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Limerick is preparing to celebrate its Solemn Novena to Our Lady of Perpetual Help from June 19th to 27th at Mount St Alphonsus on Henry Street in Limerick with the Redemptorist Fathers. On this weeks podcast we are joined by Fr Gerry Moloney who takes us through the Icon of Our Lady of Perpetual Help and through what is up coming at the novena this year where the theme is "Called and Sent". The theme is based on the Irish Synodal Pathway and over each day of the Novena, there will be sharing and reflection on the principal focus areas from the synodal pathway. Drawing thousands of attendees from across the Mid-West, the multi-session daily event features scripture-based homilies, petition writing, and specialized sessions for families, the sick, and the elderly. The novena programme is available HERE. And you can get more information including livestreams from the Redemptorists website.Text us at +353 874668950 or email at comeandseeinspirtaions@gmail.com
Limerick is preparing to celebrate its Solemn Novena to Our Lady of Perpetual Help from June 19th to 27th at Mount St Alphonsus on Henry Street in Limerick with the Redemptorist Fathers. On this weeks podcast we are joined by Fr Gerry Moloney who takes us through the Icon of Our Lady of Perpetual Help and through what is up coming at the novena this year where the theme is "Called and Sent". The theme is based on the Irish Synodal Pathway and over each day of the Novena, there will be sharing and reflection on the principal focus areas from the synodal pathway. Drawing thousands of attendees from across the Mid-West, the multi-session daily event features scripture-based homilies, petition writing, and specialized sessions for families, the sick, and the elderly. The novena programme is available HERE. And you can get more information including livestreams from the Redemptorists website.In part one of the podcast we have our regular run through the upcoming liturgical odds and ends including saints of the week and some bits and bobs from around the Catholic world news.In part three we have our weekly reflection on the Sunday gospel which this week is a return to the gospel of Matthew as we will journey with Matthew for the most of the liturgical year from now until November. In this weeks gospel (Matthew 9:36 -10:8) we have the naming and sending of the twelve apostles. Text us at +353 874668950 or email at comeandseeinspirtaions@gmail.com
Please join us at patreon.com/tortoiseshack Journalist in Stockholm, Philip O'Connor, is a long-time Brazilian Jiujitsu practitioner. So when he wrote his piece below, On Violence, and outlined the hard reality of what took place on Henry Street, we decided we'd have a wider conversation about it all. Philip ties together all of the strands from policing, to security, to media framing and to systemic racism. Do listen. Philip's piece:https://philipoconnor.com/on-violence/ The SpiceBag Podcast:https://www.patreon.com/posts/patron-exclusive-158702753
Please join us at patreon.com/tortoiseshack In this Reboot Republic, Rory talks to Tony about the massive rent increases caused by the Government's new rental policies, Micheal Martin's thinskinned replies in the Dáil and the disturbing killing of Yves Sakila on Henry Street in Dublin. Join CATU: https://catuireland.org/ Black and Irish:https://blackandirish.com/ Philip O'Connor on violence podcast:https://www.patreon.com/posts/patron-exclusive-158808490 Adam SpiceBag Doyle podcast:https://www.patreon.com/posts/patron-exclusive-158702753
35 year old Yves Sakila was detained by security personal on Henry Street, he was later pronounced dead at the Mater Hospital. For more on this our Eastern Correspont Samantha Liberi.
Protests were held today for Yves Sakila, the Congolese man who tragically died after being tackled by security personnel on Henry Street last Friday.Joining Ciara to discuss is Barry Whyte, Newstalk's Chief Reporter, who was at the protests…
A bavarian Stranded in Ireland - Tips und Tricks fuer Deutschsprachige zum Leben in Irland
reland News Digest – Mai 2026In dieser Episode von A Bavarian Stranded in Ireland werfen wir erneut einen Blick auf drei aktuelle Nachrichten aus Irland – von möglichen neuen Bahnverbindungen über einen tragischen Vorfall im Dubliner Stadtzentrum bis hin zum Besuch von König Charles in Nordirland.Ein kurzer Überblick darüber, was sich derzeit auf der grünen Insel tut. Themen der Episode Neue Hoffnung für die Bahnstrecke Dublin–NavanDie seit 1963 stillgelegte Bahnstrecke zwischen Dublin und Navan im County Meath soll wiedereröffnet werden.Nachdem der erste Abschnitt bis zum M3 Parkway bereits seit rund 15 Jahren wieder in Betrieb ist, scheint nun auch der weitere Ausbau Richtung Navan konkreter zu werden.Für tausende Pendler könnte damit die Zeit der größten Stadt Irlands ohne Bahnanschluss bald enden. Tragischer Vorfall auf der Henry Street in DublinEin 35-jähriger Mann aus dem Kongo starb nach einem Zwischenfall nahe des Kaufhauses Arnotts im Dubliner Stadtzentrum.Der Vorfall, bei dem laut Berichten zuvor auch ein älterer Mann verletzt wurde, führte landesweit zu Diskussionen über Sicherheit, Gewaltanwendung und gesellschaftliche Spannungen in Irland.Videos des Geschehens verbreiteten sich schnell in sozialen Medien und lösten Proteste und öffentliche Debatten aus. König Charles zu Besuch in NordirlandKönig Charles und Königin Camilla besuchten diese Woche Nordirland – ein Besuch mit großer symbolischer Bedeutung.Noch vor wenigen Jahrzehnten wären öffentliche Auftritte eines britischen Monarchen in republikanischen Teilen Nordirlands kaum denkbar gewesen.Der Besuch zeigt, wie sehr sich die Beziehungen zwischen Irland und Großbritannien seit dem Karfreitagsabkommen verändert haben. Quellen & weiterführende Linkshttps://www.irishrail.ie/en-ie/news/plans-for-new-navan-railway-publishedhttps://www.reuters.com/world/hundreds-protest-dublin-over-death-congolese-born-man-restrained-outside-store-2026-05-21/https://www.rte.ie/news/ulster/2026/0519/1574152-belfast-charles-camilla/ Mehr vom Podcast & UpdatesInstagram, Facebook & Pinterest a_bavarian_stranded_in_ireland WhatsApp Channelhttps://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VaVcgvgFnSzHRcuurV1V Kontaktabavarianstrandedinireland@gmail.com
Paul and Mick discuss the unfolding investigation into the death of Yves Sakila in Dublin's Henry Street. A post mortem examination has determined no exact cause of death as a vigil is held in his memory and debate around the incident follows. They also discuss other major crime stories of the week, including the sentencing of disgraced former Garda Paul Moody, and the horrific case of a son who murdered his mother and attempted to kill his father in Cavan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On Friday at about 5pm, Yves Sakila(35) was pursued by security guards on Dublin's Henry Street. He was suspected of shoplifting. As he ran down the street, it is believed he collided with an elderly man.What happened next was witnessed by several bystanders and by thousands of others because of a distressing video posted on social media. It shows the Congolese man's last minutes as he lay face down restrained by several security men.When gardaì arrived on the scene, Sakila had been held on the ground for at least five minutes. The injured man, in his 80s, was also on the ground a few metres away.Both were taken to hospital where Sakila was pronounced dead and the older man was operated on.So what happened? The incident is being investigated by both the Garda and by Fiosrú, the police ombudsman. How will these investigations proceed? Sakila had lived in Ireland since he was a teenager, what else is known about him?Irish Times crime and security editor Conor Lally explains.Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Suzanne Brennan. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Expert Security Instructor Anthony Cunnane from Krav Maga Systems Ireland in Dundalk, outlines the deficiencies in security personnel training, in light of the tragic death of Yves Sakila on Henry Street in Dublin. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Lifelong Gooners Gerry, David Sheehan, Gary Nelson and David Fitzsimons are all in dreamland following Arsenal's Premier League title win. Anthony Cunnane believes a lack of proper security personnel training contributed to the death of Yves Sakila on Henry Street last Friday. Joseph Birchall is back with "Reported Missing" the second book in his crime thriller trilogy and also spoke powerfully about caring for his son Christopher. Dr Kate McCann brought us the latest on dealing with Obesity and we heard about Mike McMahon's award winning garden which lives on in a new really worthwhile home. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Video footage appears to show five men holding a man prone on the ground before his death after an alleged shoplifting incident on Henry Street in Dublin on Friday.The almost five-minute video appears to have been taken by a bystander among the large crowd outside Arnotts department store who watched as Yves Sakila was held to the ground.Journalist Valerie Flynn joined Anton to discuss this.
A Garda investigation is under way into an incident which occurred on Dublin's Henry Street, in which a Congolese man died following an alleged shoplifting incident.The Irish Network Against Racism (INAR) has said it is very concerned that excessive force may have been used against the man, who has been named as Yves Sakila.Joining Ciara to discuss this is Shane O'Curry, Director of the Irish Network Against Racism and Barry Whyte, Newstalk's Chief Reporter.
A vigil was held for Congolese man Yves Sakila who died after an alleged shop-lifting incident on Henry Street last Friday, amid concerns that excessive force may have been used against him.And the Media Minister says there can be no further ‘drip, drip, drip' of disclosures about financial affairs at RTÉ as he meets with the Director General. Guest Presenter Shane Coleman was joined by:Niall Collins TD, Minister of State, Department of JusticeGary Ganon TD, Social Democrats Justice Spokesperson Eimer McAuley, News Correspondent, The Journal Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Video footage appears to show five men holding a man prone on the ground before his death after an alleged shoplifting incident on Henry Street in Dublin on Friday.The almost five-minute video appears to have been taken by a bystander among the large crowd outside Arnotts department store who watched as Yves Sakila was held to the ground.Journalist Valerie Flynn joined Anton to discuss this.
Paul and Mick discuss what was a weekend of violent incidents - from the death of an alleged shoplifter in Dublin's Henry Street to a man killed after being put in a headlock amid a house row in Artane. They also discuss an attack in Blanchardstown, the father of ‘Tinder rapist' Patrick Nevin saying his son deserves a second chance, and speculate on what's next for Daniel Kinahan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Episode 408: In August 2015, 22-year-old Dalhousie University physics student Taylor Samson walked into an apartment on Henry Street in Halifax, Nova Scotia, carrying 20 pounds of marijuana. He never walked out. What followed became one of Nova Scotia's most closely watched murder cases. William “Will” Sandeson — a former university track athlete and incoming medical student — was arrested days later. Surveillance footage showed Samson entering Sandeson's apartment. Blood and DNA evidence tied the scene to a fatal gunshot. Samson's body was never recovered. This is the story of Taylor Samson's disappearance, and the long road to justice for his killer. Sources: Statement from Dalhousie University regarding charges laid in Taylor Samson caseWilliam Sandeson | Global News, Videos & ArticlesHow a Drug-Dealing Med Student Was Convicted of Murder | VICEMurder trial told of evidence found in ice-cream truck at Sandeson farm | CBC NewsPolice search for Dalhousie student's body as track athlete faces murder charge CityNewsR. v. Sandeson, 2025 NSCA 86 (CanLII)R. v. Sandeson, 2024 NSCA 72 (CanLII)R. v. Sandeson, 2023 NSSC 130 (CanLII)R. v. Sandeson, 2023 NSSC 64 (CanLII)R. v. Sandeson, 2022 NSSC 387 (CanLII)R. v. Sandeson, 2022 NSSC 254 (CanLII)R. v. Sandeson, 2022 NSSC 151 (CanLII)R. v. Sandeson, 2022 NSSC 111 (CanLII)R. v. Sandeson, 2020 NSCA 47 (CanLII)R. v. Sandeson, 2017 NSSC 193 (CanLII)R. v. Sandeson, 2017 NSSC 146 (CanLII) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Radio documentary ‘The Power of The People' examines the significant impact of the ‘Dunnes Strikers' on Ireland's relations with South Africa and their contribution to the abolition of apartheidOn 19 July 1984 Mary Manning, a shop worker in Dunnes Stores on Henry Street in Dublin, refused to handle two grapefruit which had been imported from South Africa following an instruction from her union as a protest for the apartheid policies in place in the country. Mary was suspended and thus started what would become one of the longest running strikes in trade union history.A new radio documentary produced by Kelly Crichton revisits the story, highlighting the tinder box atmosphere in Dunnes which helped lead to the strike, the evolution of the strikers' motivation and understanding as well as the dramatic and dangerous events that took place over the period of the strike.The documentary follows the journey of the strikers, from the lack of support they received from politicians, the government, the church and other groups to being heralded as heroes. It shares the support they received from key people like their union official Brendan Archbold and Nimrod Sejake, who joined them on the picket line and had been a cellmate and fellow member of the African National Congress(ANC) with Nelson Mandela. Other supporters included Archbishop Desmond Tutu who helped them gain international recognition and the Reverend Jess Jackson.It's a story of determination, perseverance, love and triumph through adversity. Dunnes were approached for comment.The documentary was supported by Coimisiún na Meán with the Television Licence Fee.
Brenda Donohue reports live from Henry Street in Dublin City and is in search of the elusive country shopper.
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Whitney Elkins-Hutten of PassiveInvesting.com interviews multifamily investor Aaron Fragnito, who talks about his acquisition of the 42-unit Henry Street in Passaic, New Jersey. He breaks down everything they went through in renovating the 90-year-old building, from dealing with plumbing issues to taking care of termite damage. Aaron also shares their challenges in dealing with tenants, how they raised money to secure the property, and why they require a “green card” for their non-New Jersey clients.
The House Party radio show goes back to the 90s with a tribute to the iconic Henry Street recond label
The Government is being told it must stick to its promise to reinstate the 9% reduced VAT rate for food-led hospitality businesses or face the consequences of further closures, job losses and long-term damage to Ireland's tourism economy. The warning is coming from the Restaurants Association of Ireland (RAI), which has launched its Pre-Budget Submission, outlining urgent policy measures needed to safeguard thousands of restaurants, cafés and gastropubs across the country. The RAI's submission highlights the specific risks faced by counties like Clare, where restaurants, cafés and gastropubs are key employers and vital to rural life and economic survival. To discuss this further, Alan Morrissey was joiend by Frank Landy of Sweet N Green in Ennis, Rony Barobhuiya, Co-owner of Henry's Bistro in Ennis and Andrew Flood from Clonlara who runs An Beag Café on Henry Street, Kilrush.
Ennis has been restored to one of the top five tidiest towns in Ireland in the latest anti-litter league survey. The county town, now ranked just behind Naas, has regained its ‘Cleaner than European Norms' status, with nine out of ten areas surveyed receiving an A grade — up from five in December. An Taisce praised recent enhancement works on O'Connell and Henry Street, describing the streetscapes as “lovely,” and highlighted major improvement at the Dunnes Stores Car Park, which went from the least tidy area to earning a top grade. To dicuss this further Peter O'Connell was joined by Councillor Mary Howard and Conor Horgan of IBAL. PHOTO CREDIT: (c) IBAL
Joining Bobby this week for the industry review was:Jackie Spillane, Director of Spillane World Markets Bree Allen, Manager of Ballymaloe Grain Store Sadie Grace, Chair of the Committee for Casual Trading for Henry Street
Sinéad Ní Uallacháin is lapping up the Christmas shopping spirit in the heart of Dublin with the Henry Street market stall traders.
Solidarity WorksForty years ago this month, ten workers from the Henry Street branch of Dunnes Stores in Dublin's city centre went on strike to protest against the selling of produce from Apartheid South Africa. A year later, the group was joined by another worker, Brendan Barron, from the Crumlin store, bringing their number to eleven. The strike lasted for almost three years. I remember it well. I joined the picket line a few times and Sinn Féin and An Phoblacht were firm supporters of the Dunnes Store strikers. Their courageous stand led to the Dublin government banning South African goods from Irish stores. The strike followed a decision by the Irish Distributive and Administrative Union IDATU, now the Mandate union, not to handle South African produce. Release Leonard Peltier Earlier this month 79 year old native American indigenous activist Leonard Peltier was denied parole. He won't be eligible now for another parole hearing until June 2026. His legal team will appeal the decision.Leonard has consistently denied that he was responsible for killing of two FBI agents in 1975. His family and supporters are now deeply concerned that after almost 50 years in prison that Leonard will die there as his health has severely deteriorated in recent years. Lies and HypocrisyLies, hypocrisy, double standards, starvation, and the mass murder of civilians have been essential tools in the Israeli government's genocidal war against the Palestinian people. Some have also been a feature of the policies and propaganda employed by those governments allied to Israel's war strategy. Last week Russian missiles destroyed much of a children's hospital in Kyiv. A wave of other similar attacks took place against cities across the Ukraine. There was justifiable criticism of Russia which this column shares. Meanwhile the deliberate destruction of so-called ‘safe zones' in Gaza by Israeli bombers continues using armaments supplied by western powers. Over a hundred and fifty Palestinians are known to have been killed. Many hundreds more have been left grievously injured trapped in a place that has almost no medical facilities or resources.
The business lobby group IBEC has called for an “immediate pause” to the implementation of Dublin City Council's transport plan Kieran is joined by some business owners in the city: owner of Skechers stores around the country and Asics on Henry Street, Paul Gallagher and Sales Manager at Sweeney & O'Rourke, catering showroom located on Pearse Street, Paul Woodborne.
CLASSIC MIX Ep.39 'The most emblematic House Classic tunes on podcast' Episode Special Tracks Ranked Selected & mixed by Mr. Marceaux 01 Voices - Voices in my mind [CJ Mackintosh mix] (1994 Sound Of Ministry) 02 Dajae - Brighter days [Hadji & Emmanuel mix] (2005 Big Love) 03 Mousse T - Horny [Scott Diaz Gospel Excursion] (2018 Peppermint Jam) 04 DJ Meme Orchestra feat Tracey K - Love is you [John Morales instru] (2011 Mn2s) 05 Ultra Naté - Found a cure [Mood II Swing mix] (1998 Strictly Rhythm) 06 Boris Dlugosh pres Boom - Keep pushin [DJ Disciples mix] (1996 Peppermint Jam) 07 Zhane - Vibe [Maurice Joshua mix] (1994 Motown) 08 Copyright feat Mr.V & Miss Patty - In da club 'Shake shit up' (2008 Defected) 09 Dennis Ferrer feat Tyrone Ellis - Underground is my home (2006 King Street) 10 Yass feat L.T Brown - Im free [James Deron 2k18 Remix] (2018 Purple Music) 11 DJ Sneak - Show me the way (1995 Henry Street) 12 Wahoo - Make em shake it [Sandy Rivera mix] (2005 Defected) 13 Bob Sinclar - Save our soul [Brian Tappert re-edit] (2002 Legato Records) 14 Una Mas - I will follow you [Full Intention Club mix] (2002 Defected) 15 Belezamusica - U got me spinning [Seamus Haji mix] (2005 Soul Love) 16 Todd Terry feat Martha Wash & Jocelyn Brown - Keep on jumping [Re-Tide Disco Remix] (2018 Phoenix Music) 17 First Choice - Doctor love [Late Nite Tuff Guy Reworks] (2018 Salsoul Records) More infos on DEEPINSIDE.co.uk © 2024 DEEPINSIDE.co.uk
March is HERE! Ryan and Catherine hilariously talk you through what's going on in Saratoga Springs, NY, from the 50th Saratoga Home & Lifestyle Show to Saratoga County Restaurant Week and some twists and turns along the way. They're also talking Peter Pan at The Spa Little Theatre, The Seven Wonders: A Live Tribute to Fleetwood Mac, St. Patrick's Day, the time Ryan broke Catherine's daughter's heart, and adult tricycle race down Henry Street. HINT: the trike rally is coming back folks! These two have such chemistry and share their love for Saratoga along with what you don't want to miss. This lively bonus episode is your ticket to a rollicking good time, filled with insider insights, playful banter, and the unique charm that defines Seriously Catherine. Seriously, don't miss out – press play and let the laughter begin! Thank you to our SPONSOR - Henry Street Taproom
Cape Breton's Information Morning from CBC Radio Nova Scotia (Highlights)
A meeting was held last night in Whitney Pier for people concerned about the new rapid shelter village on Henry Street.
We talk about building a brand all the time, but what can you do with that brand? Today we are talking about turning that brand into an empire.ResourceHenry Street CreativeReal Estate Marketing DudeThe Listing Advocate (Earn more listings!)REMD on YouTubeREMD on InstagramWhat is up? Ladies and gentlemen, welcome. Another episode of the Real Estate Marketing Dude podcast, and welcome to 2024, folks. Since all it's been ten years, especially this year, this podcast has been on the ground and I'm going to start this year off where I started off 14 or ten fucking years ago in 2014. And back then we were talking about the same damn thing that we're still talking about today.00:04:40:08 - 00:04:55:20UnknownBut back then people thought I was crazy because they're like, Who the fuck are you? And more importantly, what the hell is a personal brand? I'm a real estate salesperson. I don't need a brand. My brokers, my brand, women screaming the saying. So I think it's a very appropriate episode because your personal brand has never been more important.00:04:55:20 - 00:05:11:16UnknownBecause no one hires your broker, they hire you. You're the individual that they work with, and you're the person that they remember of. And the goal here is that when I time the word real estate is thought about how many people really associate your name with that, that's what we're talking about with personal branding. So I want to start the year off with a bang.00:05:11:16 - 00:05:27:19UnknownWe brought on one of the most experts in this field. His name is Mr. Tyler Mount, and we're going to talk personal branding and how you can build an empire with it. Tyler What's up, man? I want you to run a little bit about who you are, where are you from, and what the fuck do you do? Well, look, thanks for having me.00:05:27:19 - 00:05:52:07UnknownI love the energy. You know, I've worked in digital marketing, specifically real estate. Digital marketing. For the better part of 15 years, I've been fortunate enough to work with nearly a thousand clients in 16 countries. I've represented over $7 billion in real estate developments across the nation. And you know what I have found working with whether it's the CEO of T-Mobile, the the president of the United States, the CEO of Twitter, now known as X ray.00:05:52:09 - 00:06:09:18UnknownYou know, what I've learned is the power of personal brand. I want to just double down on what you started with today. No one cares what you're talking brokerage, right? The idea that someone is hiring you because you're a Keller. Keller Williams is a misnomer, right? Because you can write a contract doesn't make you special. An idiot out of high school could do that.00:06:09:22 - 00:06:29:14UnknownWhat actually makes you special and what makes you important is the personal side humanity of you, and how we can really start to encapsulate that in your brand and get people to know I can trust you in order to transact with you. That's right. No one remembers what you did there. Remember how you do it. No one remembers what you said or how he said.00:06:29:16 - 00:06:42:11UnknownSo let's dig deeper because a lot of people sort of I feel like people understand like what a brand is, but they don't like they hear this term. It's almost like a buzzword because it is a little bit complicated. Like and here's let's just break it down to basics here. Here's where I see I will get your opinion.00:06:42:11 - 00:07:02:13UnknownSeriously, most people, when they think of their personal brand, they don't in that they don't visualize their individualism. I guess, if you want to say as a brand, because they're like, I'm a dad, I'm a father, I'm stressed out human being and I'm just a person in the rat race here. How the hell am I? BRAND And you have to realize, folks, is that you are the brand.00:07:02:13 - 00:07:18:20UnknownYour brand is your persona. It's how many people think or associate you with anything else that it stands for. And we don't look at ourselves as a business. We look at ourselves as a human. And that's a number one problem in the whole business. Look at Josh Altman, for example. We think Josh Altman actually goes on a listing presentation or he just fucking shows up and tells them where to sign.00:07:19:00 - 00:07:41:22UnknownThat's having a brand now. Josh had whatever Bravo helped build his brand. That's why he is what he is today. But it took that content creation that that media, that attention, that recognition to give him that status today. So when you walk into a room, you know how big your brand is because basically I look at it as like you're not going get as many questions.00:07:41:24 - 00:07:56:04UnknownThen if you if you have a brand is if not, people start to look up to you as the expert. Another way to look at it is like I use this example when we use it for video clients, I'll be like, I'm not a chef, but I guarantee you if I shot seven videos and put them all in front of you, you would think I was.00:07:56:06 - 00:08:13:11UnknownThat's the power of a brand, right? So what we're talking about here, guys, is how do you create that? How do you create that persona that that, that, that thing, that buzz that everyone's like, that's that real estate guy or that's that letter or That's that one guy or That's that guy. That's that guy. What makes that happen is working that.00:08:13:13 - 00:08:31:23UnknownYeah. And you know, I just want to echo what you said because it's it's exactly the basis of my philosophy. I always start with reminding people that user perception is truth. I didn't say factually accurate to your point about saying I could convince people I'm a chef. That's certainly the case. And that's really, really good news for some.00:08:31:23 - 00:08:53:13UnknownI work with a lot of immature real estate agents and they're concerned about their production history. I don't care. Let's create the most epic digital epicenter so that people assume you're the best, right? The second thing I want to stress is I work with a lot of legacy providers, people who are in the top 1% of providers in their market and their marketing ecosystem is shit, but they're still in the top 5% and they think that's fine.00:08:53:13 - 00:09:15:24UnknownThe reality is they could never quantify the amount of people who hit the floor. That wouldn't have hit the floor if they had a fucking website or a social media that didn't look at the kindergartner do it, did it? You know, I will tell you, I represent Ryan Sarhan. The most followed real estate brand on earth. And what we focus on there is really granularly focusing on consistent content.00:09:15:24 - 00:09:35:23UnknownHow do we remain top of mind and how do we make Ryan appear to be the best in the world? Not only do I think he's the best in the world, but his media and his marketing efforts absolutely reflect that. That's why he has literally the most expensive single family listing in the country right now, right here in New York City.00:09:36:00 - 00:09:53:01UnknownWell said. Let's talk about that, because like Ryan, you see him, you're like, this guy just oozes luxury. It's in the clothes he wears. It's in the watch he wears. It's the way he carries himself. You know what I mean? And like people at the end of the day, if the camera's on or off, is Ryan still not the same person?00:09:53:03 - 00:10:18:08Unknown100%. What I will tell you is we always do a master class in authenticity. Ryan in front of the camera and behind the camera is the same person. He's gracious, he's kind, he's wildly intelligent. He is that experienced salesperson, but he's also funny and irreverent and kooky and all things that he is in front of the camera. We focus on that authenticity to build this most valued brand, and you build a large brand without authenticity.00:10:18:10 - 00:10:38:12UnknownAbsolutely not. It's absolutely impossible. You can build a brand, don't get me wrong, but can you really build the brand that you could have if you followed your authentic truth? No. And the reason is quite simple because no matter who you are, whether you're a man and women hate working with you or you're maybe a woman and men hate working with you, you're a Democrat or Republican.00:10:38:12 - 00:10:56:19UnknownPro-Choice, pro-life, rich, poor, decent fucking matter. There are people on earth who are not going to want to work with you because of who you are. So if you're trying to be someone else, you're already ostracizing a certain group of people and you're never going to be as good acting like Ryan or acting like me or acting like you as we are authentically being ourselves.00:10:57:00 - 00:11:26:22UnknownSo you might as well authentically own who you are and the niche the following that enjoys your authentic truth will follow, will gravitate. And that's how you build your niche and how you build. But but wait. I'm going to turn off some people in that process, wouldn't I? Then wouldn't that be bad for business? Well, of course you're going to turn off people, but like I said, if me being gay turns off people, me being straight turns off gay people who only want to work with the gay strategist, like ultimately, no matter who I am, no matter what I do, you were ostracized.00:11:26:22 - 00:11:46:07UnknownAnd that is the biggest question I get. People are like, exactly like you said, well, I'm a really fucking nervous. What if me being, I don't know, a veteran or devout Christian or Muslim or whatever, I am ostracized as people. The answer is it will. But if we don't focus on our authentic truth, we're just going to be inauthentic and still ostracize people for a different reason.00:11:46:08 - 00:12:00:16UnknownThat's what we focus on. You're not supposed to relate with everybody. Guys like you're not wired that way, and that's not the way God made us. Like you're supposed to piss off some people. I would actually like telling people like, Hey, like if you're branding doesn't like piss some people off, that you're not you to do a good job in the first place.00:12:00:16 - 00:12:18:12UnknownLike look at my podcast as real estate marketing dude. And there's so many people have told me over the years, that's so unprofessional, so unprofessional. Guess what? Hey guys, if you're still saying that, fuck off. You know, I got 101.5 million downloads on this podcast just being authentic, right? And it's because it's just the way I talk. I'm from Chicago.00:12:18:12 - 00:12:37:09UnknownThis is how I talk. Whether the camera's on or where the camera's off. I have a potty mouth, but I don't hold back. I cleaned it up over the years quite a bit. As my brand has changed. However, overall, I'm still fucking dude at the end of the day. And those of you who listen to this podcast is a reason why you listen to this and you've been coming back and writing in all these reviews is because you follow the authenticity of it.00:12:37:11 - 00:12:50:19UnknownBut trust me, there are just as many of you who send me hate mail as there are that send compliments. Like, as a matter of fact, I have a guy booked a show with just yesterday and these are the messages I like. I like seeing. And this is when, you know, the branding is on this guy. This guy's from Nebraska.00:12:50:21 - 00:13:17:07UnknownHe's Christian, big Christian. I've seen a lot of my content lately and he and he writes me, you guys did this month and he writes he goes, Dude, I know you don't know who I am. I'd love to have a show up show up on your podcast. But I mean, listen, you for the last few years and I started doing videos because of what you said and because of that, my business has grown and I never would have thought some fucking guy from some podcasts where is in to show me this way Now I'm having him on the show to interview him, but each one of them says the same fucking thing.00:13:17:07 - 00:13:34:22UnknownThey say, Thanks for letting me just be me. Thanks for letting me. It's just it's usually somewhere around those lines. And then I know why people think so hard about this stuff because we don't overthink a conversation we're having with someone. John Doe down the street right? Yeah, but never it like. I'm mean, you are just. Just. Matt, have we ever met before?00:13:34:24 - 00:13:49:19UnknownNo, we haven't. I can be honest. I can guarantee you that you and I can talk for fucking 4 hours just on this topic, just going back and forth. But the same way we're talking with the record on is the same way we would talk in a diner or a restaurant. And that's the problem I think people have.00:13:49:19 - 00:14:05:24UnknownIt's like they overthink this thing. How do you help them overcome that? Well, look, you know, to your point, one of my favorite phrases is haters make you famous. Like, truthfully, they're all haters. That I. I put that on a t shirt. Absolutely. I mean, I should I should trademark it and we can split the profits. I love it.00:14:06:04 - 00:14:31:17UnknownYou know. You know, ultimately what I would focus on is at the beginning of my career, I was the person who wasn't authentic. Right? I wanted to appease everyone. Now, when I keynote, I strike out the line in the writer that says, I can't curse because unfortunately, I'm not