POPULARITY
In aflevering 5 ontdekken Christian en Marilou dat de Noordhoekkerk in Tilburg in 1900 al eerder plaats delict is geweest. Twee maanden vóór de moord op Marietje, wordt een ander 11-jarig meisje in de kerkbanken aangerand. Samen met rechtspsycholoog Peter van Koppen proberen we een dader in beeld te brengen. En… er is post uit het Vaticaan Archief. De zesde aflevering van deze zesdelige serie verschijnt in mei. Reageren? podcast@bhic.nl Alle afleveringen over Marietje Kessels: www.bhic.nl/marietje Alles over onze podcast: www.bhic.nl/podcast Afleveringen met ondertiteling: www.youtube.com/@bhicarchief Muziek: Imme - A home by tonight (www.immemusic.nl) Inspiring Innovation (Envato Elements) Kevin MacLeod (www.incompetech.com) License: Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) Véronique Bijvoet - Tentoonstellingsmars Mathieu Kessels (piano) Ruud Meester - Impromptu Richard Hol (cello) (https://ruudmeester.nl/muziek-3/)
In aflevering 4 reizen Christian en Marilou naar Breda, naar het huis van één van de hoofdrolspelers uit de zaak Marietje Kessels: advocaat Frans Pels Rijcken. Samen met kleindochter Miek duiken zij in zijn verleden om te weten te komen wat deze gerenommeerde advocaat dreef om zich tien maanden lang onbetaald in te zetten voor de van moord verdachte schilder Mutsaers. De vijfde aflevering van deze zesdelige serie verschijnt in april. Reageren? podcast@bhic.nl Alle afleveringen over Marietje Kessels: www.bhic.nl/marietje Alles over onze podcast: www.bhic.nl/podcast Afleveringen met ondertiteling: www.youtube.com/@bhicarchief Muziek: Imme - A home by tonight (www.immemusic.nl) Inspiring Innovation (Envato Elements) Kevin MacLeod (www.incompetech.com) License: Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
Berend was 10 toen zijn grote zus Lies van 16 verongelukte met de auto. Over haar werd nooit meer gesproken. Zij leerde hem tekenen, nu probeert hij haar te tekenen maar het lukt hem niet om haar portret ogen te geven; wellicht lukt het als we hun buurmeisje Marietje vinden die als enige het ongeluk overleefde.
In aflevering 3 sluit forensisch rechercheur Carina van Leeuwen aan bij ons onderzoek en buigt zich over de mogelijkheden van het stukje hout dat in het archief zit. En stuiten Christian en Marilou op fragmenten die lijken te komen uit het verloren gewaande dagboek van vader Kessels. De vierde aflevering van deze zesdelige serie verschijnt in maart. Reageren? podcast@bhic.nl Alle afleveringen over Marietje Kessels: www.bhic.nl/marietje Alles over onze podcast: www.bhic.nl/podcast Afleveringen met ondertiteling: www.youtube.com/@bhicarchief Muziek: Imme - A home by tonight (www.immemusic.nl) Inspiring Innovation (Envato Elements) Kevin MacLeod (www.incompetech.com) License: Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
What truly is the relationship between tech giants and government, especially with the recent change of administrations? How does democracy remain at the forefront when corporations are amassing so much capital and power? How can the US hope to balance out the influence of Big Tech money with the needs of a population that will often have different needs and goals?Marietje Schaake is a fellow at the Cyber Policy Center and a fellow at the Institute for Human Centered AI, both at Stanford University, and the author of the book The Tech Coup: How to Save Democracy from Silicon Valley.Greg and Marietje discuss the evolving and complex role of technology corporations in modern society, particularly in democratic contexts. Their conversation covers a range of topics from historical perspectives on corporate power, modern regulatory challenges, national security concerns, and the influence of tech companies on public policy and democracy. Marietje gives her insights on how the lack of deliberate governance has allowed tech companies to gain unprecedented power, and she makes the case for regulatory reforms and enhanced accountability for these companies.*unSILOed Podcast is produced by University FM.*Show Links:Recommended Resources:Jeff BezosTim CookSundar PichaiSergey BrinElon MuskTim Berners-LeeVint CerfMarc AndreessenGeneral Data Protection RegulationPalantir TechnologiesPegasus ProjectSection 230Guest Profile:Faculty Profile at Stanford UniversityProfile for European ParliamentEurasia Group ProfileWikipedia ProfileLinkedIn ProfileSocial Profile on XHer Work:The Tech Coup: How to Save Democracy from Silicon ValleyEpisode Quotes:The relentless race for tech dominance without guardrails13:55: There has been too little ownership on the part of corporate leaders of the great responsibilities that having so much power should mean, and they are also given a lot of space that they've taken. So, essentially, because there are too few guardrails, they're just going to continue to race ahead until something stops them. And the very political leaders that can typically wield quite a bit of power to put up guardrails, rules, oversight, and checks and balances, in the person of Donald Trump, are not going to do so, or at least not from a comprehensive democratic vision that I think is necessary if you put democracy first in assessing what role technology should play in our societies.Tech's unavoidable role in our lives03:13: It's hard to imagine any aspect of our lives—whether it's our kids, the elderly, or everyone in between—where tech company platforms and devices don't play a critical role. And that sort of interwovenness, not so much as a sector or as one company, but as a layer that impacts almost all aspects of our lives, makes this a different animal.Regulation's biggest fans should be its biggest critics31:02: Between the critics and the fans, I always say that the EU's biggest fans should be regulation's biggest critics because actually, we need to be honest about what it is and what it isn't. And I think one of the problems is that a lot of the regulation that has been adopted in the EU has been oversold—GDPR being a key example. At some point, the answer to every question about technology in Europe was, "But we have GDPR now." With a few years of hindsight, we can see that enforcement of GDPR was really imperfect. The fact that there was such a singular focus on the right to privacy, which is very important and understandably so from historic perspectives in Europe as well. We also needed to harmonize rules between all the different countries, so there was a lot of logic in there that doesn't translate to what it means for Silicon Valley because, in fact, that was not the most important driver.
