POPULARITY
GDP Script/ Top Stories for May 27th Publish Date: May 27th From The BG AD Group Studio, Welcome to the Gwinnett Daily Post Podcast. Today is Tuesday, May 27th and Happy Birthday to Stevie Knicks I’m Peyton Spurlock and here are your top stories presented by KIA Mall of Georgia Dacula middle schooler back to ballet and school after heart transplant New principals named for Lovin Elementary, Richards Middle Two Juveniles Charged With Felony Murder In May 15 Shooting Of Lilburn Teen All of this and more is coming up on the Gwinnett Daily Post podcast, and if you are looking for community news, we encourage you to listen daily and subscribe! Break 1: Kia MOG (07.14.22 KIA MOG) STORY 1: Dacula middle schooler back to ballet and school after heart transplant Gracelyn “Gracie” Miller, a 7th grader from Dacula, underwent a life-saving heart transplant in February after being diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy. Just 24 hours after being listed for a transplant, a new heart became available, and her surgery at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta was a success. Gracie quickly recovered, returning home in 10 days and resuming school, ballet, and her favorite activities. This summer, she looks forward to swimming, seeing friends, and attending CHOA’s Camp Braveheart for transplant recipients. Gracie embraces her journey, saying her scar symbolizes her second chance at life. STORY 2: New principals named for Lovin Elementary, Richards Middle Lovin Elementary and Richards Middle School in Gwinnett County are welcoming new principals this summer. Bridgett S. Brown, with 19 years in Gwinnett County Public Schools, will lead Lovin Elementary, replacing Kevin Payne. Brown has served as a teacher and assistant principal, most recently at Lawrenceville Elementary. Felisha E. Witcher-Caldwell, with 17 years at Richards Middle, will take over as principal following Mark McCain's retirement. She has progressed from teacher to assistant principal at Richards since 2008. Both bring extensive experience and dedication to their new roles. STORY 3: Two Juveniles Charged With Felony Murder In May 15 Shooting Of Lilburn Teen A 17-year-old from Lilburn, Andrew Gatlin, was killed, and two others were injured in a May 15 shooting in unincorporated Norcross. Police said the incident occurred after a disagreement led to gunfire on Pirkle Road. Gatlin succumbed to his injuries at a hospital, while the other two individuals sustained non-life-threatening injuries. Two juveniles are charged with felony murder, aggravated assault, and firearm possession. The investigation is ongoing, and police urge anyone with information to contact detectives or Crime Stoppers for anonymous tips and potential rewards. We have opportunities for sponsors to get great engagement on these shows. Call 770.874.3200 for more info. We’ll be right back Break 2: Ingles Markets 2 STORY 4: Family Pets Killed As Fire Displaces Family of 5 In Dacula A Dacula family of five was displaced after a fire destroyed their home on Friday morning, claiming the lives of several pets. Firefighters responded quickly to the blaze, which started on the back deck and spread to the attic and second floor. The fire was controlled within 25 minutes, but structural collapse concerns required demolition equipment. No injuries were reported, as the family was not home at the time. The fire was deemed accidental, caused by discarded smoking materials. The family is staying with relatives and declined Red Cross assistance. STORY 5: Johns Creek Business Helps Duluth's Rainbow Village With A 'Fresh Coat' Isabel Calero, a Johns Creek resident with a corporate background, co-founded Fresh Coat Painters of Johns Creek with her husband Diego Berto three years ago. The business, serving multiple metro Atlanta areas, also focuses on community service through its Fresh Coat Cares initiative. Recently, they partnered with Duluth-based Rainbow Village, a nonprofit aiding families to avoid homelessness, to repaint 30 apartment doors in Sherwin Williams’ Positive Red. Calero emphasized the joy of giving back and strengthening community ties, with plans for future collaborations with Rainbow Village and other nonprofits. Break: STORY 6: FULL RIDE: 30 GCPS Graduates Earn QuestBridge Scholarship Thirty Gwinnett County Public Schools seniors have been awarded QuestBridge National College Match scholarships, covering their entire college education. QuestBridge, a nonprofit connecting high-achieving, low-income students with top colleges, guarantees full four-year scholarships through early admission to its 48 partner institutions. These colleges provide financial aid covering 100% of demonstrated need, ensuring affordability for recipients. STORY 7: Mill Creek Promotes Sam Meers to Head Boys Soccer Coach Mill Creek has promoted Sam Meers to head boys soccer coach for the 2025-26 school year, following Stephen George’s departure for a club soccer role. Meers, an assistant coach since 2018, has been integral to the program’s success, including a Final Four run in 2025. A former goalkeeper, Meers brings experience as a varsity assistant, JV coach, and goalkeepers coach. He’s excited to build on the program’s culture and success with a young, dedicated roster. Joining him is veteran coach Mike Burrell, adding experience to the staff. Meers aims to continue competing for region titles and playoff success. Break 4: Signoff – Thanks again for hanging out with us on today’s Gwinnett Daily Post Podcast. If you enjoy these shows, we encourage you to check out our other offerings, like the Cherokee Tribune Ledger Podcast, the Marietta Daily Journal, or the Community Podcast for Rockdale Newton and Morgan Counties. Read more about all our stories and get other great content at www.gwinnettdailypost.com Did you know over 50% of Americans listen to podcasts weekly? Giving you important news about our community and telling great stories are what we do. Make sure you join us for our next episode and be sure to share this podcast on social media with your friends and family. Add us to your Alexa Flash Briefing or your Google Home Briefing and be sure to like, follow, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Produced by the BG Podcast Network Show Sponsors: www.ingles-markets.com www.kiamallofga.com #NewsPodcast #CurrentEvents #TopHeadlines #BreakingNews #PodcastDiscussion #PodcastNews #InDepthAnalysis #NewsAnalysis #PodcastTrending #WorldNews #LocalNews #GlobalNews #PodcastInsights #NewsBrief #PodcastUpdate #NewsRoundup #WeeklyNews #DailyNews #PodcastInterviews #HotTopics #PodcastOpinions #InvestigativeJournalism #BehindTheHeadlines #PodcastMedia #NewsStories #PodcastReports #JournalismMatters #PodcastPerspectives #NewsCommentary #PodcastListeners #NewsPodcastCommunity #NewsSource #PodcastCuration #WorldAffairs #PodcastUpdates #AudioNews #PodcastJournalism #EmergingStories #NewsFlash #PodcastConversations See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Our wacko of the week is former Celsius energy drink VP, Stephen George, who got nailed for fraud. What stupid decision was his downfall? What did Lady Justice have in store for him? What rapper was Ben rubbing elbows with? Travis Kelce spotted in Boca, Diddy's trial is imminent, and more! Our Bougie Bible picks include a hair savior and a holy healing herb.Contact:info@crazyrighbeighbors.com239-300-7276Crazyrighneighbors.comYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@CRNPodcastRate us ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ on Apple & SpotifyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/crazy-rich-neighbors--5053120/support.
Throughout the late 80s and early 90s, Ministry were one of the most terrifyingly aggressive industrial acts around. But in 1983 Al Jourgensen introduced himself to the masses - and this week's guest, producer/musician Dave Trumfio (Chicago's Pulsars) - with the decidedly New Wave 'With Sympathy'. This is NOT your grandma's Ministry, unless your grandma is a moody goth kid singing snappy little synth-pop tunes in a faux-British accent. Enjoy! Songs discussed in this episode: Revenge (VJ Rob Edge Mix) - Ministry; Submission Song, Tunnel Song, Suffocation - The Pulsars; Burning Inside, Just Like You, Effigy (I'm Not An) - Ministry; Body Bag - Effigies; Going For Adds - Moving Units; Revenge - Ministry; My Spine Is The Bassline - Shriekback; I Wanted To Tell Her - Ministry; Money Is Not Our God - Killing Joke; Work For Love, Every Day Is Halloween - Ministry; Just Like Honey - The Jesus and Mary Chain; Here We Go, What He Say, Say You're Sorry, I Should Have Known Better, I'm Falling, She's Got A Cause - Ministry; It's Not Right - DEVO; Das Lifeboat - The Pulsars
For this week's @EchoChamberFP https://www.instagram.com/echochamberfp/ we're bringing you a 'TWO Parter'!!! In 'Part ONE' we have two from Netflix, a rom-com via Jupiter Peak Productions, Meraki Films, and a documentary from All Rise Films, Library Films & XYZ Films. Also two from Jerry Bruckheimer Films an actioner from Black Bear, C2 Motion Picture Group, Media Capital Technologies & Lionsgate, and a drama via Walt Disney Pictures. THEN we have a faith based tale from MSI Films, Redbird Entertainment, Integrity Releasing & Vision Films! In 'Part One' we have: The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare Watch Review: Here. https://youtu.be/anKtRUoPomM New York, World Premiere: 13th April 2024 US Theatrical Release Date: 19th April 2024 US Digital Release Date: 10th May 2024 UK Digital Release Date: 25th July 2024 Director: Guy Ritchie Cast: Henry Cavill, Alan Ritchson, Alex Pettyfer, Eiza González, Babs Olusanmokun, Cary Elwes, Hero Fiennes Tiffin, Henry Golding, Rory Kinnear, Til Schweiger, Freddie Fox, Henrique Zaga, Danny Sapani Running Time: 120 min Cert: 15 Trailer: Here. https://youtu.be/zvwDen1Wrx8?si=fn64iOkl1zW0qW16 Website: Here. https://www.lionsgate.com/movies/the-ministry-of-ungentlemanly-warfare#buy ---------------- Young Woman and The Sea Watch Review: Here. https://youtu.be/GGZYPMB0MnI Roosevelt Hotel, Hollywood, World Premiere: 16th May 2024 Theatrical Release Date: 31st May 2024 Digital Release Date: 19th July 2024 Director: Joachim Rønning Cast: Daisy Ridley, Olive Abercrombie, Tilda Cobham-Hervey, Lilly Aspell, Kim Bodnia, Jeanette Hain, Glenn Fleshler, Sian Clifford, Christopher Eccleston, Stephen Graham, Alex Hassell, Alexander Karim, Sebastian Griegel, Doc Butler, Yordan Angelov, Robert Eades, Hyoie O'Grady, Devina Vassileva, Tessa Bonham Jones, Vanina Yordanova, Saskia Marguerite Running Time: 129 min Cert: 15 Trailer: Here. https://youtu.be/7tNvrYzPUrk?si=NaEYDnfiJFgFx29I ---------------- Find Me Falling Watch Review: Here. https://youtu.be/fXZGo6BFhVg Digital Release Date: 19th July 2024 Director: Stelana Kliris Cast: Harry Connick Jr, Agni Scott, Ali Fumiko Whitney, Tony Demetriou, Angeliki Philippidou, Lea Maleni, Athina Roditou, Clarence Smith Running Time: 94 min Cert: 15 Trailer: Here. https://youtu.be/56DuFZX9cuE?si=spDI-tyG-kqUeyxa Website: Here. https://www.netflix.com/tudum/articles/find-me-falling-harry-connick-jr-release-date-news-photos ---------------- Skywalkers: A Love Story Watch Review: Here. https://youtu.be/7mZbSy77awM Sundance Film Festival, World Premiere: 18th January 2024 Digital Release Date: 19th July 2024 Director: Jeff Zimbalist, Maria Bukhonina Cast: Ivan Beerkus, Angela Nikolau Running Time: 100 min Cert: 18 Trailer: Here. https://youtu.be/8jA1KpESAqk?si=oPqR_hUc93KWdnbm Website: Here. https://www.netflix.com/tudum/articles/skywalkers-a-love-story-release-date-trailer-news ---------------- For Prophet Watch Review: Here. https://youtu.be/VM76kCATKHU Theatrical Release Date: 21st June 2024 Digital Release Date: 26th June 2024 Director: Mark Stewart Iverson Cast: Ben Marten, Valentina Garcia, Enrico Natale, T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh, Bert Belasco, Eddie Jemison, Stephanie Wohar, Dennis Florine, Tom McElroy, Mike Saad, Jeanne T. Arrigo, Jose Santiago, Molly Southgate, Alexa Maria Huerta, Jamison Lingle, Stephen George, William C. Thompson Running Time: 83 min Cert: 15 Trailer: Here. https://youtu.be/yCibD0Atbww?si=7OypdSA7AYBwHu7Q Website: Here. https://forprophetfilm.com/ ---------------- *(Music) 'Da Joint' (Instrumental) by EPMD - 2020
Dr. Zac Morgan // #ClinicalTuesday // www.ptonice.com In today's episode of the PT on ICE Daily Show, Spine Division Leader Zac Morgan discusses the gap between social media and actual clinical practice, seeking real mentorship from real clinicians treating in the clinic instead of social media influencers, and the importance of having a healthy sense of humility regarding manual therapy treatments. Take a listen or check out our full show notes on our blog at www.ptonice.com/blog. If you're looking to learn more about our Lumbar Spine Management course, our Cervical Spine Management course, or our online physical therapy courses, check our entire list of continuing education courses for physical therapy including our physical therapy certifications by checking out our website. Don't forget about all of our FREE eBooks, prebuilt workshops, free CEUs, and other physical therapy continuing education on our Resources tab. EPISODE TRANSCRIPTION INTRODUCTIONHey everyone, Alan here, Chief Operating Officer here at ICE. Before we get into today's episode, I'd like to introduce our sponsor, Jane, a clinic management software and EMR with a human touch. Whether you're switching your software or going paperless for the first time ever, the Jane team knows that the onboarding process can feel a little overwhelming. That's why with Jane, you don't just get software, you get a whole team. Including in every Jane subscription is their new award-winning customer support available by phone, email, or chat whenever you need it, even on Saturdays. You can also book a free account setup consultation to review your account and ensure that you feel confident about going live with your switch. And if you'd like some extra advice along the way, you can tap into a lovely community of practitioners, clinic owners, and front desk staff through Jane's community Facebook group. If you're interested in making the switch to Jane, head on over to jane.app.switch to book a one-on-one demo with a member of Jane's support team. Don't forget to mention code IcePT1MO at the time of sign up for a one month free grace period on your new Jane account. ZAC MORGANGood morning, PT on Ice Daily Show. I'm Dr. Zac Morgan, lead faculty here with the cervical and lumbar spine management, teaching both of those courses on the weekends. And if you have not had those courses, both of them involve a decent amount of manual therapy. So we enjoy kind of teaching manual therapy, doing manual therapy on one another those weekends and kind of reframing how you might frame that manual therapy intervention with your clients. in the hopes of maybe creating a little less dependence on manual therapy and instead a lot of independence in our patients and kind of pushing them towards a more fitness-forward lifestyle. For those of you that have been to the courses, you know that's a big deal to us here at ICE and we love doing that. And this morning's podcast is titled Manual Therapy Misconceptions because I think this is definitely an area in the manual therapy world, physical therapy specifically, where I see a lot of disconnect between what happens in the clinic and then what happens on social media. So I want to start out by talking about over the last several years of spending a lot of time on the weekend, you know, teaching manual therapy techniques, fielding questions in those settings, as well as spending a lot of time in the clinic treating a lot of clients with acute back pain, with acute neck pain, with persistent back pain, with persistent neck pain. I see a lot of misconceptions and at our clinic we spend a lot of time training younger clinicians and bringing through students and then also on the weekends working with a lot of seasoned clinicians And I just see that social media has had an influence on our profession's willingness to use manual therapy and our understanding of everything. And so I think that's what today's podcast is about, is sort of how that has been influenced and maybe just reframing some of our thoughts around it. THE GAP BETWEEN SOCIAL MEDIA & REAL CLINICAL PRACTICE There's one thing that's for sure. If you spend a lot of time on social media and specifically follow a lot of the conversation that happens in our profession, you'll see a huge gap between what a lot of people say out there on social media and what actually clients want and what drives people to seek out physical therapy. So there's a huge gap there. And that's where I want to kind of start is with the social media conundrum. Obviously, social media platforms have become such a popular way for us to get new clients, for us to educate the public, and for us to educate one another within the profession. But there is a conundrum here. And the conundrum is that all of the platforms, really regardless of which one you spend time on, they are built specifically for the reason to drive engagement. The goal of those apps is to keep you on them for longer. That's why they exist. So within that, the content that typically keeps people's eyes on it for longer is generally framed more contrarian or more negative, that tends to drive engagement more frequently. So if you post something negative or if you point out something negative, often you will see a lot more engagement, a lot more comments, a lot more likes, a lot more just overall view of that content. And I think that this can cause a lot of issues in clinicians and has caused a lot of issues and I've seen it firsthand and that's a huge issue in our profession. So I kind of want to talk a little bit about those issues specifically and then what we might do to sort of reconcile them. SOCIAL MEDIA DRIVES CLINICAL CONFUSION So the biggest issues that I see and this is really regardless of whether it's a younger clinician or somebody who's a little bit more of a seasoned veteran What we see is when people spend a lot of time kind of intaking some of that negative information from social media, it drives a lot of clinical confusion. People are confused about what they should do with their patients. It drives ethical challenges. Some of these posts call into question how ethical manual therapy is, and it makes people feel like maybe it's a little unethical for us to be doing hands-on care. And they definitely often drive further away from expert opinion. So when I say expert opinion, I mean things like our clinical practice guidelines. So you think about what that is, like how those are formed, and it's really the foremost experts in our profession getting together, synthesizing all the data that exists, synthesizing clinical experience as well, and then making evidence-based recommendations. To get a clinical practice guideline published, it requires a lot of work, a lot of experts to communicate with one another and develop expert opinion. And here's what we think. This is a grade of A, this is a grade of B, and so on. To get a social media post out requires nothing other than an internet connection and a device that can do it. sometimes we're reading these opinions from non-experts and those non-experts could wind up being very loud