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he German poet and journalist Heinrich Heine coined the term “Lisztomania” on 25th April 1844 to describe the phenomenon of frenzied fandom in Europe where women would physically assault Franz Liszt by tearing his clothes, fighting over broken piano strings and locks of his shoulder-length hair. Heine said there was something about Liszt's performances that “raised the mood of audiences to a level of mystical ecstasy” – which seemed to be a result of the combination of his good looks, his charisma and his stage presence. In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly explain how Liszt created an almost parasocial relationship with his fan base; investigate why critics are still reproving of expressive concert pianists to this day; and discuss whether the Heine was trying to extort money from performers like Liszt in exchange for better reviews… Further Reading: • ‘The Virtuoso Liszt' (Cambridge University Press, 2002): The Virtuoso Liszt - Google Books: https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Virtuoso_Liszt/koSQAjlxeOIC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=lisztomania&pg=PA203&printsec=frontcover • ‘Forget the Beatles – Liszt was music's first “superstar”' (BBC Culture, 2016): https://shorturl.at/eipIP • ‘Lisztomania: the 19th-century pop phenomenon that made Beatlemania look tame' (The Telegraph, 2019): https://shorturl.at/lwNOP • ‘Before Beatlemania, There Was Lisztomania' (Great Big Story, 2020): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3sjCA8OPobw Love the show? Support us! Join
Welcome to the Temple Baptist Church - Fort Worth podcast! We exist to guide people to life change in Jesus Christ. For more information visit templebaptistchurch.net.
I adore music. It moves me like few other things in existence. There was a time when my family and I watched America's Got Talent, and it was the breakout singers that we most enjoyed. You may remember Mandy Harvey. Mandy was in college pursuing a vocal music education degree, then lost her hearing. She left the program to pursue other career options, but later returned to music. She ultimately landed on America's Got Talent where she reached the finals and was Simon Cowell's Golden Buzzer Winner. From there, CNN showcased Mandy on their Great Big Story and captured over 10 million hits on social media, Burt's Bees signed her up for their “Remarkable Women” campaign, NBC Nightly News profiled her, and she went on to perform at the world's most prestigious clubs, concert stages and festivals. Mandy then wrote a book titled, Sensing The Rhythm, Finding My Voice In a World Without Sound. The book landed on my desk and in it I found a message of helping others to realize their dreams and pursue their hopes, no matter what. I invited Mandy onto my show and following I bring back an incredibly inspiring conversation about pursuing your dreams, in spite of seemingly insurmountable obstacles, like being a singer…who goes deaf. Find her anywhere, just type in Mandy Harvey. Sign up for your $1/month trial period at shopify.com/kevin Go to shipstation.com and use code KEVIN to start your free trial. Use my promo code WHATDRIVESYOU for 10% off on any CleanMyMac's subscription plans Join millions of Americans reaching their financial goals—starting at just $3/month! Get $25 towards your first stock purchase at get.stash.com/DRIVE. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to the Temple Baptist Church - Fort Worth podcast! We exist to guide people to life change in Jesus Christ. For more information visit templebaptistchurch.net.
Welcome to the Temple Baptist Church - Fort Worth podcast! We exist to guide people to life change in Jesus Christ. For more information visit templebaptistchurch.net.
Welcome to the Temple Baptist Church - Fort Worth podcast! We exist to guide people to life change in Jesus Christ. For more information visit templebaptistchurch.net.
This conversation explores the unexpected wins of Genius Hour, highlighting the importance of fostering creativity, executive functioning skills, and community building among learners. Educators share personal stories of student projects that exceeded expectations, the significance of reflection, and the transformative power of allowing learners to pursue their passions. The discussion emphasizes the need for a supportive environment that encourages risk-taking and resilience, ultimately leading to meaningful learning experiences. SHOW NOTES: Key Takeaways Genius Hour fosters creativity and passion in students. Unexpected wins can lead to significant personal growth. Executive functioning skills are crucial for project success. Building community enhances the Genius Hour experience. Encouraging risk-taking helps students develop resilience. Reflection is key to recognizing student growth. Transformative experiences can arise from student-led projects. Students thrive when given a voice in their learning. A structured approach can guide students through projects. Patience and support are essential for student success. Chapters 00:00 Embracing Passion and Skills in Education 01:40 The Power of Executive Functioning 04:41 Unexpected Success Stories in Genius Hour 07:57 Learning Through the Journey 10:34 Encouraging Risk-Taking in Projects 16:11 Transformative Project Ideas 20:22 Fostering a Safe Learning Environment 27:09 Engaging Student Projects and Validation 28:07 Adapting Projects to Meet Community Needs 29:00 Unexpected Turns in Student Projects 31:22 Building Stamina and Resilience in Learning 32:10 The Importance of Check-Ins and Reflection 34:13 Creating Timelines for Project Success 37:15 Reflecting on Learning and Growth 39:00 Empowering Students Through Real-World Projects 42:00 Strategies for Effective Reflection 47:06 The Power of Community and Connection 49:33 Final Thoughts on Implementing Genius Hour Resources: To learn more about Andi's Genius Hour Framework and book, please visit andimcnair.com/geniushour. Special Guests Laura Haselton Catherine Augustine Dyan Branstetter Emily Frady From Laura: Skateboarding Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXKaeyS6AtA&t=5s From Dyan: Instagram Handle: giftedthinkers_excelResources: To help with inspiration: Kids Do the Most Remarkable Things by Great Big Story: https://youtu.be/or0tspzzI-4?si=QNYlsiwWYk4wMr2b Teaching Slides: https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1P986nPUAVB25CuNlVbdwyUZ19gD_cSLPjmglVLBt_ns/copy?usp=sharing Reflection Slides student template: https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1ngIdXiD4QmHATW64rz-kAA4PFTX0LpS6kC-B2c_8siA/copy?usp=sharing From Emily: The curriculum I mentioned: Encounters with Archetypes: Integrated ELA Lessons for Gifted and Advanced Learners Grades 4-5 https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/edit/10.4324/9781003234890/encounters-archetypes-tamra-stambaugh-emily-mofield-eric-fecht-kim-knaussI know you've talked about the 6 Thinking Hats: https://www.debonogroup.com/services/core-programs/six-thinking-hats/ Instagram: @emily_frady
Welcome to the Temple Baptist Church - Fort Worth podcast! We exist to guide people to life change in Jesus Christ. For more information visit templebaptistchurch.net.
We are joined by artist John Sabraw for this episode. Armin has known John for quite awhile through their connection of working together at Good's of Evanston, an art supply and frame company. I met John as the curator at Studio 23 when I invited him to participate in the Land to River Exhibit. That exhibit was a collaborative experience with the Saginaw Basin Land Conservancy. John Sabraw is an artist, activist, and environmentalist. He is a distinguished professor at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio, and in this podcast interview we are centering on his projects that lead toward solutions for the environment. "For me, environmentalism and sustainability are intrinsic to our presence within the system of Earth and the universe at large. These terms define a philosophy of Resonance, the butterfly effect, cause and effect – so we need to do the best possible action in moments and situations where we can have positive effect. If I have an opportunity to make a positive impact here, aren't I charged with the responsibility to do whatever I can for the benefit of all?" states John on his website. Listen as he share his experiences along the way on his incredible journey of art and activism. I am putting links to many resources to learn more about the artist. Be sure to check out his frequently ask questions link and his involvement with Gamblin's "Reclaimed Earth Colors" in oil paint. One more great project is with The Squibble Art Workshop in New York where John is on the board as project advisor. Please reach out with your comments and questions on this episode. Show Notes John's Frequently Asked Questions John Sabraw's Website John Sabraw's Instagram Tedx Talk Video on Toxic Art "Great Big Story" Video on Turning Toxins into Art Harvard University Center for the Environment Artist 2023/2024 with the exhibit, VITAL. Squibble Art Workshop Board Project Advisor Gamblin Oil "Reclaimed Earth Colors"
Lorenzo P. Lewis has been a keynote speaker at numerous venues across the country—from organizations to universities to government agencies—exploring themes such as toxic masculinity, therapy taboos, and more. He has also presented at TEDxFayetteville and TEDxPointParkUniversity. His work has been featured in countless media outlets including Oprah Magazine, BET, CNN's Great Big Story, NPR's Weekend Edition, Revolt on PBS, Black Enterprise, Men's Health, Huffington Post, as well as brands such as Kenneth Cole and the Minnesota Vikings. He has also made appearances on Love & Respect with Killer Mike, Jay Z's Roc Nation, Nick Cannon Mornings, The Today Show, The Kelly Clarkson Show, Jordan Peele's Monkeypaw Productions, and more. In episode 421 of the Fraternity Foodie Podcast, we find out how Lorenzo almost re-entered the system of mass incarceration at age 17, why he chose HBCU's and Arkansas Baptist College for his undergraduate experience, why he decided to join Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Incorporated, what is the Confess Project and what have been the results thus far, what are some of the Mental Health Advocate and Trainer certifications that he offers, what is his advice to the college students listening now that also want to be thought leaders in their niche, how do we create healthy spaces in terms of mental health for men and boys of color, and what it felt like to get awards from NAMI and the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.
Mariano Carranza is a Lima, Peru born Emmy award nominated documentary filmmaker that lives in Brooklyn, New York. You may have seen some of his work, such as the Miami episode of the Netflix series Street Food, which he directed, or some of the mini-docs he made for Vice and CNN's Great Big Story. His latest film is called Pachacútec, The Improbable School, which recently had its premier at the San Sebastián International Film Festival's Culinary Zinema section, organized with the Basque Culinary Center. The film is about three students that trained at Fundación Pachacútec, a culinary school in the desert hills of Ventanilla outside of Lima, Peru and where their lives have led since enrolling. The school was built with the help of chef Gastón Acurio and is said to get 350 applications every six months, though can only admit 25 people per semester. Over the last 20 years it has had more than 400 graduates and many of those graduates have gone on to accomplish incredible things. It's a great culinary film that hopefully everyone will get to watch very soon. Find out more about Mariano's work at his website.Read more at New Worlder.
Shi Yan Ming is a 34th Generation Shaolin Warrior Monk and Founder & Abbot of USA Shaolin Temple. Named “a real-life superhero” by The RZA from Wu-Tang Clan, Shifu's 1-inch punch is more powerful than a car at 35mph as recorded by History Channel's show, Stan Lee's Super Humans. His disciples and students include Bokeem Woodbine of Spiderman, Wesley Snipes of Blade, RZA, Rosie Perez, and many more. As one of the most respected martial art legends of all time, he has been featured in numerous publications & interviews across the world, including National Geographic, The New York Times, The Atlantic, The New Yorker, VICE Sports, VICE China, Grazia Homme (France), Vogue, Great Big Story, NPR, and more. For his generation and age, Shifu's physical abilities, wisdom, knowledge, and upbringing make him truly one in 3.3 billion on earth. What You'll Learn ● What daily life is like in the Temple. ● The nature of devotion. ● How to build confidence. ● How Shaolin helps in other areas of life. ● How to know once you've found yourself. ● The importance of living in the moment. ● How to find balance. ● How to take authority over our thinking. Timestamps · [06:14] Shifu's story. · [11:42] What foundation of the Shaolin Temple. · [14:49] Day in the life in the Temple. · [16:08] Lessons learned. · [18:46] Devotion. · [28:54] How to build confidence. · [33:18] How does Shaolin help in other areas of life? · [39:37] How to know if you've found yourself. · [43:35] Be honest with yourself. · [46:28] Cherishing the moment. · [49:59] What is balance and how do we find balance within ourselves? · [56:07] Taking more authority over our thinking. · [59:25] Where to start. · [61:18] Happiness vs love. Memorable Quotes · “Everyone needs help.” – Shi Yan Ming [20:32] · “Every moment, every day is precious.” – Shi Yan Ming [20:51] · “Life has everything.” – Shi Yan Ming [31:01] · “We come from nothing. We leave with nothing.” – Shi Yan Ming [49:49] Websites usashaolintemple.org.
Great Big Story offers thousands of bite-sized videos about interesting people, places and things around the world. Read the Plugged In Review If you've listened to any of our podcasts, please give us your feedback.
Good News: Link HERE! The Good Word: A wonderful autumnal quote… Good To Know: More fun facts about Labor Day! Good News: A study shows the positive impacts of even small greening projects, Link HERE. Wonderful World; Check out a Great Big Story about the killer street foods of Oaxaca, HERE. Good For You: Jazz […]
In this episode, I stumbled upon a fascinating YouTube video about Warner Bros. Foley artists, the masterminds behind sound art in filmmaking. These artists create the sounds we hear in movies and TV shows, bringing visual experiences to life through cleverly fabricated sounds. By delving into their work, I uncovered three valuable life lessons.What You'll Learn:- The 3 life lessons I learned from the art of sound making- What exactly a Foley artist does inside a sound studio- My exploration of finding life lessons in everyday occurrences- The impact our individual perception can have on our experiences- How Foley art relates to the importance of emotional awareness and effective communicationBy drawing parallels between Foley art and life, I aim to provide you with thought-provoking insights and a fresh perspective on personal development. Join me in exploring how these intriguing examples can be incorporated into life lessons for your own journey.Resources: - “The Magic of Making Sound” on the YouTube channel ‘Great Big Story' (Video about Warner Bros. Foley artists creating “natural” sounds for TV and movies): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UO3N_PRIgX0- Get my FREE on-demand video training: How to Live Life on Your Own Terms & Timeline (Ditch Life's Guilt & Anxiety — Finally Find More Peace of Mind) https://charisyourlife.com/video- Follow me on Instagram: https://instagram.com/charisyourlife - Follow me on Facebook: https://facebook.com/charisyourlife/ - Follow me on LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/charisyourlife/- Follow me on YouTube: https://charisyourlife.com/youtube/- Follow me on Pinterest: https://pinterest.com/charisyourlife/- My website: https://charisyourlife.com/
Náš redaktor Karel Kilián je nadšený do navigací. S nadsázkou říká, že ho navigace vede bytem. Začínal ovšem s papírovými autoatlasy, což je dnes nepředstavitelné. Elektronické navigace na nás mluví, sází na aktuální data a v případě Waze také na silnou komunitu, která spořádaně hlásí potíže na silnicích. Protože všechno zažil, povídá Karel o vývoji navigací od pravěku po současnost.02:06 – Papírové autoatlasy05:30 – Navigace v krabičce17:20 – Zelená vlna19:38 – Nástup chytřejších telefonů31:28 – Waze je komunitní navigace Podcast Živě je čtrnáctidenní pořad internetového magazínu Živě.cz. Redaktoři Lukáš Václavík a Petr Urban v něm řeší všechno důležité, co se děje kolem technologií.V tomto pořadu zaznívá bezplatná hudba od Nihilora. Použili jsme také úryvky z pořadů od TGPCZ, LoboLloyd, Great Big Story, GSMONLINE.PL, Jamese Veitche, Českého rozhlasu Radiožurnál.
The German poet and journalist Heinrich Heine coined the term “Lisztomania” on 25th April 1844 to describe the phenomenon of frenzied fandom in Europe where women would physically assault Franz Liszt by tearing his clothes, fighting over broken piano strings and locks of his shoulder-length hair. Heine said there was something about Liszt's performances that “raised the mood of audiences to a level of mystical ecstasy” – which seemed to be a result of the combination of his good looks, his charisma and his stage presence. In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly explain how Liszt created an almost parasocial relationship with his fan base; investigate why critics are still reproving of expressive concert pianists to this day; and discuss whether the Heine was trying to extort money from performers like Liszt in exchange for better reviews… Further Reading: • ‘The Virtuoso Liszt' (Cambridge University Press, 2002): The Virtuoso Liszt - Google Books: https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Virtuoso_Liszt/koSQAjlxeOIC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=lisztomania&pg=PA203&printsec=frontcover • ‘Forget the Beatles – Liszt was music's first “superstar”' (BBC Culture, 2016): https://shorturl.at/eipIP • ‘Lisztomania: the 19th-century pop phenomenon that made Beatlemania look tame' (The Telegraph, 2019): https://shorturl.at/lwNOP • ‘Before Beatlemania, There Was Lisztomania' (Great Big Story, 2020): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3sjCA8OPobw Love the show? Join
It's a EIDGENSI x Alkimi x Great Big Story lineup! A great big episode this week, with Alkimi & Eidgensi powerhouses and co-founders Ben Putley and Georges Tertois joined by Albertine Rae, an executive producer at whynow media. She has been at the business for three years, during which time she established their digital video production company, and developed The Sunday Times Culture Show, a weekly arts magazine programme for Britain's most prestigious news title. She now heads up the Great Big Story production team, commissioning global short documentaries for an audience of 14m followers across all platforms. And Brandon Keenen, a seasoned CMO with over 20 years of experience working for prominent publishers such as CNN, Buzzfeed, and AOL, is now a Principal Partner at Attention Economics, a consultancy firm that specialises in guiding publishers through commercial and strategic transformations in the new digital landscape. Brandon leverages his vast expertise to help clients develop data-driven, sales-focused, and creative strategies that cater to all platforms. He is currently fully dedicated to working with the return of Great Big Story in conjunction with WhyNow Media.Great Big Story was originally launched in 2015 by CNN, and won critical acclaim and countless awards before closing down in 2020. The brand is now part of whynow Media, a company devoted to the art of storytelling. Headquartered in London and working with teams around the world, our studios create and distribute micro docs and short films, as well as series. Our producers work hard to discover the untold, the overlooked and the flat-out amazing. In this episode of LabTalks, they discussed innovation and creativity within the advertising sphere.
What color is a piano note? How loud is purple? What's the brightness of a melody? If these questions are leaving you a little confused, that just means you don't have synesthesia, a rare sensory condition that's estimated to affect just one out of twenty people. If you do have it, then your answer to those questions might be very different from anyone else's, since it affects each person in a unique way. Synesthesia means “joined senses” in Greek, and that's exactly what it is: a mixture of different senses within the brain so that people can taste the words they read on a page, feel numbers as if they were building blocks, or literally see time flowing around them.The most famous kind of synesthesia might be chromesthesia, a neurological link between sound and color that allows people with this condition to see each note as a separate color. The result can be both beautiful and a little dizzying to watch, and it reveals a deeper link between the senses, and between sound and light themselves, than most of us realize.You can find a link on my blog to a short video from Great Big Story and chromesthetic artist Melissa McCracken as she shows us how she turns the songs she hears into paintings:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zbh7tAnwLCYWhile synesthesia is a neurological condition that seems to have a genetic component, it isn't technically a disorder or a disability, and it definitely isn't a disease. If anything, it seems to help some of the people who have it. There are reports of "synesthetes" having better memory and creativity than average, and for people with chromesthesia, the ability to see sound can make them more successful as musicians or artists. Leonard Bernstein famously wrote about his ability to see timbre as color and would often notice and correct changes in timbre without anyone else being able to tell the difference. Some historians suspect Isaac Newton may have also had chromesthesia, given that he devoted much of his life to exploring the relationship between musical notes and color.The cause of synesthesia is still a mystery, but it runs in families and seems to develop in early childhood while the brain's learning how to process language and symbols. One theory is that extra neurological connections are formed between different senses and the parts of the brain that process them, which might explain why having it seems to have other benefits like boosting memory and problem-solving skills. Another is that the connections are the same, but the boundaries between those different parts of the brain are weaker. That could explain why some brain injuries, and even certain hallucinogens, can also cause it. But no one's sure if that's really the same kind of synesthesia, or if all the different kinds out there are related to each other. It's still a very mysterious topic.Want to see a classical violin piece through the eyes of someone with chromesthesia? Check out my blog for a link to a YouTube 360° video of Kaitlyn Hova, a neuroscientist and musician with chromesthesia, who's created a real-time VR simulation of how she sees music:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=obrBAysVef0Most of us can't see music for ourselves, but that doesn't mean sound and color don't have a lot in common. Each one is a broad spectrum of wavelengths much larger than the part we can perceive, and both light and sound have certain wavelengths that are more comfortable than others. For light, we're most sensitive to a wavelength of 555 nanometers, which is bright green. The color our eyes are least sensitive to is blue, which is one reason why LED displays strain our eyes. On the other hand, blue light also helps us relax, so it's becoming a popular choice for street...
Today, we read CCC, 1091 - 1121 and discuss how OT types prefigure NT revelations of Jesus Christ. Not only was God preparing the way for His Son... He was preparing the way for you!
Allyson Scammell is a master intuitive business coach, psychic medium, and expert energy healer. Her mission is to help soul-guided leaders, influencers and entrepreneurs with big soul missions to earn more, serve more, and grow spiritually along the way.Websitehttps://allysonscammell.com/The Story of My Near Death Experience:https://allysonscammell.com/episode35/https://allysonscammell.com/episode36/https://allysonscammell.com/episode37/
It can be very helpful to know your history. Your family history helps explain why you are how you are. Your medical history helps explain what you may face and what to do about your health. Our "Spiritual" story begins before we even come into existence. All of our personal stories, begin with the Great Big Story of God, revealed in Jesus Christ. Our All of Life story is a continuation of the Big Story of God working in and through His people. Our Great Small story is born, because of God's work in His people - so today we remember where we came from, and how God intertwines our story into His.
As All of Life Church moves into our new building, it's a new chapter, out of the same book. Importantly, our story is a small part in the middle of a much bigger and better story - God's Story. Next week, we look at some of the details of our story, but this week, we enjoy and remember The Great Big Story we are a part of.
There are hundreds of stories in the Bible, but they all work together to tell one big story. Join Wesley and Jenna as they explore God's big story of the Bible. Copyright © 2022 Child Evangelism Fellowship Inc. All rights reserved. Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), copyright© 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Subscribe to the CEF Podcast, so you don't miss any of our episodes!
This week's Education Gladfly Show podcast is a Research Minute–only special! Amber Northern examines a survey of district and charter network leaders about staffing challenges they've faced this school year—and true to the segment's name, tries her mightiest to do so in under sixty seconds. Will she succeed? Listen to find out. (April Fools episode!)Related Content“Young Cattle Auctioneer Champion,” America's Heartland, YouTube (December 12, 2012).“Talking Fast With a Record-Setting Speed Talker,” Great Big Story, YouTube (October 25, 2017).The study that Amber reviewed on the Research Minute: Heather L. Schwartz and Melissa Kay Diliberti, “Flux in the Educator Labor Market: Acute Staff Shortages and Projected Superintendent Departures,” RAND Corporation (2022).Feedback welcome!Have ideas or feedback on our podcast? Send them to our podcast producer Pedro Enamorado at penamorado@fordhaminstitute.org.
Amir Masoud Soheili is an internationally awarded short filmmaker and the festival director for the “Asia Peace Film Festival”. He has been one of the seven most honored Iranian short filmmakers in 2015. He got a BA degree in Law from Ferdowsi University. He studied cinema at Indonesia Art institute in Yogyakarta, Indonesia and He also attended the Asian Film Academy courses in Busan, South Korea. While in Indonesia he directed a short movie Heaven of Children which selected in more than 50 international film festivals has won 3 awards. He also works as a freelance photographer, videographer, and video journalist for different platforms such as National Geography, AJ+, VICE media, TRT, Great Big Story, VOA, Business insider etc MASOUD SOHEILI | Iranian Film Maker and Director | Catatan Pingging Season 2 Episode 10 https://www.linkedin.com/in/amir-masoud-soheili-52575338
"Teenage girls are visionary. They always have been."Who are the teenage girls that you know. What can you do to support and encourage them today?//This episode was written and recorded by Amanda Meisenheimer. It was produced by Rev. Jim Keat. Background tracks include Button Mushrooms and Hopeful Child by Podington Bear. Sample tracks include Emma González from an interview on 60 Minutes, Claudette Colvin from an interview on Great Big Story, and Greta Thunberg from her 2018 TED Talk.• Visit www.trcnyc.org/BeStillAndGo to listen to more episodes from all eight seasons of Be Still and Go. • Visit www.trcnyc.org/Donate to support this podcast and other digital resources from The Riverside Church that integrate spirituality and social justice. • Visit www.trcnyc.org/BeStillAndGo/#sign-up to receive new episode by email. • Visit www.trcnyc.org/app or text TRCNYC to 77977 to download the Riverside app.
