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Today, Stephen sits down with the production team of The Mole Ohio. Together, they will talk about the genesis of the series, what makes a successful Mole game, and how to be a host for a live game. They'll also talk about this most recent season that aired, and the unique curveball it threw at production. In Behind the Game, Stephen sits down with different Live Reality Game creators to talk about their experience creating their series and the challenges the faced and overcame along the way. Find out more about The Mole Ohio here: https://www.instagram.com/themoleohio/
Today, Stephen sits down with the host and producer of Who is the Mole?, Jamie Bourn. Together, they will talk about the genesis of the series, the changes to the game over time, and what Jamie has learned along the way. They'll also tangent on Victory House: The Mole Season 3, where both Stephen and Jamie competed in. In Behind the Game, Stephen sits down with different Live Reality Game creators to talk about their experience creating their series and the challenges the faced and overcame along the way. Find out more about Who Is The Mole? The Live Game here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/995369761004929
Today, Stephen sits down with the host and producer of Survivor Durant, Cheston Smith. Together, they will talk about the genesis of the series, the changes to the game over time, and what the production members have learned along the way. They'll also likely talk a lot about the most recent season that ran this summer that Stephen also competed in. In Behind the Game, Stephen sits down with different Live Reality Game creators to talk about their experience creating their series and the challenges the faced and overcame along the way. Find out more about Survivor Durant here: https://www.youtube.com/@survivordurant1886
Today, Stephen sits down with the host and producer of Survivor: Los Angeles, Gavin Cho. Together, they will talk about the genesis of the series, the changes to the game over time, and what the production members have learned along the way. Some of the topics covered include the most recent season, equity and fairness in challenges, and running four seasons in a single year. In Behind the Game, Stephen sits down with different Live Reality Game creators to talk about their experience creating their series and the challenges the faced and overcame along the way. Find out more about Survivor: Los Angeles here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/3478092475667952
Palmyra - Do You Like Lush Harmony & Brilliant Song Writing? Then this is your band!Get inspired by Palmyra's Sasha Landon, who shares the incredible stories by their songs and what fuels their music mission.It's high-energy Americana at it's finest1A trio that also includes Teddy Chipouras and Mānoa Bell, all hailing from Virginia.=One things for sure...Palmyra's star is rising!They've supported Watchhouse, Mipso, and Illiterate Light, and received honors and recognition from the historic Newport Folk Festival, American Songwriter, The Boston Globe, NPR, Under The Radar Magazine, Americanafest, and Merlefest.Robin Hilton at All Songs Considered says, “This is a band you know would be killer live”...and we've seen them twice, it's 100% correct!You'll also discover:Their Unique Experience Performing Twice at the Newport Folk Festival (And Why They'll be Performing There this Year Again on an Even Bigger Stage)The Secrets of A Music Stage Completely Powered by Bikes.The Reaction They Get Singing, "We aren't dead yet, but we're not far from it!"The Moment Ben (our co-host) met Sasha in a Newport Food Line.The Colorful Stories Behind "Happy Pills", "Bella Donna", and "Shape I'm In"Behind the Scenes of the NPR Tiny-Desk CompetitionMental Health and Song WritingAdvice for Under-represented Groups in MusicAND an INCREDIBLE TUNE recorded for the show at the end of this EPISODE!!!Listen now on the Americana Curious Podcast!Discover more about Palmyra here:https://www.palmyratheband.com/
Send us a Text Message.Having been battling Systemic Mastocytosis and CIDP since birth, Shannon Dingey knows what it's like to have to take courage and fight hard. In her new book, she shares how there have been people who have seen how difficult its been to navigate her diagnosis, but there's more about her journey that no one has seen or known about. Most of the battles she has faced have been fought “behind the curtain.” Now, Shannon takes the leap to open up about her struggles and the debilitating symptoms she has dealt with daily, all while she appears to be a normal functioning person to the rest of the world. She shares about the anxiety, depression, identity issues and PTSD that no one saw on the surface. She once felt powerless and trapped behind the curtain. But as she reached her breaking point, she experienced healing, the curtain began to lift and she started to see purpose and power in her story. In Behind the Curtain, Shannon takes readers through her journey in a transparent and authentic way with the hope that your curtain may lift as well, and you'll find strength and courage on the other side. Support the Show.
I am excited to share the Behind the Badge series with my loyal True Crime PI listeners. In Behind the Badge, Detective Dawes and I dive into the world of cold cases, drawing from his 35 years of experience and my insatiable desire to uncover the truth. From the intricate process of piecing together evidence to the adrenaline pumping thrill of finally catching the bad guys, we'll explore it all. So, whether you're a seasoned sleuth or just a curious listener, get ready for an unforgettable ride as we embark on this journey together. Welcome to Behind the Badge!If you would like to suggest a discussion topic, email me at truecrimepi@gmail.com or visit my website at truecrimepi.com.Music: Stange Detective by Harumachi Support the Show.
Welcome to the Teach Them Diligently podcast. Today, Leslie Nunnery is joined by Helen Smallbone, mother of Rebecca St. James and Joel and Luke Smallbone of For King and Country. Helen shares her family's journey of faith and resilience. After facing major job loss and financial struggles, they moved from Australia to the United States with six children and no furniture. Through living by faith and relying on God, they experienced miracles and learned valuable lessons about trust, hard work, and the importance of family. Helen encourages wives to support their husbands during difficult times and emphasizes the need for a strong foundation in Jesus. She also discusses their homeschooling experience and the upcoming movie about their story, 'Unsung Hero.'Key Takeaways:Living by faith and relying on God can lead to miracles and life-changing experiences.Supporting and encouraging your spouse during difficult times is crucial.A strong foundation in Jesus is essential for navigating challenges.Homeschooling can provide flexibility and opportunities for practical learning.God cares about the details and provides for our needs in unexpected ways.Meet the Guest:Helen Smallbone grew up in Australia as the daughter of a Methodist minister and the youngest of four children. Even though she grew up in church, her faith became real in her mid-teens when she committed her life to Christ at a Billy Graham Crusade in Sydney.Trained as an Occupational Therapist, Helen's greatest desire was to serve God and become a wife and mother. At age 20, she married the love of her life, David Smallbone, and over the next 14 years, they added seven children to their family. In 1991, after experiencing a financial crisis in Australia, the Smallbone family relocated to the Nashville, TN, area, where David began a career in music management for Christian artists. This new adventure required every family member to place their trust in God and live by faith.In Behind the Lights: The Extraordinary Adventure of a Mum and Her Family (K-LOVE Books, April 12, 2022), Helen shares how the Smallbone family learned to let God lead – which has included living outside the box of American cultural norms. Her book describes God's constant faithfulness and provision during the lean years after their arrival in the United States. Helen recounts stories that vividly describe how the family worked together to make ends meet, found support in new friends and neighbors, homeschooled on the road, and grew closer with every challenge they overcame. Helen's love for God and family has only grown stronger as she and David have supported their children's creative career paths. Their daughter, Rebecca St. James, and two of their sons, for KING & COUNTRY stars Luke and Joel Smallbone, have collectively earned five Grammys.When not busy with her children and grandchildren, Helen is dedicated to sharing her passion and love for God with those around her. She is the co-founder of MUMlife,(www.MUMlife.org), a ministry of “mothers uplifting mothers,” and co-host of the MUMlife Community Podcast. David and Helen Smallbone live just outside of Nashville with a small menagerie of animals.Additional Resources:Secure your ticket for Unsung Hero TODAY- Click herehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHyrHRNX9Rk
On today's podcast, we're bringing you another installment of our “Behind the Numbers” series, featuring portfolio manager Connor Gordon. In “Behind the Numbers”, Chris Pepper, VP, Corporate Affairs, speaks with Fidelity's portfolio managers, analysts, subject matter experts, and more, about what brought them into investing and what drives them every day. Today Connor shares his story of what first got him interested in investing, which lead to 15 years now with Fidelity, including managing Fidelity Global Small Cap Opportunities Fund since September 2022, alongside Chris Maludzinski. At Fidelity, our mission is to build a better future for Canadian investors and help them stay ahead. We offer investors and institutions a range of innovative and trusted investment portfolios to help them reach their financial and life goals. Fidelity mutual funds and ETFs are available by working with a financial advisor or through an online brokerage account. Visit fidelity.ca/howtobuy for more information. For the third year in a row, FidelityConnects by Fidelity Investments Canada was ranked the #1 podcast by Canadian financial advisors in the 2023 Environics' Advisor Digital Experience Study.
For today's podcast, we're excited to bring you an episode of our new “Behind the Numbers” series. In “Behind the Numbers”, Chris Pepper, VP, Corporate Affairs, speaks with Fidelity's portfolio managers, analysts, subject matter experts, and more, about what brought them into investing and what drives them every day. Stacie Ware, quantitative analyst in Fidelity's Merrimack, New Hampshire, fixed income team, is today's guest. Stacie shares her intriguing background and life she lead before joining Fidelity. At Fidelity, our mission is to build a better future for Canadian investors and help them stay ahead. We offer investors and institutions a range of innovative and trusted investment portfolios to help them reach their financial and life goals. Fidelity mutual funds and ETFs are available by working with a financial advisor or through an online brokerage account. Visit fidelity.ca/howtobuy for more information. For the third year in a row, FidelityConnects by Fidelity Investments Canada was ranked the #1 podcast by Canadian financial advisors in the 2023 Environics' Advisor Digital Experience Study.
For today's podcast, we're excited to bring you an episode of our new “Behind the Numbers” series. In “Behind the Numbers”, Chris Pepper, VP, Corporate Affairs, speaks with Fidelity's portfolio managers, analysts, subject matter experts, and more, about what brought them into investing and what drives them every day. Today, Chris catches up with Montreal-based portfolio manager Hugo Lavallée who has had a long career with Fidelity, but only after some initial hurdles getting his foot in the door. At Fidelity, our mission is to build a better future for Canadian investors and help them stay ahead. We offer investors and institutions a range of innovative and trusted investment portfolios to help them reach their financial and life goals. Fidelity mutual funds and ETFs are available by working with a financial advisor or through an online brokerage account. Visit fidelity.ca/howtobuy for more information. For the third year in a row, FidelityConnects by Fidelity Investments Canada was ranked the #1 podcast by Canadian financial advisors in the 2023 Environics' Advisor Digital Experience Study.
For today's podcast, we're excited to bring you an episode of our new “Behind the Numbers” series. In “Behind the Numbers”, Chris Pepper, VP, Corporate Affairs, speaks with Fidelity's portfolio managers, analysts, subject matter experts, and more, about what brought them into investing and what drives them every day. In this episode, Chris speaks with Boston-based Fidelity portfolio manager Ramona Persaud, who was born in New York City and jokes that she had to choose between fashion or finance. At Fidelity, our mission is to build a better future for Canadian investors and help them stay ahead. We offer investors and institutions a range of innovative and trusted investment portfolios to help them reach their financial and life goals. Fidelity mutual funds and ETFs are available by working with a financial advisor or through an online brokerage account. Visit fidelity.ca/howtobuy for more information. For the third year in a row, FidelityConnects by Fidelity Investments Canada was ranked the #1 podcast by Canadian financial advisors in the 2023 Environics' Advisor Digital Experience Study.
Today, Stephen sits down with the host and creator of Survivor Brooklyn South, George. Together, they will talk about the genesis of the series, setting player expectations, running an all-star season, and what George learned along the way. In Behind the Game, Stephen sits down with different Live Reality Game creators to talk about their experience creating their series and the challenges the faced and overcame along the way. Find out more about Survivor Brooklyn South here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/661226300926226 You can apply for Survivor Brooklyn South's upcoming season here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfsxRhQNkpLCXJ2G68jokayK0RjcQFomA4wkZmdwfykXRX8Cw/viewform?usp=sharing
Today, Stephen sits down with the host and creator of Outlast, Justin. Together, they will talk about the genesis of the series, the evolution of the game from season one to two, and what Justin learned along the way. In Behind the Game, Stephen sits down with different Live Reality Game creators to talk about their experience creating their series and the challenges the faced and overcame along the way. Find out more about Outlast here: https://www.facebook.com/OutlastLRG You can find out about Justin's ORG Pandora here: https://www.youtube.com/@survivorpandora8000
Today, Stephen sits down with the production team from Survivor Angelica, including Jason, Jason, Brett, and Chris. Together, they will talk about the genesis of the series back in 2002, the changes to the game over time, and what the production members have learned along the way. In Behind the Game, Stephen sits down with different Live Reality Game creators to talk about their experience creating their series and the challenges the faced and overcame along the way. Find out more about Survivor Angelica here: http://www.survivorangelica.com/
For today's podcast, we're excited to bring you an episode of our new “Behind the Numbers” series. In “Behind the Numbers”, Chris Pepper, VP, Corporate Affairs, speaks with Fidelity's portfolio managers, analysts, subject matter experts, and more, about what brought them into investing and what drives them every day. In this episode, Chris sits down with portfolio manager Dan Dupont. Dan is based in Montreal, but we caught up with him on a recent visit to Toronto. Recorded May 2023. At Fidelity, our mission is to build a better future for Canadian investors and help them stay ahead. We offer investors and institutions a range of innovative and trusted investment portfolios to help them reach their financial and life goals. Fidelity mutual funds and ETFs are available by working with a financial advisor or through an online brokerage account. Visit fidelity.ca/howtobuy for more information. For the second year in a row, FidelityConnects by Fidelity Investments Canada was ranked the #1 podcast by Canadian financial advisors in the 2022 Environics' Advisor Digital Experience Study.
In "Behind the Therapists" Karen and Figs use the feeling of being overextended to explore 3 "roses" and 1 "thorn" about being a couples therapist, each.Karen finds it rewarding to… Take desperate and confused couples and organize what is really happening for them.Help others (thereby feeling valuable as a person enough to "exist for today.")Experience couples on the edge of giving up on the relationship become open-hearted.Karen finds it most difficult to bear the moments when a couple is stuck and she has a hard time holding them in a frame of hope.Figs is fulfilled by…How alive couples therapy is—he has to show up for the couple in the moment, no matter what.Going deeper and deeper into sadness, hopelessness, and despair with a couple, trusting that they'll come through closer.The performance and artistry of a session.The most difficult sessions for Figs are when a couple doesn't trust him yet—they're not in alliance. "Research has shown that a simple act of kindness directed toward another improves the functioning of the immune system and stimulates production of serotonin in both the recipient of the kindness and the person extending the kindness. Even more amazing is that persons observing the act of kindness have similar beneficial results. Imagine this: kindness extended, received, or observed beneficially impacts the physical health and feelings of everyone involved.” — Dr. Wayne W. Dyer
Join host Daniel Chaderjian as he introduces himself and the podcast. In Behind the Mascot, we'll take you inside the wonderful world of mascotting and give you a peak at the wacky, interesting, and endearing characters who bring your favorite mascots to life. Special thanks to Ryan Gunderson for creating the theme song and to Anders Rosenquist for designing the cover art. I would also like to thank Claire Wright for allowing me to get started in mascotting, Audrea Harris for a wonderful four years at USC, and my family and friends for their unwavering support. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/daniel-chaderjian/support
In our Season Two Finale of For The Record, we're giving you a behind-the scenes look at what it takes to create quality, consistent digital media day-in and day-out.In “Behind the Content Curtain” Dr. Tiphany Hall sits down with Director of Media Productions for Aesthetic Record & Aesthetic Next, JT Cothran.While JT Cothran came to AR with a long history of studio engineering and live event productions, he's helped build a substantial video production house at AR, learning and evolving his own skill set, one step at a time.He's the man behind the camera, directing the talent, finding the best angle, and capturing the best video and audio for the job. But, he's also the one in post-production doing all the editing, adding motion graphics and transitions, and creating lots of movie magic. He's a unicorn, some might say, and can do just about anything! In this episode, JT & Tiphany break down a few key elements of success regardless of your budget or resources:Using the tools you have in your tool box today to create high-quality, high-impact videos and what to buy next to fill in the holes.Various software program you can use to get the look of big production quality without spending big budgets (and do some really cool stuff!) We share SO many great tools!!!!Tips for improving your video quality from pre-production planning, to background lighting,to refurbishing old videos and building content with purpose.What to consider when deciding when to bring in a production company vs. trying to do it all yourself.This is a great episode to watch or listen to if you are a content creator who is either stuck in a rut or eager to take things to the next level. If you are a video ninja, we promise you may get some time-saving efficiency hacks that make things easier!!We share the perspective of the onscreen talent and the behind-the-scenes creative genius, something that isn't normally discussed together!
Before the next episode, we have something a little different for your ears - an introduction to a whole new podcast - Behind the Sun. In Behind the Sun, Nadia, a young Syrian woman in the diaspora, struggles to come to terms with what the world knows about what's happening in her country. She speaks with Riyad - her father's friend - whom she had first met in the strangest of circumstances. In episode 1, Nadia and Riyad explore the true meaning of "safety and justice" in Syria. He tells her the story of his disappearance in Syria for 21 years and how he formed a close friendship with Diab between the walls of the infamous prison Sednaya. Behind the Sun is co-produced by Message Heard and The Syria Campaign, in collaboration with the Association of Detainees and the Missing (ADMSP) and the Syrian Center for Justice and Accountability (SJAC) under its project On the Margins No More. Subscribe to Behind the Sun wherever you get your podcasts. Episodes out weekly. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
As a society, we send close to 100,000 people to prison each year. But what happens to people while they're behind bars? Sally Tilt and Dr Kerensa Hocken are forensic psychologists who work in prisons. Their role is to help people in prison look at the harm they've caused to other people, understand why it happened and figure out how to make changes to prevent further offending after they've been released. In Behind the Crime, they take the time to understand the life of someone who's ended up in prison, and what happened afterwards. In this episode, they talk to 23 year-old Courtney, a mum who received a five-year sentence for her part in a series of armed robberies at the age of 17. Through the course of the conversation, they explore some of the key events in Courtney's life and track some of the threads that led her down a path to prison. At the same time, Sally and Kerensa explain some of the methods they use to reach the core factors that can lead to people harming others – and how they then work with people in prison to prevent further harm from happening in the future. Producer: Andrew Wilkie Editor: Hugh Levinson A BBC Radio Current Affairs and Prison Radio Association co-production for BBC Radio 4 Image: Sally Tilt and Dr Kerensa Hocken. Credit: Christopher Terry/Prison Radio Association
Our new season kicks off with some talk about convention games. Our professors speak with Lurking Fears operator: Mathew McCloud. We might spend a lot of time this episode on running convention games, but the themes we talk about apply to all tabletop RPGs. You can support the Bardic College at https://www.patreon.com/thebardiccollege where we have extra content for our subscribers. Or you can simply click the Support button at the bottom of our episode description. In Behind the GM Screens, two of our Bardic College professors speak with gamemasters from across the spectrum. We talk about their games and campaigns, ask them stupid questions and try and cover some topics that will be of use to all those who like to run tabletop games. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-bardic-college/support
This week we are joined by the one and only, Academy Award winner Paul Hirsch. Paul is the editor of films like Star Wars: A New Hope, Empire Strikes Back, Carrie, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, and MANY more! The guys have a chat with Mr. Hirsch about his rise in the industry and his recently published book A Long Time Ago in a Cutting Room Far Far Away! In Behind the Scenes Jeremy gives us a big update on the Nintendo Documentary (Which is now a Docuseries!) And much more! And in this week's Cutscenes segment the guys discuss the latest developments in The Mandalorian, spoilerrs ahead on this one kiddos! Check out Mediajuice.com for all things Mediajuice and links to all the videos we talked about during today's show. And don't forget to send a screenshot of your 5-star rating and review to MediajuicePodcast@Gmail.com for a free digital copy of Video Games: The Movie, or the docu-series Unlocked: The World of Games Revealed! Produced by Jeremiah Isley, Mediajuice Studios, llc.
Subscribe now and hear new episode every Thursday starting November 12th. It’s no secret that business owners want to receive positive reviews and customers want to have a positive experience. In Behind the Review, Yelp and Entrepreneur dig a little deeper on both accounts. Hosted by Yelp’s Small Business Expert, Emily Washcovick, Behind the Review features conversations with reviewers and business owners about their experiences—whether it was one star or five stars—giving listeners behind-the-scenes insights into what was really going on.
Our pre-Halloween episode is about keeping the mood tense, especially in horror themed games. Our professors speak with Call of Cthulhu Keeper and DM: Melinda Knowlton Fulk. We might spend a lot of time this episode on Call of Cthulhu, but the themes we talk about apply to all tabletop RPGs. You can support the Bardic College at https://www.patreon.com/thebardiccollege where we have extra content for our subscribers. Or you can simply click the Support button at the bottom of our episode description. In Behind the GM Screens, two of our Bardic College professors speak with gamemasters from across the spectrum. We talk about their games and campaigns, ask them stupid questions and try and cover some topics that will be of use to all those who like to run tabletop games. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-bardic-college/support
The Rams and Packers both lost in week 6, so does this mean Seattle is the NFC's best team through six weeks? John Clayton takes a look in Monday's Top Five. Solomon Wilcots of Pro Football Focus joins the show to discuss the haves and have-nots in the NFL. In Behind the Lines, the injuries continue to pile up to key contributors across the league. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In “Behind the Beat,” Passion Project Executive Director Bronte Cook chats with different musical artists about their craft and how they make sense of the world. In Episode 1, she interviews Aaron Rizzo — a singer-songwriter, producer, and engineer from Rochester, New York. He released his first solo album “Blck Tee Shrt” in 2017 and plans to release a new album this winter! You can find his music on Spotify and Apple Music.
Why did the Seahawks waive John Ursua in favor of Penny Hart? Are the Seahawks and Shaquill Griffin getting closer to an extension? John Clayton takes a look in Wednesday's Top Five. What challenges will the Falcons present the Seahawks on Sunday? The Professor takes a listen to what Atlanta Head Coach Dan Quinn had to say about facing Seattle. In Behind the Lines, Clayton examines Von Miller's season-ending injury and Jalen Ramsey's extension. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Pete Carroll is optimistic about Seattle's pass rush even though they didn't add much to it for 2020, so is John Clayton feeling the same way? He discusses in Tuesday's Top Five. Mariners Insider Shannon Drayer dials in to go over Seattle's hot streak and whether they can keep it going. In Behind the Lines, all sorts of extensions are getting handed out across the NFL today, so The Professor keeps you updated on all of them. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In Behind the Bench, journalist Craig Custance sits down for film sessions and candid conversations with some of the hockey world's most notable modern luminaries.
I'm an historical fiction author although it wasn't until I retired that I had the time to write – and I didn't know where to start. It was an article on our reactions when faced with extreme danger and my grandfather's WW1 military record that clicked. In Behind the Clouds two people, who barely tolerate each other, are trapped in Belgium at the start of WW1. Betrayed, they flee for their lives, avoiding capture, witnessing death and atrocities. They reach safety as two different people – to face charges of treason and a woman intent on killing them. Ric Savage, Black Velvet Seductions UK, was enormously helpful during the editing of this book, released in 2015. www.nomadauthors.com/JanSelbourne
From her life as a journalist in Northern Ireland to her first women's fiction book, Claire Allan's publishing journey was punctuated by key life events. In Behind the Bestseller she reveals what made her take that first step into fiction and how she moved from women's fiction to crime. Sam Blake delves into what makes Claire's books bestsellers across multiple platforms and all over the world, and how she comes up with her ideas. Character is crucial in Claire's books - as she digs into her writing process, Sam Blake gets Claire's top tips for bestseller success and unlocks her secrets. Claire Allan is a former journalist, turned bestselling author from Derry in Northern Ireland who graduated with a Masters Degree in Newspaper Journalism from Ulster University in 1999, before starting work as a staff reporter with the Derry Journal (http://www.derryjournal.com/) - covering an array of news from politics to human interest stories. She was the paper's first female columnist in its 200 year history. She also worked for a time as acting news editor. Claire was part of the award winning team that covered the Saville Inquiry into the events of Bloody Sunday, and she covered Derry's year as the first UK City of Culture. She maintains the best part of the job was always meeting 'ordinary people with extraordinary stories to tell'. In 2006, Claire decided to try and fulfil a lifetime ambition to write a novel and spent six months writing 'Rainy Days and Tuesdays' - loosely based on her own experienced of post-natal depression. This was published by Poolbeg Press in Ireland in 2007 and became an instant bestseller. Seven more women's fiction novels followed before Claire decided to leave journalism to concentrate on writing, and also to try her hand at writing psychological thrillers. Ten years after 'Rainy Days and Tuesdays' was written, Claire began to write 'Her Name Was Rose', which was published by Avon Books in 2008. It became a bestseller in the UK, Ireland, Canada, America and Australia. It was followed by Apple of My Eye (Jan, 2019) and 'Forget Me Not' (May, 2019). Her fourth thriller 'The Liars Daughter' is out now.
Domestic oppression…what is that? Did you know that domestic oppression is the seedbed for every other form of abuse that takes place within families and churches? And did you know that the quantity of people who suffer under domestic oppression within the church is staggering in its pervasiveness?In Behind the Veil: Exposing the Evil of Domestic Oppression and Providing Hope, pastor and biblical counselor Warren Lamb pulls back the veil on an evil that has been too long misunderstood and overlooked in Christian circles. Join me as I talk with Pastor Lamb about how to: :•Identify domestic oppression and its sufferers among us;•Become rescuers comforters of the oppressed ;•Confront and, where possible, call to account those who oppress their families; •Provide oppression-free churches for God’s children to thrive in; •Become the safe haven for the oppressed and exploited that Christ intends for it to be. It is high time we effectively partner with Jesus Christ to “proclaim release to the captives…and to set free those who are oppressed.” (Luke 4:18b) You can call in at 929-477-1965 and press 1 to be live on air. Or, click on the link here: http://tobtr.com/s/11389221.
Thomas Lerooy kennen we al van zijn sculpturen. In Behind the Curtain toont hij voor het eerst ook dat hij kan schilderen. Theatercollectief STAN waagt zich met ‘Que sera sera’ aan een portret van cinema-grootmeesters Hitchcock, Truffaut en Godard. Damiaan de Schrijver komt toelichten. En Christophe Vekeman las ‘Het leven anno nu’, van de negentiende-eeuwse auteur Anthony Trollope. Wat blijkt: fraude en opportunisme zijn van alle tijden.
In this episode, Adam is back! Drew and Adam quickly discuss some things from around the league including some milestones and this play: https://deadspin.com/dexter-fowler-kindly-helps-noah-syndergaard-hit-his-fir-1834200772. Later, Adam puts walks and the weather under the microscope to see if there is any rough correlation with walks and stadium temperature. In Behind enemy lines, Drew and Adam are far too optimistic, but are unable to control themselves. Penultimately, Drew presents his idea for a new stat called "Keeping it Close" or KIC, which serves to benefit relief pitchers who pitch well in close games when they are behind. Finally, Drew sticks up for Brandon Lowe, 2B for the Rays. KIC leaders (1970-Present) First iteration https://www.baseball-reference.com/tiny/ljS0k KIC leaders (1970-Present) Final iteration https://www.baseball-reference.com/tiny/aHMlr
Today in the "Green Room" Jeremy welcomes Ryan Ramirez (a.k.a. Fchamp), EVO World Champion. They chat about his origin story, the state of esports, and much more! In "Behind the Curtain" Jeremy and Jeremiah wrap up "The Talent" series with a discussion about post-production and ADRs (a.k.a. Automated Dialogue Recordings). And in this week's "Cutscene" the guys discuss the state of Star Wars and the upcoming Solo film! This week's Button Masher's Poll: Which of the lesser known bounty hunters do you want to see in Solo? Dengar IG-88 Zuckus Bossk Head over to the Mediajuice twitter page to cast your vote! Produced by Jeremiah Isley, Mediajuice Studios, LLC.
Score: The Podcast welcomes Tina Guo, a virtuoso cellist who has played on more than 50 Hollywood film scores including Inception, Wonder Woman, Dunkirk, the Fast & Furious series, Sherlock Holmes, and many of the Marvel and DC films. She is also a featured artist on Hans Zimmer’s international concert tour, and current nominee for Female Artist of the Year by the 2018 Classic BRIT Awards, which celebrate the best of classical and crossover musicians for her recent solo album “Game On!” Robert, Kenny and Matt begin the show with an update on the new Leonard Bernstein biopic project Steven Spielberg has been secretly working on, and Bradley Cooper coming on to star and direct it, as well as the rival biopic on Bernstein recently announced starring Jake Gyllenhaal. Plus, we talk through why Leonard Bernstein’s life is such an interesting subject for biopics. Then Tina Guo comes on to discuss how she connected with Hans Zimmer for the ‘Hans Zimmer Live” international tour, and how she financed her own music video which eventually led to a meeting with Hans and Guy Ritchie on Sherlock Holmes, and then composer John Debney for Iron Man 2. In Behind the Score, composers Trevor Rabin, Lorne Balfe and Bear McCreary talks about one of LA’s unique landmarks: Billboards advertising films that aren’t finished yet. With tight schedules and heavy deadline pressure, the billboards literally loom over many composers in Hollywood. Then, Tina plugs in her electric cello “White Walker” to talk about her album “Game On!” and play some recognizable video game themes in a Score: The Podcast musical first. Lastly, Tina joins the guys to play Name That Score, where you — yes, you! — could be a winner! This week’s theme: Movies with Strong Female Leads. EPISODE NOTES, PICTURES & VIDEOS: https://www.score-movie.com/podcast FOLLOW @ScoreThePodcast http://twitter.com/ScoreThePodcast Hosts: Robert Kraft and Kenny Holmes. Executive Producer: Matt Schrader. Copyright 2018 Epicleff Media
Score: The Podcast welcomes Steve Jablonsky, award-winning composer of Michael Bay films such as the Transformers film franchise, The Island and Pain & Gain; Peter Berg films such as Battleship, Lone Survivor and Deepwater Horizon; Keanu; Netflix's Game Over, Man; and the upcoming Dwayne Johnson summer blockbuster Skyscraper. He is also the composer of television shows such as Desperate Housewives and video games including Gears of War: Judgment, Prince of Persia: The Forgotten Sands, The Sims 3 and Transformers: The Game. Robert and Kenny begin the show discussing Ready Player One and how Alan Silvestri's score samples iconic music from the 1980s, true to the story's nostalgic subject matter. Silvestri is also scoring Avengers: Infinity War which releases this Friday. Robert shares a story about a mistake he made with Ennio Morricone and Warren Beatty while recording a score with a full orchestra in Rome. Steve Jablonsky joins to talk about his work with Michael Bay on five Transformers films, The Island and Pain & Gain — and how Bay communicates his elaborate visual style and explosions, sometimes before the special effects even exist. In Behind the Score, Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross discuss how David Fincher led to a thriving career scoring films after being in the recording and live performance industry with Nine Inch Nails. Then Steve talks about the first cue with his name on it — "The Jablonsky Variations" from Tears of the Sun — and how Hans realized then Steve was destined to become a great film composer in his own right. And how films "based on a true story" or with real-life characters mean his music has to find the different kind of balance. Lastly, Steve and the guys play a sports movie edition of the game “Name That Score,” where you — yes, you — can be a winner! Plus a story about Steve's first meeting with the great John Williams. EPISODE NOTES, PICTURES & VIDEOS: https://www.score-movie.com/podcast FOLLOW @ScoreThePodcast http://twitter.com/ScoreThePodcast Hosts: Robert Kraft and Kenny Holmes. Executive Producer: Matt Schrader. Copyright 2018 Epicleff Media
Score: The Podcast welcomes Brian Tyler, award-winning composer of the Fast and Furious and Marvel films, Now You See Me, and the upcoming film Crazy Rich Asians, plus television shows like Hawaii Five-0 and Scorpion and video game franchises Call of Duty, Assassin's Creed Black Flag and Need For Speed. Brian shares a story about first meeting Robert at Fox and it leading to his film career. Robert and Kenny begin the show discussing how Marvel and Black Panther films are evolving the sound of Disney, and talk about "Hans Zimmer Live" documentary now on Netflix. In "Behind the Score," Rachel Portman talks about her path in an industry made up of mostly men. The first female Oscar-winning composer talks about how determination helped her through musical training at an all-boys school in London. Finally, the team and Brian play a "robots and AI" themed edition of the game "Name That Score," where you — yes, you — can be a winner! EPISODE NOTES, PICTURES & VIDEOS: https://www.score-movie.com/podcast FOLLOW @ScoreThePodcast http://twitter.com/ScoreThePodcast Hosts: Robert Kraft and Kenny Holmes. Executive Producer: Matt Schrader. Copyright 2018 Epicleff Media
Score: The Podcast welcomes James Newton Howard, Oscar-nominated and Grammy Award-winning composer of films including Pretty Woman, The Fugitive, The Sixth Sense, Treasure Planet, Signs, The Village, King Kong, Blood Diamond, Michael Clayton, Defiance, Batman Begins & The Dark Knight, The Hunger Games series, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them and most recently Red Sparrow. Robert and Kenny begin the show discussing the score-only release of Star Wars: The Last Jedi, which is a major indicator that audiences are expressing more interest than ever in the music of entertainment. Robert and Kenny discuss how the music of "Atlanta" and "The Chi" are evolving hip hop in music. James Newton Howard talks about working with M. Night Shyamalan on "Signs," Hans Zimmer on Batman Begins and The Dark Knight and scoring Peter Jackson's King Kong via video conference in four and a half weeks. In "Behind the Score," Hans Zimmer talks about the importance of capturing the first few frames of a movie to set its musical tone. Lastly, the guys play a Danny Elfman-themed edition of the game "Name That Score," where you — yes, you — can be a winner! EPISODE NOTES, PICTURES & VIDEOS: https://www.score-movie.com/podcast FOLLOW @ScoreThePodcast http://twitter.com/ScoreThePodcast Hosts: Robert Kraft and Kenny Holmes. Executive Producer: Matt Schrader. Copyright 2018 Epicleff Media.
Score: The Podcast welcomes Harry Gregson-Williams, award-winning composer of epic films including The Martian, Chronicles of Narnia, The Town, Shrek, Prometheus, Kingdom of Heaven, Man On Fire, The Rock, Antz and Enemy of the State. Robert and Kenny begin the show discussing John Williams' donation of his entire sketchbook and score library to the Juilliard School of Music, and Steven Spielberg's rumored plans to direct a biopic about the great composer Leonard Bernstein. In "Behind the Score," Randy Newman, David Newman and Quincy Jones reflect on the birth of modern film scoring and the contributions made by the incomparable composer Alfred Newman, and the team and Harry play a superhero-themed edition of the game "Name That Score," where you — yes, you — can be a winner! EPISODE NOTES, PICTURES & VIDEOS: https://www.score-movie.com/podcast FOLLOW @ScoreThePodcast http://twitter.com/ScoreThePodcast Hosts: Robert Kraft and Kenny Holmes. Executive Producer: Matt Schrader. Copyright 2018 Epicleff Media.
Since the 1990s, vast sums of money and time have been invested in training and resources to hold elections around the world, including in parts of Southeast Asia. The conventional wisdom is that elections either enable or consolidate democracy. Where they do not have either of these effects, the reasoning goes, it’s because the design of elections is not yet right, or conditions in which they have been held are not yet sufficiently matured as to make democracy possible. In Behind the Facade: Elections under Authoritarianism in Southeast Asia (SUNY Press, 2016), Lee Morgenbesser departs from these positions and seeks to explain why and how dictators also hold elections. Through close comparative study of Cambodia, Myanmar, and Singapore, Morgenbesser argues that even when held competitively, elections can be pliable instruments for dictators to obtain information, manage subordinates, distribute largesse and claim legitimacy. Lee Morgenbesser joins New Books in Southeast Asian Studies to talk about the functions of elections under authoritarian government in Southeast Asia (tabulated here), the targets of electoral functions (tabulated here), and the relevance of the region for study of authoritarian electoral politics elsewhere. You may also be interested in: –Dan Slater, Ordering Power: Contentious Politics and Authoritarian Leviathans in Southeast Asia –Erik Ching, Authoritarian El Salvador: Politics and the Origins of the Military Regimes, 1880-1940 Nick Cheesman is a fellow at the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University. He can be reached at nick.cheesman@anu.edu.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Since the 1990s, vast sums of money and time have been invested in training and resources to hold elections around the world, including in parts of Southeast Asia. The conventional wisdom is that elections either enable or consolidate democracy. Where they do not have either of these effects, the reasoning goes, it’s because the design of elections is not yet right, or conditions in which they have been held are not yet sufficiently matured as to make democracy possible. In Behind the Facade: Elections under Authoritarianism in Southeast Asia (SUNY Press, 2016), Lee Morgenbesser departs from these positions and seeks to explain why and how dictators also hold elections. Through close comparative study of Cambodia, Myanmar, and Singapore, Morgenbesser argues that even when held competitively, elections can be pliable instruments for dictators to obtain information, manage subordinates, distribute largesse and claim legitimacy. Lee Morgenbesser joins New Books in Southeast Asian Studies to talk about the functions of elections under authoritarian government in Southeast Asia (tabulated here), the targets of electoral functions (tabulated here), and the relevance of the region for study of authoritarian electoral politics elsewhere. You may also be interested in: –Dan Slater, Ordering Power: Contentious Politics and Authoritarian Leviathans in Southeast Asia –Erik Ching, Authoritarian El Salvador: Politics and the Origins of the Military Regimes, 1880-1940 Nick Cheesman is a fellow at the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University. He can be reached at nick.cheesman@anu.edu.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Since the 1990s, vast sums of money and time have been invested in training and resources to hold elections around the world, including in parts of Southeast Asia. The conventional wisdom is that elections either enable or consolidate democracy. Where they do not have either of these effects, the reasoning goes, it’s because the design of elections is not yet right, or conditions in which they have been held are not yet sufficiently matured as to make democracy possible. In Behind the Facade: Elections under Authoritarianism in Southeast Asia (SUNY Press, 2016), Lee Morgenbesser departs from these positions and seeks to explain why and how dictators also hold elections. Through close comparative study of Cambodia, Myanmar, and Singapore, Morgenbesser argues that even when held competitively, elections can be pliable instruments for dictators to obtain information, manage subordinates, distribute largesse and claim legitimacy. Lee Morgenbesser joins New Books in Southeast Asian Studies to talk about the functions of elections under authoritarian government in Southeast Asia (tabulated here), the targets of electoral functions (tabulated here), and the relevance of the region for study of authoritarian electoral politics elsewhere. You may also be interested in: –Dan Slater, Ordering Power: Contentious Politics and Authoritarian Leviathans in Southeast Asia –Erik Ching, Authoritarian El Salvador: Politics and the Origins of the Military Regimes, 1880-1940 Nick Cheesman is a fellow at the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University. He can be reached at nick.cheesman@anu.edu.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Since the 1990s, vast sums of money and time have been invested in training and resources to hold elections around the world, including in parts of Southeast Asia. The conventional wisdom is that elections either enable or consolidate democracy. Where they do not have either of these effects, the reasoning goes, it’s because the design of elections is not yet right, or conditions in which they have been held are not yet sufficiently matured as to make democracy possible. In Behind the Facade: Elections under Authoritarianism in Southeast Asia (SUNY Press, 2016), Lee Morgenbesser departs from these positions and seeks to explain why and how dictators also hold elections. Through close comparative study of Cambodia, Myanmar, and Singapore, Morgenbesser argues that even when held competitively, elections can be pliable instruments for dictators to obtain information, manage subordinates, distribute largesse and claim legitimacy. Lee Morgenbesser joins New Books in Southeast Asian Studies to talk about the functions of elections under authoritarian government in Southeast Asia (tabulated here), the targets of electoral functions (tabulated here), and the relevance of the region for study of authoritarian electoral politics elsewhere. You may also be interested in: –Dan Slater, Ordering Power: Contentious Politics and Authoritarian Leviathans in Southeast Asia –Erik Ching, Authoritarian El Salvador: Politics and the Origins of the Military Regimes, 1880-1940 Nick Cheesman is a fellow at the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University. He can be reached at nick.cheesman@anu.edu.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
From the early days of the BBC in 1922, women were everywhere in the broadcasting company's offices. They were absent, however, argues Dr. Kate Murphy from most of the historiography devoted to this illustrious institution. In this vibrant monograph, Murphy sets out to find these hidden female figures. A former producer of the long-running program Woman's Hour and currently a Senior Lecturer at Bournemouth University in the UK, Murphy is cognizant both of women's contribution to the BBC and of the challenges they face working there. In Behind the Wireless: A History of Women at the BBC (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), Murphy delivers on the titles promises. First, she offers a detailed portrait of the BBC in the interwar period as a unique workplace complete with medical services, a subsidized canteen, and a country-club for its workers. She demonstrates why the fact that the company was created around on a new technology made it especially suitable for women in general, and ambitious ones in particular. Second, she illuminates the daily routines, challenges and opportunities for the scores of female typists, secretaries, clerks and telephone-operators who labored for the company. Murphy supplements this institutional history with four case studies of outstanding women, who rose to the top echelons of the organization. These three components make for a fascinating read. The book will complement the scholarship about the BBC but also add to the current exploration of the participation of women in the workforce in the interwar period. I expect that the book will be of great interest for scholars of media, gender, modern Britain and labor relations. It is a wonderful example of how to bring all these concerns into conversation. Tal Zalmanovich is a historian of modern Britain and media. She's currently researching the Anti-Apartheid Movement in Britain, and the impact its activists had on domestic politics in Britain. Prior to being an academic, Tal was a journalist. Podcasting is the fruitful convergence of the two. You can contact Tal at tal.zalmanovich@mail.huji.ac.il Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
From the early days of the BBC in 1922, women were everywhere in the broadcasting company’s offices. They were absent, however, argues Dr. Kate Murphy from most of the historiography devoted to this illustrious institution. In this vibrant monograph, Murphy sets out to find these hidden female figures. A former producer of the long-running program Woman’s Hour and currently a Senior Lecturer at Bournemouth University in the UK, Murphy is cognizant both of women’s contribution to the BBC and of the challenges they face working there. In Behind the Wireless: A History of Women at the BBC (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), Murphy delivers on the titles promises. First, she offers a detailed portrait of the BBC in the interwar period as a unique workplace complete with medical services, a subsidized canteen, and a country-club for its workers. She demonstrates why the fact that the company was created around on a new technology made it especially suitable for women in general, and ambitious ones in particular. Second, she illuminates the daily routines, challenges and opportunities for the scores of female typists, secretaries, clerks and telephone-operators who labored for the company. Murphy supplements this institutional history with four case studies of outstanding women, who rose to the top echelons of the organization. These three components make for a fascinating read. The book will complement the scholarship about the BBC but also add to the current exploration of the participation of women in the workforce in the interwar period. I expect that the book will be of great interest for scholars of media, gender, modern Britain and labor relations. It is a wonderful example of how to bring all these concerns into conversation. Tal Zalmanovich is a historian of modern Britain and media. She’s currently researching the Anti-Apartheid Movement in Britain, and the impact its activists had on domestic politics in Britain. Prior to being an academic, Tal was a journalist. Podcasting is the fruitful convergence of the two. You can contact Tal at tal.zalmanovich@mail.huji.ac.il Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
From the early days of the BBC in 1922, women were everywhere in the broadcasting company’s offices. They were absent, however, argues Dr. Kate Murphy from most of the historiography devoted to this illustrious institution. In this vibrant monograph, Murphy sets out to find these hidden female figures. A former producer of the long-running program Woman’s Hour and currently a Senior Lecturer at Bournemouth University in the UK, Murphy is cognizant both of women’s contribution to the BBC and of the challenges they face working there. In Behind the Wireless: A History of Women at the BBC (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), Murphy delivers on the titles promises. First, she offers a detailed portrait of the BBC in the interwar period as a unique workplace complete with medical services, a subsidized canteen, and a country-club for its workers. She demonstrates why the fact that the company was created around on a new technology made it especially suitable for women in general, and ambitious ones in particular. Second, she illuminates the daily routines, challenges and opportunities for the scores of female typists, secretaries, clerks and telephone-operators who labored for the company. Murphy supplements this institutional history with four case studies of outstanding women, who rose to the top echelons of the organization. These three components make for a fascinating read. The book will complement the scholarship about the BBC but also add to the current exploration of the participation of women in the workforce in the interwar period. I expect that the book will be of great interest for scholars of media, gender, modern Britain and labor relations. It is a wonderful example of how to bring all these concerns into conversation. Tal Zalmanovich is a historian of modern Britain and media. She’s currently researching the Anti-Apartheid Movement in Britain, and the impact its activists had on domestic politics in Britain. Prior to being an academic, Tal was a journalist. Podcasting is the fruitful convergence of the two. You can contact Tal at tal.zalmanovich@mail.huji.ac.il Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
From the early days of the BBC in 1922, women were everywhere in the broadcasting company’s offices. They were absent, however, argues Dr. Kate Murphy from most of the historiography devoted to this illustrious institution. In this vibrant monograph, Murphy sets out to find these hidden female figures. A former producer of the long-running program Woman’s Hour and currently a Senior Lecturer at Bournemouth University in the UK, Murphy is cognizant both of women’s contribution to the BBC and of the challenges they face working there. In Behind the Wireless: A History of Women at the BBC (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), Murphy delivers on the titles promises. First, she offers a detailed portrait of the BBC in the interwar period as a unique workplace complete with medical services, a subsidized canteen, and a country-club for its workers. She demonstrates why the fact that the company was created around on a new technology made it especially suitable for women in general, and ambitious ones in particular. Second, she illuminates the daily routines, challenges and opportunities for the scores of female typists, secretaries, clerks and telephone-operators who labored for the company. Murphy supplements this institutional history with four case studies of outstanding women, who rose to the top echelons of the organization. These three components make for a fascinating read. The book will complement the scholarship about the BBC but also add to the current exploration of the participation of women in the workforce in the interwar period. I expect that the book will be of great interest for scholars of media, gender, modern Britain and labor relations. It is a wonderful example of how to bring all these concerns into conversation. Tal Zalmanovich is a historian of modern Britain and media. She’s currently researching the Anti-Apartheid Movement in Britain, and the impact its activists had on domestic politics in Britain. Prior to being an academic, Tal was a journalist. Podcasting is the fruitful convergence of the two. You can contact Tal at tal.zalmanovich@mail.huji.ac.il Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
From the early days of the BBC in 1922, women were everywhere in the broadcasting company’s offices. They were absent, however, argues Dr. Kate Murphy from most of the historiography devoted to this illustrious institution. In this vibrant monograph, Murphy sets out to find these hidden female figures. A former producer of the long-running program Woman’s Hour and currently a Senior Lecturer at Bournemouth University in the UK, Murphy is cognizant both of women’s contribution to the BBC and of the challenges they face working there. In Behind the Wireless: A History of Women at the BBC (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), Murphy delivers on the titles promises. First, she offers a detailed portrait of the BBC in the interwar period as a unique workplace complete with medical services, a subsidized canteen, and a country-club for its workers. She demonstrates why the fact that the company was created around on a new technology made it especially suitable for women in general, and ambitious ones in particular. Second, she illuminates the daily routines, challenges and opportunities for the scores of female typists, secretaries, clerks and telephone-operators who labored for the company. Murphy supplements this institutional history with four case studies of outstanding women, who rose to the top echelons of the organization. These three components make for a fascinating read. The book will complement the scholarship about the BBC but also add to the current exploration of the participation of women in the workforce in the interwar period. I expect that the book will be of great interest for scholars of media, gender, modern Britain and labor relations. It is a wonderful example of how to bring all these concerns into conversation. Tal Zalmanovich is a historian of modern Britain and media. She’s currently researching the Anti-Apartheid Movement in Britain, and the impact its activists had on domestic politics in Britain. Prior to being an academic, Tal was a journalist. Podcasting is the fruitful convergence of the two. You can contact Tal at tal.zalmanovich@mail.huji.ac.il Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
From the early days of the BBC in 1922, women were everywhere in the broadcasting company’s offices. They were absent, however, argues Dr. Kate Murphy from most of the historiography devoted to this illustrious institution. In this vibrant monograph, Murphy sets out to find these hidden female figures. A former producer of the long-running program Woman’s Hour and currently a Senior Lecturer at Bournemouth University in the UK, Murphy is cognizant both of women’s contribution to the BBC and of the challenges they face working there. In Behind the Wireless: A History of Women at the BBC (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), Murphy delivers on the titles promises. First, she offers a detailed portrait of the BBC in the interwar period as a unique workplace complete with medical services, a subsidized canteen, and a country-club for its workers. She demonstrates why the fact that the company was created around on a new technology made it especially suitable for women in general, and ambitious ones in particular. Second, she illuminates the daily routines, challenges and opportunities for the scores of female typists, secretaries, clerks and telephone-operators who labored for the company. Murphy supplements this institutional history with four case studies of outstanding women, who rose to the top echelons of the organization. These three components make for a fascinating read. The book will complement the scholarship about the BBC but also add to the current exploration of the participation of women in the workforce in the interwar period. I expect that the book will be of great interest for scholars of media, gender, modern Britain and labor relations. It is a wonderful example of how to bring all these concerns into conversation. Tal Zalmanovich is a historian of modern Britain and media. She’s currently researching the Anti-Apartheid Movement in Britain, and the impact its activists had on domestic politics in Britain. Prior to being an academic, Tal was a journalist. Podcasting is the fruitful convergence of the two. You can contact Tal at tal.zalmanovich@mail.huji.ac.il Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
From the early days of the BBC in 1922, women were everywhere in the broadcasting company’s offices. They were absent, however, argues Dr. Kate Murphy from most of the historiography devoted to this illustrious institution. In this vibrant monograph, Murphy sets out to find these hidden female figures. A former producer of the long-running program Woman’s Hour and currently a Senior Lecturer at Bournemouth University in the UK, Murphy is cognizant both of women’s contribution to the BBC and of the challenges they face working there. In Behind the Wireless: A History of Women at the BBC (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), Murphy delivers on the titles promises. First, she offers a detailed portrait of the BBC in the interwar period as a unique workplace complete with medical services, a subsidized canteen, and a country-club for its workers. She demonstrates why the fact that the company was created around on a new technology made it especially suitable for women in general, and ambitious ones in particular. Second, she illuminates the daily routines, challenges and opportunities for the scores of female typists, secretaries, clerks and telephone-operators who labored for the company. Murphy supplements this institutional history with four case studies of outstanding women, who rose to the top echelons of the organization. These three components make for a fascinating read. The book will complement the scholarship about the BBC but also add to the current exploration of the participation of women in the workforce in the interwar period. I expect that the book will be of great interest for scholars of media, gender, modern Britain and labor relations. It is a wonderful example of how to bring all these concerns into conversation. Tal Zalmanovich is a historian of modern Britain and media. She’s currently researching the Anti-Apartheid Movement in Britain, and the impact its activists had on domestic politics in Britain. Prior to being an academic, Tal was a journalist. Podcasting is the fruitful convergence of the two. You can contact Tal at tal.zalmanovich@mail.huji.ac.il Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Brainy Part starts at 24:25 Redwood Curtain starts at 32:55 Margaret talks about trying to find the perfects cotton yarn for socks and Catherine tells of her adventures with the Fantasy Red Cardi. Margaret explains auditory learning from the VAK Learning style perspective and how we use all our senses when we are learning. In Behind the Redwood Curtain, Catherine celebrates the California Poppy.
In Behind the News, host, Doug Henwood, covers the worlds of economics and politics and their complex interactions, from the local to the global. The post Behind the News – March 26, 2015 appeared first on KPFA.
Brainy stuff starts at 22:30 Behind the Redwood Curtain begins at 39:00 Catherine talks about mystery knitalongs, both Laura Aylor's mystery shawl and Josh Ryks' Scarfie Shenanigans. Margaret describes her learning on three pairs of children's socks including two zebra socks and one generic toe up. In the Brainy section, Catherine explains some of the work of Betsan Corkhill at Stitchlinks about how knitting is therapuetic in a number of ways for a number of conditions. In Behind the Redwood Curtain, Catherine shares information about how our climate is ideal for artisan goat cheese. Margaret offers a knitting tip about how getting stitch markers to closely match the size of the needle will help to prevent those yarn overs from slipping under the markers.
Brainy stuff starts at 28.25 and Behind the Redwood Curtain begins at 44:50. Catherine talks about finishing her PANEM Katniss Cowl Wrap by Dahlia in Bloom and the Two-toned Tawashi by Maryann Walsh. Margaret talked about knitted and crocheted jewelry: Ribband by Laura Nelkin, Crocheted Wrap Around Bracelet by Yuli Nilssen, Kaitlyn Necklace Rose by Javori Designs, and the Gatsby Necklace by Shaina Bilow. Catherine lays the foundation for understanding brain chemicals that make us happy and how knitting influences that. She talks about Dr. Barry Jacoibs, EMDR, Betsman Corkhill and Stitchline. In Behind the Redwood Curtain, Margaret talks about the Mad River (the California one.) And in the knitting tip, Margaret talks about flipping a blocking board upright to save space.
Catherine and Margaret talk about what their knitting is teaching them. For Margaret it is the Kirklees sock and the Hermione's Everyday Sock. For Catherine it is knitting a sweater for a theatre production. (No pattern.) In Behind the Redwood Curtain, they discuss the annual Fall North Country Fair and in the Brainy Part, Margaret introduces the VAK Learning Style. Catherine offers a knitting tip about how gauge changes throughout a project.
Brainy part at 18.60 minutes. Catherine talks about what she is learning from casting on Fabrege'. Margaret talks about her infatuation with Triplets Scarf. Catherine contines to talk about Flow and the conditions at least one psychologist believes is necessary to achieve it. In Behind the Redwood Curtain Catherine talks about Banana Slugs and in Knitting Tips she talks about gauge -- everyone's favorite subject
The history of modern China is bound up with that of student politics. In Behind the Gate: Inventing Students in Beijing (Columbia University Press, 2010), Fabio Lanza offers a masterfully researched, elegantly written, and thoughtful consideration of the emergence of “students” as a category in twentieth-century China. Urging us to...
The history of modern China is bound up with that of student politics. In Behind the Gate: Inventing Students in Beijing (Columbia University Press, 2010), Fabio Lanza offers a masterfully researched, elegantly written, and thoughtful consideration of the emergence of “students” as a category in twentieth-century China. Urging us to move away from a kind of historical view that takes the trans-historical existence of categories (like “students”), places (like cities or universities), and communities for granted, Lanza argues that it was only after and as a result of the May Fourth Movement and the events of 1919 that “students” emerged as a coherent notion connected with the specific spaces of the city of Beijing, Beijing University, and Tiananmen Square. The parts of the book successively introduce different sorts of space that were both produced by and helped generate the history that unfolds here, including everyday lived spaces, intellectual spaces, and political and social spaces. Lanza argues that new forms of everyday, lived practice in these spaces allowed student activism to emerge in the gaps where politics was separated from the state, and that the category of “students” as a signifier of a politics outside the state ended only with the government intervention ending the Red Guards in the late 1960s. In the course of this wonderfully readable history, we are offered glimpses into the classrooms and dorms of Beijing University, the bodily practices of early Beida students, and the streets of early twentieth-century Beijing. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The history of modern China is bound up with that of student politics. In Behind the Gate: Inventing Students in Beijing (Columbia University Press, 2010), Fabio Lanza offers a masterfully researched, elegantly written, and thoughtful consideration of the emergence of “students” as a category in twentieth-century China. Urging us to... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The history of modern China is bound up with that of student politics. In Behind the Gate: Inventing Students in Beijing (Columbia University Press, 2010), Fabio Lanza offers a masterfully researched, elegantly written, and thoughtful consideration of the emergence of “students” as a category in twentieth-century China. Urging us to move away from a kind of historical view that takes the trans-historical existence of categories (like “students”), places (like cities or universities), and communities for granted, Lanza argues that it was only after and as a result of the May Fourth Movement and the events of 1919 that “students” emerged as a coherent notion connected with the specific spaces of the city of Beijing, Beijing University, and Tiananmen Square. The parts of the book successively introduce different sorts of space that were both produced by and helped generate the history that unfolds here, including everyday lived spaces, intellectual spaces, and political and social spaces. Lanza argues that new forms of everyday, lived practice in these spaces allowed student activism to emerge in the gaps where politics was separated from the state, and that the category of “students” as a signifier of a politics outside the state ended only with the government intervention ending the Red Guards in the late 1960s. In the course of this wonderfully readable history, we are offered glimpses into the classrooms and dorms of Beijing University, the bodily practices of early Beida students, and the streets of early twentieth-century Beijing. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The history of modern China is bound up with that of student politics. In Behind the Gate: Inventing Students in Beijing (Columbia University Press, 2010), Fabio Lanza offers a masterfully researched, elegantly written, and thoughtful consideration of the emergence of “students” as a category in twentieth-century China. Urging us to move away from a kind of historical view that takes the trans-historical existence of categories (like “students”), places (like cities or universities), and communities for granted, Lanza argues that it was only after and as a result of the May Fourth Movement and the events of 1919 that “students” emerged as a coherent notion connected with the specific spaces of the city of Beijing, Beijing University, and Tiananmen Square. The parts of the book successively introduce different sorts of space that were both produced by and helped generate the history that unfolds here, including everyday lived spaces, intellectual spaces, and political and social spaces. Lanza argues that new forms of everyday, lived practice in these spaces allowed student activism to emerge in the gaps where politics was separated from the state, and that the category of “students” as a signifier of a politics outside the state ended only with the government intervention ending the Red Guards in the late 1960s. In the course of this wonderfully readable history, we are offered glimpses into the classrooms and dorms of Beijing University, the bodily practices of early Beida students, and the streets of early twentieth-century Beijing. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices