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Light Reading's Iain Morris joined the podcast to discuss why Germany is taking a different stance from the rest of the EU on how it handles Huawei equipment in its networks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Light Reading's Iain Morris explains why there's speculation about a potential $10 billion takeover by Samsung of Nokia's RAN business and whether such an acquisition is likely to happen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this week's show, June Thomas (author of A Place of Our Own: Six Spaces That Shaped Queer Women's Culture) and Dan Kois (author of Hampton Heights) fill in for Dana and Stephen. First, the panel tackles It Ends With Us starring Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni (the latter also directed and produced the film.) It's a big, glossy melodrama laced with a domestic violence plot, and is the first film adaptation of BookTok star author Colleen Hoover. Then, the three explore Time Bandits, a new television show from Jermaine Clement, Iain Morris, and Taika Watiti starring, among others, a sublime Lisa Kudrow. The Apple TV+ series is based on Terry Gilliam's 1981 film of the same name and follows a ragtag bunch of bandits as they thieve and travel through time. Finally, in light of its 20-year anniversary, the trio considers Yelp – does the crowd-sourcing review platform still hold power in 2024? This conversation was inspired by Jaya Saxena's Eater piece, “Everybody Gets a Star.” On this week's exclusive Slate Plus bonus episode, the panel goes on the hunt for the wonderful, elusive “perfect cracker.” Email us at culturefest@slate.com. Endorsements: JUNE: A very well-reviewed book from two years ago: Katheine Rundell's Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne. DAN: The Ministry for the Future: A Novel by Kim Stanley Robinson. JULIA: First Class Tailors on Wilshire Blvd., which boasts a 4.7 Star rating on Yelp. Podcast production by Jared Downing. Production assistance by Kat Hong. Hosts June Thomas, Dan Kois, Julia Turner Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this week's show, June Thomas (author of A Place of Our Own: Six Spaces That Shaped Queer Women's Culture) and Dan Kois (author of Hampton Heights) fill in for Dana and Stephen. First, the panel tackles It Ends With Us starring Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni (the latter also directed and produced the film.) It's a big, glossy melodrama laced with a domestic violence plot, and is the first film adaptation of BookTok star author Colleen Hoover. Then, the three explore Time Bandits, a new television show from Jermaine Clement, Iain Morris, and Taika Watiti starring, among others, a sublime Lisa Kudrow. The Apple TV+ series is based on Terry Gilliam's 1981 film of the same name and follows a ragtag bunch of bandits as they thieve and travel through time. Finally, in light of its 20-year anniversary, the trio considers Yelp – does the crowd-sourcing review platform still hold power in 2024? This conversation was inspired by Jaya Saxena's Eater piece, “Everybody Gets a Star.” On this week's exclusive Slate Plus bonus episode, the panel goes on the hunt for the wonderful, elusive “perfect cracker.” Email us at culturefest@slate.com. Endorsements: JUNE: A very well-reviewed book from two years ago: Katheine Rundell's Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne. DAN: The Ministry for the Future: A Novel by Kim Stanley Robinson. JULIA: First Class Tailors on Wilshire Blvd., which boasts a 4.7 Star rating on Yelp. Podcast production by Jared Downing. Production assistance by Kat Hong. Hosts June Thomas, Dan Kois, Julia Turner Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
When Lisa Kudrow was approached to star in a serialized adaptation of the 1981 film ‘Time Bandits' for TV (July 24th on Apple TV+), she jumped at the chance to work with creators Taika Waititi, Jemaine Clement and Iain Morris. “I love the way they tell stories and their sense of humor.” In this version, Kudrow plays Penelope, the leader of a group of thieves on a time-traveling mission to save the world. Kudrow's part was originally written for a man, “so it took a long time before the scripts stopped having male pronouns.” One thing Kudrow responded to was Penelope's false sense of confidence. “I just love that kind of fake thing. That's the confidence that's fun to play. I like to inhabit confidence.” Despite her character “facing danger every episode,” Penelope still finds a way to be a blunt and possibly mean leader—in a funny way—to her group, which includes an 11-year-old boy. “There were talks about, ‘Should I, just in case, do a take where I'm not so mean?'” But that behavior only exists in her character. “I don't act like that. I don't have as much to prove as Penelope does.” Visit Newsweek.com to learn more about the podcasts we offer and to catch up on the latest news. While you're there, subscribe to Newsweek's ‘For the Culture newsletter. Follow H. Alan Scott on everything at @HAlanScott. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Light Reading's Iain Morris explains why the financial dip in Samsung's network segment is reflective of economic woes facing the broader industry. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this podcast, Light Reading's Iain Morris explains why Aramco Digital CEO Tareq Amin wants to provide 'AI-infrastructure-as-a-service' to customers and democratize access to AI chips, in part by teaming up with startup Groq. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
With tapas and cervezas in the rear view, Light Reading's Mike Dano, Phil Harvey, Tereza Krásová and Iain Morris recap the conversations around AI, open radio access network (RAN) technology, sustainability and other topics that dominated this year's Mobile World Congress (MWC). Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Chris and Taylor review the sports comedy-drama film Next Goal Wins written and directed by Taika Waititi and co-written by Iain Morris. Based on the 2014 documentary of the same name by Mike Brett and Steve Jamison, the film follows Dutch-American coach Thomas Rongen's efforts to lead the American Samoa national football team, considered one of the weakest soccer teams in the world, to qualification for the 2014 FIFA World Cup. The film stars Michael Fassbender, Oscar Knightley, Kaimana, David Fane, Rachel House, Beulah Koale, Will Arnett, Elisabeth Moss, Uli Latukefu and Chris Alosio.Follow us on:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thepotentialpodcast/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thepotentialpodcastTwitter: https://twitter.com/thepotentialpodSupport us on Patreon:patreon.com/thepotentialpodcastThanks to our sponsor: AURAGet a 14-day free trial of Aura for individuals, couples and or their family by going to aura.com/potential ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Light Reading's Phil Harvey, Iain Morris and Mike Dano join the podcast to discuss the original goal of open RAN compared to recent moves by service providers to go all-in on one vendor. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Light Reading's Iain Morris joins the podcast to discuss whether BT will get dinged for missing the UK government's deadline to fully remove Huawei from its core network. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Light Reading's Phil Harvey, Iain Morris and Mike Dano discuss the economic impact the AT&T and Ericsson open RAN deal could have on both large and small vendors in the telecom industry. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ronald Young Jr. reviews Next Goal WinsRYJ enjoys a cute movie set against the backdrop of beautiful HawaiiRYJ - 3 of 5 starsFollow me on IG, Threads,Twitter, and TikTok - @ohitsbigronAvailable in TheatersStarring Michael Fassbender, Oscar Knightley, Kaimana, David Fane, Rachel House, Beaulah Koale, Will Arnett, and Elizabeth MossWritten by Iain Morris and Taika WaititiDirected by Taika WaititiFor more information about Next Goal Wins check out this linkSupport Leaving the Theater on Patreon using this link
