Podcast appearances and mentions of Sarah Franklin

American anthropologist

  • 69PODCASTS
  • 91EPISODES
  • 44mAVG DURATION
  • 1EPISODE EVERY OTHER WEEK
  • Feb 26, 2025LATEST

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Best podcasts about Sarah Franklin

Latest podcast episodes about Sarah Franklin

Publish & Prosper
Book Publicity Simplified with Sarah Franklin

Publish & Prosper

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2025 51:55 Transcription Available


In this episode, Matt & Lauren are joined by Sarah Franklin, Lulu's Public Relations Manager and expert book publicist! Hear about book publicity simplified as Sarah answers questions like: →  What's the value in hiring a publicist vs. doing your own publicity?→  What exactly is a publicist's role in book marketing? →  How do you make the most of earned publicity once you have it? And more! Listen now or watch Episode #60 on YouTube. Dive Deeper

Joncast Podcast
E124: ESPN Madison Wisconsin Volleyball event with Kelly Sheffield, Sarah Franklin, Mimi Colyer and Charlie Fuerbringer (Season 3 Episode 23)

Joncast Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2025 19:28


In this special episode, I share our Q&A from the end-of-season ESPN Madison Wisconsin Volleyball event at North and South in Verona. The newest Badger, Mimi Colyer, discusses her whirlwind transfer from Oregon to Wisconsin and what drew her to the program. LOVB Madison and former Badger Sarah Franklin gives insight into life as a pro volleyball player. Setter Charlie Fuerbringer talks about running the Badgers' offense and what it's like having elite talent around her. Plus, Head Coach Kelly Sheffield breaks down the offseason, answers fan questions, and shares some breaking news about Wisconsin's spring schedule.

TSCRA Talk
Ag Loan 101

TSCRA Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2025 21:44


Sarah Franklin, Texas Farm Credit vice president branch manager in Pleasanton, joins TSCRA Talk host, Kristen Brown, to discuss the basics of an ag loan. Franklin outlines both long-term loans and short-term loans such as operating loans, as well as documentation needed for the application process.  She shares the five C's they take into consideration when evaluating a loan – character, capacity, capital, collateral and conditions, in addition to valuable insight on the loan process.  Additional information can be found at texasfarmcredit.com/resources/.  

Joncast Podcast
E123: Wisconsin volleyball adds a transfer plus Badgers women's basketball players Lily Krahn and Carter McCray (Season 3 Episode 22)

Joncast Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2025 14:59


In this episode I talk about the date and time for the Wisconsin Volleyball end-of-season event at North and South in Verona with Kelly Sheffield and LOVB Madison's Sarah Franklin. Plus, I share my reaction to the Badgers' latest portal addition, Mimi Colyer, and what she brings to the team. Wisconsin women's basketball player Lily Krahn joins me to talk about her recent scoring surge and why Adam Sandler movies top her list. Also, Wisconsin forward Carter McCray opens up about her decision to transfer to Wisconsin and shares her favorite Netflix series.

Serving Pancakes
Serving Pancakes | LOVB is Here! The First Two Weeks with Sarah Franklin and Chiaka Ogbogu

Serving Pancakes

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2025 62:06 Transcription Available


The League One Volleyball season has started! LOVB Austin opposite Khat Bell joins Tiffany as co-host, and the two break down what’s happened so far in the season with insights only an athlete who played in those matches can provide. The pair also chat with Khat’s teammate and LOVB Austin Founding Athlete Chiaka Ogbogu and LOVB Madison rookie Sarah Franklin, who joined the league as part of the LOVB 6 in December. Follow Khat on Instagram and X (formerly Twitter).Follow Chiaka on Instagram, TikTok and X (formerly Twitter).Follow Sarah on Instagram and TikTok. Host: Tiffany OshinskySenior Producer: Anya AlvarezExecutive Producers: Carrie Stett, Tamara Deike, and Lindsay HoffmanTheme Music: Pancakes by Eric W. Mast, Jr.Sound Designer: Daniel Gonzalez Serving Pancakes is an iHeart Women's Sports Production, in partnership with Deep Blue Sports and Entertainment. You can find us on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Go To Market Grit
#225 CEO Lattice, Sarah Franklin: Trailblazer

Go To Market Grit

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2025 72:01


Guest: Sarah Franklin, CEO of LatticeAs the CEO of a growing company, Lattice's Sarah Franklin has learned that one of her most important contributions is taking a leap of faith. “You have to have the courage to be the first one to do it,” she says,” and to show that it can be done, and to pave the way so that then your team feels trust.”Sarah cautions, though, that sometimes courage is deciding to stop and go a different direction. As agentic AI becomes more common, the people building companies like Lattice should look to the “cautionary tales” of how social media and mobile phones have changed society, she says.“We can have the courage to say, what are the outcomes that we want to prevent? Or what are the outcomes that we want to make sure happen? This all takes, courage, because it's all unknown.”Chapters:(01:14) - Schooling in Mexico (04:09) - Raising brave children (10:28) - Sarah's upbringing (13:29) - The pursuit of money (16:23) - Measuring success (19:28) - Learnings, not regrets (22:55) - Make an impact (26:44) - Pitching Trailhead (32:56) - Elevating a B2B company (35:27) - How to colonize Mars (38:39) - Marketing, the Salesforce way (44:21) - Dolphining and truth-tellers (50:56) - Renewed purpose (56:30) - The challenges of being CEO (01:00:18) - Pave the way (01:03:25) - “Humanizing AI” (01:06:57) - Handling controversy (01:11:04) - Who Lattice is hiring and what “grit” means to Sarah Mentioned in this episode: FaceTime, Salesforce, Marc Benioff, Mahatma Gandhi, Instagram, the Fortune 500, Java, Jerry Maguire, National Parks, Nike, Michael Jordan, Apple and “Think Different,” Sara Varni, Scott Holden, Andy Kofoid, Databricks, Datadog, Behind the Cloud, Oracle, Microsoft, Elon Musk, Amazon AWS, George Hu, Mike Rosenbaum, Cheryl Feldman, Zac Otero, Guidewire Software, AI agents, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, and LinkedIn.Links:Connect with SarahLinkedInConnect with JoubinTwitterLinkedInEmail: grit@kleinerperkins.com Learn more about Kleiner PerkinsThis episode was edited by Eric Johnson from LightningPod.fm

Joncast Podcast
E121: LOVB Madison preview with Sarah Franklin, Annie Schumacher and Annmarie Hickey (Season 3 Episode 20)

Joncast Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2025 21:22


This episode offers a behind-the-scenes look at LOVB Madison and the players and coaches shaping its first year. I discuss the upcoming season as well as New Year's resolutions and favorite TV shows. Rookie Sarah Franklin shares why she chose to join LOVB and what it's like playing alongside former Badger and pro standout Lauren Carlini. Two-time Olympic medalist Annie Schumacher discusses the challenges and excitement of building a team culture and identity in their inaugural season. Plus, assistant coach Annmarie Hickey reflects on the unique experience of coaching a former teammate.

Joncast Podcast
E117: Don't count out Wisconsin's seniors/Kelly Sheffield Show Review/Sarah Franklin/Charlie Fuerbringer/Annie Drews Schumacher (Season 3 Episode 16)

Joncast Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2024 23:38


In this episode, I make the case for why you shouldn't count out Wisconsin's seniors when it comes to the NCAA Tournament. Hear Head Coach Kelly Sheffield's thoughts on the match against Nebraska and what it means moving forward. I also revisit some pre-match interviews: Sarah Franklin shares the story behind choosing the number 13, Charlie Fuerbringer talks about returning to her home state of California and her favorite part of playing volleyball, and LOVB Madison's Annie Drews Schumacher previews what to expect in the upcoming LOVB season. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jon-arias/support

Joncast Podcast
E114: It's Blocktober in a win over Michigan/Kelly Sheffield Show Review/Trinity Shadd-Ceres/Gulce Guctekin

Joncast Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 19:20


In this episode I talk about Wisconsin Volleyball's dominant performance, including the team's record-setting 21 blocks against Michigan, as highlighted by Head Coach Kelly Sheffield. We also recap standout bounce-back performances from Sarah Franklin and Anna Smrek. Plus, meet freshman Trinity Shadd-Ceres, who shares how she followed the Badgers from Canada and her impressive track and field background. And don't miss Wisconsin libero Gulce Guctekin's thoughts on the team's winning streak and how she celebrated her birthday with a special visit from her mother, all the way from Turkey. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jon-arias/support

The Edge of Work
Leading with People: Aligning People, Technology and Leadership with Sarah Franklin The Strategic Power of People Leaders in the Age of AI

The Edge of Work

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2024 42:35


Sarah Franklin is the CEO at Lattice. After starting her career as a chemical engineer, Sarah spent 15 years at Salesforce and along the way has spent a lot of time collaborating and partnering with different C-Suite roles on using technology and AI to enhance the employee experience. Now, in her role as CEO of an HR software company, Sarah spends her time talking with Chief People Officers and has a keen understanding of how they navigate the strategic and operational challenges in today's work environment.During this conversation, Sarah shares her reflections on the evolving role of HR, the CEO-CPH relationships, and the role of and how companies can foster manager effectiveness to drive performance and employee engagement. Sarah also shares insights on the role of AI in HR, balancing technology with human skills and strategies for creating high-performing teams in today's dynamic workplace.LinksSarah Franklin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sarahfranklin/Lattice: www.lattice.comLattice & YouGov Research: https://lattice.com/library/lattice-research-reveals-what-employees-really-think-about-hrs-impact-on-cultureV2MOM Background: https://www.salesforce.com/blog/how-to-create-alignment-within-your-company/Al Dea: https://al-dea.com/contact/

Wiser than Before
How to Fix Your Metabolism Without Starving or Over-Exercising w/ Sarah Franklin

Wiser than Before

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2024 57:39


“The biggest thing I see is most women are under-eating. You cannot thrive and have an optimal metabolism and thyroid on 1,500 calories a day. That's not enough.” - Sarah FranklinYou'll discover…Why eating less isn't the key to weight lossWhy cutting calories doesn't work, and what you can do insteadHow exercising LESS can help you lose weightHow modern exercise routines can sabotage your metabolismWhy not eating enough slows your metabolismWhy age is not the main factor in health declineHow blood sugar imbalances show up long before diabetesWhich fats support health and which fats harm healthWhy eating enough (healthy) fat is essential for your hormones to function properlyWhy lean chicken makes some people feel tiredWhy electrolytes are crucial on the carnivore diet, and how to get yours rightTips for safely implementing the carnivore dietPitfalls to avoid if you want to try a carnivore dietThe power of metabolic flexibilityListen now and stay wise!EPISODES YOU MAY ENJOY:Alessia MainWhy Environment Is the Most Overlooked Aspect of HealthUnlearning What You've Been Taught About Health, Trusting Your Intuition, and The Power of Your Mind in Healing w/ Jessica YeagerConnect with Sarah:Instagram: @inthebuffwellnessWebsite: https://inthebuffwellness.com/YouTube: @inthebuffwellnessConnect with your host Josh Dodds:Website: www.thecalnut.comInstagram: @josh__doddsThis podcast is proudly produced in partnership with www.podlad.com

Wiser than Before
Carnivore Diet for Weight Loss: Bigger Meals, More Dietary Fat, and No Calorie Counting w/ Sarah Franklin

Wiser than Before

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2024 8:35


“Calories in versus calories out is not how the body works. It's not about the calories, it's about the hormonal response to the food that we eat.” - Sarah FranklinYou'll discover…Why calorie counting won't help you lose body fat long-termHow to tell if your body is in “famine mode”Why high stress stops your body from burning fatHow “eating less” can actually lower your metabolismWhy so many of us are overfed but undernourishedThe biggest misconception about the carnivore dietThe role of fat in balancing hunger hormonesWhy snacking hurts your metabolismListen now and stay wise!Connect with Sarah:Instagram: @inthebuffwellnessWebsite: https://inthebuffwellness.com/YouTube: @inthebuffwellnessConnect with your host Josh Dodds:Website: www.thecalnut.comInstagram: @josh__doddsThis podcast is proudly produced in partnership with www.podlad.com

Joncast Podcast
E110: Kelly Sheffield Show Review/Sarah Franklin went off!/Lauren Carlini (Season 3 Episode 9)

Joncast Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 15:33


In this episode, I recap Sarah Franklin's incredible performance against Marquette, where she shattered the Wisconsin school record with 33 kills. I break down how Franklin's dominant play impacted the match and what it means for the team moving forward. I also recap this week's Kelly Sheffield Show, sharing my top three takeaways from the show. Plus, hear my exclusive pre-game interview with former Badger setter and new Offensive Analyst and Strategy Consultant, Lauren Carlini, as she talks about her new role with the team. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jon-arias/support

VARSITY
9.19 The Kelly Sheffield Show - Rivalries, Records and Rotations

VARSITY

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 45:21


Voice of the Wisconsin Badgers Volleyball Radio Network is joined by Badgers head coach Kelly Sheffield and the program's newest assistant coach, Lauren Carlini. The trio recap the Badgers 3 -1 victory over in-state rival Marquette in the Kohl Center Classic. The atmosphere of having 15,000 fans in the Kohl Center. As well as Sarah Franklin's record setting night. Kelly and Lauren will answer some questions from Badgers fans and will look ahead to the start of B1G play next week.

VARSITY
Marquette vs #7 Wisconsin Volleyball

VARSITY

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 177:45


The 7th ranked Wisconsin Badgers host in state rivals, the Marquette Golden Eagles for the Kohl Center Classic. The Badgers drop the first set before winning three straight for the 3-1 victory. It was also a record setting night for Sarah Franklin as she earn career kill 1500 and breaks the school record for kills in a match with 33.

Joncast Podcast
E103: Sarah Franklin (Season 3 Episode 2)

Joncast Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2024 4:53


Wisconsin's standout outside hitter Sarah Franklin joined me before the Badgers' first match of the season in Louisville. In this pre-game interview, Sarah shares insights from her summer training, her thoughts on the upcoming season, and how it all began when she first picked up a volleyball at just 11 years old. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jon-arias/support

Single Jungle
Ep.91

Single Jungle

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2024 58:09


"J'ai eu besoin d'écrire sur l'amour parce que je ne crois plus qu'il y ait quoi que ce soit à reconstruire ou à réinventer. Il faut détruire l'idée d'amour. " Majé, enseignante, chercheuse, autrice : "Non-binaire quand je suis dans ma chambre, femme cisgenre quand je me présente aux autres".Majé ouvre un débat passionnant : et si finalement, l'amour au sens "relation amoureuse", plutôt qu'un souhait positif, n'était en fait, que l'origine de nombreuses souffrances. Et si on sortait de la matrice ? Des schémas répétitifs ? En serait-on plus heureuse, heureux ? J'ai dévoré le livre de Majé "Ne plus tomber (en amour) - manifeste de dissidence affective" (éditions Ixe), paru en octobre 2023. Dans cet épisode, nous évoquons : l'éducation (conditionnement ?) à l'amour et à la quête d'une relation amoureuse, la dépendance affective, le male gaze (être validé·e par les hommes) mais aussi la joie, le plaisir, la sexualité, la tendresse, la jalousie ou la compersion, les différentes formes d'amour ou de relations intimes pas forcément amoureuses, la CONSIDERATION qu'on est en droit d'attendre de tout partenaire, le consentement, l'amitié, l'habitat, le sommeil (en solo ou à plusieurs) etc. Si vous êtes une grand·e romantique, et que le titre de l'épisode vous effraie, ouvrez votre cœur et votre esprit, cet épisode vous est dédié, vraiment ! Si vous voulez soutenir Single Jungle, avec un don en une seule fois (ou +), j'ai ouvert un Tipeee : https://fr.tipeee.com/single-jungle. J'ai suivi le conseil d'auditrices et d'auditeurs qui ont proposé de participer à la hauteur de leurs moyens, ponctuellement, aux frais des épisodes (prise de son/montage). Merci aux premières personnes qui ont participé ! MERCI à tous et toutes ! Single Jungle a dépassé les 340 000 écoutes cumulées, tous épisodes confondus ! C'est un bel accomplissement ! En route pour les 400 000 ! AUTO-PROMO : Je suis encore passée sur France inter ! Cette fois, dans l'émission "Blockbusters" animée par Frédérick Sigrist, avec Jennifer Padjemi (autrice, journaliste, podcasteuse) et Benjamin Benoit (journaliste et auteur), pour parler de la série "Grey's Anatomy", série féministe, inclusive, qui a déjà 20 ans ! Merci à toute l'équipe, attachés de production : Lysiane Larbani, Benjamin Dussy, réalisation : Charles De Cilliahttps://www.radiofrance.fr/franceinter/podcasts/blockbusters/blockbusters-du-vendredi-12-juillet-2024-8349512Extrait : https://www.instagram.com/p/C9XGV0WAJfQ/La 1ère fois, c'était dans la matinale la plus écoutée de France, animée par Léa Salamé et Nicolas Demorand. Et en plus j'étais aux côtés de Judith Duportail ! C'était super. N'hésitez pas à mettre un like et/ou commentaire, ça aide mon référencement : https://youtu.be/QOaP9WlBcTw?si=tLMgg_rrhMoxSkApLien audio : https://www.radiofrance.fr/franceinter/podcasts/le-debat-du-7-10/le-debat-du-7-10-du-lundi-01-avril-2024-2959967 Références citées dans l'épisode ou en bonus (à suivre) résumé du livre de Majé :"J'ai eu besoin d'écrire sur l'amour parce que je ne crois plus qu'il y ait quoi que ce soit à reconstruire ou à réinventer. Il faut détruire l'idée d'amour. Un jour, Majé en a eu marre. Marre d'être fragilisée par la relation amoureuse, marre d'être anéantie par la rupture, marre de tomber chaque fois dans le même piège. Alors elle a décidé d'arrêter, et ce fut plus facile que prévu. Car si l'amour est une belle boîte noire qui nous arrive toute ficelée, quand on l'ouvre pour chercher à comprendre comment fonctionne l'engrenage, on se rend compte que tous ces rouages qui tournent ensemble peuvent être dissociés les uns des autres. Et à y regarder de plus près, on voit qu'il est possible de ne garder que les moments beaux, intenses et drôles en renonçant au désir d'être « tout » pour l'autre. Et on peut alors choisir de préférer à l'amour la tendresse radicale."https://www.placedeslibraires.fr/livre/9791090062818-ne-plus-tomber-en-amour-maje/ Autres livres "Libres ! manifeste pour s'affranchir des diktats sexuels" d'Ovidie et Diglee (éditions Delcourt) "Sexfriends : comment (bien) rater sa vie amoureuse à l'ère numérique, de Richard Mèmeteau (éditions La Découverte) "Si je veux : mère célibataire par choix" de Johanna Luyssen (éditions Grasset), et son prochain livre "Mères solos : Le combat invisible des mères célibataires", à paraître le 4 septembre 2024 (éditions Payot) "Maternités rebelles" de Judith Duportail, à paraître le 23 octobre 2024 (Binge Audio Editions), couverture dessinée par Chien fou « Polyamoureuse, confidences d'une femme qui aime au pluriel » de Lucile Bellan (éditions Larousse) "Au-delà du personnel : Pour une transformation politique du personnel" ouvrage collectif dirigé par – Grand livre, 30 mai Corinne Monnet et Léo Vidal, résumé :«Il faut du temps. Du temps pour réfléchir, discuter et tenir compte des rapports inégalitaires de genre. Du temps ensuite pour essayer, se tromper, réfléchir, discuter et reprendre. J'ai maintenant trente-sept ans, je réfléchis, je discute, j'essaye, je me trompe, je reprends… Les relations multipartenariales transparentes s'apprennent progressivement – comme la guitare, la bicyclette ou l'espagnol. Mais c'est une discipline encore confidentielle avec peu de pratiquants et peu de pratiquantes.Quant aux manuels et autres ouvrages théoriques… Parmi ceux qui existent en France, Au-delà du personnel explore le genre, le féminisme et l'amour libre dans une perspective libertaire. Vingt ans après le début de cette nouvelle vague de libération affective et sexuelle des années 2000, à une époque qui balbutie encore sa liberté sexuelle entre tantrisme et adultère serein, ce livre reste indéniablement d'actualité. »Éva ThiébaudAvec des contributions de : Tamara Bower, Christel, Katherine Davis, Françoise d'Eaubonne, Dominique Fauquet, Sarah Franklin, Claude Guillon, Sheila Jeffreys, Joris, Lola, Stanfield Major, Marie-Odile Marty , Elise Matthesen, Corinne Monnet, Annie S. Murray, Nicolas, Simone Nijboer, Noémie, Weia Reinboud, Jackie Stacey, Sylvie, Éva Thiébaud, Naomi Tucker, Léo Vidal et Rymke Wiersma. Podcasts Single Jungle, épisode 60 : Ella, 38 ans, a fait congeler ses ovocytes (en Espagne, car c'était trop tard en France) https://singlejungle.lepodcast.fr/ep-point-60-ella-38-ans-a-fait-congeler-ses-ovocytes-je-ne-voulais-plus-depee-de-damocles-au-dessus-de-la-tete "Marie et les œufs en neige", podcast génial de Marie Cahu, à écouter ici : https://www.binge.audio/podcast/le-coeur-sur-la-table/marie-et-les-oeufs-en-neige et en intégralité ici : https://open.spotify.com/show/6VdQuPdfONEWNypix9Emp1 "Les mecs que je veux ken" de Rosa Bursztein, avec Judith Duportail https://open.spotify.com/episode/7kFfQpY23ig25JTk1XA2XF?si=KPTRo76rQiqFrnpl5mbe7w Suivez Judith Duportail, réflexions sur sa vie de jeune maman PMA sola, de jumeaux !, sur son compte Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/judithduportail_/ "Plaisir d'offrir" (sur le don d'ovocytes) de Klaire fait grr, prises de son additionnelles : Elodie Font, Réalisation & mix : Samuel Hirsch, chez Arte Radio https://www.arteradio.com/serie/plaisir_d_offrir [Bonne nouvelle : depuis la loi d'août 2021, le conjoint de la personne qui donne ses gamètes n'a plus à donner son consentement. Ce qui n'était pas le cas lorsque Klaire Fait Grr a fait son don d'ovocytes.] Lucile Bellan, et sa règle personnelle des 24h (et non 48h comme je l'indique dans l'épisode) où elle a besoin d'une pause entre 2 relations intimes avec ses amoureux, amoureuses, dans le cadre de son polyamour. Elle évoque aussi sa vision de la compersion, en comparant avec une mousse au chocolat que l'un de ses amoureux, amoureuses, mangerait sans elle, eh bien, elle serait alors ravie pour elle ou lui. Mais.. les gens ne sont pas des desserts chocolatés, donc pas toujours évident de ne pas être jalouse, jaloux... à retrouver dans l'épisode 66 de Single Jungle https://singlejungle.lepodcast.fr/ep-point-66-lucile-bellan-polyamoureuse-ce-qui-coince-cest-que-je-prenne-du-temps-pour-moi-alors-que-je-suis-maman Photos Oeuvres de Nan Goldin https://www.mep-fr.org/les-collections/nan-goldin/Voir aussi le documentaire avec Nan Goldin, réalisé par Laura Poitras, et sorti en 2022 "Toute la beauté et le sang versé" https://youtu.be/6H_y2iCuQ3I?si=jX4fGG4zMQteLKpD Vidéo Pourquoi les couples se disputent systématiquement à Ikea ? Sketch de Gad Elmaleh dans son spectacle "L'autre, c'est moi"https://youtu.be/6ptarOq0vs4?si=8Vg2kbuKP80TXmMu AVERTISSEMENT IMPORTANT : Ne jamais s'inscrire sur une application ou site de rencontres payant sans 1) lire les avis sur Google (Play store) ou Apple (App store) 2) lire les conditions tarifaires d'abonnement. Ainsi je vous déconseille fortement le site PARSHIP, qui pratique l'extorsion : on ne peut pas résilier avant 1 an obligatoire, même si on n'utilise plus le service, qui n'est pas satisfaisant, car très peu de personnes dans votre région. Le service client n'a que mépris pour les clients et le service communication ne veut rien entendre (un comble), aucun arrangement possible. Donc évitez une dépense inutile. Episode enregistré en avril 2024, merci à elle (et à son chat) pour son hospitalitéMontage et mixage : Isabelle FieldMusique : Générique de "Manimal", virgules sonores : Edouard JoguetLogo conçu par Lynda Mac-ConnellHébergement : Podcloud

AI DAILY: Breaking News in AI
IS CHATGPT CONSCIOUS?

AI DAILY: Breaking News in AI

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2024 3:43


Plus Should Be Put AI Bots In The Org Chart? (subscribe below) Like this? Get AIDAILY, delivered to your inbox, every weekday. Subscribe to our newsletter at https://aidaily.us Poll Reveals Majority Believe AI Like ChatGPT Is Conscious A University of Waterloo survey found that two-thirds of respondents believe AI tools like ChatGPT have some form of consciousness. Researchers warn this misconception could lead to emotional dependence and AI overreliance, affecting human interactions and decision-making. Public attitudes should guide AI tool design and regulation. Could Integrating AI Chatbots Into The Org Chart As ‘Employees' Be The Future Of Work? Lattice introduced “digital workers” that are onboarded, trained, and managed like human employees, sparking mixed reactions. AI chatbots can automate HR tasks, enhancing efficiency. However, concerns about AI replacing jobs and ethical implications persist. CEO Sarah Franklin acknowledges the complexity and the need for responsible AI integration.  YouTube Music Tests AI-Generated Radio Stations YouTube Music is trialing an "AI-generated radio" feature for Music Premium subscribers, allowing users to create personalized playlists via conversational prompts. By describing specific music preferences, such as "angry metal" or "relaxing instrumentals with female vocals," users can enjoy customized streams. This feature enhances user experience by leveraging YouTube's existing keyword matching.  How AI Can Help Young Workers Thrive A PwC survey reveals 70% of young people believe Generative AI offers opportunities to expand their capabilities. AI skills can lead to higher productivity and a 25% wage premium, but workers must quickly develop these skills. Embracing skills-first hiring can help young workers thrive in the AI-driven job market.  Workday Faces Groundbreaking Bias Lawsuit Over AI Hiring Software A federal judge ruled that Workday must face a class action lawsuit alleging its AI screening software discriminates against job applicants based on race, age, and disability. The case, filed by Derek Mobley, claims the AI reflects existing biases in workforce data. This ruling could set a precedent for the legal implications of AI in hiring. Study Reveals Preference for AI in Decision-Making A study by the University of Portsmouth and the Max Planck Institute found over 60% of participants preferred AI over humans for redistributive decisions. Despite this preference, participants rated AI decisions as less fair. The findings suggest that with improved transparency and consistency, public acceptance of AI decision-makers could increase, even in morally significant areas.

The Jump Around
5PM: More Packers Shareholder Perks!

The Jump Around

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2024 45:46


Molly Brown and Matt Hamilton roll into Hour 2 with some elite vs. good QB talk and whether fans of NFL teams would buy "stock" in their favorite franchise the way that Packers shareholders do. They also react to the Lakers drafting Bronny James to play alongside his dad Lebron. Benny Bets himself joins for this week's Betting With Brust. Coming off the Bucks selecting two 19-year-old "project players" in AJ Johnson and Tyler Smith, Ben says why he doesn't fell confident about the Bucks' apparent lack of direction and closing/closed championship window with Giannis. Will the Bucks make a big move on this offseason's trade market? Molly, Matt and Ben then give their locks for the scant sports weekend, and Primetime asks if Ben and his co-horts will make over/under 50% of their three-point shots in Friday's 3rd annual alumni charity challenge at Summerfest. Throwing Stones includes questions NBC'S AI-generated version of Al Michaels, the most usnderrated WI athletes like Badgers volleyball star Sarah Franklin, and the best ways to celebrate with the Stanley Cup down in Florida. Jim Rutledge calls in from the airport to recap his three-day trip to NYC!

Wellness by Designs - Practitioner Podcast
Nutrition and Digestion in Palliative Care with Sarah Franklin

Wellness by Designs - Practitioner Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 42:08 Transcription Available


Join Nurse and Naturopath Sarah Franklin as she traverses the delicate landscape of palliative care, moving beyond cancer to address the silent battles against kidney failure, liver disease, and neurological disorders. Our episode delves into the complex interplay between medication, nutrition, and quality of life, shedding light on the often-underestimated need for personalised care and the power of effective communication during life's most vulnerable moments, empowering you with knowledge and understanding.Episode HighlightsPersonalised Care and Effective Communication: The importance of tailoring care to individual needs and maintaining open, sensitive communication during end-of-life stages.Involving Children in Care: Strategies to engage children in caring for their ailing parents in meaningful and age-appropriate ways.Speech Therapy and Nutritional Solutions: Insights from speech therapists on maintaining dignity for patients with swallowing difficulties through innovative nutrition.Medication Management: A discussion on the dual nature of medications in palliative care, balancing their healing potential against possible harm.Emotional and Ethical Considerations: Sarah's reflections on the significance of open dialogue about death, honouring patient wishes, and the emotional impact on healthcare providers.This episode is a heartfelt exploration of the delicate artistry in palliative care, providing valuable perspectives for healthcare practitioners dedicated to improving the quality of life for their patients in their final days.About Sarah:Sarah Franklin is a highly qualified practitioner with  25yrs experience Sarah started out her health career as a paramedic in the Australian Army while studying for her nursing degree at Griffith University. Once she became a qualified nurse, she went on to specialise in Oncology and Emergency.With cytotoxic qualifications from the Australia College of Nursing,  she then went on to work in oncology and palliative care. With an inquisitive mind and a passion for understanding pharmacology,  she then went on to study Naturopathy, Nutrition, Western Herbal medicine, and Acupuncture. Sarah now runs her own clinic, combining the best of both worlds.Sarah still works as a registered nurse in a variety of settings and presents at a range of integrative settings, including local hospitals, support groups and via podcasts for different organisations.Connect with SarahWebsite: www.balancehealth.com.auFacebook: @balancedhealthsarahfranklinInstagram: @balanced_health_naturopathyShownotes and references available on your local Designs for Health websitewww.designsforhealth.com.auRegister as a Designs for Health Practitioner and discover quality practitioner-only supplements at www.designsforhealth.com.auFollow us on SocialsInstagram: DesignsforhealthausFacebook: DesignsforhealthausDISCLAIMER: The Information provided in the Wellness by Designs podcast is for educational purposes only; the information presented is not intended to be used as medical advice; please seek the advice of a qualified healthcare professional if what you have heard here today raises questions or concerns relating to your health

The Jump Around
4PM: Sarah Franklin is our Caitlin Clark

The Jump Around

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2024


Jim Rutledge and Matt Hamilton roll into this High Life Thursday following the Brewers' big gentleman's sweep of the Cubs after rocking ace pitcher Shota Imanaga -- aka the modern day Fernando Venezuela -- last night and completing a comeback win Thursday afternoon. They also react to the news of the Bears being selected as this year's team for preseason Hard Knocks on HBO. Jim asks Packers fans if they'll be watching? Badgers Volleyball head coach Kelly Sheffield joins Jim and Matt in-studio to talk about ESPN Madison & 620 WTMJ becoming the new radio homes of his program! Coach Sheffield talks about the trajectory of his championship-level program, how this year's team stacks up against the Final Four teams of past seasons, the growing audiences for women's collegiate sports, and how more people need to pay attention to athletes like Sarah Franklin the same way they pay attention to Caitlin Clark! Coach also gets into his personal philosophies on pump-up music, bourbon, and alcohol sales at more UW athletics events. Jim and Matt wrap up with the High Life Dive Bar of the Week: Remington Tavern in Cross Plains!

The Jump Around
Badgers Volleyball Coach Kelly Sheffield on R&H

The Jump Around

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2024


Badgers Volleyball head coach Kelly Sheffield joins Jim and Matt in-studio to talk about ESPN Madison & 620 WTMJ becoming the new radio homes of his program! Coach Sheffield talks about the trajectory of his championship-level program, how this year's team stacks up against the Final Four teams of past seasons, the growing audiences for women's collegiate sports, and how more people need to pay attention to athletes like Sarah Franklin the same way they pay attention to Caitlin Clark! Coach also gets into his personal philosophies on pump-up music, bourbon, and alcohol sales at more UW athletics events.

VARSITY
Kelly Sheffield on R&H

VARSITY

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2024 30:58


Badgers Volleyball head coach Kelly Sheffield joins Jim and Matt in-studio to talk about ESPN Madison & 620 WTMJ becoming the new radio homes of his program! Coach Sheffield talks about the trajectory of his championship-level program, how this year's team stacks up against the Final Four teams of past seasons, the growing audiences for women's collegiate sports, and how more people need to pay attention to athletes like Sarah Franklin the same way they pay attention to Caitlin Clark! Coach also gets into his personal philosophies on pump-up music, bourbon, and alcohol sales at more UW athletics events.

Social Justice & Activism · The Creative Process
SUCHITRA VIJAYAN · FRANCESCA RECCHIA · ANAND TELTUMBDE

Social Justice & Activism · The Creative Process

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2023 52:22


In this episode of the Speaking Out of Place podcast, Professor David Palumbo-Liu and Azeezah Kanji talk with the founders of the Polis Project—Suchitra Vijayan and Francesca Recchia—about their new book, How Long Can the Moon Be Caged? Voices of Indian Political Prisoners. They are joined by the eminent Dalit intellectual, and former political prisoner Dr. Anand Teltumbde to lend his unique insight into the political situation in India and the realities of being a political prisoner there. The book combines deep historical research, documents regarding the current political situation in India, and a set of creative works from political prisoners conveying to the world their resistance and courage.The Polis Project, Inc. is a New York-based hybrid research and journalism organization that works with communities in resistance. Through its Research, Reportage and Resistance approach, they publish and disseminate critical ideas that are excluded from mainstream media.Their work sheds light on the rise of authoritarianism especially in democracies and focuses on issues of racial, class and caste injustice, Islamophobia and State oppression around the world.In September 2019, the United States Library of Congress selected The Polis Project, Inc.'s website for inclusion in its web archives. They consider the “website to be an important part of their collection and the historical record.”www.thepolisproject.comwww.palumbo-liu.com https://speakingoutofplace.comhttps://twitter.com/palumboliu?s=20Photo credit: Sarah Franklin

The Creative Process Podcast
Speaking Out of Place: SARA AHMED discusses The Feminist Killjoy Handbook

The Creative Process Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 46:47


In this episode of the Speaking Out of Place podcast, Professor David Palumbo-Liu and Azeezah Kanji talk with Sara Ahmed about her new book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook. How and why is it that complaining about sexism, misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, and other forms of bigotry, is considered impolite? How is civility uncivil, and the mandate to be “happy” a tool for silencing grievances? Sara Ahmed tackles all those questions, and gives us strength and courage to keep on killingjoy and speaking truth.Sara Ahmed is an independent queer feminist scholar of colour. Her work is concerned with how power is experienced and challenged in everyday life and institutional cultures. Her first trade book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook is coming out with Seal Press next month. Previous books (all published by Duke University Press) include Complaint! (2021), What's The Use? On the Uses of Use (2019), Living a Feminist Life (2017), Willful Subjects (2014), On Being Included: Racism and Diversity in Institutional Life (2012), The Promise of Happiness (2010) and Queer Phenomenology: Objects, Orientations, Others (2006). She is currently writing A Complainer's Handbook: A Guide to Building Less Hostile Institutions and has begun a new project on common sense. She blogs at feministkilljoy.com."She often said I was the daughter she didn't have. And I was the daughter she had, in fact, because I'll say that to you. And I got a lot from her. She was very much willing always to speak her mind. And I would watch her tell my father off. It would be just like, yeah, this is possible! And she was outspoken, but also very loving. She's no longer with us. I never came out to her in the sense of saying 'I am a lesbian' or whatever, but I think she kind of knew. We had conversations, and I think she would have been okay with it. And because she was just a very, very curious and creative person and an enormous influence in my life."https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/454793/the-feminist-killjoy-handbook-by-ahmed-sara/9780241619537www.palumbo-liu.com https://speakingoutofplace.comhttps://twitter.com/palumboliu?s=20Photo credit: Sarah Franklin

Books & Writers · The Creative Process
Speaking Out of Place: SARA AHMED discusses The Feminist Killjoy Handbook

Books & Writers · The Creative Process

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 46:47


In this episode of the Speaking Out of Place podcast, Professor David Palumbo-Liu and Azeezah Kanji talk with Sara Ahmed about her new book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook. How and why is it that complaining about sexism, misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, and other forms of bigotry, is considered impolite? How is civility uncivil, and the mandate to be “happy” a tool for silencing grievances? Sara Ahmed tackles all those questions, and gives us strength and courage to keep on killingjoy and speaking truth.Sara Ahmed is an independent queer feminist scholar of colour. Her work is concerned with how power is experienced and challenged in everyday life and institutional cultures. Her first trade book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook is coming out with Seal Press next month. Previous books (all published by Duke University Press) include Complaint! (2021), What's The Use? On the Uses of Use (2019), Living a Feminist Life (2017), Willful Subjects (2014), On Being Included: Racism and Diversity in Institutional Life (2012), The Promise of Happiness (2010) and Queer Phenomenology: Objects, Orientations, Others (2006). She is currently writing A Complainer's Handbook: A Guide to Building Less Hostile Institutions and has begun a new project on common sense. She blogs at feministkilljoy.com."She often said I was the daughter she didn't have. And I was the daughter she had, in fact, because I'll say that to you. And I got a lot from her. She was very much willing always to speak her mind. And I would watch her tell my father off. It would be just like, yeah, this is possible! And she was outspoken, but also very loving. She's no longer with us. I never came out to her in the sense of saying 'I am a lesbian' or whatever, but I think she kind of knew. We had conversations, and I think she would have been okay with it. And because she was just a very, very curious and creative person and an enormous influence in my life."https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/454793/the-feminist-killjoy-handbook-by-ahmed-sara/9780241619537www.palumbo-liu.com https://speakingoutofplace.comhttps://twitter.com/palumboliu?s=20Photo credit: Sarah Franklin

Social Justice & Activism · The Creative Process
Speaking Out of Place: SARA AHMED discusses The Feminist Killjoy Handbook

Social Justice & Activism · The Creative Process

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 46:47


In this episode of the Speaking Out of Place podcast, Professor David Palumbo-Liu and Azeezah Kanji talk with Sara Ahmed about her new book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook. How and why is it that complaining about sexism, misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, and other forms of bigotry, is considered impolite? How is civility uncivil, and the mandate to be “happy” a tool for silencing grievances? Sara Ahmed tackles all those questions, and gives us strength and courage to keep on killingjoy and speaking truth.Sara Ahmed is an independent queer feminist scholar of colour. Her work is concerned with how power is experienced and challenged in everyday life and institutional cultures. Her first trade book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook is coming out with Seal Press next month. Previous books (all published by Duke University Press) include Complaint! (2021), What's The Use? On the Uses of Use (2019), Living a Feminist Life (2017), Willful Subjects (2014), On Being Included: Racism and Diversity in Institutional Life (2012), The Promise of Happiness (2010) and Queer Phenomenology: Objects, Orientations, Others (2006). She is currently writing A Complainer's Handbook: A Guide to Building Less Hostile Institutions and has begun a new project on common sense. She blogs at feministkilljoy.com."So the door was shut. So when she said no, she ended up with nowhere to go. And that's one of the institutional mechanisms. You're more likely to progress if you say yes. It's a reproductive mechanism, which is why feminist culture knows so much about everything. We can explain how it is that institutions keep being reproduced in the same way. So what then do you do? Where do you go if your no has nowhere to go? And I think when you say no to the world, and you're pushed out by it, you still find your people. And that there's the world-making is in the people who find in the refusal of the institution a common ground."https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/454793/the-feminist-killjoy-handbook-by-ahmed-sara/9780241619537www.palumbo-liu.com https://speakingoutofplace.comhttps://twitter.com/palumboliu?s=20Photo credit: Sarah Franklin

LGBTQ+ Stories · The Creative Process
Speaking Out of Place: SARA AHMED discusses The Feminist Killjoy Handbook

LGBTQ+ Stories · The Creative Process

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 46:47


In this episode of the Speaking Out of Place podcast, Professor David Palumbo-Liu and Azeezah Kanji talk with Sara Ahmed about her new book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook. How and why is it that complaining about sexism, misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, and other forms of bigotry, is considered impolite? How is civility uncivil, and the mandate to be “happy” a tool for silencing grievances? Sara Ahmed tackles all those questions, and gives us strength and courage to keep on killingjoy and speaking truth.Sara Ahmed is an independent queer feminist scholar of colour. Her work is concerned with how power is experienced and challenged in everyday life and institutional cultures. Her first trade book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook is coming out with Seal Press next month. Previous books (all published by Duke University Press) include Complaint! (2021), What's The Use? On the Uses of Use (2019), Living a Feminist Life (2017), Willful Subjects (2014), On Being Included: Racism and Diversity in Institutional Life (2012), The Promise of Happiness (2010) and Queer Phenomenology: Objects, Orientations, Others (2006). She is currently writing A Complainer's Handbook: A Guide to Building Less Hostile Institutions and has begun a new project on common sense. She blogs at feministkilljoy.com."She often said I was the daughter she didn't have. And I was the daughter she had, in fact, because I'll say that to you. And I got a lot from her. She was very much willing always to speak her mind. And I would watch her tell my father off. It would be just like, yeah, this is possible! And she was outspoken, but also very loving. She's no longer with us. I never came out to her in the sense of saying 'I am a lesbian' or whatever, but I think she kind of knew. We had conversations, and I think she would have been okay with it. And because she was just a very, very curious and creative person and an enormous influence in my life."https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/454793/the-feminist-killjoy-handbook-by-ahmed-sara/9780241619537www.palumbo-liu.com https://speakingoutofplace.comhttps://twitter.com/palumboliu?s=20Photo credit: Sarah Franklin

Feminism · Women’s Stories · The Creative Process
Speaking Out of Place: SARA AHMED discusses The Feminist Killjoy Handbook

Feminism · Women’s Stories · The Creative Process

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 46:47


In this episode of the Speaking Out of Place podcast, Professor David Palumbo-Liu and Azeezah Kanji talk with Sara Ahmed about her new book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook. How and why is it that complaining about sexism, misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, and other forms of bigotry, is considered impolite? How is civility uncivil, and the mandate to be “happy” a tool for silencing grievances? Sara Ahmed tackles all those questions, and gives us strength and courage to keep on killingjoy and speaking truth.Sara Ahmed is an independent queer feminist scholar of colour. Her work is concerned with how power is experienced and challenged in everyday life and institutional cultures. Her first trade book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook is coming out with Seal Press next month. Previous books (all published by Duke University Press) include Complaint! (2021), What's The Use? On the Uses of Use (2019), Living a Feminist Life (2017), Willful Subjects (2014), On Being Included: Racism and Diversity in Institutional Life (2012), The Promise of Happiness (2010) and Queer Phenomenology: Objects, Orientations, Others (2006). She is currently writing A Complainer's Handbook: A Guide to Building Less Hostile Institutions and has begun a new project on common sense. She blogs at feministkilljoy.com."So the door was shut. So when she said no, she ended up with nowhere to go. And that's one of the institutional mechanisms. You're more likely to progress if you say yes. It's a reproductive mechanism, which is why feminist culture knows so much about everything. We can explain how it is that institutions keep being reproduced in the same way. So what then do you do? Where do you go if your no has nowhere to go? And I think when you say no to the world, and you're pushed out by it, you still find your people. And that there's the world-making is in the people who find in the refusal of the institution a common ground."https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/454793/the-feminist-killjoy-handbook-by-ahmed-sara/9780241619537www.palumbo-liu.com https://speakingoutofplace.comhttps://twitter.com/palumboliu?s=20Photo credit: Sarah Franklin

Education · The Creative Process
Speaking Out of Place: SARA AHMED discusses The Feminist Killjoy Handbook

Education · The Creative Process

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 46:47


In this episode of the Speaking Out of Place podcast, Professor David Palumbo-Liu and Azeezah Kanji talk with Sara Ahmed about her new book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook. How and why is it that complaining about sexism, misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, and other forms of bigotry, is considered impolite? How is civility uncivil, and the mandate to be “happy” a tool for silencing grievances? Sara Ahmed tackles all those questions, and gives us strength and courage to keep on killingjoy and speaking truth.Sara Ahmed is an independent queer feminist scholar of colour. Her work is concerned with how power is experienced and challenged in everyday life and institutional cultures. Her first trade book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook is coming out with Seal Press next month. Previous books (all published by Duke University Press) include Complaint! (2021), What's The Use? On the Uses of Use (2019), Living a Feminist Life (2017), Willful Subjects (2014), On Being Included: Racism and Diversity in Institutional Life (2012), The Promise of Happiness (2010) and Queer Phenomenology: Objects, Orientations, Others (2006). She is currently writing A Complainer's Handbook: A Guide to Building Less Hostile Institutions and has begun a new project on common sense. She blogs at feministkilljoy.com."She often said I was the daughter she didn't have. And I was the daughter she had, in fact, because I'll say that to you. And I got a lot from her. She was very much willing always to speak her mind. And I would watch her tell my father off. It would be just like, yeah, this is possible! And she was outspoken, but also very loving. She's no longer with us. I never came out to her in the sense of saying 'I am a lesbian' or whatever, but I think she kind of knew. We had conversations, and I think she would have been okay with it. And because she was just a very, very curious and creative person and an enormous influence in my life."https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/454793/the-feminist-killjoy-handbook-by-ahmed-sara/9780241619537www.palumbo-liu.com https://speakingoutofplace.comhttps://twitter.com/palumboliu?s=20Photo credit: Sarah Franklin

Love on the Go
How Sarah's Friend Played Matchmaker

Love on the Go

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 26:21


Not long ago, Sarah Franklin's friend saw a man in a Kroger parking lot that was just her type. Her friend hooked them up and they went on a date! Sarah shared the story on TikTok and it's been seen over 2 million times- a testament to random encounters, matchmaker friends, and fun story time!Sarah joins Laurie on this week's podcast to talk about Kroger man, her dating life and about her own personal journey to learn and love herself. Sarah is an optimistic, enthusiastic, hype-girl who by day is an association professional and special event makeup artist. By night, she shares dating insights on TikTok. She became a single-mom five years ago after divorcing the only person she ever dated. She has navigated the dating world with a lot of humor and collected great stories along the way -- she's learned to love herself through faith, fitness, and reflection. Watch the original video at https://www.tiktok.com/@sarahfranklinky/video/7212415861640940842 Follow Sarah on TikTok at https://www.tiktok.com/@sarahfranklinky Follow Laurie on Instagram at http://instagram.com/carolinasmatchmaker To learn more about Laurie and her team, visit http://carolinasmatchmaker.com Donate to Great Dane Rescue at https://www.greatdanerescueinc.com/ Donate to the Alzheimer's Association at https://www.alz.org/

Renegade Thinkers Unite: #2 Podcast for CMOs & B2B Marketers
Tuesday Tips: Marketing in Turbulent Times: Tips from Salesforce's Sarah Franklin

Renegade Thinkers Unite: #2 Podcast for CMOs & B2B Marketers

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2023 3:03


This is a Tuesday Tips episode where you will hear host Drew Neisser, CMOs, and other B2B experts share their hard-earned wisdom and fresh marketing insights in a bitesize format. Featuring: Sarah Franklin, President & CMO at Salesforce To see the video versions, follow Drew Neisser on LinkedIn or visit our YouTube channel—The Renegade Marketing Hub! And if you're a B2B CMO, check out our thriving community: https://cmohuddles.com/​​

