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Adam welcomes Billy Mulley of the Oak Road Hatter Podcast to give us an insight into Luton Town as they travel up to the City Ground.This Podcast has been created and uploaded by Red Side of the Trent. The views in this Podcast are not necessarily the views of talkSPORT.Follow us:Twitter/X: @redsidetrent Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Luke Mulley joined Toby McKinnon to chat about his horses and his own running exploits. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Mulley talks music. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sandy-carlton/message
Conversation with Kat Mulley Check out Australian Meno and Peri support group Kat Mulley pr --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/your-daley-pass/message
Dette afsnit er lavet i samarbejde med Bookbeat.dk https://www.bookbeat.dk/vin La Biòca 2016 er venligst skænket af Propperiet https://propperiet.dk/ Så skal vi til det… Vi har snakket og henvist til dette afsnit i en uendelighed efterhånden. Missionen er klar; vi skal blive klogere på de fire anmeldere, så vi med større sikkerhed kan købe vine, der passer til vores smag. Desuden skal vi have en forståelse for de forskellige pointsystemer, som de forskellige anmeldere gør brug af og snakke lidt om de medaljer, der også tit pryder flaskehalsene. Vi smager på: Robert Parker 99 point Mulley dooker Velvelt glove 2006 https://www.vivino.com/DK/da/mollydooker-winery-velvet-glove-shiraz/w/1381424?year=2006 James Suckling 99 pointDonnhoff Rielsing 2019https://www.wine-searcher.com/find/donnhoff+riesling+trocken+nahe+germany/2019 Luca Maroni 98 pointLu’Li Appassite 2019https://www.vivino.com/DK/da/masca-del-tacco-lu-li-appassite/w/4488313 Decanter 97 points La Biòca 2016https://propperiet.dk/la-bioca/610-2016-barolo-aculei-la-bioca.html Lyt også til håndbold-podcasten Duften af Harpiks, som Jonas laver med Niklas Landin: https://podcasts.apple.com/dk/podcast/duften-af-harpiks/id1482597703 Besøg os på Facebook og Instagram, hvor man kan vinde vin og se billeder og andet godt. https://www.facebook.com/vinforbegyndere https://www.instagram.com/vinforbegyndere Web: https://www.radioteket.dk/ Kontakt: radioteket@radioteket.dk Musik: Jonas Landin
After Leighton & Eddie catch up to look at current events, Leighton is joined by Heather Mulley of Enville Golf Club. Heather has gained an excellent reputation as a Manager and this was topped off by being crowned the 2019 GCMA Manager of the Year. Heather tells us more about Enville and what makes it a great club as well as some of it's upcoming plans. This includes a renovation of both courses through the services of CDP (Clayton, Devries and Pont), who have featured on the show previously. Our show partner BRS form the second interview where Karen Moss talks through the recent COVID impact study which was carried out by BRS. There are some revealing numbers from 2020, and Karen also looks ahead to what's expected for 2021. Member retention will be key and Ryan and Ian join to talk about how the V12 Finance option through BRS can assist with this. Enville Golf Club BRS Golf COVID Impact study from BRS Join us on Twitter - @golfclubtalkuk or email us at golfclubtalkuk@gmail.com
Mala Malstead & Sarah Mulley: Why Volunteer For A Nonprofit Combating Sex Trafficking by Browncroft Community Church
My guest this week is Corinne Mulley, who has been researching transport for over 50 years.She is especially interested in using the tax system to find new ways of financing public transport: property value uplift or road pricing.She's Professor Emerita at the University of Sydney and was the inaugural Chair of Public Transport at their Institute of Transport and Logistics Studies.
In this episode we're in conversation with January writer-in-residence, award-winning playwright and historian Kate Mulley ('21). From The Tudor, her play about a law student paying for school by selling her underwear, to The Grey Lady, a historical fiction piece about a female soldier in the Civil War, her works interrogate the complicated relationships between gender and power. Kate spent her time in Corsicana researching for her new play regarding the life of 17th-century Puritan Anne Hutchinson and her effect on the development of religious freedom in America. Kate’s also working on a book about the history of sex on stage. Here, the writer discusses gender, female rage, and residency life in Corsicana.
Sit tight and get ready for the first episode of GUEST LOST. Rumours of our first guest have been spreading around the streets of Loughborough like wildfire. We can now reveal that this guest is here to avenge Clark's take on the penknife story and also tell all about a sick night he had, much emphasis being on the sick. You guessed it, Josh Mullane will be joining us. Tune in for an episode with a hearty amount of 'your mum' jokes, a dash of sarcasm and a truly disturbing story about a tortoise. Enough talk, lets get lost.
Politicians like to say that elections are won on doorsteps. But most of them now spend almost as much time on their Facebook pages and Whatsapp groups. But who is policing Facebook and messaging groups for misinformation, planted false stories and algorithm-gaming? It's not the BAI. It's not the telecoms regulator, Comreg. And it's not the Irish Press Council or Press Ombudsman. Unlike broadcasting or print, there is no official policing for fairness, accuracy or balance. Invariably, it comes back to the companies themselves. This week, Adrian is joined by Damien Mulley, founder of Mulley Communications, to look under the hood of how targeting works on social media during an election campaign. Mulley talks about an experiment he ran where he was able to target a handful of influential TDs and their political advisers for a couple of euro using Facebook's ad system. And the two discuss the darker side of the political system and what it can throw up by way of trying to skew political debate online. Techniques have moved beyond the creation of outright false headlines claiming that a particular candidate has been endorsed by the Pope. Modern methods can be subtle and sophisticated, playing off algorithms. This includes getting dozens, or hundreds, of people to swarm online, all leaving comments under a news article or candidate post. Or to search repeatedly for a candidate's name in an attempt to skew the search engine's algorithm.
The Eden Gathering Podcast (voted the best podcast in the world ever, by a man who doesn’t understand the internet or the concept of sound) On this weeks episode, we are joined by Claire Mulley, who is here to share her story of faith, motherhood and battling with cancer. Eden is a place where we can explore our personal narratives in three different environments. A monthly event, get togethers over food and doing "good" in the community. Next Eden Gathering is on 4th April / 7pm - 9:30 PM LOCATION: The Mix, 127 Ipswich St, Stowmarket IP14 1BB Stay Connected: Instagram: @EdenGathering Twitter: @GatheringEden Ben Lasky, Insta/Twitter @BenjaminLasky Alex Laver, Insta/Twitter @AlexLaver
This month Myself, Ryan, Brian, and Mully briefly recap the past Frozen Yeti, as well as future race plans. This includes a close look at the Massanutten Mountain Trails 100 race - May 18 and 19, 2019. This will be Mulley's 5th consecutive finish in Virginia at this event - Whoa! Don't forget to check out the links below and to help spread the word about the 500 miles for Mission 22 fundraiser. Brian & Josh's Fundraising Page for 500 miles for Mission 22 Mt. Toby Ultra and 22k Like a Bigfoot Podcast featuring Brian & Josh - Mission 22
Everyone seems to have an opinion about public transport fares. Most think they should be lower and some even suggest they should be free. But does it matter that much? And what are the consequences of different prices not just in the short term as who decides to get a bus or a train rather than use your car, but also in the long term which includes where we chose to live and work and the resultant impact on the shape of the city that develops. Professor Corinne Mulley, then Professor of Public Transport at the University of Sydney’s Institute of Transport & Logistics Studies
Jason shares an abridged real-world Portfolio Makeover™ and some thoughts on empire building. Investment Counselor and Area Manager, Lynda Mulley, asks a common client question and Jason interviews a prior guest from episode #29, Chartered Financial Analyst and Finance MBA, Daniel Amerman, on winning through inflation and creating wealth with prudent debt. Learn how the “Three Boxers” fight with powerful economic forces and who wins in the ring. Website: www.DanielAmerman.com
This episode is focused on venomous lizards. The first half is all about the desert specialist and ultra-efficient Gila Monster. With the latter portion covering possibly the most charismatic lizard still roaming the earth – the iconic Komodo Dragon. We explore how these lizards interact with their environments and discuss the existence of their venoms. At the end we have the usual Species of the Bi-week who also harbours a dangerous toxin. FULL REFERENCE LIST AVAILABLE AT: herphighlights.podbean.com Main Paper References: French, Robert, Daniel Brooks, Anne-Michelle Ruha, Farshad Shirazi, Peter Chase, Keith Boesen, and Frank Walter. 2015. “Gila Monster (Heloderma Suspectum) Envenomation: Descriptive Analysis of Calls to United States Poison Centers with Focus on Arizona Cases.” Clinical Toxicology 53 (1): 60–70. Fry, Bryan G, Stephen Wroe, Wouter Teeuwisse, Matthias J P van Osch, Karen Moreno, Janette Ingle, Colin McHenry, et al. 2009. “A Central Role for Venom in Predation by Varanus Komodoensis (Komodo Dragon) and the Extinct Giant Varanus (Megalania) Priscus.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 106 (22): 8969–74. OPEN ACCESS Gienger, C. M., C. Richard Tracy, and Kenneth A. Nagy. 2014. “Life in the Lizard Slow Lane: Gila Monsters Have Low Rates of Energy Use and Water Flux.” Copeia 2: 279–87. Purwandana, Deni, Achmad Ariefiandy, M. Jeri Imansyah, Aganto Seno, Claudio Ciofi, Mike Letnic, and Tim S. Jessop. 2016. “Ecological Allometries and Niche Use Dynamics across Komodo Dragon Ontogeny.” Science of Nature 103 (27): 26–37. Species of the Bi-Week: Serrano-Rojas, Shirley J., Andrew Whitworth, Jaime Villacampa, Rudolf Von May, Roberto C. Gutiérrez, José M. Padial, and Juan C. Chaparro. 2017. “A New Species of Poison-Dart Frog (Anura: Dendrobatidae) from Manu Province, Amazon Region of Southeastern Peru, with Notes on Its Natural History, Bioacoustics, Phylogenetics, and Recommended Conservation Status.” Zootaxa 4221 (1): 71–94. Other Mentioned Papers/Studies: Auffenberg W. 1981. “Behavioral ecology of the Komodo monitor. University Presses of Florida, Gainesville.” as cited in Fry et al. 2006 and Purwandana et al. 2016 Ariefiandy, Achmad, Deni Purwandana, Sanggar Abdil Nasu, Maman Surahman, Claudio Ciofi, and Tim Jessop. 2015. “First Record of Komodo Dragon Nesting Activity and Hatchling Emergence from North Flores , Eastern Indonesia.” Biawak 9 (1): 33–35. OPEN ACCESS Ashurst, John, and Robert Cannon. 2013. “Gila Monster Envenomation: A Review for the Emergency Medicine Physician.” JMED Research 2013: 1–4. OPEN ACCESS Daly, J. W., and C. W. Myers. 1967. “Toxicity of Panamanian Poison Frogs (Dendrobates): Some Biological and Chemical Aspects.” Science 156 (3777): 970–73. Davis, J. R., and D. F. DeNardo. 2007. “The urinary bladder as a physiological reservoir that moderates dehydration in a large desert lizard, the Gila monster Heloderma suspectum.” Journal of Experimental Biology 210 (8): 1472-1480. OPEN ACCESS Flannery, Tim 2002. The future eaters: an ecological history of the Australasian lands and people. New York: Grove Press. ISBN 0-8021-3943-4. Fry, Bryan G., Nicolas Vidal, Janette A. Norman, Freek J. Vonk, Holger Scheib, S. F. Ryan Ramjan, Sanjaya Kuruppu, et al. 2006. “Early Evolution of the Venom System in Lizards and Snakes.” Nature 439 (7076): 584–88. Hargreaves, A. D., M. T. Swain, D. W. Logan, and J. F. Mulley. 2014. “Testing the Toxicofera: comparative transcriptomics casts doubt on the single, early evolution of the reptile venom system.” Toxicon 92: 140-156. OPEN ACCESS Hawlitschek, Oliver, Mark D. Scherz, Nicolas Straube, and Frank Glaw. 2016. “Resurrection of the Comoran Fish Scale Gecko Geckolepis Humbloti Vaillant, 1887 Reveals a Disjunct Distribution Caused by Natural Overseas Dispersal.” Organisms Diversity and Evolution 16 (1): 289–98. Köhler, Gunther, Hans-Helmut Diethert, Ronald A. Nussbaum, and Christopher J. Raxworthy. 2009. “A Revision of the Fish Scale Geckos, Genus Geckolepis Grandidier (Squamata, Gekkonidae) from Madagascar and the Comoros.” Herpetologica 65 (4): 419–35. Laver, Rebecca J., Deni Purwandana, Achmad Ariefiandy, Jeri Imansyah, David Forsyth, Claudio Ciofi, and Tim S. Jessop. 2012. “Life-History and Spatial Determinants of Somatic Growth Dynamics in Komodo Dragon Populations.” PLoS ONE 7 (9): 1–10. OPEN ACCESS Sims, David W., Emily J. Southall, Nicolas E. Humphries, Graeme C. Hays, Corey J. A. Bradshaw, Jonathan W. Pitchford, Alex James, et al. 2008. “Scaling Laws of Marine Predator Search Behaviour.” Nature 451 (7182): 1098–1102. Other Links/Mentions: BBC Planet Earth II - Islands Clip on Komodo Dragons (Varanus komodoensis) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Q05CSZAa8U BBC Zoo Quest for a Dragon 6 http://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/attenborough/7005.shtml Music – http://www.purple-planet.com
Jason shares an abridged real-world Portfolio Makeover™ and some thoughts on empire building. Investment Counselor and Area Manager, Lynda Mulley, asks a common client question and Jason interviews a prior guest from episode #29, Chartered Financial Analyst and Finance MBA, Daniel Amerman, on winning through inflation and creating wealth with prudent debt. Learn how the “Three Boxers” fight with powerful economic forces and who wins in the ring.
David Brown speaks with Professor Corinne Mulley from the University of Sydney's Institute of Transport & Logistics Studies. Everyone seems to have an opinion about public transport fares. Most think they should be lower and some even suggest they should be free. But does it matter that much? And what are the consequences of different prices not just in the short term as who decides to get a bus or a train rather than use your car, but also in the long term which includes where we chose to live and work and the resultant impact on the shape of the city that develops. Originally aired on 4 June 2016. For past programs and individual segments visit www.drivenmedia.com.au
Session 2: Case Studies - Engagement with Select Committees Policy Engagement Training for Historians and Social Scientists - Workshop 2 25th April 2016 - Strand Building, King's College London
It's almost a cliché by now to say that we need stories of strong women, but that doesn't lessen the fact that we do. And biography is a field uniquely poised to transmit such stories- of compelling, complex and, at times, contradictory female characters- to a broad audience. Case in point: Clare Mulley‘s The Spy Who Loved: The Secrets and Lives of Christine Granville (St. Martin's, 2013). Yes, she loved and had a number of love affairs but, as Mulley makes clear, the significance of Granville's life isn't that she was, to all appearances, pathologically alluring to men. Rather, her life is riveting- it has meaning in the present day- because she seems not to have craved men nearly so much as she craved adventure, challenging work that put her at great risk. This was not simply adventure for adventure's sake either, but adventure in service to a greater good, especially that of her homeland of Poland. For all her efforts as a secret service agent during World War II were in aid of her country, which is, in part, why the British government seemed never quite to know what to do with her and why this brilliant, imaginative woman was left to constantly lobby for a greater, more challenging, role. ‘Intrepid' is perhaps the best word to describe Granville as Mulley portrays her here. She kicked off her career as a spy by infiltrating Poland from Hungary on skis. Another time, arrested by the Gestapo, she talked her way out of imprisonment. Still later, when her comrades were arrested by the Gestapo, she swooped into the local office, demanding and securing their release. For her bravery, she was awarded the George Medal, the OBE, and the Croix de Guerre but there was, sadly, little room in the world after the World Wars for a Polish, female spy, and Granville slid into reduced circumstances that culminated in a tragic end: murdered by an obsessive admirer at a hotel in South Kensington. It's a good story of a charismatic and difficult woman, a story that was nearly forgotten and one which Mulley is pulling from obscurity, rightfully so. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's almost a cliché by now to say that we need stories of strong women, but that doesn't lessen the fact that we do. And biography is a field uniquely poised to transmit such stories- of compelling, complex and, at times, contradictory female characters- to a broad audience. Case in point: Clare Mulley‘s The Spy Who Loved: The Secrets and Lives of Christine Granville (St. Martin's, 2013). Yes, she loved and had a number of love affairs but, as Mulley makes clear, the significance of Granville's life isn't that she was, to all appearances, pathologically alluring to men. Rather, her life is riveting- it has meaning in the present day- because she seems not to have craved men nearly so much as she craved adventure, challenging work that put her at great risk. This was not simply adventure for adventure's sake either, but adventure in service to a greater good, especially that of her homeland of Poland. For all her efforts as a secret service agent during World War II were in aid of her country, which is, in part, why the British government seemed never quite to know what to do with her and why this brilliant, imaginative woman was left to constantly lobby for a greater, more challenging, role. ‘Intrepid' is perhaps the best word to describe Granville as Mulley portrays her here. She kicked off her career as a spy by infiltrating Poland from Hungary on skis. Another time, arrested by the Gestapo, she talked her way out of imprisonment. Still later, when her comrades were arrested by the Gestapo, she swooped into the local office, demanding and securing their release. For her bravery, she was awarded the George Medal, the OBE, and the Croix de Guerre but there was, sadly, little room in the world after the World Wars for a Polish, female spy, and Granville slid into reduced circumstances that culminated in a tragic end: murdered by an obsessive admirer at a hotel in South Kensington. It's a good story of a charismatic and difficult woman, a story that was nearly forgotten and one which Mulley is pulling from obscurity, rightfully so. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It’s almost a cliché by now to say that we need stories of strong women, but that doesn’t lessen the fact that we do. And biography is a field uniquely poised to transmit such stories- of compelling, complex and, at times, contradictory female characters- to a broad audience. Case in point: Clare Mulley‘s The Spy Who Loved: The Secrets and Lives of Christine Granville (St. Martin’s, 2013). Yes, she loved and had a number of love affairs but, as Mulley makes clear, the significance of Granville’s life isn’t that she was, to all appearances, pathologically alluring to men. Rather, her life is riveting- it has meaning in the present day- because she seems not to have craved men nearly so much as she craved adventure, challenging work that put her at great risk. This was not simply adventure for adventure’s sake either, but adventure in service to a greater good, especially that of her homeland of Poland. For all her efforts as a secret service agent during World War II were in aid of her country, which is, in part, why the British government seemed never quite to know what to do with her and why this brilliant, imaginative woman was left to constantly lobby for a greater, more challenging, role. ‘Intrepid’ is perhaps the best word to describe Granville as Mulley portrays her here. She kicked off her career as a spy by infiltrating Poland from Hungary on skis. Another time, arrested by the Gestapo, she talked her way out of imprisonment. Still later, when her comrades were arrested by the Gestapo, she swooped into the local office, demanding and securing their release. For her bravery, she was awarded the George Medal, the OBE, and the Croix de Guerre but there was, sadly, little room in the world after the World Wars for a Polish, female spy, and Granville slid into reduced circumstances that culminated in a tragic end: murdered by an obsessive admirer at a hotel in South Kensington. It’s a good story of a charismatic and difficult woman, a story that was nearly forgotten and one which Mulley is pulling from obscurity, rightfully so. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It’s almost a cliché by now to say that we need stories of strong women, but that doesn’t lessen the fact that we do. And biography is a field uniquely poised to transmit such stories- of compelling, complex and, at times, contradictory female characters- to a broad audience. Case in point: Clare Mulley‘s The Spy Who Loved: The Secrets and Lives of Christine Granville (St. Martin’s, 2013). Yes, she loved and had a number of love affairs but, as Mulley makes clear, the significance of Granville’s life isn’t that she was, to all appearances, pathologically alluring to men. Rather, her life is riveting- it has meaning in the present day- because she seems not to have craved men nearly so much as she craved adventure, challenging work that put her at great risk. This was not simply adventure for adventure’s sake either, but adventure in service to a greater good, especially that of her homeland of Poland. For all her efforts as a secret service agent during World War II were in aid of her country, which is, in part, why the British government seemed never quite to know what to do with her and why this brilliant, imaginative woman was left to constantly lobby for a greater, more challenging, role. ‘Intrepid’ is perhaps the best word to describe Granville as Mulley portrays her here. She kicked off her career as a spy by infiltrating Poland from Hungary on skis. Another time, arrested by the Gestapo, she talked her way out of imprisonment. Still later, when her comrades were arrested by the Gestapo, she swooped into the local office, demanding and securing their release. For her bravery, she was awarded the George Medal, the OBE, and the Croix de Guerre but there was, sadly, little room in the world after the World Wars for a Polish, female spy, and Granville slid into reduced circumstances that culminated in a tragic end: murdered by an obsessive admirer at a hotel in South Kensington. It’s a good story of a charismatic and difficult woman, a story that was nearly forgotten and one which Mulley is pulling from obscurity, rightfully so. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It’s almost a cliché by now to say that we need stories of strong women, but that doesn’t lessen the fact that we do. And biography is a field uniquely poised to transmit such stories- of compelling, complex and, at times, contradictory female characters- to a broad audience. Case in point: Clare Mulley‘s The Spy Who Loved: The Secrets and Lives of Christine Granville (St. Martin’s, 2013). Yes, she loved and had a number of love affairs but, as Mulley makes clear, the significance of Granville’s life isn’t that she was, to all appearances, pathologically alluring to men. Rather, her life is riveting- it has meaning in the present day- because she seems not to have craved men nearly so much as she craved adventure, challenging work that put her at great risk. This was not simply adventure for adventure’s sake either, but adventure in service to a greater good, especially that of her homeland of Poland. For all her efforts as a secret service agent during World War II were in aid of her country, which is, in part, why the British government seemed never quite to know what to do with her and why this brilliant, imaginative woman was left to constantly lobby for a greater, more challenging, role. ‘Intrepid’ is perhaps the best word to describe Granville as Mulley portrays her here. She kicked off her career as a spy by infiltrating Poland from Hungary on skis. Another time, arrested by the Gestapo, she talked her way out of imprisonment. Still later, when her comrades were arrested by the Gestapo, she swooped into the local office, demanding and securing their release. For her bravery, she was awarded the George Medal, the OBE, and the Croix de Guerre but there was, sadly, little room in the world after the World Wars for a Polish, female spy, and Granville slid into reduced circumstances that culminated in a tragic end: murdered by an obsessive admirer at a hotel in South Kensington. It’s a good story of a charismatic and difficult woman, a story that was nearly forgotten and one which Mulley is pulling from obscurity, rightfully so. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week we’re taking a look at food photography - joining the best in the business at the Pink Lady Food Photographer of the Year Awards, where Lucy Boler talks to host for the evening, Jay Rayner, and this year’s winner. - Professional food photography involves much more than a single photographer with a camera - to learn more about this, we meet food stylist Nico Ghirlando and photography Philip Webb. - We also speak to Guardian and New Statesman food columnist, Felicity Cloake, about the photos for her new recipe book & Errazuriz wine photographer of the year, Tim Clinch. - Finally we learn what the professionals think about taking photos in restaurants and we get their tips on how to take better food photos. -- www.twitter.com/_InGoodTaste & www.twitter.com/z1radio www.ZoneOneRadio.com & www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio
Grated Expectations (The Cheese Episode) Clare Mulley presents #InGoodTaste - cooking up a storm every week on ZoneOneRadio - the Mayor of London-funded community radio station for Central London. Lucy shares with us her foolproof Twice Baked Cheese Soufflé Meanwhile, Anjul treads Caerphilly in Borough Market and to the Cave au Fromage in South Kensington to learn about the history behind cheesemaking and some handy tips about keeping it longer in your fridge. We also head East of Edam and talk to food blogger Julia Frey about traditional Russian cheese fritters or 'Syrniki' -- www.twitter.com/_InGoodTaste and www.twitter.com/z1radio www.ZoneOneRadio.com www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio - Dinah Washington - I'm a fool to want you Pavrov stellar - Jimmy's gang Propellerheads feat. Shirley Bassey - History Repeating Hot Club de Norvège - Monsieur Camembert London Symphony Orchestra - From Russia with love Aretha Franklin - Sweet lover Nina Simone - Sugar In My Bowl The Two Man Gentleman Band - Cheese & Crackers
The Cape Cod Cookbook Clare Mulley and Lucy Boler present #InGoodTaste - cooking up a storm every week on ZoneOneRadio - the community radio station for Central London. Fond of sand dunes and salty air? #InGoodTaste were privileged to have lunch with Kelly Moss, the author behind the wonderful Cape Cod Cook Book . Kelly lives in London with her fourteen-year-old daughter, Chatham. In 2003 she was in a motor vehicle accident in Africa, leaving her a quadriplegic. All the proceeds from her book are going to charities supporting spinal research and providing wheelchairs to those in need. Lucy will be cooking crab cakes from the book to some classic Jimmy Buffett tunes. -- www.twitter.com/_InGoodTaste and www.twitter.com/z1radio www.ZoneOneRadio.com www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio - Patti Page - Old Cape Cod The Dave Brubeck Quartet - Take Five Paul Simon - You Can Call Me Al Jimmy Buffett
Hugh Hick examines Sponsorship and Social Media measurement In this podcast Hugh Hick interviews John Trainor from Onside Sponsorship about the prospects for sponsorship in 2012 and areas of potential growth. Also interviewed is Damien Mulley who discusses the forthcoming Measurement.ie conference which examines the area of social media ROI.
There's no question that the U.S. health care system needs mending. Media attention ricochets from Washington to academia, but who really has the solution? Dr. Mulley will examine the role of data in health care delivery, the importance of the patient's voice, and how pundits and politicians can work more effectively to help foster productive debate.
Jason shares an abridged real-world Portfolio Makeover™ and some thoughts on empire building. Investment Counselor and Area Manager, Lynda Mulley, asks a common client question and Jason interviews a prior guest from episode #29, Chartered Financial Analyst and Finance MBA, Daniel Amerman, on winning through inflation and creating wealth with prudent debt. Learn how the
Jason shares an abridged real-world Portfolio Makeover™ and some thoughts on empire building. Investment Counselor and Area Manager, Lynda Mulley, asks a common client question and Jason interviews a prior guest from episode #29, Chartered Financial Analyst and Finance MBA, Daniel Amerman, on winning through inflation and creating wealth with prudent debt. Learn how the... Read more »
Previously, on "24"... / no offense to transvestites / Manson Family rating / journey walk / what is the deal with the Queen? / 3 logical fallacies / The Rainbow Suspenders / what Fox News does / policemen are just doing their jobs / what does furtively mean? / jerk in an $1800 suit / O'Reilly: No Suit Zone! / Dirt has a research addiction / David Icke is not crazy / left-leaning conspiracy websites / Mulley and Sculder / geniuses vs. the rest of you guys / emotionally manipulated by films / Dragon is concerned about Jack Nicholson's "winkie" / what does "citizen" mean? / labels are powerful! / TheFreeDictionary.com definitions of "freedom" terms / Dirt has no interest in being a citizen / Word #1: "GOVERNMENT" / govern-ment = control-ment / Word #2: "CITIZEN" / allegiance and loyalty in exchange for protection? / Dragon is *not* looking forward to "Sex With Dogs" / politics is all about controlling people / Word #3: "OWNERSHIP" / In conclusion, therefore, a citizen is government property! / finally, "Sex With Dogs" / consent is necessary for true freedom / we're just doing our part to expose the lies