CMM #333 - Rod Stewart: Every Picture Tells a Story

EPISODE · Jan 11, 2024 · 1H 1M

CMM #333 - Rod Stewart: Every Picture Tells a Story

from CMM · host Crazy Metal Mind

Episódio originalmente publicado em 12/01/2018. No 333º episódio do Podcast mais Rock’n Roll da internets Rômulo Metal, Marcel Pfütz e Carlos Augusto Monteiro batem papo sobre o disco Every Picture Tells a Story do Rod Stewart.   Trilha sonora do podcast (na ordem): *Rod Stewart - Maggie May *Rod Stewart - That's All Right *Rod Stewart - Reason To Believe *Rod Stewart - Tomorrow Is Such A Long Time *Rod Stewart - Every Picture Tells A Story *Rod Stewart - Seems Like A Long Time *Rod Stewart - That's All Right *Rod Stewart - Amazing Grace *Rod Stewart - Tomorrow Is Such A Long Time *Rod Stewart - Henry *Rod Stewart - Maggie May *Rod Stewart - Mandolin Wind *Rod Stewart - (I Know) I'm Losing You *Rod Stewart - Reason To Believe

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CMM #333 - Rod Stewart: Every Picture Tells a Story

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Eating at a Meeting Tracy Stuckrath, CFPM, CMM, CSEP, CHC Eating at a Meeting explores a variety of topics on food and beverage (F&B) and how they impact individual experience and inclusion, sustainability, culture, community, health and wellness, laws and more. The mission of Eating at a Meeting is to share authentic stories that illustrate the financial, social, emotional, and mental impact food and beverage have on individuals, organizations, and the earth. I see it being threefold:● Help individuals and organizations understand how F&Bimpacts employee, customer and guest experience, theplanet and the bottom line.● Help those growing, producing, preparing, and servingF&B understand the duty of care they hold in food safetyand inclusion as well as the opportunity they have tocreate experiences that are safe and inclusive.● Support those with dietary needs by gathering theirinsight on eating at a meeting with dietary needs,helping them better advocate for themselves andeducating them on the processes found on the otherside of Stories Lived. Stories Told. Abbie VanMeter and The CMM Institute The purpose of Coordinated Management of Meaning is to create better social worlds through better communication. This podcast is about empowering all of us in our communication to see ourselves as curious and active participants with the ability to create meaningful change in our relationships and social worlds. Our practice of CMM is about embodying a “communication perspective,” which asks us to “look at communication, rather than through it.” To take a communication perspective is to consider what we’re making and how we’re making it through our communication practices. This means we look at patterns, contexts, stories, and relationships; and that we use curiosity, mindfulness, collaboration, and dialogue to create better social worlds for ourselves. So, join us as we take CMM from theory to practice, engage in collective learning together, and apply a communication perspective to make meaning in our conversations. CosmoParenting CMM Institute for Personal and Social Evolution What does it mean to parent? CosmoParenting is designed to support you in this journey of figuring out what it means to parent by enriching your parenting toolbox, offering one short episode each week that provides opportunities to reflect, listen, connect, practice, and engage in meaningful conversations. cosmoparenting.substack.com Sons de la Memòria | Born CMM Eufònic Festival Curated by Arnau Horta, and following the link between the sound arts and intangible heritage, the program of sound interventions "Sons de la Memòria" at El Born Centre de Cultura i Memòria of Barcelona is intended as a framework for the presentation of live performances, sound installations and other hybrid formats that explore the issue of memory and its malleable nature through music.Sounds (and music in particular) have a unique ability to trigger emotional reactions and relive lived, perhaps forgotten, stories, inviting us to reimagine and even fictionalize memory. Under the effects of music, memory can become an evanescent and ghostly material, pierced by imagination and fantasy. It is in this sense that one must understand the notion of "hauntology" that cultural critic Mark Fisher (1968-2017) borrowed from Jacques Derrida to describe a series of musical proposals that seem to oscillate between nostalgia and aspiration for a lost future, projecting itself back and forth in tim
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