Circulation on the Run
Circulation January 31, 2023 Issue

Circulation on the Run

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 43:54


Please join Guest Host Maryjane Farr, authors Sarah Franklin and Stavros G. Drakos, as well as Associate Editor Hesham Sadek as they discuss the article "Distinct Transcriptomic and Proteomic Profile Specifies Heart Failure Patients With Potential of Myocardial Recovery on Mechanical Unloading and Circulatory Support." Dr. Carolyn Lam: Welcome to Circulation on the Run, your weekly podcast summary and backstage pass to the journal and its editors. We're your cohosts. I'm Dr. Carolyn Lam, associate editor from the National Heart Center in Duke National University of Singapore. Dr. Peder Myhre: And I'm Dr. Peder Myhre, social media editor from Akershus University Hospital and University of Oslo. Dr. Carolyn Lam: Peder, today's featured paper is very, very important in the heart failure world. It is such a deep dive into the transcriptomic and proteomic profile that specifies heart failure and the potential of myocardial recovery with mechanical unloading and circulatory support. Dr. Peder Myhre: Can't wait for that feature discussion today, Carolyn. Dr. Carolyn Lam: But you have to wait because I insist on telling you about yet another really important paper, of course in my favorite subject, heart failure with preserved ejection fraction or HFpEF. Now you know that exercise intolerance is a defining characteristic of HFpEF and a marked rise in pulmonary capillary wedge pressure during exertion is pethepneumonic for HFpEF and it's thought to be a key cause of the exercise intolerance. Now if that is true, acutely lowering the wedge pressure should improve exercise capacity, right? Well, don't assume this because to test this hypothesis, authors led by corresponding author Dr. Ben Levine from UT Southwestern evaluated peak exercise capacity with and without nitroglycerin, which was used to acutely lower pulmonary capillary wedge pressure during exercise in patients with HFpEF. Dr. Peder Myhre: Oh, that's so cool. What an amazing research question and Carolyn, you're the best to summarize this. Please tell us what did they find? Dr. Carolyn Lam: Well, they studied 30 patients with HFpEF and get this. They underwent two bouts of upright seated cycle exercise dosed with sublingual nitroglycerin or a placebo every 15 minutes in a single blind randomized crossover design. So really well done. Wedge pressure, VO2 and cardiac output were assessed at rest with 20 watts exercise and at peak exercise during both the placebo and nitroglycerin conditions and the principle finding of the study (singing) acutely lowering pulmonary capillary wedge pressure during upright exercise with nitroglycerin in HFpEF did not improve peak exercise performance. So peak VO2 was practically identical with a 1% difference despite a 17% drop in peak wedge pressure. Peak cardiac output and peak peripheral oxygen extraction were unchanged, again, despite the drop in peak wedge pressure suggesting that oxygen delivery and utilization were unaffected. Exercise performance variables including peak wattage, peak ventilation and peak RER were unchanged, suggesting that again, reductions in peak wedge were insufficient to improve exercise tolerance. All these results suggest acute reductions in wedge pressure are insufficient to improve exercise capacity and provide convincing evidence that a high wedge during exercise by itself is an epiphenomenon perhaps rather than a primary limiting factor for exercise performance in patients with HFpEF. Now of course this is incredibly interesting contrary to hypothesis and so please read the paper. The discussion is very rich. Dr. Peder Myhre: Oh wow, Carolyn. That is such a great paper. I can't wait to pick it up and read it from start to finish and now Carolyn, we're going to look into research within cardiovascular disease from COVID-19 and we have learned so much and so quickly about COVID-19 and its effects on the heart and we have really come a long way from the first case reports reported in the beginning of the pandemic and this paper, which comes to us from corresponding author Professor JP Greenwood, really adds important knowledge to this field. The COVID heart study was a prospective longitudinal multi-center observational cohort study of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 and at elevated serum troponin levels across 25 hospitals in the UK and these investigators aim to characterize myocardial injury, its association and sequela in convalescent patients following hospitalization with COVID-19 utilizing appropriately matched contemporary controls. Dr. Carolyn Lam: Ooh, important stuff. So what did they find? Dr. Peder Myhre: So these authors included in total 519 patients comprising 342 patients with COVID-19 and an elevated troponin, 64 patients with COVID-19 and a normal troponin and 113 age and comorbidity matched controls without COVID-19 and the frequency of any heart abnormality defined as left or right ventricular impairment, scar or pericardial disease was two full greater in patients with COVID positive and troponin positive, so 61% compared to the control groups and that is 36% for COVID positive and troponin negative and 31% for COVID negative and comorbidity positive and the myocardial injury pattern was different for these patients with COVID and an elevated troponin more likely than controls to have infarction and micro infarction. But there was no difference in non-ischemic scar and using the late MRI criteria, the prevalence of probable recent myocarditis was almost 7% for those with COVID and elevated troponin compared to only 2% for the controls without COVID-19 and myocardial scar is but not prior COVID-19 infection or troponin was an independent predictor of MACE. So Carolyn, these authors discussed their findings in light of previously reported studies and these authors identified a lower prevalence of probable recent myocarditis than previously described and a higher proportion of myocardial infarction and this newly described pattern of micro infarction following COVID-19 and Carolyn, there is a brilliant editorial really summarizing this by Dr. Stuber and Baggish entitled "Acute Myocardial Injury in the COVID Heart Study Emphasizing Scars While Reassuring Scarce." I really recommend everyone to pick this up and read the editorial as well. Dr. Carolyn Lam: Very clever title. Thank you. For the last original paper in today's issue, it focuses on the crosstalk between sterile metabolism and inflammatory pathways, which have been demonstrated to significantly impact the development of atherosclerosis. Authors today are featuring and focusing on 25 hydroxy cholesterol, which is produced as an oxidation product of cholesterol and belongs to a family of bioactive cholesterol derivatives produced by cells in response to fluctuating cholesterol levels and immune activation. So these authors with co-corresponding authors, Dr. Suárez and Fernández-Hernando from Yale University School of Medicine, they showed beautifully that first, 25 hydroxy cholesterol accumulates in human coronary atherosclerosis. Next, that 25 hydroxy cholesterol produced by macrophages accelerated atherosclerosis progression and promoted plaque instability by promoting the inflammatory response in macrophages and also via paracrine actions on smooth muscle cell migratory responses. Dr. Peder Myhre: Wow, that is so interesting, Carolyn. What are the therapeutic implications of these findings? Dr. Carolyn Lam: Yes, I'm glad you asked because it was summarizing a lot of work in those findings with the very important implications that inhibition of 25 hydroxy cholesterol production might therefore delay atherosclerosis progression and promote plaque stability. So this study actually opens a door to explore the role of 25 hydroxy cholesterol as a target to control inflammation and plaque stability in human atherosclerosis. Dr. Peder Myhre: Oh, that is so important. Thank you so much and there is more in this issue as well, Carolyn. We have another issue of Circulation Global Rounds and this time we're going to France in a paper written by Dr. Danchin and Bouleti. We also have an exchange of letters by Dr. Yang and Dr. Schultze regarding the article, "Deep Lipidomics in Human Plasma: Cardiometabolic Disease Risk and Effect of Dietary Fat Modulation" and an ECG Challenge by Drs. Manickavasagam, Dar and Jacob entitled "Syncope After Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation: Pace or Not." Dr. Carolyn Lam: Interesting. There's a Frontiers paper also by Dr. Dimopoulos on “Cardiovascular Complications of Down Syndrome: Scoping Review and Expert Consensus,” a Research Letter by Dr. Kimenai on the impact of patient selection on performance of an early rule out pathway for myocardial infarction from research to the real world. Nice. Well let's carry on to that feature discussion on heart failure, transcriptomics and proteomic, shall we? Dr. Peder Myhre: Can't wait. Dr. Maryjane Farr: Welcome everybody to Circulation on the Run. We are so pleased to be talking with Dr. Stavros Drakos and Dr. Sarah Franklin from the University of Utah. My name is Maryjane Farr and I am the heart failure section chief at UT Southwestern and Digital Strategies editor for circulation. Myself and Hesham Sadek will be talking with them about their new paper and circulation called "Distinct Transcriptomic and Proteomic Profile Specifies Heart Failure Patients with Potential of Myocardial Recovery Upon Mechanical Unloading and Circulatory Support." Just briefly, Dr. Stavros Drakos is the director of cardiovascular research for the division of cardiology at Utah and co-director of the Heart Failure Mechanical Circulatory Support and Heart Transplant Program. Dr. Sarah Franklin is associate professor of medicine at the University of Utah whose lab has a specific expertise in the applications of proteomics to heart disease. Welcome, Stavros and Sarah. Dr. Sarah Franklin: Thank you. Dr. Stavros Drakos: Thank you. Thank you for having us. Dr. Maryjane Farr: This paper is exciting for clinicians. It's exciting for translational scientists. Hesham, why don't you start digging into this paper and tell us one or then the other of you tell us what this paper is about, what's the background and let's get into the science. Let's go there and then we'll pull back and look at some of the big picture stuff. Hesham. Hesham Sadek: Well, thank you. So I've been fascinated by the field of cardiac recovery for some time now and obviously Stavros is as an expert and one of the leaders of that field and what struck me about this is that we are starting to see some distinct molecular signature of patients that can experience recovery as opposed to patients undergoing the same procedures with the same profile that do not manifest evidence of myocardial recovery and specifically, the study was conducted very rigorously and the signature was very clear in that they saw primarily interest for someone like me who's interested in cardiac regeneration, a signature of cell cycle in the patients that experience recovery as well as ECM signature which could suggest reverse remodeling and also there's some evidence that ECM might impact cardiomyocyte and myocardial regeneration. So my interest in this for selfish reasons is primarily that this supports the hypothesis that perhaps there is a molecular signature of regeneration that occurs in patients that experience myocardial recovery with LVAD. Dr. Maryjane Farr: So Stavros, let's start with you. Give us the reason why to do this study. You mentioned some of the background. It'd be great to sort of talk for a moment about re-stage heart failure and then how it brought you to this study. Dr. Stavros Drakos: Thank you, Jane. So again, thank you for the opportunity to talk about the findings and the implications of this study. I like the way you are asking us to look a little bit at what led to this study and as you mentioned, the re-stage is a multi-center study that was performed in six US sites which showed in a reproducible fashion now given that we had single center studies from all over the world suggesting that, advanced heart failure is not an irreversible process that has to lead to end stage, an irreversible disease and what a re-stage demonstrated was that there is a subset of patients which if you select them based on clinical characteristics that we derived from other studies that were performed previously, you can achieve reverse remodeling, essentially a bad heart looking much better by every clinical, functional, structural characteristic in up to 50% of the selected patients. That's what re-stage showed. So having this finding now in a multicenter study, what made this study very timely was to be able to understand what drives this remarkable response. What are some of the mechanisms, as Hesham said, that we can if uncover take advantage of and expand this paradigm and enhance it and achieve reverse remodeling and recovery of even more patients and even go earlier in the disease process. So that's kind of how I would link the clinical findings that preceded this study with the motivation to perform the study and the implications of these findings for the ongoing translational and basic science research. Hesham Sadek: I'd like to ask a question here. So Stavros, do you think it's too early to sort of redefine the term reverse remodeling in this context to include perhaps some evidence of regeneration? Is there evidence of regeneration in this field or that's too premature to say? Dr. Stavros Drakos: I think the data are directing us towards the direction you just mentioned. I think that we can begin talking about it and planting the seed. We do have other evidence from work that you and others have performed indicating that this indeed is one of the mechanisms that drives this phenomenon and I think that the findings, especially in the cell cycle that we identified add to and contribute even more to that body of work that you and others have done. At this point, I will turn it to Sarah who can talk a little bit more about the findings related to the cell cycle that we identified in our study and I think that these may complete the answer to you, Hesham. Dr. Sarah Franklin: Yeah, I would love to comment. I think it's a really interesting phenomenon and really in these patient samples we were trying to understand molecularly what the difference is between individuals that respond positively to therapy and individuals that receive the same exact therapy and do not respond positively. So these are termed responders and non-responders and in our analysis we combined two platforms where we could molecularly interrogate what's different in these two tissues and try to see what is differentiating these populations. So what's consistent and reproducible different in responders and non-responders on a molecular level and in both the transcriptomic data and the phospho proteomic data, we saw clear patterns with cell cycle regulation and extracellular matrix or focal adhesion molecules and the interesting thing about cell cycle is cardiomyocytes have typically been thought to exit the cell cycle not long after birth and we see some interesting phenomenon either in humans or mice where we can have nuclei that have either multiple sets of chromosomes or multiple nuclei and there's some differences that have been observed in the nucleus with regards to disease, so hypertrophy, heart failure. So the molecules that we've identified, we saw a large difference in proteins involved in cell cycle regulation. Now the interesting thing is not all of those molecules are increasing or decreasing. We see a combination of molecules that are increasing or decreasing. But I think the other thing that's interesting is that these molecules, even though we are seeing changes in expression or changes in phosphorylation, exactly how that contributes to either cell cycle or cell cycle reentry or just nuclear function and transcription of proteins or genes or DNA regions is still what we need to continue to study. So exactly how these changes in proteins or transcripts related to the cell cycle, how they are exactly contributing to the physiological improvements that we're seeing is something that still needs to be investigated but is really important that that is a highlight of this study and as Stavros mentioned of previous work. Dr. Maryjane Farr: Stavros, tell us the design of the study. Dr. Stavros Drakos: Okay. So this study was performed in 93 patients that were prospectively enrolled in the Utah transplant affiliated hospitals here in Salt Lake City between the University of Utah, Intermountain Medical Center and the VA and these people came from all over the mountain west, the surrounding states of Utah and through our VA, through the state, from all over the west and south, from Alaska and Hawaii to Texas and we think it's a very representative population of our country's patient population and then we followed prospectively these people with serial echocardiograms so we can tell who will respond as Sarah said before, which essentially means which hearts are going to get better by echocardiographic criteria functionally and structurally, the dimensions of the heart shrinking and the ejection fraction improving to more than 40% and the dimension shrinking to normal range and then we compare these people, the subset of patients that have responded to the majority of patients actually that they have not responded. As we know these are advanced end stage patients and there is only a subset of those that they will favor respondents. As we said earlier, these subset can increase if you go selectively and pick these patients based on baseline characteristics. So then we analyze the tissue we got from these people when the LVAD went in, which is the core of the apex of the heart and compare that to the tissue we receive when the patients got transplanted and we got the whole heart. So in the meantime, as we just discussed, we phenotyped these people so we knew who were responders and non-responders and then we went back in the lab and tried to marry two basic processes, analyzing the transcriptome and the proteome and by doing that we were able to see some overlapping changes between the transcriptome and the proteome and we felt that by doing this overlapping analysis, we will increase the likelihood that what we are seeing, exponential mechanistic drivers will be the real mechanism and not just associations that you can frequently find when you do studies in humans and that's kind of a rough, brief summary of the design. Sarah, would you add something to that? Dr. Sarah Franklin: No, I think that's a great overview of it. I think what excites me about it is that this was first clinically observed that these patients were recovering and so I think the exciting part is the hypothesis was that there was some molecular underpinnings that could molecularly define these patients that were responding or not responding and so with that hypothesis we then carried out these analyses hoping that we would see a difference and we're very excited. It's very successful in that we found very clear, molecular differences that are reproducible between these patient populations. Dr. Maryjane Farr: So obviously there's lots of implications. Let me start with one very simple clinical one and that is, so based on some of the differences in the signatures and pathways that you saw for the next patient who needs LVAD therapy and you're trying to predict in some way whether they may be a responder or a non-responder, could you look at a biopsy sample and try to make some sort of prediction based on some of your findings so that they can choose a VAD over a transplant? That's a very clinical question and then I guess the second question is would it have to be a left ventricular myocardial sample? So are the differences? What do you think about that question? Or it's just too much too, far beyond? This is obviously a mechanistic study. But I'm just asking. Dr. Stavros Drakos: No, that's a great question and I'll start and Sarah can add later. So obviously it will be great if we can have a practical way to predict before the intervention who are the people that they will respond and that's one of the motivations for this study. It was not just to find the mechanism so we can make this phenomenon better and enhance it and find the mechanism, create new therapies. It was also the practical approach that you suggested, Jane, and I think that yes, this adds to the clinical predictors that we have already identified from other studies and yes, we could theoretically take the tissue and do this analysis. Is this the most practical thing we can say to the patient to biopsy the heart, right? It would've been better to be able to identify a biomarker in the plaque and we've done that. We started in other studies, identifying what's going on in the tissue and then going targeted in the blood and that's how we identified two cytokines and a two cytokines model, interferon gamma and TNF alpha being predictive as circulating biome. In this study we identify changes that can also inform future studies of biomarkers in the blood. But if we had a way to easily get the tissue and analyze the genes, yes, we could have done that as a predictor as well. The practical issue is that asking a patient for a biopsy just to predict the response to therapy may be something that most patients and most clinicians will consider way too advanced and complicated, right?that's why more work should and could be done to identify circulating biomarkers or other modalities that can help us interrogate what's going on in the heart related with these findings. But not that we cannot also do what you said. It's just more complicated. I don't know if Sarah would like to add to this. Dr. Sarah Franklin: I'd love to. I think that's a great overview. I think the only thing that I would add is that there are a number of conditions whether in the heart or otherwise in the body that you can use a single biomarker and it can be very predictive of conditions. Heart failure is so complex that often individual biomarkers are not sufficient enough to cover an entire population and all the nuances that can go into heart failure symptoms or syndromes and I think the exciting part about this study is it is one of the largest cohorts of patients that have been examined in this manner, which is exciting, but also that we have a multi-factor panel that is made up of multiple biomarkers that with the number of individuals that we examined is completely predictive of all of these patients. So these biomarkers are consistent and reproducible across all of these patients between responders and non-responders regardless of some of the nuances in the heart failure that they have and so it's very exciting because it's possible that a multifactorial panel could be much more applicable and last the test of time more so than an individual biomarker. I think the one other thing that is exciting like Stavros mentioned is that we did initially identify these in the left ventricle and it will be really exciting to see how far these biomarkers can be used if they can be used in potentially other aspects of the heart or blood, which obviously is less invasive and so that's not something that we've applied this panel to yet, but I think is a really wonderful extension of now saying, can we also identify some of these biomarkers in the blood which would be less invasive even if it's a fraction of them. That would still be wonderful. Dr. Maryjane Farr: I have so many clinical questions. But Hesham, what questions do you have? Hesham Sadek: Yeah, so the elephant in the room here obviously is that the variable is that these patients have an unloaded heart and there is evidence that unloading can reverse some of the changes that occur after birth with increasing ventricular load and initiate cascade of molecular events that may allow myocytes to proliferate. So this begs the question, is there a difference in how these ventricles of patients that recover versus those that do not recover see load? Are we able to measure load appropriately and is there a difference in load between these patients and if so, can this be improved or detection or measuring unloading or the degree of unloading clinically, can this be improved? Dr. Stavros Drakos: No, that's a great question and it provides the opportunity to talk about some of the things we can do on the clinical arena to further enhance this phenomenon. Yes, there are ways that we can use to tailor the mechanical unloading that we can provide in order to enhance this phenomenon. One way, and that's a study that we are proposing, is to use sensors, pressure sensors that can guide the way you function the machines, the devices, right? The way you remove part of the load and these sensors, some of them are clinically approved like cardioments and then without doing invasive procedures you can follow chronically how these patients are being unloaded and how the heart is responding to this unloading. We know that a lot of LVAD patients, despite doing clinically well, we know this from snapshot evaluations in right-heart cath studies, they are not optimally unloaded. They are feeling pressures left and right are not always optimized and so by doing this kind of prospective assessment of the mechanical unloading, you can tailor what you offer and the hypothesis generated is that by doing that you may be able to recover even more people. You can do this as we said, with approved sensors like cardioments or with other sensors that they are under investigation. You can also do more invasive stuff like PV loops. Of course these will require cathing these patients, which is a little bit more complicated. But it will provide more accurate assessment and it will also interrogate how the heart is improving and provide to you in-depth investigation and in-depth insights on also how the recovery process and the reverse remodeling process is being, I would say, digested by the heart and translated to functional response instead of just looking at it with an echocardiogram or the findings of a right-heart cath and these are studies that others have performed and have published and we know that they can give you a real good look into the systolic and diastolic function of the heart and how this is changing and improving down the road. So yes, that's the short answer. We can do that and we can tailor the unloading and potentially that's the hypothesis, maximize the effect that we saw here. Hesham Sadek: So this begs the question, maybe two questions here. One, is there evidence that patients who recover not from this study only but from other studies, is there evidence that patients who recover are more unloaded than patients that do not recover and the second question is: is it time to standardize assessment of mechanical load in patients with LVAD, especially those that will undergo or would be considered for recovery? Dr. Stavros Drakos: Yes. So that's a great opportunity to share with our audience what we know and what we don't know in this field in relation to your question about whether we know what is the optimum degree of unloading and the answer I think is that we need to know and understand more. What do I mean by that? There's this idea that the heart as every other organ after being unloaded and not working for some time may it lazy, may get atrophic and may need some rehab like the skeletal muscle when we put it in the cast and get atrophic and we need to rehab it when we remove the cast. So you can imagine that the LVAD and the unloading that provides, which in many cases may take over a significant part of the function of the heart may need gradual reloading as a second phase after the first phase of unloading and that's something that we've done. We have an ongoing study on this and also others have published that it may be beneficial. Of course, it needs to be validated and investigated further and to discuss about the degree of unloading in the first phase and what is the optimum degree of unloading, I would say even there, there is room for us to understand better what's going on and I think that we can investigate with ongoing studies right now whether full unloading versus partial unloading and measure the pressures using these sensors can translate to better changes functionally and structurally. I think that's something that is very doable and it would be very beneficial. What was the second part of your question, Hesham? Hesham Sadek: I was asking whether it's time to start standardizing some measure of unloading if these patients are planned for recovery? Dr. Stavros Drakos: Yes, and that's what we are doing. In all of these people, we report from the get-go what is their recovery score based on the intermixed ICARS derived score and when we have patients that they have high likelihood of recovery, we monitor them very closely and clinically what we do is just looking at the echo and whenever we do a right heart cath for clinical reasons. But in a prospective research study we could do more than just looking at the echo and occasional right heart cath and using the sensors we just discussed previously, you can tailor the unloading and begin prospectively unloading them in a more I would say well monitored wave. Yes. Hesham Sadek: So this is unloading or device specific parameters. Now are there patient specific parameters with regards to type of heart failure? So we talked initially about whether there's an element of regeneration specifically when it comes to cell cycle. But many patients with non-ischemic cardiomyopathy for example, don't have large scars and don't have lot of myocytes as the underlying cause of cardiomyopathy. Would you foresee that there is different mechanisms, for example, in these patients that don't have myocyte loss, that perhaps maybe it's not cardio myocyte proliferation and not regeneration? Dr. Stavros Drakos: Yes. So I think that the differential responses we get based on the heart failure theology warrant further investigation. Sarah and I have discussed that and actually we are following on our findings with larger number of patients so we can tease out these and I'll let Sarah talk a little bit more about it in a minute. But to answer the clinical part of this question, we don't know yet whether different parts of heart failure should be prescribed different modes of unloading. But the way you described it of course invites the hypothesis that of course different substrates, different injuries of the heart, as you said, it's a completely different failing heart if you have a big scar there versus a patient who has a mode of heart failure, another type of injury and would this be treated better and more effectively in terms of reverse remodeling by applying a different mode of unloading? That's things that we need to investigate further. But Sarah, would you like to comment on the potential on the effect of the different heart failure theologies on some of the findings we saw? Dr. Sarah Franklin: Yeah, definitely. So I think it's a really interesting question and in this analysis we included ischemic and non-ischemic samples in the patient populations and really we're just stratifying them based on responders and non-responders. When we start layering additional levels onto that, then we're effectively kind of reducing the potential numbers. So if we have 25 responders and we start breaking that down into ischemic and non-ischemic to see if there's another layer of biomarkers there, we actually did that we did not include it in this study. It's something that we're working on to add that. But we do reduce the number overall of patients in those two populations. So it would be fine to share that we were seeing stratification between ischemic and non-ischemic. But we did not feel like the numbers might be high enough within the responder and non-responder categories that warrant including that in this manuscript. So it's very intriguing that just responders and non-responders alone stratify as well as they do. They separate based on these biomarkers and it looks like it will also be possible in the future for us to even separate these samples further based on similar or additional biomarkers based on more specific factors in the etiology. So I think that will be another really exciting next step for future research. Hesham Sadek: My final question would be maybe a little bit broader than LVAD population, but definitely informed by this study. The term non-ischemic cardiomyopathy, do you think it's too broad and too vague for us to use in this setting because this encompasses many different types of cardiomyopathy that really are not nuanced enough by this definition. Dr. Stavros Drakos: Well, Jane was smiling while you were asking this question because we all as heart failure clinicians need to accept that it was not a good idea to name all of these different diseases non-ischemic cardiomyopathy when we did it or when this happened many moons ago. As you said, Hesham, and I couldn't agree more, these are completely different diseases. We need to understand them better and I think that the way we treat nowadays, chronic heart failure, many years down the road when people will look back, they will consider it a little bit, I would say, surprising that we were treating all of these the same way. We need more studies like the one we just did, that they will have enough numbers and that's when the issue becomes that you need enough numbers to be able to tell the differences between all of these non-ischemic cardiomyopathy types, theologies and if you go upstream, motivated and inspired by findings like this, we hope that we will be able to identify how to go and do a root cause analysis and treat these diseases, not down, down, downstream the same way, but going upstream, finding what really went wrong and treating them earlier in the molecular or other pathophysiological mechanism pathway that led to the heart failure and so yes, it was a bad idea to do that. But of course sometimes we do things because we don't understand it better, right? As one of our keynote speakers here in the recovery symposium said a few years ago, Jay Khan, the founder of Heart Failure Strata of America, some things look complicated until you understand them. Then when you understand them, they look simple. So here we don't really understand non-ischemic cardiomyopathy and how all these theologies lead there and I think studies like these can help us really inform the field better. But we will need, as Sarah said, more numbers. Dr. Maryjane Farr: So that was a great conversation. I wanted to just raise one last thing and that is what's so interesting about this cohort relative to re-stage heart failure is these were older patients and for re-stage heart failure, I think the average age was 35. So you would imagine there might have been one etiology for cardiomyopathy, uncontrolled hypertension or peripartum. But for cohorts in their fifties, there's probably an accumulation of different insults over many years time and so I thought that was particularly interesting from the point of view of that you were probably dealing with, again, a mixed bag of pressure overload, volume overload, maybe a genetic underpinning, whatever the life trajectory of some of these patients were and then lastly, the decision to try to go to recovery rather than to transplant, which would be the real world experience of why this wet pathway than the other. These are people truly in their fifties where they may have one or two surgeries in their lifetime left and so it's the relevant population that you're studying and so I'll leave it at that. That's a comment rather than a question, I think. But I think for heart failure clinicians, this is why the bench to bedside piece is so relevant to understanding this because it actually does change clinical practice, even if the mechanistic pathways may take still many more years to truly understand. It helps understand what's possible from an accrued clinical decision-making level. Dr. Sarah Franklin: Jane, if I might just comment on that, I actually think that's one of the most exciting parts about this dataset is that, as you mentioned, these patients have complex diseases. They are older. But yet we are still able to see consistent and reproducible differences between the patient populations that respond and don't respond and to me that suggests that at the end of the day there are consistent differences or reproducible or consistent molecular changes in cardiac tissue and in response to stress and I think that that gives us hope that we could potentially not only predict who would respond or not respond, but that as we get better at understanding the differences, that there could be potential therapeutic targets or therapies that would still be beneficial regardless of the complexity of the heart failure. Dr. Maryjane Farr: Okay. So Sarah, Stavros, thank you so much for spending time with Hesham and myself and look forward to EUCORS--I'm allowed to say that. Dr. Stavros Drakos: Of course. Dr. Maryjane Farr: Thanks so much. Bye. Dr. Greg Hundley: This program is copyright of the American Heart Association 2023. The opinions expressed by speakers in this podcast are their own and not necessarily those of the editors or of the American Heart Association. For more, please visit ahajournals.org.

Eat Meat + Question Everything
Getting to the Root Cause of Illnesses; Histamines, Dairy + Blue Zones

Eat Meat + Question Everything

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2022 66:22


We are joined by guest Sarah Franklin, who is an Nutritional Therapy Practitioner. What she practices is a holistic individualized approach to nutrition where she will look at the entire body and get to the root of the issue. You can find more about here HERE! Hosts: Devan- find her here! Courtney- find her here!

The Good Robot IS ON STRIKE!
Sarah Franklin on Reproductive Technologies and Feminist Research Ethics

The Good Robot IS ON STRIKE!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2022 38:41


In this episode we talk to Sarah Franklin, a leading figure in feminist science studies and the sociology of reproduction. In this tour de force of IVF ethics and feminism through the ages, Sarah discusses ethical issues in reproductive technologies, how they compare to AI ethics, how feminism through the ages can help us, Shulamith Firestone's techno-feminist revolution, and the violence of anti-trans movement across the world. 

Gruesome Hertzogg Podcast
Season 12 Episode 34 : Reed's Point (2022)

Gruesome Hertzogg Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2022 7:42


A vehicle crash in the Pine Barrens leads to a missing teen which raises conspiracy theories about the infamous Jersey Devil legend. On the anniversary of the crash, Sarah Franklin, convinced her cousin Kelsey is alive, goes out to the crash site with Alex, Kelsey's boyfriend, to investigate. Things go downhill quickly as Sarah and Alex uncover what really lurks in th... Read all DirectorDale Fabrigar WritersTricia Aurand(screenplay by) Suzanne DeLaurentiis(story by) Sandy Lo(screenplay by) StarsJoe Estevez Tonya Kay Clint Carmichael --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gruesome-hertzogg/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gruesome-hertzogg/support

Joncast Podcast
E66: Anna Smrek and Sarah Franklin (from B1G Volleyball Media Days)

Joncast Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 17:23


Anna Smrek and Sarah Franklin are teammates on the Wisconsin Badger volleyball team. In this episode from B1G Media Days I talk to Sarah about why she chose Wisconsin and Anna about life after winning the 2021 National Championship as well. Get caught up with Badger volleyball in this special B1G Media Day edition! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jon-arias/support

Wellness by Designs - Practitioner Podcast
Safe and Simple Cancer Support with Sarah Franklin

Wellness by Designs - Practitioner Podcast

Play Episode Play 53 sec Highlight Listen Later Jul 21, 2022 43:19


Joining us today is Sarah Franklin, a  naturopath and registered nurse specialising in Oncology. Today we are discussing safe and simple cancer support. In today's episode, we discuss: The variables of cancer therapies Common side effects of chemotherapy and radiotherapyDiet and lifestyle supportHow to support a patient through chemo or radiotherapyGut health and chemotherapy The glutamine conundrum Post chemo support About SarahSarah Franklin is a highly qualified practitioner with over 25yrs experience in healthcare. Sarah started out her health career as a paramedic in the Australian Army while studying for her nursing degree at Griffith University. Once she became a qualified nurse, she went on to specialise in Oncology and Emergency. With cytotoxic qualifications from the Australia College of Nursing,  she then went on to work in oncology and palliative care. With an inquisitive mind and a passion for understanding pharmacology,  she then went on to study Naturopathy, Nutrition, Western Herbal medicine, and Acupuncture. Sarah now runs her own clinic combining the best of both worlds.  Sarah still works as a registered nurse in a variety of settings and presents at a range of integrative settings, including local hospitals, support groups and via podcasts for different organizations. Sarah has been recognised for her wok across our industry, and received many awards for her dedication.Winner of the 2015 Bioceuticals Integrative Medicine Awards Judge for Bioceuticals Integrative Medicine Awards 2018 & 2019 Medicine Awards 2018 & 2019 Medi-Herb Master Herbalist 2014 to 2021 2005 Clinical Nutrition Award for Nutrition Care Australia Presenter for QLD and NSW cancer council and local cancer support groups Contributor for Gold Coast Bulletin, Multi-Sport and Triathlon Magazine and other publications Podcast Interviews for FX Medicine Connect with Sarah Website: www.balancehealth.com.au Facebook: @balancedhealthsarahfranklinInstagram: @balanced_health_naturopathyShownotes and references available on your local Designs for health website www.designsforhealth.com.au Register as a Designs for Health Practitioner and discover quality practitioner-only supplements at www.designsforhealth.com.auDISCLAIMER: The Information provided in the Wellness by Designs podcast is for educational purposes only; the information presented is not intended to be used as medical advice; please seek the advice of a qualified healthcare professional if what you have heard here today raises questions or concerns relating to your health 

