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This week on Toilet Radio: We're at the Pizza Hut. We're at the Taco Bell. We're at the combination Pizza Hut/Taco Bell. Join us as we get way deep into the weeds of Taco Bell's "Feed the Beat" marketing campaign. For years now, the ubiquitous fast food taco chain has been giving little bands a pile of $5 gift cards in exchange for their cultural cache. Is it cynical? You bet! Also on this episode: Matt Barlow is 100% going to re-join Iced Earth, Rob Halford is double-booked on the night of Ozzy's final show, and Attack Attack are threatening to release new music. Folks, it's an episode. Music featured on this show: Lunar Blood – Survivalist Want more Toilet Radio? Get hundreds of hours of exclusive content and access to the TovH Discord over at the Toilet ov Hell Patreon. This program is available on Spotify. It is also available on iTunes or whatever they call it now, where you can rate, review, and subscribe. Give us money on Patreon to get exclusive bonus episodes and other cool shit.
Welcome back to 'It's All Kicking Off!' We start by discussing the struggles at Tottenham with Mail Sport's man in the know at Hotspur Way, Matt Barlow. Tune in to find out whether Ange Postecoglou will be awarded more time in north London, and if he can expect to be backed financially in the transfer market. The lads praise Bournemouth and Nottingham Forest for their mightily impressive starts to the season. Plus they chat: managerial philosophies, the struggles of teams like Everton, the value found in the transfer market, and the return of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer to management. Presenters: Ian Ladyman and Chris Sutton Producer: Henry Williams With thanks to: Matt Barlow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Another year has passed and All Hallows' Eve is upon us yet again and this year the boys are diving into Horror Show by Iced Earth! This is the first Iced Earth review by Adam and Orion and is only fitting as each track delves into the classic movie monsters Wolfman, Dracula, Mummy, Frankenstein and more! This album sees the band stay mostly locked in to their power metal roots with bombastic vocals from Matt Barlow and tight riffs from Jon Schaffer. Come join us as we get festive with spooky season! Don't forget to leave us a 5-star review or else the Ripper will find you! Follow us on our Facebook page, The Metal Oasis, on Twitter @themetaloasis, on Instagram @themetaloasispodcast and email themetaloasis@gmail.com
D'Arcy Waldegrave returns to recap an exciting week in the world of sports! Highlights for tonight include: Super Rugby tournament director Matt Barlow on why they're not letting Beauden Barrett suit up for the Blues in the playoffs. Talkback - Beauden and whether the current 8-team playoff structure should be more of a 6-team playoffs. Sailor Greta Pilkington on getting the Olympic callup. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Beauden Barret is an Auckland Blue. He's one of the best players in the world. He's available to play for them in the Super Rugby playoffs. So why exactly are the powers that be putting their foot down and stopping him from playing? D'Arcy Waldegrave got one of those very powers - Super Rugby tournament director Matt Barlow - on Sportstalk to explain. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Lisa and Glenn are joined by Matt Barlow to discuss financial health and how impacts leaders. Matt is the Executive Director of Mary's Meals and former CEO of Christians Against Poverty and has served as a leader in his local church for the past 15 years. Matt mentions a couple of books in the podcast that can be found here. If you would like to discuss further any of the issues on this podcast you can contact Glenn and Lisa via their emails. Find the Baptist Union on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter. You can sign up for Connect newsletter here and find all the other information about the Baptist Union at scottishbaptist.com.
On this segment of The Six Five LIVE, host Patrick Moorhead welcomes Matt Barlow, CVP of Microsoft Surface Marketing, at CES 2024. They discuss Microsoft Copilot, AI PCs and OEM collaboration with Microsoft. Their discussion also covers: The excitement around AI PCs running Copilot experiences and benefits to productivity, creativity, and connectivity. How AI PCs represent the next super cycle The unique nature of the Windows ecosystem, with Microsoft leading and collaborating with brands like HP, Dell and Lenovo
In part 10 of the iced earth retrospective, we take a look at the last album with Matt Barlow.
On this episode of The Six Five – On The Road, hosts Daniel Newman and Patrick Moorhead welcome Microsoft's Matt Barlow, Corporate VP, Microsoft Windows + Surface Marketing, for a conversation on Microsoft's latest Copilot announcements, Generative AI, and Microsoft's vision for the future. Their discussion covers: Microsoft's latest Copilot announcements How Copilot can create new ways to monetize The differences in the ways consumer and commercial customers might leverage Microsoft Copilot Microsoft's Generative AI vision, and Matt's thoughts on the pace of the AI wave
DHL Super Rugby Pacific Tournament Director Matt Barlow joined the program, to discuss their latest law innovations for the 2023 season. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, Mythily talks to Anne Galloway and Laura McLauchlan. Anne is a former academic and current farm witch who, in both roles, has spent a weird amount of time getting to know sheep. Laura is a multispecies anthropologist at the Social Policy Research Centre at UNSW and lectures with the UNSW Environment and Society group. Anne and Laura are also, it must be said, dear friends. As they speak of friendship, policy, care, death, and killing, anthropology emerges as a way into practices and relations that could maybe (we hope) inform a ‘better world'. Anne and Laura are both deeply invested—through their entanglements with sheep and farmers (Anne), hedgehogs and ecological conservation workers (Laura)—in understanding what sophisticated practices of love, kindness and friendship look like. So we talk through the sticky and unruly nature of lived ethics; of what it means to dislike with respect. Or, to kill with love. And also, of choosing to walk away from academia. This episode was produced by Mythily Meher, with editing and production support from Tim Neale and Matt Barlow. Mythily lives and works in Aotearoa New Zealand, and we recognise Māori in Aotearoa as tangata whenua (people born of the whenua [land/placenta]), whose right to sovereignty here is inalienable. Conversations in Anthropology is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and with support from the Australian Anthropological Society. Works mentioned: ‘Lively Collaborations: Feminist Reading Group Erotics for Liveable Futures' by Laura McLauchlan (in Transformations: The Journal of Inclusive Scholarship and Pedagogy) ‘The Mushroom at the End of the World' by Anna Tsing ‘Power in the Helping Professions' by Adolf Guggenbühl-Craig Also, more generally, the expansive works of Deb Bird Rose, and Maria La Puig Bellacasa
This week Jordan and Brian are joined by community staple, beloved local businessman, and all around positive and great guy Matt Barlow.Matt came on to tell us about how he got started opening Barlow's Barbershop, how he contributes and gives back locally to the community, and we even got him to talk about some pop culture blips including 'Stranger Things' on Netflix and 'The Staircase' on HBO-Max. Check out all of this and more on this week's episode of The Kokomo Press Podcast!
On this episode of Heavy Radio Marco Battaglia fires it up with Matt Barlow from Ashes of Ares! Barlow and Battaglia talk about the bands latest release and what Matt has been up to. Join them as they add tracks to the heavy radio playlists on spotify and youtube! Listen not to ones who preach, be true to yourself and true to your own and your spirit will crush the hearts of stone!!! http://www.ashesofares.com
check out the latest ashes to ares release as we discuss with matt barlow and his contribution to the metal heirarchy --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cryofthewolfmagazine/message
#MattBarlow #AshesOfAres #EmperorsAndFools #IcedEarth #RockOfAngelsRecords #Batman #RatSaladReview #heavymetal First episode of 2022 and we have an interview with Matt Barlow! Vocalist from the band Ashes of Ares. We talk about the new album Emperors and Fools, as well as his past with Iced Earth and Batman. We also talk about the latest news about Judas Priest, Wasp, Jethro Tull and the passing of Budgies Burke Shelley. Visit the Ashes of Ares website to get the new album. http://www.ashesofares.com/ Visit our website for our other shows and more www.RatSaladReview.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rat-salad-review/message
Nine years after forming ASHES OF ARES, Matt Barlow and Freddie Vidales return with their third full-length album “Emperors and Fools”. The writing process began almost immediately after their previous album “Well of Souls” was released, and showcases a true collaborative effort between the two, with ideas originating from one or the other, then evolving [...]
This week Chris and J talk about the Iced Earth albums featuring vocalist, Matt Barlow. Our picks of the week: J - Ghoul - Live in the Flesh; Chris - Gamma Ray - 30 Years Live Anniversary How to Subscribe to the show: Itunes Google Podcasts Stitcher Spotify Follow The Heavy Metal Hangover on Social Media: Instagram Facebook
Techstination interview: A lot to love in new Microsoft Surface line-up: Corporate VP Matt Barlow
In this episode, Tim sits down with Associate Professor Monica Minnegal to chat to Dr. Will Smith, an environmental anthropologist and research fellow at Deakin University. Will's book, ‘Mountains of Blame: Climate and Culpability in the Philippine Uplands' recently published with University of Washington Press, explores the political ecologies of forests in relation to the experiences and effects of climate change on the island of Pala'wan, in the Philippines. This conversation tackles some thorny questions around Indigenous understandings of changing climates, the refusal by communities to be categorized by governments as vulnerable victims or resilient saviours, and more-than-human relations marked by fear and violence, rather than reciprocity, flourishing, or love. As Will states, the forests are full of malevolent spirits, and he has been bitten by a lot of stuff in the forests of Pala'wan. Enjoy this great conversation between Will Smith, Monica Minnegal, and Tim Neale. Show Credits Lead Production: Tim Neale Editing: Mythily Meher, Tim Neale, and Matt Barlow. This episode was recorded by Tim Neale on the lands of Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. Check us out on twitter @ anthroconvo.
Sunday 12th September 2021 - Matt Barlow by The Light Church, Bradford
We are delighted to bring you a conversation between Matt, Tim, and Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Graduate Institute for Design, Ethnography, and Social Thought at The New School, Hugh Raffles. Raffles is the author of three books. The first of which, In Amazonia: A Natural History, is an ethnography about how rivers and humans co-constitute one another in the east Amazon of Brazil. Raffles' second book, Insectopedia, is a collection of tales about humans and insects that takes us from the discovery of language among bees to artistic representations of contaminated butterfly wings in Chernobyl. His most recent book, The Book of Unconformities: Speculations on Lost Time, is a bracing tale of time, memory, and loss, written through stories of stone. Across all three books Raffles has developed a deeply philosophical, historical, and poetic way of writing stories anthropologically that remain open to readers beyond the academy. What Raffles does with these subjects, in researching and writing about them, is somewhat alchemical, spinning them into meditations on humanity that are searing, deep, and evocative, like art; his fascination on the page is contagious. We hope you enjoy this conversation with Hugh Raffles, on his career and process, what he is learning from newer generations of anthropologists, crafting an authorly voice, and supporting others to find and craft theirs. https://www.newschool.edu/lang/faculty/hugh-raffles/ Works mentioned Hartman, S 2019. Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments: Intimate Histories of Riotous Black Girls, Troublesome Women and Queer Radicals. WWNorton Press, New York. Stepanova, M 2021. In Memory of Memory. Fitzcarraldo Editions, London, England. Show Credits This episode was produced by Matt Barlow and Timothy Neale, and edited by Matt Barlow, Timothy Neale, and Cameo Dalley. Conversations in Anthropology is supported by the Australian Anthropological Society and made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association.
There is an uproar in European football following the announcement that twelve elite clubs plan to form a breakaway European Super League. The clubs - labelled by some the Dirty Dozen - unveiled plans for their involvement in the lucrative competition, while continuing to compete in their respective national leagues. Condemnation of the announcement has been close to unanimous - from politicians, to football administrators, to former and current players. Former Manchester United and England defender Gary Neville said the move pointed to "pure greed". UK Daily Mail football writer Matt Barlow spoke to Corin Dann.
A great broad taste of AOR, melodic rock / hard rock, progressive metal, and much more. Experience how many cross-links there are between the many musicians ...Playlist Friday, April the 9th 2021:14. Volturian - In A Heartbeat15. Anthem - Black Empire16. Helloween - Skyfall17. Icon Of Sin - Night Breed18. Orden Ogan feat. Gus G - Interstellar (Album van de Maand: Orden Ogan - Final Days)19. Gus G - Exosphere20. Shotgun Revolution - Rise To Power21. Stranger Vision - Soul Redemption22. Brother Against Brother - Valley Of The Kings23. Kamelot feat. Alissa White - Gluz and Elize Ryd - Sacrimony (Angel Of Afterlife)23. Pyramaze feat. Matt Barlow & Lance King - The Time Traveller#rockradio #radio #rock #rockmusic #hardrock #metalradio #internetradio #metal #Neverrockband #rocknroll #live #newmusic #rocndroll #rockradioshow #classicrock #classicrockradio #heavymetal #music #alternative #webradio #onlineradio #esportes #liveradio #radioaovivo #jornalismo #sportsradio #radioshow #belairrocks #golerock #bhfypSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/alle-bel-air-rockz-uitzendigen/exclusive-contentAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Hello anthro-enthusiasts, we are back for 2021 with a conversation convened by Cameo Dalley on animals, industrialisation, eating and all the manifold issues that unfold at their intersections, featuring special guests Alex Blanchette and Catie Gressier. Dr Blanchette is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Tufts University and has published widely on the politics of industrial labor and life in a post-industrial United States. His books include 'Porkopolis: American Animality, Standardized Life, and the Factory Farm' (Duke University Press, 2020) and the collection 'How Nature Works: Rethinking Labor on a Troubled Planet', edited with Sarah Besky(University of New Mexico Press, 2019). Dr Gressier, an ARC DECRA Fellow in Anthropology at the University of Western Australia, has written extensively about the anthropology of food, settler identities, and issues of health and illness, including in her books 'At Home in the Okavango: White Batswana Narratives of Emplacement and Belonging' (Berghahn Books, 2015) and 'Illness, Identity, and Taboo Among Australian Paleo Dieters' (Palgrave, 2017). -- Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
Cruising towards the end of 2020, we are back with a new conversation between Matt, Tim and Radhika Govindrajan about relatedness, lives with other species, and the changing context for doing ethnography today. Dr Gonvindrajan is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Washington whose research spans the fields of multispecies ethnography, environmental anthropology, the anthropology of religion, South Asian Studies, and political anthropology. Their outstanding first book 'Animal Intimacies' (University of Chicago Press, 2018) is an ethnography of relatedness in the Central Himalayan state of Uttarakhand in India, and the book has since been was awarded the 2017 American Institute of Indian Studies Edward Cameron Dimock Prize in the Indian Humanities and the Society for Cultural Anthropology's Gregory Bateson Prize in 2019. -- Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
Kushal and Dean of the Guillotine interview Matt
In this episode, David Giles fires up the international teleconference machine to convene a conversation between Davydd Greenwood, Melinda Hinkson and Cris Shore about austerity, anthropology and the contemporary university. Greenwood is Goldwin Smith Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Institute for European Studies at Cornell University, Hinkson is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Deakin University, and Cris Shore is Professor of Anthropology and Head of Department at Goldsmiths University of London. -- Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
Los daneses Pyramaze lanzan su nuevo single “World Foregone”, perteneciente a su último álbum “Epitaph”. Este disco saldrá a la venta el próximo 13 de noviembre a través del sello discográfico AFM Records. En el próximo disco, Pyramaze abarca temas tan actuales como el cambio climático y nuestra forma de vida. AFM Records añade sobre el nuevo single: «¡Una composición hermosa y poderosa que se erige como una representación perfecta del disco musical y líricamente!» En “Epitaph”, la banda repite la misma formación que en los dos trabajos anteriores: “IV: Disciples Of The Sun” y “Contingent”; compuesta por Morten Gade Sørensen a la batería, Jonah Weingarten al teclado, Toke Skjønnemand a las guitarras, Jacob Hansen al bajo y Terje Harøy como vocalista. En ese disco además nos sorprenden con la colaboración de Brittney Slayes (Unleash The Archers), junto con Matt Barlow (ex Iced Earth) y Lance King.
Algorithms and artificial intelligence are on the menu for our 36th adventure in anthropology! In this episode, we present two conversations with two great Science and Technology Studies scholars: Dr Nick Seaver and Dr Thao Phan. Dr Seaver, an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Tufts University, examines themes of taste and attention in his research, drawing on his ethnographic research with US-based developers of algorithmic music recommender systems. Dr Phan is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Deakin University, where her research who focuses on gender, AI, and algorithmic cultures. -- For more on our sparkling guests, see: https://twitter.com/npseaver Seaver, Nick. "What should an anthropology of algorithms do?." Cultural anthropology 33.3 (2018): 375-385. https://journal.culanth.org/index.php/ca/article/download/ca33.3.04/90 https://twitter.com/thao_pow Phan, Thao. "Amazon Echo and the aesthetics of whiteness." Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience 5.1 (2019): 1-38. https://catalystjournal.org/index.php/catalyst/article/download/29586/24800 -- Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
Techstination, your destination for gadgets and gear. I’m Fred Fishkin. As of today…Microsoft is back in the mobile phone business…with the dual screen Surface Duo on sale…but VP Matt Barlow says….c’mon…don’t call it a phone. It’s much more than that…a true mobile powerhouse..“I even, like...
The crew have logged on for another episode - live from lockdown - to talk life, the universe and anthropology. In this episode, Tim and Mythily speak with Dr Catherine Besteman, an anthropologist who has spent their career analyzing the power dynamics that produce and maintain inequality, racism and violence. Dr Besteman holds the position of Francis F. Bartlett and Ruth K. Bartlett Professor of Anthropology at Colby College and is the author of several books, including the forthcoming 'Militarized Global Apartheid' (Duke University Press, 2020), and several edited collections, including the recent 'Life by Algorithms: How Roboprocesses Are Remaking Our World' (University of Chicago Press, 2019). In this conversation, Dr Besteman discusses the subtle violence of humanitarianism, the rising criminalisation and militarisation of mobility, the difference between 'interlocutors' and 'friends', and much more. -- Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
Techstination interview: Surface Duo is much more than a dual screen phone: Corp. VP Matt Barlow
La Tienda De Biblioteca Del Metal: Encontraras, Ropa, Accesorios,Decoracion, Ect... Todo Relacionado Al Podcats Biblioteca Del Metal Y Al Mundo Del Heavy Metal. Descubrela!!!!!! Ideal Para Llevarte O Regalar Productos Del Podcats De Ivoox. (Por Tiempo Limitado) https://teespring.com/es/stores/biblioteca-del-metal-1 Tim "Ripper" Owens (Timothy S. Owens, 13 de septiembre de 1967 en Akron, Ohio) es un músico estadounidense de Heavy metal, más conocido por sus pasos por Judas Priest y Iced Earth, Yngwie Malmsteen. Actualmente es vocalista de Beyond Fear y Charred Walls of the Damned, entre otros proyectos. Antes de unirse a Judas Priest en 1996, Owens era el vocalista de la agrupación Winter's Bane, grabando el álbum Heart of a Killer en 1993. También fue vocalista de una banda tributo a Judas Priest llamada British Steel. Owens pasaría de ser fanático de Judas Priest a ser su vocalista, reemplazando a Rob Halford. Con Judas Priest grabó dos álbumes de estudio (Jugulator en 1997 y Demolition en 2001) y dos en directo ('98 Live Meltdown en 1998 y Live in London en 2002). En 2003 Rob Halford retorna a Judas Priest, dejando a Owens fuera de la banda. Ese mismo año, Matt Barlow, cantante de Iced Earth, dejó la banda y Owens tomó su puesto. El primer disco de Iced Earth con Owens, The Glorious Burden, salió al mercado en 2004. Su segundo álbum de estudio en esta banda fue Overture Of The Wicked, de 2007. Owens además inició un proyecto paralelo a Iced Earth, llamado Beyond Fear, que continúa hasta hoy. A finales de 2007 se confirmó el regreso del vocalista Matt Barlow a Iced Earth, lo cual significó la salida de Owens de la banda. En febrero de 2008 Yngwie Malmsteen anunció que Tim Owens sería el nuevo cantante de su banda. En 2009 lanza su primer disco solista, denominado Play My Game, contando con colaboración de varios reputados músicos de la escena mundial del metal. Ese mismo año además crea la superbanda Charred Walls of the Damned, junto a Richard Christy, antiguo baterista de Iced Earth y Death. La banda está formada por Christy en batería, Owens en voces, Steve DiGiorgio en bajo y Jason Suecof en guitarra. La banda lanzó su disco debut el 2 de febrero de 2010, a través de Metal Blade Records. Ripper también es miembro de una banda de covers de clásicos del metal, denominada Hail!, junto a músicos como Andreas Kisser, Paul Bostaph, David Ellefson, Mike Portnoy, Jimmy DeGrasso, James LoMenzo y Roy Mayorga. Con esta agrupación ha realizado diversas giras por Europa y Sudamérica. En 2011 Owens forma la banda Dio Disciples, junto a exmiembros de Dio, como una forma de homenajear al fallecido cantante Ronnie James Dio. En diciembre de 2012 Ripper realiza, junto a la productora Argentina Pisando Cables, un Tour Latinoamericano titulado Latinamerican Tour 2012 , donde recorrió gran parte de Brasil, Chile y Argentina, registrando en este último país imágenes para un próximo DVD. En 2013, "Ripper" aparece como invitado de la banda argentina Helker para cantar junto a Ralf Scheepers la canción Begging For Forgiveness del disco "Somwhere in the circle." En septiembre de 2014 se estrena el DVD En línea titulado Tim "Ripper" Owens, Latinamerican Tour 2012, Live At The Roxy, Argentina realizado por la productora audiovisual argentina Heresy Videoclips y producida por Pisando Cables.
Techstination interview: Surface Duo is much more than a dual screen phone: Corp. VP Matt Barlow
In this episode, we continue to explore the outer limits of collegiality during a pandemic and bring you a conversation with Professor Anne Pollock and special guest host Professor Emma Kowal (Deakin University). Dr Pollock is Professor of Global Health and Social Medicine at Kings College London, and her research focuses on biomedicine and culture, theories of race and gender, and the ways in which science and medicine are mobilised in social justice projects. Dr Pollock's books include 'Medicating Race: Heart Disease and Durable Preoccupations with Difference' (Duke University Press, 2012), 'Synthesizing Hope: Matter, Knowledge and Place in South African Drug Discovery' (University of Chicago Press, 2019) and, as we discuss, she is finishing a book manuscript on racism, health disparities and biopolitics in the 21st Century titled 'Sickening'. We also discuss hope as a practice, the ethics of the uneventful, accessing medical scientists, feminist STS and much more. -- Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
We at 'Conversations in Anthropology' hope you are all surviving and thriving as we bring you another episode, recorded by our very own David Boarder Giles during a (pre-pandemic) trip to Turtle Island (aka North America) and the American Anthropological Association annual meeting. In this episode, we hear from Rayna Rapp, Faye Ginsburg and Risa Cromer, three anthropologists who have each made major contributions to our understandings of gender, reproduction and disability. Rapp and Ginsburg are both Professors of Anthropology at New York University, where Ginsburg is also the Director of the Graduate Program in Culture and Media. Cromer is Assistant Professor in Anthropology at Purdue University. Each scholar has a fearsome biography to reckon with, and listeners may already be familiar with Rapp's book 'Testing Women, Testing the Fetus: The Social Impact of Amniocentesis in America' (1999) and Ginsburg's 'Contested Lives: The Abortion Debate in an American Community' (1989). In this fascinating and wide-ranging discussion, our three guests discuss many topics including how, whether in life or academia, you often don't know what the universe has planned for you. -- Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
Matt is the lead Pastor at The Light Church in Bradford. He was one of the founders and has helped lead the church alongside 21 years at Christians Against Poverty including 14 years as CEO. In January 2020 he took over the role of Lead Pastor. Adam and Matt have a conversation about what is going on in this season and what are some of the lessons for us to learn. How does the church begin to rebuild and reconnect post covid19.
Matt is the lead Pastor at The Light Church in Bradford. He was one of the founders and has helped lead the church alongside 21 years at Christians Against Poverty including 14 years as CEO. In January 2020 he took over the role of Lead Pastor. Adam and Matt have a conversation about what is going on in this season and what are some of the lessons for us to learn. How does the church begin to rebuild and reconnect post covid19.
Hello, anthro-enthusiasts! In this episode, we present a pre-COVID conversation that David Giles recorded with the esteemed anthropologist Anna Tsing, a professor in the Anthropology Department at the University of California, Santa Cruz and director of the AURA: Aarhus University Research on the Anthropocene at Aarhus University. Dr Tsing likely needs little introduction, as someone whose research and writing on globalisation and capitalism has travelled far outside of anthropology and academia. She is the author several books including 'In the Realm of the Diamond Queen: Marginality in an Out-of-the-way Place' (1993)and 'Friction: An Ethnography of Global Connection' (2004), both based on fieldwork in South Kalimantan, Indonesia. More recently, she published an ethnography of the Matsutake mushroom and its entanglement in diverse human worlds and economies - 'The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the possibility of life in capitalist ruins' (2015) - which won both the Gregory Bateson Prize and the Victor Turner Prize. In this conversation, David and Dr Tsing discuss her training in anthropology, working for things you believe in, telling terrible stories beautifully, and the possibilities of ethnography in the Anthropocene. -- Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
[SCOTT's PICK] "War has changed... It's an endless series of proxy battles, fought by mercenaries and machines. War--and it's consumption of life--has become a well-oiled machine. War has changed... The age of deterrence has become the age of control, all in the name of averting catastrophe from weapons of mass destruction, and he who controls the battlefield, controls history..." -David Hayter as Solid Snake. Metal Gear Solid 4 said it best about war in the 21st century. Today, the middle east is full of various factions fighting for various reasons. From actual military units, to vengeful mercenaries, to equally vengeance seeking freedom fighters, there is one thing that they have in common--they are all being exploited by the interests of bigger power players. Whether it be the US or Russia supplying radical elements with armories of weapons, or ISIS using the trauma of war to make boys into men that they can use for their own authoritarian cause. War in the middle east has become so convoluted that many truly don't understand what is going on. But before that fog of post 9/11 patriotism lifted, America was out for blood, and it didn't much care who's blood. They just needed the POTUS to tell them where to fire their rockets. This is the political climate that Iced Earth was in when they went to the studio for "The Glorious Burden." 9/11 rocked the band, causing a line up change, as lead singer Matt Barlow wanted to contribute to the "real world" and left after recording much of the album with them. Fortunately, Jon Schaffer (main songwriter of Iced Earth) got Tim "Ripper" Owens (lead singer of Judas Priest), who was originally just supposed to guest on the album, to take the mantle of lead singer. It helped that Rob Halford, original singer of Judas Priest had just rejoined the band, leaving Owens to make his own conclusions and make the official change-over to Iced Earth. Together, they made an exciting history lesson for war, with representations of patriotism, glorification of battle, and the pain and regret that comes with being part of those conflicts. Join Brad, Scott, and Jon as they joke together about the horrors of war... Also, Fuck 12. Donate here to help peaceful protestors that get locked up: https://freethe350bailfund.wordpress.com/ Next Up: (06-08-20) BONUS EPISODE Black Lives Matter feat. RTJ4 (with guests RamBunxious and Lil Guillotine) (06-15-20) BONUS EPISODE Rush - 2112 SPOTIFY PLAYLIST NUMBER ONE: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6Z67Ka5xedSfYIvWw6YNt4?si=GG5CAvtUQ0CWpr74gRn-_A Other Links: www.twitter.com/RevoloverAudio www.anchor.fm/AlbumConceptHour www.twitter.com/AlbumConceptPod www.myspace.com/AlbumConceptHour www.ko-fi.com/RevoloverAudio --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/albumconcepthour/support
Here, in the last of our mini-podcasts on crisis and digital research, Mythily is in conversation with anthropologist Jolynna Sinanan (Research Fellow in Digital Media and Ethnography at the University of Sydney). Jolynna's research focusses on digital media practices in relation to family relationships, work and gender. She has written on these themes in Social Media in Trinidad (UCL Press, 2017), Visualising Facebook (Miller and Sinanan, UCL Press, 2017), Webcam (Miller and Sinanan, Polity, 2014) and How the World Changed Social Media (Miller et. al. 2016, UCL Press). Most recently, Jolynna has been developing this work in two projects: on mobile mining work in Western Australia, and on digital/data practices around tourism in Mt Everest. With her fieldwork plans for both sites shelved for the time-being, this conversation reflects on the possibilities of adapting projects to digital modes during a crisis, and also if we should. You can find Jolynna on twitter at @jolynnasinanan - Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
This conversation is the third in our mini-pod series on crisis and the digital. In it, Mythily Meher speaks to Susan Wardell while they are in lockdown in Aotearoa New Zealand. They talk about the shape of work, life, distress and future research in this pandemic, and—reflecting on Susan’s work with an online climate change ‘doomer’ community—on the kinds of meaning-making people engage in crisis. Susan is a lecturer of Social Anthropology at the University of Ōtākou / Otago in Aotearoa. Her ethnographic work deals with emotion and affect, care, religion and spirituality, mental health and wellbeing, and digital worlds. She also publishes poetry and essays, which you can read in Landfall, The Spinoff, Cordite Poetry review and elsewhere. You can find Susan on twitter at @Unlazy_Susan, and you can browse (and contribute to) the collective online pandemic dream diary she is running (find it by googling “CoviDreams”). - Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
Number 2 in our series of mini-episodes featuring conversations with anthropologists about crisis and the digital. This episode, Timothy Neale speaks to Jonah Lipton, a post-doctoral researcher based at the Firoz Lalji Centre for Africa and the ESRC Centre for Public Authority and International Development at the London School of Economics. A specialist in the anthropology of West Africa, Lipton conducted fieldwork in Sierra Leone immediately before and during the 2014 Ebola outbreak, and in this conversation he reflects on that work and how it is shaping his interpretation of the current COVID-19 pandemic. For more on Lipton's work visit: http://www.lse.ac.uk/africa/people/Researchers/JonahLipton or look him up on Twitter @Jonah_Lipton -- Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
Hello friends, how are you? Are you running out of listening content? We are back with a new episode, featuring a conversation recorded by Matt Barlow (in the days before physical distancing) with Rick Smith and Megan Warin. Rick is a biocultural anthropologist who is currently a postdoctoral fellow with the Neukom Institute for Computational Science and the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth, and Megan is a professor in the School of Social Sciences at the University of Adelaide. In this episode, they discuss epigenetics - its origins, politics, promise and potential risks - and what anthropology can contribute to this field of biological research. Many thanks to Alex Fimeri and his team at the Learning Enhancement and Innovation Unit at the University of Adelaide for their assistance in the recording of this episode. DOHaD (https://dohadsoc.org/) Indigenous STS Lab (https://indigenoussts.com/) Scholarship mentioned: Alaimo, Stacy. 2010. Bodily Natures: Science, Environment, and the Material Self. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. Barad, Karen. 2007. Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning. Durham: Duke University Press. Barker, David. 1994. Mothers, babies, and health in later life. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingston. Bolnick, Deborah. 2015. ‘Combating Racial Health Disparities through Medical Education: The Need for Anthropological and Genetic Perspectives in Medical Training.’ Human Biology. 87(4): 361-371. Bourdieu, Pierre. 1977. Outline of a Theory of Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Coole, Diane and Samantha Frost. 2010. New Materialisms: Ontology, Agency, and Politics. Durham: Duke University Press. Kimmerer, Robin Wall. 2013. Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants. Minneapolis: Milkweed Editions. Roberts, Elizabeth. 2019. ‘Bioethnography and the Birth Cohort: A Method for Making New Kinds of Anthropological Knowledge about Transmission (which is what anthropology has been about all along).’ Somatosphere. November 19. http://somatosphere.net/2019/bioethnography-anthropological-knowledge-transmission.html/ Sharp, Gemma G; Deborah A Lawlor; Sarah S Richardson. 2018. ‘It’s the mother!: How assumptions about the causal primacy of maternal effects influence research on the developmental origins of health and disease’. Social Science & Medicine. Vol. 213: 20-27. Smith, Rick and Deborah Bolnick. 2019. ‘Situating Science: Doing Biological Anthropology as a View from Somewhere.’ In: Vital Topics Forum—How Academic Diversity is Transforming Scientific Knowledge in Biological Anthropology. American Anthropologist. 121(2): 465-467. Tallbear, Kim. 2013. Native American DNA: Tribal Belonging and the False Promise of Genetic Science. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Verran, Helen. 2001. Science and an African Logic. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Warin, Megan and Tanya Zivkovic. 2019. Fatness, Obesity, and Disadvantage in the Australian Suburbs: Unpalatable Politics. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. Warin, Megan; Emma Kowal; Maurizio Meloni. 2020. ‘Indigenous Knowledge in a Postgenomic Landscape: The Politics of Epigenetic Hope and Reparation in Australia.’ Science, Technology, & Human Values. 45(1): 87-111. Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
Lost and now unburied, Dr. West's interview with the legendary Matt Barlow of Ashes of Ares. They do a track by track of "Well of Souls." Get "Well Of Souls" now: USA: http://bit.ly/AoA-Well-amzn-US musicmegastore.com: http://bit.ly/AoA-Well-mm roar.gr: http://bit.ly/AoA-Well-roar Germany/EU: http://bit.ly/AoA-Well-amzn
We’ve got a roving mic on the loose. In this episode, that mic is in the hands of David Giles, as he roamed the halls of the 2019 joint meeting of the American Anthropological Association and Canadian Anthropology Society in Tkaronto/Toronto. There, David caught up with two bright minds of migration studies, namely Jason De León and Teresa Mares. What does an anthropological framework bring to the study of borders? How do you do an ethnography of borders? This episode covers some big contemporary questions. Jason is Professor of Anthropology and Chicana/o Studies at UCLA, and Director of the Undocumented Migration Project (UMP), a long-term study of clandestine border crossing on the Mexico-USA border. Teresa is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Vermont, and has conducted extensive ethnographic research on food access and food security among Latino/a in the United States. Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at https://conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
Meeting face to face - Matt Barlow by The Light Church, Bradford
3-3-20 Tonight at 9PM ET GotMead Live will be talking with Steve Patik, an accomplished and award winning mead maker who will be speaking at the AMMA MeadCon in two weeks on braggots, along with Andy Brewer from Locavore Beerworks. Steve discovered mead over Thanksgiving dinner in 2012, and a year later was making it. Since then, Steve has been making mead in unconventional ways, yet successful. Steve is a regular entrant in mead competitions all over the country, and he consistently does really well, even taking a Best in Show now and again. His favorite styles to work with are traditionals and braggots, and he really shines with his braggots and is known for them in the mead world. We'll have a bit shorter show tonight, as Steve has a late commitment this evening, but we'll have fun talking shop about braggots and other meadly things! Join us on the live chat and don't be afraid to call in if you want to! This player will show the most recent show, and when we're live, will play the live feed. If you are calling in, please turn off the player sound, so we don't get feedback. Click here to see a playable list of all our episodes! If you want to ask your mead making questions, you can call us at 803-443-MEAD (6323) or send us a question via email, or via Twitter @GotmeadNow and we'll tackle it online! 9PM EDT/6PM PDT Join us on live chat during the show Bring your questions and your mead, and let's talk mead! You can call us at 803-443-MEAD (6323), or Skype us at meadwench (please friend me first and say you're a listener, I get tons of Skype spam), or tweet to @gotmeadnow. Coming up: March 10, 17 and 24th off for MeadCon final prep, the event, and recovery (I'll have no voice) Show links and notes Honeybee: Lessons from an Accidental Beekeeper by C. Marina Marchese The Honey Connoisseur by C. Marina Marchese and Kim Flottum National Honey Board Mead Crafter Compeitition Penn Herb Co San Francisco Herbs Wellcome Mead: 105 Mead Recipes from the 17th and 18th Century English Receipt Books at the Wellcome Library by Laura Angotti Cider and Perry in Britain to 1700: A Collection of Material from Primary and Selected Secondary Sources by Laura Angotti Let There Be Melomels by Rob Ratliff The Big Book of Mead Recipes by Rob Ratliff Upcoming Events March 6 - Bos Meadery, Madison, WI - Music with the Dead Johhnys and Butter Brick March 7 - Kvlt Mead, Tacoma, WA - One Year Anniversary March 7 - Brimming Horn Meadery, Milton, DE - Bastion's Wake with Matt Barlow and Freddie Vidales March 11-12 - Ancient Fire Mead & Cider, Manchester, NH - 2nd Birthday Celebration March 13 - Grimsby Hollow Meadery, Middleville, MI - Zachary Craft, music March 17 - MeadCon Meadery Open Houses at Queen Bee Meadery (Denver) and Honnibrook Meadery (Castle Rock) March 18-19 - MeadCon 2020, Broomfield, CO - 2 days of seminars and the MeadUp mead tasting event March 20-21 - Mazer Cup International Mead Competition and Mead Mixer Tasting Event (March 20) March 28 - Starrlight Meadery, Pittsboro, NC - Viking Shield Combat April 3 - Clear Skies Meadery, Gaithersburg, MD - Opening day, 3PM Got an event you’d like us to mention on GotMead Live? Send us an email at gotmeadlive@gotmead.com and tell us about it!
2-18-20 Tonight at 9PM ET GotMead Live will be talking with Marina Marchese, the Honey Sommelier. Marina will be speaking at MeadCon 2020 this year, talking about honey sensory analysis and dong a live honey tasting. Carla Marina Marchese is a member of the Italian National Register of Experts in the Sensory Analysis of Honey, where she received her formal training as a honey sensory expert. Her book, The Honey Connoisseur co-authored with Kim Flottum (editor of Bee Culture Magazine) parallels the concept of terroir to single - origin honey directly matching floral sources to flavors and conceived the first U.S. honey aroma and flavor wheel. In 2011, Marina established The American Honey Tasting Society as the resource for honey sensory education in the United States. An apiculturist, Marina has also successfully completed the Charles Mraz Apitherapy Course, twice, achieving a deep understanding of products of the beehive and their applications to health and healing. An avid world traveler, Marina has had the opportunity to taste hundreds of new and old world honeys maintaining an impressive private library of honey samples. Most of Marina's work today is consulting for culinary professionals as well as sourcing rare, exotic and exquisite honeys for some of the finest chefs around the country. She is available to create and style honey menus and events or lead guided sensory educational courses for those who would like to train their senses to identify flavors, floral sources, crystallization and defects in honey. Join us on the live chat and don't be afraid to call in if you want to! This player will show the most recent show, and when we're live, will play the live feed. If you are calling in, please turn off the player sound, so we don't get feedback. Click here to see a playable list of all our episodes! If you want to ask your mead making questions, you can call us at 803-443-MEAD (6323) or send us a question via email, or via Twitter @GotmeadNow and we'll tackle it online! 9PM EDT/6PM PDT Join us on live chat during the show Bring your questions and your mead, and let's talk mead! You can call us at 803-443-MEAD (6323), or Skype us at meadwench (please friend me first and say you're a listener, I get tons of Skype spam), or tweet to @gotmeadnow. Coming up: Feb 25 - Roger Wanner and Joe Abruzzo - WA MeadWerks - Start Up on a Shoestring March 3 - TBA March 10, 17 and 24th off for MeadCon final prep, the event, and recovery (I'll have no voice) Show links and notes Honeybee: Lessons from an Accidental Beekeeper by C. Marina Marchese The Honey Connoisseur by C. Marina Marchese and Kim Flottum National Honey Board Mead Crafter Compeitition Penn Herb Co San Francisco Herbs Wellcome Mead: 105 Mead Recipes from the 17th and 18th Century English Receipt Books at the Wellcome Library by Laura Angotti Cider and Perry in Britain to 1700: A Collection of Material from Primary and Selected Secondary Sources by Laura Angotti Let There Be Melomels by Rob Ratliff The Big Book of Mead Recipes by Rob Ratliff Upcoming Events February 22 - Strad Meadery, Cordoba, CA - Paint and Sip class February 23 - Threadbare Cider and Mead, Pittsburgh, PA - Koji and Tempeh Master Class February 23 - Washington Mead and Cider Cup Deadline February 28 - Fifth Annual Michigan Nordic Fire Festival and Mead Hall - Charlotte, MI February 29 - Brimming Horn Meadery, Milton, DE - Mead, Cider and Fruit Wine pairing with Girl Scout cookies March 7 - Kvlt Mead, Tacoma, WA - One Year Anniversary March 7 - Brimming Horn Meadery, Milton, DE - Bastion's Wake with Matt Barlow and Freddie Vidales March 11-12 - Ancient Fire Mead & Cider, Manchester, NH - 2nd Birthday Celebration March 13 - Grimsby Hollow Meadery, Middleville, MI - Zachary Craft, music March 17 - MeadCon Meadery Open Houses at Queen Bee Meadery (Denver) and Honnibrook Meadery (Castle Rock)
Love One Another - Build A Strong Family (Matt Barlow) by The Light Church, Bradford
We are back for 2020 with a new episode, a new name and a new and larger collective to bring you further conversations about the state of anthropology and what it has to tell us in the twenty-first century. In this episode, we present a conversation between Timothy and Michael M.J. Fischer recorded at the Society for the Social Studies of Science 2019 conference in New Orleans. Dr Fischer is Professor of Anthropology and Science and Technology Studies at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the author of several books including 'Anthropological Futures' (Duke University Press, 2009) and, most recently, 'Anthropology in the Meantime' (Duke University Press, 2018). He conducts fieldwork in the Caribbean, Middle East, South and Southeast Asia and writes on an extensive range of topics including anthropological methods and the anthropology of biosciences, media circuits, and emergent forms of life. To find out more, visit his faculty website at https://anthropology.mit.edu/people/faculty/michael-fischer Conversations in Anthropology is a podcast about life, the universe, and anthropology produced by David Boarder Giles, Timothy Neale, Cameo Dalley, Mythily Meher and Matt Barlow. This podcast is made in partnership with the American Anthropological Association and supported by the Faculty of Arts & Education at Deakin University. Find us at https://conversationsinanthropology.wordpress.com or on Twitter at @AnthroConvo
Matt Barlow Commissioning And Guest Speaker Steve by The Light Church, Bradford
Love One Another - Matt Barlow by The Light Church, Bradford
Matt Barlow (soon to be Lead Pastor of The Light Church) talks about our vision for 2020
He Equips The Called - Matt Barlow by The Light Church, Bradford
Scandalous Jesus - Matt Barlow by The Light Church, Bradford
New Testament Heros, John The Baptiser - Matt Barlow by The Light Church, Bradford
Jesus Redefined Success - Matt Barlow by The Light Church, Bradford
In the forty-sixth episode of the St Pete SALT (Stories About Local Talent) podcast, we talk with Matt Barlow, Max Cook, Noah Cook, Katelyn Grady and Emily Updegraff. During the episode, we discuss the upcoming Maui to Molokai crossing.
This week on our motorcycle podcast we don't have any big topics, so we just shoot the shit. We talk about some new riders who came in for help with their bikes, and Emma shares a story about a Grom on her lift. Jim and Liza talk about setting up a proper moto garage for a friend in S. Dakota, and then we give Matt Barlow a call. He tells us about his dirt biking trip to S. Utah that ended in him in the back of a pick up truck being taken to the hospital with multiple fractures. Then we finish up with listener emails and answer some burning questions. With Liza, Henry,Nak, Bagel, Miss Emma and Naked Jim. Call and leave us a message at 831-291-5112 Go to www.motorcyclesandmisfits.com to find the links to our Facebook, Instagram, Youtube, Patreon and more. And send us an email at recyclemotorcyclegarage@gmail.com www.patreon.com/motorcyclesandmisfits
Real Estate REality Check | Real Estate & Business Career Success Education and Training
Introduction: Today we have with us a real estate rock star who on a daily basis channels my “Albert Einstein-Snoop Dogg-Drake Bring Your A-Game Theory,” given that he strives to not only be a man of value to his clients, but one who takes Snoop’s line, “If it’s flipping hamburgers at McDonald’s, be the best hamburger flipper in the world. Whatever it is you do you have to master your craft” to heart, as he knows that if he does not, his iPhone will no longer “Light Up” with calls from his clients, and even worse, he will no longer have access to his “Hotline Bling.” Yes my friends, today’s guest is Brad Wolk, Executive Managing Director, Co-Head of Integrated Consulting Strategies at Savills Studley. Brad, an attorney by education and training, is able to maximize leverage throughout the tenant representation process - with a little help from the title of an old Lionel Richie and the Commodores song - by leaning on the “Brick House” of knowledge he acquired while working for five years in real estate development, exclusively representing commercial owners in the acquisition, disposition and leasing of various commercial properties. On a personal note, this is not the first time I have sat down with Brad for an interview, as the last time was nearly 20 years ago, back when we both had full heads of hair. Like the dog and pony shows he puts on when attempting to secure new business, his was one of the most engaging, informative and off-beat interviews I ever had ... so good in fact that I hired him for my old real estate development firm right out of law school. More importantly, I take great pride in knowing that (1) career wise, the pupil has definitively exceeded the mentor, and (2) he met his amazing wife Jen, who worked at another of my firm’s offices, while at our old company. Episode Notes: At 2:42, Brad Wolk reminisces about his 2001 interview with Larry Haber for a summer internship position, while still attending law school. At 3:34, Brad shares his appreciation for the underdog mentality of working hard to prove others wrong. At 5:14, Wolk touches upon fear of failure and the need to please others. At 7:34, Brad discusses goal setting, going after challenging assignments, and the importance of prioritizing. At 8:42, he believes that one must respect the competition, and over prepare to win while utilizing an intelligent strategy. At 9:39, Wolk speaks about service and focusing on clients. He advises that one should listen and react, more so than they preach. At 10:49, Brad talks about preparation, drive and negotiation. At 12:00, he reflects on his first boss (Larry Haber), his partnership and relationship with Matt Barlow, founder of Savills Studley’s consulting group, and his relationship with Mitch Steir, Chairman and CEO of Savills Studley. At 13:34, he shares how he manages the talent on Savills Studley’s Integrated Consulting Strategies (ICS) team made up of 15 diverse professionals. At 14:53, Wolk dives into the topic of whether tenants have altered their strategies as a result of the recently enacted FASB accounting changes. At 17:05, Brad talks about how creating lists of both personal and business tasks, keeps him organized and on top of whatever he sets out to accomplish. At 19:17, he shares the ski mantra of, “If you are not falling, you are not trying.” At 21:01, Wolk mentions the importance of paying it forward by spending time with younger professionals or anyone seeking out help. At 23:31, Brad notes his ambition to grow ICS, as well as being a great role model for his three kids. At 25:25, he stresses that one needs to have short memory when dealing with rejection, and that one cannot take the losses to heart. At 26:36, Wolk believes that the key to success and longevity is surrounding yourself with people that are smarter than you. At 27:11, Brad considers any word that resembles an excuse as “nails on a blackboard.” At 29:27, he shares that he is blessed to wake up daily, and work with his friends at Savills-Studley. At 30:45, Wolk speaks about working on complex deals, and taking challenging shots down field. At 31:31, he feels that the time of his life is “now,” as life continues to get fuller, and is enjoying time with his wife and kids. At 34:16, Brad Wolk closes the door on the podcast with a message that pertains to stamina and extreme focus when on the “5-yard line” of a deal.
The Pursuit Of Holiness - Matt Barlow by The Light Church, Bradford
Matt Barlow is back! His band Ashes of Ares recently released the long-awaited follow-up to their self-titled debut album. “Well of Souls” presents an increased intensity and more wide-ranging sound which builds upon the foundation laid down by the first album and further solidifies Matt Barlow and Freddie Vidales’ partnership in writing. Former Ashes Of [...] The post Former ICED EARTH Member and ASHES OF ARES Frontman MATT BARLOW Discuss Second Album: “Each Song We Write Deserves Our Time and Passion” appeared first on Sonic Perspectives.
We got stoked for the announcement of a new Ashes Of Ares album for a variety of reasons. First off, its the long awaited follow up to their five year old debut. The effort's monicker took us back to the first Indiana Jones flick (!). But most importantly, it afforded us the chance to have a long time coming sit down with mainman Matt Barlow. Metallers will be familiar with Mr. Barlow for his amazing discography with Iced Earth. Now he's remaking Metal history with his sorta new "offering" (ha,ha), Ashes Of Ares. We discussed the new record "Well Of Souls". As well as his tribute to the late, great Chris Cornell and his career as a police officer(!). In our 'News, Views, and Tunes", we share some war stories on the live front, go further in the the Oli Herbert saga, and give our 2 cents on the "Decibel Top 40 Albums of 2018". Musically, we crank the new Ashes... record plus the latest efforts from Tomb Mold, Ken Mode, Evoken, Fleshreaper, and Wristmeetrazor!! Horns!! This Episode is sponsored by Trve Kvlt Coffee. Summon the coffee demons to possess yourself a cup today! Follow us on Twitter and Instagram. Listen Live Thursday's at 8pm eastern on Pure Rock Radio Drop us a line at radmetal666@gmail.com
Legendary metal singer Matt Barlow of Ashes Of Ares joins the podcast in this interview recorded November 12, 2018, to discuss the band's sophomore release, "Well Of Souls". Cover photo courtesy Heather Barlow; excerpts from the Ashes Of Ares track "Let All Despair" (Rock Of Angels Records, 2018) used with permission from Dustin Hardman Press Relations. https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/great-metal-debate-podcast/id1037874814 http://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:66031413/sounds.rss https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLC0ED1Ri2oNwBQW9All3Yw https://www.facebook.com/thegreatmetaldebate https://www.instagram/metaldebate https://www.twitter.com/metaldebate
Interview with Ashes of Ares Vocalist Matt Barlow. Barlow called in to talk about the band's new release WELL OF SOULS, recording in 2018, and the growth of the music between the debut release and this new release WELL OF SOULS. Catch THE CLASSIC METAL SHOW on Saturdays from 9pm to 3am EST at www.cmsradio.net. www.theclassicmetalshow.com - WEBSITE www.facebook.com/thecms - FACEBOOK www.twitter.com/cmsrocks - TWITTER www.spreaker.com/cmsrocks - PODCAST www.chatandkill.com - LIVE CHAT www.youtube.com/user/CMSClassicMetalShow - Youtube http://bit.ly/cmsiheart - IHEARTRADIO www.zazzle.com/cmsmerch - MERCH STORE
Interview with Ashes of Ares Vocalist Matt Barlow. Barlow called in to talk about the band's new release WELL OF SOULS, recording in 2018, and the growth of the music between the debut release and this new release WELL OF SOULS. Catch THE CLASSIC METAL SHOW on Saturdays from 9pm to 3am EST at www.cmsradio.net. www.theclassicmetalshow.com - WEBSITE www.facebook.com/thecms - FACEBOOK www.twitter.com/cmsrocks - TWITTER www.spreaker.com/cmsrocks - PODCAST www.chatandkill.com - LIVE CHAT www.youtube.com/user/CMSClassicMetalShow - Youtube http://bit.ly/cmsiheart - IHEARTRADIO www.zazzle.com/cmsmerch - MERCH STORE --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cmspn/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cmspn/support
Greetings, True Believers and have i got a wonderful present for you all , please welcome my amazing guest MATT BARLOW !!!! FAMOUS IN HIS EARLY YEARS WITH THE MIGHTY ICED EARTH , HIS MAJESTY ! THE KING HAS A NEW MONSTER YOU ALL NEED TO PAY ATTENTION TO ....ASHES OF ARES M/ !!!!! COME CELEBRATE THIS EPISODE AND HEAR THE NEWS OF THE WEEKEND !!!!! HORNS HIGH !!!!!!!!