Light Reading's Iain Morris and Nicole Ferraro discuss tech trends they identified while selecting finalists for the 2023 Leading Lights Awards, from AI and ML for network analytics, to new tech addressing the digital divide – and more. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Light Reading's Iain Morris joins the podcast to discuss mounting pressure on European mobile network operators to avoid Huawei and ZTE when looking for equipment and tech suppliers for their 5G networks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
AUSTIN – Big 5G Event – Light Reading editors Phil Harvey, Kelsey Ziser, Iain Morris and Mike Dano gathered on the show floor to discuss their top takeaways from the Big 5G Event, including the state of 5G monetization, open RAN, MVNOs and more. Hear all about it in The Notebook Dump for the week ending May 19. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Iain Morris joins the podcast to discuss a potential merger between Three UK and Vodafone. We discuss what the merger could mean for the broader market, what regulators and analysts think of the deal and how it could impact consumers.The unedited audio transcript is available in the media player of this episode page. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
MWC23 – As MWC wraps up, Iain Morris, Mike Dano and Kelsey Ziser ruminate on T-Mobile's 5G voice service plans, how hyperscalers are trying to differentiate themselves and investment plans for future 5G and 6G deployments.The unedited audio transcript is available in the media player of this episode page. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Taking us back to our youth. Back into the gutter of our young minds and back into the classroom of our formative years, THE INBETWEENERS is a horrifically accurate depiction of what it was like surviving your teenage years in the UK. As the only one of the pair to survive the UK school system, Ryan has plenty of stories (and non-stories) among which we appreciate, dismantle, and gawp over the bold and brave depravity of this modern sitcom/cinema saga. The Iain Morris and Damon Beesley created show with Ben Palmer coming in to direct, is easily one of the best TV creations of the last 50 years. It spawned a 3-series show of 6 parts each, a hugely successful first movie and a sequel. Join us as we dive deep into THE INBETWEENERS SAGA! Bring yer wellies, a snorkel, and a packet of ham, it's going to be a wild one!
Iain Morris joins the podcast to discuss how automated telcos really are and what's actually contributing to job cuts in the telecom industry over the past few years. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Light Reading's Iain Morris and Kelsey Ziser review the Leading Lights Awards categories they judged and examine emerging trends that appeared in the submissions. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, Light Reading's Iain Morris explains why German service providers could be in hot water. Germany's reliance on Russian energy sources, plus the use of networking technology from Huawei, could present some serious problems now and in the long term for German service providers.You can download an unedited transcript of the podcast here. If you want to skip around and listen, here are some highlights in this interview:Why Germany's relationships with Russia and China could present problems for German service providers (00:46)How Deutsche Telekom's customers could be impacted by energy shortages, and the consequences of tricky trade relations (03:06)Long-term impacts of German telcos' collaboration with Huawei (07:48)Privacy concerns for mobile customers traveling through Germany (09:28) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Many industries are feeling the squeeze of supply chain challenges, and the open RAN and semiconductor businesses are no exception.Despite the flexibility that open RAN promises from an equipment and technology standpoint, supply chain speed bumps plus geopolitical factors are presenting new challenges to that market, Light Reading's Iain Morris explained on the podcast."Open RAN for people who aren't that familiar with it is really just a set of interfaces that allow you to mix and match components and software from different companies," said Morris. "But the idea is that because you don't need an end-to-end portfolio, it's a lot easier then for smaller companies and specialists to come into the mix and kind of compete."Morris recently reported on one of the most prominent players in the open RAN game, Parallel Wireless, which had to lay off employees."They've had to let go of a lot of their staff," he said. "It depends on what reports you read how many have gone, but there are some saying it's up to 80%, which sounds pretty disastrous, really, for a company to lose that many."In addition to discussing open RAN woes, Morris explained why a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan could have a major impact on the semiconductor market.You can download an unedited transcript of the podcast here. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Light Reading's Iain Morris joins the podcast with insight into why Ericsson's stock price took a hit despite a solid second quarter."I was a bit surprised to see the share price, they opened at about 11% down, which is a big drop ... and normally that's the kind of thing that happens when they have a bad news item like the investigation for some of their activities in Iraq where there were various wrongdoings going on," said Morris.Morris provides background on Ericsson's missteps in Iraq, but explains that this is an example of poor choices from previous management. While current management's efforts have righted the ship in some ways, the sins of Ericsson's past continue to make investors skeptical.Related stories and links:Ericsson's market share has rocketed, yet investors are unhappyEricsson gets US clearance for Vonage take-off See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Light Reading's Iain Morris joins the podcast to discuss Elon Musk's offer to buy Twitter for $43 billion. Morris explains Musk's potential motives behind purchasing Twitter, what it might look like if he goes through with taking ownership of the social media outlet, and what impact that could have on Twitter's future revenues and profits. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Light Reading's Iain Morris joins the podcast to share highlights from last week's Mobile World Congress event in Barcelona. He discusses how attendance compared to pre-COVID-19 times, themes that emerged such as the metaverse, his thoughts on the slowest 5G-powered barman on Earth, whether robot dogs can be trusted and more.Morris also provides updates on drama that unfolded outside the walls of the Fira as telecom companies halted business in Russia, and Ericsson had to answer why the company "initially kept quiet about the possibility it may have paid Islamic State to use Iraqi roads."For more MWC coverage from Light Reading, check out the MWC Resource Center.Sign up today for the Light Reading newsletter. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This special episode of the pod was recorded on the Orange stand at Mobile World Congress 2022 so, technically, it's not ‘live' but you know what we mean. Scott decides to tag-team three guests and starts by chatting to Phillipe Lucas of Orange to get his impressions of this first full version of the show for three years. That line of conversation is carried over to friend of the Pod Mary Clark and then Telecoms.com Deputy Editor Andrew Wooden, with Iain Morris of Light Reading apparently having better things to do than turn up. Stay up to date with the most important telecoms stories from around the world with the Telecoms.com daily newsletter. Delivered FREE and direct to your inbox every day: ow.ly/hqNV50IWnYk
Albert Adomah, Sex Pistol Glen Matlock and Inbetweeners creator Iain Morris join Chris Charles and Paul Finney in a star-studded podcast that's not to be missed!
