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We're talking to Prison Chaplain Jonathan Stubbs about the process of a day ministering in a prison. Help Vision to keep 'Connecting Faith to Life': https://vision.org.au/donate See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
WE’RE BACK! Jonathan Stubbs joins Travis on the comeback episode of Film Shady. Adam will be back next week and every week after that! We talk Netflix docs and movies, along with a ton of other random tangents. Thanks for listening! The post Either Way, He’s Going Home – The Return of Film Shady appeared first on Cinema Shelf.
WE’RE BACK! Jonathan Stubbs joins Travis on the comeback episode of Film Shady. Adam will be back next week and every week after that! We talk Netflix docs and movies, along with a ton of other random tangents. Thanks for listening! The post Either Way, He’s Going Home – The Return of Film Shady appeared first on Cinema Shelf.
Fresh off Summer vacation, Travis is back on the show with guest Jonathan Stubbs from Beyond the Outer Rim. Today they discuss some of the most recent shows and series they’ve checked out! The post Netflix & YouTube – Recent Watches appeared first on Cinema Shelf.
Jonathan Stubbs joins Travis on this week’s News and Reviews to discuss the recent storm of rumors that Robert Pattinson has been cast as Batman in Matt Reeves’ upcoming film, The Batman (2021) The post THE BATMAN Casts Robert Pattinson? appeared first on Cinema Shelf.
This week Jonathan Stubbs from Beyond the Outer Rim joins Travis to go down the rabbit hole of 1999’s The Mummy! We dive deep into this 90s classic. Watch along or listen to us discuss! The post The Mummy (1999) – Commentary appeared first on Cinema Shelf.
This week on News and Reviews, Travis and Kameona are joined by Jonathan Stubbs from Beyond the Outer Rim to talk about the podcast network’s best moments and events from 2018 and what’s coming up in 2019. The post 2018 Wrap-up & 2019 Preview appeared first on Cinema Shelf.
World Policy Institute — Months after the Brexit vote and with a Trump presidency fast approaching, is France next in line for a nativist victory? On today's episode of World Policy On Air, British political blogger Jonathan Stubbs examines how Republican presidential nominee François Fillon has shifted his rhetoric to appeal to a growing populist electorate.
World Policy Institute — Waves of anti-immigrant, anti-globalist, and anti-elitist sentiment buoyed the success of both Brexit in the U.K. and Donald Trump in the United States' Republican primary. On today's episode of World Policy On Air, British political blogger Jonathan Stubbs discusses these two campaigns and why post-Brexit Britain could find it difficult to engage in trade partnerships with a potential Trump administration.
In the first podcast in the FT’s Deals & Dealmakers series, mergers and acquisitions correspondent Anousha Sakoui talks to industry analysts about the outlook for the year. With studio guests Jonathan Stubbs, head of European equity strategy at Citigroup in London, and Jon Clark, who heads the UK oil and gas transactions team at Ernst & Young. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Running through much of Professor Andrew Higson’s work is a concern for questions of national cinema; his article ‘The concept of national cinema’, first published in Screen in 1989, has proved very influential and has been translated and/or reprinted several times. He has published various papers since 1989, which revise his arguments about national and transnational cinema as well as papers on the British heritage film, on the British new wave, on silent cinema, on Channel 4 television and on film acting. He is currently working on three separate projects. He is editing the Routledge Encyclopedia of Film History, with Kristian Moen, Nathalie Morris and Jonathan Stubbs. He is working on a history of Anglia Television, the ITV company for the East of England. He is completing a book on British cinema in the 1990s and 2000s, provisionally entitled Film England, 1990-2008: (Trans)National Cinema, English Literature and Narratives of the Past and Present some of which forms the basis for the Nick Burton Memorial Lecture 2011.