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If you can count yourself among the lucky ones who've met Robert Priest in person, any chance you remember what you were wearing? _____ Well, fear not: He does. According to his business partner, the designer Grace Lee, Priest possesses a near-photographic memory of how people present themselves. And those first impressions last a lifetime. _____ To hear him talk, though, it's not at all about being judgy. Priest is just naturally consumed with all things visual. He has been since childhood. (He gets it from his mother). To him, design is everything. _____ Priest has dedicated his 50-plus-year career to the relentless pursuit of taste, style, and fashion. And it shows. He has led design teams at all of the big magazines: GQ, House & Garden, InStyle, Newsweek, and Esquire. Twice. _____ But there's another side to Robert Priest. He's a huge sports fan. And designing magazines is his sport. Indeed, like a head coach, he's hired to win. And the trophies in this case are readership, advertising, circulation, and buzz—and when that's all taken care of, the design awards start to pile up—they certainly have for him. _____ We talked to Priest about his early days in London, when he—and The Beatles and the Rolling Stones—were just getting started, about why soccer is the real football, and the rise and fall of one of the biggest magazine launches in history, Condé Nast Portfolio.
In this 1300th episode of Toronto Mike'd, Mike chats with Bob Wiseman about his career making and producing music for Blue Rodeo, Ron Sexsmith, Bruce McCulloch, Lowest of the Low, Robert Priest, and others. Toronto Mike'd is proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery, Palma Pasta, The Moment Lab, Ridley Funeral Home and Electronic Products Recycling Association.
In this 1294th episode of Toronto Mike'd, Mike chats with Poet, Author, Singer and Songwriter Robert Priest about co-writing an Alannah Myles hit, working with Bob Wiseman, writing with Julian Taylor and so much more. Toronto Mike'd is proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery, Palma Pasta, The Moment Lab, Ridley Funeral Home and Electronic Products Recycling Association.
Martin and Greg reflect on the episode #28 interview with Robert Priest. They discuss Priest's courageous missiology, the implications of his "bridge-building" metaphor for anthropology, and the importance of addressing contemporary issues with rigorous on-the-ground research.
Martin Rodriguez sits down with Robert Priest, missiologist and retired professor of anthropology. Priest shares about his experiences as a missiological anthropologist, his research, and his hopes for the future of the field.
Dr. Robert Priest shares his story with the field of anthropology.
Bob talks with Toronto poet and singer-songwriter, Robert Priest. and they present an impromptu collaboration on Robert's song, "If You See Peace".Episode Producer: Zoe Henderson
Aflevering 10! Het lang verwachte deel 2 van onze John Wayne Gacy aka Patches! Na enkele weken edittroubles is hij er dan eindelijk! Onze excuses voor het lange wachten maar hopelijk is deze het meer dan waard! Ook een kleine aankondiging op het einde dus stay tuned! Hou jullie vast voor de getuigenis van Kim Byers, de collega van Robert Priest, die een onmisbare schakel was in de capture van John. Een opsomming van de gruwel die de jongens hebben moeten doormaken en 2 presentatoren die toch even een momentje nodig hebben deze te plaatsen. Luister, deel, like en vooral laat ons weten wat jullie ervan vonden! Love and Kisses Caro en Nick
Robert Priest has written poetry, rock songs, fantasy novels and lived to tell the tale. The Rabbi meets the Priest as we explore a life well lived.
Native Opinion Episode 187 THEIR DREAMS, ASPIRATIONS, and FUTURES. How To Reach Our Show: E-Mail: hosts@nativeopinion.com Twitter: @nativeopinion Facebook: facebook.com/nativeopinionpodcast/ Our Website: nativeopinion.com CALL OUR SHOW! Click or Tap to call: 860–800–5595 ________________________________________________________ Listen LIVE every Saturday Morning, 9am Eastern Standard Time Through Our Website or via the SPREAKER APP SUBSCRIBE to our Podcast! Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, i-Heart Radio, Spotify Radio Public or wherever you get your favorite podcasts from… ________________________________________________________ PLEASE support our show! Native Opinion is growing, and while we have always been a self-funded entity, and It takes a great deal of time and out of pocket capital to produce a show like ours on a weekly basis. Things like bandwidth, web hosting, storage, recording equipment, hardware, software, etc.…., really add up each month. After much thought and debate, we have decided to seek the support of our listeners to help us grow. There are three ways you can do that: 1.) The most helpful would be a monthly donation. We understand every donation is hard-earned, and we will strive to utilize those gifts and donations to the fullest and continue to provide the best content we can possibly provide You can cancel at any time. 2.) Another way is with a one-time donation to say, “thank you”. This would also be very much appreciated! 3.) Simple Share us with your friends! if you feel that someone may be interested in our show, please encourage them to subscribe to our podcast in any podcast directory. Donations can be made through our PATREON account.. ________________________________________________________ Episode Summary: Increasing Access to S.T.E.M. programs for Native American students including “Soverign” summer camps is our focus in this episode. Also, Trumps irresponcible weather forcasting and stupidity by mainstream news media. And more… Music by Mohawk recording artist Julian Taylor. ________________________________________________________ The Native Opinion theme song “Honor The People” is by Casper Loma Da Wa. FIND THE SONG AND MORE OF HIS MUSIC HERE: ________________________________________________________ ARTICLES DISCUSSED IN THIS EPISODE: NAGPRA and other laws waived for Trump’s border wall. Top 10 things to know about the Day of the Dead. A short documentary produced by Britain’s BBC about Day of the Dead Four deaths by suicide, 22 attempts an ‘ongoing crisis’ in God’s Lake First Nation. Native students learn about science in ‘Sovereign’ summer camp. Cherokee Nation Names First Delegate To Congress. Official treaty of New Echota. Native American hydrologist talking about his tribe and wildfires. _______________________________________________________ Living Landscapes, How a Changing Climate is Affecting a Tribal Community. More information about Casey Ryan’s work at these sites: http://therezweliveon.com/ http://skclivinglandscapes.org/ RACISM IN AMERICA: New Jersey Cop Faces Up to 40 Years for Federal Charges Including Using Excessive Force. In 1912, This Georgia County Drove Out Every Black Resident. A top federal prosecutor in Ohio just sent a harsh message to white supremacists. ________________________________________________________ Building a STEM Pathway for Native Students. Sailors Find Pumice ‘Raft’ the Size of Washington D.C. Floating in Pacific that Could Help Restore Great Barrier Reef. FEATURED RECORDING ARTIST: ARTIST: Julian Taylor Band TRACK: Avalanche BIO: The voice drifting into the lobby from the soundcheck sounds so timeless it might be emerging from some ancient well of souls at the end of the world, but it’s also fresh and vulnerable. Other times, lost in the dreads, the voice comes up out of the shadow summoning ancestral tones of Maroon resistance or slipping into a high Mohawk register. So…not a monotone experience at all. And well beyond stereo. In fact not of any one genre. Not limited that way. There’s no dissonance. it’s a harmonic whole. Julian Taylor masterfully re-combines and updates the vintage sounds that inspired him, to create bold, innovative songs. Taylor, of both West Indian and Native Canadian decent, is a charismatic frontman, prolific songwriter, and endearing individual – the kind who immediately connects and makes you feel at ease. That character of warmth and generosity permeates everything Taylor does. Toronto poet Robert Priest describes him as “the kind of artist forever in the zone, the voice limitless, the songs full of feeling and memorable hooks.” In his His latest album, “Avalanche” the title track of the same name is inspired by death, remorse, redemption, and unconditional love. “Life is made of two things” Taylor says… “moments and the memories that they leave behind. This is the title track to the album because when I began working on this record my life was in turmoil. It felt similar to a time when I buried a lot of close friends. I was in this endless spiral of self-destruction and it seemed like I was at a funeral every other weekend. Julian Taylor Band Website Kutupitush! (Thank You!) for listening!
Robbie Mustoe and Robbie Earle are joined by Robert Priest and Miles Kohrman of Eight by Eight magazine for a special interview on Chelsea (1:00), Manchester City (21:10) and the Premier League's superstar managers (28:15).
Robert Priest‘s The Gospel According to Renan: Reading, Writing, and Religion in Nineteenth-Century France (Oxford University Press, 2014) is a fascinating book about another fascinating book: Ernest Renan’s Vie de Jesus, published in 1863. Renan’s was a nineteenth-century non-fiction bestseller, but is far from widely read today. In a series of chapters that explore issues of authorship, content, and reception, Priest offers readers a contextual analysis of this “secular” life of Jesus within Renan’s own biography and oeuvre. He also examines the controversy surrounding the book in France, and traces its continuing impact and legacies into the early twentieth century. One of the major contributions of this work is its analysis of the popular reception of Vie de Jesus by French citizens across the political and religious spectrum. In addition to contemporary press and pamphlet discussion of the text, Priest also consulted hundreds of letters addressed to its author from men and women throughout France. This previously unexamined archival material gives us a glimpse of how “everyday” readers responded to Renan’s work, its spiritual and political meanings. The Gospel According to Renan illuminates the history of reading and writing under the Second Empire. Its in-depth analysis of La Vie de Jesus also reveals a great deal about the intersections of religion and politics in the years leading up to the Third Republic. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Robert Priest‘s The Gospel According to Renan: Reading, Writing, and Religion in Nineteenth-Century France (Oxford University Press, 2014) is a fascinating book about another fascinating book: Ernest Renan’s Vie de Jesus, published in 1863. Renan’s was a nineteenth-century non-fiction bestseller, but is far from widely read today. In a series of chapters that explore issues of authorship, content, and reception, Priest offers readers a contextual analysis of this “secular” life of Jesus within Renan’s own biography and oeuvre. He also examines the controversy surrounding the book in France, and traces its continuing impact and legacies into the early twentieth century. One of the major contributions of this work is its analysis of the popular reception of Vie de Jesus by French citizens across the political and religious spectrum. In addition to contemporary press and pamphlet discussion of the text, Priest also consulted hundreds of letters addressed to its author from men and women throughout France. This previously unexamined archival material gives us a glimpse of how “everyday” readers responded to Renan’s work, its spiritual and political meanings. The Gospel According to Renan illuminates the history of reading and writing under the Second Empire. Its in-depth analysis of La Vie de Jesus also reveals a great deal about the intersections of religion and politics in the years leading up to the Third Republic. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Robert Priest‘s The Gospel According to Renan: Reading, Writing, and Religion in Nineteenth-Century France (Oxford University Press, 2014) is a fascinating book about another fascinating book: Ernest Renan’s Vie de Jesus, published in 1863. Renan’s was a nineteenth-century non-fiction bestseller, but is far from widely read today. In a series of chapters that explore issues of authorship, content, and reception, Priest offers readers a contextual analysis of this “secular” life of Jesus within Renan’s own biography and oeuvre. He also examines the controversy surrounding the book in France, and traces its continuing impact and legacies into the early twentieth century. One of the major contributions of this work is its analysis of the popular reception of Vie de Jesus by French citizens across the political and religious spectrum. In addition to contemporary press and pamphlet discussion of the text, Priest also consulted hundreds of letters addressed to its author from men and women throughout France. This previously unexamined archival material gives us a glimpse of how “everyday” readers responded to Renan’s work, its spiritual and political meanings. The Gospel According to Renan illuminates the history of reading and writing under the Second Empire. Its in-depth analysis of La Vie de Jesus also reveals a great deal about the intersections of religion and politics in the years leading up to the Third Republic. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Robert Priest‘s The Gospel According to Renan: Reading, Writing, and Religion in Nineteenth-Century France (Oxford University Press, 2014) is a fascinating book about another fascinating book: Ernest Renan's Vie de Jesus, published in 1863. Renan's was a nineteenth-century non-fiction bestseller, but is far from widely read today. In a series of chapters that explore issues of authorship, content, and reception, Priest offers readers a contextual analysis of this “secular” life of Jesus within Renan's own biography and oeuvre. He also examines the controversy surrounding the book in France, and traces its continuing impact and legacies into the early twentieth century. One of the major contributions of this work is its analysis of the popular reception of Vie de Jesus by French citizens across the political and religious spectrum. In addition to contemporary press and pamphlet discussion of the text, Priest also consulted hundreds of letters addressed to its author from men and women throughout France. This previously unexamined archival material gives us a glimpse of how “everyday” readers responded to Renan's work, its spiritual and political meanings. The Gospel According to Renan illuminates the history of reading and writing under the Second Empire. Its in-depth analysis of La Vie de Jesus also reveals a great deal about the intersections of religion and politics in the years leading up to the Third Republic.
Robert Priest‘s The Gospel According to Renan: Reading, Writing, and Religion in Nineteenth-Century France (Oxford University Press, 2014) is a fascinating book about another fascinating book: Ernest Renan’s Vie de Jesus, published in 1863. Renan’s was a nineteenth-century non-fiction bestseller, but is far from widely read today. In a series of chapters that explore issues of authorship, content, and reception, Priest offers readers a contextual analysis of this “secular” life of Jesus within Renan’s own biography and oeuvre. He also examines the controversy surrounding the book in France, and traces its continuing impact and legacies into the early twentieth century. One of the major contributions of this work is its analysis of the popular reception of Vie de Jesus by French citizens across the political and religious spectrum. In addition to contemporary press and pamphlet discussion of the text, Priest also consulted hundreds of letters addressed to its author from men and women throughout France. This previously unexamined archival material gives us a glimpse of how “everyday” readers responded to Renan’s work, its spiritual and political meanings. The Gospel According to Renan illuminates the history of reading and writing under the Second Empire. Its in-depth analysis of La Vie de Jesus also reveals a great deal about the intersections of religion and politics in the years leading up to the Third Republic. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Robert Priest‘s The Gospel According to Renan: Reading, Writing, and Religion in Nineteenth-Century France (Oxford University Press, 2014) is a fascinating book about another fascinating book: Ernest Renan’s Vie de Jesus, published in 1863. Renan’s was a nineteenth-century non-fiction bestseller, but is far from widely read today. In a series of chapters that explore issues of authorship, content, and reception, Priest offers readers a contextual analysis of this “secular” life of Jesus within Renan’s own biography and oeuvre. He also examines the controversy surrounding the book in France, and traces its continuing impact and legacies into the early twentieth century. One of the major contributions of this work is its analysis of the popular reception of Vie de Jesus by French citizens across the political and religious spectrum. In addition to contemporary press and pamphlet discussion of the text, Priest also consulted hundreds of letters addressed to its author from men and women throughout France. This previously unexamined archival material gives us a glimpse of how “everyday” readers responded to Renan’s work, its spiritual and political meanings. The Gospel According to Renan illuminates the history of reading and writing under the Second Empire. Its in-depth analysis of La Vie de Jesus also reveals a great deal about the intersections of religion and politics in the years leading up to the Third Republic. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Robert Priest‘s The Gospel According to Renan: Reading, Writing, and Religion in Nineteenth-Century France (Oxford University Press, 2014) is a fascinating book about another fascinating book: Ernest Renan’s Vie de Jesus, published in 1863. Renan’s was a nineteenth-century non-fiction bestseller, but is far from widely read today. In a series of chapters that explore issues of authorship, content, and reception, Priest offers readers a contextual analysis of this “secular” life of Jesus within Renan’s own biography and oeuvre. He also examines the controversy surrounding the book in France, and traces its continuing impact and legacies into the early twentieth century. One of the major contributions of this work is its analysis of the popular reception of Vie de Jesus by French citizens across the political and religious spectrum. In addition to contemporary press and pamphlet discussion of the text, Priest also consulted hundreds of letters addressed to its author from men and women throughout France. This previously unexamined archival material gives us a glimpse of how “everyday” readers responded to Renan’s work, its spiritual and political meanings. The Gospel According to Renan illuminates the history of reading and writing under the Second Empire. Its in-depth analysis of La Vie de Jesus also reveals a great deal about the intersections of religion and politics in the years leading up to the Third Republic. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
East Van Poetry Salon organizers Julie Peters and Chris Gilpin join co-hosts RC Weslowski and Pamela Bentley to discuss their selection process and play some of their choices for the 10 Best Poems of 2015.
“This was an opportunity for us as designers to have no limits on what we wanted to do…we are the editors and designers. There was nobody’s opinion we were seeking other than our own…to do whatever we wanted to do on every single page. And that’s a privilege really..." Eight by Eight Magazine founders Robert Priest and Grace Lee join the show this week, as well as marketing director, Cooper Lemon. Both Grace and Robert come from very successful and award-winning backgrounds in editorial design having worked on publications for O Magazine, Esquire, Newsweek, Condé Nast Portfolio, GQ, Esquire and more. Currently they run their own NYC design studio, Priest+Grace. On this episode we discuss the founding of Eight by Eight Magazine, the departure from Howler Magazine (another soccer magazine they helped found), and starting a print publication in a time when many magazines are folding due to the digital world. We also touch on soccer’s growth in the U.S., cultural implications behind the growth of proper football, the new MLS identity & direction, as well as Eight by Eight’s future plans regarding the way they share their content. Mentions include: Eight by Eight Magazine Condé Nast Portfolio * Newsweek comes back to print * Howler Magazine * Replica font * The Pitch (blog of 8by8 Magazine) * Deadspin * Vice Magazine & 8by8 * Adam Levite of Ghost Robot and 8by8 * New Major League Soccer (MLS) Identity My next guest is Kristopher Bazen, designer at J. America and founder of Sports Font Foundry. Kris has been working in the sports industry his entire career creating identities, apparel and more for the likes of Adidas, Reebok, Old Hat Creative and Rickabaugh Graphics to name a few.
"My goal isn't to please the (blogs and internet) audience. Our goal isn't to make everyone happy. It's really to tell the story that the school wants to tell. It's about those athletes. It's about that school, at that time." This week, I'm joined by Adam Clement. Adam is the Team Sports Creative Director at Under Armour where he leads a team of designers creating highly conceptual, functional uniforms for many different professional and college athletic teams. We discuss Adam's path to Under Armour, one in which he initially didn't get a job he applied for. His persistence and passion for sport eventually landed him a gig as a Senior Men's Graphic Designer which also happened to be the seventh designer in the entire company (now there are more than 150). Throughout Adam's 12+ years at the company, he has helped to create and grow the Team Sports department from outfitting three teams to over 500 per season and has lead some of the brand's most iconic and sometimes infamous designs. Designers often make mistakes throughout their careers, however, most don't have their work on such a high pedastal like the sports industry. Adam touches on a mistake made a few years ago and what he as learned from it, as well as how he and his team handle criticism from the uniform geek blogs. Mentions include: Northwestern Basketball "By the Players" uniforms Notre Dame uniforms Navy Midshipmen "Summer Whites" South Carolina "Wounded Warrior" uniforms Vanderbilt uniform confusion Armour 39 Magzip Maryland basketball "Brooklyn inspired"