Business Wind Up
Photographers Zara Ashby and Spyros Heniadis drink wine and discuss the ins and outs of running a photography business.
Categories: Business
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Photographers Zara Ashby and Spyros Heniadis drink wine and discuss the ins and outs of running a photography business.
Categories: Business
Ana and Brian take deep dives into your favorite foods. They find out where they came from, what makes them so good, and why are they so damn important? They’ll share history, recipes, and tips on how to make some tasty food! Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/forkthis/support
Categories: Arts
“A smash hit” – TimeOut
Splendid Chaps was a year-long celebration of Doctor Who fiftieth anniversary: eleven – well, okay, twenty-something – live performances recorded as podcasts in which your brain will be fed, your funny bone tickled and your hearts opened (yes, both of them!). Hosted by writer John Richards (Outland, Boxcutters), comedian Ben McKenzie (Dungeon Crawl, Pratchat) and singer Petra Elliott, with special guests, musical performances and surprises in every episode. And while the anniversary year is now long behind us, the Chaps still pop back up from time to time to discuss the parts of Who the original episodes couldn’t reach.
Tags: Ben, doctor, elliott, john, mckenzie, petra, richards, television, tv, who
Woke from Home. Just some friends(Eugene @sooomanywho, Siba @ sibatshuma, Toyin @toyinn) discussing various topics from the perspective of 1st Gen Africans. Anything that you are thinking about, we are talking about. Join us every week for a fresh new EP. We are on all streaming platforms so please hit the subscribe!! https://linktr.ee/wokefromhome Please follow us on: IG @WokeFrom_Home Twitter @WokefromHome email @wokefromhome2020@gmail.com YouTube – t.ly/4shw
Categories: Society & Culture
A podcast that touches on everything from Improv to Speech Pathology
Categories: Society & Culture
A lot of us live in our head, disconnected from our feelings and intuition. This podcast touches on releasing insecure attachment, accepting your authentic self and getting “unstuck” by connecting to how you FEEL instead of how you THINK. I’ve been there, and discuss sensitive subjects using my own experiences with a lot of laughs and even more empathy… because we’re all flawed humans.
Categories: Education
Equipping Women to fearless pursue purpose to live abundantly
Categories: Education, Religion & Spirituality
Tags: christianwomen, entrepreneurship, inspiration, leadership, Motivation
Me (Marlowe) and my cousin (Ivy) will get someone we know and they will ask a question we will answer it with a book or a story. If we don’t know the answer we will have some fun
Categories: Kids & Family
Sharing stories of families facing unexpected challenges and how they respond.
Categories: Kids & Family
Have You Met Her Yet? is a podcast that highlights the accomplishments, confronts the uncomfortable and addresses our most fascinating questions about women in the workplace. Who they are. What they do. Why you should know them. Join host, Lindsay Dent, founder of Creative Agency & Community, Pink Crown Creative each week as she interviews a new influential woman in the workplace and shares her passion for sharing their incredible stories. You can expect real conversations, lessons and stories from Canadian women who are thriving in their industries.
Categories: Business, Education
Tags: advice for women, Canadian entrepreneurs, Canadian women, career advice, Female Empowerment, female stories, inspiring women, women in business, women in the work place
A one stop mobile shop A place to come together with a cuppa and talk fashion
Categories: Arts
In life we experience many challenges, setbacks, failures and pain. At times we may wonder how we have lived through so many daunting experiences and live to tell about it. The purpose and focus of this podcast is to give yourself permission to think critically about life and all its valleys and mountain peaks. I hope that as you listen and join this podcast community, I earn your listening respect and lead you to muse and ponder on the purpose of your life and how we together can engage in the process of giving ourselves permission to think.
Categories: Education, Religion & Spirituality
Catching Up is a podcast by The Ocean Cleanup, giving you updates and insights from the team behind the non-profit organization. The Ocean Cleanup is designing and developing cleanup systems to clean up what is already polluting our oceans and to intercept plastic on its way to the ocean via rivers. Their end goal is to remove 90% of floating ocean plastic by 2040.
Categories: Business
“Been All Around This World” explores the breadth and depth of folklorist Alan Lomax’s seven decades of field recordings. From the earliest trips he made through the American South with his father, John A. Lomax, beginning in 1933, to his last documentary work in the early 1990s, the program will present seminal artists and performances alongside obscure, unidentified, and previously unheard singers and players, from around America and the world, drawn from the Lomax Collection at the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress. It is produced and hosted by Nathan Salsburg, curator of the Alan Lomax Archive at the Association for Cultural Equity, the non-profit research center and advocacy organization that Lomax founded in 1983. (Photo of Alan Lomax by Peter Figlestahler.)
Brutality and inhumanity were central to the Southern state prison farms, in their theory and their practice, and of them all, the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman Farm was the most brutal and inhuman. Both John A. and Alan Lomax made repeated visits to Parchman, recording — under the eye of the disinterested white captains, sergeants, and warden, and the guns of the “trusty” prisoner-guards — a body of American song unmatched in its depth, dignity, and power. Folklorist and prison documentarian Bruce Jackson once said that the group work songs sung by the black inmates of the Southern penitentiary farms were means of “making it in Hell.” Alan Lomax, writing in 1947, said that: “In the pen itself, we saw that the songs, quite literally kept the men alive and normal…. These songs, coming out of the filthy darkness of the pen, touched with exquisite musicality, are a testimony to the love of truth and beauty which is a universal human trait.” In this episode, spurred by the ongoing horrors being reported in the Mississippi Department of Corrections in general and at Parchman in particular, we listen back over the four decades of recordings made by the four white folklorists (the Lomaxes, Herbert Halpert, and William Ferris) who took the trouble to visit the place and document the singing of its prisoners: work songs for clearing ground, felling trees, picking cotton, or breaking rocks, as well as solo field hollers, spirituals, and blues.No one can mourn the passing of this song tradition and the system of black disenfranchisement and white supremacy that made it necessary to its singers. But, despite the 1971 class-auction lawsuit that forced federal reorganization of Parchman due to its epidemic use of “cruel and unusual punishment,” it’s only differently awful in 2020. In his harrowing “Worse Than Slavery: Parchman Farm and the Ordeal of Jim Crow Justice,” Michael Oshinsky provides a 1975 quote from a convict named Horace Carter, who’d been at Parchman for fifty years. What was missing in the “new” Parchman, Mr. Carter said, was “the feeling that work counted for something… awful bad as it was in most camps, that kept us tired and kept us together and made me feel better. I’m not looking to go backwards. I know the troubles at old Parchman better than any man alive. I’m 73 years old. But I look around today and see a place that makes me sad.” This episode was completed before the announcement that William Barr’s Justice Department will open a civil rights investigation into conditions at Parchman. It’s hard to imagine an administration with less sympathy for incarcerated people of color, but who knows, maybe, at last, Parchman Farm will be shuttered for good. “These songs are a vivid reminder of a system of social control and forced labor that has endured in the South for centuries, and I do not believe that the pattern of Southern life can be fundamentally reshaped until what lies behind these roaring, ironic choruses is understood.” —Alan Lomax, 1958For streaming audio of all of Alan Lomax’s 1947, 1948, and 1959 Parchman Farm recordings, visit research.culturalequity.org. PLAYLIST:[Bed music:] Unidentified ensemble, including Lonnie Robertson, guitar, and possibly “Black Eagle,” cornet. Camp 1, April 1936. *Frank Devine and unidentified man: In the Bye and Bye. Unidentified camp, August 1933. *Bowlegs (real name unknown): Drink My Morning Tea. Camp 12, August 1933. *Unidentified men: He Never Said A Mumblin’ Word. Unidentified camp, August 1933. *M.B. Barnes, Louella Dade, Passion Buckner, Alberta Turner, Bertha Riley, Lily Mallard, Christine Shannon, and Josephine Douglas: Oh Freedom. Women’s camp, April 1936.*Big Charlie Butler: Diamond Joe. Unidentified camp, March 1937.
[Bed music:] John Dudley: Cool Drink of Water Blues. Dairy camp, October 1959. *Mattie May Thomas: Workhouse Blues. Women’s camp, May 1939.*”22″ (Benny Will Richardson) and group: It Makes A Long Time Man Feel Bad. Camp B, November or December 1947. *Ervin Webb and group: I’m Goin’ Home. Dairy camp, October 1959. *Johnny Lee Moore, Henry Mason, Ed Lewis and James Carter: Tom Devil. Camp B, October 1959.[Bed music:] James Carter and group: Poor Lazarus. Camp B, October 1959. *Unidentified prisoners: Water Boy Drowned In the Mobile Bay. Unidentified camp, August 1968. *Heuston Earms: Ain’t Been Able to Get Home No More / interview. Camp B, October 1959.
These podcast episodes aim to tackle interesting practical topics within the world of fine art. Transatlantic conversation flows between third-generation colourman Michael Craine (Managing Director of UK based Cranfield Colours) and US based Sales Manager and graduate printmaker Sarah Carnline. Cranfield produce and export Artists’ oil paints and printmaking inks across the world so have seen and heard it all!
Categories: Arts
Pinnacle Financial Advisors, a Marlton, New Jersey-based wealth management advisory firm, presents a series of financial education podcasts for its clients and friends of the firm. Topics include protecting yourself from identity theft and credit card fraud, and dealing with the practical realities of managing personal finances, including having conversations about financial management with adult children, estate and long-term care concerns, and other wealth management issues. For more information on Pinnacle Financial Advisors, please call Pat at Pinnacle, at +1 (856) 797-8082 x222 or or email info@pfacentral.com. You can also visit Pinnacle’s website at www.pfacentral.com.
Categories: Business
Tags: Advisor, Advisors, brenner, C#, cherry, conference, Estate, fee, financial, fraud, hill, Identity, intelysis, investing, Jersey, lubetkin, Management, marlton, metz, new, nj, only, pinnacle, planning, Podcasts, Professional, scheyer, seminar, theft, Wealth
Welcome to Arctis – A high fantasy Dungeons and Dragons world set in a magical polar region filled with adventure! The mystical aurora borealis serves as a guiding light for the continent’s mysterious inhabitants. Storied heroes can Ascend to a higher plane, becoming revered wardens of the land. Will you protect Arctis, or corrupt it from within? Arctis is a persistent campaign played with D&D 5th edition rules on Foundry Virtual Tabletop. Our players are video game industry professionals, designers, and content creators with decades of experience who want to kick back and roll some dice with friends.
Categories: Leisure
In Victorian-era Wheeling, West Virginia, a German-American brewer and entrepreneur would create a lasting impact that is still felt in the community today. From immigration to politics, industrialization to crime, take a step back in time as we look at Wheeling through the lens of Henry Schmulbach’s life. Brought to you by Wheeling Heritage Media and hosted by William Hal Gorby.
Preview of our upcoming podcast – Henry: The life and legacy of Wheeling’s most notorious brewer.
Categories: History, Society & Culture
Tags: History, west virginia, wheeling
2 ex-rappers and a DJ friend from Halifax, Nova Scotia discuss music, food, movies, entertainment news and interview artists and other people in the entertainment industry.
Categories: Music
An interview from June 2011 with James Corden about his current role in One Man, Two Guvnors, and his career in theatre and television.
Categories: Arts
Tags: James Corden, National Theatre, One Man Two Guvnors, Platform