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Today's episode is a repeat from last year - the interview with poet, fiction writer, performer, and podcaster Tim Clare. Apologies for the low audio quality of my introduction! Full transcript of this episode at parallel.olliepalmer.com. Links Tim's website Tim Clare's podcast Death of 1000 Cuts (recommended for anyone who wants to write!) Follow Tim on Twitter @timclarepoet or buy Tim a Coffee --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/olliepalmer/message
https://www.swordandthescript.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/bab_011_tim_callahan.jpg There’s a talent shortage in cybersecurity and it’s been that way for several years. Because of that shortage, some analysts forecast millions of cybersecurity roles will go vacant over the next few years. One source of cybersecurity talent is veterans because they have a natural inclination to protect information and gauging risk. That’s according to Tim Callahan, a 23-veteran of the Air Force, who today serves as the global chief information security officer (CISO) at Aflac. That idea is a big part of the conversation in this episode. See the show notes online at www.bootsaboutbusiness.com. Links: • Tim’s employer Aflac (https://www.aflac.com/) • The Aflac Careers (https://www.aflac.com/careers/default.aspx) site • Tim’s 2017 RSA Conference presentation, where in part, he talks about veterans as a source of cybersecurity talent: An Aflac Case Study: Moving a Security Program from Defense to Offense (https://youtu.be/xCsHcRbWucM) • Find Tim on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/tim-callahan-4b39241/)
Welcome to Dev Game Club, where this week we finish our series on Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney. This week we talk about the final original case, particularly looking at the growing complexity of the story, and then turn to our takeaways and feedback. Dev Game Club looks at classic video games and plays through them over several episodes, providing commentary. Sections played: Turnabout Goodbyes Podcast breakdown: 0:48 Phoenix Wright Case 4 59:57 Break 1:00:34 Takeaways and Feedback Issues covered: being novelistic and weaving through multiple narratives, intricate backstories coming together, wanting the macro arc, ending on a high note, developing character empathy, the impact of one event on many lives, wanting to have a character introduced earlier, feeling a greater sense of the world, the Castlevania-lookin' character, goofy gourds, Edgeworth staying a little too quiet, potential professional embarrassment and guilt and shame, a common setup for a mystery, turning expectations on its head, where is this game set?, Lotta Hart, layers of motivation, getting stuck in a cross, the puzzle of getting to a bit of conflicting evidence and when, when to press and when to present, the way information enters into the world, looking for tells, the localization nightmare when language is so ambiguous, localization as design, animation tells, the case room, the police tools, Missile the Shiba Inu, what the police tools do, finding Larry's CO2 compression canister, working back from the one idea, establishing Yanni Yogi's identity and his own knowledge of it, the Chewbacca effect, economy driving connection, raising the stakes, the boss battle with von Karma, how are you going to get to von Karma, the riddle of the one bullet, von Karma's shoulder-grabbing pose, being careful to work within your constraints, deepening von Karma's "Objection", the screaming and head-banging, "the evidence was in you all along," a possible plot hole, what's "fair," realizing a connection, using every part of the animal to emphasize drama, doing a lot with a little, the hallmarks of a novel, anime/manga treatment of the courtroom procedural, making the rules part of the drama, what you marry to the adventure game to breathe new life in, a different take on the adventure game, JRPG to Western RPG, being careful about what you bring from a genre, asking whether a thing is necessary, Brett's Book Recommendation, a shout-out to a listener, fast-forwarding through random combat, the one-handed version of this game, playing the touch-screen, All Those Who Wander. Games, people, and influences mentioned or discussed: X-Files, Castlevania, Bird Box, Josh Malerman, Sandra Bullock, Star Wars, Hotel Dusk, Secret of Monkey Island, Halo 1, Misery, Shinji Mikami, Resident Evil, Tango Gameworks, Zenimax, The Evil Within, Platinum, Eliza, Danganronpa, Richard Lloyd Parry, The People Who Eat Darkness, Mark Sean Garcia, Final Fantasy IX, Chrono Trigger, Final Fantasy XII, Matt A, Nintendo Wii, Kingdom Hearts, Yakuza (series), Persona 5, Ben "from Iowa" Zaugg, Hollow Knight, Kirk Hamilton, Aaron Evers. Links: Tim off on his trip Next time: ...? We will let you know. Twitch: brettdouville, instagram:timlongojr, @brett_douville, @timlongojr, and @devgameclub DevGameClub@gmail.com
Our guest on this episode of the Business and BBQ Podcast is Charlie Calise, CEO of Imaginuity marketing agency, real estate investor, and marketing guru. He provided listeners with so much relevant marketing knowledge that it might merit a second listen.When it comes to the customer journey, Charlie points out that while many people would like to think that they can conduct their entire customer interaction either online or offline, it will almost always be a combination of both. Through ad science, the Imaginuity team uses machine learning to understand where each customer journey begins, observe customer behavior, and then create lookalike audiences that can be marketed to in the future. This takes into account customer demographics as well as personal interests and browsing or purchasing behaviors. If you want a first-hand look at how this works, just scroll through your own Facebook feed and notice the sponsored posts that are being served to you. From the small business perspective, the simplest way to do marketing is to look around at who your customers are and then figure out how to get more people like them. Collecting data like their physical or email addresses and using old forms of marketing such as direct mail is the most straightforward way, but you can also run some targeted Facebook ads. It is imperative that you pop up on Google Maps and that the information there is enough because being there when consumers are looking for you is crucial. If Charlie were to give advice to an entrepreneur looking to start a new business, it would be: establish your target audience, choose the best location, send out direct mail coupons, convert customers when they look for you online, and have an effective website. As you get more sophisticated, you can get into SEO, but the algorithms are changing so frequently that you really need to be able to invest in this to get it right. A good rule of thumb when planning a budget and marketing plan is: Do what you are comfortable doing for an extended time. You need to be consistent and reliable, not falling off the radar when your customers are looking for you.In terms of real estate investing, Charlie is a huge fan of the way he and his wife operate their portfolio, which has allowed them to accumulate wealth in a short time. His wife does their rehabbing work and Charlie likes to focus on owner financing and other creative financing models in Dallas, TX, and Jacksonville, FL.Connect with Charlie:Charlie Calisehttps://www.imaginuity.com/Links:Tim’s Real Estate Investor Mastermind https://www.reimasterminds.com/Audible trial promotional link: audibletrial.com/thHubSpot promotional link: hubspot.com/thConnect with Tim:Blog and More https://timherriage.com/LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/herriageTwitter https://twitter.com/timherriage Facebook https://www.facebook.com/timherriage/ Business and BBQ Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/timherriage/Instagram https://www.instagram.com/timherriage/With business questions: ask@timherriage.comWith BBQ questions: bbq@timherriage.com
Tim & Amr are filling in for Jake & Jonathan this week—which means you'll actually get to listen to an episode related to the product world (shots fired)! They talk about how you shouldn't aim for empathy in design. And how books don't work. Links: Tim on Twitter Amr on Twitter Amr on Instagram Why I Don't Believe in Empathic Design---Don Norman---Adobe Blog Book: The Design of Everyday Things Book: Competing Against Luck: The Story of Innovation and Customer Choice Jobs-to-be-Done Book: Rework Jason Fried DHH Mike Matas Andy Matuschak Why books don't work---Andy Matuschak Quantum Country Learning How to Learn: Powerful mental tools to help you master tough subjects---Coursera Book: Buy Sprint!
TBJ111: Tim Buzbee on learning The Furies overnight, winning gigs in 8 countries and being put in a piece of metal Tim Buzbee, Principal Tubist with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, knows he would probably be flipping burgers if not for the help of teachers Ed Jones, Gene Pokorny, and Matt Good. Tim Buzbee has been the Principal Tubist with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra since 2010. Tim grew up in Queen City, Texas and knows he would probably be flipping burgers if not for the help of teachers Ed Jones, Gene Pokorny, and Matt Good. He has performed as guest tubist with many orchestras including the Chicago Symphony, Danish Radio Orchestra, Swedish Radio Orchestra, Dallas Wind Symphony, Malaysia Philharmonic, and the Helsingborg Symphony. As a soloist, he has performed with the Iceland Symphony, Singapore Symphony, Acapulco Symphony, Marshall Symphony and the “Pershing Own” Army Band in Washington D.C and currently has two solo CDs on the Albany Record label. Before taking his position at the MSO he held the Principal Tuba position at the Iceland Symphony, Chicago Civic Orchestra, Acapulco Philharmonic, Singapore Symphony, Gavle Symphony, and the Malmo Symphony. In this fun and lively discussion, we cover: Has won gigs in 8 different countries Calling us from Australia in the middle of the night Originally from Queen City TX (pop. 1,600) Started on country fiddle, taking after his grandfather, later moved on to the bass guitar Switched to euphonium and later was drawn to the tuba Didn't take it seriously until mid-way through his undergrad Being put in a piece of metal Was going to work on a fishing boat in Alaska Pantless Mahler 6 leading to a breaking and entering incident (and the launch of his career path) Studying with Ed Jones Learning the Three Furies 3rd movement in one night The influence of Gene Pokorny Making the simple beautiful Having to play catch up Studying with Matt Good and Dave Kirk Winning a few gigs before moving on to study with Gene Pokorny Ed provided the foundation of fundamentals, Matt helped him understand what to do with the sound and Gene helped him build a musical product he could sell Leaving a busy career in Chicago to go to Singapore Following his own path Singapore was too crowded for him so he moved on to Sweden The differences in playing in those orchestras Adding Iceland Symphony to the mix for a year Tim's wife, Jessica (who he met while she was Principal Trombone in the same Swedish orchestra) also won a gig in Iceland and they eventually moved there Having five kids Flying with a tuba (hilarity and bent metal) Audition strategy, switching from being physically prepared to be mentally prepared Tim's forthcoming (hypothetical) book"The Death of American Brass Playing Due to the 3 T's (Tone, Time, Tuning)" How do I make an emotional connection with a listener? The 3 T's are too procedural and disconnect the player from the listener Running mental audition processes ahead of auditions, changing the variables each time, always simulation culminating with him being announced as a winner Every audition system is flawed in some way so you have to find a process to allow you to succeed in any situation The influence of the book, "Unleash the Warrior Within" by Richard Machowicz Mental toughness LINKS: Tim's Melbourne Symphony bio page Tim's facebook page Want to help the show? Here are some ways: Help others find the show by leaving a rating and review on iTunes. Show us some love on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter. Help us pay the bills (and get regular bonus episodes!) by becoming a Patreon patron. Show some love to our sponsors: The brass program at The Mary Pappert School of Music at Duquesne University and Parker Mouthpieces (including the Andrew Hitz and Lance LaDuke models.) Tell your friends! Expertly produced by Will Houchin with love, care, and enthusiasm.
"I was mixed before it was fashionable,” stated Tim Lounibos in this week’s episode. Tim Lounibos is an actor starring in the runaway hit series, Bosch, on Amazon Prime. Tim, gained notoriety in the nineties when he was branded as part of 'an exciting new breed of Asian American actors with widespread mainstream appeal’. He took a break from acting for a while, and now he is back and working like crazy. Tim Lounibos is of German, Irish, and Korean descent and like most mixed kids had to do some major soul-searching to embody his identity as Asian American. Tim is one cool, down-to-earth, compassionate actor who really cares about humanity, the power of the arts, inclusion and openly shares his inspiring personal story. In this episode, Tim chats to Hope about life, Hollywood, love, enlightenment, and his unique slice of the mixed experience. “Whatever I’m involved in, I push for diversity, I push for inclusiveness, whether it’s in front of scenes or behind the scenes. Anybody I speak with I try to enlighten and nudge….to get them to see the importance of that. For me, it’s not about just seeing Asian Americans on the screen. It’s about diversity, seeing a tapestry of who we are.” Listen in today to hear Tim’s empowering story. Show Highlights: Growing up mixed with a GI father and Korean mother The power of humor and how it saved his family from abuse in the home His secret to having a strong sense of innate confidence Tim’s life-changing moments that helped clarify his identity How to overcome shame. Navigating microaggressions without anger, but as an opportunity to enlighten The state and plight of Asian American cinema in Hollywood. Tim’s observations on race, diversity, and inclusion Links: Tim on Instagram: @timlounibos Tim on Twitter: @timlounibos
On this episode, we interview Dr. Tim Church from Your Financial Pharmacist. I asked Tim to come on the show to provide some not so common tips for pharmacists to manage their finances. We also got to learn a little bit about Tim and his career with the VA. Hope you enjoy! Connect with Tim: Website: Yourfinancialpharmacist.com Email: timchurchpharmd@gmail.com Social Media: @YourFinancialPharmacist Who Tim would take to dinner: https://patflynn.com/ Links Tim mentioned: https://yourfinancialpharmacist.com/14-practical-ways-to-make-extra-money-as-a-pharmacist-in-2019/ https://yourfinancialpharmacist.com/the-ultimate-guide-to-pay-back-pharmacy-school-loans/ https://yourfinancialpharmacist.com/20-financial-moves-every-pharmacy-graduate-should-make/ Music: Richard Waithe (Yes, this music is original) Like Rx Radio on Facebook: www.facebook.com/RxRadio.fm Check out our memes on Instagram: instagram.com/rxradio.fm Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/rxradiofm Host: Dr. Richard Waithe www.twitter.com/richard_waithe www.facebook.com/pharmacydude www.instagram.com/richiewaithe Richard's book, The First Time Pharmacist, is now available on Amazon. Get it here: www.amazon.com/dp/1732381402 Podcast episodes are powered by VUCA Health, a company that has the largest library of medication education videos that serves to enhance patient engagement and provide an on-demand extension of pharmacists and other healthcare providers. Learn more at vucahealth.com
You'll be hard-pressed to find someone who is more passionate and driven about writing than Tim Clare. We talk about Tim's Weekly Writing Workout newsletter, his Couch to 80k Writing Bootcamp as well as his novels The Honours and forthcoming The Ice House. Plus, of course, we discuss the word count required for reaching the optimum point of neuroplasticity, what Tim learned while talking to the Institute for Procrastination Research and how the same part of your brain is used for processing fiction and reality. Hosted by Simon Jones, writer and Digital Marketing Manager at the National Centre for Writing. Find out more about the National Centre for Writing: https://nationalcentreforwriting.org.uk/ Links: Tim talks to the Institute for Procrastination Research: http://www.timclarepoet.co.uk/death-of-1000-cuts-season-2-episode-37-chatting-with-tim-pychyl/ Couch to 80k Bootcamp: http://www.timclarepoet.co.uk/couchto80kwritingbootcamp/ Weekly Writing Workout: http://www.timclarepoet.co.uk/tim-clares-weekly-writing-workout/ Events: Agent Insight with Eve White: https://nationalcentreforwriting.org.uk/whats-on/agent-insights-with-eve-white/ Dragon Hall Salon: https://nationalcentreforwriting.org.uk/whats-on/dragon-hall-salon-3/ All upcoming events: https://nationalcentreforwriting.org.uk/whats-on Music by Bennet Maples: https://sonicfruit.co.uk/
The beginning of the school year is a great time for inspiration, and who better to inspire your students than some amazing artists? Tim and Abby get together to discuss some of their favorite topics and artists that inspire students, why positivity is so important, and how to take artists' ideas and make them work for your own classroom. Resources and Links Tim and Andrew's Podcast on Their Favorite Contemporary Artists 18 Contemporary Artists Your Students Will Love Kristin Farr Tom Friedman CJ Hendry Bridget Riley Tara Donovan Remedios Va
Iliad e gli operatori virtuali. Instagram e la comunicazione ipersintetica. Unilever contro i falsi influencer. L’avvelenamento di McAfee. Queste e molte altre le notizie commentate nella puntata di questa settimana. Dallo studio distribuito di digitalia: Franco Solerio, Massimo De Santo, Giulio Cupini, Michele Di Maio Produttori esecutivi: Ruggero Todesco, Stefano Z., Giorgio Beggiora, Nicola Pedonese, Luca Polignano, Cristian Vidimari, Alessandro Grossi, Emanuele Zdunich, Matteo Ottone, Simone Magnaschi, Diego Dalla Bernardina, Marco Santonocito, Roberto Nespoli, Paolo Posocco, Marco Traverso, Roberto Esposito, Claudio Meloni, Paola Bellini, Gianni Stanghellini (Walk About Tuscany), Federico Giuntoli, Maurizio Chiarotto, Giuseppe Brusadelli, Valerio Bendotti, Cristiano Belli, Stefano Villani, Giuseppe Marino, Paolo Antognoni, Matteo Sandri, Mattia Lanzoni, Paola Danieli, Roberto Duina, Maurizio Mistrali, Carlotta Cubeddu, Andrea Delise, Massimo Pollastri, Lorenzo Fenoglio, Alessandro Lago, Roberto Basile, Antonio Manna, Paolo Massignan, Antonio Gargiulo, Flavio Castro, Marcello Marigliano, Gabriele Bonetti, Riccardo Tempesta Sponsor: Active Powered - utilizzate il codice coupon "DIGITALIA" per avere il 10% di sconto sul costo del servizio. Links: Tim accusa Iliad di violare le leggi antiterrorismo Il figlio di Giuliano Sangiorgi avrà un nome scelto dai follower? Effetto Iliad, la corsa dei concorrenti a offrire più sconti sulle telefonate Ways to think about machine learning Nathan Gitter on Twitter - AR for newspapers Thermostats, Locks and Lights: Digital Tools of Domestic Abuse Young people still love Twitter — as screenshots on Instagram John McAfee on Twitter - Wrath Adobe is using AI to catch Photoshopped images Apple MacBook & MacBook Pro Keyboard Service Program $1 Billion Bitcoins Lost in Mt. Gox Hack to Be Returned to Victims McAfee Claims Enemies Tried To Kill Him By Spiking Something He Ingested Unilever, cada la mannaia sui follower dei falsi influencer Ho. – Il nuovo operatore virtuale Vodafone sfida Iliad Car Consortium Announces Digital Car Key Specification for Smartphones Gingilli del giorno: Top 500 - i supercomputer Qwant, il motore di ricerca europeo che insegna come si rispetta la privacy Running Reality - The World History Model Evoland 2 Mobile
#34: Hello, Kelly Baader here, welcome to the Christian CEO Podcast. I am honoured you are here with us today. Make sure you hit that subscribe button, so you don’t miss any power packed episode, and your reviews on iTunes serves as fresh does of blessings to me and my team, we will really appreciate it! When it comes to business, we all know that no sales, no business, period.But how to sell well and without being feeling sleazy and yucky. Our guest today – the sales conversion expert Tim Paige comes to the rescue. If you have ever attended Leadpages’ weekly webinars before, you most likely listened to Tim, or like me, bought from him. The whole webinar presentation made you feel he’s very professional, gave tons of value, and more importantly, made attendants credit-card ready. How did he do that?! Was he born as a professional sales expert? Let’s find out! Key Lessons: How Tim’s band career prepared him to be the Leading LEAD Converter in the industry. Why the “public crafted face” won’t work for your business, you should do THIS instead. How to share the STORY that truly converts. What’s the #1 thing you prefer your prospects to say for the best sales conversion. Why the principal of “Just do what you want others do unto you” might not work for your marketing. What does “offer value to your audience” exactly mean? What you should and shouldn’t do for your tripwire offer. How Tim’s hiccups resulted in the highest converting webinar. Tweetable: TimThePaige (https://twitter.com/TimThePaige) “Conversion Pro Tip: Give them what they think they need first.” Links: Tim’s Website: https://timpaige.lpages.co/the-voice-of-tim-paige/ (https://timpaige.lpages.co/the-voice-of-tim-paige/) The Foundation: https://thefoundation.com/blog/start-saas (https://thefoundation.com/blog/start-saas) Subscribe + Review on iTunes: https://kellybaader.com/review (https://kellybaader.com/review) Did you know you can listen to our show on iTunes, iHeartRadio, Tunein, GooglePlay, Android, and Stitcher. That means, if you have Alexa from Amazon at home, you can also give the commend to play our show, pretty cool, right? Please do Subscribe + Review at https://kellybaader.com/review (https://kellybaader.com/review) . It helps more people can find the show, my team and I would really appreciate it! For all the goodies + today’s show notes, visit KellyBaader.com/034. Remember, YOU Matter! See you in the next episode!
Last week, the guys talked at length about the slow finishers--the ones who never get work done. This week, they are back to talk about the other end of the spectrum--the fast finishers! It can be frustrating as a teacher to fill all of that down time that and deal with the misbehaviors that come from it. Listen as they guys discuss why fast finishers cause stress for both teachers and fellow students (4:00), how to deal with the excuses kids make (13:15), and proactive classroom management strategies (17:00). Resources and Links: Tim's article about teaching 3 projects at once This article talks about some great classroom management strategies How and why to slow your students down
So many teachers have a love/hate relationship with teaching ceramics, but the Radio Guys want to convince everyone they can love ceramics like they do. Tim starts the show with a pretty crazy confession about his history with teaching ceramics (1:15). Andrew comes on the show as the guys discuss their favorite homemade tools (5:30), Tim teaches Andrew how to keep his sinks from smelling disgusting (12:30), and Andrew tells about his terrible self-given nickname (15:15) and his best firing processes (16:30). The conversation runs up against the clock, though, so there's even more the guys need to talk about. Be on the lookout for Part 2 soon! Resources and Links: Tim's video on using blenders for slip How to take your basic ceramics projects to the next level 50 Amazing Clay Resources from AOE Check out the Studio: Ceramics course
