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Join Stargate's Chief Master Sergeant Walter Harriman to learn the ins and outs of the hotseat of the control room in this immersive roleplay and cosplay experience!Tickets and info are available now at www.thecompanion.app/events. Sign up as a member (paid or free) for a discount code!Whilst clearing out the attic, novelist Molly Flatt chances upon a box of X-Files memorabilia that transports her back in time.The original article on The Companion The Companion's Audio Articles is a new series and we'd love to know if you like the new show. If you do, please share it with your friends on social media, WhatsApp, or any other text groups. You can Tweet us @thecompanionapp or send a message on Discord: https://discord.com/invite/BcFBwtY3Ju The Companion's Audio Articles is produced by Rebecca DavisOur wider team includes Nick Hayward, Lawrence Kao, Tommy Valentine, George Mole, & Ben Herbert
The sixth episode of our Season 1 presents the play Scientific by Fernanda Rocha, directed by Sandra Theresa Buch, and performed by Sarah Boberg, with sound design by Julian Starr. After the play we talk to writer Fernanda Rocha and our special guest Molly Flatt. "I'm careful, but it is very difficult not to get involved with a research object, especially when it is such an extraordinary object." The episode is hosted by Lily McLeish & Josephine Starte, edited by Lily McLeish, with intro music by Jane Dickson. Cover art by Alice Müller. Fizzy Sherbet is produced by Steph J Weller for Playwell Productions and Ameena Hamid Productions. This episode was only possible thanks to the kind support of the National Lottery through Arts Council England and Sainsbury Foundation. Thanks also to our anonymous supporters - you know who you are. You can find out more about Fizzy Sherbet on fizzysherbetplays.com. If you enjoyed this episode, please like follow subscribe and review. Time codes: Podcast starts: 00:00 The Play: 07:10 Interview with Fernanda Rocha: 18:00 Interview with Molly Flatt: 01:03:18
Journalist Molly Flatt sits down with host Miriam Robinson to discuss her tangled love affair with London, the limits of rational thought, how to combat perfectionism and the unexpected upside of a Hackney bar fight. Together, they explore what Molly's life would have been like if, in 2014, the sale on the house she intended to buy in the countryside hadn't fallen through and she'd left London for the countryside of her youth.Molly Flatt is a journalist who specialises in the impact of technology on publishing, culture and identity, and is Comment Editor at The Bookseller. Her novel is The Charmed Life Of Alex Moore (Pan Macmillan). She is also co-founder Big Book Weekend, a free virtual book festival accessible to all, supported by BBC Arts and Arts Council England.Make sure to subscribe to hear the rest of Season 1 – in each episode, Miriam Robinson interviews a guest about a path their life might have taken and together, step by step, they write the stories of their unlived lives.Produced by Tess Davidson#MyUnlivedLife Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode Robbie confronts the most devastating clichés of regret, learns to speak with his own voice, and to use that voice to ask difficult questions. Brilliantly Easy, Stupidly Difficult is a podcast about the choices we make, and the lives we end up living. Join Robbie Dale as he negotiates a specially curated 9others dinner to explore how the choices we make at work, at home - at all - can be the difference between relief and regret. Written, presented by Robbie Dale, writer, snoozer and co-founder of Today Do This. Guest one: Molly Flatt, author. Guest two: Simon Lawson, Chairman of Lawsons. Read more about 9others at https://9others.com
In this week's show from the broom cupboard and bedroom, Hayley Doyle on her new rom-com, Never Saw You Coming (Starts at 1.00) Molly Flatt on the recording of her book, The Charmed Life of Alex Moore, plus we hear the books of her life (14.30) David Farrier explores what traces we will leave for the very deep future in his book 'Footprints' (31.05) And we return to Hayley Doyle for the books of her life (48.52)
Today's interview is with Molly Flatt, Word of Mouth Evangelist for global marketing agency 1000heads, to get some insight into how to get the most out of your word of mouth marketing. This interview follows on the back of last week's interview: Blogger outreach and building trust with your customers – Interview with Hugh Anderson and is number fifty-five in the series of interviews with authors and business leaders that are doing great things and helping businesses innovate, become more social and deliver better service.
Today's interview is with Jessica Hagy, who is widely known for her award winning blog: Indexed (I've been a subscriber for years!). Recently, she wrote an article for Forbes magazine on How To Be More Interesting (In 10 Simple Steps). That article was incredibly popular. So much so that she has turned it into a book: How to Be Interesting: An Instruction Manual. Apart from being a fan of Jessica's work, I thought the interview and subject matter was apt and appropriate for some of the issues that I explore here on the blog. I hope you enjoy it. This interview follows on the back of last week's interview: Word of mouth marketing starts with proper listening – Interview with Molly Flatt of 1000 Heads and is number fifty-six in the series of interviews with authors and business leaders that are doing great things and helping businesses innovate, become more social and deliver better service.
Irish author Kevin Barry, winner of the Impac Award and the Goldsmiths Prize, discusses his new novel Night Boat to Tangier, a dark comedy billed as Waiting For Godot meets In Bruges. Novelist and journalist Molly Flatt, who writes about culture and technology for the Bookseller, discusses a growing trend for book versions of successful podcasts. 25 years since the death of Derek Jarman, Mariella is joined by writers Philip Hoare and Mike Parker to explore queer nature writing, a genre concerned with the push and pull of the natural world, from a queer perspective.
How can books win the attention of today’s distracted consumer? Christian Ward talks to author and journalist Molly Flatt and Stylus’ Media & Marketing Editor Julia Errens about the benefits of human curation and keeping things slow, the role for iteration in publishing and books as a tailor-made panacea for our times.
Listen to journalist and author, Molly Flatt, talk about how technology influences our lives, how she delivered her baby in her bathroom (!), why she decided against moving to the suburbs and how many times she threw out and rewrote her 100,000 manuscript before it got published!! You can follow her on Twitter @mollyflatt.
This week's episode shines the spotlight on the representation of women on our big screens, little screens, conference daises, and bookshelves. It's worth taking some time to consider the messages we receive from all forms of entertainment and education and whether we are getting a balanced view of the world. If you come to the realization that your bookshelf needs more female authors on it, never fear, we have a list of some favorite female authors and books. Check them out! Tweet your favorites to @UnravelingPink and we'll add them to the list. Resources in this episode: Molly Flatt, The Guardian, "Is The Future Female? Fixing Sci-Fi's Women Problem." Check out: Molly Flatt's "A Darker Wave," Kassandra Khaw’s "There are Wolves in These Woods," Madeline Ashby’s "The Cure For Jetlag," Liz Williams’ "In the God Fields." Jodi Picoult, "Small Great Things" Debby Irving, "Waking Up White" Karen Catlin, "Present! A Techie's Guide to Public Speaking" Ed Yong, 4/19/2018, "When Will the Gender Gap in Science Disappear?" Emma Pierson, 8/5/2014 "In Science, It Matters That Women Come Last" The Unraveling Pink's Brain Trust List of fav female authors and books: Arundhati Roy, "God of Small Things" Ntozage Shange, "for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf" Curtis Sittenfeld Doris Kearns Goodwin Loung Ung, "First They Killed My Father" Ayn Rand Kate Germano, "Fight Like A Girl" Julie Kratz, "ONE: How Male Allies Support Women for Gender Equality" Amy Waninger, "Network Beyond Bias: Making Diversity a Competitive Advantage for Your Career" Jennifer Brown, "Inclusion: Diversity, The New Workplace & the Will to Change" Iris Bohnet, "What Works: Gender Equality by Design" Another list of favorite female-authored business books : Shona Brown and Kathleen M. Eisenhardt, "Competing on the Edge: Strategy as Structured Chaos" Andrea Kates, "Find Your Next: Using the Business Genome Approach to Find your Company's Next Competitive Edge" Angeles Arrien, "The Four-Fold Way: Walking the Paths of Warrior, Teacher, Healer and Visionary" Rayona Sharpnack, "Trade Up: Five Steps for Redesigning Your Leadership and Your Life from the Inside Out" Gail Larsen, "Transformational Speaking: If You Want to Change the World, Tell a Better Story"
Andre Holland is perhaps best known for his role as Kevin, the chef (and love interest) in the Oscar winning film Moonlight. Now he is in Britain playing Othello at Shakespeare's Globe in a production also featuring Mark Rylance as Iago. He tells Kirsty Lang how, unlikely as it might seem, his southern American accent fits the iambic pentameter of Shakespeare's lines perfectly. The arrival of artists in rundown areas invariably signals that gentrification is on its way with those very same artists, as well as other locals, eventually getting priced out. London is where this process seems to happen fastest but it's also in London that new housing models for artists are being explored. Hadrian Garrad, director of Create London, and Marcel Baettig, artist, founder and chief executive officer of Bow Arts, discuss the work involved in providing affordable homes for artists.Women Invent the Future is a new anthology of science fiction short stories by and about women. One of the authors, Molly Flatt, discusses re-imagining the future from a feminist perspective with Christina Dalcher, whose new novel Vox is set in a dystopian world where women's voices are strictly limited. And how on this day, 25th July, in 1965 music changed. Presenter: Kirsty Lang Producer: Julian May.
Mike talks stories with the author of 'The Charmed Life of Alex Moore" - the wonderful Molly Flatt. It's her debut novel and, without giving too much away, is unexpected and challenging and has some rather deep things to say about character and story. Molly started out in drama school before becoming a digital 'word of mouth' marketing expert. Then onto novel writing and digital publishing. This podcast is about the intersection between real stories and the (sometimes) pretend world of social media. Brilliant.
Subscribe to Uncaring Universe on iTunes - and It massively helps us if you leave a review: itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/uncar…id985787268?mt=2 Molly is the author of the The Charmed Life of Alex Moore, a genre-bending thriller – that I don't want to describe too much and ruin the surprises. We discuss: • The impact of digital media on storytelling • Genre bending and the weird world we already live in • The beauty of going back to analogue • Much more Molly on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/38087830-the-charmed-life-of-alex-moore Your host, Danny: www.goodreads.com/user/show/20408243-mad-quills Follow Molly on twitter: @mollyflatt And Danny: @madquills
I first met the writer Molly Flatt in Bogota, Colombia a number of years ago, but to continue our discussion on the future of books and publishing, we arranged to meet in an equally interesting, although somewhat less exotic, bar in Fitzrovia, London. A prolific journalist and researcher into digital trends, Molly is the Associate Editor for FutureBook, Digital Editor for PHOENIX magazine and Associate Editor for the Memo, and writes regularly for publications such as the BBC and the Guardian. Her debut novel is entitled The Charmed Life of Alex Moore.
I first met the writer Molly Flatt in Bogota, Colombia a number of years ago, but to continue our discussion on the future of books and publishing, we arranged to meet in an equally interesting, although somewhat less exotic, bar in Fitzrovia, London. A prolific journalist and researcher into digital trends, Molly is the Associate Editor for FutureBook, Digital Editor for PHOENIX magazine and Associate Editor for the Memo, and writes regularly for publications such as the BBC and the Guardian. Her debut novel is entitled The Charmed Life of Alex Moore.
Molly Flatt, experta en Social Media y columnista de The Guardian, habló en La Nube de Blu Radio sobre las redes sociales y cómo se manejan las mismas... See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.