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    chautauqua

    Explore " chautauqua" with insightful episodes like "85 | The Zaaki Cup 🏆", "Serene Jones — Grace in a Fractured World", "[Unedited] Serene Jones with Krista Tippett", "Ep. 3: It Just Takes One Person" and "TOMMY BERRY Interview, Doomben Double and NRL Multis" from podcasts like ""On The Drift", "On Being with Krista Tippett", "On Being with Krista Tippett", "Tight Knit" and "The Leg Up Australia"" and more!

    Episodes (16)

    85 | The Zaaki Cup 🏆

    85 | The Zaaki Cup 🏆
    How good was Mazu last week Drifters? All honors to Jungle Magnate as well, hell of a run. 

    In this episode, we cover:
    - The Goodwood, can Extreme Warrior get one over the older horses?
    - The Doomben Cup, is Zaaki a living, breathing certainty?

    On The Drift, the self acclaimed biggest horse racing podcast on the Southside of Brisbane. We dissect the Group 1 races across the Australian calendar, while providing best bets each week. We'll have a light hearted look at the racing industry, talking about the topics that ourselves & our listeners are interested about. 

    We love bringing this content to you each week, so if you're picking up what we're putting down, please join our community on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/onthedriftpodcast & Twitter https://twitter.com/onthedriftpoddy
    Thanks for listening!!!

    Serene Jones — Grace in a Fractured World

    Serene Jones — Grace in a Fractured World

    The glory that coexists in human life right alongside our weird propensity to choose what is not good for us; the difference between a place of sheer loss and a sacred space for mourning; grace as something muscular amidst the muck and mess of reality. These are some of the places of musing, sweeping perspective, and raw wisdom a conversation with Serene Jones takes us. And after hearing this, you’ll never think in the same way again about Woody Guthrie, or John Calvin, or what a Christian upbringing in Oklahoma might be.

    Serene Jones serves as the 16th president — and the first female president — of Union Theological Seminary in New York City. She is a minister ordained in the Disciples of Christ and the United Church of Christ. Her books include Trauma and Grace: Theology in a Ruptured World, Feminist Theory and Christian Theology: Cartographies of Grace, and most recently, Call It Grace: Finding Meaning in a Fractured World.

    Find the transcript for this show at onbeing.org.

    This show originally aired December 5, 2019

    [Unedited] Serene Jones with Krista Tippett

    [Unedited] Serene Jones with Krista Tippett

    The glory that coexists in human life right alongside our weird propensity to choose what is not good for us; the difference between a place of sheer loss and a sacred space for mourning; grace as something muscular amidst the muck and mess of reality. These are some of the places of musing, sweeping perspective, and raw wisdom a conversation with Serene Jones takes us. And after hearing this, you’ll never think in the same way again about Woody Guthrie, or John Calvin, or what a Christian upbringing in Oklahoma might be.

    Serene Jones serves as the 16th president — and the first female president — of Union Theological Seminary in New York City. She is a minister ordained in the Disciples of Christ and the United Church of Christ. Her books include Trauma and Grace: Theology in a Ruptured World, Feminist Theory and Christian Theology: Cartographies of Grace, and most recently, Call It Grace: Finding Meaning in a Fractured World.

    This interview is edited and produced with music and other features in the On Being episode "Serene Jones — Grace in a Fractured World" Find the transcript for that show at onbeing.org.

    TOMMY BERRY Interview, Doomben Double and NRL Multis

    TOMMY BERRY Interview, Doomben Double and NRL Multis

    Multiple Group One winning jockey Tommy Berry joins the show to chat all things life and racing. From his time in Hong Kong to his new Brewery the boys cover plenty. Hear him chat about wild parties, riding Chautauqua and a few to follow in the future. Pat and Sam also give us their tips for the two Group 2 Races in Doomben, still aiming to nail their $1000 win and they give us a few winners for the upcoming restart of the NRL.

    https://standrewsbeachbrewery.com.au/

    Support the show

    Stuart Chafetz: Celebrating the CSO's New Principal Pops Conductor

    Stuart Chafetz: Celebrating the CSO's New Principal Pops Conductor

    Our guest this episode is Stuart Chafetz, the longtime principal timpanist of the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra who has just been named as the ensemble’s first-ever principal pops conductor. A well-known and cherished presence on the Chautauqua Institution grounds each summer, Chafetz has made annual appearances on the podium for the ensemble’s Independence Day Pops Concert and the late-season collaboration with the Chautauqua Opera Company’s Young Artists. More recently, he has also served as a conductor for the orchestra’s live performances accompanying film presentations, beginning in 2019 with “Star Wars: A New Hope,” and continuing with “The Empire Strikes Back,” on Aug. 15, 2020.

    Chafetz also serves as principal pops conductor of the Columbus Symphony Orchestra, and is newly appointed as the principal pops conductor of the Marin Symphony. A conductor celebrated for his dynamic and engaging podium presence, he is increasingly in demand with orchestras across the continent.

    Chafetz joined Chautauqua Vice President of Performing and Visual Arts Deborah Sunya Moore for a phone conversation shortly before the announcement of his new appointment at Chautauqua.

    Jennifer Bailey and Lennon Flowers — An Invitation to Brave Space

    Jennifer Bailey and Lennon Flowers — An Invitation to Brave Space

    Lennon Flowers and Rev. Jennifer Bailey embody a particular wisdom of millennials around grief, loss, and faith. Together they created The People’s Supper, which uses shared meals to build trust and connection among people of different identities and perspectives. Since 2017, they have hosted more than 1,500 meals. In the words they use, the practices they cultivate (some of which we’ve collected on onbeing.org), and the way they think, Flowers and Bailey issue an invitation not to safe space, but to brave space.

    Rev. Jennifer Bailey is co-founder of The People’s Supper and the founder and executive director of Faith Matters Network. She is also an ordained itinerant elder in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and her writing appears regularly in publications including Sojourners and The Huffington Post.

    Lennon Flowers is co-founder of The People’s Supper and the co-founder and executive director of The Dinner Party. She is also an Ashoka Fellow and an Aspen Ideas Scholar. She has written for CNN,YES!, Forbes, Open Democracy, EdWeek, and Fast Company.

    Find the transcript for this show at onbeing.org.

    [Unedited] Jennifer Bailey and Lennon Flowers with Krista Tippett

    [Unedited] Jennifer Bailey and Lennon Flowers with Krista Tippett

    Lennon Flowers and Rev. Jennifer Bailey embody a particular wisdom of millennials around grief, loss, and faith. Together they created The People’s Supper, which uses shared meals to build trust and connection among people of different identities and perspectives. Since 2017, they have hosted more than 1,500 meals. In the words they use, the practices they cultivate (some of which we’ve collected on onbeing.org), and the way they think, Flowers and Bailey issue an invitation not to safe space, but to brave space.

    Rev. Jennifer Bailey is co-founder of The People’s Supper and the founder and executive director of Faith Matters Network. She is also an ordained itinerant elder in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and her writing appears regularly in publications including Sojourners and The Huffington Post.

    Lennon Flowers is co-founder of The People’s Supper and the co-founder and executive director of The Dinner Party. She is also an Ashoka Fellow and an Aspen Ideas Scholar. She has written for CNN,YES!, Forbes, Open Democracy, EdWeek, and Fast Company.

    This interview is edited and produced with music and other features in the On Being episode "Jennifer Bailey and Lennon Flowers — An Invitation to Brave Space." Find more at onbeing.org.

    Hawaiian Language and Culture with J. Ekela Kaniaupio-Crozier

    Hawaiian Language and Culture with J. Ekela Kaniaupio-Crozier

    Our guest this episode is J. Ekela Kaniaupio-Crozier, the E Ola! Learning Designer and Facilitator at Kamehameha Schools Maui, where she provides campus support for a world-class Hawaiian culture-based education to students. A fluent speaker of the Hawaiian language, Kumu Ekela serves on the Hawaiʻi Development team for the Duolingo language learning app. She has been a Hawaiian language, studies and history instructor for more than 40 years in various settings, including K-through-12 schools, community college and four-year universities, and she continues to teach classes on Molokaʻi and on Maui free of charge.

    Kumu Ekela and her Kamehemeha Schools colleague Makana Garma joined our Emily Morris for an in-studio conversation on July 26, shortly after she delivered a lecture titled “Renormalizing the Hawaiian Language” in the Chautauqua Amphitheater as part of a week themed “The Life of the Spoken Word.”

    Sam Teresi/‘A Midsummer Night's Dream’

    Sam Teresi/‘A Midsummer Night's Dream’

    For the second consecutive summer, Chautauqua Theater Company is producing a free, touring outdoor production of a Shakespeare classic. This summer, having started June 25 on our own Bestor Plaza, CTC is performing A Midsummer Night’s Dream at a variety of locations around Chautauqua County, including Jamestown, Mayville and Southern Tier Brewing Company. On this episode, CTC Artistic Director Andrew Borba and Midsummer director Sarah Elizabeth Wansley, speak with longtime Jamestown mayor Sam Teresi about the city’s two productions, including the upcoming July 13 show at the Riverwalk Park.

    Hugh Hewitt

    Hugh Hewitt

    Hugh Hewitt is a lawyer, law professor and political commentator who as of July 1 began his service as president of the Richard Nixon Foundation. His nationally syndicated radio show is heard in more than 120 cities across the United States every weekday afternoon, with an audience estimated at more than 2 million listeners every week. Hewitt also makes frequent appearances on all the major cable news networks and Sunday morning political talk show panels, and he is a contributing columnist at The Washington Post. He is also the author of a dozen books, including two New York Times best-sellers.

    Hewitt served for nearly six years in the Reagan administration in a variety of posts, including assistant counsel in the White House and special assistant to two attorneys general. He is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Michigan Law School and has been teaching constitutional law at Chapman University Law School since it opened in 1995.

    Hugh joined CHQ&A’s John Merino for an in-studio conversation on June 27, shortly after delivering a lecture in the Chautauqua Amphitheater as part of a week themed “Moments That Changed the World.”

    James and Deborah Fallows, Taína Caragol

    James and Deborah Fallows, Taína Caragol

    On today's episode we feature two conversations with presenters from Week Two of the Chautauqua season, themed "American Identity." First is a discussion with James and Deborah Fallows, who took the Amphitheater stage on the Fourth of July to present on their new book, Our Towns: A 100,000-Mile Journey Into the Heart of America. Then, Taína Caragol, who opened the week of lectures on July 2, joins us at the 47:00 mark to expand upon her work as a curator at the National Portrait Gallery.

    For the last five years, Jim and Deb have been traveling across America in a single-engine prop airplane and reporting on the people, organizations and ideas re-shaping the country. As part of their “City Makers: American Futures” project in partnership with The Atlantic and APM’s “Marketplace,” the Fallowses visited smaller and medium-sized cities, meeting civic leaders, factory workers, recent immigrants, and young entrepreneurs to take the pulse and understand the prospects of places that usually draw notice only after a disaster or during a political campaign. Our Towns is the story of their journey — and an account of a country busy remaking itself, despite the challenges and paralysis of national politics. Jim is a national correspondent for The Atlantic and was editor of the US News & World Report. He has also authored several books himself, including China Airborne and National Defense, which won the American Book Award for nonfiction. Jim also worked as the chief White House speechwriter for Jimmy Carter for two years. Deb is a linguist who speaks six languages, and the author of A Mother’s Work and Dreaming in Chinese: Mandarin Lessons in Life, Love, and Languages. Before her travels abroad she was an assistant dean at Georgetown University and wrote about education, travel, work and women in publications such as The Atlantic, National Geographic and Newsweek. Follow them on Twitter at @JamesFallows and @FallowsDeb, and read The Chautauquan Daily's recap of their Amphitheater lecture here: http://chqdaily.com….

    Taína Caragol is the curator of painting and sculpture, and of Latino art and history, at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery, where she and her colleagues tell the story of America through portraits of people who have shaped it. Regarding her role specific to Latino art and history, Taína has said, “When people are missing from a history museum, the visitor gets the sense that it’s because they haven’t made an impact on our history. My priority is to make sure that the Latinos who have had a significant role are well represented throughout our collections and in our exhibitions.” Among the many exhibitions Taína has curated are “Portraiture Now: Staging the Self,” and “One Life: Dolores Huerta,” which has been expanded and redesigned as a traveling exhibition this year. Taína previously worked as the curator of education at the Museo de Arte de Ponce in Puerto Rico, as consultant of art and archival collections for Lord Cultural Resources, and Latin American Bibliographer for the The Museum of Modern Art. She also co-curated an exhibition about the Young lords, Puerto Rican activists from the 1960s, for the Bronx Museum of the Arts. Follow her on Twitter at @Playacreciente, and read The Chautauquan Daily's recap of her Amphitheater lecture here: http://chqdaily.com….

    Matt Ewalt

    Matt Ewalt

    Matt Ewalt, Chautauqua Institution chief of staff, joins the podcast this episode to speak on his work in overseeing Chautauqua's signature and historic 10:45 a.m. weekday Amphitheater lecture platform — the process of selecting themes and presenters, considerations of balance and representation, and a fulsome preview of each of the 2018 season's weekly themes. See a full and up-to-date schedule of all 2018 themes and lecturers at chq.org/2018.

    Ewalt has served in several roles at Chautauqua since joining the Institution staff in 2006. For seven seasons he was the 16th editor of The Chautauquan Daily, the Institution's official seasonal newspaper, before becoming associate director of education and youth services. In 2017 he was appointed as chief of staff by President Michael E. Hill, tasked with the primary responsibility for Chautauqua's Amp lecture program. Before Chautauqua, Ewalt was a reporter for the Times Observer in Warren, Pennsylvania. Follow him on Twitter at @mjewalt.

    Deborah Sunya Moore

    Deborah Sunya Moore

    Deborah Sunya Moore, vice president of performing and visual arts at Chautauqua Institution, joins the podcast this episode to share her unique path to Chautauqua — she first came as a guest artist in 1996 — and her department's important work in arts-integrated education in the local region, plus a preview of 2018 Chautauqua programming in opera, theater, visual arts, dance, orchestral and chamber music, and popular entertainment.

    Moore is a percussionist and arts educator with a long history as an advocate of performing arts programs for youth and persons with disabilities. In addition to her appointment at Chautauqua, she is a National Workshop Leader for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Previously, Moore held the positions of arts education and community engagement specialist and associate professor of percussion at the University of Trinidad and Tobago; director of education and community engagement for the Louisville Orchestra; and artistic director and percussionist of Tales & Scales, a nationally touring instrumental quartet for youth. Follow her on Facebook at @deborahsunyamoorechq.

    Bishop Gene Robinson

    Bishop Gene Robinson

    The Rt. Rev. V. Gene Robinson, vice president of religion and senior pastor at Chautauqua Institution, joins the podcast this episode to share his remarkable faith journey — including his path to being the first openly gay man to be elected bishop in the high church traditions of Christendom — and a preview of the Department of Religion's 2018 programs and initiatives in interfaith engagement.

    Robinson is the former Episcopal bishop of New Hampshire, and currently serves as a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and Auburn Seminary. He is known as an activist in the area of full civil/human rights for the LGBT community, in the U.S. and abroad. Follow him on Twitter at @BishopGRobinson.

    For more on Chautauqua's 2018 season, visit chq.org/2018.

    Chautauqua Institution President Michael E. Hill

    Chautauqua Institution President Michael E. Hill

    Chautauqua Institution President Michael E. Hill joins the podcast this episode to share his path to Chautauqua, new and strategic initiatives for the Institution, and a preview of his most-anticipated 2018 season moments.

    Hill is entering his second season as Chautauqua's president, having previously served in senior leadership positions at several Washington, D.C., non-profit arts and cultural organizations. He originally found his way to Chautauqua Institution as a copy editing intern with The Chautauquan Daily in 1996.

    For more on Chautauqua's 2018 season, visit chq.org/2018.

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