:00 When he told hospital staff he'd gone to Harvard law school, that confirmed to them Jim was delusional - Jim didn't accept their conclusion he'd never be able to practice law again, they'd call it 'denial' - Jim says 'denial' of being mental ill is one of the most positive things you can do - because the message of the mental health system is 'abandon all hope ye who enter here' 0:19:00 When in the hospital, they wanted to put Jim on lithium - he said he was a pilot and he couldn't fly if he was taking lithium, but they didn't care about that - so they creatine clearance test to his kidney function because lithium is hard on the liver and Jim's known a number of people killed by lithium - to do the test, they needed a kidnay biopsy, but the doctor couldn't find Jim's kidney's to do the test 0:20:00 Jim finds that work pressure with deadlines - and the habit is to always make the document better and file at the last minute - so Jim tries to file the day before so he doesn't have that sleep problem 0:21:00 Jim knows that if he's not getting enough sleep he can get into trouble, he knows the signs - the first sign is that Jim gets more witty with rejoinders, but nobogy notices except himself - then he'll have 'thought blocking' when he just stops for a few seconds when he's talking (his thoughts are blocked) - the next stage is that Jim thinks people are looking at him funny - he deals with that by telling himself that he's probably not acting funny 0:22:00 Then he'll also try to look at himself from 'above' to see if he's doing anything weird - at that point Jim may take a benzodiazipine (Halcyon) - just to break the cycle and get a nights sleep - it usually only takes 1 pill and then it'll be a year before he needs it again - benzos are highly addictive so its important not to take them daily 0:23:00 The FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) said Jim couldn't fly for 2 days after taking a benzo 0:24:00 Jim got involved in the legal side of mental health simultaneiously with his own psychotic break - in 1956 Congress enacted the Alaska Mental Health Enabling Act and gave a bunch of land for that purpose - later another Act redisgated that land for the state and said they'd maybe pay for it 0:25:00 Jim's mother was head of the Alaska Mental Health at the time and went to Congress and said you can't take this land, that's not legal - they said we don't care - so they sued them and won a billion dollar settlement 0:26:00 Jim found a couple of mental health 'consumer' groups - he was also on the Board of the Alaska Mental Health - then in 2002, Jim read Mad in America, Bad Science, Bad Medicine and the Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally Ill by Robert Whittaker - to Jim it was a raodmap to challenging forced psychiatric drugging - JIm founded the Law Project for Psychiatric Rights (PsychRights.org) - and it challenged that and shock therapy 0:27:00 PsychRights also educates the public about these medications and shock therapy and their risks - Jim says we shouldn't call ECT (electro convulsive therapy) 'therapy' because it is not 0:28:00 The shock machines were invented in the 50s and have been modified since then - but before the FDA was responsible for regulating medical devices - but they didn't do that for 20 - 30 years - then in the last year they basically said that shock treatment is not harmful and we're not going to regulate them - Jim's says that is outrageous 0:29:00 Just shows how people in psychiatry just don't think - they're running electricity through the brain to cause a grand mal seizure, where neurologists do everything they can to prevent grand mal seizures - the convulsions were so intense people would break bones, bite through their tongue - now they anaesthetize them, but that requires more electricity to cause the convulsion 0:30:00 Dr Peter Breggin has written great psychiatry books - and he says electro shock is really a closed head injury - some people when they get a head injury, become euphoric for a while - but people have horrendous memory loss they don't get back - Jim thinks electro shock should be banned - its barbaric 0:31:00 A court in Conneticut has ordered a woman to be shocked against her will 500 times - that's the thing about psychiatry, 'if something doesn't work, do more of it' - 0:32:00 In November 2006 Jim received a call an expert witness in a massive lawsuit over side effects from the psych med Zyprexa - like diabetes and other metabolic problmes Eli Lily had not owned up to - he said he had documents showing Eli Lily knew from the beginning, hid it from the doctors and they were illegally marketing it to children and the elderly - but he was under a secrecy order - however if he was subpoanaed in another case - he wanted to know if Jim would do that - there's more to the story and that's what is book The Zyprexa Papers is about the New York Times published some articles 0:33:00 The expert witness had also been working with a writer from the New York Times, Alex Berenson - the expert witness gave the documents to Jim - there were a series of front page stories in the NYT and then Eli Lily came after Jim with criminal charges and to the Alaska Bar Association to try to get Jim disbarred 0:34:00 Zyprexa is a 2nd generation neuroleptic medication, also called antipsychotic, but that's just a marketing term - 'neuroleptic' means 'seize the brain' and that is what they do - in the 90s they started atypical neuroleptics which supposedly didn't have negative effects like tardive dyskinesia (results in involuntary, repetitive body movements, which may include grimacing, sticking out the tongue, or smacking the lips) - basically drug induced Parkinson's Disease 0:35:00 It blocks 70 - 90% of dopamine in the basal ganglia, same thing with Parkinson's patients - licking their lips, strange movements - and doctors interpret that in Zyprexa patients as mental illness, not as negative effects of Zyprexa - Eli Lily said this new generation of atypical meds didn't have tardive dyskenesia and that was a lie - another negative effect was neuroliptic malignant syndrome and it is often fatal, and Eli Lily lied about that too 0:36:00 Risperdal causes little boys to grow breasts, called gynecomastia - Seroquel causes problems, like elongates the heart rhythm and that can cause death - they are putting Veterans on Seroquel and another medication and they are dying in their sleep from this drug cocktail - they were prescribed originally for schizophrenia and the manic phase of bipolar disorder - cut in the US a doctor can prescribe any drug for any thing 0:37:00 Pharmaceuticals can only market a drug for a specific illness, but they do it anyway through various guises and artifices, like ghost writing articles, basically huge fraud perpetrated on the public - Dr David Eagleman was the expert witness and had these documents proving Eli Lily's lies and thought the public should know, but he was under a secrecy order 0:38:00 Dr Eagleman was looking for someone to subpeona him and Jim had just won a case for Faith Myers where they wanted to force her to take Zyprexa - Jim had a great witness, Dr Grace Jackson, and she analyzed the papers on which Zyprexa was given approval by the FDA, and she could see it caused diabetes just from that - but not just diabetes 0:39:00 People would gain a 100 pounds in a year - Dr Jackson found the studies were fraudulent - because the meds block dopamine, the first thing the brain does is try to pump out more dopamine - then after a few weeks it grows more dopamine receptors 0:40:00 So abrupt withdrawal causes some people to experience psychosis - but the doctor will say 'see what happens when you're not on medication' - but some people did quite well with the sudden withdrawal, but those people were thrown out of the study 0:41:00 About 2/3 of people in the study dropped out because of the negative effects - so Dr Jackson put all this in a report 0:42:00 Jim shared the documents with the NYT in 2006 and found someone to put them on the internet 0:43:00 Then a group called Psychiatric Survivors got involved - another group Mind Freedom.org with David Oakes, and they also helped get it out - Jim says it was amazing how Eli Lily could whip up Federal Judges to issues orders against Jim without him even being given notice 0:44:00 Psychiatric survivor Eric Weiland had posted them on his website and Eli Lily harassed and threatened him so he took them down - Pat Riser passed away a few years ago probably a result of psych drugging, he wrote the Eli Lilly and said 'geez, I saw these in the NYT and downloaded them and made a few CDs of them and sent them to newspapers and family and friends and went to... 0:45:00 ...handed them out in a shopping plaza parking lot - I didn't know they were illegal and sorry, I'm not going to be able to get them all back' - that's one of Jim's favorite vignettes - but Eli Lily had endless money to fight Jim 0:46:00 Jim testified and the judge ruled Jim conspired to steal the documents and a 'criminal act' and that set up Jim for criminal contempt charges 0:47:00 One of the clients in the case had a Gaurdian, and it was only the Gaurdian who could sign release papers so Jim could look at the client's medical records 0:48:00 Jim did get the medical records and the client had been drugged with Zyuprexa against his will - he was held down and injected with it 0:49:00 Eli Lily had portrayed themselves as the 'victim' in the lawsuit, so going after Jim, and the ensuing publicity, would've make Eli Lily look bad - they could have crushed Jim financially - so it was scary because the consequences could have been severe, including jail time 0:50:00 Zyprexa is still available and still forced - about 3 years ago Jim had financial troubles and had to give up most of the pro bono Pysch Rights work he'd been doing for 14 years and boost his law practice 0:51:00 After a year he had some clients but not a lot, so used his time to write the book - Jim would like the public to be aware because he thinks they'll be shocked by Jim's representation of Bill Bickley and to stop him from being drugged against his will 0:52:00 Jim represented him for 4 years, 10 trials and 5 trips to the Alaska Supreme Court - one of those decisions was an important precedent 0:53:00 Jim's says people are really taken with the 2 chapters on his defence of Bill Bickley and how the system is set up against patients, it is basically a kangaroo court - Bill's wife had divorced him and took custody of the 2 kids and sued him for child support which he couldn't afford - he had a good job as a heavy equipment operator and had a nervous breakdown - so Jim tries to convey how people's lives are ruined by what psychiatry does to them 0:54:00 In 2007, Dr Jackson testified that if Bill was continued to be drugged, he'd be dead within 5 years, and she was off by 6 months - Bill's Gaurdian didn't want Jim representing Bill, because they wanted him drugged - Jim won about half the cases for Bill - the Gaurdian told Jim that Bill didn't want Jim to represent him anymore, and Jim said that he'd never heard Bill say that 0:55:00 The judge asked Bill if he wanted Jim to represent him, and Bill said 'Jim knows a lot about me. And I'm the president." - the Gaurdian changed their tune after that, and said that Bill was not competent to make the decision - while Jim won half of Bill'ls cases, the Public Defendor who lost all but one of the cases - but the Alaska Supreme Court decided that Bill could not choose Jim as his lawyer, and that is a very frightening thing - so they got to drug him without constraint and he died within a couple of years 0:56:00 Jim pointed out to the Gaurdian that these drugs shorten lives, and the Gaurdian argued that quality of life is important - but they didn't care what Bill thought of his quality of life, and it was better without the drugs 0:57:00 One of the reasons Jim wrote the Zyprexa Papers is to bring people's attention - it is available on Amazon in Kindle or paperback 0:58:00 To connect with Jim, go to PsychRights.org and email him through that site 0:59:00 Jim talks to people all the time who had no idea this was going on - 'you can learn from your mistakes, but its better to learn from other people's mistakes' - hopefully he can prevent other people from having this sort of terrible thing happen to them Twitter: https://twitter.com/jimgottstein Connect with Jim Gottstein on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jim.gottstein http://psychrights.org/http://gottsteinlaw.com/Author of The Zyprexa Papershttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B0838YYYWV Be a podcast patron Support Medical Error Interviews on Patreon by becoming a Patron for $2 / month for audio versions. Premium Patrons get access to video versions of podcasts for $5 / month. Be my Guest I am always looking for guests to share their medical error experiences so we help bring awareness and make patients safer. If you are a survivor, a victim’s surviving family member, a health care worker, advocate, researcher or policy maker and you would like to share your experiences, please send me an email with a brief description: RemediesPodcast@gmail.com Need a Counsellor? Like me, many of my clients at Remedies Counseling have experienced the often devastating effects of medical error. If you need a counsellor for your experience with medical error, or living with a chronic illness(es), I offer online video counseling appointments. **For my health and life balance, I limit my number of counseling clients.** Email me to learn more or book an appointment: RemediesOnlineCounseling@gmail.com Scott Simpson: Counsellor + Patient Advocate + (former) Triathlete I am a counsellor, patient advocate, and - before I became sick and disabled - a passionate triathlete. Work hard. Train hard. Rest hard. I have been living with HIV since 1998. I was the first person living with HIV to compete at the triathlon world championships. Thanks to research and access to medications, HIV is not a problem in my life. I have been living with ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) since 2012, and thanks in part to medical error, it is a big problem in my life. Counseling / Research I first became aware of the ubiquitousness of medical error during a decade of community based research working with the HIV Prevention Lab at Ryerson University, where I co-authored two research papers on a counseling intervention for people living with HIV, here and here. Patient participants would often report varying degrees of medical neglect, error and harms as part of their counseling sessions. Patient Advocacy I am co-founder of the ME patient advocacy non-profit Millions Missing Canada, and on the Executive Committee of the Interdisciplinary Canadian Collaborative Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Research Network. I am also a patient advisor for Health Quality Ontario’s Patient and Family Advisory Council, and member of Patients for Patient Safety Canada. Medical Error Interviews podcast and vidcast emerged to give voice to victims, witnesses and participants in this hidden epidemic so we can create change toward a safer health care system. My golden retriever Gladys is a constant source of love and joy. I hope to be well enough again one day to race triathlons again. Or even shovel the snow off the sidewalk.
