POPULARITY
MILANO (ITALPRESS) - Presentato, durante un evento che si è tenuto al Palazzo Pirelli a Milano, un documento d'indirizzo per la presa in carico in Lombardia dei pazienti affetti da Insufficienza Intestinale Cronica Benigna e da Sindrome dell'Intestino Corto. Il documento, di cui l'Associazione 'Un Filo per la Vita Onlus' è promotrice, punta a dare una risposta a chi è costretto a convivere con una malattia rara ma molto debilitante.f03/sat
MILANO (ITALPRESS) - Presentato, durante un evento che si è tenuto al Palazzo Pirelli a Milano, un documento d'indirizzo per la presa in carico in Lombardia dei pazienti affetti da Insufficienza Intestinale Cronica Benigna e da Sindrome dell'Intestino Corto. Il documento, di cui l'Associazione 'Un Filo per la Vita Onlus' è promotrice, punta a dare una risposta a chi è costretto a convivere con una malattia rara ma molto debilitante.f03/sat
MILANO (ITALPRESS) - Presentato, durante un evento che si è tenuto al Palazzo Pirelli a Milano, un documento d'indirizzo per la presa in carico in Lombardia dei pazienti affetti da Insufficienza Intestinale Cronica Benigna e da Sindrome dell'Intestino Corto. Il documento, di cui l'Associazione 'Un Filo per la Vita Onlus' è promotrice, punta a dare una risposta a chi è costretto a convivere con una malattia rara ma molto debilitante.f03/sat
Occupy Revisited: The Movement that Shook the WorldWe go back to the streets of Zuccotti Park with "Occupy Revisited: The Movement that Shook the World." Occupy Wall Street exploded onto the global stage in September 2011, sparking a widespread movement against economic inequality and the influence of big corporations on government. In this episode, we trace the origins of the movement, examine its profound impact on political discourse, and explore its enduring legacy in contemporary social and political movements. From passionate protests to the powerful slogan "We are the 99%!", we still feel the effects of OCCUPY.
Darkest Mysteries Online - The Strange and Unusual Podcast 2023
Occupy Revisited: The Movement that Shook the WorldWe go back to the streets of Zuccotti Park with "Occupy Revisited: The Movement that Shook the World." Occupy Wall Street exploded onto the global stage in September 2011, sparking a widespread movement against economic inequality and the influence of big corporations on government. In this episode, we trace the origins of the movement, examine its profound impact on political discourse, and explore its enduring legacy in contemporary social and political movements. From passionate protests to the powerful slogan "We are
In diretta da Sanremo, ai nostri microfoni è stato ospite Massimo Zuccotti, event manager di Gardaland che, insieme alla mascotte Prezzemolo, ci ha parlato della nuova stagione del parco divertimenti. «Il 23 marzo ci sarà la riapertura, con tante novità - ha spiegato al nostro Alvise Salerno - e a giugno avverrà l'inaugurazione della nuova attrazione, di cui non possiamo dire nulla, se non che sarà dedicata gli amanti dell'avventura e del mistero».
Nel PN1 di mercoledì 29 marzo, con i nostri Miky Boselli e Marco Vignoletti, è stato ospite Massimo Zuccotti, Senior Event Manager di Gardaland, che dal 1° aprile riapre le sue porte ai visitatori. Nonostante il tempo passi Gardaland, rimane un punto di riferimento del divertimento. Quest'anno il parco di attrazioni più famoso d'Italia apre le danze con nuove attrazioni, tra cui Jumanji - The labyrinth: «È una delle quattro novità rivolte a tutte le fasce di età ed è un'esperienza immersiva e molto divertente». Non solo, Gardaland riserva sorprese anche per quanto riguarda Gardaland Theatre: «Nautilus è un live show unico, altamente coinvolgente ed emotivamente forte con una grande componente tecnologica», ci spiega Massimo. Ci sono inoltre tante altre novità nel parco tra cui il cinema 4D e Miniland, che quest'anno propone la ricostruzione di undici grattacieli più imponenti della metropoli milanese. Per massimizzare il divertimento all'interno del parco, Gardaland offre infine alcune novità a livello logistico che consentono di fluidificare l'arrivo dei visitatori all'ingresso.
Nel pomeriggio di giovedì 8 marzo, in diretta da Let Expo 2023 il nostro Claudio Chiari ha intervistato alcuni dei protagonisti della fiera della logistica sostenibile e dei trasporti
Nel primo pomeriggio di mercoledì 8 febbraio, con i nostri Degiornalist – Fabiana Paolini e Claudio Chiari – è stato ospite Massimo Zuccotti, event manager di Gardaland, per parlare della nuova stagione del parco divertimenti. Per quanto riguarda le attrazioni, la novità 2023 è Jumanji - The labyrinth, «un'esperienza fantastica adatta alle famiglie con bambini di tutte le età e anche ai gruppi di amici». Secondo Zuccotti il 2022 è stato un anno importante per Gardaland: «Il parco ha fatto una performance molto buona, è stato un anno che servito per far decantare i periodi meno positivi dei mesi precedenti, e ora siamo lanciati verso un'estate fantastica con molteplici novità e sorprese a non finire».GLI EVENTI DEL PARCO - A Gardaland l'anno è scandito da varie fasi: Night Is Magic, l'apertura estiva fino a tarda serata, l'Oktoberfest in cui si propongono birra ed elementi culinari dell'enogastronomia bavarese, l'Halloween party e le feste invernali a tema natalizio che coinvolgono grandi e piccini. Come spiega Zuccotti, «con i grandi eventi il parco è sempre operativo al 100%, le attrazioni funzionano sempre e aggiungiamo quel qualcosa in più che ci permette di essere sempre rinnovati e coinvolgenti».
Durante il pomeriggio di lunedì 3 ottobre nel PN1 con Miky e Marco Vignoletti è intervenuto Massimo Zuccotti, responsabile eventi di Gardaland. Durante l'intervista sono stati svelati i dettagli sul Gardaland Magic Halloween dove tutti i weekend dal 7 Ottobre al 6 Novembre tutto il parco divertimenti si vestirà a festa con show, eventi e proposte culinarie da paura. Tra i vari eventi di questa ventesima edizioni di Gardaland Magic Halloween ci saranno la Polenta Maledetta, il Carrozzone degli orrori e molti ospiti dal mondo dello spettacolo e dello sport. Inoltre tutti i venerdì del mese si trasformeranno in Venerdì da Paura con eventi dedicati e DJ set mostruosi fino a chiusura del parco. Per l'occasione anche Prezzemolo cambierà vesti.
Ai microfoni di Claudio Chiari, è stato ospite Massimo Zuccotti, Senior Event Manager di Gardaland, che ha parlato dell'evento Gardaland Light Night che si terrà sabato 10 settembre e segnerà la fine dell'estate. Il parco verrà trasformato in una grande discoteca, in cui ci saranno tantissimi artisti che faranno divertire i presenti con musica, effetti speciali e fuochi d'artificio. Il prossimo weekend, dal 17 settembre fino al 2 ottobre, ci sarà il Gardaland Oktoberfest, un festival in cui saranno presenti gli elementi fondamentali della festa tedesca con spettacoli a tema e un menù ricco di specialità enogastronomiche. Il parco sarà inoltre decorato con tavoli e sedute realizzate con elementi scenografici, come ad esempio, botti e paglie di fieno
Nel pomeriggio di Radio Number One, con i nostri Miky Boselli e Marco Vignoletti, è stato ospite il responsabile eventi di Gardaland Massimo Zuccotti, per parlarci delle nuove attrazioni introdotte nel famoso parco divertimenti. Ci ha spiegato come fanno a sfidare il tempo e le mode proponendo sempre nuove attrazioni: «Ci mettiamo sempre tantissimo impegno, ogni anno sfoderiamo una novità in grado di coinvolgere grandi e piccini». Quest'anno non è da meno, perché Gardaland offre agli appassionati del divertimento una novità a tema Jumanji: si tratta di una dark ride, una missione per avventurieri di ogni età che prevede un percorso con dodici ambientazioni scenografiche altamente immersive e ispirate alla scene della celebre serie cinematografica. Massimo ci ha inoltre parlato di altre novità che sono state introdotte nel parco divertimenti più famoso d'Italia e a quali fasce di età sono rivolte le nuove attrazioni.
In this episode of All Things Co-op, Larry, Cinar, and Kevin talk about the lessons from occupy as we commemorate the 10 year anniversary of that revolutionary fall. They discuss what we should learn from that experience, what we owe to it, and how it still provides us crucial lessons on organizing in revolutionary times. It also forces us to reckon with the idealism of pure horizontalism, and the necessity of leadership in periods of struggle.
O ano de 2011 foi marcado por uma sequência de mobilizações e protestos ao redor do mundo. Embora as pautas locais mudassem, havia em comum nesses movimentos uma insatisfação com a ausência de perspectiva de futuro para uma juventude cada vez mais precarizada e com as consequências da crise deflagrada em 2008. Por ter ocorrido no centro do sistema financeiro internacional, o movimento Occupy Wall Street (“Ocupem a Wall Street”) tornou-se o mais célebre. Embora o movimento não tenha se limitado à ocupação de espaços públicos, foi a presença ao longo de dois meses de centenas de manifestantes na Praça Zuccotti, em Nova Iorque, que tornou conhecido o movimento e seu slogan (“somos os 99%”). Para celebrar os 10 anos desse episódio — que teve início em 17 de setembro de 2011 — conversamos sobre espaço público, democracia, cidade e filmes ruins do Batman. 00:03:11 — Conversa LINKS Occupy Wall Street — NYC Protest for World Revolution Occupy Wall Street: entenda o que foi o movimento — Politize How Occupy Wall Street Led to the Rise of Donald Trump — Fortune David Graeber's Real Contribution to Occupy Wall Street Wasn't a Phrase – It Was a Process — Novara Media Reinhold Martin — Occupy: What Architecture Can Do David Graeber — Super position. Slavoj Žižek — Ditadura do proletariado em Gotham City 'Ocupe Wall Street' faz aniversário — AFP Manifestantes de Wall Street marcham contra Polícia e mantêm seu protesto — EFE Occupy Wall Street critica violência da polícia de Nova York — EFE Occupy Wall Street prova sua força com manifestação no Congresso — EFE MÚSICAS Frank Sinatra — New York, New York The Budos Band — Ride or Die Playlist no Spotify NA INTERNET foradeprumo.com, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube. REDES SOCIAIS Arthur, Gabriel, Juliana, Natália.
*SUBSCRIBER EPISODE UNLOCKED* -A look back at Occupy Wall Street on the 10th anniversary of the first demonstration in New York City -Chip Gibbons on how OWS influenced a decade of mass movements -FOIA Friday: Recognizing the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund for exposing FBI surveillance of Occupy -This week's Garbage Can line-up includes the House Dems who carry water for pharma, a billionaire space tourist, and the guy who said Amazon should build company towns To listen to more shows like this, subscribe at Patreon.com/DistrictSentinel
Zach D Roberts and Aaron Cynic are back with a conversation about Occupy Wall Street, which turns 10 years old on Friday, September 17th. No OWS hasn't been occupying Zuccotti Square for 10 years but the legacy OWS lives on in many forms. There's no Bernie presidential run without OWS, there's no conversation about the 99% without OWS - we could go on - but that's why we recorded this podcast! Zach was in NYC for the occupation at Zuccotti aka Liberty and Aaron was in Chicago's financial district and Grant Park. READ THIS: This is a great piece in The Indypendent on how 9/11 set back the anti-globalization/pro-worker movement. https://indypendent.org/2021/09/9-11-and-never-forgetting/ Lessons from OWS in The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/sep/15/occupy-wall-street-10-year-anniversary-lessons Occupy Wall Street Did More Than You Think in The Atlantic by the co-founder of the Occupy Wall Street Journal https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/09/how-occupy-wall-street-reshaped-america/620064/ I was beaten several times and arrested at OWS #D17 along with hundreds of other journalists and activists. This is an excellent report detailing some of them. (The Global Justice Clinic (NYU School of Law) and the Walter Leitner International Human Rights Clinic at the Leitner Center for International Law and Justice (Fordham Law School) https://chrgj.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/suppressingprotest.pdf
Il nostro Claudio Chiari ha intervistato Massimo Zuccotti, senior events manager di Gardaland, dove, dal 18 settembre al 3 ottobre, si svolgerà Gardaland Oktoberfest, un evento ispirato alla tradizione bavarese. Massimo ci ha spiegato che all'interno del parco verrà allestito un vero e proprio viaggio enogastronomico a tema birra con diverse tappe, ognuna delle quali sarà dedicata a un brand di birra con una specifica offerta culinaria. In chiusura, massimo Zuccotti si è anche espresso sulla ripartenza di Gardaland dopo lo stop dovuto al covid.
Début en bourse décevant pour la start-up américaine Robinhood dont la cotation navigue en dessous des 38 dollars son prix d'introduction*. On peut penser ce que l'on veut du néo-courtier en ligne ou de ses premières heures difficiles au Nasdaq … mais il faut reconnaître une chose que jamais personne ne pourra enlever à la fintech américaine, à ses fondateurs, à ses salariés et désormais à ses investisseurs. Elle est un symbole du rêve américain ! Vladimir Tenev, l'un de ses 2 co-fondateurs, est arrivé aux Etats-Unis à l'âge de 5 ans en provenance de Bulgarie. Sur les bancs du très prestigieux campus de Stanford où il étudie les mathématiques, il rencontre son futur associé Baiju Bhatt qui fait, lui, dans la physique. Baiju est certes né sur le sol américain mais de parents immigrés indiens qui ont cru, avant lui, qu'aux Etats-Unis tout était possible pour eux et leurs enfants. En 2011, Vlad et Baiju assistent à New York au mouvement Occupy Wall Street qui s'ancre symboliquement au cœur du parc Zuccotti, propriété de Goldman Sachs. Les 2 entrepreneurs le sentent : le rapport des jeunes américains à la finance va changer durablement. En 2013, dans un effort d'inclusion financière, ils créent Robinhood, une application où les ordres de bourse sont gratuits et où l'on peut investir non pas dans une action, mais dans une fraction d'action pour un tout petit dollar seulement. La start-up n'a pas encore soufflé les bougies de son 10ème anniversaire que sa valorisation tourne déjà aujourd'hui autour des 30 milliards de dollars, un montant stratosphérique. C'est plus que la Société Générale ou la Deutsche Bank. Et dans son prospectus d'introduction visé par la SEC, la fintech a dévoilé 5 chiffres impressionnants qui devraient soutenir sa croissance future. 68% des jeunes adultes américains âgés de 18 à 29 ans n'ont encore jamais investi en bourse le moindre dollar. Aux Etats-Unis, 59% des boursicoteurs âgés de 18 à 34 ans passent des ordres à l'aide d'une application mobile. 81% des américains âgés de 18 à 34 ans envisageraient d'acheter des produits financiers par l'intermédiaire d'une plateforme opérée par une entreprise technologique plutôt que par l'intermédiaire d'un acteur traditionnel. Pour Robinhood aux 17,7 millions d'utilisateurs actifs chaque mois, le coût d'acquisition moyen d'un nouveau client s'élève à 15 dollars et la société met 5 mois à le rentabiliser. Mais ce n'est pas tout. Robinhood n'est pas un simple courtier. C'est aussi une plateforme de publication qui fait dans l'éducation financière. Elle y est par ailleurs très attendue. Sa newsletter et son podcast aux épisodes hebdomadaires - Under The Hood - comptent 32 millions d'abonnés. Enfin, l'IPO de Robinhood marquera aussi le début de son aventure à l'international, la fintech américaine ayant été très claire à ce sujet même si elle se défend d'avoir le moindre projet dans ses cartons. Ses solutions aujourd'hui réservées aux seuls citoyens américains iront bien à la conquête de l'Europe et de l'Asie. Ses dirigeants ont été prévoyants. Ses plateformes techniques ont déjà fait l'objet d'investissements pour opérer à l'international et la fintech cherche constamment à protéger sa propriété intellectuelle. En particulier sa marque et ceci à une échelle mondiale. En Europe, ses bases arrières pourraient être le Royaume-Uni et les Pays-Bas où l'américain a déjà des filiales. On pourrait faire le pari qu'elle débarquera en priorité au Royaume-Uni où l'attend un marché de 2.500 milliards de livres sterling. (*) au 6 août, le cours de l'action HOOD reprenait des couleurs autour des 50 dollars
Today’s episode is another throwback, reflecting on Occupy Wall Street, which we are currently in the 7th anniversary of. The occupation began on September 17th, 2011, and was viciously evicted on November 15th. Living in New York during OWS is something I will always treasure. I first heard about something going on downtown from a few friends’ posts on Facebook. It wasn’t long before I realized that this was a historical moment, and so I tried to participate as much as I could. At the time, I was working full-time at an ad agency cranking out animated banner ads (for Citibank, ironically). Deb and I were not yet married, and we were 8 months into occupying our new roles as parents with our first son, Dominic. I started spending my lunch breaks down at the park, holding up a sign that read “I have worked in advertising for 13 years for corporations such as GE, Pfizer, Merck, Wells Fargo, Citibank, HSBC, and many more. I know this beast, and it is not human. END CORPORATE PERSONHOOD” On the weekends, the whole family would go down together for a few hours to talk with people or play some music. My favorite song to perform down there was Sixteen Tons, by Merle Travis. A few weeks into the occupation, I had a flash of inspiration. I remember, I was smoking a cigarette on my apartment stoop, when I suddenly realized that the people’s mic, the only means of amplification permitted in Zuccotti, would be an amazing way to propose to Deb. I spent the next week looking through antique flea markets for a reasonably priced ring, writing a speech that would work within the people’s mic format, and organizing some friends to meet us at the Park the following Saturday. Deb thought we were just heading down there to hang out and play some music again. I knew that my idea was going to go over great with Deb and our friends and family, but I had no idea that the damn video would go viral! I uploaded it to YouTube on Saturday evening, October 15th. On Monday, friends started messaging me that my video was featured on Gawker.com. By the end of the next week, we'd been featured in The Atlantic, The Huffington Post, Gothamist, The New York Daily News, and dozens of blog entries, with over 100 thousand views. The experience galvanized our support for the movement, and we used every media inquiry into our story as an opportunity to articulate specifically why we were supporting OWS. We then became aware of Parents for Occupy Wall Street, and figured that be a good entry point for going deeper into supporting the occupation. On October 21st, the group organized a sleepover in Zuccotti park, which ended up being quite a fiasco. So much so that the night after, Deb and I decided to sit down and record a recap of what transpired. If I weren’t spread so thin with work this month, I’d love to have done a full episode discussing all the aspects of OWS that we witnessed and participated in, but I just don’t have the damn time. Shit, I wanted to have this episode prepped and ready to drop a week ago, but it took me this long to write and record this introduction. So in the meantime, please enjoy this time capsule recollection of the night Deb, Dominic, and I spent in Zuccotti park, and thanks for listening.
Seven years ago this week, this innocuous-looking downtown courtyard was taken over by Occupy Wall Street, and what resulted was one of the most exciting, chaotic, and controversial public protests ever held in New York. Our own Dan London was there in the thick of it. In this episode Dan goes back to Zuccotti to remember … Continued The post Episode 5: Zuccotti Park appeared first on RacecarRadio.
Susan Zuccotti, author of a number of award-winning books on the Holocaust, talks about the subject of her recent biography, "Père Marie-Benoît and Jewish Rescue: How a French Priest Together with Jewish Friends Saved Thousands during the Holocaust” (Indiana University Press, 2013). The lecture was supported by the Kraft-Hiatt Fund for Jewish-Christian Understanding.
Historian Susan Zuccotti tells the story of Père Marie-Benoît, a courageous French Capuchin priest who risked everything to hide Jews in France and Italy during the Holocaust. From monasteries first in Marseille and later in Rome, Père Marie-Benoît worked with Jewish co-conspirators to build remarkably effective Jewish-Christian rescue networks. Acting independently without Vatican support but with help from some priests, nuns, and local citizens, he and his friends persisted in their clandestine work until the Allies liberated Rome. After the war, Père Marie-Benoît maintained his wartime Jewish friendships and devoted the rest of his life to Jewish Christian reconciliation. In addition to her research in French and Italian archives, Susan Zuccotti personally interviewed Père Marie-Benoît, his family, Jewish rescuers with whom he worked, and survivors who owed their lives to his network.Susan Zuccotti is author of The Italians and the Holocaust: Persecution, Rescue, and Survival; The Holocaust, the French, and the Jews; and Under His Very Windows:The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy. She has taught Holocaust history at Barnard College and Trinity College. Recorded On: Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Welcome to our third podcast episode commemorating the one-year anniversary of Occupy Wall Street. The Civilians conducted interviews with activists in the movement since its start last year at Zuccotti up to this one year anniversary on September 17, 2012 (referred to as #S17 in the Twitter-sphere). The first performance in this episode is by special Civilians guest-star David Cale of an interview with Carne Ross, a British Diplomat who gives us a different perspective on the movement. Next up is Jordan Mahome performing Radio Raheem (the man who inspired the character in Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing), who helped start Paul Robeson Freedom School. To close this episode, join in from home or on the subway or wherever you are, as Mary Kate O’Neil and her band Gerry Giaimo, Robin Eaton, David Shuman, and Mia Theodoratus sing a rendition of John Lennon’s Power to the People. Interviews for this podcast were conducted by Adam Odsess-Rubin and Steven Cosson. The performances you just heard were directed by Mia Rovegno. Thanks for listening. For more, please visit http://www.thecivilians.org.To leave a comment, please visit The Civilians' blog http://blogforthecivilians.blogspot.com/!
John Zuccotti was the President of World Financial Properties and First deputy Mayor of New York City during the period of 1976-1977. In this session, John Zuccotti and Jack Bigel, President of Program Planner Inc., and moderator Edward Rogowsky, City editor of CUNY-TV, discuss the government sector of New York during the fiscal crisis of the 1970's.
John Zuccotti, U.S. Chairman, Brookfield Properties
It's a movement that's gained international attention. Occupy Wall Street started on 9/17/2011 as a protest against social injustice, economic inequality, corporate greed, and banking frauds just to name a few of the abuses that have spawned this passionate protest. Mike McGrath & Tom Hagan are residents of Bayside, Queens that have been activists since the start. Today they share some of OWS' complaints & describe the ever-changing scene of Zuccotti Park & the movement at large. But OWS isn't the the only occupation featured on today's episode. Having been inspired by you listeners, I decide to start my own movement, & I need your help. Listen!
Talking with David Buccola, who was there all day yesterday for the massive Shutdown Wall Street protests. Police craziness. Shutting down Zuccotti one day then kettling people in the next. But then tens of thousands came. This was far too manyy for them to control. The "99%" and other slogansprojected on the Verizon Building as marchers crossed the Brooklyn Bridge was inspirational, made even more so by it coming from an apartment in the projects. When the mom in the apartment saw what was being projec ted, she refused to take the agreed upon payment, saying this was for the people! At one point 30,000 were watching live streaming from theother99 on Ustream who had over 700,000 unique views. This shows the power of social media. he said cops backed off from him when they saw the live streaming. Most important, this movement is everywhere now. Support it in your community or start one of your own.
Talking with David Buccola, who was there all day yesterday for the massive Shutdown Wall Street protests. Police craziness. Shutting down Zuccotti one day then kettling people in the next. But then tens of thousands came. This was far too manyy for them to control. The "99%" and other slogansprojected on the Verizon Building as marchers crossed the Brooklyn Bridge was inspirational, made even more so by it coming from an apartment in the projects. When the mom in the apartment saw what was being projec ted, she refused to take the agreed upon payment, saying this was for the people! At one point 30,000 were watching live streaming from theother99 on Ustream who had over 700,000 unique views. This shows the power of social media. he said cops backed off from him when they saw the live streaming. Most important, this movement is everywhere now. Support it in your community or start one of your own.
The Rev. Pat Bumgardner | God alone is my Hope and my Salvation | Metropolitan Community Church of New York (MCCNY). | www.mccny.org | A church of the LGBT community. Open to all.