Podcast appearances and mentions of Sarah Cohen

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Best podcasts about Sarah Cohen

Latest podcast episodes about Sarah Cohen

JOWMA (Jewish Orthodox Women's Medical Association) Podcast
The Truth Dysautonomia with Sarah Cohen Solomon, MD, FAAP

JOWMA (Jewish Orthodox Women's Medical Association) Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2025 44:11


In this exciting episode of the podcast, Dr. Jennie Berkovich interviews Dr. Sarah Cohen, an expert in dysautonomia, to explore the complexities of this often misunderstood condition. Dr. Cohen shares insights into the types of patients she typically works with and how her journey led her to specialize in dysautonomia. They discuss common misconceptions physicians and medical professionals have about patients with dysautonomia and explore potential risk factors, including early signs that may predict the development of the condition. The conversation delves into the gap in Western medicine when it comes to treating dysautonomia and offers an explanation of Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS), its typical presentations, and the conditions associated with it. Dr. Cohen also reflects on how treatments for dysautonomia have evolved over the years, providing listeners with the latest updates in care. The episode further explores whether there are any preventive measures available for dysautonomic conditions or ways to slow their progression. This episode is a must-listen for anyone interested in dysautonomia, whether you're a healthcare professional or simply curious about the condition. Tune in for expert insights and a deeper understanding of this important health topic! Sarah Cohen Solomon, MD FAAP is the ABP Board Certified Pediatrician at PRISM Spine and Joint, where she specializes in caring for patients with hypermobile Ehlers Danlos Syndrome and related conditions, including Dysautonomia (POTS) and Mast Cell Activation Syndrome. This interest stems from her own lifelong experience with these conditions. After graduating from Sidney Kimmel Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, Dr. Cohen Solomon remained at the affiliated Nemours Hospital for Children, where she was awarded the Pediatric Academic Excellence Award for Outstanding Research, Education, and/or Advocacy in General Pediatrics for her work expanding the Advocacy curriculum for their residency program. Dr. Cohen Solomon is passionate about breaking down barriers to healthcare and education, by providing children with appropriate accommodations so they can thrive at school among their peers and mentoring medical students with disabilities. _________________________________________________ Sponsor the JOWMA Podcast! Email digitalcontent@jowma.org Become a JOWMA Member! www.jowma.org Follow us on Instagram! www.instagram.com/JOWMA_org Follow us on Twitter! www.twitter.com/JOWMA_med Follow us on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/JOWMAorg Stay up-to-date with JOWMA news! Sign up for the JOWMA newsletter! https://jowma.us6.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=9b4e9beb287874f9dc7f80289&id=ea3ef44644&mc_cid=dfb442d2a7&mc_eid=e9eee6e41e

All Shows Feed | Horse Radio Network
The Disease Du Jour 147: Role of the Permitted Treating Veterinarian in FEI/USEF Competitions with Dr. Sarah Cohen

All Shows Feed | Horse Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2024 20:26


In this episode, Sarah Cohen, DVM, joined us to discuss the role of the permitted treating veterinarian at FEI/USEF competitions, especially with regard to current discussions around social license to operate. She talked about the differences between a permitted treating veterinarian and an official veterinarian, how current discussions on social license are influencing discussions within the FEI and USEF, what's involved in the trot-up process, and what it's like to work as a holding box veterinarian.You can contact Dr. Cohen at cohendvm@equity-performance.com.The Disease Du Jour podcast is brought to you by Merck Animal Health.Disease Du Jour Podcast Hosts, Guests, and Links Episode 147:Host: Carly Sisson (Digital Content Manager) of EquiManagement | Email Carly (CSisson@equinenetwork.com) Guest: Sarah Cohen, DVM of Equity Performance EquinePodcast Website: Disease Du JourThe Disease Du Jour podcast is brought to you in 2024 by Merck Animal Health.

Disease DuJour
Ep. 147: Role of the Permitted Treating Veterinarian in FEI/USEF Competitions with Dr. Sarah Cohen

Disease DuJour

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2024 20:26


In this episode, Sarah Cohen, DVM, joined us to discuss the role of the permitted treating veterinarian at FEI/USEF competitions, especially with regard to current discussions around social license to operate. She talked about the differences between a permitted treating veterinarian and an official veterinarian, how current discussions on social license are influencing discussions within the FEI and USEF, what's involved in the trot-up process, and what it's like to work as a holding box veterinarian.You can contact Dr. Cohen at cohendvm@equity-performance.com.The Disease Du Jour podcast is brought to you by Merck Animal Health.Disease Du Jour Podcast Hosts, Guests, and Links Episode 147:Host: Carly Sisson (Digital Content Manager) of EquiManagement | Email Carly (CSisson@equinenetwork.com) Guest: Sarah Cohen, DVM of Equity Performance EquinePodcast Website: Disease Du JourThe Disease Du Jour podcast is brought to you in 2024 by Merck Animal Health.

Kabbalah 20/20
Confrontación proactiva: 3 pasos para hacerlo bien

Kabbalah 20/20

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 40:46


Todos nos hemos enojado con algún socio o amiga (por las razones correctas o equivocadas, da igual) y gran parte –quizá– del resultado fue la manera en la que los confrontamos. En este episodio, Sarah Cohen nos comparte 3 pasos para "pelearnos" desde otro lugar, de una manera proactiva en lugar de explosiva. Sugerencias y comentarios, te escuchamos por Instagram: @i.sarahcohen y @bianca_ladywellness #kabbalah2020Support the show

BackTable OBGYN
Ep. 41 Laparoscopic Myomectomy Tips and Tricks with Dr. Sarah Cohen Rassier

BackTable OBGYN

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2023 55:43


In this episode of BackTable OBGYN, Dr. Mark Hoffman is joined by Dr. Sarah Rassier, a minimally invasive gynecologic surgeon and Director of the Fibroid Clinic at Mayo Clinic, to discuss the multiple treatment modalities of fibroids with a focus on laparoscopic myomectomy. Drs. Hoffman and Rassier discuss the various factors they consider when deciding on the most suitable approach for a myomectomy. Specifically, they touch on pre-surgical patient optimization, the use of laparoscopic techniques in surgery, and the significance of efficient incision planning and closure. Dr. Rassier also highlights the practice of using preventative measures, such as iron infusions and Lupron, in certain patients to manage fibroids before surgical intervention. The conversation wraps up with a discussion about how future developments could potentially revolutionize fibroid management. --- SHOW NOTES 00:00 - Introduction and Overview of the Podcast 03:32 - Discussion on Fibroids and Their Different Treatment Options 06:40 - The Future of Fibroid Treatment 09:17 - Patient-Centered Decision Making in Fibroid Treatment 11:40 - Preparation and Approach for Myomectomy 13:18 - Discussion on the Use of MRI in Fibroid Treatment 15:55 - The Role of Laparoscopy in Myomectomy 29:00 - Umbilicus vs. Suprapubic Approach 32:04 - Cosmetic Considerations in Surgery 32:27 - - C-sections After Myomectomies? 34:51 Instruments and Techniques for Fibroid Removal 36:28 - Minimizing Blood Loss in Surgery 38:47 - The Importance of Efficient Closure in Surgery 44:46 - Tissue Extraction Techniques 49:02 - The Future of Myomectomy

Kabbalah 20/20
¿Necesitas vacaciones de las vacaciones?

Kabbalah 20/20

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2023 33:21


Tú, la playa, el verano… no sé, piénsalo… Aunque clásico que llegando de las vacaciones necesitamos ooootro descanso porque volvemos agotados, ¿pero por qué pasa esto? En este episodio, Sarah Cohen nos propone otro ángulo interesante que seguro te va a poner a pensar. “Viajando o no viajando, no es lo mismo irse de vacaciones con guerra interna a irse con paz interior”. Síguenos en IG: @i.sarahcohen y @bianca_lifestyleblogger #kabbalah2020 *Si te interesa la oración para el avión, mándame DM. Support the show

Kabbalah 20/20
¡Llegó el Omer!

Kabbalah 20/20

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2023 28:23


¿Om qué? Si no tienes mucha idea qué es el Omer o te gustaría darle un nuevo sentido a estos 49 días de oscuridad, ¡¡¡escucha este episodio con Sarah Cohen!!! Incluye tips prácticos que puedes aplicar durante las próximas 6 semanas (porque esto inició hace ya 10 días, desde el Domingo de Pascua y acaba con Shavout, el 25 de mayo). Si te interesa saber más, ve a kabbalah.com o escríbenos por Instagram a @i.sarahcohen y @bianca_lifestyleblogger #kabbalah2020 Support the show

Splash
La sécurité sociale financera-t-elle nos courses ?

Splash

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2023 19:44


Selon l'Insee, en seulement un an, le prix de la nourriture a augmenté de 13,6% en moyenne, faisant baisser la consommation alimentaire française de 4,6 % en 2022. Une baisse record… depuis 1960. Et si la solution résidait dans la création d'une sécurité sociale de l'alimentation qui permettrait l'attribution de 150 euros mensuels à tous·tes les citoyen·nes ? Robin Lemoine se penche sur le sujet accompagné de Nicolas Bricas, économiste chercheur en socio-économie de l'alimentation au Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement et titulaire de la Chaire UNESCO Alimentation du monde et de Sarah Cohen, ingénieure agronome et coprésidente de l'association membre du collectif Ingénieurs sans frontières.En quoi consisterait exactement la sécurité sociale de l'alimentation ? Est-ce qu'elle pourrait réellement pallier aux problèmes économiques des français·es ? Comment mettre en place une telle mesure ? Sources : La lutte contre la précarité alimentaire - Rapport de l'IGASSplash est un podcast de Nouvelles ÉcoutesÉcrit et animé par moi, Robin Lemoineen compagnie d'Emmanuel MartinPrise de son, montage, et mixage : Adrien Beccaria à l'Arrière Boutique StudioRéalisé par Adrien Beccaria et Mathilde JoninProduit par Julien NeuvilleDirectrice Générale Adjointe : Nora HissemDirectrice Des productions : Marion GourdonDirectrice artistique : Aurore MahieuChargée de production : Mathilde Joninavec l'aide de Neïla HakmiVous pouvez consulter notre politique de confidentialité sur https://art19.com/privacy ainsi que la notice de confidentialité de la Californie sur https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

courses rapport ing sociale selon nouvelles californie sarah cohen selon l'insee marion gourdondirectrice adrien beccaria
Kabbalah 20/20
En el amor, ¿cuándo irme y cuándo quedarme?

Kabbalah 20/20

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2022 44:27


Imagina esta situación: te casas y duras 20 años, llega la crisis y te divorcias. Tú te metes a estudiar Kabbalah y el otro –o la otra– se inscribe a un curso de superación personal muy picudo... Mantienen el contacto por correo y tal, pero nada romántico. De pronto un día dicen "¿Y si nos vemos?". Ambos se dan cuenta que aunque se parecen mucho (nadie pasó por el cuchillo ni nada por el estilo) han cambiado, han evolucionado, han estado haciendo el trabajo espiritual ¡y se nota! Pasado el tiempo se dan cuenta que, como dicen Chino y Nacho, "aquí hay, hay, hay, hay, hay, hay amor" ¡y se vuelven a casar! Bueno, pues esta historia es real y es de nuestra invitada especial de este episodio, Sarah Cohen, en directo desde Miami :)

Joie 2 Vivre - Femmes
Rabanit Sarah Cohen- HIZOUK magnifique sur la Paracha Lekh Lekha- DEPASSER LES ÉTOILES

Joie 2 Vivre - Femmes

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2022 7:32


✨Rabanit Sarah Cohen✨ HIZOUK magnifique sur la Paracha Lekh Lekha à ne manquer sous aucun prétexte et à PARTAGER en masse. DEPASSER LES ÉTOILES ✨✨✨ Rejoignez nous sur joie2vivre femme au WhatsApp +972 58 704 0688

Joie 2 Vivre - Femmes
Rabanit Sarah Cohen- Magnifique préparation à Rosh Hachana pour être au top le jour J

Joie 2 Vivre - Femmes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2022 12:13


✨Rabanit Sarah Cohen✨ Magnifique préparation à Rosh Hachana pour être au top le jour J Sur quoi exactement va-t-on être jugées ce jour là ? SI JE SUIS CÉLIBATAIRE ou SI J'AI PLEINS D'ENFANTS dans les pattes..... Qu'est-ce qui compte le plus?

Coast Community Radio
ARTS – Live & Local! August 19, 2022

Coast Community Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2022 60:00


Friday, August 19th at 3 pm, ARTS – Live & Local! Carol Newman hosts:    Founder, Director & Vocal instructor Lisa Nelson with Sarah Cohen, director of the new Dance Program at the Astoria Conservatory of Music.    Caroline Bricheux and Agnes Field with ‘Celebrating the Art of Jim Fink’ at Studio 11 in Astoria.

92.1 WLNG Archived Performances
Tell It To 'LNG - July 6, 2022

92.1 WLNG Archived Performances

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 29:09


Bonnie Grice speaks with Hollis Forbes, Co-Chairperson at the 2nd annual fundraising luncheon for the East Hampton Emergency Department coming up on July 14. Bonnie will also speak with Sarah Cohen, Administrator of the Center for Parkinson's Disease at Stony Brook Southampton Hospital regarding fall prevention on this edition of Tell It To 'LNG.

Global Founders
Employment & Empowerment for Nigerians with Disabilities

Global Founders

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2022 24:12


Episode Notes Racheal Inegbedion and Sarah Cohen are reducing the barriers to employment for persons with disabilities in Nigeria. Listen in to hear more about their recent Reciprocal Exchange - a component of the Mandela Washington Fellowship that provides funds for U.S. professionals to travel to sub-Saharan African countries or implement hybrid or virtual projects. This collaboration resulted in a disability employment manual for Nigerian Employers of Labour and a 7-minute documentary film that shares the experiences of three young adults with barriers that hinder their participation in inclusive workplaces. Racheal & Sarah hope that the film will shift attitudes from a "culture of compliance" to an increase in truly inclusive workspaces. Watch the documentary here: https://youtu.be/Ct1RzX8v5LQ

Virage
Ep 20 Arthur Rimbaud: Celui qui a revolutionné la poésie avant de lui tourner le dos (avec Sarah Cohen Scali).

Virage

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2022 48:07


Cette semaine j'ai retrouvé Sarah Cohen Scali pour que l'on discute autour d'une boisson chaude d'un de nos amours commun: Arthur Rimbaud.  Qui mieux que Rimbaud pour illustrer mon podcast ? Comment mieux incarner le virage qu'en ayant été l'un des plus grand génie de la littérature Française, qui a laissé derrière lui des pièces maîtresse en poésie avant de tourner le dos à cette discipline pour devenir un négociant en Afrique, un explorateur ? Pour parler de ce grand homme j'ai eu envie de m'entourer d'une autrice qui a toute mon admiration et qui a écrit l'un des livres qui m'a le plus touchée sur Arthur Rimbaud: "Le voleur de feu".   Nous avons évoqué ensemble son enfance émaillée de souffrances, le moment où l'enfant prodige est devenu un véritable voyou marquant ainsi le premier tournant de sa vie, celui de sa personnalité. Nous avons parlé de la naissance du génie incompris qui a tourné le dos à la poésie après avoir laissé des oeuvres majeures, avant d'arriver à Rimbaud l'explorateur vagabond puis le commerçant.  Nous avons passé, pour enregistrer cet épisode, un délicieux moment dans notre bulle en ayant l'impression de discuter d'un de nos amis communs et j'espère que c'est ce que vous ressentirez en écoutant.  Bonne écoute! 

92.1 WLNG Archived Performances
Tell It To 'LNG - April 27, 2022

92.1 WLNG Archived Performances

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2022 26:02


Chris Buckhout speaks with Sarah Cohen, Administrator, Center for Parkinson's Disease at Stony Brook Southampton Hospital on this edition of Tell It To 'LNG. Originally aired on: April 27th, 2022

Kabbalah 20/20
¿Qué es el Omer y cómo nos afecta?

Kabbalah 20/20

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2022 39:45


“Yo estoy bien, tú estás mal”. ¿Y si esto no fuera taaaan cierto? ¿Y si hubiera una ventana cósmica que nos permitiera cuestionar esta creencia con seriedad y profundidad? Bueno, ¡buenas noticias!, sí la hay y estamos en ella. Se llama Omer y dura 49 días (7 días de 7 semanas). ¿La vamos a aprovechar o nomás nos vamos a quejar? Recuerda que si nosotros somos el problema, nosotros somos la solución. ¡Te queremos escuchar! Síguenos en Instagram: @KabbalahMX @i.SarahCohen y @Bianca_Lifestyblogger – Ahora que si te gusta el podcast, siéntete libre de escribir una reseña en Apple Podcast para que más personas sepan qué es la Kabbalah y cómo puede ayudarles a transformar su vida.  ¡Gracias de antemano! 

Kabbalah 20/20
La causa de nuestras acciones negativas

Kabbalah 20/20

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 48:52


“Si Dios es infinitamente bueno, entonces no es infinitamente poderoso. Y si Dios es infinitamente poderoso, entonces no es infinitamente bueno”. Esta frase desató una conversación súper interesante con Sarah Cohen, quien nos explica la razón de nuestras acciones negativas. El video del que hablamos lo puedes ver aquí: https://bit.ly/3Mm1lh8 Síguenos en Instagram para saber más acerca de este y más temas interesantes para nuestro crecimiento espiritual: @KabbalahMX @i.SarahCohen @Bianca_Lifestyleblogger 

The Styling Advisory Podcast - The Business Of Personal Styling & Retail Innovation
How To Get Your Personal Styling Audience Connecting With You Online (Masterclass)

The Styling Advisory Podcast - The Business Of Personal Styling & Retail Innovation

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2022 56:40


Welcome to another 'TEA & CHATS - STYLING BUSINESS MASTERCLASS!' This time, we were joined by Clinical Psychologist Talya Rabinowitz and C-Suite Brand Transformation Specialist, Dara Donnelly, along with image experts from around the world to uncover this pressing issue.... ⭐How In The Name Of Zeus Can We Get People Actually Connecting With Our Posts, Blogs & Emails??? ⭐ It's so soul-destroying when you put hours into a piece of content, only to have it generate a few likes from friends and family.... We're doing this stuff to attract amazing, like-minded individuals to our business, and we don't have time to waste! So let's find out what makes someone feel a sense of connection on a subconscious level, and then create social media/digital content from that place! PS

Historias que contar
Historias que contar con Aaron Cohen Guenoun

Historias que contar

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2022 97:12


Nuestro siguiente invitado a #historiasquecontar es Aaron Cohen, un ejemplo de liderazgo desde sus inicios como presidente del centro de estudiantes del colegio Moral y Luces Herzl-Bialik, además de ser un destacado deportista en Basquetbol y Beisbol. Fue Secretario General del MUS (Movimiento Universitario Sionista). Estudió Ingeniería Civil en la UCAB, realizó un MBA en la escuela de negocios IESA. Contrajo nupcias en 1982 con Fanny Perel Z'L', y se mudó a Filadelfia donde realizó un PhD en Finanzas, en Wharton School graduándose en 1987. Se relocalizaron ya con sus tres hijos en Simsbury, Connecticut. Jack, casado con 4 hijos, residenciado en Aventura, Florida, Rabino y Director de educación de la fundación Olami; Danny Cohen, casado, 2 hijos, reside en New York y es Product Manager para Google-YouTube Music y Sarah Cohen, comprometida, reside en New York y es Mid Market Sales en Google. Los tres recibieron educación en Ivy League Universities. Entre 1987 y 1990 fue Director de Operaciones de Centum Financial Management. Desde 1990 al 2003 fue Director de operaciones y de Investigaciones de Financial Partners Capital Management, LLC fpcm.net y a partir del 2004 funge como Presidente. Fue además presidente de Bess & Paul Sigel Hebrew Academy (1998-2002). Y de Beth David Synagogue (2003-2007). Aaron es originario de Tánger, Marruecos, emigró a Venezuela en 1961 junto a sus padres Moses y Estrella Cohen. Ronny, como lo conocen sus amigos más cercanos, pierde a su esposa Fanny por una penosa enfermedad en diciembre de 2017. Actualmente está comprometido con Mireille Manocherian, originaria de Río de Janeiro, residenciada en New York desde los años ochenta. Emocionada de poder indagar en la vida de este personaje, segura que tendrá muchas historias que contar y maravillosas lecciones de vida. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tamara-kassab/support

3Camps Podcast
Paul and Maddie Voge - Where are they now? Part 1

3Camps Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2021 46:54


In Episode #13 we begin a new series for the podcast entitled "Where are they now?" This series will spotlight individuals who have come through our 3 camps and are now onto the next phase of life's adventure. In this episode, we highlight Paul and Maddie Voge. Paul and Maddie have a long, rich tradition at Brookwoods and Deer Run, and have now started their own company called Aura Bora.  Seth and Jon were joined by friend-of-the-podcast, Sarah Cohen, and Sarah tells a great story about Paul accomplishing a tremendous project. They discuss with Paul and Maddie some of the exciting things that are happening in their lives and with Aura Bora. The gang is also joined by some other individuals who chime in on some "Paul and Maddie" stories. Finally, the episode ends with a reflection on camp and how it shapes our lives well beyond our time as campers.  We're continuing to take your camp hero calls. Take a moment and think about who has impacted your life at camp! Also, we're taking any other messages you may have at (978) 308-2679. Thank you to all of our guests and contributors. In addition to our voicemail, you can also connect to us by email at podcasts@christiancamps.net.  Your hosts: Jon Cooper, Food Service Director, Brookwoods/Deer Run Seth Coates, Director, Moose River Outpost   Guests include Sarah Cohen, Paul and Maddie Voge, Mark Kuhn, and Amy Anstatt.

3Camps Podcast
Totally Worth It!

3Camps Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2021 47:30


In Episode #12 we debrief the eventful season of camp at Moose River Outpost. Seth is back in the studio! Seth and Jon were joined by friend-of-the-podcast, Sarah Cohen. They discuss the crazy times that were had at MRO. They tackle the "Maker's Space," Covid, Food Shortages, and everything else. Throughout the episode, we hear from counselors and staff discussing their highlights and thoughts about this summer. There is also a short spotlight on the WILD Group, which includes a comical story about living in the elements at camp. The podcast touches on the interplay of hardship, growth, and perseverance, specifically on how we depend on the Lord for His grace and mercy.  We are continuing to take your camp hero calls. Take a moment and think about who has impacted your life at camp! Also, we're taking any other messages you may have at (978) 308-2679. Thank you to all of our guests and contributors. In addition to our voicemail, you can also connect to us by email at podcasts@christiancamps.net.  Your hosts: Jon Cooper, Food Service Director, Brookwoods/Deer Run Seth Coates, Director, Moose River Outpost   Guests include Sarah Cohen, Logan Gwynn, Evan Anderson, and Emma Hiner.

America's Top Rebbetzins
Rebbetzin K. Sarah Cohen Talks about Emunah and Bitachon

America's Top Rebbetzins

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2021 36:55


Rebbetzin K. Sarah Cohen gives a powerful interview on emunah and bitachon. She also talks about hasgaha pratis and seeing the hand of Hashem in every aspect of our lives. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/vera-kessler/message

LA LETTRE DE F. GUTHLEBEN
CHRONIQUE LIVRE BIBLIOTHEQUE DEPARTEMENTALE DU BAS-RHIN - MAX - SARAH COHEN-SCALI - NOVEMBRE 2021

LA LETTRE DE F. GUTHLEBEN

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2021 1:00


Envie de découvrir un livre disponible dans le réseau de la Bibliothèque Départementale du Bas-Rhin (BDBR) - http://biblio.bas-rhin.fr/ ? Présentation du livre de Sarah COHEN-SCALI - Max

Memory Chips
Lightly Salted with Sarah Cohen of Route 11 Potato Chips

Memory Chips

Play Episode Play 39 sec Highlight Listen Later Nov 9, 2021 30:41


If anything good comes from this podcast, it is that it gives me an excuse to meet and chip out with one of my personal talent crushes--Sarah Cohen of Route 11!In this episode, Sarah unleashes the roundabout origin story of my favorite local potato chips, and we go off on how chips companies develop their flavors and how large snack companies are so good at distracting your from the chips you would really rather be eating!www.rt11.com Subscribe to Memory Chips podcast on any of your podcast platforms! https://pod.link/1588265708

We Grow Together
Episode 13 - Why Business Owners Should Care about Intellectual Property Protection

We Grow Together

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2021 18:13


In episode 13, we speak with Sarah Cohen, partner at Lombard & Geliebter LLP about the value of protecting your intellectual property from the beginning. Not only will this deter infringers and copycats, but it will also make your business more marketable in the long run. Taking these simple steps now will save you time, money, and aggravation. Don't miss this important conversation!  Check out the video podcast on our YouTube channel!

The Styling Advisory Podcast - The Business Of Personal Styling & Retail Innovation
How To Build Connections With Your Audience Using Your Heart

The Styling Advisory Podcast - The Business Of Personal Styling & Retail Innovation

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2021 57:16


I wanted to share a recording of our monthly, free industry catch-up called 'Tea & Chats' Styling Business Masterclasses. Any and all stylists, image experts and aspiring stylists are invited, just sign up to our Facebook community @StylingAdvisoryCommittee via our website. This month we spoke with clinical psychologist Talya Rabinovitz about how we can start to build real, genuine connections with our audience and build trust towards client bookings. We shared: ⭐Why we are hating the process of marketing right now ⭐What's impacted our ability to show up as ourselves ⭐What happens when you acknowledge your soul's true purpose Want to learn how to build connections with your audience in a fulfilling, gentle, authentic way without having to smash out post after post? Then you need to join THE CONNECTION program. ✨WHAT IS IT? A mentor-facilitated program to develop your authentic brand, niche client and digital marketing content designed to magnetise clients. ✨WHAT'S THE FORMAT? -Weekly instructional training -Weekly exercise to complete a new step of the brand & marketing plan -Weekly group working session with mentor to refine each section of your plan ✨WHO ARE THE TEACHERS? Sarah Cohen, Founder of The Styling Advisory Talya Rabinovitz (Clinical Psychologist) Dara Donnelly (C-Suite Brand Advisor) ✨WHAT DO I GET? A powerful brand summary co-created by a C-Suite brand specialist A clear niche you intrinsically know how to talk to without effort A strategic content plan for the year that is so clear, aligned, exciting and easy you'll fall in love with building your business again *PLUS*

Friendsome and Then Some
Real Housewives & Real Friendship with Heather Dubrow & Sarah Cohen

Friendsome and Then Some

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2021 44:57


She's an actress, businesswoman, philanthropist and reality television royalty, so needless to say, all of us at Friendsome & Then Some could not be more thrilled than to welcome, our friend, the incredible Heather Dubrow to the show! And folks, you had to know we were going to go BIG for our BIG season two finale!! So, not only is our favorite Real Housewife of Orange County on the show, she brought her real life best friend, the equally stunning and gracious, Sarah Cohen along for the ride! Having known each other for 16-years, you can bet the is chemistry off the charts, and let's face it, they absolutely shine side by side on the big screen at ModPod Studio! Mindy kicks things off with so many riveting questions your head will spin! From champagne and tequila to parenting advice, they share intimate details on how they managed to keep their friendship intact throughout a difficult patch, and how it survived five seasons of reality TV stardom. And just when you thought you had heard it all, Michelle and JD join in for the ultimate knockout interview of the season getting to the bottom of just what it takes to make REAL FRIENDSHIP work in an often surreal world. By the time the tears dry and laugher dies and we fade to black on season two, you'll not only have tools to strengthen your own friendships, you'll know what it takes to be the kind of star who can leave a hit show on top and return a champion on her own terms! The life hacks, profound insights and all around solid advice was flowin' like the rain on this one, ya'all! So, saddle up or buckle-up, because no matter how you and your besties like to ride or die, this show's gonna leave a mark where your strap was! So, giddy up!  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Is That Normal? with Dr. Dan
Ep 2: The Importance of Sleep for Children AND Parents

Is That Normal? with Dr. Dan

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2021 26:23


Dr. Dan talks with Westmed Child, Adolescent & Family Psychiatrist, Dr. Sarah Cohen (https://www.westmedgroup.com/providers/sarah-d-cohen/) about the impance of sleep for children AND parents. ----------- Is That Normal?" is a podcast hosted by Westmed Medical Group pediatrician Dr. Dan Cohen that brings to the forefront common questions that arise behind the exam room door. Dr. Cohen and his guests discuss why – when it comes to your kids - some things that seem odd, are actually totally common.

Shine: Inspired Jewish Women Podcast
Episode 20: Your Best Life Begins in Midlife

Shine: Inspired Jewish Women Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2021 43:16


Join midlife coaches Sarah and Ali, founders of Eden Life Coaching, as they discuss ways to embrace and support women through this important and often misunderstood life stage. With the right approach and shift in mindset, midlife doesn't have to be a crisis. It truly can be the most fulfilling time of your life! As coaches, Sarah and Ali are committed to the kind of transformational work that can help women live full and satisfying lives now, as well as build the groundwork for the best future possible. Most recently Ali Begoun served as the co-Director and founder of L'Chaim Center, a Jewish life and learning center in the northern suburbs of Chicago. As a teacher she has always had a particular focus on self-development and personal growth through the lens of Jewish tradition. Ten years ago Ali received her certification as a life coach with a special passion for coaching women in midlife and the various transitions of their lives. She will be moving to Israel in the near future. Sarah Cohen holds a Master's Degree in Public Health and a certification in Geriatric Care Management. For the last 12 years she has worked with seniors and their families both as a memory care director and as a geriatric care manager. Sarah has helped many women in the sandwich generation navigate some of the most challenging issues in the cycle of life. Sarah has always been propelled toward conscious growth and intentional living. She is a certified life coach who is passionate about assisting women at midlife to reach their goals and enrich their lives with self awareness and clarity. She lives with her husband and three teenage children in Chicago.

3Camps Podcast
Activate Activities!

3Camps Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2021 47:43


In Episode #10 we discuss all things program and activities at camp. We start off the episode hearing from Sarah Cohen and Tim Nielsen discussing how activities will look at Brookwoods and Deer Run. We're then joined by Seth and Robbie Jacobson to discuss Moose River Outpost's activity lineup. We then get the "inside scoop" from Camp Influencers Annie Dunlap and Tennessee Bowling. Finally we hear from Ava Bishai, an 11 yr old Deer Runner who discusses her memories of camp and her activity plans for this summer. July 23-25 is coming! Be a Changemaker at Changeover.  We're also taking your camp hero calls and any other messages at (978) 308-2679. Thank you to all of our guests and contributors. In addition to our voicemail, you can also connect to us by email at podcasts@christiancamps.net.  Your hosts: Jon Cooper, Food Service Director Brookwoods/Deer Run Seth Coates, Director Moose River Outpost   Guests:  Sarah Cohen, Tim Nielsen, Robbie Jacobson, Annie Dunlap, Tennessee Bowling and Ava Bishai    

Podcast Torah-Box Entre Femmes
En chemin avec Déborah-Sarah Cohen : accueillir la douleur...

Podcast Torah-Box Entre Femmes

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2021 3:21


Cours vidéo de 3 minutes donné par Déborah Sarah COHEN.

Podcast Torah-Box Entre Femmes
En chemin avec Déborah-Sarah Cohen : le message du Colibri...

Podcast Torah-Box Entre Femmes

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2021 2:33


Cours vidéo de 2 minutes donné par .

Kabbalah 20/20
¿Qué pasa después de la muerte?

Kabbalah 20/20

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2021 31:39


"El poeta Tagore escribió: 'La muerte no es extinguir la luz; es tan sólo apagar la lámpara porque llegó el amanecer'. El Rav Berg solía enseñar que la muerte es la ilusión más grande de todas, aunque su importancia es indiscutible. Perder a alguien que amamos es uno de los dolores más grandes de la vida, pero con la sabiduría de la espiritualidad y la Luz del Creador nos podemos ayudar a superar dicho dolor. Y es que, cuando las hojas mueren y caen al suelo en el otoño, ¿no aparecen unas nuevas en la siguiente primavera? La muerte no existe porque la energía nunca muere, solo cambia de forma. Nuestra alma continúa, aunque el cuerpo quizá no lo haga. El alma continúa hacia otras encarnaciones, transforma su ser en nuevas vasijas. Al igual que el agua se convierte en vapor, todo cambia de forma. Nunca le decimos adiós a nada en realidad, simplemente cruzamos una nueva puerta". ++++ Con estas palabras de Karen Berg, la maestra Sarah Cohen nos guía sobre las interrogantes que nos surgen cuando un ser querido trasciende. Preguntas y comentarios son bienvenidos vía Instagram: @KabbalahMX + @iSarahCohen + @BiancaPescador_BeautyLifestyle 

The Styling Advisory Podcast - The Business Of Personal Styling & Retail Innovation
‘The Rise of The Capsule Collection' with Personal Stylist Jessica Ryan

The Styling Advisory Podcast - The Business Of Personal Styling & Retail Innovation

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2021 25:57


JOIN OTHER STYLISTS FOR TEA & CHATS EVERY MONTH! ☕ Head to https://www.facebook.com/groups/stylingadvisorycommittee and join us for discussions on the styling industry and business challenges. @StylingAdvisoryCommittee Hi everyone! I'm your host, Sarah Cohen, Stylist Marketing Specialist and founder of the Styling Advisory, and in this podcast I ask successful personal stylists how they built their business, and what marketing tactics worked for them.

Mullins Farrier Podcast
Dr. Sarah Cohen

Mullins Farrier Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2021 74:52


My guest today is Dr. Sarah Cohen, and she definitely has a unique perspective on her business as a veterinarian serving the Wellington Florida area, her business website for Equity Performance Equine has the description listed under the subtitle team approach, seamless concierge-style medicine, tailored to the needs of your specific team and program. Dr. Sarah was recommended to me as a guest by a previous guest, Dr. Andrea Dubé. Dr. Andrea described her as a bad-ass vet that I needed to talk to. I'll read you her bio from her website, and you'll start to understand why.  Dr. Sarah Cohen grew up in New Jersey showing in the hunters and equitation before attending Purdue University for her undergraduate training. She graduated from Ross University in June of 2007. Having completed her clinical training at Iowa State University, Sarah then joined Merritt and Associates Equine Hospital outside of Chicago for a one-year intensive internship. Then joining Miller and Associates in 2008, and finally launched Equity Performance Equine in the fall of 2020. Over her decade plus in practice, Dr. Cohen has developed a client-based consisting of some of the most well-regarded in the Hunter and showjumping community in the country. Dr. Cohen believes passionately in evidence-based medicine and putting the horse's needs at the fore of all decisions. Since 2010, she has been a regular on the international scene serving as the USEF showjumping team veterinarian in competitions in Spain, Slovakia, Belgium, France, Wellington, and other international competition locales. Sarah is president of the Northeast Association of Equine Practitioners, having served on the board of directors for five years. She is a member of the USHJA's horse and riders advocates committee. She lives in Wellington, Florida, and Waccabuc, NY  with her husband, Lance and two daughters, Evelyn and June. Dr. Andrea's recommendation was spot on and Dr. Sarah did not disappoint. I hope you enjoy the conversation as much as I did. As mentioned in the episode if you are interested in participating in the American Farriers Association Journal club please reach out to Martha Jones at mjones@americanfarriers.org

Kabbalah 20/20
Tu Caja de Herramientas Espiritual

Kabbalah 20/20

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2021 55:58


Que si el martillo, el desarmador, la llave de allen… También en el mundo espiritual hay herramientas de las que podemos echar mano a la hora de sentir emociones tan fuertes como ira, tristeza, frustración, ansiedad y preocupación. En este episodio, la maestra Sarah Cohen nos explica qué, cómo y cuándo usar las herramientas kabbalísticas para transitar por el mundo con menos caos y más tranquilidad, menos enojo y más paz. Si quieres participar de una meditación kabbalística guiada con Sarah Cohen, da click aquí: https://bit.ly/3tDEYue Y recuerda seguirnos en Instagram * @KabbalahMX * ¡¡Nos encanta escucharte!!

Commedansunlivre
Max / Sarah Cohen-Scali

Commedansunlivre

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2020 2:10


Découvrez le roman "Max" de Sarah Cohen-Scali, paru aux éditions Scripto.

Dyad Podcast
Season 1, Episode 3 - Research Roundtable

Dyad Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2020 69:08


In the first installment of the Dyad Research Roundtable, Gentry talks with Josh Schutts and Sarah Cohen about Dyad's research into the roots of fraternal brotherhood and sisterhood.

WNHH Community Radio
Thabisa & Friends Sarah Cohen, Lee Lee Thompson & Briah Luckey

WNHH Community Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2020 51:57


Thabisa & Friends Sarah Cohen, Lee Lee Thompson & Briah Luckey by WNHH Community Radio

Gynecologic Surgeons Unscrubbed
COVID-19: AAGL joint guidelines on surgical safety during an infectious disease pandemic

Gynecologic Surgeons Unscrubbed

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2020 17:40


On March 27, 2020, Dr. Cara King (@drcaraking) hosts Sarah Cohen, MD, MPH, Division of Minimally Invasive Gynecologic Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota They discuss: AAGL guidelines – starting the discussion Global collaboration among AAGL and other societies to craft guidelines Potential viral spread during laparoscopic surgery Potential viral spread during open procedures Thinking outside of the box (minilaps and vaginal hysterectomy) COVID-19 testing in surgical patients – what is possible today Universal chest CT before surgery? Recommended PPE for the OR Rethinking MIGS surgical steps to optimize for infectious disease Ideal surgical masks for the OR Ongoing updates to AAGL joint statement guidance Reliance on global colleagues * * * Resources COVID-19: Joint Statement on Minimally Invasive Gynecologic Surgery * * * This podcast is developed in collaboration with the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons Email the show: podcasts@mdedge.com Interact with us on Twitter: @MDedgeObGyn @drcaraking For more MDedge Podcasts, go to mdedge.com/podcasts

Garland magazine
A romance between a "white" and "black" Jew in southern India: Interview with Bony Thomas

Garland magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2020 28:47


We go to Kochi, the ancient port city in the southern tip of India, to visit its most renowned historian, Bony Thomas, who features in our current issue Uphaar with an article about the history of the Jewish populations in the city and its touching presence today with the young Muslim man, Taha Ibrahim, who continues the tradition of Jewish embroidery taught him by his adopted mother, Sarah Cohen. Bony Thomas shares his rich knowledge of this Indian-Jewish culture with it's many Romeo and Juliet love stories that give a personal dimension to India's unique mix of faiths. We're sitting in an old Dutch home, overlooking a busy intersection, in the days before our current lockdown. See the original story here: https://garlandmag.com/article/jewtown/

The Sound Of The Hound
#2 Syria Lamonte, the world's first female recording star

The Sound Of The Hound

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2020 20:50


Just weeks after arriving in London, Fred makes the world's first disc recording of a female singer outside of America. The lady's name is Syria Lamonte and, according to Fred, she's a barmaid in Rule's restaurant, next to his studio on Maiden Lane. Lamonte – real name Sarah Cohen – is an Australian who arrived in London from Sydney in 1896. Her recordings, which include songs such as Comin' Through The Rye, accompanied by a tinkling piano, are groundbreaking. But was Lamonte really the struggling waitress that Fred claims? Hall and Holley discover that Lamonte's history is not quite as Fred described. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Global Medical Device Podcast powered by Greenlight Guru
Live Atlanta True Quality Roadshow Panel: The Changing Quality & Regulatory Paradigm

Global Medical Device Podcast powered by Greenlight Guru

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2019 36:46


Do you love quality and regulatory and keeping up with all things related to the medical device industry? There's never a shortage of changes to learn about. Greenlight Guru is traveling around the country to bring medical device professionals together and provide up-to-date insights on the latest quality and regulatory trends. This special episode features a recording of the industry panel from the Greenlight Guru True Quality Roadshow in Atlanta, presented by the Global Center for Medical Device Innovation (GCMI) and Rook Quality Systems. The panelists include Sarah Cohen, senior engineering project manager at GCMI; Ronald Bracken, principal at Paladin Biomedical Consultants; and Ward Broom, chief operating officer at Intent Solutions. Some of the highlights of the show include: ● Panel experts identify which programs and regulations have made the biggest impact on their businesses and the industry. ● Changes aren't limited to the United States. European (EU) MDR made changes that require interpretation of what each country and its regulatory agencies want. ● Turn to experts to answer questions and learn how to apply and implement medical device regulations. ● Panel experts describe the pros and cons of a regulatory strategy for a Class I medical device. ● Educating and training companies on the importance of regulations is critical to help them navigate all the changes in the medical device industry. ● Medical device startups need to identify what is non-negotiable to build a culture of quality and train employees. ● A quality system is set up for a reason. Companies should focus on making products that they're proud of and help patients. ● Biggest mistake is when inventor puts technology before patients: Who am I making it for? What do they want? What does it have to do? How to deliver it?

Liveng Proof Podcast
LPP #119 Reclaiming Your Power & Reconnecting To Your Intuition with Engrid Latina, Kat Beck, & Dr. Sarah Cohen

Liveng Proof Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2019 69:18


This is a VERY special episode because it is the recording of my very first ever LIVE podcast episode! Which has been a dream of mine for years and I’m still shook that it actually happened. I had the honor of hosting it alongside two of my favorite women here in my community: Kat Beck & Dr. Sarah Cohen. It’s an hour of serious courage and truth telling. I was just beside myself to be sitting in the presence of these two women as they shared their personal experiences that lead them to where they are today and why we are each so passionate about inviting others to reclaim their power. FRIENDLY DISCLAIMER: Sensitive topics are discussed in this episode and you may be triggered. Should this happen, please do whatever you need to do to take care of yourself. IN THIS EPISODE WE DISCUSS: Each of our personal stories that lead us to be passionate about helping others reclaim their power How the culture as a whole centers around disempowerment Being ordinary and “fitting in” is energy neutral and in this state we are never really connecting to our souls higher purpose and mission Modalities that disconnect us from […] The post LPP #119 Reclaiming Your Power & Reconnecting To Your Intuition with Engrid Latina, Kat Beck, & Dr. Sarah Cohen appeared first on Liveng Proof.

Liveng Proof Podcast
LPP #119 Reclaiming Your Power & Reconnecting To Your Intuition with Engrid Latina, Kat Beck, & Dr. Sarah Cohen

Liveng Proof Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2019 69:18


This is a VERY special episode because it is the recording of my very first ever LIVE podcast episode! Which has been a dream of mine for years and I’m still shook that it actually happened. I had the honor of hosting it alongside two of my favorite women here in my community: Kat Beck & Dr. Sarah Cohen. It’s an hour of serious courage and truth telling. I was just beside myself to be sitting in the presence of these two women as they shared their personal experiences that lead them to where they are today and why we are each so passionate about inviting others to reclaim their power. FRIENDLY DISCLAIMER: Sensitive topics are discussed in this episode and you may be triggered. Should this happen, please do whatever you need to do to take care of yourself. IN THIS EPISODE WE DISCUSS: Each of our personal stories that lead us to be passionate about helping others reclaim their power How the culture as a whole centers around disempowerment Being ordinary and “fitting in” is energy neutral and in this state we are never really connecting to our souls higher purpose and mission Modalities that disconnect us from […] The post LPP #119 Reclaiming Your Power & Reconnecting To Your Intuition with Engrid Latina, Kat Beck, & Dr. Sarah Cohen appeared first on Liveng Proof.

EquiRatings Eventing Podcast
Event Rider Masters Special: Arville Preview

EquiRatings Eventing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2019 44:01


The Event Rider Masters heads to Belgium for leg 3 in the Series and there is a seriously strong field making the line up.  The defending Arville & Series Champion Chris Burton lines up with Quality Purdey, Tim Price, fresh from his Luhmuhlen win brings forward fan favourite Wesko, plus 2017 Series Champion Gemma Tattersall riders the super mare Quicklook V who was victorious at Chatsworth in 2017. Plus there are lots of other big names in the line up including Bill Levett, Laura Collett, Sarah Cohen, Jonelle Price and many more... Who tops the podium?  Let us know what you think!

Global Medical Device Podcast powered by Greenlight Guru
Live Atlanta True Quality Roadshow Panel: The Changing Quality & Regulatory Paradigm

Global Medical Device Podcast powered by Greenlight Guru

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2019 36:50


Do you love quality and regulatory and keeping up with all things related to the medical device industry? There’s never a shortage of changes to learn about. Greenlight Guru is traveling around the country to bring medical device professionals together and provide up-to-date insights on the latest quality and regulatory trends. This special episode features a recording of the industry panel from the Greenlight Guru True Quality Roadshow in Atlanta, presented by the Global Center for Medical Device Innovation (GCMI) and Rook Quality Systems. The panelists include Sarah Cohen, senior engineering project manager at GCMI; Ronald Bracken, principal at Paladin Biomedical Consultants; and Ward Broom, chief operating officer at Intent Solutions. Some of the highlights of the show include: ● Panel experts identify which programs and regulations have made the biggest impact on their businesses and the industry. ● Changes aren’t limited to the United States. European (EU) MDR made changes that require interpretation of what each country and its regulatory agencies want. ● Turn to experts to answer questions and learn how to apply and implement medical device regulations. ● Panel experts describe the pros and cons of a regulatory strategy for a Class I medical device. ● Educating and training companies on the importance of regulations is critical to help them navigate all the changes in the medical device industry. ● Medical device startups need to identify what is non-negotiable to build a culture of quality and train employees. ● A quality system is set up for a reason. Companies should focus on making products that they’re proud of and help patients. ● Biggest mistake is when inventor puts technology before patients: Who am I making it for? What do they want? What does it have to do? How to deliver it?

Liveng Proof Podcast
LPP #83 Beyond The Body & Healing From The Inside Out with Dr. Sarah Cohen

Liveng Proof Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2018 69:49


Dr. Sarah Cohen is a second generation chiropractor with a passion for unleashing optimum human potential. She’s not your average rack’em crack’em chiro, she  practices NETWORK SPINAL: thorough specific, non-invasive, tonal adjustments. This enables her to unwind stored tensions in the nervous system, allowing the body to reorganize to a higher level of functioning. Dr. Cohen additionally implements breathing exercises, Somato-Respiratory Integration, or body-breath work and offers group guided meditations. Conscious Chiropractic offers healing from above-down, inside-out.   IN THIS EPISODE WE DISCUSS: Presence is the inverse of force Traditional chiropractic versus Network Spinal We touch on the history of chiropractic care Nature needs no help, it just needs no interference Network spinal deals with the root cause: WHY bones go out of alignment Network spinal studies adverse mechanical cord tension The reason bones go out of alignment is actually a very smart response of the body A natural response to trauma is observed in nature (shaking, wagging, flapping, moving) versus what we have societally learned to do: hold it in We’re NOT expressing our full range of emotions and by default we are storing and/or absorbing them What happens in our body when we don’t feel safe What causes us […] The post LPP #83 Beyond The Body & Healing From The Inside Out with Dr. Sarah Cohen appeared first on Liveng Proof.

body healing nature network traditional lpp network spinal sarah cohen healing from the inside out liveng proof
Liveng Proof Podcast
LPP #83 Beyond The Body & Healing From The Inside Out with Dr. Sarah Cohen

Liveng Proof Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2018 69:49


Dr. Sarah Cohen is a second generation chiropractor with a passion for unleashing optimum human potential. She’s not your average rack’em crack’em chiro, she  practices NETWORK SPINAL: thorough specific, non-invasive, tonal adjustments. This enables her to unwind stored tensions in the nervous system, allowing the body to reorganize to a higher level of functioning. Dr. Cohen additionally implements breathing exercises, Somato-Respiratory Integration, or body-breath work and offers group guided meditations. Conscious Chiropractic offers healing from above-down, inside-out.   IN THIS EPISODE WE DISCUSS: Presence is the inverse of force Traditional chiropractic versus Network Spinal We touch on the history of chiropractic care Nature needs no help, it just needs no interference Network spinal deals with the root cause: WHY bones go out of alignment Network spinal studies adverse mechanical cord tension The reason bones go out of alignment is actually a very smart response of the body A natural response to trauma is observed in nature (shaking, wagging, flapping, moving) versus what we have societally learned to do: hold it in We’re NOT expressing our full range of emotions and by default we are storing and/or absorbing them What happens in our body when we don’t feel safe What causes us […] The post LPP #83 Beyond The Body & Healing From The Inside Out with Dr. Sarah Cohen appeared first on Liveng Proof.

body healing nature network traditional lpp network spinal sarah cohen healing from the inside out liveng proof
Eventing Radio Show
Arville CCI, Sarah Cohen – #513 Liz & Paul by Bit of Britain

Eventing Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2018 29:26


This week Liz and Paul are at Arville CCI in Belgium and chat with the organizer as well as competitor Sarah Cohen.Support the show

Podcast – Investigative Post
Podcast: Journalist Sarah Cohen

Podcast – Investigative Post

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2017 15:02


After a hiatus, Investigative Post has resumed its podcast program with a Jim Heaney interview with Sarah Cohen, a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and editor with The New York Times.   Cohen, a Buffalo native, will be the keynote speaker at Investigative Post’s gala dinner on Oct. 19 at the Hyatt Regency. She’ll discuss the […] The post Podcast: Journalist Sarah Cohen appeared first on Investigative Post.

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 239 Rhea Butcher

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2014 67:10


Rhea Butcher (@rheabutcher) () is a Chicago comic and also has podcasts. Fun. PYHT and a Maximum Fun podcast, WHAM BAM POW on iTunes. She loves her some Back to the Future. A Lot. Let's do this. This month's sponsor is my sister. Respectable, socially responsible financial advisor Darla Kashian. www.darlakashian.com She is smarter than I am and funnier than her ad. So give it a whirl. www.allthingscomedy.com/thedorkforest is the All Things Comedy umbrella we are a part of. There's a MILLION great podcasts over there. Get on it. Credits: Mike Ruekberg composed and sang the intro song (w Sarah Cohen) and sings the lyrics he made up to the Mexican Hat Dance at the end. Vilmos fixes my website and is great. Patrick Brady fixes the audio and makes these teaser clips and rules. My website for standup and, really, everything. It has a player for the pod, link to Amazon banner to buy stuff. Donation button. www.jackiekashian.com Direct to podcast? www.dorkforest.com Donate, Buy Stuff if you want, Listen, Proselytize. Amen.

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 211 – Brian Thompson loves Vonnegut

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2014 65:55


Brian Thompson (@Amsci) of the podcast QUIT IT http://amateurscientist.org/ is a comedy writer (Feb 19 UCB-LA) and a self-admitted, literary nerd. We are gathered to speak fo Kurt Vonnegut, and we do, we dork out hardcore on books for the hour. I do weed off and sypathize with the witch in Tangled.  Brian goes with it and makes it all so fascinating. It's a good one. Enjoy. Feel free to DONATE again to the show. My dream is that, if you can, donate $100 over the course of the year. That's $8 a month. It just gives me cash to pay for the extraneous cost of doing the show and it REALLY makes me feel like you value the show and find it worthwile. So there's that. If you want to order TDF merch (T-shirts, CDs, Hoodies) do it where my standup schedule and links to all things are found, www.jackiekashian.com. There is also an AMAZON banner (white) on the front page that, if you go to amazon through that portal, order your stuff, I get a kickback. No additional cost to you. Very supportive. www.allthingscomedy.com is the podcast network that I'm with and there's a lot of grea pods over there if you're looking for more goodness. NOTES:Something Happened by Joseph HellerLynda Barry wrote One Hundred DemonsAllen Ginsberg wrote "Howl" and other poemsMother Night by Kurt VonnegutTimequake by Kurt Vonnegut11/22/63 by Stephen KingKilgore Trout was in 7 booksThe Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman by Laurence SterneTristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story (movie 2005)Paycheck with Ben Affleck (movie 2003)I don't know what syndrome I was talking about. can't find it.Man in the High Castle by Philip K. DickThe Martian Chronicles by Ray BradburyFirebombing of DresdenWhy We Fight series directed by Frank Capra Bluebeard by Kurt VonnegutOut of the Silent Planet and Perelandra by CS LewisTangled  - Rapunzel not Rumplestiltskinwww.fanfiction.netComepetitive Erotic Fan Fiction - I did ep #15Saga/Y the Last Man by Brian K. VaughnRobert HeinleinFritz Leiber wrote Fafhrd and Grey Mouser CollectionGeorge Saunders wrote "Tenth of November"Lois McMaster Bujold writes both space opera and fantasyAnne McCaffrey wrote the Dragonrider SeriesIain Banks wrote Player of GamesIrredeemable/Incorruptible by Mark Waid from Boom! comicsChronicle (movie 2012) CREDITSMike Ruekberg composed and sings (with Sarah Cohen) the theme song.Patrick Brady fixes the audio and complies the teaser videos on youtubeVimos fixes my website and has his own podcasts, including The Green Room Bonus track (on apps for iPhone/Android) and also, free, for some reason, at tdf.libsyn.com. It's Andy and I discussing the show for a minute.

Spectrum
Richard Norgaard, Part 2 of 2

Spectrum

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2014 30:00


Richard Norgaard Prof Emeritus of Energy and Resources at UC Berkeley. Among the founders of ecological economics, his research addresses how environmental problems challenge scientific understanding and the policy process. Part two of two.TranscriptSpeaker 1: Spectrum's next. Speaker 2: Okay. Speaker 1: Welcome to spectrum the science and technology show on k a l x Berkeley, a biweekly [00:00:30] 30 minute program bringing you interviews featuring bay area scientists and technologists as well as a calendar of local events and news. Speaker 3: Hi there and good afternoon. My name is Renee Rao and I'll be hosting today's show today. We present part two of our interview with Richard Norgaard, professor emeritus of the energy resources group at UC Berkeley. He's among the founders of the field of ecological economics. His recent research addresses how environmental problems challenged scientific understanding [00:01:00] and the policy process, how ecologists and economists understand systems differently and how globalization affects environmental governance. In part two of the interview Norgaard talks about interdisciplinary problem solving. He also shares his thoughts on sustainability co-evolution and confronting a change in climate. Speaker 4: You've been very interested in them multi-disciplinary collaborative research model. Yeah, this is true. I've had very interesting experiences working in groups with people who think very differently [00:01:30] and I don't know when it starts. I guess probably the first project was a Ford Foundation funded project where eight or nine of us from different disciplines were set up as an Alaska pipeline team in 1970 the summer of 70 and we spent the summer talking to pipeline engineers to state officials, federal officials, scientists in the area, wildlife management people, native Americans, the Eskimo [00:02:00] about what's going on and as a team we tried to assess what's really the potential of [inaudible] Bay oil field for the state of Alaska and what are the myths, how do we break those myths and try to come up with a better understanding. Shortly after I came to Berkeley, Robert Vandenbosch from biological control entomology came into my office and said, we need an economist to work on pesticide use, and I didn't know anything about pesticide use other than what I'd read in silence swing by Rachel Carson and I [00:02:30] had an incredible experience working with Vandenbosch, Carl Huffaker, many, many anthropologists, but rather quickly. Speaker 4: Also just because there weren't other economists doing it. Found myself on a presidential advisory committee working with the council on environmental quality on pesticide policy, a working on on 19 University National Science Foundation Integrated Pest Management Project. And you get out in the field, you talked to farmers, [00:03:00] end up talking to the pesticide industry people and you learn a lot and you try to assemble it and try to change how things are working. So early in my career I got very involved with these interdisciplinary activities, but the, the strongest experience was just joining the knowledges, being on national academy committees with the former president of Stanford University whose names Donald Kennedy, a tremendous scientist that was able to work across [00:03:30] scientific fields with other people. But I was seen scientists involved in collective understanding or using their judgment together to try to say, this is what science can say and this is what society probably should do given what we know. Speaker 4: But it was a judgment process. It wasn't that there was a great big computer model that put all of our understanding together. And have you seen that process improving over time? I think there's more people participating in processes [00:04:00] like that. And the intergovernmental panel on climate change is certainly a massive experiment along those lines. And the Millennium Ecosystem assessment was one of these, we're doing it more. What we're not doing is actually teaching undergraduate students and graduate students that this is how science works when it really comes to understanding complex systems. It's a matter of getting in a room together and talking a lot and bringing your knowledges together. [00:04:30] And then that raises new questions that we can go back and study and do deeper research in small teams of maybe interdisciplinary or maybe it's strictly disciplinary, but it's that does my knowledge fit together with this other person's knowledge? Speaker 4: And if not, what does it mean? And if it does, great, you know, science does not come together. And if it did, who would know, who would be smart enough to know and how would we know that person knew? And so there's a great problem, you got to do it together [00:05:00] and we're not teaching that yet. I think the energy and resources group does, but it's not quite as explicit or as open as it should be. And is that what makes that program so distinctive? Well, I tried to leave that mark on it and had the advantage of serving on the admissions committee. And certainly one of my criteria was to bring people to the program who had enough experience to have a sense of identity [00:05:30] and a sense of voice, experiential knowledge that they could bring to the group, but also to not just take the most brilliant students we could find on the list that best matched the interest of the professors, but to actually try to select 15 to 22 students who could learn together, who had different understanding, who had different disciplinary backgrounds or experiential knowledge. Speaker 4: And so I literally tried to set it up as a shared learning to the extent I could. There's many people involved [00:06:00] in the, in the decision process, and of course the applicants this themselves have to say, yes, your best intentions are never carried out. But that was certainly an influence I tried to have. And to some extent did. And the book that you're working on now or I've just completed? Well, I just try authored a book, David Schlossberg and John Drysek. I have to say that they basically did most of the writing. We had try edited a handbook in Oxford Handbook on climate change in society [00:06:30] and so we decided we ought to build a write up a shorter book, a 200 page book that would be for lay people are educated obviously, but uh, a broader audience, a much broader audience. And the title of that is climate challenge society, right. And I [inaudible] wordpress. Yes. So I, I can say I contributed to the title climate challenge society and climate challenge in both ways that were having difficulty coming to grips with the concept of climate change. But we're also challenged [00:07:00] by the consequences of climate change and that books currently out. That book came out a couple of months ago. I have no idea how it's selling yet. I'm, I'm hopeful. Speaker 2: [inaudible] spectrums. Brad Swift is interviewing Richard Norgaard and ecological economists. Next segment. He talks about the book that he's currently writing. Speaker 4: [00:07:30] The book I'm writing now as the unusual title economism and the economy scene. And so elaborate on the first term economism. Uh, there's several ways to get into this, but you probably understand the difference between environmentalism and environmental science and that environmentalism is the movement. It draws on environmental science, but not as rigorously as it probably should. It doesn't mind using old [00:08:00] environmental science if that suits its purposes better. But environmentalism also feeds back on environmental science that environmental scientists needed speak to environmental ism environmentalist's and so they will choose words to speak to their public. We don't use the word economism. And the quickest way to say this, the difference between environmentalism and economism is that we don't use the word economism because there isn't any difference between economics and economists. [00:08:30] And they're kind of so tightly bound that we don't see the difference that, but economism is the beliefs we hold as a people. Speaker 4: And those beliefs help keep the economy going there. The ideas that are invoked in political discourse. You can think of it as just like we think of environmentalism as only kind of a religious movement or a movement that brings people their social identity. Economism is similar in that way that our economic beliefs help rationalize where we are in the economy [00:09:00] or economic beliefs. Help rationalize allowing our corporations to use cheap labor abroad or economic beliefs. Sort of explain how the system we're in exists and why it's there. Almost everything in our lives on a daily basis and to understand that we have economism that intertwines with economic sciences. Economists themselves are engaged in this belief system in partly perpetrating it and [00:09:30] partly changing it. So that's the nature of the next book, the second term as econo scene and he wrote a familiar, many of them audience would be familiar with the idea of the Anthropocene, the idea that we're now in a new geological era, an era in which people are the primary drivers of environmental change, and that's controversial among the scientific community, but it's begun to be used quite a bit. Speaker 4: And anthropocene to me is very vague. It doesn't [00:10:00] identify what it is. It's doing the driving. If you use the word econo scene, you should say, Nah, it's the economic system that we're in that's doing the driving and it's the economic system that we need to change. I mean we're not going to transform people. We're going to transform our social organization to solve this problem. And so econo scene to my mind is at least since post World War II is the appropriate term. As you look at the current economic system [00:10:30] you and mentioned earlier that the growth paradigm isn't really sustainable. Sustainability is a buzz word of the moment in so many areas. How can we define that and how do we pursue sustainability? I think we're so far from sustainability that it's very difficult to find and we're in this very difficult to understand very complex big system that has all these different feedbacks. Speaker 4: You know, the idea that we can comprehend sustainability is [00:11:00] like, can we comprehend the full environmental system? I don't think so. I think we have a strong sense that we're in a danger zone and we need to move out of it. And we know what directions we need to go. And that means slowing down the rates of material flows, slowing down the rates of energy use, slowing down the amount of toxic materials we're putting into the environment or pulling out of with the environment and transforming and releasing back into the environment. And [00:11:30] we have certain equity concepts that sort of says that those who are doing more of it should cut back more than those who are doing less of it. And I think as we move in those directions, we will see the system responding and we'll eventually get a better sense of sustainability, but we'll never really understand sustainability. Speaker 4: It's a really important word, but the idea that we can define it and get it all tied down scientifically and do it is now become part of our problem. But the idea that [00:12:00] we need to change and we know which direction to go, I think that's actually very clear within that change. Yeah. Does that relate to your idea of co-evolution? Is that sort of the basis of co-evolutionary thought or [inaudible] okay, so yeah, we haven't really laid that out. This was a thought experiment that I was in my own mind working in Brazil in the late seventies and I was very involved in sort of what's going on in the Amazon, gone onto [00:12:30] an Amazon planning team for Brazilian government and they were trying to optimally plan how things work, how could we develop the Amazon using science? And I was sitting there admits this process saying that's not the way development occurred in Europe. Speaker 4: That's not the way development occurred in the United States. There was a lot of experimentation and a lot of things didn't work and some things did work. Oh, that sounds like evolution at the time I was reading a lot of ecology and evolutionary theory and [00:13:00] was a friend of Paul aeroflex who was one of the cofounders of the idea of co-evolution species are primarily evolving in the context of each other, not to a fixed environment and what does that mean for how we think evolutionarily? And so yes, I began to try to understand or think about change in the human nature interaction in co-evolutionary terms. It's a pattern of thinking that sheds light on our predicament. But it's only [00:13:30] one pattern of thinking. So I don't say this is the answer, but it's very insightful. It's a pattern of thinking that says things are happening by experiment and that we should be experimenting more and be less certain about what we're doing. And what we've really done is set up a global system of everybody doing the same thing and we're not learning very much from it. And it's a very risky experiment. So I think if you understand change as an evolutionary process, you don't do what [00:14:00] we've done in globalizing the economy and trying to push that further and further and further. Speaker 1: Spectrum is a public affairs show on k Alex Burke. Our guest today is professor Richard Norgaard of UC Berkeley. In the next segment, he talks about the need for increasing diversity and experimentation in the world's economies. Speaker 4: [00:14:30] So the idea that industries and enterprises should try to become sustainable becomes an experiment. We're always experimenting. We have sincere corporations that are trying to go green. We have corporations that are greenwashing. Everybody's experimenting. But is the system as a whole set ups and those experiments are giving us the diversity we need from a systems [00:15:00] perspective and we're not doing that. And is that much easier to identify in the biological realm rather than in the technology economic world of manufacturing. And um, if economists were actually going out looking at how the world works more than we do, we, one of the beautiful things about biologists, they go out in the field and say, oh look, that's interesting. Yeah. I kind of spend very little time going out and say, wow, this industry is co-evolving [00:15:30] with that industry. Isn't this interesting? We tend to sit in our offices and smash data rather than actually try to observe. Speaker 4: I'm obviously, it's very difficult to observe economic phenomena today, uh, cause there's just so much of it happening and it's not as visible as it was say in the 19th century when industries were just emerging. Certainly there are applied and practical economists that are born at this. How are firms we configuring, how are they relating [00:16:00] to each other in different ways than the economics profession is the academic economics profession. Yeah. I think if we were to be more field oriented we would see co-evolution and maybe you'd be able to draw on it and learn from that. In terms of trying to alter the economic system and the path that we're currently on, given the ideological polarization, do you see a way that that could happen with the current polarization? I have great difficulties seeing it. [00:16:30] The common element unfortunately is we all need our share of material stuff rather than a discussion about what's the good life and how are we going to go forward. Speaker 4: The forward for both of them is more, it's more at the tension over who gets what. Until we get to a situation where we get beyond the stuff and use of energy to what makes a good life. I don't see that transformation happening, but I'm hopeful that it's creeping up somewhere [00:17:00] that those discussions are going on and that'll emerge somewhere. Certainly there are people talking about those things. I don't see it at the center we have now the two centers we have now two, can we create a world in which nations become less in tangled and we can get more experiments between them and then have some sort of a learning way between those different nations so that we retain our flexibility [00:17:30] and don't put all of our eggs in one basket. I guess that's the experiment I'm looking for and does the approach to climate change and global warming, is that an opportunity for the same kind of experimentation? Speaker 4: It may be the disaster that forces us into action. I don't know if you call that an or not, but a opportunity or disaster. It's certainly testing how well we understand complex systems and change with those systems [00:18:00] and I'm hoping we'll find a way to to make this adjustment, but we're not doing it very well now. It certainly seems that they're trying to stay within the growth paradigm so far in your mind until they abandoned that on some level or completely it's not really gonna pay off by my mind. Then again, growth is kind of tricky. What we don't want is a growth of impacts. We want a decline. We want to simplify the ways in which we're interactive with nature. Minimize the footprint. That's one way [00:18:30] to put it. Minimize the footprint so that's not a matter of growth or no growth, right? You could still have growth in the arts. Speaker 4: We could all cut each other's hair every other day and charge each other and the GDP would look fantastic. GDP is a very deceptive numbers just to measure market activity. If somebody wants to call that growth, that's okay with me, but what we really need to do is simplify and be less intrusive in the natural system. Similarly, looking [00:19:00] longterm and coming up with an experimental framework. The delta program that you were talking about and the delta in general being a mysterious black box that no one quite understands. Do you feel that there's a growing acknowledgement within the policy community that it's going to take years and years and years and a very dynamic approach to solve it? I think that's true. The Delta Reform Act of 2009 [00:19:30] is very supportive of science. It mandates that we use adaptive management. You know, it's acknowledging that we have to change our management as the times change. Speaker 4: It's legislation that says climate change exists and we need to bring climate change into our understanding of how we think of the Delta as right in the legislation. I mean that's unusual, you know, at least in the state of California already in a world in which we are acknowledging the system is changing [00:20:00] and we need to change with it. There's real complications as to how you get responsible public action and responsible private action in a changing world and a predictable world. You can say, if you do this, then this will happen. If you don't do it, you're responsible and changing world responsibility is really hard to assign and we still want responsible government. [00:20:30] We still want responsible managers, we want responsible enterprises, but how do you set up rules which you know need to change. If you know they need to change, then our agencies or private parties allowed to adjust before the rules are changed. You give it to see the problem. Structurally responsibility and a rapidly changing world are in conflict. This means we need a dramatic [00:21:00] increase in trust and that trust has to be based on actual actions that are based in scientific understanding of a changing world. How do we build that trust? It gets back to how do we collectively understand and learn together and live as a community together in a changing world, it's pretty dramatic transformation. Speaker 4: How do you see academic work addressing some of these [00:21:30] societal problems going forward? Is there a role? Of course, and of course academia is constantly changing and where the learning is taking place is constantly changing within academe. I guess I'd like to go back to this. You know, we're not a university where multiversity and Clark Kerr wrote a book on that almost 50 years ago. Yeah. How to become a university again. How to become a model for the experiment. We're actually in of trying to collectively understand [00:22:00] a very complex system. I think universities could play a very strong role in making an effort to actually change the system and the system of learning among students, and we're not even talking about that yet. We're still very much in the fractured disciplinary mode and if anything, maybe with the greater need for corporate funding for rich individuals help even more show going into the [00:22:30] disciplinary mode rather than the collective understanding mode. Richard Norgaard, thanks very much for coming on spectrum. Thank you very much for inviting me. It's great pleasure Speaker 2: spectrum shows are on iTunes here. This kid is simple link for you. The link is tiny url.com/k a l ex spectrum. Speaker 5: Now a few of the science of technology events [00:23:00] happening locally over the next two weeks. Vic, could I ski and I present the calendar on Tuesday, January 14th former NASA astronauts and Co founder of the B6 12 foundation. Ed Lou, well discuss protecting earth from asteroids. Why we may not see them coming at the Commonwealth Club of California, five nine five market street in San Francisco. Lou is pointed out that more than a million near Earth Asteroids are larger than the asteroid. That struck Siberia in 1908 [00:23:30] that one was about a thousand times more powerful than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima and it was only about 40 meters across, yet it destroyed an area roughly the size of the San Francisco Bay area. Lou will discuss his mission to detect and track the million with the potential to destroy any major city on earth and how his B6 12 foundation plans to build, launch, and operate a deep space telescope with an infrared lens. The first private sector deep space mission [00:24:00] in history and mission will be $20 or $7 for students. For more information, visit Commonwealth club.org Speaker 3: on January 16th Dr Tom Volk will present a talk on the hidden romantic lives of fun guy. Dr [inaudible] is a professor of biology at the University of Wisconsin Lacrosse where he teaches courses on medical mycology, plant microbe interactions, food and industrial in Mycology, organismal biology and Latin and Greek for scientist. [00:24:30] Dr. Buck has also conducted fungal bio diversity studies in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Alaska, and Israel. His free public talk will be held on Thursday, January 16th from seven 30 to 9:30 PM and three 38 Koshland Hall on the UC Berkeley campus. Speaker 5: Basics, the bay area art and science interdisciplinary collaborative sessions is hosting talks center reception with exhibits on our watershed. Over 7 million of us live near the bays, [00:25:00] rivers and creeks that comprise the San Francisco Bay watershed. Professor Jay Lund will highlight and explore the ramifications of the urban bay areas, dependence on water from distant sources, environmental artists, Daniel McCormick and Mary O'Brien. We'll discuss what they term remedial art, surveying some of their watershed sculpture projects and professor Sarah Cohen will introduce us to sea vomit and other species as she spotlights aquatic diversity [00:25:30] in the bay accompanied by a string quartet. The show will be on Saturday, January 18th seven to 9:00 PM with doors at six 30 it's at the ODC theater, 31 five three 17th street in San Francisco. Admission is on a sliding scale so you can attend for free. You should visit Oh d C dance.org to make your reservation Speaker 3: the years first iteration of the monthly lecture series signs that cow will be held on January 18th [00:26:00] Christian Reichardt or researcher at UC Berkeley will speak about his research on cosmic microwave background radiation. Much of it connected in the South Pole. Cosmic background radiation is our most ancient form of detectable lights and carries the imprint of the big bang. It has been a crucial tool and exploring the beginning of our universe. For the past 20 years, scientists had been mapping this radiation using telescopes located in the South Pole. Dr Reichardt will discuss what is already known about the Big Bang, what the latest results from the South Pole could mean and what it's like to work at the bottom of the world. The free public talk will be held [00:26:30] on January 18th in room one 59 of Mulford Hall on the southwest edge of the UC Berkeley campus. The talk will begin promptly at 11:00 AM a feature spectrum is to present new stories we particularly interesting. Rick Karnofsky joins me for the news. Speaker 5: Oxford anthropologist, Robin Dunbar is famous for formulating the so called Dunbar's number. That's the maximum number of people with whom one can maintain stable social relationships with and it's about 150 [00:27:00] people he's published in the proceedings of National Academy of Sciences. This week. His article coauthored by Jerry Sarah Maki from Alto University in Finland and others reports on a study in which 24 students we're giving it an 18 month sell contract. Throughout the study, participants were given a survey to rank the emotional closeness of friends and family members. Perhaps unsurprisingly, greater emotional closeness rankings correlated with the frequency and duration of [00:27:30] cell phone calls. More surprisingly though was the number of people a person called and how much time they spent on the phone with them remained relatively constant. Even if the particular people they talk to May change. For example, the top three contacts typically get 40 to 50% of the time spent on calls. As new network members are added, some old network members either are replaced or receive your calls. The author's note. This is likely to reflect the consequences of finite resources [00:28:00] such as the time available for communication. That emotional effort required to sustain close relationships and the ability to make emotional investments. Speaker 3: A team of researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have used the inorganic material, vanadium dioxide, to create a micro sized robotic torsional muscle motor. The artificial muscle is a thousand times more powerful than a human muscle of the same size. The device can also hurt all objects 50 times as heavy as itself up to a distance five [00:28:30] times as long as its own link faster than the blink of a human eye within 60 milliseconds. A paper describing the innovative machine and its use of material phase transitions appeared in a recent issue of the journal. Advanced materials, the material and the robotic muscle. Vanadium dioxide is highly prized itself because its properties change with temperature. At low temperatures. It acts as an insulator, but suddenly I 67 degrees Celsius. It becomes a conductor. Additionally, upon warming the crystal instructure, the material will contract in one direction while expanding [00:29:00] in the other two. The multi-functionality of the material makes it a prime candidate for use as an artificial muscle, as well as helping to improve the efficiency in other electronic devices. Okay. Speaker 1: And the music heard during the show was written and produced by Alex Simon. Thank you for listening to spectrum. If you have comments about the show, [00:29:30] please send them to us. Our email address is [inaudible] spectrum dot k a l x@yahoo.com join us in two weeks at this time. Speaker 6: [inaudible]. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Spectrum
Richard Norgaard, Part 2 of 2

Spectrum

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2014 30:00


Richard Norgaard Prof Emeritus of Energy and Resources at UC Berkeley. Among the founders of ecological economics, his research addresses how environmental problems challenge scientific understanding and the policy process. Part two of two.TranscriptSpeaker 1: Spectrum's next. Speaker 2: Okay. Speaker 1: Welcome to spectrum the science and technology show on k a l x Berkeley, a biweekly [00:00:30] 30 minute program bringing you interviews featuring bay area scientists and technologists as well as a calendar of local events and news. Speaker 3: Hi there and good afternoon. My name is Renee Rao and I'll be hosting today's show today. We present part two of our interview with Richard Norgaard, professor emeritus of the energy resources group at UC Berkeley. He's among the founders of the field of ecological economics. His recent research addresses how environmental problems challenged scientific understanding [00:01:00] and the policy process, how ecologists and economists understand systems differently and how globalization affects environmental governance. In part two of the interview Norgaard talks about interdisciplinary problem solving. He also shares his thoughts on sustainability co-evolution and confronting a change in climate. Speaker 4: You've been very interested in them multi-disciplinary collaborative research model. Yeah, this is true. I've had very interesting experiences working in groups with people who think very differently [00:01:30] and I don't know when it starts. I guess probably the first project was a Ford Foundation funded project where eight or nine of us from different disciplines were set up as an Alaska pipeline team in 1970 the summer of 70 and we spent the summer talking to pipeline engineers to state officials, federal officials, scientists in the area, wildlife management people, native Americans, the Eskimo [00:02:00] about what's going on and as a team we tried to assess what's really the potential of [inaudible] Bay oil field for the state of Alaska and what are the myths, how do we break those myths and try to come up with a better understanding. Shortly after I came to Berkeley, Robert Vandenbosch from biological control entomology came into my office and said, we need an economist to work on pesticide use, and I didn't know anything about pesticide use other than what I'd read in silence swing by Rachel Carson and I [00:02:30] had an incredible experience working with Vandenbosch, Carl Huffaker, many, many anthropologists, but rather quickly. Speaker 4: Also just because there weren't other economists doing it. Found myself on a presidential advisory committee working with the council on environmental quality on pesticide policy, a working on on 19 University National Science Foundation Integrated Pest Management Project. And you get out in the field, you talked to farmers, [00:03:00] end up talking to the pesticide industry people and you learn a lot and you try to assemble it and try to change how things are working. So early in my career I got very involved with these interdisciplinary activities, but the, the strongest experience was just joining the knowledges, being on national academy committees with the former president of Stanford University whose names Donald Kennedy, a tremendous scientist that was able to work across [00:03:30] scientific fields with other people. But I was seen scientists involved in collective understanding or using their judgment together to try to say, this is what science can say and this is what society probably should do given what we know. Speaker 4: But it was a judgment process. It wasn't that there was a great big computer model that put all of our understanding together. And have you seen that process improving over time? I think there's more people participating in processes [00:04:00] like that. And the intergovernmental panel on climate change is certainly a massive experiment along those lines. And the Millennium Ecosystem assessment was one of these, we're doing it more. What we're not doing is actually teaching undergraduate students and graduate students that this is how science works when it really comes to understanding complex systems. It's a matter of getting in a room together and talking a lot and bringing your knowledges together. [00:04:30] And then that raises new questions that we can go back and study and do deeper research in small teams of maybe interdisciplinary or maybe it's strictly disciplinary, but it's that does my knowledge fit together with this other person's knowledge? Speaker 4: And if not, what does it mean? And if it does, great, you know, science does not come together. And if it did, who would know, who would be smart enough to know and how would we know that person knew? And so there's a great problem, you got to do it together [00:05:00] and we're not teaching that yet. I think the energy and resources group does, but it's not quite as explicit or as open as it should be. And is that what makes that program so distinctive? Well, I tried to leave that mark on it and had the advantage of serving on the admissions committee. And certainly one of my criteria was to bring people to the program who had enough experience to have a sense of identity [00:05:30] and a sense of voice, experiential knowledge that they could bring to the group, but also to not just take the most brilliant students we could find on the list that best matched the interest of the professors, but to actually try to select 15 to 22 students who could learn together, who had different understanding, who had different disciplinary backgrounds or experiential knowledge. Speaker 4: And so I literally tried to set it up as a shared learning to the extent I could. There's many people involved [00:06:00] in the, in the decision process, and of course the applicants this themselves have to say, yes, your best intentions are never carried out. But that was certainly an influence I tried to have. And to some extent did. And the book that you're working on now or I've just completed? Well, I just try authored a book, David Schlossberg and John Drysek. I have to say that they basically did most of the writing. We had try edited a handbook in Oxford Handbook on climate change in society [00:06:30] and so we decided we ought to build a write up a shorter book, a 200 page book that would be for lay people are educated obviously, but uh, a broader audience, a much broader audience. And the title of that is climate challenge society, right. And I [inaudible] wordpress. Yes. So I, I can say I contributed to the title climate challenge society and climate challenge in both ways that were having difficulty coming to grips with the concept of climate change. But we're also challenged [00:07:00] by the consequences of climate change and that books currently out. That book came out a couple of months ago. I have no idea how it's selling yet. I'm, I'm hopeful. Speaker 2: [inaudible] spectrums. Brad Swift is interviewing Richard Norgaard and ecological economists. Next segment. He talks about the book that he's currently writing. Speaker 4: [00:07:30] The book I'm writing now as the unusual title economism and the economy scene. And so elaborate on the first term economism. Uh, there's several ways to get into this, but you probably understand the difference between environmentalism and environmental science and that environmentalism is the movement. It draws on environmental science, but not as rigorously as it probably should. It doesn't mind using old [00:08:00] environmental science if that suits its purposes better. But environmentalism also feeds back on environmental science that environmental scientists needed speak to environmental ism environmentalist's and so they will choose words to speak to their public. We don't use the word economism. And the quickest way to say this, the difference between environmentalism and economism is that we don't use the word economism because there isn't any difference between economics and economists. [00:08:30] And they're kind of so tightly bound that we don't see the difference that, but economism is the beliefs we hold as a people. Speaker 4: And those beliefs help keep the economy going there. The ideas that are invoked in political discourse. You can think of it as just like we think of environmentalism as only kind of a religious movement or a movement that brings people their social identity. Economism is similar in that way that our economic beliefs help rationalize where we are in the economy [00:09:00] or economic beliefs. Help rationalize allowing our corporations to use cheap labor abroad or economic beliefs. Sort of explain how the system we're in exists and why it's there. Almost everything in our lives on a daily basis and to understand that we have economism that intertwines with economic sciences. Economists themselves are engaged in this belief system in partly perpetrating it and [00:09:30] partly changing it. So that's the nature of the next book, the second term as econo scene and he wrote a familiar, many of them audience would be familiar with the idea of the Anthropocene, the idea that we're now in a new geological era, an era in which people are the primary drivers of environmental change, and that's controversial among the scientific community, but it's begun to be used quite a bit. Speaker 4: And anthropocene to me is very vague. It doesn't [00:10:00] identify what it is. It's doing the driving. If you use the word econo scene, you should say, Nah, it's the economic system that we're in that's doing the driving and it's the economic system that we need to change. I mean we're not going to transform people. We're going to transform our social organization to solve this problem. And so econo scene to my mind is at least since post World War II is the appropriate term. As you look at the current economic system [00:10:30] you and mentioned earlier that the growth paradigm isn't really sustainable. Sustainability is a buzz word of the moment in so many areas. How can we define that and how do we pursue sustainability? I think we're so far from sustainability that it's very difficult to find and we're in this very difficult to understand very complex big system that has all these different feedbacks. Speaker 4: You know, the idea that we can comprehend sustainability is [00:11:00] like, can we comprehend the full environmental system? I don't think so. I think we have a strong sense that we're in a danger zone and we need to move out of it. And we know what directions we need to go. And that means slowing down the rates of material flows, slowing down the rates of energy use, slowing down the amount of toxic materials we're putting into the environment or pulling out of with the environment and transforming and releasing back into the environment. And [00:11:30] we have certain equity concepts that sort of says that those who are doing more of it should cut back more than those who are doing less of it. And I think as we move in those directions, we will see the system responding and we'll eventually get a better sense of sustainability, but we'll never really understand sustainability. Speaker 4: It's a really important word, but the idea that we can define it and get it all tied down scientifically and do it is now become part of our problem. But the idea that [00:12:00] we need to change and we know which direction to go, I think that's actually very clear within that change. Yeah. Does that relate to your idea of co-evolution? Is that sort of the basis of co-evolutionary thought or [inaudible] okay, so yeah, we haven't really laid that out. This was a thought experiment that I was in my own mind working in Brazil in the late seventies and I was very involved in sort of what's going on in the Amazon, gone onto [00:12:30] an Amazon planning team for Brazilian government and they were trying to optimally plan how things work, how could we develop the Amazon using science? And I was sitting there admits this process saying that's not the way development occurred in Europe. Speaker 4: That's not the way development occurred in the United States. There was a lot of experimentation and a lot of things didn't work and some things did work. Oh, that sounds like evolution at the time I was reading a lot of ecology and evolutionary theory and [00:13:00] was a friend of Paul aeroflex who was one of the cofounders of the idea of co-evolution species are primarily evolving in the context of each other, not to a fixed environment and what does that mean for how we think evolutionarily? And so yes, I began to try to understand or think about change in the human nature interaction in co-evolutionary terms. It's a pattern of thinking that sheds light on our predicament. But it's only [00:13:30] one pattern of thinking. So I don't say this is the answer, but it's very insightful. It's a pattern of thinking that says things are happening by experiment and that we should be experimenting more and be less certain about what we're doing. And what we've really done is set up a global system of everybody doing the same thing and we're not learning very much from it. And it's a very risky experiment. So I think if you understand change as an evolutionary process, you don't do what [00:14:00] we've done in globalizing the economy and trying to push that further and further and further. Speaker 1: Spectrum is a public affairs show on k Alex Burke. Our guest today is professor Richard Norgaard of UC Berkeley. In the next segment, he talks about the need for increasing diversity and experimentation in the world's economies. Speaker 4: [00:14:30] So the idea that industries and enterprises should try to become sustainable becomes an experiment. We're always experimenting. We have sincere corporations that are trying to go green. We have corporations that are greenwashing. Everybody's experimenting. But is the system as a whole set ups and those experiments are giving us the diversity we need from a systems [00:15:00] perspective and we're not doing that. And is that much easier to identify in the biological realm rather than in the technology economic world of manufacturing. And um, if economists were actually going out looking at how the world works more than we do, we, one of the beautiful things about biologists, they go out in the field and say, oh look, that's interesting. Yeah. I kind of spend very little time going out and say, wow, this industry is co-evolving [00:15:30] with that industry. Isn't this interesting? We tend to sit in our offices and smash data rather than actually try to observe. Speaker 4: I'm obviously, it's very difficult to observe economic phenomena today, uh, cause there's just so much of it happening and it's not as visible as it was say in the 19th century when industries were just emerging. Certainly there are applied and practical economists that are born at this. How are firms we configuring, how are they relating [00:16:00] to each other in different ways than the economics profession is the academic economics profession. Yeah. I think if we were to be more field oriented we would see co-evolution and maybe you'd be able to draw on it and learn from that. In terms of trying to alter the economic system and the path that we're currently on, given the ideological polarization, do you see a way that that could happen with the current polarization? I have great difficulties seeing it. [00:16:30] The common element unfortunately is we all need our share of material stuff rather than a discussion about what's the good life and how are we going to go forward. Speaker 4: The forward for both of them is more, it's more at the tension over who gets what. Until we get to a situation where we get beyond the stuff and use of energy to what makes a good life. I don't see that transformation happening, but I'm hopeful that it's creeping up somewhere [00:17:00] that those discussions are going on and that'll emerge somewhere. Certainly there are people talking about those things. I don't see it at the center we have now the two centers we have now two, can we create a world in which nations become less in tangled and we can get more experiments between them and then have some sort of a learning way between those different nations so that we retain our flexibility [00:17:30] and don't put all of our eggs in one basket. I guess that's the experiment I'm looking for and does the approach to climate change and global warming, is that an opportunity for the same kind of experimentation? Speaker 4: It may be the disaster that forces us into action. I don't know if you call that an or not, but a opportunity or disaster. It's certainly testing how well we understand complex systems and change with those systems [00:18:00] and I'm hoping we'll find a way to to make this adjustment, but we're not doing it very well now. It certainly seems that they're trying to stay within the growth paradigm so far in your mind until they abandoned that on some level or completely it's not really gonna pay off by my mind. Then again, growth is kind of tricky. What we don't want is a growth of impacts. We want a decline. We want to simplify the ways in which we're interactive with nature. Minimize the footprint. That's one way [00:18:30] to put it. Minimize the footprint so that's not a matter of growth or no growth, right? You could still have growth in the arts. Speaker 4: We could all cut each other's hair every other day and charge each other and the GDP would look fantastic. GDP is a very deceptive numbers just to measure market activity. If somebody wants to call that growth, that's okay with me, but what we really need to do is simplify and be less intrusive in the natural system. Similarly, looking [00:19:00] longterm and coming up with an experimental framework. The delta program that you were talking about and the delta in general being a mysterious black box that no one quite understands. Do you feel that there's a growing acknowledgement within the policy community that it's going to take years and years and years and a very dynamic approach to solve it? I think that's true. The Delta Reform Act of 2009 [00:19:30] is very supportive of science. It mandates that we use adaptive management. You know, it's acknowledging that we have to change our management as the times change. Speaker 4: It's legislation that says climate change exists and we need to bring climate change into our understanding of how we think of the Delta as right in the legislation. I mean that's unusual, you know, at least in the state of California already in a world in which we are acknowledging the system is changing [00:20:00] and we need to change with it. There's real complications as to how you get responsible public action and responsible private action in a changing world and a predictable world. You can say, if you do this, then this will happen. If you don't do it, you're responsible and changing world responsibility is really hard to assign and we still want responsible government. [00:20:30] We still want responsible managers, we want responsible enterprises, but how do you set up rules which you know need to change. If you know they need to change, then our agencies or private parties allowed to adjust before the rules are changed. You give it to see the problem. Structurally responsibility and a rapidly changing world are in conflict. This means we need a dramatic [00:21:00] increase in trust and that trust has to be based on actual actions that are based in scientific understanding of a changing world. How do we build that trust? It gets back to how do we collectively understand and learn together and live as a community together in a changing world, it's pretty dramatic transformation. Speaker 4: How do you see academic work addressing some of these [00:21:30] societal problems going forward? Is there a role? Of course, and of course academia is constantly changing and where the learning is taking place is constantly changing within academe. I guess I'd like to go back to this. You know, we're not a university where multiversity and Clark Kerr wrote a book on that almost 50 years ago. Yeah. How to become a university again. How to become a model for the experiment. We're actually in of trying to collectively understand [00:22:00] a very complex system. I think universities could play a very strong role in making an effort to actually change the system and the system of learning among students, and we're not even talking about that yet. We're still very much in the fractured disciplinary mode and if anything, maybe with the greater need for corporate funding for rich individuals help even more show going into the [00:22:30] disciplinary mode rather than the collective understanding mode. Richard Norgaard, thanks very much for coming on spectrum. Thank you very much for inviting me. It's great pleasure Speaker 2: spectrum shows are on iTunes here. This kid is simple link for you. The link is tiny url.com/k a l ex spectrum. Speaker 5: Now a few of the science of technology events [00:23:00] happening locally over the next two weeks. Vic, could I ski and I present the calendar on Tuesday, January 14th former NASA astronauts and Co founder of the B6 12 foundation. Ed Lou, well discuss protecting earth from asteroids. Why we may not see them coming at the Commonwealth Club of California, five nine five market street in San Francisco. Lou is pointed out that more than a million near Earth Asteroids are larger than the asteroid. That struck Siberia in 1908 [00:23:30] that one was about a thousand times more powerful than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima and it was only about 40 meters across, yet it destroyed an area roughly the size of the San Francisco Bay area. Lou will discuss his mission to detect and track the million with the potential to destroy any major city on earth and how his B6 12 foundation plans to build, launch, and operate a deep space telescope with an infrared lens. The first private sector deep space mission [00:24:00] in history and mission will be $20 or $7 for students. For more information, visit Commonwealth club.org Speaker 3: on January 16th Dr Tom Volk will present a talk on the hidden romantic lives of fun guy. Dr [inaudible] is a professor of biology at the University of Wisconsin Lacrosse where he teaches courses on medical mycology, plant microbe interactions, food and industrial in Mycology, organismal biology and Latin and Greek for scientist. [00:24:30] Dr. Buck has also conducted fungal bio diversity studies in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Alaska, and Israel. His free public talk will be held on Thursday, January 16th from seven 30 to 9:30 PM and three 38 Koshland Hall on the UC Berkeley campus. Speaker 5: Basics, the bay area art and science interdisciplinary collaborative sessions is hosting talks center reception with exhibits on our watershed. Over 7 million of us live near the bays, [00:25:00] rivers and creeks that comprise the San Francisco Bay watershed. Professor Jay Lund will highlight and explore the ramifications of the urban bay areas, dependence on water from distant sources, environmental artists, Daniel McCormick and Mary O'Brien. We'll discuss what they term remedial art, surveying some of their watershed sculpture projects and professor Sarah Cohen will introduce us to sea vomit and other species as she spotlights aquatic diversity [00:25:30] in the bay accompanied by a string quartet. The show will be on Saturday, January 18th seven to 9:00 PM with doors at six 30 it's at the ODC theater, 31 five three 17th street in San Francisco. Admission is on a sliding scale so you can attend for free. You should visit Oh d C dance.org to make your reservation Speaker 3: the years first iteration of the monthly lecture series signs that cow will be held on January 18th [00:26:00] Christian Reichardt or researcher at UC Berkeley will speak about his research on cosmic microwave background radiation. Much of it connected in the South Pole. Cosmic background radiation is our most ancient form of detectable lights and carries the imprint of the big bang. It has been a crucial tool and exploring the beginning of our universe. For the past 20 years, scientists had been mapping this radiation using telescopes located in the South Pole. Dr Reichardt will discuss what is already known about the Big Bang, what the latest results from the South Pole could mean and what it's like to work at the bottom of the world. The free public talk will be held [00:26:30] on January 18th in room one 59 of Mulford Hall on the southwest edge of the UC Berkeley campus. The talk will begin promptly at 11:00 AM a feature spectrum is to present new stories we particularly interesting. Rick Karnofsky joins me for the news. Speaker 5: Oxford anthropologist, Robin Dunbar is famous for formulating the so called Dunbar's number. That's the maximum number of people with whom one can maintain stable social relationships with and it's about 150 [00:27:00] people he's published in the proceedings of National Academy of Sciences. This week. His article coauthored by Jerry Sarah Maki from Alto University in Finland and others reports on a study in which 24 students we're giving it an 18 month sell contract. Throughout the study, participants were given a survey to rank the emotional closeness of friends and family members. Perhaps unsurprisingly, greater emotional closeness rankings correlated with the frequency and duration of [00:27:30] cell phone calls. More surprisingly though was the number of people a person called and how much time they spent on the phone with them remained relatively constant. Even if the particular people they talk to May change. For example, the top three contacts typically get 40 to 50% of the time spent on calls. As new network members are added, some old network members either are replaced or receive your calls. The author's note. This is likely to reflect the consequences of finite resources [00:28:00] such as the time available for communication. That emotional effort required to sustain close relationships and the ability to make emotional investments. Speaker 3: A team of researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have used the inorganic material, vanadium dioxide, to create a micro sized robotic torsional muscle motor. The artificial muscle is a thousand times more powerful than a human muscle of the same size. The device can also hurt all objects 50 times as heavy as itself up to a distance five [00:28:30] times as long as its own link faster than the blink of a human eye within 60 milliseconds. A paper describing the innovative machine and its use of material phase transitions appeared in a recent issue of the journal. Advanced materials, the material and the robotic muscle. Vanadium dioxide is highly prized itself because its properties change with temperature. At low temperatures. It acts as an insulator, but suddenly I 67 degrees Celsius. It becomes a conductor. Additionally, upon warming the crystal instructure, the material will contract in one direction while expanding [00:29:00] in the other two. The multi-functionality of the material makes it a prime candidate for use as an artificial muscle, as well as helping to improve the efficiency in other electronic devices. Okay. Speaker 1: And the music heard during the show was written and produced by Alex Simon. Thank you for listening to spectrum. If you have comments about the show, [00:29:30] please send them to us. Our email address is [inaudible] spectrum dot k a l x@yahoo.com join us in two weeks at this time. Speaker 6: [inaudible]. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 208 – Zoo Expedition with Ben Aller

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2013 64:04


Ben Aller (@zoofab) is a Zoo Guy! He makes prefab vines and rocks for the animals to climb on! He knows things. We walk around the San Francisco Zoo and talk it out. Dork Expedition at the ZOO! It's WINDY... Patrick has done as much as he could do. I hope it's not too windy for you all, cuz it's great. Enjoy. December's sponsor is www.geekiana.com. Leann Olsen was on TDFEP206 talking Doctor Who and, her story reflect that. Use the code "RANGER" and get 20% off. She also has her own podcast. LISTEN UP. ORDER UP. This month, it's still December! DONATE to your local food bank instead of TDF. Finde them in the US at If you want to order stuff (t-shirts, CDs, Hoodies) go to www.jackiekashian.com and do that. There's also an AMAZON banner there (white) on the front page. Click through when you order from Amazon, no additional cost to you, I get a kickback. Thanks for that help. www.allthingscomedy.com is the podcast network The Dork Forest is a part of where plenty of other podcasts there if you're looking for them. And you should check it out. NOTES: Ben's Company San Francisco Zoo CREDITS: Mike Ruekberg composed and sings (with Sarah Cohen) the theme song. Patrick Brady fixes the audio and compiles the teaser clips on www.youtube.com/thedorkforestVilmos fixes my website www.jackiekashian.com and has his own pods, including The Green Room. Bonus track (on iPhone/Android apps) and at tdf.libsyn.com for free, for some reason.

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 207 – Matt Mira enjoys James Bond

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2013 61:31


Matt Mira (@MattMira) loves James Bond. I learn a lot. Like what he likes to do in hotel rooms after kicking some ass. Matt is on the Nerdist and another pod called James Bonding. Cuz he's a bit of a James Bond dork. Enjoy. I did. There's also another "find Jackie a thing and win something" contest. Good luck. December's sponsor is last episode's guest - www.geekiana.com  - She has a world of geekery that includes t-shirts, Doctor Who hoodies, scarves and sweatshirts. She also has a podcast! LISTEN UP! ORDER UP! Get 20% off with checkout code, "Ranger." Yeah... a deal. This month I do not ask you to donate to TDF... INSTEAD, find your LOCAL Food Bank and donate to THEM. In the US? Go here: http://feedingamerica.org/foodbank-results.aspx and search by your zip. Out of the US? I believe in your school systems... you can find them! You can probably still order this week and get stuff by Christmas if you're in the US. Tshirts, Zip Hoodies, CDs at www.jackiekashian.com. Also, PLEASE use the AMAZON banner on my website to order from them. Costs you nothing, I get a kickback. Right after Christmas I'm recording my NEW Hour Special in Minneapolis at ACME. Come to the taping! Dec 26, 27, 28th... www.acmecomedycompany.com NOTES: Chris Hardwick and Matt Mira Podcast - www.nerdist.comBaltimore, VOL 1 - www.amazon.com/Baltimore-Volume-The-PLague-Ships/dp/1595826734Jaws - Richard KielNever Say Never Again - Kevin McCloryJames Bonding - Matt Gourley and Matt Mira's other podcast - www.nerdist.com/podcast/james-bonding/Scott Conant - www.scottconant.comTyler's Ultimate - Old Food Network showFlipper 1963 - TRAILER so you KNOW WHAT I WANT! www.tcm.com/mediaroom/video/338245/Flipper-Movie-Clip-My-Life-On-The-Sea.htmlCREDITS: Mike Ruekberg composed and sings (with Sarah Cohen) the theme song. Patrick Brady fixes the audio and compiles the teaser clips on www.youtube.com/thedorkforestVilmos fixes my website www.jackiekashian.com and has his own podcasts... including THE GREEN ROOM. www.allthingscomedy.com is the podcast network that TDF is a proud part of. Bonus track on the iPhone/Android apps and, free, just there, for some reason, at tdf.libsyn.com. Andy Goes off on Baccarat. heh.

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 206 – Leann Olsen WON!

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2013 34:51


Leann Olsen () won the Laffster () contest wherein you get to be ON TDF. We talk crafting and Dr. Who. She's been listening to the show so long I think she KNOWS that, schedule permitting, you don't have to "win" to be on TDF... you just have to get me in the same room in the same town with some time. As it is... this episode is only about 40 minutes and it could have gone on much longer. But the standup show at ACME was about to start and so we went our separate ways. More will come to you from the tshirt designing, British television loving world of on twitter. Enjoy this until then.   This month DO NOT DONATE to the show. INSTEAD, Find you LOCAL Food Bank and donate to THEM. can help you find it. If you want to ORDER merch (tshirts, CDs, Hoodies) from me and the show for the holidays… go for it at   There’s an AMAZON banner (white) on the front page too… if you want to use that, I get a kickback. No additional cost to you. And that’s where I’m keeping my schedule for standup and live TDF. www.allthingscomedy.com is the podcast network The Dork Forest is a part of. Plenty of other podcasts there if you're looking for them. NOTES:Miro Inverted Personages Con-Vergence Watership Downton Abbey: Georgette Heyer: Nicholas Blake: Daniel Dad Lewis.  CREDITS:Mike Ruekberg composed and sings (with Sarah Cohen) the theme song. Patrick Brady fixes the audio and compiles the teaser clips on   Vilmos fixes my website  and has his own pods, including The Green Room Bonus track (on iPhone/Android apps) and at tdf.libsyn.com for free, for some reason.

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 205 – Brandi Brown loves SCOTUS

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2013 63:50


Brandi Brown (twitter @ItsTheBrandi) is, like most of us, a nesting doll of dorkdoms. We, eventually, get to her fascination with the current Supreme Court of the United States and local Canadian news. But we go through Justin Beiber, to SCOTUS, to Sesame Street. She really wants there to be a dramady where we watch 9 old people argue. It's Fun! Enjoy. This month DO NOT DONATE to TDF... INSTEAD, find your LOCAL Food Bank and donate to them. www.feedingamerica.or/foodbank-results.aspx if you're in the US. If you want to ORDER stuff (T-shirts, CDs or Hoodies - I have, in stock, one of each size of the hoodies and everything in Dork Forest shirts and Ranger Shirts). If you are ordering from AMAZON this month - and, really, who isn't? Use the Amazon banner on www.jackiekashian.com (white, right above my Conan set) and it'll take you to Amazon and TDF will get a kickback, no additional cost to you. NOTES: Brandi's Pod - www.blaxploitationpodcast.comBrandi's Blog - www.houseofprocrastination.orgBrandi's Fringe SCOTUS show: www.fringefestival.org/2011/show/?id=1512More info on SCOTUS: www.supremecourthistory.orgJudge John Robert's sports analogies: Robert Bork Supreme Court Hearings (close! 1987!): Judge Sotomayer on Sesame Street: www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHICz5MYxNQBrandi's Heathcliff Blog: www.orangecatantics.wordpress.com/ To READ:The Nine by Jeffry Toobin CREDITS:Mike Ruekberg composed and sings (with Sarah Cohen) the theme song.Patrick Brady fixes the audio and compiles the teaser clips on www.youtube.com/thedorkforestVilmos fixes my website www.jackiekashian.comwww.allthingscomedy.com hosts the show on their podcast network. BONUS CONTENT: available on the apps (IOS and Android) and on www.tdf.libsyn.com

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 203 – Ryan Stout went to Traffic COURT

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2013 67:40


Ryan Stout (@StoutRyan) is a great comic www.ryanstout.com adn a guy that is willing to "fight the man." We hash out the traffic justice system in this country, the Constitution and NONE of this is legal advice. Know that in your heart. It's funny, insightful and great. I'll stand by that forever. Enjoy. This month DO NOT DONATE to the show. INSTEAD, find your LOCAL food bank and donate to THEM. http://feedingamerica.org/foodbank-results.aspx can help you find it. If you want to ORDER something offa the site for the holidays... sure! If you want to use the AMAZON banner on www.jackiekashian.com and click on that to get to Amazon (I get a kickback, no additional cost to you) ... go for it. www.allthingscomedy.com continues to grow more podcasts and will start putting out original content soon. Go there!! NOTES: Demur - NOT Demure. Sigh. a couple times I say it wrong, don't do it right. Sigh. www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/demurMeyer Lansky - Mob Money Guy - wikipedia the guy. He's fascinating.Google YouTube "fight traffic court" and get ready to watch a million vids. CREDITS:Mike Ruekberg composed and sings (with Sarah Cohen) the theme song.Patrick Brady fixes the audio and compiles the teaser clips on www.youtube.com/thedorkforestVilmos fixes my website www.jackiekashian.com and has his own pods, including The Green Room Bonus track (on iPhone/Android apps) and at tdf.libsyn.com for free, for some reason with Andy IS GREAT this ep. they're all great. this one is extra great.

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 202 – Live Streaming Monster Talk

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2013 83:45


This episode was LIVE Streamed through www.Laffster.com. Dana Gould (@DanJGould), Matt Weinhold (@MattWeinhold) and Shawn Sheridan talked with me about scary movies that might be palatable to me. I was inspired to see Evil Dead 2 for the first time, RIGHT after this... and, they were right. They're hilarious, but - as with some live shows... I make audio choices that are hard for Patrick to fix. SO... it's worth the slight buzzing... because these guys know TOO much and LOVE these movies so much. It's great. enjoy.  This month DO NOT DONATE to the show. INSTEAD, Find your LOCAL food bank and donate to THEM. http://feedingamerica.org/foodbank-results.aspx if you're in the US. If you're overseas... google it. I believe in you. If, however, you want to order something for the holidays to support the show... that can totally happen at www.jackiekashian.com (tshirt, CDs, Hoodies). And if you're ordering from Amazon, USE THE "Support the Show" Amazon Banner on www.jackiekashian.com. No additional cost to you. I get a kickback. My regular website is, too, where my standup schedule is updated. www.allthingscomedy.com is the podcast network TDF is a part of. They are also going to start producing original content and it's gonna be cool. So check that out! NOTES:Sci-Fi Classics: www.amazon.com/Sci-Fi-Classics-50-Movie-Pack/dp/B0001HAGU6/Abbott and Costello, The Gathering, The Prestige, Pirates of the Caribbean, Evil Dead 2&3, American Werewolf in London, The Exocist, The Omen, The Human Centipede (2010) huh, Lizz Winstead http://lizzwinstead.com, Rosemary's Baby, Halloween, Psycho, 1972 Nightstalker, The Thing CREDITS:Mike Ruekberg composed and sings (with Sarah Cohen) the theme song.Patrick Brady fixes the audio and compiles the Teaser clips at www.youtube.com/thedorkforestVilmos fixes my website and has his own podcasts, like THE GREEN ROOM

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 199 – Michelle McNamara on True Crime

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2013 71:58


Michelle McNamara returns to creep me out about True Crime! (@truecrimediary & www.truecrimediary.com) and it's great. This is her third time back... we discuss home security and cops and criminals and crime and creeps. Her previous eps (TDF#50, #129) are where I first learn about the undiscovered killers of the world. This ep we catch up on bad guys and Michelle's life. She's hilarious. Enjoy. This month's shows have been sponsored by MY comic book store: www.earth2comics.com They have two stores in LA, one in Sherman Oaks and One in Northridge. Go in, tell them yer a Ranger and get 10% off for listening to TDF. www.allthingscomedy.com is the podcast network TDF is a part of. Plenty of other pods over there... check them out! CREDITS: Patrick Brady fixes the Audio and puts the Teaser Audio/Video together. He's great.Mike Ruekberg composed and sings (with Sarah Cohen) the theme to TDF and the Mexican Hat Dance. So great.Vilmos fixes www.jackiekashian.com and has his own podcast(s). He's great. DONATE folks. Somebody told me that $100 year works out to $8/month. I haven't made that easy for you. But I believe in you. And I think her math is probably right. You can do that, you can order shirts/hoodies/CDs from www.jackiekashian.com or you can use the Amazon banner there to order stuff you're going to get anyway. I get a kickback. My schedule is also over there ... right by the donate button. NOTES:Georgia Lady who talked down the gunmanCold JusticePatton Oswalt (Michelle's comic husband) http://pattonoswalt.com Patton's article on www.TrueCrimeDiary.com (over 1000 words) Blaine Capatch should be followed on twitter @blainecapatchDriving in Cars with Coffee - Broadchurch The Fall The Blacklist

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 194 – James Adomian

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2013 64:29


James Adomian (@JADOMIAN on twitter) is one of my favorite comics working today and knows that there are True and Valid conspiracies that are happening. It's not reptiles and the moon landing. He is interested in what has been called "Deep Politics." He's always funny, always smart and he has a great album that you should get from iTunes called Low Hanging Fruit. This month's episode is sponsored by Earth 2 Comics... MY very own comic store. has a store in Sherman Oaks, CA and Northridge, CA. MENTION you are a Ranger of The Dork Forest and Get 10% off your purchase!! LIVE IT UP!! DONATE folks... I'm working over here. www.dorkforest.com or www.jackiekashian.com. Use the Amazon banner on my page to order your amazon stuff and I get a kickback if you can't donate. Or order merch from my page if you want to fly yer dorkin flag. Full standup schedule available and life TDF's are listed! Thanks for tuning in! NOTES: Peter Dale Scott coined "Deep Politics"Jesse Ventura - 1980 wrestling, Gov of MN 1998, 2009 Conspiracy Theory showPaul WellstoneAntiWar History in WW2 - I am WRONG - I know, hard to believe, 313 MIllion people in the US - not 380. And... the planet has more than 7 billion of us, that one annoying species on it. To READ: Homage to Catalonia - George OrwellGeneration Kill - Evan Wright (Recon Marines into Iraq)Politics and teh English Language - George OrwellPromethea - Alan MooreCharles Protis - all of it, I'm told.Aristophanes - what's left of it. Asgard! Thor is from AsgardQuantitative Easing - It's going to end up BEING inflation but it, in itself - i'm told, is not inflation. I'm not an economist... nor do I wish to be one... so i don't know. Waiting for Waiting for Godot - James Howard Kunstler CREDITS: Mike Ruekberg (composed, sang) opening song. lyrics to end folk song as well. Sarah Cohen on intro musicPatrick Brady fixes the Audio and puts together the teaser clips: Vilmos fixes my website: www.jackiekashian.com 

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 109 - Kevin Avery and KleeWiggins

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2012 58:54


(@KevinAvery) and (@kleethepimp) are standup comics and are real, dyed in the wool, Star Wars fans. Klee could probably act out the whole series. I need to have them back separately so that Klee and I allow Kevin to talk. This ep weeds off into TV, movies and actors. I get another recommendation of a movie I will never see on purpose. They both just did a short film, . Look into it. Tell me if the notes are showing up on your apps. There are apps by the way... heh. I'm told I have to type them into libsyn's word document.Donation Button is on and ... . Knock yourselves out. NOTES: Credits: Audio by . Intro Music and Lyrics by  and Sarah Cohen (outro accapella by Mike as well)Website design and maintenence by , who has his own you should listen to. Bonus content when you get the app foror The podcast is also subscribable on - feel free to review the shows and leave comments. It's supposed to impress itunes. heh.

The Dork Forest
TDF EP 90 – Live with Margaret Cho

The Dork Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2011 75:02


This is a HUGE show. and are my guests. They are comics, actors, fans of tattoos and self empowerment. and Sarah Cohen sing and play the theme song he composed LIVE. And then close the show  with their fantastic music/comedy. You really missed a great live show. Or. Did. You? It’s a very musical one. Enjoy.   December Donation Button: This month donate here:   Credits: Live Recording by Recorded Live by Recorded Live by Audio leveling by Music is by . Website design by : who has his own   Apps are available with bonus content: or My websites are and  . Review the show on Feel free to e me.   NOTES: – MUSIC on OPENING – Successful!