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Pawlikowski, Smoczyńska, Glazer, Eisenberg – to tylko nieliczne osoby, których filmy produkowała Ewa Puszczyńska, producentka filmowa, która przyjechała do Wrocławia w ramach 15. American Film Festival, gdzie wraz z pozostałymi twórcami promowała najnowsze dzieło Jessego Eisenberga pt. „Prawdziwy ból”. O zakamarkach branży filmowej, czerwonych dywanach i międzynarodowych produkcjach rozmawiał Mateusz Nowak.
Florian Czarnyszewicz (1900-1964) nie doczekał publikacji swoich powieści w kraju. Tworzył na emigracji, w Argentynie. Jego niewielki dorobek, ledwie cztery powieści, spotkał się jednak, zarówno na emigracji, jak i po latach, w kraju, z entuzjastycznym przyjęciem. Porównania np. do Mickiewicza, Reymonta, Sienkiewicza padały z wielu ust. Zachwycali się jego twórczością Wańkowicz, Pawlikowski, Giedroyc, Czapska...
Com este episódio terminamos É DESTA, CHICLO, ou seja já vimos todos os filmes que nos faltavam ver na vida. Só que não. O António vai ao passado recente e traz-nos Cold War (2018), uma história de amor atormentado que se estende por um período de 15 anos, co-escrita e realizada pelo tio Pawlikowski , que tem música presente do início ao fim. Cada frame é um quadro ou uma fotografia nesta sexta longa-metragem de ficção do senhor que já tinha um Oscar de melhor filme estrangeiro lá no armário de casa. Ou na despensa.
Kanske är hjälten den som inte förändras? Och samhället inte anpassat efter en klassisk berättarstruktur? Morris Wikström reflekterar över två konstnärer som gjorde uppror mot genrekraven. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. ESSÄ: Detta är en text där skribenten reflekterar över ett ämne eller ett verk. Åsikter som uttrycks är skribentens egna.I Kristian Lundbergs kriminalroman ”Eldätaren” från 2004 möter läsaren en berättarröst som inte klarar av deckargenrens krav. Berättaren säger: ”Det är en tidig morgon. Det är så alla berättelser skall påbörjas. Du anger tiden, platsen och först senare kommer händelseförloppet att veckla ut sig, som en turistkarta man drar upp ur fickan. Vad säger kartan? Att du är vilse. Att detta inte är dina kvarter.”Nej, deckargenren var nog inte poeten Kristian Lundbergs kvarter. För genom hela boken bråkar han med genrekonventionerna. Istället för mysteriets gradvisa upplösning möts läsaren av en ordmassa om samhällets orättvisor, och det uppstår egentligen aldrig ett spänningsmoment. Någon deckare i traditionell bemärkelse är det alltså inte. Ett misslyckat försök, kanske. Men just därför blir boken en intressant inblick i hur svårt det är att berätta för den som inte accepterar de konventioner som är förknippade med genre och dramaturgi. Då har ändå författaren en lättare uppgift än filmskaparen – vars konstnärliga verk ofta av kommersiella skäl avkrävs en början, en vändpunkt och ett slut. Ja, så vanliga och utbredda är dramaturgins konventioner inom filmen att man som tittare ofta inte reagerar förrän de utmanas.En av dem som i sina filmer gjort just det är den polske regissören Pawel Pawlikowski. I sin Oscarsvinnande film Ida från 2013 berättar han historien om en katolsk ung kvinna som vuxit upp på ett kloster nu, innan hon ska avlägga sitt nunnelöfte, uppmanas att söka upp sin enda levande släkting – ett slags farväl till en värld som Ida egentligen aldrig upplevt. Filmen skildrar hur Ida stiger ut från ett skyddat klosterliv och utsätts för jazzmusik, kommunister, ateister och inte minst för den fysiska kärleken. Men trots dessa upptäckter sker inte det vi förväntar oss: långsamt inser vi att det inte spelar någon roll vad Ida får uppleva – hon kommer inte att ompröva sitt beslut att bli nunna. Ingen upptäckt, inget löfte om framtiden förmår förändra hennes beslut. Mötet med kärleken, som enligt dramaturgins konventioner borde innebära en vändpunkt för protagonistens strävan, leder inte till förändring. Idas bevekelsegrunder är desamma under hela filmen. Vad vill Pawlikowski säga? Det vore lätt att förstå filmen som en skildring av hur den kristna trons eviga anspråk trumfar samtidens förgänglighet. Men faktum är att Pawlikowski redan 1991 använde ett liknande berättande – då i dokumentärfilmen ”Dostoevsky's travels”.I dokumentärfilmen får vi följa Fjodor Dostojevskijs sentida släkting Dmitrij Dostojevskij som beger till Europa. Dmitrij är till skillnad från sin berömda släkting ingen författare, utan en enkel spårvagnsförare – och hans mål med resan till Europa är enkelt: han vill få tag i en Mercedesbil, ett märke som blivit populärt på Sankt Petersburgs (dåvarande Leningrads) grå paradgator. Dmitrij Dostojevskij är ärligt talat en ganska grå figur han med. Väl i Tyskland inser han snabbt att den summa pengar han fört med sig från Ryssland inte räcker för att köpa en Mercedes. För att tjäna pengar beslutar sig Dmitrij för att föreläsa för tyskarna om sin berömda författarsläkting. Men Dmitrij verkar inte vara så beläst, så för att knåpa ihop sina föreläsningar plagierar han skamlöst tyska läroböcker om Fjodor Dostojevskijs idévärld, samtidigt som han kedjeröker och dricker öl på toaletten. Det är först när Dmitrij deltar i en reklamfilm och får låna en röd sportbil som folk öppnar sina dörrar för honom. Det ena leder till det andra, och när Dmitrij till slut återvänder till Tyskland efter en hejdlös Europaturné lyckas han faktiskt få tag i en Mercedes. När filmen slutar står Dmitrijs tyska bilhandlare och vinkar av honom. ”Jag trodde aldrig han skulle lyckas”, mumlar bilhandlaren för sig själv.Men poängen är att Dmitrij – liksom Ida – inte alls förändras av sina nya erfarenheter. Han är lika färglös när han åker från Tyskland som när han kom. Trots alla sina möten lär han sig ingenting, han utvecklas inte. Han tänkte ju bara på sin Mercedes hela tiden. Men i Pawlikowskis film framstår detta inte alls som en svaghet – utan som en styrka. I sin orubbliga längtan efter en Mercedes är Dmitrij lika helig som Ida i sin religiösa tro. Omvärlden har gjort sitt bästa för att rubba deras drivkrafter, men misslyckats. Vad Pawlikowski gör är att ifrågasätta dramaturgins konventioner. Berättelsens vändpunkt, som borde innebära att huvudpersonen lär sig något, att huvudpersonens motiv förändras – inträffar aldrig. Istället tycks förhållandet vara det rakt motsatta: det är huvudpersonerna som stirrar dramaturgin i ögonen - tvingar dramaturgin att rannsaka sig själv. Tvingar den att ifrågasätta sin uppfattning om att vi människor blir våra bästa jag först när vi förändras. I Pawlikowskis värld är det den som inte viker en tum som avgår med segern.Det finns något väldigt subversivt i det här berättandet, som talar om beslutsamhet och integritet i en kultur och ekonomi som strävar efter att ersätta gamla begär och föremål med nya. Dramaturgins konventioner framstår i Pawlikowskis filmer som en otäck gestalt som ömsom sträcker fram morötter, ömsom låter piskrappen vina – allt för att få oss att hitta nya föremål för vår längtan. Både Ida och Dmitrij Dostojevskij prövas, men vägrar att omvändas. På det viset lyckas Pawel Pawlikowski gestalta den konflikt som Kristian Lundberg stod inför i sina prosaböcker när han vägrade anpassa sig till genrekonventionerna. hans romaner är ett sökande efter en berättelse som inte ger vika för oväntade slut och omvälvande vändpunkter.Kristian Lundbergs väg är en mycket svår väg att vandra. För problemet för den som förvägrar berättelsen en vändpunkt är att berättelsens början blir så avgörande. Ingenting går ju att förändra efterhand. Det är därför, tänker jag mig, som hans romaner är fyllda med omtagningar. Det han efter när han gör sina omtagningar är inte berättelsens slut, utan dess början. Ett godtagbart första påstående som kan styra den logik som berättelsen sedan måste följa. Och när deckargenren eller romangenrens karta inte stämde med den verklighet Kristian Lundberg ville berätta om – en verklighet där det sociala arvet aldrig gick att trolla bort i vändpunktens befriande rörelse – då blev skrivandet ett försök att rita en ny karta.Frågan är om Kristian Lundberg någonsin blev klar med sitt kartritande. I sin sista bok ”Sånger vid avgrunden” beskriver författaren hur han återfaller i ett drogmissbruk. Han söker fortfarande efter den där början som ska förklara allt som hände sen, men tycks ständigt misslyckas. Ändå, eller kanske just därför, är det i ”Sånger vid avgrunden” som Kristian Lundberg blir som tydligast i sin kritik mot ett konventionellt berättande. Han skriver i en passage som jag tror är avgörande, men lätt att missa i textens rasande rörelse: ”Du upptäcker inte förrän det är för sent att du igen har förlorat. Du förstod inte ens att det hade utkämpats en strid. Det är ett sätt att närma sig berättelsen”.Morris Wikström, kulturjournalist och doktorand i rysk litteratur
