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Kissing Lips & Breaking Hearts: A U2-ish Podcast with the Garden Tarts
When it rains, it pours! It's been a U2 drought for too long, and now they are everywhere... and we love it! The Garden Tarts go over some of our favorite press moments from the last week. RTE, the Ivors Awards, Titanic Museum, and Stories of Surrender press abound! And let's not forget The Edge's angelic voice preaching the truth. www.thegardentarts.comSUPPORT: www.patreon.com/thegardentarts AND www.buymeacoffee.com/thegardentartstwitter: @the_gardentartsinstagram: @the_gardentartswatch this ep on YouTube: @thegardentarts
Chris and Will travel to Sevierville and Pigeon Forge, Tennessee and visit Skyland Ranch, Shadracks Productions, and the Titanic Museum.
The Most Haunted City On Earth | Presented by The Savannah Underground
Become a Parajunkie Today! www.patreon.com/savannahunderground Take a listen to our new podcast, From One To Wicked here: https://open.spotify.com/show/06QAIRzlD07PLxLLm3tHfA Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/from-one-to-wicked/id1772817108
Zwei Zeitzonen, Grenzen zu acht anderen US-Bundesstaaten, mehr als 800 Kilometer von West nach Ost: Tennessee erstreckt sich quer durch die Südstaaten, bietet aber weitaus mehr Vielfalt als nur „Vom Winde verweht“-Flair. Highlight für Outdoor-Fans sind die Great Smoky Mountains, berichtet Südstaaten-Kennerin Nadine Skopp im Gespräch mit Meine-Reise-Moderator Holger Jacobs: Ob Wandern oder Wipfelpfad, in dem beliebten Nationalpark und in den umliegenden Orten gibt es ein riesiges Aktivprogramm für Jung und Alt. Auch aus den Städten ist es nie weit in Richtung Natur. Knoxville, Nashville und Memphis, aber auch kleinere Cities wie Bristol und Franklin glänzen zudem mit einer unschlagbaren Musikszene – Blues, Country, Rock'n'Roll, Soul und viel mehr können überall live erlebt werden. Und ob Barbecue oder Banana Pudding, Whiskey oder Moonshine, fürs kulinarische Wohl ist auch stets gesorgt. Was hat ein Titanic-Museum in Pigeon Forge zu suchen? Wo trifft die langlebigste Radio-Show auf ein multimediales Musikmuseum? Und in welchem Visitor Center gibt es jeden Werktag mittags kostenlose Live-Konzerte? Dies und vieles anderes – auch viele praktische Reisetipps! – verrät Nadine Skopp im aktuellen Podcast. Besonders hörenswert sind diesmal auch die O-Töne aus dem Bluebird Café in Nashville, vom Blue Plate Special in Knoxville und von … Dolly Parton! Also am besten gleich mal reinhören in die aktuelle Folge von Meine Reise USA!
Try Fractor https://factormeals.com/Watcher50 Use code WATCHER50 Try Miracle at https://trymiracle.com/Watcher for 40% off and a free 3 piece towel set. See Us On Tour! https://GhostFilesLive.com! This week the Return of Sausage Man! A Ghost in the Titanic Museum?! And buffet etiquette! HOSTED BY Ryan Bergara & Shane Madej & Steven Lim PRODUCER & EDITOR Matt Real INTRO BY Anthony De Vera EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS Steven Lim Ryan Bergara Shane Madej Social: http://www.instagram.com/wearewatcher http://www.instagram.com/ryanbergara http://www.instagram.com/shanemadej http://www.instagram.com/stevenkwlim https://twitter.com/wearewatcher https://twitter.com/ryansbergara https://twitter.com/shanemadej https://twitter.com/stevenkwlim Business Inquiries: hello@watcherentertainment.com Ask Watcher Pods! AskWatcherPods@gmail.com or leave a voicemail at (818)275-4585 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Compendium Podcast: An Assembly of Fascinating and Intriguing Things
In this episode of The Compendium, we continue our Titanic story as we set sail across the Atlantic within this engineering marvel, we explore the luxury and daily life aboard the ship, providing insights into the lives of both passengers and crew. We'll uncover the intricate details behind why the Titanic sank and the aftermath of this catastrophe. By examining the ship's design, the events leading up to the collision, and the harrowing experiences of those on board, we shed light on the legacy this disaster left behind. We give you the Compendium, but if you want more, then check out these great resources:1. "A Night to Remember" by Walter Lord2. "Titanic" Wikipedia3. "Titanic: The Tragedy Begins" The rest is history4. “The official Titanic Museum” website5. "Titanic” by James CameronSend us a Text Message and get a shout out in Listner Mail!Connect with Us:
The Compendium Podcast: An Assembly of Fascinating and Intriguing Things
In this episode of The Compendium, we're jumping onboard the highly requested Titanic! This is the first episode of our two-part series. In this episode, we look at the ambitious conception of this gigantic ship and the stories of some of its passengers and crew that make this story everlasting.Today, you'll learn about key figures like J.P. Morgan and Bruce Ismay, whose dreams and ambitions led to the creation of what was then the largest and most luxurious ship ever built.We also bring to life the experiences of the Titanic's passengers and crew, from the elite millionaires in first class to the hopeful immigrants in third class.We will load all the luggage and its passengers onboard as we prepare for the Titanic's maiden voyage in episode 2.We give you the Compendium, but if you want more, then check out these great resources:1. "A Night to Remember" by Walter Lord2. "Titanic" Wikipedia3. "Titanic: The Tragedy Begins" The rest is history4. “The official Titanic Museum” website5. "Titanic” by James CameronSend us a Text Message and get a shout out in Listner Mail!Connect with Us:
The richest man on board the Titanic had a town bearing his family name in the heart of Florida. His death in the frozen waters of the Atlantic changed the future of the small town in the heart of the Ocala National Forest. Pick up your copy of FLORIDA! right here! Thank you to Chelsea Rice for her incredible design of our summer logo! Thank you to Chrystel Hopkins and Paul Burns from the Titanic Museum for their help in this episode! All of the music was originally composed.
Join me as I reflect on the sinking 112 years later + present to you my live show at Titanic Museum Attraction in Pigeon Forge, an event that will stay a core and important memory to me forever. Thank you to everyone who came out for it and thank you to Steven Schwankert for being the best live show guest I could ask for. Find him on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sschwankert/ and make sure to follow along as he prepares to release his book about The Six early next year!Support the Show.Support Unsinkable on Patreon for as little as $1/month: https://www.patreon.com/unsinkablepodOr buy me a coffee!: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/labeadlesBuy Unsinkable shirts here!: https://www.bonfire.com/unsinkable-the-first-t-shirt/Support the pod via my Bookshop Storefront: https://bookshop.org/shop/unsinkablepodFind me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/unsinkablepod/Website: https://www.unsinkablepod.com
On this episode of Our American Stories, Lowell Lytle has been one of the privileged few who has seen Titanic first-hand. Lowell has played the part of Captain Smith at Titanic events all over the globe and has been entertaining guests at the Titanic Museum for more than fifteen years. He is also the author of the inspiring read, Diving Into The Deep. Here's Lowell Lytle to tell his story and the story of The Titanic's Last Hero. Support the show (https://www.ouramericanstories.com/donate)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Skip the Queue is brought to you by Rubber Cheese, a digital agency that builds remarkable systems and websites for attractions that helps them increase their visitor numbers. Your host is Kelly Molson, Founder of Rubber Cheese.Download the Rubber Cheese 2023 Visitor Attraction Website Report - the annual benchmark statistics for the attractions sector.If you like what you hear, you can subscribe on iTunes, Spotify, and all the usual channels by searching Skip the Queue or visit our website rubbercheese.com/podcast.If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave us a five star review, it really helps others find us. Show references: https://carbonsix.digital/https://www.linkedin.com/in/pmarden/Paul Marden is the Founder and Managing Director of Carbon Six Digital and the CEO of Rubber Cheese. He is an Umbraco Certified Master who likes to think outside the box, often coming up with creative technical solutions that clients didn't know were possible. Paul oversees business development and technical delivery, specialising in Microsoft technologies including Umbraco CMS, ASP.NET, C#, WebApi, and SQL Server. He's worked in the industry since 1999 and has vast experience of managing and delivering the technical architecture for both agencies and client side projects of all shapes and sizes. Paul is an advocate for solid project delivery and has a BCS Foundation Certificate in Agile. https://www.rubbercheese.com/https://www.linkedin.com/in/kellymolson/Kelly Molson is the Founder of Rubber Cheese, a user focused web design and development agency for the attraction sector. Digital partners to Eureka! The National Children's Museum, Pensthorpe, National Parks UK, Holkham, Visit Cambridge and The National Marine Aquarium.Kelly regularly delivers workshops and presentations on sector focused topics at national conferences and attraction sector organisations including ASVA, ALVA, The Ticketing Professionals Conference and the Museum + Heritage Show.As host of the popular Skip the Queue Podcast for people working in or working with visitor attractions, she speaks with inspiring industry experts who share their knowledge of what really makes an attraction successful.Recent trustee of The Museum of the Broads. Transcription: Kelly Molson: Welcome to Skip the Queue, a podcast for people working in or working with visitor attractions. I'm your host, Kelly Molson. In this new monthly slot, Rubber Cheese CEO Paul Marden joins me to discuss different digital related topics. In this episode, we'll talk about how you can make your site more interactive and the tasks and costs associated with that. You can subscribe on all the usual channels by searching Skip the Queue. Kelly Molson: Hello. Back for a fourth time. Paul Marden: Hello. Kelly Molson: What attraction have you visited most recently, and what did you love about it? Paul Marden: Do I go first? I always go first. Kelly Molson: We've got a format now. Don't break the format. I'm comfortable. Paul Marden: I went to the Titanic Museum just recently. We were exhibiting, actually, at the Association of Science and Discovery Centres at their annual conference in Belfast, which was actually at W5 in the Titanic quarter of Belfast. And I could talk loads about W5, which I will do in another session. But the place that I went to that I was most kind of emotionally moved by which I'm a bit of a geek and I'm fairly concrete in terms of my emotional stuff, for me to feel moved. Kelly Molson: Yeah. It's normally me that's got the blubbing. Paul Marden: Yeah. So I was blown away by the experience at the Titanic Museum. I've never been to a museum with so few artefacts, which, of course, is because everything was lost at sea. And so the whole museum is about telling the story through reproductions and immersive experiences, which was all amazing. But then you stumble upon one of the original artefacts as you're wandering around, and there's only a handful of them, but it hit me like a brick wall when I actually came across them. So there's a life jacket. There's only twelve of those left in existence, and they've got one of them at the museum. And you walk into this room, where all of the names of the victims of this tragedy are on this massive wall. And it's a darkened room, but lit in the centre of the room was this one life jacket. Paul Marden: Amazing. And then you walk around and there's a section talking about the root cause of the accident. And there are the keys to the binocular store from the crow's nest, which happened to be in the second officer's pocket. And he had to get off the ship in Southampton and he didn't get back on, and so there were no keys. And so the people that were in the crow's nest couldn't open the box with the binoculars that would have led them to see the iceberg. Kelly Molson: Wow. What a story. That wasn't in the film. Paul Marden: No, it wasn't in the film. So it's really impactful. And then the storytelling was amazing, but completely lost on me. So I was chatting to. I made a new friend, Lucinda Lewis, the CEO of Catalyst Science and Discovery Centre, and we would, like, both say how amazing it was, how impactful it was. And she was like, "Yeah, and the dominoes." And I'm like, "Dominoes? What dominoes?" Paul Marden: And she was like, "Did you not see when you were looking at all of the root causes, they wrote them on these big pillars that were toppling, showing you the domino effect." I was like, "Okay, yeah, that was completely lost on me." Kelly Molson: So lesson for you is you need to pay more attention to the interpretation next time. Paul Marden: Completely clueless to the subtext of what was going on around me. But the story was amazing. Kelly Molson: Story is really cool. Yeah. I have never heard that before. That's really impressive. I think that picture that you painted of all the names with the one kind of life jacket in the middle of it is so powerful. I can see it in my head, but I've never seen it. Paul Marden: That was only one of a dozen kind of really powerful memories that I've got of being just blown away by their storytelling and how they communicated what happened. It was just an amazing place. Kelly Molson: Nice. I've got it. I missed that I couldn't make it to the conference this year because I was elsewhere. Paul Marden: Absolutely. What have you been doing recently? Where have you been? Kelly Molson: So this is a very recent one, literally last week, last Thursday, I was very kindly invited to go and visit the Ashmolean Museum, which is a free to enter museum. But what I really liked is they have a very large donations area as you first walk in and you've got card donations. Beep. So easy. I never have cash, so that was a big thumbs up for me. The museum is brilliant. I mean, it has some brilliant exhibitions in it that are there. They're always there. But I was really keen to go and see their colour revolution exhibition, which is all around Victorian art, fashion and design. Some of you might not know this about me, but I was a graphic designer in the past, actually. Probably. Actually, loads of you people know about that. Loads. Kelly Molson: I was a graphic designer once upon a time and I was a packaging designer and just design and colour. And also I've got a real passion for kind of interior design as well. So all of these things just, I have a big love of. So this exhibition for me was like, "This is the one. This is a big tick." What I found really fascinating is that Victorian Britain has this kind of connotation of being really dull and dreary, and the exhibition was kind of exploring that. It's absolutely incorrect, but they start with Queen Victoria's morning dress, which is a really powerful image. So after Prince Albert's sudden death, she plunged into a very deep grief. And she actually wore. I didn't know this. She wore black for the remaining 40 years of her life. I had no idea that she. Kelly Molson: I mean, I knew she mourned for a really long time. I had no idea she never wore another colour again. So she's obviously such an iconic image, an iconic person of that era, that image probably sticks with you, which is why it adds to that illusion of Victorian's love in the dark completely. But they didn't they really love colour. And they love to experiment with it. And they have a big thing about insects and animals and bringing that into the colours that they wore. And the jewellery, like, some of the jewellery, like this beetle necklace, was just incredible. And there is a lot of. I know that they have a lot of that in their kind of fabrics and their kind of artwork from that time as well. But what I really loved is really small artefact in the museum that I totally loved. So it was a very early colour chart, like a paint sample colour chart. So this is quite current for me at the minute. Kelly Molson: My office is full of furnishings because we're renovating a cottage in Norfolk and it's not ready, but I've had to order all the things for it or find them off Facebook Marketplace and eBay and charity shops and vintage places and my office. So colour chart and all of that kind of stuff is, like, right up here at the moment. But anyway, there was an 1814 Scottish artist called Patrick Syme, and he tried to solve the problem of how to describe colour by giving each one of them a name. But he draw nature to do this. So you have, like, mole's breath now from Barrow and ball and lighting green and those kind of stuff. Well, this is where this started in the Victorian age, so it's absolutely beautiful. I posted it on my LinkedIn. Kelly Molson: But this colour chart is just gorgeous and it gives a number for each colour. So number 54. Its name was Duck green. The animal that it was named after is the neck of Mallard. I actually thought the colour was neck of Mallard, which I was like, that's absolutely brilliant. The vegetable that it was similar to is the upper disc of yew leaves, and the mineral is. I don't know if I'm going to pronounce this Ceylanite and I Googled it isn't green. I had no idea what ceylanite is, but it's not green. Paul Marden: Yeah, I'd struggle to identify a yew tree, let alone the upper disc green of a yew tree's leaf. Kelly Molson: Well, there you go. Honestly, I loved it. I loved every minute of it. It was really interesting. And that for me was like, I know it's a really small artefact, but it was the standout one for me because it just connected with some of it is so current for me at the moment. It was £15 pounds to go and see this exhibition and that is money well spent. It's open now until the 18th of Feb 2024. So totally get yourselves along to visit that. And also their restaurant and food is top notch. Paul Marden: Was it good? Was it really okay? Kelly Molson: We'll talk about that another time. Paul Marden: We've done a few of the Oxford Uni museums, but we've not done the Ashmolean yet, so that needs to be on my list of places to go. Kelly Molson: Yeah, definitely worth a little visit. Okay. Right. We're going to talk about interactivity today. Making your website more interactive can improve engagement which is more likely to improve your conversion rate. But very few attractions have interactive elements, which is quite surprising, actually. So we're going to talk about how you can make your site a bit more interactive and immersive. So one, the stat from the survey is that, 53% of visitor attractions survey don't have any interactive elements on their websites. Kelly Molson: So that's like. I'm quite surprised about that because during the pandemic, went all in on interactivity. We had to. It was the only way that you could kind of get people to your site and get people engaged in what you were doing. And we're talking about things like virtual tours, interactive maps, or even just integrating video and audio on your site is a way of making it interactive as well. So, yeah, I was quite surprised that it was so low, actually. Paul Marden: Yeah, it surprised me as well, because a lot of the people that we talk to want that kind of interactive content added into their sites. Kelly Molson: Do you think. And I'm not trying to make us idiots here again, because we did enough of that on the last episode, but do you think that people understand that video and audio is an interactive element? Paul Marden: That's a good point. Kelly Molson: Or is our expectation of it to be more. Because audio and video, do we see that as a standard thing now? We don't see that as a special element. Paul Marden: That could be absolutely true. And we talked a lot about things that we could do to improve the survey for next time. There's a real risk, isn't there? Because you could ask a lot more very detailed questions. Do you have a virtual tour? Do you have an interactive map? Do you have video and audio on your site? And now, all of a sudden, we've gone from one question to three questions, and we're asking too much of everybody when they fill stuff in, so you end up having to have broader questions, but those broader questions themselves become a little ambiguous. So maybe there's an element of. It could be that there's a bunch of people in that 53% of people that don't have interactivity, that may have stuff that is video or audio that we would consider to be interactive, but they don't. Kelly Molson: Do you think as well, that because life has gone back to relative normality for the majority of us, that we just are not engaging with those things as much, or they just not seem to be as relevant anymore? Paul Marden: Yeah, it's interesting, isn't it? We talk about audience personas and trying to personalise the site to give people exactly the content that's relevant to them. Who is the target audience for the virtual tour? Is the target audience for a virtual tour the people that are going to come visit? Is it a way of enticing people to come and physically come on site? Is it a way of extending the reach of the attraction, or let's say it's a cultural or museum kind of setting? Is it a way for them to extend the reach of their collection to people that can't come. Understanding what the interactivity is there for and how it enables the audience to achieve the goal that they're trying to achieve. And for the clients, the attraction themselves, to be able to achieve what their goal is for that audience group is interesting. Paul Marden: Interactivity for its own sake doesn't help anyone if you're not really thought about why you're putting it there. Kelly Molson: Yeah, I was just trying to think. I've got a really good case study of this and I've forgotten the name of the place. I want to talk about it, but I've forgotten the name of it, so I'll give you an explanation of it instead. Years ago, so. Oh, God, I think this is. In 2015, Lee and I went to Australia on holiday. Lee actually asked me to marry him in Australia at Ayers Rock. It was very romantic. Paul Marden: Oh, wow. Kelly Molson: But one of the best, I should say that was the best trip, obviously, that was the best trip, but one of the other best trips that went on while were there. When were in Melbourne, I've gone to the island and I've forgotten the name of the island. It's come off totally out of my head. But went to see the little penguins, so the penguin parade that comes in. These penguins come in to shore every night and you can go and watch them come in. It's like an army of miniature penguins. And it genuinely is the most magical thing I've ever seen in my whole life. And you can't take photos because it hurts their eyes. So you're immersing yourself into this experience and it's all up here in my head. Kelly Molson: Well, during the pandemic, they started live broadcasting it on Facebook and I was like, "Shut up. This is amazing." Because it's an expensive trip back to Australia, but I'd love to do that again. I would absolutely 100% go back and do that again. But this was like a magical opportunity to see it in my home office and watch it as well. So those kind of opportunities, I think, are pretty magical. Paul Marden: You reminded me of in the middle of lockdown, I was obsessed by watching the webcam at Monterey Bay Aquarium. Kelly Molson: I just got something else that got obsessed about a few weeks ago, which is I watched the webcam Sandringham have got. No, is it Sandringham or Balmoral? One of them have got a webcam with the Red Squirrels. I think it's Balmoral. And I got absolutely, totally obsessed with it. Had it on in the corner of the screen just while I was working, just going, "Is it there yet? Is it back yet? Red squirrel. Red squirrel."Paul Marden: I think it might be. The two of us were looking at penguins and sea otters during the height of the pandemic when were desperate to travel. Now, watching Red squirrels on a webcam might be, might not have the same justification for the rest of your day's life. Kelly Molson: It's really cool. It's really cool. You don't get to see red squirrels very often. Paul Marden: No, you don't. Kelly Molson: Anyway, apologies went off on a total tangent, but you can see, look, we've got really animated about this, so you can totally see the value of having those kind of experiences on your website and being to engage with different audiences. Paul Marden: Should we do a stat? Should we talk about some numbers?Kelly Molson: Yeah, what's the benefits? Paul Marden: Yeah. So HubSpot again. We talk about HubSpot data all the time. But HubSpot found that interactive content like quizzes, assessments and polls can increase time spent on a website by 80%. That one's lifted straight out of the survey that we put into there. But there's some more. The Content Marketing Institute shows that 81% of marketers agreed that interactive content grabbed more attention than static content. But that chimes with the data that we gathered from people, doesn't it? Because a lot of people do think that this is important stuff. Maybe not quite to the same level that the Content Marketing Institute found, but obviously people in the results set from our survey thought that this was important. Kelly Molson: Yeah. And I think it depends on what that interactive content is. So, interestingly, when we did the live webinar for the report, we had someone on the webinar mention that they were a bit worried about distraction. So we talk a lot about focusing people's attention on the job in hand, which is ultimately showcase what your attraction does, get them to buy a ticket. And this person said, are we distracting them from those journeys by doing that? But I don't know if it's part of the purchase journey. I think it might be post purchase. It feels for me like post purchase, getting them to come back and engage in your site, repeat visit stuff, just those things around quizzes and assessment and polls and stuff like that. And also this example that I just gave about the little penguins. Kelly Molson: I absolutely will go back to that place one day and being able to engage with it keeps it front and centre of my mind to go. When we go back to Australia, I'm going to take my kid to see that because she will love it. I'll make sure she loves it. And I don't know if it's part of the first point of engagement. I think it's post purchase engagement. Paul Marden: That's interesting. Yeah. What the problems say? Kelly Molson: Anyway, problems? Sustainability. Paul Marden: Yeah. Shall I share a bugbear of mine that I share regularly in meetings all the time. But a lot of interactive content, especially the stuff that uses video, can be inherently unsustainable. Video uses bandwidth. And a lot of people don't think of the impact that websites can have on CO2 emissions. Yeah, it's a link that I don't think many people make. I certainly didn't until there's been a lot of talk around in our industry about this in the last couple of years and it's really opened my eyes up. It's easy to understand if you work for an airline, you can see the CO2 emissions coming out the back of the plane, but if you build websites, you don't see it necessarily, but video consumes bandwidth and bandwidth takes all of these things, the compute power to produce the video and publish it out onto the Internet. Paul Marden: And then to shift all of that data across the Internet ultimately uses energy, and that energy comes at the cost of producing CO2. So one of the obvious ways, if we're just talking about video itself, because video is one kind of more interactive element, avoiding autoplaying videos, which is my absolute bugbear when you land on a home page of a website. And the video autoplays that for me, now that my eyes have been opened to the impact of it, I only used to see the conversion rate benefit, but now the cost associated with that is clear in my mind. And I think if we can avoid doing that and find other ways to increase conversion, I think that's really important. But also doing things to make sure that we understand what the sustainability impact of the web pages that we produce. Paul Marden: So as we make our web pages more complex, they will produce more CO2 as a result of doing that. And I think as people become more aware of this, the world is going to change. At the moment, the people that buy from us, this is not something that is front and centre of their minds in the buying process, I think, at the moment. And there's a lot of power in the hands of the marketers and the procurement people to make it so that technical people like us that build things are required to take that sustainability perspective into account when we're building things and making sure that we build things sustainably. Kelly Molson: And then there's accessibility. So interactive elements can be really great for people that can't visit your site, for one example. However, the digital aspect of that means that you could intentionally put something on your site which actually is less accessible for people who have visual impairments or hearing impairments, for example. Paul Marden: Yeah, absolutely. If you've got video with audio, have you got subtitles? If you've got video, do you have audio descriptions that describe what the video is showing? If you've got an interactive map, how would you provide a more accessible way of being able to see the interactive map? If you've got a 3D, interactive, immersive virtual tour, how will you interact with that? If you can't see it, to interact with it, those are all things that people need to be thinking about. And many of the institutions that we work with will have a statutory obligation to think about it as well. It's not just a nice to have, it's a statutory obligation to do it as well. Kelly Molson: Yeah, for sure. Okay, so who's doing it well? I think we should just caveat this one by saying that our report and a survey and subsequent report are all anonymous. Kelly Molson: If we ever share anyone's information, that is, in relation to the report data. We have asked for their express permission. Prior to this. Prior to sharing. In this instant, we've just gone out and found some stuff on people's websites and gone, “We really like this. This is really cool.” So we're not talking about these institutions in relation to survey data? Paul Marden: No, absolutely. Should we talk about. The first one in our list was Mary Rose Trust. And the Mary Rose Museum has got an amazing array of interactive artefacts that they've listed off the bottom of the seabed and made it available on the website so you can come. Kelly Molson: With your mouse, you can turn it around. Not with your hand.Paul Marden: Not yet. The technology isn't quite there yet, but, yeah, you can interact with those artefacts and I think that's pretty amazing for an organisation like them, to be able to share those, because they've got an amazing collection of Tudor artefacts and to be able to share those with the outside world is really impressive. Yeah. Kelly Molson: So that's like a simple technology where you can kind of 3D model the artefact and you can spin it around and you can click on elements of it that will tell you a little bit about this part of it or where it was found or the condition of it, et cetera. So that is super cool. What was the other one on this list that you were like, “This is great.”Paul Marden: I really loved the Museum of London's Victorian Walk. It's a 3D tour affair and obviously they've scanned, taken photos and composed this together into this really cool 3D tour system that you can just move around and experience what life is like on a Victorian walk. I was blown away by, you were talking about the colour of Victorian England. Yeah, it was a really colourful experience. So in my mind, it was a bit like going into diagonally in Hogwarts in the Harry Potter world. It felt that kind of side street of London kind of thing. But you really got into it. It was very cool. Kelly Molson: Oh, that's one for me. So I should go and do that and do a little comparison of how colourful it was based on my Ashmolean experience. Paul Marden: Absolutely. Kelly Molson: Okay, next steps that someone can take if they're thinking about stuff like this. So assess what you can do really quickly and easily. So what do we already have? Paul Marden: Yeah, a lot of people are already going to have stuff, aren't they? So what video have they got? What audio have they got? Were they like Mary Rose and had a bunch of 3D scans of their artefacts that then you can stick into a tool and put onto your website. Obviously, if you've got a large collection and you want to 3D scan everything and put it onto your website, that's not a trivial undertaking, is it? But if you've already got the 3D scans of stuff and you need to then make it available on the website, then the step might be relatively much simpler than scanning your whole collection. Kelly Molson: Yeah. So have a look through your video, your audio, your 3D elements. What do you already have, what can you make more of? And then what can you easily add to your current site? Paul Marden: Yeah, absolutely. A lot of websites can add video and audio just straight out of the box. I'm going to get a bit geeky and talk about iframes, but essentially an iframe is a little cut out area of your website that you can post a little bit of content into that a lot of different interactive tools on the web will enable you to do so. The 3D models. There's a tool that you can create 3D models of the world in that we've used on a number of different projects. And then you just embed it as an iframe, which is essentially take a URL of your 3D scan and you pop it into your website and it comes out and works on the page as is. It's pretty awesome. And takes so little effort for your developers to be able to add it to the site. Kelly Molson: Cool. And then think about what you could commission or think about some of the things that you could potentially look at as a larger piece of project work. Paul Marden: Yeah, I mean, there's a brainstorming exercise, there, isn't there, of trying to get lots of people together and come up with creative ideas and think about what you can do. Some of the other stuff that we've talked about. Easy. Doesn't take a lot of effort. You've got the assets already or it's relatively easy to add them to your site. But what else could you do? That takes a lot of effort and planning. Kelly Molson: Ask your visitors. Ask people what more they'd like to see. Paul Marden: Yeah. Figuring out what your audience wants and how do you get them to that is step number one, isn't it? Kelly Molson: Okay, and then what kind of budget are we looking at for some of these things? Paul Marden: How long is a piece of string kind of question? This one isn't. It's really hard adding interactive maps onto your site that are fully accessible and easy to use. I guess you're looking at a few thousand pounds to be able to do that, potentially less depends on what you want to put into your interactive map, video and audio. If your website already supports it and you got a whole library of this stuff that you want to share with the outside world, it could cost you nothing but the time it takes you to add it to the site. And then you get into some of the more complex elements like the you can imagine that creating a 3D kind of immersive virtual walkthrough, that's not a trivial job. Paul Marden: If you want to go and photograph an entire exhibit, walk around the whole floor plan of your museum and create an amazing virtual tour. That's going to take some effort, both in terms of getting the right people to turn up with the right kit to be able to do that photography, and then in terms of the technology that's needed to turn that into a virtual tour, and then the effort to embed that into the website itself could be amazing. Probably not a cheap exercise.Kelly Molson: No, substantial investment, and just need to make sure that you're doing it for the right reasons and for the right audience as well. Also podcast if you are thinking about doing a podcast for your museum or your attraction, which I think is a genius idea, give us a shout and we'd be happy to share some of our kind of top tips. Kelly Molson: I think we did an episode on it back in the day with Paul Griffith from Painshill Park, who actually, he interviewed me on this podcast and we talked about some of the reasons that we did it, how we set it up, and some of the kind of costumes around that as well. So it's worth having a little bit through, dig through the archive, but if you got any questions on that then yeah, give us a shout. Good chat again today. I enjoyed this. Paul Marden: Been good, hasn't it? Kelly Molson: Yeah. I'll see you next time. Paul Marden: Thank you. Cheers, mate. Bye. Kelly Molson: Bye bye. Kelly Molson: Thanks for listening to Skip The Queue. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave us a five star review. It really helps others find us. And remember to follow us on Twitter for your chance to win the books that have been mentioned. Skip the queue is brought to you by Rubber Cheese, a digital agency that builds remarkable systems and websites for attractions that helps them increase their visitor numbers. You can find show notes and transcriptions from this episode and more over on our website, rubbercheese.com/podcast. The 2023 Visitor Attraction Website Report is now LIVE! Dive into groundbreaking benchmarks for the industryGain a better understanding of how to achieve the highest conversion ratesExplore the "why" behind visitor attraction site performanceLearn the impact of website optimisation and visitor engagement on conversion ratesUncover key steps to enhance user experience for greater conversionsDownload the report now for invaluable insights and actionable recommendations!
This is the first of two holiday-inspired December episodes.Join me AT the Titanic Museum Attraction as Emily Densky and I discuss the haunting beauty in recognizing the lives of Titanic's children, both those who survived and those lost. We tell the story of Douglas Spedden, whose survival that night (alongside his family) inspired his mother Daisy to write a children's book at Christmas, 1913--to help him cope with the unbelievable trauma, no doubt. Douglas' life was cut horrifically short just two years later, and the manuscript slept in a trunk for decades...until a descendant stumbled upon it and brought it out into the world. We jump around at the end to a bit of everything as well--happenings at the museum, descendant visits to the museum, and....past life regression?!To find out more about the museum and all it does + how to visit, so right here: https://titanicpigeonforge.comHistory Nerds UnitedLet's make history fun again! Come listen to interviews with today's best authors.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showSupport Unsinkable on Patreon for as little as $1/month: https://www.patreon.com/unsinkablepodOr buy me a coffee!: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/labeadlesBuy Unsinkable shirts here!: https://www.bonfire.com/unsinkable-the-first-t-shirt/Support the pod via my Bookshop Storefront: https://bookshop.org/shop/unsinkablepodFind me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/unsinkablepod/Website: https://www.unsinkablepod.com
Hometown Radio 11/20/23 3p: Guest no show so we chat then Lucy Wickstrom takes us to the Titanic Museum Exhibit in LA
On the 28th and 29th of November, The Titanic Museum will host the Hydrogen Conference aiming to look at delivering a balanced pathway to net zero, Joining Emmet to discuss this in more detail is Director and Spokesperson with Hydrogen Ireland, Paul McCormack.
We're back with the screaming fans and our favorite little brother Frankie in the Disney Channel documentary miniseries, "Jonas Brothers: Living The Dream", but this time, healthy eating, school work, and a field trip to the Titanic Museum are at the forefront. ----- Follow The Time Mousechine: Instagram Twitter TikTok Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Please Stop Saying Cookie In The Titanic Museum.
A special surprise summer episode (say that five times fast!) for your feed. Join me as I travel in-person to the Titanic Museum Attraction in Pigeon Forge where I livestream with Steven Schwankert, co-creator the documentary The Six and host/researcher of the new podcast Titanic New Jersey. I also sit down with Jody, education director and long-time crew member at the museum about the summer's goings-on there and some new artifacts.Find Steven's new podcast here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/titanic-new-jersey/id1641933136Follow The Six on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thesixdocumentary/As always, find all the info for the Titanic Museum (Pigeon Forge and Branson) here: https://titanicpigeonforge.comAnd don't forget to click on their donation links to help Samaritan's FeetSupport the showSupport Unsinkable on Patreon for as little as $1/month: https://www.patreon.com/unsinkablepodOr buy me a coffee!: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/labeadlesBuy Unsinkable shirts here!: https://www.bonfire.com/unsinkable-the-first-t-shirt/Support the pod via my Bookshop Storefront: https://bookshop.org/shop/unsinkablepodFind me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/unsinkablepod/Website: https://www.unsinkablepod.com
The waterfront of Belfast, Northern Ireland, is home to one of the world's biggest tourist attractions: Titanic Belfast, also known as the Titanic Museum. The museum opened in 2012 and attracted more than six million people in its first seven years of operation. In 2018, two important new attractions – the Great Light and Titanic Walkway – officially opened to the public near the museum. The so-called Great Light is the world's first and largest hyper-radial Fresnel lens -- the largest and most powerful lighthouse lenses ever made. It was originally installed in Tory Island Lighthouse in 1887, and it went through some unusual changes over the years. The Great Light, photo by Albert Bridge. Titanic Quarter, Belfast CC BY-SA 2.0 Sally Montgomery Dr. Sally Montgomery has been a science educator for more than 40 years. She is currently a board member of the Commissioners of Irish Lights, a board member of the Titanic Foundation, and a former trustee of the Maritime Belfast Trust. Sally has done much in-depth research on the history of the Great Light. Focus 244 Gallery, York, Maine Focus 244 is a new photography gallery in York, Maine. This month the gallery is hosting a lighthouse festival, featuring an artists' reception on July 22, kids' activities on July 23, and also an evening presentation by "Light Hearted" host Jeremy D'Entremont on July 23. Shannon Culpepper is the curator of the Focus 244 gallery.
To celebrate Pride Month, we've teamed up with Chris Sweeney of Homo Sapiens for a two-part crossover podcast. This is part 1, where we tackled the very deepest LGBTQIA+ topics, including The Titanic Museum and who we fancied most on Saved By The Bell. To hear the second part of this very lovely conversation, head over to the Homo Sapiens feed - https://play.acast.com/s/homosapiens Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We took a group trip to the Titanic Museum in Branson, Missouri Tenants From Hell - Issues With Water https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqqeynWN5AU
On this episode of Our American Stories, (This Day in History: Titanic sank in 1912) - Lowell Lytle has been one of the privileged few who has seen Titanic first-hand. Lowell has played the part of Captain Smith at Titanic events all over the globe and has been entertaining guests at the Titanic Museum for more than fifteen years. He is also the author of the inspiring read, Diving Into The Deep. Here's Lowell Lytle to tell his story and the story of The Titanic's Last Hero. Support the show (https://www.ouramericanstories.com/donate)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Titanic Museum in Belfast NI --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/kathleen-smith/message
Register for the Virtual Film Fest via the Titanic Museum Attraction's Events Page here: https://titanicpigeonforge.com/titanic-pigeon-forge-events/#worldeventIf you're in Asheville, here's the info for the meetup March 16:Burial Beer Asheville Taproom6pm-7:30pmCome as you are, super casual!Support the showSupport Unsinkable on Patreon for as little as $1/month: https://www.patreon.com/unsinkablepodOr buy me a coffee!: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/labeadlesBuy Unsinkable shirts here!: https://www.bonfire.com/unsinkable-the-first-t-shirt/Support the pod via my Bookshop Storefront: https://bookshop.org/shop/unsinkablepodFind me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/unsinkablepod/Website: https://www.unsinkablepod.com
Join me as Emily Densky and I discuss a few of the children who boarded Titanic in 1912, highlighting both gorgeous and heartbreaking human moments the night of the sinking as well as how the events affected their lives moving forward. This year, 2023, the Titanic Museum Attractions celebrate a "Year of the Child" with new artifacts, galleries and events that showcase the hope, resiliency and memory of all the children on the ship.As always, find info about the museums here: https://titanicpigeonforge.comThe Laroche/Navratil photo can be found here: http://aftitanic.free.fr/titanic/passagers/laroche_l_navratil_m_et_dean_m_h.jpgFind the story of the Caldwell family via Bookshop: https://bookshop.org/p/books/a-rare-titanic-family-the-caldwells-story-of-survival-julie-hedgepeth-williams/18644775?aid=80949&ean=9781588382825&listref=episodes-miscellany Here is the link for the Florida meetup group started by listener Collin: https://www.meetup.com/florida-titanic-fans-meetupSupport the showSupport Unsinkable on Patreon for as little as $1/month: https://www.patreon.com/unsinkablepodOr buy me a coffee!: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/labeadlesBuy Unsinkable shirts here!: https://www.bonfire.com/unsinkable-the-first-t-shirt/Support the pod via my Bookshop Storefront: https://bookshop.org/shop/unsinkablepodFind me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/unsinkablepod/Website: https://www.unsinkablepod.com
On this episode of Our American Stories, Lowell Lytle has been one of the privileged few who has seen Titanic first-hand. Lowell has played the part of Captain Smith at Titanic events all over the globe and has been entertaining guests at the Titanic Museum for more than fifteen years. He is also the author of the inspiring read, Diving Into The Deep. Support the show (https://www.ouramericanstories.com/donate)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Join me for this, my very first collaborative episode with the Titanic Museum Attraction:For the month of November we decided to share some research and chat about a few of the 48 veterans who sailed on Titanic. I welcome back Kadi Brazil, who has appeared on the pod before and, honestly, I'd have her on every week! This is the important work, telling the stories, and looking at passengers through a lens like military service opened up so many intriguing tangents as well. A few passengers featured here: Helen Churchill Candee, Edith Pears, Archie Butt, Archibald Gracie, Father Frances Browne, and the star of the show today, truly--Gus Cohen, a third class passenger with perhaps even more than nine lives.Find everything you need to know about visiting the museum here: https://titanicpigeonforge.comFor more on Archie Butt, see:-George Behe, On Board RMS Titanic-George Behe, A Death on TitanicFilm vs Film PodcastThe film podcast where guests pick their favourite films to battle it out!Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showSupport Unsinkable on Patreon: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/unsinkable-the-titanic-podcast/id1585578882Find me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/unsinkablepod/Shoot me an email if you like: UnsinkablePod@gmail.com
We are back again! Episode 5 y'all-- halfway through season 2 (because you know your girl works 60 hours a week and can manage 10 episodes a season like I'm a streaming service- shout out to Hulu!)Adara is back in the pod-seat sharing her experience visiting the Titanic Museum in Belfast waaaaay back in September. She was thoughtful enough to record her live reactions to the exhibit, the experience, and what she saw...even if she broke the rules doing it!Join us as we talk about the shipyard history, the contemporary feel to the museum itself, setting foot on The Nomadic, and.... the ride!? Yes, you read that-- a ride. With a cue like Disneyland and everythang. Hit play! Let's gooooooo *kiss*
From the September/October 2022 edition of The Scottish Rite Journal. Any accompanying photographs or citations for this article can be found in the corresponding print edition.As an added feature to this Scottish Rite Journal Podcast, I had the privilege to speak with Br Mike Lee regarding his article. Hope you enjoy it.
Join me in a FUN but also incredibly informative chat with actress and docent Kadi Brazil-- who works at the Titanic Museum Attraction in Pigeon Forge, where she portrays some of the ship's most iconic female passengers, historical and fictional (wink, wink, Rose reference). Kadi was so generous with her time and gives us a real sense of what it's like to work in a place where it's always, always 1912. From moving moments with visitors to some wacky anecdotes, this is one of my favorite interviews to date!For peeks into her Titanic characters as well as other projects, follow Kadi on Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/misskadimarie/Find info on the museum here: https://titanicpigeonforge.comFind me on Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/unsinkablepod/?hl=enFind Violet Jessup's memoir, which we mention, here: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/titanic-survivor-violet-jessop/1141380852If you enjoy the pod, please consider taking a moment to review on Apple or Spotify!Support the show
I was invited to attend Northern Ireland Comic Con in Belfast. I took a week to travel around Northern Ireland and Ireland to take in all the beautiful country. The first stop was Belfast by way of New York City JFK and London Heathrow. The Titanic Hotel is located in the Titanic Quarter of Belfast. It is conveniently right across the street from the Titanic Museum. The hotel itself, is the old headquarters of Harland & Wolff, builders of Titanic. They really did a great job of modernizing the building while maintaining a lot of the old structure. There are lots of awesome pieces of art detailing the history of White Star Line and the Titanic. The Titanic Hotel Belfast is a great hotel to stay at for one night while you are visiting the Titanic Museum. The history and ambience of the Titanic Hotel are top notch and their bar and dining are amazing. If you plan on staying in Belfast for more than one night, I suggest getting a room in downtown Belfast for the other nights, mostly due to the price. SUBSCRIBE to watch more videos like this one! LET'S CONNECT! -- Zia Comics website -- Zia Comics TikTok -- Zia Comics Facebook -- Zia Comics Twitter -- Zia Comics Instagram LISTEN TO OUR PODCAST! - iTunes #ziacomics #lascruces #newmexico #lascrucesnm #lascrucesnewmexico #belfast #titanic #titanichotel #titanicmuseum
Join me and Jenna as we regale you all with our tales from The Great Smokey Mountains! We discuss the beautiful sites, The Titanic Museum, Moonshine, swimin' holes, almost dying while tubing, "Duck Hunting", Jeep life, and so much more! Thank you for listening on #tuneintuesdays! We appreciate all of the listens! If you would like to be on the show, please reach out! You can email me directly at bitterandjadedpodcast@gmail.com or you can visit our website at https://www.bitterandjadedpodcast.com Thank you so much for listening to our show!
On 15th April 1912, the RMS Titanic sank into the Atlantic Ocean. 100 years later, the city of Belfast inaugurated the opulent Titanic Museum, built at the cost of a whopping 116 million Euros. The museum also tells another story, that of the rise of Belfast city, making it one of the largest ports in the world. But there is another story, which it does not tell, and it involves India. This week, in the seventh episode of the series, Ireland Untravelled, we travel from Belfast in Northern Ireland, to Mosul in Iraq to Calicut in India, and uncover the global shame of western museums. Tune in, and discover the story of the decimation of a rich Indian cultural tradition.Morse code audio sourced from Meridian Outpost: https://www.meridianoutpost.com/resources/etools/calculators/calculator-morse-code.phpTill then Check out the other episodes of "Ireland Untravelled"Lost Treasures, Dynamite and the Irish Nation : https://ivm.today/3okwxm5Gaelic and the stunning decline of the Irish Language : https://ivm.today/3zmhE9iTrinity Long Room and the Soul of the Irish Nation : https://ivm.today/3PnZkSEU2, Body Snatching and the Irish Way of Death : https://ivm.today/3IQ6fl3You can check previous episodes of 'Podcasts from Nowhere' on IVM Podcasts websitehttps://ivm.today/3xuayw9You can reach out to our host Utsav on Instagram: @whywetravel42(https://www.instagram.com/whywetravel42)You can listen to this show and other awesome shows on the IVM Podcasts app on Android: https://ivm.today/android or iOS: https://ivm.today/ios, or any other podcast app.
Monkey Pox -- Gun Violence -- Off Broadway "Titanique"We speak with the Houston Health Department about the rise of Monkeypox in the community. Monkeypox is a rare disease caused by infection with the monkeypox virus. Monkeypox virus belongs to the Orthopoxvirus genus in the family Poxviridae. The Orthopoxvirus genus also includes variola virus (which causes smallpox), vaccinia virus (used in the smallpox vaccine), and cowpox virus. Monkeypox is not related to chickenpox.GUEST: Janine White https://www.houstonhealth.org/services/disease-prevention/monkeypox/about-monkeypox We speak with Aimee Mobley Turney with the League of Women Voters anti-gun violence committee. This is part of the movement of Americans fighting for public safety measures that can protect people from gun violence. They work to educate regarding stronger gun laws.GUESTS: Aimee Mobley Turneywww.lwvhouston.orgFinally, we speak with former Houstonian Tye Blue about his show "Titanique". When the music of Céline Dion makes sweet Canadian love with the eleven-time Oscar®-winning film Titanic, you get TITANIQUE, a musical celebration that turns one of the greatest love stories of all time into a hysterical and joyful slay-fest.Want to find out what really happened to Jack and Rose on that fateful night?The story begins when Céline Dion hijacks a Titanic Museum tour and enchants the audience with her totally wild take, recharting the course of Titanic's beloved moments and characters with her iconic song catalog.Guest: Tye Bluehttps://titaniquemusical.com/
Welcome to July 14th, 2022 on the National Day Calendar. Today we celebrate a classic comfort food and the spirit of class. Macaroni and cheese has become a staple food for kids everywhere. If you're a parent, you're probably sick of being asked to make this dish, but you gotta know you're not alone. Kraft sells one million boxes of mac and cheese. Per day. And Canada buys almost 24% of that total. Up there, it's referred to as Kraft Dinner and some have unofficially called it the country's national meal. It's also popular to put ketchup on it, but don't give your kids any ideas. On National Mac & Cheese Day, whip up a bowl of this classic comfort food, though it may not feel different from any other day, still a celebration is a celebration, right? Everything about the orange flavored liqueur known as Grand Marnier signifies class, elegance and distinction. Made from Caribbean oranges, fine cognac and sugar, this spirit is aged to perfection for nearly 10 years. Since its debut in 1880 the process has changed very little. It first appeared at the Ritz Hotel in Paris and sailed aboard the RMS Titanic. To this day a rescued bottle is found in the Titanic Museum. It was more recently served to Queen Elizabeth II for her Golden Jubilee and today a new bottle is purchased every two seconds. On National Grand Marnier Day, celebrate the spirit that evokes class in everything from cocktails to desserts. I'm Anna Devere and I'm Marlo Anderson. Thanks for joining us as we Celebrate Every Day. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this travel recap, Josh and Courtney discuss their recent trip to Nashville and Pigeon Forge,TN. They visited the Parthenon and the Titanic museum. They discuss what it was like visiting the Parthenon from a Christian perspective, the history of the original Parthenon in Athens, how that ties into history as well as Christian history, a bit about paganism and much more. They also discuss their trip to the Titanic museum and all of the threads they found to follow there, including both the history of pastors on the Titanic and the Jewish passengers of the Titanic. We know you won't want to miss the adventure videos for these trips. Check them out at the links below. And don't forget to like share and subscribe both here and on our channels for all of our videos and podcasts. Parthenon Adventure video (YouTube): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OalYfvPoOZU
We mark the 110th anniversary of the sinking of RMS Titanic with a tour of Titanic Belfast, the £multi-million visitor attraction built on the launch site of the ill-fated ship. The maritime theme continues with our ever-present segments designed to test even the hardiest of Titanoraks. Can Andrea guess Heidi's particularly abstract Where In The World destination? And which of the other Top Five Titanic-linked locations has Andrea explored? We discuss The Titanic Graveyard in Halifax, Nova Scotia; the Titanic Museum, Pigeon Forge, Tennessee; Titanic – the Artefact Exhibition in Las Vegas, Nevada; our very own Titanic Belfast and the Sea City Museum in Southampton, England. SUBSCRIBE to our podcast for lots more travel insights and musings: Instagram - @travelinyourpocketpodcast Twitter - @Travel_IYP Facebook - @TravelInYourPocketPodcast Near, far, whereeeeever they are, our hearts will go on for our good friends at Northern Ireland band 3D Shark, who provide our theme tune. Thanks for listening and see you next month!
Shelly is gifted at networking! She has built a powerful networking group. And this year she is taking everyone back to a castle in Ireland! And she has built a powerful Facebook group that is driving her business. It's her town, and she's the mayor, in what is now the biggest country in the world. Yes Facebook. Bigger than India and bigger than China! She gives you the 3 secrets to starting your successful Facebook group AND MORE!First you get to hear a little about the Mastermind In Paradise event we were attending together. It was epic.How do we grow our Facebook group while we sleep!?Name your Facebook group appropriately and Facebook will help you grow. No rhyme'ee. Gyim'ee stuff. Clear over clever.Always use the stuff they create. Use their toys. and they will thank you by showing you to more people. Their Live streams. Avatar meme's. (Ugly memes). Use what they make that's how the make you.We dive into her non-profit “Operation Christmas Magic.Her official business is Executive Networking Events. She helps you network, connect, and scale your business. Her next one is in Crom Castle Ireland and it is EPIC. There will be business owners from all over the world. It's not all huge businesses. There's also Solopreneurs, small business owners, Change Makers, and Prime Movers. There's the Titanic Museum. The castle ticket holders will all put a chapter in the book they are publishing “The Art of Risk and Reward.” They're gathering the one gamble everyone took on themselves and putting it in the book. And there's even more at the event!You need two networks to succeed.1 Your expert network2 Your client networkWhich leads us to FaceBook groups… And it started when she saw the ad on the Super Bowl for the Facebook group “Do You Kazoo?” And she new that Facebook was all in on groups. Create your own town on Facebook. Control who comes in. She's the mayor. You could be the mayor of your town. “How can I be the boss and grow as fast as I want? How do I become an influencer?… I had already decided that a Facebook group was my weapon…!”Your the mayor of your town. You can live stream the Perfect Webinar into your town every Tuesday. The lightbulb goes off. Did you know that 1 billion + people search the Facebook search bar? It rivals google.The 3 secretsName your city! And use this framework. What it is AND who it's for. Simple as that. Hers is “Executive networking events; high level connections, and growth for business owners and executives”Make the name clear over clever! CLEAR OVER CLEVER! Stupid clear. Your avatar should read it and go “that's for me”. Start by doing some research in the Facebook groups search bar.Put your face on the banner. You're the mayor. Let them know who the boss is!Bonus! Put your tagline on the banner along with your big smiling face. Her tagline? Connect, Network, Scale.Administrative: WATCH this episode here: Table Rush Talk Show.Listen on the go at http://TableRush.net. Over 450 episodes and counting!Check out the Tools For A Good Life Summit here: Virtually and FOR FREE https://bit.ly/ToolsForAGoodLifeSummitStart podcasting! These are the best mobile mic's for IOS and Android phones. You can literally take them anywhere on the fly.Get the Shure MV88 mobile mic for IOS, https://amzn.to/3z2NrIJGet the Shure MV88+ for mobile mic for Android https://amzn.to/3ly8SNjSee more resources at https://belove.media/resourcesEmail me: contact@belove.mediaFor social Media: https://www.instagram.com/mrmischaz/https://www.facebook.com/MischaZvegintzovSubscribe and share to help spread the love for a better world!As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
I'm excited to bring you an interview with Jim Myers, who is the Education Executive for both Titanic Museum Attractions (Branson, Missouri, and Pigeon Forge, Tennessee). We speak about the museum's goals of memorializing both the survivors and the victims of Titanic, its role as an interactive attraction, its efforts to broaden educational programs around the ship, and also just some of Titanic's achingly human stories. I managed to only mention James Cameron's Titanic ONCE...can you believe it?For March, the museums have a special exhibit honoring Irish passengers, and we speak a bit about it.To plan your visit to one of the ships (for the museum buildings are half-scale ships!) or to contact Jim about an educational program for your class/school, see the museum's great website: https://titanicbranson.com for Branson and https://titanicpigeonforge.com for Pigeon Forge.As always, contact me anytime--unsinkablepod@gmail.comSupport the pod on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/unsinkablepodOn Insta: https://www.instagram.com/unsinkablepod/On Twitter: https://twitter.com/unsinkablepodOn Bookshop: https://bookshop.org/shop/unsinkablepodSupport the show
The worlds largest Titanic museum comes crashing down in rural Tennessee.New video: https://youtu.be/aCfq_KghVSURate the show: https://ratethispodcast.com/ghosttownpodHaunted Merch: http://bit.ly/ghosttownstuffSupport the show: https://www.patreon.com/ghosttownpodInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/ghosttownpodSources: https://bit.ly/3nv5xkB Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Chivalry is a virtue often used to describe the codes of behavior of knights in the Middle Ages, but the essence of its meaning remains entirely relevant in modern times. It is a virtue that encompasses a series of virtues one displays for the benefit of others, such as courtesy, love, honor and loyalty. Even in this cynical age, chivalry continues to say, “This is how men should live.” One of the most memorable examples of this great virtue was displayed on the night of April 14th, 1912. This was the night that the RMS Titanic struck an iceberg, sunk in less than three hours and killed over 1,500 people. Hosted by Scott Einig and featuring Titanic historian Jim Myers, Education Executive for the Titanic Museum in Branson, Missouri.
Hey you freaks! Hang out with The Beard and The Babe while we talk about a little backstory and some spooky stuff that happens in these museums! Don't forget to email us at thebeardthebabe@gmail.com and get in touch with us on our links! https://linktr.ee/Thebeardandthebabe Also, if you're interested in Bash Brew https://www.Facebook.com/bashbrewing and https://www.Instagram.com/bash_brew First Sip is https://www.Facebook.com/firstsipbrewbox and https://www.Instagram.com/firstsipbrewbox --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thebeardandthebabe/support
Come join us around the campfire! Today, Meghan takes Madison on a journey to Antarctica, and all of the museums that celebrate its history. First, though, we need to discuss the Amazing Race and the recent mishap at the Titanic Museum.
The Boys cannot invalidate contracts, but apparently the CDC can now. President Joe Biden is calling on Governor Andrew Cuomo to resign, and the NIH Director clarifies comments about masking around kids while at home. A democratic senator says voting laws are, “The Delta variant of Jim Crow,” while Mark and Patricia McCloskey were pardoned by the governor of Missouri. President Biden tells the governors of Texas and Florida to, “Get out of the way,” and former President Obama “scales back” plans for his birthday bash. The brave Texas democrats that ran away are vacationing in Europe, and the Titanic Museum's fake iceberg fell and injured three people. It's not exactly clear what the President is saying about illegal immigrants, but it's quite clear Mayor Bill de Blasio completely gutted Governor Andrew Cuomo. A US Olympian is overjoyed after winning the gold medal in wrestling, and she proclaims, “I freaking love the United States!” The infrastructure deal uses COVID relief money, and the vaccine passport just seems a bit racist. Doesn't it?
Zach's back! Small town connects over beach ball. Summer food trends. Butter or leftovers? Microwavable syrup. How much are Olympic medals worth? Why can you microwave syrup, but not honey? Four "clean" things you need to know about hotels. Titanic Museum injuries. Most attractive and least attractive jobs for dating. Disney's new annual pass programs. East coast vs west coast butter.
15. April 1912: Das unsinkbare Schiff sinkt. Was viele nicht wussten: Damals wurde die Titanic nicht als unsinkbar bezeichnet, sondern - bulletproofes wording - als PRAKTISCH unsinkbar. Ein kleiner aber feiner Unterschied, wie wir heute wissen. Wir haben für euch das Titanic Museum in Belfast besucht und dort mit Rob Caddies gesprochen. Er weiß alles über die Titanic. Zum Beispiel, ob das Drama hätte verhindert werden können, wenn nicht alles - wirklich alles - schief gegangen wäre oder ob das Schiff, das seit über 100 Jahren auf dem Grund des Atlantik liegt, nicht doch vielleicht die Schwester der Titanic, die Olympic ist. In dieser Episode hört ihr alles, was ihr schon immer über die Titanic wissen wolltet, von James Cameron aber nicht erzählt bekommen habt. Außerdem hört ihr in dieser Folge die wahren Geschichte der Menschen auf der Titanic. Und wir können euch eins verraten: Die sind um einiges ergreifender als die tragische Liebesgeschichte von Rose und Jack. Coverbild: Scott Coller Social Media: Luisa Delling Overvoices: Max Tenschert
WARNING: This episode contains explicit language of the sexual nature due to direct quotation of the show and commentary on the material in "Titanique". After a year of Broadway being dark, it was no surprise that Adara and I were THRILLED to be able to purchase tickets and watch a a live streamed performance of a new parody musical that just so happened to be a parody of Titanic (1997). Welp, the show wasn't all smooth sailing, and certainly was not spared a disastrous end. I am a firm believer that comedy should punch up, make your audience connect the dots, don't just drown them in d**k jokes.
It's the weekend after the 109th Anniversary and I've got another great guest. Joining me is Titanic Museum's Education Executive, James (Jim) Myers. Sit in and sip some tea with us as we talk about what visitors of both museum locations can expect, the education & outreach programs offered for students, I ask questions about ghosts (because of course I do), and I learn how Anne Frank was connected to The Ship of Dreams.
In this episode we catch up with Paris Norriss also known as Guy in Dubai on his last trip to Ireland. From visiting the Titanic Museum, Game of Thrones filming site, to Bog Diving, we uncover so many historical hidden gems. Full of laughs and nostalgia to traveling again, this one's for Ireland. Paris is a British adventurer, an avid sports enthusiast and TV personality. He has toured the world facing extreme challenges from racing the world's fastest powerboat to diving with sharks in shipwrecks. This episode is in partnership with Tourism Ireland. #WeCauseCulture Hosted by OT, Reem, and Akkaoui, the Dukkan Show is brought to you by the audiophiles at Dukkan Media. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode we catch up with Paris Norriss also known as Guy in Dubai on his last trip to Ireland. From visiting the Titanic Museum, Game of Thrones filming site, to Bog Diving, we uncover so many historical hidden gems. Full of laughs and nostalgia to traveling again, this one's for Ireland. Paris is a British adventurer, an avid sports enthusiast and TV personality. He has toured the world facing extreme challenges from racing the world's fastest powerboat to diving with sharks in shipwrecks. This episode is in partnership with Tourism Ireland. #WeCauseCulture Hosted by OT, Reem, and Akkaoui, the Dukkan Show is brought to you by the audiophiles at Dukkan Media. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
When the Titanic sank in the Atlantic back in 1912, more than 1,200 people died in an icy cold sea. The "unsinkable" ship sailed only 5 days on its maiden voyage to New York before slamming into an iceberg.The Titanic Museum Attraction houses the largest collection of Titanic artifacts in the world. John Joslyn, the museum's owner, was the explorer who led the expedition to recover the artifacts from the ship's resting place.The original artifacts, worth more than $4,000,000.00, are beautifully displayed. The interactive museum gives guests an opportunity to see how the ship was built, ascend the grand staircase, dip your fingers into 20+ degree water, and imagine traveling as a passenger.The most famous artifact on display is the Hartley Violin. Hartley and his small ensemble played hymns while the ship sank in an effort to give peace to passengers.The 56,000 piece Lego replica of the Titanic is also on display.Marc and Ann talk about their visit to the museum, lunch at Hard Rock Café, and how you can get discount tickets.A bonus ending includes a conversation with Ann's sisters about their recent trip to the Gatlinburg Skylift Park.