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To feed a child is fundamental to a parent, it's instinct. But what if your baby can't swallow? After receiving lots of emails to a programme we made on dysphagia – or swallowing difficulties – we were asked to explore the condition as it affects children. In this edition, Ruth Alexander speaks to parents Kelly Rose, in the UK, and Melanie and Sean Hoffman in Canada, about how they manage their children's conditions and their relationship with food; and to a doctor, Professor Hamdy El-Hakim, who is on a mission to ensure dysphagia is better understood. And we hear from the children themselves. Three-year-old Bodhi and five-year-old Ophelia share their thoughts about food. If you would like to get in touch with the show, please email: thefoodchain@bbc.co.uk (Picture: Bodhi and his mother Kelly Rose. Credit: Kelly Rose/BBC) Producer: Elisabeth Mahy
Sean Hoffman is an American entrepreneur based in Southern California. His new podcast 'Reality with Sean Hoffman' is about politics and money.For accurate information about COVID-19 vaccinations, visit this page: https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/coronavirus-covid-19/coronavirus-vaccination/coronavirus-vaccine/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Yes, we're finally back, but this time better than ever! Today we have our first ever non-current wrestler on the podcast in Sean Hoffman, former alumni and wrestler at WKHS. We also have wrestler David Barone on as well. Sean tells us about the corrupt inter workings of College and where not to go --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In this episode, we visit the Pullman neighborhood of Chicago to visit Sean Hoffman, the President of Nuance Solutions. We talk about managing time as a leader, doing what you love, and the experience of managing a plant that manufactures cleaners and disinfectants amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
After finishing 8-4, the Gophers football team was invited to the Holiday Bowl for a match-up against Washington State. Nadine Babu and Sean Hoffman put a bow on the regular season, including discussing the collapse against Michigan and Mitch Leidner's struggles at quarterback. Also, is Tracy Claeys reported extension the right move?
This is clearly the season of missed opportunities for the Minnesota Gophers football team. Nadine Babu from GopherHole.com and Sean Hoffman, former Gopher, dive into a discussion about whether Tracy Claeys will get fired after the season. Are these losses respectable enough to have faith going forward? Are Gophers fans right to be frustrated? All of this, and more, on a new episode of the GopherHole podcast!
It hasn't always been pretty, but the Gophers are tied for the Big 10 West lead heading into the final three games of the season. Nadine Babu from GopherHole.com and Sean Hoffman, former Gopher, dive into the awful targeting call that will cost the Gophers one of their best defensive players for part of the upcoming Nebraska game, how and why casual fans still are not fully on board with this team, Mitch Leidner's performance lately, and Rodney Smith becoming a star.
Regardless of schedule, the Gophers are bowl eligible in October! On this episode, Nadine Babu and Sean Hoffman offer thoughts on the running game, which continues to impress; The penalties, which continue to mount; And the current lack of a signature win, which continues to keep the fan base at arm's length. You can find the GopherHole podcast on GopherHOle.com, 1500ESPN.com, Podcast One and iTunes!
NYPTI Executive Director, Susan Valle Interview with CDAA Chief Executive Officer, Mark Zahner and Legislation Director, Sean Hoffman, about CA's Prosecutorial Misconduct Bill signed by Gov. Brown.
The Gophers got their first Big 10 win out of the way -- and with starting QB Mitch Leidner out with a concussion, no less. Nadine Babu and Sean Hoffman break down the road win against Maryland, the decision to start Conor Rhoda at QB, the fantastic running game with Shannon Brooks and Rodney Smith, and Minnesota's defense, which held a team that averages 37 points to just 10. That's how you win games. All that, plus we talk about the season-ticketholder survey at the U of M.
On this episode of the GopherHole podcast GopherHole.com's Nadine Babu and former Minnesota Gophers linebacker Sean Hoffman cover the following: - Disappointment over the Iowa game. Issues that start at the top and go all the way to the O-Line - The miraculous return of Mike Sherels - The defense playing well - Hoff talking about his rivalry against Iowa, going 3-1 in his years, and getting heckled by an 80 year old woman at Kinnick
Welcome to the debut episode of the GopherHole podcast, with GopherHole.com's Nadine Babu and former Minnesota Gophers linebacker Sean Hoffman! Gophers fans were hoping to celebrate a Big 10 opening win at Penn State - especially after leading by 10 at halftime - but everything came crashing down in the second half and overtime. Nadine and Sean provide thoughts on the game, and the program in general. Also, Sean explains the biggest differences between playing for Jim Wacker and Glen Mason in the 90's.
Sean Hoffman is a good buddy of mine. We played in a country band and even wrote a children's record together. Now Sean makes a living writing and recording music for TV, Film, Video Games and whatever else he gets hired for. In this episode we discuss Sean's formative years as a heavy metal army brat, his eventual move out to Los Angeles, and his time as a hired gun in a successful indie rock band. Find out more about Sean or maybe hire him for your next project here: www.seanhoffman.net
Sean Hoffman is a good buddy of mine. We played in a country band and even wrote a children's record together. Now Sean makes a living writing and recording music for TV, Film, Video Games and whatever else he gets hired for. In this episode we discuss Sean's formative years as a heavy metal army brat, his eventual move out to Los Angeles, and his time as a hired gun in a successful indie rock band. Find out more about Sean or maybe hire him for your next project here: www.seanhoffman.net
If you could change your name, would you? Artists take stage names for all kinds of reasons. Sometimes it’s because their given name doesn’t fit easily on a theater marquee – one might speculate that that’s why Henry John Deutschendorf, Jr. is known to us as John Denver. Having a different name also can allow artists to create a character for themselves that gives them the freedom to explore varying musical styles or gain a third-person perspective on the familiar world they inhabit in everyday life. Los Angeles-based Little Lonely’s given name is just fine, and she has been performing under it for most of her life - stylistically sticking fairly close to a kind of performance art neo-traditionalist country music. But for her brand new pseudonymous and eponymous album, she smartly assumed a new moniker, and with the help of wunderkind producer and multi-instrumentalist, Sean Hoffman, forged a sophisticated identity that suits the strong new material. Hoffman’s deft guiding hand helps Little Lonely hit all the right marks, as well as providing what Daniel Lanois calls “elements of danger” that differentiate the album from countless other female singer-songwriter albums; a searing guitar solo or two, synthesizer lines that fit because they shouldn’t, and ambient sound effects that give listeners a strong sense of place. But it’s Little Lonely’s distinctive voice that cuts through all of this, tipping a cosmic cowboy hat to torch and twang while retaining her signature theatrical emotive scope.
If you could change your name, would you? Artists take stage names for all kinds of reasons. Sometimes it's because their given name doesn't fit easily on a theater marquee – one might speculate that that's why Henry John Deutschendorf, Jr. is known to us as John Denver. Having a different name also can allow artists to create a character for themselves that gives them the freedom to explore varying musical styles or gain a third-person perspective on the familiar world they inhabit in everyday life. Los Angeles-based Little Lonely's given name is just fine, and she has been performing under it for most of her life - stylistically sticking fairly close to a kind of performance art neo-traditionalist country music. But for her brand new pseudonymous and eponymous album, she smartly assumed a new moniker, and with the help of wunderkind producer and multi-instrumentalist, Sean Hoffman, forged a sophisticated identity that suits the strong new material. Hoffman's deft guiding hand helps Little Lonely hit all the right marks, as well as providing what Daniel Lanois calls “elements of danger” that differentiate the album from countless other female singer-songwriter albums; a searing guitar solo or two, synthesizer lines that fit because they shouldn't, and ambient sound effects that give listeners a strong sense of place. But it's Little Lonely's distinctive voice that cuts through all of this, tipping a cosmic cowboy hat to torch and twang while retaining her signature theatrical emotive scope.
If you could change your name, would you? Artists take stage names for all kinds of reasons. Sometimes it’s because their given name doesn’t fit easily on a theater marquee – one might speculate that that’s why Henry John Deutschendorf, Jr. is known to us as John Denver. Having a different name also can allow artists to create a character for themselves that gives them the freedom to explore varying musical styles or gain a third-person perspective on the familiar world they inhabit in everyday life. Los Angeles-based Little Lonely’s given name is just fine, and she has been performing under it for most of her life - stylistically sticking fairly close to a kind of performance art neo-traditionalist country music. But for her brand new pseudonymous and eponymous album, she smartly assumed a new moniker, and with the help of wunderkind producer and multi-instrumentalist, Sean Hoffman, forged a sophisticated identity that suits the strong new material. Hoffman’s deft guiding hand helps Little Lonely hit all the right marks, as well as providing what Daniel Lanois calls “elements of danger” that differentiate the album from countless other female singer-songwriter albums; a searing guitar solo or two, synthesizer lines that fit because they shouldn’t, and ambient sound effects that give listeners a strong sense of place. But it’s Little Lonely’s distinctive voice that cuts through all of this, tipping a cosmic cowboy hat to torch and twang while retaining her signature theatrical emotive scope.
Sean Hoffman's brilliantly facile guitar work and Leyla Akdogan's hushed vocals form the nucleus of the duo Loch and Key. Their debut album, Jupiter's Guide for Submariners, is a love song to the artistically area just north of downtown Los Angeles. Their ethereal mix of bossa nova, folk and pop perfectly complements the band's beautifully endearing visual artwork.
Sean Hoffman's brilliantly facile guitar work and Leyla Akdogan's hushed vocals form the nucleus of the duo Loch and Key. Their debut album, Jupiter's Guide for Submariners, is a love song to the artistically area just north of downtown Los Angeles. Their ethereal mix of bossa nova, folk and pop perfectly complements the band's beautifully endearing visual artwork.
Sean Hoffman's brilliantly facile guitar work and Leyla Akdogan's hushed vocals form the nucleus of the duo Loch and Key. Their debut album, Jupiter's Guide for Submariners, is a love song to the artistically area just north of downtown Los Angeles. Their ethereal mix of bossa nova, folk and pop perfectly complements the band's beautifully endearing visual artwork.