here to curse. I'm just authentic. That's Homeland. And and ultimately, what I will remind everyone is to answer your question, how do we overcome this issue?00:14:31:22 - 00:14:48:24UnknownWell, we first have to test it out. We have to be bold enough to have the balls to do it. And then we'll start realizing and I mean this with the most respect that no one fucking cares about you right now. There are people in your life care about you. Your mom loves you. Probably your dad probably loves you, maybe not.00:14:48:24 - 00:15:06:02UnknownI don't know. The moral of the story is no one is at home thinking about you like I would wish. Tonight. You go to bed, put your head on the pillow, and really think about me for 45 minutes. You might think about me tomorrow. And the editor for this podcast asked a question about the episode. But outside of that, you're not going to look.00:15:06:02 - 00:15:26:07UnknownTyler had a potty mouth of Tyler's gay or what is that like? No one cares. And that's what I remind people. And that's what you remind people of even in their social content. I have people who are like, Well, I didn't post anything this month because I just like completely frozen because of my hair. I'm like, the average person is spending less than one fucking seconds on your Instagram.00:15:26:07 - 00:15:43:23UnknownLiterally. That's not an exaggeration. We're talking about point seven, 5 seconds. The idea that they're thinking about you 5 seconds later after they've looked at seven other pieces of content, much less 5 hours, much less five days is a misnomer and gives yourself a far more value in their life than you think. But also that should be the best news to hear.00:15:44:01 - 00:16:09:19UnknownWe really, unless we do something so polarizing, we awful people don't remember. And so the goal is to remind them consistently you're alive, well, and able to transact. And that's how we focus on our brand through consistency. Love it, guys. AKA, you're not that important. my God. I guess I'm not that important at all. Like, here. Let's just give you guys an exercise.00:16:09:19 - 00:16:32:06UnknownAnd I honestly do this exercise literally, that's going to take you a whole 10 seconds. Do you remember the context of one video you saw yesterday on social media? I mean, it's physically impossible. Yeah, I don't I've seen like, which one? Like then I think about like, like I saw like 100 videos on social media. The last thing the last thing I'm thinking about is some dude's hair out of place or like, some dude's, like, shirt and tie or some guy said a word I don't agree with.00:16:32:06 - 00:16:52:20UnknownLike, who cares? Yeah, well, well said. Because what you also see is, like, I also feel too like there's a lot of people that do it with video. It's perfect. Like we do so many videos like and now we're doing all attorneys on videos and maybe doing real estate videos for agents. But it's funny because you see an agent side and you see an attorney side.00:16:52:20 - 00:17:12:24UnknownThey're both professionals, but they both ultimately work for themselves. But from a business perspective, in creating content, they're identical. Everyone had to have the exact same issues and they're always more like, my God, I'm so worried about what I say. It's like, Dude, it doesn't matter. Talk to me about consistency though, because that is the key to this, is that some of your content will fall on deaf ears or just be horrible.00:17:12:24 - 00:17:37:20UnknownYou're going to regret you ever created it, right? That's part of the game, isn't it? Yeah, absolutely. If we're not consistent, you know, consistency is it's twofold, right? Consistency not only positively influences the algorithm that improves our likelihood of being served to like minded content creators, But most importantly, it allows us to buy more lottery tickets. Right? We can't win the lottery and go viral unless we're playing it.00:17:37:20 - 00:17:53:12UnknownWe are more likely to win the lottery if we buy multiple tickets. Right. And I will tell you the few things that I've done in my personal career that have gone viral have never been the things that I thought would. They're the shitty pieces of content. I didn't think about posting the ones that they spent exorbitant amounts of time, energy and resources on.00:17:53:16 - 00:18:25:17UnknownOftentimes not all the time, but oftentimes fall on deaf ears. And it really is half science, half pseudoscience and chance and what resonates and what is relatable to audiences. So what I always focus on is consistency. If we are consistently posting, let's say, seven times a week across all of these platforms, not only even if these don't perform as well as we want them to compounded, we're serving an exorbitantly higher rate of impressions and engagements over the month, which compounds over years, which compounds over decades, and that's how we grow the personal brand.00:18:25:22 - 00:18:42:09UnknownI want people to know about me before I even get on the call. I want them to be excited to talk to me before they get on the call. I want someone to understand who I am in the context of who I am and the energy I bring before I get on the call. And honestly, that saves me so much time because if you see my content, you're like too much energy to go to X, Y, and Z.00:18:42:12 - 00:18:57:00UnknownThen guess what? You're never booking that call. This gives me 30 minutes of my life to talk to someone who I'm actually going to be able to book. Yeah, I mean, you're exactly right. It's almost like you call out your people ahead of time. And because people aren't going to like, Have you ever put it this way, guys?00:18:57:00 - 00:19:14:08UnknownLike, have you ever, like, just met somebody or just like, I don't care what the hell they say. I'm just not going to get along with them, Right? You know what I mean? And it's just it's just normal that it's okay. It's okay. It's okay. That's fine when you have your content out. So but the content really works in twofold full, doesn't it?00:19:14:08 - 00:19:31:14UnknownBecause one is the creating to stay consistent. But and that usually what happens in practice is like when someone gets you get on someone's radar, when you really have an active buyer or seller in your world or for me, a branding or video client for you saying whatever that person fucking stalks you before they reach out to you.00:19:31:14 - 00:19:50:00UnknownRight? And this is also where people shortchange the amount of content creation and the multipurpose in of it over time is because, like, let's just say I'm going to hire Tyler, I want to hire Henry Street to do my branding and story, right? sure. And I'm sure this isn't a cheap process. Like, I'm trying to sell your shit right here, but I'm sure it's a few thousand bucks to say that.00:19:50:00 - 00:20:05:07UnknownTo say that, to say the name just to start. Right. I'm sure there's a couple thousand bucks a month. Great. If I really dig into one of your pieces of context, I'm on your Web site right now. I have to get along with you first before I actually schedule or book that call. So and it happens nine times.00:20:05:07 - 00:20:22:06UnknownLike I'm going to go to your Instagram page or Facebook page. I mean, look at all the rails you've created and then I'm going to get hooked. And people do that with this podcast all the time that I just been watching your podcast, bro. Like it was fucking amazing. Like, great, great. Why did you binge watch it? Because you're in a buying decision, right?00:20:22:06 - 00:20:43:21UnknownAnd the content, it has to be multipurpose. So like, I'll see people to I want to get your opinion on this because now we have a lot of video images, what kind of content you create, right? Just on social. But I believe that you should create multipurpose across all your channels nonstop. And you have to be everywhere you're at because you never know where that person is going to come from.00:20:43:23 - 00:21:02:04UnknownYou don't know where the next deal is going to come from. But that little split second of your face, meeting them on a news feed or something like that literally, literally, is the difference between getting a call and not nine times out of ten? Yeah, absolutely. I always say we can't control the way people enter our ecosystem. We can only control the narrative once they're there.00:21:02:09 - 00:21:35:24UnknownThe first thing I do with a new client is really focus on user perception. So I will listen to them talk about X, Y, and Z and how great they are, and I'll go, Great, all of that's fine. You're never going to get that 15 minutes with the client. Let's open an incognito browser, let's Google you. And nine times out of ten, even if you are the most reputable agent, what I find is an outdated LinkedIn because that's highly injectable, followed by maybe Coldwell banker's template they set up for you, which looks like shit, and then maybe a Zillow profile and maybe an air profile.00:21:36:05 - 00:21:53:13UnknownAnd I got the my my broker has me a page on my on their website. I'm there. Yeah. But let me tell you what is a broker's intention. They don't care if you sell. They care if one of their people sells everything. It's brokerage level marketing. It doesn't differentiate you. And so our job is to control the narrative.00:21:53:17 - 00:22:10:12UnknownWhat I want to focus on, if people Google you, they're at least going to hit the first three links bare minimum. So literally yesterday I was working with a top agent and she's like, I don't really use LinkedIn. It's not that important. I said, Let's Google you as the first fucking link. Literally, it had. I'm not kidding.00:22:10:14 - 00:22:36:05UnknownThe most recent experience was her working at a fucking grocery store. We're like a spring for. Yeah, absolutely. Thank God. By the way, social media wasn't out when I was in. I mean, think the Lord I would have never been hired. But what I will tell you is, like, that is what matters. Yeah, I. If I had never transacted in my life and I started today, I bet I could get listings over some of these other premium agents because I would have the best fucking ecosystem.00:22:36:09 - 00:22:53:04UnknownAnd that's what we work on here at Henry Street and through my consultancy. That's what we want to focus on how we can control that narrative. And your point is exactly right. The Yeah, because it's not that the best agent always gets hired, it's the one they feel most comfortable with, but the one they feel most comfortable with is typically the one they meet over 80% of the time first.00:22:53:05 - 00:23:09:15UnknownThat's why attention so important, guys. And when the branding comes in because you're already like playing catch up if, if you're not thought of first just when you're ecosystem as Tyler is putting it here doesn't associate your name with real estate and it's really not that fucking hard. Like, I never understood why the average agent only does six sides a year.00:23:09:15 - 00:23:32:14UnknownIt's like impossible. It literally is impossible If you're doing if you're doing less than 15 deals a year, you are ghost like like if you have a thousand friends on social media numbers, just a thousand friends just on Facebook or Instagram, just a thousand people make it 500. I don't care. 500 people know who you are. Out of those 500 people, 10 to 15% of them are moving and all 500 of them have a referral for you guys.00:23:32:16 - 00:23:57:12UnknownSo like when you build a big personal brand, you make yourself more referable, more marketable, but also more approachable. And a lot of the one of the biggest questions I get on branding is and you'll get I sure you get this all the time of all your answers. How do you measure the success of this? Because when you're creating a personal brand and content, it's not like running ads where I could attribute a direct action to a direct result for a cost for costs, banner or result generated, right?00:23:57:12 - 00:24:18:06UnknownSo if I'm signing up for Zillow to put in context, everyone understands I'm signing up for Zillow, I'm spending four or five grand a month, I'm either making a positive role on that or I'm not. It's very easy to determine. Now, it's not that quite easy in building a personal brand in content creation. That's the number one reason why I think people don't go all in on it and why they hesitate so much because doesn't happen overnight.00:24:18:12 - 00:24:46:22UnknownSo how do you answer that? Absolutely. Because the ROI is so attributable and trackable for ads. The issue whenever we talk about environmental branding or a personal brand a.k.a a billboard or your social content, it's there are a few ways, but it's very difficult to track this. What I will tell you is I know personal brand works. I know personal brand works because my clients on average see 50 to 70% increase in year over year and the majority of people talk to these people and say, my God, I see you everywhere.00:24:47:01 - 00:25:09:18UnknownIs that true? Absolutely not. They just get served in that same person's algorithm over and over because they keep can they keep consuming the content and