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We have an exciting year ahead, and look forward to sharing it with you! Listen in as Hitomi Kubo shares in more detail, on what's to come in 2025…Feb - Roar For Rare! Share how you're Roaring for CASK and all rare diseases, and tag @projectcask! Social frames in multiple languages can be found here: https://projectcask.org/#cask-gene-rare-disease-dayMarch - Meet Dr. Mingshan Xue, lead researcher of the CASK gene replacement therapy, the most proven gene therapy technique currently applicable for CASK. More info on the study:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bftS7quS8DU&t=10sMay - The Ultra Rare Collection - Ultra Rare Art to Cure an Ultra Rare Disease. Our 2nd Edition of this online and in-person art auction is back with a new theme - The Mother of All Art Shows - art about motherhood, caregiving, and love. https://www.ultrararecollection.com/July - CASK Gene Awareness Day; let's celebrate our Liocorns and honor those who remain in our hearts.Aug - Make A Splash For CASK! Our 2nd annual peer-to-peer community-wide fundraiser. Join us in raising funds for research and showcase our Liocorns' love for water! Renée Roquet's community fundraiser: https://www.instagram.com/p/C_EdkDlSSf3Yxblx_mpyz5TGCGu0bkvSp56wJo0/Oct - CASK Family & Science Conference - Coming together as a community to learn, connect and find inspiration.REMINDERS:Please register for Citizen Health + Project CASK (takes 3 minutes!): https://www.citizen.health/partners/project-caskUpdate your Rare-X surveys here:https://rare-x.org/cask/CASK seizure study:https://www.instagram.com/p/DF2lwMBSqam/Make sure to register with Project CASK to stay in the know for all things 2025https://www.tfaforms.com/5104302We look forward to a promising 2025 together!
Dans cette seconde partie de notre entretien avec Alexandre Borwin, ostéopathe et doctorant en sciences de l'éducation, nous explorons l'évolution des ostéopathes après leur formation initiale. Pourquoi certains continuent-ils à se former tout au long de leur carrière, tandis que d'autres se figent dans une pratique stable et répétitive ? Nous abordons la notion d'apprentissages informels, ces connaissances acquises en dehors des formations officielles, au détour d'une discussion entre collègues, d'un article lu par hasard ou même d'une simple réflexion sur un cas clinique. Ces apprentissages jouent un rôle crucial dans le développement des compétences, mais comment les identifier et les valoriser ? L'échange nous amène aussi à questionner la place de l'ostéopathie dans le paysage de la santé. Comment maintenir un lien avec la profession lorsque l'on travaille seul ? La concurrence entre praticiens nuit-elle au partage des savoirs ? Enfin, nous tentons de définir ce qui fait un "bon" ostéopathe, du point de vue des patients comme des professionnels. Un épisode passionnant pour tous ceux qui s'interrogent sur leur propre évolution en tant que praticien et sur l'avenir de la formation en ostéopathie. Références : Cristol, D. et Muller, A. (2013) . Les apprentissages informels dans la formation pour adultes. Savoirs, n° 32(2), 11-59. Roquet, P. (2012). Comprendre les processus de professionnalisation : une perspective en trois niveaux d'analyse. Phronesis, 1, (2), 82–88. Musique : Epic Rock | Alex Grohl | Envato Elements Soutenez-nous sur Tipeee !
Pierre-Louis Roquet, Co-fondateur de SmartLawyer.Nous avons eu le plaisir d'accueillir Pierre-Louis Roquet sur le podcast Cheat Code pour discuter de SmartLawyer.Après être entré à la faculté de droit de l'Université Paris Nanterre, il a poursuivi ses études en Allemagne, toujours avec une forte dimension européenne.Il explique que cet aspect européen a été essentiel dans son parcours, car il reflète la vision de Smartlawyer, qui aspire à être présent dans plusieurs pays.Il a ensuite exercé en tant qu'avocat, mais juste avant de signer une collaboration, il a ressenti que c'était le bon moment pour se lancer dans l'entrepreneuriat.L'arrivée de l'intelligence artificielle offrait de grandes opportunités pour les cabinets d'avocats.En observant que les avocats perdaient beaucoup de temps sur des tâches chronophages, Smartlawyer est né, avec pour mission : simplifier et d'automatiser ces processus.l'IA des avocats & des juristes.SmartLawyer met l'intelligence artificielle au service des avocats pour simplifier et automatiser la gestion des tâches quotidiennes, rendant ainsi leur travail plus efficace et productif.Leurs services sont clairs et intuitifs :GED IA-telligente : Une gestion électronique des documents optimisée par l'IA, pour organiser et retrouver facilement vos fichiers.Recherche avancée : Accès à une base de données de plus d'un million de sources juridiques pour des recherches rapides et précises.Analyse juridique automatisée : Identification et résolution des problématiques juridiques spécifiques à chaque dossier, facilitant la prise de décision.SmartChat : Un assistant virtuel interactif qui permet de dialoguer avec votre dossier pour obtenir des informations en temps réel.Création de documents personnalisés : Génération automatique de documents de travail adaptés à chaque cas, en fonction de vos besoins.Avec SmartLawyer, gagnez du temps et concentrez-vous sur l'essentiel : vos clients.Écouter l'épisodeÉcoutez l'épisode complet ici et sur toutes les plateformes de podcast ! Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Hey CX Nation,In this week's episode of The CXChronicles Podcast #238 we welcomed Lee Roquet, CEO at Finch based in Salt Lake City, UT. Lee is passionate about delivering exceptional customer, team, product, and brand experiences, he brings a unique blend of professionalism, passion, and positivity to his current role as CEO at Finch an e-commerce marketing company. With a track record of achieving outstanding results, Lee is the go-to leader for Experience Management, Customer Success Operations, Business & Revenue Operations, and Building a Positive Team Culture.In this episode, Lee and Adrian chat through the Four CX Pillars: Team, Tools, Process & Feedback. Plus share some of the ideas that his team think through on a daily basis to build world class customer experiences.**Episode #238 Highlight Reel:**1. Starting in CX and becoming the CEO of the company 2. Why CX/CS makes incredible customer focused business leaders 3. Helping change the world of e-commerce for the better 4. Future of marketing & agency service offerings 5. Putting your team & EX above everything else to scale into the future Click here to learn more about Lee RoquetClick here to learn more about Gleen AIHuge thanks to Lee for coming on The CXChronicles Podcast and featuring his work and efforts in pushing the customer experience & customer success space into the future.If you enjoy The CXChronicles Podcast, stop by your favorite podcast player hit the follow button and leave us a review today.For our Spotify friends, click here to make sure you are following CXC & please leave a 5 star review so we can find new listeners & members of our community.For our Apple friends, same deal -- click here to follow CXCP and leave us a review letting folks know why you love our customer focused content.You know what would be even better?Go tell one of your friends or teammates about CXC's content, our strategic partners (Hubspot, Intercom, Zendesk, Forethought AI, Freshworks, TimeToReply & Ascendr) + they can learn more about our CX/CS/RevOps services & please invite them to join the CX Nation!Are you looking to learn more about the world of Customer Experience, Customer Success & Revenue Operations?Click here to grab a copy of my book "The Four CX Pillars To Grow Your Business Now" available on Amazon or the CXC website.For you non-readers, go check out the CXChronicles Youtube channel to see our customer & employee focused business content. Reach Out To CXC Today!Support the Show.Contact CXChronicles Today Tweet us @cxchronicles Check out our Instagram @cxchronicles Click here to checkout the CXC website Email us at info@cxchronicles.com Remember To Make Happiness A Habit!!
In this episode we were joined by Lee Roquet. Lee is the CEO of marketing agency Finch having previously held the role of VP of Customer Experience.Lee shared his journey from Chief Customer Officer roles to now running a company and how this has helped forge his customer led leadership style.During our chat, Lee also shared some tips on how customer leaders can better engage their own CEO's and the wider C Suite in investing in and prioritising CX. Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.
« Un bon vol, c'est un vol sans histoire ! » ou encore : « Quand il y a le feu aux réacteurs, il n'y a pas le feu ! » Voilà les petites phrases que se répètent les pilotes de ligne. Savoir gérer le stress et éviter les risques. Dans son livre Manager comme un pilote aux éditions De Boeck, l'auteure Célina Roquet fait le parallèle entre deux mondes, l'avion et l'entreprise. RFI : Votre livre nous fait découvrir les coulisses du décollage. Notamment la répétition obligatoire juste avant le décollage... Célina Roquet : Oui. C'est une procédure qui permet une concentration maximale de l'ensemble de l'équipage. Un principe qui rappelle les données du vol et les informations sur les gestes à suivre. Le vocabulaire est codifié, réduit au minimum. C'est ce qui permet d'éviter les confusions. Chaque membre de l'équipage sait ce qu'il a à faire. Vous expliquez que cela repose sur un principe humain : les deux mémoires. Mémoire de court terme et celle de long terme. Parfaitement. Pouvoir se concentrer sur une tâche répétitive, mais délicate, et en même temps, connaître sa position et savoir ce qu'il restera à faire pour atteindre ses objectifs. Ce principe-là, lié à l'aviation, est très inspirant pour le monde de l'entreprise. Vous en faites d'ailleurs un mantra : un bon patron est un bon pilote. Il doit savoir gérer le stress et les risques. Le stress est nécessaire pour pouvoir agir. Mais quand il y a trop de stress à bord ou dans n'importe quel milieu, il empêche de prendre les bonnes décisions, sereines et prudentes. Dans votre livre, vous donnez des exemples d'accidents d'avions qui se sont produits à cause d'une incompréhension entre le pilote et le reste de l'équipage... Oui. En analysant les causes de plusieurs catastrophes aériennes, on a pu améliorer les méthodes et établir un vocabulaire commun et des procédures codifiées permettant d'agir vite et bien.Pour vous, le pilote de ligne agit en cas de vent, de tempête... mais on dit aussi qu'un bon patron d'entreprise sait prendre des risques, c'est paradoxal, non ? Pas du tout. En décollant, le pilote prend déjà un risque. Pourquoi avoir choisi l'exemple du pilote de ligne et non pas le conducteur de train, par exemple, qui est également confronté aux risques ? Vous, comme moi, ou n'importe quel passager d'avion, a déjà vécu cette situation. Dès son entrée dans un avion, on se dit qu'une fois en l'air, c'est fini, on ne peut plus sortir pour sortir sur la terre ferme en cas de problèmes. Dans un avion en hauteur, on doit rester à bord. L'une des autres qualités à rapprocher du monde de l'entreprise est la capacité à anticiper, là encore, dont devrait s'inspirer et s'enrichir beaucoup de patrons ou de créateurs d'entreprises pour éviter les catastrophes... Oh que oui ! Pour résumer, je dirais qu'avec ses équipes, il faut deux choses : un, être aligné sur les objectifs à atteindre et deux, avoir un plan B.Donc préparer, savoir anticiper. C'est ce que fait un équipage. En cas de turbulence, de difficultés ou d'accidents, ils savent ce qu'ils feraient. Même si cela n'arrive pas, être en capacité de réagir. Dans une entreprise, imaginez les réponses à donner en cas d'entretiens avec des clients difficiles, est une carte trop souvent négligée. Pourtant, dans le jeu de négociations, cette carte s'avère gagnante.
Lee Roquet is the Chief Executive Officer at Finch, an e-commerce marketing company that empowers e-commerce enterprises with data-driven, omnichannel strategies that drive revenue growth and chart a course toward greater profitability. In this episode, KJ and Lee delve into the necessity of data centralization, narrative control in storytelling to clients, and the accountability between agencies and customers. Lee also touches on the challenges and saturation in the agency space, advocating for transparency, expectation management, and leveraging AI for creative and strategic advantages. Key Takeaways: 01:48 A Spotlight on E-Commerce Innovation 03:03 The Power of Data and AI in Transforming E-Commerce 09:48 Centralizing Data for Strategic Insights 21:19 The Evolution of Agency Roles in the AI Era 31:45 Maximizing Human Connection in a Digital Age Quote of the Show (21:00): "The last thing I always try to do is simplify, take out friction for the customer and employee experience. I want less systems, honestly." – Lee Roquet Join our Anti-PR newsletter where we're keeping a watchful and clever eye on PR trends, PR fails, and interesting news in tech so you don't have to. You're welcome. Want PR that actually matters? Get 30 minutes of expert advice in a fast-paced, zero-nonsense session from Karla Jo Helms, a veteran Crisis PR and Anti-PR Strategist who knows how to tell your story in the best possible light and get the exposure you need to disrupt your industry. Click here to book your call: https://info.jotopr.com/free-anti-pr-eval Ways to connect with Lee Roquet: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leeroquet Company Website: https://www.finch.com Company LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/finch-ecomm-agency/ How to get more Disruption/Interruption: Amazon Music - https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/eccda84d-4d5b-4c52-ba54-7fd8af3cbe87/disruption-interruption Apple Podcast - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/disruption-interruption/id1581985755 Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/6yGSwcSp8J354awJkCmJlDSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of the Experience Strategy Podcast, we are joined by Lee Roquet, the CEO of Finch, e-commerce marketing company. We talk about What Lee has learned in the shift from Chief Customer Officer roles to CEO roles- and what he now wishes every experience strategist knew. How to lead companies with an experience mindset How to lead teams with a people-first approach. Don't miss this powerful and inspiring conversation! For access to the transcripts to the episode, click here.
Joey Roquet is a vice president and top producer at Secure Choice Lending, a Riverside-based mortgage brokerage. Joey's been involved in the mortgage industry since age 19, and worked his way up from loan assistant to branch manager. He's experienced every loan type, program, and scenario which allows him to help his clients reach their goals while providing the best customer service and experience. Despite most of the industry struggling in 2022, Joey led Secure Choice Lending through significant growth. During this episode, Joey and MDME host Jon Maddux discuss Joey's path through the mortgage industry, what makes his company stand out, how to grow a company during tough times, the importance of culture and hiring right people, how to build relationships by getting back to the basics, how artificial intelligence (AI) will affect the future of mortgage lending, the benefits and drawbacks of non-QM, tips for mortgage brokers, and their optimistic predictions for 2023.
Neste programa achegámonos ata o festival Curtocircuíto en Santiago de Compostela para palorar e reflexionar sobre a liberdade coas cineastas Clara Roquet e Carla Andrade, xurado e participante na sección Planeta GZ respectivamente. Experimentamos un pouco co formato debido a unha cuestión técnica, pero a esencia prevalece. Para falar de liberdade trouxemos os exemplos de Marina Abramović, o caso real de Christopher McCandless e os filmes Into the Wild, Frances Ha ou Lady Bird. Pero a cuestión de todo isto está nos debates que as nosas convidadas abriron. Un programa diferente, pero intenso.
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L'amitié peut-elle transcender les classes sociales ? C'est la question que se pose la réalisatrice espagnole Clara Roquet dans son film Libertad. L'histoire de Nora et Libertad débute lors d'un été idyllique en Espagne. Elles vivent dans la même maison mais pas au même étage. Libertad traite de plusieurs thématiques sociétales, d'amitié bien sûr mais aussi d'identité et nous fait réfléchir sur les réalités que nous côtoyons mais que nous ignorons souvent.
Los directores y directoras nominados a los Goya 2022 juntos en una mesa sobre guion, dirección y creación. Fernando León de Aranoa es candidato por 'El buen patrón' e Icíar Bollaín, por 'Maixabel'. Clara Roquet y David Martín de los Santos están nominados en dirección novel por 'Libertad' y 'La vida era eso'
Many people are familiar with MK-ULTRA, the CIA's illegal human experimentation program, which involved psychedelics and resulted in torture techniques that have since been used at CIA black sites around the world. What if someone tried to tell you these techniques were, in fact, a novel therapy that could revolutionize mental healthcare and transform dissidents into better citizens? In this episode, we discuss Dr. Salvador Roquet, a man who tortured people for the Mexican state and also parlayed those techniques to become an influential pioneer of psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy. What does it mean that Roquet's trainings and ideologies have influenced an untold number of present-day psychedelic practitioners? Support: ☼Patreon: http://patreon.com/psymposia ☼Donate: https://www.psymposia.com/donate/ For full episodes, transcripts, supporting documents, and more, visit: https://psymposia.com/powertrip Additional reading: Power Tripping supporting docs "Bad TRIPS" may be the BEST TRIPS by Walter Houston Clark Psychology and Destruction of the Psyche: the Professional use of Psychological Knowledge for Torture of Political Prisoners by David Pavón-Cuéllar Undiscovering the Pueblo Mágico: Lessons from Huautla for the Psychedelic Renaissance by Ben Feinberg What I Got Wrong in More Than Two: The Dark Night of the Soul by Eve Rickert Mundo enfermo y tarado The Unified Field Theory of Psychedelic Integration and Portugal Style Decriminalization by David Bronner Sounding the Alarm on Compass's Interference with Oregon's Psilocybin Therapy Program by David Bronner Additional Podcasts / Videos #32 – It's All Red Flags: 5-MeO-DMT with Dr. Martin Ball Jim Lehrman Covert Journeys, Visionary Summit, September 3 2016, Paonia, CO Follow: ☼Twitter: https://twitter.com/psymposia ☼Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/psymposia/ ☼Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/psymposia ☼Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/psymposia ☼Website: https://www.psymposia.com ☼Podcast: https://www.psymposia.com/plusthree ☼Newsletter: https://www.psymposia.com/subscribe/ Thank you to our podcast and video tier Patreon supporters: Reliable Spores, Houston Puck, Dave Hodges, Jon Hanna, James Hubbard, Lindsay Munson, Evan Freimuth, Abigail Bianchi, Meghan Kennedy, Dave Ayers, Darrell Duane, Tehseen Noorani, Tariqul Islam, Clifford Hudson, Daniel McQueen, Maryann Kehoe, Ben Yono, Nathan Espinosa, Annick McIntosh, Starbuck, Aaron Williams, Jenine Innes, Julia A, Jesse Liberty, Christian Dawley, Leon Boroditsky, Samy Tammam, Amanda Alexander, Jason Gross, Paige Hausfeld, John Bannon, Clifford Hudson, Sandra Dreisbach, Will Petersen, Jason Seidel, Gurpreet Saini
In this episode of The Support Automation Show, a podcast by Capacity, Justin Schmidt is joined by Lee Roquet, Chief Customer Officer at Yellowfin. They discuss why an organization that adopts support automation needs to find the right balance between the company and customer's need to succeed.
Sergio Pérez entrevista a Clara Roquet por su ópera prima Libertad, retrato de una familia acomodada y su último verano en la costa la matriarca.
Libertad es la cinta con la que La guionista Clara Roquet da el salto a la dirección tras su intensa experiencia como guionista y la ópera prima de Daniel Brühl es La Puerta de al Lado que dirige y protagoniza. Una comedia negra que deriva hacia el thriller de suspense, que abrió la pasada Berlinale y en el que comparte protagonismo con el actor Peter Kurth. Esta semana ambos se pasan por el programa para contarnos algunos detalles más de esta experiencia como director. Nos detenemos en El poder del perro, película de Jane Campion basada en una novela de Thomas Savage y Y profundizamos en la trayectoria de Anya Taylor-Joy que protagoniza la película de terror psicológico de Edgar Wright, Última noche en el Soho que llega a la cartelera. Spencer, de Pablo Larraín también llega a las salas, la cinta en dónde se narra un momento muy concreto de la vida de Diana de Gales, el fin de semana crucial a principios de los años 90, cuando la princesa se enfrenta a las dudas sobre su matrimonio. Los documentales acaparan la cartelera Pedro Calvo se detiene en dos, Nueve Sevillas de Gonzalo García Pelayo y Pedro G. Romero, un documental que ganó el premio a Mejor Película en la sección Nuevas Olas_No ficción del Festival de Cine Europeo de Sevilla. Un documental sobre el flamenco y sobre Sevilla. Algo salvaje. La historia de Bambino, es el otro documental, la aproximación al artista de culto Miguel Vargas, el chico de Utrera. Repasamos el resto de estrenos de la cartelera y en el capítulo de series, El tiempo que te doy, que podemos ver en Netflix. Nos damos una vuelta por los Festivales internacionales de cine de Gijón y Almería y contamos con el resto de secciones habituales. Escuchar audio
'Libertad' es la cinta con la que La guionista Clara Roquet da el salto a la dirección tras su intensa experiencia como guionista y la ópera prima de Daniel Brühl es 'La puerta de al lado' que dirige y protagoniza. Una comedia negra que deriva hacia el thriller de suspense, que abrió la pasada Berlinale y en el que comparte protagonismo con el actor Peter Kurth. Esta semana ambos se pasan por el programa para contarnos algunos detalles más de esta experiencia como director. Repasamos el resto de estrenos de la cartelera y en el capítulo de series, "El tiempo que te doy", que podemos ver en Netflix. Nos damos una vuelta por los Festivales internacionales de cine de Gijón y Almería y contamos con el resto secciones habituales. Escuchar audio
Clara Roquet nos acompaña esta semana para hablarnos de su debut en el largometraje con Libertad. También debuta como director el actor Daniel Brühl con quien charlamos de La puerta de al lado. Conocemos una una mirada de Diana de Gales en el cine con Spencer de Pablo Larraín, pasamos una Última noche en el Soho, vemos cómo es El poder del perro y nos pasamos por los festivales de Gijón y Almería. Y además, Nadia Santiago nos presenta la miniserie, El tiempo que te doy (19/11/2021). Escuchar audio
Ha escrito los guiones de 10.000 km y Los días que vendrán con Carlos Marqués-Marcet, el de Petra con Jaime Rosales y el relato de Que nadie duerma junto a Antonio Méndez Esparza, ha dirigido los cortos El adiós y Los bones nene, y este año debuta con su primer largometraje, 'Libertad', película que pasó por el Festival de Cannes. Clara Roquet es una de las voces más interesantes del llamado nuevo cine español y se suma a otras directoras, y amigas, que han llevado a pantalla en su ópera prima experiencias personales. En 'Libertad' conjuga un relato de iniciación adolescente, un retrato del privilegio de clase y un estudio de los cuidados y las relaciones maternofiliales. Todo ambientado en una casa de la Costa Brava durante ese verano juvenil en el que empiezas a mirar el mundo con otros ojos.
For this Halloween Short Spirits episode, the Lushes sip on "Vampire Squid" while they talk to author, Angela Roquet, about her short story, "Bloodymoon".
Aquesta
In episode #123 of The CXChronicles Podcast we welcomed Lee Roquet, Chief Customer Officer at Yellowfin based in Melbourne, Australia & offices across the world. Yellowfin is a global Business Intelligence (BI) and analytics platform dedicated to enabling product managers to improve their application's analytical experiences with embedded BI, solving real enterprise analytics challenges, and helping business people understand not only what happened, but why it happened.Founded in 2003 in response to the complexity and costs associated with implementing and using traditional BI tools, Yellowfin is a highly intuitive, 100-percent Web-based reporting and analytics platform. More than 25,000 organizations and more than three million end-users across 75 different countries use Yellowfin every day.Episode #123 Highlight Reel:1.) How Lee built his CX team at Yellowfin 2.) Leveraging business intelligence & customer data in today's world 3.) Constantly learning new tactics & paths forward 4.) New ways for customer focused leaders to climb the ladder 5.) How you can build game changing CX within your business! Huge thanks to Lee for coming on the show and featuring his work and efforts in pushing the business intelligence space into the futureClick here to learn more about Lee RoquetClick here to learn more about Yellowfin If you enjoy The CXChronicles Podcast, please stop by your favorite podcast player and leave us a review, this is the easiest way we can find new listeners, guests and future CX'ers!Watch The CXChronicles Podcast On Youtube HereSupport the show (https://cxchronicles.com/)
What's your favorite Olympic Sport? Croquet? Roquet? Tug of War? Poding? Well, we've been training and this week are all up in your business like a Chinese anal covid test. We'll also see what the fuck is going on in Utah, where parents are trying to opt their kids out of Black History month. A 12 year old swallows some magnets because he hoped he could become Magneto. Meanwhile, a Louisiana woman accidentally made herself indestructible with Gorilla Glue. Finally, get your surf on at the Olympics! What sport do you think would be suitable for us? Another week, another pod. Welcome back to The Hour!
A charitable donation account is a tool some credit unions use to be more strategic with their charitable giving. These accounts can help credit unions have more funds available to donate while also strengthening the credit union’s financial situation. In this episode, CUNA Mutual Group Executive Benefits Specialist Andy Roquet describes two steps to setting up a CDA, best practices for CDA programs, and how and when to talk with your board about these accounts.
Today, we talk to Alicia Roquet who is the Manager of a brand new coffee house in Crestline Ca. We discuss her coffee Journey, and what the struggles have been to open up a new shop.
Naomi Beth Roquet, aka The Purple Gnome, aka The Drunken Gnome could be one of the most interesting industry people in St. Louis. From her background in music, theatre, improv, her purple hair done by the fabulous Kristina Cheeseman, to her new blog highlighting female leaders in the industry, she's got a lot on her plate. She recently started a new job at Reeds American Table over the summer, and is killing it. #shakeyourtintins www.thedrunkengnome.net www.instagram.com/thepurplegnome www.twitter.com/thepurplegnome www.instagram.com/kristinacheeseman As a favor to We Eat Stuff, would you consider giving our podcast a rating and review? It would mean the world to us! That helps get the word out about what we're doing, and help even more people learn about the great stuff going on in St. Louis! We'd also appreciate your support on our patreon site! Please visit www.patreon.com/weeatstuff to make a financial contribution. Thanks.
[Videos mentioned in this podcast are available for viewing at http://cmsw.mit.edu/podcast-paul-roquet-japanese-artist-animation] Independent animators often pride themselves on an intimate, hand-drawn aesthetic. But they increasingly rely on computer software not only to accelerate their workflow, but to manipulate the look and feel of their drawings. Compositing software enables subtle but decisive shifts in the spaces portrayed, through manipulations of color, texture, line, and movement. Seeking to unravel the analytical split between the “drawn” and the “digital” in animation and media studies more broadly, Roquet’s project moves back and forth between two desktops: the hard surface of the drawing table and the pixelated surface of the screen. This talk focuses on how the physical and perceptual affordances of both interfaces appear reimagined in the textures, movements, and tactility present in the animations themselves. Through a phenomenology of the contemporary desktop, Roquet seeks to ground the contemporary audiovisual imagination in the materiality of the tools and techniques at hand. Paul Roquet is Assistant Professor of Japanese Studies in the Global Studies and Languages Section at MIT. He is the author of Ambient Media: Japanese Atmospheres of Self (Minnesota 2016) as well as numerous essays on Japanese audiovisual and literary aesthetics.
Paul Roquet’s wonderful new book begins with an offering of jellyfish and proceeds to teach us how to read the air. Ambient Media: Japanese Atmospheres of Self (University of Minnesota Press, 2016) looks carefully at the phenomenon of ambient subjectivication or, the emergence of self with and through ambient media in modern Japan. Beginning in the 1970s, atmosphere was becoming ambient, according to Roquet, and the emergence and proliferation of new techniques of ambient subjectivication reflected a shift in how the person was understood, away from collective self-understanding and toward a model rooted in a liberal ideal of autonomy and self-determination. Each chapter of the book looks at some specific way that music, film, video, and literature from the 1970s onward have incorporated forms of ambient subjectivication, from the Erik Satie boom and the birth of environmental music of the late 1970s to the music of artists like Hatakeyama Chihei (whose 2006 Minima Moralia I highly recommend!), to films like Ichikawa Jun’s Tony Takitani, and much much more. The book is also a gateway into a world of arresting and inspiring electronic media, and I recommend reading with an internet connection at hand to explore experiences like Ryoichi Kurokawa’s rheo: 5 horizons, Tsuchiya Takafumis’ Apoptosis, and Ise Shoko’s Noema while you work through Roquet’s text. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Paul Roquet’s wonderful new book begins with an offering of jellyfish and proceeds to teach us how to read the air. Ambient Media: Japanese Atmospheres of Self (University of Minnesota Press, 2016) looks carefully at the phenomenon of ambient subjectivication or, the emergence of self with and through ambient media in modern Japan. Beginning in the 1970s, atmosphere was becoming ambient, according to Roquet, and the emergence and proliferation of new techniques of ambient subjectivication reflected a shift in how the person was understood, away from collective self-understanding and toward a model rooted in a liberal ideal of autonomy and self-determination. Each chapter of the book looks at some specific way that music, film, video, and literature from the 1970s onward have incorporated forms of ambient subjectivication, from the Erik Satie boom and the birth of environmental music of the late 1970s to the music of artists like Hatakeyama Chihei (whose 2006 Minima Moralia I highly recommend!), to films like Ichikawa Jun’s Tony Takitani, and much much more. The book is also a gateway into a world of arresting and inspiring electronic media, and I recommend reading with an internet connection at hand to explore experiences like Ryoichi Kurokawa’s rheo: 5 horizons, Tsuchiya Takafumis’ Apoptosis, and Ise Shoko’s Noema while you work through Roquet’s text. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Paul Roquet’s wonderful new book begins with an offering of jellyfish and proceeds to teach us how to read the air. Ambient Media: Japanese Atmospheres of Self (University of Minnesota Press, 2016) looks carefully at the phenomenon of ambient subjectivication or, the emergence of self with and through ambient media in modern Japan. Beginning in the 1970s, atmosphere was becoming ambient, according to Roquet, and the emergence and proliferation of new techniques of ambient subjectivication reflected a shift in how the person was understood, away from collective self-understanding and toward a model rooted in a liberal ideal of autonomy and self-determination. Each chapter of the book looks at some specific way that music, film, video, and literature from the 1970s onward have incorporated forms of ambient subjectivication, from the Erik Satie boom and the birth of environmental music of the late 1970s to the music of artists like Hatakeyama Chihei (whose 2006 Minima Moralia I highly recommend!), to films like Ichikawa Jun’s Tony Takitani, and much much more. The book is also a gateway into a world of arresting and inspiring electronic media, and I recommend reading with an internet connection at hand to explore experiences like Ryoichi Kurokawa’s rheo: 5 horizons, Tsuchiya Takafumis’ Apoptosis, and Ise Shoko’s Noema while you work through Roquet’s text. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Paul Roquet’s wonderful new book begins with an offering of jellyfish and proceeds to teach us how to read the air. Ambient Media: Japanese Atmospheres of Self (University of Minnesota Press, 2016) looks carefully at the phenomenon of ambient subjectivication or, the emergence of self with and through ambient media in modern Japan. Beginning in the 1970s, atmosphere was becoming ambient, according to Roquet, and the emergence and proliferation of new techniques of ambient subjectivication reflected a shift in how the person was understood, away from collective self-understanding and toward a model rooted in a liberal ideal of autonomy and self-determination. Each chapter of the book looks at some specific way that music, film, video, and literature from the 1970s onward have incorporated forms of ambient subjectivication, from the Erik Satie boom and the birth of environmental music of the late 1970s to the music of artists like Hatakeyama Chihei (whose 2006 Minima Moralia I highly recommend!), to films like Ichikawa Jun’s Tony Takitani, and much much more. The book is also a gateway into a world of arresting and inspiring electronic media, and I recommend reading with an internet connection at hand to explore experiences like Ryoichi Kurokawa’s rheo: 5 horizons, Tsuchiya Takafumis’ Apoptosis, and Ise Shoko’s Noema while you work through Roquet’s text. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Paul Roquet’s wonderful new book begins with an offering of jellyfish and proceeds to teach us how to read the air. Ambient Media: Japanese Atmospheres of Self (University of Minnesota Press, 2016) looks carefully at the phenomenon of ambient subjectivication or, the emergence of self with and through ambient media in modern Japan. Beginning in the 1970s, atmosphere was becoming ambient, according to Roquet, and the emergence and proliferation of new techniques of ambient subjectivication reflected a shift in how the person was understood, away from collective self-understanding and toward a model rooted in a liberal ideal of autonomy and self-determination. Each chapter of the book looks at some specific way that music, film, video, and literature from the 1970s onward have incorporated forms of ambient subjectivication, from the Erik Satie boom and the birth of environmental music of the late 1970s to the music of artists like Hatakeyama Chihei (whose 2006 Minima Moralia I highly recommend!), to films like Ichikawa Jun’s Tony Takitani, and much much more. The book is also a gateway into a world of arresting and inspiring electronic media, and I recommend reading with an internet connection at hand to explore experiences like Ryoichi Kurokawa’s rheo: 5 horizons, Tsuchiya Takafumis’ Apoptosis, and Ise Shoko’s Noema while you work through Roquet’s text. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices