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Join Melanie Hempe and guest Becky Grant as they tackle the challenge of introducing the Kids' Brains & Screens curriculum to resistant or sensitive kids. They share personal stories and offer tips and strategies for parents to navigate this crucial conversation effectively.In this episode:Learn how to approach the scenario where kids push back against the ScreenStrong message or show sensitivity towards screen topics.Discover the inviting and engaging nature of the Kids' Brains and Screens material and how it resonates with students and parents alike.Get practical strategies to engage resistant or sensitive kids, including seeking feedback and providing incentives.Explore tips for encouraging open dialogue and applying the curriculum to various aspects of kids' lives.Understand the transformative potential of the Kids' Brains & Screens curriculum in empowering students to control screen habits and build offline relationships.Gain insights into the importance of education in making informed decisions about screen time, with parallels drawn to health education.Tune in for valuable insights and practical advice on guiding kids toward healthier screen habits, and join the mission to empower the next generation in the digital age.Support the show______________________________________________________The "Kids' Brains & Screens" paperback is NOW AVAILABLE! Please subscribe, rate, and share this podcast to help spread the word. Stay Strong! Start your ScreenStrong Journey today! Become a Connect Member to get access to our exclusive online forum, LIVE webinars with medical experts, and the entire ScreenStrong library of videos, audio clips, interviews, e-books, handouts, and more! Want to help spread the ScreenStrong message to your community? Consider becoming a ScreenStrong Ambassador! ScreenStrong Tech Recommendations Gabb Wireless—Smartphone Replacement (use code STRONG for discount) Canopy—Device Filter (use code STRONG for discount) ______________________________________________________Production Team: Host: Melanie Hempe Producer & Audio Editor: Olivia Kernekin
Get ready because it's almost here! In this exciting episode, Melanie and Mandee unveil the highly anticipated print curriculum "Kids' Brains and Screens" (KBS), slated for release on March 1, 2024.But this isn't your typical parental guidance spiel. KBS is a groundbreaking, evidence-based educational journey crafted to empower tweens and teens with hard-hitting scientific truths. It's a catalyst for transformative discussions that can revolutionize your family's relationship with screens, fostering healthier connections along the way.Whether your kids are already glued to their devices or you're deliberating when to introduce them, KBS arms them with the knowledge and inspiration to take a step back from harmful screen habits and rediscover the joys of the offline world.This eight-part course isn't your run-of-the-mill curriculum. Bursting with vibrant graphics reminiscent of a graphic novel, it's designed to captivate and educate. While tailored for middle schoolers, its impact transcends age, resonating with high schoolers and parents alike.What's inside Kids' Brains and Screens for Students?300 pages of engaging content filled with captivating visuals to keep your child hookedEight Colorful Lessons, each divided into three sections, complete with Lesson Worksheets and Quizzes24 Lesson Plans meticulously crafted for educators24 Video Summaries delivered by a Physician for enhanced understandingA 7-Day Challenge Screen Detox to kickstart healthier habitsFriday Fun Night instructions for family bondingAn Escape from Screen Jail Bonus Challenge for added excitementDon't miss out on this game-changing resource that promises to reshape your family's screen dynamics. Tune in as Melanie and Mandee give you an exclusive sneak peek into the future of screen education.Support the show______________________________________________________Please subscribe, rate, and share this podcast to help spread the word. Stay Strong! Start your ScreenStrong Journey today! Become a Connect Member to get access to our exclusive online forum, LIVE webinars with medical experts, and the entire ScreenStrong library of videos, audio clips, interviews, e-books, handouts, and more! Our ScreenStrong Student Course is NOW AVAILABLE! Want to help spread the ScreenStrong message to your community? Consider becoming a ScreenStrong Ambassador! ScreenStrong Tech Recommendations Gabb Wireless—Smartphone Replacement (use code STRONG for discount) Canopy—Device Filter (use code STRONG for discount) ______________________________________________________Production Team: Host: Melanie Hempe Producer & Audio Editor: Olivia Kernekin
Australian Film, Television and Radio School alumni, award-winning filmmaker Warwick Thornton and production designer Bethany Ryan, alongside AFTRS Council Chair Debra Richards, reflect on 50 years of formal screen education in Australia.
Episode SummaryDisney’s Cinderella thrilled Erin and Rachel almost as much as it thrilled 1950 audiences, with “almost” being the operative word. The co-hosts revisit their favorite topics of gender roles and colonization, while also debating what, exactly, dreams are made of for the second Disney princess. Episode BibliographyBeauchamp, F. (2010). Asian origins of Cinderella: The Zhuang storyteller of Guangxi. Oral Tradition, 25(2), 447-496.Cinderella. (2020, June 20). In Wikipedia. Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CinderellaCinderella (1950 fim). (2020, June 25) In Wikipedia. Retrieved from https://web.archive.org/web/20200619065636/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinderella_(1950_film)England, D. E., Descartes, L., Collier-Meek, M. A. (2011). Gender role portrayal and the Disney princesses. Sex Roles, 64, 555-567. Geronimi, C., Luske, H., & Jackson, W. (Directors). (1950). Cinderella [Film]. Walt Disney Animation Studios.Giaimo, C. (2017, June 14). The ATU Fable Index: Like the Dewey Decimal System, But With More Ogres. Atlas Obscura. Retrieved from https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/aarne-thompson-uther-tale-type-index-fables-fairy-talesHiggs, S. (2016). Damsels in development: Representation, transition, and the Disney princess. Screen Education, 83, 62-69. Hovdestad, W. E., Hubka, D., & Tonmyr, L. (2009). Unwanted personal contact and risky situations in ten Disney animated feature films. Child Abuse Review, 18, 111-126. Huggins, N. I. (1971). Harlem renaissance. Oxford University Press. Mahar, W. J. (1985). Black English in early Blackface minstrelsy: A new interpretation of the sources of minstrel show dialect. American Quarterly, 37(2), 260-285.Maurice Rapf. (2020, June 25). In Wikipedia. Retrieved from https://web.archive.org/web/20190118074308/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maurice_Rapf Rosalind Sibielski (2019) Reviving Cinderella: Contested Feminism and Conflicting Models of Female Empowerment in 21st-Century Film and Television Adaptations of “Cinderella”, Quarterly Review of Film and Video, 36:7, 584-610Tennant, A. (Director). (1998). Ever After: A Cinderella Story [Film]. Twentieth Century Fox Films. Tóth, Z. A. (2017). Disney’s violent women: In quest of a ‘fully real’ violent woman in American cinema. Brno Studies in English, 43(1), 185-212.Wood, N. (1996). Domesticating dreams in Walt Disney’s Cinderella. The Lion and the Unicorn, 20 (1), 25-43. doi:10.1353/uni.1996.0003.
Episode SummaryErin and Rachel discuss Disney's first full-length animated feature, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, snidely referred to by critics as "Disney's Folly" before its release and subsequent box office success in 1937. The hosts unpack the impact of this groundbreaking film on popular culture, including its sexist and ableist themes. Episode BibliographyAloff, M. (2013). Disney’s Snow White at 75. Virginia Quarterly Review, 89(1), 238-244. England, D. E., Descartes, L., Collier-Meek, M. A. (2011). Gender role portrayal and the Disney princesses. Sex Roles, 64, 555-567. Esmail, S., Darry, K., Walter, A., & Knupp, H. (2010). Attitudes and perceptions towards disability and sexuality. Disability Rehabilitation, 32(14), 1148-1155. [fireurgunz]. (2008, August 12). Walt Disney’s multiplane camera (Filmed: Feb. 13, 1957) [Video]. Youtube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YdHTlUGN1zwFrome, J. (2013). Snow White: Critics and criteria for the animated feature film. Quarterly Review of Film and Video, 30(5), 462-473. DOI: 10.1080/10509208.2011.585300Higgs, S. (2016). Damsels in development: Representation, transition, and the Disney princess. Screen Education, 83, 62-69. Hovdestad, W. E., Hubka, D., & Tonmyr, L. (2009). Unwanted personal contact and risky situations in ten Disney animated feature films. Child Abuse Review, 18, 111-126. Kuhn, A.F. (2010). Snow White in 1930s Britain. Journal of British Cinema and Television, 7(2), 183-199. Lenz, L. (2017, June 14). A brief history of dwarism. Pacific Standard. https://psmag.com/social-justice/a-brief-history-of-dwarfism-and-the-little-people-of-americaLittle People of America. https://www.lpaonline.org/Longworth, K. [Host]. (2015, March 31). 39: Star Wars Episode XIII: Walt Disney (39) [Audio Podcast Episode]. In You Must Remember This. Stitcher. https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/stitcher/you-must-remember-this/e/45778139Miller, D.D. & Martin, P. (1956). My Dad, Walt Disney: Part 6 “Disney’s Folly.” Saturday Evening Post, 229(20). Retrieved February 28, 2020, from http://www.saturdayeveningpost.com/wp-content/uploads/satevepost/Disneys-Folly1.pdfMorey, L., Hand, D., Sharpsteen, B., Jackson, W., Pearce, P., Cottrell, W. (Directors). Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. (1937). The Walt Disney Company, Walt Disney Animation Studios. Disney+.Pfeiffer, Lee (2010, July 12). Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved February 28, 2020, from https://www.britannica.com/topic/Snow-White-and-the-Seven-Dwarfs-film-1937Tóth, Z. A. (2017). Disney’s violent women: In quest of a ‘fully real’ violent woman in American cinema. Brno Studies in English, 43(1), 185-212.Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937 Film). In Wikipedia. Retrieved February 26, 2020, from https://web.archive.org/web/20200203011808/http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snow_White_and_the_Seven_Dwarfs_(1937_film)Whelan, B. (2012). Power to the princess: Disney and the creation of the 20th century princess narrative. Interdisciplinary Humanities, 29(1), 21-34. Whitley, D. (1997). The idea of nature in Disney animation. Ashgate.Wright, T. M. (1997) Romancing the tale: Walt Disney's adaptation of the Grimms' “Snow White.” Journal of Popular Film and Television, 25(3), 98-108.Youngs, G. (1999). The ghost of Snow White. International Feminist Journal of Politics, 311-314.
12:06 - Joe Deters, Hamilton County Prosecutor - homeless camp moving again1:06 - Lisa Wells, attorney - Shayna Huber trial1:35 - Stooge Report2:06 - JoJo Dries, workplace speaker & author of The Lotus: How I Beat The Patriarchy - domestic violence and what's next for the Urban Meyer case2:35 - Stooge Report2:50 - Mike Mercier, President of Screen Education - teens and adults are addicted to their smartphones...how to fix this problem.
Major things have happened on Halt and Catch Fire this week, and in the sixth episode of the podcast we discuss 4x07 'Who Needs a Guy?', the tragedy at hand, and try reroute ourselves after this shook our foundations. Grab the tissues. Ella is a journalist, critic, and student from Brisbane, Australia. You can read her in publications like Vanity Fair, The Guardian, Little White Lies, Junkee, SBS, Brisbane Times, Metro Magazine, Screen Education, and Kill Your Darlings. Camille is a history graduate and aspiring film editor from Quebec, Canada. Images copyright AMC Networks.
In the fifth episode of the podcast, Camille and Ella discuss the sixth episode of the fourth season of Halt and Catch Fire. We know we talked about Donna and Cameron last week, but this week we do the deep dive we keep alluding to. Strap in. Ella is a journalist and critic of anything pop culture and arts as well as a student. You can read in publications like Vanity Fair, The Guardian, Little White Lies, Junkee, SBS, Brisbane Times, Metro Magazine, Screen Education, and Kill Your Darlings. Camille is a history graduate and aspiring film editor. Images copyright AMC Networks.
In the third episode of the podcast, Camille and Ella discuss the fourth episode of the fourth season of Halt and Catch Fire, which is named after the the 1994 Winter Olympics Tonya Harding/Nancy Kerrigan incident. Who's Halt's Tonya and Nancy? We've got a few ideas... Weirdly, we're discussing this the day after a film about Tonya Harding premiered at the Toronto Film Festival to a barnstorming reception, so kudos to Halt for preempting this resurgence. Ella is a journalist and critic of anything pop culture and arts as well as a student. You can read her in publications like Vanity Fair, The Guardian, Little White Lies, Junkee, SBS, Brisbane Times, Metro Magazine, Screen Education, and Kill Your Darlings. Camille is a history graduate and aspiring film editor.
In the second episode of the podcast, Camille, Ella, and Alex discuss the third episode of Halt and Catch Fire's fourth season, as well as how the show has changed its characterisations of Joe and Donna. Ella is a journalist and critic of anything pop culture and arts as well as a student. You can read in publications like Vanity Fair, The Guardian, Little White Lies, Junkee, SBS, Brisbane Times, Metro Magazine, Screen Education, and Kill Your Darlings. Camille is a history graduate and aspiring film editor. Alex is a film and television graduate and arts programmer. Images copyright AMC Networks.
In the first episode of the podcast, Camille and Ella discuss the double-headed season four opener for Halt and Catch Fire, as well as spitballing what the season ahead(as well as the end of the show) may hold. We have grave concerns for Joe's phone bill. Ella is a journalist and critic of anything pop culture and arts as well as a student. You can read in publications like Vanity Fair, The Guardian, Little White Lies, Junkee, SBS, Brisbane Times, Metro Magazine, Screen Education, and Kill Your Darlings. Camille is a history graduate and aspiring film editor. Images copyright AMC Networks.
It's the second last week of Halt and Catch Fire ever, a fact we're actively avoiding. In the seventh episode of the podcast, we talk about the show shifting gears once again to create a mournful, human masterpiece in 4x08 'Goodwill'. It asks the question the show has from the very beginning: how do you put a human in a box, to capture what it is capable of in a machine? Ella is a journalist, critic, and student from Brisbane, Australia. You can read her in publications like Vanity Fair, The Guardian, Little White Lies, Sydney Morning Herald, Junkee, SBS, The Age, Brisbane Times, Metro Magazine, Screen Education, and Kill Your Darlings. Camille is a history graduate and aspiring film editor from Quebec, Canada. Images copyright AMC Networks.
In the fourth episode of the podcast, Camille and Ella discuss the fifth episode (halfway!!) of the fourth season of Halt and Catch Fire. There's really only one thing we can talk about...what the hell is going on between Donna and Cameron? Ella is a journalist and critic of anything pop culture and arts as well as a student. You can read in publications like Vanity Fair, The Guardian, Little White Lies, Junkee, SBS, Brisbane Times, Metro Magazine, Screen Education, and Kill Your Darlings. Camille is a history graduate and aspiring film editor. Images copyright AMC Networks.
We are back after a week off! On this week’s Intellicast podcast, join Adam and Brian and they discuss: IIeX Recap Latest mergers and acquisitions in the market research industry New Mount Rushmore And much more! As a bonus, Adam explains that picture we tweeted out prior to the live recording! To watch Brian's recent webinar, The Art of Data Consistency: Sample Blending For Your Tracker Studies, visit http://bit.ly/2jTS2J0. You can also register for Screen Education's webinar on teen smartphone addiction by visiting http://bit.ly/2ysINdf. Have questions or topics you want the team to discuss on an upcoming episode? You can reach us at Intellicast@emi-rs.com or @Intellicast1, or @EMI_Research
Writer Ella Donald chats with House Conspiracy's Jonathan O'Brien about real life and the internet and how they're becoming more and more the same thing. Ella Donald is an arts and popular culture journalist and critic from Brisbane. Her work regularly appears in the UK-based film magazine Little White Lies in both print and online editions, and also can be seen in publications like The Guardian, Vanity Fair, SBS, Junkee, Brisbane Times, Kill Your Darlings, and Screen Education. She’s been writing professionally since she was 15, editing and co-owning the popular website FashionOfGlee.com, which was profiled by various outlets including Tumblr and received worldwide press and recognition from publications including Elle and fashion houses like Kate Spade. With backgrounds in film and television, dance, theatre, photography, and music, she has written extensively on these topics, as well as covering celebrity, popular and youth culture, social and cultural issues, technology, and fashion from both an industry and audience perspective. In 2016, she participated in the Melbourne International Film Festival Critics Campus. She is available for all your trivia team needs (for a fee, of course). See more of Ella: houseconspiracy.org/ella-donald Subscribe on iTunes or wherever you get your podcasts.
ONE HEAT MINUTE is the podcast examining Michael Mann’s 1995 crime opus HEAT minute by minute. It’s the 157th minute (2:36:00 - 2:37:00) - host Blake Howard joins the joyously obsessive award-winning film critic for many publications including Senses of Cinema, Kill Your Darlings, The Age and Fandor - Joanna Di Mattia. Blake and Joanna discuss the great physicality in Pacino’s intuitive performance, the coalescence of themes in this minute and being at the precipice of the climax.BIO:JOANNA DI MATTIAJoanna Di Mattia is an award-winning film critic who has written for many publications and outlets, including Senses of Cinema, Screen Education, SBS Movies, Kill Your Darlings, The Age, The Big Issue and Fandor. (Bio via The Monthly).Twitter: @JoannaDiMattia Website: inalonelyplacefilm.comIt's impossible to imagine The Godfather trilogy without Al Pacino, but it nearly happened by Joanna Di MattiaSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/one-heat-minute-productions/donations