Nieuwe afleveringen! Het is misschien wel Brabants oudste cold case, want voor de moord op Marietje Kessels is nooit een dader veroordeeld. Maar 125 jaar later duiken er nieuwe archiefstukken op en zetten podcastmaker Marilou Nillesen en archivaris Christian van der Ven het onderzoek voort. In aflevering 2 proberen we te achterhalen hoe de laatste minuten van Marietje eruit hebben gezien. Door op zoek te gaan naar het plaats delict en samen met een arts naar haar post mortem foto's te kijken. Met alle gruwelijke conclusies van dien. Reageren? podcast@bhic.nl Alle afleveringen over Marietje Kessels: www.bhic.nl/marietje Alles over onze podcast: www.bhic.nl/podcast Muziek: Imme - A home by tonight (www.immemusic.nl) Inspiring Innovation (Envato Elements) Kevin MacLeod (www.incompetech.com) License: Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
Nieuwe afleveringen! Het is misschien wel Brabants oudste cold case, want voor de moord op Marietje Kessels is nooit een dader veroordeeld. Maar 125 jaar later duiken er nieuwe archiefstukken op en zetten podcastmaker Marilou Nillesen en archivaris Christian van der Ven het onderzoek voort. Wat weet de familie nog? Wat concluderen forensisch experts en advocaten? En we gaan op zoek naar het plaats delict. Allemaal om antwoord te krijgen op de vraag: wie vermoordde Marietje Kessels? In deze proloog nemen we je mee naar wat eraan voorafging: hoe zat het ook alweer; wie werd aangehouden en wie niet? En waarom is deze nieuwe serie zo hard nodig? Reageren? podcast@bhic.nl Alle afleveringen over Marietje Kessels: www.bhic.nl/marietje Alles over onze podcast: www.bhic.nl/podcast Muziek: Imme - A home by tonight (www.immemusic.nl) Ruud Meester (www.ruudmeester.nl) Erik Timmermans - Impromptu voor Maria Kessels Inspiring Innovation (Envato Elements) Kevin MacLeod (www.incompetech.com) License: Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
Nieuwe afleveringen! Het is misschien wel Brabants oudste cold case, want voor de moord op Marietje Kessels is nooit een dader veroordeeld. Maar 125 jaar later duiken er nieuwe archiefstukken op en zetten podcastmaker Marilou Nillesen en archivaris Christian van der Ven het onderzoek voort. In aflevering 1 ontmoet je Maria Smulders, de caféhoudster die Marietje als laatste de kerk in ziet gaan. En samen met Wendy Hoenkamp, achterachterkleinkind van de familie Kessels, gaan we op zoek naar een belangrijk verdwenen document van de familie. Reageren? podcast@bhic.nl Alle afleveringen over Marietje Kessels: www.bhic.nl/marietje Alles over onze podcast: www.bhic.nl/podcast Muziek: Imme - A home by tonight (www.immemusic.nl) Inspiring Innovation (Envato Elements) Kevin MacLeod (www.incompetech.com) License: Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
Big Tech bosses. Their immensely profitable corporations. And the fabulously wealthy venture capitalists who fund them. They are gaining power over the destinies of nations. Yet they also contribute to injustice and inequality, even in areas like Silicon Valley that are typically celebrated for generating wealth and innovation. The Valley's crumbling infrastructure and its stark disparities form part of The Tech Coup, a new book by Marietje Schaake, a former member of the European Parliament for the liberal Dutch D66 party. Since leaving the Parliament in 2019, Marietje has spent considerable time in the Valley at the Cyber Policy Center and the Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence at Stanford University. Her book is packed with concrete and compelling examples of how the tech industry, in its quest for power and profit, undermines democracy, civil liberties, the environment, and even national security. But the book is not a counsel of despair. Marietje lays out proposals such as revamping public procurement, banning rogue cryptocurrencies, and trialling Artificial Intelligence models before letting them loose on the public. To be sure, the new transatlantic era complicates the challenges posed by the Tech Coup. Donald Trump and Vice President-Elect JD Vance ran campaigns funded by tech magnates who will want to leverage US power to resist unfavourable regulations, including those from the EU. But Marietje says there's still time to develop alternative technology models that uphold liberal democratic values and that avoid capitulating to Silicon Valley — and to its mythologisers. Marietje Schaake serves as one of four chairs leading the development of the first Code of Practice for the European Union's A.I. Act and is a senior fellow at the Centre for Future Generations, which partnered with EU Scream in producing this episode. Support the show
How can big tech and a healthy democracy coexist? In this episode Rick is joined by Marietje Schaake, author of The Tech Coup: How to Save Democracy from Silicon Valley. Together, they delve into the growing influence of big tech companies on global democracy, the dangers posed by unchecked data collection, and the rise of tools like Pegasus spyware. Schaake highlights the need for greater transparency, regulation, and accountability in the tech sector, while addressing the potential threats to privacy and democratic freedoms. They also discuss the weaponization of data by companies like Palantir and Cambridge Analytica, as well as potential solutions to safeguard democratic systems in the face of advancing technology. Marietje's book, The Tech Coup: How to Save Democracy from Silicon Valley, available now. Timestamps: (00:01:26) The Tech Coup (00:05:37) Government against large corporations (00:09:56) Which country's are doing it right? (00:15:05) Palantir Follow Resolute Square: Instagram Twitter TikTok Find out more at Resolute Square Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Wat vertellen de archieven over de zaak Marietje Kessels ons nog meer? En welke deskundigen kunnen nieuw licht werpen op de dader? Op deze, en nog veel meer vragen, storten we ons in juli en augustus. Dat betekent een zomerpauze voor de podcast maar in september zijn we terug, met deze én andere verhalen. Want wat is het verhaal van Duifje de Raaij; een jonge vrouw uit Den Bosch die in 1942 trouwt? Hoe zag haar leven eruit voor haar huwelijk, dat maar drie maanden mag duren? Met deze aflevering sluiten we aan bij Namen en Nummers, een online herdenkingsmonument voor slachtoffers van de Holocaust. In deze aflevering willen we vooral stilstaan bij haar leven, en niet enkel haar tragische dood. En het onderzoek naar haar levert bijzondere informatie maar nog meer interessante ontmoetingen op. Reageren? podcast@bhic.nl Alles over onze podcast: www.bhic.nl/podcast
Peer Wittenbols is schrijver van toneelstukken, dichtbundels, hoorspelen, liedteksten en filmscripts. Hij won meerdere prijzen, waaronder de Charlotte Köhler Prijs, de Gouden Krekel, en de Annie M.G. Schmidtprijs. Ook was hij columnist voor onder meer De Limburger en de Volkskrant. Zijn nieuwe monoloog 'De steen in mijn mond' vertelt het historische verhaal van Marietje, een meisje dat tijdens de oorlog achterblijft wanneer haar vader en oudste zus worden vastgezet in Kamp Vught. Femke van der Laan gaat met Peer Wittenbols in gesprek.
Downton Abbey in Middelburg. Maartje Duin maakte een podcastreeks over de vriendschapsband tussen haar overgrootmoeder Marietje gravin van Lynden - Calkoen en de inwonende dienstbode Mina. Kan er wel sprake zijn van echte vriendschap, als er zo'n grote sociale ongelijkheid is? Maartje Duin vertelt aan Linde Merckpoel hoe ze het antwoord zocht in de dagboeken van haar overgrootmoeder. Een verhaal over vrouw zijn, klasse en onafhankelijkheid.
Aan het begin van dit tweede en voorlopig laatste deel van deze serie zit de schilder August Mutsaers nog altijd in voorarrest, terwijl de koster Johan van Isterdael net in vrijheid is gesteld. Maar niet iedereen gelooft in de onschuld van de Kerk. Je bladert mee door de nieuw ontdekte documenten; kaartjes en briefjes, vaak anoniem, waarin vraagtekens worden gezet bij de dubieuze rol van de koster... en de pastoor. Tegenstrijdige getuigenverklaringen, maar wie liegt hier? En als er zoveel rook is, waar is dan het vuur? Reageren? podcast@bhic.nl Alle afleveringen over Marietje Kessels: www.bhic.nl/podcast/dossier-marietje-kessels/afleveringen Alles over onze podcast: www.bhic.nl/podcast Muziek: Inspiring Innovation, Autumnel Glow, Inspirational Emotional, Dream Sonata via Envato Elements Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) License: Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
In het eerste deel van deze tweedelige serie hoor je hoe het kan dat er 124 jaar na de moord nieuwe archiefstukken aan het licht komen over de zaak Marietje Kessels. En je gaat mee terug in de tijd; terug naar het Tilburg van 1900. Maar ook naar de gevangenis waar de twee verdachten vastzitten: de koster en de schilder. En terwijl de schilder vanuit zijn cel smartelijke brieven schrijft naar zijn ouders en zijn vriendin, antwoordt de koster op de vraag of het kind nog leeft met… ‘zwijg maar'. Reageren? podcast@bhic.nl Alle afleveringen over Marietje Kessels: www.bhic.nl/podcast/dossier-marietje-kessels/afleveringen Alles over onze podcast: www.bhic.nl/podcast Muziek: Inspiring Innovation, Autumnel Glow, Inspirational Emotional, Dream Sonata via Envato Elements Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) License: Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
Nadat de Russische oppositieleider Aleksej Navalny overleed in een strafkamp, kondigde zijn vrouw, Yulia, aan om de strijd van haar man door te zetten. Politico-journalist en voormalig Rusland-correspondent Eva Hartog over de situatie. Na de Tweede Kamerverkiezingen leek er een coalitie te vormen tussen de PVV, BBB, VVD en NSC, maar de onderhandelingen klapten. Nu onderzoekt informateur Kim Putters hoe de kabinetsformatie verder moet. Oud-D66-Kamerlid Boris van der Ham, politiek journalist Leonard Ornstein en hoogleraar politicologie Sarah de Lange bespreken de recente ontwikkelingen in de formatie. De 11-jarige Marietje Kessels werd in 1900 vermoord na het posten van een brief, maar historicus Marilou Nilessen en archivaris Christian van der Ven ontdekten recentelijk nieuwe stukken die nieuw licht schijnen op de zaak:
Misschien ken je dit verhaal: van het 11-jarige meisje Marietje Kessels dat op een zomerse dag in 1900 een brief gaat posten, vlakbij haar huis in Tilburg, maar nooit meer terugkeert. En misschien weet je dan ook dat haar dode lichaam twee dagen later wordt gevonden, in de nabijgelegen kerk. Precies dit verhaal komt nu in een ander daglicht te staan. Want nu is er een archiefdoos opgedoken met onbekend archiefmateriaal; allemaal over deze zaak. Tussen de talloze archieven in ons depot bleek één doos een dossier te bevatten, dat daar eigenlijk helemaal niet thuishoorde. Een grote archiefdoos vol handgeschreven getuigenverklaringen, bewijsstukken, brieven en notities; allemaal betrekking hebbend op deze rechtszaak over Marietje Kessels. Niemand die deze stukken eerder onderzocht. Maar nu speuren Marilou en Christian van het BHIC tussen al dat materiaal naar nieuwe verklaringen en feiten. Hun bevindingen zorgen voor een andere kijk op de twee verdachten van toen, de koster en de schilder. Bovenal leren we iemand beter kennen, wiens naam àltijd valt als het over deze moord gaat; die van pastoor George van Zinnicq Bergmann. Volg Marilou en Christian in hun zoektocht naar de waarheid en luister naar 'De Moord op Marietje Kessels: nieuwe getuigen van een oude cold case'. Te beluisteren vanaf maandag 26 februari. Reageren? podcast@bhic.nl Alle afleveringen over Marietje Kessels: www.bhic.nl/podcast/dossier-marietje-kessels/afleveringen Alles over onze podcast: www.bhic.nl/podcast Muziek: Inspiring Innovation via Envato Elements Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) License: Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
Een halve eeuw waren de levens van ‘Mina en Mevrouw' innig met elkaar verstrengeld. Mevrouw was Marietje van Lynden - Calkoen, een gravin op een kasteel, Mina Marinusse haar inwonende dienstbode. Door de Van Lyndens, Maartje's familie, wordt hun verhouding herinnerd als een liefdevolle vriendschap. Maar kan er wel liefde zijn, als er zo'n grote ongelijkheid is? Op zoek naar antwoorden legt Maartje contact met de familie Marinusse. En ze stuit op een ongelofelijke bron: haar overgrootmoeders dagboeken, die bijna de hele twintigste eeuw beslaan. Maartje vraagt haar familie om ze te helpen transcriberen.
In deze Knolcast zijn Milan Knol's grootouders, opa en oma Knol, als speciale gasten. Henk (84), geboren in Zwolle en Marietje (82), geboren in Assen.Ze praten over verschillende onderwerpen, zoals de schooltijd van opa Knol, de jeugd van oma Knol, en hun gezamenlijke ervaringen, waaronder het bezoeken van de Elfstedentocht. Ook delen ze herinneringen aan hun reizen met de caravan en hoe de liefde tussen hun twee ontstond. Het gesprek geeft een kijkje in het leven van deze bijzondere grootouders en hun rijke geschiedenis. Zie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Verkeerde vrienden? Slechte buurt? Moeilijke jeugd? Waarom raakt iemand eigenlijk van het rechte pad? En vooral: hoe krijg je daarna je leven weer op de rit? Pas in de 19e eeuw bedenken mensen, dat je boeven niet alleen moet opsluiten. Je moet ze daarna ook helpen om voortaan uit de gevangenis te blijven. Erik-Jan Broers van de Tilburg University weet alles van de geschiedenis van het strafrecht. Hij is genomineerd als Docent van het Jaar 2023. En in deze podcast neemt hij je mee door twee eeuwen hulp aan schurken en schavuiten. Onze gevangenisarchieven puilen uit van mannen en vrouwen, jongens en meisjes die iets op hun kerfstok hebben. Van een doodeenvoudige landloper tot een zware crimineel met een moord op zijn geweten. Een paar eeuwen terug was het normaal deze mensen achter slot en grendel te zetten en na hun straf weer op straat, in de hoop dat ze hun lesje hadden geleerd. Dat het beter is om mensen daarbij te begeleiden, bij die weg terug naar de maatschappij, dat komt met de oprichting van het Nederlandsch Genootschap tot Zedelijke Verbetering der Gevangenen in 1823, het huidige Reclassering Nederland. Wij hebben hun archieven in huis en daar blijkt een bijzonder geluid in verborgen. En in de moordzaak rond Marietje Kessels stuiten Christian en Marilou op een bekentenis: een man die beweert Marietje te hebben vermoord. Reageren? podcast@bhic.nl Archieven, foto's en sites in deze aflevering: www.bhic.nl/podcast/17 Alles over onze podcast: www.bhic.nl/podcast Muziek bij Stem uit het Verleden: "Comfortable Mystery 3" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Muziek onder voice over: “Our story begins” / "Sneaky Snitch" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Fragmenten uit: Willy Derby - Morgen gaat het beter (tekst: Chef van Dijk/muziek: MaxTak/uitvoering: Willy Derby, 1939) mondharmonica -Swiebertje; Artiest: Joop Doderer & De Damrakkertjes ; Auteur: Harry de Groot/John uit den Bogaard ; Label: Park ; Jaar: 1962.
S3E20 - AmaiDit is wel een hele andere setting dan normaal. Door de titel van deze aflevering verwacht je dat Mo en Kaj in België zijn, maar dit is op Ibiza. Monica is voor het eerst alleen op vakantie omdat zij moest vluchten voor een traumatische ervaring thuis. Zelfs Kaj is het dit keer eens met haar trauma. Ze gaan luisteraar Marietje helpen haar autenticiteit te bewaren door haar wat welgemeend advies te geven.
Vrijdag 27, zaterdag 28 en zondag 29 oktober 2023 zal Stichting Carnaval Mill het 66-jarig bestaan van carnaval in Mill gaan vieren. In het kader van dat jubileum gaan we de komende tijd interviews doen met personen die actief deel uitmaakten van carnaval in Mill. Het gesprek is in De Neije Krant Podcast te beluisteren en ook zal er een geschreven verhaal geplaatst worden in De Neije krant. In deze podcast praat Corné Kremers met Marietje van Kempen en haar dochter Marianne van Hal van Kempen. Marietje kijkt terug op de tijd voordat men carnaval vierde in Mill. In 1971 werden Marietje en Tiny prinsenpaar en werden zij enorm actief in het Millse carnaval. Het carnavalsvirus gaven zij door, want ook dochter Marianne is al zo'n 50 jaar betrokken bij het carnaval en deelnemer aan zo'n beetje alle carnavalsactiviteiten in Mill. Ook vormde ze met haar man Johan ooit het boerenbruidspaar. Techniek Thijs van den Heuvel en interview door Corné Kremers.
De onopgeloste moord op de elfjarige Marietje Kessels vormt een van de meest spraakmakende zaken uit de Nederlandse geschiedenis. Een meeslepende reconstructie van de gebeurtenissen rondom deze moord, het onderzoek en het proces.Uitgegeven door VoltSpreker(s): Beatrice van der Poel
Aku tak percaya bapak-bapak anggota dewan, aku lebih percaya kepada dinding toilet. Itu adalah salah satu kutipan dari kumpulan cerpen Corat-Coret di Toilet karya Eka Kurniawan. Buku ini pertama kali diterbitkan sekitar tahun 2000 oleh Yayasan Aksara Indonesia berisi sepuluh cerpen, kemudian diterbitkan ulang oleh Gramedia pada tahun 2014 dengan menambah dua cerpen lagi. Cerpen-cerpen tersebut adalah Peter Pan, Dongeng Sebelum Bercinta, Corat-Coret di Toilet, Teman Kencan, Rayuan Dusta untuk Marietje, Hikayat Si Orang Gila, Si Cantik yang Tak Boleh Keluar Malam, Siapa Kirim Aku Bunga?, Tertangkapnya Si Bandit Kecil Pencuri Roti, Kisah dari Seorang Kawan, Dewi Amor, serta Kandang Babi. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sahabatbuku/support
On this episode of Lawfare's Arbiters of Truth series on disinformation, Evelyn Douek and Quinta Jurecic spoke to Marietje Schaake about how Europe is not necessarily waiting for America to get its act together and is moving ahead with tech regulation. Marietje served as a Member of European Parliament for 10 years for the Dutch liberal democratic party and is now the international policy director at Stanford University's Cyber Policy Center and international policy fellow at Stanford's Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence. They spoke about what's happening in Europe in the tech space, what distance there may be between European and American ideas about regulation of tech platforms, and whether that distance is bridgeable—especially under a Biden administration. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Here at IT Desk, we know we live in social times. We collect clout here differently. We analyze and execute support that will crush the competition and with our great Marketing team, we can further assist you as you reach for the stars. Join us with special guests (Cam Strong and Marietje Haubrich) Hosted by Jaren George.