John Brisson, We've Read the Documents, Jack Heart, Tek-Gnostics, Discordianism, Operation Mindfuck, LARPing, Kerry Thornley, Robert Anton Wilson, Illumanti, Illuminatus trilogy, Bob Shea, I AM movement, Robert LeFevre, Freedom School, counterculture, Lee Harvey Oswald, Jim Garrison, JFK assassination, Process Church of the Final Judgment, Cicada 3301, Cracking the Cicada Code, Great Big Story, CNN, Fake Cicada 3301, hackers, Thomas Schoenberger, DeFango, Saint Germain, alternate reality game, ARG, Ong's Hat, Formless Ocean Group, FOG, Joseph Matheny, JZ Knight, Corey Goode, David Wilcox, Gaia TV, QAnon, Michael T. Flynn, Robert David Steele, Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity, VIPS, Stephen K. Bannon, gamers, Gamergate, Cambridge Analytica, personality profiling, Operation Gladio, Biden presidency
For the first edition of Account Admin Confidential, I talk with the account owner for Feminist Lisa Frank, a Tumblr intersecting feminism with the iconic 90s brand and then take a closer look into Lisa Frank, the person, and the company. Full show notes here: https://soundservicechi.com/feminist-lisa-frank Music and Audio Attribution: “FEMINIST LISA FRANK” - dismantling the patriarchy one rainbow kitten at a time (this blog is not endorsed, run, or appreciated by Lisa Frank) https://feministlisafrank.tumblr.com/ “Inside the Rainbow Gulag: The Technicolor Rise and Fall of Lisa Frank” Tracie Egan Morrissey https://jezebel.com/inside-the-rainbow-gulag-the-technicolor-rise-and-fall-1179495705 “The World of Lisa Frank” - A Short Filmhttps://vimeo.com/73328418 Directed by Scott Ross (scottjross.com) & Karl Beyer (karlbeyer.com), along with producer John Osborne Interview conducted by Kate Williams Music by Evan Younger, performed by members of Miracles of Modern Science Produced by Urban Outfitters (urbanoutfitters.com) “We Found Lisa Frank!” - Great Big Story https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EOVUCkgoAuE&list=PLrmsVEgrXv8AB1dyYjFgggk1onqPu52rj&index=82 Glamor Dolls seems like they’re going through something on their own end, that’s probably worth a look at a later date. https://www.facebook.com/GlamourDollsMakeup/?ref=page_internal “The Third Wave Of Feminism”“The Fourth Wave Of Feminism” https://www.britannica.com/topic/feminism/The-third-wave-of-feminism https://www.britannica.com/topic/feminism/The-fourth-wave-of-feminism “The Second Coming Of Lisa Frank”BY RINA RAPHAELhttps://www.fastcompany.com/40493102/the-second-coming-of-lisa-frank “Lisa Frank’s colorful creations get sassy for feminism” https://www.msnbc.com/krystal-clear/watch/lisa-frank-s-creations-get-sassy-for-feminism-444817475838 Thinking Music by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4522-thinking-music License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Pamgaea by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4193-pamgaea License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Digital Lemonade by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3648-digital-lemonade License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Blippy Trance by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/5759-blippy-trance License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
-Dad started his love with basketball coaching, UW basketball season tickets -Watching Sam Okey play during his youth -Hugh Roberts & Bob Haffele -The beginning of his relationship with Scot Vesterdahl -AAU Basketball with George Karl and meeting Tom Desotell -Meeting John Wooden in California and touring his condo -Joe Wolf coaching one of his AAU tournaments and the drills he had -His decision to attend UWL -Not about what you know, but who you know -“Kill them with kindness.” - Luke Homan -Wisconsin Playmakers AAU (connections to Henry Ellenson and Matt Thomas) -Mistake in coaching youth kids as if they were college kids -Gaining coaching insight from John Ellenson -Looking back and learning from reflection -Met Dale Layer at IMG Academy and Coach Layer got him connected with Marquette Basketball Camps -IMG Academy Summer Intern experience -Punctuality is top five on his priority list -Study abroad experience -Philosophy: Be a good person. Do the right thing and work hard. If I do that, opportunities will present themselves. -Substituting, working at Nike, volunteering at Madison College and then taking over the GM job at JustAGame Fieldhouse -Getting hired based on Hugh Roberts recommendation -Day to day lifestyle of running JustAGame Fieldhouse -“No job that is above you.” -Cleaning the toilets -Starting AAU programs under the JustAGame Fieldhouse brand -Main focus was getting kids to play and developing their skill sets -Using your practice as conditioning -Coaching during a tournament that you set-up and organized (not being able to yell at the refs because you hired them) -Making hot dogs, cleaning toilets and coaching -“If you do everything right during the week, everything should go right during the event.” -Preparation of being organized. -Connecting once again and working for Scot Vesterdahl -Coaching at a Junior College -Stepping in as head coach after Scot Vesterdahl retired -Two years having success and being named Coach of the Year in the league -Being late for the bus and leaving best player behind -Offensive philosophy -Ball just bounces the wrong way sometimes -Having best player receive Division II scholarship -Creating stricter rules and consequences in year 2 -So much more than basketball -Have to feed them confidence -Hard to build culture at the junior college level -Managing family and basketball -Life changes when having your first kid -Evolution of Billy Kegler Basketball -Reading Kevin Eastman’s book “Why the Best are the Best”, Basketball Immersion podcast, Great Big Story podcast --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Dancer and artist, Jerron Herman talks about life with cerebral palsy, the limitations of our definitions especially when it comes to defining health and wellness or masculinity, and the importance of our genuine expression in building community. Studies show, Black children are about 30 percent more likely than whites to have cerebral palsy, one of the most common motor disabilities developed in childhood. Through a myriad of technical difficulties and obstacles, in this episode we reflect on Jerron's journey thus far, the importance of parents that will advocate for you and discovering ways to laugh through it all. Transcript on Medium (https://medium.com/@tayllure) More about Jerron Herman can be found on his Website (https://jerronherman.com/) Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/jerronherman/) Great Big Story: (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRMpE6gxf1o)Dancing Professionally w/ Cerebral Palsy Follow Beyond Our Cells on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/beyondourcells/) Twitter (https://twitter.com/beyondourcells) Follow host, Taylor Camille (https://www.instagram.com/tayllure/)
An avid runner since high school, Hannah Gavios suffered a spinal cord injury after a horrific attack in 2016 that left her partially paralyzed. But she didn’t let that end her dream of running a marathon. Unable to imagine a life without running, the native New Yorker learned how to run in a different way — what she likes to call “crutching.” In this episode, Great Big Story follows her as she attempts to complete the 2019 New York City Marathon. (This episode contains a description of sexual violence — so this may not be suitable for all listeners.) Let us know what you think of the show! Take a short survey at cnn.com/podcastsurvey. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
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If you’re listening to this episode, you’re probably working hard to build a business flipping and wholesaling houses to gain the income and time freedom you want.But one of the best things about success is that it gives you the opportunity to make an impact on the world around you.Recently we held a live real estate investing event for veterans and active-duty military members called Veterans REI Live.All the proceeds from that event went to support a charity called Veterans Community Project.These guys are building tiny houses to help get homeless veterans off the street……and the work they’re doing is incredible.We were able to raise $35,000 to fund a new home for a veteran……and we’re planning to raise a LOT more.I’ve brought one of the co-founders of Veterans Community Project, Mark Solomon, onto the podcast to day to share his story and break down what their organization does and how they do it.Getting to support people like this is WHY we do what we do.It’s why your success as an entrepreneur matters.This episode will inspire you, show you what’s possible, and drive home the importance of the work that you’re doing as you grow your business.Listen in here!Links and ResourcesReady to help support what Mark and the rest of the team at Veterans Community Project are doing? Any amount you donate between now and the end of August, I WILL PERSONALLY MATCH! Make sure to donate through our direct link below so I can see the amount. Let’s get these guys the funding they need to end veteran homelessness in the US!- DONATE HERE: https://7figureflipping.com/vcpVeteran Community Project was featured in an episode of Great Big Story. Check it out here!- CLICK HERE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dEGJ_U_-k-QYou can also check out Veterans Community Project at their website and on Facebook.- WEBSITE: https://www.veteranscommunityproject.org/- FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/veteranscommunityproject/====================Want to continue your house flipping / wholesaling journey? Here are a few more resources to check out...Subscribe: Join the 7 Figure Flipping email list to get the latest house flipping and wholesaling secrets, plus insider access to real estate investing tips, training, and more! Click Here: https://7figureflipping.com/subscribe7 Figure Flipping Podcast: Subscribe and get more episodes like this one delivered to you every week! Click Here: https://7figureflipping.com/listenFacebook Group: We've built a community of serious investors who are learning and growing their businesses together. Join the Group on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/fliphacking/7FigureFlipping.com: Learn more about who we are, our mentoring groups, upcoming events, and the causes we support at our website. Plus, grab some free downloads and other materials to help you on your real estate investing journey! Click Here: https://7figureflipping.com/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
A flash review of three outstanding new podcasts to discover! Guru: The Dark Side of Enlightenment - Three people dead. The Gift of Forgiveness - True stories from both sides. Great Big Story - The most fascinating stories you've never heard.
Hidden in wilderness off the coast of Vancouver Island, Canada sits the magical home of Catherine King and Wayne Adams. 45-minutes by boat to the nearest town, this couple’s sustainable fortress is complete with a dance floor, art galleries, and gardens galore. Every single building is not only built by hand, but is completely floating on the water. In this episode of Great Big Story, we explore this fantastical homemade island and learn what drove Catherine and Wayne to build a home so utterly unique. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
Noel, Allison, and Kate continue Streaming In Place with Avatar: The Last Airbender season two, episode 16, “Appa’s Lost Days.” Appaaaaaa! At long last, we get an update on everyone’s favorite not-a-taxi, and man, it is a rough one. Tune in for our thoughts on these episodes and come back tomorrow as we talk episodes 17 and 18, “Lake Lagoai” and “The Earth King.”Shout-out to our Zoom listeners, Keenan, Marcus, and Scottie. Thanks for helping us process this episode and sharing your thoughts. Normally, we strive to keep Streaming In Place expletive free, but that is not the case here. If any younger viewers are listening, be warned. Videos referenced: Behind the Scenes featurette about the voices of Avatar: The Last Airbender (Here’s a Dee Bradley Baker excerpt); Great Big Story’s Meet the Voice Actor Behind Hollywood’s Monsters and Creatures, about Dee Bradley Baker
Noel, Allison, and Kate continue Streaming In Place with Avatar: The Last Airbender season two, episode 16, “Appa’s Lost Days.” Appaaaaaa! At long last, we get an update on everyone’s favorite not-a-taxi, and man, it is a rough one. Tune in for our thoughts on these episodes and come back tomorrow as we talk episodes 17 and 18, “Lake Lagoai” and “The Earth King.” Shout-out to our Zoom listeners, Keenan, Marcus, and Scottie. Thanks for helping us process this episode and sharing your thoughts. Normally, we strive to keep Streaming In Place expletive free, but that is not the case here. If any younger viewers are listening, be warned. Videos referenced: Behind the Scenes featurette about the voices of Avatar: The Last Airbender (Here’s a Dee Bradley Baker excerpt); Great Big Story’s Meet the Voice Actor Behind Hollywood’s Monsters and Creatures, about Dee Bradley Baker
Zur 55ten Folge gibt es zwar keinen Schnaps, aber jede Menge ernste und lustige Themen. Wir quatschen u.a. über unseren Umgang mit der aktuellen Situation, Autogeschichten, Kontakt zur Community und die Suche nach einem guten Baid. Eure Fragen oder Themen unter dem Hashtag #die2onair Links zu den Themen der Folge: ► JoeGameboy bei Twitch https://www.twitch.tv/joegameboy ► Great Big Story https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCajXeitgFL-rb5-gXI-aG8Q ► Der Penny-Markt auf St. Pauli: Eine Kult-Reportage und ihre prominenten Fans https://youtu.be/Ma502jP8B18 ► Eskimo Callboy - Hypa Hypa https://youtu.be/75Mw8r5gW8E ► I Built a Hospital That Specializes in Ending Lives - Project Hospital https://youtu.be/U2QKDVIQ1zg Die2 auf Twitter https://twitter.com/die2onair
This is a great big world we live in, and there are millions of untold stories all around us. Join us as we discover the curious, surprising, delightful side of the human experience. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
In this episode of the Millionaire Mindcast, we have a superb guest, Nick Santonastaso who shares his inspiring life story and insights of making your dreams happen, how to push beyond your limits, how to gain confidence, why the WHY is more important than HOW, the power of thoughts and clarity, and how to achieve happily and fulfilled life! Nick Santonastaso is a global keynote speaker, a professional model, and bodybuilder, a best-selling author, has featured on Forbes and shared stages with Tony Robbins. He has made cameos on TV shows like “The Walking Dead” and has become a social media sensation gaining more than 1 million followers on “Vine” in less than a year. In 2017, he won the 3rd place in his first competition in bodybuilding at the “Iron Bay Classic”. His accomplishments in the gym have been featured in Men’s Health, The Independent, and CNN’s Great Big Story. Currently, Nick is inspiring people globally by sharing his experience as a keynote speaker and a coach at conferences, professional sports teams as well as Fortune 500 companies. Teaching the youths to push beyond their limiting beliefs and live a life that has NO LIMITS. Nick already helped to inspire GIANTS in today's world, such as Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, Ed Mylett, and many more. Nick was born with Hanhart Syndrome with no leg and one arm. He was the 12th baby in the medical history that was born with that birth defect and gave him 30% of chances to live because out of the twelve, eight of them had passed away. Unfortunately, Nick is super blessed to have very supportive parents. They’ve cast those limiting beliefs of the things Nick can’t accomplish with. They were determined to give him a good life and believed that he could outshine on his limitations. Nick’s dad promised to be his arms and legs until the day he dies. As expected, the world was so hard for Nick, especially during middle school. It was a very dark place for him where he experienced bullying. He started to question himself “WHY ME?”, and was not exempted from that victim mentality. The worst thing is Nick hated himself. He was thinking that his body is the biggest curse and the most disgusting thing to him. Until one day Nick realized he had to change his life. Find the things that make him comfortable in order to gain confidence, and to avoid a miserable life. He was determined to shift his mindset and focus on positive things. He believed that nothing is impossible and he could be whatever he wanted to be. But then again, Nick was not an instant Mindset King. Things didn’t just happen for him but were constant progress of creating reality. He experienced downfalls but sees it as strength and gifts that mold him as a person to grow. Nick believes that life is a game and more opportunities come into your life if you control the game. He keeps working towards his dream and it’s worth it. Now, Nick has found clarity, happiness, and fulfillment in life. His mission is to contribute and give impact to the world by helping the kids. He believes that he could change teens’ life by giving them the knowledge, perspective, and the tools to overcome difficulties and live the best life. Nick wanted to be “The Mindset Guide for the Kids”, by showing his biggest superpower to make people comfortable through sharing inspirational and actionable videos for kids, as well as building a community for parents. Nick believes that kids are very receptive. Therefore, the best thing we can do is plant seeds. Plant seeds of contribution, plant seeds of how you can give fulfillment, and of how we can gain confidence, creating winners, giving them the victorious mindset, and teaching them how to teach and help others. Take the action now so your kids can win the future! Some Questions I Ask: Who is Nick Santonastaso? (00:29) How have you been so good to create and manage that narrative within yourself to make you first instead of allowing other people to put that shown on you? (06:33) How did you find the clarity? What do you say to the person who doesn’t know where they should be going right now? (20:04) Tell me more about what that machine looks like making an impact on the kids. (29:58) What does your spiritual development look like? (43:02) In This Episode, You Will Learn: What is limiting beliefs (03:48) The power of thoughts (07:05) How Nick shifts his mindset and gains this confidence thing (11:11) Confidence as a synonym for self-integrity (13:03) How Nick is helping the kids to change their lives (16:24) Why the WHY is even more important than the HOW (20:18) One of the biggest limiting beliefs (21:49) How comparison epidemic on social media affects kids thoughts (35:41) The two things you need to live a fulfilled life (41:26) The two things that are always around us and bring us home (49:21) Quotes: “The biggest disability is a bad mindset.” “Figure it out because the world is not going to be easy for you.” “Everything is a muscle and I always have to train it.” “Confidence is actually a skill.” “Confidence is a synonym for self-integrity.” “I may not be the best but I know I’m moving forward.” “Clarity is power.” “The HOW will reveal itself when the WHY is powerful enough.” “One of my greatest gifts is being broke.” “Don’t fall in love with your product; fall in love with your customer’s needs.” “The real transformation comes from human interaction.” “If we want massive changes in the world, we need a consciousness shift.” “Life is a video game.” “When you’re in your head you are dead and when you’re playing in your heart you’re smart.” Connect with Nick Santonastaso on: YouTube Instagram LinkedIn Facebook Tiktok
Tsering Bista is a documentary filmmaker based in Jersey City, NJ. She delineates the experience of receiving education from Advanced Enrichment Programs (AEP), which streamlined going into high school. She chose New York University (NYU) for college and worked through various internships for practical experience that helped her obtain jobs. After graduation, she has worked for video teams at PBS Frontline, NPR, CNN, Great Big Story, and New York Magazine. We discuss how her Mustang identity influences her work, and how she strives to represent the Mustang/Tibet/Nepal experience as she explores her professional and personal life. Find more about her here: https://www.tseringbista.com
The Born 2 Win podcast highlights individuals excelling at high levels in their purpose and calling. This podcast is for anyone looking to get ahead in life and willing to take ACTION and reach their full potential. Using our C.H.A.M.P.S. Mentoring Model of the 3E's Education, Empowerment, and Exposure.Today's guest is Kareem K.W.O.E. Wells leads a team of, what he calls Flowfessionials, that bring together families, friends & co-workers to celebrate. From Bar/Bat mitzvahs and birthday parties, to weddings & corporate events, FLOW brings something special to every party. More than just your standard DJ company, Flow Entertainment provides not only high-quality interactive entertainment but offers a personalized experience to each individual event.Coined "King of the Mitzvahs" by many, including CNN's Great Big Story and Chicago Magazine, K.W.O.E. has taken the lessons he learned growing up on the West Side of Chicago, as well as the Jewish teachings of a mitzvah, (a good deed done from religious duty) and through the K.W.O.E. Foundation, created "Parties with Purpose" (featured on NBC Chicago's Making A Difference). Through this concept, he inspires others to perform acts of human kindness while building bridges between all communities to ensure a better future for generations to come. Follow K.W.O.E. here!⬇️Web | https://www.kwoegroup.com//Instagram | http://instagram.com/kwoeFacebook | https://www.facebook.com/KWOEGROUP Twitter | http://twitter.com/therealkwoeYoutube | https://youtube.com/therealkwoeFollow CHAMPS MENTORING Here!⬇️✅ Please like and subscribe to our Podcast from our pagewww.born2win.buzzsprout.com/✅ Please like and subscribe this page and our CHAMPS Youtube- https://youtube.com/champsmentoring✅ For business inquiries contact me at vsingleton@champsmentoring.com✅ Let's connect:Personal Facebook-https://facebook.com/vondalesCHAMPS Facebook-https://facebook.com/champsmentoringCHAMPS Twitter - https://twitter.com/champsmentoringCHAMPS Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/champsmentoringCHAMPS Youtube- https://youtube.com/champsmentoring
#plugintodevin Show - Devin Thorpe for Congress Guest: Philippe Cousteau Issue: Environment. We are all suffering as our climate changes, our ocean health declines and the war on science continues to make us less healthy, less resilient and less sustainable. We need to recognize that the war on science must stop and that we must build a sustainable society. This pandemic is an opportunity to accelerate that trend. Bio: Inspired by the legacy of his grandfather of Jacques Cousteau, Philippe is an multi Emmy-Nominated TV host and producer as well as an author, speaker, and social entrepreneur. Philippe is the host and executive producer of the multi-Emmy nominated weekly syndicated series Awesome Planet, now in its sixth season. Philippe and Ashlan’s latest project is a Virtual Reality program called Drop in the Ocean which gives participants an immersive adventure exploring the ocean and premieres at Tribeca Film Festival Interactive in the spring of 2019. Recently Philippe and his wife Ashlan were the stars of The Travel Channel’s hit series Caribbean Pirate Treasure; winner of a Cynopsis Media Award for Best Adventure Reality Series. In 2016 Philippe teamed up with his wife Ashlan to co-host Nuclear Sharks, the #1 show for Discovery’s Shark Week. In 2015, they co-hosted a three-part series with Takepart.com, exploring tiger and rhino conservation in Nepal called Treasures of the Terai. As a special correspondent for CNN, he has hosted several award-winning shows, including his series Going Green which ran for four years and the 8-part special Expedition Sumatra. Philippe has also hosted and produced television programs for Animal Planet and the 8-part series Oceans for the BBC and Discovery Channel. His conservation efforts are focused on solving global social and environmental problems. In 2005 he founded EarthEcho International; a leading environmental education organization dedicated to inspiring youth to take action for a sustainable planet. To date, 2 million youth in 146 countries have participated in EarthEcho programs. Philippe has served as a consultant on a select group of international resort developments where he advises on best practices for social and environmental sustainability and his team designs immersive and meaningful 21st century experiences that leverage local environmental and cultural assets to redefine destinations. Twitter: @pcousteau Facebook: @pcousteau Linkedin: *|LinkedIn Profile|* Instagram: @pcousteau Photo credit: Voyacy Ventures Guest: Ashlan Cousteau Bio: Journalist and explorer, Ashlan Gorse Cousteau, travels the world in search of stories that entertain and inspire. From diving with great white sharks off Mexico, searching for tigers in the jungles of Nepal and filming caribou migrations in the Arctic, Cousteau engages viewers through incredible storytelling and experiences. Most recently, Ashlan was the co-star of Travel Channel’s award winning series, Caribbean Pirate Treasure. She, along with her husband Philippe Cousteau dive into maritime mysteries, explore pirate history and investigate the lore of lost treasures. Ashlan’s documentary, Nuclear Sharks, for Discovery Channel’s Shark Week 2016 premiered as the #1 rated show across all cable programming. Traveling to the Marshall Islands, she led an expedition to film, tag and investigate the mystical grey reef sharks who survived against all odds in the fall out of one of the world’s largest nuclear testing grounds. Ashlan also joined the eccentric crew of the “Desiree” for season two of The Aquatic World of Philippe Cousteau, the highly successful adventure spoof, on CNN’s digital platform Great Big Story. For over a decade, Ashlan worked for top rated entertainment shows; at Entertainment Tonight as a special correspondent and for 7 years prior as a correspondent and fill-in anchor for E! News. She also was the lead anchor of E! News Now, reaching millions of digital viewers daily. As an entertainment journalist, she covered everything from breaking news and celebrity exclusives to award shows and premieres. Cousteau’s endeavors go beyond television. In January of 2017, she traveled to Antarctica to be a headlining speaker at TedxScottBase where her talk, Laugh, Cry, Connect…How Entertainment Can Save Our Planet, was received with great praise. At the request of the United Nations, Ashlan served as host for the UN’s Convention on Migratory Species in Quito, Ecuador. She has presented at the Society of Environmental Journalists, DreamForce and SXSW Eco. Ashlan was selected by former Vice-President Al Gore to be the opening anchor for his internationally live broadcast of 24 Hours of Reality and continues to be a leading voice for environmental issues on Capitol Hill. Website: www.earthecho.org Twitter: @ashlancousteau Facebook: @ashlancousteau Instagram: @ashlancousteau #plugintodevin #UtahValues #BoldSolutions #UTpol
Mossville, Louisiana is a shadow of its former self – a community rich in natural resources and history, founded by formerly enslaved people and free people of color – where neighbors lived in harmony, insulated from the horrors of Jim Crow. Today, Mossville is surrounded by 14 petrochemical plants and the future site of apartheid-born South African-based chemical company Sasol’s newest plant – proposed as a $21.2 billion project and the largest in the western hemisphere. The remaining family members of Mossville struggle to let go of their ancestral home - and at the center of it all is a man named Stacey Ryan. Stacey is 49 years old and a lifelong resident of Mossville. In the past ten years Stacey has lost much of his family to cancer and seen the neighborhood he grew up in demolished to make way for Sasol’s new multi-billion dollar project. Having promised his dying parents to fight the sprawling chemical companies, Stacey struggles to keep his word as his power, water, and sewage are all cut off, and his health continues to decline from ongoing chemical exposure. As Sasol encroaches on citizens’ property with buyout offers, Stacey and other community members have to decide whether to exist in a chemical war zone, or abandon land that has been in their families for generations.,MOSSVILLE: When Great Trees Fall Director and Editor Alexander John Glustrom joins us to talk about one man’s fight to hold on to the last patch of a historic community and the legacy of a shattered community. For news and updates go to: mossvilleproject.com About the filmmaker: Alexander John Glustrom - Director / Editor / Director of Photography Alexander John Glustrom's first film was the award winning documentary, "Big Charity," winner of The Jury Award and Audience Award at New Orleans Film Festival and the 2015 Documentary of the Year by Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities. He was awarded "Filmmaker of the Year" at the 2015 New Orleans Millennial Awards and one of New Orleans' "40 under 40" by Gambit Magazine. He has directed, shot, produced, and edited a wide variety of film and media projects that have reached hundreds of thousands online, played at film festivals internationally and aired on major networks including HBO, CNN, Fusion, NYtimes.com, Great Big Story and Democracy Now. Daniel Bennett, Katie Mathews and Catherine Rierson are Producers, while Linda Karn and Michelle Lanier serve as Executive Producers. Lyntoria Newton is Impact Producer. For more about Alexander John Glustrom go to: ajgmedia.com Social Media: facebook.com/MossvilleProject twitter.com/MossvilleDoc instagram.com/mossvillefilm
Over uitputtende videocalls, tikkertje en een bijzondere outdoor reclame van een chips merk. Shownotes 06:31 Great Big Story op YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCajXeitgFL-rb5-gXI-aG8Q 07:53 World Chase Tag https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvo8BitSExXgP-eYjXwJvgw 10:45 Outdoor reclame van Emily Crisps https://www.adformatie.nl/purpose-marketing/een-eerste-buitencampagne-tijdens-de-lockdown 13:56 De reden waarom conference calls je zo uitputten https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20200421-why-zoom-video-chats-are-so-exhausting 18:12 E-working in China voor altijd veranderd https://www.frank.news/nl/article/tech/e-working-in-china-voor-altijd-veranderd.html
26th January 2020
Welcome back to Seeds And Their People! In this second episode, Owen interviews his seed friend Kristyn about her Korean seed stories, her food, farming, and activist community, and our mutual love for Jewel in the Palace. SEED STORIES TOLD IN THIS EPISODE:Mugwort and Ungnyeo (Bear Woman)Better Chamoe Korean Melon38N Kkaennip (Korean Perilla) MORE INFO FROM THIS EPISODE:Kristyn Leach on Instagram Namu Farm at Truelove SeedsSecond Generation Seeds at Kitazawa Seed Co.Great Big Story (video documentary about Kristyn's work)Chuseok (Harvest Festival)Jewel in the Palace / Dae Jang Geum ABOUT:Seeds And Their People is a radio show where we feature seed stories told by the people who truly love them. Hosted by Owen Taylor of Truelove Seeds and Chris Bolden-Newsome of Sankofa Community Farm at Bartram’s Garden.trueloveseeds.com/blogs/satpradio FIND OWEN HERE:Truelove SeedsTumblr | Instagram | Twitter FIND CHRIS HERE:Sankofa Community Farm at Bartram’s Garden THANKS TO:Kristyn LeachSara TaylorLaura Starecheski of RevealAlthea Baird, Amirah Mitchell, and Zoe Jeka of Truelove SeedsAdele, Elena, and Remy
Having been drawn together by God’s deep love and inspired by Jesus’ message of radical servanthood, Immanuel is a community in which we believe in practicing God’s extravagant welcome.
Part two of AJ and Chris'part discussion on the people who influenced them creatively and professionally. On this episode, your PNW podcasting duo pick up right where they left off in Episode 136 on that word that gets thrown around, especially in our current social media marketing internet age: influencers? Shout out to the men and women who serve in the US armed forces.Where do you find inspiration and motivation?Chris: Grown-up life Billy Sheehan, bassist extraordinairePatrick Rhone, minimalmac.com, author, thinker.My WifeMinimalists in generalAJ: Analog Insights -“Jules, Greg and Max. This channel's primary focus is analog photography in the digital age” https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEsIPHfiX6UpomrXTrdq67Q Max in Munich- http://www.maxplusone.net/Great Big Story- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCajXeitgFL-rb5-gXI-aG8QLiving Big in a Tiny House : Bryce Langston - https://www.youtube.com/user/livingbigtinyhouse*Music*John Gorka : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bXcjRH7mn4 “...contemporary American folk musician.[1] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gorka#cite_note-1) In 1991, Rolling Stone (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolling_Stone) magazine called him "the preeminent male singer-songwriter of what has been dubbed the New Folk Movement."*The Whys*Not for ‘the gram“- See Analog Explorer for my manifestoLiving better, stronger, healthier For the positive things in a negative day-to-day at timesAJ & Chris’s cultural recommendation to check out just because*AJ: Book * On Puget Sound *Robert Walkinshaw* (https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/SearchResults?an=robert%20walkinshaw&cm_sp=det-_-bdp-_-author) 1929: https://www.amazon.com/Puget-Sound-Robert-Walkinshaw/dp/B00086AIU8 Chris: Magazine * 0.4 Magazine - Issue 01. Might still have a copy at Village Books? https://www.pointfourmag.com/ Find us on the WebAJ: ajbarse.com (http://ajbarse.com/)Chris: chrispowell.co (http://chrispowell.co/)“Community-Powered KMRE, 102.3 FM airing our show Mondays @ 6:30 pm and Thursdays @ 6:00 pmand streaming worldwide at kmre.org” (http://kmre.org/)
Part two of AJ and Chris'part discussion on the people who influenced them creatively and professionally. On this episode, your PNW podcasting duo pick up right where they left off in Episode 136 on that word that gets thrown around, especially in our current social media marketing internet age: influencers? Shout out to the men and women who serve in the US armed forces.Where do you find inspiration and motivation?Chris: Grown-up life Billy Sheehan, bassist extraordinairePatrick Rhone, minimalmac.com, author, thinker.My WifeMinimalists in generalAJ: Analog Insights -“Jules, Greg and Max. This channel's primary focus is analog photography in the digital age” https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEsIPHfiX6UpomrXTrdq67Q Max in Munich- http://www.maxplusone.net/Great Big Story- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCajXeitgFL-rb5-gXI-aG8QLiving Big in a Tiny House : Bryce Langston - https://www.youtube.com/user/livingbigtinyhouse*Music*John Gorka : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bXcjRH7mn4 “...contemporary American folk musician.[1] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gorka#cite_note-1) In 1991, Rolling Stone (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolling_Stone) magazine called him "the preeminent male singer-songwriter of what has been dubbed the New Folk Movement."*The Whys*Not for ‘the gram“- See Analog Explorer for my manifestoLiving better, stronger, healthier For the positive things in a negative day-to-day at timesAJ & Chris’s cultural recommendation to check out just because*AJ: Book * On Puget Sound *Robert Walkinshaw* (https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/SearchResults?an=robert%20walkinshaw&cm_sp=det-_-bdp-_-author) 1929: https://www.amazon.com/Puget-Sound-Robert-Walkinshaw/dp/B00086AIU8 Chris: Magazine * 0.4 Magazine - Issue 01. Might still have a copy at Village Books? https://www.pointfourmag.com/ Find us on the WebAJ: ajbarse.com (http://ajbarse.com/)Chris: chrispowell.co (http://chrispowell.co/)“Community-Powered KMRE, 102.3 FM airing our show Mondays @ 6:30 pm and Thursdays @ 6:00 pmand streaming worldwide at kmre.org” (http://kmre.org/)
Courtney Coupe is the head of Great Big Story, cinematic storytelling unit of CNN. Since it launched in 2015, Great Big Story has produced countless mini-documentaries, primarily distributed on Youtube. Courtney discusses how Great Big Story has honed their brand, why she thinks certain stories go viral, and why they turn down 80% of incoming pitches, even from their own producers.Check out Great Big Story on YouTubeFind Rough Cut on InstagramFind Host Jennie Butler on InstagramFind Producer Sky Dylan-Robbins on Instagramhttps://www.roughcutpodcast.com/This episode is brought to you by Musicbed, which has made it easier than ever for you to find the song you're looking for with intuitive and easy-to-use browse and search, amazing indie artists and bands, incredible composers, and thousands of songs to choose from. To create your free account, go to musicbed.com. Plus, as a Rough Cut listener, you’ll get one month of subscription for free — or 20% off of a single-song license. Just enter promo code ROUGHCUT, all one word, when you check out.
Careshia Moore & Marvin Logan – Kids Growing Up in Urban America: The Truth About Their SupportAired Thursday, September 19, 2019 at 12:00 PM PST / 3:00 PM ESTThe political climate has been heating up over the past few years, and one of the many hot topics is racial disparity. Oftentimes the dialogue is judgmental and misinformed. Who gets hurt the most? The kids. Of all races. Urban America is comprised of a diverse racial landscape, and yet oftentimes the support systems necessary for urban youth to prosper are not in place. Join Jennifer as she discusses the many facets, consequences and importance of providing resources to the youth of urban populations with Careshia Moore, President and CEO of Usher’s New Look Foundation and Usher’s New Look Alumni, Marvin Logan.BiosCareshia Moore – President and CEO, Usher’s New LookCareshia Moore is an advocate and educator who has a heart for inspiring others to reach their potential. She mentors leaders, facilitates workshops, designs educational products and connects people with others and opportunities to promote personal success through education. In her roles as an Attorney, Educator and most currently, President & CEO for Usher’s New Look, she has always worked on behalf of providing access, opportunity and exposure of underserved youth.Careshia is active in her community through membership on boards such as Communities in Schools of Henry County and United Way Advisory Board, a certified Aggression Replacement Trainer and a mentor to young girls. She is also the founder of League of Women Entrepreneurs, a networking group that seeks to empower, educate and elevate women in business. In recognition of her dedication to the community and her passion for encouraging and inspiring others, she was named as one of Southern Journal Magazine’s Top 14 under 40.Careshia earned her Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Education and Juris Doctor degree from University of Florida. She shares her thoughts and experiences regarding education, parenting and success on her blog Compete to Succeed and is the President and Founder of Compete to Succeed Educational Resources, an entity that creates resources that promote positive parenting and student success.Careshia is married to her husband of 16 years, and they are the proud parents of one son and one daughter. The Moore family recently co-authored a children’s book, Mikaela the Koala.Marvin LoganMarvin Logan is a youth advocate, Hip Hop education professional, and activist. Over nearly a decade, Marvin has dedicated himself to advocating for access to education and leadership opportunities from youth all over the country. He regularly lectures on community building and bridging the gaps on how it relates to the principles of Hip Hop. Marvin’s journey began in the small city of Warren, OH. Even before he graduated high school, he participated in several student organizations, community organizing, and leadership.Marvin has worked in education with The White House, The Department of Education, the National Campus Leadership Council, Usher Raymond IV, and many others. He served as the SGA President at Kent State, and worked 2 years with Usher’s New Look organization. He has served thousands of students in the US and around the globe. You can hear some of his story with entities such as CNN’s Great Big Story, Consumer Reports, and others.Marvin is a proud graduate of Warren G. Harding High School and obtained a B.A. from Kent State University. He currently serves the founder and CEO of The Logan Company. His company focuses on supporting education, adult recreational sports, and entertainment. He is a proud member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc. His passion is to continue educate his community and fight for those who feel they don’t have a voice.His favorite quote is:“I want to make the world a better place than it was when I arrived.” – Marvin Logan
We are living in a golden age of entertainment, in which anything and everything is at our fingertips and is increasingly available to enjoy free from unwanted brand intrusions. However, we're also living in a time where our social feeds are increasingly curated by commercially-driven platform algorithms which prohibit organic exposure, forcing brands back into an ad-centric cul-de-sac. To relook at the way brands approach storytelling, our panel discussion, ‘Setting Stories Free: New adventures in storytelling beyond the spot’, brought together industry thought leaders to understand the power of stories, the channels available to contemporary storytellers, and the opportunities that exist for forward-thinking brands. With: Dave Roberts – Chief Content Officer, ENGINE Will Storr – Author, The Science of Story Telling Adam Harris – Director of Custom Solutions, Twitch Megan Wastell - Podcast Director, Global Entertainment Connor Boals - Supervisor Producer, Great Big Story
That's right, you read right- we’re going to dive deep into the depths of our favorite carbonated liquid and bit of its history. This one is bubbling with referecnes everyone, on this minreal infused edition of the Bellingham Podcast. Sparkling water (the differences) (https://skillet.lifehacker.com/the-difference-between-club-soda-seltzer-and-sparkling-1787683786) - from Lifehacker’s Skillet section * *Club Soda:* Club soda is plain water with added minerals and dissolved solids, usually sodium bicarbonate, sodium citrate, disodium phosphate, and—less commonly—plain ol’ sodium chloride. The carbonation in is added, rather than naturally occurring, and the taste can range from practically flavorless to slightly salty or bitter. Its lack of strong flavor makes it a good choice for adding some effervescence to cocktails, lemonade, or juice.* *Seltzer (Sparkling Water): *Seltzer is just plain water that has been carbonated, but is (usually) lacking in minerals. Some varieties are flavored with fruit “essence” and oils, and are meant to be enjoyed on their own. Though they lack the slight mineral bite of club soda, they make a pretty good cocktail, especially if you just want to add a tad of flavor by way of pamplemousse or some other fruit oil. [ CP - named for the town of Seltsers, Germany. From the Science History Institute Podcast episode: The Unnatural History of a Carbonated Drink (https://www.sciencehistory.org/distillations/podcast/fizzy-water). ] * *Sparkling Mineral Water:* Sparkling mineral water usually comes from a natural spring or well, and can be naturally carbonated, depending on the source. As its name would suggest, there are some minerals in there, though the type and amount of dissolved solids vary from brand to brand. Mineral water is usually best enjoyed on its own, as the flavor imparted by all the minerals (such as magnesium, potassium, and calcium) can be distracting in a cocktail.* Tonic Water*Spa towns and Niederseltzers*What are we drinking? - Get to Know Your Sparkling water choices1783: Scheweppes- watchmaker...and bubble entrepenuer: Founded in Geneva then 10 years later moved to Londo https://www.schweppesus.com/ San Pellegrino - 120 years old https://www.sanpellegrino.com/us/enPerrier - 150 years old https://www.perrier.com/us/* A French brand of natural bottled (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottled_water) mineral water (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mineral_water) captured at the source in Vergèze (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verg%C3%A8ze), located in the Gard (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gard) département (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C3%A9partement). Perrier is best known for its naturally occurring carbonation, distinctive green bottle, and higher levels of carbonation than its peers. La Croix - The anti-Perrier?From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Croix_Sparkling_Water. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Croix_Sparkling_Water)In 1981 the G. Heileman Brewing Company of La Crosse, Wisconsin, introduced LaCroix as one of the first "Anti-Perrier" brands. Meant to appeal to sparkling water consumers who were put off by Perrier's "snobbish positioning", LaCroix marketed to its niche by imaging itself as an "all occasion" beverage. In spring of 2015, with sugary soda sales plummeting to a 30-year low in the US, National Beverage saw an opportunity to expand their consumer base, subsequently launching a marketing campaign for the beverage on social media, specifically targeting millennials.Their marketing efforts have since helped position LaCroix with mainstream news outlets as a healthier alternative to sugary soda, as well as a mixer for popular cocktails.Bubly Sparkling Water (https://www.bubly.com/#/) - a PepsiCo company. Be prepared for a Michael Buble-infused, colorful, ADHD website.Canada Dry Sparkling Seltzer Water (https://www.canadadry.com/products/sparkling_seltzer_water) - FYI, made in Canada since 1904. Best known for its Ginger Ale. “The champagne of soda.”Dasani Sparkling (https://www.dasani.com/products/sparkling/) - a Coca Cola company. Fourteen flavors available.Spindrift (https://spindriftfresh.com/) - Founded in 2010, 5-8% real fruit juice in every can instead of “natural flavors.” Small company with 99 employees.VOSS (https://vosswater.com/)- was conceived back in 1998 by childhood friends, Ole Christian Sandberg and Christopher Harlem. They started out as a venture that purchased a small *water* company in Vatnestrøm, Norway* *AJ’s Desert Island Fizzy Companion: **Chris’ Desert Island Fizzy Companion:* A berry-flavored sparkling/seltzer beverage, but he leans towards Raspberry Bubly.Beverage HackingSome SodaStream owners hook up a heavy carbon dioxide tank (https://www.wsj.com/articles/want-even-cheaper-seltzer-some-fanatics-hack-their-sodastream-machines-1537458688) (think welding) or a paintball canister (https://www.wired.com/2016/03/sodamod/) to their SodaStream instead of the original gas canisters. “...per-bottle cost is roughly 25 cents per liter of carbonated water. It's much cheaper than supermarket seltzer, and it involves less worry about the environmental costs of making plastic and glass bottles and shipping them around the world.” “When I refill my two new tanks, it costs $10 instead of $45, and I've got some nice, cheap fizz on tap.”Home Carbonation Setup for Unlimited Seltzer (https://www.instructables.com/id/Home-carbonation-setup-for-unlimited-seltzer/) - A DIY recipe from Instructables.com (http://instructables.com/) that only costs $1,000. Take a $150 little bar fridge modified with beer tower/faucets and a reverse osmosis system. #YouDoTheMathOr drop $100 on a Drinkmate Carbonation Maker (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B018K1C3KK?tag=thewire06-20&linkCode=xm2&ascsubtag=AwEAAAAAAAAAAXCx) on that online website marketplace. Deep Dive into bubbly LearningThe Origins of Soda Water (https://www.mcgill.ca/oss/article/history/origins-soda-water) - 1874, Joseph Priestley's home in Leeds happened to be next to a brewery which gave off plenty of vapors. He became interested in these "airs" as he called them, particularly in the one that was responsible for the bubbles in beer. This "fixed air" he recognized as the same gas that made certain naturally occurring spring waters effervescent. Priestley combined sulfuric acid and chalk to form carbon dioxide, although he of course did not recognize the gas. He collected the gas in a pig's bladder and found a way to use it to carbonate water. He was awarded the Royal Society's prestigious Copley Medal for his publication on "Directions for Impregnating water with Fixed Air." Soda water, as the fizzy stuff was called, became very popular. But John Nooth, a Scottish physician, complained that the use of a pig bladder imparted an off flavour to the water, and to solve the problem, developed a glass apparatus for carbonating water. This found widespread use in shops and homes. The soda boom had begun.2018 Quartz piece on How Seltzer took over Americahttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrJrq4-Jn4Y&t=1sBUBBLES IN THE BUBBLE https://qz.com/1364156/the-only-people-more-obsessed-with-sparkling-water-than-millennials-are-venture-capitalists/ “The only people more obsessed with sparkling water than millennials are venture capitalists“2017 Bon Appétit (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbpMy0Fg74eXXkvxJrtEn3w)’s Brooklyn's Last Seltzer Men | I Got a Guyhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=agAkMbk20y4A century ago, New Yorkers got their fizzy water from the thousands of seltzer men that delivered to the five boroughs. Alex Gomberg is a fourth generation seltzer man and, as Brooklyn's youngest, he's trying to keep the business alive. 2016 Great Big Story’s The Last of the Seltzermenhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6xDt2RwR7YGomberg Seltzer Works is the last seltzer company in New York City. It's been around since 1953, fills up 3,000 bottles and has seltzer deliverymen attend to their customers in the New York area. There are eight seltzer men at Gomberg, who are all pretty entering old age. This is a story about the remaining few dedicated to the craft of old fashion seltzer.Find us on the WebAJ: ajbarse.com (http://ajbarse.com/)Chris: chrispowell.co (http://chrispowell.co/)“Community-Powered KMRE, 102.3 FM airing our show Mondays @ 6:30 pm and Thursdays @ 6:00 pmand streaming worldwide at kmre.org” (http://kmre.org/)Randy Rhoads, Kirk Hammett
That's right, you read right- we’re going to dive deep into the depths of our favorite carbonated liquid and bit of its history. This one is bubbling with referecnes everyone, on this minreal infused edition of the Bellingham Podcast. Sparkling water (the differences) (https://skillet.lifehacker.com/the-difference-between-club-soda-seltzer-and-sparkling-1787683786) - from Lifehacker’s Skillet section * *Club Soda:* Club soda is plain water with added minerals and dissolved solids, usually sodium bicarbonate, sodium citrate, disodium phosphate, and—less commonly—plain ol’ sodium chloride. The carbonation in is added, rather than naturally occurring, and the taste can range from practically flavorless to slightly salty or bitter. Its lack of strong flavor makes it a good choice for adding some effervescence to cocktails, lemonade, or juice.* *Seltzer (Sparkling Water): *Seltzer is just plain water that has been carbonated, but is (usually) lacking in minerals. Some varieties are flavored with fruit “essence” and oils, and are meant to be enjoyed on their own. Though they lack the slight mineral bite of club soda, they make a pretty good cocktail, especially if you just want to add a tad of flavor by way of pamplemousse or some other fruit oil. [ CP - named for the town of Seltsers, Germany. From the Science History Institute Podcast episode: The Unnatural History of a Carbonated Drink (https://www.sciencehistory.org/distillations/podcast/fizzy-water). ] * *Sparkling Mineral Water:* Sparkling mineral water usually comes from a natural spring or well, and can be naturally carbonated, depending on the source. As its name would suggest, there are some minerals in there, though the type and amount of dissolved solids vary from brand to brand. Mineral water is usually best enjoyed on its own, as the flavor imparted by all the minerals (such as magnesium, potassium, and calcium) can be distracting in a cocktail.* Tonic Water*Spa towns and Niederseltzers*What are we drinking? - Get to Know Your Sparkling water choices1783: Scheweppes- watchmaker...and bubble entrepenuer: Founded in Geneva then 10 years later moved to Londo https://www.schweppesus.com/ San Pellegrino - 120 years old https://www.sanpellegrino.com/us/enPerrier - 150 years old https://www.perrier.com/us/* A French brand of natural bottled (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottled_water) mineral water (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mineral_water) captured at the source in Vergèze (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verg%C3%A8ze), located in the Gard (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gard) département (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C3%A9partement). Perrier is best known for its naturally occurring carbonation, distinctive green bottle, and higher levels of carbonation than its peers. La Croix - The anti-Perrier?From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Croix_Sparkling_Water. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Croix_Sparkling_Water)In 1981 the G. Heileman Brewing Company of La Crosse, Wisconsin, introduced LaCroix as one of the first "Anti-Perrier" brands. Meant to appeal to sparkling water consumers who were put off by Perrier's "snobbish positioning", LaCroix marketed to its niche by imaging itself as an "all occasion" beverage. In spring of 2015, with sugary soda sales plummeting to a 30-year low in the US, National Beverage saw an opportunity to expand their consumer base, subsequently launching a marketing campaign for the beverage on social media, specifically targeting millennials.Their marketing efforts have since helped position LaCroix with mainstream news outlets as a healthier alternative to sugary soda, as well as a mixer for popular cocktails.Bubly Sparkling Water (https://www.bubly.com/#/) - a PepsiCo company. Be prepared for a Michael Buble-infused, colorful, ADHD website.Canada Dry Sparkling Seltzer Water (https://www.canadadry.com/products/sparkling_seltzer_water) - FYI, made in Canada since 1904. Best known for its Ginger Ale. “The champagne of soda.”Dasani Sparkling (https://www.dasani.com/products/sparkling/) - a Coca Cola company. Fourteen flavors available.Spindrift (https://spindriftfresh.com/) - Founded in 2010, 5-8% real fruit juice in every can instead of “natural flavors.” Small company with 99 employees.VOSS (https://vosswater.com/)- was conceived back in 1998 by childhood friends, Ole Christian Sandberg and Christopher Harlem. They started out as a venture that purchased a small *water* company in Vatnestrøm, Norway* *AJ’s Desert Island Fizzy Companion: **Chris’ Desert Island Fizzy Companion:* A berry-flavored sparkling/seltzer beverage, but he leans towards Raspberry Bubly.Beverage HackingSome SodaStream owners hook up a heavy carbon dioxide tank (https://www.wsj.com/articles/want-even-cheaper-seltzer-some-fanatics-hack-their-sodastream-machines-1537458688) (think welding) or a paintball canister (https://www.wired.com/2016/03/sodamod/) to their SodaStream instead of the original gas canisters. “...per-bottle cost is roughly 25 cents per liter of carbonated water. It's much cheaper than supermarket seltzer, and it involves less worry about the environmental costs of making plastic and glass bottles and shipping them around the world.” “When I refill my two new tanks, it costs $10 instead of $45, and I've got some nice, cheap fizz on tap.”Home Carbonation Setup for Unlimited Seltzer (https://www.instructables.com/id/Home-carbonation-setup-for-unlimited-seltzer/) - A DIY recipe from Instructables.com (http://instructables.com/) that only costs $1,000. Take a $150 little bar fridge modified with beer tower/faucets and a reverse osmosis system. #YouDoTheMathOr drop $100 on a Drinkmate Carbonation Maker (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B018K1C3KK?tag=thewire06-20&linkCode=xm2&ascsubtag=AwEAAAAAAAAAAXCx) on that online website marketplace. Deep Dive into bubbly LearningThe Origins of Soda Water (https://www.mcgill.ca/oss/article/history/origins-soda-water) - 1874, Joseph Priestley's home in Leeds happened to be next to a brewery which gave off plenty of vapors. He became interested in these "airs" as he called them, particularly in the one that was responsible for the bubbles in beer. This "fixed air" he recognized as the same gas that made certain naturally occurring spring waters effervescent. Priestley combined sulfuric acid and chalk to form carbon dioxide, although he of course did not recognize the gas. He collected the gas in a pig's bladder and found a way to use it to carbonate water. He was awarded the Royal Society's prestigious Copley Medal for his publication on "Directions for Impregnating water with Fixed Air." Soda water, as the fizzy stuff was called, became very popular. But John Nooth, a Scottish physician, complained that the use of a pig bladder imparted an off flavour to the water, and to solve the problem, developed a glass apparatus for carbonating water. This found widespread use in shops and homes. The soda boom had begun.2018 Quartz piece on How Seltzer took over Americahttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrJrq4-Jn4Y&t=1sBUBBLES IN THE BUBBLE https://qz.com/1364156/the-only-people-more-obsessed-with-sparkling-water-than-millennials-are-venture-capitalists/ “The only people more obsessed with sparkling water than millennials are venture capitalists“2017 Bon Appétit (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbpMy0Fg74eXXkvxJrtEn3w)’s Brooklyn's Last Seltzer Men | I Got a Guyhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=agAkMbk20y4A century ago, New Yorkers got their fizzy water from the thousands of seltzer men that delivered to the five boroughs. Alex Gomberg is a fourth generation seltzer man and, as Brooklyn's youngest, he's trying to keep the business alive. 2016 Great Big Story’s The Last of the Seltzermenhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6xDt2RwR7YGomberg Seltzer Works is the last seltzer company in New York City. It's been around since 1953, fills up 3,000 bottles and has seltzer deliverymen attend to their customers in the New York area. There are eight seltzer men at Gomberg, who are all pretty entering old age. This is a story about the remaining few dedicated to the craft of old fashion seltzer.Find us on the WebAJ: ajbarse.com (http://ajbarse.com/)Chris: chrispowell.co (http://chrispowell.co/)“Community-Powered KMRE, 102.3 FM airing our show Mondays @ 6:30 pm and Thursdays @ 6:00 pmand streaming worldwide at kmre.org” (http://kmre.org/)Randy Rhoads, Kirk Hammett
Today on Bud's #WeeklyGeekOut . . . One of the internet's greatest mysteries has just been given a deep dive by one of the coolest storytelling companies. Great Big Story dives into CICADA 3301. =) webmeister Bud Listen and get more details here: http://www.TheZone.fm/2019/08/21/geekout-great-big-story-cicada-3301/
Today on Bud's #WeeklyGeekOut . . . One of the internet's greatest mysteries has just been given a deep dive by one of the coolest storytelling companies. Great Big Story dives into CICADA 3301. =) webmeister Bud Listen and get more details here: http://www.TheZone.fm/2019/08/21/geekout-great-big-story-cicada-3301/
In 2015, CNN launched Great Big Story -- a video-first media company that produces inspirational micro-documentaries. For its first four years, that meant building an audience on platforms. Now, as Coupe looks towards the future, she wants to see GBS continue to grow, not just in views, but also in audience impact. On this week's episode of The Digiday Podcast, Brian Morrissey sits down with Coupe to discuss the importance of strategy in diversifying platforms, knowing when to say no and why she wants to make GBS's website their premier online destination.
Pippa Scaife är commercial director, Emerging Brands på CNN International, där hennes uppdrag är att göra “cool stuff”, som att bygga kommersiella partnerskap för det hyllade CNN-bolaget “Great Big Story”. De lyfter fram fascinerande berättelser om människor, platser och saker som kan förändra hur vi ser på världen – och sprider historierna via streamingtjänster och sociala plattformar. Scaife är en lysande talare med en bred bakgrund från både Spotify och Playstation – och hennes superstyrka är vetskapen om hur man ska anpassa berättandet för olika typer av skärmar.
this episode takes a look at great big story. Com. A website that allows students to create videos and has videos to share with your classroom.
This is a special collaboration with $6.99 Per Pound Podcast and First Generation Burden. Rich Tu sits down with Jaeki Cho and Joann Park to talk about their origins in South Korea, the commonalities between Korean and Filipino culture, and what it means to be the "other". We're gettin' real #immigrantexcellence up in here. $6.99 Per Pound is a podcast featuring interviews with leaders and professionals from a wide variety of fields. Paying homage to Korean-owned hot food delis in New York City, the inquisitive duo Joann Park and Jaeki Cho treat listeners to a buffet of HOT takes on career, culture and community. Jaeki Cho is a Queens native whose insight on race and culture have been quoted on MSNBC, The New York Times, BBC Radio, MTV, and Forbes. He co-produced the feature documentary Bad Rap, which premiered at Tribeca Film Festival and is currently streaming on Netflix. He's a partner and creative director for lifestyle boutique Alumni. Before his entrepreneurial pursuit, he was a music journalist, writing for Complex, VIBE, Billboard, and working as an editor for XXL. Joann Park is a Content Strategist, Producer and Community Builder based in New York City. By day, Joann works at CNN's Great Big Story, a cinematic media company, where she oversees content programming and audience development. She has also worked for MTV, CBS & Kore Asian Media. In 2018, Joann was also honored as a Cynopsis Rising Star, an title that recognizes emerging leaders under 30 in the media industry. Joann has organized and moderated panels for CNN, Vox Media, Phillip Lim and The Cosmos to advance the creative Asian American community. Check out FirstGenBurden.com for all the episodes Follow us @firstgenburden and Rich Tu / @rich_tu Thanks DesGin for their support --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/firstgenburden/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/firstgenburden/support
This is a special collaboration with $6.99 Per Pound Podcast and First Generation Burden. Rich Tu sits down with Jaeki Cho and Joann Park to talk about their origins in South Korea, the commonalities between Korean and Filipino culture, and what it means to be the "other". We're gettin' real #immigrantexcellence up in here. $6.99 Per Pound is a podcast featuring interviews with leaders and professionals from a wide variety of fields. Paying homage to Korean-owned hot food delis in New York City, the inquisitive duo Joann Park and Jaeki Cho treat listeners to a buffet of HOT takes on career, culture and community. Jaeki Cho is a Queens native whose insight on race and culture have been quoted on MSNBC, The New York Times, BBC Radio, MTV, and Forbes. He co-produced the feature documentary Bad Rap, which premiered at Tribeca Film Festival and is currently streaming on Netflix. He’s a partner and creative director for lifestyle boutique Alumni. Before his entrepreneurial pursuit, he was a music journalist, writing for Complex, VIBE, Billboard, and working as an editor for XXL. Joann Park is a Content Strategist, Producer and Community Builder based in New York City. By day, Joann works at CNN’s Great Big Story, a cinematic media company, where she oversees content programming and audience development. She has also worked for MTV, CBS & Kore Asian Media. In 2018, Joann was also honored as a Cynopsis Rising Star, an title that recognizes emerging leaders under 30 in the media industry. Joann has organized and moderated panels for CNN, Vox Media, Phillip Lim and The Cosmos to advance the creative Asian American community.
First Of All wishes you all Happy Asian Pacific American Heritage Month! OK, so he West Coast vs East Coast conversation has been the source of many mainstream jokes, memes & rap songs throughout American pop culture. But what about the Asian American perspective? In this episode, Minji sits down with the insightful & hilarious hosts of the NYC-based 6.99 Per Pound Podcast, JoAnn Park & Jaeki Cho right in the heart of Manhattan at Great Big Story during the Tribeca Film Festival. Together they break down their upbringings from international moves to pop culture & neighborhood influences in slang, school, partying, careers & everything in between that shaped their unique Asian American experiences on opposite coasts. This week's guest: Jaeki Cho - IG: @JaekiCho Joann Park - IG: @JoJoParque $6.99 per Pound Podcast Special thanks to guest engineer Marcus Hahm and guest producers Julie Young & Michael Ken Strewart from $6.99 per Pound for their assistance in making this episode! Follow Minji on: Twitter (@minjeeeezy) Instagram (@minjeezy) Our theme song is "Yellow Ranger" by Awkwafina Follow the show on Instagram and Twitter and support our Patreon This podcast is part of Potluck: An Asian American Podcast Collective Produced by @marvinyueh
La historia ha sido marcada por grandes epidemias, y muchos cambios en planificacion urbana fueron a causa de epidemias. Piénsenlo, las epidemias pueden causar la muerte de mucha gente, los gobiernos no se pueden dar el lujo de tener a gran parte de su poblacion enferma o muriendose. Ejemplos de grandes pandemiad de la historia, la muerte negra, la gripe espanola, SIDA, y la 3ra pandemia de cólera. Ahora la epidemiologia, pues obviamente se puede simplicficar demasiado como el studio de epidemias, pero en que consiste ese estudio? Dale play para que te enteres. Información extra: Video de Crash Course: Disease! Video de Great Big Story: Disease Detectives
Film Photography Podcast Episode 204 - November 1, 2018 Michael Raso is joined by Leslie Lazenby, John Fedele, Mark Dalzell and Mark O'Brien. Discussed is Kodak Ektachrome history, Great Big Story, Film Ferrania Update and more. Show Notes:https://filmphotographyproject.com/podcast/ FPP On-Line Storehttps://filmphotographystore.com/
What is up everyone! We are back with another episode of The Just Talk Podcast with Episode 59! First and foremost we give shout outs to Superawesomestuff for giving us a wonderful review as well as rating us on iTunes and Jameson Brown Coffee over at Pasadena. Superawesomestuff THANK YOU SO MUCH for doing that and we hope you keep on listening and enjoying the podcast! As for Jameson Brown Coffee, stop by and get some coffee from them because Mike said so hahaha. In this episode we ask the question, out of the Kung Fu Masters, from Jackie Chan, Jet Li, Bruce Lee, and Donnie Yen, who would win in a battle royale fight? Or just a round-robin type of tournament between the 4 Masters. Also included in the mix was Scott Adkins, Michael Jai White and The Raid Franchise. We talk about David Goggins, Jocko Willink, Jiu Jitsu, the Military in general and the Special Forces / US Navy SEALS. .....So Diphallia (2 Penises) is a rare condition and was brought up in the episode.....LOL Another question that we asked was if you can dump some older memories/skills to learn new skills, would you? Examples of this would be learning the piano, leaning a new language, or even learning how to cook. We also talk about Chris Rock's Special Tamborine on Netflix, NF the Rap/Hip-Hop Artist/Musician, the Great Big Story and how there's an Indian Food place inside a gas station, and finally Ugly Delicious that was recommended by Mike. And finally, we dive in and say what are Mount Rushmore of Superhero Movies are! Rich (Superman: The Movie, X2: X-Men United, The Dark Knight, and The Avengers) Tommy (Blade, Batman Begins, Iron Man, Deadpool) As always, we thank you all for the support that you've given us and also for listening to us! And if you awesome people could leave us a rating and a review on iTunes, we would appreciate that very much! Thank you again and keep on listening! Follow us on Instagram @thejusttalkpodcast!
What is up everyone! We are back with another episode of The Just Talk Podcast with Episode 59! First and foremost we give shout outs to Superawesomestuff for giving us a wonderful review as well as rating us on iTunes and Jameson Brown Coffee over at Pasadena. Superawesomestuff THANK YOU SO MUCH for doing that and we hope you keep on listening and enjoying the podcast! As for Jameson Brown Coffee, stop by and get some coffee from them because Mike said so hahaha. In this episode we ask the question, out of the Kung Fu Masters, from Jackie Chan, Jet Li, Bruce Lee, and Donnie Yen, who would win in a battle royale fight? Or just a round-robin type of tournament between the 4 Masters. Also included in the mix was Scott Adkins, Michael Jai White and The Raid Franchise. We talk about David Goggins, Jocko Willink, Jiu Jitsu, the Military in general and the Special Forces / US Navy SEALS. .....So Diphallia (2 Penises) is a rare condition and was brought up in the episode.....LOL Another question that we asked was if you can dump some older memories/skills to learn new skills, would you? Examples of this would be learning the piano, leaning a new language, or even learning how to cook. We also talk about Chris Rock's Special Tamborine on Netflix, NF the Rap/Hip-Hop Artist/Musician, the Great Big Story and how there's an Indian Food place inside a gas station, and finally Ugly Delicious that was recommended by Mike. And finally, we dive in and say what are Mount Rushmore of Superhero Movies are! Rich (Superman: The Movie, X2: X-Men United, The Dark Knight, and The Avengers) Tommy (Blade, Batman Begins, Iron Man, Deadpool) As always, we thank you all for the support that you've given us and also for listening to us! And if you awesome people could leave us a rating and a review on iTunes, we would appreciate that very much! Thank you again and keep on listening! Follow us on Instagram @thejusttalkpodcast!
Here is a special treat - chances are you’ve seen the blockbuster show, America’s Got Talent. And if so, you may have seen Mandy Harvey, the incredible singer who is, deaf. Talk about an overcoming, inspiring story! She was in college pursuing a vocal music education degree, then lost her hearing. She left the program to pursue other career options, but later returned to music. There is a great story on what led to that. Fast forward to America’s Got Talent where she reached the finals and was Simon Cowell’s Golden Buzzer Winner, and in addition, CNN’s Great Big Story captured over 10 million hits on social media, Burt’s Bees signed her up for their “Remarkable Women” campaign, NBC Nightly News profiled her, and she has started performing at the world’s most prestigious clubs, concert stages and festivals.Now in addition to her recording career, live performances, and inspirational speaking, Mandy has just released her first book title; Sensing The Rhythm, Finding My Voice In a World Without Sound and it’s a message of helping others to realize their dreams and pursue their hopes. As an Ambassador for No Barriers USA, she travels the country to heighten awareness, break down blocks, challenge stereotypes, and lead the charge toward a brighter future for all.In this show we talk about her, her story and her message. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The opportunity to be newsworthy for brands and make headlines for them… Otto Bell, Chief Creative Officer of Courageous Studio at CNN (Turner’s first brand studio – (profile)), joins Lisa Berger, Dalia Strum and Edward Hertzman at the MouthMedia Network Studios powered by Sennheiser. Presented by 24 Seven Talent.The genesis of Courageous, stories with editorial merit, and the eclipse event Otto Bell, Chief Creative Officer of Courageous Studio at CNN, discusses the genesis of Courageous, Turner’s first brand studio, and what it’s been like to make branded content for CNN, HLN and Great Big Story. Bell says that while embarking on creating branded content for Courageous, it’s been important to him to maintain brand credibility and he’s taken particular care to avoid eroding the audience’s trust in the brand. Bell says what sets CNN apart is the brand’s authority its history in video. CNN and Courageous offer more than 50 points of video-driven distribution, from Snapchat to airport channels and robust social channels – Courageous is a one-stop shop for a true global rollout of content campaigns. Bell also notes that Courageous has a full-time, in-house team of cinematographers, editors, photographers, graphic designers etc. and this enables the team to create the best content possible. They can recruit top talent because of the brand’s reach (they offer artists a chance to have their work seen by a tremendous audience) and because Courageous offers the opportunity to learn marketing from the ground up, to become fluent in getting ideas commissioned. He touches on how Courageous is not in the business of making “fluffy advertising”, and how they are looking for stories that have editorial merit. Bell goes into the excitement of working on the eclipse concept this past summer. His team worked with Grey and BY MindShare to bring the world access to the moment of totality. They used new technology and high dynamic range cameras with 44 incoming feeds (around 6 times more than a usual CNN day). Passing the acid test branded content, the value of a WPP Fellowship, and the contraction of the agency world Bell goes into exploring live advertising and how working with new technology like Alexa programming and audio augmented reality is what keeps things exciting. He dives into a recent piece on the world’s only milk sommelier where he traveled to Holland to meet with a dairy farmer. He says this piece passed an “acid test” when it was picked up by Food and Wine Grub Street, DairyBusiness.com and The Washington Post, proving branded content stands on its own two feet. According to Bell the opportunity to create newsworthy moments for brands is thrilling but there are pitfalls of this type of work, such as the challenges of setting up proper production facilities to keep the pipeline filled. Bell recalls his WPP Fellowship and how he saw the TV advertising model was breaking, and that the entertainment model was growing. He describes coming to New York with a desire to go into branded entertainment, and how he landed a role as Creative Director at Ogilvy. Bell shares how he helped come up with an idea for a content studio at CNN and how it was the right jump at the right time. Snack time brings a British candy offering orange to caramel to raisin flavors.Communication, being proud of the work, and a new magazine Bell describes the different experience of working on CNN TV vs. the digital side. When he thinks about future-proofing the business, he says it’s the way you look at the world -a good story is a good story, whether it’s a documentary or a piece of targeted intelligent brand content. What’s key to his process is over-communicating so clients feel deeply involved. Bell reflects on the value of being proud of the work in the end, and the goals of making sure any piece hits objectives, works for the audience, is good looking, and thoughtful work. He distinguishes between breaking news and branded content, how they produce a lot of 2-3 minute short films, and the way real events lead to branded content (such a wedding proposal story). Bell reveals what keeps him up at night, and the glut of content in the marketplace. His final thoughts, “There has to be some kind of exchange if you want your content to succeed in this busy, busy marketplace.” The post 24 Seven Presents: Otto Bell of Courageous Studio at CNN – Making Headlines for Brands appeared first on Content Is Your Business.
“Thank you Mr. Machine...or Ms. Machine?” —John Zerzan About: What does one make of our future—like the one 50 years from now? The answer, or rather a possible answer, has a lot to do with choice and technology. Whether we survive or go extinct is, however, another question. Show Notes: [01:20] A link to download the Park Mobile app [01:25] “Inamorata (Marimba Solo)” by Blue Dot Sessions [04:40] “Inside the Tower” by Visager [06:15] More on Clooneys Pub (SFGate) [06:40] Light reading on the James Comey hearings (CNN) [07:50] More on Peter Eckersley (Electronic Frontier Foundation) [08:20] Light reading on the latest allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 US Election (The New York Times) [09:40] “When in the West” by Blue Dot Sessions [09:45] Light reading on: The abacus (Ryerson University) The astrolabe (Smithsonian Magazine) The sundial (How Stuff Works) The analytical engine (ThoughtCo) And a worthwhile video on Charles Babbage And this Crash Course series on the history of computing is worth the watch [10:35] Related: How much Internet v.1 cost (Larry Press) [10:20] Newsreel from 1964 track meet between the US and USSR [10:35] Some worthwhile videos on how the Internet started: In animation form In SciShow series form with Part I, II and III And in a super-short condensed form [10:45] “Timesharing: A Solution to Computer Bottlenecks” (Computer History Museum) [11:25] Light reading on ARPANET (Live Science) Related: Original sketch of ARPANET (SRI International) Related: Room where the first message was sent (Gizmodo) Related: The growth of the Internet over the years (Vox) Related: An overview of the Internet (WebpageFX) Related: A list of Internet firsts Related: What happens every second on the Internet [11:55] “Gregorian Chant” by Kevin MacLeod [12:25] “Inside the Tower” by Visager [12:55] Some background on: TCP/IP Protocols and the individual behind it (WIRED) Advanced packet switching (Editor’s note: you should watch this) Email (Nethistory.com) Related: How the Internet was viewed in 1969 and in 1981 [13:10] Light reading on the World Wide Web And on Tim Berners-Lee Related: Why it’s called surfing the web [13:30] What it was like being online in the 80s (Gizmodo) [13:50] Light reading on AOL (Fast Company) ...and Compuserve (Ars Technica) Animation illustrating “the series of tubes” Sound of a 56K dial up modem (10Stripe.com) [14:00] Light reading on the Eternal September (Wikipedia) Related: A guide on the Internet before it took off (TIME) [14:10] The man behind the “You Got Mail” audio (Great Big Story) [14:15] Light reading on the early browser days of Erwise, Mosaic and Netscape (Ars Technica) [14:25] Commercialization begins (New York Times) Sort of related: Vice President Al Gore logs onto the Internet (CSPAN) Also sort of related: Al Gore’s relationship with the Internet (Gizmodo) [14:25] “Astrisx” by Blue Dot Sessions [14:35] A montage of Pets.com commercials—and a brilliant overview on the dotcom bubble (WIRED) [14:45] Is there a 2010s Tech Bubble? (in no particular order) Bloomberg Vanity Fair The Telegraph Business Insider Inc Forbes [15:15] More on the more modern history of the Internet and related services [15:30] More on Aral Balkan (@aral) And on his mission for an independent Internet (Paste) [16:30] See the Ethical Design Manifesto here [18:00] Some short videos on how online advertising works: The evolution of online display advertising (IABUK) The life of a programmatic ad (Media Crossing) Background on real-time bidding (Acuity Ads) ...and one more pivot to video—the history of ads (Mashable) [20:10] More on Kevin Kelly (@Kevin2Kelly) Bio Author of What Technology Wants The Inevitable Read his writing here (WIRED) Hear about his trip around the world (This American Life — First Act of the show) Read his “Network Nation” report here Light reading on the Whole Earth Catalog (Rolling Stone) And the WELL And his book Out of Control, which was a required reading for actors on The Matrix [22:50] “Cyclotrak” by Blue Dot Sessions [23:20] More on the Technium [25:45] “Drone Birch” by Blue Dot Sessions [27:30] See related study on early human brain vs. later human brain (Smithsonian Magazine) [27:40] Light reading on John Zerzan (The Guardian) [27:50] Light reading on the Unabomber (The Atlantic) [28:05] Kaczynski's Manifesto and its reviews [28:45] A 60 Minutes report on the Battle for Seattle (CBS News) [29:00] “Tralaga” by Blue Dot Sessions [29:40] Zerzan’s book—Elements of Refusal [29:45] More on Anarchy Radio [29:55] And a link to the Black and Green Review [32:50] Maker Faire 2017 (San Jose Mercury News) [33:40] See the tesla coil here [34:20] See Randy Gallegos’ paintings here [35:35] “Epilogue” by Visager [36:00] More on Jason Malcolm Stewart (@sabbathsoldier) [38:55] More on Ronald Moore (@rondmoore) See related Portlandia skit [40:00] Related: See Ray Kurzweil on the three technologies that will shape our future [40:30] More on Alex Schultink Related: Dr. Jennifer Doudna (New York Times) Related: Radiolab episode on CRISPR [43:40] More on Dr. Heather Berlin (@heather_berlin) An interview where Berlin discusses what happens to your brain on creativity (Studio 360) [47:40] Meet Pepper Inside Pepper (Nikkei Asian Review) [48:55] Light reading on Softbank (Wikipedia) [50:30] “How Realistic Is Westworld?” (Vulture) [50:55] Light reading on technological singularity (The Guardian) The concerns over AI (The Hive) Open letter on artificial intelligence [51:05] Stephen Hawking on AI (BBC) [52:30] Kevin Kelly’s full takedown of the singularity (WIRED) [53:05] Kelly’s $1,000 bet with Kirk Sale (Wired) [57:05] “A Simple Blur” by Blue Dot Sessions [58:00] Light reading on the state of mental illness in the States (Salon) Related: Study finds more Americans suffering from stress, anxiety and depress (CBS News) [01:02:50] Recommended Podcast to Listen to Until the Next Show: Terrible, Thanks For Asking More at thisissomenoise.com/ep-19
MediaVillage's Insider InSites podcast on Media, Marketing and Advertising
This episode of Insider InSites gathered some insights in a little bit of a different way: E.B. Moss spoke directly with some of the attendees and a panelist from the 4th Annual 1stFive Summer Intern Experience. At Media Village 1stFive refers to people who are in their first five years of the media, marketing, and advertising industries. Interns? They’re the ones who work hard all summer long, trying to gain their own insights about what this field is that they might be getting into. MediaVillage, Turner and Horizon Media gathered about 350 students and invited them to hear from some senior industry leaders, like our own Jack Myers, the Founder of 1stfive.org and MediaVillage.com, and Donna Speciale, President of Turner Ad Sales, Eileen Benwitt, Chief Talent Officer for Horizon Media, and a host of other luminaries. The students were really interested in what these senior leaders had to say, and we were really interested in what these Generation Z students had to say during breakout sessions afterwards. We heard some pretty heartfelt stories from these students, ranging from their experience with diversity and the challenges that that presented, to the thrill of being able to really make on the job contributions, whether it was in production or social media, or coming up with a smart media plan. The stories are heartwarming. You can read a lot more about them on mediavillage.com in the 1stFive section. Here's the transcript: E.B. Moss We're here at the 1stFive Experience. My current victim is Casey Carty. She's a senior at College of Holy Cross, and she had a great opportunity interning at Turner this summer, right? Tell me a little bit about the department where you work. Casey C.: I'm working on the Solutions Team at Turner, specifically in the News Department, so I work with CNN, HLN, and Great Big Story. Moss: Are you already a news fan, or was this a department you were put into regardless of your interests? Casey I think it was more of a marriage... I've always been very passionate about politics in particular. I'm actually a political science major at Holy Cross, so it worked out really beautifully. I'm also really passionate about human interest stories, which is something Great Big Story does so, so well right now. They're creating beautiful content, from all around the world and the people that live within it. Moss: Tell me a little bit about your goals for your career in media. Casey I think that for me it's really important to be constantly challenged, and to find something that I'm really passionate about, something that I can throw all my energy behind. I want something that's really going to move me and move the people around me....I'm loving branded content right now; it’s an amazing way that media's really catering to clients right now, and companies that want to put their message out there, making it interesting to audiences, and really relevant to what's happening in the world. Some do it not so well, but the people that are doing really well are phenomenal...and it's only going to create more opportunities and visibility for people. Moss: What did you get to put your hands on in developing branded content this summer as an intern specifically? Casey: I just finished my intern project, where I had the chance to pitch two editorial and two branded content ideas for Airbnb, which was really fun. It's a company that's very near and dear to my heart, because I use it quite a bit [studying in Scotland] ... I got to was partner them up with Great Big Story and the incredible human interest stories that they're telling. A specific one was one about a couple who live in Maine... renting their home out and pursuing their dream of traveling up and down the coast of New England on their sailboat. ... Moss: What did they let you do specifically? How embracing was Turner of your ideas and how much did they let you push up your sleeves and put your hands on things? Casey: This is more of a thought starter, so it was something that we were theoretically pitching Airbnb, so no production. I'm more on the marketing and sales side, but where a lot of my input came in was the idea...I sat down with a couple of the producers and we just talked it out. We were like, "What about this? What about that?" We made up a story and then we went out on Google and actually found those people, which was really fun. Julie and Michael came to life. ... Moss: You felt that people listened to you as a 20-something-year-old and you haven't graduated college yet, but you felt respected and listened to? Casey: I think it's a lot about how you portray yourself. I'm learning so, so much from the people around me, but I think that they also realize that I have valid ideas. I have a valid opinion. It took a while, of course, as I started out. I'm not going to burst out on my first meeting, "Oh, I have a great idea." I'm still learning at that point, but I think as I started to realize what the company was trying to portray for themselves, and what Turner is and the brand image that Turner has and has established for itself for so many years. I started to understand that, which I still haven't completely after two months or three months, but I think I got a better perspective and I was able to talk to my supervisor and say, "I think I have a really good idea." They'd be like, "Bring it up in the next meeting. We want to hear it." They really opened that door for me and shined that light on my idea, my creative side that maybe wasn't always being shown when I was taking notes or copying papers. Moss: There was a lot of talk earlier in your breakout session here at the 1stFive Summer Intern Experience about diversity. What's your observation about that, and what's been your experience? Do you sense inclusion? ... exclusion? Talk to me a little bit about diversity and what you want in a future organization you'll join. Casey: I think one of my fellow Turner interns said it really well, that companies can always do better. There's so much more that companies can do, because it's never going to be enough. I think there's always so much more that we can do. I think that companies need to push beyond the gold stamp of "We hired two minorities this year." That's not enough. They need to be people that young people in the company, young people in the industry coming up, can view as mentors, as people in leadership positions, because they're qualified. They're ready to take on those jobs and they're ready to push the companies forward. Women, minorities, they're all here for it, and they're ready to do big things in the industry. Hopefully companies like Turner, big trendsetters, CBS, Disney, hopefully they realize that, they recognize that and they do more, because there's definitely more to be done. E.B. Moss: I think that you express yourself beautifully. I think that you're well on your way, Casey Carty in case anybody's hiring in another year! -------------- Now I'm sitting here with another fabulous intern, Catharine Okoye, who was in a different breakout session here at the 1stFive Summer Intern Experience. Tell me a little bit about where you've been interning this summer, Cat. Catharine O.: This summer I'm interning with Experience Harlem. It's a local Harlem blog that informs people of all the essential activities to experience in Harlem, uptown. I've been a marketing intern, so just learning how to create and send messages that reflects what Experience Harlem is all about. Moss: This is your second internship. What inspired you to apply for Experience Harlem? How did that form, or whatever you've done in your other internships, form where you want to go in your future? Cat: I was inspired to apply for Experience Harlem because of the lack of diversity [in my previous internship.] Experience Harlem is owned by a black woman and she has a lot of experience within the industry of marketing, working for Ebony and Essence. I just wanted to go to where my voice would be represented, respected, and obviously reflected, and I have a lot of hands-on experience right now. She's letting me do a lot of things that, especially with the social media marketing, I didn't really get a chance to do before. Moss: What do you get to do as an intern? Tell me all about your experiences. Cat: I had another internship at WABC-TV and I had a lot of hands-on work I could do there too. They also let us go to different departments as well, which was really cool. But with Experience Harlem I get a lot more because it's way smaller, so I get to see a lot more of the action: I attend events, do street teams, sending out guides...As far as in the office, I am doing social media marketing, so I'm looking at the different activities that are going on in Harlem, and how I can create a short caption to really relay the information to her audience...of Uptown, which is Harlem, Washington Heights, Inwood, and let them know, "Yo, you need to come experience this, this weekend, or experience it today, it's going to be fun," stuff like that. Moss: You feel valued. You feel like they listen to you and that they take up your recommendations and your creativity? Cat: Yeah. I feel like I'm learning a lot with this internship. I'm learning that it takes a lot of thought and effort, and a lot of meaningfulness, and making sure that you really do care about the type of messages that you're sending out. It's not something that you just do quickly, [despite] this era that we're in, people are so incentivized to send out whatever they want so quickly. I feel like preparation... is really important alongside creativity. That's what I'm learning and just trying to figure out, actually, how my path is going to go. It's not as straightforward as I thought it was going to be. It's changing. Moss: That's really good to know and to own and decide where you want to go after that. A big focus for us at MediaVillage and a large part of why we wanted to do this Summer Intern Experience was to talk about diversity. It's very important in terms of the Gen-Z generation which is very multicultural and represents where America is going in terms of the [shifting] balance of minority and majority [population]. What do you think, as a Gen Z woman, in terms of any progress we're making, any hope for the future, any balance that you're seeing or not? Cat: This is tough for me. As far as diversity goes, I feel like there's a lot more work that could be done, especially when you see the transition from Obama White House to now a Trump White House. I really do believe that America can do more to make people feel more inclusive. I do see progress somewhat, and... I do bag on Trump, but at the same time his confidence is something that I can't really just knock down. I've been inspired by the fact that he's able to be himself. It makes me more inspired to make sure that I stick to my truth and communicate that to others, and making sure that I'm helping my community and we're helping ourselves to progress. I do see it. It just needs more work. I feel if there were more people who believe that, they need to just do as they say. Moss: I love that you took a positive out of what's going on in our country today, and that you're applying it. It sounds like you're applying it in terms of choosing where you wanted to intern as well, is that right? Cat: Yes, yes. Put your money where your mouth is. Moss: Great conversation, Cat. Keep us in mind when you're looking for that first job out of college. You sound great! -------------- Finally, I had a chance to also catch up with Eileen Benwitt, who is the EVP, Chief Talent Officer at Horizon Media. Eileen was a speaker as part of our 1st Five opening panel. Then she led a breakout session and really got to get inside the heads of some of the interns who spent their summers both at Horizon and a slew of other media companies. Moss: Eileen, what would your big takeaway be from today? Eileen Benwitt: I would say the level of intelligence and awareness of the interns really blew me away. This was an incredibly articulate, passionate, purposeful group of interns that, I would hire all of them if I could. Moss: A lot of what we talked about today was the Gen-Z attitude and what they're expecting, hoping for, the difference between them and Millennials. What was your take on their perceptions and their attitudes? Benwitt: It's an interesting question, because during the breakout, a couple of people said that they were surprised and pleasantly pleased that as Gen-Z that they're different than Millennials. They're desperate to have their own identity and not to be blended in with Millennials. They themselves, to hear that, were surprised and pleased. Moss: What do you think is a key difference, for example? Benwitt: I think the key difference with Gen-Z is that they grew up smart. What I mean by smart: smartphones, smart technology, smart TVs, and that interaction is something that none of us grew up with. I can't imagine what it's like but for them that's all they know: They have access. They have interplay, they have intersection with everything, so we have a lot to learn from them. Moss: Fascinating, yes, and Jack Myers [in his keynote] asked them to "Please disrupt. Disrupt, we need you as our future leaders." Do you feel similar? Benwitt: bsolutely, because they're in it. They're experiencing it. That's their comfort. What I'm interested in is what is their discomfort, because if you're comfortable in disruption, what's next? They're going to teach us that. Moss: Yes, and part of the advice that you gave to these 1stFivers was to develop an understanding of themselves... There was a lot of conversation around diversity Tell me more about what Horizon's doing to satisfy the Gen-Z interest in seeing diversity. Benwitt: Their level of awareness that they each brought to this topic moved me quite a bit and it made me feel really passionate about figuring it out, because we don't have the diversity that we want in this community, in this industry. We absolutely, we have to figure it out, and we all are trying to figure it out. We're partnering with different organizations, different schools to understand and see what we can do to bring more diversity in. I think it's going to be what's going to change this industry. Moss: Did you identify some standout interns that you can see working here? What were some of the qualities that you just loved? Benwitt: Their awareness of themselves, their awareness of the marketplace, their awareness of the role social media, media advertising has in community, in business, in the socio-economic landscape that we're all a part of. E.B. Moss: Well said. Eileen Benwitt, who is the EVP and Chief Talent Officer, Horizon Media, thank you so much for not only being a part of the 1stFive Summer Intern Experience but also for guiding them through some really great lessons in the breakout session.
Sharon and Scott return to TWiV for a Zika virus update, including their work on viral evolution and spread, and whether pre-existing immunity to dengue virus enhances pathogenesis. Hosts: Vincent Racaniello, Dickson Despommier, Alan Dove, and Kathy Spindler Guests: Sharon Isern and Scott Michael Become a patron of TWiV! Links for this episode Hurricane Zika (TWiV 410) 454 Corporation (Wikipedia) Regional Zika update, Americas (PAHO, WHO) Zika virus serum bank (pdf) Zika virus evolution and spread in the Americas (Nature) Multiple introductions of Zika virus in US (Nature) Inhibition of Zika Virus Replication by Wolbachia (J Virol) Zika virus pathogenesis in rhesus macaques unaffected by immunity to dengue virus (Nat Commun) Impact of flavivirus immunity on Zika virus infection in rhesus macaques (PLoS Path) Enhancement of Zika virus pathogenesis by antiflavivirus immunity (Science) No ADE by dengue antibodies in Zika virus patients (Clin Inf Dis) Oropharyngeal mucosal transmission of Zika virus in rhesus macaques (Nat Commun) Letters read on TWiV 454 Weekly Science Picks Dickson - Industrial Scars Kathy - Eclipse info by zipcode Sharon - Michaela’s article in The Conversation Scott - Signal P, Pecaan, Phamerator, DNAmasterAlan - The Eagle Whisperer” (and the Great Big Story channel) Vincent - Bottle Listener Pick Kevin - Tenure track scientist bites the dust Intro music is by Ronald Jenkees. Send your virology questions and comments to twiv@microbe.tv
The Total Tutor Neil Haley will interview PHILIPPE COUSTEAU and ASHLAN GORSE COUSTEAU. They will discuss the second season launch of The Aquatic World on Great Big Story, a new distributed video network launched by CNN last October - Ashlan is joining Philippe in the second season. Philippe Cousteau, who as you may know is the grandson of famed oceanographer Jacques Cousteau. Philippehas been a environmentalist likely since the day he born! :) And with his nonprofit org EarthEcho International ..and his wife Journalitst/Adventurer and Advocate (also TV Host of Entertainment Tonight) Ashlan Gorse Cousteau.
Youth Christmas Program - December 20 2015, Youth Choir Directed by Laura Emory and Michelle Jones