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On this week's Ringing The Blues, all the action and reaction from Crawley including Garath McCleary and Head Coach Mike Dodds, plus Chairboys fan Tom Hancock joins us for Till Death Us Do Part.
London-based industrial noise pop trio Tayne (Matt Sutton, Tom Hancock, Paul Traveller) released their debut album LOVE on January 31. Frontman Matt talks about moving to London, how the band started, the influence of his dad on the lyrics, Matt's tattooing career, and art. Buy LOVE: https://tayneband.bandcamp.com/album/love
Bloomberg Radio host Barry Ritholtz speaks to Tom Hancock, a partner at GMO LLC, where he is also head of the focused equity team. He manages the focused quality fund and its new Quality ETF, and is the portfolio manager for quality strategies. He previously served as co-head of the firm's global equity team. Prior to joining GMO, he was a research scientist at Siemens and a software engineer at IBM. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Doug Ramsey, chief investment officer for The Leuthold Group, says the stock market's recent rally most likely pushes the economic cycle out by a month or two, but he says that the amount of tightening that is already in place and the impacts of the inverted yield curve hitting the economy will finally come to roost in economic fallout that "down the road is going to be severe." Ramsey expects a recession in the first half of 2024, and has a lot of economic data that he suggests support that conclusion. Also on the show, David Trainer, founder/president of New Constructs, heads to "The Danger Zone" for one final time in 2023, noting that investors who think the market rally has removed all pressure from stocks are wrong. In The Market Call, Tom Hancock of GMO -- manager of the new GMO U.S. Quality ETF -- talks about what makes a quality stock and how to use those issues in a portfolio.
In this episode of First Look ETF, Stephanie Stanton @etfguide analyzes new actively managed ETFs from GMO, USCF Investments and Zacks Investment Management. The newly launched ETFs for our November episode use active investment strategies linked to commodities and stocks. The guest lineup for this episode includes:1. Douglas Yones, ChFC, Head of Exchange Traded Products at NYSE2. John Love, CFA & President & CEO at USCF Investments 3. Tom Hancock, Head of GMO Focused Equity & Portfolio Manager 4. Sal Esposito, Head of ETF Products at Zacks Investment Management**********First Look ETF is sponsored by the New York Stock Exchange*Learn more at http://www.ETFCentral.comWatch us on YouTube (Link http://www.youtube.com/etfguide)Follow us on Twitter @ETFguide (Link https://twitter.com/etfguide)Visit us at ETFguide.com (https://www.etfguide.com)
CNBC's Bob Pisani sat down with Tom Hancock, Head of the Focused Equity Team at GMO and Portfolio Manager for GMO's Quality Strategies - along with Nate Geraci, President of The ETF Store. They discussed the future of value investing and the rapid rise of ETFs, as legendary investor Jeremy Grantham's firm gears up to launch its first ETF ever – and the name of the game is quality. They also waded into the growth vs. value debate and delved deeper into key investing trends in the year ahead. Plus, our panel of experts explored the recent explosion of active ETFs and continued demand for Treasury ETFs – on both the short and long end. In the “Markets 102” portion, Bob continued the conversation with Nate Geraci from The ETF Store.