I talked to comedian Marietje Hauprich about Sweet Tooth by Jeff Lemire. We also get into to topics like Leper Colonies, bad life advice, movies that don't age well as adults, Fabio, and much much more. Recorded, Edited, and Produced by Gene Deweber Theme song written and performed by Lydia Manning.
How can the transatlantic partners bolster their economic security and effectively compete for tech leadership vis-à-vis China? Mikko Huotari and Marietje Schaake join Andrea Kendall-Taylor and Jim Townsend to discuss the current state of U.S.-European alignment in their approaches to China in the economic and technological realms. Mikko Huotari is the ExecutiveDirector of the Mercator Institute for China Studies. His research focuses on China's foreign policy, China-Europe relations and global economic governance and competition. He has published on China's rise as a financial power, trade and investment relations with Europe as well as on geopolitical shifts related to China's emergence as a global security actor. Marietje Schaake is the international policy director at Stanford University's Cyber Policy Center and international policy fellow at Stanford's Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence. Between 2009 and 2019, Marietje served as a Member of European Parliament for the Dutch liberal democratic party where she focused on trade, foreign affairs and technology policies.
This week on Size 10, Nick and David are joined by the hilarious Marietje Hauprich! We talk comedy, Busch Light Apple, the cockles of our hearts, Seltzer, Cats, and Marietje's Stella McCartney Adidas!
This special episode features an excerpt from a recent ASPI webinar with international cyber expert Marietje Schaake on technology, democracy and the question of accountability. Marietje joined ASPI's Fergus Hanson for a conversation on the challenges that technologies create for and how democracies can work together amidst rising authoritarianism to better regulate technologies. They discussed the proliferation of surveillance tools available on the free market, including Pegasus spyware, and the need for companies to move away from a values agnostic approach to a human rights centred approach to business. Marietje is the International Policy Director at Stanford University's Cyber Policy Center. She is also International Policy Fellow at Stanford's Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence and President of the Cyber Peace Institute. Watch the webinar: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c30_AoPDIdI Guests in this episode: Fergus Hanson: https://www.aspi.org.au/bio/fergus-hanson Marietje Schaake: https://cyber.fsi.stanford.edu/people/marietje-schaake Music: "Just Wondering" by Maarten Schellekens via the FreeMusicArchive.org
Marietje Hauprich returns to sub in for Bjorn on this very special intimate episode of 5 star to talk reviews of Curb Your Enthusiasm.
Comedian and Cat Mom Marietje Hauprich is back in the studio subbing in for David to talk about cats, Catnip, and read some reviews of her cats favorite toy the the Yeowww! Catnip Toy, Yellow Banana!
Het verhaal van de 11-jarige Marietje Kessels. Hoewel dit een wat oudere moord is, blijft dit een bizarre moord. Wie vermoordde Marietje Kessels en wat had de kerk ermee te maken? Je hoort het in deze aflevering. Zie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In this episode Bjorn is joined by special guest, friend and comedian Marietje Hauprich! Together they get a chance to nerd out about video games in quarantine and share thoughts on the perfect game for playing while stuck at home (unless you like to share), Animal Crossing New Horizons. Grab your Switch and your copy of the game and laugh along with these two in this island hopping adventure of Five Star Review!
Marietje Schaake is the international policy director at Stanford University's Cyber Policy Center and international policy fellow at Stanford's Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence. She spoke with Ryan Merkley, Aspen's Commission on Information Disorder project director, on her experience as a member of European Parliament for the Dutch liberal democratic party and the legislative effort to reduce the spread and impact of disinformation on social media. This session is part of a video series of expert briefings on mis and disinformation hosted by the Aspen Institute in tandem with our Commission on Information Disorder to help make sense of the various facets of the information crisis. They are designed as a resource for the commissioners and the broader public. To learn more about Aspen Digital's Commission on Information Disorder, visit www.AspenInfoCommission.org. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook @AspenDigital.
Meimaand is Mariamaand. Elke woensdagmiddag is er om 14.00 uur daarom een bijeenkomst bij de Mariakapel op de Acaciahof aan de Hoogstraat in Mill. Maar als het goed bevalt en er behoefte aan is, gaat dit ook na mei door. Wij belden hierover met Marietje van den Elzen van de KBO Mill
Meimaand is Mariamaand. Elke woensdagmiddag is er om 14.00 uur daarom een bijeenkomst bij de Mariakapel op de Acaciahof aan de Hoogstraat in Mill. Maar als het goed bevalt en er behoefte aan is, gaat dit ook na mei door. Wij belden hierover met Marietje van den Elzen van de KBO Mill
In this episode we focus on the question of what should be done to constrain the dominance of the tech platforms, and to regulate the ways in which they control aspects of our economy, markets and the public sphere. First up, we hear from Alec MacGillis, a reporter for ProPublica that has just written a book that considers Amazon's dominance and what it means for wealth of American cities and people called https://www.amazon.com/Fulfillment-Winning-Losing-One-Click-America/dp/0374159270 (Fulfillment: Winning and Losing in One-Click America). Then, we listen to a panel discussion from the Betalab: Fix The Internet program at Betaworks. The discussion focuses on priorities for the regulation of social media, and features Yaël Eisenstat, Researcher-in-Residence at Betalab and formerly a CIA officer, a White House advisor, and the Global Head of Elections Integrity Operations for political advertising at Facebook; Jason Kint, the CEO of Digital Content Next, a trade association that advocates for media companies such as The New York Times, Conde Nast, ESPN, Vox, Politico and Insider, and the Chairman of TrustX, a cooperative digital advertising marketplace designed to address the industry's trust, transparency and accountability challenges in digital advertising; and Marietje Schaake, international policy director at Stanford University's Cyber Policy Center and international policy fellow at Stanford's Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence. Between 2009 and 2019, Marietje served as a Member of European Parliament for the Dutch liberal democratic party where she focused on trade, foreign affairs and technology policies.
On this episode of Lawfare's Arbiters of Truth series on disinformation, Evelyn Douek and Quinta Jurecic spoke to Marietje Schaake about how Europe is not necessarily waiting for America to get its act together and is moving ahead with tech regulation. Marietje served as a Member of European Parliament for 10 years for the Dutch liberal democratic party and is now the international policy director at Stanford University’s Cyber Policy Center and international policy fellow at Stanford’s Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence. They spoke about what’s happening in Europe in the tech space, what distance there may be between European and American ideas about regulation of tech platforms, and whether that distance is bridgeable—especially under a Biden administration.
In todays episode we get to know Marietje Plaizier, the founder of the Monkeyclub.nl. She produces her clothing ethically in Columbia and has much bigger ambitions to develop the business in other places of this world. We talked about her ambitions, how she defines motivation and why connections are more important than knowledge.
In this 301 episode we talked to Marietje Plaizier the founder of the Monkeyclub.nl. Super interesting insight into an ethical fashion start-up producing their goods in Columbia. Stay tuned for the full interview dropping tomorrow.
Voor de laatste aflevering van seizoen 2020 ontvangen we een bijzondere gast: Johanna Maria van Winter, oftewel Marietje. Met haar 92 jaar draagt ze een enorme hoeveelheid kennis over historisch koken, en een voelbare liefde voor het vak met zich mee. Op haar uitnodiging maken we een gerecht uit de Arabische keuken, gemaakt van zure druiven. We praten over de vele groente en fruit in Arabische recepten, historisch koken als opmerkelijke hobby van een hoogleraar, en de helende krachten van postelein. Een must-listen voor elke liefhebber van historisch koken!
Today I speak with Shahira Marei. Shahira is the furthest person from your typical Betty Crocker. In fact, in her past life, she was an aerospace project manager. The Dirty Cookie was born from the desire to turn something small, into something meaningful. It was born from her personal aspiration to change lives. When she was 10 years old, on vacation in Egypt, she witnessed the devastation of hunger and homelessness first hand. She was shocked that children my age were living on the streets, that they were deprived of basic food and shelter. Shahira begged my father to give them money, and he conceded, but not before engraving the single most important statement she would hear, to date. “If you really want to help them, give them jobs, not money.” It was monumental enough for Shahira to decide to build a company. One that she vowed would be centered around the people she employ. Today, you’ll see that aside from a unique and delectable cookie, her business is about personability. From the customization options on their shots to the creative freedom I give to my employees, Shahira has worked to drive home the idea that anything is possible. She's always open to trying new things, and she employs her customers and team to challenge her, as they work together towards a common goal. The Dirty Cookie is more than a dessert haven, it’s a home for those who are searching for themselves and what they love. www.dirtycookie.com This podcast series is hosted by Patricia Kathleen and Wilde Agency Media. This series is a platform for women, female-identified, & non-binary individuals to share their professional stories and personal narrative as it relates to their story. This podcast is designed to hold a space for all individuals to learn from their counterparts regardless of age, status, or industry. TRANSCRIPTON*Please note this is an automated transcription, please excuse any typos or errors [00:00:00] In this episode, I had the opportunity to speak with founder of the Dirty Cookie Shahira Marei. Key Points addressed were Shahira's is unlikely background as an aerospace engineer. And her plunge following it into the world of cookies. We also discussed Shahira's crucial pivot into e-commerce in 2018 and how that is playing out in the climate of Covid 19 and the pandemic's effect on her business and its future. Stay tuned for my talk and interview with Shahira. [00:00:34] Hi, my name is Patricia Kathleen, and this podcast series contains interviews I conduct with women. Female identified and non binary individuals regarding their professional stories and personal narrative. This podcast is designed to hold a space for all individuals to learn from their counterparts regardless of age status. For industry, we aim to contribute to the evolving global dialog surrounding underrepresented figures in all industries across the USA and abroad. If you're enjoying this podcast, be sure to check out our subsequent series that dove deep into specific areas such as Vegan life, fasting and roundtable topics. They can be found via our Web site. Patricia Kathleen dot COM, where you can also join our newsletter. You can also subscribe to all of our series on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, PodBean and YouTube. Thanks for listening. Now let's start the conversation. [00:01:31] Hi, everyone. Welcome back. I'm your host, Patricia. And today I am elated to be sitting down with Shahira Marei. She is the founder of the Dirty Cookie. You can find it online. W w w dot. Dirty cookie. Dot com. Welcome Shahira [00:01:47] Patricia, how you doing? [00:01:48] Good. I'm excited to kind of unpack what you're doing. We talked off the record prior to this. [00:01:52] But your Web site video I was researching prior to speaking with you and my entire household lit up over. So we will get into every all the goods that you're providing there and particularly the cookie shop. Prior to doing that, though, for everyone listening. I will read a bio on Shahira. But before that, a quick roadmap of today's podcasts for any new listeners will follow the same trajectory as all of them in the series. We will first look at unpacking Shahira's academic and professional background that brought her to launching Dirty Cookie. Then we'll look at unpacking the dirty cookie. We'll get into the logistics for all of you entrepreneurs and founders out there. The who, what, when, where, why, funding growth, all of those early stage things. And then we'll kind of turn our efforts towards the ethos and the philosophy behind it and some of your as motivations there. We'll also look at some of the current and contemporary issues about Covid 19 and how that has impacted everyone's businesses. And then we'll look at goals and plans that she has for the future, for both herself and her business and how those intertwined sometimes and segregating others were up everything up with advice that she has. For those of you who are looking to get involved, purchase some of her gorgeous products or emulate some of her success. So, as promised, a quick bio before I start peppering her with questions on Shahira, Shahira is the furthest person from your typical Betty Crocker. In fact, in her past life, she was an aerospace project manager. The dirty cookie was born from the desire to turn something small into something meaningful. It was born from her personal aspiration to change lives. One year it was 10 years old on a vacation in Egypt. She witnessed the devastation of hunger and homelessness firsthand. She was shocked that children her age were living on the streets, that they were deprived of basic food and shelter. She begged her father to give them money, and he conceded, but not before engraving the single most important statement she would hear to date. If you really want to help them, give them jobs, not money. It was a monumental enough for her to decide to build a company, one that she vowed would be centered around the people that she employs. Today, you'll see that aside from the unique and delectable cookies, her business is about personality from the customization options on their shots to creative freedom that she gives her employees. She has a work group to drive home the idea that anything is possible. She's always open to trying new things, and she employs her customers and team to challenge her as they work together towards a common goal. The dirty cookie is more than a dessert heaven. It's a home for those who are searching for themselves and what they love. Again, you can locate it at dirty cookie dot com. [00:04:35] And so she heard before we get into unpacking it, which I am super excited to do. I'm hoping you can draw for everyone listening your background of academic and professional life prior to launching the dirty cookie. [00:04:48] Yeah, so I went to coffee for 10 years in California for my undergrad. I majored in business marketing and then I got my MBA in management while I was working full time at Boeing. [00:05:03] I was a aerospace project manager for about six years at the Boeing Company. That's my I guess. [00:05:13] So what is the connection? Draw me the annexation. [00:05:16] How did it go from Project Interna, an aerospace engineer at Boeing, to launching a cookie company when you're not Betty Crocker? [00:05:26] Yeah, so I'm definitely not a baker. Do not put me in the kitchen. [00:05:32] I, I like I said, since I was really young. [00:05:36] That was in engraved in my mind that I was gonna be an entrepreneur. You know, my father told me, like, if you really want to help people, you're gonna have to give them jobs. And the way to do that is employer, not an employee. So I had that really early on because he was an entrepreneur. He was a retired entrepreneur. So with that being ingrained in my mind, when I had my daughter at twenty twenty six sorry, I started Boeing at twenty three, I had my daughter at twenty six. [00:06:07] I went to the Slainte panic mode. I was like, OK, I have this awesome corporate job, I have a kid now but like whereas my business. Like how am I going to help people and give people jobs. So that's when I went into this on maternity leave, got five months of maternity leave, just trying to figure out how I'm going to start a business. That's all I did for five months. And I manifested it and I was like, it's coming this year. It's happening. So. Within being backup Boeing within like three weeks, I had met someone who introduced me to a landlord of my future storefront. And I signed a four five year lease to the store. A big jump. Yeah. I had no idea what I was going to do. But I use my experience at Boeing and my friends there to help me design a mold. You get into cookie shop shape. So we got on the mall and I picked a cookie because I wanted something unique and different. And I have the biggest sweet tooth in the world. Like, I just love dessert. I eat dessert first before ordering my meal. That's just who I am. I knew it was going to be in the dessert field. So, yeah, I signed my five year lease and then just kind of work backwards from there, figuring out what I'm going to put in there and what your normal story would like a whole business plan. And here's what we're going to go do. [00:07:24] No, it sounds like you didn't lack bravery at all because it hit a hit. There is like a lot of empty space in between these sentences, and that's cool. You know, that's kind of what you need. They say in the beginning you have to be, like, brave enough to or short sighted enough to take the leap and then have enough energy to fulfill it. Once you're terrified. So as an entrepreneur, I'm wondering, you love cookies. That's what started you off there. You have. So if you for everyone listening, like getting into unpacking the dirty cookie, because surety kind of drops that little crumb, pun intended, if you will, about the mold she has. So Shira has this cookie shot and it's essentially like it looks like I want to say like a shot glass, a very tiny tumbler that's based out of a cookie. And it looks like it's it's lined with chocolate. And then the video, as you and anyone who sees when you hit her website, is milk being poured inside of it, which is simply, you know, ingenious. I think it's a it's a very clever take. Cookies have had a revitalization. Right. I'm old. I'm forty three. Back in the day, there was Mrs. Fields in the mall, and that was kind of it, you know, and then they went silent for a while. And then then there was this rebirth along with cupcakes, their sister. And I feel like people just kind of started making them again. They didn't start re engineering them. And that is what you've done. And it's clever and it's whimsical and it's cool and it's fun. And that's what dessert usually is. I'm wondering, what was the impetus behind it? Like, how did you come up with the cookie shot? [00:08:53] Well, I actually was inspired. [00:08:56] I signed this five year lease and I'm looking at my future store front and I'm like on Pinterest scrolling through like, OK, I have to find something in the dessert world to put in here. [00:09:06] And I saw this lady molding cookie dough on bowls, you know, like you're trying to pull out of cookie dough. And I'm like, oh, I'm like the biggest, like milk and cookie dough birth in the world. I could put the milk and cookies together as one. And that's when I called my engineer at Boeing. I'm like, hey, help me make this mold. I want to do a cookie cutter basically and fill it with milk. And he's like, sure, no problem. [00:09:29] We went to his house and, you know, designed it, 3D printed it. And then my best friend from high school had talked to him like ten years. She was one of the best bakers in the country like she is. She went to the top culinary school and pastry chef. You name it. So I went to her with the more than I'm like, hey, can you, like, develop these recipes for me? Because this is what I really want to do. And I signed this five year lease. Yeah. She started coming up with the recipes. [00:09:54] She was on board for a while and then she got really busy with her own work and just handed me over all our recipes and the whole team of bakers. And then I started learning how to bake. So within two years, I became a baking expert. [00:10:10] You were broken. You have to become Betty Crocker. Fantastic. And so can you unpack let's get into the logistics for all of our nerdy entrepreneurs out there and founders alike. And first of all, let's talk about when it was founded. You said did you have co-founders? Did you take any funding? And is it brick and mortar or is it solely online? [00:10:34] Yes. So it was founded in 2015. July 30, 1st, 2015 is when I open the storefront. And I actually started it with my best friend from Boeing. And she ended up leaving after a year because of the entrepreneurship. Life was very challenging. [00:10:54] No, just some people have this idea of wanting to start a business. But then when you really get into it and you see the challenges, she's like, no, you know what? This is your dream. Go for it on your own. [00:11:06] So she she left about a year into the business. And then we had the store for four years. I had the store for four years. I closed it in December twenty when I just felt like I didn't want to do this anymore. I didn't want I saw my company as bigger than this little tiny store in a terrible location. [00:11:28] I wanted to go into, like distribution and I wanted to go into online. So store and decided to shift to e-commerce right away. [00:11:38] I had no idea how to run an e-commerce business. So that's a whole other story. [00:11:43] And it changes, right? You're in a very specific thing. It's not a closing a clothing boutique and switching to online, which has its own unique challenges. [00:11:50] But you're in baked shipping, baked goods or shipping any kind of edible. It's a very different conversation with even the process and what you're making. [00:12:01] And I think I didn't realize at that time, you know, like Facebook as an Instagram ads are kind of like a pay to play game. [00:12:07] And we don't have extra money to play with all the big boys online. So it was we and we went from like three or four different ad agencies, couldn't find the right person to help us. So that I think we lost a lot of money online, just trying to understand how online, you know, e-commerce business works. But I'm glad we did all of that homework because that's what's really helping us right now after. Right. And this is really we have all that data from Facebook ads back from twenty nineteen. Early on when we played around with it. And now we're really on the right person to help us really grow that and use it to our benefit. [00:12:44] So, yeah, it's auspicious. It's crazy. The timing, given that, you know, it seems like you were kind of this flagship perhaps for different reasons, but switching to e-commerce and having that be your soul moment. I'm curious, when you went, did you take a break at all from closing your brick and mortar in 2018? Was there any kind of a break or did you go straight over to your e-commerce, straight over into e-commerce? [00:13:07] And then we still had catering like a huge part of our business was catering. [00:13:11] We did weddings, mitzvahs, corporate events work with like clients like Facebook and Netflix. So we had a ton of catering. I just wanted to grow and have an online presence like a big one. [00:13:24] Did you take any original funding when you founded the brick and mortar? [00:13:27] No. That was like fifty thousand from my best friend. Maxed out all my credit cards, pulled my four one kay bootstrapped. [00:13:37] Yeah. That's old school. Excellent. Okay. So that which is cool too because you retained a lot of autonomy and authority was that right. No investors, fewer voices, which is also kind of draws into. It's interesting the voices that you did kind of want to bring in and listen to within the ethos, behind the philosophy behind you, people who are working with it and things like that. Can you kind of speak to the open creative process that you and your crew have when you're developing products? And also, what kind of products do you offer right now? [00:14:09] So I do, too. Just doing a little pivot with covered. We just started we just launched our decorating kits like DIY. [00:14:19] You get a set of cookie shops, you fill them with chocolate, you get them and sprinkles and then decorate them with characters. Like we're really big on the customization part of our quick shots. We brand them for, you know, birthdays, events. So now you can put like a little happy birthday characters and birthday presents and balloons on them, their fondant characters or royal icing characters. So you can just eat them. They're basically sugar. So they're really good and fun activities. I was inspired to do this because primarily I was at home now with my daughter and she's six and I'm just like trying. She's almost six. I'm trying to keep her entertained all the time. We did brownies, we cook, we've done everything, you name it coloring. And I'm just like, OK, how about you just take some cookie shots and decorate them for me? And she love her and her friends, like our neighbors. They were playing with it and they had a blast. So that's what you know. [00:15:10] So it's a delicious craft that they can do counts as art, exact coloring craft dessert. It's covering bases. I love that. Do you have you have you had people reach out? I feel like you're inches away from some kind of a collaboration or someone saying, like, here's what I want you to mold next. You know, I think that you've, like, hit the tip of an ice. Here. Have you had anyone reach out and try to collaborate? Are you interested in those kind of forward or future motions or are you going to, like, hold tight to where you're at? [00:15:41] You know, I love collaborations. I love collaborating with other companies. I did one previously. I did a bunch previously. [00:15:49] I love love. I think the future partnerships and collaboration with brands. I love supporting women owned companies. So I do look to my female entrepreneurs and say, hey, how can we, you know, collaborate and support each other? So I tend to do that. I have a giveaway with a donut company this Friday. I have another one next week with just giving out our products. And then also trying to infuse two brands together, whether it's a flavor or a unique idea. [00:16:21] So nice. I love that. Well, so looking. We've spoken a little bit about how you you've changed your product a little bit, given the recent Kofod situation to this, you know, the social engineering aspect of what kids should be crafting with this their home. [00:16:36] And you also have there been other things, other ways that I'm curious with people who had products, you know, there was an onus, if you will, of a responsibility to communicate in some degree as to how Colvard was affecting you or how you wanted to communicate to your audience and your customers that it was affecting them. How did you personally deal with that? Was there anything that you communicated with your clients or customers as it hit and moving forward? Has it changed anything about outside of this new endeavor with the decorating kits? Has it changed anything else? [00:17:11] Yeah. Excellent question. [00:17:13] So when I first got the news of social distancing, I think that was like a I had all my clients cancel all our events. We had like 30 events scheduled out for the last few months. So it felt like overnight all my events were canceled that were on the calendar. And then we had just been working so hard and getting until all these really big hotels like Four Seasons and Marea and Cosmopolitan Vegas. And we just you know, we were starting to really pick up with hospitality. The food and beverage structures were going crazy with our products. You know, like trying incorporate it into their events and the weddings and the parties and some of these major hotels. So things were like getting really exciting. And then they also just canceled like overnight, obviously. So I think that week was really, really difficult for me. I I walked in, I remember March 13th, Friday the 13th. I walked into my production facility like you couldn't stop crying and told all my team members, I'm just going to have to let them go right now. I can't I don't know what's on the books for us. I don't have any business. And I got scared, like I mean, to be honest, I got super scared. [00:18:21] And I just said, I'm so sorry. I'm going to let you guys know if I get any business and bring you back immediately. But right now, I just have to let everybody go. [00:18:29] And it's a sad day. I cried a lot and cried with my team and it took about a week off and didn't even think about work. It just that a lot of meditation and a lot of praying and just tried to kind of like say, OK, what can't how can we, you know, come out of this and come out of it stronger? Because I'm a very positive person. I'd like to believe, like everything happens for a reason and there's always good and everything. So after that week, I call it my week of mourning, I got the idea for the decorating kits. Actually, during my meditation. So it was Easter, like our cut off for Easter was Monday. I launched the kits on Friday. And within those 48 hours, we sold like 400 Easter cookie kits. Wow. This leg. Oh, my God. This is my direction. This is what I've been praying for the whole week. And this is what we're gonna do. So I brought my team back. I brought four, you know, four people back. And they've just been working on the kids in the kitchen right now. So nice. [00:19:33] Great. I mean, what a great success with a quick turnaround from, you know, and a moment of pause and reflection. I don't know of anyone who hasn't taken time to reflect. [00:19:43] And. And it really has pivoted. It's a lot of people have changed. And it seems like there's been a great deal of it that was good, you know. And at least there's that coming from such a tragedy as a pandemic. I'm curious. Moving forward, particularly because you have this recent kind of pivot growth, change, you know, success on your heels. What are your plans for the future? Have you looked. Have you gone back to the board and said, let's look at the next one to three years? Must have changed from what there was before. [00:20:14] Oh, 100 percent. Definitely, definitely changed. I think we're going in the more DIY direction. The decorating kits have inspired me actually for years like her since I started. [00:20:28] People have been asking me to buy our molds. Right. And I was always. There's no way I'm ever going to sell my Mon's, but I was like, no. This could be an opportunity to carry a smaller version of my molds. [00:20:42] A six piece kit. [00:20:44] Make it at home yourself. With our proprietary cookie mix and all the decorating character, stuff like this one big awesome activity box, you know, with the molds that cookie makes and the decorating stuff. So that's kind of where I'm going. And this could be sold in retail stores. You know, Target, Bed, Bath and Beyond, wherever. [00:21:05] And I don't have to deal with what I deal with right now, which is a lot of shelf life issues for a big good a major distribution because of the fact that we have a short shelf life. And I'm not really open to putting a kind of preservatives in my product. So I'm like, oh, this could be the perfect solution. You know why people make it themselves and then we can get into a ton of distribution. So. Right. Kind of what I'm working on now. [00:21:32] That's exciting. Yeah. And it changes. It's interesting. You know, I always find every time I've gone back on something I've said, I will never do that. It's always for a good reason. You know, it's always a happy end. It's not you know, I am selling my hair limus Arab style. It's more like, oh, but it worked out well for me to go back on what I said I thought I didn't want to do. And it's adorable to kind of see those early perceptions of, you know, just, hey, that brings us all the same. Like, I would never. And then being like, wait, this could work out. [00:21:59] Well, you know, there's everything. And this is like the perfect time to roll this, especially because there is a need for. I've been if I show you how many e-mails and the M's on Instagram asking worldwide, Brazil and Europe, you name it, asking for our molds, every day we get messages about it. [00:22:18] So I'm like, you know what? This is where we should focus on a little bit now. [00:22:22] Yeah, absolutely. Well, good on you for being open to it. You know, part of life is just staying open, right? Exactly. Well, we're at the point. Well, first, I actually wanted to ask you I forgot and neglected my other community, but I myself am vegan and gluten free joy. And I know people like what? No. And I'm like, no, I still eat baked goods. I'm still allowed. I still get in there. And and there's a you offer some Vegan. Are you used to some vegan and gluten free? Will you stay along with that characteristic? And did you see an increase in that market over the past year? [00:22:58] Definitely. We have double chocolate being gluten free right now on our site. We just we had a ton more being gluten free products. [00:23:07] But just because with the limited stuff right now, we've decided to just get one item that's being equal and free and focus, just trying to streamline the process a little bit more. But my sisters, Vegan, and she told me when I first started, just like you are not launching a store without a Vegan product. So and my other sister, Bree, and I needed to satisfy both of them with one cookie. So that's kind of how that Vegan gluten free cookie shop was born. [00:23:33] Wonderful. Well done. Two sisters and right mind. That's awesome. I love that they made it about them. That's fantastic. I know. And you listened. It's as you said, the three of you are well suited. I'm wondering. So we've gone to the place, whereas my kind of my favorite part of the podcast and and I'm known for asking this, but I'm curious if you were in a public space, a socially, properly distanced from person who came up to you tomorrow, and it is a woman or a female identified or non binary individual, anyone other than a man for purposes of this podcast endeavor and who said, listen, I'm I've got this history in, you know, some science based areas in business administration. I'm doing quite well. But I've always wanted this is security and intrigue and expression of having my own business. I'm going to launch when I find a place. And that's about all I know. What are the top three pieces of advice you would give that person, knowing what you know now? [00:24:32] Number one, I wish I would have talked to someone in the industry before launching my store and didn't think I knew at all, but I didn't know that there were people willing to help. [00:24:45] You know? I think that was a big oversight on my part. [00:24:50] So I'll go talk to people who are doing it first and get their lessons learned and get their feedback, because when I learn that later on when I it's just helped me so much not make further mistakes or limit them. You know, Biden is open to receiving from the experts. Having a mentor is huge. [00:25:12] I have like four different mentors in four different areas where I utilize all of them. [00:25:17] So getting a mentor is really, I think, aligned with that. The second thing would be. [00:25:26] Don't rush into it. I was very. I didn't want to take my time. You know, I, like, totally rushed into everything. I didn't think twice because I was so eager. [00:25:37] I was the type like I would just jump. And because of this burning desire I've had for, like, 15 years of just swarming, I. [00:25:47] I mean, I'm glad it happened because I'm the type that, you know, I would have I needed to get my feet wet to learn, but it cost me a lot of money. A lot of mistakes. So if you can hold onto that desire a little bit and just get the right help along the way, that would be really great. [00:26:06] And networking, I think networking. I lived in a bubble for the first two years. Business like I don't even like client networking meant just building relationships. You know, I, I was so focused on making a business like successful that I didn't get out to talk to anybody doing anything great. Didn't have a system. [00:26:25] But when I met these group of amazing entrepreneurs, I just it was just like magic happened between us. So that support system, whether it's entrepreneurs or family. But I like to tend to hang out with more entrepreneurs because they understand choose whether it's payroll or rent or whatever. I convince that and not my family. They're like, OK, we I want to hear another word about your business. [00:26:49] So you have to be around people who get it for sure. Yeah. And they're scrappy. Other entrepreneurs are going to come up with that like Yanqui know how. Had those exciting like dictate moments. [00:26:59] OK, so I've got to talk to someone in the industry and there are people that are happy to advise and mentor as you get started. Don't rush into it, preserve your passion, but get some information first. And number three, network, find out people. You're awesome. You're trying. You drive. There you go. I love those three pieces. And I think they're so true. It's a you know, you come across axiomatic like tourism. It's just like that works for every industry. Does it matter what business you're in? Well, thank you. Sure. I appreciate your time today. We're out of time. But I wanted to say I really appreciate your story. I loved hearing all about it. And I'm encouraging everyone to get online and check out your stuff. Thank you, Patricia. [00:27:41] I had a blast. Absolutely. And for everyone listening, we have been speaking once again with show here, Marietje, as she's the founder of The Dirty Cookie. [00:27:49] You can find out more online. W w w dot. Dirty cookie, dot com. [00:27:54] And until we speak again next time, remember to stay in love with the world and always bet on yourself.
Not even a pandemic seems to be slowing down the world’s tech giants. Companies like Facebook, Amazon, and Google may emerge as the winners of the COVID-19 crisis, but at what cost to our societies and democracies? Marietje Schaake joins Opinion Has It to discuss how Big Tech has shaped our politics and economies, and how, if left unchecked, these companies may gain unprecedented power in the wake of the pandemic. Marietje is the International Policy Director of the Cyber Policy Center at Stanford University.
Some economists have argued that data is the new oil, a precious commodity driving exponential growth of some of the biggest multinational corporations. This week, our guest says it could also be the new CO2, quietly changing the world in irreparable ways if not properly controlled. On the latest episode of GZERO World with Ian Bremmer, a look at the ongoing debate about data and how it's used by governments and big tech companies in ways both helpful and harmful. The policy conversation was complicated before COVID-19, as Europe established its General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the US begins to grapple with similar laws, like California's Consumer Privacy Act. Our guest, Marietje Schaake, former EU Parliament Member and international policy director of Stanford's Cyber Policy Center, argues that more regulation is necessary to curb unchecked use of consumer data. Taped just days before many US cities entered lockdown in the COVID-19 pandemic, the interview also examines early uses of tracking and surveillance in Singapore and China, and what those actions foreshadow for the US as the nation balances freedom and security. Subscribe to the GZERO World with Ian Bremmer Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred podcast platform, to receive new episodes as soon as they're published.
Some economists have argued that data is the new oil, a precious commodity driving exponential growth of some of the biggest multinational corporations. This week, our guest says it could also be the new CO2, quietly changing the world in irreparable ways if not properly controlled. On the latest episode of GZERO World with Ian Bremmer, a look at the ongoing debate about data and how it’s used by governments and big tech companies in ways both helpful and harmful. The policy conversation was complicated before COVID-19, as Europe established its General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the US begins to grapple with similar laws, like California’s Consumer Privacy Act. Our guest, Marietje Schaake, former EU Parliament Member and international policy director of Stanford’s Cyber Policy Center, argues that more regulation is necessary to curb unchecked use of consumer data. Taped just days before many US cities entered lockdown in the COVID-19 pandemic, the interview also examines early uses of tracking and surveillance in Singapore and China, and what those actions foreshadow for the US as the nation balances freedom and security.
1978 - Bezoek aan Bart in het ziekenhuis (vervolg). Bart vindt dat hij het bureau van Beerta niet had mogen overbrengen naar een andere kamer zonder het Beerta te vragen. Begrafenis van Marietje. Maarten stelt voor om met zijn zevenen naar het Museum te gaan en ontmoet bij Lien Rie. Bij de koffie complimenteert hij Freek met zijn bespreking. Freek deelt mee dat hij weggaat. Ze praten over de bibliografie en over Richard. Engelien voegt zich bij hen. Ze heeft Omzien met weemoed gelezen en vraagt Maarten hoe oud hij is. Maarten vertelt over Kassies en 't Mannetje, die plotseling een doodshoofd onder hun vel hadden. Vergadering over het bezoek aan het Museum: over pizza's en vegetarisme. Maarten ontvouwt het programma. Met: Krijn ter Braak (Maarten Koning), Jacob Derwig (Bart Asjes), Chiara Tissen (Marion Asjes-Spelberg), Yvonne van den Hurk (Nicolien), (Bert Geurkink (Ferd), Tycho Gernandt (Jasper), Sylvia Hoeks (Olla), Hans Hoes (Ad Muller), Anneke Blok (Tjitske van den Akker), Roeland Fernhout (Gert Wiggelaar), Roos Ouwehand (Sien de Nooijer-Flipse), Bodil de la Parra (Lien Kiepe), Nettie Blanken (Rie Veld), Jacqueline Blom (Joop Schenk), Hans Dagelet (Freek Matser) en Carine Crutzen (Engelien Jansen).
1973 - Beerta belt, verontrust door de geheimzinnigheid van Bart. Dat irriteert Maarten. De eerste dag na de vakantie. Maarten feliciteert Bart ten onrechte met zijn verjaardag. Ad is ziek maar komt even later binnen, wat geïrriteerd als Maarten niet begrijpt dat hij oververmoeid is. Ad is wat argwanend en vijandig. Hij vertelt meesmuilend hoe Marietje met het ondergoed van Nicolien heeft gesleept en over de iriscopist. Maarten vraagt advies over zijn radio. Jaring vraagt werk voor Graanschuur. Bart wil het raam dicht. Graanschuur wordt aan het maken van een trefwoordenboek gezet, waarover vervolgens vergaderd wordt. Bart heeft bedenkingen en wijst op slordigheden in het systeem en de service aan de bezoekers. Maarten stelt voor een ventilator te plaatsen. Met: Yvonne van den Hurk (Nicolien), Krijn ter Braak (Maarten Koning), Joop Keesmaat (Beerta), Jacob Derwig (Bart Asjes), Hans Hoes (Ad Muller), Geert Lageveen (Jaring Elshout), Roos Ouwehand (Sien de Nooijer-Flipse), Kenneth Herdigein (Stanley Graanschuur) en Jacqueline Blom (Joop Schenk).
On today's episode, we are hosting Marietje Schaake. She is the International Policy Director at Cyber Policy Center and International Policy Fellow at the Institute for Human-Centred AI at Stanford University. Prior to this, she was a member of European Parliament for 10 years.The Wall Street Journal called her "Europe's most wired politician", while CNN called her a "rising Dutch star". I was lucky to catch her for a conversation amidst her very busy schedule.Marietje shared her personal story of growth. From not even considering a career in politics to becoming one of most prominent Members of European Parliament. We discussed the role of regulation in the space of AI and how it can potentially spark new innovation rather than slow it down.
De berichtgeving over islamitische basisscholen is vaak negatief, constateerde Marietje Beemsterboer, zelf juf in het basisonderwijs. Dat komt omdat media zich vaak alleen maar baseren op de drie strikt islamitische basisscholen in Nederland. Maar er zijn er 52 die in meer of mindere mate islamitisch zijn. Dus vatte Marietje na haar masterstudie wereldgodsdiensten (specialisatie: islam)de koe bij de horens en keek in haar promotieonderzoek naar de positieve kanten. Ze bezocht 19 scholen en constateerde dat islamitische basisscholen juist heel goed kunnen helpen bij de integratie.
Aflevering drie: #depastoorheefthetgedaan Met in de hoofdrollen een onschuldig meisje, een postbode op pensioen en een tooghanger die zijn mond voorbij praat. #OperatieKelk in de 19de eeuw. Hoe braaf was jouw pastoor? Laat het ons weten! Ook bij ons is het van like, share en follow, en laat ons iets weten op twitter, instagram of facebook @devolksjury BYE Zie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Marietje Schaake was under 30 years old when she first joined the European Parliament as a representative from the Netherlands in 2009. She candidly discusses the kinds of challenges she faced as a young woman navigating what was then--and still is--mostly and old mens club. We caught up shortly after a series of consequential elections in Europe, including the victory of Emmanuel Macron in France and the surprising near-defeat of Therese May in the UK. We kick off this conversation discussing the current state of right wing populism in Europe and the effect that Donald Trump is having on European politics. This conversation is a great explainer of how the European Parliament works--we use Martietje's efforts to create some rules of the road for digital trade as an entry point to discuss the procedures, processes and politics of the European Parliament and the EU more broadly. Marietje Schaake is someone I've known for many years. We are both alums of Humanity in Action from our University days and it was great to catch up with her and learn about her work as an MEP. Marietje's website Leave a review on iTunes! You can EMAIL Mark by clicking here. Become a premium subscriber to unlock bonus episodes, earn other rewards, and support the show! Bonus episodes for premium subscribers include: #1: International Relations Theory, explained. #2: A Brief History of Nuclear Non-proliferation #3: A Brief History of NATO #4: The Syrian Civil War, explained. #5: Meet the Kim family of North Korea. #6: Better Know Vladimir Putin #7: How to Get a Job at the United Nations #8: How to Pick the Right International Relations Graduate School
I'm pleased to post Show # 246, November 6, my interview with Member of the European Parliament Marietje Schaake on democracy and technology in Europe. Recommended by former Hearsay Culture guest Lousewies van der Laan of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe, Marietje is a leading EU public official focusing on technology policy and the impact of technology on democracy. Her work is a perfect fit for Hearsay Culture, as it spans issues including Internet freedom, dual use technology, copyright policy, international trade agreements like the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) and Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), and the EU's Digital Single Market. In our wide-ranging interview, we covered all of these topics, and even got into a discussion about EU-US relations and the impact of Edward Snowden's revelations on that relationship. Marietje was an outstanding guest, and we had a terrific discussion. I look forward to having her back on the show in the future. {Hearsay Culture is a talk show on KZSU-FM, Stanford, 90.1 FM, hosted by Center for Internet & Society Resident Fellow David S. Levine. The show includes guests and focuses on the intersection of technology and society. How is our world impacted by the great technological changes taking place? Each week, a different sphere is explored. For more information, please go to http://hearsayculture.com.}
Datum 551 februari 1986, 857 april 1985, 1039 oktober 1984 Gasten Edi Clijsters (De Morgen, telefonisch, over het voortbestaan van de krant) Met ondermeer en onder andere 00:00 Jacques Plafond & Evelien - Pietje en Marietje 04:30 De radio, de radio - Tune 06:10 The Searchers - Goodbye My Love 08:30 Kloteplaat [...]