Podcasts about Mazzei

  • 117PODCASTS
  • 144EPISODES
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Best podcasts about Mazzei

Latest podcast episodes about Mazzei

The P.A.S. Report Podcast
America's Founding Series: Filippo Mazzei and the Declaration of Independence

The P.A.S. Report Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2025 19:25


In this first installment of America's Founding Series, Professor Nick Giordano uncovers the forgotten story of Filippo Mazzei, an Italian immigrant whose revolutionary ideas helped shape the Declaration of Independence. While history has largely forgotten about his contributions, Mazzei's words directly influenced Thomas Jefferson's famous phrase, “All men are created equal.” Join us as we explore Mazzei's journey, his friendship with Jefferson, and his tireless efforts to advance the cause of American liberty. Episode Highlights: • How an Italian immigrant, Filippo Mazzei, writings influenced the Declaration of Independence • Mazzei's friendship with Thomas Jefferson and their late-night debates on liberty • Why Congress took nearly 200 years to recognize Mazzei's role in America's founding

Ultim'ora
Operazione antimafia tra Catania e Milano, 18 arresti

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2025 1:18


CATANIA (ITALPRESS) - Operazione antimafia dei Carabinieri del Comando provinciale di Catania. Oltre 200 militari hanno eseguito tra Randazzo e Milano un'ordinanza di custodia cautelare nei confronti di 18 indagati, accusati di associazione a delinquere di stampo mafioso, estorsione, traffico e detenzione ai fini di spaccio di sostanze stupefacenti, questi ultimi aggravati dal metodo mafioso e con la finalità di agevolare il clan mafioso di riferimento. Il provvedimento è stato emesso dal gip del Tribunale di Catania. L'indagine, condotta dai Carabinieri del Nucleo Operativo della Compagnia di Randazzo e coordinata dalla Dda di Catania, ha consentito agli investigatori di portare alla luce le attività illecite di un'associazione mafiosa legata alla famiglia di Cosa nostra etnea dei "Mazzei", individuandone gli elementi apicali, operanti nei territori di Bronte, Maniace, Maletto e nelle zone limitrofe. Durante le indagini è emerso un vasto giro di estorsioni ai danni di imprenditori locali, un fiorente traffico di droga e una attività di controllo dell'area di influenza del clan. vbo

Ultim'ora
Operazione antimafia tra Catania e Milano, 18 arresti

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2025 1:18


CATANIA (ITALPRESS) - Operazione antimafia dei Carabinieri del Comando provinciale di Catania. Oltre 200 militari hanno eseguito tra Randazzo e Milano un'ordinanza di custodia cautelare nei confronti di 18 indagati, accusati di associazione a delinquere di stampo mafioso, estorsione, traffico e detenzione ai fini di spaccio di sostanze stupefacenti, questi ultimi aggravati dal metodo mafioso e con la finalità di agevolare il clan mafioso di riferimento. Il provvedimento è stato emesso dal gip del Tribunale di Catania. L'indagine, condotta dai Carabinieri del Nucleo Operativo della Compagnia di Randazzo e coordinata dalla Dda di Catania, ha consentito agli investigatori di portare alla luce le attività illecite di un'associazione mafiosa legata alla famiglia di Cosa nostra etnea dei "Mazzei", individuandone gli elementi apicali, operanti nei territori di Bronte, Maniace, Maletto e nelle zone limitrofe. Durante le indagini è emerso un vasto giro di estorsioni ai danni di imprenditori locali, un fiorente traffico di droga e una attività di controllo dell'area di influenza del clan. vbo

Rule Your Pool
Water's Story (w/ Jim Lauria and Terry Arko)

Rule Your Pool

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2025 26:26


00:00 - Introduction01:52 - Jim Lauria and Mazzei07:53 - Leonardo da Vinci and water11:46 - Podcast: Water We Talking About?15:14 - The Blue Mind - Wallace J. Nichols20:13 - Water must be coaxed.23:10 - Closing ------------------------------------Connect with Orenda TechnologiesWebsite: https://www.orendatech.comHelp Center: https://ask.orendatech.comBlog: https://blog.orendatech.comYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/OrendaTechnologiesFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/orendatech/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/orendatechnologies/Swim Across America | Team Orenda: https://www.swimacrossamerica.org/goto/orenda

ABC Cardinal 730AM
12 12 2024 A LA GRAN 730 - Ricardo Fleitas, Jefe De Marketing MAZZEI

ABC Cardinal 730AM

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 8:39


12 12 2024 A LA GRAN 730 - Ricardo Fleitas, Jefe De Marketing MAZZEI by ABC Color

Noticias de América
¿Por qué Chile tiene una tasa de natalidad inferior a la de Japón?

Noticias de América

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 2:31


Esta semana los chilenos andan de fiesta nacional. El "Día de las Glorias del Ejército" es celebrado cada 19 de septiembre, y para esta ocasión por las calles marchan numerosas compañías de militares… Numerosas por ahora pero quizá llegue el día en que a sus filas le falten soldados. Un reporte de la ONU asegura que la tasa de nacimientos de Chile es la más baja de toda América, incluso por debajo de la de Japón. Los cálculos de los expertos estiman que actualmente la tasa de fecundidad mundial es de 2,3 nacimientos, y que podría descender a 2,1 hacia mediados de nuestro siglo.El caso de Chile está muy por debajo de esas cifras: 1,17 hijos por mujer según el Fondo de Población de las Naciones Unidas. ¿A qué se debe esto?“Yo creo que un factor diferenciador de Chile tiene que ver con un cambio, una transformación social y cultural muy profunda y muy rápida que se ha dado sobre todo en los últimos 20 años en particular”, analiza Marinella Mazzei, Subdirectora de la Escuela de Salud Pública de la Universidad de Chile. “Los niveles educativos femeninos y la incorporación femenina al mundo laboral también se han profundizado en los últimos años, y eso ha generado una modificación importante en las trayectoria en un contexto mucho más individualista, por decirlo de alguna forma”, subraya.Este cambio cultural liderado por las mujeres también está modificando la idea que los chilenos tiene sobre qué es una familia.“A diferencia de un pasado, el ser mujer hoy necesariamente está unido al ser madre, y tampoco el ser familia, tampoco necesariamente estar unido a ser una familia con hijos, y eso es un cambio cultural profundo que se está dando en todas partes del mundo. Pero en Chile había una mirada un poco más conservadora y eso ha cambiado muy rápidamente para las nuevas generaciones”, estima Mazzei. A estas explicaciones se le suma el factor económico, concretamente el inestable panorama laboral del siglo XXI que contrasta con los años gloriosos del pasado.“De percibir que posiblemente no tengo un salario tan alto, de que posiblemente mi situación laboral no es tan estable… Las trayectorias laborales son mucho más inestables hoy que la que vivieron, por ejemplo, nuestros padres en algún sentido, y eso afecta la decisión de tener hijos en Chile y en otras partes del mundo. Fíjate que son los mismos comentarios que uno escucha en Chile respecto de lo que se escucha en jóvenes asiáticos, en jóvenes de países europeos como Francia, por ejemplo”, subraya. Marinella Mazzei también resaltó que la edad se impone como el reloj biológico que marca la mejor hora para tener hijos, especialmente para las mujeres. 

Noticias de América
¿Por qué Chile tiene una tasa de natalidad inferior a la de Japón?

Noticias de América

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 2:31


Esta semana los chilenos andan de fiesta nacional. El "Día de las Glorias del Ejército" es celebrado cada 19 de septiembre, y para esta ocasión por las calles marchan numerosas compañías de militares… Numerosas por ahora pero quizá llegue el día en que a sus filas le falten soldados. Un reporte de la ONU asegura que la tasa de nacimientos de Chile es la más baja de toda América, incluso por debajo de la de Japón. Los cálculos de los expertos estiman que actualmente la tasa de fecundidad mundial es de 2,3 nacimientos, y que podría descender a 2,1 hacia mediados de nuestro siglo.El caso de Chile está muy por debajo de esas cifras: 1,17 hijos por mujer según el Fondo de Población de las Naciones Unidas. ¿A qué se debe esto?“Yo creo que un factor diferenciador de Chile tiene que ver con un cambio, una transformación social y cultural muy profunda y muy rápida que se ha dado sobre todo en los últimos 20 años en particular”, analiza Marinella Mazzei, Subdirectora de la Escuela de Salud Pública de la Universidad de Chile. “Los niveles educativos femeninos y la incorporación femenina al mundo laboral también se han profundizado en los últimos años, y eso ha generado una modificación importante en las trayectoria en un contexto mucho más individualista, por decirlo de alguna forma”, subraya.Este cambio cultural liderado por las mujeres también está modificando la idea que los chilenos tiene sobre qué es una familia.“A diferencia de un pasado, el ser mujer hoy necesariamente está unido al ser madre, y tampoco el ser familia, tampoco necesariamente estar unido a ser una familia con hijos, y eso es un cambio cultural profundo que se está dando en todas partes del mundo. Pero en Chile había una mirada un poco más conservadora y eso ha cambiado muy rápidamente para las nuevas generaciones”, estima Mazzei. A estas explicaciones se le suma el factor económico, concretamente el inestable panorama laboral del siglo XXI que contrasta con los años gloriosos del pasado.“De percibir que posiblemente no tengo un salario tan alto, de que posiblemente mi situación laboral no es tan estable… Las trayectorias laborales son mucho más inestables hoy que la que vivieron, por ejemplo, nuestros padres en algún sentido, y eso afecta la decisión de tener hijos en Chile y en otras partes del mundo. Fíjate que son los mismos comentarios que uno escucha en Chile respecto de lo que se escucha en jóvenes asiáticos, en jóvenes de países europeos como Francia, por ejemplo”, subraya. Marinella Mazzei también resaltó que la edad se impone como el reloj biológico que marca la mejor hora para tener hijos, especialmente para las mujeres. 

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane
9585 - Francesco Mazzei confermato alla guida del Consorzio Tutela vini della Maremma Toscana

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 5:04


Francesco Mazzei è stato confermato alla guida del Consorzio Tutela vini della Maremma Toscana per il suo terzo mandato."Sono onorato della fiducia che mi viene riconosciuta, si sono raggiunti risultati incoraggianti riguardo la notorietà e l'apprezzamento della Denominazione ma vi è ancora molto lavoro da fare”, afferma il riconfermato presidente, che aggiunge “La DOC Maremma Toscana ha fatto degli evidenti passi in avanti ed è auspicabile agire in continuità con gli obiettivi del programma di sviluppo messo in campo, assieme al CDA, all'inizio del mio primo mandato; proseguiremo in quella direzione cercando di portare avanti al meglio tutti gli impegni istituzionali – dalla valorizzazione alla promozione della Denominazione –, puntando su quattro ulteriori asset: razionalizzazione del disciplinare, ricerca, enoturismo, e sinergia con gli altri Consorzi sul territorio”.

Ultim'ora
Mazzei (Edra) "Al Salone del Mobile per far apprezzare nostre qualità"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2024 0:48


MILANO (ITALPRESS) - Il Salone del Mobile "è la Fiera più importante, ci permette di far vedere la nostra collezione e di presentare nella maniera più opportuna i modelli e di far apprezzare le qualità che ogni giorno cerchiamo di portare avanti". A dirlo Niccolò Mazzei, director of International Development di Edra, a margine del Salone del Mobile di Milano. xh7/fsc/gtr/gsl

Ultim'ora
Mazzei (Edra) "Al Salone del Mobile per far apprezzare nostre qualità"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2024 0:48


MILANO (ITALPRESS) - Il Salone del Mobile "è la Fiera più importante, ci permette di far vedere la nostra collezione e di presentare nella maniera più opportuna i modelli e di far apprezzare le qualità che ogni giorno cerchiamo di portare avanti". A dirlo Niccolò Mazzei, director of International Development di Edra, a margine del Salone del Mobile di Milano. xh7/fsc/gtr/gsl

Rádio Rcc Fm
Falando em Saúde | Psicóloga Clinica Patrícia Mazzei

Rádio Rcc Fm

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2024 51:25


Apresentação: Keila Louzada Links Site: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠aplateia.com.br⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Jornal A Plateia⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Instagram: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Jornal A Plateia⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

The Wine Conversation
▻ Marcheses Filippo and Francesco Mazzei

The Wine Conversation

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2024 37:51


Sarah Kemp meets Marcheses Francesco and Marchese Filippo Mazzei of Castello di Fonterutoli, who have 600 years of winemaking history in the family. As their Super Tuscan “Concerto di Fonterutoli” celebrates its 40th anniversary, they discuss Tuscany's quality revolution. Listen in to hear about the changes they made in the vineyard and cellar, and the new generation of wine lovers and sommeliers who are putting Tuscany firmly on collectors' map.Find out more at wine-conversation.com

The Kula Ring
A Water Treatment Marketer and Top of the Funnel Content Marketing

The Kula Ring

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2024 31:26


Jim Lauria is here to talk about some strategies that have worked well for him and Mazzei around content creation and marketing. Adding value to not only his own company but to Mazzei's partners as well. Jim brings a ton of knowledge and experience on what content looks like done right, and how an AI will never replace the human touch.

The Wine Conversation
▻ Giovanni Mazzei – The Next Generation

The Wine Conversation

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2024 22:48


600 years of winemaking runs through the blood of Giovanni Mazzei, son of Marchese Filippo Mazzei of Castello di Fonterutoli. Sarah talks to him for our Next Generation series about his life with his wife and three young boys at the Il Caggio estate where he runs Ipsus, the wine he wants recognised as the finest Sangiovese in Italy. “I wasn't sure I was given the responsibility, I asked for it” he tells Sarah as he describes why he believes that the Sangiovese at the Il Caggio estate is second to known. A fascinating interview with one of Italy's most dynamic and passionate personalities.Find out more at: wine-conversation.com

Radio 32 - La Radio cha Ascolta
Roma siamo noi- intervista a Maria Pompa e Andrea Mazzei

Radio 32 - La Radio cha Ascolta

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2023 20:51


Roma siamo noi Nella puntata di oggi ascolteremo due testimonianze di Maria Pompa e Andrea Mazzei entrambi facente parte del network di larghe vedute un network che comprende più radio di Italia e non solo sulla salute mentale

Rádio Rcc Fm
Falando em Saúde | Psicóloga Patrícia Mazzei

Rádio Rcc Fm

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2023 46:18


Apresentação: Keila Louzada Links Site: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠aplateia.com.br⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Jornal A Plateia⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Instagram: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Jornal A Plateia⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

KFRM's
Allison Mazzei - On The Front Porch

KFRM's "On the Front Porch" Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2023 43:15


Allison Mazzei - On The Front Porch [00:00:00] Allison Mazzei - On The Front Porch [00:10:29] Allison Mazzei - Front Porch 2 [00:20:43] Allison Mazzei - Front Porch 3 [00:32:07] Allison Mazzei - Front Porch 4See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

SEO y SEM con Luis Revuelto
# 125 Andres Kloster y Guido Mazzei muestran cómo escalar una agencia a 12000 km de distancia

SEO y SEM con Luis Revuelto

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 50:01


Uno de los grandes retos que existen para los que prestamos servicios en marketing digital como autónomos, es el de dar los pasos para crecer y transformarse en una empresa. Pasar de ser uno solo a contar con un equipo. Crear procesos para poder atender proyectos de forma más eficiente y productiva. Aumentar el número de proyectos… En este punto muchas personas optan por asociarse. Y es que dicen que caminando sólo llegas más rápido, pero en compañía llegas más lejos. Ahora bien, ¿cómo te asocias con una persona a la que no conoces de nada? Y más aún, ¿cómo lo haces estando a 12000 km de distancia? Pues es lo que hicieron Andrés Kloster y Guido Mazzei para montar agencia Eleven. Nos lo cuentan hoy en este episodio.  PATROCINADOR: Máster SEO de Webpositer Academy. Más información en el siguiente link: https://www.webpositeracademy.com/master-seo/?utm_source=LUISREVUELTO&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=promo-1fase&utm_term=descuento-colaboradores&utm_content=podcast-LR

Maria Celina Fabregues
Facu Mazzei: "Crecer duele pero no crecer, duele más"

Maria Celina Fabregues

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2023 40:21


A horas de la presentación de su Camaleón Tour en el Teatro Español de General Villegas, encuentro en radio con Facundo Mazzei junto a la villeguense Azul Garrido. En la zona de dragones del programa, Facu da una mirada a su vida, disfruta de este presente, pero se prepara para mudar la piel artística y personal. Un espacio de total alegría y la más profunda intimidad de un artista que se reinventa a cada paso. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/maria-celina-fabregues/message

TOP SEO
Gestión de Proyectos SEO con Guido Mazzei

TOP SEO

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2023 44:59


Bienvenidos al episodio del TOPSEO Podcast "¿Cómo gestionar proyectos SEO?", con nuestro invitado especial Guido Mazzei. En este episodio, descubrimos cómo definir objetivos, manejar la comunicación con el cliente, y mucho más en la gestión de proyectos SEO. Recuerda, en TOPSEO, "compartir es crecer". Únete a nosotros en esta conversación profunda y enriquecedora. Timestamps: 00:00 - Introducción 02:21 - Presentación de Guido Mazzei 04:54 - Definir objetivos en proyectos SEO 08:08 - Manejo de la comunicación con el cliente 10:32 - Contratos de servicios SEO 14:13 - Abordando la capacitación SEO 16:40 - Afrontar cambios de estrategia en SEO 18:48 - Herramientas para la gestión de proyectos y trabajo remoto 26:27 - Consejos para gestionar varios proyectos SEO a la vez 29:57 - El arte de delegar en SEO 36:07 - Comunicación efectiva en reportes y resultados SEO 40:08 - Cambios en la gestión de proyectos con la introducción de la IA 43:05 - Despedida No te pierdas este episodio lleno de consejos prácticos y útiles. ¡Haz clic en el enlace para comenzar tu prueba gratuita de #SEMrush hoy mismo! https://bit.ly/seoenmexico

En Perspectiva
Entrevista María Eugenia Mazzei - ¿Qué cuidados necesita la piel por aumento de salinidad del agua?

En Perspectiva

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2023 9:22


Entrevista María Eugenia Mazzei - ¿Qué cuidados necesita la piel por aumento de salinidad del agua? by En Perspectiva

Campamento Web
Gestionar contenidos a gran escala, linkbuilding y SEO Local, con Guido Mazzei #220

Campamento Web

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2023 37:49


Italian Wine Podcast
Ep. 1424 Philana Bouvier | Masterclass US Wine Market With Juliana Colangelo

Italian Wine Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2023 28:56


Welcome to Episode 1424 on Italian Wine Podcast, today on Masterclass US Wine Market With Juliana Colangelo she will be interviewing Philana Bouvier. More about Philana Bouvier: Philana Bouvier is the President of Demeine Estates where she provides leadership and vision in creating a best-in-class sales and marketing organization. Demeine Estates serves and supports the dynamic and growing portfolio of the Lawrence family and Chief Executive Officer Carlton McCoy Jr.'s owned fine wine estates and import supplier partners. The collection includes Heitz Cellar, Burgess, Stony Hill, Brendel, Ink Grade, Champagne Legras & Haas, Domaine Roc De' L'Abbaye, Mazzei and additional esteemed international producers across France and Italy. You can learn morel by visiting: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philana-bouvier-a5325515/ https://demeineestates.com/ More about Juliana Colangelo: Juliana Colangelo is a Vice President at Colangelo & Partners, the leading wine and spirits communications agency in the U.S. Juliana joined Colangelo & Partners in 2013 with previous experience in events, hospitality, and nonprofit development. During her tenure at C&P, Juliana has led the development of the California office, growing the agency's domestic presence to a dedicated office of 13 people with representation of leading wine companies such as Jackson Family Wines, Far Niente, Charles Krug Winery, Foley Family Wines and more. Juliana has completed her WSET Level 3 and her eMBA in Wine Business with Sonoma State University, allowing her to bring a strategic and sales-oriented approach to communications strategy for the agency. In 2021, Juliana was named one of PR News' Top Women in PR in the “Rising Stars” category. In 2022 Juliana became a Vinitaly International Academy Italian Wine Ambassador. To learn more visit: Instagram: www.instagram.com/julezcolang/ Facebook: www.facebook.com/jules.colangelo/ Twitter: twitter.com/JulezColang LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/juliana-colan…lo-mba-04345539/ Instagram: www.instagram.com/colangelopr/ Facebook: www.facebook.com/ColangeloPR Twitter: twitter.com/ColangeloPR LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/colangel…public-relations Let's keep in touch! Follow us on our social media channels: Instagram @italianwinepodcast Facebook @ItalianWinePodcast Twitter @itawinepodcast Tiktok @MammaJumboShrimp LinkedIn @ItalianWinePodcast If you feel like helping us, donate here www.italianwinepodcast.com/donate-to-show/ Until next time, Cin Cin!

KFRM's
On The Front Porch - Allison Mazzei

KFRM's "On the Front Porch" Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2023 45:51


On The Front Porch - Allison Mazzei [00:00:00] On The Front Porch - Allison Mazzei [00:10:39] Allison Mazzei - On The Front Porch Part Two [00:21:23] Allison Mazzei - On The Front Porch Part Three [00:33:46] Allison Mazzei - On The Front Porch Part FourSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Black Hoodie Alchemy
37: UFOs, Psychedelia & Disinfo Games (feat. Mike Mazzei of Mind Escape)

Black Hoodie Alchemy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2023 100:36


On the show this week, my good friend and fellow researcher Mike Mazzei joins me to discuss both UFOs and ancient history -- but not in the traditional "ancient alien" sense of the topic. Host of the podcast, Mind Escape, it is co-hosted by his cousin Maurice who is currently on hiatus, preparing their new documentary to soon release at the Roswell UFOXPO conference this month, March 10-12th! I will actually have a small guest spot in this documentary, explaining some of the strange things I've seen in the sky while living in Alaska, and there will be a whole roster of accredited scientists and philosophers, including the well-known Dr. Rick Strassman -- the first person to conduct clinical trials with DMT and popularize the monicker "spirit molecule". This documentary, instead of attempting to draw specific conclusions, will instead attempt to investigate and document the psychedelic, Carl-Jungian, dream-like qualities of the UFO experience that the nut-and-bolts mindsets tend to gloss over. This in mind, we take some time to go down the rabbithole of modern Ufology as we know it. We talk about some of the current news with spy-balloons and alleged craft shot down all over, we talk about some of the plot-holes in mainstream Ufology, some of the biases, and some of the underdeveloped angles of investigation -- like the psychedelic angle. That is to say: UFOs are not exclusively tied to the consumption of a psychedelic chemical, but rather, the experiences heavily mimic experiences of psychedelic chemicals. And as the cherry on top, there is of course a very long history of people specifically seeing UFOs on psychedelics in very impactful ways that go a bit beyond the notion of a mere fever dream. Lastly, we attempt to parse through some of the ancient history of psychedelic drugs and the sacramental, religious, mystical uses. What is "soma"? Why do so many people consider it a psychedelic, and could it have been cannabis, an ayahuasca analogue, a mushroom, or perhaps all of the above -- depending on the circumstances? We take a little bit of time to look through the uses of these chemicals and more in different cultures, and we consider what has become of all these traditions in the modern day. Join us! "As Within So Without: from UFOs to DMT" documentary, premiering at the Roswell UFOXPO March 10-12th 2023, including guest appearances from me -- Anthony Tyler, Martin Ferretti (as many of you will know from Black Hoodie Alchemy) and many impressive and accredited doctors and philosophers! Keep an eye out for the release of their documentary right here on their Patreon, and I will update this description as the release happens and continues! Don't forget to support that black hoodie rap and all your favorite independent artists! This week's featured music: The Return - Babylon Warchild (feat. Daddy Rose) Syllable MUX-IP - Hex One Spit the Claw - Doc Hammer Way it Used to Be - Tribesmen x Arkeologists Chances Are - The Liberators --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/blackhoodiealchemy/message

The Kula Ring
A Water Treatment Marketer and Top of the Funnel Content Marketing

The Kula Ring

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 31:26


The connection can't be missed on this one! Funnel, water, see that? Jim Lauria is here to talk about some strategies that have worked well for him and Mazzei around content creation and marketing. Adding value to not only his own company but to Mazzei's partners as well. Jim brings a ton of knowledge and experience on what content looks like done right, and how an AI will never replace the human touch.

Qualitative Conversations
Episode 38: Episode 38. Thinking With Theory: A Conversation with Alecia Y. Jackson and Lisa A. Mazzei

Qualitative Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2023 51:42


SPEAKERSAlecia Jackson, Liza Mazzei, Jessica Van Cleave Jessica Van CleaveHello and welcome to qualitative conversations, a podcast hosted by the qualitative research SIG of AERA, the American Educational Research Association. I'm Jessica Van Cleave, Chair of the Qualitative Research SIG and Associate Professor of Curriculum and Instruction at Gardner Webb University. The Qualitative Conversations podcast doesn't have a regular host. Instead, each episode is organized by our podcast committee. Today I have the pleasure of hosting this episode, in which I interviewed Dr. Lisa Mazzei and Dr. Alecia Jackson about their recently published second edition of Thinking with Theory in Qualitative Research. Lisa Mazzei is Professor of Education Studies and Alumni Faculty Professor of Education at the University of Oregon, where she is also affiliated faculty in the department of philosophy. She is a methodological innovator in post human inquiry, and her work is widely read and cited across disciplines such as education, psychology, sociology, political science, anthropology, business and medicine. She is the author of Inhabited Silence in Qualitative Research from 2007. Alecia Jackson is Professor of Educational Research at Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina, where she is also affiliated faculty in the Gender, Women's and Sexuality Studies program. Dr. Jackson's research interests bring feminist post structural and post human theories of power, knowledge, language, materiality and subjectivity to bear on a range of overlapping topics deconstructions of voice and method conceptual analyses of resistance freedom and agency in girls and women's lives and qualitative analysis and the posts. Her work seeks to animate philosophical frameworks in the production of the new and her current projects are focused on the ontological turn qualitative inquiry and thought. Together they are co-authors of Thinking with Theory in Qualitative Research, first and second editions, and coeditors of Voice in Qualitative Inquiry from 2009. Their forthcoming edited book, Postfoundational Approaches to Qualitative Inquiry, will be published in 2023. Lisa and Alecia, thank you so much for joining us on this episode of Qualitative Conversations. Liza MazzeiDelighted to be here. Thanks for inviting us. Alecia JacksonThank you for the invitation. Jessica Van CleaveAbsolutely. So some of our listeners may not be familiar with your work, or maybe new to your work. So would you be willing to tell us a little bit about yourselves, how you came to write together, and how you came to write Thinking with Theory in Qualitative Research? Liza MazzeiWell, Alecia and I say that we share an academic genealogy. We first met at AERA in 2005, I think I was presenting a paper on some of my voice work. Alecia came to attend the session. And she came and introduced herself at the end of the session. And I had just finished reading an article that she had written about subjectivity with new teachers. And so I was so excited to meet her and I had just been reading her work. And so we sat out in the hallway for about an hour. And we're talking about projects. And we said that we should propose a session for AERA the following year on voice because we were both looking at voice and challenging conventional understandings. And so that was right before I was moving to England, I moved to England in 2006, was attending the British Education Research Association Conference, started chatting with a book editor. And like a good editor, he always says, What's your current project? And so I told him about this idea that Alecia and I had for a session and he said, that sounds fabulous. Can you get a book proposal to me in a month? So I'm at this conference, emailing this woman that I've met in person once saying, can we put a book together, a book proposal, and that was the proposal we wrote for voice and qualitative inquiry. And the reviews were very positive for the book. But people who read the proposal didn't think that we could secure some of the authors that we had said we would put that would contribute. And they didn't know that I had studied with Patti Lather at Ohio State University, Alecia had studied with Bettie St. Pierre at the University of Georgia, and through these feminist networks, we had connections with some scholars who were doing some very interesting work. So that was the that was the beginning of our long and fruitful partnership. Alecia JacksonYeah, when we were working on the voice book, I traveled to Manchester. And so we had some writing time together. So one thing I do want to say is that Lisa and I have, ever since the collaboration began, we've never we've never lived in the same time zone. Is that right? Yeah, that's right. Yeah. Yeah. So I think that's something that, you know, is really unique to the way that we've made things work. But we went to Manchester, we worked on the voice book, and then you came here, and we were working on Thinking with Theory. So we've had a couple of times that we've worked together, but in you know, Lisa has explained kind of the origin story. And then how Thinking with Theory came about is that after the voice book, we got really interested in we both were doing separately, we both were working on philosophically informed inquiry. And it didn't have that name at the time. Nobody was calling it that. Nobody was you know, calling it thinking with theory. It didn't have a name. And but it's what we were doing. And we started because we're reading each other's work and through the voice book, we realized is that, you know, what, what would it be like to, you know, to write something together, that was an alternative to, quote, data analysis. We were both talking about how to teach this way of doing this kind of analytic work and conceptual work. And there were lots of journal articles that people doing this kind of analytic thinking. But there wasn't anything that was out there cohesive, that we could use me, really to us in our teaching, that was kind of the impetus. So we were at the Congress. And we were out to dinner with Philip Mudd, who was our editor for the voice book. And we pitched this idea of taking, you know, one data set, and we will talk about how we don't really use that language anymore in a moment. But we talked to him about how to maybe conceptualize a book where we had one set of data that we looked at, that we analyzed across different theories. And he really loved it. And at that dinner, you know, he said, Yeah, let's put this together and see, see what it's like. Jessica Van CleaveThank you so much. It's really fantastic to sort of trace that process, obviously, briefly from that first meeting, until the beginnings of thinking with theory. So as you began the process of writing, thinking with theory and moving through to publication, what were your hopes for the book at the time? Liza MazzeiI think I don't know, I don't know what our hopes were, I think our hopes were that it would be I mean, we've talked, we talked about our work when we started envisioning a new project as what kind of intervention do we want to make? And I remember extending what Alecia was saying, I remember being at the Congress, and we started talking about wanting something for our teaching and going to the book exhibit and looking at what was what was presented as analysis. And it was all about coding. And so our I think, you know, our initial hope was, well, this, this isn't what this is not representative of the kind of work that we do. This isn't how we teach our students. And so as Alecia said, We wanted something for our own teaching. And maybe I guess the hope was that it would be picked up by others and be useful to them. So Alecia Jacksonyes, I think it was a matter of, of what Lisa said, the intervention, I think, is a really good word. We, as I mentioned, what we did there wasn't a name for what we were doing. And we said, we wanted that we you know, Bettie St. Pierre always says write something that people can cite. And so that was something that, you know, she's always said to, and you've probably heard it too, Jessica, write something that people can cite. And, and, and put something out in the world that people can, you know, can use, and I really have a big part of part of the impetus for both of us, I think was to give this alternative to the field and name it in some way and have it so that, you know, it was it would become something that was recognizable that people could use, and really to take the field into that direction. I think that we, you know, back in the early 2010 to 12 qualitative research was shifting. It was shifting away from, you know, interpretive work and even critical work. And it was just time, it was time to bring it all together and give it a name and give it a place. And there was just so much enthusiasm right away because I think people were really didn't feel like coding was really analysis. So, you know, we had already done some work on that talking, writing about pieces, we're writing about how coding is not analysis and, and I thought this was just a way to give it a place in in the in the in the field Jessica Van CleaveWell, I mean, it's fascinating because as you said, Yes and that advice from Bettie it's definitely something that that I think all of us who have ever worked with her have heard, and it's so true. since y'all have published the first edition of Thinking with Theory, there's been an explosion of all of the you know, the methodologies without methodology, and concept as method and anti-methodology. You know, this sort of thing that you said there was a hunger for at the time. I mean, I think there's no better evidence than how much has proliferated since then. So in the years since its initial publication, Thinking with Theory has become a staple in qualitative inquiry. People are citing it not only in dissertations, but in articles across the field, across publications. Instructors are using your text in their masters and doctoral level courses, Thinking with Theory has really become part of the canon of what qualitative analysis can be and can mean. And one thing also from Bettie, that comes up for me a lot when I think about what work does, especially aside from what your hopes might have initially been, is Alcoff's, quote, to paraphrase, you never know where your work goes and what it does there. So what do you think about where your work has gone? And what it's done there? How it's been taken up and received, since you published? Liza MazzeiDo you want to start Alecia or? No? Um, you know, I think, what do I think? This isn't about I remember the first time I was at AERA decades ago, and I had a piece that had come out in ED Researcher, and I was walking, like, from building to building and there was someone sitting on a bench. And I happened to glance and they were reading my article. And I thought, oh, my gosh, what, what? What a, what a validation, I guess, of one's work to know that someone would take the time to actually pick it up and read it. And so I think that the fact that people are talking about thinking with theory as a methodology is not something that I ever imagined would happen. I think one of the things that I'm most proud of in terms of the work that Alecia and I've done together is that people will say to us at conferences, or students will say to us how pedagogical the work is how, how much it helps them understand. And that was really a primary goal of ours was to, to extend the reach of this way of thinking, so that people would consider a new analytic, if you will. I'm not I don't feel like I'm really answering your question. I don't go ahead, Alecia. Alecia JacksonNo, I think it's, I think that Lisa and I are both very, I don't know, humble people, and we just didn't really write this book in order to, you know, do anything other than, I don't know, I think we kind of wrote it for ourselves, at first, you know, and then because we wanted to do something together. And then I think, I've been most surprised, I guess, at how it's not just in educational research, like when I've had to go through and do my, you know, annual reviews, and, you know, going up for promotion, and all that. And you pull up the, you know, the Google Scholar citations, and it's just surprising to me that all sorts of social science disciplines have picked up this work. It's not just educational research, but it's, you know, people in, in all sorts of disciplines that I never would have imagined. I think there was even some citations from a business journal. And I just thought, wow, you know, so I guess what's been most delightful is that it's crossed all kinds of boundaries, which I believe that's one of our missions in, you know, is reaching into other found, you know, do some do some deterritorialized thing through the book, in terms of qualitative research, but it moving across all these other fields, you know, anthropology, sociology, business, I mean, just, there's just a whole, a whole lot of other disciplines that have taken it up. And just the expansion of that has been really surprising. I would have never thought that the work would go there. But it's really, I think, it's exciting. It's humbling. It's very endearing for people, you know, on social media to, you know, make comments about that. They have it, they've read it. It's, you know, I had a colleague who did a Fulbright in Australia. And she got there and was working with a faculty member. And the first thing they said is, oh, you work with Alecia Jackson, look, I have the book, you know, do you know. And it's just so it's just wonderful that it's just connected us, to so many people. And it's been so useful and so helpful. So. Jessica Van CleaveSo then you get asked to write a second edition of this incredibly impactful book that has gone all of these places and done all of these things. When you were first asked to write that second edition, how do you approach that as a project, especially given how big Thinking with Theory is? Alecia JacksonIt was very difficult. And we've been working on the second edition for a while the pandemic hit us, and it slowed everything down as it did for a lot of people. We changed editors, in in the at somewhere in the middle of all this, but we, we wanted to do something because it will talk a little bit about how the book is different. But in the intervening years after this was published, we began to critique some of the things that we had done in the first edition. And we wanted to update some of the things that we had written in chapter one in particular, the way we were conceptualizing some different aspects of it. And we'll get into that, but the main thing we struggled with was, do we add more theoretical chapters? Do we keep them really, you know, they work? Why change them? Do we want to add? So it took us a while, a couple of years to really think about how we wanted it to look and what we wanted to say that would be different enough, so that people would, you know, find the second edition, you know, an actual extension of what we had done. Something different. So it, it took a while. It was a process, but once we really figured out what we were doing, it flowed pretty well, you know, we were able to really work with it. Quickly. So. Liza MazzeiI mean, yeah, I think, I think initially, when we first started talking about the project, we thought that it would not, it would not involve as much new writing as it did. And when we started even, even the chapters that we that we said, Okay, well, you know, we're pretty solid with the with Derrida, there's not a lot we need to change. But then when we started really getting into it, it's like, oh, everything has to change, because all of our thinking and languaging is different. And as both of you have talked about, you know, I think when the first edition was published, that was about the time when, when Bettie published her first piece on post qualitative inquiry, and then we had special issues on data analysis after coding and so forth. And so everything that was informing our thinking, in addition to the way we were doing our own work had shifted, and, and then what we learned from working with students and the places that, that we were able to be more that we were able to show more well, what we were doing, or what we thought we were doing, because we had been doing it, you know, in the intervening time, we've been teaching it, we've been working with students around these texts in the intervening time. So I think it was it's, it's a completely different text in many ways. Jessica Van CleaveSo that kind of leads in you, you have spoken to this, I think a little bit already with that, that your thinking and your languaging and your processes and your experiences and your inter and intra actions had all shifted since the initial publication, but how did you end up deciding then what to include, what to change ,and what not to include in that second edition? Alecia JacksonThat was a process. I think that emerged from what Lisa was saying about the teaching, you know, using the book and teaching what really kind of confused students, you know, what, what was what were some things that they just couldn't, you know, make the turn into, because it was some languaging. Also related to where the book has gone. What it's done is we have done lots of workshops, using this text at the Congress in particular, but also individually, we've gone to institutions and have done workshops together and individually. And we just started to notice there were some some languaging, that that didn't really quite represent what we really wanted to do. And part of that was if we wanted to really make a break, we really wanted to escape conventional qualitative inquiry and go on this line of flight, we would need to really, really change how we talked about it. So the second edition, we dropped data altogether, it's not even in the title anymore. We don't use that word anywhere in in the book, and we call it instead, we came up with a concept, you know, so we were very much into this work is about concept creation, and, and so we came up with performative accounts. And that's how we talk about the so called stories that are that are part of the part of the plugging in. So performative accounts helps us to say something differently about, about memory, about language about subjectivity, what words do, what stories do and rather than representing reality or experience that they're, that these are actually ontological stories and the process of plugging in is a performative and so we use that language in Butler's chapter. And we just decided to pick it up and use it in the intro to make well actually, in the preface, we, we describe that shift from data to performative accounts, and then we had to rewrite the whole, you know, all of the middle chapters because data was everywhere. And really reconceptualize not just replace the word throughout, but really rewrite what was going on in plugging in if we call this entire process performative. So that was that was one. Lisa, if you want to talk about a couple of the others. Liza MazzeiYeah, I think we do a much better job in this edition talking about the questions and the emergence of the questions. That was also a thing that I think, through workshops and teachings that students were, how do I, you know, how do I do this? And so so an example when I sit on dissertation committees and students would, you know, in their proposal say, well, this is my analytic question. Well, now we call them becoming questions, but I would, but then it's like, no, you're you're missing the point. Because you can't identify that question up front, because you don't know what's going to emerge until you are actually immersed in the texts, both the conceptual philosophical texts and the research texts. So I think we did, we spent a lot of time talking about how to explain the process and the way that we sort of came to the process, or the process came to us. I think, another thing and Alecia picked up on the, the nature, the ontological nature of this work that, particularly in the last chapter, we we talk about the ontological nature of writing, and we talk about the way in which the very act of doing is producing these new ontological formations. And so that, that that language, I think, is also present throughout and it's, it's showing how we're shifting in our, in our present work both individually and together. Alecia JacksonYes, a couple of other new changes and additions, I think, we do a better job in the second edition addressing thought and thinking. In the first edition, we were really focused on theory and I think in that first chapter, really justifying the use of theory and the importance and also in the handbook chapter four. We, we really focused on that and and in, in this second edition, we do a lot with thought and the movement of thought we rely a lot on Erin