KZYX News
Lake County's first Indigenous-curated, all-Indigenous art show opens in Middletown

KZYX News

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 6:29


July 11, 2022 — The Middletown Art Center in Lake County was packed on Saturday night. Visitors from several counties were there to look at work by 31 Native American artists, including traditional baskets, digital art and paintings, woodcut prints, bobbleheads, and a short film about the historical context of Jules Tavernier's paintings. “Tonight, we are at the opening of Earth, Sky, and Everything in Between, which is actually the first time that a Native American has curated art by Native Americans. Ever,” said curator Corine Pearce, just as visitors began to arrive. She's from the Little River Band of Pomo Indians in Redwood Valley, but she also claims ancestry from people indigenous to Lake County. Pearce said the show is a culmination of a year-long project that involved teaching basket-making to Native and non-Native people as a way to build cultural bridges. She emphasized the variety of styles and approaches on display. “While we were setting this up, the owner of the gallery, Lisa Kaplan, said she'd never had as many mediums in at one time. So we have acrylic on canvas, we have three-dimensional baskets of lots of kinds, including electrical cable…if you are alive, and you are Indigenous, no matter what art you're making, it is contemporary art.” That includes commemorating recent achievements and memorializing ongoing tragedy. In one small room, there are a pair of mannequins in a mix of modern and traditional regalia, and a haunting empty skirt covered with red handprints. One piece celebrates a young woman's recent graduation, while the other is a reminder of how many Indigenous women are missing and murdered. According to statistics that are part of the installation, Indian women are murdered at a rate of ten times the national average, though only 2% of the known number are included in the Department of Justice database. The mannequins, notes Pearce, “are a cool thing.” A young woman from the Pinola family of Kashia graduated from school this year. “The school she goes to allows them to wear a traditional outfit to one graduation, and then a contemporary cap and gown. And she broke the mold. She made a little feather topknot. And the white beads that go down (across the forehead), that's a Pomo thing, representing wealth. So she brought both of them. Also, where that room is, there's a display for the Missing Murdered Indigenous Women that has statistics. Because that sad statistic is part of our culture.” Many of the artists are displaying their work for the first time, from twelve-year-old Sarah Franklin, who made a small red basket, to 75-year-old Wanda Quitiquit, who created a special technique for burning designs onto gourds. But some of the artwork has been on tour. The video about Jules Tavernier's paintings of the Elem people, which includes local experts discussing the mercury mining that began at that time, was recently at the De Young Museum in San Francisco. “It was actually at the Met first, and then it came to the De Young,” Pearce said. “When it came to the De Young Museum, they incorporated more representations of living artists. I happened to be one of those artists. So they had my baskets, they had baskets of Susan Billy, they had baskets of Clint McKay, and they had tule dolls made by Meyo Marruffo. That exhibit just ended, and they sent the stuff back to me, and then I brought that stuff here to exhibit here for a little while, and then it's going to go to the Grace Hudson Museum (in Ukiah). So we have some really ‘fine art' art here.” Wanda Quitiquit, who is Eastern Pomo from Robinson Rancheria, debuted her work at the Middletown Art Center, wearing a multi-strand shell necklace made by her late sister. She took a seat on a hay bale next to a garden full of basket-weaving plants to talk about her artistic approach. She is partly inspired by her own tradition, and partly by Indigenous Peruvian artists who carve elaborate designs onto tiny gourds. “What I like to do is I make big, large gourd bowls,” she said. “I have to draw the design first, and then I wood-burn the design in. And then I use dye for color. I only do Pomo basketry designs, old designs…But they all come out different on the gourd. It just depends on the gourd, and my feeling. I think the most important thing is that these designs that I use are gifts to us Pomos who use them in our artwork. I just stick with Pomo basket designs, because I'm a Pomo. It's done by a Pomo, and it's Pomo art.” Jacob Meders, who is Mechoopda Maidu, takes a different historical approach. In addition to making sculpture and woodcut prints, he is an associate professor of an interdisciplinary art and performance program at Arizona State University. He's also the founder of a printmaking company called War Bird Press. His woodcut, “Divided Lines,” is a mixture of Socratic line theory, illustrations from accounts of first contact between Indigenous and European people, and pop-culture satirical riffs. One design features a figure wearing a cross and a crown, sitting cross-legged on a tree stump. “I was thinking more of the British crown in that,” Meders said. “What he's sitting on is the largest stump in all of those woodcuts. It's this very large tree that was cut down, so he's using that as a throne in some way. And he's referencing Manifest Destiny…the idea that God has given him the right, as the king, and chose him to be royalty, but also the idea of Manifest Destiny, that God has given him the right to take from us, as Indigenous people. So there's that reference to that spiritual power that is a colonial spiritual power, that is used as a weapon, really.” Jacqueline Graumann, of the Redwood Valley Little River Band of Pomo Indians, melded a personal fascination with the “Everything” part of the exhibit's title. “During the pandemic, I got kind of a fixation on anatomical hearts,” she said. “So I have drawn probably 20 different anatomical hearts. I try to pull out, what people's hearts are about, what their lives are about. My sister is a basket-weaver, so I did a basket-weaver's heart. I was a traditional dancer when I was younger. I had a death in my family and I stopped dancing, so I try to find my way back to that by doing a dancer's heart.” As a labor and delivery nurse, Graumann brings a medical understanding of anatomical features to her artwork. “I'm there at the very beginning of life, and a lot of it starts with hearing the heartbeats of babies,” she said. “Hearing the heartbeats of mamas. So it's a connection throughout generations, and listening to the Earth. It's the beginning of everything.” As she spoke, an Elem elder inside the gallery clacked a stick sharply, twice. It was a call to go in and hear a blessing for a historical show, equal parts ancient, the first of its kind, and not necessarily confined to a gallery. “They are museum quality,” Pearce said of the pieces on display. “But we are not people who live in museums. So it's important for us to share, in community, that we're still here.”

Eversheds Sutherland – Legal Insights (audio)
Pensions Education Podcast: Multi-Academy Trusts and the potential consolidation of participation arrangements in the LGPS

Eversheds Sutherland – Legal Insights (audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2022 11:08


Multi-Academy Trusts that operate academy schools in England often participate in multiple LGPS Pension Funds where their academy schools are located in different geographical areas across the country. In this Pensions Education Podcast, Sarah Franklin is joined by Cat Ellis and Alec Bennett to discuss the potential for Multi-Academy Trusts to consolidate their participation arrangements into one LGPS Pension Fund and the issues, benefits and potential challenges when doing so.

Baywatch Watch
World Class Skaters - "Bad Blades" w/ special guest Sarah Franklin!

Baywatch Watch

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 93:49


Number two on Interpol's most wanted list is also a getaway driver with a penchant for extreme sports. Wayne from The Wonder Years slacks off in his role as a member of a criminal enterprise. Ryan poses as a fan club president, while Mitch poses as a bodyguard. Mitch stops a treasury heist with some light shoves. Join Zach, Charlie, and special guest Sarah Franklin (check out her podcast, Trust the Bachelor Process!) for episode two of Baywatch Nights, which takes place almost entirely during the day!

Natural Medicine Podcast
Integrative Cancer Support: Part 1: Where to start after a cancer diagnosis.

Natural Medicine Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 47:55


This is Part 1 of a several-part series on Integrative Cancer Support. These will be a "must-listen" podcast series for those who care for patients with a cancer diagnosis.Our expert today is Sarah Franklin who is a naturopath, nutritionist, acupuncturist and registered nurse with specialised training in oncology care. In this episode, Sarah discusses how her clinical background and her blend of modalities can be employed  to best support her patients' through their cancer diagnosis journey. From the first numbing "thump" upon receiving a cancer diagnosis, to the ensuing anxiety over mortality, pain, family, work, finances, organising a patient's support team...and all the things!. Sarah guides us through the practical aspects of patient care, some of the therapeutic options to consider and how to prioritise and implement interventions that support both their physical and emotional wellbeing. She also helps to clarify the (sometimes many!) medical specialists and their roles and functions in a patient's care team.  In our later episodes we will cover such topics as how different cancer types receive differing integrative cancer support, when to offer supplements and when to "pick up the pieces" after treatment, how to engage with orthodox health professionals who have limited knowledge about naturopathic approaches and how we can offer real and lasting support to those caring for cancer patients. RESOURCES FROM THIS EPISODE:Find Sarah at BalancedHealth.com.auFind Sarah on FacebookFollow Sarah on InstagramDISCLAIMER: The Natural Medicine Podcast is intended as professional information for integrative medicine practitioners and as such, must not be taken as medical advice. Patients are expressly directed to seek appropriate care from a suitably qualified practitioner.

The Tableau Wannabe Podcast
#Data22 Live - Sarah Franklin SF CMO

The Tableau Wannabe Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 25:24


In this episode, Matt and Emily talked to Salesforce CMO Sarah Frankling about her experience of TC, the Salesforce family and how she feels about the #datafam 

Blazing Trails
Axios CEO Is Betting on Brevity for Political News

Blazing Trails

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2021 35:23


A "mix between The Economist and Twitter" -- that was Jim VandeHei's vision for Axios when he founded the company in 2016. Today, as CEO, he leads his team of several hundred with that principle top of mind. He calls it “Smart Brevity” and in this episode, he joins Sarah Franklin, Salesforce's President and Chief Marketing Office, to discuss how that mindset has helped the company stand out among consumers, while also creating trust within the company. Tune in to learn how to apply Smart Brevity to your business.

Mind Your Business Podcast
Let Your Past Make You Better (Not Bitter) With Sarah Franklin

Mind Your Business Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2021 31:17


In this episode I'm joined by Sarah Franklin. Sarah is the President & CMO of billion dollar tech company, Salesforce. With over 70,000 employees under her management, Sarah is a force to be reckoned with. Her journey was far from easy, filled with setbacks and rejections, but lots of perseverance. We talk about her story and letting your past make you better, leading during tough times, and the future of marketing. An incredible episode you don't want to miss!

SPOTLIGHT Radio Network
* Cathy George, MSU Head Volleyball Coach & Sarah Franklin, MSU Volleyball Stand-Out

SPOTLIGHT Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2021 19:55


The Drive with Jack
* Cathy George, MSU Head Volleyball Coach & Sarah Franklin, MSU Volleyball Stand-Out

The Drive with Jack

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2021 19:55


Crush Fictionally
Controversy, Bachelor Nation, and Eligible Bachelors (ft. Alex and Sarah Franklin)

Crush Fictionally

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2021 99:46


It’s the love of a lifetime. It’s the right amount of everything - a little bit of this but not too much of that. It’s romance based on the perfect match. In order to make the perfect match, you definitely need an eligible bachelor. With masterly help from sisters, reality tv connoisseurs, and podcast hosts (“Trust the Bachelor Process”) Alex and Sarah Franklin, we break down true love for all the right reasons, how ABC could actually build a better Bachelor process, and what characteristics make a fictional bachelor oh so eligible. In it for all the right reasons and accepting our final roses this week: Ted Lasso (Jason Sudeikis) of Ted Lasso, Jess Mariano (Milo Ventimiglia) of Gilmore Girls, a young Han Solo (Alden Ehrenreich) of Solo: A Star War Story, and Heimdall (Idris Elba) of Thor. This week’s small business shout-out: Breakaway Records (Austin, TX) __ Show Information Crush Fictionally is produced by Peter Byrnes. Original music by Edith Mudge. Artwork by Rose Feduk. Have a crush-worthy episode idea? Slide into those DMs... Instagram: @crushfictionally Twitter: @crushfctionally Email: crushfictionally@gmail.com

Table Flipping with Alyssa and Taylor
Bling Empire and Botox (with Dayna Kathan)

Table Flipping with Alyssa and Taylor

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2021 67:11


Taylor and Alyssa get into all the Madison Lecroy, J Lo, Arod, Kristin Cavallari drama. They recap the Southern Charm reunion, the premiere of Summer House, and this week's Real Housewives of Atlanta, Salt Lake City, 90 Day Fiance. Dayna Kathan (Vanderpump Rules) joins them to talk all things Bling Empire, her thoughts on injectables and why Kevin's storyline reminds her of her own love triangle on Vanderpump. *This week's Bachelor recap is on an episode of Trust the Bachelor Process with Alex and Sarah Franklin!   *** This show is a part of the Podglomerate network, a company that produces, distributes, and monetizes podcasts. We encourage you to visit the website and sign up for our newsletter for more information about our shows, launches, and events. For more information on how The Podglomerate treats data, please see our Privacy Policy.    Since you're listening to Table Flipping, we'd like to suggest you also try other Podglomerate shows surrounding pop culture, comedy, and entertainment like 2 Girls 1 Podcast and Green Eggs & Dan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Good Day, Sir! Show
You Can't Leave the Ohana

Good Day, Sir! Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2021 68:05


In this episode, we discuss Wade Wegner's farewell to Salesforce, Sarah Franklin's promotion to CMO, recent acquisitions by Komodo and IBM, and a Zoom etiquette rant from Jeremy.

Table Flipping with Alyssa and Taylor
The Bachelor And Bad Dancing (with Trust The Bachelor Process)

Table Flipping with Alyssa and Taylor

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2021 77:09


Alyssa and Taylor discuss what they believe is the best episode of Real Housewives of Salt Lake City so far, Real Housewives of Atlanta's party for Porsha, 90 Day Fiance and RuPaul's Drag Race. Then sisters Alex and Sarah Franklin (hosts of Trust the Bachelor Process) come on to make predictions about Matt James's season of The Bachelor.

Chippy Lane's Podcast
NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL - EMILY WHITE

Chippy Lane's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2020 8:49


Welcome to Chippy Lane’s Podcast, series two the PICTURES / LLUNIAU PROJECT. This series celebrates Welsh and Wales-based writers and their stories. This is our NY 2020 special, an extract from OVER THE HILL by Emily White. Moira is in her late 80's and has been stuck indoors being looked after by carers on 15-minute shifts, for as long as she can remember.  She is bored, lonely, pissed-off and longing for adventure but her daughter won't let her leave the house.  Until Rhodri, an eighteen-year-old oddball arrives to care for her full-time and together they set off on a road trip of the imagination. Writer: Emily White  Emily is an emerging screenwriter and playwright.  She originally trained as an actress at RADA before changing tack and obtaining an MA in Theatre Writing at the University of York in 2015.  In the five years since graduating she has been shortlisted and longlisted for numerous competitions including: Bolton Octagon Top Five Season, Arcola Heretic Voices, 4 Screenwriting, 4Stories, and BBC Drama Room. In 2018 she won a place on Channel 4’s 4Screenwriting Course where she developed her pilot Land of My Fathers about a Syrian refugee coming to live in a small Welsh town.  She was then selected to be part of the BBC Wales Writersroom group ‘Welsh Voices’ in 2019. Her acclaimed play, Pavilion, premiered at Theatr Clwyd in Sept-Oct 2019, directed by the Olivier award winning director Tamara Harvey and published by Faber & Faber. Her digital theatre microplay ‘Homework’ was released in October online for Wrapt Films/Open Sky Theatre, to high acclaim.   She is under commission to write another play for Theatr Clwyd and was one of six writers selected for English Touring Theatre’s Nationwide Voices Program 2020.  She also has a television serial in development with Little Door Productions.   Director: Chelsey Gillard Chelsey is the Carne Trust Associate Director at the Stephen Joseph Theatre, where she recently worked on The Snow Queen. She is also a co-founder of PowderHouse, the Company in Residence at the Sherman Theatre in Cardiff. Recent Directing credits include: Antigone (National Theatre Wales/ Sherman Theatre/ PowderHouse), The Invisible Woman (Wales Millennium Centre and tour), Saethu Cwnigod/Shooting Rabbits (Sherman Theatre and tour) and BLUE (Chippy Lane/Chapter Arts Centre). Currently Chelsey is on the script reading panel for both the Theatre Uncut Political Playwriting Award and The Other Room’s New Page programme. Chelsey is an Associate Director of Chippy Lane.  Performer: Michelle McTernan Michelle has been a professional actress for 24 years. She is also a Drama Practitioner and runs a disability theatre in Swansea S.Wales. Theatre Credits Includes: Metamorphosis (Hijinx Theatre Company) The Revlon Girl (Edinburgh Festival/Park Theatre, London) Mission Control (Hijinx Theatre/National Theatre Wales) The Three Night Blitz, (Joio Productions/Swansea Grand Theatre) Titania, A Midsummer Night's Dream, (Pontardawe Arts Centre) The Revlon Girl, Barren (October Sixty Six Productions) Bara Bread (Theatr Gwalia) Macbeth, Merchant Of Venice, Buoy, Fall Out 84 (Pontardawe Arts Centre) GrannyAnnie,Trivial Pursuits, Erogenous Zones, Roots And Wings, Family Planning, Kiss On The Bottom (GrassrootsProductions)FleshAndBlood(ShermanTheatre/Hampstead Theatre),TheOystercatchers )SwanseaGrand/ShermanTheatre),Blue Remembered Hills (Torch Theatre), Under Milk Wood, Rosencrantz And Guildenstern Are Dead (Clwyd Theatr Cymru/Tour),Twelfth Night, Cymbeline, The Merchant Of Venice (Ludlow Festival) And (Wales Theatre Company/Tour). Television And Film Work Includes: The Crown (Netflix) Casualty (BBC Wales) The Lost Viking (Tornado Productions), Sisters, (Tornado Productions), Aetheled, Tree Bastards, (Tornado Films/Nowhere Fast Productions),The Healers (Pooka Films) Stella (Tidy Productions, Sky1 Hd) 4 Series semi regular,  Rain (Tornado Films) Caerdydd (S4C) Midnight (Nowhere Fast Productions) Dr Terrible’s House Of Horrible (Bbc), Tales From Pleasure Beach (Bbc), Light In The City (Bbc Wales) And The Feature Film Very Annie Mary (Dragon Pictures). Bobinogs. Cbeebies/Bbc Wales/Worldwide. Radio Work Includes: Goat St Runners, Return Journey (Lighthouse Theatre Co),Cottage Industry (BBC Radio Wales) Commercial- GumTree, BT Advert, Llandovey House Advert, Mind Cymru Advert. Performer: Lissa Berry Lissa is an actress, voiceover artist and narrator. Her theatre career began at the Sherman Theatre in Cardiff in the mid 80s in productions of Mishima and Hamlet. She performed in many productions in London, including Queen Christina at BAC, White Lies at the Finborough Theatre and NewsRevue at The Canal Cafe Theatre. She is a regular performer at Short Stories Aloud in Oxford and also at The Berko Speakeasy where in 2018, she had the privilege of performing a duologue with Geoffrey Palmer called Easter Lilies. Also in 2018 she wrote and performed her first solo piece, Sin Eater, directed by Chelsey Gillard at the Offbeat Festival in Oxford and then as an extract for the Chippy Lane Welsh Women’s showcase at The Old Red Lion in London. In 2019 she was selected as the Welsh entrant for the BBC Radio 4 Norman Beaton Fellowship Award where she became a finalist. She began her voiceover career as a continuity announcer for BBC Choice, Sky Arts and as a co-announcer with Phill Jupitus for the Paramount Comedy Channel. She has narrated many TV shows and documentaries for BBC, ITV, Channel 4,, Sky Arts and Discovery, such as Horizon, Ancient Apocalypse and World’s Most Extreme. Her most recent audiobook titles for Audible are Impossible Causes by Julie Mayhew, The Librarian by Salley Vickers and How to Belong by Sarah Franklin. Written by Emily White Directed by Chelsey Gillard Performed by Michelle McTernan & Lissa BerryProduced & Edited by Chippy Lane Productions Ltd. Music by Grand Tradition  This podcast has been kindly supported by The Carne Trust.

Book Off!
Carys Bray and Sarah Franklin (Forests, Friendships and Fabulous books)

Book Off!

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2020 45:19


Authors Carys Bray and Sarah Franklin discuss their writing, friendship, inspirations, new books and what they've been reading recently. They also go head to head in a war of the words pitting "The Great Believers" by Rebecca Makkai against Jenny Erpenbeck's "Visitation" but which one will you want to take home??? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Blazing Trails
Creating a Culture of Psychological Safety so Employees Can Thrive: A Conversation with Adam Grant

Blazing Trails

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2020 30:36


Ever wonder how you can best motivate your employees? What the long term outlook for remote work looks like? Or how to retain top talent in an ethical way? Those are questions best selling author and Wharton Professor Adam Grant spends a lot of time thinking about. Today, Professor Grant joins Sarah Franklin from Salesforce to share his ideas about how business leaders can create a 'culture of safety' that allows their employees to thrive.

SheLeads with Carly
35: Sarah Franklin | EVP & GM Platform, Trailhead & Developers, Salesforce

SheLeads with Carly

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2020 40:34


As the Executive Vice President and General Manager of Platform, Trailhead & Developers at Salesforce, Sarah specializes in bringing emerging technologies and trends into the market, and she shares her passion for helping people develop the skills needed to obtain their dream jobs. Sarah chats about the importance of female role models, embracing our natural empathetic instincts as a woman, and removing fear from decision-making in order to lean into our passion and purpose.

TechRepublic's Dynamic Developer with Bill Detwiler
TrailheaDX 2020: How Salesforce plans to its virtual developer event better and more meaningful

TechRepublic's Dynamic Developer with Bill Detwiler

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2020 22:41


In this special episode of Dynamic Developer, Bill Detwiler speaks with Salesforce's Sarah Franklin about how the company plans to make its virtual TrailheaDX 2020 developer event a better, more inclusive, and more meaningful tech event. You can listen to episodes of Dynamic Developer on a variety of podcast platforms, including: Spotify: https://tek.io/34Vo2mT Stitcher: https://tek.io/2KkwjHG Apple Podcasts: https://tek.io/2xQUSt5 Google Play: https://tek.io/3btMluL Follow Bill Detwiler: https://twitter.com/billdetwiler Watch more TechRepublic videos: https://www.youtube.com/techrepublic TechRepublic on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TechRepublic/ TechRepublic on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TechRepublic/ TechRepublic on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/techrepublic/ TechRepublic on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/techrepublic/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

IT Visionaries
Protecting and Empowering your Employees, Customers, and Communities During Times of Crisis

IT Visionaries

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2020 49:12


In the last few months, we have seen quite a shift in our world. Our day-to-day lives are vastly different, and the way many of us live and work has changed. Companies around the globe are adjusting to this new normal and trying to navigate how to not only manage their workforces and provide the necessary technology and productivity tools but, more importantly, how to ensure their employees’ wellbeing. On this special episode of IT Visionaries, we brought in two tech leaders, Julie Cullivan, the Chief People, and Technology Officer at ForeScout Technologies, and Sarah Franklin, the EVP & GM Platform, Trailhead & Developers at Salesforce, to discuss how they are navigating through these unprecedented times. Things are hard, there’s no doubt about it, but as both women say, when you put the human element first, have empathy for others, and keep a positive attitude, we can all make it through this together.  Key Takeaways: The human element and how people are managing on a human level must always come first New work environments pose unique challenges, from how to provide productivity tools to how to encourage employees to maintain a separation between work and home When we get through this, we will be living in a new normal, and it might actually include changes for the better --- IT Visionaries is brought to you by the Salesforce Customer 360 Platform - the #1 cloud platform for digital transformation of every experience. Build connected experiences, empower every employee, and deliver continuous innovation - with the customer at the center of everything you do. Learn more at salesforce.com/platform

Ken Broo
Ken Broo in for Willie 3-9-20

Ken Broo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2020 74:21


The Average American in for The Great American! Ken talks with Dr. Carole Lieberman on Coronavirus Stress Sydrome, why Mom's are drinking more than ever with Sarah Franklin, and much more on 700 WLW.

Table Flipping with Alyssa and Taylor
Kaitlyn Bristowe and Slut Shaming (with Alex and Sarah Franklin)

Table Flipping with Alyssa and Taylor

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2020 56:32


In a very Bachelor focused episode, Alyssa and Taylor discuss the five hours of Bachelor content they watched this week, whether Peter Weber is really in control of his journey or not and how Victoria F shouldn't throw stones in glass houses. Plus Alex and Sarah Franklin (Trust the Bachelor Process) come on to talk about Kaitlyn Bristowe as the first Bachelorette to directly address sex on the show.

Hills I'd Die On with Taylor Cox
Jennifer Aniston & Brad Pitt Should NOT Get Back Together: Sarah Franklin

Hills I'd Die On with Taylor Cox

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2020 57:13


Today we say goodbye to host/comedian Sarah Franklin (TRUST THE BACHELOR PROCESS) who died on the hill of "Jennifer Aniston & Brad Pitt Should NOT Get Back Together." Go listen to Sarah's hilarious last words about THE photo and the cosmic link that may or may not be forever connecting Jen and Brad,Art: Mackenzie MooreMusic: Hayden CoplenEditor: Will Witwer

LNK Today with Jack and Friends
Addiction Specialist Sarah Franklin

LNK Today with Jack and Friends

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2020 8:12


Kaleb and Kellan talk with Sarah Franklin about Dry January - and some tips on addiction information

The Most Wonderful Pod of the Year
Second Chance Christmas with Sarah Franklin

The Most Wonderful Pod of the Year

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2019 90:28


"Second Chance Christmas", is a holiday love story, and who better to break it down with us than Sarah Franklin? She's a comedian, a newly married woman, and a bit of a love expert as the co-host of "Trust The Bachelor Process". Join us as we give this movie a second chance at our love. Follow Sarah on... Twitter Instagram   This is an Audio Wool original, produced by Byron McKoy

FX Medicine Podcast Central
Naturopathic Approaches for Palliative Care with Sarah Franklin

FX Medicine Podcast Central

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2019


Is there a place for naturopathic medicine in palliative care? What is the active role a naturopath can play within a patient's healthcare team when a person's illness progresses to a palliative care phase? Sarah Franklin is a Registered Nurse, Naturopath and Acupuncturist with a vast breadth of expertise in oncology care and today we'll discuss the more personal, sometimes confronting aspects of naturopathic care when our patient's prognosis changes to palliation. Sarah shares her expertise on how to best manage symptoms and offer ethical, safe and compassionate care to enrich and honour a person's final days. Find today's podcast transcript and show notes here: https://www.fxmedicine.com.au/content/naturopathic-approaches-palliative-care-sarah-franklin *****DISCLAIMER: The information provided on FX Medicine is for educational and informational purposes only. The information provided is not, nor is it intended to be, a substitute for professional advice or care. Please seek the advice of a qualified health care professional in the event something you learn here raises questions or concerns regarding your health.*****

Heritage Radio Network On Tour
Jessica B Harris, Sarah Franklin, and Klancy Miller at CHSWFF18

Heritage Radio Network On Tour

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2018 42:37


A very special episode of Radio Cherry Bombe takes place at Heritage Radio Network with guest host Klancy Miller. Joining Klancy is Jessica B. Harris and Sara Franklin to talk about the lasting effects of Edna Lewis on Southern cuisine. According to Heritage Radio Network, there’s perhaps no greater expert on the food and foodways of the African Diaspora than Doctor Jessica B. Harris. She is the author of twelve critically acclaimed cookbooks documenting the foods and foodways of the African Diaspora including Iron Pots and Wooden Spoons: Africa’s Gifts to New World Cooking, Sky Juice and Flying Fish Traditional Caribbean Cooking, The Welcome Table: African American Heritage Cooking, The Africa Cookbook: Tastes of a Continent, Beyond Gumbo: Creole Fusion Food from the Atlantic Rim. Harris also conceptualized and organized The Black Family Reunion Cook Book. Her most recent book, High on the Hog: A Culinary Journey from Africa to America, was the International Association for Culinary Professionals 2012 prize winner for culinary history. In her more than three decades as a journalist, Dr. Harris has written book reviews, theater reviews, travel, feature, and beauty articles too numerous to note. She has lectured on African-American food and culture at numerous institutions throughout the United States and Abroad and has written extensively about the culture of Africa in the Americas, particularly the foodways. In the most recent edition of the Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, author John Mariani cites Harris as the ranking expert on African American Foodways in the country. An award winning journalist, Harris has also written in numerous national and international publications ranging from Essence to German Vogue. She’s a contributing editor at Saveur and drinks columnist and contributing editor at Martha’s Vineyard magazine. In 2012, she began a monthly radio show on Heritage Radio Network, My Welcome Table, that focuses on Food. Travel, Music, and Memoir. Klancy Miller is a writer and pastry chef deeply fascinated by all things French. After graduating from Columbia University and working in international development in French Polynesia, she earned a Diplôme de Pâtisserie at Le Cordon Bleu Paris. Klancy stayed in Paris to apprentice in the pastry kitchen at the Michelin-starred Taillevent restaurant, and was later hired by Le Cordon Bleu Paris to join the recipe development team. During this time, Klancy was featured on Food Network’s Recipe for Success in an episode about American culinary professionals in Paris. Now in New York and Philadelphia, she continues to write about food. She was a commentator on the Cooking Channel’s show Unique Sweets and has been a contributor to the online magazine Food Republic. When she’s not writing or cooking, Klancy takes hip-hop dance classes, throws waffle parties, obsesses about her next vacation, and searches for the perfect cookie. Sara Franklin is a writer, oral historian, and food studies scholar. She is the editor and commissioner of the upcoming book Edna Lewis: At the Table with an American Original, a volume of original essays about the celebrated Southern food chef and cookbook author. The essays, written by both food-world stars and family members, explore personal memories of Lewis as well as her cultural legacy. Jessica B. Harris called the book “as close to meeting Miss Edna as one can get.” Before pursuing her PhD in Food Studies at New York University, Sarah worked as a full time farmer, a restaurant reviewer, and sustainable agriculture policy advocate. She currently teaches courses on food culture and writing at NYU's Gallatin School for Individualized Study and via the NYU Prison Education Initiative at Wallkill Correctional Facility. Heritage Radio Network On Tour is powered by Simplecast.

Radio Gorgeous
Sarah Franklin, SHELTER with Donna Freed AUTHOR on Radio Gorgeous

Radio Gorgeous

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2017 27:09


Author of the Week: Sarah Franklin, SHELTER, with Donna Freed Set in the Forest of Dean in the spring of 1944, Shelter is the debut novel from Sarah Franklin, 2 time judge of the Costa Short Story Award, founder & host of Short Stories Aloud and lecturer in publishing at Oxford Brooks . The Forest provides refuge, if not shelter, for Connie, a lumberjill for the Women's Timber Corps and Seppe, an Italian prisoner of war. While their meeting sparks new beginnings, they both harbour deep secrets... The delightful Sarah shares her insights into storytelling and the lure of the Forest. @SarahEFranklin @BonnierZaffre @CostaBookAwards @PubOxford #SHELTER

I Burn Everything: Food & Relationships
The Sweet & Sour of Sisterhood with Alex & Sarah Franklin (Trust the Bachelor Process Podcast)

I Burn Everything: Food & Relationships

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2017 48:22


Stevie Nelson and guest co-host, Katy Stoll, chat with Alex and Sarah Franklin (hosts of Trust the Bachelor Process) about the sweet & sour of sisterhood, recovering from breakups and cooking for the people we love.

Science and Research Show
Signs of Heart Recovery

Science and Research Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2017 8:15


For most people, a diagnosis of advanced heart failure signals an inevitable decline with no chance for recovery. However, a few years ago, doctors found a small yet signiLicant proportion of these patients can bounce back if their heart is given a chance to rest with help from a left ventricular assist device (LVAD). Scientist Sarah Franklin is investigating the responses of different sets of patients. She explains what she's searching for and how what she Linds may one day beneLit patients.

Social Science Bites
Whose Work Most Influenced You? Part 2

Social Science Bites

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2017 12:35


The Communist Manifesto. Novelist Don DeLillo’s account of a big moment in baseball. Works by Wittgenstein and Focault. And a famous –and shocking – behavioral experiment.  These are a few of the supremely inspiring works which have influenced some of the leading social scientists at work today. During the recording of every Social Science Bites podcast, the guest has been asked the following: Which piece of social science research has most inspired or most influenced you? And now, in honor of the 50th Bites podcast to air, journalist and interviewer David Edmonds has compiled those responses into three separate montages of those answers. The second appears here, with answers – presented alphabetically – from Bites’ guests ranging from Sarah Franklin to Angela MacRobbie. Their answers are similarly diverse. Sociologist Franklin, for example, who studies reproductive technology, namechecked two greats – Marilyn Strethern and Donna Haraway -- who directly laid the foundation for Franklin’s own work. “I would hope,” she reflected, “that I could continue toward those ways of thinking about those issues now and in the future.” David Goldblatt meanwhile, who studies the sociology of football, picked influencers whose contributions are apparent in his work but less academically straightforward. He chose The Communist Manifesto (“the idea that history was structured and organized has never left me”) and the first 60 pages of American novelist Don DeLillo’s Underworld, which describes ‘the Shot Heard Round the World,” a famous home run from baseball’s 1951 World Series. Goldblatt terms it the “greatest piece of sports writing ever.” Other guests in this 15-munte podcast recall important studies that set the scene for their own work, or important figures that left them wanting to emulate their scholarship. And not everyone cited academics in their own fields. Witness Peter Lunt citing Ludwig Wittgenstein and MacRobbie Michel Focault, while Jennifer Hochschild named an historian, Edmund Sears Morgan. She called his American Slavery, American Freedom “a wonderful book, everyone should read it – including the footnotes.” The book’s thesis, that “you had to invent slavery in order to be able to invent liberalism,” sticks with her to this day. Other Bites interviewees in this podcast include Jonathan Haidt, Sarah Harper, Rom Harre, Bruce Hood, Daniel Kahneman, Sonia Livingstone, Anna Machin and Trevor Marchand. To hear the first montage, click HERE.  *** Social Science Bites is made in association with SAGE Publishing. For a complete listing of past Social Science Bites podcasts, click HERE. You can follow Bites on Twitter @socialscibites and David Edmonds @DavidEdmonds100

Lizard People: Comedy & Conspiracy Theories
Bush and Britney with Sarah Franklin

Lizard People: Comedy & Conspiracy Theories

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2016 56:19


We all know Brit Brit had a pretty tough go of it in 2007. But not a lot of people remember that George W. Bush was doing the political equivalent of shaving his head and fighting paparazzi with umbrellas. Guest Sarah Franklin makes a SHOCKINGLY compelling argument that Spears was an off-the-books employee of the Bush White House. You might disagree with our politics, and you might disagree with our pop-culture obsession. But you can't disagree that Crossroads is the greatest film of our generation.

Honey
Most Definitely (Sarah & Adam)

Honey

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2016 57:13


Julia interviews Sarah Franklin and Adam Miller about who dropped the ball when they were getting together, and also about the time that Adam told Sarah to meet him at his place but then got so drunk he forgot to go home. Also Adam keeps his phone on silent AT ALL TIMES and that is extremely weird. This is a relatively new relationship, they're very smitten with each other, and it's very adorable.Produced by: Ryan MiddledorfArtwork: Aly MonroeTheme Song: Erin & MeLissa

Choose Your Own Religion
What Makes You Happy with Sarah Franklin

Choose Your Own Religion

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2015 89:59


Sarah Franklin was here and she chose her own religion! Sarah is an improviser from all over this great nation and is one of my dearest friends. Warning: highly infectious personality. She’s the co-host of the podcast Under the Top Part of a Boat, which is barely about season three--and only season three--of Bravo’s reality show “Below Deck”. Sarah grew up going to an all-girls Catholic school, so she breaks it down to a Protestant what it was like growing up in the ORIGINAL Christian church. We also talk about cool youth pastors, self-love, and come up with a religion that would be perfect for any weird artist. Up top, I detail the first field trip in CYOR history!

FX Medicine Podcast Central
The Successful Management of Pain with Sarah Franklin

FX Medicine Podcast Central

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2015


Sarah Franklin is a Registered Nurse, Naturopath and Acupuncturist whose passion is supporting cancer patients before, during and after orthodox therapy. Sarah successfully uses an integrative approach to reduce the side-effects of orthodox treatments and enhance quality of life of her patients. Today, Sarah discusses how she manages both acute and chronic painful conditions with the use of herbs, nutrients, acupuncture, as well as simple yet powerful home treatments and lifestyle recommendations. Andrew and Sarah also touch on the medical use of cannabis for pain and its potential for the future.

FX Medicine Podcast Central
Complementary Cancer Care with Sarah Franklin

FX Medicine Podcast Central

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2015


Sarah Franklin is a registered nurse and naturopath with many years experience in oncology. Her special areas of interest lie in the successful integration of complementary medicine with conventional treatments. In this podcast interview, Sarah discusses how she approaches each cancer patient care in a very personalised way. Every patient that presents with a cancer is unique and complementary practitioners require an awareness of the risks and benefits of any chosen treatment. Sarah also reviews her approach to nutrition, diet and herbal medicines as well as interactions and contraindications. This is a very important podcast for anyone interested in cancer care and better patient support and outcomes.

Crisis and Social Change: towards alternative horizons
After IVF: the reproductive turn in social thought - Sarah Franklin Inaugural Lecture (with slides)

Crisis and Social Change: towards alternative horizons

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2014 69:00


Professor Franklin was elected to the Cambridge University Chair of Sociology in June 2011 and took up her post on 1 October of that year. The following lecture was introduced by the Vice Chancellor, Leszek Borysiewicz, and the Head of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Professor Martin Daunton. It was delivered in the Arts Lecture Theatre on the New Museums Site at 5pm on Wednesday October 30th 2013.

Thinking Allowed
Masculinity and betting shops; 'New' biological relatives and kinship

Thinking Allowed

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2014 28:03


IVF - it's 35 years years since the initial success of a form of technologically assisted human reproduction which has led to the birth of 5 million 'miracle' babies. Laurie Taylor talks to Sarah Franklin, Professor in Sociology at the University of Cambridge, about her study into the meaning and impact of IVF. Has the creation of new biological relatives transformed our notion of kinship? They're joined by Henrietta Moore, Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge. Also, the male space of the 'bookies'. Betting on horses and dogs has long been seen as a male pastime and the betting shop as a 'man's world'. Rebecca Cassidy, Professor of Social Anthropology at Goldsmiths at the University of London, asks why this should be, interviewing both workers and customers in London betting shops. Producer: Jayne Egerton.

New Books in Biology and Evolution
Sarah Franklin, “Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship” (Duke University Press, 2013)

New Books in Biology and Evolution

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2014 66:30


Sarah Franklin‘s new book is an exceptionally rich, focused yet wide-ranging, insightful account of in vitro fertilization (IVF) and the worlds that it creates and inhabits. Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship (Duke University Press, 2013) treats IVF as a looking-glass in which can see not only ourselves, but also transformations in modern notions of biology, technology, and kinship. In addition to a fascinating ethnography of the various kinds of work (by artists, by scientists, by patients and doctors) at IVF and stem cell research facilities, readers will find insightful explorations of the work of Marx and Engels, Haraway, Plato, Strathern, Derrida, Firestone, along with a wide range of authors of feminist texts from the 1980s and after. It is a book full of hands, socks, pipettes, eggs, screens, organisms, and arguments, it is fascinating, and it was a great pleasure to talk with Sarah about it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Sarah Franklin, “Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship” (Duke University Press, 2013)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2014 66:30


Sarah Franklin‘s new book is an exceptionally rich, focused yet wide-ranging, insightful account of in vitro fertilization (IVF) and the worlds that it creates and inhabits. Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship (Duke University Press, 2013) treats IVF as a looking-glass in which can see not only ourselves, but also transformations in modern notions of biology, technology, and kinship. In addition to a fascinating ethnography of the various kinds of work (by artists, by scientists, by patients and doctors) at IVF and stem cell research facilities, readers will find insightful explorations of the work of Marx and Engels, Haraway, Plato, Strathern, Derrida, Firestone, along with a wide range of authors of feminist texts from the 1980s and after. It is a book full of hands, socks, pipettes, eggs, screens, organisms, and arguments, it is fascinating, and it was a great pleasure to talk with Sarah about it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Medicine
Sarah Franklin, “Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship” (Duke University Press, 2013)

New Books in Medicine

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2014 66:30


Sarah Franklin‘s new book is an exceptionally rich, focused yet wide-ranging, insightful account of in vitro fertilization (IVF) and the worlds that it creates and inhabits. Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship (Duke University Press, 2013) treats IVF as a looking-glass in which can see not only ourselves, but also transformations in modern notions of biology, technology, and kinship. In addition to a fascinating ethnography of the various kinds of work (by artists, by scientists, by patients and doctors) at IVF and stem cell research facilities, readers will find insightful explorations of the work of Marx and Engels, Haraway, Plato, Strathern, Derrida, Firestone, along with a wide range of authors of feminist texts from the 1980s and after. It is a book full of hands, socks, pipettes, eggs, screens, organisms, and arguments, it is fascinating, and it was a great pleasure to talk with Sarah about it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/medicine

New Books in Critical Theory
Sarah Franklin, “Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship” (Duke University Press, 2013)

New Books in Critical Theory

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2014 66:30


Sarah Franklin‘s new book is an exceptionally rich, focused yet wide-ranging, insightful account of in vitro fertilization (IVF) and the worlds that it creates and inhabits. Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship (Duke University Press, 2013) treats IVF as a looking-glass in which can see not only ourselves, but also transformations in modern notions of biology, technology, and kinship. In addition to a fascinating ethnography of the various kinds of work (by artists, by scientists, by patients and doctors) at IVF and stem cell research facilities, readers will find insightful explorations of the work of Marx and Engels, Haraway, Plato, Strathern, Derrida, Firestone, along with a wide range of authors of feminist texts from the 1980s and after. It is a book full of hands, socks, pipettes, eggs, screens, organisms, and arguments, it is fascinating, and it was a great pleasure to talk with Sarah about it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Gender Studies
Sarah Franklin, “Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship” (Duke University Press, 2013)

New Books in Gender Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2014 66:30


Sarah Franklin‘s new book is an exceptionally rich, focused yet wide-ranging, insightful account of in vitro fertilization (IVF) and the worlds that it creates and inhabits. Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship (Duke University Press, 2013) treats IVF as a looking-glass in which can see not only ourselves, but also transformations in modern notions of biology, technology, and kinship. In addition to a fascinating ethnography of the various kinds of work (by artists, by scientists, by patients and doctors) at IVF and stem cell research facilities, readers will find insightful explorations of the work of Marx and Engels, Haraway, Plato, Strathern, Derrida, Firestone, along with a wide range of authors of feminist texts from the 1980s and after. It is a book full of hands, socks, pipettes, eggs, screens, organisms, and arguments, it is fascinating, and it was a great pleasure to talk with Sarah about it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Science, Technology, and Society
Sarah Franklin, “Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship” (Duke University Press, 2013)

New Books in Science, Technology, and Society

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2014 66:30


Sarah Franklin‘s new book is an exceptionally rich, focused yet wide-ranging, insightful account of in vitro fertilization (IVF) and the worlds that it creates and inhabits. Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship (Duke University Press, 2013) treats IVF as a looking-glass in which can see not only ourselves, but also transformations in modern notions of biology, technology, and kinship. In addition to a fascinating ethnography of the various kinds of work (by artists, by scientists, by patients and doctors) at IVF and stem cell research facilities, readers will find insightful explorations of the work of Marx and Engels, Haraway, Plato, Strathern, Derrida, Firestone, along with a wide range of authors of feminist texts from the 1980s and after. It is a book full of hands, socks, pipettes, eggs, screens, organisms, and arguments, it is fascinating, and it was a great pleasure to talk with Sarah about it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Sociology
Sarah Franklin, “Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship” (Duke University Press, 2013)

New Books in Sociology

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2014 66:30


Sarah Franklin‘s new book is an exceptionally rich, focused yet wide-ranging, insightful account of in vitro fertilization (IVF) and the worlds that it creates and inhabits. Biological Relatives: IVF, Stem Cells, and the Future of Kinship (Duke University Press, 2013) treats IVF as a looking-glass in which can see not only ourselves, but also transformations in modern notions of biology, technology, and kinship. In addition to a fascinating ethnography of the various kinds of work (by artists, by scientists, by patients and doctors) at IVF and stem cell research facilities, readers will find insightful explorations of the work of Marx and Engels, Haraway, Plato, Strathern, Derrida, Firestone, along with a wide range of authors of feminist texts from the 1980s and after. It is a book full of hands, socks, pipettes, eggs, screens, organisms, and arguments, it is fascinating, and it was a great pleasure to talk with Sarah about it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Autosport International Show 2015 - NEC, Birmingham from the 8th to 11th January, 2015.

Autosport International Show 2014

podcasts motorsports asi british women sarah franklin autosport international show asi podcast
Crisis and Social Change: towards alternative horizons
After IVF: the reproductive turn in social thought - Sarah Franklin Inaugural Lecture

Crisis and Social Change: towards alternative horizons

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2013 69:00


Professor Franklin was elected to the Cambridge University Chair of Sociology in June 2011 and took up her post on 1 October of that year. The following lecture was introduced by the Vice Chancellor, Leszek Borysiewicz, and the Head of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Professor Martin Daunton. It was delivered in the Arts Lecture Theatre on the New Museums Site at 5pm on Wednesday October 30th.

Universal Energy Radio
Law of Attraction ~ What Makes You Glow!?

Universal Energy Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2013 61:00


Join Anna K. as she interviews Sarah Franklin, Love Expert. Sarah is a Love Expert for conscious, powerful, fun-loving women. She will help you step into your power and let your light shine so brightly that you are a magnet for the right man (you know, the one that is as equally amazing as you are!). Sarah excels at getting to the root of what you are doing to keep love away (and the man of your dreams from entering your life). Oh yeah, and she also will help you get out there and enjoy dating.  She does this all with lots of laughter and a heavy dose of fun!  Please check her out here!

Social Science Bites
Sarah Franklin on the Sociology of Reproductive Technologies

Social Science Bites

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2013 24:53


New technologies have opened up new possibilities in the area of reproduction. Sarah Franklin, Professor of Sociology at the University of Cambridge discusses this from a sociological perspective in this episode of the Social Science Bites podcast. Social Science Bites is made in association with SAGE.

Panels, Lectures and Symposiums @Smith

The Global Issues Panel brought notable alumnae together to discuss contemporary global issues such as poverty, health, economics, the environment, education, war, and human rights. Presented during All Reunion Weekend 2012 on the Smith campus, the panel was moderated by Smith College President Carol T. Christ and included Nan Darling Borton '62 (international disaster response expert); Diana Eck '67 (professor of comparative religion and Indian studies, Harvard Divinity School); Marilyn Clark '72 (European health affairs expert); Jacquelyn Ottman '77 (green marketing consultant); and Sarah Franklin '82 (professor of social studies of biomedicine and associate director of the BIOS Centre, London School of Economics).