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Genre: CountryGuest: Jessica RussellLocation: Nova Scotia, CanadaSong: "She Can Keep It"Studio B Podcast is all about creating deeper connections between Canadian musical artists, the Canadian music industry, and their audiences. Since 2019, each episode features dynamic conversations with musicians, bands, and industry professionals, diving into their personal journeys, inspirations, and future projects.You get an exclusive look behind the scenes, with candid stories and insights into the unique impact these individuals are making in the music world. Tune in for a deeper understanding of the artists and the industry they shape.Hosted by Alberta, Canada's own award-winning and multi-nominated media personality, podcaster, and MC, Sarah Scott. Find Studio B Podcast on Facebook (Studio B Podcast), Instagram (@__studio__b__) or on TikTok (@studiobpodcastprod) to stay up to date on new episode releases and hot new music.Sarah Scott can be found on Instagram @heyitssarahscott.
In this episode, EALA chats with Jessica Russell, Student Service Coordinator at DreamHouse ‘Ewa Beach Public Charter School in Hawai‘i, about her experience as a School Study Tour attendee. Listen in as she shares what inspired DreamHouse to join, the biggest eye-opening moments, and how the school is already putting key takeaways into action. Plus, hear how these changes are impacting students and teachers and what's next on their journey. For more information, visit www.dreamhouseewabeach.org. Access the full podcast transcript at: https://bit.ly/4hZv6Us
Ask Win: http://askwin.weebly.com. Please donate to Ask Win by going to Payment Venmo Win1195 at https://venmo.com/. Win Kelly Charles' Books: https://www.amazon.com/Win-Kelly-Charles/e/B009VNJEKE/ref=dp_byline_cont_book_1. Win Kelly Charles' MONAT: https://wincharles.mymonat.com. On Ask Win today (Monday, January 4, 2021), Best-Selling Author, Win C welcomes Jessica Russell. Jessica is an American woman who a serial entrepreneur. She owned an international business consulting company co-founded a real estate investment company, produced motion pictures though her entertainment company Zinkler Films, and Jessica founded and sold a top Hollywood talent management company “Blubay Talent”. Jessica became a best seller author and acquired multi awards for her work in hypnotherapy, business, corporate and entrepreneur coaching. She is a top authority in functional and integrative health and mindfulness. Jessica is the founder of the Hypnotherapy Centers and HTC Empowerment in Los Angeles and Beverly Hills. She is also partner in “The NLP and Hypnotherapist Association of America” a membership association with international members in coaching, hypnotherapy, NLP practitioner and highly credentialed individuals in the holistic, wellness, mindfulness, and mental health related fields. Priority is yo offer member's high level education, positive advocacy, and resources in the international and local communities. Since she was 18, she never worked for anyone and has owned, operated and invested in all her companies. Jessica Dawn Russell Made her first million in her 30's. She lost all in her 40's including her mother, her inspiration, business partner and mentor due to brain cancer. That was the beginning of lessons, harsh love and personal reflection pulling her into the world of mindfulness and self-awareness. And life changes. Jessica today continues to speak, lecture and train individuals from all over the world. She loves culture, people, and reinvention. To learn more about Jessica email her at thehtcoffice@gmail.com.
The guys have their first ever surprise guest on the show, Jessica Russell. They run through another game of Is There A Flag On The Play? Before going over date party negotiations, freshman year roommates, and roasting three different Joe's. Join us.
Jessica Russell is the pen name of Jesse Broadt, a professional web content writer who specializes in travel. Passionate about history, the author is an avid reader of both historical fiction and non-fiction history books. Throughout her life, she was inspired by authors such as Victoria Holt, Phyllis A. Whitney, and Belva Plain, and strives to create the same type of multi-dimensional, entertaining characters that readers can relate to, understand, and ultimately enjoy. Broad created her first novel-length work of fiction with Hot Winter Sun, and laughingly calls it the kind of book you think no one writes anymore. A professional singer at one time, the author often refers to words as the music of another kind and hopes they are felt that way by her readers. Broadt lives in the Southeastern United States with her husband and childhood sweetheart, Dan, as well as Frosty and Snoodle, her faithful, purring companions. She loves music, reading, traveling, and simply enjoying the sights and sounds of nature, and also has a blog for travel enthusiasts, called Your Endless Holiday. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/diane-winbush/support
Jessica Russell is an accomplished businesswomen and serial entrepreneur, best selling author, entertainment and media producer and executive, and international mastermind coach and integrative and functional therapist. As one who successfully worked only for herself, you can see alone the diversity of interest and abilities of entrepreneurship. She also is a partner with the hypnotherapy centers and founder of the NLP and Hypnosis association in the United States. She speaks publicly about business, entrepreneur topics and business development and self care to success. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/makeyourbigimpact/support
TALK ABOUT LIFE™Real Lives&Conversations-Heartfelt Original Unedited
Many people is suffering from mental health problems. This pendemic has brought on even more people to the edge.What is this and what must we do when anxiety hits. Ms Jessica Russell: I have been interviewed or featured in numerous podcasts, live events and panels in areas of Entrepreneurism, wellness and mindfulness, coaching, family, relationships, entertainment, business and hypnosis. I am also a best selling author working on a new book, I am also a mastermind accountability and wellness Coach and Certified Hypnotherapist with international clients and 3 locations in Los Angeles who works strongly with disorders, functional and integrative health and business. I also train and will introduce in 2021 a online training programs. Please feel free to contact me for a chat at: (310)801-6211 or email at TheHTCoffice@gmail.com
David George Gordon admits he was a bookworm as a child. Is that why the prolific author loves insects, and loves to eat them? Sno-Isle Libraries Check It Out! podcast hosts Ken Harvey, Jim Hills and Jessica Russell sat down with Gordon and chewed the fat about his reputation as “the bug chef.” And they graciously accepted the guest’s gifts, as polite hosts do. Yes. Harvey, Hills and Russell ate bugs. The Seattle-based author of “The Eat-a-Bug Cookbook” and 19 other titles covering slugs and snails, oyster history and Sasquatch research has appeared on many TV shows and headlined national festivals. When Gordon visited Sno-Isle Libraries and laid out plates of edible bugs, the hosts were understandably skeptical. Gordon is used to tough crowds. “In so many ways, this is the food of the future,” Gordon said about insects as ingredients or cuisine. “It’s really good for you. It’s easy to raise. It doesn’t require the gallons of water that go into raising a steak and so on. But our dislike of insects in our culture is so strong, even at insect festivals it’s hard to get people to eat this stuff.” Harvey, Hills and Russell mostly overcame their cultural instincts. They ate kosher, farm-reared locusts, “the official Bible food of John the Baptist,” Gordon said. They ate seasoned chapulines, wild grasshoppers harvested from cornfields in Oaxaca, Mexico. They ate the caterpillars of a sphynx moth, which lays its eggs on blue agave plants, which is where tequila starts. The caterpillar is “the proverbial worm in the bottom of the tequila bottle,” Gordon explained. And they ate protein-rich energy bars. “If I didn’t tell you there were crickets in there, you would never know. You’d be eating the blueberries,” Gordon said. That’s because the crickets are dried and ground into flour, “so we’re not talking about a bunch of goo.” Some of Gordon’s samples went down easier than others. First, the locusts. The legs are removed but not the wings. Each locust is a couple of inches long, so it’s mostly abdomen and head and it looks dramatic. It looks exactly like a big bug. Russell hedged. “There’s something about the way they’re looking at me,” she said. “Hold them by the wings, they’re great handles,” Gordon explained. “Eat the body.” He said to expect the taste of Shredded Wheat cereal. Hills was just as dubious as Russell. “This is gonna be a one-bite thing,” he said before he audibly crunched one down. While Russell and Hills were busy overcoming their nerves, Harvey had already eaten a locust. “I’m taking the wings home to prove that I ate it,” he said. “I have a reputation as a very picky eater. It has a nice taste.” “It tastes like the smell of freshly harvested hay,” Russell said. Next, the chapulines. The three test subjects gave the crunchy critters enthusiastic thumbs up. “Oh, I like that!” Hills said. “I could actually sit around and eat those.” Russell and Harvey liked the caterpillar. Russell described a crispy, salty first blast on the tongue and a perfumy flavor that lingered pleasantly on her palate. “My family will be shocked when they hear that this picky eater did that,” Harvey said. But for Hills, the caterpillar was a bridge too far. “Yeah, I couldn’t do that,” he said. “They look like the big version of the grubs you find in your yard.” The good-natured Gordon wasn’t offended. He knows food that wiggles is not often on the menu. “I didn’t want to eat the locusts,” Russell said. “I feel like they’re looking at me and I’m not quite OK with that. I grew up in Louisiana where we eat some really interesting, quirky things that are not eaten in other places that have become really normal to me.”
In this final episode of the second season of Check It Out!, hosts Ken Harvey, Jessica Russell, Paul Pitkin and Jim Hills relate their personal holiday dreams and nightmares and dive into library resources that may just help set a tasty dinner table. Hills, not beset by the piled-plate, food-touching phobia, shares that a holiday meal is best perceived as a single entity, the sum of its parts as measured both horizontally and vertically. The description, however, takes Russell back to a time in her life when space between menu items was required and the queasy realization that she may not have moved as far past those days as thought. Russell describes her southern roots by painting the mental picture of deep frying turkey in a Louisiana front yard. “Deep-fried turkey is the best,” Russell proclaims with no dissenters. The pot, she goes on to say, is the same one used for the crawfish boil. “In Mississippi, that (pot) is called a washtub,” Harvey says. Pitkin allows that as a child his family finally rebelled at his mother’s cooking to the point that they chose to have the holiday dinner delivered. From Nordstrom. The Sno-Isle Libraries collection, Russell points out, has thousands of cookbooks and other resources available to help make any holiday celebration memorable. Pitkin, executive director for the Sno-Isle Libraries Foundation, points out that there is more to the holiday season than eating. “I encourage everyone to make a year-end donation to the foundation,” Pitkin says, adding that foundation donations support a variety of programs at the Sno-Isle Libraries. “The third-grade reading challenge is coming up,” Pitkin says of the program that includes thousands of students across Snohomish and Island counties. “The reading challenge helps third-graders improve literacy at a time that very important to their development level.” The foundation is also the primary sponsor of TEDxSnoIsleLibraries, which is returning after a hiatus on May 9, 2020 at Edmonds Center for the Arts, Pitkin says. Speaker videos from the 2015, 2016 and 2017 events have been viewed more than 3.5 million times, Harvey says. “The foundation has always been the main sponsor and we could not be more excited that it’s coming back,” Pitkin says. Finally, Harvey offers a peek at what’s coming in Season 3 for the podcast. “We working on getting Everett Community College President Daria J. Willis,” Harvey says. “And, the head of IBM’s Watson project is going to talk to us about artificial intelligence and quantum computing.” And books? What about books? “We are working on a slew of authors, some nationally acclaimed, some just getting started,” Harvey says. Episode length 37:26 Episode links Holiday and winter resourcesTEDxSnoIsleLibraries Sno-Isle Libraries Foundation EvCC President Daria J. Willis IBM Watson Deep-fried turkey recipes Paula Deen Alton Brown John Lovick
Even for the folks whose jobs are to know things about the library, Sno-Isle Libraries continues to amaze and surprise. In this episode, co-hosts Ken Harvey, Jim Hills, Jessica Russell and Paul Pitkin, “Go over the highlights of what we don’t know.” Service Center Hills points out the oddity that while the library district’s Service Center in Marysville serves all 23 community libraries, Library on Wheels and online services, it is not itself a library. Jessica Russell, Assistant Director of Technical Services - Collection Services, says that, yes, all the materials that are in community libraries flow through the Service Center, those items aren’t there for very long. “Our job is to get them out into the libraries and the hands of our customers,” Russell says. Pitkin adds the fact that for visitors and employees alike, the Service Center building can be a confusing place. “You see people wandering around looking lost because the building has been added on to three times. People walking around lost, but trying to not look like they’re lost.” Special days With everything from Peanut Butter Fudge Day (a Pitkin favorite) to special days for vegans, clams and craft jerky, November is more than just Thanksgiving. “Craft jerky?” Russell asks. “You mean, like craft beer?” With the “fall back” to standard time in November, Hills takes an informal poll of the co-hosts for their preferences: Harvey – “Daylight Savings Time all the time.” Pitkin – “Never. I like the darkness. In the summer it just gets ridiculous.” Russell (a recent Texas transplant)– “But, it’s such beautiful light here, so soft. If you ever want to know what it’s like to be a bug under a magnifying glass, go to Texas.” Hills – “I’d keep both. I love summer nights when it’s light until 9:30 maybe 10 p.m.” Harvey (again) – “And if our listeners have an opinion, let us know at checkitoutpodcast@sno-isle.org Title talk “One of the most clicked on things on our website is the ‘new items’ link,” Hills says. “And Jessica is responsible for getting the stuff that’s new in the collection.” Russell says it is actually the work of “the amazing, wonderful, collection development staff.” For a person who sees the world of what’s published, Russell says her personal reading list is currently focused on “regency romance” novels. “There are tons and tons of regency romances,” she says. For Russell, that means downloading from Overdrive to her iPad. “I have become an almost exclusively digital reader,” she says. Still, Pitkin wondered about “regency.” “Is that a publisher?” he asks. The phrase, regency romance” refers to a time period of dukes and other royalty, Russell says. “If you’ve ever watched ‘Pride and Prejudice,’ you’ll love regency romances,” she says. Bookmobile As executive director of the Sno-Isle Libraries Foundation, Pitkin says he is always looking for great stories of how library services supported by donations to the foundation are helping customers. “The Bookmobile is just an amazing service,” Pitkin says of the mobile service that is part of the larger Library on Wheels department. Russell said a recent ride-along was inspiring to her. “The depth of knowledge our staff members have of their customers and how they know what customers are looking for is amazing,” she says. Episode length: 34:45
In this month's podcast Programme Manager for Justice & Emergency Services, Jessica Russell, reflects on techUK's annual public sector conference, Building the Smarter State. Over 200 leaders from across the public sector and tech industry attended to unpack challenges and opportunities for tech to enable the future of public services. Speakers and attendees from all levels of government, including public safety, contributed to the conversation that focused on the twin themes of People and Places. During the conference, Jess sat down with two guests; Jenny Nelson, Programme Manager of Digital Newcastle, (interview starts at 00:40) and Wayne Parkes, Director of the National Enabling Programmes (interview starts at 10:12), to discuss how their work and their organisations are contributing to "building the smarter state". Follow the conversation online by following #techUKSmarterState.
Jessica Russel is a collector who is looking to the future. As Assistant Director of Technical Services - Collection Services for Sno-Isle Libraries, Russell oversees the process that makes 1.5 million books, magazines, DVDs, CDs, digital and other items available to customers at 23 community libraries and online. The Louisiana native and Texas transplant says developing a library collection is not just deciding what goes in, but also what goes out. “It’s a lot like your closet at home,” Russell says. “There’s maintenance to be done and sometimes you have to let things go.” Russell’s department does have librarians who sift through what she calls a “fire hose” of published materials: “We try to winnow it down to a manageable garden hose.” In addition, library customers get to suggest items for the collection. “It’s called a ‘request for item not in collection’ and we get hundreds of RINC request each week,” Russell says. Change in the collection is fine with Russell, who says she embraces change. “It’s incredibly exciting to be in a profession that is changing so rapidly right now,” Russell says. “I realize that’s not uncommon, yet there is something special about the way we can also guide our community through change.” Episode length: 29:30 Episode links Harris County Public Library Montgomery County Memorial Library System Request Item Not in Catalog (RINC)
Welcome to the, It's Not You, It's Us episode, where my special guest, Jessica Russell, Director of People Operations s at First, shares her insights and confessions on the candidate experience. Pay close attention to what she has to say about making diversity and inclusion an important part of your company's culture. Even at small and medium sized companies. Thanks for listening! If you like what you hearing on this podcast please subscribe wherever you enjoy podcasts and do share with others. If you like what you're hearing on this podcast please subscribe wherever you enjoy podcasts and please share with others. Want to comment, discuss, provide feedback you can send me a note via LinkedIn, via the contact form on our website TheCX.xyz or via audio message below. This episode originally aired on Friday, June 7, 2019. Thanks for listening! Chuck Solomon Host of The Candidate Experience Podcast Resources: Recruiting – The 3rd Crucial Startup Skill by David Skok Former NetFlix CHRO, Patty McChord #candidateexperience #candidatejourney #employerbrand #HR #talentacquisition #culture #workplaceculture --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/candidate-experience/support
Welcome to the, It's Not You, It's Us episode, where my special guest, Jessica Russell, Director of People Ops at First, shares her insights and confessions on the candidate experience. Pay close attention to what she has to say about making diversity and inclusion an important part of your company's culture. Even at small and medium sized companies. Thanks for listening! If you like what you hearing on this podcast please subscribe wherever you enjoy podcasts and do share with others. If you like what you're hearing on this podcast please subscribe wherever you enjoy podcasts and please share with others. Want to comment, discuss, provide feedback you can send me a note via LinkedIn, via the contact form on our website TheCX.xyz or via audio message below. The full episode will air on Friday, June 7, 2019. Thanks for listening! Chuck Solomon Host of The Candidate Experience Podcast #candidateexperience #candidatejourney #employerbrand #HR #talentacquisition --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/candidate-experience/support
Happy Hump Day. We are back at it with the interviews. Today's guest, we have Jessica Russell on the show she's got an amazing story. Jessica is from LA California where she was born and raised. By the age of 34 where she became a multimillionaire through her entrepreneurial endeavors and then opened a production office which spun into another business managing talent which she then later sold her company to a major talent company in Hollywood. Now, she's an NLP Master and has 3 Hypnotherapy Centers throughout Los Angeles and also does her appointments via SKYPE. She is an entrepreneur and creator at heart, but has a deeper passion to help others and influence people in a positive way. she has 2 young sons and spends her free time with them when she's not out saving the world. LINKS BELOW Phone number (310)844-1024 Website - www.jessicadawnrussell.com Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100015671748053 LinkedIN - https://www.linkedin.com/in/jessicarusselljrewingenterpris Hynpotherapy Centers - www.TheHypnotherapyCenters.com
In October 2018, techUK held its Supercharging the Digital Economy flagship event in Manchester. Whilst at the event, Matthew Evans, associate director at techUK caught up with Liliana Danila, Economist at the British Retail Consortium on how technology is impacting the high street stores and online shopping experiences. He then catches up with our own, Jessica Russell, programme manager for transport and smart cities, on techUK’s new report, Future Mobility Services in the UK.
Ryan visits long time colleague and a true jack of all trades, Jessica Russell. "Soon to be leader in the arts industry". The two caught up on Jess's year. Which was crammed with Producing, Publicity, Blueroom Theatre Support, Workshop with the legendary Maxine Doyle (Punchdrunk) and working on Blueprint. They also touched on the importance of community theatre, rejection, resilience and the true power of comic books.
There are international concerns about the world's dwindling bee population. Here in New Zealand the varoa mite has decimated numbers in parts of the country, and that's far from the only threat to them. Over the holidays Victory University summer scholarship student Jessica Russell will be working with laboratory-reared honey bees as part of an experiment she hopes will provide information to help them in the wild.
Dan Graham joins host Miguel Baltierra for a discussion on his new book in this edition of the Oculus Podcast. Artist Dan Graham and writer Jessica Russell's playful Architecture/Astrology considers some of the most important and innovative figures in the world of architecture from an angle few would expect: their star signs. Originally published as a column for Domus magazine, Graham and Russell's book integrates critical analysis with astrology and mythology to offer alternative perspectives on the work and personalities of artist/architects including Frank Gehry (a restless, dreamy Pisces), Frank Lloyd Wright (a romantic Gemini with one foot in the past and the other in the future), Eero Saarinen (a dynamic, dramatic Leo) and Le Corbusier (a logical, balanced Libra). With accompanying illustrations by Mieko Meguro, Architecture/Astrology itself resembles the best sort of architect, one who is at once rigorous and whimsical, with his feet on the ground and his head in the clouds.