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Sukienki z farbowanej tetry i MODA POLSKA, PDT-y i HOFFLAND – o modzie PRL w rozmowie z Ewą Okońską opowiada Jarosław Panek.
How does a 175-year-old brand stay relevant in a constantly evolving market?Tracey Panek, Levi's brand historian, joins me to share how Levi's balances heritage with innovation to remain a cultural icon. From historical accuracy in marketing to the brand's deep connection with customers, Tracey offers a fascinating look into how storytelling shapes Levi's identity.We dive into what exactly the role of a brand historian plays in modern marketing, how Levi's taps into its rich archives to inspire future campaigns, and why authenticity is the key to long-term brand success. Tracey also shares incredible stories from Levi's history—including how a pair of jeans helped tow a broken-down car and why some fans insist on being buried in their Levi's.If you're passionate about branding, storytelling, and marketing that stands the test of time, this episode is packed with insights you won't want to miss.About TraceyTracey Panek is the Historian for Levi Strauss & Co. and Director of Archives at the company's world headquarters in San Francisco. She manages the day-to-day workings of the Levi Strauss & Co. Archives as a key corporate asset, answering historical questions, assisting designers, brand managers, executives and other employees whose work requires historical materials in the Archives. She regularly hunts for unique vintage Levi's® garments and unusual Levi's® items to add to the Archives.Tracey is a contributor to Unzipped, the company's blog, writing about company history, vintage Levi's® garments, and behind-the-scenes work in the Archives. She narrates the video series From the Levi's® Archives on YouTube and From the Levi's® Archives on TikTok. Tracey is the media spokesperson for Levi Strauss & Co. heritage.Connect with Tracey:https://x.com/TraceyPanekConnect with VeronicaInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/vromney/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/vromney/If you're serious about advancing your career in marketing and you're looking for some personal insights into how then I invite you to schedule a free Pathway to Promotion call with me: https://pathwaycall.com/If you found value in today's episode, I would appreciate it if you could leave a rating and review.
Gość Ewy Okońskiej Jarosław Panek przybliża postać Donatelli Versace, włoskiej projektantki, która odeszła właśnie na emeryturę. Jest o życiu w blasku fleszy i w cieniu tragedii oraz o sukience, która miała nie tylko wpływ na zawodowy rozwój artystki, ale również na historię Internetu.
In this episode, Rachel brings you a fun visit with Kaid Panek. Kaid curses at goats regularly and brings the showdad scene down to the people. He's pretty dang funny. He spent the visit in the pickup watching a cow calve and then posted a little video after he pulled the calf. It's the real reel, man.You can find Kaid on social at Kaid Panek, and you can also find Rachel on Substack at https://substack.com/@rachelgabel.This episode is brought to you by Adam Rose at Iliff Custom Cabinetry and Premier Farm Credit.Check your cows, check your fields, check your neighbors.
Inflacja w lutym poniżej oczekiwań przy zmianie struktury koszyka dóbr. Panek rezygnuje z carsharingu. Firma marketingowa WiseGroup nabyła udziały w kancelarii, aby poszerzyć swoje portfolio usług. Pracodawcy mogą zaliczyć wydatki na zakup owoców i warzyw dla pracowników do kosztów uzyskania przychodu.Wspieramy Klub Inwestora SGH, organizatora XVI edycji Akademii Private Equity.- To intensywne warsztaty z zakresu Private Equity, Venture Capital, M&A i prawa inwestycyjnego. Główna część wydarzenia odbędzie się 7-10 kwietnia 2025 r.- Akademię otworzy konferencja PE Voices – 27 marca w rotundzie PKO Banku Polskiego. W programie panele dyskusyjne z ekspertami i networking.- Uczestnicy wezmą udział w case competition, gdzie wcielą się w rolę analityków funduszy inwestycyjnych. Najlepsze zespoły mogą liczyć na nagrody.- To doskonała okazja do zdobycia wiedzy, nawiązania kontaktów i spotkania specjalistów z branży.- Zapisy na odpowiednie moduły od 10 marca do 2 kwietnia. Więcej informacji na ape.klub-inwestora.com.plZasubskrybuj prasówkę na www.businessupdate.pl.Podcast powstał przy pomocy ElevenLabs.
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W Mediolanie już wiosna – przynajmniej na wystawach znanych domów mody. O tym, co się będzie nosić wiosną w światowej stolicy mody w rozmowie z Ewą Okońską opowiada Jarosław Panek.
Decking expert Luke Panek fills in for Andy. Changes in deck construction over the years. What is KDAT lumber and why it is a good choice for building a deck. Working with hard wood. Building with diamond pier footings. Turning a 3 season porch into a 4 season. Should a snowblower be used on a deck? Deck materials that are not as slippery. If you have questions regarding your home or construction project contact Andy at lindusconstruction.com or you can call 844-9lindus.
Tracey shares insights into her unique role, managing one of the most iconic fashion archives in the world. From preserving pieces dating back to 1873 to leveraging Levi's rich history for modern branding, Tracey discusses how storytelling through archives plays a crucial role in connecting the past with the present.
Send us a textToday I'm sitting down with Tracey Panek, the historian and archives manager at Levi Strauss & Company. With nearly 175 years of history behind it, Levi's is not just a brand; it's a cultural icon that has successfully connected with multiple generations. Tracey shares the "secret sauce" behind this enduring connection, revealing how Levi's has evolved while staying true to its roots.Through engaging storytelling and insights from her extensive experience, Tracey delves into the brand's rich heritage, discussing pivotal moments that have shaped its identity over the decades. From the gold rush origins of blue jeans to their status as a global fashion staple, this episode promises to be both fun and informative. Join us as we explore how Levi's continues to resonate with audiences today, blending tradition with innovation in a way that few brands can achieve.Thanks for listening! If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star rating along with a brief review. And don't forget to order your BADASS T-shirt here.About MeHey there, I'm Joelly - the Branding Badass. My BADASS superpower is helping you build a brand that matters. From branded merch to keynote speaking, when you work with me, you get results! Need help telling your brand story? Learn more here.To advertise on the show click hereLet's stay connected!instagram - @Branding_BadasslinkedIn - Joelly Goodsonwebsite - BAMKO.NET
O modzie w Polsce po odzyskaniu przez nasz kraj niepodległości w 1918 roku oraz rozwoju i promowaniu w tamtym czasie polskich marek odzieżowych, polskiego lnu i jedwabiu opowiada Jarosław Panek w rozmowie z Ewą Okońską.
Kamala Harris Donald Trump – pojedynek na modę obojga kandydatów na prezydenta USA ocenia Jarosław Panek.
When is lack of knowledge a writer's best friend? New York Times bestselling author and Guggenheim winner Richard Panek has found that starting from a place of relative ignorance allows him to research and then write about complicated subjects in a way that allows the average reader to find their own way in. We speak with Richard on the book birthday of his newest title, Pillars of Creation: How the James Webb Space Telescope Unlocked the Secrets of the Cosmos. He discusses how he found the form for the book, his favorite punctuation and how it helps to create a more conversation tone, how blog writing informs his book writing, and trying creative things you haven't tried before. Richard Panek is the author of numerous books including The 4% Universe: Dark Matter, Dark Energy, and the Race to Discover the Rest of Reality, which won the American Institute of Physics communication award and was longlisted for the Royal Society Prize for Science Books. The recipient of fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation and the New York Foundation for the Arts as well as an Antarctic Artists and Writers grant from the National Science Foundation, he is also the co-author with Temple Grandin of The Autistic Brain: Thinking Across the Spectrum, a New York Times bestseller. His own books have been translated into sixteen languages, and his writing about science and culture has appeared in publications including the New York Times, the Washington Post, Scientific American, Discover, Smithsonian, Natural History, Esquire, and Outside. He lives in New York City.Pillars of Creation: How the James Webb Space Telescope Unlocked the Secrets of the Cosmos This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit emergingform.substack.com/subscribe
Wybitny polski kompozytor na emigracji w Paryżu zwracał uwagę nienagannym strojem – opowiada Jarosław Panek.
Poeta wszedł do historii mody słynnym „kołnierzykiem Słowackiego”, ale w swoich czasach znany był nie tylko z kołnierzyka – Jarosław Panek w rozmowie z Ewą Okońską.
On this week's podcast, we talk with Bazile Panek about what farmers can learn from Indigenous knowledge in agriculture. Panek, CEO of Good Sky Guidance, shares his work on Indigenous knowledge, cultural revitalization, and environmental initiatives. He discusses the importance of conserving wild rice and the threats it faces, adapting to changing weather patterns and the use of controlled burns in ecosystem management.Good Sky Guidance is a consulting firm specializing in the use of Indigenous Knowledges in environmental initiatives and advising institutions on respectful tribal community engagement. Bazile highlights the need for relationship building and explores Indigenous foodways and the benefits of local, sustainable agriculture, and suggests leveraging Indigenous authors and scholars.His roots come from the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe where he was born and raised. Bazile primarily serves as an Indigenous Consultant for the Institute for Tribal Environmental Professionals (ITEP). In his role with ITEP, he is co-facilitating the creation of the Status of Tribes and Climate Change Report, Volume 2. Bazile also works as the Fire-Plan Research Coordinator at the University of Wisconsin- Platteville for a National Science Foundation-funded project that combines various ways of knowing to help heal fire dependent lands and cultures in the Great Lakes region. Bazile's guiding philosophy in life is to honor his ancestors by becoming an honorable ancestor for future generations. Connect With Guest:Email: bazile@goodskyguidance.comWebsite: goodskyguidance.comInstagram: @goodskyguidance Podcast Sponsors:Huge thanks to our podcast sponsors as they make this podcast FREE to everyone with their generous support: Do you have more tasks on your farm than you have time? Stop interruptions and focus on what matters most. Delegate repetitive duties in your tunnel to Orisha, get rid of diseases for good and get the most out of your tunnels. Sleep better, knowing that they'll call you if anything goes wrong in your greenhouse. For tips and tricks on how to simplify your farm activities, check out their free ebooks at orisha.io/tools and sign up to Orisha's newsletter at orisha.io/newsletter.Farmhand is the only ready-to-ride assistant made by and for farmers. Through a simple text or email to Farmhand, you can offload admin tasks, automate your CSA, update your website, and sell more to your customers. Learn more and take one of our many time-saving tasks for a test drive to see firsthand how Farmhand can help you earn more, and work less at farmhand.partners/gfm.Bootstrap Farmer offers a complete range of growing supplies including heat mats, ground cover, frost blankets, silage tarps, irrigation, and trellising. They also make all-metal, all-inclusive greenhouse kits, constructed of steel made in the USA and fabricated in Texas. Their heavy-duty, Midwest-made propagation and microgreens trays will last for years and are available in a full spectrum of colors. For all that plus experienced support for everything they sell, check out Bootstrap Farmer at bootstrapfarmer.com. Subscribe To Our Magazine -all new subscriptions include a FREE 28-Day Trial
Królowa Bona, Włoszka, wywodząca się ze znamienitego rodu Sforzów, wychodząc za mąż za króla Zygmunta Starego, przywiozła do Polski nie tylko warzywa (nazwane włoszczyzną), ale też nie znane dotąd nad Wisłą piękne i drogie stroje. O prawdziwej rewolucji modowej, która za sprawą królowej najpierw dotarła na Wawel, a potem do Krakowa i innych polskich miast w rozmowie z Ewą Okońską opowiada Jarosław Panek.
26 lipca w Paryżu rozpoczną się Igrzyska Olimpijskie. Nie wiemy ile medali zdobędą Biało-Czerwoni, ale już wiemy jak będą wyglądać. Zmieniły się firmy dostarczające stroje polskiej reprezentacji olimpijskiej i to zarówno te sportowe jak i galowe. Naszym gościem jest ekspert modowy, właściciel butiku GRAND Luxury Outlet, Jarosław Panek.
"Zboże rosło jak las. pamięć o pegeerach" Bartosz Panek. Paulina Wilk w rozmowie z Bartoszem Kamińskim opowiada o nowym reportażu Bartosza Panka. Wydawca: Wydawnictwo Czarne Pegeery były dotychczas portretowane w sposób przeinaczony, zależny od interesów polskich władz. W PRL-u ideologizowane i wychwalane, a po 1989 patologizowane. A jak było faktycznie? W książce „Zboże rosło jak las. Pamięć o pegeerach” Bartosz Panek, opierając się o dokumentacje, archiwa i rozmowy z ludźmi, pokazuje nieznane oblicze polskiej transformacji, przybliżając nam historie naszych rodziców. Dziękujemy bardzo Patronkom i Patronom wspierającym te podkasty i całą naszą działalność. Dołączcie do nas! https://patronite.pl/bigbookcafe Dzięki wielkie dla Miasta Stołecznego Warszawa, które wspiera nasze działania w Stałym Programie Kulturalnym. Nazywamy się Fundacja "Kultura nie boli" i robimy wszystko z miłości do czytania!
Na czym polega paryski szyk? Jakie cechy charakteryzują paryski styl ubierania? – opowiada Jarosław Panek
This we are playing one of our favorite episodes, our interview with Dr. Temple Grandin. We discussed sensory input, the frustration around communication, giving limited choices, transitions to adulthood, and how when you are looking for nothing, you might see everything. Dr. Temple Grandin is a Professor of Animal Science at Colorado State University. Facilities she has designed for handling livestock are used by many companies around the world. She has also been instrumental in implementing animal welfare auditing programs used by Mcdonalds', Wendy's, Whole Foods, and other corporations. Temple has appeared on numerous TV shows, such as 20/20 and Prime Time. Her books include Thinking in Pictures, Livestock Handling and Transport, and The Autistic Brain. Her books Animals in Translation and Visual Thinking have been on the New York Times Bestseller List. Temple was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in September 2017 and, in 2022, was named a Colorado State University Distinguished Professor. "Single most important picture that the Hubble took, and I learned about the story behind, and I wrote about the story behind that and wrote about it in my Visual Thinking Book. The scientist who did that wanted to take 10 days of precious observing time and point the Hubble at nothing, at nothing, and reviewers went you can't waste time doing that. When he pointed it nothing, he saw everything." Temple Grandin Her most recent book discussed in the episode: Visual Thinking: 9781846046872: Amazon.com: Books Other books: Amazon.com: The Autistic Brain: Thinking Across the Spectrum eBook : Grandin, Temple, Panek, Richard: Kindle Store Amazon.com: Thinking in Pictures, Expanded Edition: My Life with Autism eBook : Grandin, Temple, Oliver Sacks: Kindle Store Animals Make Us Human: Creating the Best Life for Animals First, Grandin, Temple, Johnson, Catherine - Amazon.com Animals in Translation: Using the Mysteries of Autism to Decode Animal Behavior (Scribner Classics): Grandin Ph.D., Temple, Johnson Ph.D., Catherine: 9781439187104: Amazon.com: Books The Outdoor Scientist: The Wonder of Observing the Natural World: Grandin PhD, Temple: 9780593115565: Amazon.com: Books Find Temple Grandin on Facebook: (2) Dr. Temple Grandin | Facebook and her website Welcome to Temple Grandin's Official Autism Website To support us: Become a subscriber here. Check out our merch! We would love to hear your feedback on the podcast. Feel free to leave us a message or send us an e-mail at talklikeamotherpodcast@gmail.com or, Send us a voice Message! You can find us: On Facebook - Talk Like a Mother: Parenting Autism Podcast Instagram - @talklikeamotherpodcast You can also find our personal pages where we write about our parenting at: Rachel Flanagan as Flanaville on Facebook Jaime Ramos as Jaime Ramos Writes on Facebook and Instagram Jaimeramoswrites.com Jenn Dunn as Keeping up with Kya on Facebook and Instagram Keepingupwithkya.com Kim McIsaac as Autism Adventures with Alyssa on Facebook and Instagram Autismadventureswithalyssa.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/talklikeamotherpodcast/message
[PŁATNA WSPÓŁPRACA] Zapraszamy na nowy odcinek programu "Rezerwacja". Gośćmi Katarzyny Janowskiej są: Zofia Jastrzębska, Adrian Panek, prof. Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett i dr Natalia Romik oraz Tomek Makowiecki. W pierwszej rozmowie odkrywamy kulisy powstawania filmu "Kolory zła: Czerwień". Zofia Jastrzębska i Adrian Panek opowiadają o thrillerze na podstawie powieści kryminalnej Małgorzaty Oliwii Sobczak. Aktorka i reżyser polecają widzom "Rezerwacji" swoje ulubione filmy, serial i książkę. To cykl rekomendacji pt. "Więcej kultury" przygotowany wspólnie z mBankiem. Dowiemy się, jakie dzieła zachwyciły Zofię Jastrzębską i Adriana Panka. W Muzeum Historii Żydów Polskich POLIN trwa wystawa "(po)ŻYDOWSKIE… Sztetl Opatów oczami Majera Kirszenblata". Rozmowa z kuratorką dr Natalią Romik oraz z prof. Barbarą Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, córką artysty. Paweł Tworek spotkał się z Tomaszem Makowieckim po jego koncercie w Warszawie. Artysta opowiedział o nowym albumie i zmianach w życiu po czterdziestce.
Kiedy piosenka popularna jest nośnikiem agresji? Jak za jej pomocą można manipulować postawami i poglądami? Czy negatywne treści w niej zawarte zawsze są łatwe do wychwycenia? Mówią dr Monika Konert-Panek z Instytutu Komunikacji Specjalistycznej i Interkulturowej Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego oraz dr Mariusz Gradowski z Instytutu Muzykologii UW.
W kwietniu dalej słabnie produkcja w EU; Panek w restrukturyzacji przez niegospodarność pracowników; Maspex przejmuje czeską Becherovkę
Z tego filmu dowiesz się, jaka jest geneza firmy Panek, jakie były wyzwania przy wprowadzaniu car-sharingu w Polsce, a także jak będzie wyglądała przyszłość całej branży w najbliższych latach. Opowie o tym Maciej Panek. Spis treści: 00:00 - W dzisiejszym odcinku 00:36 - Czy często biznesem zajmują się młodzi przedsiębiorcy? Jakie były jego wrażenia z Seminarium ASBIRO? 01:30 - Jak powstał pomysł na car-sharing? Czy może by to opcja rozwoju dla wypożyczalni samochodów? 03:15 - Czy biznes car-sharingu będzie się rozwijał? Czy są jakieś wspierające technologie do prowadzenia tego modelu jak samochody autonomiczne? 07:33 - Co było najtrudniejszą rzeczą przy wprowadzaniu car-sharingu? I jakie są plany rozwoju? 10:56 - Co dzisiaj ułatwia prowadzenie tego modelu biznesu? Jak rozwijać tego rodzaju firmę? 12:15 - Jak car-sharing mógłby pomóc rozwijać biznesy innych przedsiębiorców? Czy można zrobi flotę samochodową z car-sharingiem? 13:30 - Jak będą wyglądały najbliższe lata rozwoju tej branży? 15:30 - Rady dla młodych przedsiębiorców od Macieja Panka Gość
Zapnijcie pasy. Dzisiaj czeka nas daleka podróż. Sprawdzimy jak mogą wyglądać krańce wszechświata. Zaprasza Łukasz Szwej.Realizacja dźwiękowa Kuby Hyrji, muzykę do tego odcinka skomponował natomiast Jędrzej Panek.
Pierwsze pieniądze zarobił, gdy sprzedał wiaderko własnoręcznie zebranych wiśni i czereśni. Miał wtedy około 10 lat. Odkąd pamięta ciągnęło go do samodzielności i możliwości decydowania o sobie. W dzisiejszym odcinku Maciej Panek opowiada o tym, jak wyglądała jego droga do miejsca, w którym jest dzisiaj. A jest to bardzo ciekawa opowieść! Każdy przystanek na jego prywatnej i zawodowej ścieżce zawsze przynosił jakąś wartość i inspirował do dalszego działania. Maciej ma dyplom elektromontera górnictwa podziemnego, uczył się w szkole oficerskiej, a nawet pracował jako strażnik miejski i prowadził sklep spożywczy. Potem zaczął inwestować na giełdzie, ale stracił wszystkie pieniądze… Przez 17 lat Maciej był właścicielem firmy, które nie była znana szerszemu odbiorcy, ponieważ działała głównie w modelu B2B. Ale carsharing zmienił dosłownie wszystko. Przed firmą PANEK wielkie cele - miliard złotych obrotu i ekspansja na światowe rynki. Z Maciejem rozmawiamy między innymi o tym: Jak umiejętnie przełożyć model biznesowy, który dobrze funkcjonuje za granicą, na polskie realia? Jak stworzyć dobry i współpracujący ze sobą zespół? Jak carsharing zmienił mobilność Polaków? Jak samochody autonomiczne wpłyną na przyszłość? Dlaczego warto stawiać sobie wielkie cele? Jak dbać o zdrowie i energię przedsiębiorcy na co dzień? Dlaczego warto realizować swoje marzenia dzisiaj, a nie jutro?
Last seen alive on July 13, 1995, beautiful and kind young mother Yolanda Panek's body has still never been found. A restraining order gave authorities the information they needed to pursue Yolanda's former partner for her murder, but he still hasn't revealed where he left her body. This is the tragic story of the murder of Yolanda Panek, who deserved to share her generosity with the world and be a mother to her young son. Sources https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Yolanda_Panek https://web.archive.org/web/20200507110942/https://www.oregonlive.com/portland/2012/05/rod_underhill_--_multnomah_cou.html https://web.archive.org/web/20200114175520/http://charleyproject.org/case/yolanda-evette-panek https://web.archive.org/web/20220925174441/https://www.ywcapdx.org/yolanda-first-year/ https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-world/49975903/ https://www.newspapers.com/article/longview-daily-news/49976158/ https://www.newspapers.com/article/statesman-journal/49976979/ https://www.newspapers.com/article/albany-democrat-herald/49976130/ https://web.archive.org/web/20050320093546/http://www.paloaltoonline.com/weekly/morgue/community_pulse/1995_Aug_2.coplog.html https://www.newspapers.com/article/albany-democrat-herald/49976033/ https://namus.nij.ojp.gov/case/MP25616 https://crimedoor.com/articles/true-crime-case/yolanda-panek/ https://www.seattletimes.com/life/lifestyle/felons-hooked-on-crocheting-as-small-part-of-atonement/ https://filtermag.org/portland-is-no-progressive-paradise-just-look-at-its-district-attorney/ https://www.newspapers.com/image/526362373/?terms=yolanda%20panek&match=1 https://www.newspapers.com/image/591341170/?terms=yolanda%20panek&match=1 https://www.newspapers.com/image/338061650/?terms=yolanda%20panek&match=1 https://www.newspapers.com/image/442689355/?terms=yolanda%20panek&match=1 https://www.newspapers.com/image/202421606/?terms=yolanda%20panek&match=1 https://www.newspapers.com/image/442629989/?terms=yolanda%20panek&match=1 https://www.newspapers.com/image/442631310/?terms=yolanda%20panek&match=1 https://charleyproject.org/case/yolanda-evette-panek https://thuyanhle.wordpress.com/tag/yolanda-panek/ https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/oregon/ordce/1:2009cv06352/95944/23/
Przed nami czas wielkich porządków - każde święta to przecież presja by wszystko błyszczało. A i na co dzień mamy inny środek czystości do każdej powierzchni i każdego pomieszczenia. Może czas wrócić do tego, co naturalne, zamiast kupować te wszystkie płyny w plastikowych opakowaniach? Soda oczyszczona, ocet, kwasek cytrynowy - mniej chemii, to lepsze zdrowie przekonuje gościni tego odcinka: Sylwia Panek, W zdrowym domu
Alex is a Local 1 IATSE member and current Head of Automation at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. He received his bachelor's degree in Technical Production at Boston University and subsequently attended UNC School of the Arts receiving a master's degree in Stage Automation. Prior to the Met, Alex worked at TAIT Towers as a controls integrator working on a variety of projects from concert touring to theme parks. @theatreartlife Thank you to our sponsor @clear-com The TheatreArtLife Podcast is a branch of our larger TheatreArtLife Community. Come visit us at www.theatreartlife.com
Alex is a Local 1 IATSE member and current Head of Automation at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. He received his bachelor's degree in Technical Production at Boston University and subsequently attended UNC School of the Arts receiving a master's degree in Stage Automation. Prior to the Met, Alex worked at TAIT Towers as a controls integrator working on a variety of projects from concert touring to theme parks. “ATTENTION SPOTIFY LISTENERS: IF you want to WATCH this with VIDEO, you can also subscribe to our video version: https://open.spotify.com/show/5e9KnBRZdjUTXTvCe6Nrqm?si=6639537c61044396” @theatreartlife Thank you to our sponsor @clear-com The TheatreArtLife Podcast is a branch of our larger TheatreArtLife Community. Come visit us at www.theatreartlife.com
Levi Strauss & Co. historian Tracey Panek talks about her fascination with storytelling, her journey from academic to corporate history, and her adventures as a historian at Levi's. Panek sheds light on how corporate historians and archivists collaborate with marketing teams. And the host Patryk Babiracki gets excited because an award-winning Levi's commercial features a familiar vignette from the former Soviet bloc (and a song by a really cool Polish 80s New Wave band). We also talk about Einstein's Levi's jacket and about what history students and history departments can do to broaden students' career options and articulate their value to hiring managers at private companies. Patriyk Babiracki is a historian, researcher and writer; professor & MA student advisor at the University of Texas at Arlington. PhD from Johns Hopkins. Promoter of #AppliedHistory: using historical concepts, frameworks, and methodologies to solve real-world organizational problems. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Levi Strauss & Co. historian Tracey Panek talks about her fascination with storytelling, her journey from academic to corporate history, and her adventures as a historian at Levi's. Panek sheds light on how corporate historians and archivists collaborate with marketing teams. And the host Patryk Babiracki gets excited because an award-winning Levi's commercial features a familiar vignette from the former Soviet bloc (and a song by a really cool Polish 80s New Wave band). We also talk about Einstein's Levi's jacket and about what history students and history departments can do to broaden students' career options and articulate their value to hiring managers at private companies. Patriyk Babiracki is a historian, researcher and writer; professor & MA student advisor at the University of Texas at Arlington. PhD from Johns Hopkins. Promoter of #AppliedHistory: using historical concepts, frameworks, and methodologies to solve real-world organizational problems. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Levi Strauss & Co. historian Tracey Panek talks about her fascination with storytelling, her journey from academic to corporate history, and her adventures as a historian at Levi's. Panek sheds light on how corporate historians and archivists collaborate with marketing teams. And the host Patryk Babiracki gets excited because an award-winning Levi's commercial features a familiar vignette from the former Soviet bloc (and a song by a really cool Polish 80s New Wave band). We also talk about Einstein's Levi's jacket and about what history students and history departments can do to broaden students' career options and articulate their value to hiring managers at private companies. Patriyk Babiracki is a historian, researcher and writer; professor & MA student advisor at the University of Texas at Arlington. PhD from Johns Hopkins. Promoter of #AppliedHistory: using historical concepts, frameworks, and methodologies to solve real-world organizational problems. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kristin is the founder and spiritual director of Flowering Heart Center (FHC), a not-for-profit in Oak Brook, Illinois. After twenty years in a successful management career at Ameritech, Kristin left to pursue transformational work with Shematrix, involving Rites of Initiation into the Divine Feminine. While facilitating this work and receiving extensive training in India for twenty years, she founded FHC to support community healing and transformation into higher states of consciousness. She is also the bestselling author of Authentic Leadership: The Guide to be a Spiritual Leader in Your Community; and My Family Needs My Spiritual Leadership Now: The Guide to Being Your Family's Spiritual Support. She draws on her extensive experience in various modalities including as a facilitator for The Work of Byron Katie, an Avatar master – training in managing consciousness and creating preferred realities, a licensed practitioner by Sonia Choquette – developing intuition, trainer for Oneness – offering various processes for awakening. When she found Human Design, she realized immediately the benefits for her clients and teams and started incorporating it into her work. As a Human Design consultant and facilitator, Kristin brings a unique perspective, supporting her clients to dive deeply into their design and to appreciate their unique wiring and how it will lead them toward their goals. Her clients feel empowered and gain a deeper understanding and reverence for their true selves. Tune in to hear this Chicago-based author, consultant and facilitator share her story of how she found Human Design and crossed paths with Katie, a Chicago girl still at heart. Check out Kristin's Book, Lead By Design Kristin provides a framework in which you can effectively lead your life by aligning with your Human Design, understanding the World Design, and then moving toward your goals while inspiring others to do the same. You'll learn the best way for you to make decisions, and how to communicate with others in a way which they can hear and respond to you. Find out what you need to know to align with your natural leadership style and to be a more impactful leader.
When two 5/1 humans find each other in the world, they always have a fabulous back story! Tune in to hear a witty and wise conversation full of synchronicities, wisdom, and stories of overcoming struggle.
In this episode, Dave Panek, Partner at Aventi Group, joins Louise Liu to discuss the product/market fit. Dave shares explains how product/market fit impacts the go-to-makret strategy and overall business growth. He also discusses his process of developing product/market fit and his experience in helping clients transition from product to platform.For more information, check out article "Boosting Business Growth: The Strategic Product Marketer's Guide to Leveraging Product/Market Fit" by Dave Panek.All rights reserved. © Product Marketing Hive.
Steve King and Johnnie Putman bring you the last show for the month of July and it’s full of moments that will make you laugh or make you cry, maybe both! Our first guest Suzy Bogguss, Illinois native and country singer and songwriter, joins the show to catch up with our hosts and promote an […]
Desi gives us an update on current information. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/wcmp-news/message
My guest is Erin McGowan Panek. Erin was a member of Summer Stage from 1988 until 1994. She claims they were the best seven years of her life. She was an Apprentice in 1988, performed in Children's Theatre from 1989 to 1992, and Mainstage in the Summers of 1990, 1993, and 1994. For over 20 years she has been an elementary school teacher in the Ridley School District where she wrote, directed, and produced original multi-media productions. I hope you enjoy our conversation, so, come along and have some fun. . .We all have stories to tell, and they can be heard here. Welcome to Brave and Strong and True, a podcast created to engage Summer Stage alumni of all ages. I'm Bob Falkenstein.Links to Grace Park Drama Group productions:ROXIE (2017-2018) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImpVa3OBlG8&t=248sIMAGINE (2018-2019) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pkx3mzAPV-U&t=35sBUSTED: A GP MYSTERY (2019-2021) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXR_g6pAn2E&list=PLR4EtdF0dnyqN6kJHelqV2dYS9UW__aPT&index=3&t=236sINSIDE A BUBBLE (created during quarantine 2020) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fmIfPUkpjtcBrave and Strong and True relies on financial support from its listeners. Please click the “Support the Show” link at the bottom of the show notes to support the show. Our music is composed and performed by Neil McGettigan https://neilmcgettiganandtheeleventhhour.bandcamp.com/releasesPlease follow Brave and Strong and True on Apple Podcasts. While you're there, please rate the show and leave a comment. If you want to be a guest on Brave and Strong and True, please contact me at braveandstrongandtrue@gmail.com. You must have a desktop or laptop computer running the latest version of the Google Chrome browser. It helps if you have an external microphone and headphones, but Apple earbuds work too; however BlueTooth ones are not 100% reliable, so see if you can borrow wired ones.Support the show
We had the fantastic opportunity to speak with Dr. Temple Grandin. We are in awe of her wisdom and learned so much not only about her path in this world but the path our children take. A life-changing experience for the five of us at the Table. We discussed sensory input, the frustration around communication, giving limited choices, transitions to adulthood, and how when you are looking for nothing, you might see everything. Dr. Temple Grandin is a Professor of Animal Science at Colorado State University. Facilities she has designed for handling livestock are used by many companies around the world. She has also been instrumental in implementing animal welfare auditing programs used by Mcdonalds', Wendy's, Whole Foods, and other corporations. Temple has appeared on numerous TV shows, such as 20/20 and Prime Time. Her books include Thinking in Pictures, Livestock Handling and Transport, and The Autistic Brain. Her books Animals in Translation and Visual Thinking have been on the New York Times Bestseller List. Temple was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in September 2017 and, in 2022, was named a Colorado State University Distinguished Professor. "Single most important picture that the Hubble took, and I learned about the story behind, and I wrote about the story behind that and wrote about it in my Visual Thinking Book. The scientist who did that wanted to take 10 days of precious observing time and point the Hubble at nothing, at nothing, and reviewers went you can't waste time doing that. When he pointed it nothing, he saw everything." Temple Grandin Her most recent book discussed in the episode: Visual Thinking: 9781846046872: Amazon.com: Books Other books: Amazon.com: The Autistic Brain: Thinking Across the Spectrum eBook : Grandin, Temple, Panek, Richard: Kindle Store Amazon.com: Thinking in Pictures, Expanded Edition: My Life with Autism eBook : Grandin, Temple, Oliver Sacks: Kindle Store Animals Make Us Human: Creating the Best Life for Animals First, Grandin, Temple, Johnson, Catherine - Amazon.com Animals in Translation: Using the Mysteries of Autism to Decode Animal Behavior (Scribner Classics): Grandin Ph.D., Temple, Johnson Ph.D., Catherine: 9781439187104: Amazon.com: Books The Outdoor Scientist: The Wonder of Observing the Natural World: Grandin PhD, Temple: 9780593115565: Amazon.com: Books Find Temple Grandin on Facebook: (2) Dr. Temple Grandin | Facebook and her website Welcome to Temple Grandin's Official Autism Website --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tableforfive/support
Jak wykorzystać grywalizację do zmiany nawyków? O tym rozmawiam z kompozytorem i twórcą największego car-sharingu w regionie firmy Panek. Maciej Panek, bo o nim mowa, to były urzędnik, który stracił pieniądze na giełdzie, a następnie zbudował wiodący biznes na rynku bez wsparcia inwestorów. W rozmowie również: Jak i dlaczego kształtować samoświadomość lidera? Największe grzechy lidera i osobowość ratownika? Dlaczego car-sharing jest nierentowny i jaka jest długoterminowa wizja firmy Panek.
Pewnie znacie samochody z charakterystyczną grafiką @PANEK CarSharing . Rozmawiam z Maciejem Pankiem, który jest twórcą i prezesem firmy o ambicjach zrewolucjonizowania tego, w jaki sposób się poruszamy samochodami i nie tylko. Rozmawiamy i tym dlaczego większość osób mieszkających w miastach obeszłaby się bez samochodu. Na czym polega i co to jest właściwie car sharing? Czy jest tańszy, czy droższy od taksówek? Ale sama merytoryka to nie wszystko, bo dużo czasu poświęcamy rozmowie o samym Macieju Panku, bo to bardzo barwna postać.
Part 2 - Once-ignored Indigenous knowledge of nature now shaping science by If you come into contact with people working in and around natural resources in Minnesota you may hear the term TEK. It's a popular buzzword, which, confusingly, has little to do with technology. It's the acronym for Traditional Ecological Knowledge, an umbrella term for information about the natural world collected by countless generations of Indigenous people. Through observation and life experience, they gained knowledge — what plants were good to make teas to soothe a sore throat, what bark to harvest to bring down a fever, how certain species adapted to changes in climate and how fire can revitalize the forest floor to produce an abundance of berries. That knowledge was shared, often orally through stories or songs. Once dismissed as unscientific, there's now increasing interest in incorporating Indigenous knowledge into the policies and practices of Minnesotans working with forestry and wildlife. Mathew Holding Eagle III | MPR News A group of red pines in Camp 8 about a month after a prescribed burn. Michael Dockry is an enrolled member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation. He is also involved in American Indian studies at the University of Minnesota where he teaches TEK concepts. Through a traditional ecological knowledge perspective, “we are connected with everything,” Dockry said. “That's something that transcends science itself,” he said. “That's why the spirituality, that's why cultural practices and songs come into play with how tribal people are managing resources and thinking about them. We are all related.” TEK differs from what some call scientific or academic ecological knowledge, which often views humans as separate from nature. "It's really about that relationship between people and the place where they live, and the beings that are there with them,” said Rob Croll, who coordinates the climate change program at the Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission. GLIFWC represents 11 Ojibwe tribes in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan with treaty rights to hunt, fish and gather on lands ceded to the federal government. Scientists recently collected information through interviews with tribal elders and harvesters to assess how vulnerable certain species are to climate change. Croll emphasized that collective Indigenous knowledge about natural resources isn't ancient history. "It's happening now, it's happening today,” he said. “It's happening as people are out in the field on the lake, practicing the same activities that their ancestors did for hundreds and thousands of years." Over time, that knowledge has been handed down, usually orally through stories and songs. Michael Waasegiizhig Price is GLIFWC's traditional ecological knowledge specialist. Growing up, he knew little about his Anishinaabe culture. But when visiting family members in Canada, he listened as they told stories. Mathew Holding Eagle III | MPR News A reminder of the prescribed burn remains standing amidst the backdrop of new growth. "Some of these stories talked about ecological concepts, like burning off a forest to chase away the bad spirits and bring back the good spirits,” Price said. “From a scientific term, that would be called forest regeneration. You're talking about the same thing from two very different worldviews." When European settlers negotiated or often imposed treaties on tribes, that Western ideology, along with Manifest Destiny and the belief system that people were ordained by God to reign over nature — that everything on Earth was put here for their consumption — became implemented in policies. In turn, this threatened Indigenous people's way of life. However, at least on paper, it guaranteed them the right to hunt, fish and gather in ceded territories. Under TEK, the treaties have broader implications, said Seth Moore, a biologist for the Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa. “If those foods are not available, if those foods are toxic, if our air is toxic, if our water is toxic, the United States federal government has not honored those treaties and there has been an abrogation of those treaty rights,” Moore said. Using fire as a tool In the Cloquet Forest, just south of Duluth, underneath a canopy of towering white and red pines, nature's melody is a chorus of Traditional Ecological Knowledge. It's a point where science and spirituality overlap. In many Indigenous communities, people have long made careful use of burns to promote forest health. But the Western view saw fire as inherently bad. On the Fond du Lac Reservation of Lake Superior Chippewa, this resulted in a curbing of burns. In 1904, urged by lumber companies, the land comprising the forest — three percent of the reservation — was given to the University of Minnesota by the government so that it could study methods to replenish areas after deforestation. Dockry said nowadays, tribes are reclaiming TEK they were prohibited from using in the past, including fire. “We're starting again to see tribes leading natural resource management forward with fire use in the region,” Dockry said. Mathew Holding Eagle III | MPR News A burned log inside Camp 8 after a prescribed burn in the Cloquet Forest. In May, the first prescribed burn of at least an acre since 2000 was conducted in the Cloquet Forest. To make it happen, at the request of the Fond du Lac Reservation to the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the BIA and the U of M agreed to a memorandum of understanding. It defined the working relationship between the three entities and paid tribal fire professionals to help conduct the burn. “We can learn a lot from tribes,” Dockry said. “Tribes have done a lot of work around fire.” Dockry says fires can be a real threat in Minnesota. However, prescribed burns help by removing forest waste which can lead to larger fires. It also encourages biodiversity by not allowing any one species of plant or tree to dominate an ecosystem — making it more sustainable. During a recent workshop at the Cloquet Forestry Center, fire expert Damon Panek, an enrolled member of the Mississippi Band of White Earth Ojibwe, spoke from the field in Arizona while assisting another tribe with their fire efforts. Panek helped lead the prescribed Cloquet Forest burn. He said using fires is about much more than reshaping the landscape, it is also about reclamation of something greater. "Our identity depends on it,” Panek said. “Our language, our culture, our ways of seeing the world is based on an ecosystem that is fire adapted and we don't have that right now. So what does that mean for us?" Panek said if prescribed burns continue, they will help unshroud Indigenous identity. He predicts there will be families camping out on the reservation, on the ceded territory, foraging for berries and sharing songs, stories and life practices — as he put it, rediscovering inlets to old outlets. ‘We want to see bigger trees' One place where traditional ecological knowledge about natural resources is being put to use is the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe reservation in north-central Minnesota. The reservation encompasses nearly half of the Chippewa National Forest. The red and white pine stands on and around the reservation were heavily logged starting in the 1800s. Long before those timber barons began cutting the trees for profits, BJ Gotchie's ancestors made their home here. Kirsti Marohn | MPR News New plants, including wild strawberries, are visible on the forest floor in a portion of the Leech Lake forest where a prescribed burn was recently conducted. "A lot of tribal members — myself included — we want to see bigger trees,” said Gotchie, interagency fire restoration coordinator for the Leech Lake Band. “We don't care so much about having big trees to harvest for timber revenues.” Now, along with Keith Karnes, the band's forestry director, Gotchie is working to restore it closer to the forest his ancestors knew — by selectively cutting and using prescribed burns to give the remaining trees more space to grow." We want some of these big legacy trees, these great big old monoliths. They used to be here before the timber barons came through,” Karnes said. “There'll be some young forest that comes up, too. It's all about having a mix." The forest has responded. With less underbrush, the trees are able to grow taller and form more of a canopy. "Look at the difference in the trees,” Karnes said. “They just look happy.” Kirsti Marohn | MPR News Forestry director Keith Karnes inspects a pine tree in an area of the Leech Lake reservation near Cass Lake where recent thinning and prescribed burns have helped clear underbrush and given the remaining trees more room to grow. The forest is also getting more diverse, with other native trees and shrubs such as wild blueberries, roses and juneberries, able to thrive. For Karnes, who's not a tribal member, embracing this old way of thinking is a transformation that's taken years. When he first started working for the Leech Lake Band 16 years ago, he brought a traditional forestry mindset, all about the economics — how to harvest the most timber for the most revenue, an attitude that earned him the nickname the “Timber Beast.” Karnes recalled a conversation with a tribal employee on his first day. "I told her, ‘A happy tree is a horizontal tree,' which is what my forest products professor told me in college,” he said. “I got this absolute evil look." But after a decade or so, Karnes said his perspective changed, as he began listening to what tribal elders wanted. "The idea of timber revenues to the tribal government — it doesn't matter,” he said. “Here I was, just constantly focusing on economics. And that wasn't a vantage point for the tribe." Related stories New Bemidji State degree draws on indigenous practices to teach 21st century sustainability USDA announces a new focus on Indigenous food and agriculture Changemakers: Sean Sherman - Teaching Indigenous foods as cultural preservation Foraged plants form a connection to the earth Now, Karnes said, he uses a more holistic approach, focusing on the sustainable ecology of the forest. That includes thinning trees earlier and aggressively to allow the remaining ones to develop bigger crowns, letting some trees fall over to create habitat for wildlife, allowing more biodiversity and encouraging tree species that are hardy to climate change and invasive insects. In other words, Karnes said, thinking long term — not just about maximizing profits. "It's grounded in not just Western science,” he said. “It's adaptive silviculture. It's climate change science. But it's also traditional ecological knowledge. Everything has a purpose." Some federal agencies also are beginning to incorporate more Indigenous ecological knowledge into their policies and practices. In 2016, then-Leech Lake tribal chairwoman Carri Jones sent a letter to the U.S. Forest Service, voicing the band's concerns that the overharvesting of timber had led to forests dominated by pine and aspen that lacked diversity of plants and wildlife. In 2019, the tribe and the Forest Service signed a memorandum of understanding for shared stewardship of the Chippewa National Forest that reflects the band's goals. For his part, Gotchie envisions a thriving forest that produces local foods and medicines, much like it did for his ancestors. "It's not going to be just in my lifetime. Not even in my kids' lifetime,” he said. “My grandkids. That's what we want for future generations.”
Jest lipiec 2020 roku. Michał Nogaś rozmawia z Bartoszem Pankiem o polskich Tatarach. Przez ponad sześć stuleci Tatarzy żyli wśród chrześcijan, ale potrafili zachować odrębność narodową i religijną. Polska zawdzięcza im wybitnych żołnierzy, sędziów, lekarzy. A jednak o nich zapomniała. Kim byli i są polscy Tatarzy? Jak wygląda ich świat? W "U nas każdy jest prorokiem. O Tatarach w Polsce" przedstawia historie, które zrobiły największe wrażenie. Dla bardzo wielu czytelników będą z pewnością zaskoczeniem. Choćby opowieść o muftim Jakubie Szynkiewiczu, który udał się do Indii, by tam zdobyć fundusze na budowę meczetu w centrum Warszawy, a w czasie wojny poszedł na współpracę z Niemcami, by – jak się zdaje – uratować jak najwięcej osób, w tym Karaimów i Żydów. Czy naprawdę znał Goebbelsa? Jest także w książce opowieść o Janie Jakubie Szegidewiczu, który nie ukończył szkoły w Dęblinie, a na Pawiaku i później w Auschwitz spotkał Maksymiliana Kolbego. Pisze Panek o wielce zasłużonej dla Polski rodzinie Achmatowiczów i o odważnej Dżennet Dżabagi, która żyła po swojemu, ale – w świetle dokumentów odnalezionych po wojnie – ważną część swojego życiorysu zmyśliła. Są też w książce Bartosza Panka historie powojenne, o Tatarach, którzy zostali przesiedleni, o tych, którzy drżeli po Marcu '68 i o współczesności, która jawi się jako okres rozpadu, nieporozumień, zderzenia z szybko zmieniającym się światem. Na podcast zaprasza Michał Nogaś. Kolejne odcinki w cyklu "Książki. Magazyn do słuchania" w każdą sobotę. Do usłyszenia! Więcej podcastów na https://wyborcza.pl/podcast
In this episode of The Missing Link RC Podcast, Tyler and I have Chad Panek from Mike's Hobby Lake Elsinore. Tyler and I also talk about the u4rc race this past weekend. Thanks for the follow and shoot us a like. Find us on Instagram and FaceBook FaceBook The Missing Link RC Podcast Tyler Zavadil RCDragTalk Shawn Rusin SoCalU4RC U4RC.com Instagram @RCDrgtalk Podcast Sponsors brought to you by CowRC
To kick off the holiday extended weekend with a nice gift. the guys are joined in this episode by 'Region Rush Hour' co star and star of the widely acclaimed 'Panek in the Region' Tony Panek! Tony talks about what made him get started in the stock market and Niko is back for his hail mary pick of the week. Music: Barrett Strong - Money (That's What I Want) DISCLAIMER: WE ARE NOT PROFESSIONAL FINANCIAL ADVISORS JUST A COUPLE GUYS GIVING OUR OPINIONS --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/stock-talk-pod/support
Sylvia Panek of Natural Investments is a Financial Advisor who focuses on investment strategies that enrich lives and bring financial empowerment to clients who are concerned for people and the planet. In today's episode, Erin and Sylvia talk about what it means to be socially responsible and what socially responsible investing is, why integrity matters, and how personal development work is foundational to professional growth. Learn more about Sylvia and Natural Investments at the link below. Resources mentioned in this podcast: https://www.indiebound.org/book/9780804193962 (The Heart of the Buddha's Teaching: Transforming Suffering into Peace, Joy, and Liberation | IndieBound.org) https://www.naturalinvestments.com/heart-rating/ (The Heart Rating - Natural Investments) is the publicly available rating system of what we think of various SRI funds.
Bazile Panek is majoring in Native American Studies at Northern Michigan University. He is an enrolled tribal member of the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa in Red Cliff, Wisconsin.We talked about his pride in his heritage and traditions, his research exploring opportunities for traditional values to help decolonize entrepreneurship and the ways his academic pursuit of Native American Studies has helped him understand his own Anishinaabe identity in new ways.