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Anda Rottenberg, kuratorka wystaw, krytyczka sztuki, pisarka, wieloletnia dyrektorka Galerii Sztuki „Zachęta” przez całe życie pisze dziennik. Efektem tej systematycznej pracy są książki, w tym ta najnowsza „Schyłek. Dziennik 2019–2022”. Autorka podejmuje w niej temat starzenia się, zbliżania się do końca życia. Opisuje trudy zmagania się z dolegliwościami, niekończącymi się wizytami lekarskimi, samotnością, na którą się zdecydowała. Stara się robić porządki, przygotować się na śmierć. O te niełatwe tematy, o których mało kto decyduje się mówić publicznie, Rottenberg pytała Jana Karpienko. Spotkanie odbyło się w ramach Salonu „Notatnika Literackiego”. Zapraszamy do słuchania!
Katarzyna Janowska zaprasza na nowy odcinek programu "Rezerwacja". Rekomenduje ważne wydarzenia i publikacje kulturalne. Goście to: - Agnieszka Smoczyńska i Tomasz Jan Wygoda, którzy opowiadają o nowej inscenizacji opery "Simon Boccanegra" Giuseppe Verdiego. Premiera 14 lutego w Teatrze Wielkim - Operze Narodowej w Warszawie. - Anda Rottenberg odkrywa kulisy powstawania książki "Schyłek. Dziennik 2019-2022". Historyczka i krytyczka sztuki wydała bardzo osobistą publikację. Pokażemy też materiał z nowej wystawy w warszawskim Muzeum Sztuki Nowoczesnej pt. "Czy złożyłabyś tu jaja? Nawiedzone krajobrazy miejskiego mokradła". Trwa głosowanie w plebiscycie O!lśnienia Nagrody Kulturalne Onetu i m. st. Warszawy. Głosować można do 24 lutego 2025 r. na stronie: olsnienia.onet.pl Gala O!lśnień odbędzie się w sobotę, 1 marca w Warszawie, w Nowym Teatrze. Transmisja o godz. 20:00 na stronie głównej Onet.pl i w TVP Kultura. Partnerem i współorganizatorem nagród jest Miasto Stołeczne Warszawa.
durée : 00:07:11 - Info médias - Pour sa 20e saison, le jeu d'aventures de M6 emmène les 10 binômes de candidats de la Tanzanie à l'Afrique du Sud.
In this episode, we explore the human mood system and the origin of depression. My guest is Dr. Jonathan Rottenberg, Professor of Psychology and Director of the Better Outcomes Laboratory at Cornell University. His work examines long-term functioning and well-being after depression and related conditions, with a particular focus on explaining why some people achieve good outcomes. He received his BA from Harvard University, an MA in History from Johns Hopkins University, and his PhD in Psychology from Stanford University. Dr. Rottenberg's research has been covered in popular outlets such as the New York Times, The Washington Post, and the Wall Street Journal. He has authored two books: The Depths: The Evolutionary Origins of the Depression Epidemic (Basic Books) and Depression: What Everyone Needs to Know (Oxford). His most recent digital outreach project is Ever After, a video series about life after depression. Here are some highlights from our conversation: Jonathan's own experience with depression and how it shaped his research and mission The evolutionary origins of the mood Mood as a system The parallels between human and animal depression Depression's survival strategy and modern stressors Distinctions between ordinary sadness and depression Why depression feels permanent—and why it isn't Rumination and how it wires the brain for recurring episodes The adaptability and resilience of the mood system How mindfulness can disrupt depressive thought loops Why some achieve 'better outcomes' after struggling with their mental health than others I think this episode will help many of you see depression and overall negative moods as part of a broader human experience rather than a personal failing. It's a must-listen for anyone interested in a deeper understanding of human emotion and the complex relationship between body, mood, and environment. Enjoy!
Katrin Schumacher empfiehlt in dieser Woche: "Isay Rottenbergs Zigarrenfabrik" von Sandra und Hella Rottenberg, "Caledonian Road" von Andrew O'Hagan und Kurt Palms "Trockenes Feld".
In this episode, artist Mika Rottenberg and theoretical physicist Dr. Felix Flicker search for the intersection between art and science, inviting us to rediscover the beauty of the world around us. Rottenberg shares how her work transforms familiar materials to highlight the connection between humans and their environment, while Dr. Flicker discusses the properties of common objects and the ways we can find magic in the mundane through scientific curiosity. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
While scientists have generally assumed that the prognosis for well-being is poor among those with depression, Cornell-led research is now challenging this assumption: In national datasets, a substantial group of people who had a diagnosis of depression go on to report well-being, including lives rich with positive emotion, purpose and meaning.Join us to explore the possibilities of life after depression with Jonathan Rottenberg, a professor in the Department of Psychology at Cornell University. Rottenberg shares his research on mood disorders, his personal experience with depression and his video series on the challenges and opportunities of life after depression.What You'll LearnWhat depression is and how it's definedHow the scientific and clinical communities have typically seen the prognosis of depression as grim and communicated this to health consumersHow new data suggests that well-being after depression may be surprisingly commonWhat the implications are for our view of life after depression in light of new outcomes dataHow to destigmatize your conversations about depression and open up communicationThe Cornell Keynotes podcast is brought to you by eCornell, which offers more than 200 online certificate programs to help professionals advance their careers and organizations. Learn more in these programs:Psychology in Business EthicsPsychology of EmotionsPsychology of LeadershipPsychology of NegotiationThe Psychology of Getting Things DoneUnderstanding EmotionsWorkplace Disability InclusionDid you enjoy this episode of the Cornell Keynotes podcast? Watch the full Keynote. Follow eCornell on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, and X.
Nevertheless, She Persisted: Surviving Teen Depression and Anxiety
#203 Today's guest is Jonathan Rottenberg— the director of the Better Outcomes Laboratory at Cornell University, which explores long-term functioning and well-being after depression and related conditions. His research has been covered in popular outlets such as the New York Times, The Washington Post, and the Wall Street Journal. In this episode, we discuss:+ How people with depression experience thoughts and emotions differently + Why our cultural views on emotions can contribute to rates of depression + Reasons why we're seeing an increase in depression rates + Ways that our moods contribute to how we view ourselves + Whether people who have depression can ever achieve high levels of well-being + Factors that can contribute to well-being when healing from depression + If depression can actually lead to improved life skills & experiences+ Connecting mental health disorders to our identities & stories MENTIONED + Better Outcomes Lab+ Ever After+ The Depths: The Evolutionary Origins of the Depression Epidemic+ Depression: What Everyone Needs to KnowSHOP GUEST RECOMMENDATIONS: https://amzn.to/3A69GOCSTARBUCKS GIFTCARD GIVEAWAY: Want coffee on me?! Each month I'll be randomly choosing a winner to receive a Starbucks giftcard! To enter this giveaway, all you have to do is leave a review of the podcast on Spotify and/or Apple Podcasts and DM me on a screenshot of your review on Instagram. Win bonus entries by tagging the podcast on your Instagram story or TikTok! Good luck!LET'S CONNECT+ Instagram (@shepersistedpodcast)+ Website (shepersistedpodcast.com)+ YouTube (Sadie Sutton: She Persisted Podcast)+ Twitter (@persistpodcast)+ Facebook (@shepersistedpodcast)+ TikTok (@shepersistedpodcast)+ inquiries@shepersistedpodcast.com© 2020 She Persisted LLC. This podcast is copyrighted subject matter owned by She Persisted LLC and She Persisted LLC reserves all...
On the 135th episode of the SKIDS PODCAST; We discuss Shane's inability to stick to the subject, Terrance Howard being a complete nut job, The Amazing James Randi and Houdini himself catching fake psychics and other con artists, Greyzone Warfare - Shane's new obsession, the upcoming Elden Ring DLC, the Cannibal of Rottenberg, the attack on Stonehenge by "Just Stop Oil" cultists, the recent shootings in our own backyard by police, Critically panned movies that we love, and for our news segment - The malfunction of Oaks Park ride that stranded a bunch of people upside down for almost an hour.Coffee Brand Coffee -https://coffeebrandcoffee.com/Use the coupon code: gps1 to recff your purchase. You will be supporting an independent, growing company, as well as our show in the process!!#skids #skidspodcast #garbagepailskids #gps #podcast #comedy #discussion #commentary #conversation #video #eldenring #greyzonewarfare #videogames #helldivers2 #terrancehoward #jre #joeroganexperience #joerogan #benchwarmers #movies #vancouvershooting #police #oakspark #rottenberg #cannibal #thething #bladerunner #et #bigtroubleinlittlechina #dune
In der Kunst von Mika Rottenberg geht es um Netzwerke und Beziehungen von Dingen. Von Menschen, Gegenständen und Umständen, die sich gegenseitig beeinflussen. Das wird in der Ausstellung „Antimatter Factory“ in Werken aus rund 20 Schaffensjahren ziemlich imposant veranschaulicht. von Mirco Kaempf
On the 135th episode of the SKIDS PODCAST; We discuss Shane's inability to stick to the subject, Terrance Howard being a complete nut job, The Amazing James Randi and Houdini himself catching fake psychics and other con artists, Greyzone Warfare - Shane's new obsession, the upcoming Elden Ring DLC, the Cannibal of Rottenberg, the attack on Stonehenge by "Just Stop Oil" cultists, the recent shootings in our own backyard by police, Critically panned movies that we love, and for our news segment - The malfunction of Oaks Park ride that stranded a bunch of people upside down for almost an hour.Coffee Brand Coffee -https://coffeebrandcoffee.com/Use the coupon code: gps1 to receive 5% off your purchase. You will be supporting an independent, growing company, as well as our show in the process!!#skids #skidspodcast #garbagepailskids #gps #podcast #comedy #discussion #commentary #conversation #video #eldenring #greyzonewarfare #videogames #helldivers2 #terrancehoward #jre #joeroganexperience #joerogan #benchwarmers #movies #vancouvershooting #police #oakspark #rottenberg #cannibal #thething #bladerunner #et #bigtroubleinlittlechina #dune
Schmitz,Rudolf www.deutschlandfunk.de, Kultur heute
Schmitz, Rudolf www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Fazit
In one of the most comprehensive exhibitions of her work to date, Museum Tinguely in Basel (Switzerland) presents a survey ...
Die Kritik an der kapitalistischen Warenproduktion zieht sich durch das Werk der argentinischen Künstlerin Mika Rottenberg. Das Museum Tinguely in Basel widmet ihr bis Anfang November nun eine der umfassendsten Ausstellungen und gibt so einen Überblick über ihr künstlerisches Schaffen. Zur Ausstellung gehören vor allem Videoinstallationen, aber auch ein großer Brunnen im Park vor dem Museum.
Animatter Factory - Werkschau mit Videoinstallationen von Mikka Rottenberg am Museum Tinguely. Von Matthias Zeller. Der Oberpfälzer Künstler Wilhelm Koch erklärt "Wählen im Tempelmuseum-Aktion". Mit Christoph Leibold. Neu im Kino: "Verbrechen und Gerechtigkeit", der Dokumentarfilm über den Internationalen Gerichtshof. Von Dennis Reinhart.
Bekah Rottenberg is the founder and head coach of Brave Endeavors. Bekah's unique approach to coaching is steeped in her 12+ years as a classroom educator. Bekah is a professional mountain bike instructor (PMBI certified) as well as a NASM certified personal trainer. She raced enduro at the professional level between 2014-2018 before retiring to focus on coaching and strength training. Does a lot of work with bravery, confidence and mindset. Which are key components to mountain biking! Bekah has an arsenal of coaches who also teach for Brave Endeavors. Be sure to check out her website, where you can find information on MTB coaching, strength training, resources and her upcoming Women's MTB Retreat! Listen to our chat and learn about Bekah, her approach to teaching, and the Women's MTB Retreat. https://www.bravendeavors.com/ https://www.bravendeavors.com/womens-mtb-retreats Follow us on Instagram: www.instagram.com/womensmtbnetwork Check out our website: www.womensmtbnetwork.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/womensmtbnetwork/support
Tomasz Lis 1na1 Anda Rottenberg: Jestem stale potrzebna
If you're anything like me, you LOVE getting out on the bike but maybe you don't like strength training quite as much. But the unfortunate truth is that we NEED to be doing strength training in addition to riding our bikes.In this podcast interview, I chat with Bekah Rottenberg about why strength training needs to be a non-negotiable part of our routine. Bekah, who is a mountain bike skills coach and strength training coach, likes to say "you can't be strong on the bike until you get strong off the bike." She shares the different types of movements we should be doing, common myths around strength training, and how it can improve our confidence, coordination, and mind-body connection.
The December submitted poetry episode features: Tell me Again by Cerid Jones Meals with Grandma and Grandpa by Lori Rottenberg The Aves of Morning by Caroline Wellman Nameless Things by Özge Lena Broken Glass by Kenya McDonald --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/viewlesswings/support
This episode explores the link between unhealthy compulsivity and depression in three parts: understanding what depression may be trying to tell us, how the negativity bias protects us and makes us miserable at the same time, and why compulsives get stuck on the hedonic treadmill. Click here for the written version. TranscriptWhy Compulsive People Get Depressed Part 1: The Missed Potential of Low Mood Constance was meticulous in everything she did. She was famous, and at times infamous, for accuracy at her job, for her fastidiousness in her home, and for her painstaking protocol when running the PTA. Her friends and colleagues said that while she was really well-intentioned, her standards were just too high and she was way too controlling. “You need to let go” everyone told her. But she was determined to get everything just right. And when a big project didn't go her way, she found herself falling into into a funk. She couldn't care anymore. It felt like the drive that had throttled her through life so far was missing in action. But since we're all very enlightened and tend to think that depression is nothing more than a pathological state these days, it didn't occur to her that perhaps the depression was telling her something, and that it was telling her that walking away from unrealistic expectations just might be a healthy reaction. Not only did she miss the message, she interpreted it in a way that made her more depressed. She thought there was something wrong with her. This is the first in a short series about the reasons that compulsive people get depressed. People who meet the full criteria for obsessive-compulsive personality disorder (OCPD), and those who have just a few compulsive personality traits, are both especially susceptible to depression, and it's important to untangle the depression from the personality. Otherwise they can each make the other worse. Being compulsive can make us depressed, and sometimes we try to cure or cover the depression by being more compulsive. Not a good idea.Bringing awareness to the possible function of depression is particularly important for people who are compulsive because they often endure their suffering in the territory of “high-functioning depression”–hidden from all, but painful nevertheless.These posts will offer a very different way to understand depression, and offer suggestions to help you break the cycle that can occur between compulsive personality and depression. However, I also want to make clear that if you're suffering from a serious depression you should consult a mental health professional for help through psychotherapy, medication or both.ContentsThe Potential Purpose and Value of DepressionThe Evolutionary Benefits of DepressionJung: Depression is the Unconscious Trying To Balance UsAnd Now–The RealityWhat happened to chemical imbalances?The TakeawayThe Potential Purpose and Value of DepressionDepression sometimes has a purpose. Especially if you're compulsive or driven, it can be nature's way of slowing you down when you're racing too far and too fast in one direction. Correctly understood, it has potential value.While there is much to support this idea of depression having purpose, in this post I'll be drawing on two particular and very different sources to support it: psychologist and mood researcher Jonathan Rottenberg at the University of South Florida, and early twentieth century groundbreaking psychiatrist, Carl Jung.Rottenberg has experienced major depression himself, and he's published a book about the science of low mood: The Depths: The Evolutionary Origins of the Depression Epidemic. He shares reams of data to back up the idea that there have been evolutionary benefits for low mood. Rottenberg questions the way depression is usually understood. He asks: Why is it that we've invested such huge resources in treating depression, but so many people are still so depressed?Jung didn't have the data at his disposal that Rottenberg did, but he still somehow understood, 100 years before, that if we look for the potential purpose in “mental illness” we can contend with it in a more holistic and effective way.Both urge us to stop pathologizing depression and start listening to what it's trying to tell us. It's not a defect, it's a message.The Evolutionary Benefits of DepressionRottenberg's basic argument is that low mood has had evolutionary benefits that have helped us to survive and develop, so it's been pretty deeply engrained in us. Here are a few of the benefits:It discourages destructive conflict and sensitizes us to social risk. This was really important in the conditions in which we evolved: bands of 75 people struggling for survival. The better you get along, the more likely you are to survive because you can cooperate in collecting food, and in warding off intruders, those nasty, rule-breaking goons who hadn't bothered filling out the paperwork to join the United Nations.It discourages wasteful effort. When you hit a wall, when persistence becomes a liability, depression forces you to stop digging. It reduces the energy that would otherwise be wasted on futile goal pursuits such as trying to get everyone else to be as scrupulous and fastidious as you are.It slows us down so that we can actually concentrate more, and make better decisions about what's realistic. This can prevent calamities such as racing headlong into projects by yourself with the absolute certainty that you have to take it on alone because no-one else will do it the right way.People who are driven can become possessed by an idea and become rigid and inflexible in their drive to do what they feel is the right thing. It shows up in road rage, unwieldy kitchen commands, and passive-aggressive punishment aimed at those who don't comply. It can cause unproductive interpersonal conflict, waste energy, and lead to bad decisions. Depression can lessen that tendency and can help us to slow down and question the strategies we've been so cocksure about.To anthropomorphize in a very unscientific way, depression says, if you don't let go willingly, I will force you to let go grudgingly.Jung: Depression is the Unconscious Trying To Balance UsCarl Jung believed that the human psyche is a self-balancing, homeostatic system. Or at least it can be if ...
Thriving Adoptees - Inspiration For Adoptive Parents & Adoptees
How can you get a stronger sense of your own identity? Whether it's a full blown identity crisis or a vague lack of clarity on who we are, most of us struggle to see who we are at some stage of our lives. Transracial adoptees are, unsurprisingly, particularly conflicted. Listen in as Shelley shares how she's developed a stronger sense of self. Let her insights guide you to clarity.Here's a link to the poem Shelley reads https://www.shelleyrottenberg.ca/writingShelley Rottenberg (she/her) is a transracial and international adoptee. She was born in China at the time of the One Child Policy and adopted to Canada at eight months of age. With a Master of Arts in Human Geography, Shelley has a passion for learning about people's lived experiences and intersectional identities across space and time. She is currently working in qualitative research and volunteers with a number of adoptee-focused organizations in her spare time.https://www.shelleyrottenberg.cahttps://www.instagram.com/shelleyrottenberg/https://www.linkedin.com/in/shelleyrottenberg/
To ransom or not? And why after he died? The Maharam's responsa: Who matters - the individual or the community. Taking life during the Crusades, removing leprosy and deciding halacha based on dreams.
Découvrez le livre NEUROSAPIENS, sorti le 26 janvier aux éditions Les Arènes ! Pour apprendre à créer rapidement et à moindre coût son podcast, c'est par ici ! Pourquoi pleurons-nous ? Déjà, cette question pourrait faire tout l'épisode parce que les larmes sont un véritable mystère ! L'homme est la seule espèce caractérisée par des larmes émotionnelles ! D'autres animaux sont susceptibles de gémir ou de crier, mais aucun ne verse des larmes d'émotion – pas même nos plus proches cousins primates. Les primates, et d'autres animaux, libèrent des larmes, certes, mais leur fonction se limite à humidifier les yeux, à les nettoyer, voire à les soigner. Nous allons aussi répondre aux questions suivantes : combien de types de larmes existe-t-il ? Ont-elles réellement un effet cathartique ? Comment fonctionnent mécaniquement les larmes ? Que se passe-t-il pour les personnes qui ne pleurent jamais ? Production, animation, réalisation et illustration : Anaïs Roux Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/neurosapiens.podcast/ neurosapiens.podcast@gmail.com Produit et distribué en association avec LACME Production. _________ Musique KEEP ON GOING Musique proposée par La Musique Libre Joakim Karud - Keep On Going : https://youtu.be/lOfg0jRqaA8 Joakim Karud : https://soundcloud.com/joakimkarud ONE NIGHT AWAY Musique de Patrick Patrikios _________ Sources : Bylsma LM, Gračanin A, Vingerhoets AJJM. The neurobiology of human crying. Clin Auton Res. 2019 Feb;29(1):63-73. doi: 10.1007/s10286-018-0526-y. Epub 2018 Apr 23. PMID: 29687400; PMCID: PMC6201288. Rottenberg, J., Bylsma, L. M., & Vingerhoets, A. J. J. M. (2008). Is Crying Beneficial? Current Directions in Psychological Science, 17(6), 400–404. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8721.2008.00614.x T. LUTZ, Crying : a natural and cultural history of tears, W. W. Norton, 2001. Biological Signals as Handicaps. A. Grafen in Journal of Theoretical Biology, Vol. 144, No. 4, pages 517–546; June 21, 1990. Hendriks, Michelle & Nelson, Judith & Cornelius, Randolph & Vingerhoets, Ad. (2008). Why Crying Improves Our Well-being: An Attachment-Theory Perspective on the Functions of Adult Crying. 10.1007/978-0-387-29986-0_6. The Science of Emotion: Research and Tradition in the Psychology of Emotion. Randolph R. Cornelius. Prentice-Hall, 1995. The Handicap Principle: A Missing Piece of Darwin's Puzzle. Amotz Zahavi et al. Oxford University Press, 1997. The Symbolic Species: The Co-Evolution of Language and the Brain. Terrence W. Deacon. W. W. Norton, 1998. Crying: A Natural and Cultural History of Tears. Tom Lutz. W. W. Norton, 2001. A Darwinian Look at a Wailing Baby. Carl Zimmer in New York Times; March 8, 2005. Maternal Effects in Mammals. Edited by Dario Maestripieri and Jill M. Mateo. University of Chicago Press (in press).
In this podcast, Bekah discusses the advantages of hands-on coaching and the importance of personalized feedback, and human connection in maximizing your riding abilities. This was a really fun conversation and we hope you enjoy! Bekah's website https://www.bravendeavors.com/ ▶ If you enjoy our channel and want to support it there are a few different ways you can help out below
Aux commandes de la brigade cachée pour cette quatorzième saison de Top Chef, Hélène Darroze se confie au micro de Stéphane Rottenberg sur sa vie sentimentale compliquée. Mère de deux jeunes adolescentes et à la tête de cinq restaurants, la cheffe admet avoir mis de côté depuis quelques années ses relations amoureuses.
Anda Rottenberg: po co nam sztuka i Muzeum Sztuki Nowoczesnej? Czy będziemy burzyć pomniki JP2? Anda Rottenberg - wywiad, w którym rozmawiamy o tym czym jest sztuka współczesna? Muzeum Sztuki Nowoczesnej - Warszawa i cała Polska żyje tym projektem, czy to odpowiedni budynek? Jak uczyć się historii sztuki? Jan Paweł 2 jest jednym z przykładów pochopnie stawianych pomników, czy będziemy z czasem je burzyć? Historia sztuki - wykłady, jakich udziela się w szkołach, są często nudne, jak sprawić, by zainteresować Polaków sztuką? Rozmawiamy przy okazji premiery książki Andy Rottenberg "Rozrzut". Dobrego słuchania, Karol Paciorek / Imponderabilia
(00:30) Schone energie met een vuile rand Brussel maakt werkt van de eigen klimaatdoelen en wil zo snel mogelijk af van fossiele brandstoffen. De ambitieuze Green Deal waarbij Europa in 2050 CO2-neutraal moet zijn, is door de energiecrisis in een stroomversnelling geraakt. Om aan de grote vraag van duurzame energie te voldoen, zoals zonne-energie en waterstof, wordt er nu flink gehandeld met Noord-Afrikaanse landen. Maar correspondent Fairouz ben Salah legt uit dat inwoners van Tunesië en Marokko een hoge prijs betalen voor deze vergroening van de EU. (09:24) Hoe Poetin Rusland weer op de kaart wilde zetten In Bureau Buitenland is te gast journalist Hella Rottenberg, één van de oprichters van het kennisplatform Raam op Rusland. Rottenberg, die een bijzondere familiegeschiedenis met Rusland erop nahoudt, heeft net een nieuw boek geschreven met de titel: ‘Z. Hoe Poetin Rusland weer groot wilde maken.' (20:45) Buitenland Uitgelicht: Alpen onder de voet gelopen door jonge Zwitsers. Presentatie: Sophie Derkzen
In this episode, Aimee and Alia are rejoined by Chinese adoptee, Shelley, to discuss their thoughts on the documentary, Found , available on Netflix. Along with the emotions this documentary provoked, they share how Found has impacted their views on DNA testing and the possibilities of them attempting their own birthparent search. They also discuss the importance that documentaries like Found and One Child Nation play in not only helping Chinese adoptees learn more about themselves and their past, but also acting as a tool for non-adoptees to educate themselves. You can find Shelley on Instagram @sea_shellz7 or through her now available website, shelleyrottenberg.ca ! *note: this episode was recorded in February 2022 See you guys next time! We've added music! Intro: Lights by Sappheiros (https://soundcloud.com/sappheirosmusic) Outro: herbal tea by Artificial.Music (https://soundcloud.com/artificial-music)
Having seen many sides of the sports industry, she shares her experiences working with IMG, USA Water Polo, Fan Controlled Football, her own company, and Athleta. Being a long-time advocate for women's sports and the founding president of WISE's Los Angeles chapter, Jennifer Rottenberg is also well-versed on anything concerning women in sports. She elaborates on the history of women's sports, which factors can bring women's professional sports to an even higher level, and how many brands should have a better notion of the audiences that watch women's sports. Now working at Athleta, she explains how she shaped the newly created role of Head of Partnerships and built a team that maximizes the relationship Athleta has with its notable partners, such as Simone Biles and Allyson Felix. You do not want to miss out on this engaging and insightful episode on The CUSP show. The CUSP Show is a production by the faculty of Sports Management at Columbia University. You can get in touch with the program on Twitter @CU_SPS_Sports. The CUSP Show is hosted by Joe Favorito (@Joefav) and Tom Richardson (@ConvergenceTR). The show is produced by Yash Agarwal '22 (@yashagarwal655), Sam Marks '22, and Connor O'Neill '22, with Jillian Quinn '22 (@JillianMQuinn) and Dominique Smith '22 managing social media efforts.
Dan Rottenberg is an author, editor, and journalist who served his profession for over seven decades. There aren’t many folks who could subtitle a memoir My Seventy Years on the Frontiers of Free Speech as Rottenberg did earlier this year when he published his 12th book, The Education of a Journalist. Dan is my new hero.During his storied tenure, Rottenberg was the executive editor of Philadelphia Magazine, managing editor of Chicago Journalism Review, a reporter for the Wall Street Journal, and the chief editor of seven publications including Philadelphia’s Broad Street Review, an online arts and culture salon he created in 2005.Rottenberg also wrote an editorial page column for the Philadelphia Inquirer from 1978 to 1997, and authored more than 300 articles for publications like, The New York Times Magazine, Bloomberg, Forbes, and the Rolling Stone. During our sixty minutes together, we talked about the history of journalism, the importance of free speech, why he dedicated his life to the written word, and the future of journalism in a digital world.I hope you learn as much as I did.Watch Episode:True Thirty is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support our work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to True Thirty at truethirty.substack.com/subscribe
Het leven van Rosey Pool, geboren in 1905 in Amsterdam en gestorven in 1971 in London, raakte aan vrijwel alle grote gebeurtenissen in de 20e eeuw. Ze bevond zich vaak in het oog van de storm. Als activist, socialist, vervolgde Jodin en lesbische vrouw kwam ze op voor Afro-Amerikaanse dichters en schrijvers. Haar bloemlezingen met door haar vertaalde gedichten vonden een gretig publiek in de jaren '50 en '60 van de vorige eeuw. Ze leek vergeten en verdwenen, tot Lonneke Geerlings in 2020 promoveerde op haar biografie. Verder: Vakantieman Marlisa laat ons erotische fresco's zien in een Italiaans Palazzo, OVT 07-08-2022
Het leven van Rosey Pool, geboren in 1905 in Amsterdam en gestorven in 1971 in London, raakte aan vrijwel alle grote gebeurtenissen in de 20e eeuw. Ze bevond zich vaak in het oog van de storm. Als activist, socialist, vervolgde Jodin en lesbische vrouw kwam ze op voor Afro-Amerikaanse dichters en schrijvers. Haar bloemlezingen met door haar vertaalde gedichten vonden een gretig publiek in de jaren '50 en '60 van de vorige eeuw. Ze leek vergeten en verdwenen, tot Lonneke Geerlings in 2020 promoveerde op haar biografie. Dit is de ingekorte versie van de Radio Doc van december 2021. Benieuwd naar meer documentaires van Radio Doc? Abonneer u op de podcast DOCS.
Znawczyni sztuki współczesnej Anda Rottenberg zaprasza przyjaciół do wspólnej, bardzo pożytecznej zabawy dzielenia się ulubionymi przepisami i uwagami o gotowaniu. W zabawie biorą udział artyści, pisarze, aktorzy, politycy. Ale uwaga! Wszyscy traktują temat bardzo poważnie, przepisy są dopracowane i wzięte prosto z życia, ich autorzy tak właśnie gotują. I choć już od dawna jesteśmy obeznani z kuchniami świata, jesteśmy też bardzo przywiązani do tego, co gotowały nasze mamy i babcie. Nieobce nam krewetki, mule, awokado, ale bardzo lubimy też buraki i kapustę, kluski i pączki, pieczemy chleb i ciasta. To, co gotujemy, to efekt naszych podróży i bardzo silnych wpływów tradycji rodzinnych. Książka zawiera przepisy dla tych, którzy lubią i potrafią gotować, ale również bardzo proste przepisy na dania, z którymi każdy sobie poradzi. Co szczególnego kryje się we wspólnym przyrządzaniu i smakowaniu potraw, że tak zbliża ludzi? I czy Anda Rottenberg umie gotować? Na podcast zaprasza Michał Nogaś. W wakacje w każdą sobotę przypominamy najciekawsze rozmowy z cyklu "Książki. Magazyn do słuchania". Na nowe odcinki zapraszamy już we wrześniu. Do usłyszenia! Więcej podcastów na https://wyborcza.pl/podcast
It's safe to say that we've arrived at something of an inflection point for women's sports. NWSL games are selling out. The WNBA just turned 25. US women's soccer recently secured pay equity with the men. The KC Current are building the first women's soccer-specific venue. And on and on. Women's sports are generating more attention (and more revenue) than ever before. And no brand is perhaps better positioned to take advantage of this momentum that women's sportswear brand Athleta. In this episode, we connect with Jen Rottenberg, Athleta's Head of Partnerships, to discuss the brand's approach to sports marketing. We dive into their partnerships with Simone Biles and Alison Felix and what makes them so impactful, why partnership depth is better than breadth, and what she's looking for in new opportunities.
Wie waren de 400 mannen die tijdens de Februaristaking van 1941 zijn opgepakt, en van wie slechts een handvol de naziterreur overleefde? Historica Wally de Lang begon een intensieve speurtocht en heeft de levens van bijna al deze mannen en hun familie kunnen reconstrueren in een boek en een tentoonstelling. Sandra Rottenberg maakte er een documentaire over. Verder: Vakantieman Bareez Majid tipt een museum in Iraaks-Koerdistan, OVT 17-07-2022
Van de razzia's van 22 en 23 februari 1941 in Amsterdam hebben veel mensen wel eens gehoord. Ze vormden de aanleiding voor de Februaristaking, een moedig protest tegen de Jodenvervolging in de Tweede Wereldoorlog. Maar wie waren die 400 mannen die toen zijn opgepakt en van wie slechts een handvol de naziterreur overleefde? Historica Wally de Lang begon een intensieve speurtocht en heeft de levens van bijna al deze mannen en hun familie kunnen reconstrueren in een boek en een tentoonstelling. Tot haar verrassingmeldden zich talloze nabestaanden met nieuwe foto's, brieven en verhalen. Aan de hand van deze geschiedenissen en ander uniek bronnenmateriaal maakte Sandra Rottenberg deze documentaire. Dit is de ingekorte versie van de Radio Doc van 9 februari 2022. Benieuwd naar meer documentaires van Radio Doc? Abonneer u op de podcast DOCS.
Da Vinci Art Alliance (DVAA) was founded in 1931 by sixteen Italian immigrant artists and collectors at a time when immigrants were barred from major artistic, academic, and scientific institutions. DVAA was a creative refuge where members could show their works, hold meetings, engage in social activities, and offer intellectual and cultural exchanges and events. Together, they chose as their namesake the master of the Italian Renaissance, Leonardo da Vinci. DVAA permanently moved to 704 Catharine St. in South Philadelphia in 1966. Since then, the building has housed artist studios and exhibitions annually. In 2015, DVAA hired its first full-time Executive Director to improve the Artist Membership program. DVAA's Artist Membership program now offers several annual exhibition opportunities for artists and critically engaged programs monthly. To build community within Philadelphia, DVAA has created a Fellowship program for underserved artists, designed an annual community art and science festival called Da Vinci Fest, and installed a permanent mural on our building.DVAA is housed in a rowhome in the Bella Vista area of South Philadelphia. In an essay by Ricki Sablove they speak about our neighborhood as a part of Philadelphia “that sparkles with the history of its people--a history rich with the music of opera and organ grinders, redolent with the wonderful aromas of Italian cooking, and alive with the dialects brought from faraway places.” Read more about our vibrant neighborhood here. FOR MORE INFORMATION: https://davinciartalliance.org/ Learn more about RestART!RestART: The Arts are Back!https://phillyfunguide.com/editorial/restart-the-arts-are-back
Rooted in Arab arts and language, Al-Bustan Seeds of Culture offers artistic and educational programming that enriches cross-cultural understanding and celebrates diversity.“Al-Bustan,” Arabic for “The Garden,” serves youth and adults of all ethnic, religious, and socio-economic backgrounds, while supporting the pursuit and affirmation of Arab American cultural identity and playing a constructive civic role within broader American society.Mohannad Ghawanmeh: Executive DirectorMohannad is a scholar, cineaste, educator, and culturist intimately at large. A teacher of communication and media for twenty-five years, Mohannad's instruction has centered on the cinema, for which he has also written, produced, acted, consulted, programmed, and curated. He is co-founder of the Twin Cities Arab Film Festival produced by Mizna. Mohannad curated the first editions of the Arab American National Museum's film festival and the Minneapolis/St. Paul Italian Film Festival, as well as the series Melnitz Movies at University of California, Los Angeles. Mohannad is well awarded and published, having earned in 2020 his PhD from UCLA in Cinema and Media Studies. His research of the cinema decidedly examines such intersecting fields as governmentality, migration, nativity, religion, theater, music, literature, industrialization, and modernity typically in the mold of cultural history. Born to Palestinian refugees and an immigrant to the United States, Mohannad has also lived in Egypt, Japan, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia. Mohannad thrives on conjoining education and cultural production, connecting people and places, enriching and inspiring.To contact Mohannad please email: mg@albustanseeds.orgLearn more about RestART!RestART: The Arts are Back!https://phillyfunguide.com/editorial/restart-the-arts-are-back
This Is My Brave was co-founded in Virginia by Jennifer Marshall and Anne Marie Ames (1958-2017), two women passionate about ending the stigma surrounding mental illness, and saving lives through storytelling. In May of 2014, TIMB debuted its first ever live show in Arlington, Virginia at the Spectrum Theatre to a sold-out crowd of nearly 400. Over the past six years, the nonprofit organization has hosted performances across the United States and in Australia, including Greenville, SC; Valparaiso, IN (Chicagoland); Denver, CO; Iowa City, IA; Washington, DC; Baltimore, MD; Los Angeles, CA; Boston, MA; Lewiston, ME; Wheeling, WV; Boise, ID; New York, NY; and beyond. TIMB has been featured on the Today Show: Mind Matters with Carson Daly as well as in The Washington Post and O, The Oprah Magazine, Stage-Directions Magazine, and Health as well as many other publications. In 2019, This Is My Brave launched high school and college pilot programs. This Is My Brave, Inc. (TIMB), the national nonprofit organization dedicated to ending the stigma surrounding mental illness through storytelling, comes to Philadelphia hosting auditions May 7, 14, and 15, 2022. The resulting performance will be held at the Ambler Theater on October 9, 2022. Performances will feature area community members who live with mental health challenges or substance use disorders, telling their stories through spoken word, poetry, music, dance, and more. No performing experience is necessary. Register to Audition: https://calendly.com/thisismybrave-philadelphia (Participants must be age 18+).
TWiSTED Parenting by: Avi Fishoff (Contact: 718-902-6666 Email: TWiSTEDParenting@aol.com)
PLEASE SHARE THIS LINK! “TWiSTED Parenting” is a method developed byAvi Fishoff to guide parents of children in severe crisis. Avi personallytrains and guides parents from all over the world. All parents must have their own Daas Torahinvolved to pasken any shailos that may arise. Avi has many haskamos of leadingGedolim. All services are FREE of charge. Lessons from this podcast should not be appliedacross the board or without proper individual guidance from a leading expert inthe field of crisis. To SUBSCRIBE the Whatsapp broadcast and receiveLOTS of Chizuk: Whatsapp a request to: 718-902-6666 To SUBSCRIBE to the YouTube channel:
We're living in the “The Ever Present”, we're “Backing Track”, spending time with “The Folks at Home”, will soon bow to the “Kings of B'More”…, soon, we'll be “Crying On Television”, all this and more “Previously On…”, is Our Eric, R. Eric Thomas in the virtual studio!!
This is a special editon of Meaningful People featuring an open converation between Jewish music stars Eli Schwebel & Abie Rottenberg Subscribe to our Podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2WALuE2 Spotify: https://spoti.fi/39bNGnO Google Podcasts: https://bit.ly/MPPGooglePodcasts Or wherever Podcasts are available! Follow us on Instagram: https://instagram.com/meaningfulpeoplepodcast Like us on Facebook: https://bit.ly/MPPonFB Follow us on Twitter:https://twitter.com/MeaningfuPplPod Editor: Sruly S. Podcast created by: Meaningful Minute For more info and upcoming news check out: https://MeaningfulPeoplePodcast.com #jew #jewish #podcast #frum #rabbi #frumpodcast #meaningfulpeople #torah #mitzvah #hashem #jewishmusic #jewishpodcast #israel #kumzitz #nachigordon #yaakovlanger #jewishpod
Honor. Legacy. Pride. Taking his place out front as the choir leader at an elite all-boys, all-Black prep school, Pharus Young is determined to make his mark by challenging expectations in a world steeped in deep-rooted traditions. Can Pharus find harmony among his peers while staying true to his own voice? From Tarell Alvin McCraney, the Academy Award®-winning writer of Moonlight, Choir Boy electrified Broadway with its soaring gospel, spiritual, and R&B performances.ABOUT JEFFREY L. PAGEJeffrey L. Page is an opera and theatre director of both classical and contemporary works. As director and choreographer, he spearheaded the Tokyo production of Memphis, which received four Yomiuri Award nominations, including Best Musical. The first African American to be named the Marcus Institute Fellow for Opera Directing at the Juilliard School, he has also been nominated for an Emmy Award, and won an MTV Video Music Award for his work with Beyoncé. His work was featured on Beyoncé's “The Formation World Tour,” in her historic Coachella performance, and in two of her HBO specials. Page was the associate creative director for Mariah Carey's “Sweet, Sweet Fantasy” European Tour, and has been a featured choreographer on Fox's “So You Think You Can Dance.” He recently directed MAKING MICHEAUX (Book and lyrics by JESSE L. KEARNEY, JR. Music by ALPHONSO HORNE) for Prospect Theatre in NYC.As a performer, Page was in the original Broadway cast of Fela! and choreographed the Broadway musical Violet starring Sutton Foster. At the Barrington Theatre Company, Page won a Berkshire Theater Award for Joe Iconis' Broadway Bounty Hunter. In 2016, he established Movin' Legacy as an Indianapolis-based nonprofit organization dedicated to the ethnology and documentation of contemporary and traditional dance from Africa and the African diaspora. He holds a Master's of Fine Arts degree, (Theatre Directing) from Columbia University in New York City, and has been awarded the Chuck Davis Emerging Choreographer Fellowship from the Brooklyn Academy of Music.Jeffrey joined Harvard University as a Lecturer in Theater, Dance and Media. Currently, he is preparing to choreograph and co-direct, with Diane Paulus, the upcoming Broadway production of 1776, after premiering at the American Repertory Theatre at Harvard University.FOR TICKETS AND INFORMATION: https://philadelphiatheatrecompany.org/choir-boy/
"There is a lot more that binds us than divides us." Groundswell Strategy shares some of the many things affecting policy and implementation in DC. Labor unions and problems relating to climate, sustainability, and worker safety all impact how and when legislation gets drafted and passed. Carmen points out some of the weaknesses of the 24-hour news cycle and some of the backstory contributing to supply-chain bottlenecks. Believe it or not, Todd-Bits also chats about immigration reform and what it will take to get it to the finish line. We packed a lot in the time we had!
VISA General Counsel and Arnold & Porter alumna Julie Rottenberg joins Evan and guest host Lindsey Schultz for a special edition of Law 5D to talk about her path from partner at Arnold & Porter to general counsel of at one of the world's largest companies. Julie covers a wide range of topics from succeeding as a woman in a male-dominated industry, the importance of DEI, building strong teams, dealing with the pandemic, how she hires and manages outside counsel, and how she copes with the stress of such an important role.
Washington DC is a tough hill to navigate. Listen in as we talk strategy on the Beltway from one of the best at Groundswell Strategies.