Ok, I know I said the last episode was the LAST one, but I just wanted to slide this BONUS one in here if ya don't mind. I asked Christina Pawlikowski (CEO and Co-Founder at Causal) to join me on the show so we could talk about what they're building, the value they've gotten from working with me as their fractional head of marketing, and why they decided to hire marketing before sales. About Causal: Founded in 2021 Funding: Seed Description: Causal is product optimization in a box for data obsessed teams. You can find Christina on LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/cpawlikowski/ Check out Causal: https://causallabs.io/ I'm officially wrapping up this season but will be back for more in the future, don't forget to leave a review if you've been enjoying the show! You can sign up to get my monthly startup marketing newsletter where I'm sharing playbooks and insights and cracking some jokes >> https://share.hsforms.com/1cP1V40x7RGes5gHk1XNgNw47lba You can also find me hanging on LinkedIn, tell me what you're up to this summer >> www.linkedin.com/in/annafurmanov --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/anna-furmanov/message
Melissa Perri is joined by Christina Pawlikowski, a teaching fellow at Harvard and co-founder of Causal, to help demystify machine learning and AI on this episode of Product Thinking. Christina discusses language models, the different types of machine learning, how they can be used to solve problems, and the importance of good data and ethical considerations when using machine learning algorithms. Christina Pawlikowski is a teaching fellow at Harvard University and co-founder of Causal, a company that helps businesses make better decisions with causal inference. You'll hear Melissa and Christina talk about: How machine learning is essentially creating an algorithm or a model that can make good predictions based on data. There are three types of machine learning: supervised learning, unsupervised learning, and reinforcement learning. Good training data is crucial for machine learning algorithms to be effective. When considering using machine learning, it's important to ask questions about things like how complex the decision that needs to be made is, whether the model has to produce a definitive answer, how high the stakes are, and how quickly the answer needs to come back. Ethical considerations are important when feeding data into a machine-learning model, especially when making decisions with high stakes. GPT-3 and Chat GPT are examples of language models that use neural nets to generate predictions about what word or sentence comes next based on probabilities. The accuracy of a machine learning model is only as good as the quality of the data that is fed into it. When incorporating ML into a product, it's important to plan for scenarios where the model is wrong and to consider ethical considerations such as false positives and false negatives. Data scientists play a crucial role in assembling and cleaning training data, building and testing the model, and deploying it in production. The process may involve collaboration with machine learning engineers or other teams. The cadence of working on machine learning is different from working on traditional UX-focused teams, with more downtime and exploratory time upfront. Slack time is important for data scientists and machine learning engineers to keep up with new techniques, write papers, and attend conferences. Artificial general intelligence is probably further off than we think, and AI alignment is an important field to prevent any negative outcomes. Resources: Christina Pawlikowski on LinkedIn | Twitter Casual Labs
Melissa Perri is joined by Christina Pawlikowski, a teaching fellow at Harvard and co-founder of Causal, to help demystify machine learning and AI on this episode of Product Thinking. Christina discusses language models, the different types of machine learning, how they can be used to solve problems, and the importance of good data and ethical considerations when using machine learning algorithms. Christina Pawlikowski is a teaching fellow at Harvard University and co-founder of Causal, a company that helps businesses make better decisions with causal inference. You'll hear Melissa and Christina talk about: How machine learning is essentially creating an algorithm or a model that can make good predictions based on data. There are three types of machine learning: supervised learning, unsupervised learning, and reinforcement learning. Good training data is crucial for machine learning algorithms to be effective. When considering using machine learning, it's important to ask questions about things like how complex the decision that needs to be made is, whether the model has to produce a definitive answer, how high the stakes are, and how quickly the answer needs to come back. Ethical considerations are important when feeding data into a machine-learning model, especially when making decisions with high stakes. GPT-3 and Chat GPT are examples of language models that use neural nets to generate predictions about what word or sentence comes next based on probabilities. The accuracy of a machine learning model is only as good as the quality of the data that is fed into it. When incorporating ML into a product, it's important to plan for scenarios where the model is wrong and to consider ethical considerations such as false positives and false negatives. Data scientists play a crucial role in assembling and cleaning training data, building and testing the model, and deploying it in production. The process may involve collaboration with machine learning engineers or other teams. The cadence of working on machine learning is different from working on traditional UX-focused teams, with more downtime and exploratory time upfront. Slack time is important for data scientists and machine learning engineers to keep up with new techniques, write papers, and attend conferences. Artificial general intelligence is probably further off than we think, and AI alignment is an important field to prevent any negative outcomes. Resources: Christina Pawlikowski on LinkedIn | Twitter Casual Labs
Megan Brady (I'm Screaming podcast) returns for Pawel Pawlikowski's understated meditation on grief and loneliness in 2014's Ida. Together we get into the 2023 Oscar race, how Agata Trzebuchowska was cast in the film and how close Pawlikowski almost made it into the best director race --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/exitingthroughthe2010s/message
La pasión en la Polonia de posguerra. Un hombre y una mujer, un intelectual y una campesina, dos corazones que lloran porque no pueden encontrarse. Así canta una cría la pieza tradicional polaca, leitmotiv que va sonando en diversas variaciones a lo largo de la historia. Mediante una brillante sucesión de elipsis, el músico y la cantante cruzan sus vidas en diferentes momentos y lugares a ambos lados del telón de acero. Dos personas dañadas por la destrucción de la contienda reciente, y por su propia guerra interior, sin apenas concesiones, a base de besos, alcohol y desplantes. Se aman y no saben hacerlo, una tendencia fatal marca sus destinos. La plasticidad de un blanco y negro excelente, los aires grises de una época uniforme, de un régimen totalitario que modifica las letras de las canciones tradicionales para nombrar las bondades del maravilloso Stalin. Pawlikowski y su operador Lukasz Zal , con quien repetía tras la magnífica "Ida", consiguen el clasicismo del buen cine, el de Fritz Lang, el de Fellini, el de Billy Wilder. Paseamos por las calles lluviosas de París, navegamos por un Sena misterioso, nos tendemos sobre los pastos verdes junto al Vístula, sentimos el olor estanco de una celda del gulag, y, en un monasterio derruido, con un mural desvaído, ojos de icono contemplan la nostalgia de Tarkovski. Un pianista y una cantante en su ceremonia de renuncia, al otro lado se verá todo mejor. Esta noche esperamos en un garito de París… Chari Medina, David Velázquez. Salvador Limón, Raúl Gallego y Zacarías Cotán
Alumnus and Medical Science Liaison Jeff Pawlikowski, PhD, tells us about his long tenure as an MSL, how he juggles the role's demands, and what the travel is actually like!
Hoy toca hacer un episodio sobre el género del terror, pero no hay que perder de vista el carácter informativo del podcast: hablamos de la vuelta de Malcom, del record histórico de La casa del Dragón, detalles de la nueva película de Pawlikowski y la vuelta de Tobin Bell como Jigsaw en Saw 10. Pero después os hablamos de Terrifier 2 que está generando mucha controversia, y analizamos la saga de la que viene. También hablamos de American Horror Story, de The Watcher y de la saga Expediente Warren. Por último os recomendamos Speak No Evil, que Iker pudo ver en Sitges.
Hoy toca hacer un episodio sobre el género del terror, pero no hay que perder de vista el carácter informativo del podcast: hablamos de la vuelta de Malcom, del record histórico de La casa del Dragón, detalles de la nueva película de Pawlikowski y la vuelta de Tobin Bell como Jigsaw en Saw 10. Pero después os hablamos de Terrifier 2 que está generando mucha controversia, y analizamos la saga de la que viene. También hablamos de American Horror Story, de The Watcher y de la saga Expediente Warren. Por último os recomendamos Speak No Evil, que Iker pudo ver en Sitges. #semanaterrorivoox
MedAxiom HeartTalk: Transforming Cardiovascular Care Together
Patients with more advanced disease are returning to hospitals in pre-pandemic volumes and the cost of treating them is now higher. On MedAxiom HeartTalk, host Melanie Lawson speaks with Stuart Jacobson, Founder & CEO of Biome Analytics, Amber Pawlikowski, MSN, RN, CPHQ, Director of Client Services & Quality Improvement Analytics at Biome Analytics, and Bradley Hubbard, MD, Cardiologist at Trinity Health Michigan Heart to discuss the struggles of quality performance improvement during a time of massive resource shortages and some of the major barriers that clinicians face. We're also joined by Joel Sauer, MBA, Executive Vice President, Consulting and Denise Busman, MSN, Vice President, Care Transformation at MedAxiom who share insights on how organizations can use analytics to better achieve the “Quadruple Aim” of healthcare. Guest Bios Bradley Hubbard, MD, Cardiologist, Trinity Health Michigan Heart - Dr. Hubbard has more than 20 years of experience practicing in the area. His clinical interests include cardiac MRI, critical care, and monitoring quality outcomes. Dr. Hubbard also has additional training in adult comprehensive echocardiography and nuclear cardiology. He is the director of the coronary care unit and section head of cardiology at St. Joseph Mercy Ann Arbor, as well as a clinical instructor in internal medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School. Amber Pawlikowski, MSN, RN, CPHQ, Director of Client Services & Quality Improvement Analytics, Biome Analytics - Amber is a passionate and driven healthcare leader with over a decade of experience in healthcare delivery and services. She is considered a young, rising figure and prominent voice in the areas of data analytics and quality improvement methodologies. As a healthcare leader, Amber has created, directed, implemented, and continuously monitored quality strategic plans and outcomes for the nation's largest CVSLs with specific focus on cardiothoracic surgery, vascular surgery, cardiology (medical, interventional and electrophysiology) and interventional radiology. Amber currently serves as Director of Client Services and Quality Improvement Analytics at Biome, a leading provider of performance solutions for enterprise cardiovascular centers Stuart Jacobson, Founder & CEO, Biome Analytics – An entrepreneur, Stuart Jacobson co-founded Biome Analytics in 2013. Denise Busman, MSN, VP, Care Transformation at MedAxiom - Denise brings more than 30 years of experience as a cardiovascular clinician and leader to MedAxiom. Her clinical expertise is complemented by a passion for engaging multi-disciplinary teams to transform care delivery and enhance clinical quality. Known for her work in program development and change management, Denise is skilled in the implementation of new programs and clinical initiatives. Denise joins MedAxiom from Spectrum Health, a multi-hospital system in Michigan, where she held a variety of positions including critical care educator and cardiology clinical nurse specialist. Most recently, her focus was directed toward clinical improvement and quality for the cardiovascular service line, where she implemented innovative approaches to care and served as a trusted advisor to cardiovascular physicians and team members. Denise holds a bachelor's degree in nursing from Michigan State University and master's degree in nursing from Grand Valley State University. She has been active with the American College of Cardiology for many years as a Michigan Chapter board member and cardiovascular team liaison, ACC Scientific Program Committee member, and reviewer of scientific abstracts. Joel Sauer, MBA, EVP - Consulting, MedAxiom - Since 2010 Joel Sauer has been providing consultative services around the country to accelerate the value transition in health care, particularly within the cardiovascular realm. A significant area of concentration has been creating contemporary and effective physician/hospital partnership structures, utilizing employment and other contractual arrangements (such as professional services agreements) and joint ventures. His work includes full-service line advancement, including governance and leadership development, and the creation of targeted co-management programs. Joel is an expert in vision and strategy setting, cultural and operational integration, and physician compensation plan design that promotes the vision and objectives of the organization. Prior to consulting, Joel spent 14 years as Chief Executive Officer of a large Midwestern multi-specialty physician group that included 23 cardiologists. In 2008 Joel led his group through acquisition by a major health system and then took over as CEO of its entire physician enterprise, which eventually included nearly 500 providers. A recognized national resource in cardiovascular physician compensation, Joel is author of the annual MedAxiom Provider Compensation & Production Survey and has expertise in provider workforce planning and development. Along with the entire MedAxiom Consulting team, he is a resource in new federal payment models such as the Quality Payment Program and the Bundled Payments for Care Improvement Advanced (BPCI Advanced), and other episode payment-based arrangements. Joel is often published in health care magazines, blogs and trade journals and is a regular speaker at national health care meetings. Bonus Links:https://biome.io/
A little chaos is a wonderful thing. Miko Pawlikowski chats about chaos engineering, and how breaking things deliberately can actually make your code more stable. So how do you engineer this chaos in a helpful way, and how can you get buy-in from your manager and clients? Also, what's with the coffee today? Tune in to find out!
Connor and Dylan are joined by CJ Pawlikowski (Jersey Boys, Book of Mormon). Sit back for a fantastic, easy-going conversation about the boys from Jersey, the impact of Kelly Clarkson & American Idol, the origin of the name “CJ,” The Flight Attendant, seeing Young Sheldon in the wild, what a production of Bye Bye Birdie can do for someone, the Indiana University Hoosiers, booking your dream shows, the brilliance of Michael Urie, filming the pro-shot of Jersey Boys with Nick Jonas in Cleveland, scary movie suggestions, crushing on Jonathan Bailey, and being the final Bob Gaudio in Jersey Boys at New World Stages in New York City.Follow CJ on InstagramWatch our chat here: HERE!Follow DRAMA. on Twitter & InstagramFollow Connor MacDowell on Twitter & InstagramFollow Dylan MacDowell on Twitter & InstagramEdited by DylanGet your DRAMA merch (t-shirts, stickers, and more) HERE!SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PATREON HERE! Support us and help us continue producing content!Please subscribe on Apple Podcasts, rate us 5 stars, and leave a kind review!
Could an accident bring your day-to-day operations to a halt? Can your network survive a devastating failure? In this episode Mikolaj Pawlikowski author of the book Chaos Engineering Site reliability through controlled disruption, shares ways to master chaos engineering. Discover why testing systems in distress are the best way to ensure their future resilience and tools and techniques to help with your Choas testing.
W rozmowie z Martą Macke gość wspomina, że z branżą reklamowa zetknął się już na początku lat 80., gdy na studiach był członkiem zarządu AZS Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego odpowiedzialnym za komunikację i reklamę: projektował plakaty i koszulki. Chociaż przyjęło się, że reklama w Polsce istnieje od początku lat 90., Pawlikowski swoją przygodę z tą branżą rozpoczął jeszcze przez upadkiem komuny - Z Zofią Nasierowską, Januszem Majewskim i Bernardem Kwapińskim założyliśmy agencję, która nazywała się Art Media Pool i to była agencja, która została stworzona do obsługi Sanyo, którego przedstawicielem na Polskę był, nieżyjący już wtedy, ojciec Bernarda. I reklamowaliśmy Sanyo, nakręcaliśmy reklamówki, w których brał udział m.in. Julian Machulski, a Janusz Majewski je reżyserował - wspomina Pawlikowski. Opowiadając o początkach swojej ponad 30-letniej kariery w grupie Publicis, wspomina również, jak sama agencja zaczynała działalność na naszym rynku. - Moi mentorzy z dnb&b z Londynu powiedzieli, że chcą wejść na polski rynek i otworzyć agencję i trafili na dwóch bardzo ciekawych gości, którzy mają super kontakty, ale nie mają w ogóle żadnego pojęcia o tym biznesie - wspomina Pawlikowski. - Zaproponowali wtedy spotkanie w Czarnym Kocie, to taka była knajpa ówczesnym hotelu Victoria. Więc pojawiam się tam, schodzę do Czarnego Kota, patrzę, a tam siedzą ikony entertainmentu i twórczości, czyli Man z Materną. Oni w tym czasie mieli firmę eventową, która głównie robiła bale dla Marlboro i kilku innych klientów. I tak zaczęliśmy ze sobą pracować. Mój pierwszy kontrakt w Publicisie podpisywał Maurice Levy - opowiada. Wspominając lata 90., Pawlikowski mówi, że charakteryzowały się fantastyczną, niczym nie zmąconą spontanicznością. Później wszystko zaczęło się bardzo instrumentalizować, formalizować, powstały biurokratyczne struktury, firmy zaczęły się rozmnażać, powiększać, tworzyły się ogromne grupy. - Myślę, że taką cezurą dla branży, szczególnie dla agencji kreatywnych był moment, w którym wydzieliły się domy mediowe. A my, agencje reklamowe, nagle zostaliśmy jak porzucone dzieci, ze swoim mikro światami finansowymi. I skończyły się cudowne czasy tzw. prowizji 17,65 - mówi. - Lata 90. to były czasy szalonych inwestycji. Tak naprawdę stać nas było na wiele eksperymentów inwestycyjnych i formalno-prawnych, dlatego też robiliśmy różne rzeczy budując "przybudówki", ściągając różne pomysły, zatrudniając ludzi bez umiaru. Klienci dawali nam pieniądze, traktowali wielokrotnie agencję jak banki. Tzn. często z rezerw, żeby nie stracić tych pieniędzy, klient trzymał je w agencji, czasami mieliśmy na koncie niebotyczne kwoty typu 1 mln USD, które były przeznaczone oczywiście na media, natomiast my mogliśmy tymi pieniędzmi obracać - dodaje. Podsumowując transformację polskiej branży reklamowej - od jej początku przez ponad 30 lat - Pawlikowski stwierdza, że jako rynek "po zachłyśnięciu się nowością, jaką była reklama, mieliśmy szansę stworzenia bardzo ciekawej branży, ale tę szansę straciliśmy. Uważam, że Polska jest jednym z najmniej kreatywnych krajów w tej branży w Europie, bo to się w pewnym momencie bardzo zracjonalizowało. Ludzie zamiast drążyć i szukać coraz bardziej ciekawych rozwiązań skupili się na robieniu pieniędzy” – twierdzi gość "Reklamiary". W rozmowie nie zabrakło również wątków podkreślających rolę branży reklamowej w budowaniu postaw konsumenckich i społecznych oraz potrzebę skupienia się na sustainability oraz kwestiach związanych z transformacją globalnego zrównoważonego rozwoju, bez których nasza planeta stoi przed ogromnym zagrożeniem. Zachęcamy do obejrzenia całego wywiadu.
