POPULARITY
Patrick Reynolds is deputy chair of Auckland Council's City Centre Advisory Panel and joins Mark to talk about the Central Rail Link.
Trevor Neville, Gateway Dirt Nationals Champion; Andy Garris, ProFabrication Sales and Marketing Director; and Patrick Reynolds, “Don LaJoie On and Off The Track” co-author are this week's guests.
"There's two ways to be creative: you can sing and dance, or you can create environments where singers and dancers can flourish. I'm the second," says Patrick Reynolds, CMO at BlueConicIn this episode of The Content Cocktail Hour, our guest is Patrick Reynolds, CMO of BlueConic. Patrick shares how BlueConic leverages first-party data to build tailored, empathetic customer experiences during busy shopping seasons like Black Friday. He also talks about his insights on the evolving role of AI, which helps marketers focus on creativity and strategy by automating repetitive tasks, and explains why the best marketing often works quietly in the background, enhancing customer engagement without overshadowing it.In this episode, you'll learn:How to use first-party data to create personalized experiences that resonate with customers during high-stakes shopping seasonsThe importance of balancing data-driven insights with empathy to better serve consumersWhy AI can be a game-changer in freeing marketers to focus on strategic, creative workResources:Connect with Jonathan on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathan-gandolf/ Check out The Juice HQ: https://www.thejuicehq.com/ Connect with Patrick on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/patreynolds/Check out BlueConic: https://www.blueconic.com/Timestamps:(00:00) Intro(03:24) Black Friday and Cyber Monday strategies(04:37) The importance of empathy in marketing(08:29) Leveraging customer data for better marketing(10:20) Balancing data and creativity in marketing(17:40) Content strategy and measurement(20:46) The role of AI in modern marketing(23:43) Why marketing should be invisible to the consumer
On today's First Up pod with Leonard Powell: Fruit of the Week day; shared e-scooters have been banned in Melbournes CBD - we find out from Transport whiz Patrick Reynolds if the same could happen here and months on from Air Vanuatu's collapse - Solomon Airlines is announcing a new flight from Auckland to Santo. First Up - Voice of the Nathan!
Auckland's city centre has outpaced New Zealand in both GDP and employment growth for the second year in a row. According to an Infometrics report, GDP in the city centre grew by 9.2 percent in the year to March 2023, reaching $30.4 billion. Employment was up 7.3 percent in the same period, compared to the equivalent increase of 2.5 percent for the rest of New Zealand. Patrick Reynolds, the Council's City Centre Advisory Panel deputy chair says this growth is more than a post-pandemic bounce. "There's been a heap of investment - in both private investment and especially streetscape renewals and upgrades and the shift away from just black tarmacs of cars." LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Auckland's city centre has outpaced New Zealand in both GDP and employment growth for the second year in a row. According to an Infometrics report, GDP in the city centre grew by 9.2 percent in the year to March 2023, reaching $30.4 billion. Employment was up 7.3 percent in the same period, compared to the equivalent increase of 2.5 percent for the rest of New Zealand. Patrick Reynolds, the Council's City Centre Advisory Panel deputy chair says this growth is more than a post-pandemic bounce. "There's been a heap of investment - in both private investment and especially streetscape renewals and upgrades and the shift away from just black tarmacs of cars." LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Radio legend Phil Hendrie talks about slogging his way from local misfit to one of the most innovative and influential broadcasters of our time. Joining us is the producer of his new documentary Patrick Reynolds. Follow Phil Hendrie on Instagram @PhilHendrie
When you're a challenger brand that's trying to get unfair market share, you need to things to succeed – a healthy amount of risk-taking and the agility to take advantage of the big guy's missteps. Patrick Reynolds has a knack for developing these qualities in challenger brands in his career as a marketer. Patrick is the CMO of the customer data platform BlueConic. Prior to this role, he spent two years in an executive position for Mastercard. Patrick loves the challenge of unleashing the potential of challenger brands through ingenious marketing, branding, and positioning strategies. Tune in and learn how he puts his concepts into practice and how that has translated into business success!Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share! https://www.monigle.com/
The guys are joined this week by Patrick Reynolds. They talk about his history with East Durham, Jimmy Diresta's House, One world Trade Center, and New York City. They also get deep into Maker Camp and what it takes to bring a town back to life with a new energy and a new community. When he's not in East Durham NY, you can find Patrick on Instagram here...@reynopatrickCheck out The Art of Craftsmanship on YouTube, Instagram, and Patreon here...youtube.com/theartofcraftsmanship@theartofcraftsmanship@theartofcameraguypatreon.com/theartofcraftsmanshipRecommendations:Devon:Brooks Robinson's Hall of Fame Speech from the 1983'shttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1qMIs2BuoIPatrick:Joe Dispenza on YT "Introduction to Your Brain"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0In3V8NWxADustin:Follow the #makercampmakerswap2023 on IG to see whos making what for maker camp this year and what you might come away with if you enter. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Patrick Reynolds joins host Melinda Russell.
Brands, marketing teams, and their audiences are becoming increasingly diverse. But there's still more to be done. Patrick and Jade take a look at the current marketing landscape through the lens of DE&I, why it's essential for marketing teams to be diverse, and what marketing leaders can do to further the cause.Key talking pointsWhy a diverse marketing team enhances creativity, prevents missteps, and just makes sense from an ethical standpoint.Despite the "backlash", once you cut through the noise, marketing to diverse groups works.How marketing leaders can drive effective DE&I in their organizations.Developing and maintaining effective DE&I programs can be an important part of mastering the C-Suite. Start your journey to C-Suite success with the C-Suite Masterclass.
Looking Out for Business Nationally. The host for this show is Tom Yamachika. The guest is Patrick Reynolds. Our guest is one of the Senior Counsels of the Committee on State Taxation (COST), an organization that focuses on the impact of state taxes on businesses across the country. He speaks on what COST is and how it works, and some of the issues that are of importance to businesses around the country.The ThinkTech YouTube Playlist for this show is https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLQpkwcNJny6lmEllOKP493URXssFT4N7GPlease visit our ThinkTech website at https://thinktechhawaii.com and see our Think Tech Advisories at https://thinktechadvisories.blogspot.com.
In this episode of The Next CMO podcast, we speak to Patrick Reynolds, the CMO of BlueConic, the leading provider of pure play customer data platforms. We talk about all things data with Patrick, including the changing data privacy landscape. How to leverage and actually use the data that you're collecting for your customers in a permission enabled way, the future of data, what kind of resources you need to have in your organization to take advantage of all this data and what to think about in the coming year about the use of data. I hope you enjoy the show.Learn more about Patrick Reynolds, CMO of BlueconicLearn more about BlueConicFollow Peter Mahoney on Twitter and LinkedInLearn more about PlannuhJoin The Next CMO CommunityRecommend a guest for The Next CMO podcastProduced by PodForte
Tragically, on December 12, 2022, Kristina Moon's husband, Firefighter William P. Moon II, or Billy as everyone called him, suffered a fatal injury while preparing for a training drill at his Brooklyn firehouse. Days later when it became clear that the 21-veteran of the Department would not survive his injuries, Billy's family carried out his wishes to donate his organs to help others. In total, five organs from Moon were transplanted into five desperate recipients. Two of those recipients include retired FDNY members, Captain Patrick Reynolds and Lieutenant Terrence Jordan, who join this conversation remotely via video conference. Kristina Moon joins host Battalion Chief Brian Mulry in-studio.
Today we are joined by Patrick Reynolds from Waves Entertainment to discuss another never covered case on a podcast forum. We will tell the story about the senseless murder of 24-year-old race car driver, Donnie Ray Crawford III. Donnie Ray, Number 55, was competing in the prestigious Chili Bowl midget racing event held in nearby Tulsa, Oklahoma the week of his murder.On January 14, 2012, Donnie Ray Crawford III was shot and killed by his 74-year-old grandfather, Daniel Garcia. Donnie's parents, Jodie and Donnie, came to their son's defense and, in the scuffle, Daniel Garcia was also killed. After you hear this story of such an incredible young man, please visit the Donnie Ray Crawford – Donnie Ray Crawford Legacy Foundation to learn more.SOURCE MATERIALS:Donnie Ray Crawford – Donnie Ray Crawford Legacy FoundationRace Car Driver Hailed A Hero (newson6.com)Chili Bowl Racer Donnie Ray Crawford III Killed By His Grandfather (newson6.com)Crawford family murder (2012-01-14) in Broken Arrow, OK - Virtual GlobetrottingTulsaworld.comNewson6.comDonnie Ray Crawford Testimonial - YouTubehttps://donnieraycrawford.com/video_gallery/extraordinary-act-of-courage/https://www.floracing.com/articles/10276851-a-look-back-at-the-lucas-oil-chili-bowl-through-the-years?utm_campaign=103029chilibowlnation&utm_medium=socialmedia&utm_source=facebook&utm_content=article&utm_term=thumbnail.chilibowltimelinegraphic&rtid=103029&coverage_id=7855169&mibextid=Zxz2cZHosted and edited by Amanda ScottCo-Hosted, produced, researched, co-written and original graphic design by Pamela ScottOriginal music by Waves EntertainmentDisclaimer by Chuck HaungsPassive AggressionA Midwestern look at hot button, taboo and dated topics with Kyle and Jess WassingListen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifyBuzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched! Start for FREEWaves Entertainment Waves Entertainment is a full-service event management company for any size event.Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showPlease review us ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ at: https://www.enmeshedtruecrimepodcast.com/reviews/new/It really helps us move up the charts!SUBSCRIBE HERE:https://www.buzzsprout.com/1889239/support
Meet Patrick Reynolds, the man connecting tech startups to the Department of Defense. Based in Atlanta, Patrick scouts tech and talent as the university representative for Georgia through the National Security Innovation Network (NSIN). We sit down with Patrick who shares the numerous ways NSIN supports startups, the misconceptions of working with the DoD, what he looks for when scouting talent, and the initiatives he's most looking forward to in 2023.
Hosted by Ray Loewe Patrick Reynolds had a long career as a graphic artist. But what really intrigued him were little-known historical events. He decided to turn this interest into a money-making venture. He drew and wrote the cartoons and sold them to newspapers across Pennsylvania. Patrick has also published his cartoons in books.
Motivating Youth to Stay Vape and Tobacco Free Ep693 Featuring Interview Guest, Grandson of Cigarette Company Founder RJ Reynolds, Executive Director of Tobaccofree Earth and Author of The Gilded Leaf: Three Generations of the RJ Reynolds Family and Fortune, Patrick Reynolds; and Performance Guest, Singer-Songwriter, Actor, and Hockey Player, Zane Christopher, on The LIFE CHANGES Show, Ep693 Titled, “Motivating Youth to Stay Vape and Tobacco Free” Interview Guest: PATRICK REYNOLDS; and Performance Guest: ZANE CHRISTOPHER
Transcription:Intro 00:03Welcome to changing the rules, a weekly podcast about people who are living their best lives, and advice on how you can achieve that too. Join us with your lively host, Ray Loewe, better known as the luckiest guy in the world.Patrick Reynolds 00:11Good morning, everybody, and welcome to changing the rules and we have an incredible guest with us today. But before we let him on the air, I want to give you a little background, you know, we try every week to interview one of the luckiest people in the world. And the luckiest people in the world are those people who don't let everybody else control their lives, they figure out what they want, and they somehow figure a way to go do it. And you're gonna see how our guest meets those specs today. And the other thing I wanted to comment on is the name of our show is changing the rules. And the reason for that is all through our lives were given rules by everybody. Okay? When you start, your parents give you a set of rules. And then the schools give you a set of rules, and the Church gives you a set of rules and your boss gives you a set of rules. Before you know it, you got so many rules. And What rules do is two things. They tell you have to do this, or you can't do this. So the people who are independent and who become the luckiest people in the world have found a great way of changing the rules so that they get the freedom to be themselves. And today we have with us a young man, Patrick Reynolds, who is I think the best way to describe him is a historical cartoonist. So Patrick, say hello. And you can tell me that I was wrong and how he described you. Oh, hello, Ray. That's kind of accurate. I have a cartoonist that does historical subjects of places or people that you've never heard of. Or if you're familiar with them, something about them that's never known.Ray Loewe02:01So you found the interesting way of doing things. So you weren't always free to be you though. Warrior. Correct. So let's go back a little bit. When you are early in your life, you realize you had this flair for cartooning? Is that correct? Right. When I was a kid, and you developed it and when you had a chance to go to college or trade school, or whatever it is. You went to learn how to be a better cartoonist first.Patrick Reynolds 02:27I wanted to be an artist. And my hobby was artwork, okay. It would be great if I can make a living out of my hobby. So I made that decision to be an artist and I had a mentor, if you will in my hometown, who was a very accomplished artist, and I asked what's the best art school in our country? I can go to what I'm missing a beat. He says Pratt Institute, little known to me that is in the middle of Brooklyn, New York right next to the Bet Sty neighborhood. Okay. But you got through that you live through the experience. Okay, so, so early in your life. Okay. When you came out of Pratt, what did you do? I became an art director for an advertising agency in Scranton. It was sort of like getting my master's degree if you will. There's the whole thing. We can't hire you unless you have experience. So how can I get experienced? So this was it. So I stayed there a year and then I became an art director at an ad agency in Harrisburg. And I worked there for a year and then finally, the draft board caught up with me and says, you're not getting any more deferments. You have two months to make a decision. Otherwise, we will draft you. So I went in the army.Ray Loewe03:49Okay. And interesting. You were in intelligence in the army. Correct, Right. And it tells you something about cartoonists, doesn't it? And, you did some really interesting things. You did some aerial surveillance, and, you know, make a long story short, I understand you want up to the Bronze Star. I understand you left the Army Reserves as a retired Lieutenant Colonel. Right. Right. So this was a big part of your life. And I know you were telling me some stories when we were kind of prepping for this about how you actually wound up doing some drawing while you were doing this stuff. And, putting Mickey Mouse's on the flags just to keep yourself entertained and stuff like that. But rather than spending time there, I want to go on because I think the rest of your career was just absolutely phenomenal. I don't want to spend the time there. So you left the army. Right, and what did you do?Patrick Reynolds 04:45I got a job as an artist up in Schenectady for General Electric. I always want to say generous electric But General Electric. And that got me back on my feet in the art business. This. And from there, I became advertising manager of the host farm here in Lancaster. That's how I ended up in Lancaster.Ray Loewe05:08Okay, now I understand host farm is significant because you learned two things there that took over your career, right?Patrick Reynolds 05:16Oh, well really one thing from the my boss, I still have to make up the rate brochures to tell what it will cost to stay there for at a particular holiday. And I would add matchups and what's going to cost with the type of room. And then I would get it printed out and bring it to my boss, the manager. And he'd look at it. And he'd say, I want price to visit idiot-proof. idiot-proof, what are you talking about? He says, I want it so that any idiot can look at this and not have any questions, they'll understand everything you're trying to tell them. And that became one of the keys to my writing style. Okay. And there was something else that came out of there a while ago, I'm not going to match it up correctly. But it had to do something you didn't know, oh, I worked for the after I worked for host farm, I got a job as the public relations Information Specialist for the state tourism bureau where we promoted tours around the country. And I would look at what other states are doing. And I figured I want to do what they're not doing. And 1973-74 Halloween time. And I came up with a concept of, of a tour of haunted places in the state of haunted places you can visit. And the story got picked up by the New York Daily News front page of their travel section. And a couple of months later, I met the editor of the Travel section. I said what did I do, right? And he says, you told me something I didn't know. So when I came up with my cartoons, I decided to do with a one on Pennsylvania. And it would consist of stories from history that people never heard of, or even thought about.Ray Loewe07:17So here we are, we're doing something we didn't know. And the cartoons gave you a medium to make them idiot-proof. Right? Well, welcome to your own world, Patrick. So this led you on a career so so go back. And there was a point in time when you took off on your own because I think you got fed up with the bureaucracy. And you had this creativity that you wanted to run but I think you told me a story of that dealt with the bicentennial. And taking off to Boston and seeing something about Yankee something or other in the newspaper. So amplifying in that.Patrick Reynolds 07:57I was a member of the Society of America travel writers. And we had our convention in 1975 in several cities, and one of the first one was Boston. And on Sunday morning, right after the that previous Saturday night, I was in my hotel room and I watched this TV show you just came on Saturday Night Live 1975. Anyway, the next morning, I pick up the Boston Globe, and they had a cartoon, it was on their front page called Yankee almanac. It was a whimsical treatment of Massachusetts Bay Colony history for back in the 1600. And I said that is the coolest idea ever seen, I could do something like that for Pennsylvania. And at the time I was bucking for promotion to be our director of my bureau. At the time, I had delusions of grandeur. And so I did three of them. And one of them had to do with the July 3 and three significant events and PA and places that you would visit such as Gettysburg. Another one was on the mammoth fossil found in Pennsylvania, which is on display at the State Museum, on and on. So I did these three gave them to the higher up and didn't hear from them. And then what they did was they hired a guy from Virginia for the job that I wanted. And I thought I'm not long for this job. So he came to me and said, the powers that be were impressed by your comic strips, how long is it going to take to do one of them things? I said to myself, I'm not going to give this to the state. I'm keeping this for me. So I said four days a week, you know, wow, that's a lot to do. I said, Look, you're the boss. I'm going to do what you direct me to do and what you want done, I said but I'd like to do this on my own time. Therefore, I'd like you to get a letter of understanding from the powers that be that I can do this on my own time and sell it to the newspapers. And next day come back with a letter of understanding. And that's how it started. For there, I marketed to all the newspapers, I can in the state, I ended up getting picked up by 20 newspapers. But none of them were in Philadelphia or Pittsburgh, one of these papers now became a Pittsburgh paper. But that was long, many long years later. So I did that for a couple of years. But still, I got I had time. Oh, after that cartoon started, it took me two years to leave my state job, because I came out with books on it. And the books sold fantastically, which I printed myself, by the way. And so after two years, I forgot I could make this on my own. So now you emerge as one of the luckiest people in the world. Right? Exactly. Because now you're doing your passion. Right. And there are two passions that I detect. One is cartooning. And the other is these historic events that you pick up. And you can make come to life for people, right? As if you're there. And you could do this and figure out how to get paid for it without putting up with the bureaucracy of the state of Pennsylvania, or somewhere. Exactly. Great. All right. So now we know why you were dealing with the luckiest people in the world. So over the years, what are some of the best topics that you uncovered? You mentioned the haunted houses, but what are some of the other ones that you found fascinating that you were able to turn into comics so that everybody could understand they were idiot-proof? And we tell people something new? Right, right. Well, sometimes I try to tie them in with a current event. For example, January 6, last year, the raid on the US Capitol, I got an idea of a different type of a mass gathering in Washington, one of the first ones and that was the Bonus Army that took place in 1932. What the bonus was, was Congress passed an act in 1924. That gave a bonus to every soldier that served in World War One. And that bonus was going to be paid in 1946. So at the time, in the 1920s, people were making a living, it was a great time. And then the Depression hit. Now, half these veterans, several million of them are destitute, their farms are being repossessed by the banks. So Washington had to do something. We need that money now not 1946. So Wright Patman from Texas voted in favor of it, but no one went along with it. The House passed, the Senate wouldn't. So a couple of guys, one guy in particular in Oregon, decided to march on Washington. So how are they gonna get that had no money. So what they did was they hitchhiked or they hop on freight trains. And they got as far as and this made the news. So other veterans from the rest of the country said we're gonna do the same thing. So they started hitchhiking and train hopping, trying all converging on Washington, DC, eventually, 20,000 veterans showed up and waited for the pressured Congress to and they're very organized, by the way, since these are military. And we're gonna stay. The chief of police got them to stay in some of the abandoned buildings on Pennsylvania Avenue because PA Avenue was being rebuilt. So what it looks like today. So where do you find this stuff? I read a lot. Okay, read a whole lot. And by the way, I've been doing this long before the way hadn't Google and stuff like that. Okay, so give me another example. So that's something I didn't know. Okay. And I think I understand it. So give me something else. Well, I got I gotta tell you the kicker on the Bonus Army, okay. They Congress voted against it. And it was dead. So half the veterans left DC the other half stayed there. And most a lot of them settled in in camps, and Anacostia, which is across the Anacostia River, and, and several many 1000s were there and he built their own shacks. Some of them lived out of their own jalopy cars. And when they refused to leave, President Hoover gave the word to his Chief of Staff, General Douglas MacArthur to get rid of them, and General MacArthur along with his, Adjutant Major Dwight Eisenhower, when it's action, and they organize the two troops of squadrons of cavalry, and a one, two battalions of infantry to march down Pennsylvania Avenue and just kick everybody out. The infantry carried tear gas. The cavalry carried sabers. Commanding one of the squadrons was Captain George Patton. They eradicated everybody and he ended up burning all or setting fire to all the stuff at Anacostia. So it ended in a disaster. And when this hits the news, Franklin Roosevelt in his home in Hyde Park was the Democratic candidate for president that year. He just sat there told his aide, we don't have to campaign anymore. Wow, just lost it. Wow. So this is the core kind of story that you tried to tell in your publications. Is that right? Right, right. Okay. So, unfortunately, we're getting near the end of our time, and I want to hit something because you're kind of at the end of your publication experience. You told me you're going to retire. I don't believe that. But we'll assume that you're correct for the moment. What are you going to do and writing about your life and your history? And you I think you said that we're for events, you're gonna have to give us a short version here. But go ahead. My editors asked me the question, are you gonna do a special goodbye, and I says, Look, I not only write history, but I've lived through force. I consider four significant events in American history. The first one, I was a senior at Pratt, I was given a freelance job to help this woman in her business. Her name was Melee Dufty, a renowned civil rights leader, who owned a booking company for burlesque acts in black burlesque theaters across the country. And she needed someone to work on her book, which is a page-by-page bio of each person, I had to do the lettering on it. So I can free her up so she can make phone calls all over the country to bus companies. And these bus companies were gonna meet at churches, black churches throughout the country, and carry people to Washington DC for the 1963 march on Washington. At one point, I asked her the dumbest question in my life. I said, Do you think you're gonna get many people to show up? She says you'll see. And that summer 1000s I think over a million people showed up to listen to Martin Luther King's I Have a Dream speech. Then during when I was in the Army active duty to participate in the Tet offensive of 1968. As a reservist in the army, I was activated to my company was activated that I commanded to take part in the rescue mission of from Agnes, the Agnes flood that day to Pennsylvania. And the last one was after the TMI accidents. I got a phone call from the public relations director of TMI. That's Three Mile Island Right Three Mile Island, the nuclear plants. And the what happened was the nuke the core of the one reactor virtually melted. And he called me and he says, are you comfortable with coming onto TMI? I said are you going to pay me? I'll be there. The job I had was to interpret engineer schematics, which I had experience in before, and making them into illustrations of these tools that they're going to use to break apart the core, and then pick up the pieces. I did maybe a dozen of these things. And they made a video out of it. And they never used the video because they've decided not to go into the core at all. So there's the fourth TMI accident.Ray Loewe19:21Okay, so amazing. Okay. And, you know, all I can say is welcome to the world of the luckiest people in the world. You're there, okay? We're going to have to do an encore to this because I just see the list of stories here. You can go on and on and on forever, probably. And I think the lesson that we hope people learn is, you know when you get frustrated in your career, you know, think find that key, find how you can use your passion and go off and become one of the luckiest people in the world. And, Patrick, thanks so much for being here. And Luke, sign us off and we'll see everybody next week. weekOutro 20:03thank you for listening to changing the rules. Join us next week for more conversation, our special guest, and to hear more from the luckiest guy in the world.
Patrick Reynolds, a grandson of cigarette company founder RJ Reynolds,, is Garry's guest this week. Former U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop called Patrick Reynolds, the Founder and Executive Director of Tobaccofree Earth, “one of the nation's most influential advocates of a smokefree America.” Plus, the usual ample supply of yappetizers and nonsense.
Paul Diamond reviews Wellington Architecture: A Walking Guide by John Walsh; photographer Patrick Walsh published by Massey University Press
From Oriental Parade, to Cuba Street, Lambton Quay, The Terrace, Aro Street, Wellington is known as a very compact and walkable city. It's also packed full of interesting buildings which tell a story of the city's history. Architecture writer John Walsh has already published popular walking guides for Christchurch and Auckland, and Wellington is now in for the same treatment. Alongside photographer Patrick Reynolds, John Walsh has produced a pocket guide of one hundred and twenty of Wellington's most significant central city buildings. And as John tells Kathryn, there's a lot to write about; hemmed in by steep hills and little flat land, Wellington has the most intensely occupied downtown in the country
In season two of the "Finding Home" podcast series, Irish American Archives Society Executive Director Margaret Lynch interviews an array of Clevelanders with specialized knowledge and stories about the history of the Irish in Cleveland. This episode features an interview with Patrick Reynolds. Patrick Reynolds is a retired detective sergeant of the the Cleveland Police Department and President of the Board of Trustees of the Cleveland Police Museum. Reynolds shares information about the Museum collections and its research services--from displays about Eliot Ness and the Kingsbury Run torso murders to help documenting a family member's police service. Reynolds also reflects on his own years of high profile work on the department's bomb squad and hostage negotiating team, on his extended family's more than 100 years of service on the force, and on the camaraderie that led to the formation of the Retired Irish Police Society.
This week Gary and Iain review and discuss, Eliminators (1986) by Director, Peter Manoogian. Starring, Patrick Reynolds, Denise Crosby and Andrew Prine. For more Off The Shelf Reviews: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UChWxkAz-n2-5Nae-IDpxBZQ/join Podcasts: https://offtheshelfreviews.podbean.com/ Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/@OTSReviews Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/OffTheShelfReviews Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OffTheShelfReviews Support us: http://www.patreon.com/offtheshelfreviews Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/offtheshelfreviews Discord: https://discord.gg/Dyw8ctf
In today's episode, we're joined by Sydney based, Salesforce Principal at Deloitte, Patrick Reynolds. As a previous guest on the show, we were eager to catch up with Patrick for his views on the increasingly buoyant Salesforce market here in APAC, and available Salesforce talent. We discuss the trends he's seeing across the ecosystem, where he sees the volume of opportunities coming from, and whether the talent shortage in Australia will be alleviated when the borders reopen. Within the episode, we touch on everything from the licencing models across digital platforms, to the evolution of the traditional CEO profile in future decades. Patrick explains the progression he's seeing around industry specialisation, competitors within the industry and why Salesforce is in a very strong position to continue on their growth trajectory. Make sure that you're following Patrick on LinkedIn to stay connected, and if you have any questions, then he's happy to chat with you online. We hope you enjoy listening to his insights!
Take an adventure now! Go somewhere you've never gone before! We await! Patrons Adolas, Alex Demille, Victor Gutierrez-Diaz, Joe, ratgirl1221, TheCatThatLivesInYourWalls, Liz Lillith, PrototypeX19, Kate Avery, SevySagey, Sir Krag, MajorDemonwolf, Reddawn7744, Andrew D Lanhart, Raven Baker, Oldru Valliere, Clara Faust, Abigal Grace, Rage Fist, Amelia Parsons, Dave Willner, and Patrick Reynolds! Cast & Crew:SCP-5923 was written by Grigori KarpinHost & Narrator - Jon GrilzRossi - Rissa M.Waltham - Danielle HewittSCP-5923 - Fletcher Armstrong ____________Assistant Editor - Jesse HallSound Designer - Danny SweetCommunity Manager - Celeste CasianMusic by Tom Rory ParsonsShowrunner - Pacific S. ObadiahProducers - Tom Owen & Brad MiskaPresented by Bloody Disgustingwww.Bloody-Disgusting.com www.SCParchives.com Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scp_pod Twitter: https://twitter.com/scp_pod Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/scppod Discord: https://discord.gg/yW5BVPFgzp See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
For decades retailers have held onto the sales taxes they collect from consumers for weeks before sending those funds to state revenue agencies. States are becoming increasingly impatient with this process. Some are pushing for accelerated collection schedules and a few are even talking about real-time sales tax compliance strategies. Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker (R) has long highlighted accelerated compliance as a way to realize revenue faster and reduce opportunities for tax evasion. On April 1 the Bay State launched an advance payment tax program that shortens the remittance period. Longer term, Baker is recommending a requirement that third-party payment processors convey sales tax to the state on a daily basis, beginning in 2024. On this week's episode of our podcast, Talking Tax, reporter Michael Bologna talks with Liz Armbruester, senior vice president for global compliance at tax software company Avalara, and Patrick Reynolds, senior tax counsel for the Council on State Taxation. Armbruester talks about why she believes that "all signs point to a future where payments will be defined by near-real-time tax compliance," while Reynolds highlights the business community's concerns about the costs and burdens associated with these compliance strategies. Have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.
My favourite story so far this week has been the Hamilton to Auckland train.. and one of the board members calling it out for the waste of time and money that it is. Patrick Reynolds, on the board of Waka Kotahi-NZTA, called the service ‘the worst of both worlds’. He pointed out it didn’t stop at obvious places it should, that it was too slow, so it really wasn’t an efficient daily return service, and that he thought it would be ‘very hard to attract much ridership’. Which is exactly what I said, except for the fact I’m not on the board of Waka Kotahi.What’s sad about this, is not that he said it, the fact he said it is awesome, because at least he’s honest, the real tragedy is that he’s now had to apologise.. and he’s been rapped over the knuckles for speaking out. Since when did telling the truth earn you a reprimand? Apparently at NZTA there is only a ‘collective’ voice, and poor old Patrick and his individuality was not singing from the appropriate collective song sheet. Apparently even if you know in your own expert opinion that a service is crap, you’ve got to lie and say it’s fabulous. What a crock. And how inauthentic does that apology now look?Sir Brian Roche, chair of Waka Kotahi, said he was ‘extremely disappointed’ in Patrick’s remarks, and he’d ‘let the board down’. That’s like your Mum and Dad telling you as a child that you’ve been a bit rude to your brother and you can go apologise, so you mumble ‘sorry’ through gritted teeth to keep your parents happy. Naughty Patrick, smack on the hand, say sorry. Are you kidding me? Even worse, Brian Roche said Patrick had ‘let himself down’. If I was Patrick I’d be letting Brian know the only people they’ve let down is themselves, by pretending this service is something it isn’t.Waka Kotahi can’t stick their fingers in their ears and go la la la not listening to anyone this train service is awesome, when it very obviously isn’t. Surely the better more honest approach is to say, look, Patrick raises some valid points we agree the service needs work, we’ll look at it. Not this pathetic public telling off and dressing down. All that’s done is highlight how ignorant Waka Kotahi is prepared to be, how arrogant they are in thinking they’re beyond reproach, and that criticism, even if it is internal, is not valid.So Patrick’s been publicly admonished, he’s had to delete his tweets, he’s no doubt has had a corporate refresher course on social media protocols, and he’s had to issue a grovelling apology. And what are we left with? A phenomenally expensive train service, which Waka Kotahi threw 80 million bucks at, which is too slow, too ineffective, and as Patrick pointed out, ‘blows trough stations it should serve.’ But god forbid they fix it. Better just to give Patrick a good telling off and pretend it never happened, nothing to see here.If NZTA truly wants to serve the public, it could start by not gagging its own people when they try to speak the truth.
If you think the new fast train that isn't fast between Hamilton and Papakura is a joke, you've got good company. Patrick Reynolds, who sits on the board of Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency, the very organisation that pumped $80 million into the train, he agrees with you. Over the weekend, Reynolds tweeted that the service was the “worst of both worlds” and it is “[v]ery hard to see how it will attract much ridership”, until the train goes faster.Now that is a damning assessment coming from a Waka Kotahi board member. It says a lot that Reynolds has since deleted that tweet, gone to ground, and the chair of the board, Sir Brian Roche, has apparently also gone to ground on it.What makes it even more damning is the fact that Reynolds is normally such a fan of public transport that he often seems to defend even terrible public transport ideas - but this is evidently so bad even he can't defend it.So let's once and for all understand what's wrong here. The problem is the train goes too slowly to be a commuter train.It's too slow for two reasons according to the guys at the Campaign for Better Transport: the track can't support a fast train, and as it's on the same track as every other Auckland train, meaning it has to stop, it can't be an express service. The solution is actually to build another track that allows a train to go fast, and allows it to be express from Hamilton to Auckland at 160km an hour, instead of the current 100km an hour followed by a slow suburban train into the city.What's gone wrong is that the government decided that the best way to show that they care about public transport between cities was to throw $100 million at a slow train almost no one will use, instead of investing in the infrastructure we need now and will need in the future which will actually give us a proper fast train people might use. This is money wasted on looking like you're doing something when you're doing nothing, and if even Patrick Reynolds calls you out for how bad your slow train is, then it's really bad.
In this episode we talk with Patrick Reynolds from Boyden Executive Search about his experiences recruiting for leadership roles in the construction and engineering industries. Patrick provides some great insights into why companies should be including women in their leadership recruitment strategies and how to start that process.
In this episode of the SALT Shaker Podcast policy series, host and Eversheds Sutherland Partner Nikki Dobay is joined by Patrick Reynolds, Senior Tax Counsel, with the Council On State Taxation (COST) and fellow Partner Jonathan Feldman. They discuss a Nebraska bill that would fix an issue related to Internal Revenue Code section 965, deemed repatriation income, and GILTI. They also review some significant legislation in Alabama. The Eversheds Sutherland State and Local Tax team has been engaged in state tax policy work for years, tracking tax legislation, helping clients gauge the impact of various proposals, drafting talking points and rewriting legislation. This series, which is focused on state and local tax policy issues, is hosted by Partner Nikki Dobay, who has an extensive background in tax policy. Note: As of February 11, the Alabama measure passed the Senate and is on to the governor's desk. Questions or comments? Email SALTonline@eversheds-sutherland.com.
Let’s get into today’s show as we are talking about Gratitude and Thankful Thoughts with Melissa Neader and Patrick Reynolds. It’s important to recognize that everything that we deal with as a country that it can be very easy to fall into a place of “Why” and questioning all the things that have happened, what’s going to happen, being fearful ... Read More The post Being Thankful and Showing Gratitude | MFM 66 RADIO SHOW WSIC 105.9FM #44 appeared first on Tracy Alston | Optimize Your Mental Performance.
Podcast BIO: !! Please rate and review Dumb Dude Debrief on iTunes, drop a like on SoundCloud. !! Quarantine workouts suck, here's some information to help you... *Disclaimer: This podcast is for entertainment purposes only* Instagram: https://instagram.com/taespencertanzi?igshid=1kdcrb27qxvgc Twitter: https://twitter.com/TaeSpencerTanzi
Hey everyone, I've got another episode for you from my daily Instagram live Q&A. In today's episode I was joined by Patrick Reynolds, the founder of Kenzai and Eric Bigger, the motivational speaker. I also had a tremendous guest who was only 13 years old join me and he nearly made me cry. I want to remind you all that I host a FREE training every Friday at 11:00 am PT. I would love to see all of you there, if you are interested just text me at (949) 298-2905 and let me know that you want an invite to training.
Analog Jones finds another pearl in the ocean of tapes with our Eliminators (1986) VHS Movie Review! Directed by Peter ManoogianProduced by Charles BandWritten by Paul De Meo and Danny Bilson Starring: Andrew Prine, Denise Crosby, Patrick Reynolds, Conan Lee, and Roy Dotrice Distributed by Empire PicturesReleased on January 31, 1986, with a Box office of $4,601,265. How to find Analog Jones Discuss these movies and more on our Facebook page. You can also listen to us on iTunes, Podbean, and Youtube! Email us at analogjonestof@gmail.com with any comments or questions!
Replay from August 8, 2018
This encouraging episode looks at how the car-dependent metropolis of Auckland in New Zealand has been changing course since 2003 or so. It's part of my December 2018 discussion with Matt Lowrie and Patrick Reynolds of the Greater Auckland blog. Learn more and read the full show notes here. Support Reinventing Transport on Patreon. Follow Paul Barter on Twitter.
I interviewed Patrick Reynolds and Matt Lowrie, two of the bloggers on the Greater Auckland blog in New Zealand’s largest city. It was a wide ranging conversation which will eventually become two Reinventing Transport episodes and one Reinventing Parking episode. Auckland is a striking example of a rather car dependent city that has actually been changing some of its key trends and taking some remarkable steps towards becoming a different kind of city in which other transport options are steadily improving. This episode focuses on the Greater Auckland blog itself and its role in Auckland’s transport (and planning) policy conversations and debates. It has been amazingly effective and influential. There are lessons for transport activists anywhere.
In this weeks episode the Odours of the Odeon discuss 1986 B-movie... Eliminators! With a featured interview from the Eliminators lead star Patrick Reynolds, the Odours team discuss time-travel, the Roman Empire, Euthanasia, the perils of artificial intelligence, PTSD, modern-day Centaurs born in a B+Q warehouse, and the impact of the incestual Regan/Thatcher dynamic on the 1980’s silver-screen.
SessionM is a customer data and engagement platform that handles complex, large-scale personal data sets for some of the largest organizations around the globe – including enterprise brands like Nike, L’Oreal, Kimberly Clark, Coca Cola, TGI Fridays and others. Taking advantage of the fact that the SessionM platform unifies customer profiles into a single record, this new feature set will enable client representatives to quickly and simply service GDPR-related requests, including those to opt-out of profiling, “forget”, modify or export all personal data. Beyond GDPR, SessionM is deeply experienced with helping brands create engaging customer experiences that cultivate brand loyalty. Patrick Reynolds is CMO of SessionM and dives into the state of customer data platforms (CDPs), how the rise of AI doesn’t mean the fall of marketing jobs as well as what these platforms what they mean for brands and for consumers alike.
What does the future of brand loyalty look like? Shep Hyken sits down with Patrick Reynolds, Chief Marketing Officer for SessionM (https://www.sessionm.com/), to discuss how technology is transforming traditional customer loyalty programs into a dynamic and personalized customer experience. Top Takeaways: - In the past, it was enough for loyalty programs to offer a “punch card” with a buy-nine-get-one-free approach. Now, the quid pro quo is that in exchange for personal data, the customer receives experiences they might not otherwise. You can't get keyless hotel entry or automated coffee pickups if you aren't willing to share your “data,” which many times is just basic information such as an email or phone number. - If you are part of the Nike loyalty program, you won’t get a discount coupon, you get access to content and materials that others don't. That's what makes brands so “sticky” and so compelling for so many years. With Nike, if you buy a pair of tennis sneakers, you may receive content that shows how Roger Federer works out on the off season to achieve greatness, which fuses product and content into an experience that you can only get through their loyalty program. It makes customers feel like they’re getting a peek under the tent that they can't get any other way and makes for extremely compelling content. Another example is the ability to purchase new sneakers in advance of anyone else. - You're looking to drive incremental behavior, transforming a single purchase into a second and third purchase. If you’re coming into my coffeehouse every day, why would I you a free coffee every other Friday? Don’t give a discount to someone who would otherwise pay full price. Instead, give an offer that rewards that customer for coming in later in the same day when they don't normally go. - The future of brand loyalty is going to look like everybody interacting with the same brand, but very differently based off their ambitions, purchase behavior, how they want to interact, and so on. It’s like how there is one Netflix, but we all have our own personalized Netflix. - Any loyalty program is a defining opportunity for a business to demonstrate its loyalty to its customers by delivering amazing experiences, not the other way around. About: Patrick Reynolds is Chief Marketing Officer at SessionM, and has over two decades of experience in various businesses, media, and creative leadership positions at multiple top-tier advertising agencies. Shep Hyken is a customer service and experience expert, New York Times bestselling author, award-winning keynote speaker, and your host of Amazing Business Radio. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
5 SMOOTH STONES PRESENT: "REALITY CHECK" PART 2/2 WELCOME AGAIN TO THIS "BLACK HISTORY SPECIAL" TUESDAY FEB 20, 2018 8PM CST JOIN BRO SETH, HIS GUESTS SIS ELIANA BATYAH, BRO PATRICK REYNOLDS AND OTHERS ON FIVE SMOOTH STONES AS THEY DISCUSS THE TRUE STATE OF AFRICAN AMERICANS. LET'S DO A "REALITY CHECK." THE FATHER NEVER ABANDON THIS GREAT PEOPLE. HIS LOVE IS ALL AROUND THEM. GREAT NEWS TONIGHT, WE SHARE VICTORY REPORTS &WAYS OUT OF THEIR OPPRESSION IN THESE UNITED STATES!! *** THE TRUTH IS OFTEN STRANGER THAN FICTION *** TO LISTEN AND OR COMMENT TONIGHT CALL (914) 205-5590 LISTEN OVER YOUR COMPUTER CLICK HERE http://tobtr.com/10607915
WELCOME TO THIS BLACK HISTORY SPECIAL TUESDAY FEB 13, 2018 8PM CST. JOIN BRO SETH, HIS GUEST AND CALLERS ON FIVE SMOOTH STONES AS THEY DISCUSS THE REAL STATE OF AFRICAN AMERICANS AS A WHOLE. LET'S DO A " REALITY CHECK," WE'VE COME SO SO FAR, WE'VE DONE SO MUCH. YET SO MUCH IS BEING DONE TO US. LET'S HAVE "REAL TALK" WITH SOLUTIONS AND WHATS RIGHT WITH US AS A NATION IN A NATION!! *** THE TRUTH IS OFTEN STRANGER THAN FICTION *** TO LISTEN AND OR COMMENT TONIGHT CALL (914) 205-5590 -OR- TO LISTEN OVER YOUR COMPUTER CLICK http://tobtr.com/s/10589743 [Post show Corrections: When I spoke of William Friedman and the Paris Accords I meant to say Benjamin Friedman and the Paris Peace Conference]
In this episode, our last for 2016, we talk with Patrick Reynolds and John Walsh about their new book, City House Country House. Find out what they've learned by completing their third in a series of books, and why a building isn't truly finished until it's photographed.
More eighties badness as we review Eliminators! After the Mandroid is ordered to be destroyed he escapes only to come straight back to stop the evil scientist who should just be a plastic surgeon. Seriously, the guy is good.
UNTETHER.tv - Mobile strategy and tactics (video) | Pervasive Computing | Internet of things
Matt, Kyle, & Scott review the 1986 film Eliminators, directed by Peter Manoogian. Starring Andrew Prine, Denise Crosby, & Patrick Reynolds.
Welcome to episode #156. On the show: Our 3rd anniversary jamboree; Find a bar that is "your team" friendly with SportsBee; Google Outside in London; Google Ingress coming to LAX & JFK; Free subway tickets in Moscow; Coca-Cola inspires you to take the stairs in Brazil; Proximiti uses location based notifications to help OCBC bank branches in Singapore; Free electricity at the Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf. Our Mobile Minute with Chuck Martin shows that consumers still like stores. Our app of the week is dashboard augmented reality company Hudway. Our resource of the week looks at modern retail. Our guest this week is Patrick Reynolds of Triton Digital talking about the impact of iTunes Radio and what it means for 2014. Plus, a new feature called "Our Take" on Snapchat's decision to walk away from $3B from Facebook and the backlash over Instagram's $1B acquisition 18 months after the fact. Happy birthday to us! For full show notes, visit here
We're here again to talk about comics! This week, Carrie chose the first volume of Mouse Guard. Carrie was not feeling too well during the recording, but stuck in there like a trooper and completed the episode with the rest of us! Other books talked about this episode:Crossover #13 by Donny Cates, Geoff Shaw, Dee Cunniffe, John J Hill and Mark Waid (Image); My Brother Teddy by Jaromir Francois, Todor Hristov; and Sonya Anstasova (Source Point Press) Mouse Guard: Legends of the Guards Vol 3 (BOOM/Archaia) and Blood Stained Teeth #1 by Christian Ward, Patrick Reynolds, Heather Moore and Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou (Image)DIY Corner:DIE RPG: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/gshowitt/die-the-roleplaying-game?ref=discovery&term=DIE%20RPGCarrie's shoutouts:Frederick Joseph: https://www.instagram.com/fredtjoseph/?hl=enJasmine Garden: https://www.instagram.com/thejasminesgarden/?hl=enComics Deserve Better is a weekly podcast hosted by Brian, Carrie, Darci and Richard which covers the world of Independent Comics. For a list of episodes, socials and emails, and to request a topic for a future episode please visit comicsdeservebetter.wordpress.com.(Episode Art by David Petersen and Intro Music provided by https://www.bensound.com/)