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This interview first aired on Wednesday the 11th of June, 2025 on ONE FM 98.5 Shepparton. One FM Breakfast announcer Plemo talks to the Mayor of Strathbogie Claire Ewart-Kennedy about the Strathbogie Rocks! Youth Music Festival. This high-energy, youth-led live music event will take over Strathbogie Memorial Hall on Saturday 14 June, showcasing an incredible lineup of emerging artists aged 12 to 25 from across the region. Powered by the Amplify! youth program, the event is a celebration of creativity, connection, and the unstoppable spirit of Strathbogie's young people. With acts like The Viceroys, Ungraded, Lill Kill, and Jeremiah Johnston, the stage will be lit with homegrown talent. Headlining the event is LOWLINE, a fierce indie rock band from Albury/Wodonga known for their raw, infectious sound that draws comparisons to JET and Cage The Elephant. Free pizza—generously provided by Cross Country Pizza—will be served to keep energy levels high. For further information contact Council on 1800 065 993. Listen to One FM Breakfast with Plemo live on weekday mornings from 6am-9am. The ONE FM 98.5 Community Radio podcast page operates under the license of Goulburn Valley Community Radio Inc. (ONE FM) Number 1385226/1. Contact the station on admin@fm985.com.au or (+613) 58313131 PRA AMCOS (Australasian Performing Right Association Limited and Australasian Mechanical Copyright Owners Society) that covers Simulcasting and Online content including podcasts with musical content, that we pay every year. This licence number is 1385226/1
Listen carefully. As John Mobs from LazyJM Ranch in Hauser, Idaho, discusses his operation and talks about a new marketing strategy.
Jolie Hunt Takin' Care of Lady Business with Jennifer Justice Episode 031: She Did It Her Way: Knowing and Communicating Your Brand Jolie has built reputations for some of the world's leading companies. As CEO of Hunt & Gather, Jolie creates strategic approaches for every client. She counsels C-Suite executives on building their profiles, refining their brand positioning, and crafting their communications strategies. She also specializes in connecting brands, businesses and leaders to create partnerships and collaborations that deliver real commercial impact. Before founding Hunt & Gather, Jolie served as chief marketing & communications officer for AOL and as senior vice president, global head of brand & public relations at Thomson Reuters. Earlier in her career, she was the global director of corporate & business affairs at IBM and director of public relations for the Financial Times.Jolie serves on the boards of Kilroy Realty (NYSE: KRC), the Civilian Public Affairs Council forWest Point Military Academy and The Lowline. She is an advisor to Accompany, dv01, The New Stand, SambaNova Systems and Humbition. In 2011, the European Public Relations Consultants Association named Jolie “In-House Professional of the Year.” Listen to this Takin' Care of Lady Business episode where Jolie shares the lessons she learned from climbing the corporate ladder, and then founding her a company of her own. Here is what to expect on this week's show: ● Understanding brand-building as a tool to build the matriarchy ● Tactical approaches to building a consistent, concise, recognizable brand ● Using your women's intuition to guide you to better employment opportunities, and signs that you may need to leave your current job ASAP ● Recognizing when to negotiate, and the people you absolutely need in your corner when negotiating ● When to hire communications people ● Why your personality and intuition are your best tools for strong brand-building Connect with Jolie: WEBSITE: https://www.hunt-gather.com/ LINKEDIN: https://www.linkedin.com/company/hunt-&-gather-inc-/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Subscribe to NOW Charleston on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or via RSS.Follow the podcast on Twitter and Instagram.Feds: Hundreds of guns illegally trafficked to Philadelphia - APHow South Carolina's guns end up in the hands of out-of-state criminals - Charleston City Paper (2016)The 2022 Atlantic hurricane season will be more active than usual, researchers say - NPR2022 Atlantic Hurricane Season Fast Facts - CNNCharleston reaches halfway point in Low Battery Reconstruction Project - Count on 2Charleston receives updates on Calhoun West Drainage project for peninsula flooding - Live 5 NewsSpring/Fishburne Drainage Improvement ProjectCharleston police revamps DUI enforcement after deadliest year on city roadways - Live 5 NewsAfter Charleston loses large federal grant for Lowline park, city applies for design funds - P&CLowcountry LowlineFOLLOW:twitter.com/nowcharlestoninstagram.com/nowcharlestonWE WANT YOUR FEEDBACK:sam@nowchs.com843-474-1319INFO AND SHOW NOTES:nowchs.com
When we work in pursuit of a singular goal it can be easy to believe that if we achieve that one thing, everything after will be perfect. Steve Mesler, Olympic Gold medalist for USA bobsledding, worked toward the gold-medal goal for 10 years and achieved his dream. He found that winning feeling didn't last. Steve talks about the mindset that helped him achieve so much and what he learned from the victory. He also highlights his new foundation, Classroom Champions, which pairs athlete-mentors with school children to help them learn skills to support success.
An exit interview with Ann, Technical Creative Director of WholeWhale.com reflecting on lessons over 7 years with the company. Ann Nguyen Technical Creative Director On Social https://www.linkedin.com/in/nguyenann https://twitter.com/annnnnguyen Ann joined Whole Whale in 2013 and has been making splashes since then in the areas of design, development, and A/B testing. She keeps the New York team afloat and works directly with clients on using design and tech to scale their impact. During her time at Whole Whale, Ann has overseen site builds that include DREAM, the LAMP, and Donate Life America. Beyond website development, Ann has led the charge on work with the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, the One Love Foundation, Charitybuzz, Prizeo, and United Way ALICE. Ann is also the product manager behind Lighthouse by Whole Whale and is currently working with Power Poetry on their Poetry Genome, a tool that uses machine learning to generate a percentage comparison to various writers based on the theme, style, and content of any poem on the site. Both classic and contemporary writers are represented in different sections of our Genome (shoutout to Shakespeare and Kendrick). Ann is a regular speaker and lecturer on nonprofit tech topics. She's presented on machine learning for good and A/B testing for organ donations at the 2018 Strata Data Conference in San José, and spoke at the 2018 Strata Data Conference in New York on “How to Be Aggressively Tone-Deaf Using Data (or, We Should all Be For-Benefits).” 2018 also saw Ann copresent on A/B testing with the Wikimedia Foundation at the Nonprofit Technology Conference in New Orleans. Ann has guest lectured at NYU, Columbia University, and Sarah Lawrence College. She also frequently joins design discussions at various panels from the Lowline to the White House. Before joining Whole Whale, Ann worked with a wide range of organizations, including the Ford Foundation, SumAll Foundation, and Bitly.
Australia's LOWLINE covers new ground with a raw rock sound, and display glimpses of indie, alternative and folk influences with a dirty blues undertone. LOWLINE balance the rough guitars and thumping drums with moments of delicate melodies combined to their momentous lyrics. Join us as Rhys Duursma shares what it's …
Australia's LOWLINE covers new ground with a raw rock sound, and display glimpses of indie, alternative and folk influences with a dirty blues undertone. LOWLINE balance the rough guitars and thumping drums with moments of delicate melodies combined to their momentous lyrics. Join us as Rhys Duursma shares what it's like to be the band from down under.
Blaze Lightfoot Jones-Yellin is an afro-indigenous urbanist whose practice and teaching has largely focused on environmental justice and community-centric design in New York. He is also a professor at the Sustainability and Environmental Justice department at CUNY John Jay. Throughout his career, Blaze has helped create equitable communities by blending human and environment-centred design; always bringing community voices to the forefront of city revitalization projects. He has supported the recovery of communities in Far Rockaway after Superstorm Sandy and has worked on The Lowline - the world's first underground park, in New York City. In all of this work, he has driven the philosophy that designing for equity is good in the long run for both residents and developers. In this Open/Ended conversation, Blaze speaks with us about climate migration / building inclusive and resilient urban communities / empowering the local / and how there is no going back following this pandemic.
