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In this special Open House episode, Sarah Doody sits down with Career Strategy Lab (CSL) alum Sarah Page to discuss her journey navigating the UX job market. From being laid off as a creative director to landing a Senior UX Designer role in health tech, Sarah shares the mindset shifts, job search strategies, and portfolio insights that helped her stand out.She also reveals the unexpected format of her interviews, how she positioned her diverse experience to appeal to hiring managers, and why letting go of what's out of your control is a game-changer in your job search.If you're struggling with rejection, resume gaps, or feeling “overqualified” and “underqualified” at the same time—this episode is for you!What You'll Learn:✅ Why job rejections often have nothing to do with you (and how to move forward)✅ The power of a well-structured portfolio—and why Figma slides worked better than a website✅ How to confidently position diverse experience (even across industries!)✅ The mental shift that helped Sarah stay motivated through uncertainty✅ How social proof (from hiring managers, peers, and CSL feedback) builds confidence✅ The real role of interviews (hint: sometimes it's just a vibe check!)✅ Why finding the right company fit matters more than tweaking your resume endlessly✅ How Sarah strategically approached salary negotiation and total compensationTimestamps01:50 Open House Overview03:22 Success Stories and Strategies05:47 Navigating the Job Market09:15 Interview Experiences13:45 Negotiating Job Offers17:08 Advice for Job Seekers20:45 Conclusion and Farewell
Eleanor is a director with over 10 years experience directing Shakespeare for the RSC, audio dramas and new writing.Her most recent work includes: Midsummer Night's Dream, for the RSC and Barbican starring Matthew Bayton (Deano from Gavin and Stacey) Once Upon a Time in Nazi Occupied Tunisia, Almeida King John, RSC, starring Rosie Sheehy UK Premiere of Blue Door, Theatre Royal Bath Wendy and Peter Pan, Royal Lyceum Edinburgh Critically acclaimed World Premiere of Boudica, The Globe with Gina McKee in the title roleIn 2009 she co-founded Snapdragon Productions to bring new work to new audiences. Some work includes Toast by Richard Bean, which was nominated for Best Touring Production at the 2016 UK Theatre Awards. As well as, the world the premiere of Teddy by Tristan Bernays and Douglas Irvine, winning Best New Musical at the 2016 Off West End Awards. She recently began working in other mediums with the recent audio drama Mrs Wickson for Audible, written by Sarah Page. Starring the voices of Jessie Buckley (Chernobyl, Romeo and Juliet, Wicked Little Letters) and Johnny Flynn (Motive and the Cue, One Life, Hangmen). Eleanor is also on the board for Stage Directors UK. She discusses her production of Midsummer, her relationship with Shakespeare and branching out into audio drama. Great conversation for anyone studying Midsummer Night's Dream and for fans of the play in general!Oliver GowerSpotlight Link: https://www.spotlight.com/9097-9058-5261Instagram: @goweroliverFor enquiries and requests: olliegower10@gmail.com
Sarah Page, Drinking Water Treatment Lead for the Utah Division of Drinking Water, joins us to provide a great PFAS update. We discuss EPA's final, but not yet implemented PFAS National Primary Drinking Water Regulation, what monitoring and remediating PFAS will look like for various water systems, and the role of Guns and Roses in engaging water communication. Super practical information about a critical topic that will be with us a long, long time.
This week we're discussing the films of Ingmar Bergman, by looking at The Seventh Seal, Wild Strawberries, and Fanny & Alexander. Films: The Seventh Seal (1957, d. Ingmar Berman) US Blu-ray: Amazon US Ingmar Bergman's Cinema Box-set: [Amazon] (https://www.amazon.com/Ingmar-Bergmans-Cinema-Blu-ray/dp/B07FK78D6W) UK Blu-Ray: Amazon UK Wild Strawberries (1957, d. Ingmar Berman) US Blu-Ray: Amazon US Ingmar Bergman's Cinema Box-set: [Amazon] (https://www.amazon.com/Ingmar-Bergmans-Cinema-Blu-ray/dp/B07FK78D6W) UK Blu-Ray: Amazon UK Fanny and Alexander (1982, d. Ingmar Berman) US Blu-Ray: Amazon US Ingmar Bergman's Cinema Box-set: [Amazon] (https://www.amazon.com/Ingmar-Bergmans-Cinema-Blu-ray/dp/B07FK78D6W) UK Blu-Ray: Amazon UK This podcast is produced by Brave Voice Films. You can reach out to us at framesofreference@bravevoicefilms.com Tweet us: @podcastfor Our episodes will run bi-weekly. Please email us your suggestions!
Offerta di ESCLUSIVA NORDVPN: Vai su https://nordvpn.com/dentrolastoria per acquistare 2 anni + 4 mesi extra di NordVPN con uno sconto esclusivo + fino a 20 GB gratis su Saily - l'app eSIM per viaggiatori! Il nostro canale Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1vziHBEp0gc9gAhR740fCw Sostieni DENTRO LA STORIA su Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/dentrolastoria Abbonati al canale: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1vziHBEp0gc9gAhR740fCw/join Il nostro store in Amazon: https://www.amazon.it/shop/dentrolastoria Sostienici su PayPal: https://paypal.me/infinitybeat Dentro La Storia lo trovi anche qui: https://linktr.ee/dentrolastoria Oklahoma, inizio estate del 1921. In una città in cui vige la segregazione razziale ed al cui interno si è sviluppato un fiorente quartiere afroamericano chiamato Greenwood o "Black Wall Street", avviene uno strano incidente. Un lustrascarpe diciannovenne afro, Dick Rowland, è accusato di aver molestato una diciassettenne bianca, Sarah Page, manovratrice di ascensore in un palazzo in cui è presente una toilette per persone di colore. Quell'incidente dai contorni opachi è il pretesto utilizzato da una folla inferocita e infiltrata dal Klan per una resa dei conti definitiva con la popolazione nera in un terrificante massacro collettivo. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
YouTube: youtube.com/c/GeorgeBukaWDYCIPodcast Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/5z2U45OagymjgUsQE2Jbrw Instagram: whatdoyoucallitpodcast Twitter: bukamania89
Welcome to the final episode of Purposely for 2023 This episode focuses on the origins of Purposely, the ‘why' it started in the first place any why it has become one of the leading nonprofit podcasts in the UK, Australia and New Zealand. We celebrate a few of the ‘Purposely Heroes' for 2023, founders of charities and social enterprises, those who had a dream about how they could help people or planet and then made it happen. These individuals embarked on incredible journeys of impact and purpose often with co-founders. One such person is Sasha Lockley, the founder and CEO of Money Sweetspot, a social enterprise dedicated to helping people escape the clutches of debt. Sasha's firsthand experience with financial challenges gives her a clear vision of the mission, offering hope and empowerment to many. Laurence Marshbaum, another remarkable social entrepreneur, founded 10 x 10 Philanthropy and Community Capital. His commitment to innovative fundraising and portfolio management generating income for good causes has been truly inspiring, with a significant impact on young people. Lucas Patchett, co-founder of OrangeSky, showcased an unwavering dedication to helping people experiencing homelessness and helping them to rebuild their lives and mental health. The profound impact of their work on the homeless community in Australia and New Zealand is a testament to their selflessness and dedication. Ren Fernando, co-founder of Re-Love a social enterprise focusing helping people in need to create homes in a sustainable way. Ren is driven by an unyielding passion for making a difference and her dedication to rescuing furniture and gifting it to those in need promises a positive impact on both people and the planet. Mary Rose Gunn, founder of The Fore, which is pioneering efforts to revolutionise philanthropy by supporting innovative enterprises and charities, many of them start-up by connecting capital with motivated individuals and bringing about a positive change. Kerryn Thrupp, founder of Woven Earth a phenomenal New Zealand charity that transforms empty houses into homes for survivors of domestic violence. Kerryn's lived experience fuels her passion to help families. A special mention also goes to 'for purpose' founders who also featured this year, Anna Josse, Prism the Gift Fund, Bill Murphy, Purpose Capital, Rhodri Davies, Why Philanthropy Matters?, Benjamin Janes, Trust Partnership, James Lewis, Action for Elders, Stephanie Pow, Crayon, and Angus Crowther and Neil Pharoah, Tanck as guests of Purposely and notable figures to watch out for in 2024. and from 2022 Sarah Page, Kindness Collective, Afam Onyema GEANCO Foundation, James Palmer Community Finance, Barry Coates Mindful Money, Samuel Grice, Octopus Legacy, Becky Endicott and Jonathan McCoy We Are For Good, Bridget Williams Bead and Proceed, Christine Langdon The Good Registry, Mike Seawright Relief Aid, Rachel Brown Sustainable Business Network, Dave Rouse Carbon Click, Rui Peng Critical, Hendrikus van Henbergen, John Berry Pathfinder, Steve Wickham The Giving Department and Steven Zinsli Healthnow. A massive thank all of our wonderful guests (58 this year alone), listeners, sponsors and supporters! Here's to a new year filled with purpose, inspiration, and positive impact! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mark-longbottom2/message
Today on the podcast I'm catching up with the wonderful Sarah Page - founder and CEO of the Kindness Collective.I first interviewed Sarah this time last year and as we have just launched our second Kindness Collective Christmas Joy Store giveaway, I thought it would be the perfect opportunity to check in with Sarah and see how the Kindness Collective is getting on a year later. The Kindness Collective is such a special organisation, but as this is a podcast where I talk to creative Kiwi women in business, I still think there's also so much we can learn from Sarah in terms of how they run this non profit organisation, the challenges they face, the approach to business, and everything that that encompasses.So anyway, I hope you get something out of this short episode. And if you get a chance and you're listening to this in the right time, I'd love it if you would consider donating to my Kindness Collective Christmas Joy Store giveaway. Thanks. (You can find all the information on Insta!)You can listen to my original episode with Sarah on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.For more podcast information visit supercreativepodcast.com Hosted by Catie DawsonBought to you by Somewhere CreativeFind us on Instagram - @supercreativepodcast
Sarah Page is the founder and Executive Director of the Kindness Collective Foundation. When events in life led her to see the inequalities of life clearly for the first time Sarah knew it was time to do something about it. So she started by getting friends to donate things for those she was connected to who were in need. Ten years on and the Kindness Collective is a thriving network of thousands of ordinary New Zealanders who are getting alongside those in need, and they are partnered with some of New Zealand's biggest and most well known companies to bring love, and joy, and peace, and hope to people around the country through acts of kindness. We talk about Sarah's journey of realising what life was like for others, what she decided to do about that, and the effect that performing these acts of kindness had on her own challenging journey with mental health. We hear the very tiniest tip of the iceberg of the stories that come Sarah's way on a daily basis and why this has become a lifelong passion for her. We talk about how broken our systems are that mean the Kindness Collective even has to exist, but the huge difference they are making because they do. And we touch on this word kindness and about how deep and gritty kindness really is. Check out the Kindness Collective on their website, Facebook, Instagram, or TikTok, and see ways you can contribute to the Christmas Joy Store. ___ Connect with me at downtoearthconversations.com or at Facebook: facebook.com/downtoearth.conversations Instagram: @downtoearth.conversations Email: downtoearth.conversations@gmail.com
Nau mai haere mai - Welcome to a special edition of The New Zealand Makeup Podcast, where we take you on a captivating journey through the 50th Anniversary Cosmetics NZ Conference, an event that celebrated half a century of beauty industry excellence.Across 5 episodes, you'll be introduced to an impressive lineup of speakers who shared their insights and expertise at this landmark event. From discussions on technology and community to sustainability and innovation, these speakers painted a rich tapestry of ideas that are reshaping the cosmetics landscape in Aotearoa and beyond.Up first are Frances Valintine (07:13) and Sarah Page (36:38):Frances Valintine CNZM is Chief Executive of academyEX, and a passionate educator and technologist, focused on developing education opportunities that connect professionals to knowledge. Sarah Page is the founder and Chief Executive of The Kindness Collective, a community-led organisation working with over 140 community partners across Aotearoa, supporting more than 120,000 people each year. Stay tuned for these enlightening kōrero as we delve into the latest trends, innovations, and stories from the cosmetics industry. The "Global vs Local" themed Conference was a testament to the industry's evolution, and I'm excited to share the insights and inspiration from this remarkable event with you. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to "A Moment With," a podcast by Voices of Hope, hosted by Genevieve Mora, where we bring you intimate conversations with inspiring people. This engaging series invites listeners to hear the mental health challenges and triumphs of resilient Kiwis. Season 2, is launching on Friday, September 1st and in this season our guests Claudia Rose, Grant Trebilco, Paige Tapara, Harry Averill, James Roque, Maria Foy, Zane Munro, and Sarah Page, offer candid insights into topics such as PTSD, Anorexia, Depression, Anxiety, and more. With weekly episode drops, you're sure to feel inspired. This podcast aims to encourage help-seeking behaviours, give hope to those who may be struggling and remind you that you're not alone in your fight. It's not weak to speak.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Non-Prophets, Episode 22.29.1 featuring Cynthia McDonald, Aaron Jensen and Teo el AteoLet's not tie it to skin color': Oklahoma superintendent says racism not to blame for infamous Tulsa massacre Raw Story, By Matthew Chapman, July 7, 2023, https://www.rawstory.com/oklahoma-superintendent/ State Supt. Ryan Walters defends comments on Tulsa Race Massacre, claims words taken out of contextFox 25 News, by David Chasanov, July 7, 2023 https://okcfox.com/news/local/state-superintendent-ryan-walters-oklahoma-department-of-education-tulsa-race-massacre-critical-theory-crt-classroom-class-hannibal-johnson-raymond-doswell-greenwood-rising-black-wall-street-history-center-racist-evil-terrible-color-skin-controversy "Let's not tie it to the skin color and say that the skin color determined that," - Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters.For those not aware, far-right Oklahoma State Superintendent Walters was talking about the Tulsa race massacre in an area called Black Wall Street. This was a self-sustaining community filled with banks, schools, doctors offices, dentists, and shops. Everything that a township could use in order to be sustainable was there.But, in 1921, Dick Roland shared an elevator with a white woman named Sarah Page. While they were in the elevator Sarah screamed and then went to the authorities. She falsely accused Dick Roland of trying to assault her.The Tulsa Police put him in in jail, then a white mob went to the jail and demanded Dick to be handed over to them, the police refused. They released Dick to WWI black soldiers on the scene who had showed up to defend him against the mob.White rioters then deliberately destroyed an estimated 1,200 homes, along with churches, schools, businesses, even a hospital and library. The police force in that area even deputized citizens to become law enforcement so they could take up arms against the black township.Now moving forward to 2023, well in some places that may be more of a lateral move, Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters seems to think that a white mob attacking and destroying a black township can be taught without discussing race. The next day Walters claimed that he always said that the race riot was evil. But he still is firmly in the camp of not wanting to bring up skin color when talking about it.Critical race theory is the the study of how laws, social, and political movements are impacted by race and ethnic concepts in our society. It also delves into ways it is baked into our our systems, like our Justice systems, employment and many others.But it has become a buzzword in the right's rhetoric because they want something that gets people up in arms. So they say that critical race theory is teaching white people to be ashamed of being white and that black people are better.The attack on anything race-related has brought the troll known as Marjorie Taylor Green from under her bridge. She defines critical race theory as something that teaches white children to hate themselves and to feel guilty while lifting black children up.A lot of people hold the view they just don't want to see things that make them uncomfortable, they rail against CRT without even understanding what it is. They want to change the history of the USA, to hide the truth, to instead say things that really happened didn't happen.How exactly are we to teach about one group killing others over race without discussing race Superintendent Ryan Walters?
Sarah Page, Lead Drinking Water Specialist at the Utah Division of Drinking Water, gives an in-depth break down of PFAS. In this timely and important discussion, we explore what they are, how they've become so prevalent, and how they affect our health. We tackle the difficult questions, addressing how to lower the spread of PFAS and what future EPA regulations could mean for our drinking water. Extremely informative.
"Death and money bring out the whacky side of people." Sarah Page CliffordThis goal-driven young attorney has an energetic storytelling style that will leave you smiling. Her relatable stories about families fighting over when someone dies are downright hilarious. She can talk about estate planning and how she once was tasked with tracking down a thirty-thousand dollar dog who has its own visa and passport.How is selling a book a lot like being a real estate agent? True or False; "No one gets together to read the will."Country Song or Sarah's Book: "She gets her period, he gets the cramps."Her passion is writing fantasy genre - I learned what a 'cozy witch' is! Clifford enjoys YA (Young Adult) books and shares examples of her favorite stories. Don't miss her 'inadvertent dare' and the embarrassing moment in front of her entire conservative Christian University. Follow on Instagram (at) SarahPageStoriesFacebook: Sarah Page Clifford
I catch up with my old mate Paddy Gower ahead of the premiere of his new television series 'Paddy Gower Has Issues'. He catches me by surprise with what he reveals. I'm not crying, you're crying... And speaking of crying, Sarah Page from the Kindness Collective is doing her best to help those in need. But the need is overwhelming. She tells me why she left her privileged life to help others.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thanya Iyer + Spirodon mix for Radio Alhara راديو الحارة For @radioalhara Broadcasting on Tue May 9, 7am eastern time and 2pm in Bethlehem on radioalhara.net This is a joint mix with musician Thanya Iyer, learn about Thanya's music here: http://www.thanyaiyer.com Track listing Artist name / Track name 01. Wayne Shorter - Ponta de Areia 02. NNAMDï @nnamdiogbonnaya - Grounded 03. Jeremy Dutcher - Mehcinut 04. Florist - Sci-fi Silence 05. Macie Stewart - Finally 06. KAINA @kainamusic - Good Feeling (feat. Sen Morimoto) 07. Thanya Iyer - Leave the room and face the waves 08. Joni Void @joni_void - Hi-Hatsss Nightsss 09 David Parker @slowmantofu - A Murder of Crows at Dawn 10. Sarah Pagé @sarahpageharp - Premiers pas au Marécage 11 Mark Trecka - Loping Breath (as Bells) -with Chaz Prymek and A-Y-dancers- - Eventual Peace - Kazuo Speaks (long excerpt)
Episode 629: May 7, 2023 playlist: JG Thirlwell and Mivos Quartet, "Apeirophobia" (Dystonia) 2023 Cantaloupe Music Wolf Eyes, "My Whole Life" (Dreams In Splattered Lines) 2023 Disciples House of Harm, "Taste the Light" (Taste the Light) 2023 self-released Loraine James, "Damn 2015" (2013-2015) 2023 self-released Sarah Page, "Premiers pas au Marecage" (Voda) 2023 Backward Music Working for a Nuclear Free City, "Push the Button (2005)" (Push the Button) 2023 self-released Parish, "Cascade III" (Cascades of Refinement) 2023 Important Papa M, "Sabotage" (Whatever, Mortal) 2001 Drag City De-Bons-en-Pierre, "Card Short of a Full Deck" (Card Short of a Full Deck) 2023 Dark Entries Julia Bloop, "zoodle" (doole) 2023 self-released Email podcast at brainwashed dot com to say who you are; what you like; what you want to hear; share pictures for the podcast of where you're from, your computer or MP3 player with or without the Brainwashed Podcast Playing; and win free music! We have no tracking information, no idea who's listening to these things so the more feedback that comes in, the more frequent podcasts will come. You will not be put on any spam list and your information will remain completely private and not farmed out to a third party. Thanks for your attention and thanks for listening.
"I hate it, but I didn't like it, okay...I didn't hate it...but I didn't like it..." -Brooke Bates from Happily Booked (She makes no sense 100% of the time)“Godfather?” Sputtered Uncle Vernon. “You haven't got a godfather!” “Yes, I have,” said Harry brightly. “He was my mum and dad's best friend. He's a convicted murderer, but he's broken out of Wizard prison and he's on the run. He likes to keep in touch with me, though…keep up with my news…check if I'm happy…” And, grinning broadly at the look of horror on Uncle Vernon's face, Harry set off toward the station exit, Hedwig rattling along in front of him, for what looked like a much better summer than the last.Harry Potter And The Prisoner Of Azkaban by J. K. Rowling 6:06 - Jane In Love by Rachel Givney8:11 - An Old Fashioned Girl by Louisa May Alcott8:22 - Five Little Peppers And How They Grew by Margaret Sydney8:26 - The Age Of Innocence by Edith Wharton8:55 - Eye Of The World by Robert Jordan 11:09 - The Great Hunt by Robert Jordan / A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman12:15 - Butterbeer from Books-A-Million17:37 - Blue Starbucks Cup Grande Size18:26 - Wool by Hugh Howey19:05 - I'll Be Gone In The Dark by Michelle McNamara (non-Fic True Crime)20:46 - Please Love Me At My Worst by Michaela Angemeer (Poetry)34:16 - Mrs. Wickham by Sarah Page 35:37 - Anxious People by Fredrik Backman 44:11 - Eye Of The World by Robert Jordan 44:48 - A Court Of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas45:33 - Soul Riders: Darkness Falling by Helena Dahlgren / A Court Of Wings And Ruin by Sarah J. Maas45:55 - Blood Red by James A. Moore46:25 - Pride, Prejudice, And Zombies by Seth Grahame-Smith / Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen46:45 - Fallen by Lauren Kate57:01 - The Living Dead by George A. Romero & Daniel Kraus Support the showBe sure to keep yourself Happily Booked! Becky's Homestead Etsy Page: bobwhitehomestead.etsyInstagram/ TikTok - happilybookedpodcastFacebook - Happily Booked PodcastLikewise - BrookeBatesHappilyBookedGoodreads - Brooke Lynn Bates Storygraph - brookebatesratesbooks / magbeck2011 THE Sideways Sheriff - Permanent Sponsor Insta/ TikTok - Sideways_sheriffFacebook - Sideways SheriffYoutube - Sideways Sheriff
This week we have a wonderful guest on our show! Sarah Page is an incredibly engaging 8th grade History teacher in Texas who infuses her classes with a lot of humor and heart and every once in a while dresses up as a historical figure. She is very active on TikTok and Instagram and shows incredible insight into her students and on top of all of that, she is incredibly funny! Join @hofmannedu, @mrsjamiehalsey, and @findingmyaloha each week by subscribing to our podcast and rating and reviewing us on Apple Podcasts! Find us on Instagram @rebelteacheralliance, on Twitter @rebelteacherpod, and on TikTok @rebelteacheralliance. Things mentioned on the show: ChatGPT AI Voices from Elevenlabs Make your own Wordle game - www.mywordle.me --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rebel-teacher-alliance/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/rebel-teacher-alliance/support
Sarah Page, People Operations Lead at OOMPH has a diverse experience from working in public, private, start-up and corporate companies. She has learnt what works and what doesn't, to create a role in this new, award-winning business.We discuss... How Sarah has intentionally shaped a role that focuses on people over process.What are the key elements that have made the role, and her employer, so successfulThe impact of different approachesRevealing blind spots that lead to actionOpen mindset and a disruptive approach to workingCulture add vs fit for culture; the power of diversityThe hugely influential value from working within a non-profit organisation Sarah is incredibly humble but the reality is she has so much wisdom that others can really benefit from. She makes it all sound so easy but when we are driven by our values and adopt a human approach to work, it really isn't that hard.Listen to the podcast and then reach out to continue the conversation. You can tell from hearing us... we're easy to talk to! More about SarahSarah is passionately sustainable, a little bit nerdy about tech (and excel) and a lover of people, so it's no surprise she finds herself working in the EV sector for one of the coolest companies in Cambridge - OOMPH EV Charging, 'a Female founded clean-tech start-up that is developing the technology to deliver an EV charge top up, when and where you need it. Helping to remove the barriers to EV ownership by putting the consumer first.'Her focus at Oomph is both to talent spot and help foster a culture that supports diversity, inclusion and belonging. To build an environment that focuses on people and their experience, making work more efficient, fulfilling, rewarding and enjoyable for all.Links to contact Sarah:LinkedIn:Sarah PageOOMPHInstagram: @oomphevchargingTwitter: @oomphEVWebsite: www.oomphev.comResources & ReferencesRUN BRITANNIA: What I learned - Rachel Sparkhall (LinkedIn)Consider yourself a good leader? - It's Time for Change (itstimeforchange.co.uk)Engagement surveys...worth it? - It's Time for Change (itstimeforchange.co.uk)Don't be the brand who cried purpose – Sophie Turton & Alice Reeves, The Joyful - It's Time for Change (itstimeforchange.co.uk)Should I Stay or Should I Go? – with Emma Browning - It's Time for Change (itstimeforchange.co.uk)Contact details for Lisa LLoyd:LinkedIn : www.linkedin.com/in/lisapsychologyWebsite: www.itstimeforchange.co.ukSign up for Lisa's Monthly Bulletin:
Today on the podcast I speak with the incredible Sarah Page - founder of the Kindness Collective. In 2014, Sarah and her husband Dave started a small mobile food bank operation delivering food to a local Women's Refuge group and began growing a behind-the-scenes group of friends and family, finding ways to give back to their community. The Kindness Collective registered as a charity in 2020 and is now a network of over 25,000 people with active donors, volunteers, followers, brands and businesses all working together to build a kinder Aotearoa. The Kindness Collective community believes that every Kiwi deserves kindness. They believe that everyone should at the very least have access to the basics in life: food, clothing, shelter and safety. Every Kiwi deserves to have everything they need to thrive, so the Kindness Collective work to fill the gaps in government support wherever possible through donations of everyday essentials and moments of joy. I can't remember when I first came across Sarah Page – I'm pretty sure it was on Instagram or it might have been on TV. However, as soon as I heard of the Kindness Collective I started following along and keeping up with what they were doing. As you will all know, I have been incredibly inspired by every woman I've interviewed on this podcast – I don't have any favourites! But I am just so humbled and in awe of women like Sarah. Someone who started with an idea to help others and has literally put her time, money and whole heart where her mouth is. I find it particularly inspiring as over the years I've had many thoughts of giving my time (like many of us do) and life so often gets in the way. So, when I encounter women like Sarah – it really does inspire and motivate me to do more.I loved chatting with Sarah – I know you will love hearing the Kindness Collective creative business journey as much as I did.After interviewing Sarah, I decided I would like to use this little but mighty Super Creative platform to help raise some money for this incredible organization to spread joy this Christmas. I'd love your help! https://givealittle.co.nz/fundraiser/super-creative-x-the-kindness-collectiveYou can find the Kindness Collective at kindness.co.nz or on Instagram @kindnesscollectivefoundationFor more podcast information visit supercreativepodcast.com Hosted by Catie DawsonBought to you by Somewhere CreativeFind us on Instagram - @supercreativepodcast
The Tulsa Race Riot also known as the Black Wall Street Massacre started on May 30th, 1921 when 19 year old Dick Rowland was accused of assaulting a 17 year old white girl named Sarah Page in Tulsa, Oklahoma.. After he was arrested, a massive crowd showed up at the courthouse with talks of him being lynched. Just then, an elderly white man tried to disarm a black man carrying a pistol. Shots rang out and all hell broke loose. The "black wall street" neighborhood of Greenwood was burned and many residents killed. The incident was pretty much suppressed by the city of Tulsa and the state until 1996 when an official commission was created to study the massacre and bring to light the atrocities that occured. We have it all from beginning to end.Anything we missed or got wrong? Send us an email at bangdangpodcast@gmail.com and let us know. You can also find us on Twitter @OGMMPOdcast.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/show/outlaws-gunslingers/support.
With almost 10 years of experience in multiple countries, Sarah Page is an experienced and organized communications manager with a wide variety of skills, particularly in copywriting, content creation, and digital campaigning. She manages global teams on busy programs. Sarah has exceptional diplomacy and negotiation skills and effectively motivates teams with a sense of humor. ____________________________ For more about Obehi Podcast, visit our YouTube channel - Youtube.com/c/ObehiPodcast. Check out also our official website ObehiEwanfoh.com. Do you want to learn how to better leverage your storytelling skill and earn more? Then check out our training class: Storytelling For Content Creators and Digital Entrepreneurs --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/obehi-podcast/message
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Scholars have labeled the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 as one of the most horrific incidents of racial violence in U.S. history. But why has that history remained under wraps for so long? Historian Dr. Karlos Hill of the University of Oklahoma; and Scott Ellsworth, author of “The Ground Breaking,” shed light on the disaster. And with this racial attack as a backdrop, host Eddie Robinson chats with acclaimed violinist, Daniel Roumain, about the real reason why he was fired from a special centennial concert hosted by Tulsa Opera. The Opera's artistic director, Tobias Picker, also makes a guest appearance and responds to Roumain's accusations with some surprising revelations.
Sarah Page joins Purposely Podcast to share her founder story starting the Kindness Collective Foundation (KCF). It began with Sarah bringing together a small group of people wanting to do good in the community, their vision to help build a kinder New Zealand. The collective is now a registered charity with a network of over 10,000 people including active donors, volunteers, brands and businesses. Described by Sarah as ‘quite simply a match-making service', matching those in need with those who have more to share. They make it easy for people, brands and businesses to help kiwis in need. They work with schools, early childhood education centres, social services, community groups and other charities to donate time, tools, resources and money. KCF point to the poverty and family violence statistics that continue to climb in New Zealand. 1 in 5 children experience hardship, and at least 33% of New Zealanders experience some form of food insecurity. Sarah believes in the power of communities helping each other to offer creative resource solutions to the many problems families face in society. Before the Kindness Collective, Sarah worked in Marketing and PR for many years within hospitality, music industries and corporate event management. Working with bars, nightclubs and restaurant groups with their marketing, music, events and PR strategies. Sarah started the Kindness Collective in 2014 with a mobile food bank operation delivering food to a local Women's Refuge group and has grown the charity to what it is now. Sarah has big plans for the Kindness Collective to impact the lives of as many people as possible in Aotearoa. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mark-longbottom2/message
On the morning of May 31st 1921, 19-year-old Dick Rowland, a Black shoeshiner, was accused of assaulting Sarah Page, the 17-year-old white elevator operator of the Drexel Building. After being arrested, a white mob formed outside of the county courthouse, where he was being held, with the intention of taking Rowland out and murdering him. The black citizens of Tulsa knew that Rowland was innocent and that they needed to do something in order to keep him alive. But when the mixture of the angry white men, combined with the concerned black men, violence broke out. Over 18 hours a white mob attacked residents, homes and businesses in the predominantly black Greenwood neighborhood of Tulsa, Oklahoma, destroying everything in their path. If you'd like to make a donation to Greenwood Rising or to the BLM movement check out the links below: Greenwood Rising: https://www.greenwoodrising.org/support-1BLM: https://blacklivesmatter.com/Other BLM Charities/Fundraisers: https://blacklives.help/?gclid=Cj0KCQiA6NOPBhCPARIsAHAy2zA3PxN1I3xYkHaIfejQvEDQVXerMWmGzAwa9tc-nY_7kpozAww_8W0aAuuXEALw_wcB
In this episode of Behind the Headlines, host Teri Barr talks with Tulsa World Editor Jason Collington, assistant editor Kendrick Marshall, and and reporter Randy Krehbiel. They share some of the new information learned while covering the anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre this year, along with the many things that remain unknown, and why a search for answers still continues. The horrible historic event, which left 35 square blocks in ashes and hundreds dead over the course of Memorial Day weekend 1921, erased decades of success for African Americans who had built solid homes and prosperous businesses in the Greenwood District of the city, also known as “Black Wall Street.” Many believe it started when a young black man, 19-year-old Dick Rowland, was accused of assaulting the white elevator operator, 17-year-old Sarah Page, triggering the mayhem that followed. "Revisit the history of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre": https://tulsaworld.com/news/revisit-the-history-of-tulsas-race-massacre-of-1921/article_0e9e3208-a109-11ea-8fcb-d779f15e9e22.htmlSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Sarah and I discuss her multiple relapses and what she thinks caused them. What she is doing differently now to prevent another one and advice for those in early recovery. We also highlight her super fun IG account and blog @sassy_sobriety32. The Sobriety Diaries is a video podcast where we talk to recovering alcoholics and addicts and hope to help those who may still be struggling. You can also find us where you listen to your favorite podcasts with new episodes every Sunday and Wednesday. Please share our show with just 1 person in your life who may be struggling, you just never know what they may need to hear today. Also, please consider donating to The Sobriety Diaries here: https://www.thesobrietydiaries.com/support/ Your donations help us to source the best stories from around the world and keep the show going! . Find all things TSD related at www.thesobrietydiaries.com . Make sure you subscribe so you never miss an episode, every Sunday and Wednesday! Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-sobriety-diaries/id1570033658?uo=4 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0aKbMuMUb2jjTkBBD41Mhm Google Podcasts: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy81YjYzNDVkOC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw== Anchor: https://anchor.fm/sobrietydiaries Radio Public: https://radiopublic.com/the-sobriety-diaries-Wa0nBA PocketCasts: https://pca.st/6i505fmy Try your best not to drink, and be good to yourself!
As Black teenager Dick Rowland sat in a jail cell at the Tulsa courthouse, news of his arrest flew through the town. Egged on by rumors about his alleged rape of white teenager Sarah Page, a white mob bent on a lynching Rowland began assembling outside the courthouse. By that evening, the crowd had swelled to thousands. Meanwhile, some young African American veterans of the recent world war were determined to defend Rowland, with their lives if necessary. When they arrived at the courthouse Tuesday night, they found themselves thrust into a situation far more volatile than they were prepared for.This episode originally aired in 2019.Listen to new episodes 1 week early and to all episodes ad free with Wondery+. Join Wondery+ for exclusives, binges, early access, and ad free listening. Available in the Wondery App https://wondery.app.link/historytellers.Support us by supporting our sponsors!SimpliSafe - Visit simplisafe.com/tellers today to customize your system and get a free security camera. You also get a 60 day risk free trial, so there’s nothing to lose. ZipRecruiter - Sign up for free right now on ziprecruiter.com. Better Help - Get 10% off your first month at betterhelp.com/tellers.
It was May, 30th 1921 and on this day Dick Rowland was on his way to the Drexel building. Which was mostly closed for the Memorial day holiday but the building had something that very few buildings in downtown Tulsa had. A colored restroom on the top floor, as Rowland walked toward the elevator. It was being operated by a 17 year old white woman by the name Sarah Page and he would step into history.Audio Onemichistory.com Please support our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=25697914Buy me a Coffeehttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/Countryboi2mSources:Riot and remembranceby James S. Hirschhttps://www.history.com/topics/roaring-twenties/tulsa-race-massacrehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulsa_race_massacrehttps://www.britannica.com/event/Tulsa-race-massacre-of-1921https://tulsaworld.com/news/local/racemassacre/tulsa-race-massacre-in-aftermath-no-one-prosecuted-for-killings-and-insurance-claims-were-rejected/article_3ba23c3c-886d-5821-9970-02153261960a.html
Con el enviado especial a Tulsa, Fran Sevilla, rememoramos la peor matanza racial de la historia de EEUU: la que tuvo lugar en esa localidad de Oklahoma entre el 31 de mayo y el 1 de junio de 1921. Una multitud de personas blancas, en connivencia con las autoridades locales, arrasó, saqueó y quemó más de 1.200 viviendas en una de las comunidades negras más prósperas del país. Hubo unos 300 muertos. El detonante fue una denuncia por agresión de una joven adolescente blanca, Sarah Page, contra un joven limpiabotas negro, Dick Rowland. Escuchar audio
May 30, 1921. Dick Rowland, a Black teenager, works as a shoeshine in the predominantly white downtown of Tulsa, Oklahoma. On his break, he goes into a nearby office building to use the restroom, and gets on the elevator. Sarah Page, a white teenager, is the elevator operator. What happens next is just an innocent accident, but it sparks the deadliest episode of racial violence in American history. What was the story behind Greenwood, the Tulsa neighborhood known as “Black Wall Street?” And why was it decimated on one horrific night? Special thanks to Kalenda Eaton, professor of Africana Literature at the University of Oklahoma, and Kendra Field, professor of history at Tufts University and author of Growing Up with the Country: Family, Race, and Nation after the Civil War. And for more history around the end of Reconstruction, listen to our episode from November 2, 2020, "Stealing the Presidency." See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Scholars have labeled the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 as one of the most horrific incidents of racial violence in U.S. history. But why has that history remained under wraps for so long? Historian Dr. Karlos Hill of the University of Oklahoma; and Scott Ellsworth, author of "The Ground Breaking," shed new light on the disaster. And with this racial attack as a backdrop, host Eddie Robinson chats with acclaimed violinist, Daniel Roumain, about the real reason why he was recently fired from a special centennial concert hosted by Tulsa Opera. The Opera's artistic director, Tobias Picker, also makes a guest appearance and responds to Roumain's accusations with some surprising revelations.
In 1921, Tulsa, Oklahoma boasted one of the nation’s most prosperous African-American communities. Greenwood was home to 108 Black-owned businesses, two theaters, 15 physicians, two newspapers, and a luxury hotel. It was nicknamed “the Black Wall Street.”Then, on May 30th, a Black shoeshine boy named Dick Rowland was accused of assaulting a white teenaged elevator operator, Sarah Page. What happened next would ultimately lead to the destruction of Greenwood and the deaths of over 300 African Americans -- a massacre that, until recently, was virtually erased from American history.This episode originally aired in 2019.Listen to new episodes 1 week early and to all episodes ad free with Wondery+. Join Wondery+ for exclusives, binges, early access, and ad free listening. Available in the Wondery App https://wondery.app.link/historytellers.Support us by supporting our sponsors!ZipRecruiter - Try ZipRecruiter FOR FREE at this web address: ziprecruiter.com/aht.
Today, with a full and grateful heart, I am welcoming back to the podcast Carole Boston Weatherford, author of Unspeakable: The Tulsa Race Massacre, illustrated by Floyd Cooper. May 31st, 2021 marks the 100th anniversary of the start of the Tulsa Race Massacre, a horrific event that devastated the wealthiest African American community in the entire nation. What provoked the event, beyond that elevator ride where Dick Rowland, and African American teen, either stumbled or stepped on the foot of Sarah Page, a young white elevator operator in a downtown office building, resulting in Rowland being jailed on assault charges… what provoked the event was Black advancement. As Carole reminds us in this interview, Black advancement is the single greatest threat to White Supremacy. Get a copy of this book and support independent bookstores (and this podcast) by visiting our BookShop Store. Support us on Patreon at patreon.com/matthewcwinner or on Paypal at paypal.me/childrensbkpod
An explanation to Texas electric market is deregulated/privatized, Where Gen Z/Millennials Are Getting Distracted, Uncle Tom (2020 Prime film), and Black Wall Street/Tulsa race massacre. Texas Electric Market (a friend filled me in) "In Texas, the electric market is deregulated/privatized. You sign up for an electricity plan with a given company. That company then buys supply from various electricity producers. Whenever you sign up for a plan, there are different options available. For example, you can sign up for a flat rate plan or a variable rate plan, or some more complex plans with rates that vary based on hours of the day, amount used, etc.........Instead of being a libertarian free market approach, this is straight up cronyism and corruption. The power companies get to make as much profits as the market will allow in good times. But the minute a crisis hits they're allowed to completely ignore their contracts and pass on rate hikes to their customers. It's a classic case of private profits, socialized losses. Absolute corruption of the highest order." Where Gen Z and Millennials Are Getting Their Entertainment and Distraction - source Uncle Tom 2020 Amazon Prime Documentary - source Uncle Tom: An Oral History of the American Black Conservative Black Wall Street/Tulsa race massacre The massacre began during the Memorial Day weekend after 19-year-old Dick Rowland, a black shoeshiner, was accused of assaulting Sarah Page, the 17-year-old white elevator operator of the nearby Drexel Building. He was taken into custody. After the arrest, rumors spread through the city that Rowland was to be lynched. Upon hearing reports that a mob of hundreds of white men had gathered around the jail where Rowland was being kept, a group of 75 black men, some of whom were armed, arrived at the jail to ensure that Rowland would not be lynched. The sheriff persuaded the group to leave the jail, assuring them that he had the situation under control. As the group was leaving the premises, complying with the sheriff's request, a member of the mob of white men allegedly attempted to disarm one of the black men. A shot was fired, and then according to the reports of the sheriff, "all hell broke loose." At the end of the firefight, 12 people were killed: 10 white and 2 black. As news of these deaths spread throughout the city, mob violence exploded.[2] White rioters rampaged through the black neighborhood that night and morning killing men and burning and looting stores and homes. Around noon on June 1, the Oklahoma National Guard imposed martial law, effectively ending the massacre. About 10,000 black people were left homeless, and property damage amounted to more than $1.5 million in real estate and $750,000 in personal property (equivalent to $32.25 million in 2019). Many survivors left Tulsa, while black and white residents who stayed in the city kept silent about the terror, violence, and resulting losses for decades. The massacre was largely omitted from local, state, and national histories. Produced by The Wild 1 Media. Check out our other podcasts- https://darksidediaries.sounder.fm https://mindyourmanners.sounder.fm https://anchor.fm/ttmygh --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Sarah is an old friend that I was excited to sit down with. She is an artist, an adventurer, a designer, visual strategist, muralist, etc. In sum, she's really gifted! We cover everything from how she has used from hula hoops to paint brushes to inspire and create beauty in our world. She is committed to using her gifts to help us all take responsibility for the condition of our planet as well as our communities. This was an awesome conversation that dug into lessons from improve, flow state, the communal mandates of success and so much more. I hope you enjoy this conversation as much as I did! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theworkethic/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/theworkethic/support
A 19-year old Black man, named Dick Rowland strides down Main Street. Once an orphan with his two sisters, Rowland was adopted by his current family and raised by them in Tulsa. He played basketball at the local Booker T. Washington high school, before he dropped out to begin work as a shoe-shiner at a parlor on Main Street. But right now, Rowland feels the call of nature. He exits the parlor and walks into a multi-story complex called the Drexel Building whose top floor bathroom is the only approved restroom for black workers on Main Street. Operating the elevator is a 17 year old white teenager named Sarah Page. She watches Rowland enter. Rowland had used this elevator before. And Page had operated this elevator for Rowland in the past. This was a routine interaction. Something they had done before and should have continued doing without incident. But what happens next, will change both their lives and Tulsa, Oklahoma forever. This is the Tulsa Massacre of 1921. Edited by Alyssa Deocampo. Music Composed by Jaimie Pangan. A special thank you to Michael Ghelfi who’s ambience YouTube channel provided the numerous sound effects that made the story come to life. Please check him out on YouTube for your sound effects needs! oursmallmajority.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/our-small-majority/message
We dig into the art and science of preserving—and talk about preserving apples— with Sarah Page, a contributor to the latest version of the Bernardin Complete Book of Home Preserving: 400 Delicious and Creative Recipes for Today.Page, who works as a recipe developer and tester, is a trained consumer chef and home economist. She loves creating new recipes with local and seasonal harvests. Page’s top tips for successful preserving are to use a tested and approved recipe; and use fresh produce.Page, who grew up in a household where her mother served applesauce regularly, loves to work with apples and shares a few of her favourite ideas:Apple-cranberry butter, preserving apples for pie filling later in the year, apple sauce with a savoury flavour (e.g. chipotle), and leaving the skin on pink apples when making apple sauce to give the sauce a pink colour.
In The Past Lane - The Podcast About History and Why It Matters
This week at In The Past Lane, the American History podcast, we take a look at one of the most deadly incidents of anti-black violence in US history: The 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. White mobs rampaged through Tulsa, Oklahoma’s African American neighborhood and burned it to the ground, killing between 100 and 300 black residents in the process. The incident was quickly covered up and driven from public memory. But in the 1990s activists and scholars began to unearth the shocking truth. Feature Story: The Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 On May 31, 1921 – 99 years ago this week – mobs of heavily armed white residents of Tulsa, Oklahoma rampaged through the city’s African-American district named Greenwood. They stole property, set fire to buildings, and indiscriminately killed black men, women, and children. When it was over, this pogram known as the Tulsa Race Massacre left between 100 and 300 people dead and 35 blocks in smoldering ruins. It was one of the single most deadly incidents of racist violence in American history. And yet, it was quickly driven from public memory. The years between the end of World War I in 1918 and the Tulsa Race Massacre in 1921 were marked by many incidents of extreme anti-black violence. This surge in violence was due to many factors. The end of World War I brought a massive strike wave as millions of workers walked off the job. Fear of socialism, communism, and anarchism surged as the nation plunged into one of its periodic Red Scares. Also contributing to the social tension was the fact that millions of African-Americans had in the previous decade moved to northern cities, part of what historians referred to as the Great Migration. Chicago’s black population, for example, jumped from 44,000 in 1910 to 110,000 in 1920. And on top of this, the Ku Klux Klan had re-emerged in 1915 as a vibrant national organization that by the mid-1920s would have 5 million members. Each of these trends contributed to surging anti-black racism that led to many incidents of violence against African-American individuals and neighborhoods. In 1919 alone, there were 25 major anti-black riots in the US. One of the worst took place in Chicago in July 1919 that left 38 dead. There were also 76 African Americans lynched in the South in 1919, including ten black soldiers who had returned from active duty in World War I. Up until May of 1921 Tulsa, Oklahoma had been relatively peaceful. But it was an oil-rich city of 72,000 that was strictly segregated. In fact, when Oklahoma was admitted to the union in 1907, the very first laws passed by the state legislature imposed segregation and disenfranchisement upon its black population. Despite these laws and a climate of racial hostility, Tulsa’s African-American population was one of the most prosperous In the United States. In fact, the Greenwood section of Tulsa where most African-Americans lived, was nicknamed the Negro Wall Street. It was filled with thriving black-owned businesses ranging from barbershops and retails stores to law firms and doctor’s offices. Many white citizens of Tulsa resented this black economic success. And it was this resentment that escalated the situation on May 31, 1921. Like so many incidents of anti-black racial violence in US history, this one began with an incident involving a black male and a white female. On May 30, a 17-year-old girl named Sarah Page, who operated an elevator in downtown Tulsa, accused 19-year-old Dick Rowland of assaulting her. Rowland was taken into custody and brought to the local courthouse. The next day, partly inspired by an inflammatory article about the incident in the local newspaper, a large crowd of angry white men gathered outside the courthouse. It was a scene that was a typical prelude to a lynching. Not surprisingly, rumors that Rowland was about to be lynched raced through the black community, prompting a large group of armed black men to arrive at the courthouse. A standoff ensued, and then shots rang out. Which side fired first remains an unanswered question. Both sides exchanged gunfire before dispersing. The clash left 12 killed, 10 white and two black. Immediately word of the incident spread throughout the city. Within an hour, large crowds of heavily armed white men gathered. It was clear what they were planning to do. And yet, the city’s police force did nothing to stop them. In fact, research would later show that police officials handed out weapons to members of the mob and that many also joined in as it descended upon the black community in Greenwood. As the attack began, many African-Americans managed to flee the district. But many were trapped and murdered by the mob. Some were shot and others stabbed, and still others were consumed by the flames set by arsonists. Members of the mob also looted homes and businesses before setting them on fire. The violence lasted all night and into the morning hours of June 1. It ended only when a large contingent of the Oklahoma National Guard arrived to impose martial law. Some 35 blocks of Greenwood were completely destroyed. Damages were estimated at $2.25 million, the equivalent of $32 million in 2020. Adding insult to injury, local officials and national guardsmen rounded up nearly every African American in the city and placed them in hastily constructed detention camps. All were treated as perpetrators, rather than innocent victims. Some were held for weeks before being released. And then there was the death toll. The official death toll was 36 African Americans killed. But African-American leaders at the time claimed the number was significantly higher, well over 100 and perhaps as high as 300. They also claimed that white officials, in an effort to cover up the enormity of the massacre, had hastily buried hundreds of black victims in a mass grave. And the cover up worked. The staggering death toll, along with the city’s complicity in allowing the massacre to take place, were soon purged from public memory. At least white public memory. African-Americans certainly didn’t forget the trauma and loss, but in this era of Jim Crow, they were powerless, unable to obtain any justice or public recognition of the incident. And it stayed that way for 75 years. The city of Tulsa never put up a historic plaque or memorial. Its school children never learned about the incident in their history classes. And the nation remained ignorant of this monstrous event. But the silence about the Tulsa Race Massacre began to break in the 1990s as African-Americans gained more political power and begin to push for a full inquiry into the incident. In 1996, The 75th anniversary of the massacre, the state legislature created the Oklahoma Commission to Study the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921. Note the title of the commission: it referred to the incident as the Tulsa Race Riot. This misnaming was significant and intentional. Nearly every massacre of African-Americans by white mobs in American history has been labeled a “race riot,” a name that suggests an equal culpability between violent whites and violent blacks attacking each other. But in every case, these so-called race riots Involved black communities being attacked by white mobs. Not surprisingly, as a more accurate and complete picture emerged of what occurred in Tulsa and other sites of anti-black violence, these incidents have been renamed to reflect what they really were: massacres. The commission worked for five years, taking testimony and funding research into the massacre. In 2001, it released its official report. Among its many findings, the commission declared that Tulsa’s political leaders had conspired with the leaders of the mob to allow the massacre to unfold without any resistance by law enforcement. It also recommended that reparations be paid to any survivors and their descendants. City and state officials balked at the call for reparations, but the state did establish scholarships for descendants of victims and survivors of the massacre. It also provided funding for historical markers and a memorial park that was completed in 2010. More recently, just a few months ago, the story of the Tulsa Race Massacre was made on official part of the state of Oklahoma’s public school curriculum. And the search for the truth about what actually happened and how many people were murdered that day continues. Just a few months ago, researchers announced that they had found several sites in Tulsa that appear to contain mass graves. Plans are in the works to excavate the sites to determine if they contain victims of the 1921 massacre. If they do, it will likely clarify the true death toll. Finally, the Tulsa Race Massacre drew renewed interest this year when it was featured as the starting point for HBO’s hit TV series, “Watchmen.” So what else of note happened this week in US history? May 25, 1787 - The Constitutional Convention officially opened in Philadelphia with 55 delegates in attendance, including George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and James Madison. Over the next four months, they drafted a new Constitution for the United States to replace the initial Articles of Confederation which had been deemed weak and ineffective. May 25, 1977 - the blockbuster film “Star Wars” opened in theaters. May 26, 1924 - President Calvin Coolidge signed the National Origins Act that sharply restricted immigration for the next 40 years. It not only shrank the volume of immigration from as many as 1 million immigrants per year to about 200,000, the law also intentionally discriminated against undesirable immigrant groups like Jews and Italians. It was replaced by a more equitable immigration law in 1965. May 30, 1922 - The Lincoln Memorial was dedicated in Washington DC. And what notable people were born this week in American history? May 26, 1895 - photographer Dorothea Lange. Her most famous photograph is Migrant Mother, which captured the desperate face of a struggling mother and her children during the Great Depression. May 26, 1926 - jazz trumpeter Miles Davis May 27, 1794 - railroad magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt. May 27, 1819 - poet and author Julia Ward Howe who is best known for writing "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" during the Civil War. May 27, 1907 - writer and marine biologist Rachel Carson who helped launch the modern environmental movement with her book, Silent Spring. May 29, 1917 - 35th POTUS John F. Kennedy May 31, 1819 - poet Walt Whitman The Last Word Let’s give it to Walt Whitman, who was born 201 years ago this week. In his preface to his masterful collection of poems, Leaves of Grass, Whitman urged his readers to free themselves of ideas, conventions, and traditions that suppressed their true selves. “re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul, and your very flesh shall be a great poem and have the richest fluency not only in its words but in the silent lines of its lips and face and between the lashes of your eyes and in every motion and joint of your body.” For more information about the In The Past Lane podcast, head to our website, www.InThePastLane.com Music for This Episode Jay Graham, ITPL Intro (JayGMusic.com) The Joy Drops, “Track 23,” Not Drunk (Free Music Archive) Sergey Cheremisinov, “Gray Drops” (Free Music Archive) Pictures of the Flow, “Horses” (Free Music Archive) Ondrosik, “Tribute to Louis Braille” (Free Music Archive) Alex Mason, “Cast Away” (Free Music Archive) Squire Tuck, “Nuthin’ Without You” (Free Music Archive) Ketsa, “Multiverse” (Free Music Archive) Ketsa, “Memories Renewed” (Free Music Archive) Dana Boule, “Collective Calm” (Free Music Archive) Borrtex, “Motion” (Free Music Archive) Ondrosik, “Breakthrough” (Free Music Archive) Cuicuitte, “sultan cintr” (Free Music Archive) Blue Dot Sessions, "Pat Dog" (Free Music Archive) Jon Luc Hefferman, “Winter Trek” (Free Music Archive) The Bell, “I Am History” (Free Music Archive) Production Credits Executive Producer: Lulu Spencer Graphic Designer: Maggie Cellucci Website by: ERI Design Legal services: Tippecanoe and Tyler Too Social Media management: The Pony Express Risk Assessment: Little Big Horn Associates Growth strategies: 54 40 or Fight Recommended History Podcasts Ben Franklin’s World with Liz Covart @LizCovart The Age of Jackson Podcast @AgeofJacksonPod Backstory podcast – the history behind today’s headlines @BackstoryRadio Past Present podcast with Nicole Hemmer, Neil J. Young, and Natalia Petrzela @PastPresentPod 99 Percent Invisible with Roman Mars @99piorg Slow Burn podcast about Watergate with @leoncrawl The Memory Palace – with Nate DiMeo, story teller extraordinaire @thememorypalace The Conspirators – creepy true crime stories from the American past @Conspiratorcast The History Chicks podcast @Thehistorychix My History Can Beat Up Your Politics @myhist Professor Buzzkill podcast – Prof B takes on myths about the past @buzzkillprof Footnoting History podcast @HistoryFootnote The History Author Show podcast @HistoryDean More Perfect podcast - the history of key US Supreme Court cases @Radiolab Revisionist History with Malcolm Gladwell @Gladwell Radio Diaries with Joe Richman @RadioDiaries DIG history podcast @dig_history The Story Behind – the hidden histories of everyday things @StoryBehindPod Studio 360 with Kurt Andersen – specifically its American Icons series @Studio360show Uncivil podcast – fascinating takes on the legacy of the Civil War in contemporary US @uncivilshow Stuff You Missed in History Class @MissedinHistory The Whiskey Rebellion – two historians discuss topics from today’s news @WhiskeyRebelPod American History Tellers @ahtellers The Way of Improvement Leads Home with historian John Fea @JohnFea1 The Bowery Boys podcast – all things NYC history @BoweryBoys Ridiculous History @RidiculousHSW The Rogue Historian podcast with historian @MKeithHarris The Road To Now podcast @Road_To_Now Retropod with @mikerosenwald © In The Past Lane 2020
Dreams of Black Wall Street (Formerly Black Wall Street 1921)
On Monday, May 30, 1921 an African American shoe shine boy named Dick Rowland boarded an elevator in the Drexel building in downtown Tulsa, OK and headed for the upper floor restroom as he had done in the past. On the elevator was a young Caucasian elevator operator named Sarah Page. According to Rowland, who was known around town as "Diamond Dick," the elevator lurched, causing him to fall against Page, who then screamed. A nearby white store clerk store ran to her aid. Fearing for his safety, Rowland Fled. The store clerk reported the incident as an attempted assault. After word of the alleged assault made its way around town, a mob formed outside of the jail Rowland was being kept in that in all likely hood would have lynched him if they could. Ultimately Page refused to testify against Rowland and declined to prosecute the case. The damage, however, had already been done. In this episode, listeners will hear excerpts of the documentary, "The Origins of Lynching Culture in the United States." The documentary is produced by the organization, “Facing History and Ourselves.” Their mission is to use the lessons of history to challenge teachers and their students to stand up to bigotry and hate. To learn more visit, www.facinghistory.org. Featured guests in this episode include: -Hannibal B. Johnson, attorney, consultant and author of Black Wall Street. -Randy Krehbiel, Tulsa World Reporter and Author of Tulsa 1921: Reporting a Massacre. Musical Attributions 1. Glueworm Evening Blues (ID 994) by Lobo Loco License, disclaimer and copyrite information. Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode Linked to music: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lobo_Loco/Welcome/Glueworm_Blues_ID_994 2. Title: Driving to the Delta (ID 923) by Lobo Loco License, disclaimer and copywite information: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lobo_Loco/Welcome/Driving_to_the_Delta_ID_923_1563 Link to music: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lobo_Loco/Welcome/Driving_to_the_Delta_ID_923_1563 3. Spirit Inside (ID 819) by Lobo Loco License, disclaimer and copyright information: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/0) Link to music: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lobo_Loco/Tree_of_Meditation/Spirit_Inside_ID_819 4. African Moon by John Bartmann Link to license, disclaimer and copyright information: CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0) Public Domain Dedication https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ Link to Music: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/John_Bartmann/Public_Domain_Soundtrack_Music_Album_One/african-moon
On this episode of the Sofa King Podcast, we look at a dark (and often unknown) chapter from American history, the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921. This was brought to the public’s attention in the excellent HBO Watchmen series, and many people (hosts included) thought it was just a fiction from this world of super heroes. However, it was very real and very tragic. The whole thing unfolded in perhaps the most unique and prosperous neighborhood for African Americans in the all of the US, a portion of Tulsa known as Greenwood. This area was called the Black Wall Street. It was a place where wealth black investors from Chicago and New York moved. It had movie theaters, jewelry stores, high end restaurants, everything that many black communities didn’t have. The problem was, Tulsa also had white supremacy groups such as the KKK and the Knights of Liberty. They ran lynch mobs and saw vigilante “justice” even on white criminals who they would storm out of police detention and kill. On Memorial Day weekend, a black shoe shiner named Dick Rowland had an encounter with elevator operator named Sarah Page in the elevator of the Drexler Building. She screamed. He ran out. The next day he was arrested for no particular reason. By that afternoon, a mob of 1000 people stormed the sheriff’s department, even though they concluded no crime was committed. Some black residents banded together with weapons (many were vets from WWI), and thing escalated quickly. Shots were fired, and ten whites and two black were dead in minutes. The white mob armed itself and stormed Greenwood. They burned down 35 city blocks in one night. They destroyed the businesses, torched 1200 houses, left 8000 black residents homeless, and murdered as many as 300 innocent victims. The immediate response afterward was a systematic cover up. No journalist could write about it. Tulsa police and military records went missing, and all the culpability of city leaders who stoked the flames were disappeared. There have since been memorials and calls for reparation, but even Dr. Manhattan can’t save the day this time. Visit Our Sources: https://www.theatlantic.com/sponsored/hbo-2019/the-massacre-of-black-wall-street/3217/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulsa_race_massacre https://www.history.com/topics/roaring-twenties/tulsa-race-massacre https://www.tulsahistory.org/exhibit/1921-tulsa-race-massacre/ https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/21/arts/television/watchmen-tulsa-race-riot.html https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=TU013 https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2018/10/11/we-lived-like-we-were-wall-street/ https://www.npr.org/2019/12/17/789015343/new-research-identifies-possible-mass-graves-from1921-tulsa-race-massacre https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/possible-mass-grave-1921-tulsa-race-massacre-found-researchers-n1102781 https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/long-lost-manuscript-contains-searing-eyewitness-account-tulsa-race-massacre-1921-180959251/ https://www.theringer.com/2018/6/28/17511818/black-wall-street-oklahoma-greenwood-destruction-tulsa
As Dick Rowland sat in a jail cell at the Tulsa courthouse on Tuesday, the news of his arrest and rumors about his alleged rape of Sarah Page flew through town. Egged on by an inflammatory op-ed in the Tulsa Tribune, a white mob bent on a lynching began assembling outside the courthouse. By that evening, the crowd of hundreds had swelled to thousands. Meanwhile in the office of the Tulsa Star newspaper, Greenwood’s most prominent citizens debated the proper course of action. Some young veterans of the recent world war were determined to defend Rowland, with their lives if necessary, while older, cooler heads urged caution and restraint.Both sides would gather at the courthouse Tuesday night, armed with their fists, guns and moonshine. Anything — or anyone — could set them off.Support us by supporting our sponsors!
The Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 is considered to be the worst race riot in U.S. history. The actual number of black citizens killed by local, white, militia men and others as a result of the riot was estimated by the Red Cross to be approximately 300. The circumstances leading up to the riot are in question. But late in the afternoon of May 30, 1921, a black teenager, Dick Rowland, used the elevator in the Drexel building in downtown Tulsa. As Dick Rowland exited the elevator, an employee of Renberg’s clothing store heard what was thought to be a scream. The clerk reached the conclusion that Sarah Page, the white elevator operator had been assaulted. Newspaper headlines supported the account and a race riot broke out on May 31, 1921.Otis Clark was 19 years old on May 31, 1921. Otis was 106 years old at the time of this interview November 23, 2009. While not an eyewitness to the lynch mob–he and his friend were the target of rifle shots. He chose to leave Tulsa to escape the encampments setup for blacks. Otis moved to California where he became an evangelist. In 1998 he returned to Tulsa where he lived for a few years before retiring to Seattle, Washington.
This episode is being recorded on May 30, 2019. It is a special edition episode that is part history, part imaginal prayer, part generational healing, part reminder of the violence that man is capable when we veer too far away from the commandment to love the Lord your God with your whole heart, your whole soul, and your whole mind and to love your neighbor as yourself. It is not meant to rationalize or explain away the horrible actions of white mobs, nor is it meant to diminish in anyway the haunting horrible effects their actions had on those days. It is an event that occurred in my home city nearly 50 years before I was born and it’s aftermath haunts the residents of that city and of our nation to this day. The purpose of this imaginal prayer exercise is recall that tragic and violent event and pray for healing of the city and nation it occurred in, for healing of the victims, for healing of the perpetrators and for healing of the racial tensions still festered and harbored below the surface by many in our country who are European American, African American, Latin American, and Native American. On this date 98 years ago in 1921 in Tulsa, Oklahoma, one of the worst incidents of racial violence in the history of the United States was about to erupt. On the morning of May 30, 1921, a young black man named Dick Rowland was riding in the elevator of the Drexel Building at Third and Main with a 17 year old white elevator attendant named Sarah Page. The details of what occurred are not certain. Sarah Page screamed and Dick Rowland was seen running from the elevator. Police were called, Rowland was accused of assault. Newspaper accounts spread news of the suspected assault of a white girl by a black man. The Tulsa Tribune — the evening newspaper int he city — printed an editorial to “Nab Negro for Attacking Girl on Elevator”. By the next day, May 31, Rowland was arrested and taken into custody. Whites gathered around the courthouse which led to fears he’d be lynched. Alarmed, some of the local black population gathered at the courthouse too, some armed. Shots were fired. 12 people were killed. The mobs dispersed — the black community members went back to the Greenwood District where most of the black community in Tulsa lived at the time. The Greenwood District was a prosperous black business area. Booker T. Washington dubbed it the “black Wall Street.” In the early hours of June 1, 1921 a white mob retaliated by invading the Greenwood District looting and burning the district destroying many of the businesses, homes, and buildings in the area. The racial massacre lasted for over 16 hours and in the end some 40 city blocks of buildings and homes had been destroyed, the “official” death toll was reported to be 36 killed — now believed to be closer to 300 black people killed, 10,000 black citizens of Tulsa left homeless. No rioters were ever charged. Dick Rowland was never charged for the incident in the elevator. It was a dark moment in the city of Tulsa, and our country for that matter, that was rarely discussed or taught in the schools. Growing up and being educated in the Tulsa Public Schools, what little was discussed about the worst racial violence in our country was described as a “race riot” with little details save for the description of the incident in the elevator and a high level discussion of what ensued. Today, we know that it was described as a “race riot” because a riot was one of the few clauses in most insurance policies at the time where the insurance company did not have to pay on claims involving a riot. None of the black owned businesses ever received compensation for any claims maid against their insurance during the incident. The light of truth shines today as we now know it was not a “race riot”, but thanks to historians and activists who have helped us identify it for what it was a “race massacre.” In recent years there has been much talk about reparations. I don’t know how reparations could ever truly be made for the utter violence and destruction that occurred at the hands of angry white mobs. I do know that God’s grace, God’s love, God’s light and truth heals. I thought an imaginal prayer exercise remembering those involved, those who witnessed it, the victims, the violent mobs, and all their descendants left to make sense of the violent massacre and destruction and loss was in order. This imaginal prayer exercise will be holding all of the above — living and deceased — in Divine Light and love with the intention of healing all involved and impacted by the events and seeking to eradicate in our imaginal prayer such racially violent energy and desires from taking hold of men again.
On May 30, 1921 a young man named Dick Rowland, who was about 19 years old, got on an elevator in the Drexel Building, on South Main St. He entered the elevator and, in some way, came in contact with Sarah Page, who was the elevator’s operator. She was about 17 years old. Sarah let out a scream and a clerk in a nearby store heard her yell, Dick Rowland ran from the scene, and the store clerk called the police.
This episode is with the incredible Lisa Spirling, artistic director of Theatre503. For everything that Lisa mentions, see below... Theatre503: https://theatre503.com 2018 Theatre503 Playwriting Award: https://theatre503.com/writers/award2018/ Paul Robinson: https://www.curtisbrown.co.uk/client/paul-robinson Tim Roseman: http://www.ayoungertheatre.com/in-turn-being-the-artistic-directors-of-theatre-503/ JMK Award: http://www.jmktrust.org Jake Orr: https://www.jakeorr.co.uk Steve Harper: https://www.thestage.co.uk/features/interviews/2017/literary-manager-steve-harper-try-oversee-theatres-relationships-engagements-writers/ Papatango New Writing Prize: http://papatango.co.uk Brentwood Prize for Playwriting: https://www.writeaplay.co.uk 503Five: https://theatre503.com/writers/503five/ Rapid Write Response: https://theatre503.com/writers/rapid-write-response/ The Acedian Pirates by Jay Taylor: https://mytheatremates.com/interview-spotlight-on-acedian-pirates-writer-jay-taylor/ In Event of Moone Disaster by Andrew Thompson: https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2017/oct/13/in-event-of-moone-disaster-review-theatre-503-london Punts by Sarah Page: https://www.whatsonstage.com/london-theatre/reviews/punts-theatre503-sarah-page_43785.html Br'er Cotton by Tearrance Arvelle Chisholm: https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2018/mar/13/brer-cotton-review-theatre-503-london-tearrance-arvelle-chisholm Sleeping Trees: http://www.sleepingtreestheatre.co.uk The Carne Trust: https://twitter.com/bucklefordust Buckle For Dust: https://twitter.com/bucklefordust The Relentless Award: http://www.americanplaywritingfoundation.org/the-relentless-award.html Camden Fringe: https://camdenfringe.com Vault Festival: https://vaultfestival.com Further Than The Furthest Thing by Zinnie Harris: https://www.standard.co.uk/go/london/theatre/further-than-the-furthest-thing-7434871.html Kneehigh: http://www.kneehigh.co.uk Tickets to Pint-Sized: October-Fest are available now - https://www.bunkertheatre.com/whats-on/pint-sized-october-fest. Once you’re on the booking page, type in the code PSPODS18 to get your discounted £8.50 ticket to the show and two workshops of your choice. If you enjoy the podcast please subscribe, share and give us a rating! We'd also love to hear your feedback so please tweet us here: @Pint_Sized_ or Facebook us here: www.facebook.com/pintsizedtheatre. Music by Teleman. Produced by Olly Jacques.
Wayfinders is offering for the Holyoke Community the opportunity of learning leadership skills and get connected with the local elected officials, organizations, and neighbors, through the Resident Leadership Program, being held from May 9 through June 14. Sarah Page, Senior Vice President, Community Building, and Engagement, and Chakai Duany, AmeriCorps VISTA Member with the Holyoke Office of Wayfinders, are our guests, and they share all the information about the program and other Wayfinder's updates.
I believe Brad Barr is one of the more unique musical voices of our time. A musician who truly knows no bounds, his openness, curiosity and deep listening abilities have accompanied him around the world many times over in his 20+ years of touring and music making. Brad spent the better part of the 90's and 2000's tirelessly traversing the country with his brother Andrew Barr (drums) and good friend Marc Friedman (bass) with an exceptional trio known as The Slip based out of Providence, RI. As their song-based but highly improvisational music organically evolved over the years from a Scofield-esque jazzy-jam band, to a bonafide indie rock power trio (with plenty of other territory covered in between), they developed a strong and extremely enthusiastic fanbase that on any given night were just as excited about the band's improvisational risks as the rewards. The Slip eventually teamed up with the beloved folk-singer Nathan Moore and keyboard whiz Marco Benevento to highlight some of their more old fashioned Rock N' Roll leanings in the festival favorite super group Surprise Me Mr. Davis. For the better part of the last decade Brad and his brother Andrew, now based in Montreal, have been putting out some of their most focused and refined music yet in an outfit they created along with harpist Sarah Page called The Barr Brothers. With Brad's lyrics and songwriting more at the forefront than ever and three Secret City Records releases under their belt, The Barr Brothers are quickly and steadily building immense international acclaim. I have a unique relationship with Brad (as well as his brother Andrew) as he has been one of the most pivotal and influential musicians in my life since I was 14 years old. Besides musicians that I play with regularly, I believe I have seen Brad and Andrew play live more times than any other group of musicians in my life. In this episode Brad and I discuss how being a father has altered his life and music, ways in which his perception of "World Music" has evolved, his elusive songwriting (non) process, and ponder why I can't find a good bagel in Northern California, among other things. Enjoy!
Ryan spoke with Edie Dopking, founder and executive director of Quantum Leap Farm, about their equine-assisted therapy center. Former participant Jake Taylor and communications manager Sarah Page also joined the discussion. www.QuantumLeapFarm.org
In acknowledgement of Black Histort Month, on tonight's show we'll be having a little history lesson on "Black Wall Street", its rise, its fall, and where blacks economically stand today as a result. For those who don't know, Black Wall Street originated in Tulsa, Oklahoma; a town you may have heard of for reasons unrelated to Black Wall Street. A lot of us may have heard of the term "Black Wall Street" but lack knowledge of its history, identity and place in African American history and there's no better time to have this discussion than in Black History Month. "Oklahoma became an official U.S. State in 1907. During the early 20th century, Oklahoma was a state in which many blacks took refuge as it posed a more promising and habbital life style for blacks. After starting their own community (originally known as "Little Africa" later named "Greenwood" and eventually known as "Negro Wall Street" later to be named "Black Wall Street"), blacks started to expand their community and economy by building more thriving businesses. Blacks were faced with racial segregation laws that prevented them from shopping anywhere other than Greenwood, which ultimately played to their advantage as their money continued to circulate within their own community. Blacks were literally creating their own economy. In the early 20th century, there was an attempt to make Oklahoma the "First Black State" which was significant in attracting blacks to migrate there. Blacks were thriving until racial tesions lead to one of the greatest tragedies in United States history. Lead by the alleged assault of a young black 19 year old shoe shiner, Dick Rowland, on Sarah Page, a 17 year old white young lady, arguably the biggest race riot in U.S. history broke out, causing millions of dollars in damages and an esitmated death total of 300 blacks. Call In # 347-838-9540