Gerelateerd aan
-
MOVIOLA es un podcast dedicado exclusivamente a hablar de cine clásico de todas las décadas: rescatar nombres, historias, estrellas y anécdotas que hicieron el cine, con la intención de parar las aguas del olvido.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
Welcome to SAGA, where we discuss animated movies, shows, and shorts as well as current animation news. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/podsaga/support
-
-
Allerede sidste december havde Poul Joachim Stender, Anne Spangsberg og Søren E. Jensen premiere på deres pastorale julepodcast, hvor de hver dag frem til juleaften havde en daglig udsendelse med pastoral drøftelse af emner, som var valgt af Kirke Saaby og Hvalsøs sognebørn.
Podcastserien fik stor omtale og meget få lyttere, men det var sjovt at lave, og derfor gentager de tre præster i år succes’en – eller mangel på samme. I år har de endda professionelt udstyr til rådighed i modsætning til sidste år, hvor teknikken bestod af en simpel mobiltelefon af kinesisk fabrikat. Måske var der på den måde lyttere alligevel; de var bare ikke lokale. -
See One Beautiful Soul is a Podcast which explores stories about the 3 F Words: Forgiveness, Failure, and Freedom. In each episode you heart will be lifted hearing about two unlikely souls forgiving one another and make sure to record the Tools you can use to live a life of more Freedom!
www.SeeOneBeautifulSoul.com
Finalist in PopCon 2022 Best Podcast in Spirituality and Religion Category -
-
Welcome to Kingdom Writers where CJ and Shelley Hitz help you take a step of faith to finally finish your book. This podcast is filled with spiritual encouragement as well as prayers to help you overcome the resistance you face as a writer. Your story matters! We believe that you have a specific role to play in the kingdom of heaven to impact lives for eternity. And because of this, we will pour out our lives encouraging writers like you to not only tell your stories but to take the courageous step of self-publishing your stories in books that will outlive you and leave behind a powerful legacy. This podcast is sponsored by our membership Christian Book Academy where we help you give birth to your books. We invite you to join our community of Kingdom Writers!
-
Retakes Podcast is the 'self-help section' for Industry Animators, discussing the mindset and mental health side of one of the most creative careers in the world!
Hosted by Dani Abram
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
Focus on Women, a platform we created to help support all women in the photography and video arena. From photographers and directors to producers and creative directors, stylists to assistants and more. Our mission is to give women a seat at the table and involve them in community through networking events, workshops, mentoring and mentorship.
-
This podcasts bring together Masterpiece exhibitors in different fields to discuss, from personal and aesthetic perspectives, a single material that is shared across those fields: how the speakers relate to the material, what they’ve learnt about it over time, what makes it beautiful; its versatility; how it has been handled, worked, manipulated, transformed by artists; and why and how collectors prize and preserve it today. The series takes a tangent on cross-collecting by exploring what disparate type of objects have in common – and what we can learn about them by placing them together.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
Photography publisher (and drone nerd) Adam Juniper, with co-hosts Tanya Nagar or Dan M Lee discuss creative techniques to improve your photography, whatever your camera. Regular tips and advice come from in-depth guest interviews.
Tanya is an accomplished Street Photographer, Dan a professional adventure photographer based in New York. Both have travelled the world to shoot photographs, while Adam has toured the world to work with some of the biggest names in photography. -
Interviews with creators, writers and innovators. From the punk underground to the radical entrepreneur. Dwayne Walker, director of BIBLE MADNESS and WRESTLING THEN AND NOW, brings newsmaker guests to your desktop, laptop, phone and television.
Video versions of the podcast may be found at: walkertown.com. -
-
http://www.adfreebooks.com - 500+ audiobooks, all ad free
"The only fire for the whole house was the kitchen stove, with a fire box about eighteen inches long and eight inches wide and deep,- scant space for three or four small sticks, around which in hard zero weather all the family of ten shivered, and beneath which in the morning we found our socks and coarse, soggy boots frozen solid." Thus, with perceptive eye for detail, the American naturalist, John Muir, describes life on a pioneer Wisconsin farm in the 1850's. Muir was only eleven years old when his father uprooted the family from a relatively comfortable life in Dunbar, Scotland, to settle in the backwoods of North America.The elder Muir was a religious fundamentalist. What his father taught, John Muir writes, was "grim self denial, in season and out of season, to mortify the flesh, keep our bodies in subjection to Bible laws, and mercilessly punish ourselves for every fault, imagined or committed." Muir's father believed that the Bible was "the only book human beings could possibly require," while John secretly read every volume of poetry and literature he could get his hands on. With no formal schooling after leaving Scotland, John also learned from nature--keenly observing details of the seasons, the life of the farm oxen, and wild animals and birds. John also became an amateur inventor, eking out time from farm chores by getting up at 1 a.m. to whittle intricate wooden clocks by candlelight in the unheated farm house basement.Muir finally made a break for freedom--his decision was to go to Madison, Wisconsin, and enter his clocks in the State Fair, with the hope that somebody might see them and offer him a job in a machine shop! All the baggage he carried the day he left home was a package made up of "two clocks and a small thermometer made of a piece of old washboard, all three tied together with no covering or case of any sort, the whole looking like one very complicated machine." His father's goodbye was to admonish John about the "wicked world" and to warn him sternly that if he should find himself in need of money, none would be forthcoming. John would have to depend on himself.How John Muir made his way from that Wisconsin farm to become the great American naturalist, spokesman for Yosemite and the California redwoods, is the stuff of legend: which makes Muir's autobiographical account of his early boyhood a fascinating read.