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-Stephanie Simon is a 2024 Olympic Trials Boxing Champion, 4x Elite National Boxing Champion, 3x National Collegiate Boxing Champion, and United States Marine Corps Boxing Hall of Famer.-After graduating Evergreen High School in 2012 as an All-American wrestler and discus thrower, she was accepted to the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis MD where she learned how to box and eventually became a 3x collegiate national champion.-In 2017, she was commissioned in the U.S. Marine Corps as an Amphibious Assault Officer where she was in charge of 50 people and 20 Amphibious Assault Vehicles. She was a part of the first wave of women who served in combat arms in USMC history and, towards the end of her time on active duty, was selected to be the captain of the USMC boxing team where she became a 2x national champion and a USMC boxing hall of famer.-After her time with the USMC boxing team, she moved to Miami Florida and switched over to the Reserves. While in Miami, she won the 2022 USA Nationals and the 2023 National Golden Gloves championships. In December 2024, she won the 2024 Olympic Trials at 146lbs.-Today she resides in Los Angeles, CA to pursue her professional boxing career and is now 1-0 since making her professional debut.Stephanie's website:https://www.stephsimonboxing.comStephanie's Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/stephsimonboxing?igsh=b2d4dXlmMzc2OWV2FirstNet Built with AT&T:http://www.firstnet.com/healthandwellnessBuilding Homes for Heroes:https://www.buildinghomesforheroes.org/Download the O2X Tactical Performance App:app.o2x.comLet us know what you think:Website - http://o2x.comIG - https://instagram.com/o2xhumanperformance?igshid=1kicimx55xt4f
Insite the mind of elite National Boxing Champ Stephanie Simon.Stephanie's Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/stephsimonboxingThank you for Listening! Learn more below.ALLSMITH IG ALLSMITH YouTubeBryce Smith IG
Stephanie Simon from Smithville, Missouri, discusses NFHS concerns with Cindy, particularly regarding dance and cheer being grouped under the same umbrella.Welcome to Anything But Routine Presented by Just For Kix. This Podcast covers Everything & anything dance. Stay up to date with the podcast by hitting the subscribe button.https://www.justforkix.com/anythingbutroutine
Having a baby in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) comes with a wide range of emotions and experiences that can be challenging for new parents to navigate. And many feel like they're facing this challenge alone. The founders of NICU Nook, Dr. Stephanie Simon and Amanda Neilan, are working to change that! This episode is filled with encouragement and support with expert advice and practical strategies to help you and your baby thrive. You'll learn strategies for navigating the NICU and cultivating a secure attachment bond that will endure beyond the hospital walls. I want to hear from you! Send me a topic you want me to cover or a question you want answered on the show! ✨ DM me on Instagram at @securelyattachedpodcast or @drsarahbren ✨ Send an email to sarah@drsarahbren.com ✨ And check out drsarahbren.com for more parenting resources
Many people are under the impression that couples therapy is a last resort solely associated with divorce. Our guest today joins us to share the true goal of couples therapy and its role in helping couples achieve relationship satisfaction and a greater connection with themselves and one another. Dr. Stephanie Simon is a licensed clinical psychologist specializing in perinatal mental health and couples therapy. She has a doctorate from PGSP Stanford PsyD Consortium and a wealth of clinical experience. Her current focus is on helping couples overcome the challenges that accompany infertility, fertility treatment, pregnancy, and postpartum. In this episode, she shares her experiential approach to couples therapy using Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) and insight into navigating the challenges of fertility treatment as a couple. Tune in to find out why couples therapy may just be the best gift you could ever offer yourself and your partner and why it's so vital that we destigmatize it as a society.
Working from home has its perks: Better coffee, easy commute, no fluorescent lighting. But, as any home office worker can tell you, there are also downsides: No more office social hours, no more ergonomic chairs, and no more quiet train rides to catch up on your podcasts. In this episode of the Better Off podcast, we'll ask: Is working from home good or bad for our health? GuestsEileen McNeely, Founder and Executive Director of SHINE, the Health & Sustainability Initiative at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.Read a study by Eileen McNeely and SHINE researchers, exploring associations between the importance of well-being domains and the subsequent experience of well-being.Read an article by Eileen McNeely discussing business as a platform for human flourishing.Bethany Barone Gibbs, Associate Professor of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at West Virginia UniversityRead a study by Bethany Barone Gibbs and other researchers who explored COVID-19's impact on sedentary behaviors.CreditsHost/producer: Anna Fisher-PinkertThe Better Off team: Kristen Dweck, Elizabeth Gunner, Pamela Reynoso, Stephanie Simon, and Ben WallaceAudio engineering and sound design: Kevin O'ConnellAdditional research: Kate Becker
This week on week on Sex & Violence with Rebel Girl, we talk an an American boxer, wrestler, aspiring mma athlete & a history making U.S. Marine Corps officer. Stephanie Simon is a United States Marine Corps Boxing Hall Of Fame Inductee, 6-Time National Boxing Champion and 2024 Paris Olympics boxing gold medal hopeful!! The U.S. Naval Academy alumni will soon be headed to the U.S. Olympic Committee's USA Boxing 2023 World Boxing Tour Camp,taking place at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, CO from March 19 – April 9, 2023. We talk about:
As COVID-19 swept through American prisons and jails in 2020, wardens scrambled to keep prisoners and corrections officers from getting sick. One strategy was to increase solitary confinement. Health experts warn that solitary confinement increases the risk of mental illness and suicide, but the practice continues. Today, about 2 million people are incarcerated in the U.S. In this episode of the Better Off podcast, we'll ask: Is it possible to build a corrections system that accounts for their health and safety? Guests:Jasmine D Graves, Ph.D. student, Population Health Sciences program, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthMonik Jimenez, Assistant Professor in the Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthCredits:Host/producer: Anna Fisher-PinkertThe Better Off team: Kristen Dweck, Elizabeth Gunner, Pamela Reynoso, Stephanie Simon, and Ben WallaceAudio engineering and sound design: Kevin O'ConnellAdditional research: Kate Becker
Guests:Ana Rausch, Vice President of Program Operations at Coalition for the Homeless of Houston/Harris CountyKimberley Richardson, therapistMaggie Sullivan, family nurse practitioner, Boston Health Care for the Homeless and instructor and human rights fellow, FXB Center, Harvard UniversityCredits:Host/producer: Anna Fisher-PinkertThe Better Off team: Kristen Dweck, Elizabeth Gunner, Pamela Reynoso, Stephanie Simon, and Ben WallaceAudio engineering and sound design: Kevin O'ConnellAdditional research: Kate Becker
Stephanie is a former active duty, now reserve officer in the United States Marine Corps. She is an Amphibious Assault Officer and she has a very long list of accomplishments. She wrestled in high school but began boxing at the United States Naval Academy. At the academy, she was also a member of the Glee Club and Captain of the Track and Field Team. On top of all that, she plays five musical instruments. She is a 3 x Collegiate National Boxing Champion, and a 3x Team USA National Champion, and we hope to see her in the ring at the Olympics in Paris 2024. www.instagram.com/stephsimon94 https://www.teamusa.org/usa-boxing/athletes/Stephanie-Simon ---------- www.instagram.com/shootlikeagirlpodcast/ shootlikeagirlpodcast@gmail.com
Tim Blanks sits down with Ziad Ahmed, chief executive of JUV Consulting and Stephanie Simon, the former head of community at Clubhouse to reflect on VOICES. BackgroundThe first three sessions at BoF VOICES 2022 tackled issues inside the fashion industry and far beyond. Speakers explored the climate crisis and accusations of corporate greenwashing; the potential of artificial intelligence and the associated ethical implications; the war in Ukraine and growing economic uncertainty and inequality across the globe and Gen-Z's rising anger over these issues and how to start to fix them.“At this event, fashion is often quite marginal,” said BoF editor-at-large Tim Blanks during the live recording of “The Best of VOICES With Tim Blanks.” “It's in our minds, but what we're talking about are the world's big, definitive issues.Blanks was joined by VOICES speaker Ziad Ahmed, chief executive of JUV Consulting and Stephanie Simon, the former head of community at Clubhouse, to reflect on the highlights from the first two days of talks and panel discussions.Key InsightsThe climate crisis is the cloud that hangs over everything, from technology to the economy. But rather than waiting on private companies to create change, widespread regulations are essential, said Simon. “It seems much more straightforward to mandate the targets that we're going to need in order to ensure progress from a climate change perspective.”The potential of artificial intelligence is limitless, but humans can help control how the world of AI unfolds. “We teach AI by example,” said Blanks. “By being ethical, kind human beings, AI learns to be ethical and kind.” While the younger generation is interested in new technologies, there's also a trepidation about the companies and people creating these innovations and a desire to upend past practices. “There's often an assumption that Gen-Z is leading the charge towards innovation,” said Ahmed. “Broadly speaking, that's not really the case. A lot of young people are really sceptical and critical about our own relationships to technology.”To see change, today's stakeholders need to bring the next generation into the decision-making process — and begin to relinquish control. “The solutions to the problems that we are facing exist,” said Ahmed. “The question is if the people who currently have the reins will give them up.” Additional ResourcesBoF VOICES 2022: Finding Optimism in an Unsteady World: From the Ukraine War to the climate crisis to the legacy of the pandemic, speakers including CNN's Clarissa Ward, Mercy Corps' Tjada D'Oyen McKenna, Goldman Sachs' Tim Ingrassia and Google X's former chief business officer Mo Gawdat discussed the uncertainty gripping the world — and why there's cause for hope. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What does a plate of healthy food look like? Everyone has an opinion – from doctors to dieticians to wellness experts. But advice on what to eat often ignores a big factor in how and why we make meals: Culture. Americans who trace their heritage back to Latin America or Africa often get messages that discourage them from seeing their home foods as healthy. In this episode, we'll ask: Are we better off when diet and nutrition advice is informed by culture?Guests:Josiemer Mattei, Donald and Sue Pritzker Associate Professor of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthDalina Soto, registered dietician, Your Latina NutritionistCredits:Host/producer: Anna Fisher-PinkertThe Better Off team: Kristen Dweck, Elizabeth Gunner, Stephanie Simon, and Ben WallaceAudio engineering and sound design: Kevin O'ConnellAdditional research: Kate Becker
Hello and welcome back to another episode of Her HypeSquad with Bosstrack! In this episode I talk with Stephanie Simon, a Marine Corps Officer now serving as a reservist who is pursuing her Olympic goals of boxing. Stephanie and I talk about motivating teams, delegating to and involving others to improve results, finding healthy outlet for stress, challenges she faced as a female Marine Corps officer, the benefits of being relatable to others, and inspiring others to change lives and so much more! About Stephanie Simon: Stephanie Simon is a Marine Corps Officer who was inducted into the USMC Boxing Hall of Fame and is pursuing her Olympic goals of boxing. Stephanie is originally from Vancouver, WA but currently lives in Miami, FL. She graduated from the US Naval Academy in Annapolis MD, where she learned how to box and eventually became a 3x collegiate national champion. She was also the team captain of the track team and a member of the Glee Club. In 2017, Stephanie commissioned as a US Marine Corps officer and became an Amphibious Assault Officer where she was in charge of 50 people. Towards the end of her time in the USMC, she was selected to be the captain of the USMC boxing team and there she became a 2x national champion and a USMC Boxing Hall of Famer. Stephanie now serves as a reservist and is a recruiter in the corporate world while pursuing her Olympic goals. How to reach Stephanie: Instagram: @stephsimon94 Youtube: @stephaniesimon123 Email: stephaniesimon123@gmail.com
The world is facing catastrophic consequences as a direct result of climate change. Charlie Sidoti, Executive Director, and Stephanie Simon, Head of Partnerships at InnSure, join us to discuss how InnSure is incentivizing bold and decisive action by the industry to help combat this threat. We exchange information and ideas about specific opportunities to support innovation at the nexus of insurance and climate risk. The world is changing. What part will you play? Learn more about InnSure: InnSure: https://innsure.org/ InnSure's Climate Initiative (ICI): https://innsure.org/climate-landing ICI Individual Memberships: https://innsure.org/climatememberships Learn more about Nassau Re/Imagine: Insurtech and Retiretech Incubator: www.imagine.nfg.com
Guests: Shruthi Mahalingaiah, assistant professor of environmental reproductive and women's health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthTamarra James-Todd, Mark and Catherine Winkler associate professor of environmental reproductive epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthVisit our website to learn more about our guests, and to find a full transcript.Credits:Host/producer: Anna Fisher-PinkertThe Better Off team: Kristen Dweck, Elizabeth Gunner, Stephanie Simon, and Ben WallaceAudio engineering and sound design: Kevin O'ConnellAdditional research: Kate Becker
40 million American homes cook their meals with natural gas. But most people don't think of the little blue flame on their gas range as the end of a very long natural gas pipeline. New research shows that gas stoves pollute our indoor air, but Americans have yet to embrace alternatives, like induction stoves. In this episode, Better Off asks: When it comes to our health, are we better off giving up on natural gas?Guests: Drew Michanowicz, senior scientist, PSE Healthy EnergyBrady Seals, manager, Carbon-free Buildings Program, RMIJon Kung, chefVisit our website to learn more about our guests, and to find a full transcript.Credits:Host/producer: Anna Fisher-PinkertThe Better Off team: Kristen Dweck, Elizabeth Gunner, Stephanie Simon, and Ben WallaceAudio engineering and sound design: Kevin O'ConnellAdditional research: Kate Becker
Stephanie Simon has staying power. For the last 25 years, she has worked at NY1 News where she covers art and culture in all its many forms across the five boroughs, including the visual arts, jazz, the New York Philharmonic, New York history, and everything in between. Her career in news started in 1st grade when she started her very own newspaper entitled, "The Gossip Gazette," which was quite a hit with her classmates in Ambler, Pennsylvania. Since then, she has danced with the Rockettes, been serenaded by Wynton Marsalis, roasted by comedian Jeff Ross, yucked it up with A-list comedians, interviewed rock stars, and walked on the biggest stages in the world. Find out how Stephanie does when the tables are turned and she is in the spotlight.
Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart Support The Daily Gardener Buy Me A Coffee Connect for FREE! The Friday Newsletter | Daily Gardener Community Historical Events 1568 Birth of Henry Wotton, English writer, diplomat, and politician. Henry celebrated our relationships with gardens and landscapes. He especially enjoyed gardens that made one think or offered a surprise. Henry served as an Ambassador to Venice, and during his time there, he fell in love with Italian gardens. Henry's concept of a "garden of surprise" was inspired by the gardens he saw in Italy. In his Elements of Architecture (1624), Henry discusses what it was like to walk through an Italian garden: I have seen a garden into which the first [entry point] was a high walk like a [terrace], from whence might be taken a general view of the whole plot below, but rather in a delightful confusion... From this the Beholder descending any steps, was afterwards conveyed again... to various entertainments of his [scent] and sight... every one of these diversities, was as if he had [been] magically transported to a new garden. 1844 Birth of Paul-Marie Verlaine, French poet. He's remembered for his work with the Symbolist and Decadent movements. His poem, Clair de Lune, begins with the line, "Your soul is a sealed garden," and inspired Claude Debussy ("deh·byoo·see") to write his own 'Clair de lune, the work for which he is now most famous. Paul once wrote, Here are fruits, flowers, leaves and branches, and here is my heart which beats only for you. 1853 Birth of Vincent van Gogh, Dutch post-impressionist painter. After his death, he became a top-selling figure in the history of Western art. Bold colors and brushwork characterized his work. Vincent found inspiration in the natural world, and he once said, If you truly love Nature, you will find beauty everywhere. Vincent was also a lover of flowers and gardens, and he also said, For one's health as you say, it is very necessary to work in the garden and see the flowers growing. At the end of his life, Van Gogh suffered from depression, an unsuccessful painting career, and poverty. He committed a slow and painful suicide at 37 by shooting himself in the chest. He died two days later beside a stack of his sunflower canvases. He said his last words to his brother Theo, The sadness will last forever. The legacy of Van Gogh's 2,100 pieces of art was much brighter than he ever expected. In March of 1987, his painting titled Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers was sold by Sotheby's in London for $39.85 million, more than three times the highest price ever paid at the time for a painting at auction. 2003 On this day, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram shared an article called, What's in a name? Deciding the name of every plant could take decades and require a huge effort by Stephanie Simon. The article revealed that the Missouri Botanical Garden is teaming up with botanists worldwide on a 10-year $100-million effort to standardize plant names. The article shared the forecast for finishing the project, saying the project's leaders' plans for... the database [is] “45 compiler years.” One note says “52 imager years.” At the bottom there's a final tally: They will need a staff of 32 for at least a decade just to compile and input the information. That's not counting the botanists who will do all the research Missouri scientists will be working in formal collaboration with the two other top botanical research centers in the world: the New York Botanical Garden and the Kew Botanical Gardens near London. Incredibly, the project was completed way ahead of schedule at the end of 2010. At the time, The Plant List included 1.25 million scientific plant names. Grow That Garden Library™ Book Recommendation Writing Wild by Kathryn Aalto This book came out in the summer of 2020, and the subtitle is Women Poets, Ramblers, and Mavericks Who Shape How We See the Natural World. This is such a good book, and I've been waiting to recommend it on the show. Kathryn herself was inspired to write this book after stumbling on a book written with all-male voices. Kathryn wanted to find the female voices and add their perspective on the natural world. In all, there are about 75 women that are talked about in Kathryn's book. Now, the goal behind curating all of these pieces was to help us deepen our connection to and understanding of the natural world. Some of these writers are some of my old favorites, like Mary Oliver, Vita Sackville West, Mary Austin, Susan Fenimore Cooper. But then there are also new voices like Helen MacDonald, Andrea Wulf, Amy Liptrot, and Elizabeth Rush. There are 25 of these women whose works are shared in full in this book. I love what Kathryn wrote in the introduction. She says, Much of this book was researched and penned outside - mountain climbing, mudlarking, canoeing, beachcombing, gardening, hiking, and birdwatching. I retraced the footsteps of those who have passed on, some of whom wrote anonymously or were chastised for daring to venture off without male chaperones. I walked and talked with living authors. I read original 19th-century journals, letters, essays, and books. I held tangible personal objects. I searched the faces and old photographs. I listened to historians, archivists, and experts. I attended live author readings and listened to recordings. I passed through 200 years of women's history through nature writing. Remarkable. Compilation books like this are excellent because Kathryn has done the heavy lifting for us. She has sifted through all of this nature writing, and she has brought us the best of the best - an excellent sampling of women writing about nature over the past two centuries. I simply have to share two beautiful quotes that Kathryn includes at the top of the book. The first is from Willa Cather in her 1913 book O Pioneers! She wrote, Isn't it queer: there are only two or three human stories and they go on repeating themselves as fiercely as if they had never happened before; like the larks in this country, that have been singing the same five notes for over thousands of years. And then there's this beautiful quote by Emily Dickinson in an 1885 letter that she wrote to Eugenia Hall. I hope you love Birds too. It is economical. It saves going to heaven. This book is chock full of great insights, quotes, and readings from women as marvelous as Willa Cather and Emily Dickinson. This book is 288 pages of women finding joy in nature and then writing about it and sharing it. You can get a copy of Writing Wild by Kathryn Aalto and support the show using the Amazon link in today's show notes for around $6. Botanic Spark 1918 On this day, The Oregon Daily Journal out of Portland, Oregon, shared a front-page story with the headline, SLACKER IF HE PUTS BASEBALL STARTING TIME BACK ONE HOUR. President Pack of National War Garden Commission Severely Criticises [Baseball] Club Owner Who Plans to Add Extra Hour of Daylight That Could Be Used in Garden Work. Charles Lathrop-Pack was president of the national war garden commission and was against baseball teams who were planning to change the start time of their games to take advantage of the brand new daylight saving plan. Pack said, A move like this will take thousands of hours of time from gardens. It will doubtless mean many extra dollars in the box office, but it is certainly a violation of the spirit of the law. In other media, Charles reminded both leagues that, [the] law was intended to increase the daylight usefulness in war work, and was not intended to give extra hours for recreation... Slackers of the worst type is the brand placed upon baseball league owners or managers who plan to move down the scheduled time of starting games this Summer. But the historian Michael O'Malley noted in his book Keeping Watch (1996) that as president of the War Garden Commission, Charles Lathrop Pack was essentially the head of [a] lobbying organization for the makers of garden products—tools, seeds, fertilizers, canning, and preserving equipment... [and he] stood to gain dramatically from any increase in wartime gardening. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener And remember: For a happy, healthy life, garden every day.
In this episode, I included the (0:00) live post-fight chat on ITRBoxing's YouTube page (YouTube.com/c/itrboxing) from after the fight, join the conversation after another big fight there, (55:00) We are then joined by Rashard Hicks who is now training with Derek Collinsworth in Texas and looking for a big fight in 2022, (1:32:00) Lukie talks about the difference between Demetrius Andrade and Gennady Golovkin and I preview the ShoBox card which is January 7th, on Showtime, at 10 PM EST/PST (tape delayed on west coast feed), and finally we have (1:43:30) Stephanie Simon fresh off her national title win talks her future, which seems to be MMA.
IWC Schaffhausen presents episode five of Creator's Time, in which host Abraxas Higgins talks to Head of Community at Clubhouse Stephanie Simon about change, finding yourself and the power of community. All thoughts and opinions are of those speaking and do not necessarily reflect IWC Schaffhausen
Guest: David M. Simpson, MD Guest: Jon T. Gertken, MD Guest: Stephanie Simon, NP Find the full Prescribing Information here. There are multiple ways to incorporate the use of Qutenza, a topical treatment for painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy of the feet, into practice. Tune in to hear Dr. David M. Simpson, Dr. Jon T. Gertken, and Ms. Stephanie Simon share their best practices for administering Qutenza as well as the management of painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy of the feet. QUTENZA® is a registered trademark of Averitas Pharma, Inc.© 2021 Averitas Pharma, Inc. All rights reserved.M-QZA-US-01-21-0065 June 2021
Guest: David M. Simpson, MD Guest: Jon T. Gertken, MD Guest: Stephanie Simon, NP Find the full Prescribing Information here. There are multiple ways to incorporate the use of Qutenza, a topical treatment for painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy of the feet, into practice. Tune in to hear Dr. David M. Simpson, Dr. Jon T. Gertken, and Ms. Stephanie Simon share their best practices for administering Qutenza as well as the management of painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy of the feet. QUTENZA® is a registered trademark of Averitas Pharma, Inc.© 2021 Averitas Pharma, Inc. All rights reserved.M-QZA-US-01-21-0065 June 2021
The Tale of Two Carriers: Symetra x Nassau Re/Imagine In July 2020, Symetra and Nassau Re/Imagine entered into a strategic partnership. Listen this episode to learn more about what brought them together, some surprising shared benefits and just how they plan to measure the impact of innovation across the company. Connect with Harry Monti:Website: https://www.symetra.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/harry-monti-b6599b1/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/Symetra/ Connect with Stephanie Simon: Website: https://www.symetra.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ssimon/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/Symetra/ Connect with Nassau Re/Imagine: Join Our Incubator Program Website: Imagine.nsre.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/nassau-reimagine Instagram: Follow Us
Derek and Maria Broaddus couldn’t have been more thrilled. In the summer of 2014, they bought their dream home in Westfield, New Jersey. But their dream home quickly turned into a nightmare when the couple received a series of unsettling anonymous letters. The letter writer knew their names. The writer knew the nicknames they gave their children. The writer alluded to secrets within the walls of the home, and referred to the Broaddus children as “young blood.” Each creepy letter was signed, “the watcher.” Then, Kristin tells us about the controversy surrounding the literary estate of Laura Ingalls Wilder. Laura Ingalls Wilder authored the Little House on the Prairie series of children’s books. She began writing them when she was in her sixties. The books brought her tremendous financial stability. When she died, her will was crystal clear. Her literary estate would go to her daughter, Rose Wilder Lane. Upon Rose’s death, the literary estate would go to the Laura Ingalls Library of Mansfield, Missouri. But that’s not what happened. And now for a note about our process. For each episode, Kristin reads a bunch of articles, then spits them back out in her very limited vocabulary. Brandi copies and pastes from the best sources on the web. And sometimes Wikipedia. (No shade, Wikipedia. We love you.) We owe a huge debt of gratitude to the real experts who covered these cases. In this episode, Kristin pulled from: “Lawsuit on the prairie: Battle pits small library against huge estate,” by Hallie Levine for the New York Post “Little library on the offensive,” by Lynda Richardson for The New York Times “Little library on the prairie in a legal tangle,” by Stephanie Simon for the Los Angeles Times “Little house on the controversy: Laura Ingalls Wilder’s name removed from book award,” by Kat Chow for NPR “Rose Wilder Lane” entry on Wikipedia “Laura Ingalls Wilder” entry on Wikipedia In this episode, Brandi pulled from: “The Haunting of a Dream House” by Reeves Wiedeman, The Cut “The Real Life Story Of The Watcher Feels Like A Stephen King Novel” by Alana Robson, TheThings.com (http://thethings.com) “'The Watcher' house is sold years after a family was terrorized with creepy letters” by Allen Kim, CNN
SPOILERS NOTE: This ep includes discussion for the whole of Season 4, up to and including MAG160.Anil hosts in this peek behind the curtain as members of the TMA production team talk about what it took to get gargantuan episode Panopticon to your ears!Thanks to this week's Patrons: Michael Spiral DESERVES Rights, Andy Loth, Daniel Williams, Heather H ,Evil Angel, Vivianne Starlight, Coney's Mom, Kay-Jay Bee, Cato, planetsandmagic, Mariada, Stephanie Simon, Melissa Ponce, Olivia Pugh, Tatyana Beck, Brittany, The Paper Librarian, Kira Apple, Lena Williams, DaniIf you would like to join them, be sure to visit www.patreon.com/rustyquillEdited this week by Nico Vettese & Alexander J Newall.Check out our merchandise at https://www.redbubble.com/people/rustyquill/collections/708982-the-magnus-archives-s1You can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast software of choice, or by visiting www.rustyquill.com/subscribePlease rate and review on your software of choice, it really helps us to spread the podcast to new listeners, so share the fear.Join our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuillDISCORD: https://discord.gg/KckTv8yEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comThe Magnus Archives is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International Licence See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Episode 35Planets and ProtagonistsCLIENT - Sales ReviewALERT - TTRPG detected, Security alertedComedic violenceEmotional abuseAlcoholismThis week's Patrons: Michael Spiral DESERVES Rights, Andy Loth, Daniel Williams, Heather H, Evil Angel, Vivianne Starlight, Coney's Mom, Kay-Jay Bee, Cato, planetsandmagic, Mariada, Stephanie Simon, Melissa Ponce, Olivia Pugh, Tatyana Beck, Brittany, The Paper Librarian, Kira Apple, Lena Williams, Dani.If you'd like to join them be sure to visit www.patreon.com/rustyquill.Created by Tim Meredith and Ben MeredithProduced by Katie SeatonExecutive Producer: Alexander J NewallPerformances:I.M.O.G.E.N: Imogen HarrisDavid 7: Ben MeredithTrexel Geistman: Tim MeredithHartro Piltz: Jenny HaufekEditing: David Devereux and Elizabeth MoffattMusic: Samuel DF JonesArtwork: Anika KhanFeatured SFX by Martineerok, dobroide, rboecker and previously credited artists via freesound.org.Subscribe using your podcast software of choice or by visiting www.rustyquill.com/subscribe and be sure to rate and review us online; it really helps us spread across the galaxy.Join our community:WEBSITE: www.rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: www.facebook.com/therustyquill/TWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: www.reddit.com/r/RustyQuill/DISCORD: https://discord.gg/KckTv8yEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comStellar Firma is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International Licence. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Join Alex, Bryn, Lydia, Helen, and special guest Frank Voss as they continue their adventures in Apocalypse World!This week things get dirty. Sundown regrets clearing their schedule, Torque continues their enemies-to-friends-to-lovers-slowburn, Grandma runs into trouble much to Grubbs's distress.Thanks to this week's Patrons:Michael Spiral DESERVES Rights, Andy Loth, Daniel Williams, Heather H ,Evil Angel, Vivianne Starlight, Coney's Mom, Kay-Jay Bee, Cato, planetsandmagic, Mariada, Stephanie Simon, Melissa Ponce, Olivia Pugh, Tatyana Beck, Brittany, The Paper Librarian, Kira Apple, Lena Williams, DaniIf you'd like to join them visit www.patreon.com/rustyquillEditing this week by Lowri Ann Davies, Tessa Vroom & Alexander J NewallSFX this week by JustinBW, bruce965, crcavol, nofeedbak, InspectorJ, kyles, vosarrian, WolffVisuals, MadamVicious, juansua990, skradz, KarlSalamander, kentspublicdomain, ReadeOnly, EFlexMusic, uagadugu, bibow, Hawkeye_Sprout, Breviceps, ZyryTSounds, CGEffex, rdaly95, Ijudman, mustardmuffin, Rodincoil, lucasduff and previously credited artists via Freesound.orgJoin our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuillDISCORD: https://discord.gg/KckTv8yEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comRusty Quill Gaming is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share alike 4.0 International Licence. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The twenty-seventh episode of Regularly Scheduled Programming! Guests: Marielle O'Malley (Improv Asylum's NXT, My Dinosaur Life) and Stephanie Simon (Improv Asylum's House Teams and Lit Night, My Dinosaur Life)
In this month's installment of The Albany Made Podcast, we begin with Stephanie Simon speaking to our Executive Director Scott Jarzombek about some highlights from 2018, as well as a look at what is coming for our patrons in 2019. In part 2 Tor Loney speaks with Dr. Alice Green and Mia Nilo from The Center for Law & Justice about community activism and community journalism.
We've transitioned! The 115th Congress is finally over and the 116th has begun. In this episode, get the details on the last acts of the 115th Congress, including the play by play of the shutdown drama, and learn about the new rules written by Democrats that will govern the 116th House of Representatives. Please Support Congressional Dish – Quick Links Click here to contribute monthly or a lump sum via PayPal Click here to support Congressional Dish for each episode via Patreon Send Zelle payments to: Donation@congressionaldish.com Send Venmo payments to: @Jennifer-Briney Send Cash App payments to: $CongressionalDish or Donation@congressionaldish.com Use your bank's online bill pay function to mail contributions to: 5753 Hwy 85 North, Number 4576, Crestview, FL 32536 Please make checks payable to Congressional Dish Thank you for supporting truly independent media! Recommended Congressional Dish Episodes CD186: National Endowment for Democracy House Rules 116th Congress House Rules Resolution Sec. 102(b): Gives delegates and resident commissioners (the representatives of D.C. and the territories) the ability to vote in Congress, but only if they are not casting the deciding vote. If they are the deciding votes, the vote will be re-taken. Sec. 102(f): Renames the following committees “Committee on Oversight and Government Reform” will be the “Committee on Oversight and Reform” “Committee on Education and the Workforce” will be the “Committee on Education and Labor” Sec. 102(i): The chairmen of the oversight committees need to create and submit their oversight plans to the Committee on Oversight and Reform by March 1, 2019, and then coordinate those plans with other committees for submission to the full House by April 15, 2019. Sec. 102(m): Removes the term limit of four out of six consecutive Congresses for members of the Committee on the Budget and removes the term limit for Chairmen of any committee barring them from serving as Chairman for more than three consecutive Congresses. Sec. 102(n): Changes the 3 day rule for mark-up notices to clarify that it means 3 calendar days excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays. Sec. 102(q): Criminal trial evidence and transcripts will be used as evidence in House ethics investigations Sec. 102(r): Between March 1 of the first year and September 30 of the second year of the Congress, the sponsor of a bill with 290 co-sponsors can put their bill on the calendar where it will remain until it is either reported by committee or voted on in the full House. Sec. 102(z): Text of bills must be available for "72 hours” Sec. 102(dd): Removes the requirement for a supermajority vote to increase taxes Sec. 102(ee): PAYGO procedures for the 116th Sec. 101(ii): Starting on January 1, 2020, members of the House of Representatives will not be allowed to “serve as an officer or director of any public company” Sec. 102(jj): A suspension of the debt ceiling will be automatically included and passed along with the budget resolution. Sec. 103(d): Registered lobbyists will not be granted access to the Congressional gym Sec. 103(h): Limited the Committee on Agriculture to six subcommittees and the Committee on Financial Services to seven subcommittees Sec. 103(i): No bill can get a vote on the House floor unless it has been passed by a committee. Excepts include continuing resolutions and emergency bills. Sec. 103(r): Requires members of the House to pay for discrimination settlements for offenses they personally committed Sec. 104(a): Creates a commission called the House Democracy Partnership, which will be funded with $52,000 available between January 3, 2019 and March 31, 2019. The commission will be managed but the Committee on Foreign Affairs. Sec. 104(d): Creates an Office of Diversity and Inclusion Sec. 104(e): Creates an Office of the Whistleblower Ombudsman Sec. 104(f): Creates a Select Committee on the Climate Crisis, which will have 15 members, 6 appointed by the Minority Leader, and which will have no power to create or change legislation and will not have subpoena power. “The sole authority of the Select Committee shall be to investigate, study, make findings, and develop recommendations on policies, strategies, and innovations to achieve substantial and permanent reductions in pollution and other activities that contribute to the climate crisis.” Sec. 201: Creates a Committee on the Modernization of Congress Sec. 301: Authorizes the Speaker of the House to use the General Counsel of the House of Representatives to defend the Affordable Are Act in Federal court. Bills/Laws S.2736 (115th): Asia Reassurance Initiative Act of 2018 Law Text Became law on New Year's Eve 2018 H.R.695 - Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2018 Law Text S.2322 - CURD Act Law Text Final Vote Results: 230-162 H.R.6061 - Secure Fence Act of 2006 Vote Summary Public Law 109-13 - Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense, the Global War on Terror, and Tsunami Relief, 2005 Additional Reading Tweet: Eric Blake on the Government Shutdown, Jan 9, 2019. Article: FDA says most food inspections halted amid shutdown by Eminy Birnbaum, The Hill, January 9, 2019. Article: White House to put Medicare cuts on hold during shutdown by Paul M. Krawszak, Roll Call, January 8, 2019. Article: Over 100 affordable housing contracts expire due to shutdown by John Bowden, The Hill, January 8, 2019. Article: Indian Health Service urban programs threatened by government shutdown by Susannah Luthi, Modern Healthcare, January 7, 2019. Article: House Democrats pass government funding bills, Pelosi jokes she'd give Trump $1 for a wall by Lindsey McPherson, Roll Call, January 2, 2019. Report: New house rules for Puerto Rico Resident Commissioner, Puerto Rico Report, January 2, 2019. Tweet: House Rules tweet to Rachel Maddow segment on CURD Act, December 21, 2018. Article: Republicans are preventing their tax bill from triggering a $25 billion cut to Medicare by Tara Golshan, Vox, December 21, 2017. Report: Southwest border security: Additional actions needed to better assess fencing's ontributions to operations and provide guidance for identifying capability gaps, U.S. Government Accountability Office, February 16, 2017. Article: Border wall breached 9,000 times. Does it even work? by Scott Bronstein, Curt Devin and Drew Griffin, CNN Politics, February 16, 2017. Report: Barriers along the U.S. borders: Key authorities and requirements by Michael John Garcia, Congressional Research Service, January 27, 2017. Article: Trump says they were going to build a wall in '06, but environmental rules got in the way by Miriam Valverde, Politifact, August 29, 2016. Article: Border-fence project hits a snag by Stephanie Simon, The Wall Street Journal, February 4, 2009. Article: Government issues waiver for fencing along border by Randal C. Archibold, The New York Times, April 2, 2008. Report: With Senate vote, Congress passes border fence bill by Jonathan Weisman, The Washington Post, September 30, 2006. Sound Clip Sources Video: Call Your Representative and Tell Them to Vote Against PAYGO NOW! The Majority Report with Sam Seder, YouTube, January 8, 2019. Rep. Ro Khanna: “People hear the word PAYGO, they tune out. They think it’s some inside baseball technical jargon related to Congress. Let me tell you: It is a very important issue. It would be unilateral disarmament for House Democrats to adopt PAYGO. The Republicans never did. They passed massive tax cuts for the 1% and they didn’t have any spending cuts to pay for those tax cuts. They never do.” Rep. Ro Khanna: "Now that House Democrats are in charge, some folks want us to limit our policies by adopting PAYGO. Here’s what it would mean: If we have PAYGO, then to do something like Medicare for All, to do something like expanding social security, to do something like a bold infrastructure plan or a Green New Deal would require us to negotiate against ourselves. We would require cuts in programs that many of us value and like. We shouldn’t do that. The Republicans didn’t govern that way.” Rep. Ro Khanna: “Paygo would be a terrible policy" House Session: Consideration of Rules for New Congress, Part 3, House of Representatives, January 3, 2019. Hearing: Rules Committee Hearing S. 2322, House of Representatives,YouTube, December 21, 2018. News Story: Rep. Jordan: We have to fund Trump's border wall now, Fox Business Network, December 18, 2018. Resources Congress.gov: Appropriations for FY 2019 Congressional Record: December 21, 2018 Obama White House Archives: The Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act of 2010: A Description Roll Call: [A Congressional Glossary Continuing Resolution Emergency Spending Sequester Vote Results: Child Protection Improvements Act of 2017, December 20, 2018. Community Suggestions See Community Suggestions HERE. Cover Art Design by Only Child Imaginations Music Presented in This Episode Intro & Exit: Tired of Being Lied To by David Ippolito (found on Music Alley by mevio)
The first episode of Regularly Scheduled Programming! Guest: Stephanie Simon (Improv Asylum's House Teams: American Cheese, Trash Birds, My Dinosaur Life)
Austin, Texas is known as the fastest growing city for tech startups and entrepreneurs filled with coworking spaces and tons of events such as South by Southwest. Chiang Mai is known for its fast growing digital nomad scene and low costs of living for bootstrapping entrepreneurs. Taylor West and Stephanie Simon recently moved from Austin to Chiang Mai and went from working for startups to freelancing as copywriters. In this episode we talk about the pros and cons of living in Austin and Chiang Mai and what place is better for startups as well as digital nomads. TaylorWest.meTaylorMetric.comStephanie.n.Simon01@gmail.com JohnnyFD.com Johnny's Guide to Chiang Mai
Security Dialogue podcast with Marieke de Goede and Stephanie Simon, guest editors of the special issue on ‘Preemption, practice, politics’, October 2014, vol 45 (5). Hosted by Claudia Aradau. The podcast discusses the main themes of the special issue and some of the key points that the contributors brings to our understanding of the politics of preemption and security almost 15 years after 9/11. Find out more by listening to this podcast. Read the introductory article to the special issue, co-authored by Marieke de Goede, Stephanie Simon, and Marijn Hoijtink.
The Improv Saved My Life Episode #64 (Norm Laviolette Co-Owner of Improv Asylum and Laugh Boston) In this episode Tom is joined by Norm Laviolette (Co-Owner of Improv Asylum and Laugh Boston) and co hosts, Bill Fryer (Improv Asylum House Teams, “BusCow”) and Stephanie Simon (“My Dinosaur Life”). A truly inspirational episode that is a MUST listen. Topics discusses include Norm’s background including his years racing motorcycles, confidence, mitigating and taking risks, improv, the formation and history of Improv Asylum, changing casts and a ton of other topics. Check out Norm’s businesses Improv Asylum (ww.improvasylum.com) and Laugh Boston (www.laughboston.com) Check out Bill, Tom and My DinoSaur Life perform at The Riot Theater in JP this Saturday, 2/14 (Valentine’s Day) at 8:00pm at “I Choo-Choo-Choose You! A Valentine’s Day Improv Extravaganza”. Get Tickets Here: http://www.theriottheater.com/i-choo-choo-choose-you.html Do me a favor and subscribe and rate "The Improv Saved My Life Podcast” on iTunes at this link https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/b.i.t.s-boston-improv-talk/id786818514?mt=2 Help Suffolk University's improv team "Seriously Bent", winners of this year's New England Regional College Improv Tournament go to Chicago to compete for the College National Title by supporting their GOFUNDME page. Every bit helps! http://www.gofundme.com/irvwdg
The Improv Saved My Life Podcast Episode #55 (Jasmin Rae Hagen & Stephanie Simon) In this episode, Tom is joined by 2 recent graduates of the Improv Asylum Training Center, Jasmin Rae Hagen & Stephanie Simon. Topics discussed include Jasmin and Stephanie’s improv careers, sketch writing, stand up and & various creative ventures. This week’s edition of “The Made Up Movie Game” features “Assassin” a John Mayer inspired movie about two Oklahoma beauticians and the suspicious customer who comes into their popular salon. Should you check out this episode? Yes, and… also check out Jasmin and Tom’s Improv Group “Robot Arms" at “What Else Ya Gonna Do Wednesday?” at Maggy’s Lounge in Quincy on 12/17. Also check out Stephanie’s awesome written work at Splitsider here: http://splitsider.com/user/88799/stephanie-simon/ and her wordpress blog here: http://stephaniesimon287.wordpress.com Do me a favor and subscribe and rate "The Improv Saved My Life Podcast” on iTunes at this link https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/b.i.t.s-boston-improv-talk/id786818514?mt=2
Union Power on the Ballot; SF News Stations Report on Chinatown Rant; News Stories that Bury the Lead; Marshall's News; The Ebola Czar; Final Thoughts