Justin hosts a Premier Unbelievable? Live Q&A with Prof John Lennox. In partnership with Kharis Productions and Pensmore Films, producers of Against The Tide, the movie documentary of John's life . Hundreds of viewers watched live and submitted questions to John. Iain Morris, director of Against The Tide also joins the conversation. For Cosmic Chemistry: https://spckpublishing.co.uk/cosmic-chemistry For Against the Tide: https://www.againstthetidemovie.org/premier For our John Lennox Confident Christianity discount: https://www.udemy.com/course/unbelievable-confident-christianity/?couponCode=JOHNLENNOX Take our Big Conversation survey: https://survey-star.net/bigconversation2022 --- For exclusive resources and to support us: • Confident Christianity apologetics course: http://www.premier.org.uk/getconfident • Support (USA): http://www.premierinsight.org/unbelievableshow • Support (rest of the world): https://resources.premier.org.uk/supportunbelievable • For our newsletter https://www.premier.org.uk/Unbelievablenewsletter • For our blog: http://www.premierinsight.org/unbelievable-the-blog • For the podcast: http://www.premierchristianradio.com/Shows/Saturday/Unbelievable • Facebook https://www.facebook.com/PremierUnbelievable • Twitter https://twitter.com/unbelievablejb • Insta https://www.instagram.com/justin.brierley
Telco in 20 sits down with Scott Bicheno and Iain Morris of the Telecoms.com podcast to have an awesome conversation about the public cloud and telco.
Light Reading's editors are in the middle of judging the 2021 Leading Lights Awards and this is the third and final episode in a three-part podcast series discussing the Leading Lights finalists. On this podcast, Light Reading's Kelsey Ziser, Fiona Graham and Iain Morris discuss trends they're seeing, what's happening in the awards categories that they're judging and what they've learned from the contest entries as they dig in and prepare to announce this year's winners.The categories covered in this podcast include:Company of the Year (Public) Outstanding Digital Enablement VendorOutstanding Test & Measurement VendorOutstanding Use Case: Service Provider AI/AutomationOutstanding Use Case: Service Provider IoT Person of the YearBest Deal Maker See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Light Reading's editors are in the middle of judging the 2021 Leading Lights Awards and this is the third and final episode in a three-part podcast series discussing the Leading Lights finalists. On this podcast, Light Reading's Kelsey Ziser, Fiona Graham and Iain Morris discuss trends they're seeing, what's happening in the awards categories that they're judging and what they've learned from the contest entries as they dig in and prepare to announce this year's winners. The categories covered in this podcast include: Company of the Year (Public) Outstanding Digital Enablement VendorOutstanding Test & Measurement VendorOutstanding Use Case: Service Provider AI/AutomationOutstanding Use Case: Service Provider IoT Person of the YearBest Deal Maker
Christian philosopher and apologist Peter S. Williams (NLA University College, Norway) speaks internationally on behalf of the truth, goodness and beauty of being a disciple of Jesus. This engaging interview by film producer Iain Morris profiles Williams as an author of several key books. For more information, see http://www.peterswilliams.com/. The original video of the interview is published at https://www.graspingthenettle.org/watch/one_man_and_his_books_peter_williams The interview is republished here with permission from Grasping the Nettle / Kharis Productions. Vil du støtte arbeidet til Damaris Norge? https://www.damaris.no/stotte-oss/
Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at Oxford University John Lennox is an internationally renowned speaker and author of several books on the interface of science, philosophy and religion. In this attractive interview by film producer Iain Morris, Lennox provides fascinating background information on a number of his books. For more information, see https://www.johnlennox.org/ The original video of the interview is published at https://www.graspingthenettle.org/watch/one_man_his_books_john_lennox The interview is republished here with permission from Grasping the Nettle/ Kharis Productions. Vil du støtte arbeidet til Damaris Norge? https://www.damaris.no/stotte-oss/
As the Andreas Idreos Professor of Science and Religion at the University of Oxford, Alister McGrath is a leading international authority. He is also a highly respected Christian apologist with a special interest in C. S. Lewis. This interview with producer Iain Morris provides fascinating insights into some of McGrath’s many key books. For more information, see https://alistermcgrath.net/. The original video of the interview is published at https://www.graspingthenettle.org/watch/one_man_and_his_books The interview is republished here with permission from Grasping the Nettle / Kharis Productions. Vil du støtte arbeidet til Damaris Norge? https://www.damaris.no/stotte-oss/
Hi everyone and welcome back to The Next Step Podcast. In this season, season two, I'm going to be focusing on search. About 10 years ago now I left corporate life to acquire my first business in partnership with my good friend Iain Morris. Over the last 10 years I've acquired four more. I've done three tours of duty as a CEO of those businesses. We've exited two of them and sold down partial stakes in the other three. I'm currently sitting as a non-exec director on two broad platforms and remain a material shareholder in those businesses. It's strange to think that it's only really been in the last six to 12 months that I've learnt about this concept in this model of search and entrepreneurship through acquisition. Even though it's actually what I started doing about 10 years ago today. The exciting thing about search is that it's owner operator and entrepreneur led, it's people first and business second, and that's what attracts me to it the most. It's also focused on the smaller end of the market, businesses that are turning over or have earnings of somewhere between half a million and 3, 4, 5 million is usually what you'll find. Employee bases of 15 to 100 people. These are the businesses that have probably been around for quite a while. They've got great cash flows, they've got really good foundational customer basis, they've got good employees, great teams. And they've got really passionate founder owners, who are potentially getting to a point where they are ready to exit but they don't have a succession plan, and they need that next generation coming through. Search is one of the models that can provide exactly the structure that they are after. It's also a really exciting model for the operator or the searcher, the individual that wants to get into a position of ownership and operation of their own business. It's where I was 10 years ago coming out of corporate and just wanting more autonomy and more accountability, wanting to have something of my own that I can lead and drive. I also want to know that I can make a real difference if I put my energy and passion and sweat and tears into this business, it can make a difference to its growth and its future. So, I think there's a model here that I'm confident has legs given the amount of traction that it's got globally. And I think it's a model that can really suit the Australian market. Now in the Australian market, you know, there's probably only been two or three traditional search funds raised and those have only been raised in the last couple of years. There is probably been another handful of what you'd describe as self-funded searches over the last decade, but it's still very, very new and I think we've got an opportunity right now if we focus on removing the friction in that market to enable searches to come to market more freely and educate the people in that ecosystem whether that's lawyers, accountants, bankers and even business owners around what this model means, we can really create some amazing opportunities. And fundamentally if you think about the bigger picture, start to facilitate that transition of ownership, that intergenerational transition of ownership, from the baby boomer generation across to the next generation of business owners. So it's a really exciting thing for me, I'm very passionate about it.I'm actively investing in searches at the moment and supporting those searchers through their initial phases. And I'm really excited to try and identify all of those people I can speak to and bring into these episodes of this podcast, to help everyone understand what is search? What are the pros and cons? What does it mean to be a searcher? What does it mean to be an investor? And how people can get involved? So I hope you enjoy this season of The Next Step!
All links and images for this episode can be found on CISO Series https://cisoseries.com/unnecessary-research-reveals-cisos-hate-cold-calls/ In a study we never actually conducted, our fellow security leaders said unequivocally that there never has been a time they welcome a phone call from someone they don't know trying to book a demo to see a product they have no interest in. This episode is hosted by me, David Spark (@dspark), producer of CISO Series and guest co-host Andy Steingruebl (@asteingruebl), CISO, Pinterest. Our guest this week is Andy Purdy (@andy_purdy), CSO, Huawei Thanks to our podcast sponsor, Living Security Traditional approaches to security communication are limited to one-off training sessions that fail to take customers, regulators, and other external stakeholders into account and rarely affect long-term behavioral change. This report lays out a four-step plan that CISOs should follow to manage the human risk. It provides design principles for creating transformational security awareness initiatives which will win the hearts and minds of senior executives, employees, the technology organization, and customers. On this week's episode Here’s some surprising research As compared to small and medium companies, big enterprises don't appear to trust the big telcos to execute their 5G strategy. This according to new research from Omdia as reported by Iain Morris of Light Reading. When asked, "do you trust a communications service provider, AKA big telco, to execute your security strategy," SMEs overwhelmingly supported the telcos over all other options, and big enterprises didn't. They trusted their own expertise or wanted to lean on a cloud service provider like Amazon or Google. Let's investigate this discrepancy. If you're not paranoid yet here’s your chance As if you didn't know it already, get ready for some sobering news about third-party risk: According to a survey by BlueVoyant, as reported by SC Magazine, 80 percent of those surveyed had at least one breach caused by a third party vendor within the past year. Most of those surveyed didn’t monitor third-party suppliers for cyber risk. But, even if they wanted to, it's often a point in time measurement, sometimes only yearly, and organizations have an average of 1409 vendors. UK's National Cyber Security Center puts the focus of securing against third party risk squarely on the development of the software supply chain, and the need for isolation and proven security checks throughout the development process. That may be good advice, but it still seems so overwhelming given the volume and how much you can't control. "What's Worse?!" A vulnerability response and incident detection conundrum from Jonathan Waldrop, Insight Global What’s the best way to handle this Lessons learned from a big security incident and how these will be applied to the next big security incident. What do you think of this vendor marketing tactic Very few, if any, security leaders like cold calls. Yet, even with all the expressed distaste of them, they still exist, and that's probably because they still work, and still deliver significant ROI. But when these companies calculating that ROI, are they calculating all the people they've annoyed? One vendor sales rep who said after searching their CRM for "Do Not Call" there was a slew of vitriol from CISOs screaming to never contact them again. And as we all know, CISOs talk to other CISOs. So if you've angered one CISO sufficiently to never consider you, they've probably told a few friends as well. Let's discuss getting pushed over the edge by a vendor's aggressive sales tactics and what was done to essentially shut them off, including telling others about their actions.
This week, Jonah watches The Big Sick with dear friend and Academy Award-nominated screenwriter Emily V. Gordon!In 2006, when Emily and actor Kumail Nanjiani were newly dating, she developed a sudden life-threatening illness and was placed in a medically induced coma. After a lengthy recovery period, Emily and Kumail adapted that harrowing experience into The Big Sick.Emily chats with Jonah about molding their story into a version that works for the screen, the unique scenes women identify with most, how her background as a therapist helps her figure out characters' motivations, when to take notes and when to stick to your guns, combatting writer's block, and how award nominations become an unexpected second job.LinksFind out where you can watch The Big SickStream Emily's series Little America on Apple TV+Read Emily's book Super YouFor writing advice, Emily and Jonah recommend Save The Cat! by Blake Snyder, Dan O'Bannon's Guide to Screenplay Structure, The Secrets of Story by Matt Bird, and Michael Arndt's free lectures on Beginnings and EndingsFollow Emily on Twitter and InstagramThank you to Allie Goertz for our theme song and Perry Shall for our artwork.
Iain joined the podcast back in August to talk about open RAN's potential in the telco space, particularly as the UK government imposes a ban on using Huawei equipment. On this episode, we talk about what we've learned about open RAN since then, whether or not the technology is living up to the hype; and what's in store for open RAN in telecom next year.
Light Reading's Iain Morris joins us to talk about convergence and consolidation amongst European telcos. France's Orange recently took a controlling stake in Telekom Romania Communications (TRC), and Iain will shed some light on what this deal means for the individual telcos and the industry at large.
Light Reading's Iain Morris and Kelsey Ziser discuss highlights from last week's BBWF event, including an update from Telefonica CTO Enrique Blanco on the operator's efforts around fiber buildouts, both in Spain and South America. In addition, Morris and Ziser discuss women in comms sessions on new career opportunities around 5G deployments, closing the gender gap in telecom and building relationships with mentors.
Screenwriter and co-creator of The Inbetweeners Iain Morris talks about shower thoughts, converting a book into a script, and the comedic development of Jimmy Carr. Intro music is "String Anticipation" by Cory Gray.
The Inbetweeners co-creator Iain Morris on his latest show, the perils of social media and challenges of writing comedy amid a pandemic; and Zig Zag Productions CEO Danny Fenton on getting back to work on the firm's new female football talent format, plus what Covid-19 means for TV's future.
Il fallait bien s'y atteler un jour où l'autre, c'est désormais chose faite. Le film culte parmi les films cultes, celui qui nous vient immédiatement en tête à l'évocation du mot "teen movie" : American Pie des frères Weitz (1999). Emblème du teen-movie des années 90 par excellence, qui donnera le La à toute la génération cinématographique et culturelle à venir, aussi bien sur ses bons... comme sur ses (nombreux) mauvais aspects. Très bonne écoute à tous et à toutes ! Podcast présenté et animé par Tanguy, Juliette, Antonin et Hugo. Films/Séries référencé.es : -Porky's (Bob Clark, 1982) -SuperGrave / Superbad (Greg Mottola, 2007) -Risky Business (Paul Brickman, 1983) -Scream (Wes Craven, 1996) -Lolita Malgré Moi / Mean Girls (Mark Waters, 2004) -Clueless (Amy Heckerling, 1995) -Harold & Kumar chassent le burger / Harold & Kumar Go To White Castle (Danny Leiner, 2004) -Grease (Randal Kleiser, 1978) -Pump Up The Volume (Allan Moyle, 1990) -The Breakfast Club (John Hughes, 1985) -Le Lauréat / The Graduate (Mike Nichols, 1967) -Les Beaux Gosses (Riad Sattouf, 2009) -Projet X / Project X(Nima Nourizadeh, 2012) -Booksmart (Olivia Wilde, 2019) -Assassination Nation (Sam Levinson, 2018) -Sex Education (Laurie Dunn, 2019 / Netflix) -Big Mouth (Nick Kroll & Andrew Goldberg, 2017 / Netflix) -Freaks and Geeks (Paul Feig, 1999-2000 / NBC-Fox Family) -Blue Mountain State (Chris Romano & Eric Falconer, 2010-2011 / Spike TV) -Les Boloss : Loser attitude / The Inbetweeners (Damon Beesley & Iain Morris, 2008-2010 / E4) -Les Boloss / The Inbetweeners Movie (Ben Palmer, 2011) -Good Boys (Gene Stupnitsky, 2019) -Russian Doll (Natasha Lyonne, Amy Poehler & Leslye Headland, 2019 / Netflix) -American Beauty (Sam Mendes, 1999) -Mr. Robot (Sam Esmail, 2015-2019 / USA Network) -Stranger Things (Matt & Ross Duffer, 2016 / Netflix) -How I Met Your Mother (Craig Thomas & Carter Bays, 2005-2014 / CBS) -100 Girls (Michael Davis, 2000) (un grand merci à PuNkY_BoY pour cette découverte !) Nous suivre sur : Facebook : facebook.com/SLTSpodcast Twitter : twitter.com/SLTSpodcast Soundcloud : @sltspodcast Podcloud : soundsliketeenspirit.lepodcast.fr iTunes : podcasts.apple.com/fr/podcast/soun…it/id1488840847 Spotify : open.spotify.com/show/0O9tpe90EjOaFhzdWT7XS8 Deezer : deezer.com/fr/show/691422
It's the penultimate episode of our Greatest Hits season, and this week calls for another of our guest specials.We're revisiting our interview with Iain Morris, co-creator of the award-winning series The Inbetweeners. Iain's telling us how they went about casting the characters we know and love, what life was like on the set of The Festival, as well as which of his own teenage experiences are reflected in the show.To get in touch with questions, comments, email us on: show@revisitingpod.com. Or WhatsApp the burner phone: 07442 077166. We’re also on Twitter and Instagram.Please take the time to rate and review us on Apple Podcasts or your preferred podcast- provider. It means a great deal to the show and will make it easier for other potential listeners to find us. Thanks!@laurakirk12 @lauragallop See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On this episode of 'What's the Story?' – a new series from the Light Reading Podcast – Iain Morris talks with pod host Nicole Ferraro about open RAN: the latest news, why it matters and what's likely to happen next.
Clive Whittingham hosts his first podcast, joining him are Flo Lloyd-Hughes, Paul Finney and special guest, The Inbetweeners co-creator, Iain Morris. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Clive Whittingham hosts his first podcast, joining him are Flo Lloyd-Hughes, Paul Finney and special guest, The Inbetweeners co-creator, Iain Morris.
Clive Whittingham hosts his first podcast, joining him are Flo Lloyd-Hughes, Paul Finney and special guest, The Inbetweeners co-creator, Iain Morris.
Welcome to What’s the Story: a new, short podcast from Light Reading where we take a step back from the most significant topics in telecom to tell you the latest news, how we got here, what it means and what to expect next. For our first episode, Light Reading Contributing Editor Nicole Ferraro talks with Light Reading International Editor Iain Morris about Rakuten and 5G. Iain recently wrote about Rakuten announcing that fellow Japanese company NEC will supply its 5G core, and that Rakuten will effectively junk its existing 4G core in the process. He tells us what this means, why it matters and what’s likely to happen next.
Iain Morris & Damon Beesley are two absolute titans of British comedy. They've worked with, nurtured or helped break through the likes of Sasha Baron Cohen, Peter Kay, Ricky Gervais and many more, before finding huge success on their own terms with The Inbetweeners. The sitcom proved a profound hit and spawned two eye-wateringly successful sequels. Now Damon and Iain have scored another goal (sorry!) with terrific football sitcom The First Team; all episodes are available to watch on iPlayer. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Will stopping Huawei in the US and Europe will do much of anything to slow down China from becoming the world's dominant technology superpower in the next decade? Light Reading's Phil Harvey and Iain Morris discuss that question and provide an update on the most recent court ruling against Huawei's CFO, and what it means as she fights extradition to the US.
Scott Mills and Chris Stark chat with Strictly and Drag Race star Michelle Visage, The Inbetweeners' writers Iain Morris and Damon Beesley discuss their new football comedy. Cel Spellman plays the Upside Down Quiz.
Footballs coming home! The great and the good of talkSPORT and beyond discuss the news that football will be returning on the 17th of June including Darren Bent, Henry Winter and Lars Siversten. Also Harry Redknapp drops in on breakfast to discuss a job offer, Spencer Oliver talks to Natalie Sawyer about what Eddie Hearn has planned in his back garden. Iain Morris & Damon Beesley drop in on H&J to discuss their new sitcom the first team and Britain's most decorated Olympian Mo Farah, joins Andy and Jason on the Sports bar to discuss his life in lockdown and whether his beloved Arsenal can chase down united for a champions league place. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The US government has moved to block Huawei's access, not only to US technology but to any technology made with US expertise. Light Reading's Iain Morris and Phil Harvey discuss this latest move and wonder at what point does the Chinese government retaliate against other, unrelated companies and industries as a way of challenging the Trump administration.
Morning/Afternoon/Evening! Whatever the time, a heartfelt welcome to EPISODE 6 of the QuaranTea Break Podcast. This is an absolute belter. Recorded in three locations across two time zones – Los Angeles, Kent and Peckham – comes the first international edition of the show as I spoke to the creators of The Inbetweeners, Iain Morris and Damon Beesley. Damon said at the end of the recording that it felt more like a Zoom call with mates, and I couldn't agree more.This is a wide-ranging conversation, starting with the usual – two incidents of police arriving with guns – before getting stuck into some lockdown chat and TV recommendations. We chat about life at the moment in Kent and LA, as well as imagining what would happen if The Inbetweeners had a lockdown episode (including a very funny IRL anecdote about not cleaning up sick). We talk extensively about their new comedy, The First Team, premiering on BBC Two on May 28. And we chat about Iain's new project with Taika Waititi, Next Goal Wins. It really has a bit of everything, this episode.We hit 31 in the Apple Podcast charts last week for TV & Film, and that's all down to you for sharing and subscribing. If you like what you hear, please tell a friend. Or two. Or even a group WhatsApp. And please follow @QuaranTeaBreak on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.If you'd like to support the podcast, why not buy me a coffee (or ideally, a tea): https://ko-fi.com/quaranteabreak.See you very soon, and please stay indoors.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-quarantea-break-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Where is God in a Coronavirus world? How belief in a loving and sovereign God helps us to make sense of and cope with the coronavirus outbreak This is the title of a brand new book by John Lennox, published today in UK. See https://www.thegoodbook.co.uk/where-is-god-in-a-coronavirus-world. John Lennox is a well-known Oxford professor emeritus in Mathematics and a remarkable Christian apologist. Listen to this fascinating interview with Lennox about his new book. Republished with permission from this video: https://vimeo.com/403768707. ----------- Mange lyttere til denne podkasten kjenner John Lennox som hovedtaler på Veritaskonferansen 2018. Se https://www.damaris.no/lennox I dette engasjerende intervjuet deler Lennox noen refleksjoner fra sin helt nye bok om følgende brennaktuelle spørsmål: Hvor er Gud i krevende koronatider?
On this week’s episode we were joined by Andy Farrell, Caelan Doris, Ronan Kelleher and Shane Byrne to dissect the decision to postpone Ireland's Six Nations tie with Italy due to the outbreak of the coronavirus. Meanwhile, FIFA President Gianni Infantino quashed claims the Euros could also be postponed due to the virus while Mick McCarthy had his say on the matter and his side’s UEFA Nations League draw. Vera Pauw’s womens team secured a hard-fought 1-0 win over Greece to further enhance their chances of qualifying for Euro 2021. League of Ireland Sunday returned with Stephen O’Donnell, Stephen McPhail, Iain Morris and Keith Long reacting to the results of the Dublin clubs. Dublin superstar Brian Howard had his say on their league campaign thus far, the fitness levels of the Dubs team and their plans for the Championship.
Bohemians secured bragging rights following their 2-0 win over Dublin rivals Shelbourne at Dalymount Park. Both Keith Long and Iain Morris reacted to the result. Meanwhile, Shamrock Rovers ran out 3-2 winners over Sligo to keep their perfect start alive with sporting director Stephen McPhail sharing his thoughts. Finally, St. Pats manager Stephen O’Donnell was thrilled following his sides 1-0 win over Cork City at Richmond Park.
Paul and Andy were joined in the studio by co-creator of The Inbetweeners, Iain Morris to promote his upcoming sitcom 'The First Team'. The guys were also joined by Steve Croot from Croots Farm Shop and Cafe who have a Wayne Rooney inspired sausage for sale. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Crossover Pod Alert! Following Light Reading's 2020 Vision Executive Summit at the Ritz Carlton in Vienna, Austria, Telecoms.com's Editorial Director Scott Bicheno joins Light Reading's Iain Morris and Phil Harvey for a wine-fueled recap of one of the most exclusive gatherings of senior global executives from the communications networking sector. Iain discusses recent the restructuring and corporate realignment activities of Orange, Telefonica and MTS. Scott muses about how dangerous (and smart) it is for telcos to collaborate with cloud providers at the edge. Before they get going, Phil chips in with some thoughts on why the perception of telcos owning media companies has changed so much in the past 12 months.
In this episode I interview my business partner and co-founder of Alpin, Iain Morris. We talk through the approach of 'five minutes, five hours and five days' as a step by step framework that is an iterative approach to assess a deal or an opportunity.
Joining us on this week's episode is co-creator of The Inbetweeners, Iain Morris. We're talking all about our favourite Inbetweeners moments, which of the characters was cast just a week before filming started, and why Iain sat on a wooden box during the shooting of his latest film, The Festival. We're also discovering how Iain, along with co-creator Damon Beesley, visited their old schools to gather inspiration for the series. To get in touch with questions, comments, email us: show@berkhamstedrevisited.com. We’re also on Twitter and Instagram: @berkorevisited **Please take the time to rate and review us on iTunes or your preferred podcast provider. It means a great deal to the show and will make it easier for other potential listeners to find us. Thanks!**@laurakirk12 @lauragallop@iainkevanmorris See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
RHLSTP Special - Damon Beesley and Joe Thomas - Baggy Trousers. Rich is still at the Bristol Slapstick Festival, chatting with some of his comedy heroes, including the co-creator and one of the stars of the Inbetweeners, Damon Beesly and Joe Thomas. They chat about the difficulty of casting the show, why it was set in the present day rather than the 80s as originally intended, Rich’s failure to get a part in the show and the phenomenal success of the films. They also discuss whether there will ever be any more Inbetweeners in the future. What do you think? Should they? Of course they shouldn’t! Plus a special message from the other co-creator of the series Iain Morris.SUPPORT THE SHOW!Check out our website and become a badger and see extra content http://rhlstp.co.ukSee details of the RHLSTP tour dates http://richardherring.com/gigsBuy DVDs and Books at http://gofasterstripe.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
John Lennox is one of the foremost Christian public voices globally. His debates with famous new atheists are legendary. Iain Morris is making a documentary where he is inteviewing Lennox about the debates. This seminar will show some clips from his debates, and allow Lennox to comment John Lennox and Iain Morris
The pod has a special guest this week in the form of Telecoms Consultant William Webb, who joins Scott along with the no-less special Iain Morris of Light Reading. They start by noting that, even by recent standards, the 5G hype reached hysterical levels in the build up to MWC Americas. They move on to IoT and contemplate whether operators are even capable of moving up the value stack, before concluding with a look at the new iPhone and the significant of Apple supporting e-SIM.
Iain Morris is the co-creator of The Inbetweeners, director of raucous Brit-com The Festival (in cinemas now), and now a temporary member of the Empire Podteam. In this week's episode he joins Chris Hewitt, Helen O'Hara, and James Dyer to discuss the week's movie news (mainly Danny Boyle leaving Bond 25), and the sexiest moment in the MCU. He also talks about The Festival, Joe Thomas' bum, and throws in a Crowded House anecdote that may be the single most shameless example of namedropping in Empire Podcast history. Elsewhere, Chris talks to Guy Pearce, star of the new Netflix show, The Innocents, and they get quite specific about accents, and wax lyrical about L.A. Confidential. Rollo Tomasi would be so proud.
Director of the Festival, Inbetweeners 2 and co-writer of the Inbetweeners talks to Marek Larwood about his latest film and what it's like to direct major films as well as other directing stuff. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Paul & Andy discuss filthy footballers, shin pads and the Asian Games. Iain Morris, the creator of the Inbetweeners & The Festival dropped in to say hello... For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy
In the first podcast of the post-Skinner era, the team is joined by super-sub Iain Morris from Light Reading. Among the key conversation-points of the week include BT finally caving in to Ofcom’s demands for the ‘legal separation’ of Openreach – whatever that means. The guys also mull over the pros and cons of accelerating 5G NR by itself and reflect on the apparent ability of the CIA to hack our devices in order to keep an eye on us.
Tim, Jamie and Ray have all abandoned Scott this week, but Iain Morris from Light Reading is still in town to make sure Mr. Bicheno doesn’t end up rambling into a microphone on his own for 45 minutes. The two of them chew the fat about Ericsson and Cisco’s ludicrously friendly relationship. Elsewhere, Trump gets to work on… whatever an unexpected President does; and a long and expensive investigation into the exploding Note7 concludes it was down to a faulty battery… well no sh!t…
With a work-shy Scott skiving off again, Iain Morris joins Tim and Jamie to explore the ramifications of governmental spying in the US and the UK. Trump gets hostile on net neutrality; BT has another mare with Ofcom and Openreach; and if you’re listening to this on an iPhone, you’re probably a girl.
We knew it was too good to last. Scott’s off again this week so Iain Morris from Light Reading is in the studio to help Jamie and Tim figure out how to control AI. We get our heads stuck in the clouds discussing Google’s Pixel launch and how it plans to take on iPhone and Samsung; before moving on to spectrum woes for Three in the UK and the Indian regulator. Yahoo’s naughty behaviour gets found out this week, and Tim recalls his tails from Berlin, where a “mentalist” ripped his head open on stage… metaphorically… while Iron Maiden legend Bruce Dickinson explained why customers are a nightmare for everyone. Finally, we find out what Europeans are searching about British people online. The results are spectacular.
The singer Loudon Wainwright III, father of Rufus and Martha, discusses his latest album Haven't Got the Blues (Yet). Mad Men star Christina Hendricks talks about her new film, God's Pocket and Irish singer Sinead O'Connor on her new album and new image… The conductor, Sir Neville Marriner discusses his long and varied career and his return to the BBC Proms and following the success of the Inbetweeners TV sitcom making a successful transfer to the big screen, co-creators Damon Beesley and Iain Morris talk about their second Inbetweeners film. And Samira Ahmed talks to writer DBC Pierre about his new novella, Breakfast With The Borgias
Sir Neville Marriner, who turned 90 this year, is the most recorded living conductor. He talks to Kirsty Lang about his long and varied career, and his return to the BBC Proms. The Inbetweeners is a rare example of a television sitcom which made a successful transfer to the big screen. Co-creators Damon Beesley and Iain Morris discuss their second Inbetweeners film in which the four friends take their teenage antics on a gap year to Australia. The words of Poets Laureate across three and a half centuries feature in a new exhibition opening this week. From the first poet appointed to the post, John Dryden, to the current one, Carol Ann Duffy - original manuscripts and rare editions of their works are on display. In addition, historic recordings of Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Ted Hughes and Sir John Betjeman, as well as readings by actors Timothy West, Sir Daniel Day-Lewis and Dame Judi Dench can be heard, bringing new resonance to the poems themselves. Curator Deborah Clarke tells Kirsty about the start and development of the post of Poet Laureate, and about bringing their words to life. Kirsty is joined by critic David Benedict to review a new production of My Night With Reg, a 1994 gay comedy set during the AIDS crisis. Image: Sir Neville Marriner (c) Mark Allan.
Renowned New Testament Scholar NT (Tom) Wright joins Justin to talk about his new book 'Paul And The Faithfulness of God'. He also answers a number of listener questions that have come in on Facebook and Twitter He answers questions on hell, Satan, creation, Adam and Eve, Old Testament texts, the role of women and more. Justin is also joined later in the show by Iain Morris, creator of the God Question DVD, responding to the 2 shows debating the series. For Paul And The Faithfulness of God http://www.spckpublishing.co.uk/shop/paul-and-the-faithfulness-of-god/ or http://www.amazon.co.uk/Paul-Faithfulness-Christian-Origins-Question/dp/0281055548 For the God Question DVD series http://www.thegodquestion.tv For more faith debates visit www.premier.org.uk/unbelievable Join the conversation: Facebook and Twitter For Unbelievable? The Conference video website http://www.premier.org.uk/apologetics Get the MP3 podcast of Unbelievable? http://ondemand.premier.org.uk/unbelievable/AudioFeed.aspx or Via Itunes You may also enjoy: Unbelievable? 9th February 2013 - NT Wright & James White debate on St. Paul & Justification Unbelievable? 27 Dec 2008 End of Year apologetics interview special featuring Tom Wright, Timothy Keller & David Robertson.
Commencing at 12pm EST on Friday, March 1st 2013 and ending at 1pm EST on Saturday, March 2nd, Ken Plume conducted a 25-hr marathon of Bit Of A Chats featuring 57 guests in support of Comic Relief's Red Nose Day celebrations. This is one of them. YOU CAN STILL DONATE at rednosenet.com. PLEASE DO.
Iain Morris (co-creator, The Inbetweeners [UK]; Flight of the Conchords); Fred Stoller (Seinfeld; Handy Manny); Charlie Grandy (The Daily Show; co-creator, Guys with Kids); Amy Ozols (Late Night with Jimmy Fallon; co-creator, Guys with Kids). Recorded September 16, 2012.
Iain Morris (co-creator and writer of the UK smash "The InBetweeners") chats with Cole and Vanessa about The Oogieloves Movie, Clint Eastwood's chair rant, Tom Cruise's wife vetting, theater manners, The InBetweeners Movie, petard-hoisting, the magical lands of Oz, unlimited worms, mean magicians, translating MI3, Jerry Seinfeld's awkward adolescence, Twin Peaks, and Iain's surreal weekend of box-office checking. Leave your answer to the firsts question (the first amusement park you can remember going to and what your favorite ride or attraction was) on our website for a chance to win a comfy Pop My Culture T-Shirt!
In this episode, Ken Plume has another chat with INBETWEENERS co-creator Iain Morris about cycling, catapulting, interventions, mirrortweeners, and starmaking Greg Davies.
In this episode, Ken Plume has a chat with INBETWEENERS co-creator Iain Morris about Americanisms, brown water warnings, errant actors, coping tea, and bus-tastrophes.