Rabbi Dr. Shmuly Yanklowitz, President & Dean of Valley Beit Midrash interviews Rabbi Dr. Alon Goshen-Gottstein, the founder and director of the Elijah Interfaith Institute (http://elijah-interfaith.org/), on the topic of "On Religious Pluralism and 'Truth.'" DONATE: http://www.bit.ly/1NmpbsP For podcasts of VBM lectures, GO HERE: https://www.valleybeitmidrash.org/learning-library https://www.facebook.com/valleybeitmidrash
Rabbi Dr. Alon Goshen-Gottstein, , the founder and director of the Elijah Interfaith Institute (elijah-interfaith.org/), presents his Valley Beit Midrash lecture "Luther was an Anti-Semite – What Does That Mean For Us?" before an audience at Temple Chai (www.templechai.com/) in Phoenix, AZ. ABOUT THIS LECTURE: Martin Luther shaped western culture. He also contributed to antisemitism, eventually inspiring the Third Reich. Is there another way of dealing with this issue than simply condemning Luther? I will suggest that what went wrong with Luther can go wrong with how any member of one religion sees another. Luther is a great teacher also in his failings. DONATE: www.bit.ly/1NmpbsP For more info, please visit: www.facebook.com/valleybeitmidrash/ www.facebook.com/temple.chai twitter.com/VBMTorah www.facebook.com/RabbiShmulyYanklowitz/ Music: "They Say" by WowaMusik, a public domain track from the YouTube Audio Library.
Rabbi Dr. Alon Goshen-Gottstein, the founder and director of the Elijah Interfaith Institute (http://elijah-interfaith.org/), presents his Valley Beit Midrash lecture "Being Inspired by the Religious Geniuses of Other Faiths" before an audience at Congregation Beth Israel (www.cbiaz.org/) in Scottsdale, AZ. ABOUT THIS LECTURE: Great personalities in religion are sources of inspiration. They allow us to see the best in religion. The category of Religious Genius has been developed in order to allow us to appreciate outstanding individuals across religions. Who is a religious genius? what are the qualities that make him or her special and how can these speak to everyone? DONATE: bit.ly/1NmpbsP For more info, please visit: www.facebook.com/valleybeitmidrash/ www.facebook.com/cbiaz twitter.com/VBMTorah www.facebook.com/RabbiShmulyYanklowitz/ Music: "They Say" by WowaMusik, a public domain track from the YouTube Audio Library.
http://www.maceopaisley.com/about may-cee-oh n. multi-disciplinary artist, designer, and cultural producer who explores themes in society and identity through movement, language, and imagery. - - - - - - after serving the in the u.s. army and climbing the ladders of corporate America, maceo "paisley" keeling III made his way into the world of arts, entertainment, and entrepreneurship. for the past decade maceo has danced professionally, performed on national stages as a spoken word and performance artist, as Executive Director of the non-profit platform Citizens of Culture, he uses art to help communities and organizations develop critical thinking, emotional intelligence, and resource inequality. maceo is a bronze star awardee for his service in Iraq, in 2015 he was a participant of the Millennial Trains Project, and was a NBCUniversal Challenge Grant recipient, in 2016 he was a member of the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs exhibition SKiN, opened Nous Tous gallery and retail space in Chinatown, Los Angeles and continues to work as a dancer/choreographer for the likes of indie rock sensation Beirut, Justin Timberlake, and performance art exhibits with groups like Marciano Art Foundation, and (LAND) Los Angeles Nomadic Division. In 2018 maceo collaborated with director Leila Jarman, and composer Michael Sempert, to create the short film Dynamite that won the Grand Jury Award as well as the Social Justice Award from the 2019 In/Motion Film Festival. His first book Tao Of Maceo: Identity, Relationships,Work: A Journal On Living, is available from Correspondence Print where books are sold. Brief cameo from Jenny Gottstein - https://www.jennygottstein.com/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/possibilityhours/support
Mit Herz und aus tiefster Überzeugung war Wolfgang Gottstein 30 Jahre lang Schulleiter. In der Redezeit spricht er über Probleme und Lösungen für die Schulen von heute. Moderation: Julia Schöning
#bebeethoven Showcase | Podiumsdiskussion [02.03.2019] Diskussion mit Yannick Hofmann, Sebastian Neidisch, Elisa Erkelenz & Björn Gottstein. Mit Diskussionen, Performances und Konzertbeiträgen gibt der #bebeethoven-Showcase einen Einblick in das Fellowship-Programm #bebeethoven, das anlässlich des Beethoven-Jubiläums im Jahr 2020 initiiert wurde. Wie kommt die Kunst in die Kultur? Wie kommt das Fremde in die Musik? Wie gehen wir künstlerisch mit neuen Dimensionen wie Künstlicher Intelligenz um? Im Rahmen des Showcases diskutieren die KünstlerInnen des Programms mit VertreterInnen der Partnerinstitutionen und des ZKM, dem Kurator von #bebeethoven Steven Walter sowie dem Publikum über diese zentralen Fragen des künstlerischen Musikschaffens.
#bebeethoven Showcase | Impulsvortrag [02.03.2019] Mit Diskussionen, Performances und Konzertbeiträgen gibt der #bebeethoven-Showcase einen Einblick in das Fellowship-Programm #bebeethoven, das anlässlich des Beethoven-Jubiläums im Jahr 2020 initiiert wurde. Wie kommt die Kunst in die Kultur? Wie kommt das Fremde in die Musik? Wie gehen wir künstlerisch mit neuen Dimensionen wie Künstlicher Intelligenz um? Im Rahmen des Showcases diskutieren die KünstlerInnen des Programms mit VertreterInnen der Partnerinstitutionen und des ZKM, dem Kurator von #bebeethoven Steven Walter sowie dem Publikum über diese zentralen Fragen des künstlerischen Musikschaffens.
Rick is joined by Tyler Gottstein, CEO of Cadi this week. An innovative new retail golf concept. Visit: www.cadikiosk.com Cadi is an unattended, automated kiosk that allows golfers the ability to demo, compare and purchase golf equipment at unbeatable pricing in the ideal environment, right on the course. At the same time, Cadi is a … Continue reading Tyler Gottstein, CEO and Founder of Cadi →
It was a moment of mid-life crisis, a question, and a vision for a new kind of religious work that set Rabbi Alon Goshen-Gottstein on his current path of promoting interfaith understanding. He is the founder of the Elijah Interfaith Institute and a prolific author. In this interview he shares his thoughts and experiences, and advice for those taking their first steps into understanding others and their differing traditions and beliefs.
It was a moment of mid-life crisis, a question, and a vision for a new kind of religious work that set Rabbi Alon Goshen-Gottstein on his current path of promoting interfaith understanding. He is the founder of the Elijah Interfaith Institute and a prolific author. In this interview he shares his thoughts and experiences, and advice for those taking their first steps into understanding others and their differing traditions and beliefs.
Alon is one of the world's leading figures in interfaith dialogue. He is the founder of the Elijah Interfaith Institute, and has worked with religious leaders ranging from Rabbi Jonathan Sacks to the Dalai Lama.
Självsvåldiga nedslag i musiklivet i en av världens musikaliska huvudstäder med tre operahus, ett tiotal symfoniorkestrar, flera större konserthus och musikkonservatorier. Dessutom finns i Berlin en stor och levande experiment- och improvisationsscen och några av världens främsta elektronikaklubbar. Vi möter norrländske tonsättaren Marcus Fjellström som bor i Berlin där han i studion skapar tvetydig musik för skivmediet. Övningar i utanförskap och Dödsmusik är titlar av honom. Marcus Fjellström avled tyvärr i september 2017, endast 38 år gammal. Svenske dirigenten Stefan Solyom, som levt sju år i Berlin, berättar varför Berlinfilharmonikerna är en av de främsta orkestrarna i världen. Men också om hur slitsamt det är att leva utan nära vänner i Berlin. Klassiskt utbildade pianisten Andrea Neumann plockade isär sin flygel, började experimentera och fick ett helt nytt förhållningssätt till de klassiska pianostyckena. Hon komponerar även för gruppen Les Femmes Savantes, de bildade kvinnorna, där den svenska ljudkonstnären Hanna Hartman ingår. Författaren och musikskribenten Björn Gottstein berättar om det speciella Berlin Sound, som experimenterande musiker utvecklade efter murens fall 1989. Ohrenstrand är ett samarbete mellan hög och låg musikkultur i Berlin. I programmet medverkar även Georg Faust, ledare för de 12 cellisterna i Berlinfilharmonikerna, som efter 35 år tagit med en kvinna i cellogruppen. Spellista: Untitled In CoF Minor A Valentine To Sherwood Anderson Mikhail/Gertrude Stein Mikhail. Gertrude Stein. DJ Spooky Remix Utgiven med boken Sound Unbound Prélude A LApres-Midi DUn Faune Claude Debussy Claudio Abbado | Berliner Philharmoniker | Emmanuel Pahud 11:04 Serge Baghdassarians & Boris Baltschun Baghdassarians & Baltschun 13:4611:0425:09 Charhizma 032 Solo Andrea Neumann Andrea Neumann Pappelallee 5 AbsinthRecords, Berlin Caravan Duke Ellington The 12 cellists of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra Round Midnight EMI Classics 7243 5 57319 2 0 (A Rap for Mozart) The Flower is a Key Sergio Cárdenas The 12 cellists of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra Round Midnight EMI Classics 7243 5 57319 2 0 Symphonie Fantastique (Op 14) Hector Berlioz Simon Rattle | Berliner Philharmoniker Orion Claude Vivier Various Artists KAIROS 0012472KAI Solo Andrea Neumann Andrea Neumann Pappelallee 5 AbsinthRecords, Berlin 4 AKTEURE Andrea Naumann Les Femmes Savantes: Andrea Neumann, Hanna Hartman, Sabine Ercklenz, Ana Maria Rodrigez Live House der Berliner Festspiele, Februari 2007 Spur (vl, vl, vc, pno) Beat Furrer Kammarensemble Neue Musik Berlin Live Art Music Marcus Fjellström Marcus Fjellström CD: Gebrauchsmusik 2006 LAMPSE LAMP006 Death Music Marcus Fjellström Marcus Fjellström CD: Gebrauchsmusik 2006 LAMPSE LAMP006 Wahrlich, du bist auch einer von denen J S Bach Gustav Leonhardt, dir. Tölzer Knabenchoir. La Petite Bande Bach: St Matthew Passion Disc 2 Deutsche harmonia mundi RD77848
This week on the Mad in America podcast, we talk to Jim Gottstein, president and founder of the organisation Law Project for Psychiatric Rights. Jim talks to us about his own experiences with the psychiatric system, patient rights in mental healthcare and the recent trial between Wendy Dolin and the UK Pharmaceutical manufacturer GlaxoSmithKline. In this episode, we discuss: Jim’s experiences growing up in Alaska How Jim became involved with the psychiatric system That Jim was told he was mentally ill and he needed drugs for the rest of his life and would never be able to practice law again How found a Psychiatrist who told him that anyone who doesn’t sleep could become psychotic and that he could manage the problem How his experience with the psychiatric system changed the focus of his life About his involvement in a case involving the State of Alaska stealing a million acre