and have a large platform and that doesn't always equate to someone that actually spends a lot of time in the clinic. So I think this is where some of that confusion can come into our practice, whether again, whether you're a younger clinician or someone that's more seasoned, it's kind of who we're choosing to listen to because of who's the loudest on social media and that being where we get most of our information. "MANUAL THERAPY DOESN'T WORK" So the narrative specifically, the misconception specifically that I'm addressing in today's episode is this manual therapy doesn't work narrative. So a lot of people have that feeling that manual therapy doesn't work and there are certainly studies that have challenged the efficacy of manual therapy and you see those studies get talked about a lot on social media again because they're negative and they drive engagement. But that narrative is one that I have heard often be challenged either on the weekend or in the clinic where people are just confused about whether or not manual therapy works. And that's a huge disconnect between clinicians that you talk to that do treat a lot of these issues. Those clinicians typically feel strongly that it does work and again our experts If you look in the clinical practice guidelines for back pain, for instance, you're going to see that really regardless of the presentation, there's some expert opinion that we should use manual therapy, that it should be used almost regardless of acuity or stage. Manual therapy might be something that should be included in back pain. And that's not just profession-specific. A lot of clinical practice guidelines make those suggestions, but ours certainly do. The updated ones from 2021 from Stephen George and colleagues make a lot of recommendations surrounding manual therapy. So I think that disconnect is driving a lot of clinical confusion for us. The reason this podcast kind of came up in my head, the topic, really came to me when I was looking through the recent JOSPT and there was a systematic review from, forgive me if I butcher the name here, but I think it's Ruzick et al, and this was just a couple of weeks ago that this one was published. You might have seen it in Hump Day Hustling, our newsletter. But essentially, it was a systematic review. It was done over at Bellin College. So the DSC program and the fellowship there at Bellin went in and they did a systematic review, kind of analyzing the literature, looking at manual therapy for low back pain. The question they were trying to answer was, are the methods in these manual therapy studies, the way they're described, are they repeatable? So in other words, if you read these studies, and you're an independent researcher outside of the group that just did that study, could you read through that and then actually replicate the findings? And the way they were looking at that is, are the methods described well enough for us to replicate the interventions? The answer was no. There was poor reporting in manual therapy intervention studies, and that limits the reproducibility of those findings. This is a big issue because one of the major tenets of science is that it needs to be replicable. You need to be able to check your work. If you're not able to do that, I would call into question whether or not it actually is science. At the end of the day, science has to be described well enough that an independent researcher could then come in and replicate the interventions to see if they can replicate the findings. If you then get a lot of data pointing in one direction, we start to say, you know what, I think there's some merit here. But if the methods aren't described well enough that we could even replicate them, you have to call into question whether or not that's actually science. And I guess my point here is a lot of these conclusions that are drawn on social media posts are of an independent study where maybe the methods aren't even described well enough to where you could apply them to the clinical cases you're seeing. And so we're drawing a huge conclusion that manual therapy doesn't work Meanwhile, the studies aren't even replicable. I think this is a massive issue. There's a huge disconnect there. And so I don't just want to point out the issue, I also want to talk to you briefly about what we might could do going forward, given that the studies don't guide us that well, given that they're not super replicable, and given that we can't draw those big conclusions off of non-replicable studies. And so let's address those problems. CLEAR UP CLINICAL CONFUSION WITH ACTUAL MENTORSHIP I think that the confusion here can be sured up by seeking mentorship. expert opinion and just time around expert practitioners. So what you will find often when you're actually seeing those people treat in the clinic, when you're working alongside of those people, is they're not confused about whether or not manual therapy works. They often have some type of a framework that they're bringing forward to the patient and they feel confident that they can often help patients because of their skill set. So I think we, as a profession, need to lean more on the empirical side of the scenario, given that our data is a bit confounded by lack of replicability. So what I mean by empirical is things you can witness, things you can see. The test-retest model, actually spending time around clinicians that utilize that and frame it positively for patients. That's what I think we should be seeking out as our evidence-based practice right now, because I think a lot of our actual evidence is challenging. That is the short-term solution. In the short-term, I would suggest if you're a younger clinician or a seasoned clinician who has some disconnects surrounding manual therapy, seek out mentors that have an understanding of manual therapy, who see a lot of back pain, who have busy schedules, busy caseloads full of patients with back pain looking to get better and see how they handle those scenarios. I think that is a much better route than seeing social media posts and drawing a huge conclusion from those posts. Meanwhile, the evidence that they're analyzing isn't that great. RESEARCH METHODS MUST IMPROVE The second thing would be a more long-term solution, and this is more speaking to the research going forward. We have to improve the methodology. That's what that systematic review from JOSPT That's what they suggested, and I couldn't agree more. In the future, our methodology has to improve. We have to get better at describing our techniques so that we can, over time, whittle down what is the most effective. But the problem is, that doesn't help you today. When you go see that patient that comes to see you with five days of low back pain, and they're really looking to feel better quickly, and they're starting to lose a lot of functional capacity because they're not doing much, because their back hurts so much, and you're confused about whether or not you should use manual therapy, long-term improvement of methods won't help you. You need to fix the short-term problem and get some understanding by spending time around clinicians that are used to seeing that and that can help you move that patient forward. And again, our practice guidelines are pretty clear here. they make a lot of suggestions surrounding utilizing manual therapy. And most of my colleagues that also treat a lot of back pain, that's basically my whole caseload is back pain and neck pain, occasionally shoulders, hips, knees, but a ton of back pain and neck pain. and I utilize a lot of manual therapy. And I don't feel bad about that. I feel like framed in the right way, it's so helpful to help that person reduce their concern and improve their activity. I agree that there are some ways you could frame it that might challenge someone's belief system in their body, but just don't do that. Just frame it correctly. And so that's my call to action. Seek credible mentors, contribute by pushing our profession forward with the use of these techniques that patients are going to seek out and they're going to get regardless of whether they see you or someone else. So let's be good at it so that they do seek us and then reframe the methods in future studies so that that way we can actually get good scientific data moving forward and understand what works and what doesn't. SUMMARY Team, in summary, I think a lot of clinical confusion comes down to a mismatch of understanding the quality of the information you're receiving. Social media has made it very easy to get your opinion out there, and often there will be opinions coming from folks who may or may not even be experts, who may or may not even be treating in that region, and challenging your belief system on whether or not an intervention works. And I see that confusion manifest as confused young clinicians who have a challenging time deciding whether or not they should utilize manual therapy. Spoken from someone who treats a lot of those problems and who has spent a lot of time around experts who also treat those problems, I've been very lucky to get a lot of time on board with experts. there's not that much confusion on the other side of the coin. So I think that mismatch of where you're getting the information from is huge. So my call to action is let's improve our manual therapy skill set. If that's what you're looking to do and this message is resonating with you at all, I'm going to tell you about a handful of upcoming courses because this is huge for us at ICE. This is why we don't hire people who aren't clinicians. It's really important to us that at ICE, when we bring forward a message to you, you're getting that message from people who actually are in the treatment room. They're behind the walls. actually trying to eradicate these problems over time. UPCOMING COURSES If you're looking for that in the cervical spine, May 18th and 19th, Casper, Wyoming, that one's filling up fast. So if you're in that area and you need a spot there, Casper, Wyoming only has a few seats left, make sure you jump into that. At the end of June, the 29th and 30th, will be in Kent, Washington. And then in July, the 13th and 14th, Charlotte, North Carolina. So a handful of options there for neck. If you're looking for low back, this weekend we've got two course offerings. If you want a last minute ticket, you can certainly jump into one of those. Carson City, Nevada, and then right here where I'm at in Hendersonville, Tennessee. Still seats left in both of those. And then next weekend, April 13th and 14th, near Boston in Braintree, oh I'm sorry, yeah, in Minnesota. I think I've got that down wrong. I think it's Braintree, Massachusetts and that's actually over in the Boston area. So if you're looking for either one of those and you're liking these narratives for reframing manual therapy, jump in with us. We're excited to bring forward some different ways of framing manual therapy. Thanks, that's all I've got for you team. We'd love to hear some interaction here in the comments throughout the day. Keep an eye on the thread. OUTRO Hey, thanks for tuning in to the PT on Ice daily show. If you enjoyed this content, head on over to iTunes and leave us a review, and be sure to check us out on Facebook and Instagram at the Institute of Clinical Excellence. If you're interested in getting plugged into more ice content on a weekly basis while earning CEUs from home, check out our virtual ice online mentorship program at ptonice.com. While you're there, sign up for our Hump Day Hustling newsletter for a free email every Wednesday morning with our top five research articles and social media posts that we think are worth reading. Head over to ptonice.com and scroll to the bottom of the page to sign up.
Guest Preacher - Stephen George by Church of God
Stephen George, a graduate student at the University of Nevada, Reno, David Lynch afficionado and filmmaker, talks to reporter Ariel Smith about the eccentricities of the local film scene, difficulties of promotion, and how he finds inspiration. Learn about the inner workings of a film set, the director's creative process and more on this week's episode.
We talk with prolific VO, and TV and Film actor Stephane Cornicard! Plus, a Sensible Gear Purchase (Okay Loan) from Sennheiser and our First LIVE Questionable Gear Purchase Review from a listener, Stephen George! https://www.vometer.com https://www.paulstefano.com http://www.dailyvo.com/ https://www.vocationconference.com/ http://studiobricks.com/ https://www.jmcvoiceover.com/demo-production/ https://www.voiceactorwebsites.com/ https://www.audiopub.org/ https://globalvoiceacademy.com/ https://timpaige.lpages.co/podcast-demos/ https://www.voiceoverxtra.com/ https://www.kaybess.com https://www.vocationconference.com/ https://www.jamiemuffett.com/ https://www.bobbergen.com/ http://www.debbehirata.com/ https://lotasproductions.com/ https://www.vonorth.com/events/v-o-north-2019 https://tracylindley.com/ https://www.voiceoverxtra.com/ https://www.tremosley.com/ https://www.margueritegavin.com http://www.rexanderson.net https://www.soundandfurycasting.com/ https://www.amandarosesmith.com/ https://www.jeffreykafer.com/ https://heathercosta.com/ https://audiobookboom.com/ https://freeaudiobookcodes.com/ https://www.audiobook-voice-over.com/ https://www.avenshore.com/ https://www.highgravityproductions.com/ https://www.romanceaudiobooknarrator.com/ https://www.onevoiceconference.com/ https://www.gravyforthebrain.com https://www.high-score.co.uk/ https://www.natalienaudus.com/ https://www.thedeepvoiceguy.biz/ https://www.ctctalent.com/ http://www.nataliarosminati.com/ https://nadeemkhaled.com/ https://www.marajunot.com/ https://www.ajmckaycreative.com/ https://www.castvoices.com/ http://www.judyscheer.com/ https://www.nataliehitzel.com/ https://www.americanvoicepower.com/home.php https://www.onevoiceconference.com/ https://www.vocationconference.com/ https://ultimatevosurvivor.us.launchpad6.com/TheUltimateVOSurvivor/ https://centrance.com/portcaster/ https://www.vorep.net/ http://www.ariannaratner.com/ https://www.midatlanticvo.com/ https://drdialect.com/ https://www.hillaryhuber.com/ https://www.storylight.net/ https://www.marleyaudio.com/ https://voatlanta.me/ https://en-us.sennheiser.com/ https://www.joelfroomkinaudio.com/ https://voatlanta.me/ https://www.ahabtalent.com/ https://voice123.com/ https://voice123.com/thebooth/how-to-get-into-voice-acting/?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=direct&utm_campaign=vog-revamp&utm_content=vo-meter https://voice123.com/thebooth/the-state-of-ai-voices-report/?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=direct&utm_campaign=ai-report-21&utm_content=vo-meter https://www.onevoiceconference.com/event/one-voice-conference-usa-2021/ https://www.malonezone.com/ https://www.dareevoiceover.com/ https://www.homevoiceoverstudio.com/ https://www.danlenard.com/ https://www.joannepickard.co.uk/ www.belaircreative.net https://www.anneganguzza.com/ https://www.voboss.com/ https://www.stephanienemethparker.com/ https://www.andiavoiceover.com/ https://www.gregjakegibbins.com/ https://www.noveencrumbie.com/ https://www.michelleleevo.com/ https://landonbeachbooks.com/ https://scottbrick.net/ https://twinflamesstudios.com/ https://danereidmedia.com/ https://www.georgethe.tech https://www.scottchambersvo.com/ http://www.thevoicelikechocolate.com/
Michael Owens has won the runoff election for Mableton mayor in Cobb County beating Aaron Carman. The former Marine veteran and cybersecurity executive will become Mableton's first mayor since it existed as a city between 1912 and 1916. Owens secured 56% of the vote compared to Carman's 44%. Both advanced to the runoff after no candidate received more than 50% of the vote in the first round of voting on March 21. Owens was endorsed by third- and fourth-place finishers LaTonia Long and Michael Murphy in the weeks following the first round. The low-turnout election saw just under 13% of eligible voters cast ballots.Top of Form Marietta City Schools has announced an 8.5% salary increase for district employees after completing their first review of the 2023-2024 budget. The raise includes the $2,000 for teachers approved by Gov. Brian Kemp, and the proposed budget maintains a millage rate of 17.97, which is lower than several other metro Atlanta districts. Additionally, the school board had approved hiring 40 full-time reading specialists for grades 1-5 earlier this year. The public can provide their input on the proposed budget at public hearings scheduled for June 13 and June 20, with the final budget adoption scheduled for June 20. In a Class AAAAAAA second round soccer match, Walton defeated Mill Creek 2-1 in a closely fought game. Mill Creek had led for most of the match, but two quick goals from Walton in the 69th and 71st minutes changed the course of the game. The win puts Walton through to the quarterfinals, where they will host Parkview. Walton head coach Bruce Wade was full of praise for both teams, saying that it was unfortunate that they had been matched up against each other so early in the tournament. Despite the loss, Mill Creek head coach Stephen George was proud of his team's season and what they had achieved. Voters in Cobb County, Georgia trickled into the South Cobb Regional Library on Tuesday to elect a mayor and four council members for Cobb's newest and largest city. However, some voters eligible to vote in the District 3 runoff did not have the contest on their ballot, an issue that is currently being investigated by elections officials. Although early voting last week saw 2,741 people cast their ballot in-person, as of 4:20 p.m. on Election Day, only around 1,800 people had voted. Some voters expressed concerns over the lack of information about the new city and how it will work, as well as the need for the new government to listen to its citizens. The School of Health Sciences at Georgia Highlands College recently hosted an Evidence-Based Practice Symposium, where second-year students in the Nursing and Dental Hygiene programs presented research posters focused on medical treatments and practices aimed at improving patient outcomes. Evidence-Based Practice, which involves reviewing and analyzing scientific evidence, is considered a cornerstone of clinical practice. The symposium provided an opportunity for students to share their research with peers and healthcare partners. Nursing students presented research on a variety of topics, including decreasing delirium in patients, while Dental Hygiene students presented on topics such as using virtual reality to alleviate dental anxiety. Habitat for Humanity of NW Metro Atlanta and Genuine Parts, a Cobb County-based full house sponsor, started their second home build of the year on April 15. The one-story house will be a home for single mother Artavia and her two children. After working as a Licensed Practical Nurse at Piedmont Healthcare for 15 years, Artavia is excited to move to a larger home in a neighborhood where her family can spend time outdoors, which they don't feel comfortable doing in their current apartment. Genuine Parts Company Director of Employee & Community Relations, Venitia Smith, said they engage their employees in volunteer opportunities to fulfill the company's commitment to local communities. The Georgia Supreme Court has upheld the conviction of Joseph Priester for the murder of Genaro Rojas-Martinez at a Smyrna gas station in 2017. Priester had appealed to the court after being found guilty and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Priester's lawyers argued that the trial court improperly admitted evidence that Priester had robbed someone and shot at their car the day before the murder, but the Supreme Court ruled that the evidence against Priester was strong enough to convict him without it. Priester was identified through surveillance footage, cell phone records, and possession of the car seen at the scene of the crime. #CobbCounty #Georgia #LocalNews - - - - - The Marietta Daily Journal Podcast is local news for Marietta, Kennesaw, Smyrna, and all of Cobb County. Subscribe today, so you don't miss an episode! MDJOnline Register Here for your essential digital news. https://www.chattahoocheetech.edu/ https://cuofga.org/ https://www.esogrepair.com/ https://www.drakerealty.com/ Find additional episodes of the MDJ Podcast here. This Podcast was produced and published for the Marietta Daily Journal and MDJ Online by BG Ad Group For more information be sure to visit https://www.bgpodcastnetwork.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In part two of our interview with Dr. Stephen George we discuss arranged marriages, future plans, and prayer requests.
Dr. Stephen George, president of the Asian Christian Academy, talks about the history of ACA and growing up in the ministry in part one of our interview.
This week, on the Access Hour, we bring you a Louisville Mayoral Candidate Forum Focused on the Nonprofit Sector, that was hosted online on March 29th, 2022 by the Center for Nonprofit Excellence and moderated by Louisville Public Media's Stephen George, and Rachel Platt from the Frazier History Museum. Watch full video: https://youtu.be/U0Auu0PNj58. Candidates Participating: Bill Dieruf: https://www.dierufformetromayor.com/ Timothy Findley, Jr.: https://findley4mayor.com/ Craig Greenberg: https://greenbergformayor.com/ Philip Molestina: https://philip4mayor.com/home David Nicholson: https://electnicholson.com/ Shameka Parrish-Wright: https://shamekaparrishwright.com/ The Access Hour airs on Forward Radio, 106.5fm, WFMP-LP Louisville, every Wednesday at 2pm and repeats Thursdays at 11am and Fridays at 1pm. Find us at forwardradio.org If you've got something you'd like to share on community radio through the Access Hour, whether it's a recording you made or a show you'd like to do on a particular topic, community, artistic creation, or program that is under-represented in Louisville's media landscape, just go to forwarradio.org, click on Participate and pitch us your idea. The Access Hour is your opportunity to take over the air waves to share your passion.
How important is purpose? What does institutional change for non-profits look like? How can charities develop after the pandemic? These are just some of the questions addressed this week as we are joined by Stephen George. Stephen is the former Vice President of the Institute of Fundraising and has over 35 years of experience within the fundraising industry. Listen in for an interesting discussion on the importance of confidence and culture shifts to ensuring development post pandemic!
Louisville Public Media President and General Manager Stephen George stops by the podcast to discuss his career journey - across multiple cities and multiple forms of media - to eventually come back to his hometown and lead an organization that has continued providing news throughout the pandemic and racial justice movement in Louisville. Despite challenges, the organization is expanding the newsroom in 2021. Join Aaron and Stephen for a great conversation on leadership, pivoting, and growing into the future.Towards the end of the episode, Stephen mentions the Center for Nonprofit Excellence (https://www.cnpe.org/) and Young Authors Greenhouse (https://www.youngauthorsgreenhouse.org/)Support the show (https://www.leadershiplouisville.org/donate-to-scholarship-fund/)
This week we welcomed Dr. Stephen George, president of Asian Christian Academy in southern India.
In this episode of Welcome To Fatherhood Interviews, Sir Royce Briales and Dr. Raheem Young talk to Stephen George.- Father, Brother, Son, Travel Plug, Alkaline Water, Tech Reseller, Certified Herbalist, and Notary. We talk about what being a father means to him. We also talk about teaching his kids young with small things like cooking and cleaning. We also talk about the importance of having patience with your kids. Enjoy! Leave a review as it helps more receive the message. Advice to any father: "Set the example" Get in contact with Stephen George: LinkedIn Facebook Get connected with Welcome to Fatherhood: WTF Website FB page FB group LinkedIn Be Well. You already are. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/wtf-interviews/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/wtf-interviews/support
Today on Episode 161 of Success Superstars is Dwell ATX Realty Group - Sarah and Stephen George. They are in the sizzling Austin market. This duo explains how working together has been super smooth for their clients, and has made their relationship stronger. Success Superstars is your place for innovation, creativity, and the blueprint of success for peak performers just like you! The intention every Thursday at 11am CT is to shed light and provide a platform to share best practices and success across JPAR teams, agents, and staff. Watch previous episodes: https://www.youtube.com/c/SuccessSuperStars/videos Also available on most podcast platforms including Apple Podcasts, Google Play, and Spotify. Just search 'Success Superstars' anywhere you listen to your favorite podcasts.
Dr. Stephen George, President of Evangelical Theological Seminary in Tamil Nadu, speaks on the history and work of ETS, the seminary's role in training future Bible teachers, and the unique challenges that they face. Follow the TLA podcast and connect with us on social media: Youtube: https://bit.ly/3i25tUF Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3nHMu37 HUM Audio Bible App: https://bit.ly/2LGY7tu Google Podcasts: https://bit.ly/2LDiQhW Social Media: https://linktr.ee/truthandlifepod
Reviews & The Impact for Ecommerce (ft. Stephen George, CEO, Surkus) - Vendo Podcast Ep 40 We've done plenty of videos on how to garner more customer reviews, but now it's time to delve deeper into the "why?". ❓
In this episode I am joined by Muhammad Khan, Studio Director at Stephen George & Partners LLP. After graduating in architecture at the University of Strathclyde, Muhammad has gone on to develop a successful career in the industry and he now has a focus on mission critical projects. We discuss how Muhammad's enjoyment of art resulted in him pursuing a career in architecture, how he initially gained exposure to the data centre industry, and how the design of data centres continues to develop as the industry expands.We then discuss Muhammad's role in mentoring the future generation of architects, how important this is to ensure knowledge is shared across the industry, and how we need to ensure that everyone is aware of the career opportunities within the data centre sector.Muhammad is a great example of someone who is keen to ensure his knowledge is shared across the industry to future proof the talent working in the sector. The more we share, the more we learn!
Code-Switched is a comedy-drama series that follows the interconnected lives of five South Asian-American roommates and friends trying to blaze their own trails in a world of high-expectations, fleeting relationships, and gentrified workplaces.This is a comedy-drama about a group of South Asian-Americans juggling love, work, and family in Chicago.Code-Switched showcases a SPECTRUM of South Asian-American characters of color through an exploration of millennial life, identity, and what it means to carry the baton of an immigrant generation while pursuing your own.The team wanted to challenge the representation of South Asians in media with characters and stories covering the SPECTRUM of South Asian-Americans (Women, men, Sikhs, Hindus, Muslims, LGBTQIA, etc. they're all here!) and exploring their lives in a three-dimensional way.Powered by rising South Asian-American comedians, artists, musicians, this series has been a grass-roots of independence and community to fight for the right to tell our own stories.We spoke to Sonal Agarwal, Saurabh Pandey, Stephen George, Sabeen Sidiqui and Vik Pandya about the series and their lives as actors, stand up comics in Chicago. Karan Sunil's writing and direction are superb and this is a series to be watched for sure.Watch the serieshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MI848mBO1vU&ab_channel=Code-SwitchedtheSeries
By Alex Clarke Bilge Pumps, Episode 26. This is special, this is one of those times the Bilge Pumps team just gets amazed! We cannot believe how lucky we are to have this person come on our podcast yet again! This is Stephen George, Commander, Royal Navy (ret.), an aero engineer the likes of which … Continue reading Bilge Pumps Episode 26: An F-35 Deep Dive with Special Guest Steve George →
By Alex Clarke Bilge Pumps, Episode 26. This is special, this is one of those times the Bilge Pumps team just gets amazed! We cannot believe how lucky we are to have this person come on our podcast yet again! This is Stephen George, Commander, Royal Navy (ret.), an aero engineer the likes of which … Continue reading Bilge Pumps Episode 26: An F-35 Deep Dive with Special Guest Steve George →
By Alex Clarke Bilge Pumps, Episode 21… and this is special…this is one of those times that the Bilge Pumps team just gets amazed! We just cannot believe how lucky we are to have this person come on our podcast. This is Stephen George, Commander, Royal Navy (ret.), an aero engineer the likes of which … Continue reading Bilge Pumps Episode 21: Engineering the Aircraft of the Falklands War with Stephen George →
By Alex Clarke Bilge Pumps, Episode 21… and this is special…this is one of those times that the Bilge Pumps team just gets amazed! We just cannot believe how lucky we are to have this person come on our podcast. This is Stephen George, Commander, Royal Navy (ret.), an aero engineer the likes of which … Continue reading Bilge Pumps Episode 21: Engineering the Aircraft of the Falklands War with Stephen George →
1. Dr. Alex Clarke's Youtube Channel2. Drachinifel's Youtube Channel3. Jamie Seidel's Youtube Channel
1. Dr. Alex Clarke's Youtube Channel2. Drachinifel's Youtube Channel3. Jamie Seidel's Youtube Channel
In this episode, Don interviews Stephen George! Stephen is the CEO and Founder of Surkus.
The real estate industry is one in which many flock to with aspirations of financial gains, schedule flexibility, and fulfillment by helping others. Our guests this week, Sarah and Stephen George of Magnolia Realty (yes, the same Magnolia of the infamous Chip and Jo Gaines) take this to a whole other level. Coming from different backgrounds and family lifestyles, these two weave their strong feelings of the importance of a home and all it stands for, their passion to serve, and their dedication to their family throughout their realty business.This episode was recorded when our state of Texas was just days away from phase 1 of re-opening amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. As real estate is about as social and face-to-face business as they come, it was interesting to hear how they shifted during this time to continue to grow, not just maintain, their lucrative business by leveraging technology solutions as well as amping up their client service offerings.Here's a quick overview of our discussion (which included a lot of laughs along the way):COVID-19 ImpactTransitioning a social, face-to-face business to virtual while keeping client care intactVirtual tours and open houses, zoom meetings, Facetime walkthroughsA day-in-the-life of helping out-of-state buyers during the pandemicThe impact on the Austin real estate marketShifting Within an Industry in FluxThree big reasons why people are choosing to move now Creative ways to offer support in new ways to clientsVirtual/technology solutions that might stick around in the real estate industry post-pandemicBusiness InsightsThe 4 key pieces to the art of a people-centric businessHelping clients identify what will work and what won'tTransitioning to real estate from another career trackRunning a business with your spouse...successfully, and during quarantineEntrepreneur JourneyTurning would-be crazy ideas into realistic sustainable businesses3 steps to take to transition from the corporate world to building your own businessHow community is critical when going out on your ownDaily routines that help intention rather than just 'winging it'Making a constantly changing and fluid schedule work with business, kids, and distance learningWhat's Next for Sarah and StephenTheir big goals moving forward (exciting!)Their vision will impact Austin and the surrounding areas in a big wayMuscle Creative Wrap-UpIf you could listen to only one music artist for the rest of your life who would it be? Sarah: Lauryn HillStephen: The BeatlesWhere can people find you online?InstagramFacebook
Plus, who has Brandy dubbed the Lasagne Man?
Stephen George has been an entrepreneur his entire life. In his early 20's, he was one of the Co-Founders of the company Groupon and managed hundreds of employees at the age of 21. After Groupon's multi-billion dollar IPO, he decided to leave the company and traveled around the world for several years. After 3+ years of traveling, he returned to the US and became the founder of Surkus - https://surkus.com/ Surkus offers members exclusive access to paid events and offers from brands in exchange for engagement. It's an amazing app that's transforming the fan-to-brand relationship. I hope you enjoy the episode and can learn something from his amazing journey. WeStrive: Be sure to check out the WeStrive App on IOS, Android, and if you're a personal trainer check us out at WeStriveApp.com to see if you want to sell your fitness plans or train privately with your clients through WeStrive.
Stephen George was the primary caretaker for his grandmother the final years of her life. After a stroke she suffered with age related dementia and Alzheimers. These conditions affected her sleep patterns and greatly affected her personality and mental capacity. She also struggled with loss of appetite. Stephen introduced Granny to cannabis, and almost immediately it stimulated her appetite and helped her get good rest. It also gave Granny more good days when she could think and communicate clearly. Full show notes can be found at www.cannabishealsme.com/73 Help us get these stories out to more people! Become a Patron http://www.patreon.com/chmpodcast Rate/review us on your podcast app Tell THREE people about the show every week --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Stephen George talks to Katherine Raskob, Chief Executive Officer of Fundraising Institute Australia, the largest representative body for the $9.9 billion charitable fundraising sector in Australia. Stephen and Katherine explore fundraising, the forces driving change, how to steer the sector and embrace new ideas. Previously Katherine, was Director of Communications & Customer Experience at the network called the Australian Alliance for Data Leadership, incorporating Australia’s largest marketing association, the Association for Data-driven Marketing & Advertising (ADMA), where she was responsible for the strategy and execution of personalised communications, member engagement and customer experience. She also oversaw brand, internal and external communications including digital, social and PR and technology platforms and solutions for the network. Her experience encompasses both commercial and not-for-profit organisations including SBS, Australia’s national multilingual and multicultural broadcaster, where she spent more than seven years as Head of Group Marketing, responsible for all marketing communications for SBS programs and services across all platforms. Katherine is also a member of the Board of Directors of Girl Guides Australia and was previously on the boards of Synergy & Taikoz, Australia’s leading percussion ensembles, and Kim Carpenter’s Theatre of Image. She grew up in Minnesota, USA where she completed her undergraduate degree as well as a Master of International Business Management degree. Katherine is also a graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors. Katherine can be found at @KatherineRaskob or at www.fia.org.au To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com
On this episode, Winnipeg Rifles head coach, Geordie Wilson stops by to get us ready for their new season. Also, Blue Bomber Michael Couture tells us what it takes to start for the team (and what Christian should eat on his next trip to BC). And finally, Charleswood Hawks president, Stephen George reminisces about the late Wayne Deschouwer ahead of a street being renamed to honour the community hero. Check out The Sports Show every week night at 7 on CJOB!!
Stephen George talks to Sarah Anderson, Senior Legacy Partnership Manager for the newly established Friends and Family Team at Cancer Research UK about her new and innovative role in legacies, on finding a career and place in the sector, searching for and finding talent and building new skills and using old ones. Sarah has worked in Legacies at Cancer Research UK for almost 5 years, recently as an Area Legacy Manager, overseeing a UK-wide team of regionally based Community Legacy Managers that engaged with and cultivated long-term stewardship with legacy pledgers across the UK. She has over twenty years of charitable experience alongside corporate, media and private sector careers and a decade invested in legacy giving and relationship management. She is passionate in supporting and mentoring those moving into the third sector, especially those who, like her, are investing in it as a second or third career path in life. Sarah can be found on twitter @sarakcruklegacy or by email to sarah.anderson@cancer.org.uk To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com
LPM's president discusses "The Pope's Long Con," the need to highlight youth voices, the future of LPM, and much more.
Stephen George talks to Vinay Nair, co-founder and CEO of Lightful, a tech-for-good company working with charities, social enterprises and foundations looking to scale their impact through the power of technology. Vinay started the The Reclaim Social campaign, which has tapped into a growing sentiment of the need for positivity on social media, brought charities together with a national day on Feb 6th to reclaim social for good. Vinay share the story of his career and learning, how the charity sector and business can work together, and how technology can help reach and scale our impact. He shares the story of the Reclaim for Good campaign, and how the campaign positively influences charity messaging for brand awareness but also how it can motivate both action and donations and finally how charities, social enterprises and foundations are shaping change Vinay was previously a director at Social and Sustainable Capital (SASC), one of the largest social impact investors in the UK and has held senior positions at the Social Investment Business, Acumen Fund and the Clinton Foundation as well as launching public health social enterprises. Vinay started his career at the investment bank J.P. Morgan, where he spent almost a decade, latterly as Executive Director. He holds a BA from Trinity College Dublin and MPA from the London School of Economics. He is a practitioner-in-residence and industry advisor at the Saïd Business School, Oxford University. Vinay can be found at https://lightful.com/ and on twitter @vinaynair To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com
In this episode Stephen George talks to Caroline Riseboro is President & CEO of Plan International Canada, one of Canada’s largest charities working in over 70 countries to help children, especially girls. Caroline is well respected for being a champion of innovation and is credited with launching ground-breaking and award-winning campaigns that have engaged Canadians on some of the world’s toughest issues. In 2017 and 2018, Caroline was named Canada’s Top 100 Most Powerful Women in the trailblazer category and is the recipient of 7 Stevie awards, including for Woman of the Year. Caroline shares her experience and path from advertising to fundraising to CEO. She explores with Stephen, the challenges of culture and diversity and how they can impact on an organisation, how fundraising needs to be central and for everyone, putting donors first, how innovation can transform if you are prepared to have risk and failure, how talent can be nurtured and why challenging the way people see things can really make a difference. Before joining Plan, Caroline held many senior roles in leading organisations including at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) Foundation, and World Vision Canada. In addition to serving as President of the GTA chapter of AFP, Caroline serves on the Boards of the Humanitarian Coalition and the Canadian Partnership for Children and Women’s Health (CANWACH). Caroline holds a Bachelor (honours) degree from McGill University and has been pursuing a Master of Philanthropy and Nonprofit Leadership at Carleton University. Caroline can be found on twitter @criseboro and Linkedin:https://ca.linkedin.com/in/criseboro and at https://plancanada.ca To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com
In this episode, Stephen George talks to Andrew Watt from the UK arm of specialist philanthropy healthcare firm Accordant Philanthropy, and former leading light at the Institute of Fundraising, the Association of Fundraising Professionals and the Association for Healthcare Philanthropy in the US. Andrew reflects on philanthropy and giving in the US and UK, his journey in leading membership organisations and the lessons learned working with key influencers and government agencies on both sides of the atlantic to shape the philanthropic environment. He shares reflections on leadership, giving, the role of charity and donors and the opportunities in healthcare. A passionate and experienced believer and leader in the value value of the social sector and philanthropy in our society. Lesson in leadership and giving for anyone in the non-profit and public world. To contact Andrew, you can email him at andrew@accordantphilanthropy.com Accordant Europe is: https://www.accordantphilanthropy.com/europe To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com
In this episode, Stephen George talks with Viki Hayden Ward, Head of Fundraising at the British Youth Council. Viki shares how she built a fundraising programme from scratch, and her personal journey to grow and develop personally, with her team and board and to make a difference by giving young people courage and confidence. Viki started her fundraising career in 2011 in the world of alumni fundraising. In what she describes as a ‘crash course’ in how to do individual fundraising, from direct mail, face to face, telephone, legacy and events fundraising, Viki still uses many of these important and valuable tools in her work, 7 years on. Viki has a successful track record in diversifying income, developing donor relationships and starting a fundraising department from scratch, while continuously being an ambassador for #DonorLove. In her spare time, Viki blogs and tweets about fundraising, often identifying the unique quirks of being a fundraiser! Her blog flightofthefundraiser.wordpress.com is a well loved blog for fundraisers, and she is on twitter https://twitter.com/vikihayden To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com
Middle managers need love and attention if they are to do what needs to be done to make things happen. Coaching, nudging, counselling and direction. The leadership deficit affects middle managers. Unsure of those above they can’t shine for those that need them below. Looking sideways they find might find solace in their colleagues, so they often look like a gang, or a tribe huddled for comfort. Sometimes they struggle because they are over promoted. Sometimes they struggle because they are too talented but locked in. Sometimes they just long to get on with things and develop and grow but are held back. In this episode, Stephen shares 10 top tips to become a better middle manager and make a bigger personal and organisational impact. This episode is from a previous blog post at https://stephenwgeorge.com/10-must-dos-for-middle-managers/ To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com
In this episode, Stephen George talks to David Mabaziira from Okusoka, a consultancy working with sectors and organisations to co-create inclusive cultures. David is a passionate advocate for all areas of diversity and inclusion. David has over 22 years’ experience as a communications practitioner and is a member of the Institute of Fundraising’s Expert Advisory Panel on Equality, Diversity and Inclusion. The Culture Club started as a panel session at IFC in October 2018 and was followed up by a panel session at AFP Toronto 2018. The sessions looked at how organisations build and support amazing cultures, encouraging the personalities of individuals and the organisations to emerge and that allows people to connect and align with core values and messages. This series on the Good Leaders Podcast continues that exploration, looking at the barriers and opportunities in a great culture, how power can make or break a culture, the impacts on fundraising, how brand can help or hinder, on aspiration, the behaviours needed and how to build a place where the culture becomes the catalyst for great work and change. Culture Club on Good Leaders is brought to you by the amazing gang at Blakely. Blakely are an integrated Marketing & Fundraising agency from North America with a powerful personality that delivers great high value programmes, experiences and relationships, and builds bridges that brings together marketing, comms and fundraising to offer donors an inspiring experience that raises more money for your mission. To find out more about Blakely go to blakelyjourney.com To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com If you want to find out more about David, you can follow him on twitter at @davidmbaziira or @okusokaCO or look for him at www.okusoka.co.uk Don’t forget to subscribe and leave a review
On the semi-presidential, January 17th edition of The CJOB Sports Show, Christian talks about life after football (which, spoiler alert, involves MORE football) for former Bomber, Kito Poblah. Also, Charleswood Hawks President, Stephen George tells us all about a night of tribute to Wayne Deschouwer. And finally, President Allan Gray of Keystone Curling helps us brush up on Winnipeg's LGBT league.
In this episode, Stephen George talks to Tammy Zonker, President and Founder of Fundraising Transformed and Chief Philanthropy Officer at The Children's Center of Wayne County in Detroit. about how to find and bring your best self to where you work, how to keep your passion and commitment to something bigger, culture and small and large charities, brand and a fascinating story about a donors journey to transformation and a huge gift that followed. The Culture Club started as a panel session at IFC in October 2018 and was followed up by a panel session at AFP Toronto 2018. The sessions looked at how organisations build and support amazing cultures, encouraging the personalities of individuals and the organisations to emerge and that allows people to connect and align with core values and messages. This series on the Good Leaders Podcast continues that exploration, looking at the barriers and opportunities in a great culture, how power can make or break a culture, the impacts on fundraising, how brand can help or hinder, on aspiration, the behaviours needed and how to build a place where the culture becomes the catalyst for great work and change. Culture Club on Good Leaders is brought to you by the amazing gang at Blakely. Blakely are an integrated Marketing & Fundraising agency from North America with a powerful personality that delivers great high value programmes, experiences and relationships, and builds bridges that brings together marketing, comms and fundraising to offer donors an inspiring experience that raises more money for your mission. To find out more about Blakely go to blakelyjourney.com To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com If you want to find out more about Tammy, you can follow her on twitter at twitter.com/TammyZonker, or look for her at http://www.tammyzonker.com Don’t forget to subscribe and leave a review
In this episode, Stephen George talks to Ryan Lester, fundraiser, advocate and campaigner on diversity and inclusion and AFP Toronto Committee member on building cultures though diversity and inclusion. Ryan explores the power of bringing your whole self to an organisation, what diversity and inclusion actually means, what gets in the way and how to embrace it The Culture Club started as a panel session at IFC in October 2018 and was followed up by a panel session at AFP Toronto 2018. The sessions looked at how organisations build and support amazing cultures, encouraging the personalities of individuals and the organisations to emerge and that allows people to connect and align with core values and messages. This series on the Good Leaders Podcast continues that exploration, looking at the barriers and opportunities in a great culture, how power can make or break a culture, the impacts on fundraising, how brand can help or hinder, on aspiration, the behaviours needed and how to build a place where the culture becomes the catalyst for great work and change. Culture Club on Good Leaders is brought to you by the amazing gang at Blakely. Blakely are an integrated Marketing & Fundraising agency from North America with a powerful personality that delivers great high value programmes, experiences and relationships, and builds bridges that brings together marketing, comms and fundraising to offer donors an inspiring experience that raises more money for your mission. To find out more about Blakely go to blakelyjourney.com To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com Don’t forget to subscribe and leave a review
In this episode, Stephen George talks to Cathy Barrick, CEO of Alzheimer Society, Ontario, on leading change and building culture through leadership. Cathy explores the challenges of how to build a common approach when authority has to be replaced with influence The Culture Club started as a panel session at IFC in October 2018 and was followed up by a panel session at AFP Toronto 2018. The sessions looked at how organisations build and support amazing cultures, encouraging the personalities of individuals and the organisations to emerge and that allows people to connect and align with core values and messages. This series on the Good Leaders Podcast continues that exploration, looking at the barriers and opportunities in a great culture, how power can make or break a culture, the impacts on fundraising, how brand can help or hinder, on aspiration, the behaviours needed and how to build a place where the culture becomes the catalyst for great work and change. Cathy talks about building great cultures with influence when authority wont work in organisations with devolved structures. She explores fundraising and performance, how brand can influence and getting the best from people. (Reality check...we interviewed when roadworks had just started outside Cathy’s office so apologies for the background noise!) Culture Club on Good Leaders is brought to you by the amazing gang at Blakely. Blakely are an integrated Marketing & Fundraising agency from North America with a powerful personality that delivers great high value programmes, experiences and relationships, and builds bridges that brings together marketing, comms and fundraising to offer donors an inspiring experience that raises more money for your mission. To find out more about Blakely go to blakelyjourney.com To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com If you want to find out more about Cathy you can follow her on twitter at saving_grace, or look for her at www.alzheimerontario.ca Don’t forget to subscribe and leave a review
Stephen George kicks off The Culture Club, a series of conversations on the Good Leaders Podcast around culture, brought to you, by North American agency Blakely. In this episode, Stephen talks to Kesheyl Van Schilt, President & Senior Fundraiser and owner of Blakely, on the power of culture, how it can make the difference and what you can do to build and lead a positive culture where people thrive. The Culture Club started as a panel session at IFC in October 2018 and was followed up by a panel session at AFP Toronto 2018. The sessions looked at how organisations build and support amazing cultures, encouraging the personalities of individuals and the organisations to emerge and that allows people to connect and align with core values and messages. This series on the Good Leaders Podcast continues that exploration, looking at the barriers and opportunities in a great culture, how power can make or break a culture, the impacts on fundraising, how brand can help or hinder, on aspiration, the behaviours needed and how to build a place where the culture becomes the catalyst for great work and change. In this first episode, Kesheyl talks about the culture at Blakely, how they find the right people, how they mix values and skills to serve, how they can build results and impact when they work as partners with charities and how leadership can make the difference Culture Club on Good Leaders is brought to you by the amazing gang at Blakely. Blakely are an integrated Marketing & Fundraising agency from North America with a powerful personality that delivers great high value programmes, experiences and relationships, and builds bridges that brings together marketing, comms and fundraising to offer donors an inspiring experience that raises more money for your mission. To find out more about Blakely go to blakelyjourney.com To sign up to hear more from Stephen & Good Leaders go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/ Or to find out more about Stephen and his work, view his blog and make contact, go to stephenwgeorge.com
Councilman Coan sits down with Stephen George, President of Louisville Public Media, to discuss the relationship between local government and local journalism.
Simon Scriver's Amazingly Ultimate Fundraising Superstar Podcast
Simon is joined by the infamous Stephen George, chatting through his career learnings...including Good Leaders, finding your purpose, the NSPCC's Full Stop campaign, launching legacies, The Spastic Society rebrand, and those IFC Gala outfits.
Episode 2: “Ohio v. Bootlegging” (George Remus) Alex travels to Cincinnati to meet with 3 historians from the Price Hill Historical Society about the “King of the Bootleggers”, George Remus. We follow his rise from a German immigrant to a high-powered lawyer in Chicago to becoming the most successful bootlegger of the Prohibition Era in the United States. We discuss 1920s Cincinnati, Remus’ business, life, love and ultimate fall with Joyce Meyer, Julie Hotchkiss and Mark Plageman. We also travel to Municipal Brew Works in downtown Hamilton, Ohio to try some great beers with owner Jim Goodman and we discuss not just their brewery but also the effect of prohibition on Hamilton, OH. (22:00) https://www.facebook.com/municipalbrewworks/ Our Ohio History Connection Minute features Stephen George, Special Advisor to the CEO. Mr. George talks about his central role in the bicentennial barn project in all 88 Ohio counties and his admiration for the Harding Administration. Join the OHC and support Ohio’s awesome history. https://www.ohiohistory.org/join. (40:00) Step back into the Roaring Twenties with us to discuss Remus’ rise to power and later incarceration. We detail Cincinnati’s “trial of the century” when Remus goes on trial for the murder of his wife, Imogene Holmes in 1927. We also confirm that George Remus was the motivation for F. Scott Fitzgerald’s, Jay Gatsby, in The Great Gatsby.
In this episode, Stephen George talksto Damian O’Broin, from Ask Direct in Dublin, Ireland and leader of the Ask Direct Fundraising School about being a rebel with a cause, the summer school, his new manifesto, fundraising and why we need to think and challenge a bit more To hear more from Damian and Ask go to https://www.askdirect.ie/blog/ To sign up to hear more from Stephen go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/
Stephen George is CEO of Surkus, based in West Hollywood. And he took an unusual path. Starting as an investor in Surkus, he then joined full-time as Chief Operating Officer once he saw the magnitude of the opportunity. He was later named CEO. Previously, Stephen served as head of operations at Groupon. Surkus is a 2-sided marketplace for events & experiences on a local basis. It connects its clients (major brands) & consumers. The platform curates a targeted group of tastemakers for client events - such as nightlife, comedy shows, classes, product launches, etc. In turn, Surkus members are invited to explore & discover these new experiences, with invitations tailored just for them. In this 20-minute conversation, Stephen reveals how he’s building the team at Surkus, now backed by $20M in venture capital.
In this episode, Stephen George talks to Professor Isaac Getz, from the top-ranked ESCP Europe Business School. His book "Freedom, Inc” which he co-authored with Brian Carney, has been translated in nine languages and examines how transformational leadership can build a work environment which liberates employee initiative and responsibility for the good of their company. Within a liberated company, employees have freedom and responsibility to take any action that they—not their supervisors or procedures —decide are the best for the company’s vision. Stephen and Isaac explore the implications for non-profits and how to get started to liberate your teams. To hear more form Professor Getz, see his TedX talk at ESCP Europe – Liberate Your Company https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sVBddXmynSc or to contact go to Linked In and search Isaac Getz or visit his website www.freedomincbook.com To sign up to hear more from Stephen go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/
Paul and Sean talk with Grover Gardner of Blackstone Audio. Plus a VO Meter Schtick from Stephen George and a LIVE Questionable Gear Purchase comparison. https://www.vometer.com https://www.paulstefano.com http://www.dailyvo.com/ https://www.vocalboothtogo.com/ https://www.jmcvoiceover.com/demo-production/ https://www.voiceactorwebsites.com/ https://www.audiopub.org/ https://globalvoiceacademy.com/ https://timpaige.lpages.co/podcast-demos/
In this episode, Stephen George talks leadership and stories with Marie Chung, the founder of Behind the Label, a platform for stories for people that are often not heard and who need to be valued for their own growth and contributions. Marie, a young leader in the non-profit world and from Melbourne, Australia talks about leadership, stories, her personal experience growing up and creating collaboration through building empathy. To sign up to hear more from Stephen go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/
In this episode, Stephen George looks back on 2017 and reflects on what’s needed in 2018 to step up and be a better leader. He shares 10 prompts, nudges, tips or shoves to approach the year with a new and honest way of taking control. From finding humour, purpose and aspiration to dealing with negative forces, taking control of your development and being much braver. A perfect kick start to 2018 and beyond. The blog of this podcast is here http://bit.ly/2lQgQmD. To sign up to hear more from Stephen go to https://stephengeorge.lpages.co/optin/
This week Bill and Kyle continue their holiday cheer with a sequel so cold its frosty... Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killler Snowman (2000) on Amazon Prime. Join #thepoliteboys and their special guest Stephen George as they get tropical with the season and hula their way to this destination holiday horror sequel filled with bad puns, chilly kills, and more unnecessary plot than you know what to do with as they answer the ulitmate question of #WYSI?
In this episode, Nikki Bell and Murray Easton, Community Fundraisers from the North East of England and Scotland with the British Heart Foundation, talk with Stephen George about progressing in community fundraising, how relationships matter, its diversity, asking and reaching others, how to build and deepen relationships by getting to know people and what we can offer the supporter as much as what they can offer us. It’s the power of community fundraising.
In this episode, Stephen George reflects from a café in Rome on some of the challenges and courage needed in finding and using emotion in fundraising, on the battle between the proven science of what works and the exploration of new positive campaigns and different emotions to connect better and the personal challenge to connect emotionally
In this episode Stephen George hijacks the 12 days of christmas to share 12 days of christmas fundraising thoughts and ideas - a fundraising manifesto for 2017 as we head into the holidays and prepare for the year ahead
In this episode, Sarah Carter, Head of Leadership at Home Fundraising shares with Stephen George a view of a more mindful, person centred leadership model and why the organisational leadership culture is at the heart of real transformation
Canadian school children at a literary festival in Toronto share their insights and joy with Stephen George on what it takes to get a story right so you turn the page, make an impact and connect
The 10 most essential values, skills and qualities that makeatruly great all round fundraiser are shared by Stephen George inacountdown of must haves to help people become abrilliantfundraising leader
Habakkuk 1:12-2:20 Stephen George leads us through the next section of Habakkuk, where some questions about God's sovereignty and the presence of evil arise.
Getting to the root a problem first before designing a solution is true of all of us. In this episode, Stephen George talks to legacy fundraisers to get their take on the problems they face to raise more money for charities from gifts in wills
Good Leaders sits at the crossroads between non-profit leaders and entrepreneurs. It aims to help non profit leaders become more entrepreneurial, more creative, raise more money and change behaviour and to give entrepreneurs an insight into doing more good in their lives and with others. In this episode, host, Stephen George, an experienced non profit leader sets out his manifesto, approach and background to introduce Good Leaders. Get the latest updates at https://stevewg.wordpress.com
Suit designer Leon Wu sees a person's first suit as a milestone. "Historically, a father will bring in his son," Wu says. "It's like a coming of age sort of thing." But what about a person who didn't grow up as a boy? Wu can relate: "Ever since I was five I would envision myself as a more masculine person," he explains. "Growing up I was happy getting my older brother's hand-me-downs. I didn't need to go buy any 'female' clothes." Wu founded Sharpe Suiting, a clothing company catering to masculine-of-center folks who want to look dapper in suits custom-tailored to every type of body. He joins us this week to talk about their work, and what it's like to work with transmasculine populations. "Whenever somebody transitions or they decide to adopt a certain type of gender representation," Wu explains, "it is in a sense like another puberty." Also this week, we meet Louisville Public Media's new executive editor, Stephen George. We chat about diversity in newsrooms and news coverage, and how it seems like we only see black neighborhoods on the news when it's about crime. "It often gives people a very wrong idea about what's happening in certain parts of this community," George says. In Juicy Fruit, we bring you the story of Jesse Jacobs, a 32-year-old gay man who died in police custody in Galveston, TX. Jacobs had been taking Xanax for over a decade to treat severe anxiety disorder. But after he turned himself in to serve a 30-day sentence for DUI, jail personnel would not give him access to his medication. He started having seizures (a known effect of sudden Xanax cessation) and died a few days later. Galveston County Sheriff Henry Trochessett insists Jacobs died of "natural causes." And we take a look at The Advocate's list of 10 Tips on Growing Older for LBGTQ folks under 40. Some make perfect sense (build a support system and be part of a community), while others left us scratching our heads (don't drink, and prepare to die alone if you don't have kids?).