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    robwalker

    Explore "robwalker" with insightful episodes like "A Conversation with Commissioner Rob Walker", "A Conversation with Commissioner Rob Walker", "Episode 58: The Six-Foot-Square Museum" and "Episode 47: No More Road Trips" from podcasts like ""Kentucky Workers Compensation Podcast", "Kentucky Workers Compensation Podcast", "The Organist" and "The Organist"" and more!

    Episodes (4)

    A Conversation with Commissioner Rob Walker

    A Conversation with Commissioner Rob Walker

    Episode 3:  Louisville workers’ compensation attorney Ched Jennings is joined by Kentucky Department of Workers’ Claims Commissioner Rob Walker in today’s episode. 

    In 2020, the Governor appointed Rob Deputy Commissioner and then Interim Commissioner.  Earlier this month, he was appointed the Commissioner of the Kentucky Department of Workers’ Claims.

    Do You Need a Kentucky Workers’ Compensation Attorney?

    Office Phone:  (502) 583-3882

    Website:  www.JenningsLawOffices.com

    Follow the Jennings Law Offices on Facebook

    Principal Office Address:  401 West Main St., Suite 1910, Louisville, KY 40202

     

     

    Have questions? 

    The Jennings Law Offices doesn’t charge for phone calls.  Many union stewards and others have Ched’s cell phone number.  If possible, we’d like you to come to the office.  For some people, that doesn’t always work.  Video calls might be an option.  In fact, due to the pandemic, many of the hearings and other activities are handled via Zoom video conferencing.  You can do a video call from your computer or a cell phone.

    That’s it for this episode.  We’ll have another one ready for you in 2 weeks.  Until next time, remember, this is the Kentucky Workers’ Compensation Podcast.  It’s what you need to know.

    Principal Office in Louisville, KY

    A Conversation with Commissioner Rob Walker

    A Conversation with Commissioner Rob Walker

    Episode 3:  Louisville workers’ compensation attorney Ched Jennings is joined by Kentucky Department of Workers’ Claims Commissioner Rob Walker in today’s episode. 

    In 2020, the Governor appointed Rob Deputy Commissioner and then Interim Commissioner.  Earlier this month, he was appointed the Commissioner of the Kentucky Department of Workers’ Claims.

    Do You Need a Kentucky Workers’ Compensation Attorney?

    Office Phone:  (502) 583-3882

    Website:  www.JenningsLawOffices.com

    Follow the Jennings Law Offices on Facebook

    Principal Office Address:  401 West Main St., Suite 1910, Louisville, KY 40202

     

     

    Have questions? 

    The Jennings Law Offices doesn’t charge for phone calls.  Many union stewards and others have Ched’s cell phone number.  If possible, we’d like you to come to the office.  For some people, that doesn’t always work.  Video calls might be an option.  In fact, due to the pandemic, many of the hearings and other activities are handled via Zoom video conferencing.  You can do a video call from your computer or a cell phone.

    That’s it for this episode.  We’ll have another one ready for you in 2 weeks.  Until next time, remember, this is the Kentucky Workers’ Compensation Podcast.  It’s what you need to know.

    Principal Office in Louisville, KY

    Episode 58: The Six-Foot-Square Museum

    Episode 58: The Six-Foot-Square Museum

    Located in a narrow alley in Lower Manhattan inside what used to be the ground floor of a freight elevator shaft, Alex Kalman’s Mmuseumm operates in a space that is almost as understated as the objects it exhibits. Kalman gives Rob Walker a guided tour through the exhibitions on display, which include homemade gas masks, KFC corsages, and a delicately detailed taxonomy of cornflakes.

    Banner Image Credit: Alex Kalman / Mmuseumm

    Episode 47: No More Road Trips

    Episode 47: No More Road Trips

    Archivist, educator and filmmaker Rick Prelinger has a remarkable eye for the unexpected value of ephemera. A massive collection of educational and industrial films he collected under the auspices of the Prelinger Archives was acquired by the Library of Congress, and with his wife, Megan Prelinger, he co-founded the Prelinger Library in San Francisco, stuffed with printed material you’d be unlikely to find elsewhere. More recently he’s been working with old home movies — thousands of them, donated or otherwise acquired. This is basically material nobody else wanted, not even the descendants of whoever made them. He’s used it to build a remarkable series of films – one is made of footage from San Francisco, another from Detroit. Old home movies are mostly silent, and he adds no narration or even a score. Instead, he stands on stage at screenings, riffs about the clips, and encourages viewers to chime in from their seats. This actually works: the audience at Prelinger’s screenings are surprisingly vocal. Prelinger’s most recent is the more broadly themed No More Road Trips? Writer Rob Walker spoke with Prelinger about the film and his career in finding joy and insight in media most people eventually throw away.

     

    The stills, below are all from No More Road Trips? (2013), courtesy of Rick Prelinger. 

    to150217CowsOnRoad2.jpg

    to150217FightPoverty.jpg

    .to150217KansasUS24.jpg

    to150217RoadTripStill.jpg

    to150217SanFernandoRd10600N.jpg

    to150217smokingkid.jpg

    to150217SteamHeated.jpg

    to150217ToTheFuture.jpg

    to150217WavingByWheatfield.jpg

     

    Produced by Rob Walker with Shelby El Otmani.

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