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Join our guest, Dr. Josh MacFadyen, as well as podcast host Matthew McRae as they go subterranean into the world of Prince Edward Island's terrain! Director of the GeoREACH Lab at UPEI, MacFadyen shares a wealth of knowledge and know-how into the methods and beauty of laying out and mapping out the island's landscapes. Whether it's historical chartmakers you're interested in, modern methods of map-capturing or even some emerging and bleeding-edge methods and technologies in the world of mapping, you're bound to learn all about how our beloved Island takes shape - on paper - in our season finale episode of the Hidden Island Podcast! Josh is Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair in Geospatial Humanities at the University of Prince Edward Island in Canada. His research focuses on energy transitions and traditional energy carriers in Canada, and he teaches Digital Humanities in the Applied Communication, Leadership, and Culture (ACLC) program in UPEI's Faculty of Arts. His most recent monograph is titled Flax Americana: A History of the Fibre and Oil that Covered a Continent. He also published an edited collection in the same series titled Time and a Place: An Environmental History of Prince Edward Island (McGill-Queens and Island Studies Press, 2016). Josh has held postdoctoral positions at the Historical GIS Lab at the University of Saskatchewan and at NiCHE: Network in Canadian History & Environment at the University of Western Ontario. Most recently he was also an Assistant Professor and remains a Sustainability Scholar at Arizona State University's School of Sustainability.
We are so happy to have Heather (4) and Bruce (3) MacFadyen on the show today. Heather is a well-known parenting mentor in the online space through her podcast, Don't Mom Alone.It's really fun to hear today how their Enneagram types influence their parenting styles. Mentioned in this episode:Anatomy of the Soul by Curt ThompsonDon't Mom Alone episode: Bruce Labels His FeelingsHeather's Book: Don't Mom AloneWe have many more amazing Enneagram for Moms resources at www.enneagramformoms.com. FREE Enneagram resources here: https://www.yourenneagramcoach.com/podcastresources Find an Enneagram Coach - https://myenneagramcoach.com/ Become an Enneagram Coach Course - https://www.yourenneagramcoach.com/bec #Enneagram #PersonalityTypes #EnneagramCoachGo to yourenneagramcoach.com to get your gift and experience up to 75 percent off!
Bodycam video shows the moments before a sheriff's deputy in Illinois shot and killed a Black woman in her home after she called 911 for help. Sean Grayson has pleaded not guilty to first degree murder of Sonya Massey, a 36-year-old mother of two. Warning: The video is disturbing.Sonya Massey's father, James Wilburn, said seeing footage of his daughter's killing has left him angry and heartbroken. Sean Grayson, who was fired last week from the Sangamon County Sheriff's Department, has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in Massey's killing after she called 911 to report a suspected prowler outside of her home.Four days after the global computer outage that caused chaos around the world, some airline passengers are still stranded. While most airlines have recovered, Delta continues to cancel flights.Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign reports raising over $100 million since President Biden endorsed her on Sunday. With support from top donors in Hollywood and Wall Street, can she rival former President Donald Trump's campaign funds? CBS News' Jo Ling Kent has been crunching the numbers.Maryland Gov. Wes Moore talks about his endorsement of Kamala Harris for president and addresses speculation about joining her ticket as a potential running mate.CBS News' Anthony Mason interviews Emmy-winning actor Matthew Macfadyen about his role as Mister Paradox in "Deadpool & Wolverine," which is out on Friday. Macfadyen also talks about ending his role as Tom Wambsgans on "Succession," and why he felt he was miscast as Mr. Darcy in "Pride and Prejudice." (edited) See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
"You have bewitched me body and soul, and I LOVE YOU!" Listeners prepare yourselves to swoon with this week's episode, Pride and Prejudice (2005). Don't worry, we'll also pay homage to the 90s Colin Firth version, but come on, Keira's is a feast for the eyes. Did you know there were two endings? And that your time zone determined which one you saw?! You don't have to be a member of the Jane Austen Society to appreciate Macfadyen's slow stomp across the misty moors. Cue: Buckled knees.
In this episode, I'm excited to share the story of Rory MacFadyen, co-founder of Reflo, a sustainable sports apparel company that transforms plastic into high-performance sportswear.As a day job, Rory is also the Chief Marketing Officer of Icons Series, a concept that brings together world class athletes from various sports to compete in a unique golf tournament.It's so inspiring listening to Rory speak, as he is clearly very passionate about driving genuine change in the garments industry, with an ambition to make sports apparel more sustainable. He speaks about the scale of single use plastic in the fashion industry, which completely blew my mind.Fortunately, Reflo is pioneering positive change, and the company recently raised £1m in funding to grow the business, including investment from one the world's most elite footballers.If you've been thinking about making small changes to reduce your use of plastic, come and join me in this conversation with Rory to learn how Reflo is making a difference in the fashion industry.Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/refloofficialWebsite - https://reflo.com/Get In Touch:https://www.instagram.com/ambitiousmindspodcast Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Join us as we welcome back special guest, Michelle Morris, to share some of her favorite reads. The Bookmark is your place to find your next great book. Each week, join regular readers Miranda Ericsson, Chris Blocker and Autumn Friedli along with other librarians as they discuss all the books you'll want to add to your reading list.
L'histoire vraie de John Stonehouse, ministre britannique devenu espion à la solde de la Tchécoslovaquie pendant la guerre froide. Cette minisérie emprunte les codes de la comédie absurde pour retracer avec malice le parcours d'un menteur pathologique interprété par Matthew Macfadyen. L'histoire est racontée en marche arrière, puis que les premières scènes s'ouvrent sur John Stonehouse qui simule sa propre mort en 1974 en quittant ses vêtements sur une plage de Miami. Au fil de la série, on découvre ses déboires financiers, son implication dans l'espionnage pour le gouvernement tchécoslovaque et ses tentatives maladroites pour échapper à ses problèmes. La mini-série en trois épisodes de la chaîne britannique ITV est disponible sur Arte.tv jusqu'au 21 mai prochain. https://youtu.be/1Txasv4VWqg?si=bjLVazd7n7aZxTMT Fin des années 1960, en Angleterre. Fils de syndicalistes, au service de la Royal Air Force durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, le député quadragénaire John Stonehouse cumule les atouts aux yeux du Premier ministre travailliste Harold Wilson, qui souhaite rajeunir ses troupes. Voilà John promu ministre de l'Aviation. Mais piégé par une interprète qui le séduit lors d'un voyage en Tchécoslovaquie, il devient espion pour l'ennemi communiste... sans éprouver la moindre culpabilité. Au contraire : les billets pleuvent et John mène la grande vie. À la fin des années 1960, il était présenté comme l'étoile montante du parti Labour, qui l'envoyait ferrailler sur les plateaux télé contre une autre figure prometteuse, Margaret Thatcher. Mais John Stonehouse n'était qu'une coquille vide. Imbu de lui-même, le député-ministre a failli dans tous les rôles qu'il a endossés : espion calamiteux, mari infidèle trop voyant, entrepreneur aussi avide que désastreux... En trois épisodes, Stonehouse adopte un ton léger et comique, mettant en lumière les péripéties loufoques de ce héros alors qu'il tente de naviguer dans un monde politique complexe. La série offre une critique satirique de la politique britannique tout en explorant les thèmes de la trahison, de la cupidité et de l'illusion du pouvoir. Le petit plus, outre un Macfadyen génial, c'est que son épouse/ex-épouse dans la série est campée par sa véritable femme à la ville, Keeley Hawes, une autre actrice britannique bien-aimée. Elle joue donc Barbara Stonehouse, qui oscille entre l'incrédulité et la colère face aux actions de son mari maladroit. Enfin, Kevin McNally complète le tableau principal et offre une performance impressionnante en tant que Premier ministre Harold Wilson, apportant une touche de sérieux à la comédie. [bs_show url="stonehouse"] À la suite de la diffusion de la série, la véritable fille de Stonehouse a exprimé sa préoccupation quant à la manière fausse dont la série dépeint l'histoire de sa famille. La mini-série nous rappellera A Very English Scandal, avec qui il partage un scénariste, John Preston. Mais le petit clin d'œil à The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe où le héros simulait également sa propre mort à partir d'une histoire vraie est aussi à noter. De toute façon, on reste dans le domaine de la fiction malgré une inspiration de faits réels. Stonehouse est disponible sur Arte.tv pour une soirée divertissante. Elle est en ligne jusqu'au 21 mai 2024.
Today's episode, I'm joined by Rory MacFadyen. Rory is the co-founder of Reflo, a sustainable apparel brand made from recycled plastic waste and is also the chief marketing officer at the Icons Series, a team matchplay golf event featuring sporting icons such as Michael Phelps, Canelo Alvarez, and Harry Kane. In this conversation, we talk about the merging on these two lives, getting investment from England's all-time record goalscorer, tearing up the traditional apparel business model, taking a sustainability-first approach, as well as partnering with a Extreme E team, plans to partner with a Formula E team, and to potentially one day land deals in football, cricket, and rugby. Time Stamps 2:00 - Working at the Icons Series and Meeting Harry Kane 4:00 - Expanding Beyond just Golf 9:00 - Developing a Passion for Sustainability 11:00 - 'McDonald's Makes Salads, it Doesn't Make them a Health Food Store' 16:00 - Accounting for the Difference in Costs 19:00 - The Opportunity for Going Digital 22:00 - Moving into Teamwear 23:00 - Introducing Reloop 26:00 - Balancing Sustainability and Commerciality 30:00 - Harry Kane's Investment into Reflo 35:00 - Could an Athlete do something Themselves in the Apparel Space? Additional Links Harry Kane deal can make our brand a behemoth The Fortnite skin that grossed $50 Million for Epic Games Roblox Launches Wimbledon World With Digital Swag From Andy Murray, Ralph Lauren Managing Sir Andy Murray, One of Britain's Greatest Ever Athletes with Matt Gentry Connect with Rory on LinkedIn - here Connect with Andy on LinkedIn - here
Rory Macfadyen is co-founder of Reflo - the sustainable performancewear brand that turns single-use plastics destined for landfill and discarded coffee grounds into technical sports apparel. In this episode, Rory chats to Teddy and Tom about the brand and how the England captain Harry Kane has come on board as a brand ambassador. Rory is also a huge Southampton fan and he runs his through his top-5 Saints players of all-time. Messrs Le Tissier and Benali obviously feature, but some surprises too. ******** #football #90sfootball #reflo #sustainability #sustainableclothing
Welcome to The Bikini Coach Podcast We are the UK's First Female Only Coaching Team and our coaches are all bikini champions striving to help every female feel the best version of themselves! We specialise in female bikini competition prep and in this podcast will be aiming to help you with everything you'll need to know to becoming a successful bikini athlete. In this episode, you have Eleanor Lee - The Bikini Coach Lifestyle & Photoshoot Prep Coach chat with Newest PCA Pro Bikini Athlete Zoe MacFadyen Zoe is the newest Pro Bikini Athlete on The Bikini Coach team. Zoe joined The Bikini Coach in 2022. She had competed prior to this however, had never placed in her show unfortunately. After joining the Team she worked with us through an off season before going into prep and what a season she had! Zoe actually achieved TWO Pro Cards this season with GBO & PCA making her a double pro bikini athlete. The results speak for themselves and she racked up PCA Bikini Pro Card PCA Ms Universe Title PCA Overall Bikini Show Champion GBO Overall Bikini Pro Show Champion GBO Pro Card Multiple PCA & NFMUK Class wins How about that for results after never placing before! Zoe talks to us about how she found the prep and overall season, what challenges she faced and more! Enjoy the The Bikini Coach Podcast! Instagram: @thebikinicoach_ Enquire About Coaching: https://forms.gle/mmPkUb1BDW2NtP4e9
Hello everyone and welcome back! This week I have a bite-sized episode for you on multivitamins! This episode is jam-packed with science (see references below) and will give you the tools and knowledge to encourage or confirm your use of multivitamins! Get in touch with me: Email: gardnermairi12345@gmail.comInstagram: mairihgardnerTiktok: mairigardner57 Blog: aaahealths.com Website: www.mairigardner.com Do you have any questions about what I offer and how I can help you? Book your FREE 15-minute session today @ www.mairigardner.com I would love to chat! Remember to share, like, comment and follow! References Beeram, I., Mortensen, S.J., Yeritsyan, D., Momenzadeh, K., von Keudell, A. and Nazarian, A., 2021. Multivitamins and risk of fragility hip fracture: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Archives of osteoporosis, 16, pp.1-7.Beeram, I., Mortensen, S.J., Yeritsyan, D., Momenzadeh, K., von Keudell, A. and Nazarian, A., 2021. Multivitamins and risk of fragility hip fracture: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Archives of osteoporosis, 16, pp.1-7.Vos, E., 2001. Multivitamin supplements are effective and inexpensive agents to lower homocysteine levels. Archives of Internal Medicine, 161(5), pp.771-778.Lonn, E.M., 2012. Multivitamins in prevention of cardiovascular disease. JAMA, 308(17), pp.1802-1803.Grima, N.A., Pase, M.P., Macpherson, H. and Pipingas, A., 2012. The effects of multivitamins on cognitive performance: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, 29(3), pp.561-569.Dickinson, A., MacKay, D. and Wong, A., 2015. Consumer attitudes about the role of multivitamins and other dietary supplements: Report of a survey. Nutrition journal, 14(1), pp.1-5.Dickinson, A. and MacKay, D., 2014. Health habits and other characteristics of dietary supplement users: a review. Nutrition journal, 13(1), p.14.Giovannucci, E., Stampfer, M.J., Colditz, G.A., Hunter, D.J., Fuchs, C., Rosner, B.A., Speizer, F.E. and Willett, W.C., 1998. Multivitamin use, folate, and colon cancer in women in the Nurses' Health Study. Annals of internal medicine, 129(7), pp.517-524.Gaziano, J.M., Sesso, H.D., Christen, W.G., Bubes, V., Smith, J.P., MacFadyen, J., Schvartz, M., Manson, J.E., Glynn, R.J. and Buring, J.E., 2012. Multivitamins in the prevention of cancer in men: the Physicians' Health Study II randomized controlled trial. Jama, 308(18), pp.1871-1880.
