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Send us a textJayme Kiyomura Chan is a passionate and accomplished leader in both the culinary and sports worlds. Born and raised in Pasadena, California, she is a proud product of the San Gabriel Valley and a long-time resident. Jayme attended La Salle High School, where she was a standout four-year varsity basketball player, laying the foundation for a career dedicated to empowering others both in the kitchen and on the court.A devoted wife to her husband Phillip for 22 years, and a mother to three children—Isabella (18), and twins Andrew and Olivia (15)—Jayme balances her professional pursuits with her love for family. She is the Executive Chef and Owner of Mainland Catering, and the Director and Owner of Practice Makes Perfect (PMP) Basketball Camp, established in 1998. Through PMP, Jayme has trained and developed thousands of youth basketball players from the San Gabriel Valley, building a reputation as a mentor and coach who impacts the lives of young athletes.Jayme's coaching legacy is undeniable. She is currently in her 13th year as Co-Head Coach of the Flintridge Prep Girls Basketball Program, where she boasts an impressive 82.26% win record (261-54). Under her leadership, the Flintridge Prep Girls Basketball team has won the only two CIF Girls Basketball Championships in the school's history. Her achievements in coaching have earned her numerous Coach of the Year awards, but Jayme takes the most pride in having helped guide more than 20 former players to realize their dreams of playing college basketball.Before her time at Flintridge Prep, Jayme served as a recruiting coordinator and assistant coach at Pasadena City College, where she helped lead the team to six South Coast Conference championships and coached in seven consecutive State Championship Tournaments from 2004 to 2010. At just 20 years old, she was given her first varsity coaching opportunity at Pasadena High School, where she made a name for herself with three CIF playoff appearances. In 1998, she became the youngest varsity Coach of the Year in California at the age of 21. Jayme also enjoyed success at Bonita High School in La Verne, where she coached a JV team to an undefeated season (22-0).In addition to her domestic coaching success, Jayme has traveled to Japan multiple times to run basketball clinics and coach teams for Yonsei, Sansei, and NABA basketball organizations, further expanding her international influence in the sport.When she is not coaching or catering, Jayme is deeply involved in her community. She is an active member of Mission Valley Free Methodist Church in San Gabriel and serves on the Board of Directors for the Yonsei Basketball Association. Her love for food is also a defining part of her life, as she enjoys dining at various restaurants throughout the SGV and discovering new culinary experiences.Jayme's work both in the kitchen and on the basketball court reflects her dedication to service, mentorship, and community building. Whether she's coaching the next generation of basketball stars or serving up culinary creations, Jayme Kiyomura Chan remains a beloved figure in the San Gabriel Valley.___________________Music CreditsIntroEuphoria in the San Gabriel Valley, Yone OGStingerScarlet Fire (Sting), Otis McDonald, YouTube Audio LibraryOutroEuphoria in the San Gabriel Valley, Yone OG__________________My SGV Podcast:Website: www.mysgv.netNewsletter: Beyond the MicPatreon: MySGV Podcastinfo@sgvmasterkey.com
Séoul organise en ce moment un sommet Corée-Afrique. Une grande opération séduction qui rassemble une trentaine de leaders du continent et 48 délégations dans la capitale sud-coréenne et une initiative importante de la diplomatie sud-coréenne qui cherche à étendre son influence et les partenariats en Afrique. Parmi ceux déjà existants, il y a des bourses, dont peuvent bénéficier de jeunes Africains, pour venir étudier dans les universités sud-coréennes. De notre correspondant à Séoul,Le campus de la très prestigieuse université Yonsei s'est paré aux couleurs de l'Afrique. Tanzanie, Maroc, Kenya, Ghana... Des stands préparent les spécialités culinaires et culturelles de chaque pays, tandis qu'une poignée d'artistes offrent aux coréens interloqués, le spectacle des danses traditionnelles du Burundi.Un événement organisé par l'association des étudiants africains de Yonsei à l'occasion du sommet Corée du Sud-Afrique, dans lequel Abir Zitouni place beaucoup d'espoir. « J'espère que ça va ouvrir l'opportunité pour des étudiants en Afrique d'avoir des bourses. J'aimerais bien que ça soit un échange, par exemple en Afrique, on a beaucoup de connaissance sur l'agriculture, en revanche la Corée est plus industrialisée. Ça peut être bénéfique d'avoir ce genre d'échanges culturels », se réjouit-elle.Un modèle à suivreCes étudiants venus étudier en Corée du Sud font du pays un modèle à suivre dans plusieurs domaines, comme l'expliquent l'éthiopienne Sapril Kerubo et le Tanzanien, Felician Pacompagassa. « Je pense que leur économie est vraiment efficace, car chaque secteur est rationalisé et en ligne avec la politique. Et sur le plan de la sécurité, ils doivent être à plus de 100%. Pour moi, c'était un vrai choc culturel ! », s'exclame Sapril. « La technologie et le secteur médical sont très avancés, ils sont particulièrement compétents pour contenir le développement de maladies infectieuses, c'est pour ça que j'ai choisi la Corée », explique Felician.L'histoire du pays en fait un partenaire de choix pour le Ghanéen Franck Ada. « La Chine, les Européens, les Américains sont plus présents en Afrique. Mais quand vous regardez la nature de la nation coréenne, leur développement a été très rapide. Donc, je pense que les pays africains ont beaucoup à apprendre du succès sud-coréen qui peut être d'une aide pour rattraper leur retard. »Pour Ayoub, jeune étudiant marocain, le vécu commun de la colonisation doit permettre de faire émerger des partenariats d'autres natures. « Les pays africains ont perdu récemment la confiance dans les pays européens et sont à la recherche de partenariats avec d'autres pays. La Corée du Sud n'a pas cette histoire impérialiste, eux aussi ont dû subir la colonisation de la part du Japon et donc, cela leur permet d'avoir une confiance plus importante qu'avec les pays européens ou nord-américains. »Un argument historique mis en avant par les autorités sud-coréennes. Reste désormais à transformer les paroles en actes.À lire aussiSommet Corée du Sud-Afrique: Séoul passe à la vitesse supérieure dans ses relations avec le continent
In this episode of the Two and a Half Hills podcast, the hosts are joined by the guests from the Downtime in the Ring podcast. They discuss the recent changes on SmackDown and the upcoming WrestleMania. Topics include the attack on Dragon Lee by Carlito, Andrade stepping in to replace, the potential winners of the match, the use of the WrestleMania arena, and the homage to Yonsei by the women. They also discuss the possibility of a free bird rule for the women's tag team titles and a potential heel turn for Bianca Belair. The conversation covers various topics including favorite WrestleMania moments, the lack of women's main events, the potential involvement of The Rock at WrestleMania, and LA Knight's promo on SmackDown. The conversation covers various topics related to WWE and WrestleMania. The hosts discuss a fight at a convention center, the unpredictability of wrestling events, the Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal, and the significance of winning the match. They also talk about potential storylines and matches for WrestleMania, including the possibility of John Moxley joining AEW. The hosts express their opinions on the Battle Royal and suggest alternative ideas for WrestleMania matches. The conversation covers various topics related to WrestleMania and the podcast itself. The hosts express their excitement for WrestleMania and discuss the importance of certain matches and events. They also reflect on the growth of their podcast and their goals for the future. The conversation ends with a discussion about their social media handles and a reminder to tune in for their WrestleMania live stream
Bekanntlich ist Südkorea das Land mit dem höchsten Anteil an tertiärer Ausbildung unter allen OECD-Ländern, mit Stand 2023 besuchen oder besuchten ca. 76% der Bevölkerung eine Hochschule. Dieser Anteil ist etwa doppelt so hoch wie in Deutschland und liegt fast 20 Prozentpunkte über dem OECD-Durchschnitt. So herrscht hierzulande eine harte Konkurrenz um die besten Studienplätze, was dadurch noch verschärft wird, dass die Universitäten seit jeher in einem unverrückbaren Hierarchieverhältnis zueinander stehen. Die drei Top-Unis sind, wie jeder schon im Kindergarten weiß, Seoul-Nationaluni, Yonsei- und Korea-Universität. Dazu gesellt sich seit einigen Jahren das Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), und auch die altehrwürdige, von Samsung stark unterstützte Sungkyunkwan-Uni wird oft mit dazugezählt. Wer hier einen Studienplatz bekommt, hat beste Aussichten auf eine erfolgreiche Karriere, denn die Eliten waren praktisch alle dort und kümmern sich um ihre Alumni. Andersrum: Wer an einer drittklassigen Uni in der Provinz landet, studiert oft für die Arbeitslosigkeit. Nicht selten trifft man Taxifahrer und Verkäuferinnen mit Hochschulabschluss. Jetzt, Anfang März, hat grad das neue Schul- und Studienjahr angefangen, und so ist dies unser heutiges Thema.
En çok istenen ülkelerden biri olan Kore'ye gidiyoruz. Bugüne kadar yaptıklarını anlatmamın en uzun sürdüğü İdil Ayral ve Miray Kuzucu ile iki kısım halinde yayınladığım Kore serisinin ilk bölümünde Kore'ye nasıl gitmeye karar verdiklerini ve Kore öncesi Barselona ve Milano'daki deneyimlerini konuştuk. Bu ikinci kısımda ise tamamen Kore'yi konuşuyoruz. Kore öncesi İdil Barselona'da, Miray Milano'da yaklaşık beşer sene yaşamış. İdil, İTÜ mimarlık mezunu, sonrasında da yine İTÜ'de mimarlık tarihi masterı yapmış ve bir yandan da İstanbul'da mimar olarak çalışmış. İdil çok yönlü birisi - okurken bir yandan profesyonel olarak şarkıcılık yapmış ve hala da devam ediyor. Bir yandan da Sadri Alışık Kültür Merkezi'nde oyunculuk eğitimi almış. 2012 senesinde akademik hayatı başlıyor ve FSM Üniversitesi'nde Mimarlık bölümünde okutman olarak çalışırken bir yandan da ODTÜ'de yine mimarlık tarihi üzerine doktoraya başlıyor ama 2013'te yurtdışı hayalini gerçekleştirmeye karar veriyor. İdil, "hiç aklımda yokken ilginç bir şekilde gittim" dediği Barselona'da Pompeu Fabra Üniversitesi'nde 5 sene boyunca Humanities ve Tarih bölümünde doktora yapıyor. Hem İspanyolca hem de tarihi orjiinal metinleri okuyabilmek için Katalanca öğreniyor. Bir yandan da Letgo'da iletişim uzmanı olarak tam zamanlı çalışıyor ve bir yandan da Katalan müzisyenlerle Anadolu ezgilerinden oluşan Türkçe, Yunanca, Ermenice, Kürtçe şarkılarla bir repertuvar oluşturduğu grup kurup farklı yerlerde ve festivallerde sahne alıyor. İdil'in Kore macerası, 2014'te bir Kore dizisi izlemesiyle başlıyor, 2015-16 ve 17'de dört kez Kore'ye ziyarete gidiyor ve son gidişinde akademik alanda iş bulmak için görüşmeler yapıyor ve sonunda 2019'da Seoul Üniversitesi Şehir Planlaması bölümünde visiting professor olarak işe başlıyor. 3 sene boyunca orada çalıştıktan sonra bir sene de bir mimarlık ofisinde ekip yöneticisi olarak 60 Koreli arasında tek yabancı olarak çalışıyor. Korece öğrenip bir yandan da bir acapella grubunda yine şarkıcılık yapmaya da devam ediyor ve hem birçok yerde sahne almış, tv programlarına çıkmış hem de ödüller kazanmış. Şimdi de Utah Üniversitesi'nin Kore'deki Asya Kampüsünde Şehir Ekolojisi bölümünde asistan profesör olarak Songdo şehrine taşınmaya hazırlanıyor. Miray Kuzucu ise Alman Lisesi ve Bilgi Üniversitesi Sinema Televizyon ile Reklamcılık çift dal mezunu. Üniversitede ilk seneden itibaren film setlerinde çalışıyor ve mezun olduktan sonra da buna devam ediyor ama daha farklı bir alana kaymak istemesi ile moda fotoğrafçılığına geçmek istiyor ve Kore Sineması'nın etkisiyle 2012'de Kore planları başlıyor. Kore'de istediği alanda İngilizce master programı olmaması nedeniyle Milano'ya başvuruyor ama Kore planı aslında hep aklında kalmaya devam etmiş. Milano'da master yaptıktan sonra Coccinelle markasında çalışmaya başlıyor ve ayrıca videographer ile fotoğrafçı olarak Vogue İtalya ile çalışıyor. İtalya'da 4 yıl çalıştıktan sonra Türkiye'ye dönüyor ve çalışırken biriktiriği para ile Kore'ye gidip Yonsei Üniversitesi'nde Korece kurusunda başlıyor. YouTube kanalım Meraki'deki son bölüm konuklarımdan Tutu ile festival giyim markası Toomuch'ı kuruyor. bu marka için birçok etkinlik ve parti organize ediyor, Dazed Korea ile fotoğrafçı ve videographer olarak çalışmaya başlııyor ve son üç senedir aynı şekilde Modelsdirectors'da çalışıyor. Kore'de 6 senenin sonunda Nisan 2023'te de Türkiye'ye kesin dönüş kararı veriyor. Uygun kur ve düşük gönderim ücretiyle yurt dışı para transferlerinizi kolayca yapabileceğiniz TransferGo uygulamasını http://bit.ly/bigidenesoralim'dan indirip inceleyebilirsiniz.