land trust for the “mentally ill” That the book ‘Mad in America‘ by Robert Whitaker provided a litigation roadmap for challenging forced psychiatric drugging How Jim formed the organisation Law Project for Psychiatric Rights (PsychRights) to mount a strategic legal campaign against forced drugging and Electroshock in the USA How the number of people detained or forcibly treated in the mental health system is dramatically out of step with the reality demonstrated by Open Dialog and Soteria type approaches That changing public attitudes to the hidden parts of the mental healthcare system is very important How cases can arise very rapidly, requiring almost immediate response which is sometimes difficult That the deck is really stacked against the patient because they are having to defend themselves against medical professionals and their lawyers while they have no credibility because they are charged with being mentally ill The events in the trial between the widow of Stuart Dolin and the UK Pharmaceutical manufacturer GlaxoSmithKline That it was a legal first because Wendy Dolin sued the manufacturer of the brand name drug, Paxil, even though Stuart Dolin was taking the generic version of the drug manufactured by Mylan How Wendy Dolin’s lawyers came up with a common law negligence claim against GSK that GSK had a duty to provide accurate information about the drug How GSK manipulated the science of the clinical trials to downplay the suicide risk That Dr. Joseph Glenmullen and Dr. David Healy were key expert witnesses That the jury unanimously found GSK guilty of withholding information That GSK have stated their intention to appeal the verdict How the appeal process will work Why we shouldn’t trust what Pharmaceutical manufacturers tell us about clinical trials The lack of informed consent where the prescribing of psychiatric drugs is concerned That outcomes for patients who have either not taken, or withdrawn from, antipsychotic drugs are much better than for those who continue with the drugs To listen on Mad in America: https://goo.gl/tyyLmt Podcast show notes: https://goo.gl/QpjVsA To get in touch with us email: podcasts@madinamerica.com © Mad in America 2017
This month is all about relationships! but what about inconceivable relationships? What is that you are not willing to ask for, demand or imagine possible because you decided is inconceivable in this reality? How can we create relationship out of definition, out of structure and out of significance with our enjoyable other, family, body, money and our selves? How different are the relationships around the world? What is truly possible now in this planet? Join this outrageous conversation with our special guests, experts in relationships Joanne Darrach from Canada and Snježana Gottstein from Croatia; both Right Relationship for You® Facilitators. Enjoy this show in Spanish once a month as well (disfruta de este show en español una vez al mes – el tercer programa de cada mes). Email us @ seducingbeyondlimitations@gmail.com Play with us on Facebook at the Seducing Beyond Limitations group. YURYRA GUZMAN www.yuryraguzman.com Facebook www.facebook.com/InJoyLiving RACHEL SILBER www.ubjoy.com Facebook www.facebook.com/TheConsciousnessFairy
CSP: Goshen-Gottstein - Celebrating 50 Years of Jewish-Christian Relations
Jenny Gottstein once loaded a toy gun with marshmallows dipped in food coloring and shot her coworker. Fortunately for her, as a professional adventure game designer, that's exactly the type of thing she gets paid to do. For years, Jenny has used the power of play to unlock creativity in the teams she works with by organizing public games around the world for groups ranging from 5 to 10,000 people. Whether internally at corporations, or publicly for random and willing participants, this Forbes 30 Under 30 play genius has a knack for understanding consumer experiences, social behavior, and risk taking. On this installment of Innovation Crush, Jenny breaks down her point of view on everything from play to failure to domestic violence.
next_generation 5.0: AKUSMATIK | Symposium 27.06.2013 - 30.06.2013 next_generation 5.0 − das größte, biennale Treffen der Hochschulstudios für elektronische Musik − geht in die nächste Runde: Das Festival am ZKM | Institut für Musik und Akustik (IMA) bietet den NachwuchskomponistInnen im Feld elektronischer Musik eine Plattform, ihre kompositorischen Neuentwicklungen zu präsentieren. An fünf Tagen und Nächten bietet das ZKM | IMA ein interessantes und dichtes Programm, das über die neuesten Positionen zu den Themen »Fixed Media«, »Raummusik« und »Live-Elektronik« informiert: 27 anwesende Studios, 17 Konzerte, 19 Vorträge, 3 Gesprächsrunden, 6 Installationen und 106 aufgeführte Werke, darunter 30 Uraufführungen umfassen das Programm. Damit garantiert das Festival eine repräsentative Übersicht über das kreative Schaffen im Kontext von Technologie und Kunst. Sicherlich werden es spannende Tage, an welchen die unterschiedlichen musikalischen Ansätze im Bereich der live Elektronik, der Audiovisuellen Komposition oder auch der Installationen im Kubus sowie im Studiobereich betrachtet und in den Gesprächsrunden diskutiert werden.
I Musikmagasinet Klang: Upptakt Berlin gör Birgitta Tollan självsvåldiga nedslag i musiklivet i en av världens musikaliska huvudstäder. Svenske dirigenten Stefan Solyom, som levt sju år i Berlin, berättar varför Berlinfilharmonikerna är en av de främsta orkestrarna i världen. Klassiskt utbildade pianisten Andrea Neumann plockade isär sin flygel, började experimentera och fick ett helt nytt förhållningssätt till de klassiska pianostyckena. Svenske tonsättaren Marcus Fjellström bytte ett litet samhälle i Norrland mot Berlin där han i studion skapar tvetydig musik för skivmediet. Författaren och musikskribenten Björn Gottstein berättar om hur det speciella Berlin Sound, som experimenterande musiker utvecklade efter murens fall, har övergått i dagens mångfald av musikaliska och elektroniska experiment. Producent, manus och produktion: Birgitta Tollan. Poddversion.
Mon, 1 Jan 1990 12:00:00 +0100 http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/2312/ http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/2312/1/2312.pdf Fischer, R.; Gottstein, J.; Siebzehnrübl, S.; Scheer, Hugo Fischer, R.; Gottstein, J.; Siebzehnrübl, S. und Scheer, Hugo (1990): Phycocyanin with modified chromophores. In: Baltschewsky, M. (Hrsg.), Current research in photosynthesis. Bd. 2, Kluwer: Dordrecht u.a., pp. 45-48. Biologie
Mon, 1 Jan 1990 12:00:00 +0100 http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/2322/ http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/2322/1/2322.pdf Schmidt, Andrea; Gottstein, J.; Scheer, Hugo; Scherz, A. Schmidt, Andrea; Gottstein, J.; Scheer, Hugo und Scherz, A. (1990): Short-wavelength absorbing complexes of Chlorophyll a in micellar solution of cationic detergents. In: Zeitschrift für Naturforschung C, Vol. 45C, Nr. 6: pp. 729-732.
Tue, 1 Jan 1985 12:00:00 +0100 http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/2168/ http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/2168/1/2168.pdf Scheer, Hugo; Paulke, B.; Gottstein, J. Scheer, Hugo; Paulke, B. und Gottstein, J. (1985): Long-wavelength absorbing forms of bacteriochlorophylls. II. Structural requirements for formation in Triton X-100 micelles and in aqueous methanol and acetone. In: Blauer, G. und Sund, H. (Hrsg.), Optical properties and structure of tetrapyrro
Sat, 1 Jan 1983 12:00:00 +0100 http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/2901/ http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/2901/1/066.pdf Gottstein, J.; Scheer, Hugo Gottstein, J. und Scheer, Hugo (1983): Long-wavelength-absorbing forms of bacteriochlorophyll a in solutions of Triton X-100. In: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, Vol. 80: pp. 1887-1892.