It's time for the First Day of School, version 2.0! Whether you had an amazing first semester or an incredibly difficult one, this is your chance to start new. You have a chance to look at classroom management, curriculum, organization, routines, and everything in between. This is also your chance to recharge and redo what isn't working. Andrew asks Tim about his best classroom management advice (8:00), mistakes to avoid (11:15), and how to go above and beyond with your projects in the second semester (16:00). The guys finish the show with a conversation on enlisting your kids to help things run smoothly. Resources and Links: Tim gave a shout out to Janine Campbell and this episode of Art Ed Radio Tim's favorite article on classroom management 3 Steps to Fix a Failing Routine Some advice on how to teach a new routine
Art teachers are always concerned about teaching students how to think more creatively. But no one ever talks about how to teach for creativity? Tim has a conversation with high school and online art teacher, Amber Kane, about the concrete, manageable, actionable ways we can get students on the path toward more creativity. Check out the discussion about helping kids appreciate the creative process (8:00), new strategies for classroom and individual critiques (13:30), and how to find the balance between procrastination and creativity (15:30). Resources and Links: Tim and Andrew debated one of these topics before in ‘Does Creativity Require Procrastination?‘ Check out Amber’s Blog, The Unstandardized Standard Learn more about AOE’s Creativity in Crisis course
Den Esport zum Beruf machen, das dürfte wohl der Traum vieler junger Menschen derzeit sein. Doch wie schafft man das, ohne Pro Gamer zu sein? Gibt es in der Sparte Ausbildungsberufe oder gar einen Studiengang? Diesen und weiteren Fragen gehen wir in der heutigen Sendung mit unserem Gast Tim Krause nach. Der Wahlberliner arbeitet seit 2010 bei der Freaks 4U Gaming, dem Unternehmen, welches hinter den League of Legends und Counter-Strike Szene-Seiten Summoner’s Inn und 99damage steckt. Eine klassische Ausbildung gibt es für den Bereich nicht direkt, doch Tim erklärt haargenau, wie er in die Firma gerutscht ist, und wie es dazu kam, dass er heute für die Organisation von Turnieren verantwortlich ist. Der Studienabbrecher war in der Vergangenheit nämlich als Caster tätig, als WarCraft und Quake noch große Esports-Titel waren. Dort eignete er sich genug Knowhow an, und bewarb sich dann bei der Freaks4U. Bei Freaks4U machte er dann eine Ausbildung zum Veranstaltungskaufmann und musste sich viele Zusammenhänge selber zusammenreimen, da die Lehre nicht auf seinen Bereich ausgelegt war. Im Podcast stellt sich immer wieder heraus, dass der Weg in den Esport meist über Umwege, freiwilliges Engagement und Leidenschaft an der Sache führt. Doch es gibt auch Schattenseiten an der Arbeit im Gaming. Welche das sind und ob sich der Aufwand dennoch lohnt, erfahrt ihr im Podcast! Hier ein paar nützliche Links: Tim auf Twitter Hier gehts zu 99damage
Andrew takes his first turn in the host chair for a discussion with Tim on the biggest things we do--the projects that define our programs. Andrew discusses inspiration, collaboration, curriculum (2:45), with maybe a mention of zombies thrown in. Tim talks about his underwater photo shoot (7:00), trying not to get fired after throwing things at his students (9:00), and why we need to always continue to push the envelope (11:30). Listen for Andrew’s thoughts on how serendipity can lead to great projects, but only if you’re ready to dive in! (26:00) Resources and Links: Tim’s Article on Throwing Things At Your Students:http://www.theartofed.com/2014/08/07/how-to-throw-things-at-your-students-and-get-away-with-it/ Tim’s Article on Underwater Photo Shoots:http://www.theartofed.com/2015/12/10/how-to-conduct-an-exhilarating-underwater-photo-shoot/ Smashing Faces Lesson Plan: https://www.theartofed.com/lesson-plans/smashing-faces-free-lesson-plan-download/ Palatable Portraits Lesson Plan: https://www.theartofed.com/lesson-plans/lesson-plan-palatable-portraits/
Art of Ed writer Abby Schukei joins Tim to share strategies to help every student find success, which encourages and empowers them to continue to create. They talk about Instagram and how social media allows us to move artwork beyond our classroom walls (10:00), and why Abby lets her worst-behaved students do whatever they want--within reason (19:00). Tim closes the show with some important thoughts on developing an authentic audience for our students to encourage their persistence and perseverance (21:00). Resources and Links: Tim’s Article on Our Most Talented Students:http://www.theartofed.com/2015/01/21/i-have-the-next-picasso-in-my-room-now-what/ Painting in the Dark Video: http://www.thisiscolossal.com/2016/01/painting-in-the-dark/ Abby on Instagram: www.instagram.com/ralstonmsart Abby on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ARTschukei