POPULARITY
Præsenteret af Arbejdernes Landsbank. Han kom til AaB som fem-årig og levede mere eller mindre i klubben gennem 20 år. Her var et unikt fællesskab, som Martin Pedersen ikke har fundet lignende siden. Medvirkende: Martin Pedersen Vært: Kasper Ørkild Bliv medlem af Rød Aalborg her: https://roedaalborg.memberful.com/join
Anders Martin Pedersen - Relationship 3,2,1 - Del 3 - Ensomhet - 29.11.2024
Host: Duo Dickinson Wednesday October 16, 2024, 12 Noon WPKN 89.5FM www.wpkn.org A century of top-down architectural determination is over. Regimes of conferring worth via station and prestige have been replaced with the number of “likes” and “followers” accruing as if the entire world is one polling station. We have reached intellectual democratization, where popularity trumps insights (good or bad) – our world is becoming unending popularity contests and beauty pageants, where everyone is the judge and the contestant – “the most eyeballs wins”. So much so that the remaining organizations are trying to ban Tik Tok, control Artificial Intelligence and social media and limit access based on age. But the cow has left the barn. As a result, in architecture, the Starchitect, the image of the Power of Style has left the building. All media is losing its editorial guardrails as the internet's overwhelming universal, free and open access to exposing every and any aspect of everyone's life becomes the basis of cultural evolution. The elitist sensibility of anointing “important work” in controlled, highly exclusive journalistic exposure of architecture is collapsing. Popular culture critic Kate Wagner voiced the power of democratic revolution in media: “We all live in the world. We all deserve to participate in it. We all also deserve to see our own lives reflected in architectural media, not just the spaces of the rich and famous. That requires reshaping everything, even vernacular or popular design media culture.” Today we have two people who know the past, present and perhaps can see a future for architecture. Martin Pedersen is a New Orleans based writer, critic and editor, and is the executive director of the Common Edge Collaborative. John Connell is the co – founder of Yestermorrow, an Architect and Urbanist.
Anders Martin Pedersen - Bergprekenen - Del 1 - Innledning - 11.02.2024
Anders Martin Pedersen - Mer Av Gud - Del 3 - Tema Redning - 03.12.2023 by Songdalen Frikirke
Anders Martin Pedersen- Jesus Er - Del 2 - 10.09.2023 by Songdalen Frikirke
Anders Martin Pedersen - Med god grunn - Del 1 - Finnes Gud? - 04.06.2023 by Songdalen Frikirke
Today, our world is New York City, where you'll hear conversations between George and former editor-in-chief of Architectural Record Cathleen McGuigan, architecture photographer and documentary filmmaker Bilyana Dimitrova, architect Adam Beaulieu of COOKFOX, and Common Edge editor Martin Pedersen.
Det blev til 2 timers debat om de nye ejere, stemningsboykot, splittelse i fanmiljøet, og meget lidt om fodbold. Vi har et kortvarigt netværksudfald ca omkring 1t 39m, som varer ca 1 minut. Vi beklager! I panelet: Emil Schjøtt, Peter Cornelius, Tor Scavenius, Klaus Byr, Ulrik Hansen & Nana Daugaard. Gæster: Jimmi Nielsen og Martin Pedersen. Vært: Per Ferdinandsen
Anders Martin Pedersen - Husk Dette - Del 3 - Hold Fast (2.Tim 3) - 27.03.2022
Thursday, January 27, 2022, 12 noon WPKN 89.5 FM www.wpkn.org Host: Duo Dickinson The successor architectural firm to that created by the deceased designer Zaha Hadid has paid $16,000,000 to use her name. https://archinect.com/news/article/150294705/zaha-hadid-architects-has-paid-almost-16million-to-keep-founder-s-name When a design is made – of a home, or anything else – when does the designer mean more than the actual act of creation itself? When the “Brand” becomes more important than the human. That is especially true when the human is dead. “Branding” is an new/old mantra: Old in advertising, newly powerful in the internet age when it comes to design, when “key words” and “rankings” begat work. Homes have been “Branded, too. They have been “typed” since Big Real Estate started selling homes after World War 2 – “Colonial”, “Contemporary, “Arts & Crafts”, Victorian, now “Net-Zero”. The commodification of the human is, well, dehumanizing. What is more human than the home? When we “Brand” them, we dehumanize the home. Style over substance reduces the joys of creative effervescence into type and pattern. Name over style reduces product to “Brand” perhaps the most hideous outcome ever derived from the illicit mating of ego and aesthetics – profit over humanity.. When “Who” is creating becomes a “Brand” it no longer matters “How” or “Why”: “What you did is “Who” you are… So buying a name, a “Brand” simply extends inhumanity beyond the grave. Architecture is no different from Nike: the juggernaut of the “Brand” is immortal, as long as you pay for it. Let us discuss this on HOME PAGE this week. Joining us is one of the creators and editor of the Common Edge Collaborative and former Executive Editor at Metropolitan Home Magazine, Martin Pedersen, Boston Architect Jeremiah Eck, writer and co-founder of The Congress of Residential Architecture, and Rhode Island architect David Andreozzi who was the director of the AIA's Custom Residential Architect Network.
Thursday, May 27, 2021, 12 noon WPKN 89.5 FM www.wpkn.org Host: Duo Dickinson If you are older than 40, you remember the first seven years of this century. For many reasons, not the least of which was greed, the peak buying years of the Baby Boom Generation perverted the basic human need to have a home we love into a fevered housing boom, then a worldwide economic crash in 2008. In the previous 30 years there had been about three other housing bubbles, and their inevitable bursting to housing busts. But the 2008 housing bust lasted a decade in Connecticut. Low or no growth in prices, slow construction activity, and a depressed reality that the extreme cost of Connecticut homes had topped out, perhaps forever, made for chastened expectations. Then another bust, Covid-19, ended any number of home renovations, sales, building. It was only natural that mandatory sequestration stopped many things people do every day, including thinking about our homes – new or renewed. But a funny thing happened, we were all force fed our homes as our one place of working, learning, eating, working out, even connecting (now through our computers). Collectively many of us found that we loved our homes, but they can be improved upon. So as soon as the bonds of lock-down were loosened, a rush to revise where we live began. The mortgage rates are still low, the houses that are up for sale (AKA “inventory”) is low – the lowest since 1963 according to the website “Meanwhile in Markets”), personal savings are up after a year of no where to spend income, and, “Voila!” a housing bubble. This means prices of everything related to homes, construction, home prices, even fixtures are exploding, and often, impossible to obtain right now. Three Real Estate and Architecture Mavens join HOME PAGE to give us all a snap shot of where we are in a crazy moment of our hone-based lives.Leigh Whiteman Is a real estate broker and leader of The Whiteman Team at William Raveis Real Estate. She has been selling real estate up and down the Connecticut Shoreline since 1988 and has helped her clients Todd Gould has lived on the Connecticut shore his entire life. He has been a broker/manager/owner for 27 years, from a family that has been involved in Real Estate for generations, and lives the market. Martin Pedersen helped create The Common Edge Collaborative , and was Executive Editor at Metropolitan Home for 20 years, seeing many (many) Booms and Busts.
Kritikken af AaB’s cheftræner træner Martí Cifuentes har været hård, men er han i gang med at lukke munden på kritikerne og gælder det samme for angriberen Tom van Weert? Hobro har ikke vundet i 2021, hvad er der galt hos superliganedrykkerne? Og så er der skrevet nye kapitler i historien om Vendsyssel FF. Det er blandt andet noget af det, der bliver set næmere på i denne episode af Ripodsten, hvor vi også fejrer jubilæum. Medvirkende er Jens Hammer Sørensen, sportschef Hobro IK, Martin Pedersen, tidligere professionel fodboldspiller og træner, og Claus Jensen, Sportsredaktør, Nordjyske. Jens Otto Barsøe er vært.
Thursday, January 28, 2021, 12 noon WPKN 89.5 FM www.wpkn.org Host: Duo Dickinson The world has changed, so architecture will change, so houses become the laboratory for change in design, process and technology as it always has been: What Does This Mean For Homes in the ’20s? Common Edge Collaborative was created 5 years ago to address architecture and its cultural context, evolution and social meanings. There has never been a time when perspective in what and how our homes mean to us and our culture than after a year where the pandemic has forced all of us to encounter our homes. I have written for Common Edge Collaborative every month for five years. Martin Pedersen was a creator of the organization will join us, as well as two of the site’s contributing writers, Richard Buday and Mark Hewitt, who, like me, are architects who write. All of them, and me, and you, have homes. From the macro level of trying to understand architecture in the context of our culture to the micro reality of how each of us lives, these thought leaders have insights we should all hear. The nimble reality of web-based commentary and shared understanding has a special meaning in this Pandemic year: everything has changed, but we will be inoculated soon, perhaps even “safe” by summer’s end. What of our present condition changes our homes, architecture, our culture? Homes are the canary in the cage of what we value: whatever architecture does, it has millions of test drives in all the homes we live in. Let’s hear what a group of creators, commentators and dwellers in homes think has changed, will changed and what will change beyond this year on Home Page Radio.
In episode #28, host Richie talks with CEO of Stellar Agency, Martin Pedersen, about Digital Transformation during this tumultuous time in the world.
Film Kid Asks is the podcast by film students for aspiring filmmakers. It centres the conversation around what we want to know going into the industry by digging into the origin stories and experiences of professionals working in film. Episode ten is a conversation with 1st assistant director Mark Ambury and 2nd assistant director Martin Steel who have worked together on projects like projects like Heartland, Diablo and Wynonna Earp. We discuss their backgrounds and journeys through the industry, how they work together and the role of the AD department, and what students should keep in mind during prep and shooting, among other things. New episodes come out every Saturday. Hosted by Jordan Harvey, edited and produced by Anya Chatterjee Get in touch! filmkidasks@gmail.com Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/groups/1140759129616261 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/filmkidasks/ Martin’s Watchlist: Say Anything (1989) Back to the Future (1985) Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) MCU Movies Mark’s Watchlist: Goodfellas (1990) Jaws (1975) Do the Right Thing (1989) Sicario (2015)
Thursday, June 25, 2020, 12 noon WPKN 89.5 FM www.wpkn.org Host: Duo Dickinson The flurry of articles exploding on our screens on “The New Architecture of COVID19” is all trees, no forest. And for good reason: we don’t know where the forest is growing, dying, or being cleared, let alone the tree species. We are in full Myopia Mode during a change time. In an effort to simulate perspective every day is a Groundhog Day of “experts” on the Internet. Think of this the beginning of a social Ice Age: we can sense that the temperature is changing (no hand shakes, let alone hugs). Some familiar animals are vanishing (offices are empty, people more often work from home). Centering our lives around a social existence, where people have to be together to work or live, has, for many, ended. Things in Sequestration have socially ripened to have gone beyond shock and adaptation, to, perhaps, thinking about what has changed beyond coping. Are we seeing things differently? If so how? How will this affect what we build in the future, especially homes? What does that shift in perception mean in terms of the home? Will it change? Will where we make them change? Are we redefining sustainability to include our personal sustainability, beyond the existential, but distant, perception of climate change? If so, what is the connection, synergy, cross-pollination of our perception of future life in the COVID/Climate Change niche of survival? This month, HOME PAGE has three thought leaders who offer perspective, rather than predictions. Ann Sussman teaches at the Boston Architecture Center and conducts intensive investigations of how humans perceive the built environment. Mark Alan Hewitt is a writer, preservationist, and an architect whose trenchant thoughts have a perspective that calls into question how and why architects create buildings. Martin Pedersen is the Editor of the Common Edge Collaborative, for all the rest of us on HOME PAGE this week, and his view during the whiplashing cross currents of this complicated time is especially valuable. Forget about conclusions: Lets understand where we are first: since it’s changing every day, it’s necessary, if frustrating.
Vi har tatt med vårt portable studio ut på roadtrip til selveste Åsgårdstrand for å snakke med Norgeshistoriens største Bankraner - Martin Pedersen! En mann som mellom 1974 og 1980 ranet 19 banker i Norge til sammen. Ofte utkledd i forskjellige kostymer som han hadde lagra på et hemmelig rom i kjelleren som kona ikke visste om. Han var utkledd som alt fra dame med barnevogn til prest, og kunne ofte skifte kostymer flere ganger under samma ranet!
Mannen som har blitt karakterisert som "Norges største bankraner", Martin Pedersen, er gjest i Alex Rosén Show. Du får høre hvordan Martin Pedersen kom seg unna med 19 ran, hva han gjør i dag og du får historien om den gangen Alex Rosén brukte dynamitt for å sprenge ut kjelleren i huset sitt.
I den femte udgave af Ripodsten, ser vi blandt andet på AaB's nye cheftræner, transfervinduet, og de nye investorer i Vendsyssel FF. Gæster er Allan Gaarde, Martin Pedersen og Claus Jensen. Jens Otto Barsøe er vært.
I første udgave af Ripodsten ser vi blandt andet nærmere på AaB's peruvianer Edison Flores, tager pulsen på de nordjyske tophold i 1.division, og diskuterer hvorfor der ingen nordjyske profiler er på landsholdet. I panelet sidder Thomas Gaardsøe, Martin Pedersen og Claus Jensen.
I første episode drikker jeg kaffe med Martin Pedersen, Norges største bankraner. Martin ranet hele 19 banker, hvor han blant annet kledde seg ut som en dame, narkoman, prest og svensk offiser.