For the last six years, Stew MacFadyen has been one of the top creative forces leading the wave in footwear and streetwear photography. In his latest role as the creative director for one of the most well known sneaker boutiques, Sneaker Politics, his responsibilities reach beyond the lens of photography and into the worlds of professional athletes and product allocation. In our interview, we discuss what got Stew into photography, how he landed the gig with Sneaker Politics, and why he has the world's longest Instagram handle. Make sure to follow Stew on Instagram at @stewwwwwwwwwww Time Stamps: 0:00 - Intro 0:57 - Growing Up / Getting Into Photography 11:00 - Working At Sneaker Politics 16:30 - Shooting In Studio vs. On Location 24:25 - Working With Pro Athletes 29:30 - Sneaker Politics x Adidas Forum Campaign 34:00 - Supporting Product With Photography 42:00 - Product Allocation 45:10 - Why Does Sneaker Politics Have So Many Photographers? 50:55 - Stew's Sneaker Collection 57:20 - Having Your Photos Re-Shared 58:50 - Q&A 1:03:20 - Outro Check us out! Online: http://www.shoepodcast.com Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/shoepodcast TikTok: http://www.tiktok.com/@shoepodcast YouTube: https://bit.ly/shoepodcastyoutube Filming and episode artwork by Houston Dragna. Music by JohnnyBgood.
Matthew Macfadyen, the Emmy Award-winning star of the hit HBO series Succession has joined the cast of the upcoming superhero comedy Deadpool 3. Specific details of Macfadyen's role in the film are yet to be revealed but it has already been confirmed that Hugh Jackman will reprise his role as Wolverine from Fox's X-Men universe, while Ryan Reynolds will also return as the titular anti-hero Deadpool. It was also announced in February this year that Crown star Emma Corrin has joined the cast in an undisclosed role. Free Guy and The Adam Project director Shawn Levy will direct Deadpool 3, the third film of the franchise.
Scott Macfadyen is a Canadian author who loves to spend his time with his wife Tabitha and his dog Carly traveling or off grid where he can work on his writing. Scott spent over 20 years as a chef in restaurants, Pubs and resorts but had always had an interest in writing stories ever since elementary school. In his younger years he was known to write many stories and shared them with his school mates. Scott had a true passion for the escapism of story telling and over the years he had come up with the idea of his first published novella, A Whisper In the Shadows. Scott continues to write and looks forward to bringing you new stories and adventures in the future. TOPICS OF CONVERSATION Scott's Writing Journey Writing a novella A strong female lead and character motivation On reading and Stephen King His personal writing escape Advice for aspiring author What's next for Scott? A WHISPER IN THE SHADOWS "Layla is a devoted mother and wife, but when someone from her past is gunned down and left for dead, she returns to her previous life that her family knows nothing about. Now Layla must keep her secret safe from her family, and find the people who shot the man who rescued her from living on the streets and who turned her into a professional hitwoman. Layla races against time while navigating twists and turns before her dark past catches up to her and her family becomes a target." CONNECT WITH SCOTT MACFADYEN! Website: https://scottmacbooks.com/ Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@scottymacwrites Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/scott.macfadyen.author Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/Scott.macfadyen_author/
In this podcast, Noozhawk's owner and founder Bill Macfadyen talks about Noozhawk's redesign and collaboration with Newspack. He also talks about the AM and PM reports, the success of BizHawk, and plans for more newsletters in 2022. Macfadyen also shares his views on some local issues, including the debacle over the La Cumbre Plaza Specific Plan, State Street and the city of Goleta. Macfadyen also shares his views on his own column, why it resonates and responds to questions about whether Noozhawk is too conservative. This is a great podcast with an entrepreneur.
JP MacFadyen, Executive Director of Moncus Park since August 2021, joins Discover Lafayette to discuss the progress made during 2022 to open the park's long-awaited amenities. Previous to serving as ED, JP served the park as Operations Director for two years overseeing construction and developing processes and procedures for daily operations. JP is a native of Pittsburgh, PA, and has a degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Notre Dame and an MBA with a concentration in Operations from the University of Houston. After graduation from Notre Dame, he stumbled across a job opening at Rockwell International. He ended up being hired to work as a space shuttle flight operations specialist as Missions Operations Director at Johnson Space Center in Houston. He looks back and says in March of the year he was interviewed, "It was the best time of year visiting Houston coming down from Notre Dame. The weather was warm and wonderful." And there he landed! His specialty was onboard propulsion, which meant de-orbiting rockets and the thruster jets that changed the altitude of the space shuttles once they were in orbit. At that time, everything prior to computers was still worked out on paper and his first job was the configuration of checklists for safety procedures. JP met his wife, Michelle, in Houston while they worked together at NASA. She was an electrical engineer, a Eunice native and a graduate of UL - Lafayette. JP MacFadyen: "I always say, when you marry a Cajun, it's not a question of if, but when that you'll move back home." In 2005, he moved to Lafayette with his wife Michelle and their four children. The family then opened Great Harvest Bread Co., the first green-certified restaurant in the state of Louisiana. They sold their interest in Great Harvest Bread Co. in 2018 and JP worked as a small business consultant before he joined Moncus Park in 2019 as operations director. He has served as Executive Director since August 2021. We are thrilled to welcome JP to update us on the many improvements that have been added over the past year in 2022. With the support of major donors, community support, and quality staff, Moncus Park has truly become an outdoor paradise in the heart of Lafayette. More than 230,000 visitors have been to the park since January 1, 2022! The wood from the original barn at the UL Horse Farm was saved and used for the construction of the treehouse. JP emphasized the importance of the leadership of the Co-Chair of Moncus Park's Board of Directors, Lenny Lemoine, who encouraged the board to go ahead and open up the park to the public early in 2022, even though the construction was not yet complete. Without that leadership, many of the park's great community events would not have occurred this year. Discover Lafayette sends kudos to JP MacFadyen, Lenny Lemoine, and the entire board of Moncus Park for the gift you have given our community! Lafayette natives have played a large role in the unique attractions at Moncus. Park. The designer of the water feature which evokes the unique character of our region, Jim Garland, is a UL-Lafayette grad who also designed the unique water feature at the Hilliard Art Museum. Jim's early works included the design of the water features at the Bellagio casino in Las Vegas. JP and the team at Moncus have taken great strides to preserve cherished bits of the original Horse Farm. The original wood of the farm is incorporated into the Savoy Family treehouse which opened this year. It offers easy access for children of all ages to enjoy. The treehouse, designed by world-renowned designer Pete Nelson, is nestled within a Live Oak in the new Louisiana-swamped-themed play area. Moncus Park's Amphitheater seats 3000 plus people and was underwritten by First Horizon Bank. People always ask, "who owns the park, how was it purchased, and how is it maintained?" Moncus Park is a public/private park conservancy that operates in a ma...
Pastor Phil interviews Josh MacFadyen Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair at UPEI. You can follow up on the information shared in the podcast and learn more about God's design and desire for us to look after the earth around us here: Articles Dave Bookless, "The farmer: What does it mean to ‘rule' and ‘subdue'?" Field Notes: A Rocha International 65 (Winter 2021), pp 18-19. https://www.yumpu.com/en/document/read/66014212/field-notes-issue-65 Katherine Hayhoe, "Christianity and Climate Change," Tearfund Canada (2021) https://tearfund.ca/program/creation-care/ Tim Keller "Can Faith Be Green?: An Open Forum," Gospel in Life (2008) https://gospelinlife.com/downloads/can-faith-be-green-an-open-forum-8107/ Resources A Rocha "Field Notes" podcast https://www.arocha.org/en/field-notes-podcast/ A Rocha International https://www.arocha.org A Rocha Canada https://arocha.ca Tearfund Canada, "Creation Care" https://tearfund.ca/program/creation-care/ University of Exeter course "Beyond Stewardship" https://humanities.exeter.ac.uk/theology/research/projects/beyondstewardship/
You'd have to be fearless to thrive in the fiery ensemble of HBO's hit drama ‘Succession,” which is probably why Matthew Macfadyen just earned his second Emmy nomination for doing just that. “[Actors] can always find something to blame,” he says. “But it's actually just fear of committing and jumping in and doing the scene; saying the words, and looking the other person in the eyes, and playing the scene." In this episode of In the Envelope: The Actor's Podcast, Macfadyen breaks down how to be a breakout performer, even in a show that's all breakout performances. This episode is brought to you by HBO Max. -- Backstage has been the #1 resource for actors and talent-seekers for 60 years. In the Envelope, Backstage's podcast, features intimate, in-depth conversations with today's most noteworthy film, television, and theater actors and creators. This is your guide to every aspect of acting, from voiceover and commercial work to casting directors, agents, and more. Full of both know-how and inspiration, In the Envelope airs weekly to cover everything from practical advice on navigating the industry, to how your favorite projects are made, to personal stories of success and failure alike. Join host Vinnie Mancuso, senior editor at Backstage, for this guide on how to live the creative life from those who are doing it every day: https://bit.ly/2OMryWQ Follow Backstage and In the Envelope on social media: - https://www.facebook.com/backstage - https://www.twitter.com/backstage - https://www.twitter.com/intheenvelope - https://www.instagram.com/backstagecast Looking to get cast? Subscribe here: www.backstage.com/subscribe Browse Backstage casting listings: https://bit.ly/3mth68e Check out our community-driven virtual programming, The Slate: https://bit.ly/2WDNXf0 Backstage stands in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement: https://bit.ly/3cuMBt5 Special thanks to... - Host: Vinnie Mancuso - Producer: Jamie Muffett - Social media: Katie Minard, Karen Jenkins - Design: Mark Stinson, Caitlin Watkins - Additional support: Kasey Howe, Samantha Sherlock, Benjamin Lindsay, Oriella St. Louis
Hi there!! Who's my guest for this episode? Well, he is an actor, musician and all round good guy, Mr Lorne MacFadyen!!!!! I have known Lorne since my teen years and watched with pride as his star has risen over the past few years! He has been in such things as BBC's Vigil, Ken Loach's The Angel's Share and he even plays Julien Temple in the new programme on Disney+ Pistol!!!! This was an absolute joy and I hope you love this chat as much as I did. Check out the Apple Music Playlist for today's episode here: https://music.apple.com/gb/playlist/lorne-macfadyens-4saad-playlist/pl.u-zPyL1v5FZDz8mK Check out Pistol on Disney+, Vigil on the iPlayer, Tina and Bobby on Britbox, you know what, just google Lorne MacFadyen and you will get a whole host of amazing acting from him.
Deception: As spy movie fans, we know that deception is a key ingredient in espionage. In World War II, the British tried many different forms of deception. One of the most impactful deceptions from that war has inspired plot points in James Bond movies and was a key driver to the creation of the Hitchcock classic North by Northwest. Deception also is the basis of the just-released movie OPERATION MINCEMEAT. Join Tom Pizzato as he gives you his no-spoiler review! Comments: info@spymovienavigator.com Episode webpage: https://spymovienavigator.com/podcast/operation-mincemeat-review-no-spoilers/
Sizzling Samachar of the day - 10th May 2022Welcome to OTTplay Sizzling Samachar, I'm your host Nikhil News first up,Jason Issacs and Lior Raz join The Crowded RoomThe Crowded Room, an Apple TV+ anthology series starring Tom Holland in the lead, has added Jason Issacs and Fauda actor Lior Raz to its cast. Holland's character Danny Sullivan is loosely based on Billy Milligan, who was the first person to be acquitted of a major crime after being diagnosed with a dissociative identity disorder. The series, written and executive produced by Akiva Goldsman, also stars Amanda Seyfried, Sasha Lane, Christopher Abbot, and Emma Laird.Ahsoka begins productionThe production of the Disney+ Star Wars spin-off series, Ahsoka, has commenced. Created by Dave Filoni, who has previously worked on The Mandalorian and Star Wars: The Clone Wars, the series will feature Rosario Dawson reprising her role as Ahsoka. Hayden Christensen, Natasha Liu Bordizzo, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, and Ray Stevenson will also star in the series.Script of Succession Season 4 is almost readyJesse Armstrong, the creator of the award-winning series Succession, has revealed that the script for the fourth season of the show is nearing completion. The show centers on the Roy family who are the owners of one of the largest media conglomerates in the world. Meanwhile, Matthew Macfadyen bagged the best-supporting actor award at the 2022 BAFTA TV Awards for his portrayal of Tom Wambsgans in the series. Apart from Macfadyen, the show features Brian Cox, Jeremy Strong, Kieran Culkin, Sarah Snook, Nicholas Braun, Alan Ruck, and Hiam Abbass.David Fincher to direct an episode of Love, Death and Robots Volume 3Acclaimed filmmaker David Fincher is set to direct an episode of Love, Death and Robots Volume 3. Fincher will reunite with Se7en screenwriter Andrew Kevin Walker for the episode titled, Bad Travelling. Based on a short story by sci-fi writer Neal Asher, the episode is centered on a shark-hunting vessel that is attacked by a giant crustacean.Jodie Comer to star in The End We Start FromKilling Eve star Jodie Comer will star in the film The End We Start From. Directed by Mahalia Belo, the movie is based on Megan Hunter's novel of the same name. Comer will play a mother who tries to find her way home along with her newborn baby amid an environmental crisis. Benedict Cumberbatch, Comer, Sébastien Raybaud, Cecile Gaget, and Eva Yates will serve as executive producers. Freddie Highmore and Maisie Williams team up for Sinner v. SaintsThe Good Doctor actor Freddie Highmore will star alongside Game of Thrones star Maisie Williams in the upcoming comedy Sinner v. Saints. The Pentaverate and Fleabag director, Tim Kirkby, will helm the film which is based on the Manacled Mormon case involving a former beauty queen who kidnapped a young Mormon missionary. Mark Williams and Andriana Williams are producing the movie.Trailer of Avatar: The Way of Water releasedThe first trailer of James Cameron's highly awaited film, Avatar: The Way of Water, gives a glimpse of the blue waters of Pandora and the Na'vi. Sam Worthington and Zoe Saldana will return as Jake Sully and Neytiri in the film which is expected to release on December 16. Meanwhile, the fourth season of the award-winning HBO series Westworld will drop on June 26. The cast of the series includes Evan Rachel Wood, Thandiwe Newton, Ed Harris, Jeffrey Wright, Tessa Thompson, and Luke Hemsworth. Mollywood News, The makers of the movie Vellari Pattanam have released a teaser that gives a sneak peek into the humorous exchange between the characters played by Manju Warrier and Soubin Sahir. Mahesh Vettiyaar has directed the movie.The Kashmir Files banned in SingaporeSingapore has banned The Kashmir Files for its alleged one-sided portrayal of Muslims. However, the recent development trigged a Twitter spar between MP Shashi Tharoor and director Vivek Agnihotri. Tharoor took to Twitter to share the news and said that the film promoted by India's ruling party has been banned in Singapore. In response to Tharoor's tweet, Agnihotri commented that Singapore is the most regressive censor in the world, and it even banned The Last Temptations of Jesus Christ. He further said that Tharoor must delete his post for the sake of his ex-wife Sunanda Pushkar, who was a Kashmiri Pandit. The Kashmir Files is set to be released on Zee5 on May 13. Well, that's the OTTplay Sizzling news for today from the world of movies and entertainment, until the next episode it's your host Nikhil signing out.Aaj kya dekhoge OTTplay se poochoWritten By Arya Harikumar
In this episode Pastor Robey and Rebekah talk about loneliness. Loneliness can strike anyone at anytime and it can be hard to admit and recognize in the moment. So in this podcast they will help you identify it, and know the effects it can have as well as give you some practical ways to combat it. Sources used for research: Brown, B. (2018). Dare to Lead. Random House. Goodwin, R (2015). Association Between Media Use, Acute Stress Disorder and Psychological Distress. Psychotherapy and Psychodynamics, 84. Seltzer EK (2017). Public Sentiment and Discourse about Zikavirus on Instagram. Public Health, 150. Thompson, C. (2010). Anatomy of the Soul: Surprising Connections between Neuroscience and Spiritual Practices That Can Transform Your Life and Relationships. Tyndale. MacFadyen, H. (2022, February 14). Be Vulnerable, Find Your People (No. 354) [Audio Podcast Episode]. In Don't Mom Alone Podcast. Libsyn. https://godcenteredmom.libsyn.com Meyers, J.R. (2003). The Search to Belong: Rethinking Intimacy, Community and Small Groups. Zondervan.
Moncus Park's, JP MacFadyen, Executive Director. We are talking with JP and Heather about Moncus Park, now that the park is open to the public, what to expect in the coming months and years as phase 2 nears completion and the weather warms up in time for tons of outdoor fun. Be sure to watch live at 1pm today. If you don't watch it live, it's still a great listen/watch for all things happening at Moncus Park. Links for reference during the conversation. https://moncuspark.org https://moncuspark.org/membership/ https://moncuspark.org/events/ https://moncuspark.org/dogpark/ — The Tea Podcast is proudly sponsored by The Music Academy of Acadiana & The Orchard, Authorized Service Providers of Apple. The Music Academy of Acadiana is Acadiana's top choice for music lessons in piano, guitar, voice, drums, violin, saxophone, flute, audio production & more. They teach students of all ages and styles, they have sent students to college, to compete in major music competitions, and have also premiered on major TV Music contests like American Idol & The Voice. Founded by University of Louisiana at Lafayette music school graduate Tim Benson, the Academy has been voted as a top finalist in the best music school by readers of the Times since 2016 and they have won the national music school of the year award in 2014. Their goal is to make music lessons fun, educational and to help foster the next generation of musicians and creative thinkers! You can find them at the following links: Website: https://www.musicacademyacadiana.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MusicAcademyOfAcadiana/ — The Orchard is our tech sponsor and are providing the tech we need to assure a successful live podcast. Check them out at https://theorchardstores.com. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-tea-podcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-tea-podcast/support
Most politics are currently dominated by political parties which are locked into conflict with each other. In this system, people don't turn up as individuals but as part of the party machine, in which they work together to wield power over other parties. Politicians aim to convince voters to give them the power to rule over them, but not to govern with them. Ideas are debated, but if there is no intention to listen and one side has all power to make decisions, then it is only for show. The goal isn't necessarily good governance, but to be seen to be "right", and to gain the control of majorities. This is a system in which power is centralised in as few hands as possible and is then used to exert their will over everybody else. It goes from the general population to a handful of politicians, to the majority party, and then the factions within that party. But what could a different system look like, where dialogue dominates instead of debate, where citizens remain involved in the decision-making process, and where politicians work to have power with instead of power over people? In this episode, I talk with the former mayor of Frome, Peter MacFadyen, about how we can take over our local politics and change the rules of the game. In the interview, we talk about the story of Frome and the group of independents that changed its politics, what it looks like in practice to listen to each other and the community, as well as the broader prospects of the movement. Find out more about Peters's workFlatpack democracy Website and Facebook page
Oto jest pierwszy, premierowy odcinek podkastu Naukowo, czyli autorskiego przeglądu prasy, badań i informacji ze świata nauki. W tym odcinku przyjrzymy się gigantycznym bakteriom, nieznośnym upałom oraz w jaki sposób obiad Twoich dziadków ma wpływ na Ciebie.A jeśli uznasz, że warto wspierać ten projekt to zapraszam do serwisu Patronite, każda dobrowolna wpłata od słuchaczy pozwoli mi na rozwój i doskonalenie tego podkastu, bardzo dziękuję za każde wsparcie!Zapraszam również na Facebooka, Twittera i Instagrama, każdy lajk i udostępnienie pomoże w szerszym dotarciu do słuchaczy, a to jest teraz moim głównym celem :)Źródła użyte przy tworzeniu tego odcinka:Katherine Unger Baillie, "One alcoholic drink a day linked with reduced brain size"https://penntoday.upenn.edu/news/one-alcoholic-drink-day-linked-reduced-brain-sizeDaviet, R., Aydogan, G., Jagannathan, K. et al. Associations between alcohol consumption and gray and white matter volumes in the UK Biobank. Nat Commun 13, 1175 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28735-5Peter Rogers, "“Impossibly big” bacteria rattle the field of microbiology"https://bigthink.com/life/impossible-big-bacteria/Elizabeth Pennisi, "Largest bacterium ever discovered has an unexpectedly complex cell"https://www.science.org/content/article/largest-bacterium-ever-discovered-has-unexpectedly-complex-cells„A centimeter-long bacterium with DNA compartmentalized in membrane-bound organelles”Jean-Marie Volland, Silvina Gonzalez-Rizzo, Olivier Gros, Tomáš Tyml, Natalia Ivanova, Frederik Schulz, Danielle Goudeau, Nathalie H Elisabeth, Nandita Nath, Daniel Udwary, Rex R Malmstrom, Chantal Guidi-Rontani, Susanne Bolte-Kluge, Karen M Davies, Maïtena R Jean, Jean-Louis Mansot, Nigel J Mouncey, Esther Angert, Tanja Woyke, Shailesh V DatebioRxiv 2022.02.16.480423; https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.02.16.480423"LIGO-Virgo Network Catches Another Neutron Star Collision"https://www.ligo.caltech.edu/news/ligo20200106Mark Kaufman, "Huge, mysterious blast detected in deep space"https://mashable.com/article/space-stars-blast-kilonova„Evidence for X-ray Emission in Excess to the Jet Afterglow Decay 3.5 yrs After the Binary Neutron Star Merger GW 170817: A New Emission Component”A. Hajela, R. Margutti, J. S. Bright, K. D. Alexander, B. D. Metzger, V. Nedora, A. Kathirgamaraju, B. Margalit, D. Radice, C. Guidorzi, E. Berger, A. MacFadyen, D. Giannios, R. Chornock, I. Heywood, L. Sironi, O. Gottlieb, D. Coppejans, T. Laskar, Y. Cendes, R. Barniol Duran, T. Eftekhari, W. Fong, A. McDowell, M. Nicholl, X. Xie, J. Zrake, S. Bernuzzi, F. S. Broekgaarden, C. D. Kilpatrick, G. Terreran, V. A. Villar, P. K. Blanchard, S. Gomez, G. Hosseinzadeh, D. J. Matthews, J. C. Rastinejad https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2104.02070Carly Cassella, "Extremely Hot, Humid Weather Could Kill a Person Far More Easily Than We Thought"https://www.sciencealert.com/human-survival-in-hot-and-humid-conditions-is„Evaluating the 35°C wet-bulb temperature adaptability threshold for young, healthy subjects (PSU HEAT Project)”Daniel J. Vecellio, S. Tony Wolf, Rachel M. Cottle, and W. Larry KenneyJournal of Applied Physiology 2022 132:2, 340-345https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00738.2021Monica Dus, "What you eat can reprogram your genes – an expert explains the emerging science of...
