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I reached out to Mark Paterson after seeing him embark on a new venture in fly fishing retailing.I always try my best to support our community especially those trying something a little different.During this recording and a number of previous phone calls I discovered someone who believes in the highest level of customer service, has sourced interesting products and has a passion for fly fishing.For me, I got the chance to try a rod brand that I've been wanting to cast for a while, try some super slick fly lines and I learn about a brand of waders that are incredibly durable.We also discuss social media, the company of friends and I hear about the River Dee.
It's the Heeler history we all need to believe in, and Gotta Be Done is fact-checking and fetishising every glorious 80s moment! From montages to hazy memories, violent consequences of jinxes and whether child discipline should be depicted for historical purposes, Mary and Kate have a fairytale's worth of half-baked theories. Also, this Fairytale poster by Bluey animator Mark Paterson, art director Costa Kassab's reimagining of little Bandit and Chilli, and the sun, the moon, the prickles, the princess, and everything! ++ Gotta Be Done is ex-journos and Adelaide/ Melbourne mums Kate McMahon and Mary Bolling, as we deep-dive every Bluey episode, with plenty of detours into mama life, childhood memories, and everything else we're bingeing, too! Follow us on Insta at @blueypod @marytbolling @katejmcmahon or on Twitter at @blueypodcast - and use #blueypod to join in.
We’ve assembled our own expert panel to discuss what’s happening in Australia’s looming energy crisis, and transition to renewable energy. Help Vision to keep 'Connecting Faith to Life': https://vision.org.au/donateSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
PRGN Presents: News & Views from the Public Relations Global Network
Embracing sustainable development means understanding and reporting the social and environment (non-financial) impacts and risks associated with a company's operations. Sustainability is the new digital. Any person or business that ignores it will be left behind. https://www.linkedin.com/in/patoatcurrie/ (Mark Paterson), principal of https://www.curriecommunications.com.au/ (Currie Communications) in Melbourne, Australia, gives voice to people and organizations that sustain life on the planet. As a change-agent, he turns visions into strategies that are doable, tells stories that inspire sustainable development and brokers collaborations that solve problems. The son of Corgi breeders, Mark sees the world changing for the better. Your host for this episode of PRGN Presents is https://www.linkedin.com/in/abbiesfink (Abbie Fink), vice president/general manager of https://hmapr.com/ (HMA Public Relations) in Phoenix, Arizona and a founding member of PRGN. Her marketing communications background includes skills in media relations, digital communications, social media strategies, special event management, crisis communications, community relations, issues management, and marketing promotions for both the private and public sectors, including such industries as healthcare, financial services, professional services, government affairs and tribal affairs, as well as not-for-profit organizations. PRGN Presents is brought to you by https://prgn.com/ (Public Relations Global Network), the world's local public relations agency. With PR leaders embedded into the fabric of the communities we service, clients hire our agencies for the local knowledge, expertise and connections in markets spanning six continents. PRGN provides customized communication solutions that combine the scale and stature of an international PR firm with the deep insights and hands-on, senior-level service of a local agency. This offers our clients a unique competitive edge. Learn more at https://prgn.com/ (https://prgn.com/) If you enjoyed this episode, please follow the PRGN Presents podcast in your favorite app. Just pick your preferred podcast player from this link and follow the show: https://prgnpodcast.com/listen (https://prgnpodcast.com/listen)
The latest season of "Stranger Things" finally returned to Netflix on May 27th and we are so excited to sit down with the creators of the show, along with several key members of the post-production team, to discuss the sound, music, and editorial process behind this wildly successful series. This is a supersized episode of the podcast with a TON of bonus guests. Joining us are the creators (as well as writers and directors) Matt and Ross Duffer; composers Kyle Dixon and Michael Stein; re-recording mixers Mark Paterson, Craig Henighan (also the sound supervisor), and Will Files (also the supervising sound editor); and the editor of the series, Dean Zimmerman. This conversation offers an incredible glimpse into the creative process of what makes "Stranger Things" work so well. And it's apparent from this conversation that it has a lot to do with how much this team trusts each other in order to work so seamlessly together. "Yeah, there's a lot of people who work on the show. But in terms of making big, big decisions, say in post-production, shaping the sound and the music of the show, it's a pretty, actually, tight knit group. And I think we've all gotten to the point where we really respect and trust each other. And then it's just a creative collaboration... It feels weirdly the same as it did season one." — Matt Duffer, Co-Creator, "Stranger Things" Be sure to https://www.netflix.com/title/80057281 (check out "Stranger Things," only on Netflix.) Please subscribe to Sound + Image Lab: The Dolby Institute Podcast https://linktr.ee/dolbyinstitute (wherever you get your podcasts). You can also check out the https://youtube.com/dolby (video) for this episode. Learn more about the https://www.dolby.com/institute/ (Dolby Institute) and check out https://www.dolby.com/ (Dolby.com). Connect with Dolby on https://www.instagram.com/dolbylabs/ (Instagram), https://twitter.com/Dolby (Twitter), https://www.facebook.com/Dolby/ (Facebook), or https://www.linkedin.com/company/6229/ (LinkedIn).
Jackson Moffatt and Mark Paterson joined Matt Mosley to discuss winning a national title, and the chemistry on this Baylor basketball team on the "Matt Mosley Show".
Mark Paterson is a National Champion
Mark Paterson is a walk-on on Baylor's roster that has gained some public acclaim for his exploits on the court and on the sideline. Get to know him on today's episode of Sic'Em 365. Intro music: Cherry Metal by Arthur Vyncke | https://soundcloud.com/arthurvost Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en_US
When a mysterious illness blinded him at age 25, British naval officer James Holman took up a new pursuit: travel. For the next 40 years he roamed the world alone, describing his adventures in a series of popular books. In this week's episode of the Futility Closet podcast, we'll describe Holman's remarkable career and his unique perspective on his experiences. We'll also remember some separating trains and puzzle over an oddly drawn battle plan. Intro: David Tennant's 2008 turn as Hamlet enlisted the skull of composer André Tchaikowsky. For J.B.S. Haldane's 60th birthday, biologist John Maynard Smith composed an ode to Struthiomimus. Sources for our feature on James Holman: Jason Roberts, A Sense of the World: How a Blind Man Became History's Greatest Traveler, 2009. James Holman, The Narrative of a Journey Through France, etc., 1822. James Holman, Travels Through Russia, Siberia, etc., 1825. James Holman, A Voyage Round the World, 1834. Sarah Bell, "Sensing Nature: Unravelling Metanarratives of Nature and Blindness," in Sarah Atkinson and Rachel Hunt, eds., GeoHumanities and Health, 2020. Eitan Bar-Yosef, "The 'Deaf Traveller,' the 'Blind Traveller,' and Constructions of Disability in Nineteenth-Century Travel Writing," Victorian Review 35:2 (Fall 2009), 133-154. Pieter François, "If It's 1815, This Must Be Belgium: The Origins of the Modern Travel Guide," Book History 15 (2012), 71-92. Joseph Godlewski, "Zones of Entanglement: Nigeria's Real and Imagined Compounds," Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review 28:2 (Spring 2017), 21-33. Rebe Taylor, "The Polemics of Eating Fish in Tasmania: The Historical Evidence Revisited," Aboriginal History 31 (2007), 1-26. Mark Paterson, "'Looking on Darkness, Which the Blind Do See': Blindness, Empathy, and Feeling Seeing," Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal 46:3 (September 2013), 159-177. Keith Nicklin, "A Calabar Chief," Journal of Museum Ethnography 1 (March 1989), 79-84. Robert S. Fogarty, "Rank the Authors," Antioch Review 65:2 (Spring 2007), 213. Daniel Kish, "Human Echolocation: How to 'See' Like a Bat," New Scientist 202:2703 (April 11, 2009), 31-33. Robert Walch, "As He Alone 'Sees' It," America 195:17 (Nov. 27, 2006), 25-26. Anne McIlroy, "James Holman," CanWest News, Dec. 16, 1992, 1. Chris Barsanti, "The Blind Traveler," Publishers Weekly 243:18 (May 1, 2006), 46. Elizabeth Baigent, "Holman, James (1786–1857), traveller," Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Sept. 23, 2004. My Futility Closet post on echolocator Ben Underwood. Listener mail: "The History of the Slip Coach," Ruairidh MacVeigh, June 27, 2020. "By Slip Coach to Bicester," video of the last slip coach in operation. Wikipedia, "Slip Coach" (accessed Nov. 25, 2020). "Slip Coaches," Railway Wonders of the World, June 21, 1935. "2 Bedroom Restored Slip Coach in Saltash, St Germans, Cornwall, England," One Off Places (accessed Dec. 3, 2020). From listener Aleksandar Ćirković: The 19:38 train departing the main station at Nuremberg each day splits in four. This week's lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by listener Marie Nearing, who sent this corroborating link (warning -- this spoils the puzzle). You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on Google Podcasts, on Apple Podcasts, or via the RSS feed at https://futilitycloset.libsyn.com/rss. Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet -- you can choose the amount you want to pledge, and we've set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website. Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode. If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!
We are lucky enough to be joined by two of our paediatric and young adult trauma & orthopaedic surgical colleagues for this episode, Claudia Maizen and Manoj Ramachandran.Chapter timings:00:00:00 intro00:01:10 paediatric orthopaedics at Barts Health00:02:05 Claudia Amazing00:03:31 Manoj Ramachandran00:06:05 the 1st time Kash met Manoj00:07:46 Manoj sneaks in a plug #orthofastfacts00:08:38 everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth00:09:21 global healthcare challenges in paediatric orthopaedics00:10:57 unique positioning of The Royal London Hospital00:12:05 Mark Paterson- the man and his legacy00:15:54 story behind the Ghana visits00:19:41 children are not small adults00:20:05 logistics of providing paediatric orthopaedic care overseas00:24:19 kit & saving the world one meniscus at a time00:25:20 challenges of providing paediatric orthopaedic care overseas00:29:17 raising funds for the Mark Paterson foundation 00:30:00 getting people involved00:32:08 plans for future provision of wrap-around paediatric orthopaedic care00:36:03 application of technology00:38:10 Commonwealth Foundation / QMUL Scholarships 00:41:19 screening / DDH project in Mongolia00:42:58 wrap-upEpisode links:Claudia Maizen: https://bartskidsbones.weebly.com/claudia-maizen.htmlManoj Ramachandran: http://manoj.mystrikingly.com; https://www.viz.aieveryone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth: https://fewzion.com.au/mike-tyson-everyone-has-a-plan-until-they-get-punched-in-the-mouth/Lancet Commission on Global Surgery: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRf8PbQgjGUhttps://www.lancetglobalsurgery.orgMark Paterson:bio https://livesonline.rcseng.ac.uk/client/en_GB/lives/search/detailnonmodal/ent:$002f$002fSD_ASSET$002f0$002fSD_ASSET:376975/one?qu=%22rcs%3A+E004792%22&rt=false%7C%7C%7CIDENTIFIER%7C%7C%7CResource+IdentifierMark Paterson Travelling Fellowship (supported by BJJ & EFORT) https://www.efort.org/fellowships/introduction/mptf/Ghana: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GhanaMotec Life: http://www.moteclife.co.uk/?LMCL=sQ1pU0Andiamo: delivers a medically effective orthosis within 2 weeks of a person’s need globally https://andiamo.io/about/Comnmonwealth Foundation/ QMUL Scholarships: https://www.qmul.ac.uk/scholarships/items/commonwealth-masters-scholarships-low-income-countries.html
That's Mark Paterson, an executive in the industrial equipment industry, and father of a boy who is autistic. Mark speaks candidly with our host David Hirsch about some of the difficulties of raising a child with special needs. That's on this Dad to Dad podcast. To find out about Little City go to www.littlecity.org. To learn about the Special Fathers Network, go to 21stcenturydads.org.
In this episode of Talking Tertiary, Stephen Parker talks with Mark Paterson the Chief Commissioner and Chief Executive Officer of the Australian Skills Quality Authority to find out what the future regulatory focus will be for the VET sector.
Horizon Power’s Mark Paterson explains why replacing poles and wires with solar and batteries is a world first, and a great idea. Plus: The RBA intervenes on climate, and Snowy’s modelling.
On this weeks episode, Carolyn meets with Anna Behlmer and Mark Paterson, the re-recording mixers for Paramounts new Transformers movie, 'Bumblebee'. Together they tell us about how they worked together to shape the large amounts of sound effects and music to bring Bumblebee's story to the big screen. Hosted by: Carolyn Giardina Produced by: Matthew Whitehurst
Welcome back to another episode of The NCR Podcast! Today we sit down with one incredible individual, Mr.Mark Paterson. Mark has been a member here at NCR for a little over a year and is a super cool dude, with an even crazier compilation of stories. Listen and enjoy!
In this show Mark talks about what it takes to set the team up, daily and weekly challenges and the team plans this season. Mark also talks about the teams expectations leading into this weeks Mx Nationals round at Connondale QLD.
In this show Mark talks about what it takes to set the team up, daily and weekly challenges and the team plans this season. Mark also talks about the teams expectations leading into this weeks Mx Nationals round at Connondale QLD.
Do you enjoy things that don't exist? Then you'll love the first half of this podcast!!!I'd explain here, but it's probably easier if you just listen to it. The good news is we spend an hour or so answering your questions, in the company of the delightful Mark Paterson.Next week, a load of E3-related sobbing, most likely.Cheers!