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This week we've teamed up with our true crime friends from The Knife, journalist-producers Hannah Smith and Patia Eaton, for a one-of-a-kind episode where we each brought a story to the table. First, Melissa and Mandy tell the bizarre and unforgettable tale of Colton Harris-Moore, better known as the Barefoot Bandit. He was a lanky teen from a small island town who went on the run, stealing cars and planes while dodging authorities for years. His story captured the internet's imagination, but behind the memes was a kid failed by the very systems meant to protect him. Next, Hannah and Patia dive into the heartbreaking and impactful case of Sally Challen, a woman convicted of murdering her husband in 2010. What seemed at first like a shocking and senseless crime was eventually reexamined through a modern understanding of coercive control and domestic abuse. The result: a rare and powerful legal reversal years later. This episode explores two lives shaped by control, survival, and the long shadow of trauma. It's a compelling look at how the ripple effects of crime stretch far beyond the headlines. Listen and subscribe to The Knife wherever you get your podcasts! Check-out bonus episodes up on Spotify and Apple podcast now! Get new episodes a day early and ad free, plus chat episodes, discord access and zoom hangouts at Patreon.com/momsandmysteriespodcast Thank you to this week's sponsors! Get the best savings of the season during Boll & Branch's Annual Summer Event! Get 20% off plus free shipping on your first set of sheets at BollandBranch.com/MOMS. Limited time only. Exclusions apply. Give your summer closet an upgrade—with Quince. Go to Quince.com/moms for free shipping on your order and 365 day returns. Right now, Skylight calendars is offering our listeners $30 off their 15 inch Calendars by going to SkylightCal.com/MOMS. To advertise on the show, contact sales@advertisecast.com or visit https://www.advertisecast.com/MomsandMysteriesATrueCrimePodcast. Check-out Moms and Mysteries to find links to our tiktok, youtube, twitter, instagram and more.
With migration continuing to make headlines in the media, we unpack what actually defines a “migrant”, and how the UK's largest producer of official statistics goes about counting them. We also shed light on the misuse of migration figures. Transcript MILES FLETCHER Hello and a very warm welcome to a new series of Statistically Speaking - the official podcast of the UK Office for National Statistics. This is where we hear from the people producing the nation's most important numbers, about how they do it and what the statistics are saying. Now it's hard to think of one statistic that could be said to have been more influential these past few years than net international migration. Suffice to say it's the one ONS statistic that probably draws more media attention than any other. But to fully understand the migration figures, and the swirling debate around them, we'd say it pays to know a little about how they are put together. And the first thing you need to know about that is what, or who, is a migrant in the first place. As usual, to unpack and explain the migration statistics we have the top experts from the ONS and beyond. Mary Gregory is director of population statistics here at the ONS. Madeleine Sumption is director of the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford, and new chair of the National Statistician's Advisory Panel on Migration. And to help us understand how the numbers are used and abused in public debate, we're also delighted to welcome Hannah Smith, senior political journalist at fact checking charity Full Fact. Welcome to you all. Madeleine, to start with you if I may, with that fundamental question, quite simply, what is a migrant? MADELEINE SUMPTION Well, there are actually lots of different definitions of a migrant and we use different definitions at different points in time. The standard definition of migration that we use in this country is long term migration, so people moving for at least 12 months, and so the Office for National Statistics figures on immigration, emigration and net migration are all using that definition. And people in that data, they're migrants regardless of whether they are British or not British. So you could have a British person who's gone to live overseas for a few years and coming back they would be counted, in theory, at least in the data, as a migrant. There are other definitions though that are very useful for policy. So sometimes people talk about migrants, meaning people who don't have British citizenship, and the value of that is that these are people who are subject to immigration control, effectively that the Home Office is regulating their status. But it's also sometimes quite useful not to look at whether someone's a citizen now, because of course people can change their citizenship, and many migrants to the UK do become British citizens. So it can be useful to look at whether someone has migrated in the past. The standard definition for that is whether someone is born abroad. But now we've got all these exciting new data sets from administrative data, and so there's a new definition that's creeping in and being used a lot, which is someone who was a non-citizen at the time they registered for their National Insurance Number, regardless of whether they've subsequently become a British citizen. So it's a bit confusing sometimes for the external user, because for various reasons, we have to have all of these different definitions. You just have to know which one you're looking at at any point in time. MILES FLETCHER But the basic headline definition, as far as the ONS is concerned -and I guess internationally too because it's important that these figures are comparable- is that it is a person traveling from one country to another for a period of 12 months. MADELEINE SUMPTION That's right MILES FLETCHER And I guess that is something that is perhaps not widely understood. People understand that migration has a degree of permanence, so they move from one country to another, and yet you can be a migrant in quite a sort of transient way. MADELEINE SUMPTION That's right, we have short term migrants as well. So we have a lot of people who come to this country to do seasonal work. For example, they spend up to six months in the country. Then you have people who are long term migrants by the ONS definition and they may spend two to three years here, for example, if they're a worker or an international student. So you're right. I think in people's minds, often when they think about who is a migrant and who comes to mind, they will typically think of someone who is moving permanently. But actually a lot of migrants to the UK only stay for a couple of years. MILES FLETCHER And none of these people, when it comes to measuring them, none of these people arrive Paddington Bear style with labels around their necks saying “I am a migrant”. The ONS in measuring migration has to classify whether these people qualify or not. MADELEINE SUMPTION That's true, and that is very tricky. And it's something I think the non-technical user of the statistics finds it difficult to appreciate quite how hard it is for ONS to work out who is a migrant or not. Because we have millions of people crossing our borders every year, most of them not migrants. We have tourists or people who come in to visit family members. There are all sorts of people and reasons why those people come and go, so ONS is really looking for the needle in the haystack, and a relatively small share of people who are crossing the borders are actually migrating. MILES FLETCHER Well, that seems a good moment to bring in the person who is in charge of finding that needle in the haystack statistically. Mary, tell us how we approach this task. Perhaps start off by explaining how we used to do it. MARY GREGORY Previously we used a survey called the International Passenger Survey, and there we would ask a sample of people as they came into the country, or as they left the country, what their intentions were, and we'd be able to provide very early estimates based on people's intentions to stay or to leave. MILES FLETCHER This is people at airports and other ports of entry, ferry ports, for example, simply approaching people as they wander along the corridors, almost in a random sort of way. MARY GREGORY Exactly that, you might have seen them. If you have travelled through an airport you may have seen a desk that sometimes says Office for National Statistics. And there would sometimes be people there with very carefully scheduled timetables to make sure that we collect a good cross section of people. MILES FLETCHER So the International Passenger Survey is essentially a big sample survey. Nothing wrong with that, and yet, the number of people being stopped at airports who did actually identify themselves as being migrants was quite small, and that made for some very broad-brush estimates didn't it? MARY GREGORY Yes, as you can imagine, people travel through airports or ports for many different reasons, and a lot of those people traveling will be traveling for a holiday or business or to visit family. And so the proportion of those people who are actually going to become residents or leaving for more than 12 months is very small, which makes it really difficult to pick up a good sample of those people. MILES FLETCHER And because it's fair to say the International Passenger Survey was never set up to measure migration in the first place, and that was something ONS found itself pointing out for a long, long time before things actually changed. MARY GREGORY For a number of years we made clear that it was being stretched beyond its original purpose, and that it was the best measure we had at the time but now we think we can do better. And I think one other really important aspect of that is understanding that the survey was asking about people's intentions, and intentions don't always match reality of what we then see. MILES FLETCHER Because you might arrive as a student, end up working, settling, starting a family... MARY GREGORY Yes. Or you might find that you've arrived planning to stay for a year and then change your mind and you've left again. So it could go in either direction. MILES FLETCHER So the case for change was strong. What has changed? How is migration measured now? MARY GREGORY So now we have a variety of different ways to measure depending on the nationality of the people arriving. So for anybody from outside the EU, we have good data around visas from the Home Office, so we can use that to understand who is coming and what their reasons for travel are, and we can come on to that a little bit later. For people within the EU, that was a bit more difficult because prior to exiting the EU nobody needed a visa. And so at the moment, we use administrative data, so that's data collected for other purposes, and we use data from DWP, so the Department for Work and Pensions, to understand who has come into the country and who is staying in the country for more than 12 months. And for British nationals, we still, at the moment, use the International Passenger Survey, but we hope to change that very soon. MILES FLETCHER And essentially, the last use of the IPS, as far as migration is concerned, is to capture British passport holders leaving the country because nobody else is counting them out. MARY GREGORY That's right, and it's actually just stopped collecting that data. So we will move to the new methods very soon. MILES FLETCHER Okay, so how successful would you say this shift has been? MARY GREGORY I think we've definitely improved the data we can provide. It's a better reflection of people's behaviours. We know that because we've compared the different methods and looked against the census and how the population has changed there. But there are also other advantages as well. So we can now look a lot more at why people have come to the UK, or which are the people who are leaving, so we know more about the reasons for migration as well. MILES FLETCHER Madeleine, you run what's recognized as one of the leading think tanks in this area. How much of an improvement is the current system? MADELEINE SUMPTION I think the data that we have, particularly on non EU citizens, is much better than it was in the past. Just to give an example, back in the early 2010s there was a big political debate about what the right level of net migration should be, and the government had a target of getting net migration down to under 100,000 from where it was. It was around 200 to 300 thousand at the time. So of course, the biggest question was, how do we do this? And the problem was that, based on those old data, we had no idea how many students were leaving the country. If someone came on a student visa we maybe caught them coming in but there were various problems. We just couldn't measure accurately enough the students going out. And so this most basic of questions, how can the government meet its net migration target, was not possible to answer with the data. Fast forward now ten years, and at least for non EU citizens, we now have pretty detailed data so we can say, okay, this number of people came in on student visas, this share of them left, that share is actually a bit lower than people were expecting. So those are quite interesting data. At the moment we can do the same for work visas, family members, refugees - so that's a dramatic improvement. There's still work to do I think on EU citizens. The ONS is measuring quite high levels of both EU immigration and emigration, of people who don't seem to be coming on visas and probably have a status from before Brexit, but we don't have a great sense of that. And as Mary mentioned, we currently don't really have any data on British citizens migrating, so that will need to be fixed. But yeah, I think the overall picture on immigration and emigration is much better than it was. Separately in the system, there are some challenges, let's say, with the surveys that give us data on the population of people in the country, their characteristics and so forth. And that, I think, has deteriorated a little but hopefully will come back on track. MILES FLETCHER And bedding in the new system has brought about the need for some pretty big revisions. And that, of course, brings challenges doesn't it. Around confidence in the numbers when you have to revise by several hundred thousand the number of people that have been classified as migrants. And you get these sort of headlines about the ONS, you know, missing the population of Cambridge or wherever it was. But it wasn't a question of missing people as such, was it? It was just getting better data to understand which of the people coming and leaving should actually be classified as a migrant. MADELEINE SUMPTION Yes. There were a number of issues there. There were a couple of cases where it was a case of missing people. There were some Ukrainians, for example, that got lost in the data. But that was a relatively small part of the overall revisions. Mostly, I think there's a challenge, and this challenge is not going to go away entirely but I think that the situation is improving, that when people's behaviour is changing the ONS still has to make assumptions about how long people are going to stay if they want to produce the data quickly. And so when you have a big policy change, you've got new groups of migrants coming in who don't necessarily behave, you know, leave and arrive after the same amounts of time as the previous groups of people who came in. Then you're more likely to have some revisions. And that's one of the things we've seen over the past few years. MILES FLETCHER Let's trace the story of migration, if we can, just over the course of this century so far because it's been one of, if not the biggest, political stories. And you might argue, one of the factors that has determined the course of political events in this country. Obviously the ONS is not a political organization, but its figures do tend to have an enormous influence in that direction. Migration really became a big issue in that sense around about the early part of the 21st century when countries were joining the EU from the old Eastern Bloc. And suddenly there was a perception not only that there were large numbers of people arriving as a result of EU enlargement, but that the ONS was struggling to actually keep track of them as well. MADELEINE SUMPTION Yeah. I mean, I would say that the increase in migration was even a few years earlier than that. The EU enlargement was one of the biggest events in migration in the last 30 years but there had already been a bit of an uptick in non EU migration, even from the late 1990s, and that is something that we saw across a number of countries. So the UK has been a major destination country, and is, if you look at comparable European countries, towards the top of the pack. But interestingly, we've seen some broadly similar trends in quite a lot of high income countries towards higher levels of migration. And that, of course, you know, as you've said, it's made migration much more salient in the political debate, and it's greatly increased the demand for accurate migration stats. And not just stats on the overall numbers, which of course are important, but really understanding who is coming to the UK. You know, what kinds of visas are they on? What do we know about their characteristics, their nationalities? How do they do when they get here...So I think that the demand for good migration statistics is just much higher than it was at a time when the UK experienced relatively limited migration. MILES FLETCHER It's arguable that it was indeed rising EU migration that actually led to the events that led to Brexit. What has changed in terms of migration flows because of Brexit? MADELEINE SUMPTION Well, the changes have been really big actually. I mean before Brexit quite a substantial share of all migration was from EU countries. After the referendum, even before the UK left the EU but after the referendum vote had been taken, there was already a decline in EU migration for a host of reasons including the exchange rate and so forth. So in some ways Brexit did what it was expected to do in reducing EU migration to the UK, because when free movement ended we saw quite a dramatic decrease in EU migration. And net migration from EU countries is now actually negative. So we've got the EU citizen population in the UK shrinking. But what was unexpected about Brexit was that then there was quite a big increase in non EU migration for various reasons. So partly policy liberalisations that at the time didn't necessarily look like a massive liberalization, but I think that the take up from migrants was much more enthusiastic than perhaps the government had expected. Lots of things came together. More international students, more workers, the war in Ukraine of course and lots of Ukrainians coming to the UK. And all of those came together at the same time and meant that we then ended up unexpectedly with these record high levels of net migration, peaking at just over 900,000 between 2022 and 2023. And now, of course, the numbers are coming right down again. So we had a record increase, we've then had a record decline to back to what are actually still pretty high levels of over 400,000. So we've really been on a roller coaster ride in terms of the migration patterns in the last few years. MILES FLETCHER Yes, and statistically the contrast between what's happened recently is that these migrants have become much more conspicuous and much more measurable because they're being covered by visa data, whereas previously, the EU migrants in the early part of the century weren't actually picked up until the until the census in 2011 were they? MADELEINE SUMPTION Yes and my hope is that because we're now measuring migration using visa data, when we get to the next census hopefully it will mean that those revisions - especially given that we'll have planned revisions over the next few years to the data - the hope is that that will mean we won't need such big revisions at the next census because we will have had a slightly more accurate measure between the censuses. MILES FLETCHER And I guess the three elements in this recent wave of migration that have attracted particular attention, yes, people have come to work and people have come to study as previously, but in this latest wave, people were bringing more of their dependents with them weren't they? Perhaps because they were coming from further afield? MADELEINE SUMPTION There's a bit of a puzzle about precisely why that increase in the number of dependents happened when I think it seems like there were probably two main factors. You've got international students bringing family members. We saw a shift in the countries as you mentioned, the countries that students were coming from. A lot more students from Nigeria, and they're more likely to come with their family members. We also saw a really big increase in the number of people coming to the UK as care workers after the government opened up a route for care workers. And so in one year alone, in 2023, there were visas issued to over 100,000 care workers, and they brought more than 100,000 family members with them, partners and children, that is. But that's now changing, because in response to these changes the government then introduced restrictions on the migration of family members, specifically of care workers and international students. So we've seen over the last year that fewer people are now bringing their family members with them. MILES FLETCHER Interesting example of better data enabling a policy response in that sense. MADELEINE SUMPTION Yes, and I think it has been very helpful that we've had these data on dependents. Ten years ago we would not necessarily have known. We would have seen that migration was high but it wouldn't have been very easy to distinguish whether people were coming as the partner of an international student or the partner of a health and care worker and now we do have those figures which is incredibly helpful for the policy debate. MILES FLETCHER Oh, Mary, one thing we haven't spoken about so far is the impact of COVID. How did the system cope with that period? In measuring the negligible flows to start with, but then the turning on the taps again as things returned to normal... MARY GREGORY I think in terms of measuring the statistics it was a massive challenge because the International Passenger Survey stopped and then it was agreed that it wouldn't restart measuring migration, and it actually accelerated our progress to what is now a better measure, but it happened under very difficult circumstances. So we very quickly moved to using administrative data. So data collected by government already to help us measure. And of course there was so much going on then that added to the challenge. Exiting the EU, changes to the immigration system etc. So it was really important we were very careful about how we make sure we understood what had caused the changes and how we measured it really accurately. MILES FLETCHER There was indeed another test of the credibility of the ONS migration estimates when it was announced that a very large number of people had applied for settled status just as we were about to leave. These are EU citizens applying for settled status in the UK just as we're about to leave the EU. How do we reconcile those two very different estimates, because a lot of people use them to suggest that there were far more people here than you've been telling us for all these years. MARY GREGORY What we can do is we can look at the data sources available to us. The census is a really valuable source in that respect because it gives us the most comprehensive view of the whole population for England and Wales, done by ONS. Obviously, Scotland and Northern Ireland are done by their own statistical offices but we can look at that to get a much better understanding of the full components of the population. But of course, it was really difficult. When there was free movement across the EU we wouldn't know for sure how many people have come and how many people have left. And that's actually become a little bit easier in terms of a statistical viewpoint, because now people do need to have visas in order to travel unless they've got settled status already. MILES FLETCHER The new system has been bedding in these last couple of years, and you've had the unenviable job of announcing some pretty large revisions to the figures. Have things settled down now? MARY GREGORY So I think we've made really good progress on people traveling from outside the EU as Madeleine already referred to. We know a lot more about them. We're more confident in that aspect, and we would hope therefore, that the revisions in future will be much lower in scale. There will always be some revisions because we are making assumptions about people. Just to pause on that for a second. We publish data five months after the reference period, but obviously it's 12 months before somebody meets the definition of being a migrant. So we have to make some assumptions about who will stay and who won't, but those are relatively small and should be small in terms of revisions. So I think with non EU numbers we have made really good progress and that is the largest part of the picture. So just to put that in perspective, in terms of immigration just over four in five people immigrating in in our latest data are from outside the EU, so that's positive. Where we do have more work to do is those people coming from within the EU and British nationals, and we've got plans to develop the methods for both of those so we will see revisions coming up in both of those areas. We will put out more information in the autumn about the progress we've made, and if they're ready and we think the quality is good enough, we will implement those methods in November. Otherwise, we'll wait until the following publication because for us it's really important that when we do this we do it properly. MILES FLETCHER And important for everybody to remember that the ONS, in the job it does, can only make the best of the information that's made available to it at any given time. MARY GREGORY Yes absolutely. And I think especially with the British nationals where there are a lot of challenges. Because, of course, if you're a British national you come and go as you please. The other things that we are looking to improve are going to be less significant in terms of the headline numbers but are also really valuable. So if we can change the methods for EU, for example, we should be able to do more on people's reason for migration. And we also hope to do more on breaking down those from outside the EU, to understand a bit more detail about how long people are staying and if they change visas, that kind of thing. MILES FLETCHER Mary, thank you very much. That seems a good moment to bring in Hannah. Hannah, then, from what you've heard, as someone who's in the business of tackling misinformation and ensuring that debates are properly understood, what is your assessment of how useful, how reliable, the ONS migration data are? HANNAH SMITH Now as we've been hearing from Madeleine there's been some significant improvements in the way that the data is collected and published. I think another thing that can give people confidence is how transparent the ONS has been with not only the strengths of the data, but also the limitations and the work they're doing surrounding ongoing development with that. I think that's absolutely key when we're talking about access to good information –transparency- understanding what the data can tell us and what the data can't tell us, and what the ONS is looking to do to change that. I think ultimately this is, as we've been hearing, a really complex issue, and trying to reconcile that with the fact that it's of massive public interest. And, as Madeline has been saying, someone who is not a technical user of the statistics, it's really important for someone like that to be able to understand these issues in a straightforward way, and trying to find that balance between getting the right level of detail that can be understandable for a general user is difficult. But I think the ONS has been really open about the challenges with that, and this conflict between the idea of timeliness and completeness of data, as Mary was just saying, we don't have complete data at the moment that the first statistics are published, but obviously the alternative is just to wait a really long time until that full data is available. So I think trying to strike that balance is also key, and something that, like I say, just being transparent about that is the best way to approach it. MILES FLETCHER In your work for Full Fact, what do you come across as the major misuses of migration figures, the deliberate misunderstanding of migration figures. And how well equipped Are you to combat those? HANNAH SMITH It's hard to know how much of it is deliberate misuse of migration figures, and how much of it is, as you say, due to just misunderstanding the data. I think there are obviously some things that we don't know, some information gaps. So, for example, the scale of illegal migration is something that's perhaps a bit harder to capture, just by the very nature of it. That's something that we found is a really common theme in the things that we're fact checking. You know, we've seen surveys that show that a quite significant proportion of the public thinks that the data shows that more people are entering the country illegally than legally. We fact check politicians who make similar claims. So we know this bad information does cause real harm, and I think that's why the information that the ONS is publishing is really, really important for reasoned debate, and just having that information available is the first step to help counter the bad information that's out there. MILES FLETCHER You mentioned illegal immigration or undocumented migration, that by its very nature is a tricky one, because it's difficult to accurately measure isn't it, and to come up with a robust estimate that can counter exaggerated claims. HANNAH SMITH Yeah, of course. And we know that some of the people who are arriving in the country, either undocumented or illegally are captured in the data. So for example, the data we have on small boat arrivals, but it is ultimately, like you say, hard to estimate. And I think similarly to what Madeleine was saying earlier about the different definitions of what constitutes a migrant. Different people will have different views or different understandings of what constitutes illegal migration. So that's another thing that we have to bear in mind when we're talking about this issue. MILES FLETCHER And do you feel you've got the tools to effectively combat the worst excesses of the Wild West that social media often is? HANNAH SMITH Yes we do work with social media companies. So we have a partnership with Meta which allows us to directly rate misleading content that we see on their platforms. And we definitely do see a lot of content specifically related to migration which thanks to that partnership we are able to have influence on. But at Full Fact I think we're always calling for improvements in how better to combat misinformation, not only in this space, but just generally. So media literacy, for example, we think is a really vital step that's needed to ensure people are equipped so that they can spot what's fact and what's fiction. And we've been making a lot of recommendations in what can be done to improve media literacy to meet the public's needs. We also think that legislation needs to be strengthened to tackle this kind of misinformation and other sorts of harmful misinformation that crop up online. So yeah, we do have a lot of tools at our disposal, but we think that the information environment and the regulations surrounding it could always be strengthened. MILES FLETCHER That's interesting. And what sort of areas do you think it could specifically be strengthened? As far as the production of statistics are concerned? HANNAH SMITH I think, as I say, transparency and accessibility is key. I think perhaps trying to anticipate where misunderstandings could crop up. A lot of the work we do, or an approach that we can take with fact checking, is something we call pre bunking, which is trying to look at what topics are resonating with the public, what things we think might crop up, and then producing content that puts the correct information out there. Ideally, trying to get ahead of the bad information. I don't know if I'm going to butcher this saying, but a lie gets halfway around the world before the truth had time to put his boots on. I think that pre bunking is an effort to try and reverse that. And I think there's a parallel there with anticipating, as producers of information, where the misunderstandings might be likely to fall, and putting content warnings on or health warnings as prominently as possible, and also making sure that the people that are using the information, whether that's the media, politicians, other people, are aware of potential pitfalls to try and minimize the risk of that spreading to a wider audience. MILES FLETCHER Survey information we have from our own sources - the public confidence in official statistics survey - suggests that people who have heard of the ONS tend to recognize the fact that it is independent, that we are not subject to political control, and therefore you might think people should have confidence in the figures. Is that corroborated by your experience? HANNAH SMITH That's really interesting. I'm not entirely sure. I think from a fundamental point of view, I think trust in organizations like the ONS, knowing that you're getting impartial evidence, knowing that you're getting unbiased information that's been put through the most robust scrutiny that it can be, can only be a helpful thing. We know that trust in politics is at a very low level, so having those impartial producers of information that we know aren't subject to any political control or affiliation, I think can only be beneficial for that. MILES FLETCHER Madeleine, this is where the National Statistician's Advisory Panel on Migration comes in, the body that you chair. Can you just tell us a little about its work? What its role is? MADELEINE SUMPTION Yes. So this is a new body that will advise the ONS on migration statistics. Obviously, the ONS migration teams have been soliciting expert advice in various ways for several years. I know this because I've been part of that process as well, but the arrangements are being formalized now, actually building on the model that I think has worked quite well in some other areas of migration statistics, like labour market data, for example, to have a panel of independent experts who help advise on things like whether the statistics are really answering the questions that users have. Obviously ONS has a lot of excellent statisticians, but they're not expected to be deep in the weeds of the policy debate and really sort of understanding exactly how people want to use the data and so forth. So the idea of this panel is to have some of that independent voice to help ONS shape its vision of what kinds of data it can produce. How can it make them more relevant and accessible to users, that kind of thing? MILES FLETCHER And I guess when you ask most people whether they think migration does have a role to play, particularly in modern economies, answering that question depends on having good data, having data that meets the needs of experts in economics and so forth. So we can see whether indeed, migration is having a positive economic benefit. MADELEINE SUMPTION Yes there are lots of things that the data are needed for. So looking at the impacts on the economy is one of them that the Office of Budget Responsibility, for example, uses the migration data when it's making its forecast of how much money there is effectively. So you know, how big is the population? What are people likely to be paying in tax? What are we likely to be spending in addition on services? Because we have more migrants, more people in the population. So it's important for the financial impacts. It's important for planning public services. How many school age kids are we going to have? How's that changing? What do we need to do to plan school places? And yeah, then it's important for the broader policy debate as well, understanding different categories of migration, what should the Home Office do? What should other government departments do, and thinking about how to respond to the impacts of migration. MILES FLETCHER Yeah. And you can't calculate GDP per head of population until you know how many heads there are, to reduce it to its most simple terms. MADELEINE SUMPTION Indeed. Yep. And that's been one of the challenges. There are more challenges along those lines, when thinking about the impacts of migration, we're getting a lot more administrative data, so data from basically the records of different government departments and agencies around the country, that will tell us things like how many migrants are claiming benefits, or how many migrants are imprisoned, or any number of things. And it's really important that if you want to be able to interpret those statistics, you really must have a good idea of how many migrants are from different countries, different parts of the world, are in the country in the first place. Otherwise you might make your calculations wrong. And I think there is still more work to be done in that area, in particular looking at population. We've been talking mostly about migration in and out of the country. There's still a fair amount more to be done on making sure that we have really accurate statistics on the number of people who are here at any one point in time. MILES FLETCHER Mary, finally from you then, do you support that good progress has been made, but important steps are still to come? MARY GREGORY I think so. I mean, there's always improvements that can be made. No matter how good we get, we will always want to do better. But I think also it's such a privilege, but a huge responsibility, to work on something so important, and we don't take that lightly in ONS. We know that these numbers make a difference to so many people, and as Madelene said, the number of people in the country is a really important number, but so often the thing driving that is the migration figure. So without the really good migration data, we don't have the really good population data, and so we will keep working on that together as well as we can. MILES FLETCHER And on that positive note we must come to the end of this podcast. Thanks to you, Mary Madeleine and Hannah, for your time today, and as always, thanks to you at home for listening. You can subscribe to future episodes of Statistically Speaking on Spotify, Apple podcasts and all the other major podcast platforms. You can also follow us on X, previously known as Twitter, via the @ONSFocus feed. I am Miles Fletcher, and from myself and producer Steve Milne, until next time, goodbye. ENDS
Joy Organics is a family-owned business that sells broad-spectrum and full-spectrum CBD products. They have simple, effective formulas with real ingredients. All of Joy Organics' products are third-party lab tested for purity.Their products are sold with minimal packaging and in amber glass jars, which is great for reducing your exposure to plastic chemicals. Plus, they have free, carbon-free shipping. Today we are joined by Hannah Smith. Hannah is a writer who has been featured on Forbes, Vice, and Vox. She's been a photographer in the Middle East and North Africa, and she is a CBD advocate and Director of Communications for Joy Organics.Learn more about Joy Organics: https://joyorganics.com/Get tested for BPA, phthalates, parabens, and other hormone-disrupting chemicals with Million Marker's Detect & Detox Test Kit: https://www.millionmarker.com/
This podcast episode focuses on the genealogy of two women, Clarinda Knapp Allen and Jerusha Barden Smith, and their connection to early settlers and significant figures in American history and the Latter-day Saint movement. Nicole discusses her husband's ancestry, specifically how his relatives married into the Hyrum Smith family. She then shifts focus to one of her own ancestors, Clarinda Knapp, whose relationship to Hyrum Smith's wife, Jerusha Barden, becomes the central point of discussion. Diana and Nicole trace the lineage of both women back to their common ancestors, Caleb Knapp and Hannah Smith, who lived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. They explain how Caleb's father, Nicholas Knapp, arrived in Watertown in 1630 and later moved to Stamford, Connecticut. The episode details the different paths taken by the Knapp descendants. Nicole shares how Clarinda Knapp's line stayed in Stamford and Danbury, and eventually clarifies her life events including her baptism into the Latter-day Saint church, her travels, and her family. Diana describes Jerusha Barden's line and how it also passed through Danbury before her marriage to Hyrum Smith and her baptism into the same church. The hosts examine the lives of both women, including their religious experiences and migrations, highlighting how their ancestry connects them to early American history and the beginnings of a religious movement. Listeners will learn how to follow ancestral lines, connect to historical events and figures, and understand how genealogy connects people and stories. This summary was generated by Google Gemini. Links Texas Institute of Genealogical Research (TIGR) https://www.txsgs.org/tigr-2025/ TIGR Course 4 – Integrating AI into Genealogical Research and Writing https://www.txsgs.org/tigr-course-4-integrating-ai-into-genealogical-research-and-writing/ Clarinda Knapp Allen and Jerusha Barden Smith - https://familylocket.com/clarinda-knapp-allen-and-jerusha-barden-smith/ Sponsor – Newspapers.com For listeners of this podcast, Newspapers.com is offering new subscribers 20% off a Publisher Extra subscription so you can start exploring today. Just use the code “FamilyLocket” at checkout. Research Like a Pro Resources Airtable Universe - Nicole's Airtable Templates - https://www.airtable.com/universe/creator/usrsBSDhwHyLNnP4O/nicole-dyer Airtable Research Logs Quick Reference - by Nicole Dyer - https://familylocket.com/product-tag/airtable/ Research Like a Pro: A Genealogist's Guide book by Diana Elder with Nicole Dyer on Amazon.com - https://amzn.to/2x0ku3d 14-Day Research Like a Pro Challenge Workbook - digital - https://familylocket.com/product/14-day-research-like-a-pro-challenge-workbook-digital-only/ and spiral bound - https://familylocket.com/product/14-day-research-like-a-pro-challenge-workbook-spiral-bound/ Research Like a Pro Webinar Series - monthly case study webinars including documentary evidence and many with DNA evidence - https://familylocket.com/product-category/webinars/ Research Like a Pro eCourse - independent study course - https://familylocket.com/product/research-like-a-pro-e-course/ RLP Study Group - upcoming group and email notification list - https://familylocket.com/services/research-like-a-pro-study-group/ Research Like a Pro with DNA Resources Research Like a Pro with DNA: A Genealogist's Guide to Finding and Confirming Ancestors with DNA Evidence book by Diana Elder, Nicole Dyer, and Robin Wirthlin - https://amzn.to/3gn0hKx Research Like a Pro with DNA eCourse - independent study course - https://familylocket.com/product/research-like-a-pro-with-dna-ecourse/ RLP with DNA Study Group - upcoming group and email notification list - https://familylocket.com/services/research-like-a-pro-with-dna-study-group/ Thank you Thanks for listening! We hope that you will share your thoughts about our podcast and help us out by doing the following: Write a review on iTunes or Apple Podcasts. If you leave a review, we will read it on the podcast and answer any questions that you bring up in your review. Thank you! Leave a comment in the comment or question in the comment section below. Share the episode on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest. Subscribe on iTunes or your favorite podcast app. Sign up for our newsletter to receive notifications of new episodes - https://familylocket.com/sign-up/ Check out this list of genealogy podcasts from Feedspot: Best Genealogy Podcasts - https://blog.feedspot.com/genealogy_podcasts/
What happens when two people go all in on each other and their real estate vision?Get ready for one of the most honest, down-to-earth convos we've had on Real Estate VS Technology: UNLEASHED. In this episode, we're sitting down with Edgar Chavez and Hannah Smith — a powerhouse couple who've built a thriving real estate business and a growing family, all while staying rooted in purpose, love, and hustle.Their story starts with humble beginnings — think service industry jobs, multiple side hustles, and long hours. But through grit, authenticity, and a deep commitment to relationships, they've grown into successful brokerage owners with a business that's as heart-driven as it is strategic. Edgar opens up about what it's taken to stay consistent over 15+ years in the game, while Hannah shares how she went from juggling three jobs to becoming a licensed agent and an essential part of their business (and life) vision.We dive into what it really looks like to build something big without losing yourself along the way — how to navigate partnership in both love and work, why collaboration always wins over competition, and the importance of creating a business that reflects who you are, not just what you do.If you're an agent trying to find your footing, a team leader looking to build something deeper, or just someone chasing more purpose in what you do — this episode is packed with stories, insights, and reminders that you're not alone on the journey.Come hang out, get inspired, and walk away with a few golden nuggets that just might change how you approach business, relationships, and your own potential!======⏰ Video Chapters with Timestamps:00:00 Intro: It's All About Relationships01:00 Meet Edgar and Hannah – A Powerhouse Real Estate Couple05:00 Edgar's Journey: From Sonic & Banking to Real Estate10:00 How They Met: A Hooters Origin Story14:00 Hannah's Leap of Faith into Real Estate20:00 Building a Life & Business Together26:00 Delegating, Systems, and Team Growth32:00 Broker Talk: Running a Values-Driven Brokerage46:00 Building Wealth Beyond Commission53:00 Real Talk on House Hacking, Portfolio Growth, and Ownership01:00:00 Final Thoughts: Don't Let Fear Stop You======Welcome to Real Estate VS Technology UNLEASHED, where we explore the intersection of Real Estate Technology and indLooking to scale, grow, and automate your real estate business? Tune in to Real Estate VS Technology UNLEASHED, a podcast that provides valuable insights into the strategies used by top-performing real estate agents across the country. Our in-depth interviews with successful agents will give you the hard-hitting questions you need to ask yourself to achieve and maintain success.In addition to agent interviews, we showcase great technology companies, featuring owners who discuss their offerings and how they can help boost your real estate business.Want to be featured on our show? Schedule your podcast date using the link below:? https://bit.ly/3nj1J85CONNECT WITH US: ▶Subscribe ? / @realestatevstechnology8232 Instagram: https://bit.ly/3ZceY7C
Michael sits down with the newest addition to the Career Services staff, Hannah Smith, Coordinator for the Graduate Students teams. Together, they explore Hannah's wildly diverse career experiences and talk about how having a resume that might seem disjointed at a glance can actually make you the strongest candidate.Read more about Hannah here. Our theme music is “The Strip” by Mala, used under a Creative Commons Attribution license. CS Radio is also available as a video podcast! Visit our YouTube channel to watch!
Hannah Smith nunca olvidó a la mujer que cambió su vida . ¡Hace poco, buscó a Essie Gilchrist, la madre que la cuidó hace 40 años, y la encontró por internet! Cuando era niña, separaron a Hannah de su madre
Elementary School Semester 2 Cycle 1 First grade All A's: Layton Barnes, Bryce Belletz, Breelyn Bertrand, Landyn Boening, Olivia Brysch, Justin Cook, Jagger Ducharme, Autumn Ebbitt, Lane Elias, Kamryn Erwin, William Gauna, Keller Gorzell, Liliann Hill, Haven Holloway, Lilly Johnson, Lindsey Korzekwa, Adeline Krpec, Aubrey Langford, Kenna Lyssy, Ricardo Mata, Avery Moczygemba, Benjamin Montez, Asher Moy, Zowie Moy, Santiago Obregon, Christian Perez, Knox Posey, Jessa Pruski, Kimber Robbins, Ember Rutledge, Kinsley Semlinger, Parker Skloss, Hannah Smith, Adalyn Tackitt, Jake Toborg, Wyatt Toepperwein. A/B: Aria Arevalos, Bexley Buehring, Grace Caraway, Ellis Dugi, Benedict Eckel, Phillip Gleason, Noah Gonzalez, Mila Gorzell, Miriam...Article Link
Hannah Smith and Ralph McCubbin-Howell have built a successful theatre company and take their two young children touring with them as well
Hannah offers a unique and refreshing perspective on crafting a compelling speaker pitch. My biggest takeaway? Her invaluable advice: "Pitch a talk that only you can give." Tune in to the full episode to discover what that truly means!About Hannah:Hannah Smith Founder Worderist.com Via her company, Worderist.com, Hannah offers consultancy, coaching, training & support to help develop and grow Creative, Production, and PR teams, improve processes and deliver results. With more than 15 years in the industry, her creative work has won multiple awards, and she's worked with a range of companies including the BBC, Dyson, Expedia, MailChimp, and Salesforce. Hannah has spoken at numerous conferences across Europe and the US, interviewed Google's John Mueller live on stage in front of an audience of 3,000, and acted as a guest lecturer at the University of Greenwich, London. Hannah also writes a newsletter called "Manufacturing Serendipity" (sign up here: https://worderist.com/newsletter/) where she shares short essays, and some of the unexpectedly delightful things she's encountered each fortnight. Where to find Hannah:Hannah's Website @hannah_bo_banna on X Hannah Smith on LinkedInAbout 'The SEO Mindset' PodcastBuild your inner confidence and thrive.The SEO Mindset is a weekly podcast that will give you actionable tips, guidance and advice to help you not only build your inner confidence but to also thrive in your career.Each week we will cover topics specific to careers in the SEO industry but also broader topics too including professional and personal development.Your hosts are Life Coach Tazmin Suleman and SEO Manager Sarah McDowell, who between them have over 20 years of experience working in the industry.Sign up to be a guest on the podcast here.Get in touchWe'd love to hear from you. We have many ways that you can reach out to us to say hello, ask a question, or suggest a topic for us to discuss on a future episode.Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Send us an emailCheck out Tazmin's Website Check out Sarah's Website Click here to download your copy of our free 'Growth versus Fixed Mindset' ebook.Click here to sign up for our newsletter to receive news and updates from the podcast eg latest episodes, events, competitions etc. We will never spam and you can unsubscribe at anytime.Check out all episodes: The SEO Mindset Podcast website Subscribe and never miss an episode: Listen to The SEO Mindset Podcast Resources used for episodeKirsty HulseWomen in Tech SEO | Global Community
Episode One – Celebrating 50 Years of Impact: The Founding of Trivium Life Services. Release Date – January 31st, 2025. Summary – This year marks a significant milestone for Trivium Life Services—50 years of Creating Hope, Empowering Lives, and Inspiring Communities. Join us as we sit down with Hannah Smith to explore the inspiring history of Trivium and the remarkable journey from its humble beginnings to the impactful organization it is today. From eight clients in 1975 to serving over 2,371 individuals in 2024, we reflect on the different eras of the past and look ahead to Trivium's unified vision for the future. Discover how a simple idea grew into a movement, evolving through challenges and triumphs to impact countless lives across multiple states. This is a story of resilience, vision, and an unwavering commitment to making a difference. Tune in each month to celebrate 50 years of Trivium Life Services and the incredible journey that continues to inspire us all. Guest Information – Hannah Smith Vice President of Philanthropy and Public Relations at Trivium Life Services. Links and Resources www.triviumlifeservices.org Call to Action Want more information on the services offered by Trivium Life Services or how to support our mission? Visit our website at www.triviumlifeservices.org. Podcast and host information Hi! I'm Michelle Schaller, Senior Director of Behavioral Health, your host for this series of podcasts by Trivium Life Services. Each week, I'll be introducing you to real professionals who dedicate their lives to helping others, and individuals who have found hope amidst their struggles with mental health, substance abuse, domestic violence, and those with intellectual and physical disabilities. Our aim is to reduce the prejudices and misconceptions surrounding these challenges and create awareness and understanding in our communities. Disclaimer The contents of this podcast, including discussions, interviews, and shared resources, are for informational and educational purposes only. They are not intended to serve as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Acknowledgements Special thanks to Webberized Inc for their invaluable contribution to this episode. To learn more about their services visit them at www.webberized.com.
Inner Moonlight is the monthly poetry reading series for the Wild Detectives in Dallas. The in-person show is the second Wednesday of every month in the Wild Detectives backyard. We love our podcast fans, so we release recordings of the live performances every month for y'all! On 1/8/25, we featured poet Hannah Smith! Hannah Smith is a writer from Dallas, Texas. Her poetry appears in Best New Poets, Gulf Coast, Ninth Letter, Southeast Review, and elsewhere. Hannah's full-length manuscript Common Prairie was a National Poetry Series Finalist, and she is the co-author of two collaborative chapbooks, Metal House of Cards (Finishing Line Press, 2024) and Astral Gaze (dancing girl press, 2025). Hannah works as the Production Manager for Southwest Review & New Pony. www.innermoonlightpoetry.com
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the intense political activity at the turn of the 18th Century, when many politicians in London went to great lengths to find a Protestant successor to the throne of Great Britain and Ireland and others went to equal lengths to oppose them. Queen Anne had no surviving children and, following the old rules, there were at least 50 Catholic candidates ahead of any Protestant ones and among those by far the most obvious candidate was James, the only son of James II. Yet with the passing of the Act of Settlement in 1701 ahead of Anne's own succession, focus turned to Europe and to Princess Sophia, an Electress of the Holy Roman Empire in Hanover who, as a granddaughter of James I, thus became next in line to be crowned at Westminster Abbey. It was not clear that Hanover would want this role, given its own ambitions and the risks, in Europe, of siding with Protestants, and soon George I was minded to break the rules of succession so that he would be the last Hanoverian monarch as well as the first.WithAndreas Gestrich Professor Emeritus at Trier University and Former Director of the German Historical Institute in LondonElaine Chalus Professor of British History at the University of LiverpoolAnd Mark Knights Professor of History at the University of WarwickProducer: Simon TillotsonReading list:J.M. Beattie, The English Court in the Reign of George I (Cambridge University Press, 1967)Jeremy Black, The Hanoverians: The History of a Dynasty (Hambledon Continuum, 2006)Justin Champion, Republican Learning: John Toland and the Crisis of Christian Culture 1696-1722 (Manchester University Press, 2003), especially his chapter ‘Anglia libera: Protestant liberties and the Hanoverian succession, 1700–14'Linda Colley, Britons: Forging the Nation 1707 – 1837 (Yale University Press, 2009)Andreas Gestrich and Michael Schaich (eds), The Hanoverian Succession: Dynastic Politics and Monarchical Culture (Ashgate, 2015)Ragnhild Hatton, George I: Elector and King (Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1979)Mark Knights, Representation and Misrepresentation in Later Stuart Britain: Partisanship and Political Culture (Oxford University Press, 2005) Mark Knights, Faction Displayed: Reconsidering the Impeachment of Dr Henry Sacheverell (Blackwell, 2012)Joanna Marschner, Queen Caroline: Cultural Politics at the Early Eighteenth-Century Court (Yale University Press, 2014)Ashley Marshall, ‘Radical Steele: Popular Politics and the Limits of Authority' (Journal of British Studies 58, 2019)Paul Monod, Jacobitism and the English People, 1688-1788 (Cambridge University Press, 1989)Hannah Smith, Georgian Monarchy: Politics and Culture 1714-1760 (Cambridge University Press, 2006)Daniel Szechi, 1715: The Great Jacobite Rebellion (Yale University Press, 2006)A.C. Thompson, George II : King and Elector (Yale University Press, 2011)In Our Time is a BBC Studios Audio Production
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the intense political activity at the turn of the 18th Century, when many politicians in London went to great lengths to find a Protestant successor to the throne of Great Britain and Ireland and others went to equal lengths to oppose them. Queen Anne had no surviving children and, following the old rules, there were at least 50 Catholic candidates ahead of any Protestant ones and among those by far the most obvious candidate was James, the only son of James II. Yet with the passing of the Act of Settlement in 1701 ahead of Anne's own succession, focus turned to Europe and to Princess Sophia, an Electress of the Holy Roman Empire in Hanover who, as a granddaughter of James I, thus became next in line to be crowned at Westminster Abbey. It was not clear that Hanover would want this role, given its own ambitions and the risks, in Europe, of siding with Protestants, and soon George I was minded to break the rules of succession so that he would be the last Hanoverian monarch as well as the first.WithAndreas Gestrich Professor Emeritus at Trier University and Former Director of the German Historical Institute in LondonElaine Chalus Professor of British History at the University of LiverpoolAnd Mark Knights Professor of History at the University of WarwickProducer: Simon TillotsonReading list:J.M. Beattie, The English Court in the Reign of George I (Cambridge University Press, 1967)Jeremy Black, The Hanoverians: The History of a Dynasty (Hambledon Continuum, 2006)Justin Champion, Republican Learning: John Toland and the Crisis of Christian Culture 1696-1722 (Manchester University Press, 2003), especially his chapter ‘Anglia libera: Protestant liberties and the Hanoverian succession, 1700–14'Linda Colley, Britons: Forging the Nation 1707 – 1837 (Yale University Press, 2009)Andreas Gestrich and Michael Schaich (eds), The Hanoverian Succession: Dynastic Politics and Monarchical Culture (Ashgate, 2015)Ragnhild Hatton, George I: Elector and King (Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1979)Mark Knights, Representation and Misrepresentation in Later Stuart Britain: Partisanship and Political Culture (Oxford University Press, 2005) Mark Knights, Faction Displayed: Reconsidering the Impeachment of Dr Henry Sacheverell (Blackwell, 2012)Joanna Marschner, Queen Caroline: Cultural Politics at the Early Eighteenth-Century Court (Yale University Press, 2014)Ashley Marshall, ‘Radical Steele: Popular Politics and the Limits of Authority' (Journal of British Studies 58, 2019)Paul Monod, Jacobitism and the English People, 1688-1788 (Cambridge University Press, 1989)Hannah Smith, Georgian Monarchy: Politics and Culture 1714-1760 (Cambridge University Press, 2006)Daniel Szechi, 1715: The Great Jacobite Rebellion (Yale University Press, 2006)A.C. Thompson, George II : King and Elector (Yale University Press, 2011)In Our Time is a BBC Studios Audio Production
Jesse Watters says Kamala Harris' for Black men are “reparations in disguise”. 'Love Island USA' Hannah Smith goes on a racist rant at a Black cop. Dr. Dre allegedly sent his ex-marriage counselor threatening text messages. Host: Dr. Rashad Richey (@rashad_richey) Co-Host: Wosny Lambre (@BigWos) *** SUBSCRIBE on YOUTUBE FOLLOW US ON: FACEBOOK TWITTER INSTAGRAM TIKTOK Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Drake London's role in the Falcons offense, Kevin McAlpin says his goodbye to the Braves, notorious BMF's Big Meech is back on the streets, Love Island star gets arrested in the battery, the latest NBA news, and more...See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
0:00 The Weekend News. 1:01 Hurricane Milton sends Mickey Mouse packing!
Marissa Spencer delivers the latest entertainment news on: - Bong Joon-ho's new film, Mickey 17 - The death of Allman Brother's Band member, Johnny Neel - The arrest of Love Island's Hannah Smith
KC & NASHVILLE LIVE SHOW TICKETS > bit.ly/LFGTOUR. Maria Georgas sets the record straight (00:00-23:29). Bachelor 'Would You Rather' game! (24:43-27:22). Maria's dating life (27:23-41:50). Zayn allegedly was the One Direction member who pushed Liam Payne against a wall (42:37-47:29). Kanye West & Bianca Censori breakup rumors (47:30-51:41). Kendrick Lamar & Rihanna both turned down Coachella (51:42-56:02). Love Island USA's Hannah Smith arrested (57:00-1:02:16). What's next for Maria? (1:02:17-1:09:42). CITO LINKS > barstool.link/chicks-in-the-office.You can find every episode of this show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or YouTube. Prime Members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music. For more, visit barstool.link/chicks-in-the-office
In this episode of The Roofr Report, host Pete McKendrick interviews Hannah Smith from Smithrock Roofing, the Roofr of the Month for October. Hannah discusses the company's growth, from its origins nine years ago to its current structure and achievements. She shares insights on scaling the business, integrating technology, and balancing sales and production. Hannah also highlights the importance of community engagement through their charity 'Shingle for Sneakers.' Tune in to learn about the dynamic journey of Smith Rock Roofing and their plans for the future.
Joyce welcomes Hannah Smith, a passionate children's book author and dedicated advocate for the celiac and food allergy communities. Through her inspiring journey and heartfelt stories, Ms. Smith empowers children to embrace their unique identities and teaches the importance of inclusion and compassion. She will share her own diagnosis of Celiac and tell how it led her to a gluten-free diet to manage her condition.
University of Wisconsin-Whitewater student and Henrico citizen Hannah Smith had the opportunity of a lifetime last month when she was named a winner of the Billie Jean King Youth Leadership Award at the 2024 ESPY Awards in Los Angeles. Smith, a communication major, was recognized for her efforts to create opportunities for athletes with disabilities in the Richmond region and beyond. She received her award July 11 and was one of three winners recognized on stage by tennis icon Serena Williams, who hosted the annual ESPN awards show. Smith said she was shocked and grateful when she received the award,...Article LinkSupport the Show.
Before we jump into our interview with Hannah Smith from Love Island USA Season 6, Jessica Clarke is joining us on the podcast to chat about our thoughts on the show and our predictions for who might win. I was thrilled to have Hannah on the podcast because, even though her time in the villa was cut short, she came across as goofy, hilarious, and authentic. We love those types of people on BGT, so I couldn't resist inviting her to discuss her experience on Love Island, her relationship with Kendall, and what it's like watching the show and seeing her friends, along with Kendall, progress in their relationships. Timestamps: 0:00 Intro & Recap with Jessica Clarke 30:00 Interview with Hannah Smith Send us your questions and stories to be featured on da pod https://www.brokegirltherapy.com/contact-page Merch is available now! https://www.brokegirltherapy.com/store #brokegirltherapy #loveislandusa #peacock Support our sponsors and BGT by using the codes below: Quinn Wellness: https://lvnta.com/lv_ShzUBGtV1kkEt6Umtu Code: 15brokegirl for 15% off your order! BetterHelp: As a listener, you'll get 10% off your first month by visiting our sponsor at BetterHelp.com/brokegirl Stefanie Maegan https://www.instagram.com/brokegirltherapy/ https://www.instagram.com/stefaniemaegan/ Hannah Smith https://www.instagram.com/hannahsmithhh.xo/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A member of the local sports community will be honored as part of ESPN's annual ESPY Awards and ESPY Week in Hollywood, California in July. Hannah Smith, a wheelchair basketball player and advocate for adaptive sports who works for adaptive sports organization Sportable, will receive an ESPN Sports Humanitarian Award July 10 as a Billie Jean King Youth Leadership Award honoree. The awards will be featured in studio programming and during the 2024 ESPY Awards, which will air live on ABC the following day at 8 p.m. ET. Smith was born with Spina Bifida and was introduced to adaptive sports...Article LinkSupport the Show.
Welcome back to The Viall Files: Reality Recap. Freaky Friday is back for a sequel… so Nick and Natalie are switching bodies! Join us at Nick's lake house, where we discuss flying on a Boeing aircraft, Cyrus family drama, Danielle Olivera leaving Summer House, and Joey Graziadei shaving his head. Meanwhile, Hannah Smith from Love Island USA, calls in to spill all the tea! “What's so much better about Love Island USA this season, than others?” Start your 7 Day Free Trial of Viall Files + here: https://viallfiles.supportingcast.fm/ Please make sure to subscribe so you don't miss an episode and as always send in your relationship questions to asknick@theviallfiles.com to be a part of our Monday episodes. Follow us on X/Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheViallFiles Listen To Disrespectfully now! Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/disrespectfully/id1516710301 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0J6DW1KeDX6SpoVEuQpl7z?si=c35995a56b8d4038 Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCh8MqSsiGkfJcWhkan0D0w To Order Nick's Book Go To: http://www.viallfiles.com If you would like to get some texting advice on Office Hours send an email to asknick@theviallfiles.com with “Texting Office Hours” in the subject line! To advertise on the show, contact sales@advertisecast.com or visit https://www.advertisecast.com/TheViallFiles THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS: Cremo - You can find all the new, decadent scents of Cremo Women's Body Wash at Walgreens and CVS OR https://www.CremoCompany.com goodr - If you want to support the show and try a pair, goodr is giving The Viall Files listeners Free Shipping! You can go to https://www.goodr.com/VIALL and use code VIALL for free shipping. Huggies - Learn More At https://www.Huggies.com Bilt - Earn points by paying rent right now when you go to https://www.joinbilt.com/viall Caraway - It's the ultimate kitchen set-up and will save you $150 versus buying the items individually. Plus, if you visit https://www.Carawayhome.com/VIALL10 you can take an additional 10% off your next purchase. Ritual - With Ritual's dedication to traceable science and sourcing, you always will. See for yourself with 25% off your first month for a limited time at https://www.Ritual.com/VIALL OUAI - Wash your OUAI to healthier hair with shampoos and conditioners made just for you. Go to https://www.theOUAI.com and enter promo code VIALLFILES for 15% off any product. Episode Socials: @viallfiles @nickviall @nnataliejjoy @hvsxoxo @ciararobinson @leahgsilberstein @justinkaphillips @dereklanerussell Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro 03:12 - Household Headlines 07:26 - Freaky Friday 09:24 - Vintage Clothes 11:54 - Billy Ray Cyrus 15:24 - Buzzcuts 17:14 - The Truth 22:07 - New GF 22:54 - Summerhouse 31:41 - Hannah Joins 01:08:31 - Love Island 01:34:45 - Outro
Hey guys and welcome back to the podcast! Today we have on Hannah Smith from #loveisland USA. Hannah was unfortunately sent home after the recoupling in the villa. Hannah is here to chat about her relationships in the villa with Hakeem and Kendall. Hannah shares her journey with us on getting casted, what to pack, making friends and what really went down. Follow Hannah: https://www.instagram.com/hvsxoxo/ Connect with me on social: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zacharyreality Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@zacharyreality Twitter: https://twitter.com/zacharyreality
This week, we are absolutely thrilled to chat with Hannah Smith, the first lady to exit the Love Island USA villa! Hannah tells us all the dirty details about her personal journey on the show, what she really thinks is going on with Leah and Rob, Kendall and Nicole, and Serena and Kordell, and what it's been like to be back in the “real world” after leaving the show. We then discuss our thoughts on the most recent week in the Love Island USA villa, including our thoughts on all the controversial couples and bizarro Islander decisions, plus Mary's truly legendary Leah impression. Do not sleep on Love Island USA! We also talk about the ridiculous finale of Perfect Match S2 on Netflix. How the &*$% did Christine and Nigel win the show? Is this the end of Harry? The end of the show? We also spill all the tea on what is happening with all the couples from the show, including some truly shocking news about Stevan and Alara. Subscribe, rate, and review wherever you get your podcasts! Follow us on Instagram: @canistealyouforaminutepod Follow us on TikTok: @canistealyouforaminute Support the pod at patreon.com/canistealyouforaminute
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/chillin-with-dylan--5842699/support.Hannah from Love Island USA 6 joins me to talk about her time on the show!Dylan Deckard Social Media Links:Chillin with Dylan InstagramDylan Deckard InstagramDylan Deckard TikTokDylan Deckard TwitterHannah Smith's Social Media Links: - Instagram
Randy Wayne White is the bestselling and award-winning author of the prolific and longstanding Doc Ford series. In 2022, Randy endured Hurricane Ian on Sanibel Island in Florida, which caused historic damage, destroying houses and knocking out the only bridge to the island. Randy stayed on the island through the storm, unreachable for a tenuous period. Now, he's rebuilding, like everyone else on the island. This dramatic experience became the inspiration for his new Doc Ford novel ONE DEADLY EYE (Hanover Square Press) as Ford rides out the deadliest storm to hit the island in a century and tries to stop a gang of criminals who swoop in to take advantage of the evacuation and pillage and kill, during the twelve hours of chaos that follow the passing of a storm's dangerous eye. Here, White combines his expertise of nature writing, Florida, and masterful craft of crime thrillers, to bring us ONE DEADLY EYE. MORE ABOUT THE BOOK: A Russian diplomat disappears while Doc is tagging great white sharks in South Africa, and members of a criminal brotherhood, Bratva, don't think it's a coincidence. They track the biologist to Dinkin's Bay Marina on the west coast of Florida, where Brotherhood mercenaries have already deployed, prepared to pillage and kill in the wake of an approaching hurricane. No one, however, is prepared for a cataclysmic event that will forever change the island and leaves Doc to deal with escapees from Russia's most dangerous prison, including a serial killer—the Vulture Monk—who has a taste for blood. His only ally is an enigmatic British inventor whose decision to ride out the storm might have more to do with revenge than protecting a priceless art collection. Doc has a lot at stake—the lives of his fiancée, Hannah Smith, and their son, plus the fate of his hipster pal, Tomlinson, whose sailboat has disappeared in the Gulf of Mexico. The greatest threat of all, though, is a force that cannot be escaped—a Category Five hurricane that, minute by minute, melds sins of the past with Florida's precarious future. ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Randy Wayne White is the New York Times bestselling and award-winning author of the Doc Ford series. In 2011, White was named a Florida Literary Legend by the Florida Heritage Society. A fishing and nature enthusiast, he has also written extensively for Outside Magazine, National Geographic Adventure, Men's Journal, Playboy and Men's Health. He lives on Sanibel Island, Florida, where he was a light-tackle fishing guide for many years, and spends much of his free time windsurfing, playing baseball, and hanging out at Doc Ford's Rum Bar & Grille. Sharks Incorporated is his middle grade series, including Fins and Stingers. For more info on the book click HERE
In this episode of The Artful Dollar, Ryan is joined by Hannah Smith, a talented tattoo artist early in her career who has already achieved remarkable success. Together, they discuss Hannah's inspiring journey and explore what it takes to excel as a tattoo artist, whether you're just starting out or well into your career. Hear firsthand how dedication, passion, and resilience can lead to extraordinary accomplishments in the tattoo industry. Follow Hannah on Instagram: @aries.inkz https://www.instagram.com/aries.inkz – Free Seminars: 3-step marketing formula for tattoo artists: https://www.theartfuldollar.com/theartfulmarketer This free Masterclass is on the 3-step marketing formula that has helped tattooers earn another $2,000-$4,000 per month. Blueprint to build wealth for tattoo artists: https://www.theartfuldollar.com/how-to-build-wealth This free Masterclass is on the Blueprint you can follow to save more money, reduce your taxes and build wealth for the future – Hear what people think about what we do at The Artful Dollar: https://www.theartfuldollar.com/testimonials Find more Artful Dollar podcast episodes on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4P0j85W6U6tG6KTCTQidL4 – Follow me on Instagram- IG: ryanroitattoo https://www.instagram.com/ryanroitattoo/ Check out my website- https://www.theartfuldollar.com/
In this episode of Environment Variables, host Chris Adams explores the theme of Community Publishing and Greening Software, by talking to Branch Magazine's Hannah Smith and Marketa Benisek. They discuss community publishing and the lessons learned from producing Branch Magazine, which supports sustainable digital practices and includes diverse voices from the Green Software Foundation. The discussion covers the complexities of adopting digital sustainability and how Branch Magazine, through its innovative, carbon-aware design, has been a platform for expressing these nuanced themes in sustainability and how finding beauty in the imperfect might just be the answer to all your problems!
We have a repeat guest joining us today. We'll talk about something that's been on her mind, which is the growth of asset-less PR in lieu of hero/content-led campaigns. We'll discuss potential reasons why this may be, and what the potential opportunity cost is of forgoing the use of content in your PR strategy. Plus, she makes a pretty strong argument for “building a moat” and how to go about doing this to set your client or company apart from the competition. In this episode, you'll learn… Why many companies should not solely rely on asset-less PR The benefits of hero (aka content-led) PR What “building a moat” means and how to get started Our guest: Hannah Smith, Director of Worderist-- a company that offers consultancy, coaching, training & support to help develop and grow Creative, Production, and PR teams, improve processes and deliver results. Smith is an award-winning creative who's been deep in the trenches of content and PR for more than 15 years.
I've owned my firm for 15 years, and at my heart, I'm a storyteller. So when you meet a fellow storyteller, it's just instant. I met my next guest at an EO event about a month ago, and we instantly clicked. Hannah Smith with Boost Your Brand is in the studio.
How does social media challenge or reinforce our own biases? On this episode, we sat down with the University of Pennsylvania's Desmond Upton Patton to discuss his research on social media and adolescence. We talk about the many roles social media has for young people and how they have taken advantage of social media as a storytelling mechanism and a tool for navigating safety. We discuss how social media can also be reductionist, reinforce negative stereotypes, and even perpetuate misinformation, revealing the flaws in AI and similar technologies. Desmond talks us through all these facets of social media in relation to his work and challenges us to think about what it would look like to recognize social media as increasingly integrated into our reality. We were so excited to have Dr. Desmond Upton Patton with us for this episode. Desmond is not only a great friend, but an incredible scholar. As a social worker, researcher, and professor at the University of Pennsylvania, Desmond has published groundbreaking research on the linkage between grief and aggressive behavior on social media platforms, and now his research focuses on the topics such AI, social media, machine learning, empathy, and race with the goal to create unbiased and culturally conscious algorithms. In addition, he serves on the research and safety advisory boards of Twitter, Spotify, and TikTok, and he has been chosen as part of the inaugural cohort of Obama Foundation Leaders for his research. Now, he is the director for the research initiative known as SAFELab at the Annenberg School for Communication, a project we will hear more about in this episode! We also had with us songwriters Alissa Abeler and Hannah Smith from the Americana duo The Daily Fare. They shared amazing insights not just on their own experiences with social media, but also on songwriting and the storytelling process. We were so thankful to have this group of people in discussion with us, and we hope you enjoy the episode! Mentioned in this episode: -Sing Me a Story -AIDS Memorial Quilt -Follow SAFELab on Twitter Make sure to follow our Instagram, Twitter, Threads, TikTok, and Facebook accounts so you can stay up to date on all our new content. Also don't forget to follow us on Twitter @kbjohnsonmd and @htbland21. You can also find us wherever you typically get your podcasts. Thanks for listening! Instagram: @infointhernd Twitter: @infointhernd Threads: @infointhernd TikTok: @infointhernd Website: https://www.kevinbjohnsonmd.net/podcast
This week the nominations came out for the Global Poker Awards and the Ante Up Poker Podcast did not make the cut. Fans can vote on four categories. The links for those are below and our Patreon Private Game is next week. Come join us for that. Elle and I talk with Hannah Smith from Camp One Step. Their annual charity poker tournament is coming around again. It looks like I will be trying to win that WSOP Main Event seat again this year. Come join us for that. Call the Floor this week is more of a discussion on the rules as one listener found themselves in a room with a couple of players speaking using ASL in the game. Patrick and I break down a hand from Curtis Schroeder. He takes a shot at 2/5 for the first time and runs into a situation. After all of that I end the show talking about a player that acted out of line at the PokerGo Tournament Championship. To vote for the 5th Annual Global Poker Awards use these Livestream: https://www.globalpokerindex.com/.../final-round-fans.../ Hand https://www.globalpokerindex.com/.../final-round-fans.../ Trophy https://www.globalpokerindex.com/.../final-round-fans.../ Personality: https://www.globalpokerindex.com/.../final-round-peoples.../ Say Goodbye to feeling amped up and hello to feeling dialed in with our new sponsor Magic Mind. Don't forget to use the code AnteUp20: https://www.magicmind.com/JANanteup Our Linktree is a quick resource to get you to our magazine, podcast, YouTube, and more https://linktr.ee/anteupmagazine Our Patreon page is a place where you can support the show and gain access to our monthly Private game. https://www.patreon.com/AnteUpPoker Jackpot Digital is our HOTW sponsor with the perfect E-Table. Check them out https://www.jackpotdigital.com/ Jack Poker is a great site for the everyday poker player. It's not incentivized for the poker pro, so there aren't tables full of sharks. This one is for our non U.S. players. If you are outside the U.S. check this one out. https://go.jack-full.com/go/0dd6e1c5
In 2012, Dennis Rodman's financial manager, Peggy Fulford, went on television to inform the world that he was sick, broke, and not paying his child support. But behind the scenes, Peggy was stealing millions and Rodman was her #1 target. In this episode, Kiki interviews Hannah Smith, journalist and the host of The Opportunist podcast, to break down the glamorous, complicated crimes of Peggy Fulford and to tell us why we've never heard of her. @hannahpodcasts The Opportunist Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Motherhood is a beautiful gift, but it isn't always smooth sailing. That's why it's important to have a supportive community around you. Two Tulsa Mom's decided to build their community by starting a healthy activity, walking. Learn more about the friend-duo, Hannah Smith and Tristen Swengle, why they started Mom Walk Tulsa and the benefits of being connected to a community of people who are experiencing the same season of life. Check out Mom Walk Tulsa: Instagram: Mom Walk Tulsa Facebook: (Private Page): Mom Walk Tulsa
Did you know you have the ability to stir and satisfy the heart of God, here and now? God has given us the ability to choose him here on earth, and nothing blesses the heart of God like his beloved people intentionally turning their hearts toward him. As we examine how to live an abundant life here on earth, today we'll search out what it means to choose to worship God in our daily lives. Our Scripture for today comes from Matthew 4:4, and today's worship is Heal Our Land. by Kari Jobe. -- Thanks for listening to today's First15 Podcast. My name is Ryn, and I'm a part of the First15 Team. If you haven't downloaded our brand new First15 app, make sure to click the link in today's show notes to check it out! One of the new features that you can enjoy when you download the app is our Guided Prayers. We are adding new prayers to our library every month, so if you need a moment of peace with God, let these prayers be your guide! In today's First15 Podcast we wanted to give you a preview of a new Guided Prayer that our friend Hannah Smith wrote titled, “Renew me with your rest.” Oftentimes when I think about rest and peace I view them as one and the same. But as I read through Hannah's prayer, I began thinking about how often she refers to action that leads to rest and prays for the grace of God to help her find rest. The first time rest is mentioned in the scriptures is after the work of building the whole world and filling it with life was complete. Hebrews 4:11-12 says, “Let us therefore strive to enter that rest, lest anyone fall according to the same example of disobedience. For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.” I love that this set of verses makes achieving rest an actionable thing. What I really love about understanding peace and rest rightly is that we can clearly see that peace is a gift from God that helps us endure as we strive towards entering into God's rest, and rest is the reward He gives us for having held fast to His calling. I pray today that this prayer reminds you that the work to which he has called us is holy and worthy, and that the promise of the reward of rest gives you the courage to keep going.
#134: Hannah Smith-Brubaker, aReal Organic Project farmer and the Executive Director of Pennsylvania-based sustainable agriculture organization PASA, shares what her peers are learning as they ramp up efforts to collect data from on-farm organic trials and experiments.Hannah Smith-Brubaker married into the farm family at Village Acres farm, a highly-diversified, organic operation founded in the 1980s in Juniata County Pennsylvania by her wife Deb's parents Roy and Hope Brubaker. She is the Executive Director of PASA, a sustainable agriculture organization that focuses on farmer-driven research and education.https://villageacres.com/ https://pasafarming.org/To watch a video version of this podcast please visit:https://www.realorganicproject.org/hannah-smith-brubaker-on-farm-organic-research-episode-one-hundred-thirty-fourThe Real Organic Podcast is hosted by Dave Chapman and Linley Dixon, engineered by Brandon StCyr, and edited and produced by Jenny Prince.The Real Organic Project is a farmer-led movement working towards certifying 1,000 farms across the United States this year. Our add-on food label distinguishes soil-grown fruits and vegetables from hydroponically-raised produce, and pasture-raised meat, milk, and eggs from products harvested from animals in horrific confinement (CAFOs - confined animal feeding operations).To find a Real Organic farm near you, please visit:https://www.realorganicproject.org/farmsWe believe that the organic standards, with their focus on soil health, biodiversity, and animal welfare were written as they should be, but that the current lack of enforcement of those standards is jeopardizing the ability for small farms who adhere to the law to stay in business. The lack of enforcement is also jeopardizing the overall health of the customers who support the organic movement; customers who are not getting what they pay for at market but still paying a premium price. And the lack of enforcement is jeopardizing the very cycles (water, air, nutrients) that Earth relies upon to provide us all with a place to live, by pushing extractive, chemical agriculture to the forefront.If you like what you hear and are feeling inspired, we would love for you to join our movement by becoming one of our 1,000 Real Friends:https://www.realorganicproject.org/real-organic-friends/To read our weekly newsletter (which might just be the most forwarded newsletter on the internet!) and get firsthand news about what's happening with organic food, farming and policy, please subscribe here:https://www.realorganicproject.org/email
Today we continue our weeklong focus on forgiveness, by looking at the incredible gift of forgiveness we've been offered in Jesus. Every command God has given us, he has already supplied the grace to live in obedience to. Forgiveness is no different. May we find the grace to forgive as we rest in the forgiveness we've already been offered through our Savior. Our Scripture for today comes from Ephesians 4:32, and today's worship is Forgive Me by Tenth Avenue North. -- Thanks for listening to today's First15 Podcast. My name is Ryn, and I'm a part of the First15 Team. If you haven't downloaded our brand new First15 app, make sure to click the link in today's show notes to check it out! One of the new features that you can enjoy when you download the app is our Guided Prayers. We are adding new prayers to our library every month, so if you need a moment of peace with God, let these prayers be your guide! Do you ever struggle with forgiveness? Sometimes it's difficult to understand how to translate God's forgiveness of us so that we can learn to forgive ourselves. In today's prayer, our friend Hannah Smith points us to scripture as she helps us engage with the Lord about what that really looks like. She reminds us that it is God's forgiveness of us that helps us know how to extend the same to others, and helps us see that our confession is what truly opens the door of our hearts to receive both the mercy and forgiveness of God in a profound and life changing way.
God's grace is the foundation of our freedom, a sure gift made available to us again every morning. Every mistake we make is covered. Every sin is forgiven. And my hope is that as we center our hearts and minds around God's grace, that his forgiveness and mercy open a pathway to true freedom for us today. Our Scripture for today comes from 1 Corinthians 15:56-57, and today's worship is Freedom by Jesus Culture. -- Thanks for listening to today's First15 Podcast. My name is Ryn, and I'm a part of the First15 Team. If you haven't downloaded our brand new First15 app, make sure to click the link in today's show notes to check it out! One of the new features that you can enjoy when you download the app is our Guided Prayers. We are adding new prayers to our library every month, so if you need a moment of peace with God, let these prayers be your guide! In today's prayer, our friend Hannah Smith helps us remember that trusting God when our situation doesn't look like we think it should gives us an opportunity to reveal his faithfulness toward us in every area of need. As she points us to scriptures that help us to remember the encouraging invitation of our Lord to all who are weak and heavy laden, she also leads us in a prayer of repentance as she helps us to see through our own frustration so that we can truly see goodness of God toward us in every situation.
As we spend this week wholeheartedly seeking to know God with all we are, we'll take time today to experience God's love for us. We all may live with the head knowledge that God loves us, but go long spurts of time without actually experiencing God's love. God's love is most radical and life-changing upon encounter, and it's my hope today you'll press into him and really feel first hand yourself how much God truly loves you. Our Scripture for today comes from Romans 5:5, and today's worship is How Sweet by Brooke Ligertwood with Brandon Lake. -- Thanks for listening to today's First15 Podcast. My name is Ryn, and I'm a part of the First15 Team. If you haven't downloaded our brand new First15 app, make sure to click the link in today's show notes to check it out! One of the new features that you can enjoy when you download the app is our Guided Prayers. We are adding new prayers to our library every month, so if you need a moment of peace with God, let these prayers be your guide! Today we wanted to give you a preview of a new Guided Prayer that our friend Hannah Smith wrote, titled, “Comfort in Suffering.” May this prayer serve as a reminder to you that the Father of mercies and God of all comfort draws near to the brokenhearted and is compassionate towards those who are suffering. I pray that as this prayer reminds you of the God who is tender with our hearts, you would feel compelled to offer the same care to those around you.
As we continue our week on prayer, we're going to explore how prayer positions us to experience the presence and grace of God. So often we think of prayer as a way to get our needs met, but it's so much more than that. So today, let's ask God to teach us how to become people of prayer so we can experience his best as we move throughout each day. Our Scripture for today comes from Mark 1:35, and today's worship is Keep Praying by Maverick City. -- Thanks for listening to today's First15 Podcast. My name is Ryn, and I'm a part of the First15 Team. If you haven't downloaded our brand new First15 app, make sure to click the link in today's show notes to check it out! One of the new features that you can enjoy when you download the app is our Guided Prayers. We are adding new prayers to our library every month, so if you need a moment of peace with God, let these prayers be your guide! In today's First15 Podcast we wanted to give you a preview of a new Guided Prayer that our friend Hannah Smith wrote titled, “Let not your hearts be troubled.” Hannah's prayer reminds us that God's peace is a refuge for us; that his blueprint for life is beautiful; and that it holds the power to not only still our worried minds, but it brings stillness to our body, soul, and spirit. I pray this prayer helps to lift your eyes from what's in front of you to gaze upon the One who holds it all in His hands … and that you have the courage to surrender to His good plans knowing that He has your ultimate good in mind.
My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark
On today's episode, Georgia and Karen are joined by Hannah Smith, the host of the podcast The Opportunist, to tell the story of Sandra Anderson and her dog, Eagle. Note: The book Karen mentioned in today's episode is "Finder: The True Story of a Private Investigator" by Marilyn Greene and Gary Provost.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
God is worthy of our worship. But have you ever wondered why God needs our worship? In today's devotional we're going to explore why God deserves, and even requires, our worship. Let us come before him in humility as we trust that he will give us his best as we give him ours. Our Scripture for today comes from James 4:10, and today's worship is Behold by Phil Wickham & Anne Wilson. -- Thanks for listening to today's First15 Podcast. My name is Ryn, and I'm a part of the First15 Team. If you haven't downloaded our brand new First15 app, make sure to click the link in today's show notes to check it out! One of the new features that you can enjoy when you download the app is our Guided Prayers. We are adding new prayers to our library every month, so if you need a moment of peace with God, let these prayers be your guide! Today we wanted to give you a preview of a new Guided Prayer that our friend Hannah Smith wrote, titled, “Our Greatest Companion.” There is nothing we have ever experienced that Jesus has allowed himself to be a stranger to. He understands our struggles because he has borne our struggles and achieved victory over them all. I pray you are reminded today that Jesus isn't a distant observer of your life, but an ever present and compassionate companion on your journey.
Happy New Year!! I'm Craig Denison, author and founder of First15. A growing relationship with God comes when you experience him every day. So thank you so much for starting your year with us. I've got a really exciting announcement with what you can expect from First15 this year. One is, we're expanding the writers that are contributing to the daily devotionals. There will still be a lot of content written by me, but this month we're kicking the year off with a focus on spiritual awakening actually written by my Dad, Jim Denison. He's one of the smartest and most heart-felt people I've ever known. It was a privilege growing up with him as a father. And I'm really excited for you to get to experience God with his content as a guide this month. Along with some new content, you'll hear a new voice on the podcast reading the days devotional. That'll help give consistency to your experience with God, not making First15 about the author, but about creating space for God to fill. Happy New Year. May God bless you as you seek him this morning, and every morning. -- Today we're going to explore what it means to truly trust God. Life is full of incredibly difficult circumstances, and in the midst of disappointments and pain it can be hard to trust that he is good and loving. But thankfully, God promises us that we can trust his heart even when we can't see his hand. Let's look at what it means to trust God in the midst of our circumstances today. Our Scripture for today comes from Jeremiah 29:11, and today's worship is Welcome Resurrection by Elevation Worship. -- Thanks for listening to today's First15 Podcast. My name is Ryn, and I'm a part of the First15 Team. If you haven't downloaded our brand new First15 app, make sure to click this link to check it out! One of the new features that you can enjoy when you download the app is our Guided Prayers. We are adding new prayers to our library every month, so if you need a moment of peace with God, let these prayers be your guide! In today's First15 Podcast we wanted to give you a preview of a new Guided Prayer that our friend Hannah Smith wrote titled, “Renew me with your rest.” Oftentimes when I think about rest and peace I view them as one and the same. But as I read through Hannah's prayer, I began thinking about how often she refers to action that leads to rest and prays for the grace of God to help her find rest. The first time rest is mentioned in the scriptures is after the work of building the whole world and filling it with life was complete. Hebrews 4:11-12 says, “Let us therefore strive to enter that rest, lest anyone fall according to the same example of disobedience. For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.” I love that this set of verses makes achieving rest an actionable thing. What I really love about understanding peace and rest rightly is that we can clearly see that peace is a gift from God that helps us endure as we strive towards entering into God's rest, and rest is the reward He gives us for having held fast to His calling. I pray today that this prayer reminds you that the work to which he has called us is holy and worthy, and that the promise of the reward of rest gives you the courage to keep going.
Hannah Smith speaks with Lee Price to hear his side of the story, and also shares a conversation with another Opportunist producer about the many discrepancies between Lee's version of the events and other interviews. Listen to The Opportunist ad-free, with bonus content, at KastMedia.com/KastPlus Listen to The Opportunist ad-free on Amazon Music You can reach out to us at TheOpportunist@kastmedia.com Find the episode transcript here: tinyurl.com/opppodcast You can purchase Opportunist merchandise here: https://theopportunistpodcast.com/ The ending credits song is called "The Crow" by Paul Graham Stanborough. Thank you to our sponsors: Shopify: Sign up for a free trial at shopify.com/opp. Canva: Get a free 45-day extended trial when you go to canva.me/OPP. June's Journey: Download June's Journey today! Available on Android and iOS mobile devices, as well as on PC through Facebook Games. The Jordan Harbinger Show: Check out jordanharbinger.com/start for some great episode recommendations. StoryWorth: Go to storyworth.com/OPP today and save $10 on your first purchase. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hannah Smith speaks with Lee Price to hear his side of the story, and also shares a conversation with another Opportunist producer about the many discrepancies between Lee's version of the events and other interviews. Listen to The Opportunist ad-free on Amazon Music You can purchase Opportunist merchandise here: https://theopportunistpodcast.com/ The ending credits song is called "The Crow" by Paul Graham Stanborough.
This one's for everyone who watched Bridgerton and wondered: could I get it in Georgian England?! Dr. Sally Holloway joins Jonathan to discuss the ins and outs of love and courtship in this era, including gifts and letters people would exchange, 18th century contraception, and the historical equivalents of ghosting and catfishing. Dr. Sally Holloway is a historian of gender, emotions, and visual and material culture over the long 18th and nineteenth centuries, and is a Vice Chancellor's Research Fellow at Oxford Brookes University. She is the author of The Game of Love in Georgian England: Courtship, Emotions, and Material Culture (Oxford, 2019), which will be published in paperback in June. You can follow Dr. Holloway on Twitter @sally_holloway. Here are some visual resources to pair with the episode: “The Unwilling Bridegroom, or Forc'd Meat Will Never Digest” “Sympathetic Lovers” Eye Miniature 18th c. Sheep's Gut Condoms The love letter from William Martin to Hannah Smith, sent on February 15, 1714, is from the Hampshire Record office in Winchester, ref. 3M51/684. You can find their contact details here. Join the conversation, and find out what former guests are up to, by following us on Instagram and Twitter @CuriousWithJVN. Transcripts for each episode are available at JonathanVanNess.com. Jonathan is on Instagram and Twitter @JVN and @Jonathan.Vanness on Facebook. Our executive producer is Erica Getto. Our associate producer is Zahra Crim. Our editor is Andrew Carson. Our socials are run and curated by Middle Seat Digital. Our theme music is “Freak” by QUIÑ; for more, head to TheQuinCat.com. Getting Curious merch is available on PodSwag.com.Love listening to Getting Curious? Now, you can also watch Getting Curious—on Netflix! Head to netflix.com/gettingcurious to dive in.