POPULARITY
The Power of Belonging at Work
When Patricia Miele's family moved her into Greenwood Place Assisted Living and Memory Care in Marietta this past October, they trusted the 89-year-old was in good hands, adding the facility came highly recommended.Miele moved from Connecticut to Georgia years ago to be closer to her family and two grandchildren. The former schoolteacher and devout Catholic lived by her routines, which involved prayer and meals. She didn't even have a television in her room.“Pat was a voracious reader and had a deep faith and understanding of her place in the world,” said son-in-law Garrett Phillips.Miele's daughter, Karen Phillips, said the facility should have known her mother's mental health was on the decline. According to her, Miele once mistook a fire alarm for an elevator button while living at Greenwood Place. Then there was the time when she accidentally locked herself in her room.Karen Phillips also remembers a nurse called to share her mother repeatedly expressed fear of getting lost. “She didn't know where she was going and needed help,” she said. They knew that.”Read the full story here: https://www.atlantanewsfirst.com/2025/01/08/dont-lose-our-mother-i-family-missing-woman-found-dead-speak-out/
Karen Phillips – Get Carmen: In court with George Carman QC, Britain's most feared Lawyer...with TRE's Giles Brown
Every Friday we get to hear from Flanjo Patterson and his Poem Of The Week where he covers off ALL of the big news stories from the Gold Coast, nationally and internationally. Last night Flan, Ali and Spida slept it rough at CBUS Super Stadium in Robina for The Vinnies CEO Sleepout to help raise funds for the Gold Coast homeless – and Ali discovered sleeping in close proximity to your co-hosts can be a bit confronting! It's Sate Of Origin season and Flan, Ali and Spida have found something that New South Wales have a chance of winning: Tug Of Origin - a tug of war between the 2 states and played right on the border on game day for origin 2 - this morning Flan and Ali filled some more spots with passionate members of the Triple M Gold family. Karen Phillips is the founding ambassador for the Gold Coasts Vinnies sleepout and she joined Flan, Ali and Spida this morning live from CBUS Super Stadium in Robina.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It's Sate Of Origin season and Flan, Ali and Spida have found something that New South Wales have a chance of winning: Tug Of Origin - a tug of war between the 2 states and played right on the border on game day for origin 2 - this morning we announced 2 league legends as the captains and they were on the show. The King could be coming to the Gold Coast......which means he will have to change his royal voicemail message - Flan has the exclusive audio. Ali introduced us to a piece of medical equipment - something that is used 'downstairs'. A friend of Ali's had a procedure with one but things went from good to bad very quickly!!! Flan, Ali and Spida are involved in this years Vinnies CEOsleepout - to help those people who sleep it rough on the Gold Coast every night - the founding ambassador Karen Phillips joined the show to talk about how you can help. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ten years after they filed for divorce, God led Karen Phillips and her husband to reunite. Her story powerfully demonstrates that even though the devil is in the business of division and destruction, we serve a God who is able to fully restore that which is broken.
In a crisis situation, organizations must be prepared to communicate effectively in these challenging situations. Karen Phillips, of Phillips & Marek, joins us to discuss strategies and best practices for managing data breaches and how to communicate with stakeholders, including internal staff, patients and the media. More info at HelpMeWithHIPAA.com/421
Karen Phillips discuses her debut novel, her interest in boxing and creating a compelling ensemble cast.
The Founder of Hope Haven Farm Sanctuary, Karen Phillips, VMD, gives Tressa a tour of their beautiful grounds and introduces her to their fabulous animals. Cami Teacoach, Founder of VolunTOTS, returns to update us on all they have planned for the next few months. And Name That Neighborhood goes back...way back. HOPE HAVEN FARM SANCTUARY https://www.hopehavenfarm.org/ IG: @hopehavenfarmsanctuary FB: @Hope Haven Farm Sanctuary VolunTOTS https://www.voluntotspgh.org/ IG: @voluntotsswpa FB: VolunTOTS of Southwestern PA Have a story of GENEROSITY or KINDNESS to share with us? Please email us: yinzaregood@gmail.com To request a KINDNESS CRATE drop off at your business or school: yinzaregood@gmail.com Please visit our website and follow us on Instagram and Facebook: www.yinzaregood.com Instagram: @yinzaregood Facebook: @YinzAreGood
If you're a fan of Humans of The Fed, Karen Phillips likely needs no introduction. The Fed's Chief Executive for much of the first two decades of the 2000s, Karen oversaw a raft of changes that pulled an organisation requiring modernising into the 21st century. Her determination and drive saw The Fed become one of the leaders in social care in the country, culminating with the merger between The Fed and Heathlands Village in 2009. And yet Karen's joining The Fed was almost by chance, and her ending up in the driving seat only came about through a serious of fortuitous events. With a lifetime of challenges that have cemented Karen's belief that if you want to see change happen, sometimes you have to be the one to make that change, Karen's story also centres around a routine stay in hospital which brought life to a terrifying halt. More than five years after stepping down from her role as Chief Executive and heading for the bright lights of London, Karen is back to tell Humans what she thinks of The Fed now and to lift the lid on her years in charge.
Speaking from the Heart: An Instructor and Her Student Reflect with Dr. Karen Phillips and Yarin Reindorp Today we speak with Yarin Reindorp, a junior in Columbia's School of General Studies, and her former teacher in organic chemistry, Dr. Karen Phillips, who was a Senior Lecturer in the Discipline of Chemistry at Columbia. Dr. Phillips shares teaching techniques and philosophies that she employs in her courses—techniques that tackle dead ideas about collaboration, student empowerment, and equity. Yarin, who also serves as a student consultant for the Columbia Center for Teaching and Learning, then discusses her experience as a student in Dr. Phillips' course and the profound impact it had on her learning.
It's the fourth mega-sized Middle Grade Ninja clips show, featuring snippets from episodes 101 through 146 that aired in 2021. This episode is so stuffed with incredible content it had to be broken up into TWO PARTS Don't miss PART TWO. New episodes are scheduled to return January 8th. Until then, enjoy this compilation of clips from conversations with AUTHORS Christina Li, Caroline Gertler, Rucker Moses, Theo Gangi, Donna Galanti, Mike Johnston, Lisa Fipps, Nick Goss, Esabella Strickland, Carrie Seim, Dorothy A. Winsor, Carole Boston Weatherford, Kyle Lukoff, Luke Cunningham, David LaRochelle, Mike Wohnoutka, Alane Adams, Susan McCormick, Robert Beatty, Payal Doshi, Jasmine Warga, Erin Entrada Kelly, Ali Standish, Nicole Kornher-Stace, Melissa Hope, Alyson Gerber, Kathleen Burkinshaw, John David Anderson, Chris Negron, Sara Pennypacker, Jessica Vitalis, Rajani LaRocca, Katherine Paterson, Gayle Forman, Sarah J. Schmitt, Diana Rodriguez Wallach, Ross Carley, Karen Phillips, Mary Ann Koontz, Elizabeth A. San Miguel, Diana Catt, Tony Perona, Elizabeth Perona, David Neilsen, Michelle Jabès Corpora, Samantha M. Clark, Alda P. Dobbs, Aura Lewis, Emily Barth Isler, and Seanan McGuire, LITERARY AGENTS Saba Sulaiman, Holly McGhee, Mary C. Moore, Marie Lamba, and Becky LeJune, EDITORS Sara-Jayne Slack, Sailaja N. Joshi, Amy Maranville, and Leila Sales.
It's the fourth mega-sized Middle Grade Ninja clips show, featuring snippets from episodes 101 through 146 that aired in 2021. This episode is so stuffed with incredible content it had to be broken up into TWO PARTS Don't miss PART ONE. New episodes are scheduled to return January 8th. Until then, enjoy this compilation of clips from conversations with AUTHORS Christina Li, Caroline Gertler, Rucker Moses, Theo Gangi, Donna Galanti, Mike Johnston, Lisa Fipps, Nick Goss, Esabella Strickland, Carrie Seim, Dorothy A. Winsor, Carole Boston Weatherford, Kyle Lukoff, Luke Cunningham, David LaRochelle, Mike Wohnoutka, Alane Adams, Susan McCormick, Robert Beatty, Payal Doshi, Jasmine Warga, Erin Entrada Kelly, Ali Standish, Nicole Kornher-Stace, Melissa Hope, Alyson Gerber, Kathleen Burkinshaw, John David Anderson, Chris Negron, Sara Pennypacker, Jessica Vitalis, Rajani LaRocca, Katherine Paterson, Gayle Forman, Sarah J. Schmitt, Diana Rodriguez Wallach, Ross Carley, Karen Phillips, Mary Ann Koontz, Elizabeth A. San Miguel, Diana Catt, Tony Perona, Elizabeth Perona, David Neilsen, Michelle Jabès Corpora, Samantha M. Clark, Alda P. Dobbs, Aura Lewis, Emily Barth Isler, and Seanan McGuire, LITERARY AGENTS Saba Sulaiman, Holly McGhee, Mary C. Moore, Marie Lamba, and Becky LeJune, EDITORS Sara-Jayne Slack, Sailaja N. Joshi, Amy Maranville, and Leila Sales.
Overview Terry and I continue our conversation by talking about his change in career. Not just once, but several times during his life. Which led to his current writing career. YouTube https://youtu.be/LRX9q8VHBXk Transcript Oh, okay. So that's evolved for me. I started out with Microsoft word. Then I went to Scribner. Scrivener is really good for organizing and managing characters. But I do all since I'm self published, I do all of my own formatting and stuff and I do it. And I do that with vellum I'm on the, what usually happens is that I'll start out, I'll get an idea for a scene or a short story. I'll write that scene and then it ends up growing into the novel. So that happens oftentimes still on Microsoft word. And then what I'll do is I'll transfer. I'll write them in word. I run it through pro writing. Which is a thing that catches the grammar and passive voice and stuff like that. And then I'll copy it and put it into the chapter in vellum. And I run actually the printout for all of the various digital copies and stuff, so I can pop it into my apple books application and read it and things like that. And then I'll go back and make fixes that way. So my barf draft, I just let it flow. I don't worry about stuff. If I do see something that needs to happen to set up a scene, I'll go back and. But I do what Patterson does and that is I'll write a hundred pages and then go back and look at it, see if it's flowing the way it should. And then I'll write another a hundred until I get to whatever the number is. I try and make them between 70 and 85,000 words, if they're going to be a novel, but I don't stick to that. I stop when the story's done. I mean, But it's a better book because I wasn't trying to hit a word count. I was trying to tell a story. And so that's the most important thing. Yeah. So I write on those things and pro writing aid is really important. I like that better than Grammarly and beta readers. I'm going to have, I have a trusted group of beta readers that represent each of the character types. My story, they read they feedback. I make the changes and then. It goes to, I have a story consultant that I use that helps me make sure my plots are right and that my characters are developing as they should. Then I've got an editor. I have three different editors to base based upon what I'm writing at the given time. And I pick one of them, use that by the time I get it back from them. It's ready to go. When it's on Amazon cover designer, Bobby Mars does my covers for, um, Fantastic person. Karen Phillips does my kids' stuff. She's really great. And then Casey Ratchford is the illustrator of the mystery bug series. Incredible talent, really good. And he's not even, he wouldn't consider himself that he's a, he thinks he's a reformed lawyer, but he's got a gift. So that real. Key. I think that you don't necessarily get when you're published by a big five publishing company, is that you retain that creative control over every piece of your work. That's also the curse because we sink or swim based upon your decisions. So I'm the only one that blame. Yep. Yeah, I am. I am the interesting thing that I got from Bobby Mars about Vega, as she says, the readers don't want us, you don't show me. Don't ever show Jessica's face, always show her from the back and she's chasing. So I always have. So, if you look at Vegas cover, she's running through a part of the Colorado river and you see the person she's chasing her hand, coming up out of the water, out of her and the chasing the captain. She is hanging from a helicopter over the. The London eye. And I had to do that because I want to make absolutely sure that all the cops that follow Jeff, what they saw that cover, they'd say, Hey, he did it. He didn't put her in great Britain. This is [00:04:08] Stephen: great. And it captures when you look at. It, you could tell it's not a romance.
The Speed City Sisters in Crime return to the scene of the… podcast? Returning for their first appearance since episode 79, they've just released a new anthology, TICK OR TREAT: TALES OF ALL HALLOWS EVE. I sit down with authors Ross Carley, Diana Catt, Mary Ann Koontz, Elizabeth Perona, Tony Perona, Karen Phillips, and Elizabeth A. San Miguel, to discuss writing and reading mysteries, publishing tips, flying saucers, and so much more. Speed City Sisters in Crime is the Indiana chapter of the world-wide mystery/crime writers' association Sisters in Crime. The Speed City chapter was founded in 2005. Members of the organization are published mystery and crime authors, writers working on mysteries and thrillers, and readers and fans of the literary genre. There are currently 40+ members who live in Indiana or the Midwest. Speed City Sisters in Crime hosts monthly meetings with speakers on topics of interest to mystery and crime writing. Past speakers have included police officers, prosecutors, investigative reporters, forensic specialists, weapons experts, researchers, and publishing and media professionals. Chapter members have published 6 short story anthologies over the years with the themes that are related to Indiana or the midwest. Members of the organization have also written and produced a play, Deadbeat, which was performed at a local fringe festival and will soon be available to for others to produce. The chapter also hosts writing and other educational workshops for its membership with well-known authors and publishing professionals.
Spend an hour with three brilliant female authors, writing from and about multiple corners of the globe—India, the Middle East, North Africa, South America, the United States—with woman-focused stories. Meet Dubai-based Indian author Avni Doshi, Ethiopian-American novelist Maaza Mengiste and Chilean author Alia Trabucco Zerán. The event is co-presented by Words Without Borders and moderated by Karen Phillips, its executive director.
This week we chat with Randy of Cave Ridge Vineyard!! Cave Ridge Vineyard is a family-owned and operated vineyard and winery located in the foothills overlooking the Shenandoah Valley, which is world-renowned for its scenic beauty and history. Low rainfall and deep rocky soils make this an ideal location for growing the highest quality grapes used to make Cave Ridge wines. The tasting room was opened in 2005 by owners Randy and Karen Phillips. soon after opening, the estate-grown Virginia wines acquired a loyal following. Their daughter, Megan, later joined Cave Ridge Vineyard as the General Manager. Rosé VA - Shenandoah Valley $24.00 / 750 mL Bottle Alcohol 12.50% --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/therosehourpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/therosehourpodcast/support
In this 19th episode of The Lavender Fix podcast I interview: Karen Phillips, a transracial adoptive mom, an incredible yoga instructor, a skincare fanatic and a silver hair ambassador and influencer based in Tennessee. Karen is a huge proponent of healthy living and her Instagram profile is a total treat for the eyes, with every caption thoughtfully written out, you can't not follow her! Karen noticed the premature greying of her hair in her early 20s, and by her mid 20s, she was 50% grey. Why did Karen decide to go dye free? Tune in to find out!Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched! Start for FREEDisclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.
Listen in as Caralee chats with Gold Coast icon, Karen Phillips as they discuss all things women empowerment! Karen is a well-known name on the Gold Coast as she runs a breakfast called 'Early Risers' which aims to inspire and connect women in business. Karen also has a programme called Women in In Business Awards Australia, we discuss the benefits of entering yourself into awards. Listen now as Caralee and Karen chat about what it means to uplift other women and the benefits of doing so!
Listen in as Caralee chats with Gold Coast icon, Karen Phillips as they discuss all things women empowerment! Karen is a well-known name on the Gold Coast as she runs a breakfast called 'Early Risers' which aims to inspire and connect women in business. Karen also has a programme called Women in In Business Awards Australia, we discuss the benefits of entering yourself into awards. Listen now as Caralee and Karen chat about what it means to uplift other women and the benefits of doing so!
One of Australia's leading relationship experts, Dr Karen Phillips, joins Tom and Liz to dish the expert advice on those toxic habits killing our relationships. Author of the book Communication Harmony, Dr Karen shares her research on the communication mistakes that can cost us our happiness and how we can fix them (without a whole lot of effort, if we're honest).Dr Karen's Bio:Karen Phillip is one of Australia’s leading Counselling Psychotherapists. She is a Lifestyle Doctor that appears regularly on television, speaks extensively on radio and writes for multiple journalists. Karen is a leading trainer for therapists and many business groups.The Reason Karen wrote Communication HarmonyAs a lead relationship therapist, Karen Phillip has worked with thousands of couples and individuals advising on how they can alleviate conflict from their life and their conversational exchanges. Her 20 years of experience and valuable teachings are captured in these pages.Episode Links:Figure out your own communication language here: https://communicationharmonybook.com/resources/https://communicationharmonybook.comhttps://www.drkarenphillip.comhttps://twitter.com/DrKarenPhilliphttps://www.facebook.com/drkarenphilliphttps://au.pinterest.com/karenphillip98https://www.instagram.com/drkarenphil…https://www.linkedin.com/in/drkarenph…Subscribe to us on ITUNES, STITCHER, SPOTIFY, RADIOPUBLIC or your podcatcher of choice.Find us on FACEBOOK, TWITTER or INSTAGRAM.
I met Karen years ago when she was a patient of mine and owning her own nutrition business was just a dream. Fast forward to the present and Karen is the owner of her very own brick and mortar company, Via Nutrition. Karen, like many, lived a busy life working full time and having children. She always thought she was “healthy” and that grabbing lunch from Panera was a suitable option. However, Karen never felt quite right inside. She suffered from sinus infections constantly, got cystic acne during her period and experienced irregularity. After embarking on her own personal fitness journey, it all went away. Karen urges others to turn to nutrition first because many supposed “medical” issue like acne could really be a lifestyle or nutrition problem. Karen discusses many buzz words and fad diets in the nutrition world today, such as intermittent fasting, the keto diet, supplements, and more. You can check out her website here at https://www.vianutritionandhealth.com/
Summary: The letter F has Martin and Georgia talking about the idea of “Formless,” Morton Feldman, Barbara Monk Feldman, Jürg Frey, Malachi Favors and Susanna Ferrar. Array to Zed is a monthly podcast exploring experimental music by way of the alphabet. Hosts Martin Arnold, Artistic Director of ArrayMusic, and Georgia Carley chat about the ideas, procedures, composers and music that make up that nebulous beautiful thing we call “Experimental Music.” Music Credits: Filament 1 is a recording made by Filament: who are Sachiko M (no-input sampler and tone generators) and Otomo Yoshihide (turntable and CD player) in 1998. They are also bandmates in the group Ground Zero. There is a fair amount of information about both artists and this recording on the internet. Morton Feldman is all over the internet. The cycle The Viola in My Life was begun in July 1970 in Honolulu (composed especially for Karen Phillips, resident performer at Hawaii University) and consists of four individual compositions utilizing various instrumental combinations with the viola. We played The Viola in My Life III, for viola and piano. Canadian composer Barbara Monk Feldman’s The Northern Shore is taken from a recording of the same name and is performed by violinist Marc Sabat, percussionist Dirk Rothbrust and Array Ensemble pianist Stephen Clarke. For more information, go to: www.moderecords.com/catalog/244_monk_feldman.html Jürg Frey is a Swiss composer and clarinetist and member of the Wandelweiser group. For more information, see: www.wandelweiser.de/juerg-frey.html and www.anothertimbre.com/freygrizzana.html Frey’s String Quartet no. 3 (the long piece that finishes this podcast) is performed by Montréal’s Quatuor Bozzini. Malachi Favors was the bassist for the Art Ensemble of Chicago until his death in 2004 and took part in many other projects, all pretty well documented throughout the internet. The excerpt from “Peace Be Unto You” (on which Favors plays all the instruments) is taken from his solo album Natural and the Spiritual (1977). Susanna Ferrar is a woefully underrepresented on the internet. Both pieces on this podcast are taken from her wonderful album A Boy Leaves Home (1997). Examples of Susan Ferrar’s work can be found at: https://vimeo.com/13958811 and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9eovrgXjBWk
With countless television documentaries dedicated to true crime cases, why do women make up the majority of the audiences? We hear from Julia Davis editor of Crime Monthly Magazine, Jacqui Hames former police officer and presenter of Crimewatch and criminologist Dr Gemma Flynn.Parental alienation is the process, and the result of psychological manipulation of a child into showing unwarranted fear, disrespect and hostility towards a parent. We look at whether there is a growing understanding of this concept with Charlotte Friedman a psychologist with a background in family law and mediation and with Paula Rhone Adrien a family law barrister.What is the best way to support a partner who is suffering from depression? The journalist and author Poorna Bell, psychiatrist Linda Gask, Nicole Krystal Crentsil a public speaker and couple Alan and Karen Phillips discuss.It's six years since the Rana Plaza collapse in Bangladesh which killed more than a 1000 garment workers. How do we raise awareness of where and how our clothes are made and how do we all learn how to consume less? Fashion industry insiders Alice Wilby and Bernice Pan explain.The author Jennifer Eberhardt, Professor of Psychology at Stanford University talks about her years of research into unconscious racial bias.When Josie Rourke became the artistic director of the Donmar Warehouse she was one of the first female theatre directors to be appointed to that role in a major London theatre. Eight years on she tells us why she has picked the musical Sweet Charity as her swan song and how theatre has changed in the last 10 years.And the food writer Alissa Timoshkina joins us to Cook the Perfect... borsch.Presented by Jenni Murray Produced by Rabeka Nurmahomed Edited by Jane Thurlow
If you can get over the awful pun and listen to this week's episode you will find out all about the role a celebrant can play in your wedding. I chat to celebrant Karen Phillips about how her role differs from that of a registrar and we discuss wedding traditions. Karen shares some tradition from other cultures past and present too. A fun-filled and informative chat that hopefully helps you to think outside of the box with your wedding traditions.
Karen Phillips Talks about North Lands Creative at the #GlassNexus forum in Scotland
Crown Council Mentor of the Month | Helping Dental Teams Build a Culture of Success
Karen's story of working at UltraDent: When I started in dentistry as a dental assistant many years ago, I was actually quite shy and had been that way my whole life—through childhood and as a young adult. Quite shy! In a crowded room, I was always the wall flower, but I loved dental assisting. Then, when the opportunity to work for Ultradent came around, I started coming out of my shell as I had to go in to dental offices as a sales rep. Later, as a regional manager, again, I blossomed a little bit more. After a few years in that position, I became a product trainer and remember distinctly a few occasions where I would talk to my mother on the phone and say, “Oh, I have a class of 30 people to train today,” or “I’m going to speak at our National Sales Meeting and I have 100 people to present to.” One day she stopped me and said, “Oh my gosh, Karen, how do you do that? You’re SO shy!” It stopped me in my tracks and it was an “Aha!” moment for me. That moment was a real marker for me in my career because I had almost forgotten that I used to be shy and to look back and go, “How did I get here?!” was amazing.I realized, and told my mom, that when you love what you do, and you’re passionate about it, you gain confidence. I mean, I went from being incredibly timid to public speaking and presenting for a living! I believe this all happened because Ultradent recognizes passion in people and fosters growth in those areas. That’s what I love the most about Ultradent. The only reason I’m in the position I am today as the director of U.S. sales is because Ultradent identified and recognized the passion I had for our products at the beginning, and helped me cultivate it and build on it by making me a trainer, which helped develop my skills further to help me become what I am today. I thank God for that and that I’m part of a company that does that for and with their people.
Graduate education on the high seas What’s it’s like overseeing all aspects of graduate education at a business school Introverted and extroverted leadership Giving and receiving feedback How to respond to angry tweets Commercial break: #questromlife The future of education BU Questrom’s Micromasters The relational aspect of digital learning MOOC certificate programs Employers and competency-based digital learning The role of industry in the future of education The spectrum of hybrid learning: where does the residential university end and online learning begin? BU’s unique MSMS program Where does education end and work begin? Hiring curious employees Are you learning what you need today or what you’ll need tomorrow? Innovation: don’t sit on your laurels Skills that have been important over the decades Do what you are passionate about
Karen's best-selling book, Women's Words of Wisdom, Power and Passion, was officially launched by the Governor-General in celebration of the 100th anniversary of International Women's Day. Founder of the Women's Words Project, Karen was the recipient of the 'Inspiring Woman Award' at the 2012 WAW International Women's Day Awards. Karen talks about life 'One moment at a Time' all it takes is YOU, one idea can change the world. In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)
Chef Karen Phillips talks about teaching cooking classes that help people who are using Food for People resources to create healthy meals and to avoid highly processed foods. Produced and hosted by Jennifer Bell, khsu.org