Manning's work. And in her collaboration with Massumi, and in writing about thinking and thought and in the ontology of that so that's some something that's, that's new. The Barad chapter is brand new, practically, of in the first edition, when it came out in 2000. When we were writing in 2010 and 11 new you know, Barad's book was very that's what everyone was reading. And everyone was there a lot of conference presentations on you know, using Barad, and we had to do it in the first edition, what we thought was some background work on new materialism some historical kind of description and tracing of how the emergence of this particular theory into the qualitative profession, but when we read it, when we read, we read it in terms of the revisions were like, we don't really need this background anymore ever. It's it's been around now for 10 years. People are very familiar with them. And it's new materialism and Barad and, and intra-action. And so we felt like we could do, you know, take a lot of that conversation out around some of the other feminists who were working on new materialism. So the Barad chapter is very much more focused on just Barad and intra-action, and we bring in power and we move the Barad chapter to follow Butler and Foucault that made it a little bit more sense to us, since we also added a section on post human performativity, it flows better, and we added a section on power in Barad. So both of those, the post human performativity, and the materialization of power are nice sections in Barad that flow from Foucault and Butler. So we felt like those three chapters just work together better. And then we moved Deleuze and added Guattari to the end. Liza MazzeiSo and just a note on the the flow. I'm I'm teaching a course this term and the students one of our texts is thinking with theory. And so last night, we started looking at we introduced her concepts last week. And so we actually took one of the performative accounts in class last night, and looked at the way it was talked about differently with Butler's concept of performativity. And then looking at the same account with post humanist performativity. And it really, it was a fantastic discussion, and the connection was much more clear for students. Alecia JacksonSo I think it's, we've just really worked to connect, you know, really pull through the coming questions, you know, game, we don't call them analytic questions. And we really make as obvious as we can the process of the emergence of those questions, how plugging in works, and just trying to be a lot more pedagogical, with with the process. Jessica Van CleaveSo I feel like you've already discussed this, and in your response to the last question, but I didn't know if there was anything else that you wanted to add in terms of thinking with theory as a as a concept or as a text. How, how would you say it has shifted for you both over the last decade? Liza MazzeiWell, I think maybe I think we did talk about this, but but the emphasis on thought, the emphasis on newness. One of the things we talked about, I think in the preface of the second edition is how in the first edition, and we've talked about this in other ways that we were, we were still in the mode of of writing against or, or deconstructing some of the, the interpretivist hooks, if you will. And we started from that place still with this addition. And then at one point, we both said, we don't need to do this anymore, we need to push into this different territory. And so I think that's one of the that was a very important but also very freeing moment, because it's like we can, we can let go of some of this language. And we had fabulous support with our editors, partly because I think of the success of the first edition. And so then we were able to say, this is what we're going to do and you know, dropping things like the starting with method, which we did in the first book. We don't we don't do that anymore. So that we I think we felt a lot more confident in our in the acceptance of us saying this is this is how the work is now and we're not going to pretend that it we're not going to try to fit it into another way of making itself intelligible. Jessica Van CleaveSo one of the one of the other things that has changed a lot in the last 10 years is the material discursive conditions of the world. So in what way does do those shifts mean that we should or need to, or might, think with theory differently or think with different theory or what? How do y'all think about those kinds of things? Liza MazzeiI'll start and then Alecia. I mean, one of the things that we do in this edition is we, we deal with the idea of the collective. Deleuze and Guattari, this idea of collective enunciation, we talk about memory in a very different way. I think even the way that we mobilize Barad's concepts is an attention to the the formation of subjectivity and and the way things are, the way not talking about agency as some even though we worked against humanist agency in the first book, it's not even attributing agency to individuals and things and talking about agentic capacities. And so I think it's a it's a reconceptualization, and I've had some students in recent years really do some very interesting work, I think that, you know, moving and thinking very differently. So that's a that's a beginning answer to that question. Alecia JacksonUm, I'm very excited about the way in which we talk about or write about power in in the new Barad chapter in terms of the materiality of power, I think it's a very different way of conceptualizing it. So that that's something that I think, that we've, that we paid really close attention to. I think that that's a concept that, that once you plug it into materiality, you know, because it's history is really connected to knowledge. You know, Foucault's famous couplet or doublet, the power knowledge workings, and, you know, when we get into the materialization of power in the Barad chapter, I think it just really opens up, you know, a whole conversation and I think it's got, we have a lot to say about about that, in terms of, like Lisa was mentioning the collective. And how that that is working, were much more, I think, smarter about assemblage in the second edition, I think that has some some implications for materiality, language, subjectivity, all of that. So we've got some real, I think, shifts in, in how we're bringing those, those theories in, not only in the Barad chapter, but also when in chapters one and eight. When we're talking about thinking, we talk, we, you know, we are using some of the material discursive theories around how thought is, is material, how thinking is, is material and that that's Barad, you know, we, we quote her on that, and then, and write about what that what that looks like. So I think those theories also allowed us to make the shift away from epistemology to ontology. You know, this book is not a knowledge project. It's not representation. So we, you know, we really relied on those theories to make arguments for how research is creation, it is creation. So when we're in this, this ontology, these theories that you've mentioned, Jessica, we, we can't talk about research as knowledge production. Really, we're in a, you know, an ontology where research is helping us to imagine the worlds that we want to live in. So that's what we talk about a lot in my classes is, so what's the what's the use? You know, why are we doing this? If we're not, you know, we know so much already. Like, why do we want to keep asking the same questions. I was somewhere one time, I don't remember maybe getting my hair cut, I don't know. And I was talking to someone about what I do. And I was in that that semester, in particular, I was teaching a women's studies course and feminist theory was a graduate feminist theory course. And she said, Oh, that sounds so, so cool. And so awesome. And I'll say, Well, it's kind of depressing, because for 10 years, we've been talking about the same things, you know, in this feminist theories class, and, and nothing is really different. So I've started thinking about that and talking with doctoral students in my research courses saying, Well, what if research was became something completely different, you know, its use its purpose. And I think what we're doing in this book, is we're saying that we're making worlds, when we think with theory, we're creating something new, we're creating openings for possibilities that have been unthought. So and I see students doing this in their dissertations now. So they're picking up, you know, their theories, you know, we just went to a defense last week of a student, I was chairing a dissertation for and she's, she has a son who has autism. And so she basically did a power knowledge reading of all the, the materials of autism, all the the documentation, the special ed, you know, just everything that the path to diagnosis is what she called it and, and just recreated an entirely different world. Through that work, you know, the outcome of what she did the she got to the end and, and she said, this is this is what we need to do to the DSM to make this entire framework less deficit oriented, and less damage centered. So she recreates she did her critique, you know, her thinking her thinking with, but what came from that was her own creation, you know, a creation of a different concept, you know, how do we redefine this? How do we, you know, how do we talk about it differently? Y'all know, Heather Cox Richardson, that the historian on Facebook has been doing her letters, and posting a lot. And as a historian, she said something recently that that I've been using in my class, and she said, the way that we make change is that we have to change the way that we that people think about something. And the only way we can change the way people think about something is to change the way that we talk about it. That's it from a historian's perspective, that's, that's how change happens. And so it is about language, but it's also about worlding. And I think that, with this, these new theories and the material discursive turn and attending to ontology, in qualitative work, we can begin to create the worlds through the words that we use, changing the way that we talk about it, changing the way that people think about it, and then the doing. So I think that this book, in particular makes those connections between thinking and doing creation, experimentation, and really pushes that, again, what we talked about this in the chapter eight, what we do in research is unleash becomings. And that still is so I can read chapter eight and see what we have to say about unleashing becomings. But, but that's what I I envision, I would like to see research moving in that direction. I think that that's what those these theories, these post foundational theories enable us to do. And students are doing it like, I see them taking risks in ways that are very exciting. Liza MazzeiThey recognize that the descriptive project is not is not moving us. I mean, we talked about that in class last night. Okay, we know we know what's happening. So how do we what are the mechanisms for, for creating these new worlds that Alecia is talking about? Jessica Van CleaveSo that was really exciting, because I was hoping you all would have something fabulous and, and generative and opening up to say, in relation to that, and I wildly underestimated what might happen. So I really appreciate that. That was, that was really helpful. I'm sure the, the audience is going to get a lot out of that. And I think, as I go back to the second edition of Thinking with Theory, I will now be reading it differently because of hearing the ways that you all frame it and how it's now being taken up and seeing where it goes with your students and in relation to the current projects that you have going on. So thank you for that. Um, so I'm gonna shift a little bit, if you don't mind to talk about the writing process. And you said that you have shifted and talked about writing as an ontological project as well. So what does that look like in terms of your writing partnership or your coauthorship? Either for this book, obviously, you've published a lot together and separately, so what does coauthorship look like and how has that shifted for you over the years? Liza MazzeiI'm not sure it has shifted. I think that we're I think we're very appreciative of the generative nature of our collaborations together. And we often when we have not worked together on a project before, and we're working on something separately, it's like, oh, we miss we miss this. Because it does, there is a, there is an energy. And a, I don't even know how to talk about it the way in which I think we've established a great deal of trust in one another. And so it's not. So there's not maybe a hesitation that there might have been at the beginning. But it's, I can't imagine not having projects to work on together. And we keep coming, we keep dreaming up new ones. Alecia JacksonIt feels often like it just a zigzag, you know, we're just kind of in it, we're in the middle of something. Sparks fly, and Lisa will write a word. And it'll remind me, I can you know, she'll she'll write a word that will just spark an idea. And then I can develop a paragraph from that, vice versa. We're not sensitive to, we don't hang on to our we're not, you know, if I write something, I'm not hanging on to it. And I think how many times have I said in the margin? I'm not wedded to this, or this is terrible. Just rewrite it? Or, you know, I think that we just have a real? I don't know, we see it, we look at it as as equals we don't, you know, we take turns on lead. You know, who's first? Who's second, but don't really track that. I mean, I couldn't even tell you, like, who's first, who's second on however many. It's very 50 50, I think, you know, on both of our leaders, we have that written very clearly that, that it's it's 50 50. And that way, it's in these collaborations we've done in the last decade with me on the East Coast, and Lisa on the West Coast, you know, we've had, we've joked a little while I'll get up and maybe work first, you know, and then and then, you know, Lisa will sometimes say, Oh, I can't wait to go in and see, you know, like what you've done and, and then I'll come back in the afternoon to kind of see, so it always feels like a gift. You know, when I go into the document, I there's never a time where I'm not a little bit excited to see what's developed and what's what's being made. Because it isn't an act of creation. And you know, we're not, but we're just you know, we're reading the same things. You know, it's just, it's, it's a collaboration in every sense of the word, you know, from reading the writing to, you know, the publishing, it's just yeah, it's, you know, we're respectful of when there's other things going on, you know, travel or family stuff. And, you know, it's just, yeah, it's just easy. Jessica Van CleaveWould that we all could have such lovely, collaborative relationships that are just easy. That's wonderful and of course, we all get to be the beneficiaries of that easy work for you. Not that it's easy, but um, so is there anything else that you want to share with the qualitative conversations audience either about thinking with theories, specifically, or qualitative research broadly or anything else that comes to mind? Liza MazzeiThis is not my this is not my original thought. This is something that you know, Bettie St. Pierre says all the time, but that I say to students, if you if you want, I mean, two things, I guess, you get into the middle of a project and you think that you want to think with this particular concept? Well start thinking with it. But if it's not doing the work that you want it to do, then try something else. But you have to be willing to spend the time to immerse yourself in the reading and the study in order to be able to, to do the work. I mean, Alecia, and I talked about with the first edition, people say, Well, how did you choose these theories? Well, some of them were ones that we had, because we had worked with them in pre, you know, with some of our other work. But then we as we started thinking, for example, with Barad, it was okay if we're going to do this, we need to really spend some time with it to see if it if it is doing something for us. And if it's not, then we need to find something else. So that's, I mean, we we talked about that a little bit in the book, but I think it's just really emphasizing that it's, it's it's not easy work, but it's such exciting and generative work. And I think once the students start, start encountering it then it's hard for them to imagine not doing their work in this way. Alecia JacksonYeah, I think that what, what Lisa just said reminds me of how I talk about theory is that it just finds you, you know, that's something I say, in every class, we're, you know, we're, we have two theory classes that we offer in our doctoral program. We just call it theory one, theory two, and it's just, it's pretty linear. You know, it starts with positivism. And then just, by the time we get to the end of theory two, we're in post humanism. So it's, you know, just going through those frameworks, and and there were some times students just nothing really speaks to them. And so we just say, you know, just keep reading, and something, you know, that language. You know, I tell the story of how, when I first read Foucault, it was like, wow, this is language that I've always sensed, and felt that I couldn't articulate, I didn't know what I needed to say. And then here's somebody who's saying it for me. And then all I had to do is plug it into, you know, what I was encountering in the world. And, and that helped me to think differently about it and opened up to the end thought so, you know, a lot of what I like to say to students is, you know, this, this work is the pursuit of the unthought it is the pursuit of what we, you know, can't imagine yet, the not yet. We were back to the movement between the first and second edition. And, and, you know, Jessica, you read a chapter for us on Manning, because we thought we need to add a new theorist, you know, and we'd both been reading a lot of affect and gone with the affect conference. And, and we thought that that was something that was missing from the book. And so we thought, well, let's just add a Manning chapter. And it didn't, it didn't fit well. It didn't, it didn't, it didn't, it wasn't working the way that we wanted it to work. But Manning was working on us, but we couldn't figure out what was going on. So we just kept wrestling with it. And and, you know, you read it, and we got great feedback from you. And it made us really ask some questions about what what is, what are we doing? And how are we putting this to work? And what happened is, I remember we were going back and forth on it. And, and I think I texted you, Lisa, or sent you an email, and I said, I think we're using Manning, Manning methodologically like as a technique. And so we're like, whoa, that's exactly what's going on. It's not that we need to plug Manning into the performative accounts, we need to plug it into writing and thinking and doing. And so chapter eight is where Manning shows up and affect because we do a lot with pre individual sensing, and how that is part of of a thought. That thought is not just cognitive, but it's this pre individual syncing of something coming into being of the coming that's emerging. So we just stayed with Manning, but it it shifted and helped us to say something about writing and thinking and ontology that we could never have planned for. So the last thing, yeah, I'll just say is that you just don't know where you'll end up. And all of this is emergent, contingent, relational, all of those things. So just stay, as Donna Haraway says, just stay with the trouble and you know, something will will come, Donna Haraway says something, something always happens, and it always will. So I think that that's part of what the message is in in the the second edition. Jessica Van CleaveWell, I want to thank you both so much for your time today. This has been a delightful conversation for me, and I know our QR SIG listeners are really going to appreciate your, your descriptions of the text, as well as the connections that that you are making and thinking about, both in their roles with students and in their roles as instructors as well as methodologists. So thank you both so much for your time this afternoon. Liza MazzeiThank you, Jessica. And thanks for prompting us to think more about our own process. Alecia JacksonYeah, it's very nice to, to articulate it and, and be able to really appreciate, you know, what, what we've done, I don't think I really sat and thought about the, you know, I mean, I know what the differences are between first and second edition, that really going back on this journey in time and space has been a real treat. So thank you. Jessica Van CleaveThank you. Thank you. It's been a gift this afternoon.

Mentalidade Empreendedora Podcast com Pedro Quintanilha
Como transformar uma dívida em sucesso, a história inspiradora de Rafaella Mazzei | PodCast RR21K

Mentalidade Empreendedora Podcast com Pedro Quintanilha

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2023 46:59


No episódio de hoje vamos conhecer a história da Rafaella Mazzei, uma farmacêutica por formação, que não se encaixou no modelo CLT e resolveu ser responsável por seu próprios resultados empreendendo. Na faculdade, para ajudar com as despesas, Rafa teve seu primeiro contato com vendas. Depois de formada, viu que apesar dos 6 anos na faculdade, não era aquilo que ela queria pra sua carreira. Nesse bate papo, ela compartilha como foi começar com uma dívida de 12 mil reais, até se tornar especialista em vendas, liderança e comportamento humano. Em apenas 5 meses no RR, a Rafa já estruturou sua esteira de produtos, remodelou seu processo de vendas e segue avançando para alcançar o lugar de MESTRE DA RECORRÊNCIA.

The Great Trials Podcast
Anthony Elman & Frederick Joseph | Jefferson v. Mazzei | $1,000,000 verdict

The Great Trials Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 73:37


This week Steve and Yvonne interview Anthony Elman & Frederick Joseph of Elman Joseph Law Group, LLC (https://www.elmanlaw.com/).    Remember to rate and review GTP in iTunes: Click Here to Rate and Review   View/Download Trial Documents   Guest Bios: Anthony Ellman Anthony (Tony) Elman is the Lead Trial Attorney of the Elman Joseph Law Group, LLC. He has been named a "Super Lawyer" by Thomson Reuters each year from 2016-2022. This "Super Lawyer" designation is granted to no more than 5% of lawyers based upon 12 indicators of both professional achievement as well as peer recognition. Anthony Elman was born in Chicago, Illinois on October 22, 1966. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1988 from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, went on to earn his J.D. degree in 1991 from Tulane Law School in New Orleans, Louisiana, and earned his Master of Law degree (L.L.M.) in health care law in 1994 from the DePaul Law School/Health Law Institute in Chicago, Illinois. He was admitted to the State of Illinois Bar and the General and Trial Bar of the United States District Court of North Eastern Illinois in 1992. Read the Full Bio Here   Frederick Joseph Frederick is a partner and trial lawyer for the Elman Joseph Law Group, LLC.  He was named to the 2021 & 2022 "Rising Stars" group of lawyers by Thomson Reuters as part of their "Super Lawyers" awards.  This "Rising Stars" designation is for those under 40 years old or who have been practicing law for 10 years or less and is granted to the Top 2.5% of lawyers.  The designation is based upon 12 indicators encompassing both professional achievement and peer review. The Elman Joseph Law Group concentrates on Illinois personal injury lawsuits involving car, truck, SUV, motorcycle, bicycle, and pedestrian accident injuries. The firm also handles cases involving premises liability injury cases (including "slip & fall" accidents), workplace accidents, injuries and accidents that occur in nursing homes, and other situations where injury or death has resulted due to the negligence or intentional actions of another person. Frederick prides himself on his success rate at arbitration and at trial. Like other lawyers at the Elman Joseph Law Group, LLC, he is unwilling to just "settle" cases by accepting inappropriate offers from the insurance companies. Among his accomplishments are the results he achieved in two Cook County car accident cases. Mr. Joseph has obtained the highest jury verdict awards in two separate Cook County municipal division courtrooms in 2018. Both verdicts are more than double the amount of the next highest verdict in their respective courtrooms. In one car accident court trial, the verdict was 12 times the final offer from the defense attorney; in the other lawsuit, the verdict was over 5 times the final offer from the defense attorney. Another example of Mr. Joseph's trial capabilities took place recently in Cook County. The plaintiff (a public school teacher) was struck after the defendant ran a red light and collided with her vehicle. The insurance company wanted to settle the case for less than the plaintiff's medical bills, and award her nothing for her pain and suffering. Mr. Joseph, unwilling to settle for that amount, took the case to trial. After closing arguments, the jury returned a verdict for his client for over four times what the insurance company was offering to settle the case. He graduated from the Purchase College Conservatory of Music, and he continued his graduate studies at Boston University. His J.D. degree is from the Loyola University Chicago School of Law. During law school, he was a member of the Dean's List, participated on the ABA Mock Trial Team, and spent two years clerking in the litigation/product liability group for a prestigious national corporate defense firm. Read Full Bio   Show Sponsors: Legal Technology Services - LegalTechService.com Digital Law Marketing - DigitalLawMarketing.com Harris Lowry Manton LLP - hlmlawfirm.com   Free Resources: Stages Of A Jury Trial - Part 1 Stages Of A Jury Trial - Part 2

The Divorce and Beyond Podcast with Susan Guthrie, Esq.
Conscious Coupling: Are Pre-Nups the Secret to a Happy Marriage? with Leading Attorney, Monica Mazzei on Divorce & Beyond #275

The Divorce and Beyond Podcast with Susan Guthrie, Esq.

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2022 46:28


Today on The Divorce & Beyond podcast, host Susan Guthrie, Esq. welcomes leading attorney Monica Mazzei! Together they explore how pre-nuptial agreements can help partners prepare for their marriage and beyond.  In this episode, Susan Guthrie and her guest, Monica Mazzei focus not on divorce, but instead on marriage and partnerships. They encourage you to think about how a pre-martial agreement can be a collaboration and bring you together, rather than used as a plan for what happens if you part.  Monica Mazzei is a Certified Family Law Specialist representing clients in the Bay Area, with a concentration in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, as well as Los Angeles. She represents high-net-worth clients throughout the litigation process and in mediation. Topics and Golden Nuggets include:  Conscious coupling is very different from conscious uncoupling Why the stigma around having a pre-marital agreement is waning  Monica shares insights on the ideal time to start the conversation about a prenup What happens during pre-marital agreement planning  “Nobody wants to talk about money, divorce, or death. But these are the things you need to talk about.” Prenups should be a collaborative and transparent process, and agreements should be balanced and fair In the event of a divorce, prenups lead to less cost, less time, and less stress because you already worked through these issues “This is your opportunity to ask for what you want while you still like each other. Try doing this ten years from now when you can't stand each other, it's a lot harder.” About this week's special guest: Monica Mazzei Monica Mazzei is a Certified Family Law Specialist representing clients in the Bay Area, with a concentration in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, as well as Los Angeles. She represents high-net-worth clients throughout the litigation process and in mediation. Monica has been named a California Super Lawyer from 2015-2019 and has been recognized in the international Chambers High Net Worth 2017-2019 guide for Family/Matrimonial Law. Monica specializes in dissolution actions involving complicated valuation and financial matters, complex community property and support issues, including international issues, and dissolutions involving hedge funds, private equity, venture capital, and privately held businesses. Monica drafts and negotiates cohabitation agreements, and pre-marital and post-marital agreements for her clients. Monica also mediates pre-marital agreements. As a mediator, Monica helps to identify the thoughts and concerns of both parties in a non-confrontational setting. Mediation helps clients discuss difficult topics which allow Monica to create a financial structure that works for both parties. Monica takes a modern approach to the practice of family law – addressing various needs for her clients related and unrelated to their family law cases. Monica has relationships with top professionals in the Bay Area such as forensic accountants, mental health professionals, real estate agents, financial advisors, and business valuation experts. She also works closely with estate planning attorneys to come up with creative solutions for her clients and ensure their agreements reflect their current objectives. Monica is a frequent lecturer and speaker on family law matters and a staunch advocate against domestic abuse in her pro bono work. Monica Mazzei - Sideman Bancroft, LLP: https://www.sideman.com/professionals/monica-mazzei/ Monica on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/monica-mazzei-5029432/ Email Monica: mmazzei@sideman.com Mentioned in this episode: Audible: Did you know that you can now listen to The Divorce & Beyond podcast on your favorite audiobook platform, Audible?  If you are like me and love your audiobooks along with your podcasts, this is a great time to check out Audible memberships – they have two levels:  Audible Plus and Audible Premium Plus  You can get a free trial of Audible Plus and if you decide to subscribe to Audible Premium Plus you will also get up to two free audiobooks!    Check it out today and it makes a great gift too: Audible Gift Memberships  THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSOR:  SOBERLINK Soberlink has teamed up with divorce and family law experts to bring you the information you didn't know that can provide peace of mind during the holidays. For those of you who still haven't heard about Soberlink, it is the solution for you if you are going through a divorce and custody case involving alcohol. Whether you are falsely accused of alcohol use or are concerned about your child's safety because of your other parents' alcohol use, Soberlink can help. Soberlink works hard to keep children safe. Offering a remote alcohol monitoring system that is the gold standard because of its technology. It includes a high-tech breathalyzer device with facial recognition that allows you to receive real-time updates from monitored co-parents anytime, anywhere allowing for swift intervention for improved child safety.  They have helped hundreds of thousands of people document proof of sobriety in real-time for peace of mind in child custody cases.  Don't miss out on Soberlink's Free Guide for the upcoming Holiday Season. Request your free guide today at www.soberlink.com/susan ********************************************************************* SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES ARE AVAILABLE!  https://divorcebeyond.com/Sponsorship-Info ******************************************************************* MEET OUR CREATOR AND HOST: SUSAN GUTHRIE®, ESQ., the creator and host of The Divorce and Beyond® Podcast, is nationally recognized as one of the top family law and divorce mediation attorneys in the country.  Susan is the Vice Chair of the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolution and is a sought-after keynote speaker, business and practice consultant, coach and trainer. You can find out more about Susan and her services here:  https://neon.page/susanguthrie Internationally renowned as one of the leading experts in online mediation, Susan created her Learn to Mediate Online® program and has trained more than 25,000 professionals in how to transition their practice online.  Susan recently partnered with legal and mediation legend, Forrest "Woody" Mosten to create the Mosten Guthrie Academy which provides gold-standard, fully online training for mediation and collaborative professionals at all stages of their careers.   Follow Susan Guthrie and THE DIVORCE AND BEYOND PODCAST on social media for updates and inside tips and information: Susan on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/susaneguthrie/ Susan on Instagram @susanguthrieesq ********************************************************************* We'd really appreciate it if you would give us a 5 Star Rating and tell us what you like about the show in a review - your feedback really matters to us!  You can get in touch with Susan at divorceandbeyondpod@gmail.com.  Don't forget to visit the webpage www.divorceandbeyondpod.com and sign up for the free NEWSLETTER to receive a special welcome video from Susan and more!! ********************************************************************* DISCLAIMER:  THE COMMENTARY AND OPINIONS AVAILABLE ON THIS PODCAST ARE FOR INFORMATIONAL AND ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES ONLY AND NOT FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROVIDING LEGAL ADVICE.  YOU SHOULD CONTACT AN ATTORNEY IN YOUR STATE TO OBTAIN LEGAL ADVICE WITH RESPECT TO ANY PARTICULAR ISSUE OR PROBLEM.

Surviving Outside Sales
The keys to sales fundamentals w/ Rick Mazzei | SOS Ep. 153

Surviving Outside Sales

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2022 53:00


Rick Mazzei knows sales.He has led massive sales operations and wants to help create great sales programs with the next generation of sales companies. He knows how to build a well-rounded sales process and it starts and ends with the fundamentals.To reach out and connect with Rick, check out his LinkedIn:Rick MazzeiIf you want to have a conversation about:- Scheduling a strategy call for your next move- Help building your business or territory- Starting your own sales podcast.Reach out to me:mike@survivingoutsidesales.comMicrophone link- Amazon Basics: https://amzn.to/3fpizi1To start your own podcast and host on Buzzsprout, click link below to get going:https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=1818120To connect with the show: Follow, Subscribe, like, 5 stars & DownloadConnect with Mike:Mike@survivingoutsidesales.comLinkedIn: Mike O'Kelly | LinkedInIG: Mike_OKellyLinktree: Mike O'KellySponsored By:Rithm AI-Website: GetRithm.comProspecting,Targeting&Routing,SimplifiedIt's time to Optimize. Not all calls are equal, Rithm puts the focus on the “right” keys to success.Go checkout & subscribe to the following YouTube channels & Websites:Connect with Surviving Outside Sales-YouTube: Surviving Outside Sales - YouTubeWebsite: SurvivingOutsideSales.comIG: SurvivingOutsideSales

Italian Wine Podcast
Ep. 1160 Francesco Mazzei | Wine, Food & Travel With Marc Millon

Italian Wine Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2022 24:50


Welcome to Episode 1160 in which Marc Millon interviews Francesco Mazzei of Castello di Foneterutoli in this installment of Wine, Food & Travel with Marc Millon on the Italian Wine Podcast. More about today's winery: The Mazzei family have been leaders in Chianti Classico since the winery was established in 1435. The family has resided at Castello di Fonterutoli, the home of their famous wines, for 25 generations. Today the winery is run by brothers Francesco and Filippo Mazzei, as well as Filippo's son Giovanni. Their global history stretches back to Ser Lapo Mazzei, who authored the first document mentioning “Chianti wine.” Marchesi Mazzei, the wine brand of the family, has continued to grow and modernize, focusing on innovation and sustainability and acquiring estates in other regions of Italy, while still respecting and building upon the history of the region and the family. To learn more: www.castellodifonterutoli.com More about the host Marc Millon: Marc Millon, VIA Italian Wine Ambassador 2021, has been travelling, eating, drinking, learning and writing about wine, food and travel for nearly 40 years. Born in Mexico, with a mother from Hawaii via Korea and an anthropologist father from New York via Paris, he was weaned on exotic and delicious foods. Marc and his photographer wife Kim are the authors of 14 books including a pioneering series of illustrated wine-food-travel books: The Wine Roads of Europe, The Wine Roads of France, The Wine Roads of Italy (Premio Barbi Colombini), and The Wine Roads of Spain. Other titles include The Wine and Food of Europe, The Food Lovers' Companion Italy, The Food Lovers' Companion France, Wine, a global history. Marc regularly lectures and hosts gastronomic cultural tours to Italy and France with Martin Randall Travel, the UK's leading cultural travel specialist. He is soon to begin a regular series on Italian Wine Podcast, ‘Wine, food and travel with Marc Millon'. When not on the road Marc lives on the River Exe in Devon, England To learn more visit: quaypress.uk/ marcmillon.co.uk vino.co.uk quaypress.com LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/marc-millon-50868624 Twitter: @Marc_Millon Let's keep in touch! Follow us on our social media channels: Instagram @italianwinepodcast Facebook @ItalianWinePodcast Twitter @itawinepodcast Tiktok @MammaJumboShrimp LinkedIn @ItalianWinePodcast If you feel like helping us, donate here www.italianwinepodcast.com/donate-to-show/ Until next time, Cin Cin!

Flow Games
WILKEN MAZZEI (TYR) e BRUNO CASEMIRO (HEIMDALL) - Flow Games #30

Flow Games

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2022 139:06


Wilken Mazzei, dublador responsável pela voz do Tyr e Bruno Casemiro, dublador responsável pela voz do Heimdall, participam de mais um papo sobre o novo God of War Ragnarok!Vai perder mais uma conversa incrível na semana especial de God of War? Vem conferir!

Money Tales
Do What You Enjoy, with Monica Mazzei

Money Tales

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2022 30:11


In this episode of Money Tales, our guest is Monica Mazzei. When she was a teenager enrolled at a private high school, Monica's parents told her that she'd have to be financially self-sufficient after graduation. This meant Monica was on her own to pay for the formal education needed to achieve her dream of becoming an attorney. Monica tells us that financing college with loans makes you look at your education a little bit differently. She knew she was making investment in herself and realized that she couldn't afford for it to be a bad investment. Monica Mazzei is a Certified Family Law Specialist representing clients in the Bay Area, with a concentration in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, as well as Los Angeles. She represents high net worth clients throughout the divorce process and in mediation. Monica has been named a California Super Lawyer from 2015-2019 and has been recognized in the international Chambers High Net Worth 2017-2019 guide for Family/Matrimonial Law. Monica specializes in dissolution actions involving complicated valuation and financial matters, and complex community property and support issues, including international issues, dissolutions involving hedge funds, private equity, venture capital and privately held businesses. Monica drafts and negotiates cohabitation agreements, pre-marital and post-marital agreements for her clients. Monica also mediates pre-marital agreements. As a mediator, Monica helps to identify the thoughts and concerns of both parties in a non-confrontational setting. Mediation helps clients discuss difficult topics which allows Monica to create a financial structure that works for both parties. Monica takes a modern approach to the practice of family law – addressing various needs for her clients related and unrelated to their family law case. Monica has relationships with top professionals in the Bay Area such as forensic accountants, mental health professionals, real estate agents, financial advisors and business valuation experts.  She also works closely with estate planning attorneys to come up with creative solutions for her clients and ensure their agreements reflects their current objectives. Monica is a frequent lecturer and speaker on family law matters and a staunch advocate against domestic abuse in her pro bono work. See all episodes >

Money Tales
Do What You Enjoy, with Monica Mazzei

Money Tales

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2022 30:11


In this episode of Money Tales, our guest is Monica Mazzei. When she was a teenager enrolled at a private high school, Monica's parents told her that she'd have to be financially self-sufficient after graduation. This meant Monica was on her own to pay for the formal education needed to achieve her dream of becoming an attorney. Monica tells us that financing college with loans makes you look at your education a little bit differently. She knew she was making investment in herself and realized that she couldn't afford for it to be a bad investment.Monica Mazzei is a Certified Family Law Specialist representing clients in the Bay Area, with a concentration in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, as well as Los Angeles. She represents high net worth clients throughout the divorce process and in mediation. Monica has been named a California Super Lawyer from 2015-2019 and has been recognized in the international Chambers High Net Worth 2017-2019 guide for Family/Matrimonial Law.Monica specializes in dissolution actions involving complicated valuation and financial matters, and complex community property and support issues, including international issues, dissolutions involving hedge funds, private equity, venture capital and privately held businesses.Monica drafts and negotiates cohabitation agreements, pre-marital and post-marital agreements for her clients.Monica also mediates pre-marital agreements. As a mediator, Monica helps to identify the thoughts and concerns of both parties in a non-confrontational setting. Mediation helps clients discuss difficult topics which allows Monica to create a financial structure that works for both parties.Monica takes a modern approach to the practice of family law – addressing various needs for her clients related and unrelated to their family law case. Monica has relationships with top professionals in the Bay Area such as forensic accountants, mental health professionals, real estate agents, financial advisors and business valuation experts.  She also works closely with estate planning attorneys to come up with creative solutions for her clients and ensure their agreements reflects their current objectives.Monica is a frequent lecturer and speaker on family law matters and a staunch advocate against domestic abuse in her pro bono work.Learn more about Money Tale$ > Subscribe to the podcast Recent episodes See all episodes > Form CRS Form ADV Terms of Use Privacy Rights and Policies

Champagne Problems
Modern Recovery & Treatment with Dr. Kuroski-Mazzei, CEO of Hopeway

Champagne Problems

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022 42:02


Robbie and Patrick sit down with Dr. Kuroski-Mazzei, CEO of renowned treatment center Hopeway. This comprehensive discussion highlights modern practices for substance use treatment and also contains important messages for parents of adolescents who may be struggling.

The Divorce Survival Guide Podcast
Why Everyone Should Have a Pre-Marital Agreement with Monica Mazzei

The Divorce Survival Guide Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022 43:18


Before we dive into this week's show, I wanted to share that my group coaching experience, Grit & Grace, is open! If you are ready to create profound shifts to own your worth, your strength, and your power - Grit & Grace is for you. To learn more about the program or to sign up for a consultation visit KateAnthony.com/Coaching. Certified Family Law Specialist Monica Mazzei joins me to talk about why everyone should have a pre-marital agreement -  yes, a prenup!  Monica is passionate about what she does and has made it her mission to educate others about everything family law—including this topic.  During our conversation, we discuss the benefits of having a pre-marital agreement, why prenups are not just for high-net-worth individuals, and what happens if a spouse tries to fight the prenup during a divorce. If you don't have assets or think you don't need a prenup, but think you might get married again in the future, this episode is a must-listen. Show Highlights The family law system is outdated especially in the area of pre-marital agreements (6:53) Conversations about pre-marital agreements offer transparency and may lead to greater intimacy (10:00) Monica explains what information and details go into a prenup - it should be a clear roadmap of what is going to happen if you get divorced (11:51) How to start the conversation with a partner about creating a pre-marital agreement (22:08) Co-habitation and Nesting agreements: what are they and what should go into them (26:04) Why a pre-martial agreement is the most impactful one you can have, where you choose your own rules and destiny as a couple if things don't work out (34:35) Learn more about Monica:Monica Mazzei is a Certified Family Law Specialist representing clients in the Bay Area, with a concentration in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, as well as Los Angeles. She represents high-net-worth clients throughout the divorce process and in mediation. Monica has been named a California Super Lawyer from 2015-2019 and has been recognized in the international Chambers High Net Worth 2017-2019 guide for Family/Matrimonial Law. Monica specializes in dissolution actions involving complicated valuation and financial matters, and complex community property and support issues, including international issues, and dissolutions involving hedge funds, private equity, venture capital, and privately held businesses. Monica takes a modern approach to the practice of family law – addressing various needs of her clients related and unrelated to their family law case. Monica has relationships with top professionals in the Bay Area such as forensic accountants, mental health professionals, real estate agents, financial advisors, and business valuation experts.  She also works closely with estate planning attorneys to come up with creative solutions for her clients and ensure their agreements reflect their current objectives. Monica is a frequent lecturer and speaker on family law matters and has been interviewed by Forbes, The Wall Street Journal, and Bloomberg.  Resources & Links: Information and links may also be found at:  https://kateanthony.com/podcast/why-everyone-should-have-a-pre-marital-agreement-with-monica-mazzei/ Grit and Grace Group Coaching is Open - Join us! Monica's website Monica on LinkedIn TODAY'S EPISODE IS SPONSORED BY: SOBERLINK Proof. Protection. Peace of Mind. The Soberlink remote alcohol monitoring system consists of a portable breathalyzer with wireless technology for real-time results. With proven use as the leading choice in child custody cases since 2011, we are the only system that combines: Court admissibility in all 50 states Facial recognition Tamper detection Easy-to-read Advanced Reporting™ Trust the Experts in Remote Alcohol Monitoring Technology™ to support the best interests of the child in your Family Law cases. JOIN THE SHOULD I STAY OR SHOULD I GO FACEBOOK GROUP

Latte With a Lawyer
Monica Mazzei, Helping to Disentangle the Financials of High-Net-Worth Family Law: Latte with a Lawyer Episode 36

Latte With a Lawyer

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2022 27:39


Monica Mazzei is a Certified Family Law Specialist representing clients in the Bay Area, with a concentration in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, as well as Los Angeles. She represents high-net-worth clients throughout the divorce process and in mediation. Monica has been named a California Super Lawyer from 2015-2019 and has been recognized in the international Chambers High Net Worth 2017-2019 guide for Family/Matrimonial Law. Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/monica-mazzei-5029432/ Sideman & Bancroft: https://www.sideman.com/ Learn more about EmotionTrac and our AI-driven Emotional Intelligence Platform: https://emotiontrac.com/calendly/ https://legal.emotiontrac.com/

Voci di impresa
Mazzei, Chianti Classico dal 1300

Voci di impresa

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2022


Dal Medioevo al Terzo Millennio. È una storia infinita e carica di suggestioni. Protagonista l'azienda vinicola Mazzei con sede a Castellina in Chianti, in provincia di Siena. Produce il Chianti Classico che esporta in 60 paesi nel segno di un'eccellenza tipica del made in Italy, una caratterizzazione apprezzata e ricercata dai palati di tutto il mondo. A ripercorrere questa lunghissima trama di vita e di famiglia è Filippo Mazzei, attuale amministratore delegato.

Irrigation Training Series
Automated Fertigation with Jain Logic and Mazzei Venturi Injectors

Irrigation Training Series

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2022 48:47


With rising labor costs and all-time highs for chemical inputs, automating fertigation through your irrigation system has never been more critical or offered more savings benefits than now. In this webinar, you will learn just how easy automating your fertigation, and chemical injection can be using Jain Logic and Mazzei Venturi Injection. Using Jain Logic to schedule exact start and stop times ensures precise application of pre-injection irrigation, chemical injection, and post-fertigation irrigation to flush lines and hold costly inputs in the root zone. Employing Mazzei Venturi Injectors with Jain Logic gives growers the most cost-effective and reliable method to inject. If you fertigate through your irrigation system, you don't want to miss this informative webinar. During this webinar, you will learn: How Jain Unity software and Mazzei Injectors work together The amount of time saved using these two technologies together An easy step by step process to set it up All the benefits of injection technology

Our Patriots DAR Podcast
DAR: Philip Mazzei

Our Patriots DAR Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2021 6:46


Philip Mazzei was an Italian-born wine merchant, surgeon, and horticulturist. A close friend of Thomas Jefferson, he spoke publicly, promoting Jefferson's ideals of religious freedom first in churches and later as a pamphleteer. The famous doctrine “all men are created equal” was likely inspired by Mazzei. During the war, Mazzei assisted abroad in Italy, sharing political rumblings and even acquiring weaponry to send back to the Continental Army.

À Deriva
#145 - Carlos Mazzei

À Deriva

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2021 173:57


Carlos Mazzei é presidente e fundador da Associação Nacional dos Inventores.

Lighting The Void
Mike Mazzei Of Mike And Maurice Mind Escape

Lighting The Void

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2021 113:19


Live Weeknights Mon-Fri 9 pm, PacificOn The Fringe FMhttps://fringe.fmhttps://lightingthevoid.comMike and Maurice's Mind Escape is a podcast dedicated to exploring the mysteries of life. We are cousins who grew up in the suburbs of Detroit and have always had the thirst for mystical experiences and life's greatest mysteries. The mission of this podcast is to spread knowledge and also to learn and grow through interviews and free-flow discussions. Let us help you escape your mind!https://www.mindescapepodcast.comDJ Steezy Stevie https://www.steezymusic.com/​​​​​​​​​www.marydusina.com/Music by Chronox at https://www.chronoxofficial.com​​

The Naked Dialogue
TND EP#11: Michael Mazzei, Mind Escape Podcast | Dimensions, Hyperspace & Relations Between Psychopathology and Psychoactive Compounds

The Naked Dialogue

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2021 94:34


The Naked Dialogue Podcast EP#11: Michael Mazzei, Mind Escape Podcast | Dimensions, Hyperspace & Relations Between Psychopathology and Psychoactive Compounds Sanjana Singh (The Host): https://itsa2amgrunge.com/ Michael Mazzei (Co-Host, Mind Escape Podcast): https://www.mindescapepodcast.com/ Indra's Web: https://www.mindescapepodcast.com/ (Discuss Metaphysical, Spiritual, Alternative, and Fringe Speculations, and Theories freely without the burden of censorship) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sanjanasinghx/support

Leaderbilt
#011 Client DNA AF + Daniel Mazzei

Leaderbilt

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2020 30:35


Laura Racky and Christian Cunningham talk about one of their favourite subjects - Client DNA. Also a wonderful guest Daniel Mazzei from Mazzei Homes.

The Alchemical Mind
Finding Your Mind Escape With Mike Mazzei

The Alchemical Mind

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2020 81:41


On this episode of The Alchemical Mind, I am joined by Mike Mazzei, half of the team behind the excellent Mind Escape podcast. We begin this episode with a discussion about the importance of balancing open-mindedness with a healthy dose of skepticism, before diving into the meat of the conversation as we talk about cognitive behavioral therapy. Cognitive behavioral therapy (or CBT) is a tool that has proven invaluable to Mike in order to help him deal with changing certain harmful habits. Because of its close relationship with mindfulness, we dive a bit into how the therapy works, its relationship to the age old concept, and maybe even how you could try this as a practice to resolve some unwanted habits. If you're not subscribed to Mike's podcast, Mind Escape yet, you should. He and co-host Maurice dive deep into topics of ancient cultures, alternative views, mysticism, psychedelics, and more. If you haven't subscribed to our show yet, be sure to do so on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Leave a review, and share with a friend. Music provided by Kabbalistic Village. Huge thanks! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-alchemical-mind/support

LGBTQ&A
Isa Mazzei: The Ins and Outs of Being a Camgirl

LGBTQ&A

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2019 30:02


In her new memoir, Camgirl, Isa Mazzei writes about just how much work goes into being a camgirl, calling it the hardest job she's ever had. On top of coming up with and executing fresh show ideas to make sure regular viewers were never bored, Mazzei's energy was focused on the online community she was building: remembering viewer's birthdays, checking in after job interviews, and responding to emails and private messages, playing the role of a de facto therapist. "There's so much work that goes in for it to look so effortless." Mazzei talks on the podcast about what she learned about herself as a camgirl, how transformative it was to finally feel a sense of control over her body, and how it reshaped her views on consent in sexual relationships. LGBTQ&A is hosted and produced by Jeffrey Masters. @jeffmasters1

The Study Abroadcast
Everything You Need To Know If You Want To Study Abroad in Vietnam with Martina Mazzei

The Study Abroadcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2019 30:04


I've been waiting a long time for this because I have heard only good things about this country and can't wait to go myself. Martina Mazzei studied abroad in Vietnam because her school actually has a satellite campus there. Her dorm came with a cleaning service, she was able to hop on the back of a motorcycle to get to class, and she got to see the entire country in all its beauty on the cheap. Thailand and Cambodia? ✔️ Sometimes schools just get it and it sounds like Loyola is one of those schools. After factoring in scholarships and cost of living Vietnam, Martina actually saved money by taking her trip. I know most schools won't have satellite campuses set up like this in Vietnam, if anything, listening to this interview will help you pick up a few pointers as you craft your own journey. “Go forth and set the world on fire” - Loyola quote