In 2005, the British actor played brooding aristocrat Mr. Darcy in the film adaptation of Pride & Prejudice. Now, he's a scheming Midwesterner on Succession: "Tom Wambsgans is a long way from Mr. Darcy," he says. We talk about Tom's complicated relationships with Shiv Roy and cousin Greg, Macfadyen's background in the theater, and how he didn't think he was "dishy" enough to play Mr. Darcy. Also, we remember Vietnamese Buddhist monk and activist Thich Nhat Hanh. He died Jan. 22.
In 2005, the British actor played brooding aristocrat Mr. Darcy in the film adaptation of Pride & Prejudice. Now, he's a scheming Midwesterner on Succession: "Tom Wambsgans is a long way from Mr. Darcy," he says. We talk about Tom's complicated relationships with Shiv Roy and cousin Greg, Macfadyen's background in the theater, and how he didn't think he was "dishy" enough to play Mr. Darcy. Also, we remember Vietnamese Buddhist monk and activist Thich Nhat Hanh. He died Jan. 22.
Noozhawk owner, founder and publisher Bill Macfadyen sits down with Josh Molina for the first SBT podcast of 2022 to dive deep about Noozhawk and the local media landscape. Macfadyen talks about whether Noozhawk is liberal, conservative, or something else. He explains the inner-workings of Noozhawk and pulls back the curtain on how the company gathers news. He also talks about his popular and sometimes controversial column. The two also relive some old days working at the daily paper. Toward the end, Macfadyen talks about Noozhawk's future and the plan for a direct public offering. Please subscribe to Josh Molina's podcast, Santa Barbara Talks on You Tube. Hit like and subscribe below on You Tube or your preferred streaming platform. Visit www.santabarbaratalks.com
"For whatever reason, I've always been really interested in the brain." // MacFadyen Nichols '22 is the current school president at Gilman School. // On Episode #65 of the Path to Follow Podcast, Jake and Mac discuss Mac's experience playing lacrosse at Gilman, running for school president, Mac's love for GIlman, the experience of learning over Zoom during the pandemic, maintaining connections in 2020, developing leadership abilities, senior retreat, Gilman traditions, public speaking, leaders and teachers Mac looks up to, comfortability with yourself and Mac's senior speech, applying to college, Paul Kalanithi's 'When Breath Becomes Air' (2016), the Library Club, and Mac's book recommendation: 'The Anthropocene Review' (2021) by John Green. // Enjoy the episode? Please follow @pathtofollowpod on all platforms. More to come! // Many thanks to Cesare Ciccanti for all of his efforts on podcast production. //
We are so happy to have Heather (4) and Bruce (3) MacFadyen on the show today. Heather is a well-known parenting mentor in the online space through her podcast, Don't Mom Alone. It's really fun to hear today how their Enneagram types influence their parenting styles. Mentioned in this episode: Anatomy of the Soul by Curt Thompson Don't Mom Alone episode: Bruce Labels His Feelings Heather's Book: Don't Mom Alone Mentioned in this episode: YourEnneagramCoach.com Becoming Us Becoming Us book Disciple Trip: Live Your Adventure by Joey Cook Follow Your Enneagram Coach on all the socials: Facebook Instagram Twitter You Tube Show Credits: Music by Sleeping at Last Edited and Produced by Angie Elkins Media
Bill MacFadyen is the founder of Noozhawk and an all-around terrific guy. He shares some perspective on the news business and his interesting life journey. We love Bill MacFadyen! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/goodlifeconversations/support
The Must Watch team hear from Rachel Shenton about series 2 of All Creatures Great and Small on Channel 5. The traitor on board HMS Vigil himself, Lorne MacFadyen chats to us ahead of the finale. Plus, reviews of The Morning Show series 2 and Y: The Last Man.
Christine is an early childhood educator, and an avid supporter in the Mental Health community on PEI. She shares her story, from childhood trauma to developing chronic auto immune disorder in her early 20s. Christine share lots of insights on the mental health care system on PEI and her experiences. Great conversation with Christine,
EPISODE 23 – ALMOST HEROES As March Mattness comes to a close, we determine once and for all who is the best Matt. Is it Damon? McConaughey? Macfadyen? Or is it Chris’s pick: Matthew Perry, who pairs up with Chris Farley in the pioneer buddy comedy Almost Heroes! This week, Brandon finds the best place in his home for a Chris Farley painting; Chris brings us more insane stories; Brian is the king of transitions; and Ashley’s Chipmunk Theory pulls through yet again! BTW: Fun field trip stories! Starring: Matthew Perry, Chris Farley, Eugene Levy, Lisa Barbuscia, and Kevin Dunn Directed by Christopher Guest FOLLOW US:Instagram (@trashwatchpodcast)Twitter (@trashwatchcast)Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/trashwatchpodcast/)Email (trashwatchpodcast@gmail.com)Listen to Brian’s music at (https://www.brianhorne.com)
"Because we were respectful of people, they were respectful of us." In the week where we saw town council meetings dissolving into unfettered chaos its seems appropriate that our guest week is Peter Macfadyen, pioneer of Frome's extraordinary town council. Macfayden talks to Julian about how it runs, how to connect councils to their residents, to the web of support they live in, and have lost contact with. Peter's career early career saw him spending a decade away from the UK in Zambia, India and Guyana, working with the rights of disabled people. After moving back to the UK, and getting caught up in the boxing day tsunami in Sri Lanka, Peter focus turned to climate change, and through that he moved towards local community organisations and into Frome's town council, where he spent ten years. Peter's unique stance on how to change the way our communities run was originally put down in Flatpack Democracy which in turn spawned a movement, which at its core has the belief that true democracy, where the people's views shape the people's society, is achievable. There is no manifesto, no ulterior motive for the good of a “party” or political movement; it works by opening up to the town, asking residents what they need, what they lack, giving them continuous access to the council so there is an ongoing flow of ideas and dialogues about things that need addressing. Since the release of Flatpack Democracy many other towns have taken the bones of Peter's idea and applied it successfully to their own locale. As this number grows, and we emerge from covid with a government particularly avoidant of listening to its people, there is a hope that the lessons from Frome will be widely applied to shift an increasingly broken democracy. Peter Macfayden on twitter Things mentioned on the podcast: Flatpack Democracy 2021 Campaign, twitter Flatpack Democracy Rebel Ideas Matthew Syed Frome Town Council Braiding Sweetgrass - Robin Wall Kimmerer Cormac Russel - Rekindling Democracy Entangled Life - Merlin Sheldrake Swampy Guardian article Julian Abel can be found on Twitter Follow Survival of the Kindest on Twitter, Instagram and subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you like to listen to get our episodes as they are released. Email us on sotk@compassionate-communitiesuk.co.uk
In the week where we saw town council meetings dissolving into unfettered chaos its seems appropriate that our guest week is Peter Macfadyen, pioneer of Frome's extraordinary town council. Macfayden talks to Julian about how it runs, how to connect councils to their residents, to the web of support they live in, and have lost contact with.Peter's career early career saw him spending a decade away from the UK in Zambia, India and Guyana, working with the rights of disabled people. After moving back to the UK, and getting caught up in the boxing day tsunami in Sri Lanka, Peter focus turned to climate change, and through that he moved towards local community organisations and into Frome's town council, where he spent ten years. Peter's unique stance on how to change the way our communities run was originally put down in Flatpack Democracy which in turn spawned a movement, which at its core has the belief that true democracy, where the people's views shape the people's society, is achievable. There is no manifesto, no ulterior motive for the good of a “party” or political movement; it works by opening up to the town, asking residents what they need, what they lack, giving them continuous access to the council so there is an ongoing flow of ideas and dialogues about things that need addressing. Since the release of Flatpack Democracy many other towns have taken the bones of Peter's idea and applied it successfully to their own locale. As this number grows, and we emerge from covid with a government particularly avoidant of listening to its people, there is a hope that the lessons from Frome will be widely applied to shift an increasingly broken democracy. Peter Macfayden on twitterFlatpack Democracy 2021 Campaign, twitterFlatpack DemocracyRebel Ideas Matthew SyedFrome Town Council Braiding Sweetgrass - Robin Wall KimmererCormac Russel - Rekindling DemocracyEntangled Life - Merlin SheldrakeSwampy Guardian article Julian Abel can be found on TwitterFollow Survival of the Kindest on Twitter, Instagram and subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you like to listen to get our episodes as they are released. Email us compassion.pod@gmail.com
On this episode of It's Bloody Complicated, Frances Foley is joined by another great double bill – this time Peter MacFadyen who has inspired the Flatpack Democracy movement and Indra Adnan one of the co-founders of the new politics champions The Alternative UK.Flatpack Democracy is an independent movement which started in Frome, inspired by frustration with missed opportunitities the way local government usually works. Since then, the group has taken control of the local council and inspired similar groups in other towns across the UK.The Alternative UK is a political platform based in the United Kingdom. Through curation, editorial, public events, commissioning and research, it aims to transform the language and practice of politics on these islands. Inspired by and associated with Alternativet in Denmark, it is trying to bring about “a friendly revolution”."It's Bloody Complicated" is moving now to fortnightly calls, and will be recorded every other Tuesday at 6pm GMT. Become a Compass Member to join our live recordings and bring your questions to our guests: https://action.compassonline.org.uk/podcastSupport the show (https://www.compassonline.org.uk/podcast/)Support the show (https://www.compassonline.org.uk/podcast/)
Every year, we spend BILLIONS of dollars on vitamins, mostly without really knowing if we need them, or if they're doing us any good. They are the most commonly used supplement in the world.In this ep we take a look at the current scientific research behind some of the most popular ones, and cover:Whether multivitamins contain the same stuffHow sailors helped us discover vitamins.The scientific evidence for and against taking one-pill for everythingWhether it's more beneficial to take isolated vitamins or one big multi.Can they help you live your healthiest and longest life?What a ‘therapeutic dose' meansWhat the AUST L number is and why you need to look for it on packagingWhich trusted brands Sal will be prescribing as a Clinical Nutritionist in Australia.Reporting non-compliant advertising to the TGA (for Australian Vitamins):https://www.tga.gov.au/advertising-enforcement-and-outcomesThe science:Bailey RL, Fulgoni VL 3rd, Keast DR, Dwyer JT. Examination of vitamin intakes among US adults by dietary supplement use. J Academy Nutrition Dietetics. 2012;112(5):657-663, e4Google ScholarBailey, R. L., Fakhouri, T. H., Park, Y., Dwyer, J. T., Thomas, P. R., Gahche, J. J., Miller, P. E., Dodd, K. W., Sempos, C. T., & Murray, D. M. (2015). Multivitamin-mineral use is associated with reduced risk of cardiovascular disease mortality among women in the United States. The Journal of nutrition, 145(3), 572–578. https://doi.org/10.3945/jn.114.204743Block G, Jensen CD, Norkus EP, et al. Usage patterns, health, and nutritional status of long-term multiple dietary supplement users: a cross-sectional study. Nutr J. 2007;6:3017958896PubMedConner M, Kirk SF, Cade JE, Barrett JH. Why do women use dietary supplements? The use of the theory of planned behaviour to explore beliefs about their use. Soc Sci Med. 2001;52(4):621-63311206658Foote JA, Murphy SP, Wilkens LR, Hankin JH, Henderson BE, Kolonel LN. Factors associated with dietary supplement use among healthy adults of five ethnicities: the Multiethnic Cohort Study. Am J Epidemiol. 2003;157(10):888-89712746241Harrison RA, Holt D, Pattison DJ, Elton PJ. Are those in need taking dietary supplements? a survey of 21 923 adults. Br J Nutr. 2004;91(4):617-62315035689PubMedMacpherson, H., Silberstein, R., & Pipingas, A. (2012). Neurocognitive effects of multivitamin supplementation on the steady state visually evoked potential (SSVEP) measure of brain activity in elderly women. Physiology & behavior, 107(3), 346–354. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physbeh.2012.08.006Rock CL. Multivitamin-multimineral supplements: who uses them? Am J Clin Nutr. 2007;85(1):277S-279S17209209PubMedRosenberg IH. Challenges and opportunities in the translation of the science of vitamins. Am J Clin Nutr. 2007;85(1):325S-327S17209220PubMedSesso, H. D., Christen, W. G., Bubes, V., Smith, J. P., MacFadyen, J., Schvartz, M., Manson, J. E., Glynn, R. J., Buring, J. E., & Gaziano, J. M. (2012). Multivitamins in the prevention of cardiovascular disease in men: the Physicians' Health Study II randomized controlled trial. JAMA, 308(17), 1751–1760. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2012.14805Watkins, M. L., Erickson, J. D., Thun, M. J., Mulinare, J., & Heath, C. W., Jr (2000). Multivitamin use and mortality in a large prospective study. American journal of epidemiology, 152(2), 149–162. https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/152.2.149https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/fullarticle/1568520?dm_i=13BV,1CD82,875I88,4JUZN,#full-text-tabHave questions / comments? Come stalk us on Social Media!Podcast: @wellnessfactorfictionSal: @thefitfoodieblogShauna: @shaunashauna_
Podcast #192 (5 Life Lessons By 40 With Mrs. Ann Lukacsy MacFadyen)
The idea began as a roundtable of 5 questions each from me and my guests, Jared Artaud & Brian MacFadyan from The Vacant Lots and Leah Shapiro & Peter Hayes of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club. It quickly became less formal than that and more conversational. We recorded for well over three hours and it was a lot of fun. I heard about cleverness in songwriting can backfire. There's a possible future for Leah & Jared in writing musical scores for boxing matches. Pete loved the silent song in Pootie Tang. And Brian is rebuilding Star Wars synths.Follow us all on social media. Please help support these artists. Their music is great and they have been so kind to this little podcast. I want to give them a huge, personal Thank You for all the time they gave me. I won't waste any more time. Let's get right into 5 Questions with Jared & Brian of The Vacant Lots & Leah & Pete of BRMC.This show is part of Pantheon Podcasts.
The idea began as a roundtable of 5 questions each from me and my guests, Jared Artaud & Brian MacFadyan from The Vacant Lots and Leah Shapiro & Peter Hayes of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club. It quickly became less formal than that and more conversational. We recorded for well over three hours and it was a lot of fun. I heard about cleverness in songwriting can backfire. There's a possible future for Leah & Jared in writing musical scores for boxing matches. Pete loved the silent song in Pootie Tang. And Brian is rebuilding Star Wars synths.Follow us all on social media. Please help support these artists. Their music is great and they have been so kind to this little podcast. I want to give them a huge, personal Thank You for all the time they gave me. I won't waste any more time. Let's get right into 5 Questions with Jared & Brian of The Vacant Lots & Leah & Pete of BRMC.This show is part of Pantheon Podcasts.
The idea began as a roundtable of 5 questions each from me and my guests, Jared Artaud & Brian MacFadyan from The Vacant Lots and Leah Shapiro & Peter Hayes of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club. It quickly became less formal than that and more conversational. We recorded for well over three hours and it was a lot of fun. I heard about cleverness in songwriting can backfire. There’s a possible future for Leah & Jared in writing musical scores for boxing matches. Pete loved the silent song in Pootie Tang. And Brian is rebuilding Star Wars synths. Follow us all on social media. Please help support these artists. Their music is great and they have been so kind to this little podcast. I want to give them a huge, personal Thank You for all the time they gave me. I won’t waste any more time. Let’s get right into 5 Questions with Jared & Brian of The Vacant Lots & Leah & Pete of BRMC. This show is part of Pantheon Podcasts.
SJVC Podcast 13 - An Interview with Psychiatrist James MacFadyen, MD, Medical Director and member of SJVC's clinical team. Host: Dr. Mariette Danilo Produced by: Pat Weston Music: Tushaan Soi cover
As part of our localising campaign at Dumbo Feather, we have a ripper conversation for you with the former mayor of Frome and legend of local politics, Peter Macfadyen. Peter is one of the architects behind Flatpack Democracy, a do-it-yourself guide to creating independent politics. In this conversation with Berry Liberman, he tells the story of how he and a small group of independents successfully took over their local town council and put an end to business as usual.
Today, we can’t stop watching Matthew Macfadyen, who plays Tom Wambsgans, the awkward yet sympathetic husband of Shiv Roy, on HBO’s “Succession.” Macfadyen takes us behind the scenes of shooting the congressional hearing meltdown and stealing chicken from Logan Roy’s plate on the show. Plus, we hear about Macfadyen’s role on “Quiz,” the AMC mini-series about a couple who attempted to cheat on the British version of “Who Wants to be a Millionaire.”
For episode 8 of the Notes from MoAD series, visual artist DeShawn Dumas and curator Rhiannon Evans MacFadyen discuss the fragility and resilience of glass, the terrifying and meditative properties of art and shooting guns, and the qualities and limits of the art institution as community space. In conversation about the creation of his works, Dumas describes how the “performance” of creating the works embodied the navigation required to survive in this landscape. By creating abstract works, the artist shifts from the narrative of race in America to the visceral experiences of those most affected by the oppressive systems and violent tools of Colonialism. DeShawn Dumas’s solo exhibition, "Against the End of History," presented painting, video, and the artist’s self-described ballistic monochromes in a multimedia installation that situates the sacred within the political. Dumas counters the assertion of liberal democracy as the final form of human government and defender of human dignity as established by American political scientist Francis Fukuyama in his 1989 essay “The End of History?”. Dumas deploys the visual languages of abstraction and minimalism to explore the psychic and historical afterlives of slavery, the increasing cultural predominance of militarized policing and the ecological catastrophe of climate change. Inhabiting the terrors of a past, not yet past, "Against the End of History" offered a space to contemplate the struggle for future(s) worth living. "DeShawn Dumas: Against the End of History" was presented at the Museum of the African Diaspora in San Francisco as part of the Emerging Artists Program September 4 through November 15, 2019.
Welcome to Notes from MoAD: Emerging Artists and Critic Series, dedicated to the Museum of African Diaspora’s 2018-20 Emerging Artist Program. For our sixth episode of this series, multidisciplinary artist Indira Allegra and curator Rhiannon Evans MacFadyen discuss an expanding of world and experience, the interplay of consent and complicity, exhaustion of identity-based inquiry, and the temperature of colonialism. Indira’s faceted explorations of weaving through performance, textile, video/new media, and performance have documented and deconstructed physical, psychological, historical, social, and practical tensions. In conversation, Allegra and MacFadyen deliberate on these vectors of power and the reality that nothing is neutral. BODYWARP was a solo exhibition by Indira Allegra exploring weaving as performance requiring a unique receptivity to tensions extant in political and emotional spaces. BODYWARP explores looms as frames through which the weaver becomes the warp and is held under tension, performing a series of site-specific interventions using her body. Like the accumulation of memory in cloth, looms and other tools of the weaver’s craft become organs of memory, pulling the artist’s body into an intimate choreography between maker, tool, and the narrative of a place. BODYWARP was presented at the Museum of the African Diaspora in San Francisco as part of the Emerging Artists Program, from September 19 through November 4, 2018.
This is Notes from MoAD: Emerging Artists and Critic Series, dedicated to the Museum of African Diaspora’s 2018-20 Emerging Artist Program. In this episode, visual artist Rodney Ewing and curator/organizer Rhiannon Evans MacFadyen talk about institutions, what the word “emerging” means when you’ve been an artist for fifteen years, and the things we learn about our work when we listen openly. As discussion about fact and truth leads to a deep-dive, head first, into the murky waters of the art market’s influence over what cultures get to have a brief and specific moment in the sun, the erasure of 200,000 years of Black art, and the long path to institutional diversity, they come up for air to affirm the power of creating our own spaces and communal opportunities. Re-examining complex and marginalized social histories, Longitude + Latitude presented an installation of mixed media works on paper created during Ewing’s residency at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts and the Djerassi Resident Artists Program. Exploring social and historical narratives of forced migration or displacement, the exhibition considered mnemonic geography and the intersections of body, place, and memory within the African diaspora. Longitude + Latitude was presented at the Museum of the African Diaspora in San Francisco as part of the Emerging Artists Program from May 8 through June 23, 2019.
Eyre on Air is back, baby! It's season two and we are starting off with a bang! This week we are doing 2005's Pride & Prejudice, starring Kiera Knightley, Matthew MacFadyen, Rosamund Pike, and like 500 other people including Donald Sutherland. Have you ever wondered why "rectory" and "rectum" share the same Latin root word? Worry not! We discuss this, amongst MANY other important topics.
Joanne runs Tea Green Events where she brings together some of the best makers from across Scotland in amazing spaces for people to buy their wares. Joanne’s journey took a few twists and turns along the way before building up Tea Green. Starting out with a ‘false start’ doing a business degree she realised that what she really wanted to do was go to art school. After getting a portfolio together and being accepted into 2nd year at DJCAD Joanne studied jewellery. In another unexpected turn she found herself doing a masters in fine art where she really started to explore how to create engaging and exciting experiences. It seems as though a lot of what she explored at this time eventually fed into what Tea Green has become, including several kilos of glitter. After being part of Vanilla Ink for over 2 years and developing as more of a commercial jeweller. It was Joanne’s fiancé that really influenced her next career change. He offered her £200 with the goal of creating a project where she would double the money. After a few discussions and ideas, Joanne decided to put on a market at GCA’s student union. A massive step out of her comfort zone but as we discuss, there were some successes and failures of that first event. Tea Green is coming up for it’s 5th birthday and Joanne has built a strong reputation, a network of makers and customer base. She’s built a brilliant platform to help makers sell their work and a well-curated offering for visitors. So, go and check out her up and coming events or if you’re a maker go and see how you can get involved. Tea Green Website - http://teagreen.co.uk Tea Green Facebook - https://en-gb.facebook.com/TeaGreenEvents/ Kibble Palace - http://www.glasgowbotanicgardens.com/the-gardens/history/kibble-palace/
Podcast #88 (Relationships) (Mr. David MacFadyen and Mrs. Ann Lukacsy MacFadyen) (The MacFadyen Team)
Heather MacFadyen is the founder of the Don’t Mom Alone podcast and the Not Alone Community. She supports and mentors a large community of women and moms, encouraging others to come out of isolation and move toward community. Heather is full of insight and uses real-life stories to convey deep truths about who God is and what He wants to do in our lives. Links mentioned: Novo Ministries Don’t Mom Alone Website The Wonderful World of Wemmecks by Max Lucado The Fogotten God by Francis Chan Connect with Heather MacFadyen and Don’t Mom Alone Community |website | instagram | facebook | twitter | pinterest | Connect with Jenni and Hope Has A Voice |personal website | hope has a voice website | instagram | facebook | patreon |
Heather MacFadyen is the founder of the Don’t Mom Alone podcast and the Not Alone Community. She supports and mentors a large community of women and moms, encouraging others to come out of isolation and move toward community. Heather is full of insight and uses real-life stories to convey deep truths about who God is and what He wants to do in our lives. Links mentioned: Novo Ministries Don’t Mom Alone Website The Wonderful World of Wemmecks by Max Lucado The Fogotten God by Francis Chan Connect with Heather MacFadyen and Don’t Mom Alone Community |website | instagram | facebook | twitter | pinterest | Connect with Jenni and Hope Has A Voice |personal website | hope has a voice website | instagram | facebook | patreon |
Clara’s moeder is op jonge leeftijd overleden. Ze laat haar kinderen een aantal geschenken achter en Clara erft een mysterieus zilveren ei. Ondanks dat Clara een technisch wonderkind is, kan ze het ei niet openen zonder sleutel. Haar peetvader leidt haar naar een magische wereld waar ze de sleutel kan vinden. Deze wereld is in chaos en het lijkt erop dat Clara de enige is die de vier koninkrijken kan redden van hun ondergang. In deze aflevering geven Narana en Nils hun spoilervrije review over The Nutcracker and the Four Realms Vergeet je niet te abonneren op ons kanaal, laat een review achter via iTunes of Apple Podcasts en volg ons op Facebook: www.facebook.com/filmfanspodcast en Instagram: www.instagram.com/filmfanspodcast. Voor meer reviews, filmnieuws en afleveringen ga je naar www.filmfanspodcast.nl.
**"There's things we can all do to look at food sustainability, it could be something really basic like looking at the amount of food we use and waste."** Bryony MacFadyen works for Hull Food Partnership which promotes food sustainability in the city, encouraging the growth of local food enterprise too. [http://hullfoodpartnership.org.uk](http://hullfoodpartnership.org.uk) This #freedomFEASTival series of portrait/podcasts has been commissioned by Freedom Festival Arts Trust, in partnership with Timebank Hull & ER, and Artlink. More about Freedom Festival FEASTival here: [https://www.freedomfestival.co.uk/projects/freedom-feastival/](https://www.freedomfestival.co.uk/projects/freedom-feastival/)
How can we change politics for the better to benefit our local communities? “This is about trying to create participatory democracy not representative democracy….It's saying elect 17 people and then their job is to build a community where whatever it is you want to get done, you can - or at least have a good try at it - and there will be money and support.” ~ Peter Macfadyen In this episode Amisha meets independent local councillor Peter Macfadyen to learn how Frome (Somerset UK) is transforming from a forgotten market town into one of the most progressive communities in the country. Peter tells the story of how he became Mayor of Frome by accident and rewrote the rules to return a sense of ownership to the community, putting 40% of council taxes back in people's hands and inviting children to vote on council budgets. He explains why manifestos inevitably end in broken promises, why he favours removing party politics at the local level and the need for epic facilitation skills in local government. Links from this episode and more at www.thefutureisbeautiful.co
We sit down with Drew MacFadyen aka @VeryWhiteGuy to discuss allyship, his dope wife Leslie and tips for white men to support inclusion and diversity in the workplace. Length: 21:27Host: Zach Interracial Jawn http://interracialjawn.com/Leslie Mac https://twitter.com/LeslieMacTRANSCRIPTZach: What’s up, y’all? It’s Zach with Living Corporate, and yes, you’re listening to a B-Side. Now, yes, we’ve introduced the purpose of a B-Side before, but every episode--remember, guys--is someone’s first episode. So for our new folks, B-Sides are essentially shows we have in-between our larger shows. These are much less structured and somehow even more lit--yes, even more lit--than our regularly scheduled shows. Sometimes they’re discussions that the hosts have internally that we share with you guys. Sometimes they are extended monologues. Or maybe they’re a chat with a special guest, and guess what? Today we have such a guest, Drew MacFadyen. Drew is the Vice President of Sales and Marketing at the busiest website in human translation in the world. In addition to his professional work, Drew is passionate about anti-racism and social inequity, known in that domain as Drew and @VeryWhiteGuy, and I can confirm--he is very white. He and his wife lead an organization called Interracial Jawn, where they discuss pop culture, TV, movies, and current events from their unique perspectives as a Very White Guy and a mostly black woman. Drew, welcome to the show, man. How are you doing? Drew: I’m well. You set the bar--that intro set it very, very high, I feel. Zach: [laughs] Drew: I usually like to under-promise and over-deliver and you’ve really--you set it high, but I’ll try. I’ll try my best. Thank you, man. Like, I appreciate it. Zach: No problem, man. So look, recently on the show we’ve discussed the concept of allyship in Corporate America. Were you able to check the episode out? And if so, what did you think about it? Drew: I did listen to the last episode, and forgive me, I can’t remember the author, the woman you had on as a guest. Zach: Amy. Yeah, Amy. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Drew: So I did listen to the episode, and I agree with almost everything Amy said, you know? She was pretty spot on. I thought it was a good episode. White anti-racists, myself included, have a history of being real kind of, like, condescending and holier-than-thou, particularly with other white folks. Like, “woker than you” is, like, a thing. Zach: [laughs] Drew: You know what I’m talking about? Like, on Twitter you’ll see white folks kind of, like, piling on to, like, you know, “I’m the most woke, and therefore this or that.” So I really liked what Amy had to say, and I think everything she said was really accurate, but I do struggle a little bit--and just, again, you referenced the podcast that I have, and I’m married to Leslie, and she goes on Twitter as LeslieMac. She’s an actual activist and an organizer and has done some really amazing things and, you know, I’ve seen her work, you know, commodified, stolen, outright taken. Twitter threads turned into articles in the New York Post kind of thing. Like, actually I’ve seen that happen. Zach: Wow. Drew: So I sometimes struggle with--I don’t want to say white folks making money [inaudible], but there’s a little bit of a--call it, like, the ally industrial complex thing where--and we white folk love education for education’s sake, and I myself am guilty of this, right? So there’s a period where I was like, “Oh, my gosh. I want to learn and tell everyone else, and I want to share this thing, and I’m gonna share that,” and even on my own podcast I’ve asked, “Whose benefit is this for? Is this really--what’s this doing?” But I think Amy’s doing, you know, like, legitimate work within the corporate structure, but I struggle a little bit with white folk becoming experts in some regard on anti-racism, inequity diversity, whatever you want to call it, and then profiting. You know, call it, like, the [ten wives?] syndrome, and that’s a real privileged place for me to come from. I have a--as you introduced, I have a normal day job. I do well, I get paid. I provide. You know, I’m in sales. I bring in a lot of value, and so I can say the things that I do I don’t need to make money with it, but that’s certainly not the case for most folks. It’s a capitalistic world. You gotta make a living, but I agree with what Amy said in terms of white folk having to really sort of be responsible for dismantling systems of oppression. And that maybe was the other--sometimes I struggle with the education for education’s sake ‘cause there’s often that last step. You know, how does that lead to--and I would ask Amy. I think you asked a lot of really pointed--and I was almost, like, worried. I was like, “God, Zach asked, like, some tough questions. I hope I’m prepared.” Zach: [laughs] Drew: But where does the work that any of us do lead to action in terms of dismantling systems of supremacy? And that’s, you know--and I ask that to myself and I don’t always have the answer. That might have been where I was left wanting. Zach: No, I hear you, and I’m curious actually--you know, what do you think about the term “ally?” Like, what do you think about that term? ‘Cause I know it’s a loaded word, right? And a lot of people have various feelings about it. I’m curious of how you feel about that word. Drew: I don’t like it. I don’t use it. I find it self-referential. If someone used it in regards to me I’m not gonna, like, be mad about it. I understand it more as a verb than as a noun, but I think a lot of people like it as a noun. And I just think the bar for what we--and even, you know, listening to the podcast, and you’ve got Amy, and you’ve got me on, and I’m thinking, “Well, why?” You know, “Why?” I’ve got a Twitter handle, VeryWhiteGuy. I’ve said a few things. I think because I’m white, you know, people give me--my voice has a little bit more, quote-unquote, cachet as an anti-racist individual. There’s not as many white dudes being actively anti-racist, but ally to me is just--the bar is so low. It’s so low. Like, my wife tells the joke, like, “Two allies walked into a bar… ‘cause it’s just so low,” and that works for any--you know, male feminists walk into a bar… ‘cause the bar was set so low.” So I don’t really like it. I don’t often use it, but if someone used it, fine. I think it also--it, to me, has this sort of connotation of, like, finality, right? Like, “Oh, I’m an ally! And, you know, I’m done.” Kinda like [inaudible], you know, more so than just sort of saying you’re an ally or just one person saying you’re an ally. You know, like, it’s really what have I done, what are my actions, more than what label, you know? Zach: No, absolutely. I’m curious, right? So we talked about--in the intro I talked a little bit about your VP role in sales, and you’ve alluded to the fact that, you know, you do well in the corporate space. I’m curious, before Interracial Jawn, which we’re gonna get to in a minute, can you talk to me about how you demonstrated or how you practiced anti-racist behaviors in the workplace? And I ask because when I look at your Twitter feed--VeryWhiteGuy, check him out, y’all. VeryWhiteGuy. The theme of your language is all about intentionality and action, and you really alluded to it just now when you talked about the term allyship and the concept of allyship. So I’m curious, what actions were you taking before you had the platform of Interracial Jawn to really demonstrate--and I won’t say allyship, but--support, you know, for people of color? Drew: That’s a good question, and I don’t know if I’ve always succeeded, you know? I think, as a white anti-racist individual, it’s a journey from, you know, indoctrinated to doing less harm, and there’s no terminal. It’s not like, “Oh, I’m finished.” I’m just trying to do less harm, and there’s steps forward and steps back, and certainly there’s been jobs and work and opportunities that I’ve missed, I’m sure. You know, I think the--when I think of allyship, right? And again, I should give a lot of credence to my wife, Leslie Mac. I’ve been married to her for 15 years, so a lot of this may be framing her language as coming from my learning from her [inaudible], but shifting dollars and resources, you know? I think--my wife always says that marginalized folks in communities, they know what they need and they know how to solve their problems. They just need, you know, access, dollars, resources. So I try to do that, and I don’t always have--you know, have, like, hiring authority at every job I’ve been at. I don’t have the ability to say who does what, who gets on what committee, but where I do have some say--so there’s an event I produce, and there’s speakers, and we get folks online to watch it, and maybe thousands of people watch it, but I was really proud that we had--and in the language or translation [inaudible], there’s a lot of women. It tends to be heavily represented on the women’s side and relatively on the Latina side, but I had mostly women of color, I think three or four black women as panelists and speakers. Those are active decisions on my part. I have a platform and an ability. If I’m gonna be compensating individuals, I’d rather it be women, black women. I’m gonna expose folks, thousands of folks who are gonna be watching these panelists. I don’t want it to be all white men. I had another job where I did have some hiring authority, and I would--you know, I was proud of the fact that I hired a few black candidates that did really well and stayed on, but really just shifting power and resources, you know? That could be you’re in a--I heard your guest Amy, and you were talking about this, you know, that women or a black person might say something, and five minutes later a white person says the same thing and it’s like, “Oh, my God! The white person’s a genius!” Zach: Right. [laughs] Drew: You know? Say something. Stand up. You know, support. You know, in different places they call it I think progressive stack, so I’ve done that in meetings. You know, “Hey, we haven’t heard from her.” You know, “This person hasn’t spoken in a while.” I had a job interview--and I think, again, I talk about action because there should be risk, and that’s why I sometimes question when white folks are making money educating other white folks on how to be better. That just sort of rubs me the wrong way, but in terms of taking risks and doing things, I’ve had vendors and interviews where I’ve asked, you know, “How many black people do you have on staff? How diverse is your--what’s your corporate culture like?” And that doesn’t always go well, you know? That doesn’t--I don’t always have the answers I want to hear, you know? But I would say what have I done? I tried to just be better. I tried to be a better individual and amplify and make sure marginalized folks are--I think Amy even said it. If they’re not in the room, do what you can to make sure their voices are represented, and try to get them in the room, and just, everywhere you can, shift power and resources. Zach: And it’s funny that you’d say that because, you know, even when I think about Living Corporate, right? So, like, we’re a startup, you know? And I think about--when you talk about just power and resources, it’s like--there are a lot of things that we want to do, and there are things that we have planned in the future, and we have all these plans and, like, the main barrier at this point, Drew--and not even barrier, but the thing that would accelerate those things is just [break?] it. Like, we don’t need a bunch of people telling us what to do. Of course we take--you know, we’ll take feedback and coaching and all that kind of stuff, but my point is, you know, it’s the resources. Like, we need the resources, and so I think that that applies to your wife Leslie’s point. It applies across the board. Like, plenty of black folks, we have--and just people of color in general, marginalized people. There’s plenty of visionaries and things like that, but because of the way that things are set up structurally and have been set up historically and systemically, the resources create a barrier. So I’m curious, right? You know, we talked a little bit about Interracial Jawn in your intro, but can you talk more about it, its origin, and what it aims to achieve? Drew: Yeah, and you said you were gonna ask me that, and I kinda had to think ‘cause it was sort of--we’ve been married now for over 15 years, and we’ve been together quite a bit, and it’s strange that our podcast is called the Interracial Jawn because I don’t think we think of ourselves interracially often. Like, I don’t think that defines us so much, but, I mean, she’s a black woman, and she works in liberation organizing. So I guess that is--you know, it’s a part of our existence, but I don’t think we think of it very often, but when we made the podcast we were--at the time we lived in Philadelphia, and we lived there for a decade, and jawn is just sort of like an adjective that’s used for anything and everything. Zach: Yeah. Yeah, yeah. [laughs] It’s made its way down to Houston too. We say it down here from time to time. I do anyway. Drew: Sweet. I didn’t know that. I guess it’s like John, J-O-H-N, or joint. Some people would use it sort of [inaudible], but so we called it the Interracial Jawn, and we don’t I even think talk that much about us being interracial, but we talk about a lot of different politics, and we just started a podcast ‘cause we wanted to do it, and we talked a lot, and we’d sit around and just, you know, by ourselves chit-chatting. We said, “You know, let’s record it. If somebody listens, all right, cool,” and for a bit it was really just a lab--and it still is a labor of love. You do a podcast and it’s not exactly a millionaire’s [inaudible], but we did it, and people listened and responded and subscribed, and we said, “Okay, we’ll keep doing it.” So we enjoy it, but it’s really just sort of--it’s more for us and just sort of time to unwind and chit-chat and connect and talk about the news and stuff that’s going on. Zach: That’s really cool, man, you know? And shout out to Leslie. I think it’s amazing that, you know, at every point and turn in this conversation, you know, you’ve referenced something that your wife has told you, right? So, like, shout out to black women in general. Sound Man, go ahead and put them air horns in here just for black women. For Leslie for sure, but then black women in general. [Sound Man comes through with it] Zach: So I’m curious, what advice, right? Now, you talked about--you said, you know, for you, the way that you practice, again for the lack of a better word, allyship in the corporate space is by just being better, but what advice or resources would you point white men to, in corporate America, to be better for everybody else? Drew: That’s a good question, and I don’t know the answer to that. Maybe--you referenced black women, and Twitter’s been a great resource. It’s relatively free. Certainly be aware that you’re consuming folks, and try to drop a dollar on their PayPal, Cash.me, or Patreon if they have it. But yeah, there’s been--I would say just about everything I know when it comes to--I was thinking again. I said I don’t like white folk being experts on race, and [if someone asks?] me I say, “No, I’m not an expert on race.” You know, [I’ve got the?] Malcolm Gladwell 10,000 Hour theory. You know, you’ve lived your entire life as a black individual in a white supremacist society. That’s more than 10,000 hours. You’re [inaudible] an expert. When you say, “Hey, that’s racist, so listen and believe black folk, amplify black folk,” but, you know, I’m not an expert on that at all. The only thing I know is sort of my journey on how I’ve sort of learned to be less harmful I guess, and this is all stuff that’s on Twitter and smarter, you know, usually black women, like you said, have written about this, but it took me a while to just sort of learn not just what people are saying but to process it a little bit differently. So [inaudible] if you’ve been this work at all for even a minute and you’re a white dude, you’ve heard “Shut up.” You know? “Sit down. Shut up. Be quiet. Don’t take up space,” and I knew that. Enough people had said it to me that I’d go to--you know, when we lived in Philadelphia there was a great group that I think is still around, REAL Justice Philadelphia. But so we’d go to meetings. There’s hundreds of people there, and of course I’m not gonna say a word. I’m gonna sit down. I’m not gonna say anything and be quiet, and I’ve been to many of these meetings, and again, I understand fundamentally to be quiet and not take up space, but my mind would keep kind of rolling and think, “Oh, what about this? What about that? What about this?” And there might have been--I can’t remember the exact instance, but there’s finally something where, again, my wife made fun of me like, “Okay, very white guy.” Like, “They don’t need your help.” You know? [inaudible]. And then it was like--you know, joking and sarcastic, but I was like, “Oh, my God.” Like, “She’s really right.” So the concept of sit down and be quiet, don’t take up space, I understood it differently over a period of time. My different understanding was “Oh, I’m a neophyte. I don’t really know anything. I need to really just sit down and absorb and really process,” and if I’m thinking of things--and that’s, again, as a white dude, the world has told me, as a white man, my opinion is valued. It’s needed. It’s necessary. My two cents are desired, and I can solve it. And yeah, it’s about, you know, allyship in the corporate world, [inaudible]. I remember--not, like, embarrassed, but I’ve been in a room full of people and pounded my fist on the desk and raised my voice and gotten what I wanted and things done, and that modality is, like, a sock that you’ve worn your whole life, a glove that fits seamlessly. It’s just real easy, so to not be a cisgendered heterosexual white male that raises his voice and, you know, reverts to Angry White Dude to get what he wants, that takes vigilance, you know? It’s kind of like actively not trying to be a horrible person. You just--you slip into it so easily. So I would say, as a white man, just be aware, you know? Understand. Like, just understand conditioned fragility and then defensiveness, you know? I think it’s a lot easier. Understand how to apologize. Know that you’re gonna mess up, and be prepared. I’ve messed up plenty, and not--yeah, I’m [trying?] “Don’t mess up.” [laughs] Don’t [inaudible], but, like, many people are willing to forgive and stay in community with me after a mistake, but very few would be willing to remain in community if I made a mistake and then spent an hour being defensive and fragile about it, you know? Like, “I didn’t mean it that way. I’m so sorry. I wasn’t trying to be racist.” So, like, I would just say to other, you know, especially white dudes, we’re gonna mess up, you know? The world has catered to us for a long time, so sit down, listen, be quiet, and when you mess up, you know, acknowledge it. Accept it. Know how to apologize. “I’m sorry. I’ll do better.” That goes a long way. Those three little things will get you really far. Zach: Man, you ain’t lyin’, because I have--you know, I have some white male friends, and when they practice those things they just apologize--and we’re friends. Like, they’re some of my closest friends, right? And because they practice those behaviors that you’re talking about we continue to be friends, and actually our relationship gets better after every mess up, and, you know, I’m there with you. I’m curious, you know, before we wrap, do you have any shout outs or any parting words? This has been a dope conversation. I want to make sure anything else you’d like to say or anybody you’d like to thank or just shout out in general, man. Drew: Ah, thank you for this opportunity and having me on the show. I appreciate it. As I said, the real deal in the household is my wife, Leslie Mac, and she’s on Twitter. You can follow her @LeslieMac. She’s got a Patreon, so you can support her that way, and we’ve got a podcast, Interracial Jawn, and that’s J-A-W-N. We don’t tweet much, but we’d love to have you listen to the show and follow us. But to your last point, let me--my little follow-up to your comment, I really--I have individuals in my life that I’m accountable to, both white and black, and when I mess up and they say, “Hey, you know what, this came off wrong,” or “I think there’s [inaudible] a certain way,” man, that’s like a gift, you know? Not only have I learned not to get fragile and defensive about it, but after I think, like, “Wow, they care enough about me as a person that they’re gonna A. let me know and B. give me an opportunity to do better,” right? Like, you know, if I really don’t like you and you mess up, I’m gonna be like, “Get out of here. Whatever,” but if [inaudible] it’s like, “Hey, you know what? What you did--let me pull you aside and really kind of--” So if you--when you get called in, called out, whichever it is, accept it as a gift because it really is. Honest to goodness, it really, truly is. It’s a gift to be able to learn how to be a better person, and not enough people are willing to receive that gift in the proper way. So be better, white dudes. Me included. Zach: [laughs] Man, this has been awesome. Look, that does it for us, guys. Thank you for joining us on the Living Corporate podcast. Make sure to follow us on Instagram @LivingCorporate, Twitter @LivingCorp_Pod, and subscribe to our newsletter through www.living-corporate.com. Check us out on Patreon @LivingCorporate. If you have a question you’d like for us to answer and read on the show, make sure you email us at livingcorporatepodcast@gmail.com. This has been Zach, and you’ve been talking to Drew, A.K.A. @VeryWhiteGuy. Peace. Latricia: Living Corporate is a podcast by Living Corporate, LLC. Our logo was designed by David Dawkins. Our theme music was produced by Ken Brown. Additional music production by Antoine Franklin from Musical Elevation. Post-production is handled by Jeremy Jackson. Got a topic suggestion? Email us at livingcorporatepodcast@gmail.com. You can find us online on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and living-corporate.com. Thanks for listening. Stay tuned.
Life is full of decisions. We do our best to choose wisely and follow God’s lead. Sometimes God leads us in a different direction. It doesn’t always make “sense” in the moment. And it definitely isn’t easy to share those changes with others. It’s been over a year since we’ve given you a glimpse behind the scenes. In that time A LOT has happened in our world: new job, school shifts, adopting & “re-homing” a puppy. So I’m bringing my hubby Bruce back on the show to share one concept he’s used at work for years and he has helped me process the last year of change. In this episode Bruce and I let you in on the thought process behind our life choices. Hoping this conversation will allow you grace to change your mind without the fear of what others think. I reserve the right to change my mind and not have to explain it to you, but every person who hears about it wants to know the whole story. What I’ve found is people want to know the should. Every time I talk to a mom, they are feeling this pressure to get it all right, so then when they hear a story that doesn’t work out or where you changed your mind they are trying to analyze the rightness of it. What we chat about: What’s happened in the MacFadyen family in the past year Bruce’s current business, Door Real Estate Brokerage The mantra, “I always reserve the right to change my mind” Making the decision to send one of our sons back to school after a semester of homeschooling What happened with our dog Giving yourself freedom to change your mind Being gracious to others who change their minds Why we need to give our kids and ourselves permission to make mistakes Working to create an environment at home where it’s okay to change your mind and make mistakes In all of the decisions in life it’s about balance and listening to God’s voice Links Mentioned: Bruce and experience doing medical missions with his parents (Ep 5) When Your Husband Has a Demanding Job (Ep 38) Goals, Roles & Superpowers (Ep 112) This is Us (Ep 145)
Simply Joyful Podcast with Kristi Clover | Encouragement for your Faith and Family
Episode #028 with Heather MacFadyen Learning How to Remain a God-Centered Mom Head to KristiClover.com/028 to see all the Show Notes & Awesome Quotes that we collected for you! * Check out this week’s wonderful sponsor: JELLY TELLY! Head over to KristiClover.com/JellyTelly Use the coupon code "SIMPLYJOYFUL" (All caps!) — & get a FREE 7-day trial + a Jesus coloring book download from Jelly Telly Have you heard of Heather MacFadyen from the God-Centered Mom Podcast? I hope you have! Today we’re going to be talking about how to remain a God-centered mom—which is the heart of Heather’s podcast. She is going to share her favorite tips that she’s received from guests on her podcast. She’s also going to rock your world with some of her morning tips—and lots of resources as well! Let’s face it, the most important part of being a God-centered mom is getting yourself in the Word of God.But that’s often really challenging for moms! It's hard to get away. We have demands piling up on us, sometimes before we even plan to get up in the mornings. Many of you have already received a copy of my book, Sanity Savers for Moms. {For those of you who haven't, it's a gift that I offer HERE.} One of my “sanity saver” tips in the book for finding time to get in the Word is to not feel guilty about putting a show on for your kids to watch, so you can sneak away with your Bible for a bit. There are so many really amazing Christian shows that you can put on for your kids, so you are both growing in the Lord at the same time. I'm excited to share with you that our sponsor for this episode just so happens to be JellyTelly! Their company is so amazing! I share some of my favorite shows below and on the podcast. JellyTelly has some amazing Christian programming to entertain your kids while you pull away to be with the Lord…or sit with them and watch, too. {Don’t forget to use the code SIMPLYJOYFUL to get some awesome freebies! — more below} You are going to be so blessed by this episode! ON A SIMPLY JOYFUL NOTE… Do you have children who have school uniforms? Keep everything—socks, shoes, shirts, etc—together in one place. Heather says they keep theirs together downstairs. That way if it's time to walk out the door and someone needs to put shoes on but doesn’t have socks, they don’t have to run back to grab socks. Everything is all together. Morning Habit: Have a spot where all your stuff is so you don’t have to think about finding it in the morning. IN THIS EPISODE… Grab your favorite drink and settle in—you are going to LOVE this episode! ***Check out the SHOW NOTES to see all the great highlights, quotes, and links!*** BOOKS MENTIONED… Hello Mornings: How to Build a Grace-Filled, Life-Giving Morning Forgotten God Sheila Walsh's God's Warriors SPECIAL THANKS AGAIN TO THIS WEEK’S SPONSOR: JELLYTELLY! Use "SIMPLYJOYFUL" (in all caps) to get a FREE WEEK of JellyTelly + 10 Page Jesus Coloring Book Download!! Yay! I'm so thrilled to be able to introduce you to JellyTelly! I'm a HUGE fan of their programming! JellyTelly is the only streaming video app designed specifically for kids where God is real and His Word is true. As a mom, I want my kids to enjoy shows and movies, but I also want those things to point them to Jesus! Which is why I’m excited to tell you about JellyTelly. What is JellyTelly? You may not have heard about JellyTelly, but you've probably heard about Veggie Tales and What's in the Bible. Well, Jelly Telly is co-developed with Phil Vischer, the creator of those popular programs. There are actually over 100 new and classic shows, movies, and video devotionals with your kids about God, the Bible, and faith -- all available to easily stream and watch on your TV, phone, or tablet. JellyTelly is available on the App Store, Google Play, Roku Channel Store, Amazon Fire TV, and Kindle devices. As I mentioned in the podcast and above, I love being able to use Christian programs to sneak some time in with the Lord -- but it's also fun to watch with the kids. A few of our favorite shows: VeggieTales, Owlegories, Friends and Heroes, and What’s in the Bible?. I hope you'll take advantage of this free special. Just signing up to try it out helps to support the Simply Joyful Podcast. So, thank you on behalf of my team -- and my family (who loves that I have a team now)! Visit KristiClover.com/JellyTelly today and use the coupon code SIMPLYJOYFUL -- just for The Simply Joyful Podcast listeners! -- to get a FREE 7-day trial and 10 page Jesus Coloring Pack download! HELP GET THE WORD OUT… My prayer is that this podcast would be a blessing to all who hear it. If you enjoy this podcast, it would be such a blessing to have you "Subscribe" to this podcast on iTunes or Stitcher and leave me a rating and review. This helps the podcast to rank in iTunes and be more "visible" for people searching for new podcasts to listen to. If you wanted to share this episode with friends or on social media, I've created several great images that are share-worthy. Thank you so much for helping us get the word out about the Simply Joyful Podcast! I hope you enjoyed this week's podcast! My prayer is always that you will be blessed and encouraged by each episode. Live Simply. Be Joyful. LET’S CONNECT!… My Website Facebook Instagram YouTube Pinterest Twitter CONNECT WITH HEATHER MACFADYEN… Heather MacFadyen has been married since the turn of the century (sounds more impressive than it is). She is the mother of four young boys (born exactly, to the day, within 6 1/2 years . . . just like she’d always planned). Heather hosts a weekly podcast (“The God-Centered Mom Podcast”)—interviewing fellow journeyers on the topic of motherhood. On social media, she chronicles the colorful chaos of “relentlessly replacing ‘me’ with ‘He’” — sharing the daily struggle of remaining God-centered while mothering four wild-at-heart, energetic, and often stubborn boys. Her heart is for moms to know God's great delight over them. How He sees the unseen eternal work they do every day. And to know they “Don’t Mom Alone”. You can check out all of Heather's podcast episodes HERE! Be sure to visit her site as well at www.godcenteredmom.com. **This post may contain a few affiliate links, both Amazon & others. Please see my disclosure page if you have any questions
Episode 68
Peter Macfadyen is the radical council member and previous Mayor of Frome. He is also the author of Flatpack Democracy, a DIY guide to creating independent politics. We interviewed him for our 3-part series "Welcome to Frome". Parts of this interview are featured in the series.
Peter Macfadyen is the radical council member and previous Mayor of Frome. He is also the author of Flatpack Democracy, a DIY guide to creating independent politics. We interviewed him for our 3-part series "Welcome to Frome". Parts of this interview are featured in the series.
Peter Macfadyen is the radical council member and previous Mayor of Frome. He is also the author of Flatpack Democracy, a DIY guide to creating independent politics. We interviewed him for our 3-part series "Welcome to Frome". Parts of this interview are featured in the series.
I'm married to a pretty fabulous man. Bruce is kind, positive, loving, intelligent, wise and successful. From the time we were dating I've also been impressed with how well he gets along with his sisters and how his family loves one another well. Not only do they love each other well, they all love to serve and care for those around them. Now I'm telling you all that not to brag, but to give you credentials for today's podcast guest, Rosemary MacFadyen, my mother-in-law. Married to a successful general surgeon, mother to 4 (3 girls, 1 boy), grandmother to 12 (9 boys, 3 girls) and minister to many, Rosemary lives a full and godly life. Over the past 18 years of knowing the MacFadyen family I've tried to ask as many questions as possible about growing up in their home, about how they did things and what makes them special. In today's episode we all benefit from Rosemary's wise approach to mothering. She shares the principles that led her parenting decisions and daily actions. We also discuss the benefits of serving internationally as a family, including their time in Liberia, years ago. (I've titled the episode with “5” principles but really I think we surpass that number. . .). What we chat about: The use of logical consequences instead of nagging. Letting children work out their own disagreements. Staying emotionally uninvolved from your children's bad behavior. The importance of morning time of prayer and Bible reading. Never talking about one child to another, or even talking about your children's decisions to a friend. Realizing once you say something it's out there and can't be taken back. Importance of telling your husband what is important to you. If you aren't part of a problem, then you won't be a part of the solution. Getting involved in a another person's problem, the problem can sometimes escalate. To grow like Jesus grew in 4 different areas: wisdom, stature, favor with God, favor with man (Luke 2). The importance of helping your children develop a personal relationship with God. Helping your children hide God's word in their hearts. How your love for God's Word can transfer to your children. Praying with and for your children. You have God, the Creator of the whole universe, ready to listen to you, why would we not pray? The Bible gives principles for living, boundaries you can use in parenting. Parents involving your children in ministry sets a standard for your kids of life including service. Observing your child's skills and plugging them into your family ministry. An experience they had with two of her daughters running a guest house in Liberia. If perfect was what was required in having people in our homes then none of us would do anything, because none of us could do it perfectly. Show Notes: And Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man. Luke 2:52 Revolutionary Parenting: Raising Your Kids to Become Spiritual Champions by George Barna (**Amazon affiliate link) What principles guide your mothering? Let's start a list in the comments.
Peter MacFadyen is an Independent councillor in Frome, and was recently elected as the town's Mayor. He is one of the founders of Comic Relief, and author of the recently-published 'Flatpack Democracy'. http://www.flatpackdemocracy.co.uk/
Heather interviews her husband Bruce MacFadyen. He shares his experience taking short-term mission trips with his family. Through exposure to other cultures, children gain appreciation, perspective and gratitude for all they have been given. He also found the trips gave him opportunities to try out new skill sets and learn his giftedness. The biggest benefit being how his family bonded through a common purpose.
Steve MacFadyen is a successful entertainment professional with over 36 years experience booking, presentating and producing live music events, corporate and sporting events. He combines a strong knowledge base with amazing people skills and leadership. He is also the Producer and Production Manager at Pollstar Magazine. Pollstar is the only trade publication covering the worldwide concert industry. They have been supplying in-depth information to concert promoters, booking agents, artist managers, facility executives and every other entity involved in the live entertainment business for more than 25 years. They produce a weekly print magazine for professionals and publish that information daily to the web via a paid subscription site at www.PollstarPro.com. The free Pollstar.com website is for live music fans and contains the same high quality information that industry professionals use daily to route their tours. Kelli Richards and Steve MacFadyen have worked together to produce the Pollstar Awards, a live annual industry event, for many years. The Pollstar Awards routinely combine diverse celebrities, such as the Eagles and The Smothers Brothers.
Jesse MacFadyen and Filip Maj talk to Carl and Richard about PhoneGap, an open source project for supporting rich applications on a large variety of mobile devices.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations