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Mens vi venter på næste afsnit, køber vi os selv lidt mere tid med dette lille bonusafsnit. Det handler om Randersmafiaen: Olga Ott, Karin Michaëlis og Sophus Michaëlis, som jo er de "ansvarlige" voksne i Estrid Otts liv - og dem der noglegange hjælper hende fremad.Som vi skal høre i det her afsnit, har de hver især sætter ild i virkelig meget under Første Verdenskrig. Og glæd jer også til historien om William Scott, som vi blev nødt til at klippe ud fra sidste afsnit.Vi vender stærkt tilbage i næste afsnit :)
In this episode Uncle Brad loses his mind over how delicious the White Lady Cocktail tastes. We are confident you'll do the same when you make it. Jules put's a spin on the cocktail and names it the Foxy Lady. Then we get into the history and evolution of the White Lady cocktail. We promise you, you'll be making this one all year long. White Lady Glass: Coupe Garnish: Lemon slice Directions & Ingredients In shaker add: 1 egg white 2 oz Gin (Roku – Yuzu citrus, pepper, cardamom, and a little bitter orange 1 oz Cointreau 1 oz Lemon juice 0.25 oz Simple Syrup 3 drops saline solution Dry shake for 30 seconds Add ice to shaker and shake for another 20-30 seconds Double Strain into coupe glass Add garnish lemon peel Framework: Foxy Lady Glass: Coupe Garnish: garnish with a little nutmeg on top! Directions & Ingredients In cocktail shaker tin add: 1.5 oz Gin 0.25 oz Amaretto 0.75 oz Lemon Juice 0.5 oz Orgeat 1 Fresh Egg White Dry shake Add ice and shake again Double strain into a coupe glass TIP: How to set-up your bar space for a small party (thanks William Scott for the question) The Art of Drinking IG: @theartofdrinkingpodcast Jules IG: @join_jules TikTok: @join_jules Website: joinjules.com Brad IG: @favorite_uncle_brad This is a Redd Rock Music Podcast IG: @reddrockmusic www.reddrockmusic.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to Art is Awesome, the show where we talk with an artist or art worker with a connection to the San Francisco Bay Area. Today, Emily features a conversation with Oakland based painter Héctor Muñoz-Guzmán. Hector discusses his life and artistic journey, including his upbringing in Berkeley, education at Parsons School of Design and Rhode Island School of Design, and the challenges he faced with his health. He shares insights into his artwork, including his first solo show 'Tocando Tierra' in Los Angeles, which represents men in his life and himself at different stages. Hector also talks about his experiences teaching at Creative Growth in Oakland, working on a mural with artist William Scott at SFMOMA, and his forthcoming studies in the MFA program at UC Berkeley. The episode highlights Hector's deep connection to his culture and community, and how these influences shape his artwork.About Artist Héctor Muñoz-Guzmán:Hector spent his foundation year at The Parsons School of Design and a year in The Rhode Island School of Design's painting department. He was a finalist for the Tournesol Award at The Headlands Art Center and has received the Berkeley Individual Artist Grant. His work has been exhibited at Fall River MoCA, Bureau Gallery, Movimiento De Arte y Cultura Latino Americana (MACLA), Good Mother Studio, and Part 2 Gallery. He published an art book with Sming Sming Books. He works as an artist instructor for William E. Scott. He currently lives in Oakland, CA.Héctor's work has been published in Juxtapoz, 48 Hills, Mousse Magazine and Graphite Journal “POCKET” at the Hammer Museum.To learn more about and purchase his book, Brown Eyes From Russell Street, CLICK HERE. For more about his exhibit in Los Angeles, Tocando Tierra, CLICK HERE. Follow on Instagram: @HectorFMunoz--About Podcast Host Emily Wilson:Emily a writer in San Francisco, with work in outlets including Hyperallergic, Artforum, 48 Hills, the Daily Beast, California Magazine, Latino USA, and Women's Media Center. She often writes about the arts. For years, she taught adults getting their high school diplomas at City College of San Francisco.Follow Emily on Instagram: @PureEWilFollow Art Is Awesome on Instagram: @ArtIsAwesome_Podcast--CREDITS:Art Is Awesome is Hosted, Created & Executive Produced by Emily Wilson. Theme Music "Loopster" Courtesy of Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 LicenseThe Podcast is Co-Produced, Developed & Edited by Charlene Goto of @GoToProductions. For more info, visit Go-ToProductions.com
William Scott Tebb gives a history of tea through 1903. He describes the origin, tea plant, harvesting, distribution, popularity and the makeup of tea. Interestingly it was a drink to boost mood. He was commissioned to find the effects of drinking tea and the characteristics of those effects finding it to be a stimulant and noting there was too much tea drinking at the time.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
William Scott Tebb gives a history of tea through 1903. He describes the origin, tea plant, harvesting, distribution, popularity and the makeup of tea. Interestingly it was a drink to boost mood. He was commissioned to find the effects of drinking tea and the characteristics of those effects finding it to be a stimulant and noting there was too much tea drinking at the time.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
William Scott is an internationally know recording artist and bassist from Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. USA. He has played and performed in various countries and the the globe
On this episode of Our American Stories, the Civil War soldier, William Scott, fell asleep at his post, at the time a transgression punishable by execution. What happened next changed military history. Support the show (https://www.ouramericanstories.com/donate)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On today's episode, we'll discuss the reasons behind our laziness and procrastination habits, we'll define discipline and talk about the different ways to build discipline and really commit to ourselves, as well as how it is connected to our self-love, our self-trust, and our sense of self-worth. Our word is powerful, and honoring the promises we make to ourselves, as well as sacrificing our immediate hedonic desires for our future self's sake, are some of the highest forms of self-love.Don't allow fear (in the form of laziness or procrastination) to block your (inner & outer) success. Kick procrastination to the curb, build sustainable habits and step out of your comfort zone, because that's where you'll find your success!Here is William Scott's Instagram Reels, the one I mention at the end of the episode. (The best definition of discipline I've ever heard)Follow the show's Instagram here! Follow Inma's Instagram here! Check out the show's website here!
If faith without works is dead, then so are commitments without discipline We're investigating an Instagram Reel again this week! In today's episode, we're listening to an Instagram Reel from a guy named William Scott - @williamscxtt. He titled this reel "The Definition of Discipline." As we shared last week, we love to ponder quotes, stories, scenes, and the like to process information and talk about life and the world around us. We do this as a back-door way to uncover and talk about our core values and beliefs through evaluating someone else's thoughts, behaviors, or stories instead of our own. This allows us to get really honest … without exposing ourselves! Sometimes it can feel overwhelming or too vulnerable to identify our personal core values. We think we have to get the language just right and have a full understanding of them in order to really think about them and how we apply them in our lives. BUT when someone else's story strikes us in a certain way, it can hint at our own core belief. And we take the time to analyze those stories, It's the difference between: “This resonates with me!! Let's unpack it together and figure out why it resonates with me and how we can apply it together” Versus “This resonates with me! Gee, I wish you'd be more like this person who just gets me.” This process helps me know myself better, beyond just “this feels right to me” – it helps us figure out why so we can communicate that with our others and uncover those things that make us feel loved, appreciated, understood, etc. Find and connect with us in more places and ways: Website: https://www.soulanchoring.com/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@soulanchoring Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/soulanchoring Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SoulAnchoring Twitter: https://twitter.com/SoulAnchoring Email: hello@soulanchoring.com Listen Now: Apple Podcasts Spotify Website If you like what you hear from us, would you be so kind as to Follow Us / Subscribe, Give us a 5-Star Rating, Write a Glowing Review, and Pray for Us? You can also make suggestions of topics you'd like to hear us discuss. Thanks!!
Hyperfixation can be an amazing thing, unless it's in regards to a murder suspect. Join us this week as we look at the crimes of William Scott Smith, and how he got away with murder for over 20 years. Check out Almostfiction.supercast.com if you would like to help support the show. SOURCES:Michael Newton - An Encyclopedia of Modern Serial Killers - Hunting HumansOn The Case with Paula Zahn, Season 9 Episode 4Wikipedia Article on William Scott SmithAccess ad-free episodes, bonus content, and get all of the 11:59 Media Podcast library!Access hours of extra content each week, exclusive merch, and early access to new podcasts.Visit https://1159plus.com
On this episode of Our American Stories, the Civil War soldier, William Scott, fell asleep at his post, at the time a transgression that was punishable by execution. What happened next changed military history. Support the show (https://www.ouramericanstories.com/donate)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On this episode of Our American Stories, the Civil War soldier, William Scott, fell asleep at his post, at the time a transgression that was punishable by execution. What happened next changed military history. Support the show (https://www.ouramericanstories.com/donate)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Sengoku Period, or Warring States Era, of Japan began in 1467 with the Onin War. Feudal Japan was characterized by violence between warring states, where kinsmen cut each other down in bids for territorial superiority. Independent warlords among the domains unleashed their samurai and fighting men on each other in anarchic attempts to gain dominance. Rivalries ebbed and flowed. Alliances formed and were shattered. Allegiance among warlords was only to self, cooperation existed only when it benefitted the warlords. For the peasant class life was hell, which resulted in regular instances of ikki, or peasant class uprisings. Power began to consolidate in the mid-16th century when a group of warlords had singled themselves out as primary dominators in their regions, having bested their rivals. These “great power” warlords boasted superior militant groups, greater territorial expansion, and grew their base through the exploitation of their weaker neighbors. But when great powers exist, great conflict arises. From the conflicts of these superior warlords came the unification campaigns of Sengoku Japan. Oda Nobunaga, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and Tokugawa Ieyasu were the three great warlords at the center of Japan's unification. Nobunaga died in 1582 before Japan could be truly unified and the rogue warlords brought to heel. His successor Hideyoshi accomplished unification in 1590, though resistance had not been entirely eradicated. It was Tokugawa Ieyasu, after Hideyoshi's death in 1598, that made Japan whole in 1600 after the Battle of Sekigahara. A battle which brought about Japan's final Shogunate, and in which this episode's subject participated at the age of only sixteen. Miyamoto Musashi, born Miyamoto Bennosuke, met with difficulty at a young age and some details of the legendary swordsman remain unclear. However, one defining theme is evident even in his earliest years: that Miyamoto's life was to be one characterized by violence. The Book of Five Rings: Link You can find the Hardtack socials, website, and Patreon via linktree. If you have any feedback on Hardtack episodes or suggestions for future episodes, please send an email to hardtackpod@gmail.com Don't forget to rate and subscribe! Make your Own Hardtack! Hardtack Recipe (Survival Bread) - Bread Dad Sources: BRINKLEY, Frank, and Dairoku KIKUCHI. A History of the Japanese People from the Earliest Times to the End of the Meiji Era ... By Capt. F. Brinkley ... with the Collaboration of Baron Kikuchi ... With 150 Illustrations ... and Maps. New York & London, 1915. Miyamoto, Musashi, and William Scott Wilson. The Book of Five Rings. Boston: Shambhala Publications, 2012. Miyamoto, Musashi, Lawrence A. Kane, and Kris Wilder. Musashis Dokkodo (The Way of Walking Alone): Half Crazy, Half Genius, Finding Modern Meaning in the Sword Saints Last Words. Burien, WA: Stickman Publications, 2015. TC 2-91.4 Intelligence Support to Urban Operations, TC 2-91.4 Intelligence Support to Urban Operations § (2015). https://armypubs.army.mil/epubs/DR_pubs/DR_a/pdf/web/tc2_91x4 FINAL.pdf. Wilson, William Scott. The Lone Samurai: the Life of Miyamoto Musashi. Boston: Shambhala, 2013. Yoshikawa, Eiji, Charles S. Terry, Edwin O. Reischauer, and Eiji Yoshikawa. Musashi. New York: Kodansha, 2012. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hardtackpod/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hardtackpod/support
513 North Daisy Avenue - 0,000, 1,456 SF (built in 1959), from Teddy M. and Doris L. Tignor to Hope & Herringbone LLC. 403 Seabury Avenue - 2,000, 1,116 SF (built in 1961), from Lisa B. Mihalcoe to William Scott and Catherine T. Burnley. 428 South Holly Avenue - 0,000, 1,250 SF (built in 1990), from Anthonny Brown to Wydaija Bilal and Thomas Carter III. 8 Longstreet Avenue - 7,000, 1,355 SF (built in 1948), from Gerald Wade Glover to Stephen Parker. 5602 Millwheel Way - 7,500, 1,440 SF (built in 2005), from Frances D. Cochran to Lauren and Robert...Article LinkSupport the show
William Scott Goldman is the founding member of Goldman Law Group, representing creative business clients throughout the U.S. and internationally. One of the world's most prolific trademark filers, he's currently ranked 'Top-5' at the USPTO with over 18,000 successful filings. Pioneering the field of Branding Law, he is also a frequent lecturer, guest speaker, media commentator and author on various legal subjects. Listen to this informative Tax-Alpha Solutions episode with William Scott Goldman about IP and branding. Here is what to expect on this week's show: How William Scott got into IP protection. What's the power of branding? What are some of the largest branding mistakes? What are the differences between branding law and trademark law? William's thoughts on NFT's. Connect with William Scott: https://goldmanlawgroup.com/ Matthew Chancey is a Registered Representative of Coastal Equities, Inc. and an Investment Advisory Representative of Coastal Investment Advisors, Inc. Neither Coastal Equities, Inc. nor Coastal Investment Advisors, Inc. is affiliated with Micel Financial LLC. Investment Advisory Services are offered through Coastal Investment Advisors, Inc., and securities are offered through Coastal Equities, Inc., Member FINRA/SIPC, 1201 N. Orange St., Suite 729, Wilmington, DE 19801. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Whew! Conor barely made it into the Crawford for this week's Work of the Week! It almost became a Night at the Museum situation in the end! But the journey through colour and form was worth it with Michael Waldron. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mike Field and Mike Butler are joined by Chris and Dan from https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/film-trace/id1518610057 (Film Trace) podcast as they discuss the 2008 film, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0430922/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1 (Role Models), directed by https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0906476/?ref_=tt_ov_dr (David Wain), and starring https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0748620/?ref_=tt_cl_t_1 (Paul Rudd), https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005405/?ref_=tt_cl_t_2 (Seann William-Scott), https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0006969/?ref_=tt_cl_t_3 (Elizabeth Banks), https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2395586/?ref_=tt_cl_t_4 (Christopher Mintz-Plasse), and a breakout role for https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1442928/?ref_=tt_cl_t_5 (Bobb'e J. Thompson). Role Models tells the story of two thirty-something losers (Rudd & William-Scott) who must enroll in their city's Big Brother program as community service or go to jail. Between a live action role playing lonely teen (Minze-Plasse) and a foul mouthed trouble-making tween (Thompson), these two losers struggle to try to make their required community service hours. Listen in as Mike, Mike, Chris, and Dan discuss what they love about the movie, from J. Thompson's hilarious character, Ronnie to the gags and the impressive improv in the film; partly from featuring members of the comedy troupe The State, and partly out of necessity due to an ongoing Writers' Guild strike at the time. They'll also go over some reasons it was forgotten; from jokes that wouldn't be appropriate today to the absolutely massive year 2008 was for comedy films. Role Models really had some crazy competition that year. So, grab your popcorn and soda, please notice the exits to the left and right of you and settle down for https://www.forgottencinemapodcast.com/ (Forgotten Cinema). 00:00 - Introduction 05:15 - Film Summary 05:55 - Film Facts 14:40 - Film Discussion 48:54 - Who Would You Suggest This To? 51:58 - Why Is This Forgotten? 1:00:59 - Where to Find Us
William Scott the Chief of police for the City and County of San Francisco. Chief Scott has brought his 27 years of experience to the bay to lead the police force of this progressive northern California city.
TW: SEXUAL ASSAULT/RAPE/MENTION OF SUICIDE For this episode, Winston and I head to Salem, Oregon for an episode involving a little bit of everything: including a serial killer, cold cases, and Oregon's first mass shooting. https://pnwtruecrimefest.com/ (PNW True Crime Fest Tickets) Check out https://www.etsy.com/shop/thecatnipcalico/?etsrc=sdt (The Catnip Calico)! https://www.truecrimecatlawyer.com/episodes/episode-47-william-scott-smith-the-oregon-museum-tavern-shooting (Sources) --- PATREON https://www.instagram.com/truecrimecatlawyer/ (INSTAGRAM) https://mobile.twitter.com/truecrimecatlaw (TWITTER) WEBSITE FACEBOOK https://linktr.ee/truecrimecatlawyer (https://linktr.ee/truecrimecatlawyer)
William Scott Smith had a, thankfully, non-lethal encounter with one of our most stalwart WD&J listeners. She sat in on this episode in the producer chair on this one to help us tell the tale of this creep show. Drinks this week: Kaiyo “The Rubi” Japanese Whisky, Rogue Spirits “Rolling Thunder” Stout Whiskey, Woodinville Straight Bourbon Whiskey --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Shortly after three o'clock on the morning of Tuesday, 3rd January 1882, a murder so savage in nature occurred at number 4, Brook Row over in a place known as Lowerhouse near to Burnley. A man by the name of Robert Templeton, who was 36 years of age had arrived in Lowerhouse around nine months prior, sometime around April, 1881. He quickly managed to find employment as a machine printer, working for A. Drew and Sons. Although quite in nature, he still managed to keep on friendly terms with most of his acquaintances and was known for being an excellent time keeper as well as a reliable workman. Not too long after arriving in Lowerhouse, he managed to find lodgings within the home of Betty Scott, a widower who was just 33 year old, and mother to three children; one boy - John, who was eleven years of age, and two girls - Martha Ann, aged nine and Hannah aged three. Having married at a young age to a man called William Scott, who sadly died in October 1876, she had fought bravely to look after herself and her family, by taking in other people's washing, and as well as lodgers. Having resided in the village since a child, Betty was a well-known and well-liked by the majority and was generally considered as one of the most industrious, clean and hard working women in the area. Not too long after taking up lodgings with Betty, it appears that some form of romantic friendship had begun between the pair, and it was rumoured that they were soon to be married. However, as time passed, Robert had began to drink heavily, leaving Betty feeling ashamed, deceived and at times, ill-treated. For more on this story, please visit our website at www.daysofhorror.com Please follow us on social media; Twitter – https://twitter.com/dohpods Instagram – www.instagram.com/dohpods Youtube – https://www.youtube.com/c/DaysofHorrorPodcast
In this episode, Skye and Anthony discuss the first man to serve time in the Territorial Prison from Nez Perce County - William Scott(Grand Larceny), and dig into the county's rich mining and union history. Clips: Senator Robert Wagner speech on the National Labor Relations Act (1935) Frank "Andy" Starr - "Tragedy in the Sunshine Mine" - In Concert at the Idaho State Penitentiary (1973)
Jon Patten and Audrey Johnson with Southwest's famous Dion's doing good for the kids and community. Jon Patten is the co-founder of Dion's. He has been an entrepreneur since he was a boy when, in third grade, he bought toys wholesale and sold them to classmates. It was at St. John's College in Annapolis that he began to learn the value of different opinions and the benefits that come from open honest discussion. Jon's restaurant career began in 1978 with the purchase of New York Pizza with partner William Scott. They started with one employee and no restaurant management degrees or experience. Jon was CEO for 35 years and continues today as Chairman of the Board. Jon lives in Corrales, NM, is married, and has four sons. He has been a Vistage International member since 1998 and served as Chair until 2021. Jon has served as a founding board member of ACCION, Viante New Mexico, as well as several other non-profit organizations. Audrey Johnson is the Senior Marketing Manager at Dion's. With a background in hospitality, she loves the opportunity to work in the restaurant industry – particularly at an establishment committed to giving back to the community. She was recognized among the Destinations International 30 Under 30 class of 2015 and is a current member of Vistage Advancing Leaders. She lives in Albuquerque, NM with her partner Bryan and their rescue dog, Rogue.
William Scott is a self-taught artist based in Oakland, California. Scott works out of a gallery and studio called Creative Growth that advances the inclusion of artists with developmental disabilities. (Scott was born schizophrenic and is also on the autistic spectrum.) Scott Frequently describes himself as an architect, reinventing the social topography of a gentrified San Francisco, as a utopian city he calls ‘Praise Frisco' in works that combine architectural design with civic responsibility to describe his desire for a more equitable society. The first significant survey of Scott's 30–year practice was recently exhibited at Studio Voltaire - a London-based not–for–profit arts organisation. Notes: Michael Maltzan & David Ogunmuyiwa with Nana Biamah-Ofosu: The World and the City https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fUuNhKqYni8&ab_channel=ArchitectureFoundation RESOLVE and PoOR Collective with Nana Biamah-Ofosu: The Cultural Meaning of the City https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UH4W7yQqedY&ab_channel=ArchitectureFoundation Tom DiMaria and Matthew Higgs on the Work of William Scott: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fUuNhKqYni8&ab_channel=ArchitectureFoundation The Turner prize and the rise of neurodiverse art - The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2021/dec/23/turner-prize-rise-of-neurodiverse-art-project-herbert-coventry Roberta Smith and Holland Carter - Best Shows of 2021 https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/07/arts/design/best-art-2021.html
www.goldmanlawgroup.com William Scott Goldman is the founding member of Goldman Law Group, representing creative business clients throughout the U.S. and internationally. Mr. Goldman received an LL.M. in Patent and Intellectual Property Law from George Washington University and is licensed to practice before several courts.One of the world's most prolific trademark filers, he is perennially-ranked ‘Top-10' at the USPTO, currently with over 10,000 successful applications and registrations. Having written the book on Branding Law, he is also a frequent lecturer, guest speaker, media commentator, and author on various legal subjects.Clients appreciate his creative legal and business insights based on almost thirty years of practical experience, reasonable flat-fee billing, and quick response times.Providing a wide-range of ancillary services, beyond the standard Patent, Trademark, and Copyright offerings, his firm's distinctive approach sets them apart from more traditional IP law firms. He is continually inventing innovative legal and business strategies, with a strong entrepreneurial slant and a special focus on Business and Branding Law, while leveraging their unique inter-disciplinary practice group structure for meeting today's biggest challenges.William Scott Goldman can be reached at wsg@goldmanlawgroup.comNeed weekly motivation? Join the Email Family at www.steveryan.comSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/steveryan)
Rom 5:17 “..much more will those who receive the abundance of grace and the free gift of righteousness reign in life through the one man Jesus Christ.” Grace maak van ons lewe n sukses. Wat is Grace, hoe kry ek dit, hoe hou ek dit.
Director of ACAMS, the worlds largest membership organization for anti-financial crime professionals, Dr. William Scott Grob talks about the rise in Human Trafficking during the pandemic.
Chief of San Francisco Police, William Scott joins the show. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
What is branding law? Check out this law group founder's innovative approach for his creative clients.
Rebecca took a job working the graveyard shift and wasn't scheduled to work that night, but had switched shifts. It was a normal night. That is until sometime after 3:20am when serial killer William Smith walked in. #williamscottsmith #rogernoseff #sherryeyerly #rebeccadarling #katherineredmond #truecrime #truecrimepodcast
Amy talks with William Scott Wilson, author and translator of over a dozen books on Japan and China. They briefly discuss a few of these including, Hagakure: The Book of the Samurai (by Yamamoto Tsunetomo), The Book of 5 Rings (by Miyamoto Musashi), and Cultivating Ch’i: A Samurai Physician’s Teachings on the Way of Health (by Kaibara Ekiken) before they zero in on the writing of Walking the Kiso Road. In this episode the author reveals a surprising fact about himself that we never knew before! (hint: If you like to kayak, you’ll definitely want to check this out). Recorded on May 31, 2019.You can see more of Wilson's books here: https://booksonasia.net/book/walking-the-kiso-road/And Issue 5: Hikes, Pilgrimages and Journeys in Japan here: https://booksonasia.net/category/issues/issue-5/Podcast Show Notes here (warning: spoilers): https://booksonasia.net/podcast/hon-podcast-5-william-scott-wilson-author-of-walking-the-kiso-road/#more-1889The Books on Asia Podcast is sponsored by Stone Bridge Press, publisher of fine books on Asia for over 30 years: www.stonebridge.com
William Scott, MD, MPH, FACOEM shares current information about the COVID-19 vaccines. He discusses the safety and effectiveness of the vaccines, how they were tested and how they work.
Come listen to the story of a man that was framed for murder in a town not too terribly far from the Reigning Blood crew.
In this episode of The Livingston Parish Thread, I interview William Scot Dykes, candidate for District Judge.
Loneliness Part 1: YOU’RE CANCELED: The Loneliest Generation on the Planet, The Social Media Crisis, & What You Can Do About It"I used to think the worst thing in life was to end up all alone. It’s not. The worst thing in life is to end up with people who make you feel all alone." ~ Robin Williams (From the film: World’s Greatest Dad)Did you know that there are risk factors for feeling lonely? Or that there are 4 different types of loneliness? Have you ever heard of misconnection loneliness? And did you know that loneliness is as harmful as smoking 15 cigarettes per day?If you’ve ever felt lonely, or if you’re feeling lonely now, you’re not alone, and I’m glad you’re here because regardless if you have as many friends as William Scott (he holds the record for the most Facebook Friends) or if your only friend is a cat named Howard, this podcast is a MUST listen. In this 3-part series we’re going to cover loneliness, urbanization, social media, the CANCELED phenomena, I’ll smatter in some brain-busting statistics, and as always, you’re going to walk away with exclusive SOLUTIONS from ACT METHOD to combat loneliness, even amidst a world-wide pandemic.Welcome to my podcast I’m Dr Nicole Cain, a Naturopathic doctor with a Master's in Clinical Psychology and a former anxiety sufferer turned Anxiety Freedom rebel.Join the Anxiety Freedom 1 Week Challenge Facebook GroupGet your FREE copy of the Anxiety Breakthrough Wellness Springboard now!Dr. Nicole Cain, ND MA is a nationally renown expert on beating anxiety. She has been published by the Arizona Republic, PESI, NDNR, SCNM, The Institute for Natural Medicine, Thrive Global, and Women's Lifestyle Magazine. Dr. Cain wants to give away 9 Free Resources to help listeners:1. Take the 1 Week Anxiety Freedom Challenge (Videos and Workbook! FREE!)2. Somatographic Imagery for Anxiety Webinar (On Demand Webinar! FREE!)3. Three Minute Hack for Anxiety Webinar (On Demand Webinar! FREE!)4. Get your FREE copy of the Anxiety Breakthrough Wellness Springboard (FREE E-BOOK!)5. Follow Dr. Nicole Cain on Facebook to access her live talks on Wednesdays 1pm EST and 10am PT (Weekly Live Talks!)6. Join the Anxiety Freedom 1 Week Challenge Facebook Group For Community (Free FB Community!)7. Subscribe to The Get Your Life Back Podcast with Dr. Nicole Cain (Free Podcast!)8. You can join her Email List by visiting: www.Drnicolecain.com (Free Information!)9. Subscribe to Dr. Nicole Cain's YouTube Channel for new videos weekly! (Free Videos!)Current Available On-Demand Courses: (Which include Video Instruction + an E-Book)!The Anxiety Breakthrough ProgramGut Health CourseMedication Tapering CourseLiver Health CourseHigh Libido Life (For Women)Follow Dr. Nicole Cain, ND MA on:Facebook InstagramYouTubeLinkedinDrNicoleCain.comDr. Nicole Cain, ND MA is the only Naturopathic Doctor that also has a Master’s Degree in Clinical Psychology with an expertise in natural and integrative solutions for anxiety, bipolar disorder, women's libido issues, depression, PTSD, and other conditions.If you are searching for a fundamentally unique method of getting to the root cause of your suffering and working toward transformation, then connecting Dr. Nicole Cain, ND MA is for you. Disclaimer: This podcast was created by Dr. Nicole Cain, ND, MA for educational purposes only. These are the opinions of Dr. Nicole Cain, ND, MA and should not be taken as the “definitive opinion” or “absolute medical opinion” on any subject. This podcast is not a substitute for medical, psychological, counseling or any other sort of professional care. Consumption of these materials is for your own education and any medical, psychological, or professional care decisions should be made between you and your primary care doctor or another provider that you are engaged with.
Our guest this is week is none other than expert listener and pattern-seeking PhD candidate William Scott Thompson. Will is interested in understanding recurring motifs in the brain, rather than its specific functions. He is currently working in a lab at a research institute in Sweden, contributing to the longterm multinational goal of mapping the human brain! On today's episode we discuss the Human Brain Project, what goes into building a high-resolution, three-dimensional atlas of the brain, the forebrain structures known as the Basal Ganglia and the evolution of such structures, pain mapping, the difference between epigenetics and gene editing, simulation neuroscience, communication at every scale of the nervous system, the anatomy of a brain cell, the future of academia and much more! NEW! This episode now has a discussion forum, so check out the following link to access and contribute to an international collaborative debate on the following thesis: "One day, it will be possible to fully simulate the human brain." https://www.kialo-edu.com/p/24fb041a-8fc8-4ba5-85b6-f40e83ba1e95/20484 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/abstractcast/message
《倚身在暮色里》 倚身在暮色里,我朝你海洋般的双眼,投掷我哀伤的网。 我的孤独,在极度的光亮中绵延不绝,化为火焰,双臂漫天飞舞仿佛将遭海难淹没。越过你失神的双眼,我送出红色的信号,你的双眼泛起涟漪,如靠近灯塔的海洋。你保有黑暗,我远方的女子,在你的注视之下有惊恐的海岸浮现。倚身在暮色,在拍打你海洋般双眼的海上我掷出了我哀伤的网。夜晚的鸟群啄食第一阵群星,像爱着你的我的灵魂,闪烁着。夜在阴郁的马上奔驰,在大地上撒下蓝色的穗须。 ———————— 作者 | 聂鲁达诵读 | NJ青木配乐 | よかったね作曲 | 神前暁封面 | William Scott 公众号 | 晚安诗集fm(可投稿)
《倚身在暮色里》 倚身在暮色里,我朝你海洋般的双眼,投掷我哀伤的网。 我的孤独,在极度的光亮中绵延不绝,化为火焰,双臂漫天飞舞仿佛将遭海难淹没。越过你失神的双眼,我送出红色的信号,你的双眼泛起涟漪,如靠近灯塔的海洋。你保有黑暗,我远方的女子,在你的注视之下有惊恐的海岸浮现。倚身在暮色,在拍打你海洋般双眼的海上我掷出了我哀伤的网。夜晚的鸟群啄食第一阵群星,像爱着你的我的灵魂,闪烁着。夜在阴郁的马上奔驰,在大地上撒下蓝色的穗须。 ———————— 作者 | 聂鲁达诵读 | NJ青木配乐 | よかったね作曲 | 神前暁封面 | William Scott 公众号 | 晚安诗集fm(可投稿)
Listen to hear how the Lord is behind you no matter what you face in life. Author William Scott Baggett tells the story of how he overcame polio and persevered through the challenges he faced leading to helping people endure their pain with his service dogs from his book "The Great Rescue: How Polio became my greatest rescue and my greatest blessing in life.." From these stories hear the Lord will have your next step ready before you level up.
William Scott Day was in trouble pretty much his entire adult life. He spent over 90% of it in Michigan prisons. Most of the time he spent outside of prison was because of his numerous prison escapes. His last escape was his most daring as he was able to talk a hospital supervisor into smuggling him out. While on the run, Day murdered at least six people during his 39 days of freedom.Join Mike and Gibby as they discuss William Scott Day. This man was a master manipulator who was able to talk people into doing what he wanted them to do. During his time on the run, Day used the Greyhound bus system to travel the country. He would walk from bus stations to find his victims, and after committing his murders, he stole money from his victims to finance his run from the law.You can help support the show at patreon.com/truecrimeallthetimeVisit the show's website at truecrimeallthetime.com for contact, merchandise and donation informationAn Emash Digital Production
A talented painter who is also great at explaining painting techniques, William Scott Jennings joins Eric Rhoads for this episode.
**It's The Relax With Rendell Show Replay On Trax FM & Rendell Radio. This Week Rendell Featured Tracks Like A Taste Of Honey, Ben E King, The Brothers Johnson, Chic, Janet Jackson, William Scott, Lemelle, Total Contrast, Aurra, Bobby Thurston, Flashlight, Karen Young, Lee Dorsey, Slave …..& More. Catch Rendell Every Saturday From 7PM UK Time The Stations: Trax FM & Rendell Radio #traxfm #rendellradio #soul #funk #70ssoul #80ssoul #60s #boogie #disco #easylistening #soulclassics #reggae #nusoul #relaxwithrendell Listen Here: www.traxfm.org Free Trax FM Android App: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=net.traxfmradio.ba.a6bcb The Trax FM Facebook Page : https://www.facebook.com/original103.3/ OnLine Radio Box: http://onlineradiobox.com/uk/trax/?cs=uk.trax Tune In Radio : https://tunein.com/radio/Trax-FM-s225176/ Radio Deck: http://www.radiodeck.com/radio/5a09e2de87e3370db06d44dc Radio.Net: http://traxfmlondon.radio.net/ Stream Radio : http://streema.com/radios/Trax_FM..The_Originals Live Online Radio: http://www.liveonlineradio.net/english/trax-fm-103-3.htm**
Prosperity Gathers Smiles | Quote Series
The Fellowship of Believers - Randy (William) Scott - 6/9/2019 by GCC
The redlining map of Greensboro depicting "best," "still desirable," "definitely declining," and "hazardous" areas in which to lend. These maps were created by the Home Owners' Loan Corporation. Image courtesy: Mapping Inequality This reporting project is a collaboration between WFDD, Carolina Data Desk at The UNC School of Media and Journalism and Wake Forest University's Journalism Program. It was made possible through funding from the Knight Foundation. Today, in our project on the Triad’s housing crisis, WFDD reporter Bethany Chafin takes us to a Greensboro neighborhood for a rare glimpse into a place at risk of losing valuable affordable housing. This intersection at East Bragg Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Drive near downtown Greensboro is a dividing line. It's between two neighborhoods, and only one is thriving. If you look to the right, you can see downtown. The tallest building in Greensboro peaks over the horizon. And there's Southside, a bright and shiny redevelopment zone that began 20 years ago. It's a vibrant area; brick townhomes surround yoga studios and hair salons. There's perfect landscaping and new sidewalks as well as Dame’s Chicken & Waffles, a city favorite. To the left of this intersection is the beginning of Ole Asheboro. Homes are boarded up. Lots are vacant and littered. People loiter at a corner Citgo gas station; the neighbors call them “day walkers.” WFDD has spent nearly a year exploring the Triad’s housing crisis. Families pay more than they can afford; in Greensboro alone, nearly 40 percent of residents struggle to meet their housing costs. The region’s two largest cities top a national list on concentrations of evictions. We dug deeper: how did we get here and why? What can be done to attract growth while preserving housing where it’s needed most? It was a series of old maps that led us to Ole Asheboro. The maps have become, in some ways, predictors of where gentrification happens. But that new investment and those new residents had not come to Ole Asheboro. The federal government drew up these maps after the stock market crashed in 1929. The colors guided banks to make safer bets on where they loaned their money. The practice is called redlining and used race as one of the “hazards” to warn away banks. Ole Asheboro was considered high-risk, colored yellow and red because of the nearby black neighborhoods. For each neighborhood on the federal redlining maps, there was a detailed "Area Description." This is an excerpt from the area called C6 which included the majority of Ole Asheboro. Image courtesy of Mapping Inequality Why does this matter? Ole Asheboro has nearly 700 residential properties – vital housing stock in a city that doesn’t have enough affordable options. In fact, Carolina Data Desk found the current average tax value of a home here is nearly $50,000, which is still within reach for low-income buyers. So, how do you a lift a neighborhood stained by lending discrimination? And how do you preserve the culture and affordable housing it provides? Is it even possible? To find out more, go left, into the heart of the neighborhood. Rooted At Home Jody Martin stands outside his house on Tuscaloosa Street. Martin knows this view, these homes, and these neighbors like the back of his hand. He grew up here, and he plans to grow older here. “My parents bought this house back in 1953. The white people that used to live in the area started moving out and then the first black families moved into this neighborhood,” he says. This was a defining moment in Ole Asheboro. Some black families settled here after the city cleared what it determined to be "slums" nearby, where homes had reached such a level of decay that the city bulldozed to start over. Jody Martin, a lifelong Ole Asheboro resident, surveys the street outside his home. BETHANY CHAFIN/WFDD Some new residents rented space in large Victorians, left vacant as Greensboro’s movers and shakers migrated to the suburbs. Others, like Martin's parents, bought modest homes along streets like Tuscaloosa. An all-black neighborhood was what Martin knew growing up. He remembers his childhood riding his bike around the neighborhood down to his grandparents’ house. At home, he dove into comic books, and his soundtrack was guided by his mom’s love of Nat King Cole. When Martin was a boy, he once asked his dad if their family of four was poor. “'No, we’re lower middle class,'" he recalls his father saying. "Now, we were poor. I mean we lived in a 5-room house. But you know, we had everything we wanted.” Despite money being tight, Martin's family invested in their home — adding rooms and a basement. The wealth they built would be passed down to Martin when he inherited the house after his mother died. A home can be a family’s fastest way to build equity and have something to give the next generation. But there’s still a large racial disparity in average net housing wealth. According to a 2016 national Survey of Consumer Finances, for a white household, the figure is over $215,000. For a black household? It's less than half that at $94,400. But for Martin and his family, a house was about more than money. “When you don’t have the fear of wanting anything, needing anything, when you know you’re in a safe place, everything else is possible,” he says. Today, Martin still feels rooted here even though most of the neighbors he grew up with are gone. “All of the original black owners have either died or moved away,” he says. Like Martin, a lot of the remaining homeowners in Ole Asheboro have been here a long time. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, about half of them have been in their houses for at least 20 years. And quite a few for more than 40. As residents age out of the community, not all of the homes are staying in the family. And that could be a problem for Ole Asheboro. To see why, all you need to do is look a few blocks away to Julian Street. "Blighted" House after house is abandoned, left to decay. There's one that's really beautiful from the outside. But there’s a lock box on the front door, and the windows are boarded up. The window that’s broken is next to a yellow condemned sign from February 19, 2010. A weathered sign posted on one of the many condemned homes on Julian Street in Ole Asheboro. BETHANY CHAFIN/WFDD This type of deterioration took root in the 1940s. Absentee landlords neglected maintenance on aging homes; others couldn’t afford these costs. And as a result of redlining, there were few new dollars or new loans being invested here. By the 1970s, the neighborhood was in serious jeopardy. And the city knew it. Stakes were high; Ole Asheboro had affordable homes the city didn’t want to lose. So, Greensboro invoked state law and declared Ole Asheboro blighted. This made things official. The city could intervene to stabilize the neighborhood. But no one predicted how long it would take. Seeing Potential In Ole Asheboro In the 1990s, Michael Akins took his wife Barbara to see the house he wanted to renovate on Caldwell Street. At the time, she couldn’t imagine making a home here. “The disparity, the drug infestation, the prostitution that was going on ... This part of town at that time was so much different from the side of town that I came from,” she says. But Michael Akins saw a place of resilience, a community he'd be proud to live in. "People that I had known from growing up, this was a community they chose to move to in moving out of the projects or in moving out of the apartments that they had lived in. When they decided to buy a home, they came to a neighborhood like this." Today, with their children grown and gone, the Akinses are still waiting for Ole Asheboro’s potential to be fully realized. As president of the neighborhood association, Barbara Akins proudly points to the new downtown greenway extension, a community garden and recently installed public art. But she says it can be an uphill battle. “And you’re climbing, you’re climbing, you’re climbing. And you can’t get anywhere,” she says. Michael Akins adds: “Am I seeing some change? Yes. Have I seen as much change as I anticipated? No.” They see the answer in more invested homeowners, people who will sit on their porches, mow their lawns, and plant flowers. Now, fewer than 42 percent of the residents here own. There are few signs that percentage is likely to increase anytime soon. Carolina Data Desk found for every 100 people living in Ole Asheboro, only eight applied for a mortgage. Across Guilford and Forsyth counties, that number was nearly double. And, for the homeowners who are coming, their arrival is through heroic effort. Barbara Akins, president of the Ole Asheboro Street Neighborhood Association, is a dedicated caretaker for this neighborhood. BETHANY CHAFIN/WFDD A Win-Win Mary Witherspoon and William Scott are watching their new 3-bedroom, 2-bath house go up before their very eyes. They’re about to be first-time homeowners. "She's been over there every day to talk to the contractor. When she rolls up, they say, 'We see you coming, Mary.' While I'm at work she goes over there and checks on the progress," Scott says while laughing. Until now, they’ve been renting a place just blocks away from the house they bought on Reid Street. And they’re bucking a trend. Black homeownership in Greensboro has been declining since the Recession. An American Public Media analysis shows that beginning in 2011, it dropped five percentage points in five years. The couple is thrilled about the opportunity. "That's all she talks about nowadays,” Scott says. “I got so much joy. I didn’t think we could be able to get this house. But we got this house. I am elated. I am happy,” Witherspoon says. A small, local nonprofit called Community Housing Solutions is making it happen. It’s a win-win — the neighborhood gets well-made homes and dedicated homeowners. Buyers get efficient, affordable houses and a chance to build wealth. It takes a lot to make this work: city-owned land, donated materials, volunteer builders. But pulling this off for Ole Asheboro's 132 vacant residential lots? Not likely. New homeowners Mary Witherspoon and William Scott stand outside their new house on Reid Street in Ole Asheboro. BETHANY CHAFIN/WFDD Nibbles, No Bites Back on Julian Street, Carl Brower knocks on a "No Trespassing" sign in front of an empty lot the city cleared to make room for revitalization. “One of the properties that the city has bought. Available for someone to put a single family home in,” he says. But it takes some imagination to see it. The grass is knee-high and there’s trash strewn about. It’s an eyesore. And a hard sell. Property values are low in this neighborhood. That means a brand new house here will immediately be worth less than a brand new house somewhere else in the city. Carolina Data Desk found the average tax value of residential homes in Ole Asheboro is just under $47,000 — a casualty of those redlining maps. By comparison, the city average is more than three times that at $160,215. Brower says, “[There's] traction being gained, but until we see these areas that are vacant and available, filled with homeownership and persons in the community that want the community to be what we want it to be, we’re going to have a never ending struggle.” For decades it’s been hard to get much here, whether residential or commercial. The neighborhood recently got a Family Dollar. But Brower says the property sat vacant for 20 years before that. It’s the same story for another undeveloped lot nearby. “It’s been out for bid and looking for proposals for over 10 years. We’ve had a couple nibbles. We haven’t had a bite.” Despite that, Brower thinks the neighborhood is at a turning point. The intersection of East Bragg Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Drive between Southside and Ole Asheboro looking toward downtown Greensboro. BETHANY CHAFIN He imagines a community where it’s not such a heavy lift to lure a Family Dollar. He welcomes a place like Southside where people can work, live, and play. The city’s been trying to court such an investment for a while. One thing is for sure. “It’s taking longer than anyone could imagine,” says Brower. At A Crossroads Back at the intersection near the gateway to the neighborhood, you can feel the revitalization of downtown creeping closer and closer. The question has always been how and will Ole Asheboro connect with downtown? And there are so many more questions. Will family members stay or return, like Jody Martin wants? “I’ll be here, and I’m hoping if either my niece or my nephew want to, eventually they’ll take it over, repair it,” Martin says. Will it be renters or homeowners like the Akinses who move in as residents age out? “Even though my professional colleagues may not live over here, and the folk I’ve known haven’t lived over here … I always say it’s because this is where I believe I belong,” says Barbara Akins. And what will future development look like? Carl Brower says the line between uplifting and gentrifying is a very fine one. “We’re not trying to keep anyone from developing, but it has to be the development that fits the culture of this city and this neighborhood,” he says. But if and when the money starts flowing, it might not be up to them or the city. What is clear is that the next few years will be crucial. For now, residents wait, as they have for decades, feeling the pull of the future and the gravity of the past. Bethany Chafin: chafinbc@wfu.edu Exploring Ole Asheboro's Changing Neighborhood Story does not include AP content #on the margins #ole asheboro #redevelopment #triad housing #greensboro #downtown greensboro #southside #redlining #lending discrimination #affordable housing #ole asheboro street neighborhood association #development #investment #gentrification #carolina data desk #wake forest university journalism program #community housing solutions Race Economy Human Interest Normal Tweet
William Scott, Chief of Police, San Francisco Police Department. Series: "Developmental Disabilities Update" [Health and Medicine] [Education] [Professional Medical Education] [Show ID: 34661]
William Scott, Chief of Police, San Francisco Police Department. Series: "Developmental Disabilities Update" [Health and Medicine] [Education] [Professional Medical Education] [Show ID: 34661]
William Scott, Chief of Police, San Francisco Police Department. Series: "Developmental Disabilities Update" [Health and Medicine] [Education] [Professional Medical Education] [Show ID: 34661]
William Scott, Chief of Police, San Francisco Police Department. Series: "Developmental Disabilities Update" [Health and Medicine] [Education] [Professional Medical Education] [Show ID: 34661]
Challenging the Collective Podcast: Becoming Awake To Conscious Choices
Did you know that your scalp is actually part of the largest organ in your body - and by putting toxic hair dyes on it we could be doing major damage to it? William Scott Blair, a NYC-based Natural Hair Color Extraordinaire walks us through the science behind natural hair color - and why it’s extremely important for anyone who might be thinking about getting a touch up from CVS. During this week’s episode of Challenging the Collective, William not only shares tons of exciting facts about the movement of natural hair coloring, but he also delves into his own wellness journey on his path of Challenging the Collective. And, it all begins with figuring out what brings him (and all of us!) the most joy. For more info, visit: www.onadulting.com/podcast To connect with Katina about questions, comments, speaker ideas, or sponsorship inquiries please e-mail onadulting@gmail.com. To join the On Adulting Tribe + email newsletter, please visit: http://eepurl.com/dhaq_T Resources: For more on O&M (and maybe snagging an appointment with William!) check out their website at https://www.originalmineral.com/nyc/
Psychosomatic conditions include fibromyalgia and other chronic functional pain conditions. These are traditionally hard to treat. In this show, neuropsychoanalysis offers a fresh, effective, and interesting approach to address mind and body. W. Scott Griffies M.D., DFAPA, is currently an Associate Professor of Psychiatry with Duke Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and the Medical Director of the Psychosomatic Medicine service at Duke Raleigh Hospital. He is boarded in General Psychiatry, Psychosomatic Medicine and is certified in psychoanalysis from the New Orleans Psychoanalytic Institute. He recently relocated to Duke from New Orleans where he was faculty at LSU Department of Psychiatry and Psychosomatic Medicine Fellowship for over 15 years. His main academic and clinical interest has been in the treatment and understanding of psychosomatic patients. While at LSU, he won numerous teaching awards and worked and directed services predominantly focused on psychiatric aspects of medical and surgical patients. He also served as the LSU Psychiatry Residency Director for 8 years through Hurricane Katrina. His most recent publication was “Non-mentalizing and Non-symbolizing Psychic Functions and Central Sensitization in Psychosomatic Patients”in From Soma to Symbol: Psychosomatic Conditions and Transformative Experiences, edited by Phyllis Sloate.
Toronto turns 183 years old today! Derringer, Jenn and Ryan celebrate with some fascinating facts about our beloved city and Sean's William Scott and Wyatt Russell stop by the studio to chat about hockey and the new 'Goon: Last of the Enforcers' movie! Definitely Derringer for Monday March 6, 2017 For more Derringer click here. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this week’ episode I sit down with Geoff William Scott. Geoff William Scott is a theatre agent with the Talent House. In our conversation today we discuss how Geoff was introduced to theatre and how his performance training has helped him in his work as a theatre agent. We discuss how he got involved working as a theatre agent and some of the things he has learned about himself and the industry since coming to the Talent House, as well as the differences he has noticed between theatres in Canada as opposed to the United States. He also speaks about where he sees theatre in Canada headed in the future and gave some great advice for performers in Canada looking to break into the theatre scene in America.
In this week’ episode I sit down with Geoff William Scott. Geoff William Scott is a theatre agent with the Talent House. In our conversation today we discuss how Geoff was introduced to theatre and how his performance training has helped him in his work as a theatre agent. We discuss how he got involved working as a theatre agent and some of the things he has learned about himself and the industry since coming to the Talent House, as well as the differences he has noticed between theatres in Canada as opposed to the United States. He also speaks about where he sees theatre in Canada headed in the future and gave some great advice for performers in Canada looking to break into the theatre scene in America.
Armed with a few blunt tools in her rucksack, Sue Stickland made her way to an enchanting walled garden in the centre of Worcester to take some valuable lessons from the resident tool sharpening expert William Scott. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
He's been part of our RIM world as the owner of a records management business and also a shredding and destruction business in Cincinnati. So, he's one of us. But while still deeply connected, those businesses are no longer a part of the equation.Now, Will Scott is creating some seriously cool results as the Inventor, Chief Designer and CEO at BlegalBloss, a company he founded and leads today.Will has revolutionized the cardboard box industry with numerous patents and innovative approaches to making life easier and more people friendly with his inventions. His design concepts include better ergonomics, efficiency, security and a lot more. His Boxie records storage boxes are now crowding out some of the most established box brands in the world on the shelves at over 2700 retail stores including those run by Staples and OfficeMax.Will is one of the most passionate and focused visionaries I've talked to in a long time. I wanted to have him back on the show to share how far he and Blegalbloss have come in the last couple of years. It's really an amazing success story.We'll also get you caught up on the latest industry news.Enjoy the show.Special Thanks to our Exclusive Show Sponsor, O'Neil Software.
With John Wilson. Wilko Johnson, one of Britain's most charismatic guitarists, has terminal cancer, with doctors suggesting that he has less than a year to live. As he prepares for farewell UK concerts in March, he reflects on how his diagnosis has made him feel "vividly alive". And, guitar in hand, he demonstrates the distinctive terse sound which powered the band Dr Feelgood in the 1970s, when they became one of the UK's most influential live acts. To mark the centenary of the birth of painter William Scott, the Tate St Ives is celebrating his life and art with an exhibition of his most important work. John talks to William Scott's son about his father's life and legacy, and how he influenced Rothko's decision to bequeath his paintings to the Tate. Henry James' classic horror story The Turn Of The Screw has been adapted by Benjamin Britten into an opera, produced as a ballet by William Tuckett, turned into a film starring Deborah Kerr and become several TV dramas. Now playwright Rebecca Lenkiewicz has created a stage version, co-produced by Hammer Theatre Of Horror - the company's first venture into theatre. Author Kate Saunders joins John to assess just how chilling this new incarnation is. Producer: Olivia Skinner.
For the next one hundred and twenty minutes, I will bring you pure listening enjoyment. In this session, I have included many new vocal's and track's plus a few classics. A few songs that stand out for me are; Syren’s “My First Love”, Jimpster’s “Sleeper” and a true classic from The Black Science Orchestra – “Where were you?” In addition, I occasionally threw in some accapella bits from Pagano Featuring Stewart Who? As always, feel free to let me know what you think at djhenryhall@yahoo.com or visit my podshow page http://www.djhenryhall.podomatic.com Happy Listening! 1. The Outfit feat. Natasha Watts - Do you Want Me Baby (Outfit Afro Mix) (http://www.GrooveOdyssey.com) (http://www.myspace.Com/GrooveOdyssey) 2. Frankie Knuckles & The Shapeshifters – The Ones You Love (http://www.nocturnalgroove.co.uk) (http://www.defmix.com/wp/?page_id=16) (http://www.myspace.com/fkalways) (http://www.myspace.com/theshapeshifters) 3. Alex Finkin & Reverend P feat. Jocelyn Mathieu – Gone Away (Animal House Deep Instrumental & Disco Mix 4. DaSoul, Fabry Diglio & M.A.D. boss feat. William Scott – Moon in Taurus (House Garage Original Mix) (http:// www.citydeepmusic.com) 5. Danny Clark & Jay Benham Ft. Dawn Tallman – Conqueror (Frankie Feliciano Mix) (http://www.solidgroundrecordings.com) (http://www.myspace.com/solidgroundrecordings) 6. Syren – My First Love (Will’s Sole Channel Instrumental and Vocal Mix) (http://www.homerecordings.ca) (http://www.myspace.com/homerecording) (http://www.myspace.com/symphonysyren) 7. Roland Clark/Kim Davis – Valentine 4 Life (Darren Campbell’s ‘Fallin 4 U Dubstramental) (http: www.homerecordings.ca) (http://www.Myspace.com/homerecording) 8. Physics – Holding On (Oscar P & Davidson Ospina Vocal Remix) (http://www.seamlessrecordings.com) 9. J Nitti feat. Shirley Davis – Deep Down 2009 (Sergio Sergi Remix) (http://www.vinylpusher.com.au) 10. Blackliquid feat. Ne’a Posey – Gotta Be Me (Ospina & Oscar P Remix) (http://www.mediaservicesnyc.com/openbar.htm) 11. Lisa Shaw – Like I Want To (Dutchican Soul Vocal Rub) (http://www.saltedmusic.com) 12. Jimpster – Sleeper (http://www.freerangerecords.co.uk) 13. Yassoul (Yass and Abicah Soul) – Back to Fundamentals (Abicah Soul Dub & Yass Rework) (http://www.backtofundamentals.com) 14. The Black Science Orchestra – Where were you (Tedd’s Lights Out Groove) (http://www.juniorboysown.com) 15. Sessions No. 9 (Tedd Patterson) – Welcome To The Magic Session (Tedd’s Big Room Mix) (http://www.defected.com) 16. DJ Dealer – Hungry (Destroyer Mix) (http://www.myspace.com/djdealer1) 17. Dance Disorder – My Time (Radio Slave Remix) - (http://www.phonicarecords.com/product/view/56617) 18. Helskanki ft. Bliss & Tihanna – Passers By (Jeremy Sylvester Vox) (http://www.brainkatrecords.com) (http://www.myspace.com/brainkatrecords) (http://www.myspace.com/helskanki) 19. Innervision feat. Melonie Daniels – Don’t You Ever Give Up (Frankie’s Summillenium Remix) (http://www.traxsource.com) 20. Beyonce – Broken Hearted Girl (Ospina & Oscar P Remix) (http://www.mediaservicesnyc.com/openbar.htm) 21. Jazz Loungerz – Amor (Ospina & Oscar P Remix) (http://www.mediaservicesnyc.com/openbar.htm) (http://www.seamlessrecordings.com) 22. Pagano Feat. Stewart Who? – Back to The Future (Accapella) – Kult Records (http://www.kultrecords.com)