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Trump politics, anti-woke rhetoric and Australian climate policy. Wilderness Society takes on Federal Minister for Environment ahead of election. As Trump shockwaves ricochet around the world, we ask how significant is the President's election for future global climate change action? And how is the changing world order affecting the political appetite for climate action at home? In this episode of Earth Matters we hear from Professor Robyn Eckersley, an academic working at the intersection of democratic theory and climate justice. Professor Eckersley shares her reflections on the dangerous trajectory of global democracy and its impact on Australian climate policy. We also hear from former NSW Fire & Rescue Commissioner and international firefighting expert Greg Mullins about the effect of anti-woke politics on climate emergency workers ability to speak out about climate change.And if you're curious as to why the Federal Environment Minister Tania Plibersek has been absent in the Australian election lead-up, our segment on wildlife protection may provide one clue. We speak to Wilderness Society Campaign Director Amelia Young about the Society's legal challenge to force the Minister to act in relation to the recovery of eleven endangered species.Acknowledgements and notes Thanks to LaTrobe University for sharing the recording of their recent panel discussion Climate Change – where are we now? The discussion was part of a LaTrobe Ideas and Society event that took place on March 17th. Professor Eckersley and Greg Mullins' comments were based on policies current at that time. Some new policy announcements and changes of policy have been announced since then. Thanks to the Climate Council for permission to air their election advertisement. You can check out the Climate Council's election report and election scorecard via these links. Thanks also to Phuong Tran of 3CR for bringing us the story about the Wilderness Society's legal action. For commentary about Australia's endangered wildlife see The Guardian's special series The Last Chance. This week's show is Episode #1497 and was produced by Claudia Craig on the lands of the Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung in Narrm (Melbourne).
Phuong Tran spricht mit Raphael Schaad über ihren Weg von frühen Chatbot-Projekten mit Dialogflow bis hin zur Automatisierung kreativer und kaufmännischer Prozesse mit GPT und Operator. Sie zeigt, wie KI ihr hilft, Zeit zu gewinnen, die sie bewusst in Familie und eigene Visionen investiert. Im Zentrum stehen echte Anwendung, präzises Prompting und die Kraft einer Community, die KI als Werkzeug versteht. Die Episode gibt persönliche Einblicke, technische Impulse und macht deutlich, wie moderne Arbeitswelten mit klarem Mindset neu gestaltet werden können.https://www.transmedial.de/https://www.linkedin.com/in/phuong-tran-transmedial/
As a child of two immigrants, Anita has a tumultuous relationship with the question: "Where are you from?" So, too, do many third culture kids — people who spend a significant number of their developmental years living in places that are not their parents' homelands. She talks with two third culture kids — one 35 and one 12 — and their moms about growing up between cultures and how they've built identity and relationships along the way.Meet the Guests:- Rayla Heide, a senior narrative designer at Blizzard Entertainment, talks about establishing cultural identity as a third culture kid and the grief and joy involved in moving around in childhood- Madeleine Maceda Heide, an international school leader and modern elder as well as Rayla's mother, shares the advantages of being a third culture kid and the ways she helped their family feel at home wherever they lived- Phuong Tran, and international journalist and communications consultant for overseas non-profit organizations, talks about her and her son's recent move from Thailand to North Carolina, and what they gained and lost in making that transition- Kaden Tran, a middle school student, talks about why moving to the US didn't meet up with his expectations and how its impacted his friendshipsRead the transcript | Review the podcast on your preferred platformFollow Embodied on TikTok and Instagram Leave a message for EmbodiedPlease note: This episode originally published November 10, 2023.Update: Rayla Heide is now the Franchise Narrative Director on a new game in development at Scopely.
Growing the business is probably the number one concern in the cafe industry. In general we tend to look at growth as either scaling the size of the business physically, or the revenue and profitability. What if I told you there was another way you can look at growth? On today's Shift Break we will be talking about ways to look at growth that don't rely only on the usual defaults of revenue and scale, but give you another option to be established and fulfilled as an owner. Recommended episodes: 469: Unremarkable Hospitality and Cafe Terroir SHIFT BREAK: Embracing Your Constraints Building your Coffee Shop's Capacity from Simplicity 327: Founder Friday! w/ Phuong Tran of Lava Java If you are a cafe owner and want to work one on one with me to bring your shop to its next level and help bring you joy and freedom in the process then email chris@keystothshop.com of book a free call now: https://calendly.com/chrisdeferio/30min Key Holder Coaching Group Applications are Open! APPLY TODAY! If you are a cafe owner and want to work one on one with me to bring your shop to its next level and help bring you joy and freedom in the process then email chris@keystothshop.com of book a free call now: https://calendly.com/chrisdeferio/30min Thank you to out sponsors! Everything you need for back of the house operations https://rattleware.qualitybystainless.com/ The best and most revered espresso machines on the planet: www.lamarzoccousa.com
Each one of our shops tell many stories. The story of our own arrival as owners, the story of the coffee and the efforts it has taken to get to a finished product, the story of our community and customers and the parts they play in shaping their world and shop itself. A coffee shop is at once a reflection of the people and a light that guides us to the future. Today we are going to hear the story of one such shop, whose owners have had quite an adventure as writers of and participants in their coffee shop story. Don Niemyer is the co-owner with his wife, Carissa, of Story Coffee Company in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Today you'll hear how Don and his wife, along with their two daughters, moved into a 99 square foot Volkswagen Rialta and lived in it for 4 years, traveling the nation visiting coffee shops and getting insights and inspiration for their dream of opening something that would be compelling and elegant, yet simple and with minimal debt. In 2015 they built and opened a Tiny House Coffee shop where customers are served inside as opposed to only at a walk up window and to this day it's the only one in the world that they are aware of. Working with Robin Pasley of Pasley Commercial Interiors, they created a design that was named “Most Beautiful Coffee Shop in Colorado” by Architectural Digest Magazine and has been featured in books such as “101 Things to Do in Colorado Springs before you Die”. Story Coffee has been featured in other national magazines such as Fresh Cup and Barista Magazine, and Don has written for Barista Magazine, detailing their adventures around the nation in a series called The Rialta Coffee Tour which is still available at BMAG online. Don and Carissa are constantly chasing the idea and practice of simplicity, and today we'll talk about how they work that principle into their business, and into their lives. In this conversation we cover: How Don go into coffee and the adventure of started a coffee shop Why hope and belief in a better future are essential Practical skills and learning from industry mentors How simplicity and focus can set a coffee shop apart in the market and allow for consistent experiences Values provide a guiding light for decision-making and saying yes or no to opportunities. Opening a second location and how it aligned with their values and the story they wanted to tell Empowering and resourcing people to fulfill their dreams and responsibilities Being part of a community, like the Key Holders Coaching Group, provides valuable feedback and support. Why cultivating a mindset of curiosity helps in simplifying and aligning with values Enjoy! Links: https://www.storycoffeecompany.com/ https://www.facebook.com/storycoffeecompany/ @storycoffeecompany Related Episodes: 327: Founder Friday! w/ Phuong Tran of Lava Java 199 : Founder Friday w/ Mario Jimenez of Banana Dang Coffee, Oceanside, CA 070 : Founder Friday w/ Kristian Hedborg, Alkemisten Kaffeebar, Gothenburg, Sweden
Today's show features audio and discussion about the Teachers and School Staff for Palestine (Vic) March 3rd launch of a Teaching for Palestine resource, and a campaign to boycott STEM programs in Victorian schools sponsored by Weapons companies. We hear an interview by Phuong Tran of 3CR with Elise West, Director of Teachers for Peace and Medical Association for the Prevention of War, and Elspeth Blunt, a teacher and member of the Teacher's and School Staff for Palestine organising committee. Later in the show are recordings from the launch event, featuring a speech by Nader, a year 6 Palestinian student from a public primary school, and Isaak Bovell, Australian Education Union Sub Branch Representative, and a Teachers and School Staff for Palestine Organising Committee member. Teachers and School Staff for PalestineTeachers for Peace Medical Association for Prevention of War, Minors and Missiles report
You can't always get what you want. In fact, getting exactly what you want may hinder your growth and creativity in the long run. Most of us in the cafe space work within constraints of budget, time, space, and capacity, and that is actually something to celebrate. On today's shift break we will be talking about why embracing and even applying constraints is the key to unlock your own, and your coffee shop's potential. Related episodes: SHIFT BREAK: Before you Expand 240 : What to do before your Build your Bar 181 : Organizational Self-Knowledge blog : Simplicity is the MVP of the Cafe 327: Founder Friday! w/ Phuong Tran of Lava Java SHIFT BREAK: Turning Radius In my consulting work through KTTS Consulting, management and leadership structures are one of the main conversations we have. Working to create clarity, understanding, and systems for success in leadership has a compound effect on the rest of the business. Would you like to work with me 1:1 to help your cafe thrive in quality, operations, and people? Click below for a discovery call and lets have a conversation! https://calendly.com/chrisdeferio/30min Thank you to out sponsors! Custom branded apps for your coffee shop: www.espressly.co The best and most revered espresso machines on the planet: www.lamarzoccousa.com
As a child of two immigrants, Anita has a tumultuous relationship with the question: "Where are you from?" So, too, do many third culture kids — people who spend a significant number of their developmental years living in places that are not their parents' homelands. She talks with two third culture kids — one 35 and one 12 — and their moms about growing up between cultures and how they've built identity and relationships along the way.Meet the Guests:- Rayla Heide, a senior narrative designer at Blizzard Entertainment, talks about establishing cultural identity as a third culture kid and the grief and joy involved in moving around in childhood- Madeleine Maceda Heide, an international school leader and modern elder as well as Rayla's mother, shares the advantages of being a third culture kid and the ways she helped their family feel at home wherever they lived- Phuong Tran, and international journalist and communications consultant for overseas non-profit organizations, talks about her and her son's recent move from Thailand to North Carolina, and what they gained and lost in making that transition- Kaden Tran, a middle school student, talks about why moving to the US didn't meet up with his expectations and how its impacted his friendshipsRead the transcript | Review the podcastLeave a message for Embodied
Acknowledgement of Country Headlines with Emily, the talent behind Thursday Breakfast's weekly news round up! Special radiothon chats with:Dr Marion Muliaumaseali'I from Village Response Collective - listen back to Inez's chat with Marion on the 8th of June 2023.Phuong Tran from 3CR's Tuesday Breakfast and Women on the Line shows!Dr Jordana Silverstein - listen back to Jordy speaking with Priya about her new book ‘Cruel Care' on the 11th of May 2023.Judith Peppard from 3CR's Earth Matters show - listen back to Judith and Inez recapping the 2023 International Harm Reduction Conference held in Melbourne on our April 20th show.Naavikaran and Levi Kohler, the musical angels behind the ongoing club night Mothprocess - listen back to Naavikaran and Levi talking about Mothprocess with Inez on the 2nd of February 2023.Our wonderful co-presenter Leila!Dr David Kelly, who along with Prof Libby Porter partnered with 3CR to broadcast last year's Forum for Dwelling Justice - listen back to audio from the forum which aired on 3CR's Acting Up on the 8th, 15th, 22nd and 29th of September 2022. Songs180 - KYESaved By The Bell - InkabeeSour - Tia GostelowWhere Are You From? - NaavikaranSomewhere To Live - Blue Mountains community members Keep those donations coming all through the month of June to help us reach our target of $1,500 as part of 3CR's $275,000 goal! Remember, you can donate by:Calling the station on 03 9419 8377 to donate over the phone,Texting 0488 809 855 to receive a text back with donation details,Donating online at the Breakfast programs' crowdraiser or on 3CR's website, orDropping into the station 21 Smith St, Fitzroy during business hours.P.S. Don't forget to nominate your favourite 3CR program/s when you donate! Stay tuned, stay radical!
Trans Pride March Melbourne excerpts from 3CR's live-to-air coverage on Sunday, 13 November. Includes vox pops by reporter Phuong Tran at the March and chat with Sally Goldner and James McKenzie in the studio. Organised by Trans Sisters United, who made history creating Australia's first Trans Pride March. To hear 3CR's full four-hour coverage of the March, including speeches: https://www.3cr.org.au/transpridemarchmelbourne https://www.facebook.com/transsistersunited/ https://qlife.org.au/ https://www.switchboard.org.au/rainbow-door Actor & writer Alastair Ward from Pansy Productions chats in the studio about his new play 'this moment in time', staging at The Butterfly Club in Melbourne from December 5 to 10. https://thebutterflyclub.com/show/this-moment-in-time https://pansyprod.com/ 3CR broadcasts from the stolen lands of the Kulin Nation. Sovereignty was never ceded.
Phuong Tran is a Vietnamese chef based in Los Angeles. In this episode, Hero and Phuong sit down for a conversation about food as a powerful vehicle for connectivity, joy, and belonging. Mental Health Resourceshttps://suicidepreventionlifeline.orghttp://www.mhresources.orghttps://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/help-support/contact-helplinehttps://www.samhsa.gov/find-help/national-helpline
Guest presenter Phuong speaks with Emma Cutting from The Heart Gardening Project about the vital importance of creating insect friendly wildlife corridors and community gardens in urban areas, and RMIT researcher Katherine Berthon about protecting native bees by nurturing their essential urban habitats. Earth Matters #1385 was produced by Phuong Tran
Coffee shops are notorious for overcomplicating their menus, concepts, and services. Most shops, if left unchecked in this, will have a significant number of poorly thought through drinks, back stock of unused inventory, and frustrated staff and customers either leaving bad reviews or leaving the business. The answer is not what we can add to our already burdened shops to find success, but what can we do less of to focus more on the few things that will bring success. On today's Shift Break we are going to discuss how to approach building your capacity and ability to make good decisions by embracing simplicity and learning what you business needs and what it can handle as you go. Related episodes: 327: Founder Friday! w/ Phuong Tran of Lava Java 224 : Essentialism: Focusing on what truly Matters w/ Greg McKeown 274 : Crafting Specialty Drinks in your Shop w/ Matt Foster” 240 : What to do before your Build your Bar Exclusivity is a Bad Strategy Blog: Soul Searching in the New Landscape of Retail Visit our Sponsors!!! The best espresso machines in the world! www.lamarzoccousa.com Custom branded mobile apps for your shop! www.espressly.co
Today's show features an interview with Elise West, the Executive Officer of the Medical Association for Prevention of War. The interview was conducted by Phuong Tran, for 3CR's Tuesday breakfast show on 17 Jan 2022. It's a really interesting conversation that covers many current Radioactive Show topics of interest, including partnerships between weapons companies and charities providing STEM education in schools, the increasing civil use of the military in Australia particularly in the govt's covid response, updates on the campaign towards abolishing nuclear weapons, and a recent multi-billion dollar purchase of tanks from the US. Thank you to Tuesday Breakfast for sharing the audio. https://www.mapw.org.au/
Today we get to talk with a pillar and foundational member of the specialty coffee community, Phuong Tran of Lava Java For 20 years now Phuong Tran has been the owner/operator of the famed coffee shop, Lava Java in Ridgefield Washington. There she discovered a passion for coffee that led her to not only craft the shop into a beacon of hight standards in the beginning of the 3rd wave of coffee, but she also became inspired to begin competing to in barista competitions as a way to improve. She won the U.S. title in 2005 and amidst the notoriety of the win simply continued to run a great cafe and teach coffee to her staff and through the SCA. I am lucky to consider Phuong a friend who I have known since back in 2006 or so. I have been inspired by her consistency, focus, values, and the simplicity with which she runs her shop and crafts her life. Today we get to explore her story from buying a business, discovering specialty coffee, and taking on new challenges - to competition, teaching, and advice to other owners from her extensive experience. I hope you really enjoy this one! We cover: Beginning coffee as an owner Buying an existing shop Learning the industry and taking on challenges Changing and refining things at the shop Establishing standards and finding specialty coffee Motivation for Competition Winning the U.S. Title Scaling to a 2nd location Choosing simplicity Self care and balance Links: www.lava-java.com Recommended Episodes: 305 : Founder Friday! w/ Andrew Sinclair of MadLab Coffee, Los Angeles, CA Founder Friday! w/ Adam Obrátil of Industra Coffee, Brno, Czech Republic 252 : Founder Friday w/ Klaus Thompson of the Coffee Collective, Denmark 232 : Founder Friday w/ Blew Kind of Fanny Lou's Porch Visit our awesome sponsors! Ground Control : Revolutionary Batch Brew Coffee! www.groundcontrol.coffee The Barista Series: Best Plant Based Beverages on Earth! www.pacificfoodservice.com
Phuong Tran from AMD joins us on this episode of SPO Coffee Chats to chat about his internship experience and journey. Phuong tells us all about what he learn throughout his journey as part of the leadership team for SPO, work-life balance and impostor syndrome. Tune into the full episode to hear more all about the first VP of Family Relations got to where he is today! GUEST:- Phuong Tran (https://www.linkedin.com/in/ph-tran/)HOSTS: - Tee Nguyen (https://www.linkedin.com/in/thnguyen21/) - Ashley Tran (https://www.linkedin.com/in/ashleyktrann/)
Phuong Tran is a young copywriter from Saigon, Vietnam. Street photography has always been one of his hobbies. Phuong tries to show in his photos how both China in Southeast Asia and France have influenced the Vietnamese culture, he follows his instincts, take shots of whatever he finds interesting and attractive. For Phuong, catching a photo is “all about the sensitivity that you may have, and you may develop yourself throughout the time”. He tries to get the consent of the people he shoots after he takes their photo to keep it natural. Phuong's main goal is to publish a book about his photos that combines his street, nightlife, food, and architectural photography. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/scopio/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/scopio/support
I dag er min gjest Phuong Tran som driver Kung Fu Yoga, en sammensmelting av Hiep Vo Mon Kung Fu og Yoga. Vi prater om alt i fra personlig utvikling, selvforsvar, kampkunst og Bruce Lee. Sjekk henne ut på www.kungfuyoga.no
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Amanda asks Phuong to take us back to the beginning of the company her father started many years ago
Amanda discusses with Phuong about the exponential growth plans for the beverage company
After a long delay, the CoffeeGeek podcast is back in the same old mp3 format and a new enhanced iTunes / iPod format. Discussions about Italy certifying espresso, new coffees tried, Vancouver visitors and the WBC machine certifications.
After a long delay, the CoffeeGeek podcast is back in the same old mp3 format and a new enhanced iTunes / iPod format. Discussions about Italy certifying espresso, new coffees tried, Vancouver visitors and the WBC machine certifications.
Topics: Awesome show with Phuong Tran sitting in on the entire thing. News with Jeanette Chan to start, then all Phuong as we discuss the USBC, WBC, Vancouver coffee, and much more. MP3 format 20.7mb, 72:29 (mm:sec) 40 kbps bitrate, 44.1Hz sample rate, mono channel. Questions or comments podcast@coffeegeek.com, call 1-206-965-8185, or look for us on Skype, username: CoffeeGeek
Topics: Awesome show with Phuong Tran sitting in on the entire thing. News with Jeanette Chan to start, then all Phuong as we discuss the USBC, WBC, Vancouver coffee, and much more. MP3 format 20.7mb, 72:29 (mm:sec) 40 kbps bitrate, 44.1Hz sample rate, mono channel.