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In this episode, we welcome Dr. Michelle White, a passionate speaker and best-selling author dedicated to helping individuals on their spiritual journey. Dr. White shares her tips on making Bible study less intimidating by starting small, much like introducing new foods to toddlers. She shares an inspiring story about a woman in her sixties who found renewed understanding of the Bible by exploring various translations, proving it's never too late to deepen one's connection with God's Word.To view a free sample or order D6 Curriculum, visit www.d6everyday.com Subscribe now to Family Faith Moments emails here: https://bit.ly/3OZcUx1 Get a copy of Dr. Michele White's book, P.R.A.Y. Before You Eat: Pursue Rightly And Yield in God's Word, here: https://drmichelewhite.com/books/
(Airdate 4/8/25) Michelle White is President of a Non-Profit company called Neighborhood Survant's. Her mission is to empower our local youth and community leaders with tools necessary to become difference makers.https://www.instagram.com/neighborhoodsurvants/ https://www.neighborhoodsurvants.com/ https://www.instagram.com/diprimaradio/
Episode No. 694 features artists Tacita Dean and Ilana Harris-Babou. The Menil Collection, Houston is presenting "Tacita Dean: Blind Folly," the first major museum survey of Dean's work in the United States. The exhibition examines a range of Dean's production, with a special emphasis on her drawing practice. "Blind Folly" includes new works informed by Dean's time in Houston, including her residency at (and in!) the Menil's Cy Twombly Gallery. It is on view through April 19. The Menil, MACK, and Dean have produced several books related to the Menil exhibition: Why Cy, an artist's book of images Dean produced during her residency in the Twombly Gallery. Within it is a small booklet of notes and drawings that Dean conceived during the same residency. Tacita Dean: Blind Folly, a book by exhibition curator Michelle White that addresses Dean's practice and oeuvre in a strikingly legible, almost narrative way. Why Cy is available from Amazon for about $95; White's Blind Folly is available from Amazon for about $28 - or just $10 on Kindle. Dean is one of Britain's most celebrated artists. She has been the subject of solo exhibitions at museums such as the Bourse de Commerce, Pinault Collection, Paris, the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, and the Kunstmuseum Basel. In 2011 Dean's work FILM was shown in the Tate Modern's Turbine Hall. Harris-Babou's 2018 Reparation Hardware is included within "Project a Black Planet: The Art and Culture of Panafrica" at the Art Institute of Chicago. The exhibition, which was curated by Antawan I. Byrd, Elvira Dyangani Ose, Adom Getachew, and Matthew S. Witkovsky, survey's Pan-Africanism's cultural manifestations across 350 objects made over the last 100 or so years. It is on view through March 30. Reparation Hardware, which was made for DIS.ART, is streamed below. Harris-Babou has been included in group shows at the Wellcome Collection, London, Apex Art, New York, and at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, Conn. Her work is in the collections of museums such as the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.
The Spectator Economic Innovator of the Year Awards, in partnership with Rathbones, celebrate the passion and creativity of British entrepreneurs. From hundreds of entries we have narrowed down to some 50 finalists across the United Kingdom. In this episode, the judges discuss the innovators within the Manufacturing and Engineering category – 3D printing hydraulic systems, making plastic alternatives out of plant-based polymers, creating recyclable electronics, and more. The judges in this episode are Ian Ritchie, an angel investor and a fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering; Gabriel Fysh, an entrepreneur working with numerous companies on areas of sustainability and material science; Michelle White, Head of Private Office for Rathbones; and Martin Vander Weyer, The Spectator's business editor. The awards and this podcast series are sponsored by Rathbones, a leading provider of individual wealth management.
The Spectator Economic Innovator of the Year Awards, in partnership with Rathbones, celebrate the passion and creativity of British entrepreneurs. From hundreds of entries we have narrowed down to some 50 finalists across the United Kingdom. In this episode, the judges discuss the innovators within the Business Services and Logistics category – the companies that help other innovators and companies operate day to day. The judges in this episode are Merryn Somerset Webb, senior columnist at Bloomberg and the founder of MoneyWeek; entrepreneur and investor Gordon Black, whose company Peter Black Holdings was a major supplier of the UK's leading retailers; Michelle White, Head of Private Office for Rathbones; and Martin Vander Weyer, The Spectator's business editor. The awards and this podcast series are sponsored by Rathbones, a leading provider of individual wealth management.
The Spectator Economic Innovator of the Year Awards, in partnership with Rathbones, celebrate the passion and creativity of British entrepreneurs. From hundreds of entries we have narrowed down to some 50 finalists across the United Kingdom. In this episode, the judges discuss the innovators within our consumer goods and services category, from suppliers of wonky fruits to producers of supplements for pets. The judges in this episode are Merryn Somerset Webb, senior columnist at Bloomberg and the founder of MoneyWeek; entrepreneur and investor Gordon Black, whose company Peter Black Holdings was a major supplier of the UK's leading retailers; Michelle White, Head of Private Office for Rathbones; and Martin Vander Weyer, The Spectator's business editor. The awards and this podcast series are sponsored by Rathbones, a leading provider of individual wealth management.
The Spectator Economic Innovator of the Year Awards, in partnership with Rathbones, celebrate the passion and creativity of British entrepreneurs. From hundreds of entries we have narrowed down to some 50 finalists across the United Kingdom. In this episode, the judges introduce those start-ups rethinking and finessing the battle against climate change, from vertical farming to carbon capture technology; as well as those working for a greater social purpose, such as getting more women into tech. The judges in this episode are Eva-Maria Dimitriadis, CEO of the Conduit Connect, which backs exceptional founders whose businesses generate positive change; Clive Bawden, director of Governance360 and a previous winner of the Innovator Awards; Michelle White, Head of Private Office for Rathbones; and Martin Vander Weyer, The Spectator's business editor. The awards and this podcast series are sponsored by Rathbones, a leading provider of individual wealth management.
Episode Summary In this episode, we delve into the intricate relationship between the nervous system, trauma, and overall gut health with psychotherapist Michelle White. We explore how understanding and addressing the root causes of chronic stress can lead to long-lasting healing. Michelle explains how embodied psychotherapy can calm the mind, emotions, and body, highlighting the often-overlooked impact of stress on gut health. She emphasizes that when stress triggers physical symptoms, traditional talk therapy alone is insufficient. Instead, Michelle shares insights on her therapeutic approach, which combines relaxation and embodied techniques with deeper self-exploration to effectively resolve symptoms and promote healing. Episode Highlights Understanding the Nervous System: The importance of identifying and addressing what activates the nervous system, particularly in the context of trauma and chronic stress. Therapeutic Process: Michelle outlines her approach, including weekly sessions, embodied work, and the significance of homework for continued practice outside of therapy. Tools for Healing: Discussion on using apps and vagus nerve devices, and the necessity of addressing underlying issues rather than relying solely on technological solutions. Safety and Healing: The fundamental human desire for safety and how true healing involves feeling secure within oneself. Resources Mentioned Podcast: Happy Inside – Available on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Website: happyinside.com.au – For more information on Michelle's practice and resources. Social Media: IG: @sohappyinside | Facebook: Happy Inside iPhone App: Offers gut-directed imagery and other relaxation tools for personal use. Connect with Us Visit our website for more episodes and information. Follow us on social media for updates and health tips. Subscribe to our podcast and leave a review! Ready to dive in? Listen here.
The Spectator Economic Innovator of the Year Awards, in partnership with Rathbones, celebrate the passion and creativity of British entrepreneurs. From hundreds of entries we have narrowed down to some 50 finalists across the United Kingdom. In this episode, the judges introduce those cutting edge healthcare companies who are amongst the finalists and compare and contrast what they do with the latest biotech, AI, and how well they fare when trying to introduce innovation into the NHS. The judges in this episode are Jonny Ohlson, founder and chairman of biotech firm Touchlight; Nicholas Hardie, entrepreneur and non-executive director on the board of Moorfields Eye Hospital; Michelle White, Head of Private Office for Rathbones; and Martin Vander Weyer, The Spectator's business editor. The awards and this podcast series are sponsored by Rathbones, a leading provider of individual wealth management.
Episode No. 651 features art historian Richard Shiff, curator and art historian Michelle White, and a clip from Kirk Varnedoe's 2003 National Gallery of Art Mellon Lectures. Serra died last month at age 85. He may be the most honored sculptor of the post-war era. The Museum of Modern Art, New York, which holds the most important institutional collection of his art, has produced Serra retrospectives in 1986 and 2007. The Menil Collection organized a drawings retrospective in 2011; it traveled to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Serra's hometown museum. The most extensive survey of Serra's films and videotapes was presented by the Kunstmuseum Basel in 2017. Serra was a guest on Episode No. 18 of this program. Shiff is a professor at the University of Texas at Austin and the director of the Center for the Study of Modernism. He has written or contributed to books on Barnett Newman, Willem de Kooning, Donald Judd, and Serra, including "Forged Steel," which was published by Steidl and David Zwirner Books in 2016. White is a curator at the Menil Collection. With Bernice Rose and Gary Garrels she curated the 2011 Serra drawings retrospective. Kirk Varnedoe was the chief curator of painting and sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art, New York from 1988 to 2001. He delivered the 2003 Mellon Lectures at the National Gallery of Art on the subject "Pictures of Nothing: Abstract Art Since Pollock."
Do you ever feel like you are the prodigal in life? Joining me today is Michelle White who shares about her journey as a single mom with four kids and her work in missions and local organizations. She shared about the importance of authenticity in friendships and the need for vulnerability and weakness. Michelle reflects on her own experiences as a prodigal daughter and how God rescued her multiple times in her life. She discusses the challenges and blessings of being a single mom and offers insights on how the Church can support and empower single moms. Michelle also highlights the power of prayer and the global perspective of God's work that she has witnessed.TakeawaysAuthenticity and vulnerability are essential in building meaningful friendships.God's love and grace can rescue and transform even the most broken and undeserving individuals.The church should create a safe and inclusive environment for single moms, offering support and friendship.Prayer is a powerful tool that connects us to God's provision and guidance.Having a global perspective helps us see God's work beyond our circumstances.Reflection Questions1. Read through the parable of the prodigal son (Luke 15:11–32), which character are you most connecting with today, the prodigal, the older brother, or the father?2. God's love and grace can rescue and transform even the most broken and undeserving individuals. Pray or journal about how God's grace has impacted you recently.Connect with MichelleEmail | InstagramHow to support The Parable Podcast: #1 Subscribe or Follow the show so you don't miss the next episode of The Parable Podcast through your favorite podcast app (i.e. iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher). #2 Share this show with a friend, this is a perfect opportunity to start your own Parable Conversation together. #3 Are you in need of a speaker for your Church, Women's Group, or event? Contact Danielle to learn more.
In this final part of our Global Anaesthesia podcast miniseries, Jan and Fi have the privilege to speak with Dr Michelle White who is a long-term volunteer for Mercy Ships. Michelle talks about her experience working in capacity Building on the ship and the delivery of surgical services in surgical care.
Every year, The Spectator travels the country in search of the best and boldest new companies that are disrupting their respective industries. In a series of five podcasts, we will tell you about the finalists for 2023's Innovator of the Year Awards, sponsored by Investec. The awards winners will be announced in a prize ceremony in November. Listeners will have heard businesses in all sorts of fields – from consumer goods to health technology, from sustainability to the cutting edge of British engineering. But what about the companies that make these businesses work? The behind-the-scenes, boiler room people who offer services to businesses themselves. These days, with advancement in artificial intelligence, their work has been made more effective than ever before. Britain, after all, brought us Alan Turing and Tim Berners-Lee. Martin Vander Weyer, The Spectator's business editor, judges the awards and hosts this podcast along with three other judges: Melissa Readman, partner and investor director at ESM Investments, a fund which invests in early stage companies; Caroline Theobald CBE, an entrepreneur and co-owner of FIRST, which provides enterprise training to young people and business leaders; and Michelle White, co-head of Investec's private office. The finalists in this category are: Igloo Vision, which creates immersive spaces using virtual reality for companies and organisations. Synthesia, an AI video creation platform that produces videos quickly and cheaply. ComplyAdvantage, which uses AI and machine learning to carry out financial due diligence for corporate clients. SoPost, which uses a digital platform to help streamline supply chains for retailers. Good-Loop, which converts clicks on online ads into revenue for partnership charities. Yoti, which provides digital IDs for identity verification. Exclaimer, which provides email signature solutions for the marketing and other needs of businesses. LegalVision, which provides legal advice on an affordable, subscription basis. Finboot, which uses blockchain to help businesses track the environmental impact of their supply chains. Huboo Technologies Ltd, which takes care of the storage and shipping needs of e-commerce businesses that don't have their own warehouses.
Every year, The Spectator travels the country in search of the best and boldest new companies that are disrupting their respective industries. In a series of five podcasts, we will tell you about the finalists for 2023's Innovator of the Year Awards, sponsored by Investec. The awards winners will be announced in a prize ceremony in November. This episode showcases the finalists in the Sustainability and Social Purpose category. These businesses all want to make the world a better place – whether that's through helping reduce our emissions or giving back to the local community. They believe that business isn't just for profit, but for a purpose. Martin Vander Weyer, The Spectator's business editor, judges the awards and hosts this podcast along with three other judges: Eva-Maria Dimitriadis, CEO of The Conduit Connect, which connects businesses with an eye to social and environmental impact with investors and mentors; Clive Bawden, chief operations officer of Warwick Music Group, a company that makes affordable instruments made from plastic and a former winner of the Innovator of the Year Awards; and Michelle White, co-head of Investec's private office. The finalists in this category are: Coracle, which provides digital education to prisoners. Beam, which supports homeless and other disadvantaged people to get jobs, homes and skills. Agricarbon, which provides affordable and accurate soil carbon audits in aid of regenerative farming. Aqua Metrology Systems Ltd, which provides water monitoring to local municipalities, to ensure their water is safe. Sunamp, which uses patented 'heat batteries' to store heat produced by heat pumps, instead of water tanks. Celtic Renewables, which produces sustainable chemicals from unwanted wastes and residues. CeraPhi, which uses the earth's heat, accessible from end-of-life oil and gas wells, to produce clean energy. NatureSpace Partnership Ltd, which helps housing developers and local authorities check for newts, a protected species, in proposed sites for building.
Episode No. 626 features curator Michelle White and artist Kenneth Tam. With Megan Holly Witko, White is the co-curator of "Chryssa & New York," a survey of work the Greek-born Chryssa made while living in New York from the late 1950s to the early 1970s. It's at the Menil Collection in Houston through March 10, 2024. During the years featured in the exhibition, Chryssa used neon and elements of commercial signage to bridge ideas rooted in the pop, conceptual, and minimalist movements. It is the first major survey of the artist's work in the United States in more than fifty years. The excellent exhibition catalogue was co-published by the Menil and the Dia Art Foundation, with which the Menil co-organized the show. Amazon and Bookshop offer it for about $49. The Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive is exhibiting "MATRIX 281 / Kenneth Tam: The Founding of the World" through November 26. The exhibition presents The Founding of the World, a video and sculptural installation in which Tam explores the history and practices of fraternities as a way of probing the dynamics of male intimacy and ritualized violence. The presentation was curated by Victoria Sung. Tam's work is also included in: "Cowboy," at the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver through February 18, 2024. "Cowboy" features the work of 27 artists who are shifting cowboy mythology. It was curated by Nora Burnett Abrams and Miranda Lash. "Kenneth Tam: All of M" at the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University. All of M is Tam's re-staging of the high school prom as a way of exploring how men perform their identities in spaces of social ritual. It is on view through November 11. Instagram: Michelle White, Kenneth Tam, Tyler Green.
Every year, The Spectator travels the country in search of the best and boldest new companies that are disrupting their respective industries. In a series of five podcasts, we will tell you about the finalists for 2023's Innovator of the Year Awards, sponsored by Investec. The awards winners will be announced in a prize ceremony in November. In the West, the UK was the first country to create a national health service, free at the point of use. And yet 75 years on, it's rare that a winter goes by without some kind of crisis in the NHS. And that's not even to mention the impact of the pandemic on waiting lists. In this category we're looking at innovations in the British health industry. How can we do things better? Many finalists in this category are relying on AI and better data collection, which can help with screening for cancer and more efficiently distributing medicines; some of them are literally inventing new technologies, patenting new materials to use in dentistry, for example, or 3D-printing personalised vitamins. Martin Vander Weyer, The Spectator's business editor, judges the awards and hosts this podcast along with three other judges: Jonny Olson, executive chair of Touchlight, a biotech start-up specialising in producing DNA at speed; Nicholas Hardie, non-executive director at Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust; and Michelle White, co-head of Investec's private office. The finalists in this category are: Nourished, which uses 3D printing to produce personalised vitamin supplements. Ethoss Regeneration Ltd, which has developed and patented a novel bone graft material for use in dentistry. iEthico, which has developed an AI-powered platform to optimise the distribution of medicine to tackle shortages. Locate a Locum, which has connected locum pharmacists to pharmacies in need using a digital platform. Nuclera, which enables researchers to obtain active proteins from DNA at speed. Attomarker, which uses nanotechnology to measure human biomarkers in the diagnostics process. Kheiron Medical Technologies, which uses AI for early diagnosis of breast cancer.
Show Notes and Transcript Col (Ret) John Mills returns to Hearts of Oak to discuss his latest book 'War Against The Deep State', a follow up to 'The Nation Will Follow'. John's background of decades in the US military gives him an unparalleled understanding of the role of The Deep State through the institutions. In this book he starts in the same way as he started his last, with family, with mums (Moms for our American viewers!) and how they will win this war. John then shows the importance of getting involved at a local level and then we look at Big Tech and how Private Public Partnerships are being used to push a big state agenda. Stay tuned until the end as John delivers us a message of hope and tells us why this battle we find ourselves in, is a fight that can and must be won. COL (Ret) John R. Mills and Former Director, Cybersecurity Policy, Strategy, and International Affairs, Office of the Secretary of Defense COL (Ret) Mills has had an immense impact on a number of significant national security events over the last 40 years, from the Cold War, Peace Dividend, War on Terror, World in Chaos, and the era of Great Power Competition and the showdown with China. He has served multiple combat tours. This service has been both in uniform and as a senior civilian for the Department of Defense and included service with the National Security Council at the White House across two Administrations. He has served in joint, conventional, and special operations units and as a senior staff planner on the Chairman's Joint Staff John is a part of the Center for Security Policy, Committee on Present Danger China, Spectrum consulting group, an adjunct Professor for a major University's Graduate Program, founder of the National Election Integrity Association, and a regular Op-Ed contributor for Newsmax, Epoch Times, Real America's Voice, and Daily Middle East. "War Against The Deep State" outlines the development of the mass surveillance program started in 2007 to protect Americans, the weaponization of mass surveillance against the American Citizen, and the rise of the unlawful 4th, 5th, and 6th branches of Government. These unlawful branches of Government are the Administrative State, the collusion and marriage of Law Enforcement, Intelligence, and Big Tech, and the Non-Profits that unduly steer and influence Government. In "The Nation Will Follow", John is a modern day Whitaker Chambers (who successfully exposed Communists in the State Department in the late 1940s and 1950s) and gives his account of finding himself in the middle of Spygate/Russiagate, realizing there is a Deep State, his four year path to getting in front of the Durham investigation, and gives the action plan for citizens to re-take their counties. American governance and elections are all based on the 3,300 counties and county equivalents. Available on Amazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/author/B0B999YZPK Connect with Colonel John.... WEBSITE: https://thenationwillfollow.com/ GETTR: https://gettr.com/user/colonelretjohn TRUTH: https://truthsocial.com/@ColonelRETJohn SUBSTACK: https://substack.com/@colonelretjohn Interview recorded 24.10.23 *Special thanks to Bosch Fawstin for recording our intro/outro on this podcast. Check out his art https://theboschfawstinstore.blogspot.com/ and follow him on GETTR https://gettr.com/user/BoschFawstin and Twitter https://twitter.com/TheBoschFawstin?s=20 To sign up for our weekly email, find our social media, podcasts, video, livestreaming platforms and more... https://heartsofoak.org/connect/ Support Hearts of Oak by purchasing one of our fancy T-Shirts.... https://heartsofoak.org/shop/ Transcript (Hearts of Oak) Colonel John Mills. It is wonderful to have you back with us. Thanks so much for your time today. (Col John Mills) Oh, Peter, thank you. An honour to be on your show again with you. Thank you so much. Great to have you. And of course, you're one of the regular War Room Posse, and it's to all the War Room Posse watching on Rumble and GETTR, great to have you with us. And today we have one of your own, one of the regular ones with Steve. And I think last time, John, we were looking at your other book, your first book. Let me bring that up on the screen. And the first one was The Nation Will Follow, and that is that first-hand experiences fighting the deep state and the action plan for the American citizen. And today we're going to look at your latest book, which is just out and it is War Against the Deep State. I will get into, I've thoroughly enjoyed reading through it. I will pull out a number of the different chapter points in it. But maybe, John, the first question, often individuals write book and then they move on to something often quite different. You've stayed on a similar thread. Do you want to just let the viewers know why this is something kind of you feel fixed on and why it's so important to produce a second book on a similar topic? Well, thank you, Peter. I always intended this to be a two-book series. The first book, in many ways, was about what I gave to the Durham investigation and my different statements and submissions to the Durham investigation and my personal war against, or my personal combat and experience fighting the deep state while I was inside of government. We do have a very important arrest out of the Durham investigation. It hadn't gotten a lot of attention and it was technically it was separated out from the Durham investigation, but I think that was pure Department of Justice front office, quibbling with Merrick Garland and John Durham who says, okay, John, we'll give you this, But you have to separate it out from the core Durham investigation. But it's Charles McGonigal, Charles McGonigal, the former director of counterintelligence to the New York field office. This is just like some of the famous British spy cases where it was found to be trusted people who were actually working for the Russians. It turns out McGonigal was the guy feeding us information in early 2016 about Trump, Trump, Trump, Russia, Russia, Russia, or actually it was Russia, Russia, Russia, Trump, Trump, Trump. And it was like, oh, okay, I'm a sworn professional. Okay. If it was, if Trump was in on this, I mean, I want to know. And that led to the, to the total fraudulent Intel community assessment of November, December, 2016. So that's, what, you know, a lot of what book one was about. And it was about, you know, the action plan right in your county. Book two is far more detail into how we've really arrived at the unlawful fourth, fifth, and sixth branches of government in America. And this is really the deep state manifesting itself. And in the American system, the unlawful for those who've been, their brains have been mushed by Howard's in history books in the American public school system. It's the fourth branch of government is the administrative state. The fifth branch of government is the coming together of federal law enforcement, federal intelligence and big tech to unlawfully surveil. And then the sixth branch of government are in the American tax code and system than what we call the non-profits, the 501C3s. So that's really the deep state manifesting itself and the order of hierarchy from the top to the lower levels is always, at this point in time in the year 2023, it's China, globalists manifested by Klaus. We must have a reset. We must establish an enduring reset. So Klaus and the Globalists. And then we always have to throw in Russia, Iran, Venezuela, and North Korea, and in America it's our uniparty that is enabling these unlawful fourth, fifth, and sixth branches of government. So that's why there was a two-book series. And then also more detail and success cases, success stories of the foundation of the American system is at the county and county equivalent level. So that's where most Americans should spend all of their time and energy, and if they want to have great effect at the national level is crash the market capitalization of these woke companies, such as Disney, okay? So there's a lot of victories and success stories here, and in America there's too many people on our side of the ledger disappointed, disillusioned, oh, nothing we can do, they'll It's worthless. It's over. You know, I'm a Churchill guy, and Churchill was both an American and a sovereign UK citizen, okay? I'm never, ever, ever give up, never, ever, ever surrender, ever. And so we will win if we put our shoulder to the wheel here. So in war against the deep state, I go over this. And I was part of the interagency team that put together the mass surveillance system in 2007 and 2014, which had a very strong enabling factor with the linkage with the Five Eyes, the five English-speaking nations, because our five intelligence services work, extremely closer, there's no closer relationship in the world. And then we have Five Eyes Plus, I'm not going to name any countries, but there's a number of other countries in the Five Eyes Plus category. So that's the transition from Book One, and the nation will fall into Book Two, War Against the Deep State. Okay, there are a lot of things we want to pick up and we'll get towards those fourth, fifth and sixth sections of the government, the administrative state, the surveillance state and the C3s, that charitable sectors as we call it in the UK and all those areas by themselves are fascinating, all those areas could be a book in themselves, no pressure on you, John, but you start chapter one, you start in a similar way to the first book, a paragraph from it. If you have read book one, the nation will follow, and if you haven't, I strongly advise that you do, then you will know that I started the book with a similar message, Moms will win this war. Tell me why you start with that same message about the importance of moms in this fight. Two reasons. I think there is a distinct identifiable, the women have been at the forefront of this fight in America and I think in many places. Women are often the first to respond to the message of Christ, they're the first to respond to many messages and actions and I think it is quite noteworthy and laudable of the role because many women in addition to being mothers have said I am NOT going put up with this insanity that I'm dealing with in my county school board. And they're the first ones to show up. So one, a bravo and more encouragement. That's great. That's wonderful. It's beautiful. But it's also a message to the men to get off the couch and get on, get in the game. Yeah, there's a lot of the men I've noticed have this attitude, well, especially in a traditional family which is a good and noble thing. It's a foundation for any society. If you don't have family, if you don't have borders, you don't have a civilization. If you don't have families, you don't have a civilization. And we're all addressing dealing with this collapse in birth rates. Having children is a God-ordained thing. Come on people, stop. Well, I'm too busy with my professional life. Oh, you know, I can't afford another child. I mean, give me a break. Come on, Let's get out there, have families, have children, but the role of women, and also a message to the men, put down the bowl of loudmouth soup, stop bellowing on social media, stop going, I might lose my job, and get into the game and provide backup and reinforcement for these incredible women. And I love what many of the women organisations are doing. We've had Moms for Liberty on, Tina a number of times and that's just one of many, I think, organisations across the state that have taken the fight back to the system and are standing up for their rights as parents and also the rights for their children. So it's exciting to see that happening right before our eyes. Another part of the ballot, chapter two, understanding your county. And this is. There are a number of chapters through the books that make me sit back and think, actually, yeah, you're right. I didn't necessarily see that as part of the fight, but it is. Tell us about the county, because I think most people automatically think the swamp, DC, central government, that's the enemy, that's the bad one. But you go down to the county level and tell us the importance of being involved there. Why is it so important? Well, in the American system, and you know, after 35 plus years of working at the federal level and facing outward to battle the external threat, I didn't even realize it. And in the American system, the county and the county equivalent are the foundation of the Constitutional Republic. If you're county or county equivalent, the Census Bureau rosters 3300 county-county equivalents across America and in different states they could be called different things like in Louisiana they're parishes, in Alaska, forgive me, I think it's districts, so there's different possible names but predominantly they're called counties, county equivalents, that's the foundation for a constitutional republic. That's the foundation for our voting system. If you have a dirty vote in a county, it's not, as we learned on January 6, 2020, it's not going to get cleaner or better as it goes up toward Congress. The state is unlikely to fix it. The federal system is unlikely to fix it. They say, well, hey, this is your vote. I'm just going by what your vote said. And I think we learned a hard lesson and we forgot the importance of right where we live. Right where I live and I spend most of my energy fighting, fighting the deep state right in my county. We used to be a deep red county. We're now a bluish, bluish purplish county. And I think a lot of it is fraudulent activity, but most of the activists, conservative activists in our county just kind of said, hey, we're in Red County, what do we got to worry about? We just, we got it under control. And it was stolen right out, right from behind our back as we were thinking, hey, we're in, we got this county. No, no. So in the American system, the county is, that's where it starts, that's the foundation. Deep state at the federal level would not exist if we had clean counties. And in the American system, the 2024 vote is the big three are Maricopa in Arizona, Fulton in Georgia, and the worst of the worst, Philadelphia and Pennsylvania. One of the subsections is establishing information dominance. I mean, tell us about that, because that's where you're sure-footed, that's where confidence comes from, that's where boldness comes from when you understand the position you're in, the fight in your area. Tell us more, and it doesn't just apply to a country level, it applies in every area that information is key. It's being able to articulate a mastery of the legal landscape, of the personality landscape. Now having worked years and in the special operations community and counterterrorism and I'm very careful about using this term because people start freaking out and taking all kinds of misinterpretations but when when I coach and mentor others I always say you need to create a target book, a target book for your county and that's where you you know exactly who is in what position what exactly are their position, policy positions on different topics and you know how and when these personalities and those seven groups, when they meet, when they have public comment periods and you can show up and say something intelligent, thoughtful and actionable. Action, action, action at all times. So and this is the challenge. A lot of people are upset and I say well how many show up to these meetings, few people, and I say, okay, of those who show up, how many say something? Even fewer people of what's left. And then I go, okay, and what did you say, or write? And then we start to go through it, and I think sometimes people need to work a little bit on their vocabulary and presentation, because sometimes it may be counterproductive. I say, oh, you wrote a letter to the county board. Can I see that letter? And I go, whoa, that's interesting. I wouldn't have written it. I wouldn't have written it that manner. In fact, if I was a public official receiving this letter, I would interpret this as a physical threat, okay? So we need to be more thoughtful in how we come across. And people say, well, you're just becoming part of the uniparty. No, no, no, this is part of civil society and we need to get tough, we need to get smart and we need to get like, dominate the information environment. We need to know the state laws on elections, okay? We need to know the state codes on these different topics. We need to know exactly the governance venue in which these laws are actually applied. We need to know what the school board, who is saying what. You need to prepare and dominate this environment. And that way when you stand up and you say something, if you have a clean county, the officials are going to pay attention because they're going to go, oh, geez, I actually haven't even read that law in 20 years. I'd better go back and read that law. And if you have a dirty county, people are going to get very nervous. You're a hundred percent. Chapter three is another one that kind of is under the radar, I think, and that's public-private partnerships. What could possibly go wrong? And you start with a quote, the most dangerous man in any government is the man who's able to think things out for himself without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos, almost inevitably comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, and intolerable, I love it. And so if he is romantic, he tries to change it. But tell us about that private partnership because these are connections, these are relationships that maybe many of the public will have no idea are in place and are happening and are shaping our lives. Well, yeah, when I first came into the office of Secretary of Defense in 2004, I think it was. Everybody was using this term public-private partnerships. We got to create a public-private partnership on, Information sharing which also led to that, mass surveillance program starting in 2007 now in the American system, I mean the elites love to use that expression and so I would I set up some of the original be even before 2007 some of the original public-private, CONFABs, CONFAB, at least in my Webster's, is a small intimate gathering where you can talk, talk in detail. Well, we would have these public-private gatherings. There is no legal definition of a public-private gathering in the American system. One of the things I realized after a while, there is no legal definition. So you can do whatever you want to do. Now, we do have laws such as the FACA, FACA. Federal Advisory and I think FACA, Federal Advisory and Consulting Act, which does lay some boundaries on how and when groups, individuals can participate in helping to formulate federal policy, which is not law, it's policy, but this led to the Enduring security framework, it led to, which was our way to, and we established it lawfully, but we essentially did end around the FACA Act because we cited exceptions, and we very artfully did that. At the time, it sounded like a good idea, but this led to us establishing a relationship with Silicon Valley. And this started at the end of the Bush years, 2006, 2007, 2008, hey, they have a lot of great technologies, we're involved in this war on terror, we need a surveillance system that is broad, that's pervasive, that's enduring, and frankly we can't do this without a public-private partnership with all these evolving big tech companies, which led to the program we set up in 2007 and 2014, which was the foundation for the modern pervasive surveillance state. A blurring together of federal law enforcement, federal intelligence, and big tech, and the Five Eyes component with our UK, Canadian, Australian, and then the two people in New Zealand that we work with, that was a joke, was very important. So that and you go on to the government returns Silicon Valley next chapter which which widens that whole conversation on big tech. I know big tech was part of the focus of the first book. But tell us because we've had exposés on big tech collusion with the government and it seems, nothing much happens and in this chapter you delve into I think you call it what the four corners of innovation and you delve into different areas. I mean, tell us more about that and why has nothing really happened in that area? Oh, contraire, my good Peter. Many good things have happened. I mean, we got McGonigal, but we also got, it's a huge case that's developing huge energy and that's the beauty of states and the relationship of states and federal government. It's the Missouri-Louisiana case against DHS-CISA, Jen Easterly, who used to work at NSA, and used to be one of my colleagues. Great energy. And I'm actually becoming a party to this case, but the Fifth Circuit just shwacked down. That's a legal technical term. So they just shwacked down Missouri and Louisiana, I mean, DHS-CISA and FBI says, if you want to for national security reasons, talk to big tech. That's one thing. But in no way, shape or form can you share names, I'm one of them, of Americans to be targeted, silenced and censored. That is absolutely, egregiously unlawful and there was just, and this dysfunctional public-private partnership of NewsGuard. NewsGuard, which had the same personalities that I've named in book one and book two. General Mike Hayden is on the board of NewsGuard. It's a non-profit, it's a fraud, and it gets government money and it also again is absolutely unlawful because they're just like the FBI, just like DHS-CISA, they're giving names of Americans to be targeted, silenced, and censored on social media. So this is huge victories are amassing in this area. This is gaining unstoppable momentum and so they've been told, you know, DHS-CISA and and the FBI said, absolutely, if you want to meet with them. For national security reasons, that's one thing, but you, in no way, shape, or form can this be a venue or obfuscate the unlawful, say, I want you, here's a list of names of people to target silence and censor, and that goes both ways. That goes neither, and industry can't give that to the government. So this is huge. It's just huge what's going on, and I, we've uncovered a list that actually had my name on it and it's like hmm what did I do that was so egregious, why was I one of the names listed so this is this is the out-of-control nature and of these of these deep staters who just you know, law is just for the little people. We're going to do whatever we want to do. And you know, Jen Easterly is up there arguing through her lawyers in the Fifth Circuit. No, it's very important that DHS modulate and regulate public discourse. Really? Where does it say that? I mean, in the UK might be a different story. But I'm sorry, the American system. Absolutely not. There is absolutely no this is DHS is monitoring election infrastructure. I'm going, where's the law on this? There actually is no statute that says DHS CISA, it's your job to federalize and operate and provide mass surveillance of the election system. There's no law that says that. There's no law that says they can give names to big tech. So that's what's going on here. And that's for these chapters. Is that a step change? Because you've got a lot of experience with the military and intelligence and the agencies and understanding that, I mean traditionally probably most of the public thought that those agencies were focused on hostile threats abroad, bad countries, bad actors outside the US, but it seems as though there's been a whole flip over of the focus now being on those internally and law abiding citizens now been followed. Is that a change or has that really always been happening? I think maybe in the past some of this has happened. In a later chapter in the book I talk about the Church Commission that Senator Frank Church who led a very noteworthy event in, 1974-75 to really review the misbehavior in the intelligence community. We need a modern commission, but it needs to go far broader and deeper. And we need to literally start over with some of these agencies. I'm all for, we have to have an aggressive law enforcement, a federal law enforcement, and intelligence. But there must be absolute transparency and accountability. And it's to protect the American people. But in no way can it be weaponized. And yes, somehow, somebody missed the memo on this. And it just started and it grew and it grew. But General Mike Hayden, who I used to think highly of, was a poster child. His most recent, one of his X-Twitters, tweets, what do we call it, an X-tweet, an X-X, I don't know what we call it. But he, you know, made some very unthoughtful comments about Senator Tuberville of Alabama. And it's like, you know, essentially I would have taken it as a physical threat, and Senator Tuberville, very rightly so, turned him in to Capitol Hill Police as this former official is making a violent threat. And I think he was. And he needs to be, again, a technical term, he needs to be schwacked for that. And it's just very unthoughtful. But it's just, you have Dr. Malone coming on in the near future. It's that mass psychosis has taken over and formerly reasonable people have just gone bat guano crazy. Another technical term, is where, they just they went berserk on this and we, it's we must modulate what Americans are saying in social media. Really? What is that? It's that mass psychosis inside of the deep staters are career civilians, are political civilians, our uniformed military, all the contractors. Yeah, the government always know best, come on John, you should know that by now. Chapter six goes, the title is An Angry County Registrar, an incremental win in taking back our counties. And you start by saying, as I have already mentioned, I never ask anyone to do something that I would not be willing to do myself. I want to take this opportunity to highlight some successes that I've had myself. And you touch on, talk to your attorney general, you talk about finding the sheriff, get an office call with a judge. Maybe you can just touch on that because those are ways that practically people can get involved. Because I think often people think it's too big. And I think one of the beauties of your book is that you break it down into manageable chunks so people can say, I can do that. So maybe touch on some of those local engagements. Yeah, thank you, Peter. Yeah, I mean, if you're gonna eat an elephant, I don't know if this is an appropriate term in 2023. I haven't run this by the censors yet, but if you're gonna eat an elephant, you gotta start a bite at a time here. And you gotta really start, again, information dominance and mastery, understand who does what in your county. And this is where in 2019, I started tangling with our former registrar. In our county, a registrar runs an election. In Arizona, they're called recorders. Again, in other states, they may be called different things, but essentially the same, very similar roles and functions. And so I started tangling with Michelle White and it just, man, she