la PERFORMANCE / TOUR: Announcing SMOKE Jazz Club’s December Line-up Featuring The 12th Annual Coltrane Festival With Ravi Coltrane’s Smoke Debut, A Spectacular New Year’s Eve Celebration, Catherine Russell and Sean Mason, And More By www.allaboutjazz.com Published On :: 2024-10-31T15:56:21+00:00 Entering its second quarter century as committed as ever to pure jazz (All About Jazz),” SMOKE Jazz Club continues its 25th anniversary season with an exciting line-up in December. The holiday season kickstarts with “A Nat King Cole Christmas” featuring singer Allan Harris (Dec 4). SMOKE is thrilled to welcome acclaimed vocalist Catherine Russell in her club debut in a thrilling duo with pianist Sean Mason (Dec 5-8) performing repertoire off their latest album My Ideal... Full Article
la PERFORMANCE / TOUR: Aaron Parnell Brown and The Riverside Gang Come To Black Squirrel Club In Philadelphia On Saturday November 23, 2024 By www.allaboutjazz.com Published On :: 2024-11-04T01:48:43+00:00 Come see and hear one of Philly's most extraordinary artists in Jazz, Soul, and Blues—Aaron Parnell Brown and The Riverside Gang! Coming to the Black Squirrel Club on Saturday November 23rd! Saturday, November 23, 2024... Full Article
la RECORDING: Acclaimed Singer Songwriter Laura Baron Returns With Poignant Jazz Infused Album 'Beauty In The Broken' By www.allaboutjazz.com Published On :: 2024-11-07T13:17:23+00:00 With a distinguished career spanning folk, jazz, and world music, award-winning singer songwriter Laura Baron has recently released her latest album, Beauty in the Broken, a stirring collection that sees her embracing her jazz roots in a new light. Featuring eight original songs along with an inspired jazz-infused take on the classic song "Dream a Little Dream," Baron’s latest work captures a journey of healing and transformation.... Full Article
la RECORDING: Celebrated Composer-Trombonist Naomi Moon Siegel Releases Shatter The Glass Sanctuary On Slow and Steady Records By www.allaboutjazz.com Published On :: 2024-11-07T15:03:19+00:00 Available at Slow and Steady Records and Bandcamp. Trailblazing composer-trombonist Naomi Moon Siegel has announced the Nov... Full Article
la AWARD / GRANT: Donald Vega Earns Grammy Nomination For 'As I Travel' - Best Latin Jazz Album By www.allaboutjazz.com Published On :: 2024-11-10T14:40:07+00:00 Celebrated pianist and composer Donald Vega receives a GRAMMY nomination in the category of Best Latin Jazz Album for his 2023 recording of As I Travel, an autobiographical suite of compositions inspired by his journey to the United States from his native Nicaragua, and the people and experiences that shaped him along the way.... Full Article
la Managing Algorithmic Volatility By www.seobook.com Published On :: Mon, 11 May 2020 03:30:47 +0000 Upon the recently announced Google update I've seen some people Tweet things like if you are afraid of algorithm updates, you must be a crappy SEO if you are technically perfect in your SEO, updates will only help you I read those sorts of lines and cringe. Here's why... Fragility Different businesses, business models, and business structures have varying degrees of fragility. If your business is almost entirely based on serving clients then no matter what you do there is going to be a diverse range of outcomes for clients on any major update. Let's say 40% of your clients are utterly unaffected by an update & of those who saw any noticeable impact there was a 2:1 ratio in your favor, with twice as many clients improving as falling. Is that a good update? Does that work well for you? If you do nothing other than client services as your entire business model, then that update will likely suck for you even though the net client impact was positive. Why? Many businesses are hurting after the Covid-19 crisis. Entire categories have been gutted & many people are looking for any reason possible to pull back on budget. Some of the clients who won big on the update might end up cutting their SEO budget figuring they had already won big and that problem was already sorted. Some of the clients that fell hard are also likely to either cut their budget or call endlessly asking for updates and stressing the hell out of your team. Capacity Utilization Impacts Profit Margins Your capacity utilization depends on how high you can keep your steady state load relative to what your load looks like at peaks. When there are big updates management or founders can decide to work double shifts and do other things to temporarily deal with increased loads at the peak, but that can still be stressful as hell & eat away at your mental and physical health as sleep and exercise are curtailed while diet gets worse. The stress can be immense if clients want results almost immediately & the next big algorithm update which reflects your current work may not happen for another quarter year. How many clients want to be told that their investments went sour but the problem was they needed to double their investment while cashflow is tight and wait a season or two while holding on to hope? Category-based Fragility Businesses which appear to be diversified often are not. Everything in hospitality was clipped by Covid-19. 