It seems there’s nothing Marquise Stillwell and his New York design and research firm can’t do. His projects promote inclusion and equity, rethink the norm, and bring people together, seen in forward-thinking concepts for Black Girls Code, the Lowline, and the DC public library. Stillwell is also a film producer and co-founder of Urban Ocean Lab, an organization focused on developing policy solutions for coastal cities. Our conversation spans the different, fascinating facets of his career, and it’s clear Stillwell’s mantra can be boiled down to one succinct remark he made: “Empathy is a muscle. It’s something you have to practice and build every day.”
Jared talks about spores (and other flora and fungi of our underground networks). Cara geeks out on the complicated transportation options in Cold War Berlin. And we both talk about the food at Ikea WAY more than one would expect for a podcast about trains. Cara's sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Berlin_S-Bahn https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Berlin_U-Bahn https://www.cntraveler.com/stories/2012-05-21/friedrichstrasse-railway-station-berlin-maphead-ken-jennings https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-europe-18044695 https://www.quora.com/How-did-West-Berliners-travel-to-West-Germany Jared's sources: https://interestingengineering.com/11-of-the-most-beautiful-metro-stations-across-the-world http://www.korea.net/NewsFocus/Society/view?articleId=180632 https://www.ianvisits.co.uk/blog/2017/06/05/theres-a-garden-inside-a-tube-station-ticket-office/ https://ny.curbed.com/2020/2/19/21143608/lowline-underground-park-lower-east-side-is-dead http://thelowline.org/about/project/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lowline_(park) https://wamu.org/story/15/10/09/in_damp_metro_tunnels_prehistoric_plants_thrive/ https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/please-dont-kill-the-sunflowers-the-phantom-planter-says-metro-destroyed-more-than-100-sunflowers-at-the-dupont-circle-station/2019/06/19/1cf3e5de-929e-11e9-aadb-74e6b2b46f6a_story.html
Rajah Caruth is a 17-year old high school senior from Washington D.C. He is a 2020 NASCAR Drive for Diversity driver, and races Late Model Stock cars in the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series along with Legend Cars in the Bojangle's Summer Shootout with Rev Racing. He is also a Richmond Raceway eSports Development driver, amassing over 100 wins in 1200+ starts on the iRacing simulator. He plans on attending Winston-Salem State University in the fall.
From declining rural villages to the inner cities of the world’s great metropolises, ruined buildings and abandoned spaces stand waiting to be repurposed and revived. Doing so not only restores function to these structures but can potentially reinvigorate entire communities. In this episode, Minds Worth Meeting sits down with Dan Barasch, leading expert on the future of architecture and design and co-founder and executive director of New York’s The Lowline, a technology-enabled underground park inside a long-unused Manhattan trolley terminal, the first of its kind in the world. Barasch’s insights can inspire not just designers, architects and urban planners but community leaders and real estate developers. Drawing on his experiences conceiving and directing the ongoing Lowline project, Barasch reveals how to reimagine and rebuild in abandoned spaces in a way that strengthens community bonds, honors the historic character of neighborhoods and towns and contributes to the aesthetic inheritance of humanity. Barasch also discusses his new book, “Ruin and Redemption in Architecture” (Phaidon Press, April 2019), and how it can provide examples and creative motivation to those seeking to resurrect buildings and spaces which have been destroyed or allowed to decay. For more information about the future of design and urban planning and Dan Barasch’s work as discussed in this episode, visit the links below: • The Big Business of Ruins • From Ruin to Redemption: Incredible Before-and-After Images Show How Abandoned Buildings Have Been Given New Leases on Life • The Upside Down: Inside Manhattan’s Lowline Subterranean Park Follow Dan on Twitter: @kineticdb and @thelowlinenyc Dan Barasch is available for speaking engagements and advisory/consulting services through exclusive representation by Stern Speakers, a division of Stern Strategy Group®. For more from Minds Worth Meeting, follow us on social media @sternstrategy, @sternspeakers and visit https://sternstrategy.com/minds-worth-meeting/.
Három kívánság, üstökösbe szorult leszállóegység, Elon eldurrantotta Mark szatelitját, az Alphabet pedig a Project Arát, a világ legnézettebb útkereszteződése, Szily és Gazs a Gawkerről, knézysrác, lézervágó, széptárgymúzeum, Lowline, svéd slágerbizottság, szuperszámítógép és bajuszkapcsoló, humánökológia, #SaveMarinaJoyce, mamutagyar-szuvenír, Codie-vég és a ceruzatartó ceruza.
We interview Marquise Stillwell, the Founder and Principal of Openbox, an independent design and innovation consultancy that helps organizations and communities think, build, and grow together. Why you should play early and play often, the power of curiosity and vulnerability, why failure shouldn't be a way of life, but a way of learning... and so much more. Plus, Marquise fills us in on the Lowline, which plans to use innovative solar technology to become the world's first underground park! Oh, and we talk about how we talk. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hablamos hoy del proyecto The Low Line, que pretende en Delancey Street, en el Lower East Side neoyorkino, convertir una abandonada estación subterránea de tranvía en el primer parque subterráneo con vegetación sostenida gracias al sistema de iluminación solar remota o "Remote skylights".https://vimeo.com/112530890Métodos de contacto:email: unminutoennuevayork@gmail.comWeb: http://un-minuto-en-nueva-york.tumblr.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/unminutoennuevayorkpodcastTwitter: @unminutoenNY Instagram: @unminutoennuevayork
Hablamos hoy del proyecto The Low Line, que pretende en Delancey Street, en el Lower East Side neoyorkino, convertir una abandonada estación subterránea de tranvía en el primer parque subterráneo con vegetación sostenida gracias al sistema de iluminación solar remota o "Remote skylights". https://vimeo.com/112530890 Métodos de contacto: email: unminutoennuevayork@gmail.com Web: http://un-minuto-en-nueva-york.tumblr.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/unminutoennuevayorkpodcast Twitter: @unminutoenNY Instagram: @unminutoennuevayork
New York City is constantly evolving -- both above ground and underground. On this edition of Cityscape, we’ll hear about efforts to construct what’s billed as the world’s first underground park in an abandoned trolley terminal on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, as well as other efforts to re-invent under-utilized spaces in the Big Apple. We'll also delve into a little bit of history, or rather mystery. Are there cow tunnels under the streets of New York City? Yes – cows as in "moo."
Dan Barasch and James Ramsey have a crazy plan — to create a park, filled with greenery, underneath New York City. The two are developing the Lowline, an underground greenspace the size of a football field. They're building it in a trolley terminal abandoned in 1948, using technology that harvests sunlight above-ground and directs it down below. It's a park that can thrive, even in winter.
Dan Barasch e James Ramsey têm um plano maluco: criar um parque, repleto de verde, por baixo da cidade de Nova Iorque. Os dois estão desenvolvendo a Lowline, um espaço verde subterrâneo do tamanho de um campo de futebol americano. Estão construindo-o em um terminal de bondes abandonado em 1948, usando tecnologias que coletam a luz solar da superfície e a direcionam para o subterrâneo. É um parque que pode prosperar mesmo no inverno.
Dan Barasch und James Ramsey haben einen verrückten Plan: einen Park mit Grünflächen unter New York zu errichten. Die beiden entwickeln in einer 1948 aufgegebenen U-Bahnstation die Lowline, eine unterirdische Grünfläche in der Größe eines Fußballfeldes. Dazu nutzen sie Technologie, die das Sonnenlicht über der Erde sammelt und nach unten leitet. So kann der Park sogar im Winter blühen.
Dan Barasch et James Ramsey ont une idée délirante - créer un parc, plein de verdure, sous la ville de New York. Ensemble, ils sont en train de développer le « Lowline », un espace vert souterrain de la taille d'un terrain de foot. Ils le construisent dans un vieux terminus de métro, abandonné en 1948, en utilisant une technologie qui permet de récolter la lumière solaire au niveau du sol et de la rediriger sous terre. Ainsi, c'est un parc qui peut fleurir, même en hiver.
What does the future hold for New York City? As we stand at the brink of a new year, we’re looking at some exciting projects in the works: from an underground park in Manhattan, to a swimming pool in the East River to a giant observation wheel on Staten Island.