En çok istenen ülkelerden biri olan Kore'nin kapılarını bu bölümde aralıyoruz. Bugüne kadar yaptıklarını anlatmamın en uzun sürdüğü İdil Ayral ve Miray Kuzucu ile iki kısım halinde yayınladığım Kore serisinin bu ilk bölümünde Kore'ye nasıl gitmeye karar verdiklerini ve Kore öncesi Barselona ve Milano'daki deneyimlerini konuştuk. İkinci kısımda ise tamamen Kore'yi konuşuyoruz. Kore öncesi İdil Barselona'da, Miray Milano'da yaklaşık beşer sene yaşamış. İdil, İTÜ mimarlık mezunu, sonrasında da yine İTÜ'de mimarlık tarihi masterı yapmış ve bir yandan da İstanbul'da mimar olarak çalışmış. İdil çok yönlü birisi - okurken bir yandan profesyonel olarak şarkıcılık yapmış ve hala da devam ediyor. Bir yandan da Sadri Alışık Kültür Merkezi'nde oyunculuk eğitimi almış. 2012 senesinde akademik hayatı başlıyor ve FSM Üniversitesi'nde Mimarlık bölümünde okutman olarak çalışırken bir yandan da ODTÜ'de yine mimarlık tarihi üzerine doktoraya başlıyor ama 2013'te yurtdışı hayalini gerçekleştirmeye karar veriyor. İdil, "hiç aklımda yokken ilginç bir şekilde gittim" dediği Barselona'da Pompeu Fabra Üniversitesi'nde 5 sene boyunca Humanities ve Tarih bölümünde doktora yapıyor. Hem İspanyolca hem de tarihi orjiinal metinleri okuyabilmek için Katalanca öğreniyor. Bir yandan da Letgo'da iletişim uzmanı olarak tam zamanlı çalışıyor ve bir yandan da Katalan müzisyenlerle Anadolu ezgilerinden oluşan Türkçe, Yunanca, Ermenice, Kürtçe şarkılarla bir repertuvar oluşturduğu grup kurup farklı yerlerde ve festivallerde sahne alıyor. İdil'in Kore macerası ise 2014'te bir Kore dizisi izlemesiyle başlıyor, 2015-16 ve 17'de dört kez Kore'ye ziyarete gidiyor ve son gidişinde akademik alanda iş bulmak içn görüşmeler yapıyor ve sonunda 2019'da Seoul Üniversitesi Şehir Planlaması bölümünde visiting professor olarak işe başlıyor. 3 sene boyunca orada çalıştıktan sonra bir sene de bir mimarlık ofisinde ekip yöneticisi olarak 60 Koreli arasında tek yabancı olarak çalışıyor. Korece öğrenip bir yandan da bir acapella grubunda yine şarkıcılık yapmaya da devam ediyor ve hem birçok yerde sahne almış, tv programlarına çıkmış hem de ödüller kazanmış. Şimdi de Utah Üniversitesi'nin Kore'deki Asya Kampüsünde Şehir Ekolojisi bölümünde asistan profesör olarak Songdo şehrine taşınmaya hazırlanıyor. Miray Kuzucu ise Alman Lisesi ve Bilgi Üniversitesi Sinema Televizyon ile Reklamcılık çift dal mezunu. Üniversitede ilk seneden itibaren film setlerinde çalışıyor ve mezun olduktan sonra da buna devam ediyor ama daha farklı bir alana kaymak istemesi ile moda fotoğrafçılığına geçmek istiyor ve Kore sinemasının etkisiyle 2012'de Kore planları başlıyor. Kore'de istediği alanda İngilizce master programı olmaması nedeniyle Milano'ya başvuruyor ama Kore planı aslında hep aklında kalmaya devam etmiş. Milano'da maser yaptıktan sonra Coccinelle markasında çalışmaya başlıyor ve ayrıca videographer ile fotoğrafçı olarak Vogue İtalya ile çalışıyor. İtalya'da 4 yıl çalıştıktan sonra Türkiye'ye dönüyor ve çalışırken biriktiriği para ile Kore'ye gidip Yonsei Üniversitesi'nde Korece kurusunda başlıyor. YouTube kanalım Meraki'deki son bölüm konuklarımdan Tutu ile festival giyim markası Toomuch'ı kuruyor. bu marka için birçok etkinlik ve parti organize ediyor, Dazed Korea ile fotoğrafçı ve videographer olarak çalışmaya başlııyor ve son üç senedir aynı şekilde Modelsdirectors'da çalışıyor. Kore'de 6 senenin sonunda Nisan 2023'te de Türkiye'ye kesin dönüş kararı veriyor Uygun kur ve düşük gönderim ücretiyle yurt dışı para transferlerinizi kolayca yapabileceğiniz TransferGo uygulamasını http://bit.ly/bigidenesoralim'dan indirip inceleyebilirsiniz.
En este “Cuéntame chingu”, (que iniciamos para platicar crudo, sin censura, ni estructura, de esos chismes actuales y momentáneos que nos carcomen) continuamos con el chisme que dejamos cortado, como novela de viernes, con nuestro buen chingu Juan. Que tiene un montón de cosas que platicarnos acerca de su experiencia viviendo en Corea del Sur.Divagamos mucho y contamos de todo un poco, pero esta vez nos centramos en la vivencia de estudiar en una universidad coreana; el proceso para entrar, sus pros, contras y algún chisme amoroso de por medio.Acompáñanos a disfrutar del chisme, a sacar trapitos al sol y recuerda, que si tienes preguntas o curiosidades acerca de alguno de los temas hablados o a futuro ¡cuéntanos chingu!No olvides suscribirte a nuestro newsletter en la siguiente liga:https://mailchi.mp/1fd8e2840873/entrechingus-newsletter-Síguenos en nuestras redes sociales para saber más de estos tips de idioma, mantenerte al pendiente de nuestros episodios y conocer el resto de contenido que compartimos:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/entrechingus/Twitter: https://twitter.com/entre_chingus
20221103 Yonsei Global News 3화 선곡표 1. Fool for you - Kastra 2. Easily - Bruno Major 3. Angel Baby - Troye Sivan
20221117 Yonsei Global News 4화 선곡표 1. Maybe we need a break - slchld 2. Bad Habit - Steve Lacy 3. Morning view - Mills 4. 잘자 - 크러쉬
20221016 Yonsei Global News 2화 선곡표 1. Guitars & Drugs - John K 2. Die For You - The Weekend 3. That's hilarious - Charlie Puth
20221006 Yonsei Global News 1화 선곡표 1. Checklist - MAX 2. Bright Blue Skies - Mitch James 3. Bout it - a.jéne
Aún se recuerda en Corea cuando soldados del imperio japonés abusaron sexualmente de más de doscientas mil mujeres y de otros países dominados, creando burdeles con lo que ellos llamaron “mujeres de consuelo”. Hablamos aquí de este trauma histórico, muy vívido en la memoria de muchos y muchas. Mariana Macias Bermúdez es candidata a Maestra en Política y Asuntos Globales por la Universidad de Yonsei en Corea del Sur.
Đại dịch Covid đã khiến nhiều thương hiệu lớn bị điêu đứng vì cuộc khủng hoảng kinh tế thế giới, nhưng điều này không xảy ra ở Hàn Quốc, bởi trào lưu mua sắm hàng hiệu của giới trẻ nước này. Theo nhà cung cấp nghiên cứu thị trường chiến lược, doanh số bán hàng xa xỉ của Hàn Quốc tăng lên 125,42 tỷ đô la, trong khi thị trường hàng xa xỉ toàn cầu giảm 19% vào năm 2020. Khi tới những khu phố sầm uất và giàu có ở Seoul, không khó để thấy hàng dài người đứng xếp hàng trước giờ mở cửa của nhiều nhãn hàng như Rolex, Gucci, Channel... Và chỉ tới buổi trưa, những mặt hàng được ưa thích sẽ được bán sạch. Năm 2020, doanh số bán hàng của trung tâm thương mại Lotte, Incheon, tăng 40% sau khi giới thiệu 15 thương hiệu cao cấp nước ngoài, bao gồm Bottega Veneta, Balenciaga, IWC và Yves Saint Laurent. Sự phổ biến của những thương hiệu đó dẫn đến mức tăng 1,8% trong tổng doanh số bán hàng của chi nhánh này. Giờ đây, Hàn Quốc đã trở thành thị trường xa xỉ lớn thứ bảy trên thế giới Giới trẻ góp phần “cứu vãn” các mặt hàng xa xỉ Cơn sốt về đồ xa xỉ không chỉ phổ biến ở tầng lớp thu nhập cao, mà còn ở những người trẻ tuổi có thu nhập thấp và trung bình. Có thể thấy rằng mức tiêu thụ hàng xa xỉ của thế hệ thanh thiếu niên đã tăng lên rất nhiều. Theo Hyundai Department Store, một trong những chuỗi cửa hàng bách hóa lớn nhất Hàn Quốc, những người mua sắm sang trọng ở độ tuổi 20 đang tăng đều đặn. Con số này tăng 28,8% vào năm 2019, sau đó tăng 37,7% vào năm 2020. Tỷ lệ bán hàng xa xỉ tại Lotte Department Store cho những người trong độ tuổi 20 và 30 tăng đáng kể lên 41,4% vào năm 2019 và 44,9% vào năm 2020. Doanh số bán hàng xa xỉ của cửa hàng bách hóa Shinsegae cho những người trong độ tuổi 20 và 30 đã vượt hơn một nửa tổng doanh số. Lý do gia tăng doanh số của các nhãn hàng xa xỉ Trả lời báo Korea JoongAng Daily, Sung Tae-yoon, giáo sư kinh tế tại Đại học Yonsei, cho biết: “Để mô tả cho sự gia tăng doanh số của thị trường hàng xa xỉ, nên dùng từ “nhờ vào đại dịch” hơn là “bất chấp đại dịch”. Nhiều người Hàn Quốc từng dành dụm thu nhập của mình để đi du lịch nước ngoài trước khi đại dịch Covid-19 bùng nổ. Nhưng giờ đây, bởi đại dịch mà việc đi lại bị hạn chế, họ tìm cho mình thú vui mới, đó là sẵn sàng chi trả số tiền tiết kiệm để mua hàng cao cấp. Những người ở độ tuổi 20 và đầu 30 có xu hướng tiết kiệm tiền lương để mua nhà trước khi đại dịch xảy ra. Tuy nhiên, giá nhà ở các thành phố lớn càng tăng cao tới mức “không thể mua nổi” đã khiến họ cho rằng việc mua nhà là vô nghĩa. Hiện tại, giá trung bình của các căn hộ ở Seoul là hơn 900 triệu won (805.000 đô la). Trong khi đó, theo kết quả điều tra tiền lương và thu nhập năm 2019 do cơ quan Thống kê Hàn Quốc công bố, thu nhập trung bình hàng tháng của những người ở độ tuổi 20 là 2,21 triệu won, ở những người độ tuổi 30 là 3,35 triệu won và 3,57 triệu won ở độ tuổi 40. Vì vậy, nhiều người từ bỏ việc mua nhà và thay vào đó theo đuổi hạnh phúc của riêng mình bằng cách đổ tiền vào những món hàng xa xỉ. Thanh thiếu niên cũng không nằm ngoài xu hướng này. Khi được hỏi tại sao mua hàng xa xỉ, 18,3% thanh thiếu niên trả lời rằng họ không muốn bị tụt hậu các xu hướng, và 17,4% nói rằng mình là người duy nhất không có hàng xa xỉ nên mua. Các chiến lược quảng cáo của những nhãn hàng xa xỉ cũng đang nhắm vào lứa tuổi thanh thiếu niên. Trước đây, các thương hiệu xa xỉ chỉ thuê diễn viên hoặc người mẫu chuyên nghiệp quảng cáo. Tuy nhiên, trong vài năm trở lại đây, các ca sĩ thần tượng Kpop đã thế chỗ bằng danh hiệu “đại sứ thương hiệu”, hoặc làm người mẫu ngắn hạn cho các nhãn hàng, để khiến những khách hàng trẻ tuổi sẵn sàng chi trả nhiều tiền chỉ nhằm giống với thần tượng của mình. Trước đây, hình ảnh của những idol Kpop chỉ là những ca sĩ hay nhạc sĩ, không đủ cao cấp đối với các thương hiệu xa xỉ. Nhưng bây giờ địa vị của họ đã thay đổi. Sự nổi tiếng của họ tới khán giả toàn cầu đã tạo nên sức ảnh hưởng lớn đối với người hâm mộ, chủ yếu là thanh thiếu niên, là không thể bàn cãi Ngoài ra, Youtube và mạng xã hội - hai phương tiện giải trí vô cùng phổ biến, cũng là “vùng đất” đầy cám dỗ đối với thanh thiếu niên. Ngày càng có nhiều video “đập hộp” những món xa xỉ như áo khoác Chanel, áo sơ mi Dior, giày Louis Vuitton, khăn Gucci... của những học sinh trung học 18 tuổi tràn lan trên Youtube. Một trong những đặc điểm thường thấy ở tuổi vị thành niên đó là các em đặc biệt nhạy cảm với đánh giá của bạn bè. Khi thấy bạn bè mua những sản phẩm đắt đỏ, rất khó cho các em cưỡng lại việc bắt chước đua đòi lẫn nhau. Một học sinh trung học tên là Choi trả lời báo Korea JoongAng Daily : “Kể từ khi tôi bắt đầu học trung học, tôi đã thấy ngày càng nhiều bạn học của mình mặc những chiếc áo sơ mi hoặc giày hàng hiệu sang trọng với đồng phục học sinh của họ. Họ đặc biệt đầu tư vào những món đồ mà họ có thể dễ dàng khoe ra, chẳng hạn như ví hoặc giày có logo khổng lồ trên đó”. Choi nói thêm rằng những người bạn đồng lứa của cô cũng thích hàng hiệu sang trọng hơn cho những món đồ nhỏ hơn, ít đắt tiền hơn. “Hầu hết các cô gái trong lớp của tôi đều có son môi của Yves Saint Laurent hoặc Dior. Các thần tượng K-pop quảng cáo chúng, vì vậy chúng được gọi là "HyunA lipstick" hoặc "Sunmi lipstick"... Chúng có giá khoảng 40.000 đến 50.000 won một thỏi, hợp túi tiền hơn so với túi xách hoặc quần áo sang trọng. Tôi cũng sở hữu một vài chiếc”. Các nhãn hàng cũng tin rằng mặc dù hiện tại thanh thiếu niên có thể không có thu nhập, nhưng một khi các thương hiệu cao cấp lấy được lòng trung thành của họ, họ sẽ trở thành khách hàng lâu dài và thị trường tương lai sẽ ngày càng được mở rộng. Làm cách nào mà giới trẻ ít tiền lại mua được những món hàng hiệu? Theo một cuộc khảo sát năm 2020 của Alba Cheonguk, một trang web về việc làm thêm, 83,3% người ở độ tuổi 20 sẵn sàng trả tiền cho những món đồ xa xỉ bằng cách tiết kiệm tiền lương từ công việc bán thời gian hoặc toàn thời gian của họ, trái ngược với suy nghĩ sai lầm phổ biến rằng cha mẹ giàu có chi trả cho con cái của mình. Chúng ta thường nghĩ rằng chỉ những người thuộc tầng lớp thượng lưu mới có tiền lãng phí cho những sản phẩm xa xỉ, nhưng đó không phải là trường hợp của hầu hết thế hệ trẻ và thế hệ thanh thiếu niên tại Hàn Quốc. Họ có thể vui vẻ sống qua ngày nhờ vào mỳ gói để có thể chi tiêu số tiền tiết kiệm được cho những món đồ xa xỉ. Cơn sốt hàng hiệu ngày nay không nhất thiết phải tương quan với các tầng lớp kinh tế trong xã hội. Một số người không chọn giải pháp ăn uống tiêu xài tiết kiệm, mà họ chọn việc mua lại đồ cũ với giá hợp lý hơn. Trên một ứng dụng chợ đồ cũ tại Hàn, một chiếc túi Gucci với giá khoảng 1,5 triệu đến 1,9 triệu won chỉ được bán với giá khoảng 400.000 won. Gần đây, có rất nhiều sinh viên đại học nữ chọn cách này để sở hữu cho mình một chiếc túi sang trọng, để có thể đeo vào những dịp đặc biệt, hoặc đơn giản chỉ là cách để họ tự thưởng cho bản thân sau một thời gian làm việc chăm chỉ và tiết kiệm tiền. Nhiều người lo ngại rằng xu hướng này đang gây nên ảnh hưởng tiêu cực bằng việc khuyến khích chi tiêu quá mức vào những thứ phù phiếm. Bởi niềm vui khi mua được món hàng đắt đỏ thì ngắn, nhưng nỗi đau khi phải chi trả một món tiền lớn thì lại quá dài. Thêm nữa, nhu cầu mua hàng xa xỉ phát triển mạnh cũng vô tình kéo theo sự du nhập của hàng giả, hàng nhái vào nước này và gây ra ảnh hưởng tiêu cực lên thị trường của các mặt hàng nội địa, bởi sự ưu tiên lớn của người dân cho các thương hiệu quốc tế.
We have a returning guest today and you might have seen him recently. He just launched a viral video called "All the Listings," a blink 182 remix.Colin Schindler, better known by his alias the Robed Realtor, ranks in the top 1.5% for transactions in the US. He stars in a Blink-182 parody video which quickly went viral.Three Things You'll Learn in This EpisodeHow authenticity boosts your marketing.How to look at yourself as a brand.Why do people need to relate to you?ResourcesLearn more about Colin SchindlerLearn more about David CaseyReal Estate Marketing DudeThe Listing Advocate (Earn more listings!)REMD on YouTubeREMD on InstagramTranscript:So how do you attract new business? You constantly don't have to chase it. Hi, I'm Mike Cuevas a real estate marketing. This podcast is all about building a strong personal brand people have come to know, like trust and most importantly, refer. But remember, it is not their job to remember what you do for a living. It's your job to remind them.Let's get started What's up ladies and gentlemen, welcome another episode of the real estate marketing dudepodcast. We got to return guests today and you might have seen him most recently. He just launched a viral video. I believe the title of it is called all the listings and as a blink 182 remix I mean I've tried a couple of music videos myself and I don't have a good voice by any means. And I just completely bombed on him but this fucking guy comes out does it was a legit music the the music sounded well it was good like it was it look, I would listen to that song. I would play it on the radio. So the sound was good. But the production was hands down like awesome. Like it was well worth the amount of time and energy I'm sure you put into that. So without further ado, we're gonna go ahead and welcome back the robed realtor Mr. Colin Schindler.Thank you, Mike. Appreciate you having me out again. And you know, kind of staying in touch the last couple of years been a crazy wild ride in between now and then and so it's great to be back in town. I'm gonna this music video.I'm going to tee up because you're on the show we were just talking about before we hopped on here you're on the show in May of 2020. And we'll get to the video in a second but what what were we talking about on this show guys is how to embrace your personal brand and screaming from the fucking rooftops quit overthinking. What are they going to think about me? Oh my God, should I really do that? Oh my god, some people might think that I'm unprofessional. Listen, guys, the entire world marketing is about grabbing your inner beast, the inner authenticity from within yourself and just let it rip. You know, have you ever noticed that? It's not the professional content that gets all the views? It's the funny shit. It's the entertainment stuff. It's the stuff that all has one thing in common and that is authenticity. So when you get in the business of content creation, it works when you're authentic regardless of it's funny if it's serious and resist or it's not because authenticity is the one thing you cannot outsource you cannot fake or anything so Colin, when you came on the show originally you weren't talking about this robed realtor. But now if you guys go to his Facebook page, which I highly suggest you should follow him on all your social channels. You have this concept of this robe realtor now who the hell is a robed realtor? What does that even mean? It doesn't matter. Go look at his branding. Colin, let's start with the robe realtor first because this ties into the viral video that you just released. So like, robed realtor, most people don't have the balls to do that. Walk me through it.Yeah, so you know, maybe you can put a link to the last show. You know, that we did originally when I was first out I was brand new agent seven months into the business. And you know, obviously wanted to stand out how do you compete with the veterans of the industry? How do you how do you gain attraction especially with everybody having something to sell? And using Facebook and Instagram as a personal promotion page? First and foremost, what what do I get to do to stand out so just kind of by happenstance, I pulled my bathrobe out and shot a my first transaction was a listing thankfully, I got very lucky there. Shot a listing video in my bathrobe sipping on coffee. Oh, thatwas your Topsis that was your first listingfirst listing first transaction first video and heand he rolls out in a robe like who does that? Nobody. But that's exactly why you're one of the top agents in not only state of Wisconsin but in the country with transaction counts right now. See this entire business is based upon popularity attention if you don't have attention, you don't have a business. All right, keep going. This is great.Yeah, so it is crazy to think about and see where it's transplant transpired. So brand new years and seven months and two years ago, so not even three full years in the business yet. One of the top 1.5 As far as transaction volume and it is solely because I broke that bathrobe out gathered a large large amount of tension. So I kind of fed off that and I kind of kept using that and developed it into my brand my persona of the road Realtor you know it people have stuck with it and it's been something that I've been able to leverage and you know, it's become my brand. I've been able to do other things. I haven't pigeon holed myself entirely into that. So I think I think that is very important. If you're brand too, if you are going to pick this image, this persona, niche is very important. But you don't want to be so specific that you're not still attracting people. So you don't want to be so specific that you're not doing something different anymore. So that is always kind of been where I've been at, you know, the road realtor doesn't necessarily just show up in the bathroom all the time. The road realtor is kind of this mysterious person where I always tell people, other agents, especially my goal with my videos, the content that I put out, when you see that thumbnail on my Instagram, or my Facebook, I literally want you to think, what the fuck is he doing next? Because that's what attracts the viewership, people aren't going to watch if you know, he's going to be in a bathrobe sitting in the bathtub, doing what happened. You know, we've seen this one 100 times before. It's something a little bit different every time and the road realtor is that it's kind of just a mysterious guy who's having fun in a bathrobe, or maybe something else.So what I like about it is that you're talking about your brand in third person, which is hard for many people. That's the number one reason like when we get somebody come in and we start working with somebody, nobody knows what the hell their brand is. And the reason for that, guys is because most of you don't look at yourself as a brand and understandably so like I look at myself as a dad, Father, follower, Christ. I likes the bears. But I don't realize that that's my brand. But when people like what he just said, right there, you guys are super important is that people first have to relate to you before they can ever do business with you first, but before they can relate to you or do business with you, they have to remember you. And if there's two people that I'm going to just come across, and I'm just going to think that just think of conversations I had 10 years ago, and I met two realtors, and one of them calls himself the role real robed realtor, the other one calls himself John Jones. Well, I'm sorry, the robed realtor has my attention. And attention is marketing. And in a popularity contest, like real estate, where 10 to 15% of the people who see your content are moving this year, and 100% of them have a referral for you. The game is very simple. And it's not theory. It's based upon mathematics. Colin just had a video that got what are you at 125,000 views right now.So there's two different versions, there's the Facebook version, and there's the Instagram version, I think both are around that 130,000 mark, so over a quarter million views betweenboth video and that's within like a two to three week timeframe. So I mean, if you guys really I know this is a local business, but statistically from those views, like I chase views, I don't care like views and engagement, you get more views with engagement, so they go hand in hand, but just do the numbers on that 10 to 15% of the people who see that video will be moving 100% of them have a referral. Now, not all 250,000 of them are going to be in Cowen's market, but it doesn't matter. Have you gotten calls from out of statemostly from other realtors. So that that, that 250,000 numbers is a you know, a community of you know, real estate professionals mostly. But as far as people who you know, I'm employed Wisconsin, South Central Wisconsin have my Illinois license as well. So I can service about an hour bubble. There's some really big metro areas, Madison Milwaukee that I'm able to take care of Rockford, Illinois, where people from around the United States do have folks that are looking in these areas. So while I was you know, I, it didn't necessarily, I mean, obviously hit my sphere of influence, like crazy. And it is one of those just, you know, extra things, you know, a piece of content that I was able to put out for my sphere to resonate with and laugh at. And, you know, it's good for this area. But now with having the referral network, yeah, it's gonna be well, and realtors literally around the country and, and even even, it's crazy, even the world I received a voice message from someone from Romania the other day, so it's, it's cool. And it's I haven't necessarily seen because this is pretty fresh. So I haven't been able to capture an ROI off office yet. But it certainly does not hurt to have other realtors knowing who you are, what you do, where you'rein that with any videos can be very difficult to determine that ROI. Because these people might, you might get on everybody's radar, but it might be six to 12 months until you see it. But the point is that you got on their radar first and that's what always pencils, and what always works. That is really, really cool. Now here I have a couple other questions for you. Because this is what people struggle with on a daily basis. They're always like, I want to go back to where you said this is the first video you put out. How do you overcome the fact that what are they going to say about me? How do you overcome the your own demons in your head? Because this is what this is what stops everyone from doing what you're doing? Everyone wants to be where you're at, but no one has the balls to get there or willing to put in the work to do it. Now if we rewind to his hear what he just got right here, folks. He was on the show two years ago, he was seven months in the road realtor didn't come out to probably about 18 months ago. Give or take, right? If you're on the show two years ago, realtor just came out just after that. So maybe maybe just under two years, almost. But yeah, two years to build a local brand is just like, I mean, that's great. But you only did because you're doing it differently. So how did you overcome that? Especially as a new realtor? That's the most impressive part. Most people think they have to be someone they're not when they start off in this profession, and you're like, No, I'm somebody I am. And you're gonna like me or not? How do you overcome that?So I guess for me, and I want to be honest and upfront for me it is it is a lot easier for me. I did plays and stuff as a little kid. I'm like a golden retriever. I love being around people I love you know, the pets and the you know, Pat's, and all that kind of stuff. So getting on camera and being in front of people or in front of the screen and having people see my face hear My voice isn't necessarily something that I've ever had the hurdle that I've had to jump over. So I've been lucky in that regard. What I would have to say, though, to folks, because I do think about this all the time, I consider myself a marketer. First and foremost marketer realtor psychologists like that is that is my order, that is my job description. So marketer first and foremost, and when I think about it with my marketing brain, and I do I truly want to help other people, overcome their fears, and help them get on video and whatnot. When I think about it from a marketing aspect, and all the things that you see on Facebook and Instagram, because like I said, it's a it's a platform for self promotion. And, you know, dog pictures and cat pictures, and all that memes and all that other kind of stuff. If you're afraid to hop on there, because of what people might think people are going to think that for a very, very short amount of time. They don't have the attention capacity to remember what you did, they're not going to laugh at you, because you stumbled over a couple of words. They're not going to remember it. Even releasing some viral videos that I've done. Like, they, they get lost in the background. But it is that cumulative effect. People remember that they saw my face. Yeah, people remember that I sell real estate. So just getting over that hurdle. Just realizing that people aren't gonna remember what you're saying, or how you're saying it or what you look like, if you had a little bit of toothpaste in the corner of your mouth. Like, there's still videos that I do, I do a live video, I'm like shit, like, I go back and watch it. And I'm like, I had like some tooth, I don't delete it or take it down. Because it's whatever. One because people don't catch it. Because they're too busy to people. If they do catch it, they're not going to remember. But the cumulative effect of the videos that I'm putting out, they know who I am, they know that I do real estate, they're gonna call me. So there's really no reason. If you are one of those people that are apprehensive about getting on camera, it doesn't matter. It just it matters that you are doing it and that you were there.Love it. Let's dial into this video. Blink 182 remix. First off, what does that tell you? About three, four minutes.Three, just under three minutes, just under three minutes able to get on tick tock and everything to sodid. How long did it take to create script and cost in any order you want.So first of all, I want to shout out amazing guys that helped me put it together like would not have been able to happen without my buddy Andy, Phil Matt, their production company AP, AP and M media. Because this has truly been an idea that I have had since I got in real estate. It's been this was truly a passion project. So it was it was really cool that I've met these guys within the last year. And some other people that made some of the other connections like being able to borrow a private jet, being able to utilize an airplane hangar for an afternoon. So very lucky to have been able to met these people that can make this thing happen in the last year. As far as writing the song, so it's been an idea for four years. Finally, like when I sat down and wrote the song. I was sipping on some bourbon and it may bethe best idea maybe.Yeah, you know, lucid, I've got the creative juices flowing a little bit, maybe took two hours to write a song, you know, and it's like the Pareto principle for the song and anything like 80% of it happened like that. It was that last 20% that you know, takes the hour and a half so sat down write it these guys are in a band as well. So they tracked it they recorded the song I think I spent a couple hours in their recording studio. That's your voice right? It is my voice it's definitely you know, Ben blink rate too, is layered and auto tuned and so I'm I am not a horrible singer. You know, I have my my range andmy stone I would listen to it on the radio, but yeah, Imean, it's it definitely. I'm not a bad singer either. And it helped to have them kind of cleaning up and stuff so and having all that professionally done made it the production It was, I don't even want to know how long they went in and edited and taken all that stuff. Because then the next aspect of it took about 12 and a half hours of shooting. So it was a fullone a one day, or do you guys do multiple isone day. And the video actually almost did not happen. So, you know, that's the other thing too. Like, I'm not some viral internet star. I mean, this video went viral. Yes, but I'm selling houses like, like we talked about, you know, I did 6770 transactions last year, another 35 or so this year, the video almost didn't happen. I almost cancelled it because I was flipping a condo selling a bunch of houses. And I was just I was just too overwhelmed. So they talked me back off the ledge. And I was like, okay, we can do this thing, but it has to happen in one day. So yeah, the 12 and a half hour day of shooting and,and it was a total cost.So I promised the guys I wouldn't really talk too much about costs. One of the things that I am going to say though, is if you are looking to do something like this, you know, definitely find and leverage people that are your friends that can make it happen. They were when I met these guys and told them about my dream, they like all pulled up like a sleeve, like on their shirt or like their leg and like they'll blink ray to tattoos. Like they are absolutely obsessed. So it was a passion project for them as well. So, literally, you know, I would say that I got a really good deal. I pay pennies on the dollar for this because I mean, it's it's a 10s of 1000s of dollar production. Yeah, it's probablyyou could like you could that's probably a five to 10 Yeah, 10,000 approach on a budget. And a lot of times people were like, oh, and I get this all the time, like, oh, what's my ROI gonna be I'm not going to spend money on video of people who are scared to spend $300 on a video. But the What happens though, it's not more content that people that that do it. It's more impact the content you create makes. And a lot of people will come in our candidate Cory ball, who real estate marketing do we want you guys to do we want to do eight videos a month, I'm like, one, you'll never do that consistently to your burnout. And three, it's going to be boring to shit. It's not more content, I would much rather have one viral video than 40 videos. It's the impact that your content makes guys that really generates the attention. So it makes sense to go all in on a video like that because it pencils it makes sense. But people always think that hey, I'm just gonna go get on video because my real estate coach told me to go get video and check a box doesn't work that way falls on deaf ears unless you really dial in your message, your brand, your persona, and more importantly your authenticity. I love that dude, that's really really cool. What are you planning on doing next? And how much content are you creating a month with like rode realtor? Because you can't do one of these once a month? It's way too much. So what are you doing? What do you How is your normal monthly robed realtor marketing plan work?Yeah, so I guess as far as what's next for me, I'm still waiting for you know, Mark compass, or Travis Barker or Tom DeLonge to reach out and collab on something. So if anybody knows them, that's listening. Let's let's get them in touch. Now, so I would like to do something like this and let you know because it was fun. Like I said, Truly a passion project the the virality of it was a cool extra bonus for sure. So I would like to do something like this probably, you know, once a quarter or once a year I'm doing something this fun, this level of production quality. Other than that, as far as other videos, because because it really is about the consistency it is like you said the impact of the video is the most important thing. So doing my listings and again, like it doesn't have to be some crazy, super expensive production. You want it to be quality, you want it to be different you want your brand and you to stand out when you're doing these things, but you know, just getting in front of the camera. So I do a video walkthrough for all my listings and I do try and incorporate a flash of who I am, you know, whether it's shot, I've shot them beers on the porches, I've, you know, played played the drums and you know, just kind of doing goofy different stuff. So, continuing to do that for my listings. I've been very lucky to have a nice steady stream of listings. That's all the leverage thatthat provides the platform for consistency right there like I was doing Brad McCallum I think that's Brad's name brand apologist by all right, alright, McCallum so I had Brett, he Brad's on the show. And his whole video strategy is just the listings, and he's just really good on video. He doesn't he's not going out. It's just when he gets listings. He does a video but he's so him. His wife are so good at capturing attention. And I see that with a lot of yours. You guys don't have to overthink this whole thing. You know, it's a lot simpler than you think if you everything you guys do is content. Right? I mean, it's all content that I seen one where you were like in a listing if I recall and you're in a bath have, like sort of, like just relaxing in the robe. And then you're just that was like the intro, I believe. But I just remember the robe Realtor in the bathtub, like being a realtor. And then that's what I remember of that listing video, which is I just made that connection. that's top of mind guys.Yep. Top of Mind. And then, you know, it's like, well, what if I'm not getting listings? I don't I don't have any listings. That's, that's great. But I work mostly with buyers, right? Do this, okay, then, you know, I also try and do a market Monday update, you know, I need to be better about it. But getting on every Monday doing a live video talking about what's going out of the market, or things that I have coming up that I'm excited about, you know, and you do like, you have to talk about yourself, you have to brag about yourself a little bit, you know, you've got to be in front of people. So, getting a couple of pieces of content out a week, especially video is kind of Pinnacle, in what I'm trying to continue to do. And then you had that boy buzz recommendation the the last time that I forgot about that. That's cool. Yes, you know, sitting down, you know, just different stuff because everything is the same. So sitting down with local business owners talking about what they do talking about the community. I'll be bringing that back here soon toyou're going to do it in a robe.Probably not let us unless it's an establishment that warrants robe I actually did one last year at a medical grade esthetics is when they do facial facial treatments and stuff. And I was I was in my room for that one and I got a cucumber mask treatment, charcoal something or another. So yeah, if the business warrants the robe, that'll be there. But I wasI could I just picture this like kind of Billboard i 94, from Illinois to Wisconsin and Yoona robes because a lot more lacks relaxing north of the border.I like it. I like it. But I, I've looked into billboards, and I don't know whether I want a billboard for you know, an actual marketing and ROI return or whether there might be like a little bit of ego kind of involved there. You know, like, look at me on a billboard, I, I truly you need you need to spend money in your business agents, it's important. Like, you have to spend money to make money if you want to get to the top. But I'm also try, I try and be pretty lean with with some of that spending as well. And especially if you can create this sphere of people, which is the most important aspect of your business, you talk about it on your show all the time, you know, remind these people, you can do that organically, for free, and people will become your biggest advocates and share and tell people about you. Say I, maybe maybe you'll see me on a billboard the next time here.Do you buy any leads? On all your sources of business? What do you attribute it to? 60 To 70 transactions. So you don't have a team? It's just you and I believe your girlfriend, right?Fiance now Yonsei, congratulations. Thank you. Thank you. We brought I brought her on this year to help kind of run the administrative stuff in the background. But yeah, it's just been me up until this point. That'sa lot of transactions, guys. 60 To 7030 to 40 is a lot for an individual agent. Like a lot. I mean, that's a lot of it. That's a lot of work. You're busy, you're busy.It's a hassle. It's a 24/7 thing, but you're very lucky to be I'm very lucky to get to do what I do. I'm very passionate about it. It is a career and a hobby for me. So yeah, but yeah, most of that business is coming from my sphere of influence from people who know me and see me, I do pay for some leads here and there. Because I do believe in versus diversifying. I don't want to get wrapped around but I got I got the Zillow but a very minimal budget in a you know, for me it is more to stay, you know, to appear in search results and things like that. And yeah, but the couple calls that I get here and there maybe they turn into something, maybe they don't, but it is just one extra platform that I kind of, I feel like you're gonna be involved inone of the things I hear all the time is all my database already knows what I'm doing. I'm already doing as much as I can on my job is trust me, I'm getting the most amount of business out of my database. People tell me that all the time. And I go, Okay, how many transactions you do last year to be like 20? Like how many Facebook friends you have, like 1500 ago, dude, you got cheated on like 40 times last year? Absolutely not. You're not generating enough. None of us are guys. Like you got to embrace that because every single person knows someone that could refer you to each year on your Facebook friend list. And if you have 1000 friends and you didn't get 1000 referrals will tell you that not everyone knows what the hell you do for a living.Absolutely. And it goes back and it's attributed to kind of what we were talking about before. What I said before is people don't remember the space is so crowded and you talk about all the time they don't mean to cheat on you. It's just that other people flooded their their view space with their information, their content and now their their care,their attention. Everyone's fighting for the same thing without attention. You will never attract but also without content you'll never build a brand and if you never build a brand you're just a salesperson chasing another check. You can't run a business without it. That's how important content creation is becoming in real estate it's everything because you really care what doesn't matter are you getting hired because of your brokerage or you get hired because youhire because of me? Yeah, you know, I'm I'm not not taking anything away from my brokerage I wouldn't be able to do the things that I've been able to do without the amazing people I have around me. But yeah, it's it's it's me they they want to work with me which is you know, kind of one of the reasons why I love doing the solo agent thing. People are I built my brand my business on me being me and working with directly with with my clients. So it'd be hard to kind of pass that off to somebody elseso awesome dude. Super pumped to see all your success. It's been awesome to watch you grow. I see you on social all the time. If I don't comment a lot, I see you a lot of people see you just know that and keep doing what you're doing, man. What else anything else you want to add on here? I think I got everything I wanted to get out of you today. But what else you want to share with the audience here?Yeah, man, I, I just want people to know, like, again, I'm super appreciative of like what I get to do and if you're not doing it from a place of appreciation, you're not going to be successful. Anyway, if you do have the I'm firm believer that if you have ill intentions like you might do it and make it happen for a little while but you got to be humbled by what you do, you got to enjoy you got to appreciate it, we got to understand that it's not just you doing either it is i i do take a lot of pride in what I do and what I've been able to create. But I also understand that I wouldn't be where I am without the people that I've had around me to help me out that can make it happen. So I don't know anything about editing videos I don't really know anything about editing scripts I'm very fortunate where they kind of just come to me it my brain is more wired in that way. But if you're not doing video and you're not doing it because like you don't know what to say and you're you're just not wired that way then here's my point of view and like last point that I want to say is get you a real estate marketing Dude get you the people around you that you need to have to accomplish your goals because you can't do it alone.And there's another bit of wisdom and you might be too young in your career even know this yet but I will tell you every single agent I've ever come across as I've had four brokerages, three teams I've coached trained hundreds of agents we have millions of people on this podcast what a what never changes whenever changes on any of this shit is where business always always comes from but every single agent who starts making money it's usually around the three to five year mark telling you it happened to me my head blew up so damn big when I was making 50 100 grand a month 120 grand a month back in the day your head grows so big don't let that shit get to your head because what happens when you start creating content you start doing well like oh I don't need that video anymore. I don't need that thing anymore. And that's what happened to Colin he's busy I'm doing 70 Fucking deals on beer I don't have time to go out and do this video. What if you didn't do that video you know what I mean? Be humble you guys you guys will get you will make money in this business but when you do be grateful for it and don't start getting that ego because those are the agents and then they always fall on their face. I was one of them. I could tell you guys from firsthand experience I used to make millions of dollars and I fucking lost it all and went bankrupt and I built myself back up. So I will tell you guys that everyone goes through the ego what he just said was probably the best advice on this whole podcast and those of you that are in that three to five year timeframe right now when you're starting to get that ego Oh my shit don't stink anymore. Watch out. We're gonna shift your thinking your shit is gonna stink really quick. All right, so that was great advice. Love that thank you so much for sharing that caller wants to give everyone a plug. If you guys have any southern Wisconsin business you want someone to take good care of them and make you look at your buck and Rockstar give the Colin your referral business com Go ahead and tell everyone how they can follow you reach you and whatnot.Absolutely thank you for that. Also Northern Illinois so anywhere in Northern Illinois, I can help them as well they are licensed in both states. So if you guys are looking to connect if you want to send some business my way I'd love to take care of them and have fun with your clients. I would also love to talk to you about what I do if you have any questions you know you got a resource like Mike and I want to be a resource and help other people like they've helped me so check me out on Instagram at robed realtor and that's our OB e d r e a l t o r find me on Facebook and Instagram there find me on Tik Tok as well not as active there. Or you know look me up on Facebook Colin Schindler let's calm with one owl shoot me a friend request send me a message and let's connect.Love it dude. Love it. Love it. Love it. Love it. Thank you guys for listening to another episode of estate marketing dude podcast folks, let us help you script and distribute your videos and if you want short form content, we just released that too. Whether you're doing long form videos and trying to rank on YouTube or you're creating short form videos for Tik Tok reels, and all the other things that you want to do. If it's on video, we can do it and we can do it really fucking Well, so call a dude now at www dot real estate market to do.com real estate market to do.com Thanks for listening and we'll see you guys next week peace. Thank you for watching another episode of the real estate marketing dude podcast. If you need help with video or finding out what your brand is, visit our website at WWW dot real estate marketing dude.com We make branding video content creation simple and do everything for you. So if you have any additional questions, visit the site, download the training, and then schedule time to speak with a dude and get you rolling in your local marketplace. Thanks for watching another episode of the podcast. We'll see you next time.
-TBS debacle-Rise in covid cases + Yoon to stop daily briefings for a while + new measures being mulled-Yonsei grad student suing cleaners for disrupting studies, but law school students giving pro bono services-TBS 논란-코로나 확진자 증가 + 윤 대통령 도어스테핑 중지 + 새로운 방법 찾기-연세대 학생 고소에 선배 법조인들 나서 "로스쿨 준비에 방해"Guest: Raphael Rashid, Foreign Journalist based in Seoul, Hyunsu Yim, local media Korea HeraldSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Lynching in Hawaiʻi--it's true, and few people even know it happened. Itʻs part of the weighty legacy we carry from plantation days in the islands. Thanks for sitting in on this episode with a lot of angles. 1889 seems so long ago, but this recent visit with Patsy Iwasaki reminds me that the famines, migrations, and worker exploitation we see around the world today happened before. Here. University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo professor Patsy Iwasaki has been studying Katsu Gotoʻs little known lynching for over 30 years. Weʻll head to Honokaʻa to meet her at the site of the crime. Goto's murder was a hate crime, meant to frighten plantation workers. Those workers began to organize and had sons and daughters who remembered their upbringing on the plantations. Former legislator, labor lawyer Dwight Takamine paints an inside picture of how protections for workers in Hawaiʻi began to take shape after the Democratic revolution in 1954 and statehood in '59. Struggling for equal rights is the way immigrants help shape the U.S. justice system. Asians have had a hand in that, from the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882 through Japanese incarceration during WWII. This history of discrimination, then validation in the courts may not continue, but it is our story. As accompaniment and counterpoint to the stories above, the musical through line this week is an exploration of identity by hyphenated Americans living in Hawaiʻi. Nick Kurosawa and Ohtoro chart facets of the immigrant experience in their recording, Yonsei. They reflect on the alienation that persists for non-white Americans. Yonsei means fourth generation. Music List Nick Kurosawa + Ohtoro. Yonsei. Yonsei (Generation I & II) https://zenburecords.bandcamp.com/album/yonsei Nick Kurosawa + Ohtoro. Yonsei. Downhill (with Maxmo & Neal Chin) https://zenburecords.bandcamp.com/album/yonsei Nick Kurosawa + Ohtoro. Yonsei. So Called Theory with Illis It https://zenburecords.bandcamp.com/album/yonsei Nick Kurosawa + Ohtoro. Yonsei. Plantated https://zenburecords.bandcamp.com/album/yonsei Zachtoro. Paradiseʻs Revenge INSTRUMENTALS. Are You Not Amused? https://zenburecords.bandcamp.com/album/paradises-revenge-instrumentals Ohtoro. Kumamoto LP. Farmer and Samurai with Cookie and Nicholas Kaleikini. https://zenburecords.bandcamp.com/album/kumamoto-lp Nick Kurosawa + Ohtoro. Yonsei. Tumult the Day https://zenburecords.bandcamp.com/album/yonsei
Today we have Nikiko Masumoto on the show. Masumoto is an organic farmer, memory keeper, and artist. She is Yonsei, a fourth generation Japanese American, and gets to touch the same soil her great-grandparents worked in California where Masumoto Family Farm grows organic nectarines, apricots, peaches and grapes for raisins. With her family, she’s co-authored 2 books: Changing Season and The Perfect Peach. She activates her facilitation, leadership, and creative skills as a performer and leader in the following organizations: co-founder of Yonsei Memory Project, team member of Center for Performance and Civic Practice, member of University Advisory Board (CSU Fresno) board of Trustees of Western States Arts Federation, board of directors of Art of the Rural, and perennial volunteer change-worker. In 2020, she was named one of the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts 100 and Creative 10. Her most cherished value is courage and most important practice is listening. I hope you enjoy this wonderful conversation with one of the valley’s treasured artists and next generation of farmers. Books: We discuss so many books this episode, so you'll just need to listen! Links: Masumoto Family Farm Website
As a farewell to the calendar year that has been, and a welcome/seeding for the new year that will be, I am joined by seed person and agent of growing transformational change - Kellee Matsushita-Tseng. Known as Brave New Seed online, Kellee is a Yonsei (fourth generation) queer, Japanese-Chinese American, as well as the farm-garden assistant manager at the UC Santa Cruz Center for AgroEcology, and a member of the seed research and growing collective Second Generation Seeds, which specializes in seeds of the Asian Diaspora. Kellee's work focuses on sharing, education, and building a movement towards seed sovereignty as a means of cultivating community health and working for collective liberation. Kellee serves on the board of directors at the National Young Farmers Coalition and also organizes with the Asian American Farmers Alliance. Her leadership voice is one of clarity, integrity, and communal intention for a new year - and growing the world we want to live in. Cultivating Place now has a donate button! We thank you so much for listening over the years and we hope you'll support Cultivating Place. We can't thank you enough for making it possible for this young program to grow even more of these types of conversations. The show is available as a podcast on SoundCloud, iTunes, Google Podcast, and Stitcher. To read more and for many more photos please visit www.cultivatingplace.com.
ช่วงนี้ไม่มีซีรีส์เรื่องไหนจะเจอกระแสแรงกว่า Snowdrop ที่เจอกระแสวิจารณ์อย่างหนักเรียกร้องให้แบนและยกเลิกออกอากาศในเกาหลีใต้พร้อมมีการลงนามเกิน 300,000 คนไปแล้ว ลองมาดูกันว่าเกิดอะไรขึ้นบ้าง ทำไมคนเกาหลีถึงอยากแบนสไนว์ดร็อป และทำไมคนเกาหลีถึงหวงแหนประชาธิปไตยมากขนาดนี้ อ้างอิงข้อมูลจาก * http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20210412000862 * https://www.allkpop.com/article/2021/03/the-story-of-the-real-life-student-protestor-chun-young-cho-who-inspired-jisoos-character-young-cho-in-snow-drop-garners-attention-in-midst-of-drama-boycott * https://www.soompi.com/article/1461271wpp/jtbc-releases-statement-about-upcoming-drama-snowdrop-denying-suspicions-of-historical-distortion * https://www.soompi.com/article/1461807wpp/jtbc-releases-new-statement-denying-possibility-of-historical-distortion-in-upcoming-drama-snowdrop * https://www.allkpop.com/article/2021/07/blue-house-responds-to-petition-to-cancel-upcoming-jtbc-drama-snowdrop * https://www.allkpop.com/article/2021/07/jtbc-drama-snowdrop-has-reportedly-completed-all-filming * https://zapzee.net/2021/12/16/snowdrop-director-stress-that-the-drama-is-about-love-between-a-man-and-a-woman-not-political-ideology/ * https://www.dispatch.co.kr/2179300 * https://www.koreaboo.com/news/petition-stop-broadcast-snowdrop-gains-200000-signatures/?fbclid=IwAR2Z1eqdrNsZoJCRwyh-JiMZssuZZTiL0LIhwIHLPjBuuTrugsKxNsrwIGg * https://www.soompi.com/article/1504834wpp/jtbc-releases-new-statement-regarding-snowdrop-controversy-over-alleged-historical-distortion * http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20211220000633&np=1&mp=1 * https://www.chosun.com/culture-life/broadcast-media/2021/12/19/TMUKSWPIFJD33HCHLEXF4WHLGY/ * https://www.koreaboo.com/news/snowdrop-writer-backlash-character-inspiration/ * https://www.soompi.com/article/1504834wpp/jtbc-releases-new-statement-regarding-snowdrop-controversy-over-alleged-historical-distortion * http://eng.518.org/ * https://www.britannica.com/event/Kwangju-Uprising * http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/752055.stm * https://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/2017/01/12/socialAffairs/30-years-on-sons-murder-still-haunts-family/3028599.html * https://www.nytimes.com/1987/01/31/world/seoul-student-s-torture-death-changes-political-landscape.html * https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-07-06-mn-1311-story.html * https://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/2005/06/28/features/Yonsei-students-ultimate-sacrifice-gets-due-tribute/2587024.html * https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pRVSS7xP6A4
In October 2021, six artists were juried into Centrum’s Emerging Artist Residency and received stipends, housing, and studio space for one month at Fort Worden State Park. Artists paired up towards the end of their residencies to chat with one another about what they were working on and thinking about after weeks of being in residence. Mel Carter and Woodrow Hunt kick off this series and chat about the ways that expectations changed because of the location and openness of the residency. They share thoughts on the history of the Fort as it relates to colonization and the ongoing stories that are unfolding and full of potential. Carter and Hunt discuss the ways that research and daily practice connect them to experiments and research into liquid spells, healing medicines, and tattoo practices specific to their cultural ancestries. Mel Carter Mel Carter is a Yonsei (fourth generation) Japanese American and non-binary femme based in Seattle on Coast Salish and Duwamish lands. Experiences within the Japanese diaspora, queerness, exploration in modern witchcraft, rituals, and mythology inform their art practice, working in tandem with waste reduction and environmental justice in the cultural context of the Pacific Northwest. Dropping through actions of the everyday mundane and focusing on the inherently magical properties of domestic spheres, their work is influenced by marine ecosystems, elements from fables, and traditional Japanese imagery. With a refusal to work within a specified medium, impermanent materials for mortality like food and plants are often used combined with elements of sculpture, garments, and textiles within a performance or installation. Woodrow Hunt Woodrow Hunt is an artist of Klamath, Modoc and Cherokee descent. Woodrow was born and raised in Portland, OR where he is currently making work. Woodrow’s film practice is focused on documentary and experimental forms. His experimental work explores the functions and relationship between digital video and memory and the ways digital video can communicate issues related to the Native community. His film production company, Tule Films, provides video services to Tribes, Native businesses and organizations, or to projects which collaborate directly with the Native community; many of which are focused on education. His films have screened at the Portland International Film Festival, Ann Arbor Film Festival and other festivals internationally including his most recent screening at MoMA DocFortnight 2021. His work has been included in the ArtForum print article “Artists’ Artists 2020,” the Boston Art Review, and Hyperallergic’s online articles about COUSIN Collective. Woodrow and his creative collaborator Olivia Camfield (Mvskoke Creek) are featured artists of COUSIN Collective.
This week on Everywhere Radio, Whitney welcomes Nikiko Masumoto, organic farmer, memory keeper, and artist. Nikiko is Yonsei, a fourth-generation Japanese American, and works the same soil her great-grandparents worked in California. In an agricultural world where 86 percent of farmers are men, most landowners are white, and few are queer, she employs art and creativity to access her power as an organic farmer. Whitney and Nikiko discuss making art, family history, farming, and seeking wholeness rather than perfection.
Nikiko Masumoto (she/her) is an organic farmer, memory keeper, and artist. She is Yonsei, a fourth-generation Japanese American, and gets to touch the same soil her great-grandparents worked in California where Masumoto Family Farm grows organic nectarines, apricots, peaches, and grapes for raisins. She activates her facilitation, leadership, and creative skills as a performer and leader in the following organizations: co-founder of Yonsei Memory Project, team member of Center for Performance and Civic Practice re-imagining group, member of University Advisory Board (CSU Fresno) board of Trustees of Western States Arts Federation, board of directors of Art of the Rural, and perennial volunteer change-worker. In 2020, she was named one of the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts 100 and Creative 10. Her most cherished value is courage and most important practice is listening. Youtube 5 Song Playlist --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/staysuckafree/support
Dorrie is a holistic lifestyle coach and animal communicator/healer based in Auckland, New Zealand. She has a background in sports, beauty therapy, therapeutic massage, reconnective healing, astrology, NLP, EFT, Reiki, Zen, Tai Chi, Kempo and Qigong. She is certified Ren Xue and Yuan Qigong instructor and a gifted Qi therapist. Today's interview is centered around her participation in the documentary "Already Free". Brandon Handley 0:41 4321 Hey, there's spiritual dope. I'm on today with Dorrie Van Roij-Houtappels helped me outdoors. Do you? You got you got Dorrie. Okay. And then. So Dorrie comes Dorrie comes to us by way of a documentary called already free. And this documentary follows both theory. And there's other gentlemen, Norbert no barito. Who they, they, they came together through like, transformative transformative practice of Qigong. And you know, throughout the decade long a practice of this practice in the wrenches system, Dori was able to come to a place of you can say enlightenment, or this kind of awakening. And this is a practice that you've been doing door has been doing for over 10 years now. And it's currently has her own practice offers one Gong classes, and works one on one as a holistic lifestyle coach. And you know, you're out there to inspire people talk a little bit earlier, and women in particular are is one of the you know, that's an area that you're highly focused in right now. And we've been trying to get together now for what three, four months story is exactly. This big thanks for being on the podcast that you're in New Zealand, it's 9am there on Sunday. And I appreciate you waking up to do this today. Dorrie 2:17 Well, I'm very happy to be here, finally. And to really to spend some time together. So I look forward to this as a Brandon Handley 2:25 thank you. So you just say checked out a podcast or two and some of the stuff that goes on. So you may have heard the question you may not have, I like to start us off with the whole idea that we You and I are vessels for, you know, universal creative energy, and it flows through us and to somebody else, like for great meetings. So the idea is that somebody is going to be listening to this podcast today. And there's a message that can be delivered only through you only right now and to that person, what would you say that messages or Dorrie 3:02 that you truly can believe in yourself? And that you, you can find yourself? Because I think that is what we all are doing here on earth? We are really looking for the truth. The true you, isn't it? Who am I? Who am I really and I think that when you look at that, that you really can find yourself. So just not giving up? I'm looking for the ways what? What is beneficial for you to find yourself. Because if I can do it, then you can do it too, because we all are humans. Brandon Handley 3:40 with that. I mean, it's I love I love the message. And you know if you could clarify what you mean, right? What does it mean to find yourself and you know, what did you What have you discovered? about who you are? Dorrie 3:54 Huh? Yes? That's a good question. And of course, a very big question. But for me, when you look at my history in my life, it sometimes hasn't been that easy. And I think we all have our life story. And we all have our challenges to go through life. But what if the biggest challenge would become your biggest treasure in life? And so, what I always ask people is to look deeper and to look in a broader way to life to understand life better. And with that, I mean, it is that we are really feeling and that we think that it is reality at this moment what we are doing but the question is, is it that way? Is that what you think that you are? Is that reality? Or is there maybe a deeper you somebody who is really connected Did with everything I mean, without who is connected with nature, who is truly connected with all the human beings who really feels at home within themselves, and who truly feel what you say in the beginning that creativity, because that is what I, what I have experienced, and also how I've been learned all the information that that person is always there. But you are not aware of that person yet. And so that person, why can't you see that yet? It was because, yeah, we are more running alive with a lot of patterns. And so what are, yeah, I can go deeper. And that may be later I think that too, truly find behind the habitual ways of thinking what you are now doing in your life, to find behind there, your heart, for example, with all the beautiful qualities, which can steer you through life, that has, that can have a great impact on your life, which it also did for me. Brandon Handley 6:19 Now, that's definitely a lot of great stuff in there, right? Feeling feel, especially feeling at home with yourself, as you're mentioning, the idea of the creativity finding this way through, you know, kind of your own internal creative devices. And then the idea that the real you is always there. So let's talk a little bit about that as as, as we as we kind of go through these different layers and your journey there. And I think that where we want to start off with is a little bit about the documentary, right? And what is the what is the where to go the system, right? The the Qigong system that you went through the the ranchu system, right, and how you got involved with that, why you got involved with it, and kind of where that led to for you. Dorrie 7:13 is unbelievably cheap. Would you like me to start with? Well, Brandon Handley 7:16 I mean, so you got involved with the, you know, the ranchu system? What led you there? And what is that? Dorrie 7:23 Yes, well, as you probably also can hear how I speak English. It's not my first language. So I'm coming from the Netherlands. And we emigrated I say, we that is my husband and two children, then they were still at the age from what is it four and six. And we emigrated now 13 years ago to New Zealand. And I really got drawn to this country here in New Zealand. Because of just a feeling what I felt I thought all that nature and it is so so you know what, I just got drawn to it. And also for the children one thing for them to grow up in a more natural way as as being in a very busy country from the Netherlands. And so we went to New Zealand and I so I, I already did their healing work, I did more animal healing, and also for people. And I was looking for a way for myself to relax more to find something nice for me to do in my free time. And suddenly, I just found somebody who was actually growing vegetables and the vegetables at that place. They tasted so beautiful. I never had this that's such a beautiful fetch the boats and I told her, I said, Oh, that is so amazing. Wow, what is that? What kind of secret are you using? And then she said, Yes. Well, when I'm gonna tell you that about it. You're gonna be surprised. And I thought Oh, really? Yes. She said it is undo when she gone. She said, I said Oh, really? Well, I know what she gone was because I did that a little bit in the Netherlands already. So and she Gong is a form. Well, most of the time when I explain it to people, it is Tai Chi. And most of the people are aware what it is. But actually Tai Chi comes from Shi Gong, it's a very old form what we use in in China, China. For movements, we use movements, breathing techniques. But there's it more. You use the hands with it. And yeah, all kinds of things are kind of meditations moving mad at Asian. And so that is what she did there at that moment that apparently she used that also to grow her vegetables with. That was really very interesting, of course for me, so I thought I'd give this a try. Well, that's how my journey there started. And I must say, although I did healing work, I find myself sometimes not in really the best state. And, and even with doing she gone, I noticed when I do it, that she gone in the beginning that I immediately already felt a lot better. That was also very strange for me that I could feel the results over so quick. And so when I was doing the, the sheet wrong, I still had the feeling that I yeah, how do I say that? That I still? I was in a good state, and then I went home, and then my state dropped again. Yeah, and especially when you have little children? I you must be actually in a good state, isn't it? Because they, yeah, they Brandon Handley 11:12 do real quick, if you don't mind what you what do you mean by not in the best date? Like just Dorrie 11:17 yeah. So what what is what is actually a normal state, a normal state is when you are relaxed, calm and natural. And so for me, that is that is normal, there is no other state. And that may be seems now for you, then strange. But when you are going to learn about this, then you then you understand that that's, I think the way you've been brought up that you have learned that it is normal to be angry, it's normal to be very sad, or whatever, because we do have our emotions. And then I now I have learned, yes, of course, we are all human beings. But the question is, do we really have to do that? Maybe we can develop ourselves and grow. So that we learn and that we don't have to do this anymore? And that we can stay in a normal state what I say in a calm, relaxed and natural way. And that it's really possible. Brandon Handley 12:23 It is that where you your your your quote, unquote, normal state was, you know, you would still have anger, was there depression involved as well? Was your normal state is low, would you just say you were kind of in your normal state was low and you you were doing the Qigong. And while you're doing Qigong, you were able to not feel that way you were able to feel this sense of calm that you're talking about this normalization of feelings. Whereas as soon as you stopped it, then you would go right back to the not the best state that you were talking about. Dorrie 13:04 While it is not that that every time is the same, of course, sometime you stay long in that state. Yes, it is that you you notice that when you are doing the Shi Gong, that immediately your whole energy level goes up. And that you can feel very calm and really very relaxed, and you're in beautiful states. And so that is of course, very nice. But and that I think that is also for other modalities when I look at a yoga. So a lot of mothers Tell me when I do the yoga, it's very nice, but then I lose my good state again. Well, that is exactly where their Rancho system comes up. So, we are talking about doing she Gong, but that is not all that is not what what makes it that you reach the state that you go to that state. It's not about reaching, it is about just going there. And so, the rain shoe system, it is really a holistic system. So what do you do there, you learn what your mind is doing the whole day. You learn how to, to find other ways to get yourself back into balance. You learn about nature, because nature is very important to go to that state. We are not so much connected anymore with nature in this ever fast going world. So learning about nature, about the rules from nature, I think that's also important. And then so you learn about your heart. You learn what it is to have an open heart And so the founder from the system, that's young say. And so the, the, he talks about having the five heart qualities. And here we are talking about openness, trust, openness, love, gratitude, and utmost respect and gorging. And so you learn about these qualities. So and so there are nine methods in this holistic system, which is really a lot. So you have the the moving meditations, you have stillness. So you do still practice where you stand still, where you learn to focus, where you learn to be quiet. And then so learning about your mind with this presence, learning with the heart, learning to, to be in the present moment. And so that is all coming together. And you know, one person needs more this one person needs more depth. But I've never seen an holistic system, but it's so broad, what brings it all together to reach higher realization, wisdom and growth. Unknown Speaker 16:19 And Brandon Handley 16:22 so you've got your five heart qualities, you've got your methodology, where Now where was the system developed? Or are you able to share that? Dorrie 16:30 Yes, so the Shi Gong, the first basic information, what Yonsei has, it comes all from China. And it has its its roots from traditional wisdom. And you can think about that wisdom, kung fu wisdom, the Buddhism, the martial arts, yeah. And so there is all that that foundation, but when Yonsei came to New Zealand, so he emigrated from China, to New Zealand, he figured out by traveling also, through all the places also in America and Europe, that people need that they're a different system, and that he really wanted to, to put all the tools in there, what we, as Western people really can good can understand. And so that is when he developed here, the young Gong system here in New Zealand, with these nine methods. Brandon Handley 17:30 Okay. And so I got, you know, my guesses then, like, these are, you know, sounds corny to say ancient Chinese wisdoms, right, but like, these ancient Chinese wisdoms that he has put into place, in a holistic system, right. So it's not just a Chee Gong, there's other pieces and involved in it, and he's put it all together to have a complete system Dorrie 17:54 is, and that is also what you really will feel if you're going to practice it, because I have really done quite some other practices in my life before that, I started this, but I, you know, you every time have questions about life, and so I did one thing and then I had questions, and then I went to the other system, and then I again, other questions came up, and I hoped like that, but when I finally found this system, I really got all the answers that I have in life. And that was so unique. And so, every aspect of life we are talking about. So that is also where you can say teach us about it can be death, it can be about, for example, the COVID. Now, it can be your physical health, it can be anything. And so having there abroad or look with somebody who has reached such a high level of wisdom, it's really interesting to Yeah, for your own growth in life. Brandon Handley 19:01 Were you able to work with him in person? Dorrie 19:05 Yes, awesome. Yeah, no, Brandon Handley 19:07 I think that's, you know, that's highly beneficial. Right. So there's lots of systems online, that you have access to in terms of with a lot of like, even yoga practices or other meditation practices. But the idea of having that person in person with you, and not just online, I think that makes a very big difference. Dorrie 19:29 Um, well, I agree. I did that also, in the one I've stated before the COVID. I felt that and so we all went to retreat from him. And so before the, for example, the teacher training that was every year, two weeks, that we all gathered together, and then in the meantime, we could see until but through the COVID we have learned that it actually isn't the problem because if feeders are live streaming the information, what comes from there, through the whole community, what is built very strongly will receive them also this information. And I think that you, you can make shifts very easily being together, what we call the key and the key field, if that makes sense. I Brandon Handley 20:23 think I think that, uh, there's, there's a, there's that element of trust, and everybody kind of focused at the same time on the same thing, and together, you know, to create or be immersed in that field together. So I think that that that certainly makes sense to me. You've mentioned that some of some of your biggest questions were answered, right? What was like, what's an example of one or two of the big questions that were answered? Some question is, it's very important that your vegetables taste differently to. Dorrie 21:00 Yes, so I learned to grow my vegetables in the way that that lady did. And yes, you can really taste it. And it is with anything that you do in life when you learn to put a chip in it, so that is the energy and it and the mind into it, then your whole meal, what you're cooking for the day can taste completely different and, and that are so many other things that you asked me my questions about life, it certainly had to do about death. That I felt that because I've always been very intrigued in in that are always in my life from a very young age. And so I got there the confirmation that, that it was the way I was feeling about death. And, and now I truly also can feel that after I've made this last bigger step, I don't know how to explain it differently, I must say. Brandon Handley 22:04 Would you say that that the it's a shift, right? Would you say that the place that you're at now is just simply a shift from where you were before? Not necessarily different, but different, right? I mean, it's it's really hard to kind of put in the terms. I was the Buddhist line or Buddhism line I don't know if it's true or not, but you know, before enlightenment, chop wood carry water after enlightenment, chop wood carry water. Right. So but there's wood you there's just a different quality to life, which is Dorrie 22:43 Yes, it is. So yeah, on the one hand, we can say there is nothing special. But on the other hand, yes, it truly is special and why is it special? Because I'm everyday in a good state. And every moment of the day in a good state. Well, that was not something what I could say that I was what you mentioned, of depression, not feeling sometimes really deeply alone in life. And now feeling the feeling that I always feel in a good and an uplifted state and I'm very content and harmonious inside myself. I think that is on the one hand truly a miracle. And to and but on the other hand, yes I am just me so there is nothing special. Brandon Handley 23:36 Dori how long what you know how long did it take you to a recognize that that space was available for you? And then the How long did it take you to maintain that state of being? Dorrie 23:53 Well, to maintain I still I still am the same. So it is still my state like that since that it happened. So not nothing has changed. Only my life has more depth now though Brandon Handley 24:07 when So when did you have that realization for yourself? Like how long a doctor practicing that she gone? Dorrie 24:16 Yes, well, when I give this answer now to you, then people are going to compare themselves with me. We are going to do this and that is actually not what I would like to do. Because you know when I learned that I when I started to do she gone, the system was not yet there. And so the system now is is fully there with all the nine methods. And so people who are now starting they go faster through it. So I did first the senang she gone and when people are doing she gone than they know what I'm talking about. And then I started to do this system that in total, I'm learning from Yancey for now for 12 years. So better the last four years have been really intense for me Brandon Handley 25:13 just in terms of that quality of life that you're talking about the transition and change where you that have entered your life, Dorrie 25:21 or years, but right from the beginning. And so when I would say the first seven years, I made my make huge shifts in growth in my life. And I can also see that in all from all the teachers who are went through this course, we all really have changed completely I can see everybody has had so much growth in their life. Brandon Handley 25:46 No, and that I love that. I think that's great. And I think that it's fair and I understand your reluctance to, you know, state how long your journey has been, simply due to the fact that everybody's journey is their own right. I mean, somebody somebody could get to a certain spate in the blink of an eye, and somebody, it may take 40 years. And and so with any with any practice, the practice is to become more yourself, as you were talking about in the beginning, right, finding out who you are, and being comfortable with who you are, and understanding who you are, versus if so, yeah, versus becoming or attaining this thing within a specified period of time. Dorrie 26:39 Yeah, that's just what you're saying. You never know, of course. What makes it that you are able to make that step has to do with your previous life? Yes, I think so. But on the other hand, I can see so much growth from the people who are who have done this, the system, that is really remarkable. And so, at the moment when I have this big step, and before me, also, there'll be for me, Norberto Rodriguez had the same, which is remarkable, isn't it that two people in the same system, go to that step, and other people are following. So because we are human, so we can we can do that, too. And so I think really, when you when you are in that, yeah, in that flow, and also when you when you receive that theoretic information, I think that a lot is possible that when you already then yeah, you get that push to do it. Right? Brandon Handley 27:47 How would you say this work has impacted your family life? Dorrie 27:54 Yes, very beautiful question. It has changed to the life of, of our family members, for all of us. It all has a lot of impact. And so now our children are at the age of 20, and 18. And so they are really in the face of gaining a lot of information from learning, you know, learning in at university, but then he didn't have changed a lot. Yes, they are so much connected with themselves. And hear well, there is peace and harmony in home. And which i think it's it's a very beautiful thing. And that is the same for my husband. So he has been on this journey with me. And so it's not that he is really doing the course here. But he learns from just me talking about life, of course, and when you are open to that you can grow to. And so we can say that we have made a big change that we all are and we all are every time taking new steps. It's amazing to see your children grow in this way. Brandon Handley 29:19 I think that it's interesting that you bring up to the idea that your husband while he's not in the course with you, he is learning through kind of what you're doing. He's opened himself. One of the questions that I see a lot of people ask is, you know, you're growing dories growing at Dorries rate, and you're growing in like, you know, by by this practice, and maybe he's not growing as fast as you or a perceived, you know, so how do you answer that question? You know, what if my spouse or significant other isn't growing at the same rate or the same way I am, what are your thoughts, sir? Well Dorrie 30:00 I have learned to look inside myself to answer that question. And I think it is also that you can find there your solution to that, because it makes me even more eager to grow more in my life. Because I think when you reach a high level of realization, then you can feel compassion for the other, you can understand the other, you can see the patterns, the struggle where another person goes through in life. And so then you also can, can react in a different way to that person. So, for example, when, when the person next to you becomes angry, you can be upset from that. But that then actually means that maybe you need to work a little bit more on yourself. Because why should I become angry when another person is angry? Maybe I can find different tools to let that person understand life better. And worse, also, what I have done, Brandon Handley 31:14 right, so sounds sounds. Yeah, so sounds like sounds like, you know, if it seems like that growth or activity isn't spiritually aligned with who you are outside of you, you still need to look inside of yourself, right? If it's coming from outside, you know, that anger somebody else is angry, or, or maybe somebody else is in growing it, quote, unquote, the rate that, you know, they, quote, unquote, should be, right, the truth of the matter is that it's still you that needs to grow and needs to find and or create that space to allow for for just long, and again, it's all you Is that what you're saying, Yeah, Dorrie 31:58 yes, every second of the day, you need to have awareness about yourself. So when that will disturb you, when that other person would have that emotion, then it means that you need to come and action and do something about it, to get yourself back to that good state, because something is going on there. Because if you are in a very good state, if you are in that feeling of high realization, you don't need to be bothered by anything. Nothing needs to be happening. There you are, everything is already okay. The way it is, isn't that. Brandon Handley 32:35 Right? Absolutely. We just have a real tough problem. Like, it's a challenge if you haven't done some of this work already. To see that. Right. You know, back to your earlier point, you know, the real you is always there, this person that you're talking about that that you are that this realize being right and and always having this, this this potential state that always exists, right? This potential you that always exists, it's just your ability desire to cultivate it, and sit with it. Is that what you're saying? Dorrie 33:20 Yeah, so that that person who you really are. So I tried to explain it, that person who you really are, is highly connected. Yeah, it's, it's connected with your spirit, your soul. So we call it in the red shoe with this, your shin. And so that is also what you take with you, when you when you die, that's what you always will take with you. And that's part is highly connected with your heart. So, when you were born, you were connected with that part. Yet you you felt all your heart qualities on what I was talking about in the beginning, I trust, openness, love, gratitude, and that through respect, but one when you're going through life, and that is already in a very early stage. You you get experiences in your life, isn't it? It's normal, of course. And so, bit by bit the pure information how you were born becomes vague, we can see. And so you you there get patterns. Now, what are patterns? What are patterns in our life? Well, it is information, what is received, processed and used in the same way. Repeat repeatedly. So let me explain it to you. With let's let's explain that just with with driving a car when I'm Driving a car, you know, can you remember how you in the beginning had to learn to drive the car? You were looking with? With what food do I need to, to bring to use the brake. And then when something what came on the road, you really had to start thinking about that I Oh, wait, I need to do this. And then I need to put my right foot on the brake. And then it happens that my car will stop here. After a while. Yeah, you don't know better. And suddenly a duck comes on the road, and you just you would use your brake, you just do that it becomes automatically Yes, right. And that is actually the same what happens in your life with many, many things. It can be on a habitual way. For example, using now the COVID, we couldn't go outside and you come back, you are at home and you want to go for your dinner and you have your dinner ready. And you think I'm going to sit for in front of the TV, and you sit there and you eat your meal. And the next day you think attipas actually quite nice. It was cozy there. I do that again. But before that, you know, you sit every day in front of the TV, eating your dinner. Yeah. And that is the same things within life. But then on a different way on in the with the consciousness. So maybe you're saying now something to me, like Dorrie. Whereby let's let's Ms. Now think I must have come up with an example. Though, let's do a talk here. And I immediately feel that I can't do that. And so why actually Shouldn't I do that? Because it's something what is naturalism there to do with talk? But no, it reminds me of when I went to primary school, and I had to do a speech there. And that was actually really very scary for me. So now I can't be natural anymore in that. And I just say, No, I don't, I don't have time for that. But actually, what really is there is a lot of fear. And that is a pattern, what is underneath there under the skin, what is going on. And so there are a lot of presence in your life, really a web of patterns. And it can be like that you want to hide for yourself, it can be like that you feeling greed, actually, which is a normal thing. But still, that you feel great. It can be that you are suspicious in life, that are a lot of patterns. While and this is what we learn that when you have awareness in your life in when something happens in your daily life, that you detect what kind of things that are playing, and that you can do something about that, that you can change it. You never can say all now I'm not doing it anymore. That's not possible. It's that it is it is in the brain a shortcut to do things. So we have to do it that way. But we want to have good patterns in life, the healthy beneficial profits, and not the patterns will give us this Yeah, not free and natural life. So when we work on that, when we really work on these patents, then suddenly there comes space in your life that cause more calmness in your life. And so when you then work on these heart qualities, you can suddenly go deeper feeling yourself, which is really very interesting. I would say that Brandon Handley 39:08 that's something that the feeling ourselves. And the snap natural state is something that in western civilization, that we're kind of trained out of. Right, and kind of what you're talking about is these patterns that we develop. We refer to it oftentimes as our programming, right? our default programming is like, Hey, you know, I'm, I'm going to do this thing because of that result that I had that one time or vice versa, like you're saying, right? Like, it's really scary up in front of class, second grade, and I don't want to have to feel that feeling again. So whatever I can do to avoid that feeling. I'm going to keep doing and what you've learned through your practices is to kind of go through see that within yourself and learn how to feel through it. around it and get yourself into a place of this free and natural and what and my guess is that when you're staying free and natural is to express yourself without that fear to be yourself without that. inhibition, and and fear, right? So you're liberate yourself from from something like that Is that Is that about right? Dorrie 40:23 And that is being at home. Brandon Handley 40:25 Yeah, that's beautiful. I love it. So you're doing this practice, now you've got, you've got your own practice. But you also mentioned that you've got an A Women's International charity that you're working on or practice that you're working on, you want to share a little bit about what that is, and oh, yes, thank you, Dorrie 40:44 Toby, on 2022, we are going to start with a foundational program. And yes, it is a charitable trust for women and the name is so she is now. And yeah, it's really beautiful. So the information comes totally from the rain shoe system. But that is that we are really focusing on the female females in the world of female energy in the world. Because I think that that is important. Now, that is that is how I felt it that it is important that the women really can find themselves here. I think they this we can see that also in the leadership in the world, the women really aren't doing very well isn't Brandon Handley 41:33 wasn't New Zealand that had like a really great Prime Minister. I don't know what the is the prime minister, she did some really great you know, you New Zealand went through this with female labour COVID with female leadership, and that was highly regarded. Dorrie 41:51 Yes, very beautiful from jacinda. Arden. And but that is not that is not all that I see in the world, what I can see is that the women, they have the connection, they really have a beautiful connection to spread a message in the world, through their own families. And by being becoming mothers, for example, and to share this with our own family members, because that will beneficial also very much are a man in the world. And I think that we need some more of these feminine qualities to to reach more peace and harmony in the world. Brandon Handley 42:36 When you say feminine qualities. What do you What are you saying? Dorrie 42:41 The the qualities, to use your heart the qualities to connect with each other. I think that women are very good in Connect making connections with each other. And to feel that the heart qualities can can bring. Yeah, profound change in the world. But as I said, we need to first dive into learning how your mind works and to Yeah, to to make that change Brandon Handley 43:14 for ourselves. Right, I forget the term. It's a Buddhist term that talks about the heart mind connection, it sounds like that's what you're trying to do. Right, you're taking you know, whereas I would say that the two differences, probably my own observation would be the two different primary differences between male and females that females lead with their heart, right that the innate connection, and then men tried more to lead with their head, you know, I'm not saying that women don't but just as a as a, you know, which one takes over most time, like men try to lead with like more logic and, and, you know, these these lines versus with their heart, right? So by combining your head and your heart, you're able to really, you've got there's a whole different thing happening there. And Buddhism has a term for it, I forget what it is off top my head. But that sounds to me a little bit what you're doing, you're saying Alright, listen, with your with your feminine qualities which are already innate with you, let's, let's bring that to connect with your mind. So that you know we can really express and, you know, take your place, you know in life, right. Let's go ahead and lead from that space. Dorrie 44:31 Yes, absolutely. And yet, you can see when when I look at the evolution from the women, of course we have changed a lot. But we had to receive our rights as women and but the question is if that went No, it went of course the way it had to grow. But now it is time to come back home more to your authentic A women qualities, because we have been always like, well, it's more like fighting against the man that you also go there, you know, like the like, feeling these same qualities that i think it's it's not, it's not what we really want to do we want to just to come home in our own qualities, and that can bring change for our men also in the society. Brandon Handley 45:25 Oh, yeah, I mean, I think it's funny, like I'm feeling the vision more than I'm seeing it right now what you're saying, and I understand. Definitely, I think a challenge two to present it. But I feel I can feel where you're going with it. And, you know, I think that's I think that's fantastic. And I think that there's the time is certainly now. Right. for for for that. And I think that, um, I think the space is open for it, right that what you're doing the work that you're doing. And I think that it's definitely, definitely necessary. Right? And it's not it's not i think is it's not this combative nature and space and place that women need to be in, they need to be in their own right space. And you know, and it's it's difficult to put, I think, into words, but I understand, I think, where you're headed with it. And so I'm definitely looking forward to seeing how that goes for you. And I think that that's a great work that you're doing and putting out there. Dorrie 46:32 Now, thank you. That's very, very lovely. Yeah. And I can understand that, that you that it's not at this moment for people is that you think, yeah, how is she going to do that. But it is going to be in a very practical way. Because I understand very well that most of the women don't have so much time during the day, actually. And, but you can see that what I have done now, I also have two children and a job and I still am able to do this and to reach the state. So then when I can do that, and everybody in the world can do that, isn't it. And so I thought about this, and I thought, we really need to do this in a practical way that you get the core information and to use it in your daily life. You need to use it in the heat of the moment, you know, when something is happening, then you must be able to have tools to grow and to come back home and yourself. And so yeah, I hope that I can surprise you. Yeah, listen, next. Yeah, I Brandon Handley 47:41 think I think that, um, you know, I think it's, it's the intent to do it, how it has to happen. It's still unfolding for you as my guests, right? It's still unfolding, and it's still presenting itself, but it's in motion. And, and you're a part of it, right? You're, then that's that's really, I think all you can say, right, as it develops and as you present it. So, Dorrie, is there anything else that you would want to cover or share with the listeners of this program today? Dorrie 48:13 Um, well, maybe if I if they haven't seen for sure, they can have a look at the website there. And then they that will lead them to the place where they can have a look at the documentary because especially also when you have physical problems, physical problems, mental problems, quite questions about life, I think it's really worth it that you will have a look at that documentary. And when you are looking that you are just feeling inside yourself, actually, what am I feeling now that I am receiving this information? And that's it, this it tickle myself? Do I feel there something? Because I think that is a call from your heart. Right? Right. So if you do, Brandon Handley 49:05 yeah, I mean, and the movie The documentary is is already free. And, you know, I can share out the link from that, so that people can go check that out. Basically, you know, they follow Dorrie, Norberto and they share the story of the red shoe system, and just kind of the changes that came into both Dorrie and Roberta's life. And you know, as Dora keeps saying is like, hey, if I can do it, you can do it too. It just takes it just takes and it's a practice, right or Dorrie 49:38 Yes. And yeah, what I say when I can do with em, you can do with too, but I really would like to tell to the listeners. When you would have found something that is so profound. How would you spread that in the world? Tell me It is not so easy, of course, because the world is very big. But I really would like to give it to all of you. And that is also my, my goal now in my life to really to tell it to others, that there really is a lot possible when you really want Would you like to develop yourself Brandon Handley 50:20 now apps? Absolutely, I think that there's, there's a place that you can get to and a space that you can get to that. I can't say that I'm in a consistent state that door is talking about, but I have had this experience of being in that place. And you know, that then the desire comes through. Alright, well, how do I keep myself in that space? Right. And and that's, that's, that's the challenge, especially with our busy lives, and all these other things going on these default programs that Laurie was talking about, and all the other ways that we've always been like, well, who do we really want to be? And I think Dorrie, that's, that's the story that you're sharing. So I've got a couple of questions for you. I kind of liken this podcast a little bit to a speed dating, right? Like somebody is going to come on my spiritual speed dating, somebody is going to come on listen to this podcast, it's in search of like, their next spiritual connection, right? The next, you know, somebody they want to date for a little bit in the spirituality space, right? Because there's so much out there, right. And it's a little tongue in cheek, it's a little kind of entertainment, but like, so I just have, like, one. Um, one quick question for you would be, what is our greatest distraction. Dorrie 51:41 Our greatest distraction is our mind. And we need to catch ourselves when we are operating from the construct that says self identity. Our greatest destruction is really our mind, and we are not aware of it. We are not aware of where we are. And that is, when we have figured that out, then we can come home to ourselves. Brandon Handley 52:08 You would say that's kind of the beginning, then to understand that we are you know, we're not our minds, and that our minds is the biggest distraction and starting to pay pay a lot of attention there. Dorrie 52:19 Yes, so but you need to learn that, of course, if you don't know, we, you need to pay attention to them. Nothing happens. So somebody needs to tell you what to do. How to do that? Brandon Handley 52:30 For sure. Yeah, absolutely. So I mean, one of the other things is I do a martial art, you know, Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. And I always bring it up too, right? Like, I could be doing, I could I could do jujitsu my entire life without instruction, and I would never get it. Right. Right. I may, I may get a couple things, right. But by taking the lessons and having somebody that knows how to do it, and training me to do it, I'll then become aware of what I need to do in the right situations at the right time. So that, you know, I can find this calm and space in place versus doing it in a frantic worried, always concerned kind of manner. I have these techniques, these tools that you're talking about with this system that you can put into place. Right so that um, yeah, yeah, yes. Very. Yeah. So Dorrie, thanks again, so much for being on today. I hope you enjoy the rest of your Sunday morning. And you know, so somebody, you know, again, outside of already free if somebody wants to come check out what Dorrie is up to, where could they go to find out more about you and your organization that you have planned? coming for? 2022? Dorrie 53:39 Yes, so well, the organization from rain shoe, it is the rain shoe international.org. But rain shoe, you spell that r e n and then x UE it's a little bit tricky. It's a little bit tricky sometimes for people. Well, and for 2022. The we don't have already our professional website up but we do have the the website up for donation for the charity. And you can have a look there at She is now.net. There you can find our information. Brandon Handley 54:18 Thank you, Dorrie. And are you taking clients now yourself as a coach? Dorrie 54:24 Well, because you mentioned that in the beginning, at this moment, we are just producing all the content for Yeah, for the launch from a she is now but after that, I probably will do that again, my, my personal coaching because I do that Brandon Handley 54:42 for people all over the world. So that's on hold a little bit right now until you've got this other piece as well. Fantastic Dorie, I know that I know that that's going to be very successful for you. I can you know, I've got a great feeling for it. Myself, and when you describe it, it just feels feels very Yeah, absolutely. It feels very good. clear for you. Right and that that path is is is open for you. So thanks again for being on today. Transcribed by https://otter.ai
Jeffrey Yasuo Mansfield is a design director at MASS Design Group and a Ford-Mellon Disability Futures fellow, whose work explores the relationships between architecture, landscape, and power. Jeffrey is a recipient of a Graham Foundation grant and a John W. Kluge Fellowship at the Library of Congress for his work on Architecture of Deafness, which explores how Deaf schools and other Deaf Spaces emerged as sites of cultural resistance. Jeffrey holds a Master of Architecture from the Harvard Graduate School of Design and an AB in Architecture from Princeton University. Deaf since birth, Jeffrey is a Yonsei, or fourth-generation, Japanese American, and attended a deaf school in Massachusetts, where his earliest intuitions about the relationship between aesthetics, geography, and power emerged. Interpreting services provided by codabrothers.com
Hai Peers! Kami balik lagi dengan episode baru! Kali ini kami mengundang kak Ratu (@ratuzka ) untuk berbincang-bincang mengenai kehidupannya di Korea sebagai both a student and a dancer. Apa aja sih rintangan, suka serta dukanya? Penasaran dengan kisahnya?
E a prosa de hoje é com Bruno Takashy. Um Paulista de Itapeva, Yonsei, ou seja, bisneto de japoneses, por parte de mãe e descendente de portugueses, por parte de pai, que desde muito pequeno se apaixonou pela música caipira e pela viola. Com apenas 22 anos de idade, mas com muita bagagem de estudos musicais, é um dos violeiros caipiras mais virtuoses do Brasil na atualidade.
E a prosa de hoje é com Bruno Takashy. Um Paulista de Itapeva, Yonsei, ou seja, bisneto de japoneses, por parte de mãe e descendente de portugueses, por parte de pai, que desde muito pequeno se apaixonou pela música caipira e pela viola. Com apenas 22 anos de idade, mas com muita bagagem de estudos musicais, é um dos violeiros caipiras mais virtuoses do Brasil na atualidade. Links do Cachaça Prosa & Viola Acesse o episódio no site: https://cachacaprosaeviola.com.br/post/cpv056 Seja um Padrinho ou Madrinha: Padrim: https://padrim.com.br/cpvpodcast PicPay: https://app.picpay.com/user/cpvpodcast PagSeguro: https://www.cachacaprosaeviola.com.br/pagseguro Pix: https://nubank.com.br/pagar/m3zy9/iAgFS0Urpz Nossos Padrinhos: Leo Lopes; Luciano Pires; Marcel Rates; Samuel Milanez; Anuncie sua marca: https://www.cachacaprosaeviola.com.br/anuncie Compre nossos produtos oficiais: http://loja.cachacaprosaeviola.com.br Participe do nosso grupo de ouvintes no Telegram: https://t.me/cpvpodcast Assine o nosso canal no Telegram: https://t.me/canalcpvpodcast Aprenda a tocar viola no conforto da sua casa, com o Curso Viola Sem Fronteiras:https://cachacaprosaeviola.com.br/violasemfronteiras Seja um apoiador!: https://apoia.se/cpvpodcast
E a prosa de hoje é com Bruno Takashy. Um Paulista de Itapeva, Yonsei, ou seja, bisneto de japoneses, por parte de mãe e descendente de portugueses, por parte de pai, que desde muito pequeno se apaixonou pela música caipira e pela viola. Com apenas 22 anos de idade, mas com muita bagagem de estudos musicais, é um dos violeiros caipiras mais virtuoses do Brasil na atualidade. Links do Cachaça Prosa & Viola Acesse o episódio no site: https://cachacaprosaeviola.com.br/post/cpv056 Seja um Padrinho ou Madrinha: Padrim: https://padrim.com.br/cpvpodcast PicPay: https://app.picpay.com/user/cpvpodcast PagSeguro: https://www.cachacaprosaeviola.com.br/pagseguro Pix: https://nubank.com.br/pagar/m3zy9/iAgFS0Urpz Nossos Padrinhos: Leo Lopes; Luciano Pires; Marcel Rates; Samuel Milanez; Anuncie sua marca: https://www.cachacaprosaeviola.com.br/anuncie Compre nossos produtos oficiais: http://loja.cachacaprosaeviola.com.br Participe do nosso grupo de ouvintes no Telegram: https://t.me/cpvpodcast Assine o nosso canal no Telegram: https://t.me/canalcpvpodcast Aprenda a tocar viola no conforto da sua casa, com o Curso Viola Sem Fronteiras:https://cachacaprosaeviola.com.br/violasemfronteiras See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Cassandra Curtis and Ari Raz have always been interested in both health food and entrepreneurship, which made them likely partners for Once Upon a Farm. Once Upon a Farm began as the first refrigerated baby food on the market and has since developed into a kids’ popular nutrition brand. Cassandra studied nutrition and its impact on development while working towards her Master’s in Psychology at Alliant International University. So she knew that nourishing a growing child was crucial. Only when she had her own daughter did she realize how hard it was to find fresh baby food at local grocers. She had to spend many hours a week preparing fresh food and wished she could find similar food in stores. In no time, she was delivering her own fresh baby food all across town from a refrigerated van. Then comes in Ari, who had grown up in a health conscious household where his mom fed him sprouted grain bread and taught yoga way before it was cool. While working towards his MBA at Yonsei, he interned for LOTTE - one of the largest food companies in the world. There he found out a passion for projects that allowed him to combine his business acumen and love for food. A few years down the line, he stumbled upon Cassandra’s website and contacted her multiple times about working together. She eventually responded, and a partnership was born. These days, Cassandra works as the company’s Chief Innovation Officer where she works on product development and recipes with various R&D teams. Ari takes on the role of CEO and President of Specialty Sales, working with VP of Sales, Business Development, and figuring out the best ways to get their products out to grocery stores and alternative channels. The company has grown from eight employees to 41 by selling its products via online channels in response to the pandemic, relocating the headquarters to Berkeley, Calif.,and partnering with actress and child welfare advocate, Jennifer Gardner, for strong brand advocacy. Despite COVID-19, the company has seen great growth, especially since people are prioritizing health and immunity more than ever. Listen in to hear all about Once Upon a Farm’s development and its growth as a result of the San Diego entrepreneur ecosystem. Favorite Tacos: Ari’s: Taco Stand for the carne asada, City Tacos for ‘fancy’ fish tacos, and Puesto for high class dining Cassandra: Hago’s Organic Tacos in Encinitas Connect with Cassandra & Ari on Socials: Cassandra - LinkedIn, Instagram Ari - LinkedIn, Instagram, Twitter Keep up with Once Upon a Farm: Website LinkedIn Facebook: @onceuponafarm Thanks to our partners at Cox Business for their support in enabling us to grow the San Diego ecosystem.
Sliding his way onto the show to say "YES" to this epic conversation today is a man who truly embodies what it means to step into kingship & answer to the call of life with an overwhelming "YES." He holds an MBA in strategic management from Yonsei graduate school of business, is one of the slickest movers i have ever witnessed, having owned a gym called Recess in Memphis famous for its "inside out" approach to wellness, unique program design & "fun first" philosophy & is a world class story teller & adventurer!
Oshirase - Update Neste episódio falamos sobre o visto de yonsei e o temido covid19. Um bate-papo sincero e que levanta alguns pontos que ajudam a olhar de uma forma diferente. Até 22/2 Yonsei: https://public-comment.e-gov.go.jp/servlet/Public?CLASSNAME=PCMMSTDETAIL&id=315000036&Mode=0 Proposta: https://public-comment.e-gov.go.jp/servlet/PcmFileDownload?seqNo=0000213248 Apoio - ABC JAPAN - https://www.abcjapan.org Ouça aqui: https://podcasts.apple.com/jp/podcast/9kbrasil/id1542453478 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15vIQBf8fduCWKH6qQol9P?si=X7aXFP1uS6qlj7s7p27l-g www.9kbrasil.com contato@9kbrasil.com
In this episode, Dr. Michael Kim (Yonsei) responds to controversial claims that Japan's higher "mindo" (level of culture) explains its successful response to the coronavirus pandemic, providing historical context about how rhetoric of "mindo" fit into Japanese colonial rule in Korea.
This episode of the Korea Now podcast features an interview that Jed Lea-Henry conducted with Ellie Choi. They speak about the author Yi Kwangsu, his place as an independence writer and his influence on the March First anti-Japanese demonstrations, the style of writing he employed and the themes that ran through his work, his views on the modernisation of Korea, how he saw and influenced the development of Korean nationalism, the important place that he held within the colonial literary scene, the line that he tried to walk between advocating a type of Korean independence within the Japanese empire, the degree of his collaboration with the Japanese authorities and how this manifested within his literature, how and why he is still often considered a traitor even today, and a focus on two books in particular: ‘The Heartless' and ‘On National Reconstruction'. Ellie Choi is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Korean Media and Culture at Brown University. Her current research interests include the transnational consumption of Korean media, the Seoul city, cyberspaces, visual culture, and dislocation. She is the author of “The City and the Image: Seoul's Recovery of Its Own Past,” The Metropole Series:The Urban History Association (March, 2018) and “Forgotten northerly memories: Yi Kwangsu and his alterities in The Heartless,” The Journal of Asian Studies (August 2018), and is currently writing a book-length project, “The Laptop Nation and the Global Consumption of Korea.” She teaches classes on Korean film and media, urban space, northern Korea, and modern cultural history. Her first book project, Space and National Identity: Yi Kwangsu's Vision of Korea during the Japanese Empire, explored the relationships among colonial space, cultural nationalism, and historical identity. Dr. Choi was Assistant Professor of Korean Studies at Cornell University, and has also taught at Smith, Dartmouth, Yale, Yonsei, and Ewha Colleges. * The Cultural Landscape of Colonial Korea's First Modern Novel, The Heartless (https://www.academia.edu/43880758/The_Cultural_Landscape_of_Colonial_Koreas_First_Modern_Novel_The_Heartless_1917_). * Memories of Korean Modernity: Yi Kwangsu's The Heartless and New Perspectives in Colonial Alterity (https://www.academia.edu/43888603/Memories_of_Korean_Modernity_Yi_Kwangsu_s_The_Heartless_and_New_Perspectives_in_Colonial_Alterity). * IN THE SHADOW OF NATION AND EMPIRE Northwestern writers in colonial Seoul (https://www.academia.edu/43880783/IN_THE_SHADOW_OF_NATION_AND_EMPIRE_Northwestern_writers_in_colonial_Seoul). Support via Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/jedleahenry Support via PayPal – https://www.paypal.me/jrleahenry Shop – https://shop.spreadshirt.com.au/JLH-shop/ Support via Bitcoin - 31wQMYixAJ7Tisp773cSvpUuzr2rmRhjaW Website – http://www.jedleahenry.org Libsyn – http://korea-now-podcast.libsyn.com Youtube – https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_qg6g1KyHaRXi193XqF6GA Twitter – https://twitter.com/jedleahenry Academia.edu – http://university.academia.edu/JedLeaHenry Research Gate – https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jed_Lea-Henry
Minii is a PhD candidate at the Toulan School of Urban Planning and completing her doctorate in Urban Studies, here is Portland (PSU). She is originally from South Korea, holds both a bachelor’s and Master’s in Urban studies from Yonsei university. Please enjoy the interview! 잘 보면 좋겠습니다! (As a reference, the host - Walle, recently completed a Fulbright English Teaching grant in Sejong, South Korea)
Non solo guerra commerciale: la Cina in queste settimane è al centro dell'attenzione per l'arresto di Meng Hongwei, capo dell'Interpol e viceministro della Sicurezza di Pechino. Il suo arresto per corruzione è l'ennesimo capitolo nella campagna di Xi Jinping che ha colpito negli anni moltissime "tigri", figure emergenti e sempre più potenti ai vertici della società cinese. Per Michael Caster, autore dell'inchiesta The People's Republic of the Disappeared, con azioni come questa la Cina sta cercando di manipolare il senso delle regole dettate dalle leggi internazionali.Questa settimana però Il Cielo Sopra Pechino si sposta in Corea del Sud, dove in compagnia di Ijin Hong, ricercatrice di politiche sociali e del mercato del lavoro presso l'università Yonsei di Seul, cerchiamo di capire qualcosa di più sulla politica interna e sulla società sudcoreana, guidata da un presidente, Moon Jae-in, che sta scommettendo sulla via socialdemocratica allo sviluppo in un Paese che per anni ha rappresentato un simbolo del liberismo.PLAYLIST- 万能年青旅店 (Omnipotent Youth Society) - 十万嬉皮 (Ten Thousand Hippies) | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBfYvY9OwqY- PRIMARY(프라이머리), OHHYUK(오혁) - Bawling | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GDeiJybf8qY
@Yonseinyc joins us for a very special episode of Freak Terrains.
Today's theme: 1987:When the Day Comes 1987: When the Day Comes is a fact-based political thriller that reconstructs a turning point in Korean history triggered by the death of a student. Directed by Jang Joon-hwan with intelligent insight, this movie is a compelling depiction of how brave individuals from all walks of life mobilized a whole nation to bring a dictator to his knee. We look into the significance of the movie and the year itself. The Conversationalist with Darcy Paquet Film critic Teaches at Busan Asian Film School Program consultant for the Far East Film Festival in Udine, Italy “This film has been very highly praised by critics, even more so than other films about contemporary Korean history like A Taxi Driver. What do critics single out as this film's strengths?” “This is a sweet victory for director Jang Joon-hwan. Who is he, and why are film industry people so happy for him?” & Professor 문명재 Moon Myung-Jae Department of Public Administration at Yonsei University “Can you tell us about your reaction to the tragic news of Yonsei university student 이한열 YI Han-yeol? What was it like being in Busan at the time? It must have been difficult for you to be serving as a public service worker while many other students were protesting against the government” Media Monster SIMPSONS BEFORE “THE SIMPSONS” Next week: Webtoon
KoreaFM.net's Chance Dorland covered the second & final day of the Asian American Journalists Association's New.Now.Next media conference in Seoul this weekend where he spoke with multiple reporters & experts on topics affecting journalism. In this audio podcast, you'll find:"Censorship and the People's Right to Know" interviews with New York Times Chinese website editor-in-chief Ching-Ching Ni, Bloomberg Japan managing editor Brian Fowler & Pusan National University media professor Nigel Callinan"Money Behind Content: Fighting for the Right Balance" interviews with Radish & Byline cofounder Seungyoon Lee & Yonsei professor & NBC producer Stella Kim"Virtual Reality with Google" interview with YouTube team leader Taewon ParkFind more AAJA New.Now.Next N3Con media conference audio reports at bitly.com/N3ConKoreaFM.Subscribe to this & other Korea FM original content via:iTunes - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/korea-fm-.-net-talk-radio/id1019399741RSS - http://feeds.feedburner.com/koreafmaudioBoom - https://audioboom.com/channel/koreafmStitcher - http://stitcher.com/podcast/korean-news-updatePlayer FM - https://player.fm/series/korea-fm-talk-radio-news-podcasts-koreafmnetTunein - http://tunein.com/radio/Korea-FM-Podcasts-p832785/Acast - https://acast.com/koreafm
Pod Sequentialism with Matt Kennedy presented by Meltdown comics
Kiyoshi "Lucky" Nakazawa is a veteran of the zine trade whose origin story is downright inspirational. Matt and Lucky discuss growing up Yonsei, having good mentors, and juggling multiple careers to make ends meet. All on this amazing episode of Pod Sequentialism with Matt Kennedy presented by Meltdown Comics! Produced by Mason Booker Engineered by Mason Booker Theme music "Rumble" provided by www.Bensound.com Logo design by Joshua Geisler www.selfuno.com. #Podcast #podsequentialism #Mattkennedy #interview #luckynakazawa #episode 019 #Meltdowncomics
The Sunshine Policy – the idea that South Korea should approach North Korea through dialogue, cooperation and reconciliation – has been highly contentious ever since its inception in the late 1990s. Its initiator, former President Kim Dae Jung, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for reaching out to Pyongyang; at the same time, however, critics have branded the Sunshine Policy as [a naive attempt to appease a dangerous dictatorship] naive appeasement with a dangerous dictatorship. Even today the dispute about the right foreign policy approach towards North Korea splits the South Korean political discourse. One of the leading experts on the Sunshine Policy is Chung-In Moon. For this episode we spoke to him about the history of this policy, whether or not it failed, the philosophical underpinnings of the Sunshine Policy’s supporters and opponents, and his opinions about how South Korea and the international community should approach North Korea. Chung-In Moon is Professor of Political Science at Yonsei University and Editor-in-Chief of Global Asia. He is also Executive Director of the Kim Dae-jung Presidential Library and Museum, and previously served as Dean of Yonsei’s Graduate School of International Studies. Professor Moon is currently a member of the Presidential Committee on Unification Preparation of the Park Geun-Hye administration. Previously, under former President Roh Moo-hyun, Professor Moon also served as Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Northeast Asian Cooperation Initiative and was Ambassador for International Security Affairs on behalf of the South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
By 2023, the Ministry of Education hopes to attract 200,000 international students to South Korea. But, with record numbers of young South Koreans unemployed, is that still possible? Korea FM attended the graduation ceremony for Yonsei University, one of Korea's top "SKY" universities, to ask recent graduates why they chose South Korea.
By 2023, the Ministry of Education hopes to attract 200,000 international students to South Korea. But, with record numbers of young South Koreans unemployed, is that still possible? Korea FM attended the graduation ceremony for Yonsei University, one of Korea's top "SKY" universities, to ask recent graduates why they chose South Korea.
South Korea’s path to democracy was long and arduous; as historian Bruce Cumings concluded, there “may be no country more deserving of democracy in our time than the Republic of Korea”. While many initially assumed Korea would transition towards a liberal democratic system following the end of Japanese colonialism, decades of authoritarianism and dictatorship ensued. Despite being founded as such in 1947, it is only four decades later that South Korea became a democracy in practice with the election of President Roh in December 1987. While the 1980s was the decade that saw democracy eventually triumph, the role played by pro-democracy movements in the 1970s has all too often been forgotten. Despite General Park Chung-hee iron fist rule, several social movements and constituencies – students, liberal church groups, unions, lawyers and journalists – structured and organized themselves during those years, paving the way for the major successes of the following decade. This is the core argument of Protest Dialectics: State Repression and South Korea’s Democracy Movement (Stanford University Press, 2015), written by Professor Paul Y. Chang, who kindly agreed to be our guest for this episode. Professor Chang is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Harvard University. He received his PhD in Sociology from Stanford University in 2008. He taught at Yonsei and Singapore Management University before joining the Harvard faculty in 2013. He currently serves on the Executive Committee of the Korea Institute at Harvard University and is affiliated with the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs and the Harvard Asia Center’s Council on Asian Studies. Professor Chang has published several book chapters and articles in various academic journals, including Mobilization, Sociological Forum, Asian Perspectives and the Journal of Korean Studies.
Por Pr. Seok-Jeon Yoon. https://bbcst.net/B5080N
Por Pr. Seok-Jeon Yoon. https://bbcst.net/B5080N
Por Pr. Seok-Jeon Yoon. https://bbcst.net/B5080N
Por Pr. Seok-Jeon Yoon. https://bbcst.net/B5080N
Por Pr. Seok-Jeon Yoon. https://bbcst.net/B5080N
Por Pr. Seok-Jeon Yoon. https://bbcst.net/B5080N
Por Pr. Seok-Jeon Yoon. https://bbcst.net/B5080N