China's economic slowdown is catching the attention of countries around the world as they brace for a possible hit to their own economies. Bloomberg's Rebecca Choong Wilkins and Tom Hancock discuss why President Xi Jinping is avoiding a big stimulus package and instead allowing China's economy to run “cold”—and how long it may take to turn things around. Read more: Run It Cold: Why Xi Jinping Is Letting China's Economy Flail Listen to The Big Take podcast every weekday and subscribe to our daily newsletter: https://bloom.bg/3F3EJAK Have questions or comments for Wes and the team? Reach us at bigtake@bloomberg.net.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today's guests are GMO's Ben Inker and Tom Hancock. Ben is the co-head of GMO's Asset Allocation Team and Tom is the head of Focused Equity team and a portfolio manager for GMO's Quality Strategies. In today's episode, Ben and Tom give their take on the markets so far in 2023. They both share why they think quality and value stocks are attractive today. We dig into both factors and get specifics on their set up looking forward. We also touch on growth traps, Japan stocks, the opportunity set in emerging markets, and what companies are at risk to be disrupted by AI. Did you enjoy this episode? Leave us a review, and then listen to Meb's episode last year with GMO co-founder Jeremy Grantham. ----- Follow Meb on Twitter, LinkedIn and YouTube For detailed show notes, click here To learn more about our funds and follow us, subscribe to our mailing list or visit us at cambriainvestments.com ----- Today's episode is sponsored by YCharts. YCharts enables financial advisors to make smarter investment decisions and better communicate with clients. YCharts offers a suite of intuitive tools, including numerous visualizations, comprehensive security screeners, portfolio construction, communication outputs, and market monitoring. Visit YCharts to start your free trial and be sure to mention "Meb" for 20% off your subscription. (New clients only). Today's episode is sponsored by The Idea Farm. The Idea Farm gives you access to over $100,000 worth of investing research, the kind usually read by only the world's largest institutions, funds, and money managers. Subscribe for free here. Follow The Idea Farm: Twitter | LinkedIn | Instagram | Tik Tok ----- Interested in sponsoring the show? Email us at Feedback@TheMebFaberShow.com ----- Past guests include Ed Thorp, Richard Thaler, Jeremy Grantham, Joel Greenblatt, Campbell Harvey, Ivy Zelman, Kathryn Kaminski, Jason Calacanis, Whitney Baker, Aswath Damodaran, Howard Marks, Tom Barton, and many more. ----- Meb's invested in some awesome startups that have passed along discounts to our listeners. Check them out here!
Last Wednesday our beautiful friend Tom Hancock passed away. Both of us have had the privilege of getting to live with Tommy in a set up which was assisted living. Tom lived with Down Syndrome and we both used to not only be his in-house carers, but we were his best friends, his travel buddies and the three of us made up our own little unique family. This week we wanted to take the time to honour Tom's memory, with permission from his mum Rachael, and not only share our most treasured memories with Tom. But to also share the incredible lifestyle we all had when we were living together. Thanks for listening and sharing in Tom's memory with us. LINKS Angie Kent @angiekent_ Yvie Jones @yvie_jones Angie + Yvie Insta @angie_and_yvie Nova Podcasts Instagram @novapodcastsofficial Email us at twogirls@novaentertainment.com.au INTERVIEWS WITH TOM Tom's Plan Documentary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vu7OFQ5oieo Yvie + Tom on Studio 10: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ACuIqe_ltYg Angie + Tom on The Project: https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1869769763168535&ref=sharing ASSISTED LIVING INFORMATION https://together2.org.au/ https://homecommunity.com.au/ CREDITSHosts: Angie Kent & Yvie Jones Executive Producer: Rachael Hart Producer: Amy Kimball Editor: Adrian Walton Show Artwork By: @ellymalone Find more great podcasts like this at novapodcasts.com.au Nova Entertainment acknowledges the traditional custodians of the land on which we recorded this podcast, Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation, The Turrbal People of the Yugara Nation and the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation. We pay our respect to Elders past and present. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The United Nations Development Program issued a new report this week that once again sounded the alarm on the urgent need for debt relief in the world's poorest countries. The UNDP said 54 countries are at risk, with African countries accounting for almost half.Zambia, however, is among a handful of countries that is actually making progress in restructuring its debt. Finance Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane says he's optimistic that a deal can be finalized before the end of the year and China has played a critical role in the process.Bloomberg reporters Tom Hancock and Matthew Hill have been covering the Zambian debt story from Hong Kong and South Africa respectively and join Eric to explain why there's so much global interest in how China responds to this particular crisis.JOIN THE DISCUSSION:Twitter: @ChinaGSProject| @stadenesque | @eric_olander | @mattstephenhill | @hancocktomFacebook: www.facebook.com/ChinaAfricaProjectFOLLOW CAP IN FRENCH AND ARABIC:Français: www.projetafriquechine.com | @AfrikChineعربي: www.akhbaralsin-africia.com | @AkhbarAlSinAfrJOIN US ON PATREON!Become a CAP Patreon member and get all sorts of cool stuff, including our Week in Review report, an invitation to join monthly Zoom calls with Eric & Cobus, and even an awesome new CAP Podcast mug!www.patreon.com/chinaafricaprojectSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Tom Hancock, Bloomberg China Economy Reporter, discusses China's Communist Party congress next month. He spoke with host Juliette Saly on Bloomberg Radio.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dispirited by pandemic lockdowns and a massive real estate crisis, today's young Chinese workers are dreaming less about becoming super-rich entrepreneurs and more about the workaday lives of bureaucrats. Their new distaste for private-sector jobs has caught the attention of the ruling Chinese Communist Party, which is trying to change opinions and recruit for private-sector manufacturing jobs that are going begging. In this week's episode of “Stephanomics,” reporter Tom Hancock discusses the unrest brewing among China's youth. Many have newly minted degrees and a growing number have embraced anti-capitalist idealism, exacerbating a mismatch between the jobs that are available and the jobs they actually want. Meantime, younger workers see the country's state-owned enterprises as more stable than privately-owned ones amid Covid-19 outbreaks and lockdowns, creating intense competition for public-sector jobs. The upshot is the jobless rate among China's youth is likely to hit 20%, which has alarmed President Xi Jinping's government. Host Stephanie Flanders talks to Bloomberg Chief Economist Tom Orlik about the outlook for the world's biggest country. He says China likely has been overstating its growth for years, giving critics reason to question how big its economy actually is right now. But China's leadership has proven it can develop that economy, and “it would be a big mistake for us to underestimate how big they will likely become in the next 10 or 20 years,” Orlik says. And, Flanders also talks worker wages with Rachel Reeves, who as the UK's Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer is the chief economic voice of the opposition Labour Party. It's a risky topic to address since Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey got lambasted last winter for suggesting workers forgo seeking pay raises because they might be inflationary. Reeves wouldn't say what a reasonable increase for workers would be, given ongoing discussions over pay by UK authorities, but suggested the trick to giving everyone a raise is boosting the economy. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In the Championship (from the start) the panel take a look back at the latest twist in the race for promotion as Bournemouth dropped more points, while Middlesbrough also suffered a wobble and QPR's implosion continued.Derby fan Justin Peach (Second Tier Podcast) assesses the latest on their takeover as Chris Kirchner was named as the preferred bidder, and look back on the career of Neil Warnock as he announced his retirement.We then hear from Nottingham Forest starlet Brennan Johnson (26m47s), as he answers our quickfire questions in Ten To Tackle.In League One (29m22s) the panel dissects the latest in the promotion race, as Wigan, Rotherham and MK Dons continue to vie for the top two spots, while Wycombe fan Tom Hancock discusses their play-off chances and Crewe were relegated.And in League Two (43m43s) Crawley fan Carol Bates (Crawley Old Girls Fan Group) joins to discuss the crypto-takeover of the club, Harrogate fan Brody Pattison (Chief Brody YouTube Channel) assesses their slide and the panel look at the promotion race as head towards the end of the season.All that and much, much more!
In the second episode of the Breaking & Entering new series, we discover the story of Tom Hancock, who went from being a research scientist at IBM surrounded by punched cards and noisy computers, to work in asset management at GMO. Hancock studied computer science at Harvard University and wasn't particularly interested in finance, until he decided to give it a go after a few experiences in the science field. Get ready to jump on the Citywire Selector Delorean and travel back to the days of (un)flat monitors and old-school coding, when receiving an email seemed like magic.
The so-called great resignation that's confounding businesses in the West has a counterpart in a most unlikely place: China. This week, we offer a double dose of China's “lie flat” movement, which is challenging the nation's historic industriousness, as well as a glimpse into how America's massive pandemic bailout juiced spending, especially among historically disadvantaged groups. First, Hong Kong-based economics reporter Tom Hancock explains why many Chinese workers are suddenly whiling away the hours playing online games instead of toiling on the factory floor. After years of clocking in at 9 a.m. and clocking out at 9 p.m., six days a week, some are saying enough is enough. Bloomberg Opinion columnist Shuli Ren shares how President Xi Jinping isn't amused with this trend. China's leadership meanwhile is eager to stop pumping out so many university graduates, preferring instead to steer youth into vocational training and high-value manufacturing. The hope is to replicate Germany's success. Next, data reporter Andre Tartar unearths some revealing credit and debit card numbers to show how government payments during the pandemic boosted spending by Black Americans as much as 40% over 2019 levels. For a time at least, it shrunk the nation's persistent racial wealth gap. Finally, Hong Kong reporter Oanh Ha shares why some big food producers are betting that soon you may be getting some of your protein from crickets. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Guest: Vince Macaulay, Owner and Head Coach of British Basketball League Franchise London Lions Owner and head coach of British Basketball League franchise London Lions Vincent Macaulay joins the Basketball Podcast to discuss British Basketball success, longevity and pathways. A former player for Brixton TopCats, Tower Hamlets/London Towers and Hemel Royals, Macaulay acquired the Royals franchise (by then located in Watford) in 1998 for an upfront fee of £1,500 and relocated it to Milton Keynes. Under his reign as owner, Macaulay has seen his team progress from whipping-boys to Play-off contenders. On 17 May 2007 he returned to coaching the franchise for a third spell, after the dismissal of Tom Hancock. Macaulay last coached the club when they were based in Hemel Hempstead and also stepped in as caretaker coach the last time Hancock was at the club in 1999. Following this period he was the Chairman of the BBL. He passed on the duty to Paul Blake, Managing Director of the Newcastle Eagles, in 2005. Macaulay also acts as a pundit for Sky Sports on NBA Sundays. In 2011, Macaulay relocated the Lions franchise to London. In 2014, he became head coach of the club. Breakdown1:00 - The Process3:00 - Build Basketball in Great Britain6:00 - Creating Pathway for Players9:00 - Multicultural Attraction13:00 - Pressing Style of Play15:00 - Playing a Lot of Players20:00 - British Basketball Experience24:00 - Warm-Ups27:00 - Spacing is Key30:00 - Three Point Attempts32:00 - Double Gaps34:00 - Rolling Bigs37:00 - Setting the Screen Decisions39:00 - Fly By42:00 - Relationship with Barking Avi46:00 - Promoter50:00 - Conclusion Vince Macaulay's Bio:Bio: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vince_MacaulayTwitter: https://twitter.com/vincemacaulay Basketball ImmersionWebsite: http://basketballimmersion.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/bballimmersion?lang=enYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/basketballimmersionFacebook: https://facebook.com/basketballimmersionBetOnline Website:Website: www.betonline.agImmersion Videos:Check out all our all-access practice and specialty clinics: https://www.immersionvideos.com/See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Five years ago, Tom and Emily Hancock were in the market for a new spray rig when they saw a country pub come up for sale for the same price. Today, they might be the most famous publicans in Australia. If you haven't heard of the Collie Hotel you might just be living under a virtual rock. To their 14,000 odd Instagram followers Tom and Emily Hancock broadcast videos that depict the hilarious mundanities and contradictions of country pub patrons - videos that have put Collie Hotel on the map. Satirising all walks of country life, from stock and station agents to contract harvesters to hens party attendees, Tom acts alongside his daughter Eliza while Emily films, often while juggling their new baby on her hip. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/humans-of-agriculture/message
More than a decade after the U.S. subprime crisis sparked the Great Recession, the threat of default at giant property developer Evergrande is raising the prospect that ghost towns of unoccupied homes could trigger a China property slump. On this week's podcast, Hong Kong-based economics reporter Tom Hancock visits Evergrande to see how the company is trying to raise money and avoid default, including by trying to sell its headquarters. Guest host Tom Orlik delves into the issues with Rhodium Group Director Logan Wright and Bloomberg economist David Qu, a former financial stability regulator at the People's Bank of China. And finally, with Halloween just around the corner, Orlik ponders the scariest risks to the global economy with three Bloomberg economists: Anna Wong in Washington, Dan Hanson in London and Ziad Daoud in Dubai. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Coach Randy Peele shares his journey from growing up in Virginia to becoming a college coach for nearly 40 years! After graduating from Virginia Wesleyan he accepted his first coaching job at St. Michael's College (VT) before moving on to Tennessee Martin under Tom Hancock. From Tennessee Martin he took a pay cut to get his first taste of coaching NCAA DI basketball at Campbell. Coach Peele ended up leaving for conference foe UNCG where he would eventually be promoted to Head Coach. He took UNCG to the NCAA Tournament after winning the conference tournament in his first season as Head Coach. Virginia Tech added him to their coaching staff but after three years there was a coaching change, he was out of coaching for a year before Gregg Marshall hired him at Winthrop in 2003. He succeeded Gregg Marshall after he took the Wichita State job and in his 1st season at Head Coach his team beat Georgia Tech, a ranked Miami team and won the Big South Regular Season and Tournament Championship. Coach Peele is still the only coach in the history of the Big South Conference to lead two different schools to the NCAA Tournament! Winthrop decided to fire him despite a very good tenure at the helm, Mark Byington then hired him at Georgia Southern 2013-14, and his former co-worker Dana Ford hired him as the Associate HC at Tennessee State. After a four year stint at TSU he moved onto coach at Texas Southern under Johnny Jones. Coach Peele is a true basketball lifer who speaks very candidly about being a white coach at a HBCU, being fired, his relationship with Gregg Marshall and his desire to become a Head Coach again!
Prior to returning to her alma mater, Hancock spent two seasons as an assistant women's basketball coach at East Carolina University. Prior to her time in Greenville, she was the head women's basketball coach at UNC Wilmington for 10 seasons. Hancock was an assistant coach for eight seasons at UNC Chapel Hill, helping the Tar Heels win the 1994 NCAA Division I national championship. As a basketball student-athlete at Wingate, Hancock was all-conference and all-district for four seasons each. She can be reached at a.hancock@wingate.edu. At East Carolina, Hancock assisted in all phases of the basketball program. She was involved in on-the-floor coaching, recruiting and scouting. Hancock was also engaged in student-athlete academic progress and summer camps. While the head coach at UNC Wilmington, Hancock led the Seahawks to the most NCAA victories in school history and the most wins in any three consecutive year period. She was the Colonial Athletic Association Coach of the Year in 2003. The same season, she helped the Seahawks set a new attendance record. UNCW signed the most highly-touted recruiting class in school history in 2003. Hancock helped Seahawk superstar Cherie Lea earn first team All-CAA honors two years in a row. She coached one NCAA I-AAA Strength and Conditioning Female Athlete of the Year, one CAA Defensive Player of the Year, two Strength and Conditioning All-Americans and two CAA Dean Ehlers Leadership Award winners during her UNC Wilmington tenure. Hancock assisted in all phases of coaching for the 1994 NCAA Division I national champion UNC Tar Heels. She was heavily involved in recruiting; Hancock signed the numbers one, four, five, seven and 14th-ranked high school players as the program's recruiting coordinator. She coached on the floor during practice, with specific work geared to the UNC perimeter players. In addition, Hancock assisted with player development and prepared in-depth scouting reports on Tar Heel opponents. She coached WNBA players Sylvia Crawley, Marion Jones, Charlotte Smith and Tracy Reid. As a collegian, Smith was the ESPN National Player of the Year. Reid was the WNBA Rookie of the Year. Hancock mentored numerous All-Academic team selections. Hancock scored 2,195 points during a distinguished Wingate career (1989-92). As a senior, she led the Bulldogs in scoring with her 19.9 points per game. During her tenure, Wingate compiled a 103-23 overall record. The Bulldogs advanced to the NAIA national tournament each season. Hancock and her teammates won three conference and three district titles. The 1992 NCAA Woman of the Year for North Carolina, Hancock earned a prestigious NCAA post-graduate scholarship. She was Wingate's first-ever Academic All-America® selection in 1990. In addition to her basketball exploits, Hancock lettered in volleyball three years and softball one year for the Bulldogs. At Wingate's 1992 commencement exercises, she won the Budd E. and Ethel K. Smith Cup. The Smith Cup is awarded annually to the senior judged to have made an outstanding contribution through leadership of fellow students. Hancock holds a Master of Arts degree in Sports Administration from UNC Chapel Hill. She earned a B.A. degree in English with a minor in Public Relations at Wingate, graduating magna cum laude. Hancock won the Woody Hayes National Scholar-Athlete Award and the South Atlantic Conference President's Award in 1992. Hancock is the daughter of Mrs. Lou Hancock and the late Mr. Tom Hancock of Elizabethtown, N.C.
On this week's show there is all the action and reaction from the Brentford game, we mark Time To Talk Day with Tom Hancock chatting to David Wheeler plus we recap the FA Cup tie against Tottenham Hotspur. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/phil-catchpole/message
Julian, Daren and Brendan sit down for a bumper episode that covers all the comings and goings in E10. Wycombe fan Tom Hancock gives us the run down on new signing Nick Freeman, Julian chats with some stateside Forest Green fans ahead of this weekend's meeting between the two sides. Plus the boys catch up with Orient full back Sam Ling.
We relive the late drama from St Andrew's, Dobbo & Scott Kashket interviews, plus we preview the trip to the City Ground to take on Nottingham Forest with Tom Hancock of Chairboys Central. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/phil-catchpole/message
Ben Aiton & Mike Duffy discuss the draw at home to Bournemouth and also look ahead to Tuesday's game against Wycombe and speak to Tom Hancock from the Chairboys Central Blog to give his views from the Wycombe camp.
On this week's show we have all the action and reaction from the game against Norwich City at Carrow Road, there is an interview with new Chairboys coach Sam Grace, plus Tom Hancock takes a look at Watford who take on Wycombe at Adams Park on Tuesday evening... --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/phil-catchpole/message
On this week's mid week show there is a round-up of the action from the Madjeski Stadium plus Tom Hancock of Chairboys Central assesses the main threats and opportunities of Norwich City. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/phil-catchpole/message
Why can't the government give a straight answer on testing? Plus, Michael Walker talks to Tom Hancock, the FT's China correspondent, about what's really been happening there.
Why can’t the government give a straight answer on testing? Plus, Michael Walker talks to Tom Hancock, the FT’s China correspondent, about what’s really been happening there.
【主播的话】 本期嘉宾是《金融时报》驻华记者Tom Hancock,他报道中国已有十年。 他是最早进入武汉报道的外国记者之一,在即将离开时却意外遭遇封城。他没有登上离开武汉的最后一班火车,而是选择留在武汉,继续记录这座城市的日常。数日之后,他乘坐英国的撤侨飞机离开了武汉。刚刚结束在英国医院隔离的他接受了我们的采访,聊了聊武汉、李文亮、WSJ记者还有中国的未来。 本期内容不便更多文字剧透,全都在音频里了。 【主播】 王磬(微博:@声几又石) 【嘉宾】 Tom Hancock(推特:hancocktom) 【本期音乐】 In My Secret Life Newsroom 【logo设计】刘刘(ins: imjanuary) 【制作总监】王若弛 【收听方式】 推荐您使用「苹果播客」、Spotify、小宇宙App或任意安卓播客客户端订阅收听《不合时宜》,也可通过网易云音乐、喜马拉雅FM收听。 【本节目由JustPod出品】 【互动方式】 微博:@不合时宜TheWeirdo 官网:https://theweirdo.fireside.fm/
【主播的话】 本期嘉宾是《金融时报》驻华记者Tom Hancock,他报道中国已有十年。 他是最早进入武汉报道的外国记者之一,在即将离开时却意外遭遇封城。他没有登上离开武汉的最后一班火车,而是选择留在武汉,继续记录这座城市的日常。数日之后,他乘坐英国的撤侨飞机离开了武汉。刚刚结束在英国医院隔离的他接受了我们的采访,聊了聊武汉、李文亮、WSJ记者还有中国的未来。 本期内容不便更多文字剧透,全都在音频里了。 【主播】 王磬(微博:@声几又石) 【嘉宾】 Tom Hancock(推特:hancocktom) 【本期音乐】 In My Secret Life Newsroom 【logo设计】刘刘(ins: imjanuary) 【制作总监】王若弛 【收听方式】 推荐您使用「苹果播客」、Spotify、小宇宙App或任意安卓播客客户端订阅收听《不合时宜》,也可通过网易云音乐、喜马拉雅FM收听。 【本节目由JustPod出品】 【互动方式】 微博:@不合时宜TheWeirdo 官网:https://theweirdo.fireside.fm/
Uber shares traded higher after hours on Thursday after the ride-hailing company promised profitability in the final quarter of this year, officials in London and Washington told the FT that Donald Trump vented in “apoplectic” fury at Boris Johnson over Britain’s decision to allow China’s Huawei a role in its 5G mobile networks, and activist hedge fund Elliott Management has built a stake worth $2.5bn in SoftBank Group and is pressing for changes. Plus, the FT’s Tom Hancock has been quarantined after reporting on the coronavirus in Wuhan. He explains how a crackdown on information about the virus in Wuhan allowed the disease to spread more widely. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The full impact of the deadly Sars-like virus that has spread across China will take time to assess. But it’s clear there will be significant damage to the region’s economies and perhaps also to the reputation of China’s leaders for failing to tackle the coronavirus early enough to prevent its spread. Andreas Paleit discusses the political and economic impact of the outbreak with Tom Hancock, recently back from Wuhan, James Kynge in Hong Kong and Sue-Lin Wong in Shenzhen.Contributors: Andreas Paleit, companies desk editor, Tom Hancock, China consumer industries correspondent, Sue-Lin Wong, South China correspondent, and James Kynge, global China editor. Producers: Fiona Symon and Persis Love. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Financial Times journalist Tom Hancock joins me from the city of Wuhan - the epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak. We spoke about the situation in the city, the response of the Chinese government to the crisis and how it compares to the SARS outbreak of 2002. We also discussed the broader political significance of the outbreak and the public mood in Wuhan and China more broadly.
Airbus is on the brink of settling a bribery and corruption probe with regulators in the UK, France and the US, Boris Johnson feels increasing heat over Huawei’s role in the UK mobile phone network, and Donald Trump’s lawyers tried to shift the focus of his Senate impeachment trial away from revelations from former national security adviser John Bolton. Plus, global equity markets and oil prices fell sharply on Monday over concerns that the Coronavirus would slow China’s economic growth. The FT’s Tom Hancock reports from Wuhan, the city at the centre of the outbreak. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
WE'RE WYCOMBE WANDERERS, WE'RE TOP OF THE LEAGUE! This week we have an interview with Tom Hancock of Chairboys Central, the takeover latest from Rob Couhig, book talk with Darius Charles, music chat with Gareth Ainsworth and his dad Bill, plus all the action and reaction from the Burton Albion game at Adams Park. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/phil-catchpole/message
UK Labour MPs appear set to reject Boris Johnson’s push for a snap election and US Treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin moves to return Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to private ownership. Plus, WeWork expects to be valued at less than half of the $47bn figure reached in its last round of funding from Japan’s SoftBank and news that the US and China will resume trade negotiations sent Wall Street equities higher on Thursday. Also, the FT’s Shanghai correspondent, Tom Hancock, explains why China’s tech groups, including Alibaba, have poured money into physical retail and how that bet worked out for them. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
UK Prime Minister Theresa May offers Labour a deal that includes the possibility of a second EU referendum, Europe’s aviation safety agency sets out strict conditions before it will allow Boeing’s 737 Max aircraft back into the skies and shares in three of the US’s biggest department store chains, Nordstrom, Kohl’s and JC Penney, fell on Tuesday after the companies reported quarterly results short of forecasts. Plus the FT’s Shanghai correspondent Tom Hancock explains why Chinese film producers are facing a funding crunch. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Varun Raman & Tom Hancock made the brilliant short film Transmission. It was a standout at the Sherman Oaks Film Festival in 2017. Even though they live in the UK, we hopped on Skype for a few hours to record an interview and a DIF4Q. What is DIF4Q? It's the Discover Indie Film Four Questions. Name your favorite film of all time (limit 3) Name a film you think is underrated Name a film you think is overrated Name a lesser-known film that you think people should seek out What were Tom & Varun's DIF4Q answers? Some they did as a team, some on their own. Varun: Favorites: Underground (dir. Emir Kusturica), Network, Pulp Fiction, Boogie Nights Underrated: Birth, The Tenant Overrated: too classy to name any Seek Out: Assholes (dir. Peter Vack), Drib Tom: Favorites: Underground (dir. Emir Kusturica), Network, Inglorious Basterds, Doctor Strangelove Underrated: Adam Sandler (in general)/Punch Drunk Love Overrated: too classy to name any Seek Out:Assholes (dir. Peter Vack), Drib Comments are blocked on this website. To discuss Discover Indie Film episodes, visit the Facebook Group. You can listen to the podcast using the media player below or on iTunes, Google Play, SoundCloud, or Stitcher. Podcast
Transmission. Transmission is a film that you MUST SEE. This film is a brilliant work of art from Varun Raman & Tom Hancock; a young team out of Manchester, England (though they've moved since) who studied film on their own, wrote a pile of scripts and then managed to put together a team and a cast to make something special. They weren't able to attend the Sherman Oaks Film Festival when we screened Transmission in 2017, but the joy of running this podcast is that it gave me a reason to get on Skype and chat with this amazing filmmaking team for a few hours. Besides being a pair of promising artists, Varun and Tom are also incredibly good guys. Talking to them was like hanging out with friends. I have no doubt that you will love listening to this podcast and hearing how they got their film made and what they plan to do next. But first... watch Transmission and then listen to the interview. Seriously... you MUST WATCH THIS FILM... watch it on the biggest screen you can find.. and click the heart in the corner to "like" it. Comments are blocked on this website. To discuss Discover Film episodes, visit the Facebook Group. You can listen to the podcast using the media player below or on iTunes, Google Play, SoundCloud, or Stitcher. Podcast
Every good series has an origins episode. Our origins won't involve altering time or the story, but it may answer some questions about how this whole thing came to be. Tom Hancock and Keith Schneider are two of MAFFC's founding members and they sit down with us to discuss just what it took to start a firefighter conference, what it takes to keep going, and where we hope the conference will go from here.
It didn't go to the moon, but Skylab can easily be considered Apollo's victory lap. Tom Hancock is my guest talking about Save Skylab, the lessons Apollo is teaching us about Ares, and the thirty plus year side-trip that was the Space Shuttle.