Tomasz Pawlikowski, past-Chair of Publicis Communications, and ex-CEO of Publicis Groupe, based in Central & Eastern Europe, is about to embark on the second chapter, the Chapter 2, of his career. But first, he took the time to compare and contrast the two different centuries (20th and 21st) of advertising he had worked, to assess what had happened and how it is happening again on a global and local basis. https://www.trinityp3.com/2022/02/comparing-contrasting-two-centuries-of-advertising/
Welcome to Episode 4 of Scripted by Paradox House... This week we spend some quality time with award-winning writer, Rebecca Lenkiewicz. Listen in as Daisy goes deeper into the process of writing for film, tv and theatre where golden knowledge lies. You're in for a treat. Rebecca Lenkiewicz is a British playwright and screenwriter. She is best known as the author of Her Naked Skin (2008), which was the first original play written by a living female playwright to be performed on the Olivier stage of the Royal National Theatre. Several of Rebecca's plays have been published individually, and in 2013 Faber & Faber published a collection. Rebecca wrote on Secret Diary of a Call Girl for television. She co-wrote the Polish-language film Ida (2013) with Paweł Pawlikowski, its director. The film is set in Poland in the 1960s and is the story of what happens when a novitiate nun first learns that she is an orphan of Jewish parenthood. The first version of the screenplay was written in English by Lenkiewicz and Pawlikowski, when it had the working title Sister of Mercy. Pawlikowski then translated the screenplay into Polish and revised it. The screenplay for Ida won the European Screenwriter category at the 27th European Film Awards in 2014,[29] and the Oscar for Best Foreign Film at the ceremony on 22 February 2015. She co-wrote, with director Sebastian Leilo, the script for the adaptation of Disobedience in 2017. She and collaborators Wash Westmoreland and Richard Glatzer wrote the screenplay for Colette in 2018. More recently for TV, Rebecca was the lead writer for Steve McQueen's hard-hitting series, Small Axe (2020), which is based on the real-life experiences of London's West Indian community and is set between 1969 and 1982. Enjoy!
Here we discuss the four documentaries that Pawel Pawlikowski made for the BBC in the early nineties: 'Tripping with Zhirinovsky', 'Dostoevsky's Travels', 'Serbian Epics' and 'From Moscow to Pietushki'. Each of these films represent Pawlikowski's unique touch in the way that they blur the boundaries between fiction and reality, occupying a space of heightened, absurdist reality. Tune in and join the chat for a real discussion on one of the greatest filmmakers of our time.
It's the most impactful article ever written about Father Emil Kapaun, but it's likely you've never encountered it. Featured in the Saturday Evening Post, an enormously popular magazine, the article is told from the perspective of Lt. Mike Dowe, who met Chaplain Kapaun on a march to a North Korean Prisoner of War Camp. The story is narrated in excellent fashion by Father Matt Pawlikowski, a Foxhole veteran and friend of Mike Dowe. Get ready for an absolute treat, and share this episode with a friend. This episode is part of our ongoing Father Kapaun Comes Home Series, leading up to the return of his remains and his Mass of Christian Burial at the end of September. To learn more, visit KapaunComesHome.com.
Segundo o diretor polonês Pawel Pawlikowski, mesmo diretor de Ida, vencedor do Oscar de melhor filme estrangeiro em 2014, o ponto de partida para Guerra Fria foi seu desejo de fazer um filme sobre seus pais, cuja relação tempestuosa durou até o fim de suas vidas, um pouco antes da queda do muro de Berlim. Além do nome – Zula e Wiktor - talvez esta seja a única característica em comum entre eles e os protagonistas de Guerra Fria. Pawlikowski disse que a melhor maneira de contar a história de seus pais era transformá-los em personagens totalmente fictícios. Se você gostou de Ida, ou se é fã de fotografia em preto e branco, não deixe de assistir essa belíssima história de amor, contada de forma sucinta, por meio de breves retratos da vida de um casal dividido por um muro, literal e figurativamente. Em seguida, confira a nossa discussão sobre o amor pendular, em constante movimento entre sonho e pesadelo; sobre ser estrangeiro e o desejo de retornar à pátria e às origens; sobre nacionalidade e identidade; e, por fim, não perca a participação especialíssima da nossa querida amiga e ouvinte Carol Galli. --- Quer fazer um comentário, uma crítica ou uma sugestão? Envie um email a saladeprojecaopodcast@gmail.com e responderemos em breve. --- Ficha do Filme: Guerra Fria (Cold War/Zimna Wojna), 2018. Direção: Pawel Pawlikowski. Roteiro: Pawel Pawlikowski, Janusz Głowacki e Piotr Borkowski. Elenco: Joanna Kulig, Tomasz Kot, Borys Szyc, Agata Kulesza, Cédric Kahn e Jeanne Balibar. 88 min. Polônia. -- Créditos: Ilustração: Felipe Sobreiro Edição e Identidade Visual: Thiago Vergara Música de Introdução: https://www.bensound.com Músicas do filme: Trechos do filme (Cold War), Loin de Toi (Performed by Joanna Kulig), Love for Sale (Cole Porter), Dwa serduszka - jazz version (Marcin Masecki) Musica de crédito ao editor: It's the Love (The Breeders)
Das polnische Kino erlebt eine beeindruckende Blüte: Filmemacher*innen wie Agnieszka Holland, Jan Komasa oder Paweł Pawlikowski werden auf internationalen Festivals gefeiert und mit Preisen überhäuft. Zu den Namen, die man sich merken sollte, gehört auch der der Krakauer Regisseurin Małgorzata Szumowska. Zweimal schon konnte sie auf der Berlinale einen Silbernen Bären gewinnen. In dieser Woche nun kommt ihr jüngster Film in die Kinos: "Der Masseur" heißt er und unser Filmkritiker Carsten Beyer hat ihn bereits gesehen.
This episode features Amber Pawlikowski, Cardiovascular Quality Excellence Leader at Saint Joseph Mercy Health System in Ann Arbor, Mich. Here, she joined the podcast to outline how telehealth, same-day care and value-based care is affecting the cardiovascular service line strategy.
Key traits that drive success as a leader.
“Chaos engineering is the discipline of experimenting on the system in order to increase your confidence that the system will survive difficult conditions." Mikołaj Pawlikowski is an engineering lead at Bloomberg and the author of “Chaos Engineering: Site reliability through controlled disruption“. In this episode, Miko shared about what chaos engineering is, including clarifications on some of the common misconceptions. Miko also mentioned about the chaos engineering tools, steps and prerequisites to do chaos engineering, and the skill set required of a chaos engineer, and how we should explain the rationale and motivation behind chaos engineering to get the management buy-in. Towards the end, Miko also shared about chaos engineering for people; an interesting excerpt taken from his book, and his mission over the last few years to make chaos engineering boring. Listen out for: Career Journey - [00:04:26] Chaos Engineering - [00:05:15] “Chaos“ in Chaos Engineering - [00:08:37] Getting Management Buy-in - [00:13:08] Running in Production - [00:18:29] Other Common Misconceptions - [00:20:53] 4 Steps to Chaos Engineering - [00:25:41] Skill Set of a Chaos Engineer - [00:28:11] Examples of Chaos Engineering Tools - [00:32:09] Chaos Engineering for People - [00:37:48] Make Chaos Engineering Boring - [00:42:08] 3 Tech Lead Wisdom - [00:46:12] _____ Mikołaj Pawlikowski's Bio Mikołaj Pawlikowski is an engineering lead at Bloomberg. He's the author of “Chaos Engineering: Site reliability through controlled disruption”, a frequent speaker, and the maintainer of Goldpinger and PowerfuSeal open source projects. Follow Mikołaj: LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikolajpawlikowski/ Twitter – https://twitter.com/mikopawlikowski Github – https://github.com/seeker89/chaos-engineering-book “Chaos Engineering“ book – https://www.manning.com/books/chaos-engineering Chaos Engineering Newsletter – https://chaosengineering.news/ Our Sponsor Are you looking for a new cool swag? Tech Lead Journal now offers you some swags that you can purchase online. These swags are printed on-demand based on your preference, and will be delivered safely to you all over the world where shipping is available. Check out all the cool swags by visiting https://techleadjournal.dev/shop. Like this episode? Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and submit your feedback. Follow @techleadjournal on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram. Pledge your support by becoming a patron. For more info about the episode (including quotes and transcript), visit techleadjournal.dev/episodes/42.
Amber Pawlikowski, Cardiovascular Quality Excellence Leader at Saint Joseph Mercy Health System in Ann Arbor, Mich., joined the podcast to outline how telehealth, same-day care and value-based care is affecting the cardiovascular service line strategy.
durée : 00:04:14 - Si on sortait France Bleu Orléans
- Ustawa zasadnicza sprzed 230 lat przyniosła istotne zmiany społeczeństwu i ustrojowi Rzeczypospolitej, przygotowując ją do takiego XIX wieku, który byłby dużo lepszy niż ten, który faktycznie nastąpił - mówił w Programie 2 Polskiego Radia prof. Richard Butterwick-Pawlikowski, autor książki "Konstytucja 3 Maja. Testament Rzeczypospolitej Obojga Narodów".
We're joined again by our friend Fr. Matthew Pawlikowski, and he shares with us the incredible story of Father Emil Kapaun, Servant of God and winner of the Medal of Honor. Join us and hear about Fr. Kapaun's heroism and holiness!
Today we're joined by Father Matthew Pawlikowski, the retired senior chaplain at West Point Military Academy. Discover his fascinating journey into the military, Army Ranger school, and eventually the priesthood. Learn about the crucial role chaplains play in the military and beyond. In this episode, we journey with Fr. Pawlikowski to West Point, Mount Sinai, Egypt, and beyond as he tells the stories of bringing the Eucharist and the Good News of the Gospel to those who protect our country.
Dans cette épisode de l'interview inspirante, j'ai l'honneur d'accueillir Alison Pawlikowski, coach spécialiste des relations toxiques Son métier, il est super inspirant ! Elle aide les femmes bloquées dans une relation toxique à transformer leur vie et reprendre confiance en elles Dans cette épisode, on va aborder de toutes les façons possible le sujet des relations toxiques Tu vas retrouver : L' incroyable parcours d'Alison, de femme bloqué dans une relation toxique à coach inspirante qui impacte ses clientes Son déclic pour mettre fin à cette relation après des années de souffrance Les signes les plus importants qui prédisent une relation toxique Comment mettre fin à une relation toxique malgré le confort apparent (mariage, maison etc) Garantir ta sécurité lorsque ta relation devient dangereuse pour ton intégrité physique La conduite à tenir si tu as des proches qui sont bloqués dans ce genre de relation dangereuse Comment se reconstruire après une relation toxique pour vivre enfin la vie qui t'inspire Comment transformer cette douloureuse expérience en la meilleure chose qu'il puisse t'arriver dans la vie Comment apprendre à s'aimer et retrouver l'amour quand ta confiance en soi à été brisé en 1000 morceaux Comment utiliser son histoire et ses épreuves personnelles pour créer un changement significatif dans ce monde Et pleins d'autres pépites à retrouver dans cette interview Le podcast pour vivre une vie incroyable épisode 156 : Dire adieu aux relations toxiques avec Alison Pawlikowski C'est juste ici sur ta plateforme préférée Pour aller plus loin, tu peux retrouver Alison sur Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/alis.paw.1 Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/Alison_pawlikowski/ Sa chaine YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrcyd4RBkjoaEbcX_B6cX3g/videos
Chaos Engineering comes to the Software Process and Measurement Cast this week delivered (chaotically) by Mikolaj Pawlikoski. Miko and I talked about the definition of chaos engineering, why chaos is not scary, and most importantly his new book Chaos Engineering, Site reliability through controlled disruption. One of the most important side effects of chaos engineering is uninterrupted sleep caused by things not going bump in the night! Mikolaj Pawlikowski is a recognized authority on chaos engineering. He is the creator of the Kubernetes chaos engineering tool PowerfulSeal, and the networking visibility tool Goldpinger. https://mikolajpawlikowski.com/ https://twitter.com/mikopawlikowski https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikolajpawlikowski/ I have discount codes for the listeners of the Software Process and Measurement Cast, ping me @tcagley@tomcagley.com and I will share them with you! The Software Process and Measurement Cast is a proud media sponsor of the DevOps Online Summit. Not to put too fine a point on it, one of the best ways to get your message heard is to speak. The crew at the DevOps Online Summit provides a phenomenal platform to network with fellow practitioners from all over the world. Start the journey to speaking at the DevOps Online Summit 2021 by submitting at https://bit.ly/3syp2c5 Re-Read Saturday News Today we dive into the main part of Fixing Your Scrum, Practical Solutions to Common Scrum Problems, by Ryan Ripley and Todd Miller, published in 2020 by The Pragmatic Programmers. In this installment of Re-read Saturday, we tackle both Chapter 1: A Brief Introduction To Scrum and Chapter 2: Why Scrum Goes Bad. If you have not bought your copy -- what are you waiting for? Fixing Your Scrum: Practical Solutions to Common Scrum Problems This Week’s Installment Week 1: Re-read Logistics and Front Matter - https://bit.ly/3mgz9P6 Week 2: A Brief Introduction To Scrum, and Why Scrum Goes Bad - https://bit.ly/37w4Dv9 Next SPaMCAST Next week, we will explore the goals of Communities of Practice. Organizations are increasingly becoming more diverse and distributed, while at the same time pursuing mechanisms to increase collaboration between groups and consistency of knowledge and practice hence the rapid growth of Communities of Practice. What are their goals? Also, Tony Timbol brings his brand new column to the podcast. “To Tell A Story” will explore the nuances of User Stories led by a practitioner, consultant, entrepreneur, and science fiction author. Tony does it all.
Mikolaj Pawlikowski wrote a book about Chaos Engineering. His book is a practical guide to using the tools to test your infrastructure. He's a tech lead at Bloomberg running Kubernetes. He walks us through the various tools and techniques for making sure that your systems will stand up to things that can destabilize them by scripting different failure scenarios. Panel Charles Max Wood Guest Mikolaj Pawlikowski Sponsors Dev Heroes Accelerator Picks Charles- Talk to people you don’t agree with Charles- Podcast: Writing Excuses Charles- The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss Charles- The Way of Kings - Stormlight Archive Book 1 by Brandon Sanderson Mikolaj - Looking into the numbers of climate change
Mikolaj Pawlikowski wrote a book about Chaos Engineering. His book is a practical guide to using the tools to test your infrastructure. He's a tech lead at Bloomberg running Kubernetes. He walks us through the various tools and techniques for making sure that your systems will stand up to things that can destabilize them by scripting different failure scenarios. Panel Charles Max Wood Guest Mikolaj Pawlikowski Sponsors Dev Heroes Accelerator Picks Charles- Talk to people you don’t agree with Charles- Podcast: Writing Excuses Charles- The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss Charles- The Way of Kings - Stormlight Archive Book 1 by Brandon Sanderson Mikolaj - Looking into the numbers of climate change
Podcast Twitter: https://twitter.com/BTOPPodPodcast email: podcast@gremlin.comMiko's Twitter: https://twitter.com/mikopawlikowskiTopics include: Why Chaos Engineering? (1:29) Miko's Book (6:55) Chaos Engineering for Frontends (10:21) eBPF (12:10) SLOs (16:28) What Miko is currently excited about (21:56)Episode transcript: https://www.gremlin.com/blog/podcast-break-things-on-purpose-mikolaj-pawlikowski-engineering-lead-at-bloomberg
Bienvenu sur le podcast : 1 jour, 1 entrepreneur
good!movies - ein neuer Streaming-Kanal von elf deutschen Filmkunst-Verleihern bietet anspruchsvolle Filme an in Zeiten geschlossener Kinos. Zu sehen ist dort unter anderem der polnische Film „Ida“, die Geschichte einer jungen Nonne von Paweł Pawlikowski. Carsten Beyer stellt den Film vor.
#Fitz22 alcanzamos el número 2️⃣2️⃣, los dos patitos 🐥🐥, aprovechamos para contaros nuestras experiencias en los bingos y explicar porque los bingos están realmente bien. Arrancamos nuestra selección musical desde el profundo Kentucky con Tyler Childers, un jornalero de la música que mezcla el country, el bluegrass y el folk, su padre trabajaba en una mina de carbón, y en sus canciones son habituales las referencias a los mineros y al ambiente de su infancia. El 18 de septiembre de 2020, Childers lanzó "Long Violent History"m un álbum sorpresa que consta principalmente de pistas de violín tradicionales. Compartimos con vosotros "Long Violent History", el tema central del álbum, una canción original que trata sobre el racismo, los disturbios civiles y la brutalidad policial. Necesitamos bailar, por eso compartimos otra novedad; “Lifetime”, el single de debut de Romy Madley-Croft la guitarrista y voz de The xx, un tema pop altamente bailable y que va directo a las pistas de baile. Compuesta y grabada en Londres durante la cuarentena, es una canción que habla del sueño de volver a reunirse con los amigos, la familia, con todos aquellos a los que queremos, capturando la euforia de poder estar juntos nuevamente. Ideal para disfrutar y bailar con los gatos. Continuamos con más música electrónica pero esta vez más oscura, con un cover de “Always“el tema original de Erasure, la banda de Andy Bell y Vince Clarke a cargo de Xiu Xiu y Dirty Beaches. El resultado es una versión menos edulcorada, una fascinante deconstrucción distorsionada del viejo hit de los ochenta. Xiu Xiu son una banda de música experimental originaria de San José (California), un proyecto capitaneado por Jamie Stewart, el único componente que ha permanecido en la banda desde su formación en 2002. Nos vamos a Ecuador a Quito con Lolabúm, este año ha sido un año prolífico para la banda sudamericana con el lanzamiento de dos discos “Verte antes de fin de año” y “O clarividencia”, álbumes que ponen banda sonora a este aciago 2020. Suena “Misterio y comedia” un tema recién salido del horno y que nos ha encantado, una muestra de la interesante escena musical ecuatoriana. Es el momento de que suene la gran Chavela Vargas, ponemos una canción de su primer disco del año 1963, una canción muy importante en nuestra vida “No volveré”. Cuantas veces hemos dicho no volveré y finalmente hemos vuelto. Podríamos estar infinidad de programas comentando sólo esta canción, sólo decir que tremenda Chavela. Para el último viajamos hasta Montreal, pinchamos “T’es belle” de Coeur de Pirate (Corazón de Pirata) nombre artístico de Béatrice Martin, con 31 años ya tiene una amplia y exitosa trayectoria a sus espaldas .Su nueva canción viene etiquetada como "un himno feminista que es fiel a los tiempos y francamente estimulante, una canción protesta contra un patriarcado sofocante que dicta lo que las mujeres deben hacer y cómo. Sus letras subversivas chocan con su alegre ritmo pop y sentimiento country”. ▶️▶️ 38’12” la película que comentamos esta semana es “Cold War” del director polaco Pawel Pawlikowski, recorremos su exitosa y premiada filmografía, centrándonos especialmente en su dos última películas hasta la fecha “Ida” y “Cold War” ,que representaron un giro respecto a todo lo que había rodado hasta la fecha; en la temática significaron una vuelta a sus raíces, a lengua polaca y a una época histórica, la de la dictadura comunista, y en lo formal supusieron una auténtica revolución estética, rodadas en un preciosista blanco y negro y en formato 4:3, con abundancia de encuadres simétricos con muchísimo aire sobre los personajes en un intento de hacer una película atemporal y de forzar a los espectadores a ver la película de modo meditativo. Cold War es una historia de amor fatal, que narra en un bellísimo blanco y negro los encuentros y desencuentros de una pareja a lo largo del tiempo desde la Polonia de posguerra y la dictadura Comunista de los años cuarenta hasta el París bohemio de los cincuenta , ella una bomba voluptuosa que parece siempre a punto de estallar, el un posibilista, en realidad la historia de un par de supervivientes en tiempos difíciles para el amor.
Welcome to another episode of Develomentor. Today's guest is Mikolaj Pawlikowski!Mikolaj Pawlikowski has been a chaos engineer for about four years. He began with a large distributed Kubernetes-based microservices platform at Bloomberg. Mikolaj is the creator of the Kubernetes Chaos Engineering tool PowerfulSeal, and the networking visibility tool Goldgpinger. He is an active member of the Chaos Engineering community and speaks at numerous conferences.If you are enjoying our content please leave us a rating and review or consider supporting usQuotes“I spent half of my time at the company that employed me and payed me roughly half of the money that I’d get if I was working there full time. During the other half of the time I had to cram in all the classes that you would normally have.”“If you have your laptop and it runs for 10 years, you assume it is basically going to run forever. But if you have 1000 laptops, you’re going to start to seem them going down.”“You can’t ever properly test things in any other environment than production. Because the data is going to be slightly different and the patterns of users will be slightly different.”“We want to minimize the blast radius. The number of things that can be affected by what we do. In the practice of chaos engineering, it’s not completely crazy to introduce some of that failure to production systems.”—Mikolaj PawlikowskiAdditional ResourcesSign up for Mikolaj’s newsletter for the latest on chaos engineering – https://chaosengineering.news/Mikolaj’s Book – Chaos Engineering: Crash Test Your Applications – https://www.manning.com/books/chaos-engineeringPast Develomentor Episodes to check out:Ep. 15 Kelsey Hightower – Tech Support to Dev Advocate to Keynote SpeakerCharity Majors – Systems Engineer & Cofounder of Honeycomb.io #66You can find more resources in the show notesTo learn more about our podcast go to https://develomentor.com/To listen to previous episodes go to https://develomentor.com/blog/Connect with Mikolaj PawlikowskiLinkedInTwitterhttps://mikolajpawlikowski.com/https://chaosengineering.news/Follow DevelomentorTwitter: @develomentorSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/develomentor)
🔴 Fitzcarraldo9️⃣ #FITZ9 Este domingo venimos rezados y con la sotana puesta ⛪️ 🙏 . Comenzamos la selección musical con Angel Olsen, un apellido que nos traen recuerdos futbolísticos de los ochenta, y la nueva remezcla que ha realizado Mark Ronson de su tema “New Love Cassette” perteneciente al disco “All Mirrors“. Seguimos con SAULT, la banda desconocida más brillante del momento , tres discos en trece meses, una fascinante mezcla de funk, disco, pospunk, hip-hop, krautrock, góspel y soul, nadie sabe a ciencia cierta quienes son sus componentes, sólo se conoce el nombre del productor; Inflo ( Dean Josiah Cover) y de Forever Living Originals, el sello londinense alrededor del que parece orbitar el misterioso proyecto, el titulo de su tercer trabajo es “Untitled (Black Is)”, su versión más góspel y racialmente reivindicativa, escúchanos “Wildfires” . Estrenamos sección “Desguaces Cañamina” , clásicos a reivindicar que merecen una segunda vida, comenzamos con Robert Palmer, un bello elegante pero con un lado turbio y oscuro, suena una de nuestra canciones favoritas “Johnny and Mary”. Johnny está corriendo alrededor buscando encontrar certezas, así comienza la canción. Seguimos con los sintetizadores, y guiños ochenteros con el tema 'On Division St.' de Nation of Language una banda de post punk y synth pop que suena a Joy División, New Orden, OMD , y que acaba de lanzar su disco de debut “Introduction, Presence”. Escuchamos a Joey Alexander, el niño prodigio del Jazz actual, de origen indonesio que con sólo diecisiete años ya tiene a sus espaldas cinco discos, el primer artista indonesio que logra entrar billboard, acaba de sacar nuevo disco “Warna” del que suena Mosaic (Of Beauty) , elegancia, nitidez … el Jazz está vivo. Ponemos el single “America” de Sufjan Stevens, una de las grandes figuras de la música independiente americana , un tema de más de doce minutos, adelanto de su octavo álbum “ The Ascension”, toda una experiencia inversiva, llena de belleza y dolor, recibida con excelentes criticas. ▶️▶️ 50:09 comenzamos a desmenuzar “El reverendo (First Reformed)” de Paul Schrader. Paul Schrader uno de los grandes guionistas de la historia del cine, (Taxi Driver, Toro Salvaje, America Gigolo…) Un director irregular. Recibió una educación religiosa estricta calvinista. Búsqueda de la redención, la culpa, el mal, la autodestrucción, son temas recurrentes. Gracias a esta película consiguió (increíblemente) su primera nominación como mejor guionista. Una película muy personal. Un reverendo inmerso en un camino de autodestrucción y en plena crisis existencial, que busca un sentido a la vida. El mal está siempre muy presente, ahora quizás el mal se haya reencarnado en las grandes corporaciones que contaminan y que nos condenan a no tener futuro. Una película que a veces recuerda a Taxi Driver 🚕 . ¿Qué función tiene la iglesia en la juventud? Intentar vivir sin dejarse llevar por la desesperación en un mundo sin esperanza. Influencias de Bergman, Dreyer, Bresson y en lo formal Ida de Paweł Pawlikowski. Nos descubre un rostro diferente de Ethan Hawke. Un personaje que encuentra la redención en un final abierto.
Some people simply admire Father Kapaun, others seek to live like him. Chaplain (Col) Matthew Pawlikowski is a Catholic Priest and the head Chaplain at West Point Military Academy. Like Father Kapaun, God fused together his love for God and his love for his country. Father Matt shares with us the importance of the lay members of the Church and encourages us not to back down due to fear but to embrace the virtue of courage in finding creative solutions to our current crisis.
Roly and Shady are joined by Merv and Liam to talk about Ida for this edition of Film Shapes: The Lockdown.
Roly and Shady are joined by Merv and Liam to talk about Ida for this edition of Film Shapes: The Lockdown.
VLA Director of Business and Event Operations Coley Pawlikowski (@coleypaw) joins the show to give crucial updates on the VLA schedule amidst the worldwide postponements/cancellations due to the coronavirus. We also chat about her Danish coaching experience, the VLA board's goals for this season and beyond, and why having a volleyball league run by volleyball people is such a great thing. Great episode at a critical time, don't miss it.
La fois où je suis arrivée en retard au déjeuner de Noël de fiston... / voix : Léon Pawlikowski, montage : Karina Pawlikowski, mixage : Julien Morissette
Przedsiębiorca z duszą. Stworzył miejsce pracy, w którym czerpie się z różnorodności, kultywuje pasje i celebruje wspólnie czas na rozmowach, przy wielkim stole, jak w rodzinnym domu. Miejsce, w duchu turkusowych wartości. A zrobił to wszystko kierując się własną intuicją i dobrą intencją, nie wzorując się na żadnej teorii zarządzania. W 2012 roku stworzył Shoplo - kompleksowe narzędzie do prowadzenia biznesu online. Dziś Shoplo obsługuje ponad 3 000 sklepów online w Europie! Gościem w tym odcinku jest Patryk Pawlikowski, który opowie: jak zarobił swoje pierwsze pieniądze jaką wartością są dla niego relacje w biznesie w jaki sposób zbudować biznes wokół pasji dlaczego bycie fair w biznesie się opłaca jak dbać o swój zespół i motywować ludzi w pracy co sprawia, że zespół szybko reaguje na zmiany i potrafi się w nich odnaleźć jaki jest jego klucz wyboru podczas rekrutacji z czego jest dumny co go zachwyca czy każdą pasję można monetyzować Rozmowę z Patrykiem miałam przyjemność współprowadzić z moją pierwszą nauczycielką coachingu, Jolantą Piątkowską. Obydwie nas łączy, sposób myślenia, ciekawość drugiego człowieka oraz środowisko w jakim pracujemy. Jola uważa, że wiele problemów jest zbyt złożonych aby mogło być rozwiązanych w ramach tylko jednej dyscypliny i dlatego stworzyła zwinny model współpracy najlepszych specjalistów w swojej dziedzinie pod marką Growth Advisors. Na co dzień wspiera przedsiębiorców w pokonywaniu wyzwań. Ekscytuje ją rozwiązywanie problemów i kreowanie śmiałych wizji, co zapewne wynika z jej Talentów Strategicznych, które dominują w jej TOP5 (według metodologii Gallupa). Jest certyfikowanym coachem w pracy indywidualnej i grupowej, coachem Action Learning, coachem Mocnych Stron uprawnionym do pracy na testach Gallupa CliftonStrengths, trenerem rozwoju osobistego i menadżerem z wieloletnim doświadczeniem w biznesie. - Swoje cele odnajduję tam, gdzie ludzie mają problemy - Patryk Pawlikowski fot. Mariusz Fijka fot. Mariusz Fijka Muzyka: Jam Morgan Jazz Cafe LINK:https://taketones.com/track/jazz-cafe FREE CC LICENSE
W pierwszym odcinku podcastu GameONie Rozmawiają Bartek i Kuba poruszają temat polskiego filmu zatytułowanego "Zimna Wojna".
Œuvre audio écrite et portée à la voix par Karina Pawlikowski. Création sonore et montage : Julien Morissette Révision : Sophie Bélair Clément, Marie-Hélène Leblanc Œuvre théâtrale citée : M.I.L.F. de Marjolaine Beauchamp
La Galerie UQO, en collaboration avec le Festival Transistor, présentent En dehors, une oeuvre audio écrite et portée à la voix par Karina Pawlikowski. Ce récit audio, à l’intersection des arts visuels et de la littérature, donne à voir une exposition incomplète où tout reste à faire, à construire et à figurer par celui qui écoute. La matérialité de l’exposition se concentre dans la capacité d’imaginer; tantôt un objet, ensuite un espace, un éclairage et même une trajectoire avec l’information audio transmise. L’écoute est-elle suffisante pour que l’exposition advienne? Ce projet est réalisé dans le cadre de la maîtrise en Muséologie et pratiques des arts de l’Université du Québec en Outaouais.Œuvre audio écrite et portée à la voix par Karina Pawlikowski. Création sonore et montage : Julien Morissette Révision : Sophie Bélair Clément, Marie-Hélène Leblanc Œuvre théâtrale citée : M.I.L.F. de Marjolaine Beauchamp
Instruktør Pawel Pawlikowski høstede for nylig stor ros for sit Oscar-nominerede kærlighedsdrama ’Cold War’ – hans seneste film, der er inspireret af forældrenes stormfulde forhold. Men hovedværket ’Ida’, der gik forud, er intet mindre end en genistreg. I denne uges udgave af "Cinemateksprogrammet" kan du høre hvorfor.Vært: Martin BunkGæst: Cinematekets programredaktør Lone Sardemann
Installation audio présentée dans le cadre de l'exposition "Ce n’est pas rien, ce n’est peut-être pas grand-chose, mais ce n’est pas rien". MA : Musée d'art de Rouyn-Noranda du 29 mars au 26 mai 2019. Un projet de Marc-Olivier Hamelin en collaboration avec : Gabrielle Brais-Harvey, Janick Burn, Antoine Charbonneau-Demers, Sabina Chauvin-Bouchard, steven girard, Zoé Julien-Tessier, Pier-Antoine Lacombe et Karina Pawlikowski
Le travail de Pawlikowski compose avec les concepts liés au caractère performatif de l’exposition et du langage en mettant de l’avant une écriture subjective dictée par une voix désincarnée. Sans objet : l’audioguide est une œuvre de 5 minutes 32 secondes portée à l’audio par une voix de synthèse nommée Chantal. Suivez cette voix comme une rampe d’escalier ou une ligne jaune au sol et vous verrez, tout ira bien. Sans objet : l’audioguide a été présentée en 2019 au Centre Clark et en 2017 à la Galerie UQO dans le cadre de l’exposition The State of Parenthesis, un commissariat de Marie-Hélène Leblanc.
Titus & Flagg Taylor talk Pawlikowski again--Cold War, a beautiful tragedy by the preeminent Polish director of our times. After Ida, which won the Best Foreign Film Oscar, Cold War, which won the Palme D'or & the director prize in Cannes (& was nominated for three Oscars). After a story of devotion & divine love, a story about merely human love & shared suffering. Set in Poland, Berlin, Yugoslavia, & Paris, this is the story of a couple who go West & East across the Iron Curtain, trying to live well together.
"Zimna wojna" jest pierwszym polskim filmem, który otrzymał nominacje do Oscara w trzech kategoriach: za najlepszy film nieanglojęzyczny, zdjęcia i reżyserię. Jednak te trzy nagrody przypadły w tym roku meksykańskiemu filmowi "Roma".
Roly and Shady are joined by Bryony to descant on Cold War.
Roly and Shady are joined by Bryony to descant on Cold War.
Nathan, Scotty, and Andydrogynous discuss “Cold War”, written and directed by Paweł Pawlikowski, on this week’s Four Seasons of Film Podcast. Plus, Andydrogynous reviews “The Upside” for Crap Night. This episode is sponsored by Philz Coffee. SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/iTunes4SOF Please Rate us 5 stars and get us to the top of the charts! YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCa_37qL4kJmriv9KyqxeZMQ?sub_confirmation=1 Show your support! Check out our website http://www.fourseasonsoffilm.com for our latest podcast episodes, digital shorts, news, and movie reviews. Plus, you can access bonus videos, special content and contact the filmmakers, podcasters, and creative team of the Four Seasons of Film universe. New Podcasts released every Tuesday Four Seasons of Film TV released every Third Thursday iTunes http://bit.ly/iTunes4SOF Google Play http://fourseasonsoffilm.libsyn.com/gpm iHeartRadio https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-four-seasons-of-fil-28854857/ Stitcher https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/four-seasons-of-film blubrry https://www.blubrry.com/fourseasonsoffilm/ Spotify http://fourseasonsoffilm.libsyn.com/spotify RSS - fourseasonsoffilm.libsyn.com/rss Email: fourseasonsoffilm@gmail.com Twitter: http://twitter.com/fourseasonspod Facebook: http://facebook.com/fourseasonsoffilm Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fourseasonsoffilm/ Tumblr: https://fourseasonsoffilm.tumblr.com YouTube: http://youtube.com/fourseasonsoffilm Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/fourseasonsoffilm Help us by donating today: http://paypal.me/fourseasonsoffilm Keep Film Alive
In October's Cinefile, RFI's Rosslyn Hyams talks to Cannes award-winning director Pawel Pawlikovski about his grave love story, Cold War and talks about light-hearted but serious unlove story L'Amour Flou's success with actor-directors Romane Bohringer and Philippe Rebbot. Click on the arrow to listen to Cinefile. Cold War A lot has already been written about Pawel Pawlikovski's film, as it has travelled across the world since winning the prize for best director at the 2018 Cannes Fim Festival. Zula and Viktor fall in love just after World War Two is over. She is much younger and intrinsically unsettled. She unsettles Viktor who remains perturbed throughout the film. Joana Kulig plays opposite Tomasz Kot and they are a well-matched as ill-matched lovers, her exuberance and passion versus his smouldering desire. Although in real life, there is a mere five-year age difference. It's not surprising as when they first meet at an audition of girls and boys from the Polish countryside, ironically, supposed to be pure, Zula explains that she if she killed her father it's because she needed to explain to him that "he had confused his daughter, with his wife." Kulig explains why this line is so important in building Zula's character. "We knew that she had a problem with the father, with a really difficult situation and something really strange about her background. So in her relationship with Viktor, we knew that Zula, who is so sensitive, at the same time, she doesn't have a good example from men. Sometimes Zula fights with Viktor, but he really loves her, and she has a problem with trust. She later on realises the problem and turns to drink to help. But it doesn't." No matter that they want different things from life, Viktor and Zula are destined to be together, because of love. Contrasts are key to the director's vision in Pawlikowski's third feature film Black and white, a powerful folk, jazz and rock and roll music score and the passage of 30 years in the space of less than two hours, sharpen the drama of Cold War, which as Pawlikovski says "is not political, although public money does go to folk culture rather than to some more contentious expressions. That being said there is freedom of expression today." Cold War is not just a clever title about an impossible love affair. It led Kulig to think about the Communist past of Poland."I knew it was difficult in those times for my parents and grandparents, and I remember my mother and grandmother talking about Walesa, and thinking this was very important. Now we can say what we think. In those days people were scared and had to be careful." *** L'amour flou (Hazy Love) In their first directing bid, the Bohringer-Rebbot team, mother-father and two children, Rose and Raoul, dish up a comedy based on the drama of separation. They make a sallient point about the blurry lines upon which so many relationships flounder, and make a success out of a situation commonly deemed a failure. Experienced actors both, they bring something refreshing to their French romp. Romane and Philippe have had enough of each other. Or so they think. It's not so easy to cut the ties and move on, or out, when you have two little ones you want to care for. Avoiding potentially stale humour about domestic love-on-the-wane, the duo lead the spectator along a bumpy path to possible contentment. Bohringer and Rebbot are at their funniest in this bundle of emotions when they feel the pull of attraction elsewhere. Rebbot's eye wanders to a much younger jogger, is thwarted by a cat-allergy, while Bohringer is led astray by lust and fantasy, hetero and homo sexual. Bravo to them for converting a family break-up into a tender un-breakup.
The Carpet wraps a bow on 2018 with a Rad Ticket segment on a number of late-year new releases, with Whalen and Siblo discussing Spiderman: Into the Spider-Verse and Pawlikowski's Cold War, Siblo unfurling quick takes on Mary Poppins Returns, If Beale Street Could Talk, Vice, and Bohemian Rhapsody, and Whalen waxing ecstatic about the return of horror host Joe Bob Briggs (3:40). Then your Carpeteers approach the home stretch of David Lynch's Twin Peaks: The Return, discussing parts 15 and 16 of the Showtime limited series (55:30).
Joanna Kulig’s performance in “Cold War” is so astonishingly captivating and commanding and downright brilliant, that it feels like a classic performance delivered by an immortal screen goddess from the golden age of film. Pawel Pawlikowski’s penetrating black and white and impeccable direction helps, but this Polish masterpiece, short-listed for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar, is impossible to imagine without Kulig. In this half hour she talks about how her music training came in handy while shooting the intricate moving camera shots in the film, and she ponders what it means when someone says she’s “so natural.” Plus she reveals how Pawlikowski helped her often simply by saying the words “Lauren Bacall.”
Today on episode #9 of 'The Dad The Best I Can Show', we're talking to Brian Pawlikowski, a 39-year-old Dad. Brian lives in Roswell, GA with his wife Sara and 2 daughters, ages 8 and 6. TIME-STAMPED SHOW NOTES [01:55] Favorite Comedy Movie? History of the World Part 1 [02:00] Favorite workout music? Dropkick Murphy's [03:10] Brian is a Stay-at-home Dad, despite the Game of Thrones badass look [03:40] Joining the army in 1998, stationed in Fort Hood [04:00] Serving in Iraq [04:05] Stories from Hurricane Katrina [04:45] Comradarie with other military dads [05:30] Why becoming a stay-at-home dad made sense with a career driven wife [06:30] Philosophy of “our family, our career” [07:10] Why being a stay-at-home dad is more challenging than a stay-at-home mom [07:40] Dad Tip of The Week brought to you by KickstartReading.com [08:10] Brian's tip? Don't take things personally, with your kids. (learned from his police career) [09:20] Yelling when you don't think you're yelling (from his military days) [10:10] Why his daughters need structure in their lives [11:05] Best part of the day? “The quiet”. When his kids get on the bus (and when they get off the bus). [12:00] The Commander and First Sergeant parallels to a family structure [13:20] Working out to stay mentally and physically fit [14:10] Playing Dungeons & Dragons - using your imagination (not the screen) [16:00] Brian started doing acting and extra work in Atlanta [17:05] Appeared in The Walking Dead and the film, Den of Thieves --------- ABOUT TODAY'S GUEST Brian Pawlikowski is a 39-year-old Dad living in Roswell, GA with his wife Sara and his 2 kids, ages 8 and 6. -------- SUBSCRIBE AND LEAVE A 5 STAR REVIEW
Pues llegó el mero momento del rocanrol, de amorcitos locos y carreras de bicis, la edulcorada, inexacta y superficial seudobiografía de Freddie Mercury que tiene a todo mundo vuelto loco de contento... y, bueno, vale la pena verla: Alejandro explica por qué. Por su parte, Penny y Josué repasan la lista de lo Mejor del Festival de Morelia (con todo y que la mejor no está en la lista)... pero antes hablan del impactante final de Un extraño enemigo. Y todo sin agua...
El director de cine polaco estrena esta cinta que Polonia presenta para competir en los próximos Oscar en la categoría de habla no inglesa
Geno steps off the court this week and sits down with General Ellen M. Pawlikowski of the United States Air Force. The four-star general opens up about her rise through the military, daily responsibilities, and her love for the game of basketball.
'Cold War' is the latest film from Pawel Pawlikowski, director of the Oscar winning 'Ida'. 'Cold War' won Pawlikowski the award for Best Director at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival and we were lucky enough to speak to the film's lead actors Joanna Kulig & Tomasz Kot for this episode of the Curzon Film Podcast.'Cold War' is an epic romance set against the backdrop of Europe after World War II. Sumptuously shot in luminous black and white, it spans decades and nations to tell a love story that is as tragic as it is moving, and as transportive as it is honest.Discussing the film are podcast regular Sam Howlett, Kelly Powell and Steven Ryder, as well as special guest contributor Iana Murray, editor of Much Ado About Cinema.Follow the team on Twitter:@SamHowlett_1 - Sam@ks_powell - Kelly@ianamurray - Iana@jakehcunningham - JakeProduced by Jake CunninghamEdited by Mark TowerMusic from incompetech.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Sam talks to award-winning director Pawel Pawlikowski about his Cannes Film Festival sensation, Cold War. Paweł Pawlikowski follows his Oscar-winning Ida with the stunning Cold War, an epic romance set against the backdrop of Europe after World War II. Sumptuously shot in luminous black and white, it spans decades and nations to tell a love story that is as tragic as it is moving, and as transportive as it is honest.Winner of the Best Director award at the Cannes Film Festival 2018, Pawlikowski melds the personal with the political to exquisite effect. Set to a soundtrack that takes you from the rustic folk songs of rural Poland to the sultry jazz of a Paris basement bar, it’s a wistful and dreamlike journey through a divided continent - and a heartbreaking portrait of ill-fated love.
Poddvärdar: Magdalena Domeradzka och Ted Bergdahl
W programie Katarzyna Janowska rozmawia z Pawłem Pawlikowskim.
Most businesses end up with data in a myriad of places with varying levels of structure. This makes it difficult to gain insights from across departments, projects, or people. Presto is a distributed SQL engine that allows you to tie all of your information together without having to first aggregate it all into a data warehouse. Kamil Bajda-Pawlikowski co-founded Starburst Data to provide support and tooling for Presto, as well as contributing advanced features back to the project. In this episode he describes how Presto is architected, how you can use it for your analytics, and the work that he is doing at Starburst Data.
Ray Pawlikowski is the CEO of OPTii Solutions. In this podcast, Ray shares how OPTii Solutions is revolutionizing housekeeping functions across global hotels and resort, delivering greater profitability and enhanced guest experience. Ray explains how his experience founding and leading HotSchedules led him to see a big opportunity for OPTii, and discusses how he transitioned to the role of CEO for an existing company.
With the nation's attention focused on U.S. Senate confirmation hearings for Secretary of State nominee and CIA Director Mike Pompeo, one of Mr. Pompeo's classmates from the Military Academy at West Point is Father Matthew Pawlikowski, CH (COL), USA. Father Pawlikowsi, who was also a classmate of U.S. Army Secretary Dr. Mark T. Esper, joins us in the latest edition of Catholic Military Life, the official podcast of the Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA. While expressing pride in his associations with former classmates, Father Pawlikowski focuses on the rewards and challenges of his current role as Command Chaplain at his alma mater, ministering to some of the nation's future leaders. Father Pawlikowski addresses what some Catholics and others view as the apparent conflict between Christ's message of peace and the Army's commitment to the military defense of our Nation and its values. Regularly seen praying the rosary on the sidelines of Army football games, Father Pawlikowski also explores the meaning of prayer in all its different forms.
General Ellen M. Pawlikowski is Commander of the Air Force Materiel and one of only two women who holds the military's highest rank. But she remembers a time when she didn't even qualify for an ROTC scholarship because she was a woman. On this episode, General Pawlikowski talks about her trailblazing career in the military, how she continues to defy the odds and her ability to effectively manage a team of 80,000. Congratulations to our No Limits Entrepreneur of the Week: Michelle Hoerdemann, Designer and Creator of Jewelry Sculptures By: Michelle Find out more: https://jewelrysculpturesbymichelle.com/ Want to be a featured NLEOTW? Know someone who should? Send your nominations to NoLimitswithRJPodcast@Gmail.com Don't forget to subscribe and leave us a review! It
John Pawlikowski, a priest of the Servite Order, is Professor of Social Ethics and Director of the Catholic-Jewish Studies Program at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago. He served for six years as President of the International Council of Christians & Jews and its Abrahamic Forum and currently holds the title of Honorary Life President. An interfaith expert, he has authored/edited some fifteen books on Christian-Jewish Relations as well as on social issues such as economic justice, war and peace, and ecological sustainability. He is the former editor of New Theology Review and a member of the editorial board of the Journal for Ecumenical Studies. He is also a founding member of the US Holocaust Memorial Council.
Offrir des cadeaux, s’habiller chics, manger de la dinde en famille… la période des Fêtes s’accompagne de toutes sortes de traditions qui font le bonheur des uns et le malheur des autres. Pour Marysol Foucault, chef propriétaire d’un restaurant, Noël rime avec angoisse. « Je pense qu’il y a une pression d’être parfait », déplore-t-elle. Les normes sociales peuvent être modifiées au fil du temps, mais pas par un seul individu, soutient le philosophe David Robichaud. « S’il y a une tradition de s’offrir des cadeaux à l’intérieur d’une famille et que vous décidez unilatéralement de ne pas offrir de cadeaux, vous pouvez vous attendre à ce que les membres de votre famille soient déçus. » Avec Julien Morissette (animateur et réalisateur), David Robichaud, Julie Blais-Comeau, Marysol Foucault, Louis-Jérôme Binet, David Thibodeau, Léon Pawlikowski (invités)
It's like Lego, it's all sort of pretend. SIN: It's episode 14 of Prognosis Negative featuring Eric, Sean, and Chris! Join us as we delve into an early Emily Blunt entry (TWSS), My Summer of Love. Let the banter begin! And yes, we lead off with a lil' belated Avengers talk. WARNING: This discussion contains miscellaneous SPOILERS pertaining to the film(s) discussed and more! If you are 100% spoilerphobic to films not yet seen, do not complain to us. This episode is mostly negative (though often that is a misnomer) and contains EXPLICIT terms, concepts, and as always expect strokes of innuendo throughout. LINKS: Cinéma vérité is the proper term for that 'shaky cam' documentary-like film style. DISCLAIMER: You should always watch the film in question before listening to our discussions unless you have zero intention of ever seeing it. This episode was orginally recorded May 14, 2012. COMING SOON: ProgNeg #15 The Dark Knight Rises How'd he shag you? I mean... horribly? Host/Producer: Eric / @BullittWHOEmail: EscoWHO ~at~ gmail ~dot~comBlog: bullitt33tvblog.wordpress.comPodcast: guidetothewhoverse.libsyn.com Co-Host: Sean / @tardistavernPodcast: tardistavern.libsyn.com Co-Host: Christopher / @dubbayooPodcast: radiofreeskaro.com Co-Creator: Julian / @JLB_ToscheEmail: samwisewise ~at~ gmail ~dot~comdeviantART: type40productions.deviantart.comThe 2am Show: twoamshow.libsyn.com Prognosis Negative / @ProgNegEmail: guidetothewhoverse ~at~ gmail ~dot~comWebsite: prognosisnegative.libsyn.com Tumblr: progneg.tumblr.com Facebook: facebook.com/ProgNeg ProgNeg Theme assembled by J.L.B. Chapman