Prayer - Matt Barlow by The Light Church, Bradford
Old Testament Heros - Isaiah (Matt Barlow) by The Light Church, Bradford
Matt Barlow - Baptisms by The Light Church, Bradford
Matt Barlow - Forsaken by The Light Church, Bradford
Honouring God With Your Work (Matt Barlow) by The Light Church, Bradford
The Carabao Cup provided a spark midweek, with Bristol City beating Manchester United at Ashton Gate, and the Daily Mail's, Matt Barlow, talks about that competition and the most underrated players in the Premier League this season on this edition of the pod. Derek McGovern and Andy Excell preview the TV games, while Pete Farries, Gav P and Al Ross, give their best bets in the football league. Mark Walton previews El Clasico and Dave Kelner is your host. #betting #PL #football #ElClasico #CarabaoCup
Habits of Happiness - Lessons From Timothy (Matt Barlow) by The Light Church, Bradford
Why do traditional musicians place a premium on humor and social rapport? Rory Makem, John Doyle, John Williams, Aidan Collins, Pauline Logue, Lisa Coyne, and Siobhan and Brendan McKinney help Shannon investigate the deep wellspring of Irish wit. Whether you already have an arsenal of quick comebacks, or you’ve never heard Irish people slag each other, this episode digs behind the banter. There’s plenty of music here, too. Credits below. * * * * * * * Special thanks to Matt Barlow, Brian Benscoter, and Mark Johnson for supporting this episode. And thank you to Matt Heaton for script editing and production music. Please CLICK HERE if you can kick in to support this podcast! * * * * * * * Visit IrishMusicStories.org * * * * * * * Music Heard on IMS Episode 09 all music traditional, unless otherwise indicated Tunes: “Tap Room, Mountain Road, Galway Rambler” (reels), from Rehearsal Recording, c. 2009 Artist: Dan Gurney (accordion), Shannon Heaton (flute), Matt Heaton (guitar) Tune: “Ramblin’ Man” from Production Music Made for Irish Music StoriesArtist: Matt Heaton Tune: “John’s Theme” from Production Music Made for Irish Music StoriesArtist: Matt Heaton Tune: “Sabai Sabai” from Production Music Made for Irish Music StoriesArtist: Matt Heaton Tune: “Hometown Lullaby” from Production Music Made for Irish Music StoriesArtist: Matt Heaton Song/Tune: “Dawn Song and The Killavil” from Rehearsal recordingArtists: Dan Gurney, Shannon Heaton, Matt Heaton Tune: “Abbey Reel: from Production Music Made for Irish Music StoriesArtist: Matt Heaton Tune: “Travel Theme” from Production Music Made for Irish Music StoriesArtist: Matt Heaton Song: “The Hawk And The Crow,” from The Light And The Half-Light, 2004Artists: Sean Doyle with John Doyle Song/Tune: “Mountain Dew,” from Irish Drinking SongsArtists: The Clancy Brothers & Tommy Makem Song: “Parting Glass,” from Live Farewell Concert at EnVie, Boulder, CO, 2001 Artists: Siucra featuring Beth Leachman Gadbaw
This week our guest speaker Matt Barlow, CAP's UK Chief Executive, speaks on the remarkable work of CAP and envisioning us on how it changes people‘s lives by helping them out of debt, poverty and its causes.
Episode #34: In episode 34 we are joined by Kevin and Derek of Slab City. Buke and George also interview Matt Barlow and Van Williams at an Ashes of Ares show. And of course our usual segments covering news, new releases, a Top 3, and all the various music we have been listening to lately. "Metal Rain" used by permission of Men Without Armies.
Episode #25: In this episode George and Buke are once again joined by Jay. He just sort of showed up, and we didn't know what to do, so we gave him a mic and decided to keep him. We are super proud and excited to bring you an hour-long interview with Matt Barlow of Ashes of Ares and formerly of Iced Earth. We also have a pair of songs for you from Irish one-man-band Sonus Mortis. Then of course there are the usual suspects, news, new releases, what we are listening to, classics, and our Tope 3 Bands That We Miss. Clocking in at almost four hours, this is not a podcast you want to miss! Two songs are played with permission from Sonus Mortis. "Metal Rain" intro used by permission of Men Without Armies.
Sparkspitter: Created from the ashes of other Adelaide bands finding their feet around 2011, Sparkspitter was an experimental outlet for Thomas Capogreco & Rohan Goldsmith. Challenging themselves to create fully fleshed songs with lap steel guitar loops as a basis, Matt Barlow came along to complete the rhythmic picture by picking up Bass duties, and that band was formed. Their music have seen them tour the country and play with such eclectic artists, such as Thee Oh Sees, OM, Love Of Diagrams & Civil Civic. Recorded by Branko Cosic. Mixed by Cameron Smith. Recorded at The Waiting Room, Brisbane on 12th of September, 2014. The Royal Artillery: Starting up in the late 2000’s, The Royal Artillery have become a powerhouse band on the blues rock circuit. Led by guitarist Zed Charles, their sound is reminiscent of early Hendrix days, with a dash of 90’s riffage. Slowly but surely, they’ve had a solid following that seems to grow strength to strength show by show. This is a band you need to watch out for. Recorded & mixed by Eoin Clements & Sep V. Recorded at 4ZZZ Studios, Brisbane on the 21st of February, 2015. Airing details: Originally via Zed Digital, 8-9pm, Friday 6 March 2015. Show production and engineering: Branko Cosic.
Aasmah Mir and Richard Coles are joined by Olympic Gold medallist Sally Gunnell. Now an ambassador for Sport England, she discusses how she keeps fit, her role in her local community in Sussex and how her sons now outrun her! Saturday Live listener Alice Munro contacted the programme to tell us about the community in Wirksworth, Derbyshire and why it's a special place to live. Matt Barlow accepted her invitation to visit. Matthew Engel describes his three year journey exploring England afresh by visiting 39 counties and the capital, what he discovered about their individual natures and traditions, and why he's adopted the county of Herefordshire as his home. Vlogger and creator of Vsauce, Michael Stevens, shares his passion for knowledge and how he makes videos relating to various scientific topics for an online community with 8 million subscribers. We hear the wonderful story of Pamela Rose - who gave up acting in her twenties to work at Bletchley Park and returned to the stage in her 80s. Crime writer Peter May explains how his real-life teenage experience of playing in a band and running away from Glasgow for London has inspired his latest book. He describes that journey, how life in the Outer Hebrides led to his Lewis Trilogy and why he is an honorary member of The Chinese Crime Writers Association. And actor Julie Hesmondhalgh shares her Inheritance Tracks - The Joy of Living by Ewan MacColl and Reach by S Club. Engel's England: Thirty-nine Counties, One Capital and One Man', is published by Profile Books. Cucumber is on Channel 4 on Thursday at 9pm. The Bletchley Girls: War, Secrecy, Love and Loss by Tessa Dunlop is published by Hodder and Stoughton. Runway by Peter May is published by Quercus. Producer: Louise Corley.
In Episode 9 of Unfolded, the illustrious Dave Harrity reflects on relationships, marriage, love, awkwardness, pride and compassion in his poetic story entitled Through The Motions. And, as always, Matt Barlow shines on the 1’s and 2’s. Dave Harrity is an author and teacher from Louisville Kentucky, where he lives with his wife and kids.… Read more about Unfolded Episode 9 – Through The Motions
What does a Benedictine monk from the 13th century have in common with an office worker from the 21st century? Find out in this week’s episode, The Escapement – written and narrated by Jesse Turri and produced by Matt Barlow. Two more things to mention: The written submissions for Unfolded are always posted a few… Read more about Unfolded Episode 6 – The Escapement
Something dark bubbles just beneath the surface of Hatuskgar. This week’s episode ventures into a fantastical land, a land that is haunted by great darkness, and there is only one person who can help. This episode features original music by producer by Matt Barlow and was written and narrated by Jesse Turri. Unfolded now has… Read more about Unfolded Episode 3: The Desecration