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En el episodio de hoy hablamos sobre una de esas películas que no dejan indiferente a nadie. Porque sabemos que hay películas que son el vivo reflejo de eso de “o blanco o negro”, de “o te apasionan o las detestas”. Películas hechas para encajar en en ese listado de “o adoradas o vilipendiadas”: «El árbol de la vida», de Terrence Malick. Porque esta cinta tiene algo que, sin discusión alguna, no tienen otras. Una forma de narrar, de contar y de no contar, de mostrarnos en imágenes y sonidos —en ocasiones realmente majestuosos— la historia de unas vidas que bien pudieran ser la de cualquiera de nosotros. Hablamos de esta película, que es cine y vida, valga la redundancia. RECOMENDACIONES LIBÉRRIMAS: —Cualquiera de Malick: En especial, «La delgada línea roja» y «Vida oculta». —Una autora: Joan Didion en, por ejemplo, «El año del pensamiento mágico». —Un par de series: «Succession y «Perdidos». —Un par de grupos: Sigus Ros y Florence and the Machine. —Un juego de mesa: «Sherlock Holmes: detective asesor», creado por Gary Grady, Suzanne Goldberg y Jéròme Ropert. —Un lugar y una historia: la Basílica y Santuario de Nuestra Señora de la Cabeza, en Andújar, Jaén, y su Romería. —Dos documentales: «Viaje a los límites del universo», de Yavar Abbas. National Geographic. (https://youtu.be/hpWuWdwt1Wc) y «Pintores y Reyes del Prado», conducido por Jeremy Irons. Intervienen: María Serrano (@mserranovicente) e Iñako Rozas (@inakorozas). Control técnico: Marcos Machado.
Host Ally Lemieux Fanset sits down with Professor Suzanne Goldberg of Columbia Law School to examine the impact of Trump's changes to the court system on Trans lives. Professor Goldberg shares her insight into the general trajectory of Trans rights.
Renato and Patti discuss the Supreme Court's recent landmark decision, which found that Title VII outlaws workplace discrimination against LGBTQ people. They were joined by Professor Suzanne Goldberg, the founding director of Columbia Law School’s trailblazing Sexuality and Gender Law Clinic, who previously worked on two cases that became cornerstone gay rights victories at the U.S. Supreme Court: Lawrence v. Texas, the landmark decision that struck down Texas’s sodomy law, and Romer v. Evans, which overturned an anti-gay Colorado constitutional amendment.
Earlier in the summer we asked you, our listeners, to get in touch and send us a picture that somehow captured you at your best. Not just looking your best, but feeling your best. Hundreds of you got in touch with pictures of your best day, and we’ll be running as many of your stories as we can. Today…. Suzanne Goldberg brings us a picture of laughter. With continuing division over Brexit in Parliament and a General Election expected soon, the Liberal Democrat party’s president, Baroness Sal Brinton, joins us from the Lib Dem Party Conference. What opportunity does the current chaos offer the party and what is their message to women? Vicky Phelan has become one of the most well-known and well-respected women in Ireland. She exposed a medical scandal which not only affected her but affected over 200 other Irish women as well. She found out that cervical smear tests, like hers, were mistakenly given the all clear but turned out to be abnormal. This meant women weren’t given important treatment that might have prevented cancer or halted it. Vicky took her case to court and won. She was awarded 2.5 million Euros in compensation. Vicky is now living with a terminal prognosis but getting treatment. She says she’s feeling strong at the moment. She’s just published a book called Overcoming: A Memoir. What does it mean to be a woman in the 21st century? Anna Hope’s third novel, Expectation, opens with three young women in their twenties, living a precarious but happy life in a rented house in Hackney, London. Ten years on they are not where they had hoped to be. Anna joins Jane to discuss friendship, love, the pain of infertility, motherhood, work and feminism.
Ikläd dig rollen som Sherlock Holmes eller en romersk legionär för att göra sommaren roligare. Eller läs om blodig kirurgi och trånga korsetter - något av det som Vetenskapsradion Historia tipsar om. Romarrikets fall och kladdiga kirurgiska ingrepp är några av ämnena som intresserat sommarens bokpratare i Vetenskapsradion Historias traditionsenliga boktipsprogram. Hör om tipsen som gör dig nylärd om etrusker, kyrktak, ransoneringsmat och korsettkrig. Och missa inte tipsen på vilka historiska brädspel som kan förgylla regniga sommardagar. Två guldklimpar har vaskats fram ur den digra historiska brädspelshögen. Programledare är Tobias Svanelid. Böckerna och spelen som du hör om i programmet är: Martin Kylhammar Ett hemligt liv Lindsey Fitzharris Konsten att skära i kroppar Kyle Harper Roms öde Barbro Santillo Fritzell Myternas etrusker Allan Klynne Antikens sju underverk Kajsa Nyström Rudling Mellan himmel och helvete Tomas Andersson och Peter Sandberg Göteborgs historia Martin Giertz Så bodde officerarna Folke Schimanski Mat: en krigisk historia Henric Bagerius Korsettkriget Gary Grady, Suzanne Goldberg och Jérôme Ropert Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective: Jack the Ripper & West End Adventures Matt Leacock och Paolo Mori Pandemic Fall of Rome
Colleges and universities face special challenges in designing and implementing procedures to respond to campus sexual and gender-based misconduct, while maintaining an academic community with equal educational opportunities for all students. In this episode Suzanne Goldberg, Professor of Law at Columbia Law School and Executive Vice President for University Life at Columbia University, and Gil Sparks, member and past Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the University of Delaware, discuss what schools are doing to implement procedures that are both effective and fair for those who have suffered from such misconduct and for those accused.
Can an employment lawsuit be based on the premise that discrimination based on sexual orientation is a Title VII violation under the Civil Rights Act of 1964? On Feb. 26, 2018, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals said in a 10-3 decision in Zarda v. Altitude Express Inc. that sexual orientation discrimination constitutes a form of discrimination “because of . . . sex,” in violation of Title VII. Some legal experts have predicted that the case might eventually make its way to the Supreme Court. Last April, the Seventh Circuit ruled in a separate case that Title VII could be applied to a similar workplace situation. But the Supreme Court passed on a third case, out of Georgia, that dealt with the same issue. Joining us on this podcast are two experts with different takes on this question. John Eastman is Henry Salvatori Professor of Law and Community Service and Former Dean at Chapman University Law School. He is also the Director of the University’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence. Suzanne Goldberg is Herbert and Doris Wechsler Clinical Professor of Law at Columbia Law School, where she also directs the Law School’s Center for Gender and Sexuality Law and its Sexuality and Gender Law Clinic. National Constitution Center president and CEO Jeffrey Rosen moderates the discussion. Questions or comments? We would love to hear from you. Contact the We the People team at podcast@constitutioncenter.org The Constitution Center is offering CLE credits for select America’s Town Hall programs! Get more information at constitutioncenter.org/CLE.
Love them or loathe them, you have to live with them - so this month we've got six stories of siblings for you to squabble over, from hired brothers to tribes of mermaids, via stoned Georgians, ghostly twins, dark family secrets and a surprising sibling love-triangle ... PLAYLIST for BROTHERS & SISTERS The Brotherhood of One by Mark Sadler NEW AUTHOR, read by Paul Clarke The Tale of Sylvie Weir by Victoria Finan NEW AUTHOR, read by Claire Lacey Burning the Cat by Duncan Grimes NEW AUTHOR, read by Alex Woodhall INTERVAL & INFAMOUS BOOK QUIZ! Sisterhood of the Sea by Alan Graham, read by Sophie Morris-Sheppard The Beijing by Ataya Kanji NEW AUTHOR, read by Keleigh Wolf Darling Amelia by Sam Carter, read by Suzanne Goldberg
Universities have long been thought of, and cherished, as places for the free exchange of ideas. This idea has, however, come under pressure. Student groups have now routinely exercised pressure to keep people who they disagree with off campus. And safe spaces and trigger warnings—which limit speech that some have deemed offensive—have become regular features at universities across the nation. -- Many see the climate of shouting-down or protesting the expression of others' viewpoints as the symbolic beginning of an era limiting the freedom of speech on college campuses. While surveys seem to show a majority of students disagree with universities curtailing speech, even when it is offensive, vocal minorities with opposing views have been the ones capturing news headlines and the attention of the public at large. -- With the accessibility to speech provided by the internet and viral sharing of information, expression and speech spread with more ease than ever, but this same technology creates opportunities for back-lash on social media and gives a larger stage to those who would threaten the free market of ideas at our nation's universities. -- The First Amendment protects principles which have always required vigilance to maintain, and today's world makes no exception. This panel will explore how these developments have affected intellectual discourse on campus and if they are conducive to a meaningful learning experience at our universities. -- This panel was presented at the 2017 National Student Symposium on Saturday, March 4, 2017, at Columbia Law School in New York City, New York. -- Featuring: Prof. Robert Post, Dean and Sol & Lillian Goldman Professor of Law, Yale Law School; Prof. Phillip Hamburger, Maurice and Hilda Friedman Professor of Law, Columbia Law School; Prof. Suzanne Goldberg, Executive Vice President for University Life, Columbia University; Herbert and Doris Wechsler Clinical Professor of Law, Columbia Law School; and Prof. Michael McConnell, Richard and Frances Mallery Professor of Law; Director, Constitutional Law Center; Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution. Moderator: Hon. Thomas Hardiman, U.S. Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.
The party had just begun to piece together clues about the mysterious murder in the fields of Velas when a blizzard struck the city. Now, under terrible conditions (and with limited time), they must uncover the secret motivations and conspiracies behind the crime. Can they find justice? And if so, at what cost? Inspired by Sherlock Holmes: Consulting Detective, by Raymond Edwards, Suzanne Goldberg, and Gary Grady. Check out the investigation documents here! And the map of Velas here! Ali Acampora (@ali_west) as Hella Varal Andrew Swan (@andrewleeswan) as Thorondir Arthur Tebbel (@atebbel) as Hadrian Keith J Carberry (@KeithJCarberry) as Fero Feritas Jack de Quidt (@notquitereal) as Lem King Austin Walker (@austin_walker) as the GM Produced by Keith Carberry Cover Art by Craig Sheldon (@shoddyrobot) Music by Jack de Quidt A transcription is available for this episode here.A full list of completed transcriptions is available here. Our transcriptions are provided by a fan-organized paid transcription project. If you'd like to join, you can get more information at https://twitter.com/transcript_fatt. Thank you to all of our transcribers!!
In the seaside port of Velas, it is Sun Day, the Long Day, the Day of High Sun, the most holy 20 hours of the year. Visitors from across the region have come to visit their families, to celebrate in the streets, and to sweat under the heat of Samothese's Gift. But when not everyone in town lives to see the sun rise, the party is recruited to investigate the murder... and the conspiracy behind it. Inspired by Sherlock Holmes: Consulting Detective, by Raymond Edwards, Suzanne Goldberg, and Gary Grady. Check out the investigation documents here! And the map of Velas here! Ali Acampora (@ali_west) as Hella Varal Andrew Swan (@andrewleeswan) as Thorondir Arthur Tebbel (@atebbel) as Hadrian Keith J Carberry (@KeithJCarberry) as Fero Feritas Jack de Quidt (@notquitereal) as Lem King Austin Walker (@austin_walker) as the GM Produced by Keith Carberry Cover Art by Craig Sheldon (@shoddyrobot) Music by Jack de Quidt Map Art by Janine Hawkins (@bleatingheart)
Five stories running the gamut from birth to death, with rat pie, Aussie anglers and fiery apocalypse in between. 1) The Rat Pie Man by Stephanie Brann, read by Tony Bell 2) The Job by Maggie Veness, read by Silas Hawkins 3) Birth Plan by Uschi Gatward, read by Beverley Longhurst *INTERVAL* 4) Memory Man by Jim Cogan, read by Suzanne Goldberg 5) Elevator Pitch by Mike Clarke, read by Sarah Feathers
Five fantastic stories of love, death, sex and flirtatious unicorns for Valentine's Day, featuring ballads, high art, highwaymen, mass slaughter and the perils of internet dating (twice). STORY PLAYLIST: 1) 00:00 THE BALLAD OF TOM & JANE by Amy Eddings, read by Lisa Rose & Peter Noble 2) 14:10 NINE DEAD, SIX WOUNDED - A LOVE STORY by Ian Green, read by Martine McMenemy & Andrew Baguley 3) 27:00 YOU & ME by Maria Kyle, read by Suzanne Goldberg & Cliff Chapman 4) 44:25 CANVAS SPIRITS by Paul Flack, read by Silas Hawkins & Patsy Prince 5) 1:03:00 IN WALKS A UNICORN by David Douce, read by Sarah Feathers & Tony Bell
The first half of our spooky October 2013 event. Features the stories Death of an Urban Hermit by Matthew Parker, read by Ben Crystal; Sorry for your Loss by Mary McCluskey, read by Jo Widdowson and White Van Men by David McGrath, read by Suzanne Goldberg.
WARNING: Rated NASTY for violence and swearing. "WANTED: MAN WITH VAN. PICK ME UP — TAKE ME TO QUIET PLACE THEN WITHOUT SAYING A WORD, GIVE ME THE FUCK OF MY YOUNG LIFE IN THE BACK. I AM NOT A WORKING GIRL. IT’S JUST WHAT GETS ME OFF." White Van Men by David McGrath was read by Suzanne Goldberg at the Liars' League DEAD & BURIED event on Tuesday, 8th October 2013 at The Phoenix, Cavendish Square, London.