not following them? What we want to focus on is what we call an omni channel approach, not just social, but we want newsletter, we want mailers, we want personal handwritten cards, we want cold calling, we want environmental branding, we want paid advertisements, we want press, earned media.00:25:09:24 - 00:25:42:06UnknownAll of these things combined create a really fantastic epic ecosystem. And the good thing is, yeah, it requires some time. It's not that expensive, but ultimately all of my clients are ROI positive. I wouldn't have a business if they weren't. We show proof, you know, year over year and our numbers and that's how I prove it out. But if you're looking to develop your personal brand in 30 days and show ROI by any agency or or consultant who tells you that's possible is lying to you, it takes a year.00:25:42:08 - 00:26:01:01UnknownAre minimal to really start seeing the year over year results. Yeah. And if and if you do everything on video that might even that might go faster. That could happen if you're doing like really good in videos and amplifier to personal branding guys and nowadays it's the only thing. But you know just a few years ago my friend was on videos very easy to build a brand.00:26:01:03 - 00:26:19:12UnknownAll you did was get on camera, even if you're terrible now you got to be a little bit more strategic. No? Yeah, I agree with that. 6 to 12 months minimum. Look at it like I can I compare. It's like working out like, like right now, like every January four. So half the country's in the gym. Give it two more weeks and then only a quarter of them will be left.00:26:19:14 - 00:26:38:03UnknownBut if I want to work out, get in shape. I'm not going get a six pack overnight. I'm going to take like months to get there and then until I get the six pack, then I get the date right. You have to build it and then it'll happen. But I have yet to see. I'm curious, in your experience, have you ever seen anybody?00:26:38:05 - 00:27:04:00UnknownI'm talking about anybody go all in on their personal brand and like whether they're committing to three or four videos a month, whatever it is, have you ever seen anyone not make it? You're going to be honest, this isn't me pushing an agenda in my career. If someone actually shows up and does the work, that's a caveat. If they show up and they do the work, I have never ever in my career having coached almost a thousand people ever seen it not work.00:27:04:02 - 00:27:20:05UnknownAnd that is why I lead a personal brand. And it's funny, you know, you and I are I'm learning the same person because that is my number one example. I guess it's like going to the gym. You don't want to do it the next day because you're on a six pack right now. I haven't used the date example, so I'm going to steal that.00:27:20:08 - 00:27:37:15UnknownBut it's like we have to go to the gym six months to get a six pack, right? And then when you have the six pack, you love going to the gym because you look fucking hot, right? When you're fat sock walking and waddling on the treadmill. Right. You want to get out of there, right? I you know, on a personal note, I wasn't I was a long distance runner.00:27:37:18 - 00:27:58:11UnknownI then, for medical reasons, wasn't allowed to run and I was just cleared to run again after five years. I am so frustrated in the gym because I can't even run a fucking mile without dying. And so I have to remember I'm not going to run my marathon pace or my half marathon pace for a year, right? I have to show up every single day to get there.00:27:58:11 - 00:28:13:03UnknownAnd that's what I remind people about in terms of personal brand. Yeah. Tyler Systems, I want you guys to take a note of is that this isn't just social media like you have to be everywhere all the time in today's world. Really easy to make that happen. And it's not very expensive to do so either, like people are.00:28:13:05 - 00:28:30:22UnknownIt's crazy. I was doing an article about just like how to compete, how brokerages can compete against mega publicly traded companies. You can do it very easily. It's not hard. You have the same tricks they do. But the trend, though, and this is just for any brokerages, is gone to personal brand. So I've seen a Facebook guy that I'm good friends with.00:28:30:22 - 00:28:47:10UnknownHe made a post the other day. Here's your opinion on it. And he basically says and to summarize it, he's like, look, any small business now has a spokesperson. So either you're going to become your own or you're not. And it's it's so true. It's like everybody has a spokesperson there and even if it's you might have a team.00:28:47:10 - 00:29:07:13UnknownSo what I'm saying is you guys, you guys might have a team. One person on that team needs to create content, has to be the personal branding person, but somebody has a great content. I don't think content creation anymore is optional. Like you have to do it. I don't I don't see a business without someone actively creating content going forward.00:29:07:15 - 00:29:29:04UnknownWhat's your opinion? Yes, I couldn't agree more. Yes, I'm biased, but I don't know a successful brand. And of course someone's going to come out of the woodwork and call me liar and tell me this one random example and I'll still disagree with them. But, you know, the reality is all brands are creating content now. That's why the word influencer is a word.00:29:29:09 - 00:29:53:08UnknownThat's why these brands who don't focus on branding and personal content no longer exist. Right? We've seen a massive migration and, you know, let's see the zeitgeist of media. We first went from print to digital and the companies who resisted it no longer exist. And we're going from profoundly professional digital like TV companies, linear advertising, these type of things.00:29:53:10 - 00:30:13:18UnknownAnd we've transitioned almost entirely really to social and UGC content, right? And if brands don't get behind it, that's fine. Just don't have a brand, don't don't have a company because I think it's that absolutely necessary. Yeah, there's marketing and advertising and there are a few of those. You'll see some of the mega teams that, you know, crush it.00:30:13:18 - 00:30:32:24UnknownThere's a guy individually I could think of. His name is Robert Slack. He's got one the largest teams in the country right now. But and he was he's got a really cool story entered the market like at 70 years of age like he's an old man and he got into this and he just took it over. But he understands how to run a business and he just bought a bunch of leads and he put in systems and his his thing is buying leads like from the portals and whatnot.00:30:32:24 - 00:30:49:20UnknownA lot of it was, I guess, but it's very expensive to do that. Guys like you could buy business or you can attract it and anyone could buy business because in any market, in any advertise, just whoever can whoever has the most amount of money to spend the control or acquire the client is the one who always wins.00:30:49:22 - 00:31:08:07UnknownYeah, very simple. Like if I could spend five grand to acquire clean and pencils and I'm going to do that and I'm going to keep spending more money than my competition, this is all this is. But when you build a brand, those numbers don't fucking matter. Like they really don't matters because there's so many ways that you monetize for it.00:31:08:07 - 00:31:24:00UnknownBut it's going to be very difficult to measure when you know what it's working is like though. When you go to the grocery store or you start getting random DMS and comments and people like, I saw your shit. I watch a video, I got this. hey, I've been watching your content. And that's, that's the first sign that something like that's working.00:31:24:00 - 00:31:41:17UnknownYou guys, for those of you that are on this journey and if you have that, you keep fucking going. You don't start now, you double down. But usually you need those little words of encouragement. It happens to me too. I didn't create videos all year. I'm in a pivot year and I couldn't nail down my branding strategy in my content strategy.00:31:41:17 - 00:31:57:08UnknownAnd I finally did last month. So now I'm ready to start creating content and starting this new business. But you have to be excited about what you're doing too. And that's where I think where it all starts. That's really what you guys like to do is figure out, okay, here's who you are, here's how you create content. Absolutely.00:31:57:08 - 00:32:15:03UnknownIt's the execution area tasks, right? That's what's really, really important here, Right? It's not this ethereal bullshit concept. And this is why I hate marketing conferences. It's like, okay, let's find our inner warrior and pray to an Ethiopian turtle. Right? It's really about how do we actually leave this comfort and execute. And that's what we focus on here.00:32:15:03 - 00:32:33:06UnknownThat's our number one goal. Yeah. So once you know that what you stand for, it's very easy to create content around it. Like suddenly it's just hard to look outside the weeds. And if you're it's very difficult for somebody in their own weeds to do good at their own shit. I'm one of them. That's why companies like yours exist, our dude.00:32:33:06 - 00:32:47:14UnknownSo we're right at this half hour. Mark, We're going to go ahead and get this thing ready to rock. I thought the show is awesome. Let's do a follow up on this now. I have a couple of questions I want to chat with you. Box. We're going to do some business outside of this podcast, but any closing thoughts?00:32:47:16 - 00:33:05:16UnknownYeah, I mean, like, look, my job is to empower other people like you and people listening to live their best life, Right? And that's not an expression. It's I build empires and how can I help build your empire? And I do that obviously, by a philosophy that I like to see is lighting someone else's candle doesn't extinguish my own.00:33:05:21 - 00:33:24:05UnknownYeah, I'm blunt. Yeah, I'm authentic, but at the same time, I authentically and bluntly love helping people because if I can spend 30 minutes with someone and change their life and that's a good 30 minutes spent, even if I made $0 because like you talked about earlier, that will come back to me and dividends because it's how I build my personal brand.00:33:24:10 - 00:33:42:13UnknownSo everyone listening, if you're interested in chatting more about me with your business, I want to give you the opportunity I give everyone. Go to my website. Tyler gmail.com on there. You can book a free consultation with me. This is not a sales pitch. There is no sales call. There is not a deck that I walk you through.00:33:42:13 - 00:33:58:04UnknownI do not try to convert you to a consultancy model. All I want to do is hear about your brand and hear how I could potentially in those 30 minutes, point you in the right direction. That's obviously open to anyone listening. And of course, you. Of course I would. I would love to chat with you offline about this, but that's my philosophy.00:33:58:08 - 00:34:18:19UnknownTake it or leave that authentically. That's me. Appreciate it, man. We appreciate you guys. Listen, another episode of the Estate Marketing Do podcast, folks. Appreciate your comments. Keep them coming. And most importantly, check out our software if you like what we saw here today, we give you all of the content to create on a monthly basis and a DIY version from your social media calendar to automation to do direct mailing to the database as well as your video emails.00:34:18:19 - 00:34:40:09UnknownWe tell you everything to do. Follow the blueprint. You have no way of not remaining on top of mind through an airline and C approach direct mail rant and social media folks while the system it works. It's not rocket science. You can visit us at referral suite dot com for that and check out all your leasing but we'll see you guys next week and appreciate you listening to another episode of the Marketing Dude podcast.00:34:40:11 - 00:35:05:02UnknownSee that. Thank you for watching another episode of the Real Estate Marketing Do Podcast. If you need help with video or finding out what your brand is. Visit our website at WW dot Real Estate Marketing do dot com. We make branding and video content creation simple and do everything for you. So if you have any additional questions, visit the site, download the training and then schedule time to speak with the dude and get you rolling in your local marketplace.00:35:05:07 - 00:35:08:01UnknownThanks for watching another episode of the podcast. We'll see you next time.
Two new businesses set to open in West Clare this week are hoping to lead a vibrant revival of their locality. Kilrush currently has the second highest commercial vacancy rate in the country with 24.5% of all units lying unoccupied. Megan Nolan will be paying tribute to Scattery Island when she opens her new restaurant 'Oileán' at the former site of Kelly' s Bar in Henry Street in early 2024. While Judi Kinnane who will be opening the "Jellyfish Marketplace Café" in the coming weeks is confident that both new premises will provide a vital community hub and platform for local producers.
Friend of the podcast Robin Runyan from Urbanize Detroit joins us to talk all things development - and a little Miguel Cabrera. 02:40 - The building with a collapsed wall at Russell and Winder will be saved, and the businesses will be able to get their stuff out - which is huge and may save some of them. 04:20 - East Warren has a series of developments happening. We discuss a lot of what's going on: https://detroit.urbanize.city/post/looking-ahead-new-businesses-and-development-east-warren 07:32 - We discuss The Perennial - apartments and townhouses on the higher end of the rental options in Detroit. Are you up for a townhouse north of $7,000 a month? If you're moving into these, we'd love to hear from you because many listeners can not figure out who is. One problem is that it costs the same to build in Boston as it does in Detroit, but people can pay a lot higher rents in Boston.. https://detroit.urbanize.city/post/inside-corktowns-newest-apartments 13:36 - The old St. Patrick's church in Midtown was demolished by the Archdiocese. We talk about the missed opportunities to creatively reuse spaces like this. https://detroit.urbanize.city/post/historic-midtown-church-was-just-demolished 18:10 - We talk about steps forward on the $3 billion MSU/Henry Ford Health/Wayne State University development in New Center https://detroit.urbanize.city/post/massive-3b-development-new-center-takes-another-step-forward 21:39 - The Henry Street gets a loan from the state https://detroit.urbanize.city/post/henry-street-development-district-detroit-nabs-65m-state-loan 23:44 - Is the University of Michigan Center of Innovation going to actually happen? Confidence is dropping as the time ticks away and the university hasn't approved the development and there's $100m in state funding in the balance. Will this vaunted project quietly vanish off the board? We covered a lot of stories - leave your feedback 313-789-3211 or email us dailydetroit -at- gmail -dot- com Don't miss another episode! We do this every weekday. Follow us on Apple Podcasts: https://lnk.to/dailydetroitonapple Or on Spotify: https://lnk.to/dailydetroitonspotify
What defines the complicated relationship between brothers and sisters—is it lineage? Love? Obligation? Friendship? Need? And why did so many parents expect their offspring to share and share alike? Historian Amy Harris joins us to talk about: What led to her interest in researching sibling relationships. Why her book project seemed to find her in an archive in England. How the early stresses on sibling relationships plagued them in later life. Why parents' behavior affects how sibling relationships function. A discussion of the book Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England: Share and Share Alike. Today's book is: Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England: Share and Share Alike (Manchester University Press, 2016), Dr. Amy Harris, which examines the impact sisters and brothers had on eighteenth-century English families and society. Using evidence from letters, diaries, probate disputes, court transcripts, prescriptive literature and portraiture, Dr. Harris argues that although parents' wills often recommended their children 'share and share alike', siblings had to constantly negotiate between prescribed equality and practiced inequalities. This is the first monograph-length analysis of early modern siblings in England, and is at the forefront of sibling studies. The book is intended for a broad audience of scholars – particularly those interested in families, women, children and eighteenth-century social and cultural history. Our guest is: Dr. Amy Harris, who is an associate professor of history and family/history genealogy at BYU, where she also serves as the director for the Family History Program. She is the author of Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England, and the co-editor of Family Life in England and America, 1690-1820. She is currently working on her new book: A Single View: Family Life and the Unmarried in Georgian England, which analyzes family relations across the lifespan of never-married men and women. Our host is: Dr. Christina Gessler, who holds a PhD in American history. She has served as content director and producer of the Academic Life since she launched it in 2020. The Academic Life is proud to be an academic partner of the New Books Network. Listeners to this episode may also be interested in: This episode on the detective work of research This episode on reclaiming lost voices and recovering history This episode on writing feminist biography This episode about the House on Henry Street and public-facing humanities This episode on how our pets are family members This episode on archival etiquette and what to know before you go This episode on launching an online history conference This episode on where research really begins Welcome to the Academic Life! Join us here each week to learn from experts inside and outside the academy, and around the world, and embrace the broad definition of what it truly means to live an academic life. Missed any of the 150+ Academic Life episodes? You can find them all archived here. And check back soon: we're busy in the studio preparing new episodes for your academic journey—and beyond! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
What defines the complicated relationship between brothers and sisters—is it lineage? Love? Obligation? Friendship? Need? And why did so many parents expect their offspring to share and share alike? Historian Amy Harris joins us to talk about: What led to her interest in researching sibling relationships. Why her book project seemed to find her in an archive in England. How the early stresses on sibling relationships plagued them in later life. Why parents' behavior affects how sibling relationships function. A discussion of the book Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England: Share and Share Alike. Today's book is: Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England: Share and Share Alike (Manchester University Press, 2016), Dr. Amy Harris, which examines the impact sisters and brothers had on eighteenth-century English families and society. Using evidence from letters, diaries, probate disputes, court transcripts, prescriptive literature and portraiture, Dr. Harris argues that although parents' wills often recommended their children 'share and share alike', siblings had to constantly negotiate between prescribed equality and practiced inequalities. This is the first monograph-length analysis of early modern siblings in England, and is at the forefront of sibling studies. The book is intended for a broad audience of scholars – particularly those interested in families, women, children and eighteenth-century social and cultural history. Our guest is: Dr. Amy Harris, who is an associate professor of history and family/history genealogy at BYU, where she also serves as the director for the Family History Program. She is the author of Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England, and the co-editor of Family Life in England and America, 1690-1820. She is currently working on her new book: A Single View: Family Life and the Unmarried in Georgian England, which analyzes family relations across the lifespan of never-married men and women. Our host is: Dr. Christina Gessler, who holds a PhD in American history. She has served as content director and producer of the Academic Life since she launched it in 2020. The Academic Life is proud to be an academic partner of the New Books Network. Listeners to this episode may also be interested in: This episode on the detective work of research This episode on reclaiming lost voices and recovering history This episode on writing feminist biography This episode about the House on Henry Street and public-facing humanities This episode on how our pets are family members This episode on archival etiquette and what to know before you go This episode on launching an online history conference This episode on where research really begins Welcome to the Academic Life! Join us here each week to learn from experts inside and outside the academy, and around the world, and embrace the broad definition of what it truly means to live an academic life. Missed any of the 150+ Academic Life episodes? You can find them all archived here. And check back soon: we're busy in the studio preparing new episodes for your academic journey—and beyond! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What defines the complicated relationship between brothers and sisters—is it lineage? Love? Obligation? Friendship? Need? And why did so many parents expect their offspring to share and share alike? Historian Amy Harris joins us to talk about: What led to her interest in researching sibling relationships. Why her book project seemed to find her in an archive in England. How the early stresses on sibling relationships plagued them in later life. Why parents' behavior affects how sibling relationships function. A discussion of the book Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England: Share and Share Alike. Today's book is: Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England: Share and Share Alike (Manchester University Press, 2016), Dr. Amy Harris, which examines the impact sisters and brothers had on eighteenth-century English families and society. Using evidence from letters, diaries, probate disputes, court transcripts, prescriptive literature and portraiture, Dr. Harris argues that although parents' wills often recommended their children 'share and share alike', siblings had to constantly negotiate between prescribed equality and practiced inequalities. This is the first monograph-length analysis of early modern siblings in England, and is at the forefront of sibling studies. The book is intended for a broad audience of scholars – particularly those interested in families, women, children and eighteenth-century social and cultural history. Our guest is: Dr. Amy Harris, who is an associate professor of history and family/history genealogy at BYU, where she also serves as the director for the Family History Program. She is the author of Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England, and the co-editor of Family Life in England and America, 1690-1820. She is currently working on her new book: A Single View: Family Life and the Unmarried in Georgian England, which analyzes family relations across the lifespan of never-married men and women. Our host is: Dr. Christina Gessler, who holds a PhD in American history. She has served as content director and producer of the Academic Life since she launched it in 2020. The Academic Life is proud to be an academic partner of the New Books Network. Listeners to this episode may also be interested in: This episode on the detective work of research This episode on reclaiming lost voices and recovering history This episode on writing feminist biography This episode about the House on Henry Street and public-facing humanities This episode on how our pets are family members This episode on archival etiquette and what to know before you go This episode on launching an online history conference This episode on where research really begins Welcome to the Academic Life! Join us here each week to learn from experts inside and outside the academy, and around the world, and embrace the broad definition of what it truly means to live an academic life. Missed any of the 150+ Academic Life episodes? You can find them all archived here. And check back soon: we're busy in the studio preparing new episodes for your academic journey—and beyond! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/academic-life
What defines the complicated relationship between brothers and sisters—is it lineage? Love? Obligation? Friendship? Need? And why did so many parents expect their offspring to share and share alike? Historian Amy Harris joins us to talk about: What led to her interest in researching sibling relationships. Why her book project seemed to find her in an archive in England. How the early stresses on sibling relationships plagued them in later life. Why parents' behavior affects how sibling relationships function. A discussion of the book Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England: Share and Share Alike. Today's book is: Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England: Share and Share Alike (Manchester University Press, 2016), Dr. Amy Harris, which examines the impact sisters and brothers had on eighteenth-century English families and society. Using evidence from letters, diaries, probate disputes, court transcripts, prescriptive literature and portraiture, Dr. Harris argues that although parents' wills often recommended their children 'share and share alike', siblings had to constantly negotiate between prescribed equality and practiced inequalities. This is the first monograph-length analysis of early modern siblings in England, and is at the forefront of sibling studies. The book is intended for a broad audience of scholars – particularly those interested in families, women, children and eighteenth-century social and cultural history. Our guest is: Dr. Amy Harris, who is an associate professor of history and family/history genealogy at BYU, where she also serves as the director for the Family History Program. She is the author of Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England, and the co-editor of Family Life in England and America, 1690-1820. She is currently working on her new book: A Single View: Family Life and the Unmarried in Georgian England, which analyzes family relations across the lifespan of never-married men and women. Our host is: Dr. Christina Gessler, who holds a PhD in American history. She has served as content director and producer of the Academic Life since she launched it in 2020. The Academic Life is proud to be an academic partner of the New Books Network. Listeners to this episode may also be interested in: This episode on the detective work of research This episode on reclaiming lost voices and recovering history This episode on writing feminist biography This episode about the House on Henry Street and public-facing humanities This episode on how our pets are family members This episode on archival etiquette and what to know before you go This episode on launching an online history conference This episode on where research really begins Welcome to the Academic Life! Join us here each week to learn from experts inside and outside the academy, and around the world, and embrace the broad definition of what it truly means to live an academic life. Missed any of the 150+ Academic Life episodes? You can find them all archived here. And check back soon: we're busy in the studio preparing new episodes for your academic journey—and beyond! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/european-studies
William Dennis Gargan was born to an irish-american Catholic family in Brooklyn, New York on July 17th, 1905. His parents—Bill and Irene—had seven children, but only Bill and his brother Ed survived infancy. Ed was four years older than Bill. The pair were close. Bill's mother had been a teacher, but his father was a book maker and a gambler, which didn't sit well with Irene's parents. Gargan's dad made book in the copy room at the New York World and in Room 9 of City Hall. The four-story brownstone they lived in at 427 Henry Street in Brooklyn Heights was won in a poker game. Today P.S. 29 stands on the site. Bill got his first silent movie job at seven for Vitagraph Studios. He was paid Three dollars and eighty-five cents. That's roughly one-hundred twenty dollars today. It portended things to come. By ten, Bill was hanging out at his father's bar in Sunset Park, Brooklyn. Gargan later said that his mother was more straight-laced, a bit of a prude on the surface, but in reality, she ran with dad all her life and his.” Both parents had good senses of humor. He grew up going to Sea Gate in the summer and fighting for the Irish kids from Bay Ridge against the Italian kids in empty lots. He played baseball and basketball for St. Francis Xavier grade school and St. James High. He ditched school in the spring to scale the Ebbets Field wall to watch the Dodgers and their stars of the 1910s. When he was fourteen and working as an ice brusher at the Prospect Park skating rink, Gargan met a girl named Mary Elizabeth Kenny. He was so taken that he used his broom to knock her down! Gargan recalled that “She got up, her eyes spitting fire and her mouth not doing badly either. I knew I was in love.” Gargan loved the theater. By high school he was playing in school productions of Hamlet, Macbeth, and Romeo and Juliet. However, a teacher who'd been out to get Bill for his comedic behavior made life so miserable during Bill's senior year that he dropped out. Gargan became a message runner for a Broad Street brokerage firm, then a cop for a clothing store, then one for a Wall Street agency until he was fired for losing a tail. He sold Wesson Oil to grocers, sneaking away to watch plays. One day the lights went up and Gargan noticed his boss was sitting next to him. “Good show,” Gargan said, “you're fired,” said his boss. Bill's brother Ed was an actor. While having lunch with Ed one day at the Lamb's Club a man named Le Roy Clemens mentioned to Bill that a play he'd written was having tryouts. Bill read a line and was hired, beginning his career in Aloma of the South Seas. They opened in Baltimore in 1924. Gargan was a quick study, learning everyone's parts as well as the stage manager's. Within a year he was directing the Philadelphia production of the play. Aloma of the South Seas ran for forty weeks. Gargan spent the next years playing all over the country with people like George Jessel and Richard Bennett. Jessel would be godfather to Bill's first son Bill Jr, affectionately known as Barrie. Barrie was born on February 25th, 1929. After the stock market crashed, Bill got a short-term job on stage in New York where he met William Bendix. Soon a casting director at Paramount called and after that Leslie Howard cast Bill in a play. Bill later said that Leslie helped make him a star. That same year, on January 12, 1932 Gargan opened at the Broadhurst theater in New York with Leslie Howard in Philip Barry's The Animal Kingdom. It was a smash hit. His success led MGM to call. They offered him the part of Sergeant O'Hara in the 1932 feature Rain, starring Joan Crawford and Walter Huston. He'd be paid fifteen-hundred dollars per week. That's over thirty-three grand today. Bill bought out his contract with The Animal Kingdom, playing on May 2nd for the last time. The next morning, Bill, Mary, and young Barrie left for Hollywood. Rain was shot on Catalina Island.
Today HMV will open their doors in Henry Street, marking a return for the music retailer to Ireland since they last opened their doors in Ireland almost 10 years ago. The shop will stock over 15,000 products across their three floors in the 6,000 sq. ft store. There will be 10,000 vinyl albums and CDs, as well as a wide range of music technology products. But is there an appetite for this kind of retail outlet? Ciara spoke to Journalist and Broadcaster Pat Carty.
It's a good day for all you music lovers out there! Yes, HMV have dropped the dial on their first bricks and mortar store in Ireland in over a decade. The iconic brand re-opened on Henry Street today and Newstalk Reporter Sarah Madden went down to have a snoop. Sarah Madden and Dave Hanratty Host of the No Encore Music Podcast joined Anton Savage on the show.
Insight, humor and a good dose of reality sounds like a great way to approach a conversation about therapy, the secret lives of teenagers or anything, when you think about it. That's just it, maybe you haven't thought about the benefits of therapy. You should, and maybe a bit of BFF therapy is just what the doctor ordered. Hey everyone, time for episode two hundred ten of Above Ground Podcast. We attempt to live out the tenants of what Dr.Jaimee Arnoff Ph.D. offers her clients and kiddos. Dr.Jaimee is a Clinical Psychologist based in Beacon, NY. No topic is off limits, including trashy young adult novels and tap dancing. We talk therapy and how we can help parents struggling with talking about mental health to their kiddos. If someone is having a hard time starting the conversation with their child about mental health, you can help. Start by asking why this is difficult or what barriers they face to just having a conversation? Let them know sometimes it is as easy as saying, I'm here for you if you ever want to talk, and I will listen". Let the parent make the choice about how to act, but guide them along the way by sharing your own tips and this podcast. We don't always have the answers. It's ok to not know how to proceed. That vulnerability can be a benefit, not a barrier. At least for your child. For you, your ego may revolt and force you into unmindful tact or energy. You only get one chance to make a first impression on anyone, but especially our children. We do not want to leave them with a sense that speaking to us is not safe. Trust me, you can have hard conversations. You might be surprised at just how much it helps your kiddo and you. When you can't, call Dr. Jaimee. That's what she is there for. You can find Dr. Jaimee Arnoff Ph.D down in Dutchess County at BFF Therapy. Located at 33 Henry Street, Beacon, NY 12508. Dr. Jaimee has a very active BFF Therapy Instagram page and is also part of the team for James's Warrior's. You can find all of Dr. Jaime's appearances at her Linktree. Until next week get well, be safe, stay Above.
Back in the day, the HMV store on Henry Street was where people would go to buy the latest record or queue for tickets for the hottest gig in town. It closed in 2016, but thanks to the resurrection of vinyl sales HMV is returning to Henry Street. It is expected to open some time next month. Henry McKean joined Sean to discuss...
Guest: Victoria Gibson, Affordable Housing reporter Sometimes even beloved neighbours and friends can slip away unnoticed at life's end, with their memory frozen in time. That's what happened to Charles Parris, 81, of Henry Street in Grange Park. He died at home, remains quietly buried, but worldly belongings remained. For 10 months, his Toronto Community Housing Corp. apartment sat uninhabited despite a raging housing crisis. Such vacancy limbo seems to be connected to another growing problem — an increasing number of unclaimed bodies. Victoria Gibson tells a haunting story on “This Matters.” This episode was produced by Saba Eitizaz, Brian Bradley and Paulo Marques.
This week we're joined by Mary Hayes from Women's Aid to discuss their upcoming Too into you campaign launching 14th Feb. Please be warned that this episode contains triggering conversation elements including domestic violence, emotional & sexual abuse. If you are worried about your own relationship or a friends relationship you can call Women's Aid on the 24Hr National Freephone Helpline on 1800 341 900. Chat to Women's Aid, take the relationship quiz, learn the red flags and how to help a friend at toointoyou.ie Men needing support can contact the Male Advice Line on 1800 816 588. LGBTQ+ support for domestic violence on Thursdays 01 8721055. You can also follow on instagram @toointoyouPop-up #TooIntoYou Valentine's Day experience14th February, 10.30am-6pm2 Henry Street, Dublin 1Free to attendAbuse can hide in relationships that seem romantic on the surface. This experience will disrupt people's view of romance and highlight the red flags of abuse.TUO's Links:PatreonInstagramKarla's Stomper of the weekJens manky playlistAnon boxSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-unpopular-opinion. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On Season 2 Episode 10 of The Art Career Podcast, Emily McElwreath interviews gallerist and overall artist advocate, Ellie Rines. Emily and Ellie discuss the importance of authenticity in the art world in this special episode with one of downtown's most popular gallerists. Eleanor Rines is a New York City-based gallery owner committed to supporting and spotlighting the work of emerging contemporary artists. Rines opened her first gallery, 55 Gansevoort, in 2013 in New York City's Meatpacking District. In 2015, she expanded and relocated the gallery to 56 Henry Street, and renamed the gallery accordingly. In 2022, Rines opened a second location, 105 Henry. This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com/TAC today and get 10% off your first month. theartcareer.com Follow us: @theartcareer Follow Ellie Rines: @cornerdeliellie Follow 56 Henry: @56henry.nyc Podcast host: @emilymcelwreath_art Social Media: @lilap3arl Music: Chase Johnson Editing: Zach Worden
Tyler Stone's Exclusive TDJS Mix presented by The DJ Sessions 8/17/22 About Tyler Stone - Tyler Stone is a producer/remixer, DJ and vocalist who has built her career as one of the first female house music producers, and has achieved several top ten Billboard Dance hits with her distinctive style rooted in deep house, disco, and downtempo. After receiving a degree in Jazz from Cornish College of the Arts, Tyler relocated to San Francisco to join the legendary Third Floor Productions where she cut her teeth under the tutelage of the masterful DJ EFX, and began showcasing her talents with some of Dance and Pop music's finest artists. This lead to a string of releases and remixes under the name “Ms T” on numerous dance labels such as Strictly Rhythm, Eightball, and Henry Street, with name acts including Armand Van Helden, Robin S, Crystal Waters and Kimara Lovelace as well as N'SYNC. As an integral part of the 90's San Francisco dance music scene, Tyler went on to open her own studio, Ms T Productions, and became the “go to” engineer within the house music community, working alongside such producers as Miguel Migs and Grammy nominated Jay-J and Chris Lum. Without skipping a beat, Tyler continues to push the envelope as a producer, lending her sophisticated programming to remixes and collaborations on reputable labels including Nervous and Aventura. Her tracks continue to chart, and receive regular features and playlist adds. Channeling the disco, funk and soul of her youth, and the house music of the early 90's, Tyler's tracks have a magic that draws you into the essence of the song. “As a vocalist myself, I tend to pay special attention to how the vocals interact both rhythmically and melodically with the rest of the track.” But make no mistake, at the core of every track is the beat, ready to groove your body at any BPM. Tyler's production savvy can also be heard in her DJ skills spinning deep house, disco and downtempo. Whether opening for Little Dragon, or playing the private after parties for such bands as Thievery Corporation and Mayor Hawthorne's Tuxedo, Tyler brings an infectious groove to the party. She has also held residencies at the W Hotel and Ian Schrager's Clift Hotel and has been called upon frequently to play at exclusive events for the SFMOMA and Make-A-Wish Foundation. Tyler is an active voting member of the Recording Academy (GRAMMY's) and has served as a National Trustee, as well as Governor for the Pacific NW and San Francisco Chapters. Tyler has proudly participated on many committees involving the awards process, membership, advocacy and community outreach. She currently lives in Portland, Oregon where she serves on the Board of MusicPortland, a non-profit trade association and advocacy group dedicated to establishing a viable and thriving ecosystem within Portland's music community. About The DJ Sessions - “The DJ Sessions” is a Twitch/Mixcloud "Featured Partner” live streaming/podcast series featuring electronic music DJ's/Producers via live mixes/interviews and streamed/distributed to a global audience. TheDJSessions.com The series constantly places in the “Top Ten” on Twitch Music and the “Top Five” in the “Electronic Music", “DJ", "Dance Music" categories. TDJS is rated in the Top 0.11% of live streaming shows on Twitch out of millions of live streamers. It has also been recognized by Apple twice as a "New and Noteworthy” podcast and featured three times in the Apple Music Store video podcast section. UStream and Livestream have also listed the series as a "Featured" stream on their platforms since its inception. The series is also streamed live to multiple other platforms and hosted on several podcast sites. It has a combined live streaming/podcast audience is over 125,000 viewers per week. With over 2,300 episodes produced over the last 12 years "The DJ Sessions" has featured international artists such as: BT, Youngr, Sevenn, Boris, MJ Cole, Lady Waks, Arty/Alpha 9, Miri Ben-Ari, DJ Ruby, DJ Colette, Nima Gorji, Kaspar Tasane, Andy Caldwell, Party Shirt, Plastik Funk, ENDO, John Tejada, Superstar DJ Keoki, Crystal Waters, Swedish Egil, Martin Eyerer, Dezarate, DJ Aleksandra, 22Bullets, Carlo Astuti, Mr Jammer, Kevin Krissen, Amir Sharara, Coke Beats, Danny Darko, DJ Platurn, Tyler Stone, Robert Babicz, KHAG3, Elohim, Hausman, Jaxx & Vega, Yves V, Ayokay, Leandro Da Silva, The Space Brothers, Jarod Glawe, Jens Lissat, Lotus, Beard-o-Bees, Luke the Knife, Alex Bau, Arroyo Low, Camo & Crooked, ANG, Amon Tobin, Voicians, Florian Kruse, Dave Summit, Bingo Players, Coke Beats, MiMOSA, Drasen, Yves LaRock, Ray Okpara, Lindsey Stirling, Mako, Distinct, Still Life, Saint Kidyaki, Brothers, Heiko Laux, Retroid, Piem, Tocadisco, Nakadia, Protoculture, Sebastian Bronk, Toronto is Broken, Teddy Cream, Mizeyesis, Simon Patterson, Morgan Page, Jes, Cut Chemist, The Him, Judge Jules, DubFX, Thievery Corporation, SNBRN, Bjorn Akesson, Alchimyst, Sander Van Dorn, Rudosa, Hollaphonic, DJs From Mars, GAWP, Somna, David Morales, Roxanne, JB & Scooba, Spektral, Kissy Sell Out, Massimo Vivona, Moullinex, Futuristic Polar Bears, ManyFew, Joe Stone, Reboot, Truncate, Scotty Boy, Doctor Nieman, Jody Wisternoff, Thousand Fingers, Benny Bennasi, Dance Loud, Christopher Lawrence, Oliver Twizt, Ricardo Torres, Patricia Baloge, Alex Harrington, 4 Strings, Sunshine Jones, Elite Force, Revolvr, Kenneth Thomas, Paul Oakenfold, George Acosta, Reid Speed, TyDi, Donald Glaude, Jimbo, Ricardo Torres, Hotel Garuda, Bryn Liedl, Rodg, Kems, Mr. Sam, Steve Aoki, Funtcase, Dirtyloud, Marco Bailey, Dirtmonkey, The Crystal Method, Beltek, Darin Epsilon, Kyau & Albert, Kutski, Vaski, Moguai, Blackliquid, Sunny Lax, Matt Darey, and many more. In addition to featuring international artists TDJS focuses on local talent based on the US West Coast. Hundreds of local DJ's have been featured on the show along with top industry professionals. We have recently launched v3.1 our website that now features our current live streams/past episodes in a much more user-friendly mobile/social environment. In addition to the new site, there is a mobile app (Apple/Android) and VR Nightclubs (Oculus). About The DJ Sessions Event Services - TDJSES is a WA State Non-profit charitable organization that's main purpose is to provide music, art, fashion, dance, and entertainment to local and regional communities via events and video production programming distributed via live and archival viewing. For all press inquiries regarding “The DJ Sessions”, or to schedule an interview with Darran Bruce, please contact us at info@thedjsessions.
Tyler Stone on the Virtual Sessions presented by The DJ Sessions 8/17/22 About Tyler Stone - Tyler Stone is a producer/remixer, DJ and vocalist who has built her career as one of the first female house music producers, and has achieved several top ten Billboard Dance hits with her distinctive style rooted in deep house, disco, and downtempo. After receiving a degree in Jazz from Cornish College of the Arts, Tyler relocated to San Francisco to join the legendary Third Floor Productions where she cut her teeth under the tutelage of the masterful DJ EFX, and began showcasing her talents with some of Dance and Pop music's finest artists. This lead to a string of releases and remixes under the name “Ms T” on numerous dance labels such as Strictly Rhythm, Eightball, and Henry Street, with name acts including Armand Van Helden, Robin S, Crystal Waters and Kimara Lovelace as well as N'SYNC. As an integral part of the 90's San Francisco dance music scene, Tyler went on to open her own studio, Ms T Productions, and became the “go to” engineer within the house music community, working alongside such producers as Miguel Migs and Grammy nominated Jay-J and Chris Lum. Without skipping a beat, Tyler continues to push the envelope as a producer, lending her sophisticated programming to remixes and collaborations on reputable labels including Nervous and Aventura. Her tracks continue to chart, and receive regular features and playlist adds. Channeling the disco, funk and soul of her youth, and the house music of the early 90's, Tyler's tracks have a magic that draws you into the essence of the song. “As a vocalist myself, I tend to pay special attention to how the vocals interact both rhythmically and melodically with the rest of the track.” But make no mistake, at the core of every track is the beat, ready to groove your body at any BPM. Tyler's production savvy can also be heard in her DJ skills spinning deep house, disco and downtempo. Whether opening for Little Dragon, or playing the private after parties for such bands as Thievery Corporation and Mayor Hawthorne's Tuxedo, Tyler brings an infectious groove to the party. She has also held residencies at the W Hotel and Ian Schrager's Clift Hotel and has been called upon frequently to play at exclusive events for the SFMOMA and Make-A-Wish Foundation. Tyler is an active voting member of the Recording Academy (GRAMMY's) and has served as a National Trustee, as well as Governor for the Pacific NW and San Francisco Chapters. Tyler has proudly participated on many committees involving the awards process, membership, advocacy and community outreach. She currently lives in Portland, Oregon where she serves on the Board of MusicPortland, a non-profit trade association and advocacy group dedicated to establishing a viable and thriving ecosystem within Portland's music community. About The DJ Sessions - “The DJ Sessions” is a Twitch/Mixcloud "Featured Partner” live streaming/podcast series featuring electronic music DJ's/Producers via live mixes/interviews and streamed/distributed to a global audience. TheDJSessions.com The series constantly places in the “Top Ten” on Twitch Music and the “Top Five” in the “Electronic Music", “DJ", "Dance Music" categories. TDJS is rated in the Top 0.11% of live streaming shows on Twitch out of millions of live streamers. It has also been recognized by Apple twice as a "New and Noteworthy” podcast and featured three times in the Apple Music Store video podcast section. UStream and Livestream have also listed the series as a "Featured" stream on their platforms since its inception. The series is also streamed live to multiple other platforms and hosted on several podcast sites. It has a combined live streaming/podcast audience is over 125,000 viewers per week. With over 2,300 episodes produced over the last 12 years "The DJ Sessions" has featured international artists such as: BT, Youngr, Sevenn, Boris, MJ Cole, Lady Waks, Arty/Alpha 9, Miri Ben-Ari, DJ Ruby, DJ Colette, Nima Gorji, Kaspar Tasane, Andy Caldwell, Party Shirt, Plastik Funk, ENDO, John Tejada, Superstar DJ Keoki, Crystal Waters, Swedish Egil, Martin Eyerer, Dezarate, DJ Aleksandra, 22Bullets, Carlo Astuti, Mr Jammer, Kevin Krissen, Amir Sharara, Coke Beats, Danny Darko, DJ Platurn, Robert Babicz, KHAG3, Elohim, Hausman, Jaxx & Vega, Yves V, Ayokay, Leandro Da Silva, The Space Brothers, Jarod Glawe, Jens Lissat, Lotus, Beard-o-Bees, Luke the Knife, Alex Bau, Arroyo Low, Camo & Crooked, ANG, Amon Tobin, Voicians, Florian Kruse, Dave Summit, Bingo Players, Coke Beats, MiMOSA, Drasen, Yves LaRock, Ray Okpara, Lindsey Stirling, Mako, Distinct, Still Life, Saint Kidyaki, Brothers, Heiko Laux, Retroid, Piem, Tocadisco, Nakadia, Protoculture, Sebastian Bronk, Toronto is Broken, Teddy Cream, Mizeyesis, Simon Patterson, Morgan Page, Jes, Cut Chemist, The Him, Judge Jules, DubFX, Thievery Corporation, SNBRN, Bjorn Akesson, Alchimyst, Sander Van Dorn, Rudosa, Hollaphonic, DJs From Mars, GAWP, Somna, David Morales, Roxanne, JB & Scooba, Spektral, Kissy Sell Out, Massimo Vivona, Moullinex, Futuristic Polar Bears, ManyFew, Joe Stone, Reboot, Truncate, Scotty Boy, Doctor Nieman, Jody Wisternoff, Thousand Fingers, Benny Bennasi, Dance Loud, Christopher Lawrence, Oliver Twizt, Ricardo Torres, Patricia Baloge, Alex Harrington, 4 Strings, Sunshine Jones, Elite Force, Revolvr, Kenneth Thomas, Paul Oakenfold, George Acosta, Reid Speed, TyDi, Donald Glaude, Jimbo, Ricardo Torres, Hotel Garuda, Bryn Liedl, Rodg, Kems, Mr. Sam, Steve Aoki, Funtcase, Dirtyloud, Marco Bailey, Dirtmonkey, The Crystal Method, Beltek, Darin Epsilon, Kyau & Albert, Kutski, Vaski, Moguai, Blackliquid, Sunny Lax, Matt Darey, and many more. In addition to featuring international artists TDJS focuses on local talent based on the US West Coast. Hundreds of local DJ's have been featured on the show along with top industry professionals. We have recently launched v3.1 our website that now features our current live streams/past episodes in a much more user-friendly mobile/social environment. In addition to the new site, there is a mobile app (Apple/Android) and VR Nightclubs (Oculus). About The DJ Sessions Event Services - TDJSES is a WA State Non-profit charitable organization that's main purpose is to provide music, art, fashion, dance, and entertainment to local and regional communities via events and video production programming distributed via live and archival viewing. For all press inquiries regarding “The DJ Sessions”, or to schedule an interview with Darran Bruce, please contact us at info@thedjsessions.
Welcome to The Academic Life! In this episode you'll hear about: Ellen Synder-Grenier's career as a curator and public historian How Henry Street helped its neighbors survive the 1918 pandemic A discussion of the book The House on Henry Street Today's book is: The House on Henry Street: The Enduring Life of a Lower East Side Settlement, which chronicles the sweeping history of the Henry Street Settlement and its enduring vision of a more just society. Through personal narratives, vivid images, and previously untold stories, Ellen M. Snyder-Grenier chronicles Henry Street's sweeping history from 1893 to today. From the fights for public health and immigrants' rights that fueled its founding, to advocating for relief during the Great Depression, all the way to tackling homelessness and AIDS in the 1980s, and into today―Henry Street has been a champion for social justice. Its powerful narrative illuminates larger stories about poverty, and who is “worthy” of help; immigration and migration, and who is welcomed; human rights, and whose voice is heard. Our guest is: Ellen M. Snyder-Grenier, who is an award-winning curator and writer, and principal of REW & Co. She has directed research projects, developed physical and digital exhibitions, and written on the history of New York City—as well the urban centers of Newark and Philadelphia—with a focus on social justice. She is a Fellow of the New York Academy of History. Our host is: Dr. Christina Gessler, the co-creator and co-producer of the Academic Life. Listeners to this episode might be interested in: · The House on Henry Street: The Enduring Life of a Lower East Side Settlement, by Ellen M. Snyder-Grenier The Henry Street website Windows on Henry Street by Lillian Wald The House on Henry Street by Lillian Wald This online journal about gender and the history of medicine This NPR episode about the 1918 pandemic and Covid The Pandemic Perspectives episodes on the Academic life, such as this one You are smart and capable, but you aren't an island and neither are we. We reach across our mentor network to bring you experts about everything from how to finish that project, to how to take care of your beautiful mind. Wish we'd bring on an expert about something? DM us on Twitter: The Academic Life @AcademicLifeNBN. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
My conversation with Howard Storm, actor, standup comic, improv teacher and prolific television director with deep ties to the Borscht Belt. Read about Howard's amazing career and buy his book, The Imperfect Storm, From Henry Street To Hollywood.Learn about the film, Eye Of The Storm, by Brooke Harris Wolff. Today's Sponsor: True Freedom – Find out how a True Freedom plan can bring piece of mind and security for you and your loved ones at onendone.us or 1-844-WANTINFO.Follow The Borscht Belt Tattler on socials!Instagram | Facebook | TwitterFollow and get to know Jen, host of the podcast and your Urban Yenta! Love what we're doing? Show some extra support through our Buy Me A Coffee page. All the funds go back into upgrading our equipment, content creation and keeping the podcast free and accessible for all. Support the show