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On the seventh season of Made In Japan Podcast, we start with equating the first capital of the U.S. , Philadelphia with the OG downtown center of of commerce in Edo/Tokyo , Nihonbashi. Meet Kousuke and Tomomi, who've glued both city areas from opposite ends of Earth with a hoagie; the Philly cheesesteak. To my surprise yet unsurprisingly, they've managed to make this beloved Philly sandwich a magnet for both locals and tourists visiting Japan come to their welcoming bar/ restaurant and teleport them to the city of brotherly love. This is their story and love through the food. Go Birds!For more info on the Nakameguro Taproom and other Baird Beer taprooms, please visit: http://Bairdbeer.com/To donate and buy drinks for the guests of my podcast:https://ko-fi.com/madeinjapanpodcastYou can follow Nihonbashi Philly on Instagram here @nihonbashi_phillyIG & FB: @madeinjapanpodcastEmail: japanmademepodcast@gmail.com
Join The Good Sight podcast as we delve into the complex issue of human trafficking in India, affecting over 8 million people. Meet Tomomi Shimizu, Co-Founder and CEO, Torii, a passionate anti-human trafficking advocate. Tomomi shares her journey, insights, and initiatives combating this grave human rights violation. Discussion Highlights: - Tomomi's inspiring story and what sparked her focus on human trafficking - Overview of human trafficking in India and progress over 12 years - The role of gender in human trafficking cases - Efforts to protect and recover abducted children - Empowering survivors through leadership programs Tune in to learn from Tomomi's remarkable journey and the impact of her work. Discover how collaborative approaches and community-driven initiatives can counter human trafficking. If you or your organisation are dedicated to driving positive social change, we want to hear from you. Reach out to us at The Good Sight by emailing us at contact@thegoodsight.org with a brief description of your work and achievements, or give us a call at 9696399931.
Podcast: The Industrial Security Podcast (LS 35 · TOP 3% what is this?)Episode: Driving Change - Cloud Systems and Japanese CCE [The Industrial Security Podcast]Pub date: 2024-10-21Get Podcast Transcript →powered by Listen411 - fast audio-to-text and summarizationTomomi Ayoyama translated the book Countering Cyber Sabotage - Consequence-Driven, Cyber-Informed Engineering - to Japanese. Tomomi recalls the effort of translating CCE to Japanese and looks forward to applying CCE and OT security principles to industrial cloud systems at Cognite.The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from PI Media, which is the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Listen Notes, Inc.
Tomomi Ayoyama translated the book Countering Cyber Sabotage - Consequence-Driven, Cyber-Informed Engineering - to Japanese. Tomomi recalls the effort of translating CCE to Japanese and looks forward to applying CCE and OT security principles to industrial cloud systems at Cognite.
Tomomi Ayoyama translated the book Countering Cyber Sabotage - Consequence-Driven, Cyber-Informed Engineering - to Japanese. Tomomi recalls the effort of translating CCE to Japanese and looks forward to applying CCE and OT security principles to industrial cloud systems at Cognite.
In this episode I invite back Tomomi from Emotions at Work together with her colleague Oriana LaVilla. We dive deeper and, in some occasions, more practically on what it means to wear the emotional lens at work. What questions can we ask ourselves? What practices can we engage with that will support us in practicing more emotional intelligence?We also get some of the latest learnings on Oriana's and Tomomi's latest cohort of their programme Emotions at Work.Talking to them feels more distanced to my usual constructivist approach, so for me it's challenging, provoking and very interesting. An invitation and a reminder that there is so much more beyond our worldview and ideals that can be extremely helpful.The research for this podcast has received support from project Cosmolocalism, funded by the European Research Council under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No 802512) and hosted by the Ragnar Nurkse Department of Innovation and Governance, Tallinn University of Technology.
Desde su infancia aprendiendo idiomas en el exigente sistema escolar japonés a su fascinación por la cultura mexicana y mucho más, hoy doy la bienvenida a Tomomi al podcast. Bienvenid@ a la temporada 4 del podcast "El Arte de los Idiomas", en la que voy a continuar con las entrevistas con profesores, políglotas... para ayudarte a comprender que TODOS podemos aprender CUALQUIER idioma disfrutando del proceso, así como nuestras sesiones en directo contestando a las preguntas más comunes relacionadas con el proceso de aprendizaje de idiomas y otras ideas nuevas. Sígueme en otras redes sociales para recibir contenido diario sobre cómo aprender idiomas de verdad mientras disfrutas del proceso:
In this episode of Affectively, Alicia interviews our very admired fellow member Tomomi Sasaki. Tomomi runs together with other colleagues a programme called Emotions at Work. As simple as that…and so challenging that we even forget that emotions are with us continuously and that they can play in our favour if we learn to be aware of them and move through them. Tomomi talks about the coaching framework she and her colleagues base her work on and she gives me a present in the form of one of the most insightful questions I have heard in a long time: when you are working on a project, how do you want to feel? Unconsciously, I think this has been one of the strongest compasses for me in the past couple of years when doing my work, but now that I'm aware of it, I feel that I have much more agency and have gotten to the heart of one of the things I care the most about. One more reminder that it's not only what we do, but also how we do it and how we can bring this into consciousness. Thanks Tomomi!The research for this podcast has received support from project Cosmolocalism, funded by the European Research Council under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No 802512) and hosted by the Ragnar Nurkse Department of Innovation and Governance, Tallinn University of Technology.
Me niego a pensar que la mejor forma de aprender los caracteres en otro alfabeto sea memorizando, y por eso hoy está Tomomi con nosotros, quien nos va a hablar de su experiencia aprendiendo estos caracteres y enseñándolos a su hija de manera natural. Bienvenid@ a la temporada 4 del podcast "El Arte de los Idiomas", en la que voy a continuar con las entrevistas con profesores, políglotas... para ayudarte a comprender que TODOS podemos aprender CUALQUIER idioma disfrutando del proceso, así como nuestras sesiones en directo contestando a las preguntas más comunes relacionadas con el proceso de aprendizaje de idiomas y otras ideas nuevas. Sígueme en otras redes sociales para recibir contenido diario sobre cómo aprender idiomas de verdad mientras disfrutas del proceso:
Let's Connect Deeper 2024年に向けてのあらたなOfferings
飲食経営とコーチング どちらも自分のやりたいことだし どっちも諦めたくない。 自分たちのなりたい姿のために 自分たちができる方法で 自分たちができることをする。 ただそれだけ。 それだけで自分はハッピー
This week we're lucky to be joined once again by Niigata Sake Lovers founder, sake educator, guide, and evangelist extraordinaire, Tomomi Duquette.Tomomi's sake vocabulary that she's brought to the bar this week on her own terms is particularly interesting in that it flies directly in the face of what her sake homefield is best known for. In Niigata – generally considered the karakuchi motherland – genuinely amakuchi sake is relatively few and far between (although that's gradually changing, as well).In general, karakuchi is more prevalent vocabulary – both in sake conversation and on the label – than amakuchi. That being said, for every karakuchi sake, there's certainly a delicious bottle of amakuchi out there as well, isn't there? So, why doesn't it seem to get as much attention? Is karakuchi as universally loved as it seems, or is amakuchi equally synonymous with beloved sake?In order to discuss amakuchi, we kind of have to address karakuchi, as well, so this week you sort of get a two-for-one here at On Your Own Terms. Lucky you!Do you lean more karakuchi or amakuchi? What's your personal barometer for each? Let us know @sakeonair on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook, or send us a message with your thoughts and experiences to questions@sakeonair.com, and we'll discuss. We'll be back with more Sake On Air – On Your Own Terms, very soon.Until then, kampai! Sake On Air is made possible with the generous support of the Japan Sake & Shochu Makers Association and is recorded and broadcast from the Japan Sake & Shochu Information Center in Tokyo. The show is brought to you by Potts.K Productions with audio production by Frank Walter. Our theme, “Younger Today Than Tomorrow” was composed by forSomethingNew for Sake On Air.
En octobre dernier nous avions déjà reçu des artistes appartenant au collectif TheVerseVerse à l'occasion de l'exposition POEME OBJKT (#363 | NFT & Poésie: L'exposition "Poème Objkt" à réécouter ici.) qui avait lieu à l'Avant-Galerie Vossen…6 mois plus tard c'est près d'une trentaine d'artistes parmi lesquels Kevin Abosch, Sasha Stiles, Ana Maria Caballero, Christian Bök, Ross Goodwin, qui se retrouvent pour le 2ème volet de ce projet intiitulé cette fois POEME SUBJKT qui mêle poésie, intelligence artificielle, NFT etc…Cette fois l'exposition a lieu à la librairie Métamorphoses 17 rue Jacob 75006 Paris du 25 mai au 15 juillet prochain, toujours à l'initiative de l'Avant-Galerie Vossen…De nombreux artistes étaient présents avec nous ce matin (merci à tous) pour nous parler de cette expo et des oeuvres qu'ils ont réalisées pour l'occasion…Dans la 2ème partie de la room, Tomomi et Mélanie Krystel de TheNoxGallery, la 1ère galerie NFT IRL qui a ouvert au Japon dans le quartier de Shibuya à Tokyo, étaient présentes avec nous pour nous introduire une exposition qui aura lieu pendant la NFC de Lisbonne et qui mettra à l'honneur 2 géants japonais de l'animation et dont on découvrira l'identité sur place…Pour aller plus loin:* Site web officiel de TheVerseVerse* Site web officiel de L'Avant-Galerie Vossen* Compte Twitter de TheVerseVerse* Site web officiel de The NoxGallery* Compte Twitter de Mélanie Krystel* Compte Twitter de Tomomi This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nftmorning.com
We're continuing on our Sake Travel series this week with a visit to the city of Niigata. While the entire prefecture of Niigata is littered with fantastic sake destinations, we've decided to narrow the scope just a bit and save our explorations into the greater region for another day. That being said, we've dabbled in Nagaoka and Sado Island as part of our previous episodes, which are you can tune into now if you're seeking a deeper exploration into the larger region right this minute.In order to help us do this great city justice we've recruited Tomomi Duquette to the show this week, founder and director of Niigata Sake Lovers, not to mention a prolific educator and navigator throughout the larger world of sake in general.In this week's discussion we more-or-less arrived at the conclusion that a visit to Niigata should start (and end) with a visit to Tabi Bar and Ponshukan – both located right inside Niigata Station – but where you go from there is really up to you.When it comes to drinks and dining we touch upon Furumachi Jikon, Bit, Armonia, Ponshu Girl, Suzuki Sengyoten (for the early-risers), Minato Sushi, and more. If you're in town at the right time, there's Furumachi Burarizake (Furumachi Pub/Izakaya Crawl), the (in)famous sake festival, Sake no Jin, and the recent Niigata brewing industry mainstay, the Niigata Jozo (Brewing) Summit.For those looking to explore the wider world of Niigata brewing and beverage, spending a night in the neighboring fermentation town of Nuttari is a must, not to mention the ever-growing Niigata Wine Country and the enjoyment of Japan's first craft beer brewery, along with a handful of other great local beer producers.For sake brewery tours, Imayotsukasa is an easy (and highly recommended) visit, as well as DHC for its hospitality and welcoming setup at Kayamatei tasting room and cafe. The brand new doburoku-centric producer (and café), Lagoon Brewery, is new entry making an impact thanks to its great sake and beautiful location.If you're looking for something on your way in (or out) of town, we touch on a few sake-centric or heavily sake-influenced excursions, including Kamosu Mori and the surrounding onsen region (not to mention Tomomi's new brewery project), or a visit to Tsubame Sanjo to explore the insane level of craftsmanship in metal working, producing some of the world's most sought after culinary knives and the most inspiring copper wares north of the equator.Niigata is incredibly accessible, yet still resting firmly in Hidden Gem status. As much as we'd like to keep it all to ourselves, we thought you deserved to enjoy it as much as we do on your next visit to Japan.For more sake explorations and regional adventures, follow along with us at @sakeonair on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook, or if you'd like to share your thoughts or questions with the hosts, please reach out to us at questions@sakeonair.com. We'll be back with more Sake On Air in just a couple of weeks.Until then, kampai! Sake On Air is made possible with the generous support of the Japan Sake & Shochu Makers Association and is recorded and broadcast from the Japan Sake & Shochu Information Center in Tokyo. The show is brought to you by Potts.K Productions with audio production by Frank Walter. Our theme, “Younger Today Than Tomorrow” was composed by forSomethingNew for Sake On Air.
・Take Back Your Power 5期生 10/10~ 開講! 詳細はこちら
Yun-A, Tomomi, and Benjy share unique perspectives on how to manage disagreements within the family in the Matching Process.
Yun-A, Tomomi, and Benjy discuss best practices for having difficult and uncomfortable conversations during the Matching Process.
Robert & Tomomi go deep into how they discovered their faith in God & the Blessing after years of searching, and how they ended up finding each other!
Distributed teams consist of team members who are all individually working from different locations. These locations can be their homes, coffee shops, or co-working spaces, but not shared office spaces. By definition, distributed teams do not have a shared office they can go to.These teams are known for being more agile, productive, and happy. They offer team members more flexibility to create a healthy work-life balance, remove the distractions that come with in-office collaboration, and are often cheaper to run. But they also come with their own challenges!And if there's one thing we can say is that this new work style has a lot going for them!In this week's episode of LeanCast, we received Tomomi Sasaki from AQ, to talk about the benefits of operating with distributed teams, its challenges, and how to guide your team away from issues. Follow Tomomi Sasaki on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tomomisasaki/Access AQ's website : https://aqworks.com/a/sync: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a-sync/‘Editing' the office workspace: https://medium.com/aq-writes/editing-the-office-workspace-862d0560b141
Tomomi Hongo of LA Mugen Taiko shares what it was like to grow up with taiko, and how her experiences, education, and family have influenced the way that she teaches and performs. We also learn more about her upcoming event, LA Taiko Festival (lataikofestival.com).www.littletokyotalks.comSupport the show
As a writer, teacher, and watercolour artist, Chloe Tomomi knows anxiety and trauma are healed with art. She shares her heart and talent with those who would also heal by creating mystical, poetic landscapes. Tweet Us! @etchr_lab Watch this full episode in video form on our Youtube Channel Ready to make more art? Check out our workshops! Browse our art supplies at etchrlab.com
The trillion-dollar question, “How do you know if you've found the One?” Does the “One” even exist? Benjy, Christian, and Tomomi share some practical and spiritual things to consider when making THE big decision.
One of the most common questions people ask when they go through the Matching Process, “Should I have preferences, and is it okay?” Tomomi is in the hot seat as a single woman currently preparing for Matching & Blessing, as Yun-A and Benjy share some insights and experiences. The Matching Process is a family-driven engagement process that was developed over the last 20 years to help people find a partner and receive the Blessing in a healthy and systematic way.
Benjy, Yun-A, and Tomomi have all chosen to marry internationally. In this episode, they discuss the WHY and HOW behind international Matching & Blessing. True Father states that international marriage is the fastest way to world peace. But how does that work in practice? And most importantly, what do you think about an international Matching & Blessing?
What are the principles that can help you create greater wealth now? How can you overcome fear and take action? In this episode, Tomomi shares her experience working with Chris and investing in real estate for the first time. Tune in to be inspired to make the shift into a cash flow mindset and take a leap of faith into real estate. Key takeaways to listen for Scarcity mindset vs. Abundance mindsetReal estate principles to create wealthOvercoming the fear to take the first stepChallenges of investing passively Chris Miles, the "Anti-Financial Advisor," is a leading authority on how to quickly free up and create cash flow for thousands of his clients, entrepreneurs, and others internationally! He's an author, speaker, and radio host that has been featured in US News, CNN Money, Bankrate, Entrepreneur on Fire, and spoken to thousands getting them fast financial results. Connect With Chris: http://moneyripples.com/https://www.facebook.com/moneyrippleshttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJS6bPY8sm53pkjiCSuBKMA
What are the principles that can help you create greater wealth now? How can you overcome fear and take action? In this episode, Tomomi shares her experience working with Chris and investing in real estate for the first time. Tune in to be inspired to make the shift into a cash flow mindset and take a leap of faith into real estate. Key takeaways to listen for Scarcity mindset vs. Abundance mindsetReal estate principles to create wealthOvercoming the fear to take the first stepChallenges of investing passively Chris Miles, the "Anti-Financial Advisor," is a leading authority on how to quickly free up and create cash flow for thousands of his clients, entrepreneurs, and others internationally! He's an author, speaker, and radio host that has been featured in US News, CNN Money, Bankrate, Entrepreneur on Fire, and spoken to thousands getting them fast financial results. Connect With Chris: http://moneyripples.com/https://www.facebook.com/moneyrippleshttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJS6bPY8sm53pkjiCSuBKMA
Tomomi is the Director of Career Services and Leadership Management at Columbia school of Social Work. We discussed what students are experiencing during these economic times plus more. This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/orlando-haynes/support
Tomomi Sasaki and I sat down to talk in-depth about her journey of self-awareness and inner work as a facilitator. We met at an advanced facilitation masterclass I ran for Google at their Sprint Conference, way back in 2018. She tweeted at the end of 2020: I've been facilitating workshops for about a decade. The first few years were ferocious, needs-based learning. Workshops took a tremendous amount of energy to plan and run, and after each one, I'd faceplant onto the nearest sofa. Once things became manageable, I plateaued. I worked on plenty of facilitation assignments (and did a bunch of public speaking about lessons learned) but I was coasting and I knew it. Then @kaihaley and the @GoogleDesign Sprint Conference gave me the gift of a full day training from @dastillman, and I started to think of facilitation as a practice. (you can listen to my conversation with Kai Haley here.) Building a practice sends a different kind of signal into the universe. This gives me watershed experiences that blows apart a door I didn't know was there. Behind each door is a whole new landscape to explore, and new friends to explore it with. It happens consistently, once or twice a year. I don't know what's behind that cadence but it is an amazing thing. You *think* you know the edges of the land and then... ah hah! It gets me every time. It had been a while since we'd connected, but when I read that twitter thread, I knew we had to sit down to talk about her journey to thinking about facilitation as a practice and what that meant. Tomomi is a designer and partner at the independent design studio AQ, and a frequent collaborator of Enterprise Design Associates. She's also a top-notch facilitator and, as you might have learned by now, a very reflective practitioner, and in this episode she gives some invaluable advice about how to improve at the skill of facilitation - beyond tips and tricks. I loved it when Tomomi said that “The insight for me was that I need to take care of who I am and what I'm bringing into the room as a facilitator because that's part of what's going to happen in the dynamics.” Tomomi is essentially saying in her own words what Bill O'Brien, the late CEO of Hanover Insurance said, that “The success of an intervention depends on the interior condition of the intervener.” When we facilitate, when we lead a group, we are noticing the system...and what we choose to respond to, focus on or call out will shift what happens in the system. The question here is...how do you affect change in a complex system...that YOU are part of? Many people treat learning and change like a purely technical challenge: They have a deficit in performance and the assumption is that they can learn better ways of doing and apply them. Similarly, we think we can apply a pattern or tool (like a facilitated workshop agenda, exercise or the like) and get a reliable result - like a baking recipe. But any bread baker will tell you that the weather, the flour and your mood can shift how things go. Dough is alive. There are two challenges with this mechanical, recipe, way of thinking...one is that people and systems of people are complex...so, the likelihood of things going exactly according to plan without any need for adaptation and improvisation is...unlikely. People, like dough, are alive. The other issue is that many people think it's new and better ways of doing that are needed...where it's actually different ways of thinking, different mental models and assumptions...which will naturally lead to different ways of doing. Some folks (Chris Argyris and Donald Schön) describe this as the difference between single-loop and double-loop learning and others even point to triple and even quadruple loop learning...the core of which could be self-awareness, or seeing how we ourselves can affect the system. This is the transition from facilitation and leadership as “doing to” or performance to “doing with” and presence. The way you show up internally will change what happens in the session. https://organizationallearning9.wordpress.com/single-and-double-loop-learning/ As Tomomi says later in our conversation, “I think what struck me was that in facilitation, we think so much about the participants, and the first question you basically asked in the master class was who are you? Until that moment, I hadn't really thought about that, and I think that's why I was getting so burnt out. You give and give without really an awareness of what you're doing to yourself or what you need to be. Then the realization is that, oh, that's where your strength comes from, it's where the practice needs to be built on, because you can't change that much, right?... So, might as well work with what you have. “ I care deeply about this idea. I think that facilitation and leadership more generally, is about expanding your range of capabilities - your ability to show up, on purpose, as the occasion calls for it. Tomomi suggests we can't change *that much...but we can try to grow. I have a free course on Exploring and Expanding your roles as a facilitator, which you can find here. There is so much goodness in Tomomi's reflections. I hope you enjoy the conversation as much as I did. Head over to the conversationfactory.com/listen for full episode transcripts, links, show notes and more key quotes and ideas. You can also head over there and become a monthly supporter of the show for as little as $8 a month. You'll get complimentary access to exclusive workshops and resources that I only share with this circle of facilitators and leaders. Support the Podcast and Get insider Access https://theconversationfactory.com/conversation-factory-insider
Podcast for people who don't want to learn Japanese from textbooks.
お久しぶりです! I'm so glad that I'm able to come back here finally. I'm explaining a grammar " -wakeniwa ikanai" whichi is in JLPT N2. I hope you enjoy this episode, and again, thank you soooo much for listening to my podcast even while I was away. Check script for this episode on my website; lovinglifeintokyo.com thank you! Tomomi
I'm here today with Tomomi. She is well-known as a Yoga teacher/guru but today we're here to talk about her second scene: She is a self described professional nomadic immigrant. She has lived in Japan, Bali, an island called Pulau Weh and that's just a start... To learn more about Tomomi and her first scene at Flying Elephant Yoga go to https://flyingelephantyoga.com/. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/second-scene/support
Podcast for people who don't want to learn Japanese from textbooks.
Script is now available on my website! →lovinglifeintokyo.com 初めまして。日本語教師のともみです。 東京で外国人ビジネスマンを対象に日本語のプライベートレッスンをしています。 今日からポッドキャストで色々なことについて話します。 あなたの勉強の役に立てば嬉しいです。 よろしくお願いします。 Hi, my name is Tomomi and I'm a Japanese teacher living in Tokyo. I've been teaching Japanese to foreigners (mainly business workers) for 14 years. I'm going to talk about many different topics in Japanese on this podcast. I hope you enjoy it! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lovinglifeintokyo/?hl=ja
Tomomi Imura loves two things: The web, and cats. It's only reasonable that she combine them in everything that she does. She talks to Scott about Code and Creativity, Making things, Raspbrry Pis, Javascript, and Cats as a Service.
Raylene Taskoski talks to Tomomi who is part owner of 1Stop-Fitness, a gym she opened with her partner in 2013. She is specialized in corrective exercise, and she trains people who have chronic pain to reduce or manage their pain. But more importantly, she has a passion to guide her clients to love themselves no matter what. She believes that we should place more value on being who we are. She is also a professional speaker and the author of Me and The Japanese Beauty Standards. She was born and raised in Japan, but she isn't good at math and she doesn't like sake, sushi, or raw fish. Her joke is, “I break the stereotype of Japanese.” She lives in Phoenix, Arizona with her life partner, Larry, and a smart dog, Roscoe.
【脳を支配する】 お顔をケアされている女性は多いかと思いますが、首や手までケアされているでしょうか。 若々しく見せたい、印象よくしたいという方には、特に聴いていただきたい内容です。 フランスにエステ留学して、エステの国家資格を取得し、フランスで美について学ばれたとのことです。 その知識と経験を元にセミナーで美容について教えていらっしゃいます。 意識していることは『脳を支配する』とのことでした。 この意味することは、ポジティブなことを言葉にすることで自信がつき、行動も変わってくるので、ポジティブな言葉で脳を支配するということでした。 そして、意識は肌にも現れてくるという実体験もあるようです。 印象を変えるには意識を変えることから。 技術も心構えも学べるセミナーを開催されていますので、若々しく見せたい、印象を良くしたいという方は、ぜひご参加ください。 special thanks to : 市川恵さん 【今回のゲスト】 美容家 TOMOMI(ともみ)さん トロワジュール トモミエステセミナー 3jourstomomi@gmail.com 日総研セミナー https://www.nissoken.com/s/14443/indexsf.html ポッドキャスト・コンシェルジュ こえラボ https://koelab.co.jp/
第74回NYこりんごラジオ、オンエアされました!Tomomi 10-15-18 Final BGM.mp3今回は、今年の1月にオンエアされた、元ラガーディア大学英語教師で、人類文学専門、日本人女子初の海外留学を切り開いたパイオニア、森分ともみさんの第4弾のインタビュー!(このインタビュー収録は、今年の1月に行われました、)第1弾では、終戦前後の生きるので精いっぱいな時代に、あることで、海外への視野は広がりました。第2弾は、大学を、予想外な行動から自主退学をし、住み込みメイドと..
ロンドンにあるカフェ KISSAWA (https://www.kissawa.co.uk) オーナーChieさんと、スタッフTomomiさんとの会話です。 日本とイギリスに住んで感じる それぞれの価値観の違いや、似ている点についてなど。
去年の11月にロンドンでカフェをオープンしたChieさん そこで働くTomomiさんとの会話です。 岡山出身のChieさんがロンドンに来て10年 その中で感じる変化や、カフェを経営する上で考えていることなど。 KISSAWA (https://www.kissawa.co.uk)
When Annette says that she has something in common with a murderer, she’s right. And she also has something in common with a tourist from Japan, as well as the American landscape. Annette doesn’t hold anything back - at her core, she’s a journalist. She investigates her own story like she investigates that of all the subjects in the book. Each person came alive through her diligent research, resulting in a tribute to a curious woman named Tomomi, sympathy for the man who killed her, and a reunion with Annette's childhood self. Annette's is a story of trauma, healing, and connection. While there's darkness, there's a whole lot of light. Annette founded a nonprofit called Healing Lands Project to help children who have experienced trauma. Women Featured in this Episode: Annette McGivney Enjoy this episode? Rate us on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen. It’ll help other people find us. Sponsored by Subaru. Learn more at www.meetanowner.com and follow along on Instagram: @subaru_usa Join the She Explores Podcast community on Facebook. Visit She-Explores.com Links mentioned in this episode: Healing Lands Project Pure Land by Annette McGivney Annette's Portfolio Adventure Grapes Book Club All That Glitters by Margo Talbot Hosted and produced by Gale Straub. Episodes air weekly on Wednesdays-- subscribe wherever you listen so you never miss an episode. Music for this episode is by Swelling and Lee Rosevere via freemusicarchive.org. Music is also by Ryan Teague.
The best-selling author discusses Japan Defense Minister Tomomi Inada, scrapping more 2020 Tokyo Olympic venues, singing superstar Hikaru Utada, karoshi and Hall of Fame pitcher Takahiko Bessho.
Herzog Zwei is a real-time strategy game that was developed by Tecnosoft and released for the Mega Drive in 1989 for Japan and for the Sega Genesis in 1990 for North America. With excellent music, you’re in for a good time. Join us with guest-host Nathan Daniels and a special appearance from composer Tomomi Otani. Track… Read More »
パリ在住のアロマトローグ、Tomomiさんにインタビューをしました(第2回)。医療関係者ではない立場であえてとびこんだ、そのプロセスや苦労話などをうかがいながら、アロマトローグになるまでの軌跡や、フランス人のコミュニケーションスタイル、日仏ダブルカルチャーの教育についてお話をうかがっています。オープニングでは、水泳の習い方が、根本的に日仏ではまったく違うという話をしています。 akigoto016.mp3
パリ在住のアロマトローグ、Tomomiさんにインタビューをしました(第2回)。医療関係者ではない立場であえてとびこんだ、そのプロセスや苦労話などをうかがいながら、アロマトローグになるまでの軌跡や、フランス人のコミュニケーションスタイル、日仏ダブルカルチャーの教育についてお話をうかがっています。オープニングでは、水泳の習い方が、根本的に日仏ではまったく違うという話をしています。 akigoto016.mp3
パリ在住のアロマトローグ、Tomomiさんにインタビューをしました(第1回)。フランスのアロマセラピーとイギリスや日本との違い、マニュアルなど定型がしっかり確立している日本とは違う、フランスの「人間らしさ」の魅力や、お客様は神様ではなく、かわいがられるお客様になることが一番!とおっしゃる意味についてうかがっています。オープニングでは、開催国フランスで大盛り上がりのサッカー、ユーロ(ヨーロッパ選手権)についてお話しています。 akigoto015.mp3
パリ在住のアロマトローグ、Tomomiさんにインタビューをしました(第1回)。フランスのアロマセラピーとイギリスや日本との違い、マニュアルなど定型がしっかり確立している日本とは違う、フランスの「人間らしさ」の魅力や、お客様は神様ではなく、かわいがられるお客様になることが一番!とおっしゃる意味についてうかがっています。オープニングでは、開催国フランスで大盛り上がりのサッカー、ユーロ(ヨーロッパ選手権)についてお話しています。 akigoto015.mp3
Today, our guest is Tomomi Shimogori, Team Leader of the Lab for Molecular Mechanisms of Thalamus Development at RIKEN Brain Science Institute in Japan. We speak with her about cortical development, studying development in marmosets, and growing up around the globe.
Computer Music Live / Citrusonic is a weekly podcast dedicated to Live Computer Music Performances. This show features Live Underground Jungle, Techno, DNB, Hip Hop, Dubstep, Future, Noise, Synth, Trance, Pop, DJ, Mixing, Battle, Records, Music, Altering, AM, FM, Modulations, Radio, Computer, Harmonies. Thunderous Scratch-Tracks, Techno, Glitches, Old, Skool, Breaks, Ejects, iDose, Chaos and Bass. An hour long podcast of Fresh Original Electronic Dance Music. Menacing Cantus Firmus Basslines, Heavyweight Drums and Synthesizers all LIVE! Computer Music Live is posted every Saturday Night from California, only the hottest Underground Jungle Music is chosen. New podcasts are posted on a weekly basis and up to the minute show information is here http://citrusonic.libsyn.com/ and you may also visit www.citrusonic.com for more. Thank you and make sure to tell all your friends to subscribe to Computer Music Live.
This week listener Jenn Y and I interview Tomomi Muraki Duquette, a sake sommelier from Niigata City who schools us in everything sake! We cover everything you need to allow you to explore the world of sake! Thanks to Tomomi and Jenn for a great lesson! We cover things like: What is sake? How much like beer is it versus like wine? How is sake made? What flavors should we expect from different kinds of sake? What are the different kinds of sake? What should we look for on the bottle? As promised, here are the types of sake that Tomomi discussed: junmai honjozo Junmai ginjo, gingo Junmai daiginjo, daiginjo For more good reading on the topic, please visit this site: http://boutiquejapan.com/sake101/ Enjoy this very cool, different WFNP special! And for more info on Tomomi's group, see her Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/niigatasakelovers?fref=ts
Computers (Live) features Underground Ape Music. The hottest BASS MUSIC on the planet. Drum and Bass Music / Electronic Jungle unlike anything you've ever heard. Amen-Breaks Podcast-Master / Living idol of idols Javier Casas : The Strongest, the Tallest, Otaku Athlete and Reaktor & MaxMSP Gosu, the Champion and Three Time Golden Mouse Winner. There is a weekly podcast of these works!!! Exclusive Dubstep Trax from the Americas. Hidden away in a Los Angeles reinforced building is the Russian Ens. It is offered only through Podcast. Your circuits will be bent once a week. 8bits, eight terabyte gig after gig. Do you like playing Video Games? Well we've stolen the Synthesizer so get ready! ACCESS VIRUS HYPERSAWS. TECHNO ELECTRONIC DANCE MUSIC IDM EDM. Are you professional DJ? Do you like mixing, what about food? OK we've got you covered. L.A Battle Artist has ties to AKB48! Thunderous Scratching. Massive Basslines and 303's PUMPING ACID BASS. Up to the minute show information is posted here citrusonic.libsyn.com and you may visit fm48.org for my info. Thank you and make sure to tell all your friends to subscribe to Computer Music Live! Otaku Reaktor & MaxMSP Gosu. Three TimeGolden Mouse Winner. Weekly podcast on iTunes called "Computer Music Live" Apps on iOS, Android, Amazon Windows8
Computer Music Live Tomochin Rewind Special