Sentences with phrase «of live radio»

Karen is the former host of a live radio show on WNJC.
One especially neat feature is Cache Radio, which lets you pause and record 10 minutes» worth of live radio.

Not exact matches

Seacrest earlier this month was named permanent co-host of the «Live with Kelly and Ryan» syndicated morning show, in addition to hosting his daily radio program.
Through its «seven baby steps,» (and radio program, TV show, podcast, courses and live events) the Ramsey organization has helped millions of Americans get out from the crushing burden of consumer debt and begin building wealth through smart saving, responsible spending and careful investing.
The most visible of the new firms, Cambridge Life Solutions, launched a marketing campaign during the past year on radio, television and the Internet.
Given state control of public life, it's not surprising that Nazi officials were successful in promoting and propagating their version of Christmas through repeated radio broadcasts and news articles.
In his latest interview with Stephen Dubner on the Freakonomics radio's, «Secret Life of CEOs» series, he details exactly why promoting from within is something he believes so strongly.
The New York Times bestselling author and radio show host of The Cardone Zone also talks about how he looks and feels younger than he did 20 years ago — because he stopped trying to please everyone and started living his life for himself.
Labour MP John Mann told BBC Radio 5 Live: «He's taking the mickey out of the taxpayer... and he should stand down as an MP.»
In his latest interview with Stephen Dubner on the Freakonomics radio's, «Secret Life of CEOs» series, he says there is one way to ensure team loyalty and prosperity in the long run: «I just think you should treat your people in the same way that you treat your family.
I spent the first 13 years of my professional life doing what was more akin to art than to business: commissioning, writing, directing, producing radio, television, films, and music.
Stephen Dubner's conversation with the former C.E.O. of Yahoo, recorded for the Freakonomics Radio series «The Secret Life of a C.E.O.»
Stephen Dubner's conversation with the former longtime C.E.O. of General Electric, recorded for the Freakonomics Radio series «The Secret Life of a C.E.O.»
Stephen Dubner's conversation with the founder and longtime C.E.O. of Bridgewater Associates, recorded for the Freakonomics Radio series «The Secret Life of a C.E.O.»
Stephen Dubner's conversation with the C.E.O. of Microsoft, recorded for the Freakonomics Radio series «The Secret Life of a C.E.O.»
Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Vine, Pinterest, Path, Tagged, Medium, blog, video blog, podcast, blogtalk, terrestrial radio, satellite radio, network TV, cable TV, Live big audience, Live small audience (Meet - up), and the list of stages goes on and on.
Greg has served as the Chairman of the Board of TripAdvisor, Inc., since February 2013; Chairman of the Board of Live Nation Entertainment, Inc., a live entertainment and ecommerce company, since March 2013 and as a director since February 2011; Chairman of the Board of Sirius XM Holdings, Inc., a satellite radio company, since April 2013 and as a director since 2009; director of Charter Communications, Inc., since May 2013; and Chairman of the Board of Pandora Media, Inc., since September 2Live Nation Entertainment, Inc., a live entertainment and ecommerce company, since March 2013 and as a director since February 2011; Chairman of the Board of Sirius XM Holdings, Inc., a satellite radio company, since April 2013 and as a director since 2009; director of Charter Communications, Inc., since May 2013; and Chairman of the Board of Pandora Media, Inc., since September 2live entertainment and ecommerce company, since March 2013 and as a director since February 2011; Chairman of the Board of Sirius XM Holdings, Inc., a satellite radio company, since April 2013 and as a director since 2009; director of Charter Communications, Inc., since May 2013; and Chairman of the Board of Pandora Media, Inc., since September 2017.
April 8, 2018 • Stephen Dubner's conversation with the founder and longtime C.E.O. of Bridgewater Associates, recorded for the Freakonomics Radio series «The Secret Life of a C.E.O.»
-- one of the nation's longest running live call - in, investment and personal finance radio show — on News 95 - 5FM and AM 750 WSB in Atlanta, Georgia.
BlackBerry's ability to manage inventory and asset risk; BlackBerry's reliance on suppliers of functional components for its products and risks relating to its supply chain; BlackBerry's ability to obtain rights to use software or components supplied by third parties; BlackBerry's ability to successfully maintain and enhance its brand; risks related to government regulations, including regulations relating to encryption technology; BlackBerry's ability to continue to adapt to recent board and management changes and headcount reductions; reliance on strategic alliances with third - party network infrastructure developers, software platform vendors and service platform vendors; BlackBerry's reliance on third - party manufacturers; potential defects and vulnerabilities in BlackBerry's products; risks related to litigation, including litigation claims arising from BlackBerry's practice of providing forward - looking guidance; potential charges relating to the impairment of intangible assets recorded on BlackBerry's balance sheet; risks as a result of actions of activist shareholders; government regulation of wireless spectrum and radio frequencies; risks related to economic and geopolitical conditions; risks associated with acquisitions; foreign exchange risks; and difficulties in forecasting BlackBerry's financial results given the rapid technological changes, evolving industry standards, intense competition and short product life cycles that characterize the wireless communications industry, and the company's previously disclosed review of strategic alternatives.
March 25, 2018 • Stephen Dubner's conversation with the former C.E.O. of Yahoo, recorded for the Freakonomics Radio series «The Secret Life of a C.E.O.»
The Voice of America Studio Tour is a behind - the - scenes look at live broadcasting in radio, television, and the Internet in several of our more than 40 languages.
Many factors could cause BlackBerry's actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward - looking statements, including, without limitation: BlackBerry's ability to enhance its current products and services, or develop new products and services in a timely manner or at competitive prices, including risks related to new product introductions; risks related to BlackBerry's ability to mitigate the impact of the anticipated decline in BlackBerry's infrastructure access fees on its consolidated revenue by developing an integrated services and software offering; intense competition, rapid change and significant strategic alliances within BlackBerry's industry; BlackBerry's reliance on carrier partners and distributors; risks associated with BlackBerry's foreign operations, including risks related to recent political and economic developments in Venezuela and the impact of foreign currency restrictions; risks relating to network disruptions and other business interruptions, including costs, potential liabilities, lost revenues and reputational damage associated with service interruptions; risks related to BlackBerry's ability to implement and to realize the anticipated benefits of its CORE program; BlackBerry's ability to maintain or increase its cash balance; security risks; BlackBerry's ability to attract and retain key personnel; risks related to intellectual property rights; BlackBerry's ability to expand and manage BlackBerry ® World ™; risks related to the collection, storage, transmission, use and disclosure of confidential and personal information; BlackBerry's ability to manage inventory and asset risk; BlackBerry's reliance on suppliers of functional components for its products and risks relating to its supply chain; BlackBerry's ability to obtain rights to use software or components supplied by third parties; BlackBerry's ability to successfully maintain and enhance its brand; risks related to government regulations, including regulations relating to encryption technology; BlackBerry's ability to continue to adapt to recent board and management changes and headcount reductions; reliance on strategic alliances with third - party network infrastructure developers, software platform vendors and service platform vendors; BlackBerry's reliance on third - party manufacturers; potential defects and vulnerabilities in BlackBerry's products; risks related to litigation, including litigation claims arising from BlackBerry's practice of providing forward - looking guidance; potential charges relating to the impairment of intangible assets recorded on BlackBerry's balance sheet; risks as a result of actions of activist shareholders; government regulation of wireless spectrum and radio frequencies; risks related to economic and geopolitical conditions; risks associated with acquisitions; foreign exchange risks; and difficulties in forecasting BlackBerry's financial results given the rapid technological changes, evolving industry standards, intense competition and short product life cycles that characterize the wireless communications industry.
What follows is Stephen Dubner's conversation with Facebook founder and C.E.O. Mark Zuckerberg, recorded for the Freakonomics Radio series «The Secret Life of a C.E.O.» It was recorded last summer, long before we learned that 50 million Facebook users» data had been weaponized by political operatives.
«The radio silence from executives over the last few days has added fuel to the growing Cambridge fire and if this data leak fiasco is left to fester it could take on a life of its own leading to tougher regulatory oversight / chatter,» Daniel Ives, head of technology research at GBH Insights, said in a research note.
To accomplish this, the company delivers a range of sports, entertainment, news, and music news through its online platforms, apps, live events, entertainment systems, hundreds of stations and websites, and digital radio channels.
Kevin has presented at a wide range of industry conferences, is quoted regularly in the financial media and has provided live and taped commentary on various TV and radio outlets.
That cash doesn't include the money PhRMA's spending on the ongoing «Go Boldly» campaign, a series of TV, print and radio ads designed to polish the drug industry's image by reminding the public that drug companies do world - class research that brings disease cures to market to save lives.
Legislation pushing cell phone carriers to activate emergency FM radio receivers in all cell phones during times of duress is necessary, and will save lives in a natural disaster.
I wonder if I am the only reader to find Williamson's stance as offensive as Ms. Nouvelle's: here's an employee from the oh - so - liberal world of public radio who fled to the security of provincial life and, through a rather sophistical analysis, passes off as common decency, common bigotry.
But Al - Khalili is best known for his role as a populariser of science on the airwaves, regularly hosting The Life Scientific on BBC Radio 4, in which he explores the lives of notable scientists.
It is significant that the most important immediate source of living inspiration for the While Rose were the radio broadcasts of the exiled German author and Nobel laureate, Thomas Mann.
When have you really heard a song on the radio that didn't just give a token verse to the topic of «life is hard» or «when I fail» or «when I'm tempted» etc only to spend the rest of the song on the chorus in Praise.
This is the third possibility: Life appears and in some cases develops into intelligent beings, but when it reaches the stage of sending radio signals it will also have the technology to make nuclear bombs and other weapons of mass destruction.
Radio would be the most wonderful means of communication imaginable in public life, a huge linked system — that is to say, it would be such if it were capable not only of transmitting but of receiving, of allowing the listener not only to hear but to speak, and did not isolate him but brought him into contact.
A week or two ago, one of the radio stations where I live on Cape Cod, Coast 93.3, switched its format over to Christmas songs.
From the ethos of economic life to the chatter of talk radio, our society is busy promoting the appetites and fantasies of the individual more than it is encouraging an investment in the larger aspirations of a community.
But when it comes to modern media like radio, television, and the internet, we can be guilty of a certain level of naiveté about the effects of technology on our lives, especially as people of faith.
«We Were Meant to Live» got lots of radio play, and the tracks on Learning to Breathe were more tuneful, but «Dare You to Move» captured the band at their most earnest, and if you haven't been to a Switchfoot concert and with both hands shot towards the clouds screaming «DARE YOU TO MOOOOOVE» than you did not have a happy childhood.
And that receding moment, once so vividly present and still so apparently alive (in part because of radio), is just like this moment, this Saturday afternoon, with its new show, coming to us live from Minnesota, where people right now are watching the red light in the World Theater in downtown St. Paul, waiting for the moment when it all begins again.
In mid-June Garrison Keillor departs his weekly public radio program «A Prairie Home Companion» and heads for Denmark, with the hope of returning to the obscurity necessary for leading the literary life.
Chicago philosopher - comic Aaron Freeman made the same point in a recent National Public Radio commentary: «Gratitude ameliorates the worst aspect of American life, which is that the consumer culture makes us constantly aware of what we do not have, without counterbalancing rituals of gratitude for the mind - boggling bounty that is the U.S.A.... As you are grateful, to that precise extent you are happy.»
The nightly television news in Israel (and hourly urgent radio broadcasts) create the sense that they are constantly living in a state of siege.
The radio stations all seemed to be talking about Jesus nonstop, and it seemed to be this crazy orgy of projection, with everyone projecting onto Jesus the antidotes to the things that had done wrong in their own lives.
The elder Bonhoeffers were listening to the radio from London on July 27 when an English voice spoke: «We are gathered here in the presence of God to make thankful remembrance of the life and work of His servant Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who gave his life in faith and obedience to His holy word... «22
Glass — the creator of podcast and radio series This American Life — is a producer of the film and based the movie on a 2005 episode of the show called «Heretics.»
The radio broadcast, a worship service, demonstrated the authenticity and energy of the religious life in the provincial diocese most closely under the protection of the central authorities.
Today, Coles may well be Britain's most recognisable vicar: he's a regular on QI, and Have I Got News for You and the co-presenter of BBC Radio 4's Saturday Live.
To mention a few of them: the coming of the radio and more recently the television; the cinema, — first silent, then talking, then colored; quick and easy communication by telephone, an accepted part of life — first to one's neighbors, then across the continent, then to the other side of the earth, then to a space ship, and to the moon.
Family Radio: You are NO prophets, you have NO supernatural «magic» powers from God, and you have NO ability to predict anything in the future no matter how much you study the Bible and you are NOT God's chosen... sorry, it's just plain old life and you're going to have to suck it up and live it like the rest of us.
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