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Hello! Glad to see you around. This week in The Chaise Lounge, Nick chats with Rebecca Hay, owner of Rebecca Hay Designs in Toronto, Canada.Though interested in interior design and entrepreneurship at a young age, Rebecca didn't enter the field until after experimenting with other careers. Initially she wanted to be an actress and a teacher. She went to school for musical theater, though she didn't feel ready for the stage just yet. She then graduated in political science and cultural studies.Later, Rebecca traveled to Spain to teach English, but was turned off by the bureaucracy and strictness of the work. When she returned home, she couldn't decide whether to study design or pursue an acting career. While Rebecca eventually landed a few acting gigs, they didn't allow the freedom and creativity that she yearned for.Finally, she went back to college for her true love, interior design. After a few years of being a designer, Rebecca started her own podcast, Resilient by Design, which aided her in networking, collaborating with other designers, and forming friendships.Be sure to check out Rebecca's podcast Resilient by Design, and follow her on Instagram @rebeccahaydesigns! For me it's all about collaboration over competition... we are stronger when we help each other out. We're not each other's competition, we all offer something unique. Rebecca Hay Tweet Chaise Lounge Updates Coast to Coast Design is back baby! Give it a listen to learn about just how many ways there are to run a design business. Our Events Page Resources See what our sponsors can do for you. Upcoming Markets High Point Market – June 5 - 9, 2021 More About Our Sponsors Wrap Up If you would like to hear more episodes, please visit us on iTunes, Spotify or your favorite podcasting app! We'd love it if you post a review, you may even hear your review read live on our next podcast. Also, find The Chaise Lounge on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter. With that said, keep dreaming big, and keep designing a great design business. See ya!
*Explicit* Your favorite mother-daughter duo look over the case of Rebecca Zahau and Max Shacknai. In July of 2011, Jonah Shacknai (father of 6 old Max Shacknai and CEO of Medicis Pharmaceuticals) had been dating the gorgeous Rebecca Zahau for few years. While Rebecca and her teen sister are babysitting Max, he tragically falls and is seriously injured to the point he later dies. Two days after his accident, Rebecca is found bound, gagged, and naked, hanging from the second story balcony of the summer home she shared with boyfriend Jonah Shacknai. A strange note painted in black paint was left on the door of the room Rebecca was hanging from..Was it murder? Was it staged? Was it suicide? Sit down, have a drink with us, and hold on to your undies while we talk about this mysterious case. As always, let us know WTF!?
While Rebecca worked hard on the presidential election, Isy and guest Elena Faverio discuss bras, corsets, and making your own decisions about your body.Support What is Sex? on Patreon to help pay hosting fees, guests, editors, and hosts!We want to hear from you! Contact us on Facebook, Instagram, or at contact@yestoconsent.org
The movie Rebecca follows a young woman as she meets a charming and handsome widower, Mr. De Winter. The two fall in love after meeting in Monte Carlo and are married soon afterward. As the couple returns home to the famous Manderley mansion, constant reminders of her husband's deceased wife Rebecca begin to plague the new Mrs. De Winter. While Rebecca may be gone, something is holding her presence at Manderley and Mrs. De Winter is pulling on the string. JJ and Javier get into a moral debate. Mattson wants more backstory. Ian plays referee. Email us: hosts@whatsourverdict.com Follow us: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/whatsourverdict Twitter: @whatsourverdict Instagram: @whatsourverdict YouTube: https://youtube.com/channel/UC-K_E-ofs3b85BnoU4R6liA (https://youtube.com/channel/UC-K_E-ofs3b85BnoU4R6liA) Visit us: www.whatsourverdict.com
It’s not often one finds within the halls of Harvard Business School warnings that capitalism is on the verge of destroying the planet and destabilizing society. The End of the World As We Know It. Yet Dr. Rebecca Henderson, one of only 25 University Professors at Harvard University, with a joint appointment at the Harvard Business School, is doing just that. Though she says she “learned early and often that achieving professional success was about mastering the numbers and playing the game,” she is now urging business leaders, her colleagues and her students to reimagine that game. For the first 15 years of her career, especially as one of the rare early female tenured faculty in her department, Rebecca learned the lesson that she says every successful manager has learned: don’t “do” enthusiasm—or ethics or emotion—at work. Do expertise. In other words, leave your politics and passions outside of work. “To be a businessperson is, by definition, to climb into a box whose walls are defined by the bottom line,” she says. “Only those who can reliably deliver profits are likely to survive in today’s ruthlessly competitive world.” But two key realizations helped her begin to climb out of the box. First, a movie changed her life. In 2006, she saw “An Inconvenient Truth” by Al Gore. The film shocked her out of the comfortable assumption that someone else would take care of things. “I sent an email to everyone on my contact list telling them that they had to see it and began teaching a course on sustainable business.” Second, about ten years ago Rebecca came home to find her husband on the floor. He was a famed astrophysicist at Harvard who had risen from the “wrong side of the tracks” in New Jersey to become one of the world’s greatest astronomers. She thought at first that he was playing with the cats. But soon she realized he had passed at age 61 from a massive heart attack. Blindsided by the loss, she learned to pay attention to the amazingness of life. I learned what I had known intellectually for a long time. I’m a Buddhist and the Buddhists say there are good news and bad news. The good news is that you’re not going to die. The bad news is it’s because you don’t really exist. I really believe that. We are balls of electrons, collections of energy moving through the world and we dissipate and that’s ok...but while we are here, we should do everything that we can. The boundary between us and the rest of the world is so fluid. So I think of myself as a song the universe is singing. So when people say, “How do you do this work? How do you keep optimistic? How do you keep hopeful?” I say, “Well look, the world is on fire. What else are we going to do with our time? What are we going to do with our time?” We have to address the problems that we face. That’s what gets me out of bed each morning. At Harvard Business School, she turned her course on sustainability into a broader examination of “Reimagining Capitalism: Business & the Big Problems”, which grew from 28 students to over 300 -- and which has become the basis for her recent acclaimed book, Reimagining Capitalism in a World on Fire (Hachette/Public Affairs, April 2020). While Rebecca recognizes that the world is “radically out of balance,” she believes capitalism can help bring it in balance and be a force for good if only we can reimagine how it operates. “Free market capitalism is the greatest source of prosperity the world has ever seen, but capitalism is on the verge of destroying the planet and destabilizing society,” she says. “The good news is we have both the resources and the technology to build a just and sustainable world – and purpose-driven businesses could be the critical catalyst that drives the kinds of global, systemic changes we need to reimagine capitalism in a way that works for everyone.” In addition to teaching at Harvard, Rebecca is a research fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research and a fellow of both the British Academy and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She sits on the boards of Idexx Laboratories and of CERES. She was named one of three “Outstanding Directors of 2019” by the Financial Times. Join Bela Shah and Preeta Bansal in conversation with Dr. Rebecca Henderson, a remarkable scholar, teacher and business leader, about reimagining a world on fire.
Hello, Lovelies! This week (because the world's on fire and our schedules are chaos) we're releasing one of our $5 level bonus episodes for ya'll! If you're interested (or need a break from reality) you can follow this link to our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/theladiesofstrange For the first bit of the episode Rebecca gives the history of dowsing (which is closely tied to pendulums) and Tiffany gives a pendulum tutorial (see link below). While Rebecca and Ashley were kinda confused by pendulums and didn't have a whole lot to report, if you stick around to about minute 22, you'll get to experience the joy of Tiffany reading from the journal she kept during this month. Here's a copy of the link Tiffany mentioned for tips and tricks for starting to use pendulums: https://askyourpendulum.com/pages/tips-for-successful-pendulum-use
First Draft Episode #237: Rebecca Serle Rebecca Serle is a television writer, producer, and New York Times bestselling author of six books, including When You Were Mine , The Edge of Falling, The Dinner List, and her newest, In Five Years, out now. She co-developed the hit TV adaptation of her YA series, Famous in Love. Links and Topics Mentioned In This Episode Marianne Wiggins, author of National Book Award finalist Evidence of Things Unseen and The Shadow Catcher, and a professor of creative writing at USC Sigrid Nunez, author of National Book Award-winning The Friend, was Rebecca’s thesis advisor at The New School’s MFA program While Rebecca was getting her MFA, she was an intern and then an assistant at Foundry Literary and Media Mollie Glick, previously of Foundry Literary and currently with CAA, represented Rebecca for her first book, When You Were Mine Lauren Oliver, author of Delirium and Before I Fall, gave Rebecca great advice: “Time is going to pass anyway,” meaning you might as well get to work. I plug my BestSelf Journal, which is helping me be more productive Kristin Stewart as Bella in Twilight movies; Shailene Woodly as Tris in the Divergent films; and Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss in The Hunger Games films Joshua Jackson and Katie Holmes dated in real life while filming Dawson’s Creek Dan Farrah, Rebecca’s manager Rebecca studied the pilots for Gossip Girl and The O.C. to prepare to write the pilot for Famous in Love Erin Malone at WME is Rebecca’s agent I. Marlene King, creator of Pretty Little Liars came on as a producer of Famous in Love ABC Signature Studios has acquired the television rights to Rebecca’s pilot adaptation of the bestselling book series Jessica Darling by Megan McCafferty (whose newest book, The Mall, is out in 2020) One Day in December by Josie Silver In Big Magic: Creative Living Beyond Fear, Elizabeth Gilbert discusses the concept that ideas are out in the atmosphere and can pass from person to person I want to hear from you! Have a question about writing or creativity for Sarah Enni or her guests to answer? To leave a voicemail, call (818) 533-1998. Subscribe To First Draft with Sarah Enni Every Tuesday, I speak to storytellers like Veronica Roth, author of Divergent; Linda Holmes, author and host of NPR’s Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast; Jonny Sun, internet superstar, illustrator of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Gmorning, Gnight! and author and illustrator of Everyone’s an Aliebn When Ur a Aliebn Too; Michael Dante DiMartino, co-creator of Avatar: The Last Airbender; John August, screenwriter of Big Fish, Charlie’s Angels, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory; or Rhett Miller, musician and frontman for The Old 97s. Together, we take deep dives on their careers and creative works. Don’t miss an episode! Subscribe in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts. It’s free! Rate, Review, and Recommend How do you like the show? Please take a moment to rate and review First Draft with Sarah Enni in Apple Podcasts, Google Play, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Your honest and positive review helps others discover the show -- so thank you! Is there someone you think would love this podcast as much as you do? Please share this episode on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, or via carrier pigeon (maybe try a text or e-mail, come to think of it). Just click the Share button at the bottom of this post! Thanks again!
This is the start of the Journey: -Lise, Gabriela and Rebecca race together as a relay team at the Barrleman 70.3. -What happens when you get 3 strong swimmers on a relay team? They make plans for next season. Journey to Ironman, What is it? A group of 7 female athletes are following the same plan, Be Ironfit by the Fink's. A few athletes are racing Muskoka 70.3 while the others are still trying to find their perfect race. While Rebecca is registered for IM Mont Tremblant, it's a wait and see game for the rest of the crew. Until the next time, have a great active day. Bye!
How does one go from being a dancer in Prince’s films to a business consultant, start-up founder, mentor and one of Entrepreneur Magazine Top Small Company honoree to a record holding land speed racer on a vintage motorcycle? Well Rebecca Berneck tells us how, and much, much more in this information packed and quite fun conversation. In case you may not know, Rebecca is the founder and “Big Head” of Officeheads, Inc., a company that helps small businesses grow using financial management and analysis. Officeheads was named one of Entrepreneur Magazine’s 2018 top small companies and was chosen for their impact, innovation, growth, leadership and business valuation. And Hubdoc named Officeheads one of North America’s Top 50 Cloud Accountants of 2018 as well. Rebecca also serves as a mentor at 1871, a Chicago-based organization that fosters technological growth and entrepreneurship, and she is past president of the board of the Evanston Chamber of Commerce. Early in her career, she was a Principal at Apogee Strategies, business manager at RNW Consulting, and an assistant at Sibson Consulting. While Rebecca is highly skilled in entrepreneurship, business coaching, finance, and process design—she has also road raced vintage motorcycles, holds several land speed records, and has raced at Bonneville on the famous salt flats. Rebecca is an amazing role model for breaking stereotypes of what may formerly have been seen as more so male dominated fields, and she does so with great humor and aplomb! She discusses her hacks and triumphs as well as her resiliency when faced with setbacks and problems, both on and off the track. She is the epitome of living life in full, and often at high speeds.
After the season 1 finale where Dmitri returns, Rebecca finds herself driving towards Anaconda, Montana. While Rebecca continues to drive, her parents are starting to put the pieces together about where she is back in Portland. Husk is written and co-created by Sean Abplanalp & Emma Brown. Associate produced by Elliott Jacobson. Transcript link: https://www.huskpodcast.com/s2e1 Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/abiglobal Episode Art by Joshua Fox. Find more of his art on Instagram: @jfox720 Credit music: "Firing Line" by Corinne Sharlet off her forthcoming debut EP. Follow her on FB at https://www.facebook.com/corinnesharletmusic/ or on Instagram: @corinne.sharlet. Follow her website for news about her latest shows and releases: https://www.corinnesharletmusic.com/ Cast (In order of appearance): Derrick the Bully: Fatty Gallagher Young Dmitri: Katherine Dery Young Rebecca: Lauren Scher Kathy: Ashleigh Elfring Rebecca: Emma Brown Stranger: Josh Paxton Aunt Caroline (Radio Voice): Kelsey Tucker Martin: Matt Woodman Gina: Anita Clark
Tyson got depressed watching Chernobyl (weird right???) but that c**ksucker loved Deadwood. While Rebecca loved Black Mirror the rest of us were pretty much not into it. Also Nick doesn't pirate things because BANDWIDTH!!! Dont you touch that wifi!
Coming October 24th. On a brisk fall day, two friends, Dmitri and Rebecca, go out to a favorite forested spot to reconnect with each other - over a couple of mushroom sandwiches.They sit the shade and the high sets in with such vivid clarity Rebecca finds herself in a high tech hospital overlooking a spired city. When she comes to in a loamy crater with Dmitri missing, she knows something is terribly wrong. She does the only thing she can: contact the local police, which leads to an emotional whodunnit. Everyone around her is trying to grapple with the disappearance and an investigation is launched. While Rebecca is the main suspect, she wrestles with the otherworldly truth of Dmitri’s abduction and how to get the help she needs to get him back.
After a week that saw Rebecca talk at a leadership conference, the couple discusses millennials and positive reinforcement in the workplace. Steve longs for a simpler time when a 52 dollar purchase was gratifying. While Rebecca talks about her cameo on the 90s sitcom Mad About You. All that plus Viewer Mail and Uber Confessions on an exciting edition of the Ball & Chain Podcast.
While Rebecca's reaction to Arike Ogunbowale's buzzer beaters at the Women's Final Four went viral, Steve was back in Connecticut attempting to cook a frozen quiche. In the 23rd installment of the Ball & Chain Podcast, the couple discusses Twitter trolls, aisle stealers, and classic game show hosts. All that plus Uber Confessions and Viewer Mail on a packed edition of the Ball & Chain Podcast.
On this short, we spoke with Rebecca Pierce - writer, filmmaker, editor of the Unruly blog, and core member of the Jews of Color, Sephardi, and Mizrahi (JOCSM) Caucus that organizes in partnership with Jewish Voice for Peace. We spoke about her recent article in the Forward, Unruly's plans for growth over the next year, and her recent film about a founding member of the Israeli Black Panthers. EDIT: At the end of the show, David mentioned that Rebecca conducted interviews for a documentary about the Bakr family, produced for the Nation magazine. While Rebecca wrote the film and helped edit it, Dan Cohen was the one who conducted the interviews. Show notes: https://www.treyfpodcast.com/2017/07/21/short-rebecca-pierce/
In episode three, we begin looking at the huge topic of anxiety. While Rebecca might want to just right into the nitty gritty of Generalized Anxiety Disorder, we start off looking at how anxiety, stress, and fear are related and different. A few coping mechanisms are tossed in here or there, but you will mostly hear us talking about personal experiences with anxiety, brain chemicals, and Mr. Bear. So in other words, welcome back to Not Otherwise Specified, a fun podcast about psychology that doesn’t take itself too seriously, so you shouldn’t either! This is purely for fun, and by no means is meant to diagnose you or anyone you know with anything at all. So just sit back and enjoy the banter, don’t worry about the oversimplifications, and get mentally intrigued. Thank you so much for listening. Please subscribe and come back next time for more psychological hilarity. And again, this is not a substitute for actual psychological care and was not meant to cure what mentally ails you. If you feel you need this help, please seek it out for yourself from a qualified mental health professional in your area.
While Rebecca is off cavorting, this week Jeff is joined by author/blogger/rustabout Chuck Wending. They talk about Barnes & Noble's slow decline, hated/favorite books, the forever war between Amazon and independent bookstores, and more. This week's episode is sponsored by The Diabolist by Layton Green and Audible.com.