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    spoken english

    Explore "spoken english" with insightful episodes like "פייק ניוז וקניה ווסט - Fake News & Kanye West", "הדרך היחידה ללמוד אנגלית מדוברת - The Only Way to Learn Spoken English", "Fighting To Make It Every Week: Restaurants Before and After Coronavirus" and "Moving the Mountain: Marketing Social Change and Making It Last" from podcasts like ""שפות שלי", "שפות שלי", "Add Passion and Stir" and "Add Passion and Stir"" and more!

    Episodes (4)

    פייק ניוז וקניה ווסט - Fake News & Kanye West

    פייק ניוז וקניה ווסט - Fake News & Kanye West

    בפרק הזה ג׳וש ואריאל מדברים על הפירוש והמשמעות של פייק ניוז והשערוריה סביב קניה ווסט.

    Fake News & Kanye West

    לאתר של שפות שלי

    לקורסים שלנו באנגלית

    לקרוס דיגיטלי באנגלית למתחילים

    Thanks for listening and always keep learning!

    הדרך היחידה ללמוד אנגלית מדוברת - The Only Way to Learn Spoken English

    הדרך היחידה ללמוד אנגלית מדוברת - The Only Way to Learn Spoken English

    בפרק הזה ג׳וש ואריאל מסבירים על הדרך היחידה ללמוד אנגלית מדוברת במהירות ובקלות!

    The Only Way to Learn Spoken English 

    לאתר של שפות שלי

    לקורסים שלנו באנגלית

    לקרוס דיגיטלי באנגלית למתחילים

    Thanks for listening and always keep learning!

    Fighting To Make It Every Week: Restaurants Before and After Coronavirus

    Fighting To Make It Every Week: Restaurants Before and After Coronavirus

    What innovations will emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic? On this episode, host Billy Shore reconnects with noted DC chef Erik Bruner-Yang (Maketto, Brothers and Sisters, ABC PONY, Spoken English) on helping the community. “This has been a wake-up call for me. I’ve always been wading in the water of being a public servant and [I’m] finally jumping into it,” says Bruner-Yang. He recently launched a crowdfunding plan called The Power of 10 that keeps restaurant workers employed while providing free meals to those in need.

    “I’ve spent the last 15 years of my life working and building up this neighborhood that we live in, and when this passes, that could all be gone… We can make a difference and leverage the resources we have just to try to keep our communities intact,” he observes. His four restaurants have had to downsize from 225 employees to about 30. “Food security issues have existed long before this pandemic - the pandemic only highlights how bad it is.”

     Listen to this informative discussion about one small business owner’s innovative plan to help workers and communities.

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    Moving the Mountain: Marketing Social Change and Making It Last

    Moving the Mountain: Marketing Social Change and Making It Last

    What is the key to creating sustainable social impact? Social change pioneer Bill Novelli and Washington DC restaurateur and chef Erik Bruner-Yang (Maketto, Brothers and Sisters, Spoken English) sit down with Debbie and Billy Shore to discuss cultural identity, community engagement and lasting social impact. As the former architect of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, Novelli built a social marketing program that successfully challenged big tobacco’s overwhelming political and cultural influence. “One of the biggest lessons I’ve learned in my life is that we can move the mountain… but we’ve got to start by saying, ‘we can do it,’” says Novelli. “We need to change social norms and expectations,” he continues. Bruner-Yang thinks the solutions to intractable social issues like gun violence require long-term inter-generational thinking. “If you’re 40-plus, your mind is made up. America can be and has been at the forefront of social change. Some of these big issues you have to just skip a generation,” he observes.

     

    As a professor in the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University, Novelli sees the promise of the next generation of leaders. “I go home every night with a song in my heart because they understand that there’s more than one bottom line. They want purpose. They want to work in an organization that doesn’t just have a profit, but also cares about people and the planet,” he says. Long-time No Kid Hungry supporter Bruner-Yang describes how his former passion for music translated into owning restaurants. “It’s a lot of the same tangibles. You get to be creative, you’re entertaining people, you’re using a lot of the same thought processes,” he notes.

     

    Listen in as these two guests discuss talk about how their values have motivated them to lead purpose-driven lives.

     


    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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