Andrew Zimmern describes his 10 - year - old food and travel show Bizarre Foods as «a show that tells stories
about culture through food.»
But back when Zimmern was first shopping the idea for Bizarre Foods around to television networks, execs weren't exactly chomping at the bit to make «a show that tells stories
about culture through food.»
Even though his family passed on a lot
about the culture through storytelling, he still felt that he didn't understand his culture.
It can be helpful for consultants to share examples of things they have learned
about culture through their own professional development experiences.
Not exact matches
No, this book won't offer you many chuckles, but it might help readers break
through our
culture's unhelpful silence around our inevitable end and think
through how to go
about the final chapter of life with some dignity.
It's not
about having pockets of great
culture, its
about having a great
culture that permeates
through every level of the business.
Many believe this «coupon comeback» is the result of the 2008 recession, increased access
through digitization of the offers, as well as pop -
culture shows
about «extreme couponing.»
An organizational
culture is either decisively created and nurtured from the very beginning, or more typically, it comes
about haphazardly
through the experiences, beliefs, behaviors and actions of those on the team.
The company boasts
about its «people
culture» that sets it apart from fast - food chains and allows workers to rise
through the ranks.
Post has been working on
cultured meat since 2008, now
through his company MosaMeat, and his experiences over the past nine years have made him somewhat cynical
about the hurdles to scaling.
Andrew Medal chats with Rich Antoniello
about how Complex Media is redefining the
culture by sparking conversation
through hip hop, sneakers, tech, news and sports.
In a 1 - on - 1 interview, Vice President Biden sits down with Dr. David Agus to talk
about the progress made
through the Cancer Moonshot and the strategy for the work ahead, including how we must change the
culture in the fight to end cancer.
But we need our Canadian leaders to recognize that this genuine interest and curiosity
about the world on the other side of the Pacific needs to be encouraged and validated
through more opportunities that allow us to engage with new peoples and
cultures.
[16:00] Pain + reflection = progress [16:30] Creating a meritocracy to draw the best out of everybody [18:30] How to raise your probability of being right [18:50] Why we are conditioned to need to be right [19:30] The neuroscience factor [19:50] The habitual and environmental factor [20:20] How to get to the other side [21:20] Great collective decision - making [21:50] The 5 things you need to be successful [21:55] Create audacious goals [22:15] Why you need problems [22:25] Diagnose the problems to determine the root causes [22:50] Determine the design for what you will do
about the root causes [23:00] Decide to work with people who are strong where you are weak [23:15] Push
through to results [23:20] The loop of success [24:15] Ray's new instinctual approach to failure [24:40] Tony's ritual after every event [25:30] The review that changed Ray's outlook on leadership [27:30] Creating new policies based on fairness and truth [28:00] What people are missing
about Ray's
culture [29:30] Creating meaningful work and meaningful relationships [30:15] The importance of radical honesty [30:50] Thoughtful disagreement [32:10] Why it was the relationships that changed Ray's life [33:10] Ray's biggest weakness and how he overcame it [34:30] The jungle metaphor [36:00] The dot collector — deciding what to listen to [40:15] The wanting of meritocratic decision - making [41:40] How to see bubbles and busts [42:40] Productivity [43:00] Where we are in the cycle [43:40] What the Fed will do [44:05] We are late in the long - term debt cycle [44:30] Long - term debt is going to be squeezing us [45:00] We have 2 economies [45:30] This year is very similar to 1937 [46:10] The top tenth of the top 1 % of wealth = bottom 90 % combined [46:25] How this creates populism [47:00] The economy for the bottom 60 % isn't growing [48:20] If you look at averages, the country is in a bind [49:10] What are the overarching principles that bind us together?
For the rest of us, it's a reminder that Christians are in a unique place in modern society, with a message of redemption
through Christ in an era when mainstream
culture has little to say
about hope for the future.
The question is not which is greater in its use of language and its power of insight, but why Milton has been the more important for our
culture and what we can learn
about the limits of both canonical writings and their challengers
through this interesting juxtaposition.
No, Mel Gibson and his dad are right
about Jewish people, they have done everything in the last 300 years to corrupt White Christian Western
culture and countries and are at the point where they can make Europeans extinct
through there lies and deceit of multi-culturalism and multiracialism, every single even in the past 300 years has been manipulated by Jews in order to take control of the world, and they white christians as being the main obstacle to obtaining that goal.
Let's face it: We are unlikely to find a single party that truly represents a «
culture of life,» and abortion will probably never be made illegal, so we'll have to go
about it the old fashioned way, working
through the diverse channels of the Kingdom to adopt and support responsible adoption, welcome single moms into our homes and churches, reach out to the lonely and disenfranchised, address the socioeconomic issues involved, and engage in some difficult conversations
about the many factors that contribute to the abortion rate in this country, (especially birth control).
A collection of anecdotes
about Turner's tumultuous relationship with popular
culture through the years, Hear No Evil can best be described as a lighthearted tribute — to growing up, to the evangelical Christian subculture, to music.
I've sat
through church services or conferences or workplaces or public arenas where the only women who are visible are the ones who are extremely thin, who are white, who are blonde, who are American, who are fashionably dressed and professionally done - up, who are able - bodied, who are bright without being intimidating, who are pretty without being sexy, who are unthreatening to our status quo of appropriate, who are ticking every box for what our
culture tells us is acceptable
about womanhood.
They also showcase stories of Indigenous women and cultural knowledge
through their products and facilitate a powerful and positive narrative
about Indigenous women and their
cultures.
«In the world in which we now live, with fears
about «The Other» - whether that be Sunni, Shia, Jew, Christian, Yazidi, Hindu or Buddhist - stoked and spread
through social media, and amplified by those who would seek to suppress understanding, rather than promote it, there is an urgent need for calm reflection and a genuinely sustained, empathetic and open dialogue across boundaries of faith, ethnicity and
culture.»
As Eugene Ulrich and William G. Thompson conclude, «Scripture, which began as experience, was produced
through a process of tradition (s) being formulated
about that experience and being reformulated by interpreters in dialogue with the experience of their communities and with the larger
culture.»
It could also empower them to learn more
about faith and its consequences in life
through the witness of Christians from other
cultures and confessions.
Marriage is rough... period but if you lean on God at all times including the good and the bad then He (God) will get you both
through anything in your marriage... TOGETHER... not divorced as our ME FIRST
culture is now all
about.
In sum, while we probably have as much information
about Jesus as any other historical figure of his time, the information is sketchy and, above all, filtered
through the minds and the
culture of the early Christian community.
They are seeking what has been called post-modern paradigms for «an open secular democratic
culture» within the framework of a public philosophy (Walter Lippman) or Civil Religion (Robert Bellah) or a new genuine realistic humanism or at least a body of insights
about the nature of being and becoming human, evolved
through dialogue among renascent religions, secularist ideologies including the philosophies of the tragic dimension of existence and disciplines of social and human sciences which have opened themselves to each other in the context of their common sense of historical responsibility and common human destiny.
The Christian contribution in this context should be in relation to the struggle of India to develop,
through dialogue among the many religions,
cultures and philosophies, a body of common insights
about being and becoming human, that is, a common framework of humanism which will humanize the spirit of modernity and the process of modernization.
Conversion, then, is what «Catholic Studies» and Don Briel's life - project are all
about: the conversion of young minds, hearts, and souls to the truth of Christ and the love of Christ as manifest in the Catholic Church, to be sure; but also the conversion of
culture through those converted minds, hearts, and souls.
He is not necessarily talking in these quotes
about teaching theology
through story, but by looking at his practice, I think that he would argue that the most basic «vernacular» of any
culture is story.
We are learning
about matrifocal
cultures in which descent may be
through the woman's family, in which the mother - child relationship is the important social unit and women have great prestige and sometimes political power.
Through the course of this investigation, the author appears to discuss nearly every ancient text that has anything of interest to say
about afterlife in the
cultures that he covers.
An «I'm just going to talk
through text and social media with whoever, whenever,
about whatever» attitude is spreading like a virus
through all sectors of our
culture, both Christian and non-Christian alike.
Laguna Beach
About Blog ILTG Media celebrates and elevates wine
culture by pairing it with fashion, film, food and music
through unique and insightful digital content.
A portion of all proceeds from the event and silent auction will benefit Common Threads, a non-profit charity founded by Chicago Chef Art Smith that focuses on educating children
about different
cultures through food and art.
It's
about continuing the legacy of Jewish life before the holocaust
through food and
culture.
About Les Dames d' Escoffier Les Dames d' Escoffier International is dedicated to creating a supportive
culture in the community, fostering excellence and promoting the achievement of women in culinary professions
through educational and charitable activities.
Reflecting on the session, Pienaar said: «After having been
through so much, fleeing war and persecution to then arriving in the UK and facing a new language and
culture, these sessions give people a chance to forget
about their troubles for an hour or so, make new friends and feel part of the community.
What sets this book apart from others is that
through the beautiful illustrations, the book teaches children
about the world and other
cultures.
Through learning
about common parenting practices of other
cultures, parents are able to question whether conforming to their own cultural norms is always in the best interests of their children.
And what
about these other rules that aren't laws, but they are so ingrained in our
culture that we don't even need them to be laws because the citizens keep them alive
through social norms?
Across time and
cultures, young women at puberty learned
about birth
through dance (as well as by observing other women labor!).
Where I have worked, in equatorial Africa, by the age of eight or nine, children, almost all of whom have been sibling or cousin caretakers at times when mothers have not taken babies in a back sling to work in a field or do another task, know everything there is to know
about raising a baby in their
culture except what one learns
through the direct experience of breastfeeding.
How do we talk
about culture, identity and responsibility
through the lens of health and food?
Strategic Plan Focus for July — Goals 2, 3, and 4 World BF Month is the perfect opportunity to promote a
culture supportive and accepting of breastfeeding (goal 2)
through parties and health fairs, etc., build, link, and ensure access to state and local resources (goal 3) by providing information to moms
about resources online and in your community, and to engage stakeholders in alignment of goals and actions to increase breastfeeding support (goal 4) by pulling in other groups that work with moms and babies to help with World Breastfeeding Day / Week / Month (WBM) activities!
I hope that people start sharing their birth stories more often so we can become more compassionate as a
culture about the things women go
through in trying to have children, as well as the things we go
through trying to raise children and trying to work well while maintaining a family.
A conversation with Ashish Ghadiali, film - maker, party activist, autonomous individual,
about reinventing politics
through culture and democracy.
Let's be clear
about what the Congressional Republican tax plan really is: It is Washington's
culture of soft - corruption at its worst - nothing more than paying back wealthy donors and lobbyists
through corporate welfare, at the expense of the middle class.
But Jeremy Hunt, the shadow Secretary of State for
Culture, Media and Sport has kept his cards close to his chest so far on broadcasting — apart from some conventional pieties
about the importance of public service broadcasting and the need to keep Channel 4 going
through some funding fudge.
About this Exhibition: HUMAN +: The Future of Our Species Centre for Contemporary
Culture, Barcelona;
through 10 April 2016