POPULARITY
It was special to sit down with Ian Farrant as he was a director of The New Zealand Salmon Company which is the reason our family moved here in 1989 as my Father is a marine biologist and we came here for that job. We start with Ian's early childhood memories which includes war rations in the 1940s, growing up in Dunedin, his studies and early career and then we talk abou this governance roles over the years and what he has learned as a director of around 40 entities over the years. If you like this then why not tell one other person about the show, and post a link to the episode on social media - it takes about a minute but really helps others find it! Related episodes: Peter Townsend interview https://theseeds.nz/podcast/peter-townsend-on-business-leadership/ Rob Lawrence interview https://theseeds.nz/podcast/rob-lawrence-reflections-on-life-at-retirement/ More info is at www.theseeds.nz
Andy chats with a real person (not an advisor) doing their own retirement planning. In this episode, Andy talks with Peter Townsend. They talk about a wide array of retirement planning topics such as becoming self-educated in the details of retirement planning AFTER already retiring, Social Security, funding potential long term care needs and more! Links in this episode:Tenon Financial monthly e-newsletter - Retirement Planning InsightsFacebook group - Retirement Planning Education (formerly Taxes in Retirement)YouTube channel - Retirement Planning Education (formerly Retirement Planning Demystified)Retirement Planning Education website - www.RetirementPlanningEducation.com To send Andy questions to be addressed on future Q&A episodes, email andy@andypanko.com
(1956-1966) - Elizabeth sale al trono in un momento per nulla semplice: a complicate situazioni politiche internazionali (la crisi del Canale di Suez, prima fra tutte) fanno da contraltare altrettanto spinose questioni interne al Palazzo: la sorella Margaret si è imbarcata in una relazione con Peter Townsend, un ex militare, quasi quarantenne, separato con due figli: ancora una volta, una storia d'amore costituzionalmente complicata, se non proibita! Le critiche, in patria, si sprecano. All'estero, invece, Elizabeth è guardata con ammirazione, soprattutto da chi avverte ancora il fascino di una figura regale, per di più femminile. È il caso della regina del sex appeal, Marilyn Monroe, che desidera quasi più di ogni altra cosa conoscere Sua Maestà: l'incontro tra le due, finalmente realizzatosi, metterà a tu per tu il mito del potere e il mito della bellezza. E non finisce lì, perché – in quegli anni Sessanta che iniziano – Elizabeth si troverà di fronte anche il mito della musica del suo tempo: a Palazzo sono in arrivo quattro ragazzi di Liverpool, i Beatles.
Elizabeth sale al trono in un momento per nulla semplice: a complicate situazioni politiche internazionali (la crisi del Canale di Suez, prima fra tutte) fanno da contraltare altrettanto spinose questioni interne al Palazzo: la sorella Margaret si è imbarcata in una relazione con Peter Townsend, un ex militare, quasi quarantenne, separato con due figli: ancora una volta, una storia d'amore costituzionalmente complicata, se non proibita! Le critiche, in patria, si sprecano. All'estero, invece, Elizabeth è guardata con ammirazione, soprattutto da chi avverte ancora il fascino di una figura regale, per di più femminile. È il caso della regina del sex appeal, Marilyn Monroe, che desidera quasi più di ogni altra cosa conoscere Sua Maestà: l'incontro tra le due, finalmente realizzatosi, metterà a tu per tu il mito del potere e il mito della bellezza. E non finisce lì, perché – in quegli anni Sessanta che iniziano – Elizabeth si troverà di fronte anche il mito della musica del suo tempo: a Palazzo sono in arrivo quattro ragazzi di Liverpool, i Beatles.
Shaun Tomson won a world title in 1977 and began developing his skills as a speaker on topics of personal adversity, growth, and writing your code, your best intentions, for day to day living. Needless to say, he eloquently shares thoughts on relaunching his brand from the 80's, Instinct, and how he used a $100 budget from Surfrider Foundation founder, Glenn Hening, to inspire surfers to prioritize our oceans' collective health. This and three fantastic surf stories will be sure to entertain. We and Daytona State College will be hosting Shaun on September 4th in person at the News Journal Center in Daytona Beach, along with a screening of Bustin' Down the Door with special guest, Peter Townsend. More news to come. Enjoy the chat. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This is it - The season 1 finale!!!! The Queen, Liz, is faced with the ultimate challenge as Peter Townsend arrives back in town and reunites with Margaret. Phillip struggles with the new mission assigned to him. Where does this these our royal family?
Join Robert Hardman and Natasha Livingstone for an analysis of "Gelignite" season 1, episode 6 of The Crown.Thanks to The episode focusses on Princess Margaret's relationship with Peter Townsend, our thanks to Nicole, one of our Canadian listeners who suggested this episode. If you'd like us to analyse a favourite episode, get in touch at FactOrFiction@mailonline.co.uk.Find out in this episode of The Crown: Fact or Fiction:Did a journalist from The People uncover the relationship, and how did the newspaper report the story initially?How did Prime Minister Winston Churchill react to the relationship and how did his wife influence him on this matter?What's the significance of the phone number 4832?What was the fallout for the Queen?...And what is an Equerry?!Plus much more. Tell us which episodes of The Crown are your favourites and we might give them the Fact or Fiction treatment on the next episode of the podcast!Email us at FactOrFiction@mailonline.co.ukor send us a message or voicenote on Whatsapp:07796657512 (start your message with "The Crown" so we know which show you're getting in touch with.)Make sure you're following The Crown: Fact Or Fiction so you don't miss an episode. https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-crown-fact-or-fiction/id1714259572 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
For the 25th anniversary of the first Bonnie “Prince” Billy album, we take a detailed look at how it was made. Will Oldham grew up studying acting but decided to pursue music while he was attending Brown University. In 1992, he released his first single with Drag City under the name Palace Brothers. A series of albums followed under several variations of the Palace name, which reflected Oldham's unique approach to treating the album, rather than the artist, as the primary entity. In 1998, he had an epiphany that he could inhabit a new character named Bonnie “Prince” Billy for his music moving forward and put his concerns about an artist identity to rest. He began living in his father's farmhouse in Shelbyville, Kentucky along with his brother, Paul, who had been studying recording and set up a makeshift studio. In this isolated environment, Oldham worked on writing songs and had the freedom to record himself in a way that he never had before. Eventually, Oldham invited other musicians including Peter Townsend, Bob Arellano, Colin Gagon and David Pajo to flesh out the songs that would make up the I SEE A DARKNESS record. In this episode, Will Oldham describes a newfound approach to making music at this time and how he viewed his former Palace work as his apprenticeship years. As Bonnie “Prince” Billy, he found that he could portray a larger than life character who had the power to sing songs across the emotional spectrum. The Bonnie character opened up his approach to songwriting as he began to incorporate some traditional elements like bridges and dramatic builds. From a growing confidence in his singing to a deteriorating relationship and the decision to form a sub label to a love of post-apocalyptic landscapes to adding humor as a release valve to taking inspiration from contemporaries like PJ Harvey to the unlikely events that led to Johnny Cash covering the title track, we'll hear the stories of how the record came together.
Peter Townsend came from a successful, loving family on the west coast of Ireland but from a very young age he got caught up in a life of crime and substance addiction, and has spent time in 9 different prisons in Ireland and the UK. After hitting rock bottom on the streets of London, Peter decided to move home and turn his life around. This podcast is a very honest account from someone living a life of substance abuse and some people may find it distressing. If you or anyone you know have been effected by any of the issues in this podcast please log on to Peter's website for a full list of helpful links: https://urpacerecovery.com/helpful-links Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
"I spent the entire film thinking that Keith Moon and Peter Townsend framed Roger Rabbit."Ammon's back to discuss June release movies from across the decades! He wouldn't be Ammon unless he themed these suckers together, so get ready for Midsummer Noir everyone!"I mean I had the Croupier bed sheets.""Have you noticed they don't even say "Merry Christmas," they say "Happy Christmas" because of their war on Merry."0:00 -- Intro11:00 -- The Cheap Detective43:51 -- Who Framed Roger Rabbit1.27:29 -- Croupier1.47:47 -- Contact information1.51:32 -- Awards and rankings2.45:11 -- Future business2:51:16 -- Outro, and outtakesHey! Be sure to watch Caesar and Cleopatra, Notorious, and Deception for next time!Hey! Leave us a voicemail at (801) 896-4542!Hey! Shop the Zazzle store!Hey! Hear In Memoriam!Hey! Hear Fantasy Murder Love Triangle!Hey! Siskel and Ebert on Who Framed Roger Rabbit!Hey! Hear our old podcast featuring Cool World!Hey! See The Cheap Detective squirm!Hey! Subscribe in iTunes!Hey! Check out the Facebook page and vote on the next category!Hey! Check out Jon's YM&T Letterboxd list!Hey! Check out Roy's YM&T Letterboxd list!Hey! Email us at yoursminetheirspodcast@gmail.com! Send new topics! Send new theme songs!Download here!
Episode 38 is here! The wheel has graced us with Vitalogy, the 1994 5x platinum album from Pearl Jam. Oh, Peter Townsend, how you saved my life! Rick are you there?
Peter Townsend is back baby! Princess Margaret gets her groove back as her nephews and niece watch their relationships fail. Can Elizabeth get the public back on her side? To support the LoG on Patreon visit: https://www.patreon.com/lordsofgrantham To buy LoG Merchandise visit: https://www.teepublic.com/user/lords-of-grantham-podcast
In 1965, the rock band The Who released Talkin bout my Generation which expressed the difference between generations. Peter Townsend, the songwriter, was experiencing the disconnect between himself and his parent's generation. Peter, now 77 and born on the cusp of the baby boomer generation, was trying to explain to the world- his new generation. Today, this could translate to each generation that has followed. The generational gap has been discussed since Karl Mannheim, a German psychologist wrote an essay called The Problem of Generations. published in English in 1952. Today we are in 2022, and as we live longer, and the discussion on generations continues as we live with sometimes six generations in one home. In this episode, we talk with an expert on generational communication and how we should embrace the experience, the differences and the similarities. We talk about how to embrace this in the workplace and at home.
In 1965, the rock band The Who released Talkin bout my Generation which expressed the difference between generations. Peter Townsend, the songwriter, was experiencing the disconnect between himself and his parent's generation. Peter, now 77 and born on the cusp of the baby boomer generation, was trying to explain to the world- his new generation. Today, this could translate to each generation that has followed. The generational gap has been discussed since Karl Mannheim, a German psychologist wrote an essay called The Problem of Generations. published in English in 1952. Today we are in 2022, and as we live longer, and the discussion on generations continues as we live with sometimes six generations in one home. In this episode, we talk with an expert on generational communication and how we should embrace the experience, the differences and the similarities. We talk about how to embrace this in the workplace and at home.
Episode Description: This episode was adapted from a recent Youtube video. Check out and subscribe to the Youtube channel linked below for more talks like this one not found in the podcast. This talk discusses what healthy boundaries are and what they are not. In the first half, we discuss what a boundary is using Henry Cloud's metaphor of property lines and why setting healthy boundaries is not only okay, but healthy. Setting boundaries is not selfish. You must set healthy boundaries to be a functional human being and to build loving relationships. We also discuss ways setting boundaries helps us obey God and consider others' needs. In order to set good boundaries, you need to understand the value of your own agency, autonomy, and individuality. Through this episode, we discuss who we might set boundaries with, reasons we don't set boundaries, differences between people with healthy boundaries and those without good boundaries, and ten specific strategies to set healthy boundaries. This video will help you learn to take care of yourself and love who God made you to be.Resources: 10 Ways to Build and Preserve Better Boundaries in Psych Central by Shannon Martin, LCSW is an article I reference in the video that discusses what boundaries are, why they are necessary, why we are afraid to set boundaries, strategies to set them, and specific scenarios that give examples of healthy boundary setting. Boundaries: When to Say YES and When to Say NO to Take Control of Your Life by Henry Cloud and Peter Townsend was mentioned as a recommended book to go more into detail with setting healthy boundaries in different situations and with different people.How to Set Boundaries YouTube video with Dr. Henry Cloud is the video I mention that uses property lines as an apt metaphor for setting good boundaries. How to Set Boundaries: Five Ways to Draw the Line Politely by Logan Bailey on Science of People is another article that I mentioned in the talk that discusses areas of our lives that need protection with boundaries, people with whom we might set boundaries, differences between healthy and unhealthy ones, and strategies for setting good boundaries. Further Resources:***The STORE is OPEN!*** https://app.podia.com/products/a-c-o-r-n-meditation-bundlePodcast Website, subscribe to podcast, free resource, email list. https://christianemotionalrecovery.com.Patreon Link, to support other trauma survivors and the podcast, become a patron, and get exclusives you can't get anywhere else https://www.patreon.com/christianemotionalrecovery Subscribe to Youtube for exclusive NEW videos and free meditations https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4a5jGXZ0-qzPINAspnLwPw
In a speech celebrating her 40th year on the throne at the end of 1992, the Queen recounts that her year has been an 'Annus Horribilis', an accurate description for the year in which she saw three of her four children separate or divorce and Windsor Castle suffer a devastating fire. But her more private pain is the accusation by her sister that she is responsible for Margaret's lifetime of unhappiness by refusing to allow her to marry Peter Townsend.In this episode, Edith Bowman talks with Director May el-Toukhy, Head of Research Annie Sulzberger, and the actor playing the character of Princess Margaret, Lesley Manville. The Crown: The Official Podcast is produced by Netflix and Somethin' Else, in association with Left Bank Pictures.
Episode 242 - Space Peter Townsend Lack of Embarrassing Stories Bake Off The Acolyte has a cast and has started production. Andor Episodes 9 and 10 Review Please help out the @amidalahelps fundraiser for @equalitytexas If you have any questions or comments you'd like us to read on the show you can email us at cantobightpod@gmail.com. You can also send us audio files! And send us possible Top 3 topics so we can continue to rank anything and everything! Or send us F*ck/Marry/Kill suggestions. If you enjoy the show, please rate and review us on iTunes. It helps grow the show! We also have merch! Check it out at teepublic.com/user/eflind Find us on Twitter: @cantobightpod @eflind @cantobritt
Episode Description:What to Do When The Past Comes Calling discusses what to do when old unhealthy habits, addictions, sins, and people who have contributed to trauma in your past show up unexpectedly and cause fear, PTSD, and temptation to fall into old patterns. While each of these are distinct experiences, they are also similar in that there is a temptation to go back into conditioned patterns, addictive behaviors, and trauma based thinking from your past that can throw you back into bondage. You have every right to leave this old life behind. This episode gives you strategies, techniques, and encouragement to stay strong, stay the course, not return to old chains, and live the overcoming life God intended you to have. Breakdown of Episode3:18 Introduction to the Episode and Topic5:07 Conflict and Cortisol Addictions7:24 Chemical Addiction and Getting to Its Root Source12:45 Sin, Guilt, Shame, Repentance, and Healing 17:43 When an Unhealthy Person From Your Past Contacts YouBulleted List of ResourcesEpisode 12 Season 1 Christian Emotional Recovery Podcast Why We Need to Talk About the Shame of Mental Illness is a podcast episode I mentioned in this episode to help you understand and overcome shame. You can heal shame if you know the difference between healthy guilt and toxic condemnation/shame. Boundaries: When to Say Yes, How to Say No to Take Control of Your Life by Henry Cloud and Peter Townsend is a book I've recommended in many episodes, and it can help you learn not to feel guilty for setting healthy boundaries, learn what healthy boundaries are, and learn to stick to your boundaries once you've established them. Out of the Fog: Moving From Confusion to Clarity After Narcissistic Abuse by Dana Morningstar is a book I read that helped me recover from the fear, obligation, and guilt from emotional abuse and helped me set boundaries to protect my emotional well-being. Further Resources:Podcast Website, subscribe to podcast, free resource, email list. https://christianemotionalrecovery.comFree visual ACORN resource for healing difficult emotions https://christianemotionalrecovery.com/free-resourceSubscribe to Youtube for exclusive NEW videos and free meditations https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4a5jGXZ0-qzPINAspnLwPwTo join free Facebook community https://www.facebook.com/groups/christianemotionalrecoverySubscribe to Instagram for weekly encouragement: https://www.instagram.com/christianemotionalrecovery/
Please subscribe! ToDiForDaily.com's Kinsey Schofield talks to author Andrew Morton about his latest book, 'Elizabeth & Margaret The Intimate World of the Windsor Sisters.' Andrew explains the difficulties of becoming a princess and why Margaret might have really distanced herself from Peter Townsend. We discuss who could play Andrew Morton in Netflix's The Crown and if he misses Princess Diana. The woman that changed his life forever. 'Elizabeth & Margaret The Intimate World of the Windsor Sisters' is available to purchase now. Hosted and edited by Los Angeles-based royals expert Kinsey Schofield of ToDiForDaily.com. The To Di For Daily podcast cover art was designed by famed pop artist, Analy Diego.
The truth is revealed. Stop the Presses. Especially between Peter Townsend and Princess Margaret. "They don't even share a grand parent" - The Windsors --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/eric-bond8/support
Even though the world is richer today than ever before, a large number of people do not share in those riches, even in democracies. So, what does living in a democracy mean for people who simultaneously confront persistent deprivations and increasing inequalities? Do people living in poverty absorb the universalistic ideas associated with democracy? Or do their precarious lives overwhelm them so much so that they cannot act beyond particularistic concerns? These are the questions that Indrajit Roy tackles in Politics of the Poor: Negotiating Democracy in Contemporary India. Indrajit Roy is Senior Lecturer in Global Development Politics at the University of York. "Why the subaltern chose, not Hindutva, but Trinamool in Bengal""India: a year after Narendra Modi's re-election the country's democracy is developing fascistic undertones""Contesting Consensus. Disputing Inequality: Agonistic Subjectivities in Rural Bihar"Twitter: Indrajit Roy Dan Banik In Pursuit of Developmenthttps://in-pursuit-of-development.simplecast.com/
The Windsor Sisters: Elizabeth and Margaret Andrew Morton on a Complex Royal Bond The Not Old Better Show, Smithsonian Associates Interview Series Welcome to The Not Old Better Show. I'm Paul Vogelzang, and this is episode #524. As part of our Smithsonian Associates, Art of Living Series, today's show is about the ever-intriguing House of Windsor. We've arranged an eyeopening interview with Royal biographer and Smithsonian Associate Andrew Morton, who'll be joining us today, and will be presenting at the Smithsonian Associates program on April 6, 2021. The title of Andrew Morton's Smithsonian Associates presentation is The Windsor Sisters: Elizabeth and Margaret, A Complex Royal Bond. They were the closest of sisters and the best of friends. But when, in a quixotic twist of fate, their uncle, King Edward Vlll, decided to abdicate the throne in 1936, the dynamic between Elizabeth and Margaret was dramatically altered. Margaret would have to curtsey to the sister she called Lillibet, and bow to her wishes. Elizabeth would always look upon her younger sister's antics with a kind of stoical amusement, but Margaret's struggle to find a place and position inside the royal system—and her fraught relationship with its expectations—was often a source of tension. Famously, the Queen had to inform Margaret that the Church and government would not countenance her marrying divorcee Peter Townsend, forcing Margaret to choose between keeping her title and royal allowances or her divorcee lover. Andrew Morton's new book, Elizabeth and Margaret, The Intimate World of the Windsor Sisters, explores their relationship from the idyll of their cloistered early life, through their hidden war-time lives, into the divergent paths they took following their father's death and Elizabeth's ascension to the throne. In conversation with us today, Andrew Morton shares his unique insight into these two drastically different women—one resigned to duty and responsibility, the other resistant to it—and the lasting impact they have had on the Crown, the royal family, and the ways it adapted to the changing mores of the 20th century. Royal watchers will be enthralled. Andrew Morton has written extensively on celebrities including biographies of Tom Cruise, Angelina Jolie, and Madonna, as well as the British royal family. He has written bestselling biographies of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Prince Andrew, and Meghan Markle. His #1 New York Times bestselling biography Diana: Her True Story won international acclaim, described by critics as a "modern classic" and "the closest we will ever come to her autobiography." Please join me in welcoming to The Not Old Better Show via internet phone, NYT Bestselling author Andrew Morton. My special thanks to Andrew Morton for his generous time today. Andrew Morton will be presenting at Smithsonian Associates on April 6 and the title of his presentation is The Windsor Sisters: Elizabeth and Margaret, A Complex Royal Bond. Details and links can be found in our show notes today. My thanks to Smithsonian Associate for all they do to support the show, and my thanks to you my dear Not Old Better Show audience for your company today, and I hope you'll join me next time. Be safe, be healthy, and please practice smart social distancing, and remember, Let's talk about better. The Not Old Better Show. Thanks, everybody. Amazon link HERE for Andrew Morton's new book, Elizabeth & Margaret: The Intimate World of the Windsor Sisters
Ukens episode er preget av etterdønningene etter hertugparets intervju, men "der skal ikke dveles" så meget ved det! Det er nok av andre nyheter fra Europas kongehus en kan ta tak i! Eksempelvis er kong Harald fortsatt sykemeldt, prins Philip er utskrevet, og nylig publiserte brev viser at det ikke var dronning Elisabeth som stoppet prinsesse Margareths ekteskap med Peter Townsend. Sleng bena på skatollet, sett teen i vrangstrupen og nyt ukens episode av Undersåttene
In the second episode of FATAL FORTUNES, we dive into the later years of Princess Margaret (1930-2002). After her doomed romance with Peter Townsend, Margaret throws herself into a wild–and also doomed–relationship with society photographer Antony "Tony" Armstrong-Jones. As Margaret's marriage to Tony falls apart, her life as a royal deteriorates. We're left searching for an answer... What is Princess Margaret's legacy? WEBSITE: fatalfortunes.com PATREON: www.patreon.com/fatalfortunespodcast INSTAGRAM: @fatalfortunes TWITTER: @fatalfortunes TIKTOK: @fatal_fortunes The Four Seasons (Vivaldi) by John Harrison with the Wichita State University Chamber Players (http://www.johnharrisonviolin.com/) is licensed under a Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/b...).
Click here to buy: https://adbl.co/3jiVpWn 'Brilliantly entertaining and historically priceless' Spectator 'Fascinating ... as much a contribution to royal legend as to the history of the war' Daily Telegraph As Assistant Private Secretary to four monarchs, 'Tommy' Lascelles had a ringside seat from which to observe the workings of the royal household and Downing Street during the first half of the 20th century. These fascinating diaries begin with Edward VIII's abdication and end with George VI's death and his daughter Elizabeth's Coronation. In between we see George VI at work and play, a portrait more intimate than any other previously published. This compelling account also includes Princess Margaret's relationship with Peter Townsend, and throws an intriguing new light on the way in which King George VI and Winston Churchill worked together during the Second World War. Lascelles was a fine writer - like most of the best diaries his are a delight to read as well as being invaluable history.
A new MP3 sermon from Free Grace Baptist Church is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Why Praise the Lord? Speaker: Peter Townsend Broadcaster: Free Grace Baptist Church Event: Bible Study Date: 8/20/2020 Bible: Psalm 145:1-21 Length: 23 min.
Henry Talbot-er-Tony Armstrong Jones enters The Crown! As Liz & Phil celebrate a decade of marriage, Margaret's love life is put on full display. Will the ghost of Peter Townsend continue to haunt her, will she marry a drunken duelist, or will Lady Mary Crawley's man kick down the door and whisk her away to an alluring world of the middle class? Oh and the PM is dealing with his wife who is clearly not in love with him. Want to win some *FREE* LoG merch? Leave us a 5 star rating and a review on Apple Podcasts, screen shot it and send it to us to be entered.
This is a rebroadcast of a November 5, 2018 interview with Roger Daltrey, founder/lead singer of The Who. Roger discusses how the hardships experienced by Brits in WWII paved the way for the musical revolution of the 1960s, he recalls what it was like to be the poster-boys for the British “mod” movement (and why he never fully embraced the fad), and he remembers the “utter chaos” of performing at Woodstock. He talks about how he and Peter Townsend pushed each other’s creative boundaries during the making of the first rock opera Tommy, how he managed to resist the drug fueled excess the 60s, and how it led to quite a bit of tension with his bandmates - especially The Who’s famously reckless drummer Keith Moon. Roger also reveals how he processed Moon’s tragic death in 1978, how it led to the band’s breakup in the early 80s, and a how it took a Silicon Valley con man to finally reunite the band. Order Roger Daltrey's new book Thanks a Lot, Mr. Kibblewhite: My Story on Amazon, Audible or wherever books are sold. Follow The Who on twitter at @TheWho. Visit Kickass News at www.kickassnews.com, subscribe to Kickass News on Apple Podcasts, and follow us on twitter at @KickassNewsPod.
Sound Advice: A Hearing Friendly Business Podcast Show Notes & Connections: Reach out to Teresa @teresabarnesrn or TBarne@HearCommunication.com, plus all the other links:https://hearcommunication.com/https://www.linkedin.com/in/hearteresabarnesrn/https://www.instagram.com/teresabarnesrn/https://www.facebook.com/hearcommunication/www.amazon.com › Sound-Advice-Tune-into-Listening Today's episode focuses on listening from a warrior stance on conquering the mountain, which is the hurdle of wearing hearing aid and being brave enough to acknowledge that your ear organs are broken and that those who care about you want you to wear them to perhaps not make their life as difficult. If you are still in the workforce it will help you avoid hearing loss discrimination or being released due to "poor job performance reviews." If you are already retired than listening to this show will help you understand why it's important to know your ADA rights and what not to say to avoid embarrassing a person who has hearing loss. Here are important links to check out and the valuable quotes from INC Magazine: https://www.inc.com/dave-kerpen/15-quotes-to-inspire-you-to-become-a-better-listener.htmlhttps://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/hearing-loss-may-affect-brain-health-2020013118739https://www.elitedaily.com/p/the-true-definition-of-love-in-a-relationship-according-to-9-people-great-im-crying-9384415https://heroeswithhearingloss.org/https://hamiltoncaptel.com/heroes-with-hearing-loss-program-for-veterans.htmlHearing Loss Association of America Association for Late Deafened Adults alda.org Keep Tune In to Listen to Sound Advice: A Hearing Friendly Business Podcast and remember to subscribe and donate what you feel you can afford to keep the podcast going. https://www.paypal.com/paypalme2/hearcommunicationhttps://venmo.com/Teresa-Barnes-33Sponorship Available: Contact@HearingU.com
Beth is a triathlete and trainer, who called Chaz and AJ this morning to help AJ along with his cycling training. As it turns out, he's woefully unprepared for what's ahead, and is in desperate need of chamois cream. (0:00) Bob Stefanowski was on the phone to promote Masks for CT in New Haven, giving away another free 50,000 masks to residents who need them. (18:17) AJ does not have the right shoes (of course) for a 24-hour cycling marathon, but the Tribe had a lot of advice to offer. (28:03) Boston comedian Will Noonan warns AJ about what "hitting the wall" feels like, and also how intense cycling is, even for a decorated runner. (32:09) In Dumb Ass News, a Peter Townsend clip turned into a debate about which member of Chaz and AJ would live the longest. (41:16) Ashley discovered her parents' record collections, which are wildly different, and learned all about the terrible music created by Dan Fogelberg. (46:23)
Beth is a triathlete and trainer, who called Chaz and AJ this morning to help AJ along with his cycling training. As it turns out, he's woefully unprepared for what's ahead, and is in desperate need of chamois cream. (0:00) Bob Stefanowski was on the phone to promote Masks for CT in New Haven, giving away another free 50,000 masks to residents who need them. (18:17) AJ does not have the right shoes (of course) for a 24-hour cycling marathon, but the Tribe had a lot of advice to offer. (28:03) Boston comedian Will Noonan warns AJ about what "hitting the wall" feels like, and also how intense cycling is, even for a decorated runner. (32:09) In Dumb Ass News, a Peter Townsend clip turned into a debate about which member of Chaz and AJ would live the longest. (41:16) Ashley discovered her parents' record collections, which are wildly different, and learned all about the terrible music created by Dan Fogelberg. (46:23)
I royal watchers sono giornalisti molto particolari. Al contrario dei colleghi non sempre possono contare su interviste dirette. Osservano, commentano, si basano su fonti vicine ai reali. Come quando un cronista della BBC notò Margaret d'Inghilterra togliere una piuma dalla giacca di Peter Townsend e rivelò la storia clandestina della sorella della regina Elisabetta. Ospite della puntata è la scrittrice e royal watcher Federica Brunini, autrice del libro "La vita di Kate Middleton come me l'ha raccontata lei" (Sonzogno).
Episode 7: Free at Last – Part 1 The manic depressant Guide placed them this time on an 1860’s Southern Plantation where white racists find themselves slaves of African American Plantation owners. On the way, they meet Peter Townsend and Tommy from the Who. The group is mistaken for slaves and are taken to the plantation to see the boss.
When Derek Batten, Peter Townsend and James Townsend headed out onto the Coral Sea, they thought they were in for the trip of a lifetime. Little did they know, the trip would be their last. Social // Twitter/Instagram: @caseremains Website: www.caseremains.com Sources // 'KAZ II skipper's 'spiritual contact' - Herald Sun 'Cruel sea refuses to give up its secrets' - The Sydney Morning Herald 'Australian coroner ends mystery of 'ghost ship' Coronial findings
Today on the Truth Perspective we begin our foray into the wide, labyrinthine world of Western Islamic studies, probing the big question of Islamic origins, looking at both the conditions under which it originated and the relation between the violent jihadists today and the religion of the 7th to 9th centuries. Basing our discussion on Peter Townsend's The Mecca Mystery: Probing the Black Hole at the Heart of Islam and Shiraz Maher's Salafi-Jihadism: The History of an Idea, we take a look at...
Shortly after her Coronation, Queen Elizabeth II faced one of the biggest challenges of her reign. Her only sister, Princess Margaret, had fallen in love with her father's former equerry Peter Townsend -- a divorced father of two, who was twice her age. In Part Two of Queen of the World, we examine the trials and tribulations the young sovereign faced, and the personal ramifications that comes with putting duty above everything else. For more exclusive clips, royals news and pictures, join our closed Facebook group, The Windsors. https://www.facebook.com/groups/2115361108484683/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Englannin prinsessa Margaret ja kapteeni Peter Townsend olivat aidosti rakastuneita, mutta he eivät koskaan saaneet toisiaan. Prinsessan ja tallimestarin avioliittoa vastustivat sekä kirkko että parlamentti.
Roger Daltrey, founder/lead singer of The Who, discusses how the hardships experienced by Brits in WWII paved the way for the musical revolution of the 1960s, he recalls what it was like to be the poster-boys for the British “mod” movement (and why he never fully embraced the fad), and he remembers the “utter chaos” of performing at Woodstock. He talks about how he and Peter Townsend pushed each other’s creative boundaries during the making of the first rock opera Tommy, how he managed to resist the drug fueled excess the 60s, and how it led to quite a bit of tension with his bandmates - especially The Who’s famously reckless drummer Keith Moon. Roger also reveals how he processed Moon’s tragic death in 1978, how it led to the band’s breakup in the early 80s, and a how it took a Silicon Valley con man to finally reunite the band. Order Roger Daltrey's new book Thanks a Lot, Mr. Kibblewhite: My Story on Amazon, Audible or wherever books are sold. Follow The Who on twitter at @TheWho. Today's episode was sponsored by National Security Agency Career Recruitment, Homecoming on Amazon Prime Video, Loop Jewelry, and Flatiron School. Visit Kickass News at www.kickassnews.com, subscribe to Kickass News on Apple Podcasts, and follow us on twitter at @KickassNewsPod.
About the guest: Dance has been in the life of Peter Townsend since he was 7. For many years he danced competitively and he became a Professional at the age of 21. He studied not only ballroom and latin but also classical, contemporary and jazz ballet and contact improvisation. He was a founding member of Team Amsterdam and he finds that one can be highly motivated by different thoughts and ideas. His approach to teaching is quite unique as he believes dancers need to have conversations from within themselves and from within the partnership. Peter has worked with amateur and professional World Champions in Ballroom, Latin and Showdance. You can find more on his workshops by following Team Amsterdam: http://www.dutchdancelab.com/workshops-2018. Topics discussed in this episode Peter Townsend's dance story; Team Amsterdam; The difference between teaching and coaching; The traits of a great dance student; The illusion of effortless dancing; The importance of structuring practice. Would you love to learn choreographies, technical details and different methods for improving your posture, style, and overall performance from the comfort of your home studio? Our online platform – Dancesportlife Academy – offers you a vast library of courses and high-quality recordings of dance camps from all over the world at highly discounted prices.
Andrew Graham joins Mark to talk about another fantastic Netflix original, The Crown (season 1)! The Crown is a biographical drama television series, created and written by Peter Morgan and produced by Left Bank Pictures and Sony Pictures Television for Netflix. The show is a biographical story about the reign of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom. The first season covers the period from her marriage to Philip, Duke of Edinburgh in 1947 to the disintegration of her sister Princess Margaret's engagement to Peter Townsend in 1955. The Crown evolved out of Morgan's 2006 film The Queen and 2013 stage play The Audience. The series is intended to last 60 episodes over six seasons, with 10 one-hour episodes per season, covering the Queen's entire life, and with new actors being cast every two seasons. Claire Foy portrays the Queen in the first two seasons, alongside Matt Smith as Prince Philip and Vanessa Kirby as Princess Margaret. Filming for the series takes place at Elstree Studios in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, with location shooting at various locations throughout the United Kingdom. The entire first season was released on Netflix on November 4, 2016, while the second was released on December 8, 2017. The Crown has received widespread acclaim, with critics praising the cast's performances, direction, writing, cinematography, production values, and the relatively accurate historical accounts of Queen Elizabeth's reign. Significant praise in the first season was directed towards the performances of Foy in the leading role and John Lithgow as Winston Churchill. The series has received several industry nominations and awards, including winning Best Actress and Best Actor at the 23rd Screen Actors Guild Awards for Foy and Lithgow, respectively, and receiving thirteen nominations for the 69th Primetime Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Drama Series.
Growing up in Rotorua, being involved in the fishing industry and co-founding the New Zealand Salmon Company in the mid 1980s, working as Chief Executive at the Canterbury Employers' Chamber of Commerce for more than 20 years and the leadership lessons learned over his career. Peter Townsend is about to retire as the Chief Executive of the Canterbury Employers' Chamber of Commerce. Visit: https://www.cecc.org.nz/
Episode 7: Free at Last – Part 1 The manic depressant Guide placed them this time on a 1860’s Southern Plantation where white racists find themselves slaves of African American Plantation owners. On the way, they meet Peter Townsend and Tommy from the Who. The group is mistaken for slaves and are taken to the plantation to see the boss.
Peter Townsend on 2UE Weekend Afternoons with John Cadogan
A better understanding of paradata, or the by-products of the collection of survey data, could help researchers gain insights into issues around survey quality and costs. That's according to a team of NCRM-funded researchers who have been examining the paradata around Peter Townsend’s famous Poverty in the UK study, undertaken in the late 1960s. Professor Ros Edwards explains more about what paradata is, the different ways in which it can be examined and what she and the team have learned about the study, the people involved in it and the implications of the team’s findings for survey research today.
The telegram of support from Jean-Paul Sartre has long since been lost, but many still remember the student uprisings of the late 1960s and early 70s, and “the experience of seeing how a social authority could crumble in the face of opposition and resistance”. In this podcast, students, academics and Estate staff talk about this “battle of ideas and words”, and how VIPs were sometimes sneaked out through obscure back routes – but some still left covered in flour and eggs. The spirit of the times changed Essex, bringing students into the decision-making process, but also hitting recruitment – yet one interviewee recalls: “They just looked as though they were having fun”. Interviewees - Sir John Ashworth, founding Professor of Biological Sciences - Marie Evers, formerly of Estate Management - Christine Hinton, Sociology student, 1967-70 - David Morgan, formerly of Estate Management - Gabriel Pearson, Professor in the Department of Literature, Film and Theatre Studies for over 30 years - Alex Selley, formerly of Estate Management - Paul Thompson, Research Professor in the Department of Sociology, first came to Essex in 1964 - Peter Townsend, founding Professor of Sociology (died 2009)
The first Vice-Chancellor and the campus architect Kenneth Capon were appointed on the same day in October 1962. In this, the fourth in our Creating a University series of podcasts, staff and students from the early days talk about the vision these two men had for “a harmonious composition of towers and terraces floating in the lap of its wooded valley”. They reminisce, too, about life at the University of Essex before the buildings went up – with lectures in Nissen huts and departments based in the old stable blocks at Wivenhoe House. Interviewees - Dawn Ades, Professor of Art History - Sir John Ashworth, founding Professor of Biological Sciences - Peter Haine, Physics student, 1964-67 - Jules Lubbock, Visiting Professor in the Department of Art History - Gabriel Pearson, Professor in the Department of Literature, Film and Theatre Studies for over 30 years - James Sutherland, structural engineer and designer - Peter Townsend, founding Professor of Sociology (died 2009) - Margery Wilson, Literature student, 1971-74
The third of our 50th Anniversary podcasts considers founding Vice-Chancellor Sir Albert Sloman, with some of those who worked with him discussing his “formidable skill” and “excellent eye for people of exceptional ability” – as well as his shyness. Sir Albert Sloman was a former wartime RAF fighter pilot who became the founding and longest serving Vice-Chancellor of the University of Essex. The interviewees in this podcast tell of a man who was “scrupulously fair-minded” and “insisted on hiring the best”. Sir Albert Sloman died in July 2012. You can read former Vice-Chancellor Professor Sir Ivor Crewe’s assessment of his life and work on our website. Interviewees - Sheila Cardy, former Secretary to the Registrar - Sir Ivor Crewe, Vice-Chancellor, 1995-2007, and Lecturer and Professor in Government at Essex for more than 35 years - Robin Dixon, former Secretary to the School of Comparative Studies - Sir Denis Forman, former executive in the British film and television industry and honorary graduate of the University of Essex - Anthony King, appointed Senior Lecturer in Government in 1966, now Essex County Council Millennium Professor of British Government - Margaret Law, former Secretary to the Vice-Chancellor - Gabriel Pearson, Professor in the Department of Literature, Film and Theatre Studies for over 30 years - Peter Townsend, (died 2009), founding Professor of Sociology
Residential care revisited - Laurie Taylor considers Peter Townsend's landmark research, 'The Last Refuge', fifty years after its publication. Retracing Townsend's footsteps, a hundred, older volunteer researchers sought to find out what had happened to the 173 care homes in his classic study. Julia Johnson, one of the authors of the new study, charts the changes and continuities in care for older people in England and Wales. She's joined by Robin Darton, an expert in social care, Also, the archaeologist Rachael Kiddey, examines artefacts from two homelessness sites in Bristol and York. What can these items, as well as oral histories collected from the homeless, tell us about what it means to have no shelter in the 21st century?Producer: Jayne Egerton.
This podcast examines founding Vice-Chancellor Sir Albert Sloman’s vision for the University and how others saw it at the time. Sir Albert Sloman saw a University which would be interdisciplinary, where subjects would inter-relate, often with an international focus that looked beyond the West, and be taught by leaders in their fields. Class and social barriers would be broken down by attracting not just some of the best and brightest students from around the world, but also many of the older men and women in the area who had never had the chance to go into higher education. Some of the early staff attracted by Sir Albert’s vision talk about the “bright, imaginative, adventurous” undergraduates who might otherwise have gone to Oxford and Cambridge – and academics who were upset at the idea of not having a Senior Common Room where they could escape from the students. Interviewees - Dawn Ades, Professor of Art History - Martin Atkinson, Emeritus Professor of Language and Linguistics, first came to Essex in 1974 - Joanna Bornat, PhD student, now Emeritus Professor, Faculty of Health and Social Care, Open University - Peter Frank, former Professor of Russian Politics in the Department of Government - Maurice Kimmit, former Professor of Physics, now Visiting Professor at the University’s Physics Centre - Anthony King, appointed Senior Lecturer in Government in 1966, now Essex County Council Millennium Professor of British Government - Alastair McAuley, Reader in the Department of Economics - Gabriel Pearson, Professor in the Department of Literature, Film and Theatre Studiesfor over 30 years - Paul Thompson, Research Professor in the Department of Sociology, first came to Essex in 1964 - Peter Townsend (died 2009), founding Professor of Sociology
Although she toiled for more than 40 years, everyone is singing Bettye LaVette's praises. Her knockout Kennedy Center performance of Who's Love Reign O'er Me and her Inaugural Bon Jovi Duet gave the world a chance to appreciate her talent. Her CD Interpretations: The British Rock Songbook is receiving both critical and commercial acclaim. Join us for an up-close interview with the woman that brought tears to Peter Townsend's eyes.
Although she toiled for more than 40 years, everyone is singing Bettye LaVette's praises. Her knockout Kennedy Center performance of Who's Love Reign O'er Me and her Inaugural Bon Jovi Duet gave the world a chance to appreciate her talent. Her CD Interpretations: The British Rock Songbook is receiving both critical and commercial acclaim. Join us for an up-close interview with the woman that brought tears to Peter Townsend's eyes.
Roy Plomley's castaway is writer and explorer Group Captain Peter Townsend. Favourite track: L'Ame Des Poètes by Charles Trenet Book: Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe Luxury: Seeds