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Pamela Escobar talks with Jennifer Moxley and Shannon Walker, from the Charlotte non-profit She Dreams In Color, a local organization dedicated to providing mental health services to marginalized women. Recorded at SHARE Charlotte's Giving Tuesday event on November 26, 2023.
Jennifer's website: https://www.sunshinemedianetwork.com/Timestamps1:58 - Jenn’s journey into entrepreneurship13:25 - The key steps for helping small businesses tell their stories. 1st step - understand your "Who"14:15 - Want to get good at telling people’s stories? be the “idiot” who asks the questions16:36 - 2nd step - Have confidence17:43 - 3rd step - Figure out the stereotypes you’re up against - people love to put you in categories19:44 - Success from big projects & fortune 500 companies that small businesses owners can learn fromLesson 1: It takes a long time to “turn the ship” with a big company. Sometimes small business are too quick to abandon an effort because it’s not working yet21:57 - Lesson 2: you can’t do everything, don’t be afraid to outsource 23:41 - Mistakes small business make in the PR, media and Marketing strategies25:45 - Why your “Why” isn’t enough - Finding your "Who"27:50 - The impact that Jenn sees investment crowdfunding having as a former member of a small community where it was used (Albemarle, NC)28:37 - What Jenn loves about local investing29:41 - Small business need to lean into what they’re good at rather than try to be like big corporations30:49 - Communities have a story - the businesses we support shape that story33:55 Things Jenn has learned about local investing- Go deep instead of wide- Find out the who of the business owner
Enmudecieron los objetos. Hasta el viejo Sr. Unicornio se quedó sin palabras, a pesar de sus labios pintados de carmín. Las cosas habituadas al vacío persisten en su fría agitación. Y, así, la ráfaga de billetes en torno del silencio central todavía parece de un oropel caritativo y brilla con el consuelo de la aflicción, la dicha de atrasarse en un pago es tanto más dichosa que otras dichas. Han crecido canciones que no son como un virus en esta temporada de registros escasos, resuenan con un eco en un largo reposo y abandonan la razón y sus conflictos a su propio desconcierto. Las cosas no podrían ser peores, o tal vez sí, podríamos resistirnos o, complacientes, argumentar contra la resistencia, ningún curso de acción pondría en riesgo el cambio. Si bien yacemos junto a la fría tapia del jardín y suspiramos exquisitamente, vendrá, libre tal vez de nuestra obligación pero obligada al fin. Es casi Navidad, la nieve cubre el suelo y cae, los pájaros sedientos nos abrieron las manos otra vez: a pesar del cansancio del ritual y sus preparativos, decoramos la casa una vez más, recreamos los fines de hábitos que hace mucho se volvieron anticuados, rectificamos la apatía violenta que nos ata a los amigos. ¿Cuál es el propósito? ¿Qué mentira se oculta adentro de un adorno, en un bollito de pañuelos de papel, apretados adentro de una caja? Una idea antigua perversamente sometida a servicio de lo nuevo hace un raro comercio de este frío cariño envuelto en cuentos infantiles, rédito de esperanza que es producto de la afásica dicción del corazón. Y si resulta falsa, al menos el trabajo diario se verá renovado tras el ocio. El sibarita que repite “ama a tu prójimo” no causa daño, y la triste medida de Tennyson de años desde la última vez que vimos a nuestro amigo puede hacernos pensar en una pérdida que se reduce de un diciembre al próximo, un consuelo y un recordatorio de que en el peor de los casos, no somos, de este lado, nada, y no corremos ningún riesgo en combatir el sentimiento sin poder siquiera cortárnoslo del pecho, en una rara penitencia por este torpe mundo; en dividir la voluntad en dos, en decir la verdad, en temer la derrota, etcétera. Las cosas que arruinaron los pensamientos han cumplido su tarea de salvaguardar el sentimiento, a pesar de que ahora sabemos que no fue para nosotros ni por amor al arte que montamos la escena, sino por un deber traspapelado de dar forma –una mesa, unos moños, un conjunto de reglas–, de ajustar el amor de un hogar iracundo, pero no pienses que nacimos para ser idiotas ni nos criaron para una felicidad tan desconsiderada como falsa, considerando la cautela de nuestro tiempo y la amabilidad de tu rebenque siempre nos ha costado decir que sí.
Welcome to the School PR Drive Time podcast brought to you by the North Carolina School Public Relations Association. This podcast brings relevant and unique insight into the world of school public relations. Join co-hosts Stacia Harris and Ellen Boyd as we explore the power of storytelling with our guest Jennifer Moxley. Jennifer is the owner and founder of Sunshine Media Network based in Charlotte. Jennifer Moxley's media training, crisis management and storymaking have helped at companies such as Ferrari, Duke Energy, and Marriott, but she spends most of her time working with women and minority entrepreneurs and experts so their stories are told and heard on national platforms. For education clients she has done video projects, media training and, during Covid, she's helped educators set up their home classrooms because better video means increased student engagement. www.sunshinemedianetwork.com or on IG @sunshinemedianetwork Don't forget to follow NCSPRA on social media: @NCSPRA Music: "Hip Jazz," Bensound.com
In this special (slightly extended) Christmas episode, The Rev. Jennifer Moxley tells a true story — a story of surprise and hope and love in the midst of war. This is what happens when Christmas breaks in. Jennifer is the brains behind The Clergy Collar Project. For more information about The Local Church, visit our website. We're also posting good stuff on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, too. Feedback? Questions? Comments? We'd love to hear it. Email Brent at brent@thelocalchurchpbo.org. Want to invest in what God's doing through The Local Church and help support these podcasting efforts? Give online here.
Halloween is this week, so we're talking about masks and hiding and vulnerability and Halloween costumes. What does it look like for us and what might it mean for our lives to risk relationship, take off our masks and be authentic with God and one another? Special thanks to the Rev. Jennifer Moxley for her participation in this week's episode. Jennifer is Associate Pastor at The Fun Church in Sikeston, MO. She's also the creative force behind @clergycollarproject on Instagram. Scripture referenced: John 3:1-21 Here’s Brené Brown’s TED Talk on shame and vulnerability. For more information about The Local Church, visit our website. We're also posting good stuff on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, too. Local Tables are where the magic happens. Find yours here. Feedback? Questions? Comments? We'd love to hear it. Email Brent at brent@thelocalchurchpbo.org.
In this episode, part #2 in a series about infertility, miscarriage, and infant and child loss, we speak with Jennifer, a pastor in the Missouri Conference of the United Methodist Church.
My special guest today is Reverend Jennifer Moxley and we are shedding some light on a topic that many of us (myself included) are uncomfortable with: how to behave at funerals, visitations, or times where we need to comfort someone! What is it about this that makes us all run our mouths unnecessarily? What are some things we CAN say to people to make them feel better (hint: it's better to be a good LISTENER!). Learn along with me as we hear Reverend Moxley's wisdom. Please join our Facebook group, The Everyday Etiquette Podcast group, for show notes. Also, could you please leave us a review or rating on iTunes? Thank you!
Wednesday Reading Series Author of over 20 books, Will Alexander works in multiple genres. Aborginal Salt: Early Divinations is a compendium of early work is due out from White Print Inc in Detroit, as well as a 2nd edition of Towards The Primeval Lightning Field to be published by Litmus Press. Winner of a 2013 American Book Award for his book of essays Singing In Magnetic Hoofbeat, he continues to draw in pencil while typing his second book of plays. Jennifer Moxley (b. 1964) studied literature and writing at UC San Diego and the University of Rhode Island and received her M.F.A. from Brown University in 1994. She is the author of six books of poetry, most recently The Open Secret (Flood Editions 2014), a book of essays, and a memoir. In addition, she has translated three books from the French. In 2005 she was granted the Lynda Hull Poetry Award from Denver Quarterly. Her poem “Behind the Orbits” was included by Robert Creeley in The Best American Poetry 2002. She is Professor of Poetry and Poetics at the University of Maine.
Sara talked about The Hallucinated and Candy reviews Jennifer Moxley
A poetry reading by Jennifer Moxley as part of the Yale Collection of American Literature Reading Series held at the Beinecke Library on April 23, 2009. The poet is introduced by Nancy Kuhl, Curator of the Yale Collection of American Literature.
If you experience any technical difficulties with this video or would like to make an accessibility-related request, please send a message to digicomm@uchicago.edu. Poet and author Jennifer Moxley delivers delivers a lecture as part of the "Poem Present" Series.
If you experience any technical difficulties with this video or would like to make an accessibility-related request, please send a message to digicomm@uchicago.edu. Poet and author Jennifer Moxley reads poetry as part of the "Poem Present" series.
If you experience any technical difficulties with this video or would like to make an accessibility-related request, please send a message to digicomm@uchicago.edu. Poet and author Jennifer Moxley delivers delivers a lecture as part of the "Poem Present" Series.
If you experience any technical difficulties with this video or would like to make an accessibility-related request, please send a message to digicomm@uchicago.edu. Poet and author Jennifer Moxley reads poetry as part of the "Poem Present" series.
A summary of Tom Devaney's selection of featured PennSound recordings and sampling of four of them--poems by Bob Holman, C.K. Williams, John Yau, and Jennifer Moxley.