40% of small businesses across the United States have stopped making rent payments. When restaurants massively close that's going to hit Yelp's business hard. Auto sales are off sharply. Likewise there can be other commonalities in sites which get hit during an update. Not only could it include business category, but it could also be business size, promotional strategies, etc. Sustained profits either come from brand strength, creative differentiation, or systemization. Many prospective clients do not have the budget to build a strong brand nor the willingness to create something that is truly differentiated. That leaves systemization. Systemization can leave footprints which act as statistical outliers that can be easily neutralized. Sharp changes can happen at any point in time. For years Google was funding absolute garbage like Mahalo autogenerated spam and eHow with each month being a new record. It is very hard to say "we are doing it wrong" or "we need to change everything" when it works month after month after month. Then an update happens and poof. Was eHow decent back in the first Internet bubble? Sure. But it lost money. Was it decent after it got bought out for a song and had the paywall dropped in favor of using the new Google AdSense program? Sure. Was it decent the day Demand Media acquired it? Sure. Was it decent on the day of the Demand Media IPO? Almost certainly not. But there was a lag between that day and getting penalized. Panda Trivia The first Panda update missed eHow because journalists were so outraged by the narrative associated with the pump-n-dump IPO. They feared their jobs going away and being displaced by that low level garbage, particularly as the market cap of Demand Media eclipsed the New York Times. Journalist coverage of the pump-n-dump IPO added credence to it from an algorithmic perspective. By constantly writing hate about eHow they made eHow look like a popular brand, generating algorithmic signals that carried the site until Google created an extension which allowed journalists and other webmasters to vote against the site they had been voting for through all their outrage coverage. Algorithms & the Very Visible Hand And all algorithmic channels like organic search, the Facebook news feed, or Amazon's product pages go through large shifts across time. If they don't, they get gamed, repetitive, and lose relevance as consumer tastes change and upstarts like Tiktok emerge. Consolidation by the Attention Merchants Frequent product updates, cloning of upstarts, or outright acquisitions are required to maintain control of distribution: "The startups of the Rebellion benefited tremendously from 2009 to 2012. But from 2013 on, the spoils of smartphone growth went to an entirely different group: the Empire. ... A network effect to engage your users, AND preferred distribution channels to grow, AND the best resources to build products? Oh my! It’s no wonder why the Empire has captured so much smartphone value and created a dark time for the Rebellion. ... Now startups are fighting for only 5% of the top spots as the Top Free Apps list is dominated by incumbents. Facebook (4 apps), Google (6 apps), and Amazon (4 apps) EACH have as many apps in the Top 100 list as all the new startups combined." Apple & Amazon Emojis are popular, so those features got copied, those apps got blocked & then apps using the official emojis also got blocked from distribution. The same thing happens with products on Amazon.com in terms of getting undercut by a house brand which was funded by using the vendor's sales data. Re-buy your brand or else. Facebook Before the Facebook IPO some thought buying Zynga shares was a backdoor way to invest into Facebook because gaming was such a large part of the ecosystem. That turned out to be a dumb thesis and horrible trade. At times other things trended including quizzes, videos, live videos, news, self hosted Instant Articles, etc. Over time the general trend was edge rank of professional publishers fell as a greater share of inventory went to content from friends & advertisers. The metrics associated with the ads often overstated their contribution to sales due to bogus math and selection bias. Internet-first publishers like CollegeHumor struggled to keep up with the changes & influencers waiting for a Facebook deal had to monetize using third parties: “I did 1.8 billion views last year,” [Ryan Hamilton] said. “I made no money from Facebook. Not even a dollar.” ... "While waiting for Facebook to invite them into a revenue-sharing program, some influencers struck deals with viral publishers such as Diply and LittleThings, which paid the creators to share links on their pages. Those publishers paid top influencers around $500 per link, often with multiple links being posted per day, according to a person who reached such deals." YouTube YouTube had a Panda-like update back in 2012 to favor watch time over raw view counts. They also adjust the ranking algorithms on breaking news topics to favor large & trusted channels over conspiracy theorist content, alternative health advice, hate speech & ridiculous memes like the Tide pod challenge. All unproven channels need to start somewhat open to gain usage, feedback & marketshare. Once they become real businesses they clamp down. Some of the clamp down can be editorial, forced by regulators, or simply anticompetitive monpolistic abuse. Kid videos were a huge area on YouTube (perhaps still are) but that area got cleaned up after autogenerated junk videos were covered & the FTC clipped YouTube for delivering targeted ads on channels which primarily catered to children. Dominant channels can enforce tying & bundling to wipe out competitors: "Google’s response to the threat from AppNexus was that of a classic monopolist. They announced that YouTube would no longer allow third-party advertising technology. This was a devastating move for AppNexus and other independent ad technology companies. YouTube was (and is) the largest ad-supported video publisher, with more than 50% market share in most major markets. ... Over the next few months, Google’s ad technology team went to each of our clients and told them that, regardless of how much they liked working with AppNexus, they would have to also use Google’s ad technology products to continue buying YouTube. This is the definition of bundling, and we had no recourse. Even WPP, our largest customer and largest investors, had no choice but to start using Google’s technology. AppNexus growth slowed, and we were forced to lay off 100 employees in 2016." Everyone Else Every moderately large platform like eBay, Etsy, Zillow, TripAdvisor or the above sorts of companies runs into these sorts of issues with changing distribution & how they charge for distribution. Building Anti-fragility Into Your Business Model Growing as fast as you can until the economy craters or an algorithm clips you almost guarantees a hard fall along with an inability to deal with it. Markets ebb and flow. And that would be true even if the above algorithmic platforms did not make large, sudden shifts. Build Optionality Into Your Business Model If your business primarily relies on publishing your own websites or you have a mix of a few clients and your own sites then you have a bit more optionality to your approach in dealing with updates. Even if you only have one site and your business goes to crap maybe you at least temporarily take on a few more consulting clients or do other gig work to make ends meet. Focus on What is Working If you have a number of websites you can pour more resources into whatever sites reacted positively to the update while (at least temporarily) ignoring any site that was burned to a crisp. Ignore the Dead Projects The holding cost of many websites is close to zero unless they use proprietary and complex content management systems. Waiting out a penalty until you run out of obvious improvements on your winning sites is not a bad strategy. Plus, if you think the burned site is going to be perpetually burned to a crisp (alternative health anyone?) then you could sell links off it or generate other alternative revenue streams not directly reliant on search rankings. Build a Cushion If you have cash savings maybe you guy out and buy some websites or domain names from other people who are scared of the volatility or got clipped for issues you think you could easily fix. When the tide goes out debt leverage limits your optionality. Savings gives you optionality. Having slack in your schedule also gives you optionality. The person with a lot of experience & savings would love to see highly volatile search markets because those will wash out some of the competition, curtail investments from existing players, and make other potential competitors more hesitant to enter the market. Categories: internet Full Article
la New Google Ad Labeling By www.seobook.com Published On :: Sun, 16 Oct 2022 00:56:57 +0000 TechCrunch recently highlighted how Google is changing their ad labeling on mobile devices. A few big changes include: ad label removed from individual ad units where the unit-level label was instead becomes a favicon a "Sponsored" label above ads the URL will show right of the favicon & now the site title will be in a slightly larger font above the URL An example of the new layout is here: Displaying a site title & the favicon will allow advertisers to get brand exposure, even if they don't get the click, while the extra emphasis on site name could lead to shifting of ad clicks away from unbranded sites toward branded sites. It may also cause a lift in clicks on precisely matching domains, though that remains to be seen & likely dependes upon many other factors. The favicon and site name in the ads likely impact consumer recall, which can bleed into organic rankings. After TechCrunch made the above post a Google spokesperson chimed in with an update Changes to the appearance of Search ads and ads labeling are the result of rigorous user testing across many different dimensions and methodologies, including user understanding and response, advertiser quality and effectiveness, and overall impact of the Search experience. We’ve been conducting these tests for more than a year to ensure that users can identify the source of their Search ads and where they are coming from, and that paid content is clearly labeled and distinguishable from search results as Google Search continues to evolve The fact it was pre-announced & tested for so long indicates it is both likely to last a while and will in aggregate shift clicks away from the organic result set to the paid ads. Categories: google Full Article
la The Magical Black Box By www.seobook.com Published On :: Sun, 24 Sep 2023 07:43:05 +0000 Google's mission statement is "organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful." That mission is so profound & so important the associated court documents in their antitrust cases must be withheld from public consumption. Hey. The full exhibit list just posted in DC federal court for USA vs Google. J/k, they literally posted the numbers of all of the admitted exhibits which would be unsealed in a sane world where public interest is respected even more so because the defendant is insanely powerful. pic.twitter.com/FViD40xVmf— Jason Kint (@jason_kint) September 23, 2023 Before document sharing was disallowed, some were shared publicly. Internal emails stated: Hal Varian was off in his public interviews where he suggested it was the algorithms rather than the amount of data which is prime driver of relevancy. Apple would not get any revshare if there was a user choice screen & must set Google as the default search engine to qualify for any revshare. Google has a policy of being vague about using clickstream data to influence ranking, though they have heavily relied upon clickstream data to influence ranking. Advances in machine learning have made it easier to score content to where the clickstream data had become less important. When Apple Maps launched & Google Maps lost the default position on iOS Google Maps lost 60% of their iOS distribution, and that was with how poorly the Apple Maps roll out went. Google sometimes subverted their typical auction dynamics and would flip the order of the top 2 ads to boost ad revenues. Google had a policy of "shaking the cushions" to hit the quarterly numbers by changing advertiser ad prices without informing advertisers that they'd be competing in a rigged auction with artificially manipulated shill bids from the auctioneer competing against them. When Google talked about hitting the quarterly numbers with shaking the cusions the 5% number