just sent me some. And this was, I didn't, because this had not resolved by the time we published book one. So I wanted to give kind of a journey here. It's still on, the battle's still ongoing. But long story short, in early 22, I was asked to give a presentation to our, Jason Miyares staff, our Attorney General in Virginia, who came in with Governor Youngkin in a kind of a red wave. And so he said, so what's going on in Prince William County? So I said, okay, here's what I think. Well, I presented my documented series of tanglings with Michelle White. I was able to force her out. I wasn't the only one probably, there was other things going on, but I was the one who really duked it out with her, it out with her, and she resigned shortly after the 2020 November election. And you know, the only person who got really angry, the only group that really got angry was the county Republican Party, who sent me just a vicious, nasty letter on it. That's another story. But she resigned. But then in early 22, the Miyares team said, OK, what's going on? I gave him that. That's it's in the American system. It just can't be one person's word. You have to have multiple parties who make statements and they're cooperated. But after that led to other people, that led to more conversations, a grand jury panel was, a grand jury was impaneled. That's a high bar to get to that. And then they ran it and the grand jury returned several felony indictments against Michelle White. So my former registrar, so she's going through the legal process right now, for election fraud in 2020. So and all the people, there's no election fraud in 2020. Well, yeah, actually my registrar has been charged with election fraud. So I'm tangling with my current registrar, who just a few months ago, the Republican election board could have easily, no questions asked, replaced the new registrar, who I have grave concerns with also, and they choked and their inner Mitt Romney came to the forefront and they renewed the contract of this registrar. And so next board meeting, I said, I went through it, said, members of the board, in short, I said they've demonstrated their absolute fecklessness and I insisted that they all three resign. The two Republicans and one Democrat need to resign. We need to start fresh with the election board. They failed in their basic duties to ensure, because they hire and fire the registrar. So I'm battling, since they failed and choked, they could have easily brought in a new registrar, said, okay, fine. I want their, in that case, I want the election board's resignation and I'm working to hammer that through. I want to move on to chapter 7 and it's in the foreword by Ed Martin which was short and right to the point and he pulls the three of the six, the last three branches of government that go under the radar and that is the administrative state which we've touched on a little bit, unlawful mass surveillance as the fifth branch and I know you certainly focused on that in in the first book. But it's also the third part of it or the sixth branch which is the non-profits, composed of IRS recognized c3 non-profits. This has been an extremely intelligent way that the battle has moved on using entities that seem to be very good or therefore good to do positive and to take them and to use them. Maybe you want to touch on either of the other two, but it was certainly the non-profit side that intrigued me because once again this goes under the radar I think and now and then we have flashes in even in the mainstream media of how some of these organizations are used and they then we're told that's a one-off, but it seems to be a trend. Yeah, I'm all for IRS 501c3s, these non-profits in the American system. Two basic elements, they're always supposed to be non-partisan and apolitical, which are two different things, but they're not supposed to get involved. So in the American system, the poster child for bad behavior here is what we call the the University of Pennsylvania Biden Center. So after he left office in 2016, or January 2017, he created this adjunct appendage, of the big University of Pennsylvania, which is a tens of billions of dollars nonprofit itself. Most universities in America are non-profits. And so we got this UPenn Biden Center, But we don't know what it is, and this is where Tony Blinken, now Secretary of State, who led this UPenn Biden Center, he ran the greatest election interference operation in history for 2020 with the 51 intel officer letter, 11 of which I had worked for or worked with. And so it shows you right there, the UPenn Biden Center, which we can't find the IRS Form 990. It's actually not in the, I've searched the IRS database multiple times. And I've talked to the lawyers at University of Pennsylvania. And supposedly it's buried somewhere. You can have a nonprofit within a nonprofit. That's legally okay. But the universities are just gargantuan nonprofits, tens of billions of dollars of wealth, ten of billions of dollars of annual revenue and yet they they're just again that whole theme of transparency and accountability. Who at the IRS is checking to, you know, the UPenn Biden Center, which again, we can't find this, 990. Blinken ran this election interference operation. You can't do that. You can't do that. And it was the greatest election interference operation in history. And everybody goes, oh, well, let's just move on. Come on. Don't ask any questions. There was no there was no matters with election fraud. So this is the poster child for bad behaviour among the nonprofits. Moving on, and I'm keen to give a flavour because you pull in so much in the book, which actually is a short read as well. Chapter eight, FBI gone wild. And I thought, well, that could go anywhere. but two areas you pull up on, the Whitmer scam and also the FBI riot on J6. Maybe you wanna touch on those as examples of how the FBI have gone wild or gone rogue. Yeah, this is where transparency and accountability must be demanded. And so in the Michigan case, there was this group that was portrayed as right wing. However, when you peel back the onion and actually look at the forensics, they were left wing and they were like the Wolverines or something like that. And, but, you know, it's, they're white males. So, well, obviously it's right wing if they're right white males. No, no, actually they actually, part of their gig and thing was providing security for BLM and Antifa events. So these people were clearly, but the big media soundbite was, you know, must be right wing. Well, there was this kidnapping hoax that was, that was supposedly there was this kidnapping threat against Governor Whitmer, the current governor in Michigan, who's just a absolutely bat guano crazy psycho. But, so here, there was 20-something informants, or excuse me, 20-something in this group thinking about kidnapping Whitmer. However, more than 50%, it was something like 13 of the 21 or 20, 13 were either FBI agents or FBI informants. Now I have a little bit of experience in these kind of activities and when over 50% of the group is penetrated by your own informants. It's no longer, I mean you're creating, you're creating the group. I don't buy this that, so and there has been multiple charges, a number of them have been dismissed, there have been some convictions but even then I would say hold on a second, the FBI created this group because normally you have, depending on the size, scope and scale, you know you always want to get at least two and usually those informants don't know about each other. You want to keep them separate and distinct, but you have at least two. But not 50% plus of the group is actually made up of government informants and agents. That's, you're creating the group. So that's one example. And then January 6th, and this is where we have the greatest mass incarceration in American history. Never since the Japanese Americans were interned during the Second World War have we seen something like this. We still, we don't know truth on exactly how many J6s are detained. There is no running publicly formulated and public facing list from Department of Justice, of how many J6s are interned. And we can't have truth on J6 until we have an absolute revelation of everything the FBI did in federal law enforcement and coordinated with state and local law enforcement, because January 6th, until there is full accountability, what I term it as a FBI riot. Hmm. Yeah, we've had Jake Lang on twice and a number of others who have been regularly targeted, for simply going there and filming what was happening. Chapter 10, the name of the game is Regime Change. Who's in? And you start by saying I want to begin this chapter with an example of regime change, of which I have personal experience over with Saddam Hussein. So you've been involved in that process abroad. I mean, tell us about that and kind of what you've learned from some of those experiences. Well, again, we need a proactive, aggressive law enforcement and intelligence that protects America. And I always point on the CIA website, I urge everybody to read the Doolittle report. This is the same Army Air Corps Lieutenant Colonel who flew Army bombers off of Navy carriers to bomb Tokyo. Eisenhower brought him in and said, what do I do with this new thing called the CIA? And it was just, I mean, you just want to stand up at the position of attention and salute the flag when you read this report. Cause I said, that is what we need. That is weak, cause he said, Doolittle said, we have never had to deal with something like the Soviet threat before and we need to take off the gloves and fight dirty. We still have boundaries and we still have responsibility and transparency and accountability but we need to take off the gloves and if we put them in a chokehold and gouge their eyes out while pouring gasoline on them and setting them on fire, that's what we need to do. That's what we need to do. This is a life or death struggle with the Soviets. His chapter was about, I'm all for this, but the whole Saddam thing kind of went out of control and I think it was kind of the early stages of a wokeness and Saddam was a bad person. He needed to be changed out. There were, was evidence of weapons of mass destruction. I point to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence 2006 report that documented thousands of pieces, elements of WMD and then said, in the body, but then in the executive summary, no evidence of WMD. And we're going, well, you just listed literally thousands in the document. So, but we could have done it better and smarter. Saddam was a bad guy, a ruthless killer, needed to go. I think we could have done it a lot better, but I wanted to show that of how things in the forever war complex kind of just really manifested itself. We could have done it a lot better with a lot more, a lot less resources bloodshed, but it just spun out of control. Yeah, we got rid of him. And then a bunch of Shia pulled, yanked them out of his, after a couple of years, yanked them out of his cell and hung them. And then they told us about it. You know, so it just was my personal involvement in regime change. Every Iraqi I worked with was killed. I mean, it's a bloody, messy business. And so we shouldn't take these things lightly. There's conditions where we need to do stuff like this, but it can be very bloody and messy. To finish off, the last two chapters, the four corners of innovation, re-establishing America, innovation and production dominance, and then the final chapter, defeating the deep state. Obviously, you don't enter a war, you don't enter a battle unless you believe that you can win that or else you're fighting just for the sake of it. And looking at the end of the book, it's a message of, this is possible. I mean, tell us about that. I think it's a good place to leave the viewers because often these issues can be so big. I mean, whenever the topic of deep state comes up, it's huge and you've broken it down into smaller chunks, but you end on a positive note. Tell us more about that and why you believe that's possible. I give a vision of what an America-first society looks like and the pathway to returning to functional governance, functional society in the American system that is based on a constitutional republic. Four corners of innovation, which are good, but they've been perverted by the elite. Big academia is good, big companies can be good, innovators can be good, academics are important, big finance, or excuse me, venture capital can be good. Those are good, but they've been perverted and we need to, that's for creating an innovative society that makes things, and more importantly, makes things that makes things. The concept of managed decline, which most in the UK understand the concept and the heritage of where that came from, yeah, I'm going to throw that right in the trash bin. I want nothing to do with managed decline. I want growth. I want ascendancy at all times, and that's the problem with the elite. They kind of achieve this climax, and they go, there's really nothing we can do beyond this. We might as well just stop having children and just kind of lead from behind. No, forget that, never, never, ever, ever. And so I wanna give a picture of what a productive constitutionally-based system looks like. That is focused on ascendancy, an ascendancy for good, not ascendancy for dominating, an ascendancy for the good of the society. And all societies should be focused on this. All nations and the world works best when there's functional nation-states putting the interests of their citizens first and working out these matters in a functional way with other countries and that's the vision of the future and yes we can do this. John, it's always wonderful talking to you. Let me bring up once again. That is the book War Against the Deep State is available now just out weeks ago. Do get hold of your copy. I find it fascinating to read, as I did the first one, and I think it makes simple a topic which often can be complex and shows the part we can play. So John, I appreciate you coming on and sharing. Thank you so much. Peter, thank you. I just always enjoy these. Looking forward the next one. It's an honour to be on your show. Thank you so much. I hope the next one we can actually do it on an aircraft carrier. I'll work on that. I'll work on that. Thank you so much, John. Okay, thank you, Peter. Take care. Please subscribe, like and share!
Every year, The Spectator travels the country in search of the best and boldest new companies that are disrupting their respective industries. In a series of five podcasts, we will tell you about the finalists for 2023's Innovator of the Year Awards, sponsored by Investec. The awards winners will be announced in a prize ceremony in November. This episode will be focusing on the manufacturing and engineering category. Some of the nominees have found novel uses for old materials, often finding a much more sustainable way of producing things. A couple of them use cutting edge engineering – including graphene, a miracle material rediscovered right here in the UK, by the University of Manchester. Britain is, of course, the home of the industrial revolution. These modern homegrown champions are keeping that legacy alive. Martin Vander Weyer, The Spectator's business editor, judges the awards and hosts this podcast along with three other judges: Gabriel Fysh, entrepreneur and Director at Transcend Packaging, a former winner of the awards; Ian Ritchie CBE, an engineer and entrepreneur, who sits on the board of a number of companies in Scotland and in the IT and engineering sphere; and Michelle White, co-head of Investec's private office. The finalists in this category are: The Cheeky Panda, which makes tissue and hygiene products from bamboo. THIS™, which makes meaty-tasting plant-based foods, from sausages to chicken. QLM Technology Ltd, which has invented a quantum gas lidar technology to detect greenhouse gases. MacRebur Limited, which uses waste plastic to replace bitumen in road surfacing. Partful, which helps manufacturers with an end-to-end repair process by locating components and parts. Graphene Innovations Manchester, which aims to replace highly-emitting cement with graphene in construction. Equipmake, which produces ultra-high-performance electric motors, power systems and vehicle drivetrains. Paragraf, which mass produces graphene-based electronic devices using standard semiconductor processes.
Today marks our 50th episode of The Lone Recruiter and it's a very special one as I interview my recruiting north star Michelle White. Michelle is the godmother of specialist recruitment, she started out as a recruiter and now works at Empowered Decision where she excels at: career consulting & mentoring, career development, professional development, leadership mentoring, recruitment agency training & coaching and corporate training. This episode is absolute gold, tune in to hear:
How did a bizarre confession derail the investigation into the first murder committed by Keith Hunter Jesperson, the notorious “Happy Face Killer,” and allow him to remain on the loose, killing at least seven more women? A new two-hour “20/20” reports on how after authorities discovered the body of Taunja Bennett in the Columbia Gorge in 1990, 57-year-old Laverne Pavlinac confessed to the police that she took part in the crime. She provided convincing evidence that implicated her and her boyfriend, 39-year-old John Sosnovske, in the murder, and they were convicted and sentenced to life in prison. In a shocking twist, Pavlinac's confession turned out to be false in an attempt to escape what she described as an abusive relationship with Sosnovske. With reporting by “Nightline” co-anchor Juju Chang, “20/20” dives into how Pavlinac was able to dupe police, featuring audio from the couple's confessions and police interviews, and from the hidden microphone installed in Pavlinac's apartment when she tried to convince Sosnovske that he was involved in the murder. The two-hour program features an exclusive interview with Melissa Gavin, a friend of Julie Winningham, the last person Jesperson killed before his arrest; and new interviews with John Ingram, lead detective who investigated Bennett's murder; Jim McIntyre, prosecutor for Pavlinac and Sosnovske's cases; Darlene Carpenter and Bonnie McAlpine, Pavlinac's daughters; Michelle White, Bennett's sister; Melissa Moore, Jesperson's daughter; and Alafair Burke, bestselling author and former prosecutor who based her first novel on the case. The program also features Chang's interview with Jesperson from the ABC News archives and gives an inside look at how police ultimately tracked Jesperson down. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Trudi Beckett, Michelle White and Jessica Kaminski discuss their queer and trans school-aged children and the things they endure: bullying, bathroom selection, self-hatred and confusion, etc. The moms share their hopes and dreams.________Guests share stories of adversity and perseverance which inspire, encourage and challenge us. Host Hara Allison embraces these tough conversations, intimately exploring our loves, fears and hopes with a delicious combination of depth and lightness. Beneath Your Beautiful won first place in Self Help and Health & Wellness in the 2022 International Positive Change Podcast Awards, was a 2023 Publisher Podcast Awards nominee in Health & Wellbeing and is a nominee in the 18th Annual People's Choice Podcast Awards in the category of Health.To get in touch with Hara Allison:Magazine + Podcast: beneathyourbeautiful.orgPhotography: hara.photographyDesign: studioh-creative.com
Have you ever seen the Free Mom Hugs group at Pride Festivals, or heard stories of parents trying to understand their queer children? The parents are real, the myths are true! Join Jonny as he sits down with a group of fierce moms that we like to call The Mom Brigade. Trudi Beckett, Michelle White and Jessica Kaminski get real and honest talking about their one goal, just to love their kids in a world that sometimes feels stacked against them. DON'T MISS THIS!
Episode No. 609 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast is a summer clips episode featuring artist Virginia Jaramillo. The Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City is presenting "Virginia Jaramillo: Principle of Equivalence," the first retrospective of Jaramillo's work. The exhibition includes 73 paintings and handmade paper works extending back over 70 years. The exhibition was curated by Erin Dziedzic and will be on view through August 26. A catalogue is forthcoming. This episode was recorded on the occasion of “Virginia Jaramillo: The Curvilinear Paintings, 1969-74” which was at the Menil Collection in 2020. The show was the first solo museum exhibition of Jaramillo's career. Curated by Michelle White, it featured a series of paintings that Jaramillo made featuring the joining of line to color against mostly monochromatic backgrounds. See Episode No. 469 for images.
Summer break is a great time to pick up a book and grow as a reader. Michelle White shares how students are turning the page and starting a new chapter by not only preventing the Summer Slide, but gaining skills to lead forward.Guest: Michelle White, Summer Reading Program https://sites.google.com/ecsdfl.us/ecsdsummerreading/home Learn more about Escambia County School District: https://ecsd-fl.schoolloop.com/ Host: Meredith Hackwith Edwards
What happens when tragedy strikes repeatedly, and how does one's faith emerge from the darkness? Join me as I sit down with my sister, Michelle White, author of My Back Pages, and navigate through her incredible journey of loss, addiction, and redemption. Born in Burbank, California, Michelle's life was shaped by her father's musical career, her mother's struggles with depression and alcoholism, and the devastating loss of her father at just seven years old.As we unfold the heartbreaking events in Michelle's life, including the passing of her father, mother, and brother, we also delve into her own battles with addiction and bulimia. Through it all, Michelle's faith has been her beacon of light. In this episode, she shares her experiences with finding solace in the Bible and her pastor's teachings, as well as her miraculous encounter with a drug dealer who asked her if she believed in Jesus. Throughout our conversation, Michelle and I reflect on the transformative power of God's love and the importance of mentorship and accountability within the church. This powerful and inspiring episode is a testament to the resilience and hope found in one's faith, even in the darkest of times. Don't miss out on the incredible story of my sister, Michelle White, as she shares her journey of faith, resilience, and redemption.
Katie is joined this week by Michelle White, a world traveler, life coach, and practicing hypnotherapist who is utilizing her experiences learned while living in China, South America, and Europe over the span of a decade to inspire and empower her clients. Find Michelle, her social media, and her services here: linktr.ee/minddesignwithmichelle Michelle's instagram: @minddesignwithmichelle Stay tuned for updates on all things BYNTHT & Be You Women's Wellness by following Katie on social media! IG: @beyoucmty TikTok: @beyoucmty Website: www.beyoucmty.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/byntht/support
Welcome to Episode 94 of The Darlington Podcast! In this episode, Head of Regester House Kim Bell talks with seniors Michelle White, Regester head dorm prefect, and Kate Scott, Regester head day prefect. They talk about Regester House's unique personality, their favorite house traditions and more. This is the third episode in a series highlighting each of the six residential houses on campus. Click here for complete show notes >>
Episode No. 583 features artist William Cordova and curator Michelle White. Cordova is featured in "Beyond the Surface: Collage, Mixed Media and Textile Works from the Collection" at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University. The exhibition is on view through May 14. Cordova's work uses a range of media to address and re-make historical narratives. His practice understands that present knowledge of history is always changing, and that artists are part of the process of revising our understandings of the past. Cordova has had solo shows at the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Pérez Art Museum Miami, the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, and at LAXART in Los Angeles. In 2019 he was included in the Havana Biennial, previously he was included in -ennials at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, and in Prague, Venice, and New Orleans (Prospect). On the second segment, White discusses "Walter De Maria: Boxes for Meaningless Work," a survey of De Maria's career drawn mostly from the Menil Collection's outstanding de Maria collection. The exhibition is on view in Houston through April 23.
Nowadays, we are constantly striving to become the best version of ourselves. While we hustle to achieve our goals and dreams in life, we oftentimes forget to prioritize ourselves because we allow the opinion of others to define who we are. How should we prioritize ourselves so we can live our lives to the fullest in a manner that we can be at peace with the world? In this podcast episode, dating and relationship coach Keshia Rice chats with mindset and identity coach Michelle White on how to prioritize oneself. Guest Michelle believes that by staying true to her most authentic self and honoring who she really is, she is most happy and at peace. She reiterates that we need to make our own choices and define who we are and not by what other people are dictating us. Michelle White is a mindset and identity coach, and a certified hypnotherapist. She teaches women self-prioritization.Michelle is on a mission to help high-achieving energetically and emotionally burnt out women build a resilient mindset and so they can feel fulfilled and ignited by life. To know more about Michelle White, follow her on the following platforms: www.MindDesignwithMichelle.com Insta: @Iammichellewhite TikTok: @iammichellewhite YT: @iammichellewhite Michelle's podcast: Minding My Own Mind Feel free to DM Keshia on her Instagram @keshiarice. Learn more about Keshia by visiting her website https://www.keshiarice.com/. Keshia also shared her book list on Amazon! Looking for help in your healing journey? I am proud to be sponsored by BetterHelp, and I'm partnering with them to offer you 10% off your first month of therapy! Sign up at betterhelp.com/keshiarice.
The Rogue Publishing Partners partners talk about their favorite books of 2022. Shelby Jo Long, CEO of Rogue. Susie Schaefer, COO of Rogue Scott Sery, Director at Rogue, Michelle White, Director of Design at Rogue, and David Wolf, CEO of Audiovita talk about how to overcome these challenges in the process of independent publishing.Tune in to learn more!Connect:Strategic Advisor Board: www.linkedin.com/company/strategic-advisor-boardBusiness Dynamics: wwwshelbyjolong.comShelby Jo Long: www.linkedin.com/in/shelby-jo-long-9a7b0620/Susie Schaefer: www.linkedin.com/in/susie-schaeferScott Sery: www.linkedin.com/in/seryouslyMichelle White: www.linkedin.com/in/mmwbooksDavid Wolf: https://www.linkedin.com/in/audivita/
Leave it up to Linda to find the craziest and randomist story. Yes, I know that's not a word but I'm going with it. Leslie is so upset with this story. Lorraine is cracking up. Thank you so much for all of your support! We can't thank y'all enough! Don't forget to rate, review and follow! @ECCthePodcast Also, check out our website www.eccthepodcast.com and Patreon! Sources --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/eastcoastcreepin/support
The Rogue Publishing Partners directors talk about the business opportunities of your brand and book. Shelby Jo Long, CEO of Rogue Publishing and SVP of the Strategic Advisor Board and Michelle White, Director of Design for Rogue Publishing talk about how to inspire your audience into action through your journey and your brand design.Connect:Strategic Advisor Board: https://www.linkedin.com/company/strategic-advisor-board/Rogue Publishing Partners: https://www.roguepublishingpartners.com/Shelby Jo Long: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shelby-jo-long-9a7b0620/
Summer break is a great time to pick up a book and grow as a reader. Michelle White shares how students are turning the page and starting a new chapter by not only preventing the Summer Slide, but gaining skills to lead forward.Guest: Michelle White, Summer Reading Program https://sites.google.com/ecsdfl.us/ecsdsummerreading/home Learn more about Escambia County School District: https://ecsd-fl.schoolloop.com/ Host: Meredith Hackwith Edwards
Every human needs a place to call home, a place they belong to that also belongs to them, whether they own it or not. This week we had an incredible conversation about housing equity with Michelle White. After Michelle obtained her Juris Doctorate from Rutgers she served the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division, eventually focusing on several housing related roles. Michelle is now the Executive Director of Affordable Housing Services, a non-profit specializing in producing units affordable for low and very low-income persons with disabilities, persons of color and families. Michelle shared a beautiful vision of what it looks like when we all have an equitable opportunity for housing, then we reimagined Ezekiel 45:9-10. Without further ado, here's Michelle. Follow along with Michelle's efforts for housing equity at https://pasadena4rentcontrol.org/ Y'all!!!! We're hanging in person!!! Join us Thursday November 17th at 7pm in Pasadena for a communal conversion about a journey of holistic evolution with Author, Actor, and Poet Arielle Estoria. Find more information on our website https://thekinshipcollective.org/gathering. Please subscribe, rate and review our podcast. As you listen week after week and share the podcast we will keep ending otherness and growing solidarity! Please share our podcast with a friend who needs to be part of a more inclusive conversation about scripture and community. You are loved! We are family! Outro "We are Family" - Sister Sledge (Official Cover) by @ShaundReynolds
For the final round of The Spectator's Economic Innovator of the Year Awards, our kind sponsors, Investec, hosted us at their offices on Gresham Street, London. We met 11 finalists for lunch — out of a record total of 176 entries across the whole of the UK — to pitch their ventures to our distinguished panel of judges. Our finalists are: UpCircle Beauty, Elvie, Ultromics, Silverstream, eConsult Health, Itaconix, Thought Machine, Recycleye, Project Etopia and Housekeep. The judges; Matthew Robinson who works in Private Equity with ICG; Eva-Maria Dimitriadis CEO of Conduit Connect, and finally Kate Gribbon and Michelle White from Investec. The judges faced the tough task of comparing businesses in very different sectors and stages of development. Given there were multiple contenders for the sustainability award, our judges also praised some of their favourite businesses for this category. We hope all the companies we meet gain from the networking opportunities, benefit from the accolade of being selected as finalists and enjoy the buzz, the conversation and the lunch. We hope Spectator readers and podcast listeners also enjoy following the search for this year's ultimate winners to be announced at the gala dinner of the 11th November – and will take a few minutes to explore the finalists' websites and products.
For this year's Midlands and Southwest Innovator of the Year Awards, the judges met four finalists at each region respectively. These eight finalists were shortlisted down from a record 176 applications. In Birmingham lunch, the finalists in this podcast were MoM incubators, Hybrid Air Vehicles and Bambino Mio. The judges, Martin Vander Weyer, business editor of The Spectator met Steve Hewitt, non-executive director of Gymshark; Clive Bawden. COO of Warwick Music and former finalist of the Innovator of the Year Awards and Michelle White representing Investec. The judges faced the tough task of comparing businesses in very different sectors and stages of development. But all four made compelling pitches – and the variety of entries is part of the fun of these Awards. We hope all the companies we meet gain from the networking opportunities, benefit from the accolade of being selected as finalists and enjoy the buzz, the conversation and the lunch. We hope Spectator readers and podcast listeners also enjoy following the search for this year's ultimate winners – and will take a few minutes to explore the finalists' websites and products. More Economic innovator of the Year Awards podcasts coming shortly!
For the next round of The Spectator's Economic Innovator of the Year Awards sponsored by Investec, we met in Leeds at the Dakota hotel and restaurant. For the Yorkshire and Northeast region, three finalists joined us for lunch — out of a record total of 176 entries across the whole of the UK — to pitch their ventures to our distinguished panel of judges. The finalists you'll hear about on this podcast are: Testcard, in the healthcare sector; MudDaddy, a portable dog shower and Tofooco. After lunch, we also met Powersheds via Zoom who couldn't make it to the pitching lunch. The judges were Gordon Black, venture capitalist and former manufacturer; Caroline Theobald, entrepreneur and chair of the Newcastle Business School at Northumbria University. Finally from our sponsors Investec; Dan Sheahan, Michelle White and Rowena Huston. The judges faced the tough task of comparing businesses in very different sectors and stages of development. But all four made compelling pitches – and the variety of entries is part of the fun of these Awards. We hope all the companies we meet gain from the networking opportunities, benefit from the accolade of being selected as finalists and enjoy the buzz, the conversation and the lunch. We hope Spectator readers and podcast listeners also enjoy following the search for this year's ultimate winners – and will take a few minutes to explore the finalists' websites and products. More Economic innovator of the Year Awards podcasts coming shortly!
The second regional podcast for The Spectator's Economic Innovator of the Year Award sponsored by Investec was set in the picturesque city of Edinburgh where the judges and finalists met for lunch at the Dome on George Street. We invited four finalists for the Scotland and Northern Ireland region — out of a record total of 176 across the whole of the UK — to pitch their ventures to our distinguished panel of judges. The finalists you'll hear about on this podcast are: Cardinal Analytics a fintech business that predicts when enterprises are about to go bankrupt; MacRebur a novel invention for road surfacing; Roslin Technologies which make lab-grown meat; and Synaptec which work in manufacturing for fault sensors in power networks. The judges were Merryn Somerset-Webb, editor and chief of MoneyWeek magazine and Financial Times columnist, Irene McAleese, co-founder and CEO of See.Sense, an early winner of these awards; finally our friends from Investec, Michelle White and Arlene Ewing. The judges faced the tough task of comparing businesses in very different sectors and stages of development. But all four made compelling pitches – and the variety of entries is part of the fun of these Awards. We hope all the companies we meet gain from the networking opportunities, benefit from the accolade of being selected as finalists and enjoy the buzz, the conversation and the lunch. We hope Spectator readers and podcast listeners also enjoy following the search for this year's ultimate winners – and will take a few minutes to explore the finalists' websites and products. More Economic innovator of the Year Awards podcasts coming shortly!
This year's regional podcast for The Spectator's Economic Innovator of the Year Awards kicks off with a fascinating lunch at The Ivy Restaurant in Manchester. Amongst 139 entrants, we invited four finalists to pitch their ideas to an esteemed set of judges over lunch. The finalists are: LoveRaw, Ordo, Interact and Better2Know. On the judging panel was: Gabriel Fysh, former regional winner of The Spectator's awards; Steve Morris, private equity and venture capital investor; finally Richard Greenhalgh and Michelle White from Investec. Entrants range across healthcare, food, sexual health, tech and personal care. It was a tough round for the judges to discuss – but that's the fun of these awards. We hope participants gain from the networking opportunities as well as the accolade of being selected as finalists — and we hope Spectator readers and podcast listeners will take a few minutes to explore their websites and products.
Decoring your home takes patience and vision. In this episode DeDe sits down with T. Michelle White, Celebrity Interior Designer and Owner of Mid City Design Group, and talks about the ins and out of becoming a notable designer. DeDe reveals that she would have chosen a life in real estate and design. Colors, art, staging and lighting are crucial when bringing a room or space to life. Tune in to the NEW episode available on YouTube and all podcast streaming apps @DeDe's Dope Podcast
The Rogue Publishing Directors discuss how an ebook can help add authority to your business. Director Scott Sery talks about how an ebook can help your marketing efforts. Director Michelle White talks about the importance of design in ebook format to best adapt to their audience. Director Shelby Jo Long talks about how an ebook can help you build a business around your ideal. Director Susie Schaeffer explores the different platform options for publishing your ebook.Connect:Strategic Advisor Board: www.linkedin.com/company/strategic-advisor-boardShelby Jo Long: www.linkedin.com/in/shelby-jo-long-9a7b0620/Rogue Publishing Partners: www.roguepublishingpartners.comMichelle White: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mmwbooks/Scott Sery: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seryously/Susie Schaefer: https://www.linkedin.com/in/%F0%9F%8D%8D-susie-schaefer-489753b/
In this episode, we hear book marketing tips from experts in the publishing industry. Rogue publishing partners help independent authors best position their books to increase their sales and support their business.Rogue Publishing Partners, CEO Shelby Jo Long, COO Susie Schaefer, and VP Michelle WhiteConnect:Strategic Advisor Board: www.linkedin.com/company/strategic-advisor-boardShelby Jo Long: www.linkedin.com/in/shelby-jo-long-9a7b0620/Rogue Publishing Partners: www.roguepublishingpartners.comSusie Schaefer: www.linkedin.com/in/
Episode No. 557 features artist Meghann Riepenhoff and curator Michelle White. Meghann Riepenhoff is included in "Watershed," an exhibition at the University of Michigan Museum of Art that considers the interconnected histories, present lives, and imagined futures of the Great Lakes region. "Watershed" features work by 15 artists, six of whom were commissioned to make new work for the show. Riepenhoff's 2022 Waters of the Americas: EPA ID NYD980592497, Eastman Kodak's Emissions B (Confluence of the Genesee River and Lake Ontario, Rochester, NY, 03.12.2022) is among those commissions. The exhibition was curated by Jennifer M. Friess, and is on view through October 23. Riepenhoff's work foregrounds the chemical processes from which pictures are and have been made since the nineteenth century, and brings those processes into contact with nature, including rivers, lakes and oceans. Her work has been included in exhibitions at SFMOMA, the High Museum of Art, the Portland Art Museum, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, and more. This September, Radius and Yossi Milo Gallery will publish Riepenhoff's new book Ice; and Yossi Milo will present related work in its New York space. Indiebound and Amazon offer the book for about $60. White discusses "Niki de Saint Phalle in the 1960s," which is at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego through July 17. The exhibition examines two of Saint Phalle's most important bodies of work: the Tirs, or “shooting paintings,” and exuberant sculptures of women Saint Phalle called Nanas. White co-curated the show with Jill Dawsey. The excellent exhibition catalogue was co-published by MCASD and The Menil Collection, which originated the exhibition, and distributed by Yale University Press. Amazon offers it for about $50.
Have a dog with cancer and wish there was something you could do – right now – to help other dogs avoid this disease? Enter Darwin's Ark. The Darwin's Ark Cancer Project is a free, survey-based project that is looking for trends that could pinpoint why some dogs get cancer and why others don't. Some of the participants will also get a free genome sequencing and/or a silicone tag to help pick up pollutants that your dog is exposed to. Blood samples may also be collected from some dogs to evaluate tumor DNA circulating in the bloodstream. Listen in to learn more about Darwin's Ark, how to sign up, and how your dog's data will be used. Links Mentioned in Today's Show: Darwin's Ark Darwin's Ark Cancer Project Dog Aging Project About Today's Guest, Dr. Michelle White: My career focus is Precision Medicine and Veterinary Genetics and Genomics. I received my DVM (Doctor of Veterinary Medicine) degree from Cornell University in May of 2014, and my PhD in Translational Medicine with a minor in Genetics and Genomics in 2019 (also from Cornell). Specialties: Veterinary Medicine, Data Analysis, Translational Research, Population Genetics, Project Management, Financial Planning LinkedIn Twitter Other Links: To join the private Facebook group for readers of Dr. Dressler's book “The Dog Cancer Survival Guide,” go to https://www.facebook.com/groups/dogcancersupport/ Dog Cancer Answers is a Maui Media production in association with Dog Podcast Network This episode is sponsored by the best-selling animal health book The Dog Cancer Survival Guide: Full Spectrum Treatments to Optimize Your Dog's Life Quality and Longevity by Dr. Demian Dressler and Dr. Susan Ettinger. Available everywhere fine books are sold. Have a guest you think would be great for our show? Contact our producers at DogCancerAnswers.com Have an inspiring True Tail about your own dog's cancer journey you think would help other dog lovers? Share your true tail with our producers. If you would like to ask a dog cancer related question for one of our expert veterinarians to answer on a future Q&A episode, call our Listener Line at 808-868-3200 www.dogcanceransers.com. Dog Cancer News is a free weekly newsletter that contains useful information designed to help your dog with cancer. To sign up, please visit: www.dogcancernews.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode, Michelle White, CEO, and founder of MMW books tells the story of her business. She is an expert independent book designer that helps authors add professionalism and credibility to their books. Through cover design and interior layout for print and ebooks. Her design helps books come to life. Tune in to discover more about the book design process.Connect:Strategic Advisor Board: www.linkedin.com/company/strategic-advisor-boardShelby Jo Long: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shelby-jo-long-9a7b0620/MMW Books, LLC: www.mmwbooks.comMichelle White LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/mmwbooks
In the ninth episode of Short Hand, we're thinking about how to make your short film set a productive, inclusive and safe space. You'll hear from filmmakers Katie Sinclair (The Last Days, Signs), Ella Glendining (Octopus) and Jessi Gutch (Octopus, The Forgotten C) and psychologist and consultant Michelle White. Topics covered include: how to support your film crew and keep morale high on set, establishing rules for good communication between the director and producer, things you might need to consider as the producer to make sure everyone has their requirements met, why good coffee is a must, the role of the wellbeing facilitator and psychological safety. *** SHOW NOTES & RESOURCES 6ft From The Spotlight The Whole Picture Toolkit Bectu *** Short Hand is a BFI NETWORK & Film Hub South East production. Produced by Nicole Davis, with support from Independent Cinema Office. Edited by Graciela Mae Chico.
Be encouraged! It doesn't matter where you start in life, you get to make the decisions at any moment to change the trajectory of your life. Stand firm under pressure and continue to press toward all that you were called to walk into.I'm humbled and honored to have my dear friend, Pastor Paula White-Cain, join me to speak encouragement and share her stories of the obstacles she has overcome to be able to fulfill her commitment to humanity and passion for spreading the word of God.Pastor Paula is the Senior Pastor of City of Destiny Church and hosts the Christian television program Paula Today. Paula is a renowned life coach, bestselling author, and highly sought-after motivational speaker. She is a mother, grandmother, and wife to Jonathan Cain of the Rock-n-Roll Hall of Fame band, Journey.
When we are struggling - physically, emotionally, psychologically - we want to get to the other side as fast as possible because it's hard to tolerate the discomfort. We consume incredible amounts of information in an effort to help us get there, but we rarely take the time required to really absorb and apply the information before we are rushing to consume the next. It's time to slow down. __ Come and listen to the whole Happy Inside podcast episode on your favourite podcast app - Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Amazon Podcasts and Stitcher. The Happy Inside Podcast is for you if you experience anxiety, stress, gut symptoms and disorders, IBS, IBD, SIBO, food intolerance, elimination diets, Low FODMAP dietary restrictions and chronic illness. Happy Inside attends to the psychological, emotional and behavioural aspects of gut disorders and chronic illness; old wounds, life misalignments, the fear, anxiety and stress around symptoms, the hypervigilence, the limitations, restrictions and impacts these are having on your life - all those conversations you've been waiting to have are happening right here. I hear you and you're not alone.
Meghan Smith and Michelle White join us to talk track and field, woman in coaching, and more
Dr. Michelle White discusses the current state of childhood obesity in the United States and emphasizes the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. She will also talk about how social determinants of health, environmental factors, and caretakers can influence children's weight and overall health. Stay tuned to hear what you can do as a caregiver or healthcare provider to prevent and manage childhood obesity. Dr. White is a pediatrician and health equity researcher at Duke University. Her research focuses on developing and adapting interventions to eliminate disparities in child obesity- a condition which disproportionately affects children of color and children in lower-income countries. “Obesity is a multi-factorial problem and no family, no parent, no grandparents who's taking care of kids should feel that they're having to walk through that alone and unsupported” Question of the Day: What healthy habits have you developed or maintained during the pandemic? What's your secret to keeping these habits going? Key Points: 0:00 - Intro with Shireen! 1:45 - What originally drew you to medicine and how did you really become involved in pediatric medicine? 2:50 - What's the current state of childhood obesity in the United States and where do you see things headed? 5:17 - How can caregivers prevent and manage childhood obesity? 9:40 - How can physicians help families experiencing childhood obesity? 11:50 - What are some environmental factors that contribute to childhood obesity, especially in racial and ethnic minorities? 17::12 - How do the identities and lifestyles of caretakers impact children? 18:51 - Additional Advice for Parents and Caregivers 21:18 - Outro with Shireen! On this episode you will learn: Social and Environmental Factors Contributing to Childhood Obesity How Identities and Lifestyles of Caretakers Influence Children Childhood Obesity Prevention and Management Social Determinants of Health Impact of COVID-19 on Current State of Childhood Obesity Connect with Dr.White! Twitter Connect with Yumlish! Website Instagram Twitter Facebook LinkedIn YouTube --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/yumlish/message
This week, Lt. Gov. Kate Marshall and Gov. Steve Sisolak's chief of staff Michelle White come on the podcast to talk about stepping down from their roles — Marshall to take a job at the White House and White to spend more time with her family. Both women talk about their jobs in the government, … Continue reading "Top state officials depart, anti-racism policy in schools, and high gas prices" The post Top state officials depart, anti-racism policy in schools, and high gas prices appeared first on The Nevada Independent.
This week, Lt. Gov. Kate Marshall and Gov. Steve Sisolak's chief of staff Michelle White come on the podcast to talk about stepping down from their roles — Marshall to take a job at the White House and White to spend more time with her family. Both women talk about their jobs in the government, … Continue reading "Top state officials depart, anti-racism policy in schools, and high gas prices"
This week, Lt. Gov. Kate Marshall and Gov. Steve Sisolak's chief of staff Michelle White come on the podcast to talk about stepping down from their roles — Marshall to take a job at the White House and White to spend more time with her family. Both women talk about their jobs in the government, … Continue reading "Top state officials depart, anti-racism policy in schools, and high gas prices"
Todays episode we talk with Michelle White about Her business that provides online educational entertainment for 0-5 year olds & Corporate Social Responsibility and what its like working with the government also we talk to Dominika Dzenisz my partner to talk about her experiences of racial discrimination and ask each other thought provoking questions that we encourage listners to ask themselves and others.
Thursday, February 4, 2021 Join our host, Kerby Anderson, as he welcomes his first guests, Michelle & Cedric White. They join him in studio to talk about their ministry, Healing Thine Hearts. Kerby brings George Barna to the mic to talk about the CRC’s most recent survey showing America’s dropping support for socialism. Kerby will […]
No good deed is left unpunished in this Christmas story. First, true crime headlines. Support the show and get ad-free episodes by joining Murder Minute + for only $4 a month. Follow us on TikTok @murderminutepod and on Instagram @murderminute and @truecrimeheadlines for even more true crime headlines. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What executive and regulatory actions might the Biden administration take with respect to DACA, travel bans, and H-1B visas? How might the ongoing pandemic affect plans for comprehensive immigration reform? In this podcast, Jorge Lopez, shareholder and chair of Littler’s Global Mobility and Immigration Practice Group, joins practice group members Sean McCrory and Michelle White to discuss possible immigration policy changes in the year ahead.
Michelle White tells us of some of the clinical challenges you might meet as a Mercy Ships anaesthetist working in Africa.
Dr Michelle White in conversation about the work of Mercy Ships in Africa
Episode No. 465 features artist Virginia Jaramillo. The Menil Collection is presenting "Virginia Jaramillo: The Curvilinear Paintings, 1969-74" through July 3, 2021. It is the first solo museum exhibition of Jaramillo's sixty-year career. Curated by Michelle White, the show features a series of paintings that Jaramillo made featuring the joining of line to color against mostly monochromatic backgrounds. The exhibition is also a celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of "The De Luxe Show," one of the first racially integrated exhibitions in the United States, which was presented in Houston in 1971. (Art historian Darby English's book 1971: A Year in the Life of Color examined the exhibition. English discussed the book on The MAN Podcast in 2017.) Jaramillo is a California-born painter whose abstractions have long explored space, line, geography and the physical remnants of civilizations. In the last decade alone, she has been included in major scholarly exhibitions such as curator and art historian Kellie Jones's "Now Dig This: Art and Black Los Angeles, 1960-80" and "Witness: Art and Civil Rights in the Sixties," which Jones curated with A. Carbone, and Mark Godfrey and Zoe Whitley's "Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power." Jaramillo's paintings are in the collections of museums such as the Brooklyn Museum, the Kemper in Kansas City, the Metropolitan in New York, the Norton Simon in Pasadena and the Virginia MFA in Richmond.
A conversation with Michelle White about the curious lives of human cadavers, connecting energy networks, toasting her life with tea, soundtracks for homeostasis, being poised between beauty and death, and Philip Glass. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Cedric and Michelle WhiteOrdained Ministers, Certified Belief Therapists, & Founders of Healing Thine Hearts Ministries "NEVER-statements are curses you're putting on your life." Top 3 Tips/Strategies: ★ Be intentional with prayer time ★ Be honest with God, and LISTEN to Him ★ Do the next right action Links From Today's ShowHealingThineHearts.org Subscribe Apple | Stitcher | iHeart Support The Show★ Make A One-Time Donation Epic Resources! 1) 5 Minute Strategy: Learn Joseph's secret to obliterate WORRY & STRESS (in 5 minutes or less)! 2) FREE Spiritual Surrender Call: Go 1-on-1 with JW & you’ll discover what's been holding you back from playing all out in less than an hour! 3) Spiritual Surrender Bootcamp: Finally, learn how to let go of your "Little Control Freak" and start winning BIG in your life! Music: Purple-Planet.com
Michelle White, Senior Program Advisor at the State Justice Institute, discusses SJI's recently released Request for Applications for Court Pandemic Response and Recovery. Access the RFA at https://bit.ly/31YtTsj for additional information.
On Monday, June 22, 2020, the White House announced a temporary suspension on new work visas, which will be in place until at least the end of this calendar year. The order blocks entry for those who enter the country under certain visa categories, such as the H-1B and L-1 visas, among others. Littler attorneys Jorge Lopez and Michelle White explain what this new rule means for both American and international employers.
Episode: “Have a Confident Online Presence ” Welcome to another episode of Nurse Marketing: The Business of Nursing. Now more than ever we need to show ourselves to be the solution that our clients need. On this episode, we talk about the importance of having a confident online presence. Have a Confident Online Presence with Keshia Michelle White Amelia Roberts interviews Keshia Michelle White ABOUT OUR GUEST Keshia Michelle White is the founder of Keshia White designs and her agency offers strategic yet beautiful, brand strategy, brand identity and website design for coaches and consultants. After nearly a decade in corporate America working in business to business sales, Keshia took her business full time in 2018. Keshia’s Design work has been recognized by Adobe. ABOUT OUR HOST Amelia Roberts is a digital native who officially became a practitioner of online marketing twelve years ago with a role as a virtual assistant. Student loans from nursing school inspired her to put her love of observing human nature, showing empathy and previous marketing experience to work in new ways and as a result, she was able to pay off her student loans in under 2 years. Now alongside other roles, you can find Amelia helping under-recognized professionals stand out and "get first dates" in business so that they can become thought leaders in the healthcare industry and beyond. When she is not optimizing human potential Amelia enjoys planning real and imagined food tours. You can connect with her on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/ameliaroberts/ LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/ameliaroberts Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rn_solutions Twitter: https://twitter.com/RN_Solutions
In this episode we have Michelle White who is a professional mental therapist on to discuss the things she sees and deals with on a daily basis.
Leo Anna Thomas (Standby Art Director) and Matt Longley (6ft From The Spotlight)spoke with former BFI Head of Events, Michelle White who is now a coaching Psychologist specialising in Positive Psychology! #positivepsychology Michelle co-founded the organisation LIVEWISE @livewise.how www.livewise.how who offer a wide range of coaching. Recorded at Shed London
Join us every week as we dive back into the "inappropriate" books of our youth and how they impacted our lives, exploring our fresh perspectives on these reads as adult women. In this week's episode (part 3 of 4), Laura Holterman, Sarah Wallisch, Andrea Roedel-Schraeder, and Michelle White review and react to New Moon (The Twilight Saga Book 2). Part 3: Really, Alice? We are back for the third week of our review of Twilight : New Moon, and things are finally starting to happen in the book, sort of. Edward thinks Bella is dead, so he decides to go to Italy to kill himself. Bella and Alice (oh yeah -- Alice showed up and her vague-ass powers kind of tell us all this) chase after him. The Shakespeare comparisons go from there, and you can't miss them since Meyer pounds you over the head with Romeo and Juliet.
Join us every week as we dive back into the "inappropriate" books of our youth and how they impacted our lives, exploring our fresh perspectives on these reads as adult women. In this week's episode (part 2 of 4), Laura Holterman, Sarah Wallisch, Andrea Roedel-Schraeder, and Michelle White review and react to New Moon (The Twilight Saga Book 2). Part 2: Healthy relationship? JK Welcome back to the second part of our review of Twilight: New Moon. Woooo weee, it’s a doozy. Bella has migrated out of her catatonic state and found a friend, Jacob, who seems to be a pleasant companion. Just kidding -- he has the hots for her and lets her know he will be waiting. So, that’s uncomfortable and high pressure. Bella discovers that dangerous situations make her hallucinate Edward’s voice, so that’s a fun choice for her. Oh yeah, and Jacob tells her in the most roundabout way possible that he’s a werewolf...And we spend 200 pages reading about nothing.
In this episode, we're throwing it back with a rewind episode with one of our favorite conversations with Michelle White! Michelle White, LMSW is a self-care blogger and creator of gmichelle: Self-Care Resources. She created gmichelle to offer space for folks to practice self-care regularly, strengthen their self-love and learn about healthy interpersonal relationships. With extensive experience as a licensed social worker, clinical therapist and statewide trainer, Michelle has worked closely with people who have survived interpersonal trauma, domestic violence and child abuse. With gmichelle, she hopes to offer shame-free support, healing-centered resources and trauma-informed tools for each person on their journey to becoming the best version of themselves in their relationships. This episode includes… How to step into your worthiness and create time to take care of yourself. How to set boundaries with toxic friendships and how to recognize that you're in a toxic friendship. Her tips of how to get started with self care and how it relates to the "spectrum" of self care. The importance of our individual responsibility to take of our selves to make the world a better place. And so much more! This episode is brought to you by: Women Creating Calm Are you looking to increase your energy, reconnect with your mind and body, & perform at a higher level? Register for my next free class to learn how to slay stress and create lasting calm here. Links mentioned in this episode Michelle's Website Click here to subscribe via RSS feed (non-iTunes feed): https://wellnessglowup.libsyn.com/rss Social Media Info Wellness Glow Up Podcast – @wellnessglowuppodcast Kayla Nedza – @kaylanedza Michelle White - @thegmichelle Did you like this episode? If you did give it a 5 star rating on iTunes and share it with your friends.
Nick Sutton recently visited the first ever TeachBetter Conference in Ohio. Along with presenting, Nick recorded a number of quick interviews with some of those in attendance to learn more about what's happening across the educational landscape. We’re sorry if any names are misspelled, etc. The environment was a little loud and some audio may be a bit difficult to understand in places. However, I think you’ll find that this episode highlights a lot of what educators are interested in at the time of this recording. We hope you enjoy this episode! Clip 1: WearCareShare.com Clip 2: Joshua Stamper of the Aspire Podcast on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get podcasts Clip 3: Michelle White, Dunlap, IL, elementary educator reflects on culturally responsive education Clip 4: Nick Mann of TeacherFit.fit discusses educator wellness Clip 5: Alex Oris of Cuyahoga Falls, OH, discusses technology integration Clip 6: Mark Losey and Milo, the Robot for Autism Clip 7: Jake Miller, from the Educational Duct Tape Podcast Clip 8: Crystal Parker, English Teacher from Florida Clip 9: Jen Molitor, Instructional Coach, Educator, and author of The Happy Teacher's Handbook Clip 10: Christy (??) Instructional Coach from Akron (OH) Public Schools Clip 11: Christina Florence, educator Clip 12: BreAnn Fennell, presenter Clip 13: Tiffany Ott,Director of Curriculum Development for the TeachBetter Team Clip 14: Latezeon Balentine, educator and author Clip 15: Amanda Post and Maggie Gifford, educators from rural Ohio Clip 16: Don Epps, education leader from southeast Kansas --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/learningthroughleading/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/learningthroughleading/support
Join us each week as we dive into the inappropriate books of our youth and how it impacted our lives. In this week's episode, Laura Holterman, Sarah Wallisch, Andrea Roedel-Schroeder, Michelle White, and Madi Veeder conclude their discussion of My Sweet Audrina and the conspiracy theories and headcanon from this drama turned terrible Lifetime movie. Each month we'll cover a new book and discuss the inappropriate and sometimes awkward moments of our youth reading them. If you would like to watch the video version of our Podcast we publish them to http://youtube.com/sexyhackers or visit http://sexyhackers.tv for the latest show notes.
Part 3 of My Sweet Audrina by VC Andrews, it's getting real now in this Episode. Listen to Laura Holterman, Sarah Wallisch, Andrea Roedel-Schroeder, Michelle White, and Madi Veeder chat it up about this sassy book. We publish new episodes every Wednesday so make sure you subscribe and follow. Each month we'll cover a new book and discuss the inappropriate and sometimes awkward moments of our youth reading them. If you would like to watch the video version of our Podcast we publish them to http://youtube.com/sexyhackers or visit http://sexyhackers.tv for the latest show notes.
We continue our journey into My Sweet Audrina by V.C. Andrews with part 2 of our Podcast. Listen to comedians, actors, authors and general book lovers Laura Holterman, Sarah Wallisch, Andrea Roedel-Schroeder, Michelle White, and Madi Veeder as we dive deep into the waters of this crazy book. We publish new episodes every Wednesday so make sure you subscribe and follow. Each month we'll cover a new book and discuss the inappropriate and sometimes awkward moments of our youth reading them. If you would like to watch the video version of our Podcast we publish them to http://youtube.com/sexyhackers or visit http://sexyhackers.tv for the latest show notes.
Join us each week as we dive into the inappropriate books of our youth and how it impacted our lives. In this weeks episode, Laura Holterman, Sarah Wallisch, Andrea Roedel-Schroeder, Michelle White, and Madi Veeder discuss My Sweet Audrina by VC Andrews, the plot points, this book's twists and turns, and how VC's own life impacted this dramatic page-turner.
In our Small Biz Episodes we will be featuring our Chamber Member Terrific Trips by Melissa and Associates. We are a chamber of on average 400 members and the majority of them are small businesses. This week I spoke with Melissa, Michelle and Tami, about what all they have to offer! For more information follow them on Facebook @terrifictripsbymelissa. Michelle White 918-647-7993 terrifictrips.michelle@yahoo.com Tami Matos 918-649-4414 terrifictrips.tami@yahoo.com Lori Marrow 918-448-7708 terrifictrips.lori@yahoo.com Melissa Holcomb 918-721-3429 melissa@terrifictrips.net Follow Poteau Chamber: Instagram: @poteauchamber Facebook: @PoteauChamber Twitter: Poteau_Chamber Website: www.poteachamber.com WordPress: poteauchamberblog Podcast: poteauchamberpodcast YouTube: Poteau Chamber Contact me: admin@poteauchamber.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/poteauchamberpodcast/message
Domestic violence and sexual assault are leading causes of injuries for young women and girls over the age of 15 in Georgia, according to the state's Department of Public Health . In fact, reports indicate that 30% of Georgia women in that age group will be abused at least once by their partners in their lifetimes. To understand why, we spoke with Michelle White, who is a child and youth project manager for the Georgia Coalition Against Domestic Violence . She explained how to identify and prevent teen dating violence as well as why teens are less likely to report it. And White also described the characteristics of healthy relationships.
On this week's episode of Tea Time with Tajuana, Tajuana sits down with blogger, LMSW, business woman and entrepreneur Michelle White Self Explore, Self Restore Journal Self-Care & Self-Love - Can you have one with the other? Changing paths in life and Her work as an LMSW Michelle on IG: @thegmichelle Michelle's blog & website: https://gmichelle.com/
In this episode, Kayla talks to Michelle White! Michelle White, LMSW is a self-care blogger and creator of gmichelle: Self-Care Resources. She created gmichelle to offer space for folks to practice self-care regularly, strengthen their self-love and learn about healthy interpersonal relationships. With extensive experience as a licensed social worker, clinical therapist and statewide trainer, Michelle has worked closely with people who have survived interpersonal trauma, domestic violence and child abuse. With gmichelle, she hopes to offer shame-free support, healing-centered resources and trauma-informed tools for each person on their journey to becoming the best version of themselves in their relationships. Michelle works full-time as a professional trainer and project manager with the Georgia Coalition Against Domestic Violence in Atlanta, Georgia. You can reach Michelle at contact@gmichelle.com. This episode includes… Why she founded gmichelle Her experience as a woman of color within the self care and wellness space Her tips of how to get started with self care What self care really means And so much more! Resources: gmichelle's Website Follow Michelle on Instagram at @thegmichelle You can reach Michelle at contact@gmichelle.com If you like this episode, please leave a rating and review on iTunes. Keep in touch with Kayla on Instagram @kaylanedza and find her on her website.
Today we are talking to Michelle White, self-care blogger and author of the guided self-care journal, Self Explore, Self Restore. Michelle created her website gmichelle.com to offer space for folks to practice self-care regularly and strengthen their self-love. Michelle is a licensed social worker in the states of Illinois and Georgia. From her experiences in providing clinical services, technical assistance and trainings on interpersonal trauma, domestic violence and child abuse, Michelle understands how difficult it can be to practice self-care on a regular basis. In this episode, we talk about… Simple ways to start a self-care practice. Overcoming guilt around practicing self-care. Practicing self-care in ways that are fulfilling for our needs. How to cultivate self-love through practicing self-care. RESOURCES: Read Michelle’s Blog: https://gmichelle.com/ Follow Michelle on Instagram @thegmichelle Michelle’s Self-Care Journal, Self Explore, Self Restore Download Michelle’s Free Self-Care Resource Guide: https://gmichelle.com/free-stuff/ Balanced Black Girl February Book Club Pick: Well-Read Black Girl by Glory Edim If you like this episode, please leave a rating and review on iTunes. Keep in touch with Les on Instagram @balancedles, follow the show @balancedblackgirlpodcast, and join the Balanced Black Girl Podcast Community on Facebook. PS: If you really want to take your new year to the next level, snag our free glow-up guide. This free guide has everything you need to implement a self-care practice that works. You’ll get daily journal worksheets, inspiring quotes, affirmations, and a bonus workout. Get the guide HERE.
On this episode (at 0:00 ), Paul explains a(nother!) shift in the podcast format for the near future. Then (at 7:52 ), Multiversity's Michelle White ( http://www.multiversitycomics.com/author/mwhite/ ) returns to talk about three graphic novels by single creators: (at 10:42 ) "The Interview" by Manuele Fiore (Fantagraphics), (at 29:24 ) "Science Comics Bats: Learning to Fly" by Falynn Koch (First Second), (at 41:30 ) and "One! Hundred! Demons!" by Lynda Barry (Drawn + Quarterly). Subscribe and follow the Comics Syllabus podcast on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, or Soundcloud, or copy this RSS feed to your podcatcher: http://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:235183739/sounds.rss or you can find archives for this podcast (previously named "Study Comics with Paul") here: http://studycomics.club/ Join the discussion on the Comics Syllabus Facebook page: http://facebook.com/ComicsSyllabus or with Paul on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TwoPlai or leave your comments here on the showpage. Thanks for listening!
Michelle White-Jones is a talented, soulful songstress and a woman of faith who was born with music in her DNA. She began her journey at the tender age of five, frequently ministering through song with her home church in Newark, NJ. For many years, Michelle cultivated her gift and developed her unique style while singing with various gospel and R & B groups. She has had the opportunity to share the stage with gospel greats such as Mattie Moss Clark, Tramaine Hawkins, Inez Andrews, Douglas Miller and Doc McKenzie. In 2015, however, Michelle was blessed to record and release three singles entitled"Hold On", "Hold On the Remix" and her personal testimony "Sweet Victory". In 2017, she released her fourth single, “One True God.” Michelle now has an even greater love for the Lord and still enjoys ministering the Gospel through song. Moving forward as a solo recording artist, Michelle looks to empower both women and men from all walks of life through her music.
If you are one of many people experiencing a gut disorder, then you are in the right place. You know the stress, anxiety, worry and way that your symptoms have changed your life…that’s what we talk about here. It’s the behavioural and psychological aspects of gut disorders; everything no one else is talking to you about. This premiere episode shares the 7 years of clinical experience Michelle White has gained in gut focused therapy through her Mind Matters clinic, how she got there, and how this is going to benefit you. Michelle White is a psychotherapist and clinical hypnotherapist specialising in gut focused therapy and gut directed hypnotherapy. through the Happy Inside Program, iPhone app and podcast. Want a happy inside? Start by subscribing to the show.
Sunit and Michelle White talk about all things essential oils. Michelle talks about how she got into them and becoming EMPOWERED as a mom. They talk about how to incorporate oils into your life, the best oils to start with and how to use oils with your kids. Michelle references Stephanie Fritz (https://www.facebook.com/theessentialmidwife/) and the Modern Essentials App (https://itunes.apple.com/ca/app/modern-essentials/id533956710?mt=8) They talk about the top oils for pregnant and expecting moms, and what oils are a must for babies and young children, as well as how oils can benefit your skin and your health in general.
Images for this episode will be at http://wp.me/p42KN3-ESt starting 7/25/2017 9am EST. On this week’s Comics Syllabus podcast, researcher, teacher, and podcaster Grace Gipson joins Paul to talk about “Black Panther: World of Wakanda” by Roxane Gay, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Alitha Martinez, and others, and “Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur” by Amy Reeder, Brandon Montclare, Natacha Bustos, and others from Marvel Comics. We’re really excited to have Grace (on Twitter @GBreezy20) as a guest, and she talks about her comics origins, her research, and her podcasting on the #BlackComicsChat team. Then, Grace and Paul explore her approach to these portrayal of black female characters in current Marvel comics, and we dig into the significance of Lunella Lafayette (Moon Girl) and Ayo and Aneka, the protagonists of “World of Wakanda.” But first, in the opening “General Ed” segment, we’d happy to have “The Non-Fiction Section” with Michelle White, Multiversity contributor and lifeblood of the “Keep It Real” column that looks at reality-based comics and graphic novels. Michelle offers a wide-ranging list of three non-fiction comics recommendations for us, “Feynman” by Jim Ottaviani and Leland Myrick (First Second), “The Green River Killer” by Jeff Jensen and Jonathan Case (Dark Horse), and “The Influencing Machine” by Brooke Gladstone and Josh Neufeld (WW Norton). I’m Paul, and I’m inviting you to join us for another episode of The Comics Syllabus, a comics analysis podcast. Our mantra is, we read widely and we dig deep. Each week, we choose one work from a wide breadth of current and classic comics, including superhero fare, comics from independent publishers and small presses, global comics, newspaper strip archives, and various collected editions. We spend time digging deep into the work from various perspectives, sometimes in actual live conversation with others, sometimes with just me on a mic surrounded by a pile of comics studies and academic books. It’s like a comics seminar, where the only prerequisite is that you love comics. Download the podcast episode here. You can find the podcast on iTunes, Stitcher, or Soundcloud, or copy this RSS feed to your podcatcher: http://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:235183739/sounds.rss or find archives for this podcast (previously named “Study Comics with Paul”) here: http://studycomics.club/ A rating, review, or star on whatever podcast source would help make the world a slightly better place. (No, Really!) Follow Paul on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TwoPlai It’s the only place on earth he stays under 140 characters. Thanks for listening! MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Grace Gipson on Twitter: http://twitter.com/gbreezy20 Black Comics Chat: http://twitter.com/blackcomicschat Michelle White’s Work on Multiversity: http://www.multiversitycomics.com/author/mwhite/ Oversight: I failed to mention in my conversation with Grace Gipson about black women superheroes my intellectual debt to Dr. Deborah Whaley for understanding topics we discuss, which you can check out here http://www.multiversitycomics.com/interviews/deborah-e-whaley-interview/ and in her book, "Black Women in Sequence" (U of Washington Press).
Episode 128.3 - Today Living Group Inc. President Michelle White joins us. Part 1 of 2
Episode 128.4 - President & Owner of Today Living Group, Michelle White, explains corporate rentals. Part 2 of 2
Episode 123.4 - Whether you're on the move or interested in a passive real estate investment option President & Owner of Today Living Group, Michelle White, explains corporate rentals. Part 2 of 2
Episode 123.3 - Today Living Group Inc. is a full service property management leasing company specifically designed for the condominium owner. President Michelle White joins us. Part 1 of 2
In the first part of this episode, I have the privilege of speaking with Kristen Swanson, the co-founder of the Edcamp movement. We talk about her previous experience as a teacher and tech director, as well as her current work as an author, consultant, professor, and Director of the Research Institute at BrightBytes (whew!). In between everything else, I learn that Barcamps are like Edcamps but for coders, and that these were an inspiration to get Edcamps going. For a great place to learn more about Edcamps, especially if you want to run your own, head to edcamp.org and click on the book below. For the second part of the show, I speak with Michelle White, who is the Director of the Passport to Innovative Education Program at The Summit in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The Summit is graciously hosting EdCamp Fort Wayne this summer on July 23. Click the image below to learn about this program. Click below to register for EdCamp Fort Wayne 2015! It's FREE!
Episode 118.2 - Real Estate Lawyer Mark Weislder & Michelle White of Today Living Group discuss Airbnb and short term rentals- Part 1 of 2
Episode 118.3 - Real Estate Lawyer Mark Weislder & Michelle White of Today Living Group discuss what to consider before using Airbnb - Part 2 of 2
Episode 102.3 - President and Owner of Today Living Group Michelle White explains short term rentals
Episode 95.2 - Michelle White of Today Living Group discusses short term rentals
Episode 90.3 - President & Owner of Today Living Group, Michelle White, discusses short-term rentals for business, relocation, & vacation
The Rogue Publishing Partners partners talk about making strides to publish your book in 2023. Shelby Jo Long, CEO of Rogue. and Michelle White, Director of Design at Rogue, gives you their publishing insight.Tune in to learn more!Connect:Strategic Advisor Board: https://www.linkedin.com/company/strategic-advisor-boardRogue Publishing Partners: https://www.roguepublishingpartners.comShelby Jo Long: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shelby-jo-long-9a7b0620/Michelle M. White: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mmwbooks/Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy