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Jeff Curtos Camera Position
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Want to get your words out into the world without contending with agents, publishers, or any of the other gatekeepers in traditional publishing? There's never been a better time to become a writer, and to be in charge of your own destiny rather than jumping through hoops to please the Powers that Be.
Self-publishing ninjas David Wright and Sean Platt -- who have manufactured a publishing machine around Amazon's Kindle Direct Publishing platform -- join popular blogger and author Johnny B. Truant to explore everything related to getting published in today's new DIY digital publishing frontier. This isn't artsy talk... we're business guys with no-BS strategies to help you make self-publishing a rewarding reality. Submit your questions at SelfPublishingPodcast.com!
The Self Publishing Podcast - DIY Digital Publishing, Kindle Publishing, and Advice for Writers
No One's Listening the podcast that could... Irene McGee, the host, was called a cross between Ira Glass and John Stewart (it must be her deep male like voice) -- Irene McGee is like a double agent of change, deconstructing the media by becoming the media. Guests have included Amy Tan, Jimmy Wales, Noam Chomsky, Lawrence Lessig, Ben Fong-Torres and Jello Biafra... if you don't recognize these names it's ok they probably don't know yours either... AND now they have video shorts you can see as well (who says radio is the fantasy theatre of your mind) check out the site http://www.nooneslistening.org
and click the video link!
No One's Listening Podcasts
Sam Tanenhaus, editor of The New York Times Book Review, discusses this week's issue.
Book Review
The New York Times
Get an insider's perspective on the most interesting objects in the collections of the Kansas Museum of History. Each biweekly episode features a different curator talking about a different object, always something featured on our web site. It's the best of our nation's history--not just Kansas, but important events for the whole United States. There's something for everyone, from the Civil War to the Cold War, Abraham Lincoln to Amelia Earhart, tornadoes to travel. You can access the full stories (with images) on the Web at http://www.kshs.org. Just look for the Cool Things link.
Cool Things in the Collection, Kansas Museum of History
The Nerdist Writers Panel series is an informal chat moderated by Ben Blacker (co-creator of the Thrilling Adventure Hour; writer for Supah Ninjas, Supernatural, among others) with professional writers about the process and business of writing. Covering TV, film, comic books, music, novels, and any other kind of writing about which you'd care to hear. Proceeds from the live panels benefit 826LA, the national non-profit tutoring program.
Nerdist Writers Panel
Tate hosts a wide-ranging programme of talks, symposia and live events at all four Tate galleries. This podcast presents highlights of this programme. Visit www.tate.org.uk/calendar for details of upcoming events at the galleries. To receive regular email updates on events and exhibitions, visit www.tate.org.uk/bulletins. All works in the Tate collection can be viewed at www.tate.org.uk/art. Additional information on this and other Tate podcasts can be found at www.tate.org.uk
Tate Events
A candid discussion of guitarists, guitars and the guitar community.
Six String Bliss
Christmas with the Bailey School Kids. Debbie Dadey reads selections from her Bailey School Kids series.
Christmas Stories
The Partially Examined Life is a philosophy podcast by some guys who were at one point set on doing philosophy for a living but then thought better of it. Each episode, we pick a short text and chat about it with some balance between insight and flippancy. You don't have to know any philosophy, or even to have read the text we're talking about to (mostly) follow and (hopefully) enjoy the discussion. For links to the texts we discuss and other info, check out www.partiallyexaminedlife.com.
The Partially Examined Life
A special NewsHour series that couples profiles of contempory poets with reports on news and trends in the world of poetry.
Poetry | Online NewsHour Podcast | PBS
PBS
The mission of the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program is to develop a national strategy to collect, preserve and make available digital content for current and future generations. Collaboration and shared ideas are essential to the success of NDIIPP and all digital preservation institutions. These podcasts are conversations with digital preservation leaders with whom the Library is collaborating. A production of the Library of Congress Office of Strategic Initiatives and the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program.
Digital Preservation
The TED Radio Hour Podcast is a journey through fascinating ideas: astonishing inventions, fresh approaches to old problems, new ways to think and create. Based on Talks given by riveting speakers on the world-renowned TED stage, each show is centered on a common theme - such as the source of happiness, crowd-sourcing innovation, power shifts, or inexplicable connections. Host Alison Stewart talks with each speaker to probe how ideas make waves and get inside people's heads. TED Radio Hour is a co-production of NPR & TED.
NPR: TED Radio Hour Podcast
THE BACKSTORY TO GREAT RADIO STORYTELLING
How Sound
Photography podcasts that deal with the why of photography over the how and discuss the essential qualities of the medium from the point of view of the creative photographer.
Jeff Curtos Camera Position
David Summer plays Selected Duets for Flute.
Using his home recording studio, David has recorded some of the duets from the book Selected Duets for Flute, Volume 1 Edited by H.Voxman.
These flute duets are standard learning material for flute students taking flute lessons and can be fun to play for all flutists.
In addition to being educational, the duets can also be used by two flutes in performance. They are especially effective for wedding ceremonies, church services and other occasions calling for elegant music.
This podcast contains the recordings of both flute parts, played as a duet. As a resource for flute students and flute teachers, David has also recorded each of these duets in a flute 2 only version that can be used as a play along.
The matching flute 2 only version for each of these recordings can be found on the Flute Podcast page of David's website at www.summersong.net.
Selected Duets for Flute Podcast
Interviews, news and reviews on all aspects of the arts from Guardian.co.uk. Plus, hear art critic Adrian Searle's gallery and exhibition tours. New for October 2009: A series of podcasts from the Cambridge Festival of Ideas
The Guardian Culture Podcast
guardian.co.uk
Contemporary drama in a rural setting from the world's longest running radio soap opera.
BBC Radio 4
PBS and our member stations are America’s largest classroom, the nation’s largest stage for the arts and a trusted window to the world. In addition, PBS's educational media helps prepare children for success in school and opens up the world to them in an age-appropriate way.
We invite you to find out more about America’s largest public media enterprise.
PBS
The New York Times is an American daily newspaper founded and continuously published in New York City since 1851. The New York Times has won 106 Pulitzer Prizes, the most of any news organization.[3] Its website is the most popular American online newspaper website, receiving more than 30 million unique visitors per month.[4]
The New York Times
Next time the show will revolve around Rouge’s Double Dead Guy Ale, so scrape up some for drinking along if you can find it. And if you happen to be a fan of horror fiction, especially of the podcasted variety, crack open/download your favorite novel or short story and get reading/listening.
Charlie the Beer Guy
Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice
guardian.co.uk
Latest news, comment and reviews from the Guardian | guardian.co.uk
Camera Position 15 : Moving Camera Position & Moving Your Boundaries
Jeff Curtos Camera Position
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Photography podcasts that deal with the why of photography over the how and discuss the essential qualities of the medium from the point of view of the creative photographer.
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I’ve moved my Camera Position! I’ve abandoned Apple’s “easy but limited” iWeb software and moved over to a WordPress blog. Hopefully, the majority of listeners have made the switch with no problems. There is a new RSS subscription feed (see first post at the top of the page to see the new information). If you’re [...]
Camera Position 15 : Moving Camera Position & Moving Your Boundaries
0:12:01
Camera Position is a podcast about the visual and creative processes in photography, not the technical. Using images and the spoken word, my podcasts are about the “why” of photography from the point of view of the creative photographer. Passion for subject, experience and image all wind together in these short commentaries about camera-based images [...]
Welcome to Camera Position
In Camera Position #8, we looked at Paul Strand’s “The Family, Luzzara, Italy, 1953″. Listener Don Bricker wrote in to note that there are, in fact, two different images of this photograph. The idea that Strand “directed” this image by changing the content in an important way should be considered when we think about how [...]
Camera Position 14 : Strand’s “Family” Revisited
0:10:19
Photographers sometimes have a hard time separating their own emotional response they have to a subject from the image that they make of that subject. It’s up to us as imagemakers not only to respond to the subject and the way we feel about it, but also to remember that our viewers can only rely [...]
Camera Position 13 : Time and the Subject
0:09:08
How do we go beyond a record of a place and begin to make photographs that convey a real sense of place? The objective is not just to show what your destination looks like, but rather to convey, in photographs, what it felt like to be there. Play Podcast: Links for this Episode: Exhibition: WANDERLUST: … Continue reading Camera Position 196 : A Sense of Place →
Camera Position 196 : A Sense of Place
8:40
This episode is a little meditation on the importance of aligning ourselves with the messages around us, using Anne Lamott’s book Bird by Bird as inspiration. “The Gulf Stream will flow through a straw provided the straw is aligned to the Gulf Stream, and not at cross purposes with it.” -Anne Lamott Play Podcast: Links … Continue reading Camera Position 195 : The River of a Story →
Camera Position 195 : The River of a Story
8:12
“But the art in an artwork might not be located precisely where you thought it was. Perhaps it was just as much in the damage and decay as it was in the intact original. Perhaps it was in the gaps – in contemplating and rending those insults and injuries – that we find ourselves, by … Continue reading Camera Position 194 : Our Wish To Persist →
Camera Position 194 : Our Wish To Persist
6:05
As photographers, we know that there is a fairly wide range of options available to us that change what was to what we show the world in our images. Every photograph is a composite of the choices we make as the person who eventually presents the image. Every photograph is an interpretation of the way … Continue reading Camera Position 193 : Is It Art? →
Camera Position 193 : Is It Art?
6:35
An early influence on my ways of thinking about photography on a deeper level was the great writer John Berger. A poet, novelist, artist screenwriter and more, Berger, born in 1926, and died just a few weeks ago, in January of 2017 at the age of 90. A read of Berger’s work gives great insight … Continue reading Camera Position 192 : John Berger, Looking and Seeing →
Camera Position 192 : John Berger, Looking and Seeing
6:53
Walt Whitman’s poems in his opus Leaves of Grass mirror the actions of the photographer by beginning with facts and transforming those facts into ideas. I explore how both photography and Whitman’s poetry use simple language to convey complex ideas, giving any object or experience new importance by recording it on a previously blank page. Play Podcast: … Continue reading Camera Position 191 : Walt Whitman, Poetry and Photography →
Camera Position 191 : Walt Whitman, Poetry and Photography
11:40
“You can observe a lot just by watching.” – Yogi Berra I like to see photographers out in the world and watch them photograph. Observing how photographers photograph can be a great aid in helping us make better, more informed, more personal photographs. Play Podcast: There are still a few spaces left in 2 of … Continue reading Camera Position 190 : Watching Photographers Photograph →
Camera Position 190 : Watching Photographers Photograph
9:51
What drives and motivates photographers to do the work they do? I think that our unifying motivation is curiosity – an unrelenting, never-ending curiosity – an “itch” to know more about something and to learn about that thing through photographing it. I was prompted to think about how we should cultivate the itch – our … Continue reading Camera Position 189 : Cultivate The Itch, Not The Scratch →
Camera Position 189 : Cultivate The Itch, Not The Scratch
6:10
Do you take time to be creative each day? The creative act is worth taking the time for. It’s worth making the time for. It’s what holds us up and keeps us going. Thousands upon thousands of creative people are forced to make the time to create. It’s worth it because of what we give … Continue reading Camera Position 188 : You Are Worth The Time →
Camera Position 188 : You Are Worth The Time
6:50
If you see a picture that you think you may have photographed before, take it. Both the subject and the photographer may have changed since the last time you photographed it. Regardless of the reason, you should always make the photograph. Play Podcast: Links for this Episode: University of Georgia Studies Abroad Program in Cortona, … Continue reading Camera Position 187 : Always Make the Photograph →
Camera Position 187 : Always Make the Photograph
6:52
Among the many things that make photography such an interesting pursuit are its qualities of objectivity combined with subjectivity. In the end, photography is an objective medium with a subjective soul. Play Podcast: Sign up for the Workshops Mailing List – Planning is underway for the 2017 Italy Photography Workshops. Each one of these … Continue reading Camera Position 186 : Objective and Subjective →
Camera Position 186 : Objective and Subjective
6:15
In addition to the phrase “Less is More,” the great architect Mies Van der Rohe also had another saying that relates to making creative work, and that is “God Is In The Details,” suggesting that attention to each and every detail of your process, from conception to execution, is integral to making the best work … Continue reading Camera Position 185 : God Is In The Details →
Camera Position 185 : God Is In The Details
6:52
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