which was shared skewed a bit low: For a brand campaign focused on a niche product, she said the average CPC at $11.74 surged to $25.85 over the last six months, amounting to a 108% increase. However, there wasn’t an incremental return on sales. “The level to which [price manipulations] happens is what we don’t know,” said Yang. “It’s shady business practices because there’s no regulation. They regulate themselves.” Early in the history of search ads Google blocked trademark keyword bidding. They later allowed it. When keyword bidding on trademarks was allowed it led to a conundrum for some advertisers. If you do not defend your trademark you could lose it, but if you agree with competitors not to bid on each other's trademarks the FTC could come after you - like they did with 1-800 Contacts. This set up forces many brands to participate in auctions where they are arbitraging their own pre-existing brand equity. The ad auctioneer runs shady auctions where it looks across at your account behavior and bids then adjusts bid floors to suck more money out of you. This amounts to something akin to the bid jamming that was done in early Overture, except it is the house itself doing it to you! The last auction I remembered like that was SnapNames, where a criminal named Nelson Brady on the executive team used the handle halverez to leverage participant max bids and put in bids just under their bids. The goal of his fraud? To hit the numbers & get an earn out bonus - similar to how Google insiders were discussing "shaking the cushions" to hit the number. Halverez created a program which looked across aggregate bid data, join auctions which only had 1 other participant, and then use the one-way view of competing bids to put in a shill bid to drive up costs - which sure sounds conceptually similar to Google's "shaking the cushions." "Just looking at this very tactically, and sorry to go into this level of detail, but based on where we are I'm afraid it's warranted. We are short __% queries and are ahead on ads launches so are short __% revenue vs. plan. If we don't hit plan, our sales team doesn't get its quota for the second quarter in a row and we miss the street's expectations again, which is not what Ruth signaled to the street so we get punished pretty badly in the market. We are shaking the cushions on launches and have some candidates in May that will help, but if these break in mid-late May we only get half a quarter of impact or less, which means we need __% excess to where we are today and can't do it alone. The Search team is working together with us to accelerate a launch out of a new mobile layout by the end of May that will be very revenue positive (exact numbers still moving), but that still won't be enough. Our best shot at making the quarter is if we get an injection of at least __%, ideally __%, queries ASAP from Chrome. Some folks on our side are running a more detailed, Finance-based, what-if analysis on this and should be done with that in a couple of days, but I expect that these will be the rough numbers. The question we are all faced with is how badly do we want to hit our numbers this quarter? We need to make this choice ASAP. I care more about revenue than the average person but think we can all agree that for all of our teams trying to live in high cost areas another $___,___ in stock price loss will not be great for morale, not to mention the huge impact on our sales team." - Google VP Jerry Dischler Google is also pushing advertisers away from keyword-based bidding and toward a portfolio approach of automated bidding called Performance Max, where you give Google your credit card and budget then they bid as they wish. By blending everything into a single soup you may not know where the waste is & it may not be particularly easy to opt out of poorly performing areas. Remember enhanced AdWords campaigns? Google continues to blur dataflow outside of their ad auctions to try to bring more of the ad spend into their auctions. Wow. Google. Years behind other browsers (aka monopoly power), Google is attempting to deprecate tracking system A (aka third party cookies) and replace it with another tracking system B (aka Topics) that treats sites as G data mules.This is deceptive as hell comparing B to A. pic.twitter.com/hCBJgYr7qn— Jason Kint (@jason_kint) September 22, 2023 The amount Google is paying Apple to be the default search provider is staggering. What is $18 billion / year buying ? The DoJ has narrowed in an agreement not to compete between Apple and Google: "Sanford Bernstein estimates Google will pay Apple between $18 billion and $19 billion this year for default search status" https://t.co/HmoZxCZkqm— Tim Wu (@superwuster) September 22, 2023 Tens of billions of dollars is a huge payday. No way Google would hyper-optimize other aspects of their business (locating data centers near dams, prohibiting use of credit card payments for large advertisers, cutting away ad agency management fees, buying Android, launching Chrome, using broken HTML on YouTube to make it render slowly on Firefox & Microsoft Edge to push Chrome distribution, all the dirty stuff Google did to violate user privacy with overriding Safari cookies, buying DoubleClick, stealing the ad spend from banned publishers rather than rebating it to advertisers, creating a proprietary version of HTML & force ranking it above other results to stop header bidding, & then routing around their internal firewall on display ads to give their house ads the advantage in their ad auctions, etc etc etc) and then just throw over a billion dollars a month needlessly at a syndication partner. This is right -- Google was once an extraordinary product, but over time became stagnant & too grabby of random revenue as it ate its ecosystem. Makes it the right time to force Google to try and compete without reaching for its bribery checkbook https://t.co/gDhtDMjfo0— Tim Wu (@superwuster) September 22, 2023 For perspective on the scale of those payments consider that it wasn't that long ago Yahoo! was considered a big player in search and Apollo bought Yahoo! plus AOL from Verizon for about $5 billion & then was quickly able to sell branding & technology rights in Japan to Softbank for $1.6 billion & other miscellaneous assets for nearly a half-billion, reducing the net cost to only $3 billion. If Google loses this lawsuit and the payments to Apple are declared illegal, that would be a huge revenue (and profit) hit for Apple. Apple would be forced to roll out their own search engine. This would cut away at least 30% of the search market from Google & it would give publishers another distribution channel. Most likely Apple Search would launch with a lower ad density than Google has for short term PR purposes & publishers would have a year or two of enhanced distribution before Apple's ad load matched Google's ad load. It is hard to overstate how strong Apple's brand is. For many people the cell phone is like a family member. I recently went to upgrade my phone and Apple's local store closed early in the evening at 8pm. The next day when they opened at 10 there was a line to wait in to enter the store, like someone was trying to get concert tickets. Each privacy snafu from Google helps strengthen Apple's relative brand position. Google has also diluted the quality of their own brand by rewriting search queries excessively to redirect traffic flows toward more commercial interests. Wired covered how Project Mercury works: This onscreen Google slide had to do with a “semantic matching” overhaul to its SERP algorithm. When you enter a query, you might expect a search engine to incorporate synonyms into the algorithm as well as text phrase pairings in natural language processing. But this overhaul went further, actually altering queries to generate more commercial results. ... Most scams follow an elementary bait-and-switch technique, where the scoundrel lures you in with attractive bait and then, at the right time, switches to a different option. But Google “innovated” by reversing the scam, first switching your query, then letting you believe you were getting the best search engine results. This is a magic trick that Google could only pull off after monopolizing the search engine market, giving consumers the false impression that it is incomparably great, only because you’ve grown so accustomed to it. The mobile search results on Google require at least a screen or two of scrolls to get to the organic results if there is a hint of commercial intent behind the search query. Once they have monetized the real estate they are reliant on broader economic growth & using ad buy bundling to drive cross-subsidies of other non-search ad inventory, which may contain more than a bit of fraud. Performance Max may max out your spend without actually performing for anybody other than Google. Google not only shill bid on lower competition terms to squeeze defensive brand bids and boost auction floor pricing, but they also implemented shill bids in competitive ad auctions: Michael Whinston, a professor of economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said Friday that Google modified the way it sold text ads via “Project Momiji” – named for the wooden Japanese dolls that have a hidden space for friends to exchange secret messages. The shift sought “to raise the prices against the highest bidder,” Whinston told Judge Amit Mehta in federal court in Washington. While Google's search marketshare is rock solid, the number of search engines available has increased significantly over the past few years. Not only is there Bing and DuckDuckGo but the tail is longer than it was a few years back. In addition to regional players like Baidu and Yandex there's now Brave Search, Mojeek, Qwant, Yep, and You. GigaBlast and Neeva went away, but anything that prohibits selling defaults to a company with over 90% marketshare will likely lead to dozens more players joining the search game. Search traffic will remain lucrative for whoever can capture it, as no matter how much Google tries to obfuscate marketing data the search query reflects the intent of the end user. “Search advertising is one of the world’s greatest business models ever created…there are certainly illicit businesses (cigarettes or drugs) that could rival these economics, but we are fortunate to have an amazing business.” - Google VP of Finance Mike Roszak Categories: google Full Article
la Cryptocurrency's power players spent big on the election. Will it pay off? By www.npr.org Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 08:33:44 -0500 NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with Punchbowl News reporter Brendan Pedersen about the cryptocurrency industry's heavy spending on the 2024 campaign and what it could mean for crypto regulation. Full Article
la A law expert explains the role federal judges will play in Trump's presidency By www.npr.org Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 08:33:48 -0500 NPR's Ayesha Rascoe talks to Georgetown Law Professor Steve Vladeck about the role federal courts can play as a check on presidential power during a second Trump Administration. Full Article
la Chicago may become the latest city to lose Greyhound bus services By www.npr.org Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 08:34:07 -0500 Chicago may soon become the largest city in the northern hemisphere without an intercity bus terminal as Greyhound's downtown station is threatened. Full Article
la Copland By www.npr.org Published On :: Sun, 14 Jan 2007 09:00:00 -0500 Small-town America is the setting for Aaron Copland's music for = the score to the film version of Thornton Wilder's Our Town. = The Cleveland Orchestra, conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas, is in = Severance Hall for this performance of the Suite from Our Town. Full Article
la A researcher explains why polls failed to predict a Trump victory By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 07:58:22 -0500 NPR's Scott Simon speaks to Sunmin Kim, an assistant professor in Dartmouth College's sociology department, about the reliability of political polling leading up to elections. Full Article
la Scientists try to repopulate shorelines with an endangered snail By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 07:58:25 -0500 On a rare undeveloped point of the California coast, scientists are trying to repopulate shorelines with an endangered marine snail. This type of experimental conservation is becoming more necessary. This story first aired on All Things Considered on November 7, 2024. Full Article
la Albania proposes plans to create a new, Vatican-like state By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 07:58:32 -0500 Albania's Prime Minister wants to give a state and nationhood -- similar to the Vatican in Italy -- to a Muslim minority within the country. Full Article
la Gangs in Haiti shot at a Spirit Airlines plane as it was trying to land in Port-Au-Prince By www.npr.org Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 05:07:34 -0500 Violence continues in Haiti, despite the appointment of a new prime minister. The international airport was shut down after shots were fired at a landing commercial flight. Full Article
la The long and complicated — and expensive — effort to replace lead lines in the U.S. By www.npr.org Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:29:26 -0500 Cincinnati's public water utility is on a years-long effort to replace its lead service lines. They began in 2016 following the crisis in Flint, Michigan. Full Article
la Former airman Jack Teixeira sentenced to 15 years for leaking classified documents By www.npr.org Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 18:29:02 -0500 The former Massachusetts Air National Guard member, Jack Teixeira, has been sentenced to 15 years in a federal prison for leaking classified documents about the war in Ukraine. Full Article
la ON EXPLORATIONS – the science of black holes, with Dr. Neil Degrasse Tyson and Dr. Fulvia Melia. By kkfi.org Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 17:48:47 +0000 On Explorations this week Dr. Michio Kaku speaks with Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson, an American astrophysicist, author, and science communicator. Tyson studied at Harvard University, the University of Texas at […] The post ON EXPLORATIONS – the science of black holes, with Dr. Neil Degrasse Tyson and Dr. Fulvia Melia. appeared first on KKFI. Full Article
la Teresa Ghilarducci: Is Your Employer Selling Off Your Pension? and HELU, Higher Education Labor United By kkfi.org Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 17:54:45 +0000 Pension expert Teresa Ghilarducci returns to the Heartland Labor Forum this week to explain how some corporations are selling off workers’ pension plans and putting them at risk. Find out […] The post Teresa Ghilarducci: Is Your Employer Selling Off Your Pension? and HELU, Higher Education Labor United appeared first on KKFI. Full Article #LaborRadioPod
la FIRST WAVE: CLASSIC PUNK AND NEW WAVE AND MORE By kkfi.org Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 17:40:19 +0000 First Wave returns to the genesis and evolution of Punk, New Wave, its roots, and the eventual liberation of rock n roll. It brings context to the music to understand […] The post FIRST WAVE: CLASSIC PUNK AND NEW WAVE AND MORE appeared first on KKFI. Full Article
la HOW CAN YOUR CITY MEET THEIR CLIMATE GOALS? BUILD AND USE SOLAR! By kkfi.org Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 15:45:47 +0000 Thanks for listening to EcoRadio KC! We bring you vital information underserved or ignored by mainstream media. We are supported by listeners who share our mission. EcoRadio KC is glad […] The post HOW CAN YOUR CITY MEET THEIR CLIMATE GOALS? BUILD AND USE SOLAR! appeared first on KKFI. Full Article
la Julie Hollar and Jim Naureckas on Placing Blame for Trump By kkfi.org Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 20:08:33 +0000 This week on CounterSpin: We talk about what just happened, and corporate media’s role in it, with Julie Hollar, senior analyst at the media watch group FAIR, and FAIR’s editor Jim Naureckas. We […] The post Julie Hollar and Jim Naureckas on Placing Blame for Trump appeared first on KKFI. Full Article
la WMM presents Brock Wilbur & Nick Spacek of The Pitch + Damron Russel Armstrong of The Black Repertory Theatre of Kansas City By kkfi.org Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 06:18:48 +0000 Wednesday MidDay Medley Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning Wednesday, November 13, 2024 Brock Wilbur & Nick Spacek of The Pitch + Damron Russel Armstrong of The Black Repertory Theatre […] The post WMM presents Brock Wilbur & Nick Spacek of The Pitch + Damron Russel Armstrong of The Black Repertory Theatre of Kansas City appeared first on KKFI. Full Article
la Balancing Our Chakra System For Emotional And Spiritual Healing with Anodea Judith, Ph.D. By kkfi.org Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 19:21:31 +0000 Energy is at the core of everything. It’s the currency of existence. Anodea Judith substitutes the word “charge” for energy. It’s easy to relate to the idea of being charged […] The post Balancing Our Chakra System For Emotional And Spiritual Healing with Anodea Judith, Ph.D. appeared first on KKFI. Full Article
la Where Does the Labor Movement Go from Here? and Labor Leader Series: CWA Local 6327’s Tanya Holmes By kkfi.org Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 02:27:02 +0000 It’s been a year since veteran labor strategists Rand Wilson and Pete Olney discussed the chances of a “labor movement moment” on the Heartland Labor Forum. This week we’ll ask […] The post Where Does the Labor Movement Go from Here? and Labor Leader Series: CWA Local 6327’s Tanya Holmes appeared first on KKFI. Full Article #LaborRadioPod
la Are we living in a simulation? Look to Free Guy, not The Matrix, for answers, says David Chalmers By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Wed, 23 Mar 2022 13:48:21 EDT Pop culture, and especially science fiction, has played host to several of philosophy’s biggest questions that can trace their origins back thousands of years, according to David Chalmers, philosopher and author of Reality+. Full Article Radio/Tapestry
la Pay-as-you-go health care: Uninsured people in Canada face sky-high bills, delays in treatment, doctors say By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 17 Jan 2020 17:01:05 EST Most Canadians are secure knowing that they benefit from universal health care. All you have to do is walk into a clinic or hospital and you will be treated. For an estimated 500,000 people who live and work among us, it’s a different reality. Full Article Radio/White Coat/ Black Art
la Catherine Lacey imagines a character without race or gender in her novel, Pew By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 26 Feb 2021 15:25:54 EST The American author of Pew spoke with Eleanor Wachtel about writing a novel that examines faith, forgiveness and identity politics. Full Article Radio/Writers & Company
la The beautiful, melancholy world of Anita Desai By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sun, 07 May 2017 14:47:00 EDT The South Asian author and winner of the 2017 Blue Metropolis International Literary Festival's Grand Prix spoke with Eleanor Wachtel on stage at the festival in Montreal. Full Article Radio/Writers & Company
la Why International Booker Prize winner Jenny Erpenbeck never planned on becoming a writer By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 02 Oct 2015 12:07:43 EDT The German writer spoke with Eleanor Wachtel, who chaired the International Booker Prize jury, in 2015. Full Article Radio/Writers & Company
la Laurie Anderson on language, story and losing her archives to Hurricane Sandy By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sun, 14 May 2017 14:46:00 EDT The American musician and storyteller spoke with Eleanor Wachtel about her book All the Things I Lost in the Flood. Full Article Radio/Writers & Company
la Edna O'Brien discusses her journey from Ireland's outcast to celebrated icon By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sun, 18 Feb 2018 16:52:00 EST Listen to O'Brien's conversation from 2009 with Eleanor Wachtel. O'Brien died on July 27, 2024 at the age of 93. Full Article Radio/Writers & Company
la Ali Smith on the circular movement of time in nature, life and art By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sun, 04 Mar 2018 01:40:00 EST Eleanor Wachtel spoke with the Scottish author about her novels, Autumn and Winter, in 2018. Full Article Radio/Writers & Company
la Feb 18: Super-size penguins, planning a mission to Uranus, an Egyptian embalming workshop and more… By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 17 Feb 2023 15:35:11 EST A sandwich inspired water filter and 19 ways of looking at consciousness. Full Article Radio/Quirks & Quarks
la Drone surveillance and crowdfunded ransom: How tech is changing borders and those who cross them By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 16 Sep 2022 17:11:16 EDT Millions of people are on the move today, in the biggest forced displacement since the Second World War. And unlike in decades past, new technologies are changing the narratives of their movement — both by reinforcing and extending borders, and acting as a lifeline for those trying to cross them. Full Article Radio/Spark
la These artists are exposing the dangers of AI and surveillance through art By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 06 Jan 2023 15:42:02 EST From an AI-generated infinite conversation between thinkers to making art from easily obtained surveillance footage, artists are making the dystopia entertaining, at least Full Article Radio/Spark
la Thursday, Feb. 23, 2023: Rebecca Black and Hannah Alissa Richardson By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 23 Feb 2023 08:45:00 EST Today on Q with Tom Power: viral sensation Rebecca Black and dancer Hannah Alissa Richardson Full Article Radio/Q
la Monday, Feb. 27, 2023: Lakecia Benjamin and Lindsay Wong By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Mon, 27 Feb 2023 08:45:00 EST Today on Q with Tom Power: saxophonist Lakecia Benjamin and author Lindsay Wong Full Article Radio/Q
la Apr. 26, 2024: Law & Order & Learn a New Language By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 25 Apr 2024 18:33:56 EDT Is Law & Order the greatest TV show of all time? With the recent release of Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent, Kate Davis and Sean Cullen are taking this series to court. Then, Hunter Collins and Marito Lopez are sharp-tongued when they debate the current ease of learning a new language. Full Article Radio/The Debaters
la Jun. 7, 2024: Never Too Late to Get Divorced & Convenience Stores By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 06 Jun 2024 18:37:56 EDT Bruce Clark and Clare Belford go their separate ways on whether it’s never too late to get divorced. Then, Graham Clark and Julie Kim avoid knee-jerky reactions when they decide if nothing beats a convenience store. Full Article Radio/The Debaters
la Sept. 13, 2024: Atlantic Ocean vs. Pacific Ocean & Growing Up Poor By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 12 Sep 2024 21:01:38 EDT Matt Wright and Charlie Demers make waves in St. John’s, Newfoundland when they discuss if the Atlantic Ocean is superior to the Pacific Ocean. Then, Bree Parsons and Nikki Payne bring a wealth of wit when they decide if growing up poor makes you a stronger person. Full Article Radio/The Debaters
la Oct. 18, 2024: Butter vs. Margarine & Newfoundland Time Zone By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 17 Oct 2024 19:34:28 EDT Is butter better than margarine? Derek Seguin and Matt Wright churn out jokes in a battle for the superior spread. Then, Nour Hadidi and Hisham Kelati get in the zone when they decide if Newfoundland has the best time zone. Full Article Radio/The Debaters
la Did Sheila Arrive Early? By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Tue, 09 Mar 2010 13:12:10 -0330 Hey folks, I posed this question last night on Here & Now... Do you think this past weekend storm was Sheila's Brush? I know, I know, it's only March 9th... but here are a few facts for you. 1) Sheila's Brush is of course the big Winter Storm that hits Eastern Newfoundland every year around St. Patrick's Day. The Storm is usually considered that last big one of the Winter. 2) St. Patrick's Day is next just around the corner... next Wednesday the 17th. 3) This has been a CRAZY winter with a lack of Snow and Warm temperatures. PAST 5 YEARS Here's a look at the Past 5 Years and when Sheila's Brush moved in. 2009- March 21st. 28 cm in St. John's and Gander had 24 cm. 2008- March 17-19th. St. John's had 58 cm of Snow! Gander had 57 cm of Snow. Gander also got hit just days before 64 cm of Snow on the 13th and 14th... so it was a double whammy. 2007- March 29th-30th. Gander gets 20 cm while St. John's only gets less than 5. However St. John's had 14 cm just a few days earlier. You have to go all the way back to Feb 23-24th to find a Big Snowfall for St. John's in the weird year of 07. 2006- March 27-29th. St. John's sees 32 cm of Snow. Gander lands 27 cm. 2005- March 30-31st. St. John's gets 18 cm of Snow and 60 mm of Rain. Gander gets 63 cm!!! So there's no doubt the numbers show, this past weekend storm was WAY too early to be Sheila. But again you never know. This winter has been one of the warmest we've seen in decades... it will be really interesting to see how it all plays out. Especially considering we do appear to have something brewing for early next week. NEXT WEEK SYSTEM A quick update on our potential (Sheila) system for early next week. -The Canadian model is still bringing the system in on late Sunday and into Monday. It's taking the centre of the system waaayyy to the West and wrapping nothing but warm air and rain into Newfoundland and even Southeastern Labrador. -The American model continues to do the cha cha cha. It was showing a miss early yesterday, then it brought it back West... now it's somewhere in between. Still with the Tuesday idea. -The European is thinking Tuesday as well and has an interesting track... just East of the Island. Again, I'll keep you updated. Ryan Full Article
la Chris Hall: Breaking down Canada's latest Security Council election loss By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sat, 20 Jun 2020 04:00:42 EDT Canada's second failure in a row to win a Security Council seat was a blow to the Trudeau government's prestige. But how much will it matter to this country in the long run? Full Article Radio/The House
la Iran protests, Kelly Clarkson's best covers, Iain Reid's new novel, The Linda Lindas and more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 30 Sep 2022 17:54:17 EDT How protests in Iran threaten the country's regime; Chinese police have set up outposts in Canada; Kelly Clarkson's best Kellyoke covers; Becky Toyne reviews Iain Reid's new thriller, We Spread; The Linda Lindas drop by for an after-school hangout; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
la Baraye as Iran's protest anthem, The Right Stuff dating app, Derry Girls; The French Laundry's founder & more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 07 Oct 2022 14:44:37 EDT How Baraye became the unofficial anthem of the protests in Iran; former Trump administration staffers have created a dating site for conservatives; Talking Derry Girls podcast hosts get us ready for season three; a new documentary celebrates the founder of California's famed French Laundry restaurant; Cree writer Kenneth T. Williams spins a tale of prophecy, purity and identity in his new play, The Herd; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
la The risk of arming Ukraine, board game cafes in Iran, iconoclasm, Bayonetta 3, the Proud Boys and more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sat, 29 Oct 2022 09:33:46 EDT How a multi-Billion dollar campaign to arm Ukraine might fuel the illicit arms trade; How Iran's board game cafes allowed young people to imagine a different future; Bayonetta 3 is out this week — should you play it?; a brief history of targeting art for political protest; author Andy Campbell says the era of political violence the Proud Boys helped usher in is here to stay; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
la Israel's far right, Putin's Potemkin fixation, Cormac McCarthy's new novels, ending slavery in 2022 and more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 04 Nov 2022 18:19:34 EDT Itamar Ben-Gvir's journey from far-right extremist to political power-broker; why Vladimir Putin wanted the bones of 18th-century Russian leader Grigory Potemkin; Becky Toyne reviews Pulitzer Prize winner Cormac McCarthy's first new novels in 16 years; Haiti's political and economic crisis is fueling a public health disaster for women; five U.S. states get ready to vote on whether to close a loophole that allows for slavery in 2022; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
la Corporations at COP27, Tweeting as Elon Musk, the labour movement takes a stand, Margaret Sullivan and more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 11 Nov 2022 18:10:11 EST Corporate influence at COP27; cartoonist Jeph Jacques gets booted from Twitter for impersonating Elon Musk; Margaret Sullivan on how to cover Trump and Trumpism; what Ontario unions' victory over Bill 28 means for Canada's labour movement; graphic novelist Cecil Castellucci hopes Shifting Earth will be a path toward climate action; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6