British feature-film, theatre and documentary director, and film critic
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Let's be real—dating at any phase can feel like walking a conversational tightrope. How much is too much? What's not enough? When should I ask? What do I say if they ask me about something that I don't want to talk about? And how do you strike that magical balance between showing up as your radiant, authentic self and still being curious, fun, and engaging? In Part 2 of our juicy conversation, I'm back with the brilliant Lindsay Anderson, one of Smart Dating Academy's most beloved coaches, and we're continuing our deep dive into how to absolutely crush it on a first date. We cover:
Ever wonder what makes a truly great date, and what are the best questions to ask (and how)? In this must-listen episode (part 1 of 2), the brilliant and longstanding Smart Dating Academy coach Lindsay Anderson and I sit down to break down the art of dating with confidence, ease, and authenticity. If you've ever felt awkward on a date, struggled with what to say or what to ask, or worried about making a lasting impression, this episode is for you! ✨ We dive into: The key traits of a great date
Spéciale Ken Loach à l'occasion de la rétrospective à la Cinematek à Bruxelles en avril et mai. On en parle avec Dick Tomasovic, chargé de cours en histoire et esthétique du cinéma et des arts du spectacle à l'ULg. Le cinéma anglais a connu, à l'image de la Nouvelle Vague française, un tournant radical qui entendait dynamiter un cinéma sclérosé en traitant les sujets critiques de l'époque par un engagement social qui ramenait le cinéma au plus proche du peuple. Les Angry Young Men, emmenés par Lindsay Anderson et Karel Reisz, ont laissé un héritage dont Ken Loach en particulier s'est saisi à la fin de la décennie, pour à son tour porter un regard sur la réalité mû par le même souci d'engagement social que ses prédécesseurs. Merci pour votre écoute Entrez sans Frapper c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 16h à 17h30 sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez l'ensemble des épisodes et les émission en version intégrale (avec la musique donc) de Entrez sans Frapper sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/8521 Abonnez-vous également à la partie "Bagarre dans la discothèque" en suivant ce lien: https://audmns.com/HSfAmLDEt si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement. Vous pourriez également apprécier ces autres podcasts issus de notre large catalogue: Le voyage du Stradivarius Feuermann : https://audmns.com/rxPHqEENoir Jaune Rouge - Belgian Crime Story : https://feeds.audiomeans.fr/feed/6e3f3e0e-6d9e-4da7-99d5-f8c0833912c5.xmlLes Petits Papiers : https://audmns.com/tHQpfAm Des rencontres inspirantes avec des artistes de tous horizons. Galaxie BD: https://audmns.com/nyJXESu Notre podcast hebdomadaire autour du 9ème art.Nom: Van Hamme, Profession: Scénariste : https://audmns.com/ZAoAJZF Notre série à propos du créateur de XII et Thorgal. Franquin par Franquin : https://audmns.com/NjMxxMg Ecoutez la voix du créateur de Gaston (et de tant d'autres...) Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Mick Travis is back in O LUCKY MAN!, at least some version of Mick Travis. Join him on an epic journey through the hellish and bizarre landscape of 70s Britain. From coffee salesman to superstar, and many stops along the way. This is a sprawling state-of-the-nation film akin to SOUTHLAND TALES or maybe I'm just making that comparison to get you to watch it, it's hard to tell. We also take a look at what appear to be some pretty boring Oscar nominations and talk about some other movies we've been watching.Join us next for the conclusion of Lindsay Anderson's MickTril, BRITANNIA HOSPITALFollow us @thefranchisees on Instagram and Twitter and email us at thefranchiseespod@gmail.com
wow jeez sorry it's late again ahh jeez guys I'm really running out of excuses here!please enjoy this episode on Lindsay Anderson's 1968 film IF...., not to be confused with the disgusting John Krasinski's IF (2024) and the even more disgusting Marvel's WHAT IF... ?we also take time to talk about the life and work of our beloved David Lynch who passed away earlier this week. sometime soon we promise we'll do a full David Lynch episode where we needlessly rank his entire filmography.join us next week for the 2nd film in the Mick Travis trilogy, O LUCKY MAN!
Lindsay Anderson's revenge on the British public school
This week, we celebrate Revolutions Per Movie's 1 year anniversary with filmmaker and actor OWEN KLINE (A24's Funny Pages), who chose one of the most anticipated music films to discuss on the podcast, THE WHO'S TOMMY. We discuss the chicken/egg of the movie vs. the lp, the baked bean mythology, Ken Russell's pre-filmmaking history from being a ballet dancer to dodging the war, Russell's early BBC Composer films, Richard Lester and Lindsay Anderson, Robert Crumb and Fantagraphics Books, being a cultural dinosaur, the concept of selling out, the precision of the film that betrays its midnight movie status, Who's Next, how the Tommy LP kept The Who from breaking up, the ARP synth, the use of repetition in both the LP and the movie, transgressive music, how and why Townshend kept changing the shape of the story of Tommy, the aborted projects LIFEHOUSE & THE ANGELS that used elements to make the film Tommy, could we pick up the concept album plot before seeing the movie (and even after seeing it!), Ann-Margret's Oscar-nominated performance, the amount of sweat that appears on actors in the film, the surprising debut acting turn of Roger Daltrey, the UK white boy blues movement, Russell's choice of having the actor sing, including Jack Nicholson's strange turn, Keith Moon's approach to Uncle Ernie, Chris's concept double album Colonel Jeffrey Pumpernickel, Tina Turner's incredible performance as the acid queen and how Mick Jagger was in talks to do the role instead, does Elton John and Tina turner steal the film, the strange final 1/3 of the film, Dauhgltrey's perfect cartwheels, acting through song and so much more!We are also joined by special guest Barry Winch, who starred in TOMMY as ‘Young Tommy'!!! He illuminates us both about being a child on the set of the strange film, what it was like working with Ken Russell, Ann-Margret & Oliver Reed, how they got honest performances out of him as a child actor, how The Who protested going to the premiere unless he was invited (since he was underage), how Ken Russell himself accidentally cast him, his family's acting history, playing hide and seek with Oliver Reed, what it felt like being on the set of that movie, what the Tommy props from the film have been auctioned at, why he wasn't allowed to wander around the set, his favorite memories and some moments of being afraid as well.All this and more as we celebrate the one year anniversary of REVOLUTIONS PER MOVIE!!!OWEN KLINE:https://a24films.com/films/funny-pagesREVOLUTIONS PER MOVIE:Host Chris Slusarenko (Eyelids, Guided By Voices, owner of Clinton Street Video rental store) is joined by actors, musicians, comedians, writers & directors who each week pick out their favorite music documentary, musical, music-themed fiction film or music videos to discuss. Fun, weird, and insightful, Revolutions Per Movie is your deep dive into our life-long obsessions where music and film collide.Revolutions Per Movies releases new episodes every Thursday. If you like the show, please subscribe, rate, and review it on your favorite podcast app.The show is also a completely independent affair, so the best way to support it is through our Patreon at patreon.com/revolutionspermovie. By joining, you can get weekly bonus episodes, physical goods such as Flexidiscs, and other exclusive goods.SOCIALS:@revolutionspermovieX, BlueSky: @revpermovie Click here to get EXCLUSIVE BONUS WEEKLY Revolutions Per Movie content on our Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The fourth episode of our season on the awesome movie year of 1969 features the Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or winner, Lindsay Anderson's If….. Directed by Lindsay Anderson from a screenplay by David Sherwin and starring Malcolm McDowell, Robert Swann, Richard Warwick, Christine Noonan and David Wood, If…. is the first of three films Anderson directed featuring McDowell's character Mick Travis.The contemporary reviews quoted in this episode come from Vincent Canby in The New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/1969/03/10/archives/screen-if-begins-runtale-of-school-revolt-opens-at-the-plaza.html), Paul Schrader in the Los Angeles Free Press (https://paulschrader.org/articles/pdf/1969-If.pdf), and Penelope Houston in The Spectator (https://archive.spectator.co.uk/article/20th-december-1968/20/much-virtue-in-if-arts).Visit https://www.awesomemovieyear.com for more info about the show.Make sure to like Awesome Movie Year on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/awesomemovieyear and follow us on Twitter @AwesomemoviepodYou can find Jason online at http://goforjason.com/, on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/JHarrisComedy/, on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/jasonharriscomedy/ and on Twitter @JHarrisComedyYou can find Josh online at http://joshbellhateseverything.com/, on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/joshbellhateseverything/ and on Twitter @signalbleedYou can find our producer David Rosen's Piecing It Together Podcast at https://www.piecingpod.com, on Twitter at @piecingpod and the Popcorn & Puzzle Pieces Facebook Group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/piecingpod.You can also follow us all on Letterboxd to keep up with what we've been watching at goforjason, signalbleed and bydavidrosen.Subscribe on Patreon to support the show and get access to exclusive content from Awesome Movie Year, plus fellow podcasts Piecing It Together and All Rice No Beans, and music by David Rosen: https://www.patreon.com/bydavidrosenAll of the music in the episode is by David Rosen. Find more of his music at https://www.bydavidrosen.comPlease like, share, rate and comment on the show and this episode, and tune in for the next 1969 installment, featuring our documentary pick, the Maysles brothers' Salesman.
The third episode of our season on the awesome movie year of 1969 features the year's biggest flop, Carl Reiner's The Comic. Directed and co-written by Carl Reiner and starring Dick Van Dyke, Michele Lee and Mickey Rooney, The Comic was inspired by Van Dyke's love of silent film comedians.The contemporary reviews quoted in this episode come from Roger Greenspun in The New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/1969/11/20/archives/comic-and-desperados-on-double-bill.html), Jack Goff in The Hollywood Reporter (https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/comic-review-movie-1969-1254978/), and Pauline Kael in The New Yorker.Visit https://www.awesomemovieyear.com for more info about the show.Make sure to like Awesome Movie Year on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/awesomemovieyear and follow us on Twitter @AwesomemoviepodYou can find Jason online at http://goforjason.com/, on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/JHarrisComedy/, on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/jasonharriscomedy/ and on Twitter @JHarrisComedyYou can find Josh online at http://joshbellhateseverything.com/, on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/joshbellhateseverything/ and on Twitter @signalbleedYou can find our producer David Rosen's Piecing It Together Podcast at https://www.piecingpod.com, on Twitter at @piecingpod and the Popcorn & Puzzle Pieces Facebook Group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/piecingpod.You can also follow us all on Letterboxd to keep up with what we've been watching at goforjason, signalbleed and bydavidrosen.Subscribe on Patreon to support the show and get access to exclusive content from Awesome Movie Year, plus fellow podcasts Piecing It Together and All Rice No Beans, and music by David Rosen: https://www.patreon.com/bydavidrosenAll of the music in the episode is by David Rosen. Find more of his music at https://www.bydavidrosen.comPlease like, share, rate and comment on the show and this episode, and tune in for the next 1969 installment, featuring the Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or winner, Lindsay Anderson's If ….
Rose Poivrée by The Different Company (2000) + Series Six Synthetic: Tar by Comme des Garçons (2004) + Serge Noire by Serge Lutens (2008) + Pinaud Clubman + Black Aoud by Montale (2006) + Current 93 (1982- ) + Throbbing Gristle's TG24 (1980, 2002) + Psychic TV's First Transmission (1982) + Coil (1982-2005) + Boyd Rice (1956- ) + Death in June (1981- ) + Robin Hardy's The Wicker Man (1973) + Lindsay Anderson's if...(1968) + Ken Russell's The Devils (1971) + Derek Jarman's Sebastiane (1976), The Angelic Conversation (1985), and Blue (1993) with Ortant Aper, John, Will, Blauergeist, Sam, Jugs, Boyd Rice, and Ty E S3E13, S3E14, S2E41, S2E28, and S1E33 4/11/21, 4/4/21, 9/27/20, 6/20/20, 9/4/19 S6E57 To hear this episode and the complete continuing story of The Perfume Nationalist please subscribe on Patreon.
A chance encounter with the director Lindsay Anderson changed Robin Askwith's life forever. It led to his first acting job, playing the schoolboy Keating in Anderson's film if.... which became one of the most popular British films of all time. If.... kickstarted Robin's incredible career that spans an extraordinary period of time. Over the past 50 years, he's appeared in everything from Pier Paolo Pasolini's The Canterbury Tales to the Confessions comedies to Inside No. 9, The Madame Blanc Mysteries and even a stint in pantomime that saw him batting bread rolls with Ian Botham. Now he's enjoying something of a renaissance moment. And boy, does he have some stories to tell...
Bill Maher and legendary actor Malcolm McDowell discuss the impact of his film A Clockwork Orange, how some American cities are living in a Clockwork Orange simulation, the futility of Hollywood remakes, gender roles for actors, Malcolm's early inspiration from actor Albert Finney, working with renowned directors like Stanley Kubrick and Lindsay Anderson, the real story behind the set of the movie "Caligula" and its controversial nature, English humor and its differences from American humor, Malcolm's recovery journey, the British monarchy and its cultural significance, stories about Richard Pryor and Garry Shandling, the difference between comedy and serious acting, and much, much more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
GGACP continues its celebration of the birthday of actor and raconteur Malcolm McDowell (b. June 13) by revisiting PART TWO of a memorable two-part episode from 2020. In this episode, Malcolm talks about the art and design of "A Clockwork Orange," the troubled history of "Caligula," the awkward truth about H.G. Wells and the lives and careers of screen legends John Gielgud, James Mason, Peter O'Toole and Robert Shaw. Also, Anthony Quinn grunts, Gene Kelly turns a cold shoulder, Albert Finney turns down "Lawrence of Arabia" and Malcolm rids the world of Captain Kirk. PLUS: J. Lee Thompson! Gore Vidal pulls out! Christopher Lee wigs out! The improvisational talents of Peter Sellers! And Malcolm remembers his mentor Lindsay Anderson! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What does the path to a decarbonized grid by 2040 look like? Dr. C. Lindsay Anderson of Cornell University is working to answer the question of where best on the grid to incorporate large amounts of new generation on the future grid to achieve optimal performance. Anderson is chair of Cornell's Department of Biological & Environmental Engineering. Her research focuses on creating detailed models of energy systems to see how they'll perform under different conditions. Her other research interests run the gamut including energy economics; the future of nuclear power including fusion; renewable power systems including solar, wind, geothermal and hydropower; energy conservation by users and demand-side management; and global climate change.The research team at the eponymous Anderson Lab is looking for ways to modify the algorithms used to make decisions on operating systems. The lab's modeling is comprised of numerous independent data sets including those provided by NREL (the National Renewable Energy Laboratory). Anderson notes that NYISO's publicly available datasets play an essential role in validating historical power flows, peak load patterns, and market behaviors.“The last thing we want to do is keep all the fossil generators online and running just in case we need them,” she said, “because that undermines our ability to decarbonize.”A big part of the research deals with considering the practical implications of the CLCPA. She calls it an exciting opportunity to look at New York's climate goals and determine how they'll workTalking to people at the NYISO who know the system well is another important part of the process according to Anderson. She cites our ongoing System Resource and Outlook reporting and analysis of multiple decarbonization scenarios as essential in understanding the numerous variables and impacts.Some of those challenges result from geospatial issues. Renewable energy generated upstate still needs to be transmitted to downstate where the demand is greatest.“The offshore wind off Long Island is key to that because it's located down there and wouldn't have to come through those lines. So those being effectively built up is going to be critically important,” she said.Moving forward, modeling the ideal end state of a decarbonized grid is as important as anticipating the steps along the way in order to understand the iterative impacts of integrating new technology, and how we keep the system reliable throughout the transition.Additional Resources and InformationDr. C. Lindsay Anderson bio | Anderson Lab Learn More Follow us on Twitter @NewYorkISO and LinkedIn @NYISO Read our blogs and watch our videos Check out our 2040 grid page
She is more than a reality competition star. Lindsay Anderson has spent years training and coaching people in business on how to REALLY make money with their online businesses. She explains how she got started, and how she feels about having our very own John Ashton as a client. Then, we talk with Lindsay about how she used her training to navigate the world of reality competition in Netflix's series "The Trust". Lindsay got more than her share of air time on the show, and we dive into some very personal issues as Lindsay spills the tea on "The Trust", her fellow contestants and their on-going relationships. Give us the tea!
This week, Lindsay Anderson continued through our sermon series "How to Change the World in Seven Days" exploring Mark 14:32-42. The accounts of Jesus' life spend most of the time talking not about the three years of his ministry but about the last week of his life. That's because those seven days changed everything. During How To Change the World in 7 Days we will see how Jesus changed the world in order to transform each of us.
In this episode, Ralph and Owen journey into the spectral wastes of British film, asking: what went wrong, and what is to be done? Through kitchen sink realism, folk-horror spooks, socially-engaged documentarians, materially-inclined avant-gardism, and more than a handful of oddballs, the situation seems as underwhelming as it was in 1927, when Kenneth Macpherson opined that “it is no good pretending one has any feeling of hope about it”. Ninety-seven years later, is the landscape still as dispiriting – and why did ‘we' never get our own New Wave – and why are we still stuck in the kitchen sink? Through cash, ‘character', class, and capital, there's a lot to unpick. Regardless, the boys do their best to keep the aspidistra flying. Who do they discuss? Who don't they! Anderson, Macpherson, Grierson, Hogg, Keillor, Reisz, Clark, Watkins, Jarman, Brook, Greenaway, Powell & Pressburger, Reed, Lean, Hitchcock, Loach, Leigh. The lot. 00:00:00:00 Intro 00:04:20:04 Early Silent British film 00:05:27:03 Talent leaving Britain for America 00:06:52:14 British documentaries and municipal filmmaking 00:09:09:17 The Studios of the interwar years 00:12:01:16 Powell and Pressburger 00:15:22:14 Class and politics in film 00:17:56:16 Free Cinema movement 00:24:30:13 Woodfall 00:28:15:05 The Third Man 00:30:37:10 60s-70s studio films/Merchant Ivory 00:31:54:13 60s counterculture 00:35:12:00 Folk horror 00:37:04:09 London Filmmakers Coop 00:48:04:15 Playwrights 00:55:27:00 The Paternalism of Social Realism 01:00:11:03 Pedro Costa as a counterpoint to social realism 01:04:16:13 Peter Watkins 01:09:47:05 Lindsay Anderson making an arse of himself 01:10:55:10 Peter Wollen's 1963 essay on the British New Wave 01:13:10:09 Kenneth MacPherson's 1927 article about British film 01:19:02:16 TV's influence in the 70s-80s 01:19:16:09 Alan Clarke 01:23:05:18 Sally Potter 01:30:10:24 Peter Brook 01:31:47:19 90s 01:32:34:21 British art film/essay films 01:37:09:20 00s and 10s 01:40:06:10 Joanna Hogg 01:43:08:18 Borderline (Kenneth Macpherson) 01:48:13:19 Peter Greenaway 01:55:09:09 Top 5 worst tendencies 01:57:31:14 Alternative Top 5 British films 01:59:59:23 Conclusion Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6hdAjXtGPpeQTCcuJ3KNmH?si=Ud_f__90TOSa28tzYPA5GQ Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/muub-tube/id1515030490 Watch on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@returntoformpod
He lost his job. He got his draft notice. The only path forward for this cinefile is clear: alienate everyone in his life and fracture his sanity by filming a progressively more erratic week of his life. Is he really searching for truth? Is film even the right way to capture truth? Does he really care about truth at all? Director Jim McBride fake documentary is about how everything filmed is a lie. Join our Patreon and support the podcast! Join the Random Acts of Cinema Discord server here! *Come support the podcast and get yourself or someone you love a random gift at our merch store. T-shirts, hoodies, mugs, stickers, and more! If you'd like to watch ahead for next week's film, we will be discussing and reviewing Lindsay Anderson's If.... (1968)
This week, Lindsay Anderson concluded our sermon series "Why We Need Christmas". He explored the the miracle of Jesus healing the man born blind- John 9:1-38
From the vault: Malcolm McDowell joins the podcast to talk about "A Clockwork Orange" on the occasion of its 50th anniversary. He goes deep on his complicated relationship with director Stanley Kubrick, the strange sequence of events that led to him being picked for the role, his close working relationship with other great directors, including Lindsay Anderson, Kubrick's passion project, "Napoleon," and the wan simulacrum which Ridley Scott just released, as well as tales of life in front of the camera, raising kids Ojai and much more. We did not talk about the Ankithera, rugby or Brazilian emeralds. Here's an insightful interview with McDowell from Slash Films. https://www.slashfilm.com/760908/how-a-clockwork-orange-changed-malcolm-mcdowell-forever/#:~:text=Much%20like%20Burgess'%20evolving%20emotions,saw%20onscreen%20was%20very%20real.
Špeciálna live epizóda podcastu denníka SME Vertigo, priamo z 18. ročníka Medzinárodného filmového festivalu Cinematik. V slnečných festivalových Piešťanoch si Peter Konečný a Juraj Malíček zaspomínali na svoje najväčšie festivalové zážitky z domácich či zahraničných podujatí. Vidieť a doslova zažiť film na filmovom festivale býva často celoživotnou spomienkou, nielen vďaka atmosfére, či priestoru kinosál, ale aj vďaka priateľom a celonočným diskusiám. Live epizóda filmového podcastu denníka SME bola spojená aj s diváckymi otázkami priamo od návštevníkov Cinematiku. Zoznam filmov z relácie: If.... (Lindsay Anderson, 1968) Deep Throat (Gerard Damiano, 1972) Meet the Feebles (Peter Jackson, 1989) Life of Brian (Terry Jones, 1979) Dancer in the Dark (Lars von Trier, 2000) One, Two, Three (Billy Wilder, 1961) Mommy (Xavier Dolan, 2014) _ Ak nám chcete napísať, ozvite sa na vertigo@sme.sk _ Ďakujeme, že počúvate podcast Vertigo a zaujímate sa o filmový svet
Bela chats with her long standing Smart Dating Academy coach Lindsay Anderson in a 2 part episode to review the secrets of her most successful clients! Lindsay has been helping people find love for over 20 years, and has helped thousands of singles find love! They will discuss the patterns that have HELPED their clients most! You won't want to miss any of this, and here are some highlights of the episode: 1) You won't know who the love of your life is based off on online profile or a first date - and hear WHY! 2) Ignore the clock - internally and externally! How and why to do that! 3) Doing something everyday adds up to big results over time - what's the best routine? 4) Treasure Hunting - How people find love in the most unexpected places! 5) Diversify your dating life - how do you do that? 6) Where there is smoke, there is fire....Kick the tires, and hard! Join our free newsletter database by signing up here: www.smartdatingacademy.com/contact Follow us on Instagram at @smartdatingacademy Schedule your consultation with us here! We are on a waiting list, and would love to help you! https://www.smartdatingacademy.com/11-coaching/coaching-call-with-bela
In this episode, we move on to our ninth-ranked film of 1963, "This Sporting Life," directed by Lindsay Anderson and starring Richard Harris and Rachel Roberts. Please subscribe to this podcast, and thanks for your support!
In the forty-fifth episode of Season 8 (Coming-of-Ages) Kyle is joined by filmmaker Daniel Lopez and sound designer/musician Jake Dilley to discuss the revolutionary bent in both form and theme that defines Lindsay Anderson's full frontal assault on British imperial traditionalism and the imbedded ritualistic brutality in the scholastic institutions in the counter cultural film If.... (1968).
Attention all food enthusiasts and industry professionals! We are thrilled to announce the upcoming episode of The Daily Restaurant Podcast Show, Women In Food Edition, hosted by Melanie Campbell and Chef Liana Robberecht. Mark your calendars for Thursday, June 1st, at 3pm EST because this episode is not to be missed!In this episode, we have two extraordinary guests joining us, each of whom has made significant contributions to the foodservice and hospitality industry. Let's meet them:1️⃣ Lindsay Anderson: With her extensive experience in the industry, Lindsay Anderson has become a prominent figure in the foodservice and hospitality sector. As a thought leader and advocate for sustainable food practices, Lindsay has played a vital role in raising awareness about ethical sourcing, reducing food waste, and promoting a more environmentally conscious approach to dining experiences.2️⃣ Dana VanVeller: As an acclaimed food writer and author, Dana VanVeller has captured the hearts and palates of food lovers everywhere. Through her captivating storytelling, Dana has shed light on the diverse culinary landscape of our nation, uncovering hidden gems and sharing the stories of local food producers and artisans. Her work has not only celebrated the richness of Canadian cuisine but has also inspired countless individuals to embark on their own culinary journeys.Join us as we engage in a captivating conversation with Lindsay Anderson and Dana VanVeller. Together with our hosts, Melanie Campbell and Chef Liana Robberecht, we will explore their journeys, delve into industry insights, and celebrate their immense contributions to the foodservice and hospitality industry.Don't miss out on this incredible episode of The Daily Restaurant Podcast Show, Women In Food Edition, dropping on Thursday, June 1st, at 3pm EST. Stay tuned for an empowering and enlightening discussion that pays tribute to the exceptional women shaping the culinary world.
Having survived the apocalypse, Andrew and Dave have decided to pursue a far more meaningful goal: selling coffee in the northern parts of the UK! Okay, maybe they aren't selling coffee in the north, but Mick Travis, the protagonist of director Lindsay Anderson's O Lucky Man!, certainly is. What do the podcasting duo make of Anderson's not-exactly-a-sequel-to-If.... epic comedy? Is this the most likeable Malcolm McDowell has ever been on screen? And just how stellar is Alan Price's score to the film? Tune in and find out!Next Episode: Before Jackson, there was... BAKSHI!All music by Andrew Kannegiesser. Editing by Dave Babbitt.
Hola Gerardo aquí en otro episodio de Simplemente Yo; La selección de esta semana es If..., if.... es una película dramática satírica británica de 1968 producida y dirigida por Lindsay Anderson y protagonizada por Malcolm McDowell como Mick Travis. Es una sátira de la vida escolar pública inglesa, la película sigue a un grupo de alumnos que organizan una revolución como reveldía en una escuela. La película fue objeto de controversia en el momento de su estreno y recibió un raiting X por sus representaciones de violencia. Espero que lo disfruten ;) Información adicional del podcast: Enlace del website official de Filmic Notion Podcast: https://filmicnotionpod.com/ Enlace a nuestra página de Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/fnpod
Mason librarian Lindsay Anderson read this version of “Twas the Night Before Christmas” on 99.1 WFMK and AM 1240 WJIM. Storytime includes special messages from executive director Scott Duimstra and Governor Gretchen Whitmer. Also, click to hear our Spanish version which aired on WKAR's 870 AM/102.3 FM.
"The Good Listening To" Podcast with me Chris Grimes! (aka a "GLT with me CG!")
Ladies n Genminminminmin (er, min...) look who I've gawn n' bagged for The Good Listening To Show! None other than National Children's Theatre Treasure David Wood OBE.With the peace, quiet & sanctuary of very specifically "Room 208" of the Cooden Beach Hotel in Bexhill-on-Sea in Sussex for his Clearing, where a lot of his 'writing magic' over the years has taken place!Heralded by The Times as being "The National Children's Dramatist" David Wood was a favourite of Queen Elizabeth II (presented to her no less than 4 times - and twice on the same day for reasons that he'll explain!). His new book, "Elizabeth Taylor's Kiss And Other Brushes With Hollywood!" reflects on his life & extraordinary career like a big fat kiss!David Wood is a children's entertainment all-rounder, versatility-pants & polymath. He is an Actor, Author, Composer, Director, Magician (Bingo Caller!) & Producer. He is also an esteemed member with a "Gold Star" for recognition of his services to Children's Entertainment of the Magic Circle. With so many seminal Children's theatre works & adaptations to his name including "The Gingerbread Man" (that partnered him way-back-when with Producer Cameron Macintosh & a show that has since toured the world many times over); "The Selfish Shellfish"; "The Owl & The Pussycat Went To See"; "The Tiger Who Came To Tea"; "Dinosaurs & All That Rubbish"; "Goodnight Mr Tom" & "Noddy" to name but several.He also wrote "The Queen's Handbag" as part of the Queen's 80th Birthday celebrations in 2006, culminating in a Garden Party hosted by the Queen for 5,000 children + an all star cast in the gardens of Buckingham Palace - & simultaneously broadcast Live on BBC One!He is also a man to whom I will be eternally grateful, as he gave me my 1st ever professional job, on graduating from The Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, understudying TV Presenter Peter Duncan in Whirligig Theatre's "Dinosaurs And All That Rubbish". So it's all his fault! This is a sincere opportunity after all these years to welcome him to the Clearing to say THANK YOU!David Wood has something of the magical spirit of Peter Pan about him. No wonder: it was his favourite story as a child & he was shaped in the 1960s. Well over half a century later, David still exudes an ageless happy-go-lucky, childlike optimism, a super-civilised energy & endless enthusiasm, which is simply irresistible. OK, he readily admits to being ‘a bit of a show-off'! Magic was his first party trick. From an early age, he also enjoyed being a choirboy - as it involved a distinctive wardrobe & a weekly public performance. What's more, going to church two or three times on Sundays gave David a credible excuse to escape the parental tensions at home. Aged 14, when he told his Headmaster in Chichester that he wanted to be an actor, he was immediately pointed towards a one week residential course. What he learned there has served David well for all of his professional life! Another teacher at that school, curiously nicknamed ‘Spiv', suggested to David that focusing exclusively on acting might be a self-limiting decision. What about writing, directing, producing? It instantly broadened David's vision of theatrical possibilities. Look at the nominations, the awards, the applause: He has excelled on stage, in the cinema and on TV. He has directed & produced, written literally dozens of plays, songs and books.During his action-packed life, David has met & worked with just about all of the great English names in the theatre & Hollywood, including Laurence Olivier, Michael Redgrave, Alec Guinness, Cameron Macintosh, John Mortimer, Peter Cook and Bernard Miles. Not to mention Richard Burton & Elizabeth Taylor, George Martin, Lindsay Anderson, Malcolm McDowell & Michael Palin! "If you have ears, prepare to lend them now!"
In the twenty-sixth episode of Season 7 (Fantastical Realities) Kyle is joined by screenwriter David Gutierrez and novelist Alex Buda to discuss the surreal depiction of capitalist hierarchy and the fantasy of hard work equating success in the pseudo-musical satire of Lindsay Anderson's O Lucky Man! (1973).
Bela chats with her long standing Smart Dating Academy coach Lindsay Anderson in a 2 part episode to review the secrets of her most successful clients! Lindsay has been helping people find love for over 20 years, and has helped thousands of singles find love! They will discuss the patterns that have HELPED their clients most! You won't want to miss any of this, and here are some highlights of the episode: 1) You won't know who the love of your life is based off on online profile or a first date - and hear WHY! 2) Ignore the clock - internally and externally! How and why to do that! 3) Doing something everyday adds up to big results over time - what's the best routine? 4) Treasure Hunting - How people find love in the most unexpected places! 5) Diversify your dating life - how do you do that? 6) Where there is smoke, there is fire....Kick the tires, and hard! Join our free newsletter database by signing up here: www.smartdatingacademy.com/contact Follow us on Instagram at @smartdatingacademy Schedule your consultation with us here! We are on a waiting list, and would love to help you! https://www.smartdatingacademy.com/11-coaching/coaching-call-with-bela
Reel Britannia - a very British podcast about very British movies...with just a hint of professionalism. Surreal schoolboy shenanigans this week as Scott, Steven and Anthony uncover the very dark side of public school in the sixties. If (1968) Lindsay Anderson's If.... is a daringly anarchic vision of British society, set in a boarding school in late-sixties England. Before Kubrick made his mischief iconic in A Clockwork Orange, Malcolm McDowell made a hell of an impression as the insouciant Mick Travis, who, along with his school chums, trumps authority at every turn, finally emerging as a violent savior in the vicious games of one-upmanship played by both students and masters. Mixing color and black and white as audaciously as it mixes fantasy and reality, If…. remains one of cinema's most unforgettable rebel yells. "Education in Britain is a nubile Cinderella: sparsely clad and much interfered with." You can find this and all our previous episodes everywhere you download your podcasts Follow us on Twitter @rbritanniapod Join us over at our Facebook Group ….we'd love to chat with you email: reelbritannia@gmail.com #podcast #britmovie #reelbritannia #if #ifmovie Thanks for listening Scott, Steven and Anthony
Last episode I spoke with the "Yes Lady" Lindsay Anderson in Taber, Alberta about the strange path that led to her starting a soup business.Today, we get crackin' on writing our own obituaries, or at least talking about some of the obituaries in Lindsay's collection!Kettle Brand Apple Cider Vinegar Chips from Niagara Falls, Canada remind us that 'sour' is just another way of saying "tangy"!https://lindsayanderson63.wixsite.com/my-site Subscribe to Memory Chips podcast on any of your podcast platforms! https://pod.link/1588265708
The first part in a series of conversations with Lindsay Anderson--the woman who likes to say 'Yes".In this episode, Lindsay tells the unlikely story about how she started her soup business--which sounds like it would be boring--but because it is Lindsay--it isn't!Chips Flavors purchased in Toronto, Canada:Savoursmith's Bubbly and Green ChileSavoursmith's Black Truffle and Rosemaryhttps://lindsayanderson63.wixsite.com/my-site Subscribe to Memory Chips podcast on any of your podcast platforms! https://pod.link/1588265708
PRETTY AS A PICARESQUE: Join me and filmmaker Steve Herold (Death of an Umbrella Salesman, Walmea) while we talk two films inspired by Voltaire's Candide, The Jerk and O Lucky Man! “I was born a poor black child”: It's a tale as old as the Spanish Golden Age and made perhaps most famous in the west by Voltaire's Candide. Take a somewhat naïve innocent, usually of lower social class, thrust him out in the world, and have him navigate the slings and arrows he encounters, trying to survive in an essentially corrupt society. Or as I call it, Episode 80 of Pop Art, where I and my guest find the pop culture in art and the art in pop culture. It's the podcast where my guest chooses a movie from popular culture, and I'll select a film from the more art/classic/indie side of cinema with a connection to it. For this episode, I am happy to welcome as my guest, filmmaker Steve Herold, who has chosen as his film the Steve Martin vehicle, Carl Reiner's The Jerk, while I have chosen Lindsay Anderson's cult favorite, O Lucky Man!, both picaresque films with a naïve innocent having to go out on his own to discover the world. And in this episode we answer such questions as: Quentin Tarantino's The Jerk? Reactive, active or passive? What is white male protestant comedy? What are the problematic aspects of both films? How does Stanley Kubrick fit in? How many slaps did McDowell endure in the final scene? What is Steve Martin's favorite line? What is the French title of O Lucky Man!? Where was Hartounian's gas station located? How does Star Wars fit in and what does it have to do with Pig Man? Where does Rob Reiner appear in the film? And don't forget to check out Steve Herold and his films. His IMDB page is at https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0003750/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0#director Hs film Death of an Umbrella Salesman can be found on Amazon Prime and his newest film Walmea is making the festival rounds. Check out my blog at https://howardcasner.wordpress.com/ My books, More Rantings and Ravings of a Screenplay Reader, The Starving Artists and Other Stories and The Five Corporations and One True Religion can be found at https://www.amazon.com/s?k=howard+casner&ref=nb_sb_noss --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/howard-casner/support
Are you ready for a deeper conversation? In this episode we go into deeper conversation such as human design, gene keys, shadow work and telling your story to take your power back with 2 amazing women leaders.Lindsay Anderson is the CEO of My Core Collective and runs programs based on human design, shadow work and wealth so women can uncover their keys to success in business and life. Marsha Vanwynsberghe is a Storytelling Business Coach helping women to heal, own and write their stories and build a profitable business online. She used her human design to help her in her own business and helps others do the same. Marsha is also an author and podcast host of Own Your Choices Own Your Life and Every Body Has a Story.In this episode we dive into:- Marsha and Lindsay's share their stories on how they got to where they are today - how to go from feeling at rock bottom to successful entrepreneurs. - Shame stories and how to take your power back- How to use your rock bottom and see it as a blessing and trust that you are on the right path- Marsha shares her message on how to pick yourself up from rock bottom - you have to initiate what you desire to the Universe - We are not suppose to know the how so let go and stop waiting to be ready - claim what you want and let go of what you don't want- Why/how to take responsibility for your choices- Understanding you are not a victim of circumstance - Feel your feelings even when they are uncomfortable and then do one thing that will make you feel a little bit better or to move you forward- Focus on where your energy is and make a choice that works for you not against you- Call in support, know you don't have to do this all on your own- Your soul is not sent here to not have struggles or hardships, it is part of the journey and actually helps you grow, learn and become stronger- How human design has helped Lindsay and Marsha build, scale and grow their businesses- What is shadow work? why should you do your shadow work and how it can help you- How to embrace and love all parts of yourself- What are Gene Keys? What they tell you and how understanding yours can help you in your purpose, relationship and to bring in prosperity (money) into your career - What is scripting? How you can make it work for you.- Why sometimes affirmations and gratitude just doesn't work and what to do instead if it's not working for you- How to stop outsourcing your power and find validation within - let go of the paradigms and stories that are limiting you- How do you want to feel each day? can you create your script from that place- Learn about Lindsay and Marsha's upcoming program Successful & Satisfied my heading to mycorecollective for all the detailsFollow us over on Instagram @divinehealthpodcast & @pam_rocca or over on our website www.pamrocca.comWe love your reviews! If you haven't left a 5 star review yet please take a minute to leave one to let others know what the podcast is all about. If you enjoyed this episode we would so appreciate it if you would share with a friend who you know would love it too.
Actor Brian Cox chooses his one-time mentor and fellow Scot, Lindsay Anderson. "His effect is still on me to this day, and I can't throw him off. He taught me how to think. He triggered something off in me that nobody else had previously done." A critic, an outsider, a provocateur, Anderson founded the Free Cinema movement in the 1950s with fellow documentary makers Tony Richardson, Karel Reisz and Lorenza Mazzetti. His films include This Sporting Life and If… which won the Palm d'or in 1969 and helped launch the career of Malcolm MacDowell. Lindsay Anderson's international reputation surpassed his fame in Britain, where his uncompromisingly anti-establishment stance failed to win him mainstream admirers, but he made several more provocative films and is remembered fondly by his friends and collaborators as an extremely funny, loyal and principled man. Brian Cox, star of Rushmore, The Bourne Identity and Succession, is joined by Karl Magee from the Lindsay Anderson Archive at the University of Stirling. Presented by Matthew Parris and produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Ellie Richold. Future programmes in this series include journalist Donald McIntyre on the editor of Picture Post, Tom Hopkinson; Janet Ellis on the founder of the Puffin Club, Kaye Webb; and Terry Christian on Mr Manchester, Tony Wilson, along with author Paul Morley who wrote From Manchester With Love.
POP ART, WHERE I FIND THE POP CULTURE IN ART AND THE ART IN POP CULTURE. Join me and podcaster, blogger and film enthusiast Richard Kirkham as we discuss Bull Durham and This Sporting Life, two films about athletes in existential crises. I know what you're thinking. What happened to Episode 77. Well, we recorded that episode on 2001 and Solaris twice, but Skype failed to download it. But everything seems fine now and we should be doing that episode in the near future. For some illogical reason, I decided to keep it Episode 77. Don't ask me. IT TAKES A LOT OF BALLS: I believe in the Church of Baseball. It's spring when a young man's fancy turns to thoughts of…sports; or sport for our English listeners. Yes, sounds like it's time for Episode 78 of Pop Art, where we find the pop culture in art and the art in pop culture. It's the podcast where my guest chooses a movie from popular culture, and I'll select a film from the more art/classic/indie side of cinema with a connection to it. This time round, I am happy to welcome back, for the fourth time, Richard Kirkham, who has chosen as his film the Ron Shelton low key classic Bull Durham, while I have chosen the Lindsay Anderson's angry young man, kitchen sink drama This Sporting Life, both films about athletes going through an existential crisis. And in this episode we answer such questions as: What is it about sports films? What does it mean to win by losing? What do the writers of both films have in common? What happened during the Broadway production of David Storey's The Changing Room that didn't shock little old ladies? Where did the names come from? If a baseball player hits the bull do they really get a free steak dinner? How does Ron Shelton resemble his Bull Durham hero? How does Lawrence Olivier fit in? Who did the producers of Bull Durham want for Tim Robbin's role first and how did Ron Shelton react? Why were young men angry in Britain? Check out the LAMBcast at http://www.largeassmovieblogs.com/ Check out Richard's blog at https://kirkhamclass.blogspot.com/?fbclid=IwAR3YYgDVY-42zT8hsDDo5ECSNe1xyPP9x2bvUAmm_XsVDDjtUjp3Aj8smCQ Check out my blog at https://howardcasner.wordpress.com/ My books, More Rantings and Ravings of a Screenplay Reader, The Starving Artists and Other Stories and The Five Corporations and One True Religion can be found at https://www.amazon.com/s?k=howard+casner&ref=nb_sb_noss --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/howard-casner/support
EPISODE OVERVIEW: Disclaimer: This interview includes sensitive content that may be triggering, including, but not limited to suicide ideation and mental illness. This episode is in honor of World Bipolar Day. I have the pleasure of interviewing Lindsay Anderson, who shares her personal experience of living with and managing multiple mental health conditions, including bipolar disorder, generalized anxiety disorder and PTSD. She delves into the complexities of being misdiagnosed for years, navigating the mental healthcare system, and the importance of self-advocacy, amongst other topics.In this episode we discuss:How Lindsay started her blog, Consciously Coping, after searching YouTube for black mental health providers and not finding anyLindsay's mental health journey, which began in middle school with extreme bullying The symptoms of bipolar disorder and how different episodes can feelHow getting the right diagnosis and right meds made a world of difference in managing her symptomsHer 30 day stay in the psych ward and what the experience was likeHaving a stroke and being paralyzed for 3 monthsLindsay's toolkit for managing her mental health..and much more!ABOUT THE GUEST: Lindsay (she/her/hers) is a mental illness advocate, writer, and scientist with 20+ years of lived experience. She is well known for her raspy, yet powerful voice and honesty about the mental health system in America. How you can connect with Lindsay:Email: coping.consciously@gmail.comFacebookInstagram YouTube RESOURCES MENTIONED:Imade Nibokun (Depressed While Black)Dr. Joy (TherapyforBlackGirls) The Okra Project TKO Alabama Dr. Amber Thorton (Balanced Working Momma) JOIN THE SISTA CIRCLE COMMUNITYSubscribe to The Sista Circle Podcast:Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotifyStitcherFollow The Sista Circle Podcast:IG: @thesistacirclepodcastFacebook: @thesistacirclepodcastYouTube: The Sista Circle Podcast Subscribe to The Sista Circle Podcast Mailing List HereBuy Me a Coffee (Support the Show) HereSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/sistacirclepod)
Olivier and Emmy-winning actor Brian Cox is best known these days as Logan Roy, the tyrannical media mogul and disappointed father in the hit series Succession. It's a character familiar to him having played King Lear, along with virtually every other classical role during a sixty year stage career at the National Theatre, the RSC and repertory theatres throughout the UK. On screen he's made a name for himself as the go-to character actor of his generation, with roles in the Bourne trilogy, Troy, Braveheart and many more. Villains are his speciality and include the original portrayal of Hannibal Lector on screen in the film Manhunter. In a wide-ranging conversation, he tells John Wilson about the most formative influences on his career which started when he worked as a stage hand at the Dundee Rep Theatre in his home city. He reminisces about working with directors including Lindsay Anderson and John Schlesinger, and how seeing Albert Finney on screen in the 1960s made him realise there were new opportunities for working class actors. He also reflects on the international fame he has found playing Logan Roy. Producer: Edwina Pitman
Faces [00:33] "Miss Judy's Farm" A Nod Is as Good as a Wink... to a Blind Horse Warner Bros. Records BS 2574 1971 The lads at peak form, produced by none other than Glyn Johns. Soft Cell [04:09] "Say Hello, Wave Goodbye" Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret Sire SRK 3647 1981 Excellent low-key groove from these Leeds lads. There's fun cover of this by Japanese duo Salon Music and Russell Mael of Sparks (https://youtu.be/s6M69rLUMfE). Aidan Baker & Karen Williams [09:37] "Meeting in the Dark" Nonland Gizeh Records GZH74 2017 Guitarscapes by Aidan Baker and percussion by Karen Willems. Atari Teenage Riot [15:03] "Atari Teenage Riot" Not Your Business EP 1996 Grand Royal GR039/Digital Hardcore Recordings DHR US 12.1 Yup, digital hardcore was a thing. The Partridge Family presentado a Shirly Jones y David Cassidy [20:26] "Nadie Desea Ser Amada (Doesn't Somebody Want to Be Wanted)" Al Dia (Up to Date) Bell Records 2308 004 1971 Jeez leweez, never trust a kid to refile records correctly. Why is there a copy of The Partridge Family's Up to Date in the sleeve for The Partridge Family Notebook? And why is the label in Spanish but none of the songs are in Spanish. Oh well. Herb Ellis [23:07] "Big Red's Boogie Woogie" Nothing but the Blues Verve Records MG V-8252 1957 Hot! Featuring Stan Levey on drums, Ray Brown on bass, Stan Getz on tenor sax, and Roy Eldridge on trumpet. Big Star [28:46] "When My Baby's Beside Me" No. 1 Record Big Beat Records WIK 53 1986 (original release: Ardent Records DS-2083 1972) Every day someone is born who has never heard Big Star. If you are one of those people, enjoy! The Number Ones [32:09] "Sharon Shouldn't" The Numbers Static Shock Records SSR024 2014 Hot mid-teens power pop punk from Dublin. Iron Maiden [35:56] "The Prisoner" The Number of the Beast Harvest ST-12202 1982 Bruce Dickinson's debut outing with Maiden. This album loomed large in my adolescence. Evidently Mr. Dickinson is touring with a spoken word show? (https://youtu.be/R9jfm-9L0q4) TacocaT [41:59] "Psychedlic Quinceañera" NVM Hardly Art HAR-079 2014 So many awesome songs on this album that it's hard to pick just one, but really... This Is the One! From the lyrics to the trumpets, what's not to love? Romeo Void [44:10] "Never Say Never" Never Say Never Columbia/415 Records 5C 38178 1981 Every day someone is born who has never heard "Never Say Never". If one of those people is you, enjoy! Thank goodness for the early days of MTV otherwise I would have had no idea this sound existed. Alan Price [50:16] "O Lucky Man!" O Lucky Man! Original Sountrack Warner Bros. Records BS 2710 1973 I've been obsessed with this Alan Price soundtrack since I first heard it in this over-long shaggy dog of a film by Lindsay Anderson. L.A. Witch [54:44] "Heart of Darkness" Octubre Suicide Squeeze SSQ166 2019 Mellow down spooky. Bobbie Gentry [57:12] "Mississippi Delta" Ode to Billie Joe Captiol Records ST-2830 1967 One of the hottest track one side ones you could ask for. Mulatu Astatke [01:00:22] "Munaye" Mulatu of Ethiopia Worthy Records W-1020 1972 (2003 reissue) Putting the funk in Ethiopian jazz. The Cramps [01:03:54] "I Can't Hardly Stand It" ...Off the Bone Illegal Records ILPIC 012 1985 The Cramps give this Charlie Feathers number (https://youtu.be/8h_O6U1xMlc) a fine take. There's some great local television footage of Alex Chilton helping The Cramps record at Sun Studios if you shake the internet. Music behind the DJ: "Goldfinger" by Mantovani
Directed by Lindsay Anderson and released in 1963, This Sporting Life follows a rugby player named Frank Machin on and off the field. Hosting tremendous performances from its leads, Richard Harris and Rachel Roberts, it's considered one of the greatest British films ever made and still influences viewers to this day.
In this episode, Sue and Marsha are sharing what happens when we stand up together in solidarity, as they discuss the truck drivers convoy that is happening across Canada right now. Their decisions to stand up and make a statement that impacts so many of us truly makes us proud to be Canadian. They are also discussing how more and more people are inspired by other people's stories and this is one of the big reasons why they are so passionate about sharing our stories. In this episode we discuss: 1) How more and more people are done with the division in our society and how we are all craving connections and this is now shifting because of some very brave humans who are choosing to stand up for what they feel is right. 2) We talked about bravery, courage and vulnerability as so many people are hoping that someone else will speak up at this difficult time. We tend to admire this in others as courage yet we judge it in ourselves as weakness. We all have bravery inside of us and we can all choose to leave these messages with others because it creates more impact for the world. 3) As the first volume of Every Body Holds A Story is getting ready to go to the editor, the doors are open for the next round of authors and we are starting the writing process in the first week of March. There is a link below or connect with us to apply to be an author in Volume 2 and the special edition on Brain Health. If this speaks to you, please apply!4) Our experience with Lindsay Anderson from My Core Collective when she went through talking to us about Gene Keys and how to embrace the shadow parts of ourselves instead of fighting or judging those sides of ourselves. Connect with Lindsay for more information on Gene Keys at mycorecollective@gmail.comJoin the Every Body Holds a Story Facebook Grouphttps://www.facebook.com/groups/582412896496298 Application for Every Body Holds a Story Collaborative Bookhttps://www.everybodyholdsastory.com/assessments/2147570491 Follow us on Instagram:https://instagram.com/everybodyholdsastory Tune into Sue's podcast, Love Your Cells: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/love-your-cells-podcast/id1478170164 Tune into Marsha's podcast, Own Your Choices Own Your Life:https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/own-your-choices-own-your-life/id1445904739
In this episode, I sit down with emotional intelligence coach, Lindsay Anderson, creator of the Try Again Classroom. Lindsay shares tangible steps to creating and using affirmations as a way to transform habits to be long lasting changes. She dives into knowing the WHY behind your affirmation and what negative beliefs are lurking under there to help find real and lasting transformation in your habits and goals. If you've found yourself setting goals but unable to follow through and wondering how to make it happen and take your momentum to the next level this episode is for you. Connect with Lindsay: Website: www.tryagainclassroom.com Follow Lindsay on IG: https://www.instagram.com/lindsayluminant Connect with Amber: >>> I'm inviting you to join me for a ridiculously value packed FREE four day challenge starting Monday, January 3. It's four days long and you'll receive daily action steps plus three motivating mini-trainings to help you gain clarity into your goals and start building momentum. We will cover your roadmap to consistency, set intentions, and create routines that work with your life. Plus you'll get access to my live workshop, "5 Keys to Help You Not Quit". Sign up here: https://view.flodesk.com/pages/61b801b13d946afb20c71ad6 IG: @coachamberb Website: https://www.coachamberb.com >>> This episode is sponsored by The Momentum Restart, a fail-proof system created by me to keep you accountable to your goals and feeling your best. If you keep hitting that same wall again and again, you don't need a new health program you just need to add a momentum restart.. Learn more at https://www.coachamberb.com/restart
In this episode, I sit down with emotional intelligence coach, Lindsay Anderson, creator of the Try Again Classroom. Lindsay shares tangible steps to creating and using affirmations as a way to transform habits to be long lasting changes. She dives into knowing the WHY behind your affirmation and what negative beliefs are lurking under there to help find real and lasting transformation in your habits and goals. If you've found yourself setting goals but unable to follow through and wondering how to make it happen and take your momentum to the next level this episode is for you. Connect with Lindsay: Website: www.tryagainclassroom.com Follow Lindsay on IG: https://www.instagram.com/lindsayluminant >>> This episode is sponsored by The Momentum Restart, a fail-proof system created by me to keep you accountable to your goals and feeling your best. If you keep hitting that same wall again and again, you don't need a new health program you just need to add a momentum restart.. Learn more at https://www.fasterwaywithamberb.com/restart Connect with Amber: IG: @coachamberb Website: https://www.fasterwaywithamberb.com/
CORRECTION: Rob mentioned some 80s film essays on Channel Four by Lindsay Anderson and Alan Clarke – it was actually Alan Parker. (His correction)Rob Young's new book continues his exploration of British culture, delving into TV and cinema.Growing up in the 1970s, Rob Young's main storyteller was the wooden box with the glass window in the corner of the family living room, otherwise known as the TV set. Before the age of DVDs and Blu-ray discs, YouTube and commercial streaming services, watching television was a vastly different experience. You switched on, you sat back and you watched. There was no pause or fast-forward button.The cross-genre feast of moving pictures produced in Britain between the late 1950s and late 1980s - from Quatermass and Tom Jones to The Wicker Man and Brideshead Revisited, from A Canterbury Tale and The Go-Between to Bagpuss and Children of the Stones, and from John Betjeman's travelogues to ghost stories at Christmas - contributed to a national conversation and collective memory. British-made sci-fi, folk horror, period drama and televisual grand tours played out tensions between the past and the present, dramatised the fractures and injustices in society and acted as a portal for magical and ghostly visions.In The Magic Box, Rob Young takes us on a fascinating journey into this influential golden age of screen and discovers what it reveals about the nature and character of Britain, its uncategorisable people and buried histories - and how its presence can still be felt on screen in the twenty-first century.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/writers-on-film. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week we break down Lindsay Anderson's subversive school movie, 'If....'We analyze the movie beat by beat and discuss everything from Malcolm McDowell's late audition to the film's subsequent sequels. After that, we pair the film with two other films with many recommendations in between. Created by Spike Alkire & Jake KelleyTheme Song by Breck McGough
Last week we talked with Lindsay Anderson about her Stress Elimination Method, and one of the key points that stood out to me was how at the core of stress is almost always an identity issue. Why do we struggle so much with our identity? Why do we tend to act out of this struggle? What can we do to take action on these feelings and grab a hold of truth? Well, scripture tells us exactly what we should do! In this episode, we go into the root cause of imposter syndrome, what it is, and steps we can take to change our thinking about who we are and how we view ourselves. Join Dr. Baylis as she teaches what God says about Imposter Syndrome.Stress Elimination Method - http://www.kingdommompodcast.com/applyJoin us in our discussions around this topic and others in our Facebook Community: http://m.facebook.com/groups/697684061168775/?ref=group_browseLearn more about Dr. Baylis and Jackie Bailey:http://www.lesliebaylis.com
Dr. Baylis and Jackie are so excited to share this interview with Lindsay Anderson with you! Lindsay hosts a Mom Community and membership for moms to eliminate stress. In this episode we talk about her free mom binder course to help moms take control of their day. Lindsay shares how the mom binder works and how it has helped her in her own life.The mom binder has three main components: 1. Routines 2. Zones3. Brain DumpsTo learn more about Lindsay Anderson, her Stress Elimination Method, and for tons of free training: Mom Binder Masters - www.facebook.com/groups/MomBinderMastersPodcast - www.kingdommompodcast.comFree Training - www.kingdommompodcast.com/free-training Stress Elimination Method - http://www.kingdommompodcast.com/applyJoin us in our discussions around this topic and others in our Facebook Community: http://m.facebook.com/groups/697684061168775/?ref=group_browse
Jonathan Owen and Samm Deighan join Mike to look at three films by Lindsay Anderson that all star Malcolm McDowell as Michael “Mick” Travis. In If.... Mick is the leader of a student revolution. In O Lucky Man he's a coffee salesman. And, in Britannia Hospital he's an investigative reporter. We'll be talking about how Mick changes through the three films along with their possible connections and contradictions.David Wood, star of If.... and author of Filming If.... discusses his role in the groundbreaking British film.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices