6 Burst results for "Paul Webb"

Revision Path
"paul webb" Discussed on Revision Path
"Check out our post that we put on social media. We have one on Twitter, one on Instagram. There's also a link to it in the show notes. We have a lot of fun putting it together. For those of you who may not know, we've put together a holiday gift guide, I think every year we've done her vision path, except for 2019 that was a bit of an outlier, but if you want to check out what we've got on the list this year, go check the link. I hope you'll enjoy it. Secondly, we released a bonus episode last week on the design of Black Panther Wakanda forever. It's a really great conversation with me, Jordan green, reginae Gilbert, and Paul Webb. Talking about not just the plot of the movie, but also the music, the symbolism, the art, and the overall design of the movie. If you haven't seen the movie, it's got a lot of spoilers, so maybe don't listen to the episode, but if you have seen the movie already, definitely go check out that bonus episode. We really had a lot of fun putting it together and we hope that you enjoyed that as well. Now if you've listened to revision path for any amount of time, you know we've got a job board, of course we just listed some job listings at the top of this episode. And of course you've heard me talk about the tenth collective, which is this new talent collective initiative from revision path and state of black design. Now, unless you've been under a rock for the past few weeks, there have been tens of thousands of people displaced and put out of work because of layoffs. We're talking Amazon. We're talking Twitter. We're talking meta. Lots of people right now are looking for work. Present company included, by the way. So we put out this talent collective called the tenth collective as a way to really help you in your job search because we know that there are companies that are out there looking to hire black designers. And if you're a black designer looking for work, then you should join the tenth collector so you can be matched up with these companies. If you're not a member, it's free to join, you just have to fill out a short profile and you're all set. We'll put a link to it down in the show notes, and it's really super, super easy. You'll only get contacted by companies when they're ready to talk to you. You can hide your profile from companies or you can remain completely anonymous. The tenth collective is really meant to be a resource for you, whether you're looking for your next opportunity or not. Just great to have in your back pocket because you're going to be sending out resumes, you're going to be talking to people left and right. Let us help you out in your job search as well. Head over to the tenth collective dot com to join or check out the link in the show notes like I mentioned before. This episode of revision path is brought to you by hover. Building your online brand has never been more important. And that begins with your domain name. Show the online community who you are and what you're passionate about with hover. With over 400 plus domain extensions to choose from, including all the classics and fun niche extensions, hover is the only domain provider I use and trust. So what are you waiting for? Go to hover dot com forward slash revision path and get 10% off your first purchase. Now for this week's interview, I'm talking with Chris Rudd, founder of shy by design in Chicago, Illinois. Let's start the show. All right, so tell us who you are and what you do. Chris Rudd, founder and CEO of shy by design. And my world is to give leadership to the organization as we practice our antiracist design and systems and social service work around the country. House 2022 been going so far. It's been good. It's been busy, I think, because our work is again centered on anti racism and designing antiracist outcomes. After the racial awakening of 2020, lots of organizations and institutions are trying to figure out a, how are they perpetuating systemic racism and then B figuring out pathways to stop and from our perspective, hopefully, to heal the communities and folks that they've harmed over the past. So yeah, it's been a lot. Great work, but also heavy work. Yeah, I can imagine. So I would guess you probably got like an influx of work during that summer of 2020. I think there's a lot of people I spoke to on the show where during that summer are like right after that summer, they just kept getting hit up with requests to speak or to consult or to work or anything like that. Did you kind of have that same swell of interest during that time? Yeah, a lot of speaking, I think during that time, particularly people were really trying to wrap their heads around what it was. And so there was a lot of, can we just talk to you? We want to hear what you're thinking about this. Then the work started to pick up, but we actually developed a rubric for our firm on what we would do and what we wouldn't do. So we really started to vet the organizations that wanted to work with us to see if they were actually about the change that they say they were or if it was just we want to put a black face to the work to somehow validate the efforts, even if they knew it was going to fall short. And even if they didn't know, we would work with them to say, hey, here's where we see your shortcomings. And if they were willing to understand and accept that, then we could move forward. If they weren't, then we were happy to walk away. That's good. 'cause I can imagine people probably came all out of the woodwork that found your firm and was like, wait a minute, that's a black guy. Let's talk to them. Let's see if we can help it. Yeah. And then really, you know, they thought they knew. That was a lot of them. All we gotta do is just, it would come out in this way. All we have to do is just make this one simple change. And boom, racism is gone or, you know, we will function differently. And the hard part for us is helping them understand that changing an organization changing a system, an institution is a huge shift or requires large scale shifts from top to bottom, not just in terms of personnel, but also in terms of philosophy, practices, policy, right? All these organizational structure. And so that was a hard thing for folks to deal with, right? It's been doing this thing for so long and from your perspective, you've been doing a great job, right? Profit margins may be through the roof or you've put out a couple of surveys of rate us and for the most part you send them to people that like you and you're like, yep, that was a great and then the negative ones that come back. You're like, oh, they don't really get it. And so, yeah, it's been interesting journey. Well, let's kind of dive in more and talk about your firm's shy by design. What you describe as a collaborative and cultivating space for designers of color, like that already just that hit me like a ton of bricks there. Tell me more

Revision Path
"paul webb" Discussed on Revision Path
"Thanks to Regina <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Gilbert, Jordan <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> green, <Speech_Music_Male> Paul Webb. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> And of course, thanks to <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> you for listening. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Check out each <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> of the guests through the links <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> in the show notes, as well <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> as links to other resources <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> we mentioned in the <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> episode at revision <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> path dot com. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> Revision <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> path is brought <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> to you by lunch. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> A multidisciplinary <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> creative studio <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> in Atlanta, Georgia. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> This <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> podcast is created <Speech_Music_Male> hosted and produced <Speech_Music_Male> by me, Maurice <Speech_Music_Male> cherry, with <Speech_Music_Male> engineering and editing <Speech_Music_Male> by RJ basilio. <Speech_Music_Male> Our <Speech_Music_Male> intro voice-over is <Speech_Music_Male> by music man Dre, <Speech_Music_Male> with intro and <Speech_Music_Male> outro music by yellow <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> speaker. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Transcripts are <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> provided by brevity and wit. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Music> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> So what did you <SpeakerChange> think of the <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> episode? Betty, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> what do you think about <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> revision path overall? <Speech_Music_Male> You know, we <Speech_Music_Male> love doing these sorts <Speech_Music_Male> of bonus episodes. <Speech_Music_Male> We might do more of these <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> in the future. I <Speech_Music_Male> mean, we've been <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> doing this show now for <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> almost ten years, so <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> there will definitely be plenty <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> more <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> opportunities for us to do <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> more things like <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> this. Again, have <Speech_Music_Male> to give big thanks to <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> the panelists. <Speech_Music_Male> Thanks, of course, to <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Marvel Studios, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Ryan <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> coogler, the whole <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> crew that did Black <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Panther Wakanda forever. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Really was <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> a great movie and I'm glad <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> that we had a chance to really <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> sit down <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and chop it up and just <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> talk about it all. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> And of course, we want <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> to hear from you as well, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> so don't be a stranger. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Hit us up on Twitter <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> or Instagram, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> just search for revision <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> path, all <SpeakerChange> one word, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> or you know <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> what? If you really love <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> this, leave us <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> a rating and a review <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> on Apple podcasts, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Amazon <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> music, or Spotify, and <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> let us know that way. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> The more people <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> you tell about the show, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> the bigger we become, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and the further we <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> can extend our reach <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> to talk to black designers, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> developers, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> artists, and other digital <Speech_Music_Male> creatives from <Speech_Music_Male> all over the world. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> As always, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> thank you so much for <Speech_Music_Male> listening and we'll see you <Speech_Music_Male> next time.

Revision Path
"paul webb" Discussed on Revision Path
"Through in depth interviews you'll learn about their work, their goals and what inspires them as creative individuals. Here's your host, Maurice cherry hello everybody and welcome to revision path. Thank you so much for tuning in. I'm your host Maurice cherry. This is a special bonus episode about the design of Black Panther Wakanda forever. Remember when the first Black Panther movie came out back in 2018, we did an episode then you can check the link in the show notes. And I knew that we had to dive into this movie and talk about the music, the art and the symbolism of it all. Actually, that 2018 bonus episode on Black Panther that we did, it's in the Smithsonian's permanent archives for the national museum of African American history and culture. So you know what? You can check it out there as well. In the meantime, settle in for a panel discussion on Black Panther Wakanda forever with myself, as well as some past guests from revision path. Reginae Gilbert, Jordan green, and Paul Webb.

Rhythm and Pixels Video Game Music Podcast
"paul webb" Discussed on Rhythm and Pixels Video Game Music Podcast
"Tunes b ball for any es but paul webb james denmark mark gayness kingsley thurber and roy wilkins and cornell mc i was wrong with me but that's so i love how clearly it's still stuck in my head. I mentioned on the earlier part of the show. But like i say i take this track because i was like. That's off the the flu. The funky solo is super funky but that base like you were like they were just kind of like on your head friend. And you're like is your foot. Then you're like humming along and then like your whole body was moving. It all started just blast. Yeah and destiny's child just came out. Your mouth became a looney toon. So obviously. I don't think i didn't even know about this game. It makes sense. They space jam basketball. We're talking football basketball volleyball or brisket ball play the heck out of brisket bowl. The end result is dinner but like yeah like like this is probably like a superfund silly basketball game and one thing about video games and sports is at sports like you make your talking about video game like a shooter or beat them up or ascites even an rpg. Those games have their own rules and they build the rules into in this game. You have to reach a certain level and you can level up into something else right Sports have their own rules already. So like you think about it like oh you. If you have to score this many points to win there are going to be. Four quarters in a game is going to be split up into four quarters. There's going to be a halftime. You can only score two points here three points here like it's already in the sport are you saying since worst like is already pretty established advancement and characters as you play the game and they play around with it like Maybe it's going to be two on two or three. Looney tunes are gonna have crazy news right but like when you talk about sports video games especially now are most of it is all simulation Like the rules are established. The one thing. I find funny about sports now when these primaries esi one or two other has done this but i never seem to hear or come across as were the actual stamina like just like in real football. You'll have a team of players but you can have your best players all four quarters because they get tired so here's get exhausted at the beginning of the show was beginning to see how we talk. I mentioned cyber. Has that the stamina meter stan. Yeah because eventually you're robots will just run out of gas and getting real slow. I think they eventually explode. They overheat see if anyone's listening plays like he's like really into sports games like he'd think of any like like traditional sport ball the matt and the nba. James but obviously not like number but make sense of fica had like that kind of thing because this this those guys are running cutoff knocked on the ground and mess check but like i feel like even like even if they want to put that in their overall because ruin the whole rtd feel career motion. At least has something like statement. I would. I would imagine they do my brother's really into he's really into the nba games online. And he. i've thought about because we. That was our history. I grew up with my brother playing these games. I never i just. I can't see myself being like yeah. I'm playing madden now. That's i played some his brother. But then i totally lost favor because i was losing one hundred points and basketball games tonight but being the younger brother i would throw tantrums. Now if there's a crew a new nfl blitz. I'll probably do that. Oh god no no was. Nba jam was really big with my friends. And i hated it. It was the reason. I i personally believe. I lost the blockbuster. Only one i was good at it was was an because i something to me because i never had a chance to play the The the blockbuster video game challenge when we were kids And their chance to play the new sonnet was three three. Yeah i never got a chance to play. It's that thing. I've practiced the heck out at a full ring. Collecting lou was good but the nba new. But when i worked at the arcade nfl blitz was huge and people would play at home on their end. Sixty four and put plays on their memory cards and you can put the memory card in the machine. Oh really yeah and actually. That was the only way that you could do like really goofball plays that would like throw everybody off. How about you were going to say about being used by knowing sixty four. Let you do as pretty awesome. Maybe we had a special machine or what but it makes sense because the memory card packs. So i totally makes sense as one guy. I think his name is adrian and how to get so upset at them. Because i just wanna play within have fun but like all these plays. That'd be like the guys are going these crazy different directions. I can't choose that. That's the power of the institute for rob. I played at home all the time. And if you have a thing you can do the thing i was like. Oh i don't like this pay to win. Think play to win your console at home. Yeah i mean. I'm not gonna pay for another console and pay for a memory card. Pay for the cost coach. Mooch man. what's your what's your first track down. Mooch off a year for the funny thing is i was. I had a track in mind but now knowing that you pick this i have to go with my next distract because of the funniness composers so my track comes from the genesis game. Wwf royal rumble.

Rhythm and Pixels Video Game Music Podcast
"paul webb" Discussed on Rhythm and Pixels Video Game Music Podcast
"Your perfect i love. Don't sorry go go go. I love a win tracks. That background music to from the game. Jack nicklaus turbo gulf for the turbo graphic cd composed by paul webb. Oh my god. That was legit. Did it freeze vigil. Everybody smiling further. I was about this this mood at this track. Has this feels like driving to the beach in a convertible with the top down. And you're not there yet. You're on your way and it's the morning and you have the whole day ahead of you. It just feels so good. It feels soga already risen or is it rising. It's just roast. It's like you're getting out there and it's like seven in the morning six in the morning and it just feels the music feel so good. It's so cheesy. I gotta say the more. I listen to him so key. Gm the more like. I'm into this type of music. And when i hear i get put on hold for vendors and stuff but my job and a hustle hold music and i'm like this is awesome ended. There's a there's a positive vibe that comes out of that kind of thing like there's a reason why most sitcom vibe in those hammocks show isn't theme derail sitcoms. I would be haphazard to guests that a lot of the trashy plays deal they could double s sitcom themes just because of that style of music is what they use for. Most sitcoms this the day abby picture that the forty five in my head like the intro of me likes working at me kitchen stirring up some soup and that's our horse on whiskey to the pot and look like oh. I get caught only point of whiskey. I don't know. But i got caught doing it what i was thinking but i got busted. That was bad like that. About sitcom they would always have the guy doing something they shouldn't be doing or something they don't know someone sees doing it and he gets noticed the cameras and go home face. There's there's a A comedy special on netflix. For john malini called new in town. And it's like a whole theme song like a sitcom theme song and it's mainly him just like in different outfits like an comic turning ongoing would man gotta watch gesture that because that is a pride as a major staple to sit cup opening someone doing something noticing the camera on. Oh it's still high alerts the The the ultimate and inevitable conclusion to that is the too many cooks swim after hours. Like weird fever dream macula holds up to. It really does so long i remember. They did one after that. That was a an ad for a drug it was like it was like such and such may cause sleepiness such and such may cause suicidal thoughts and it just went on for like ten minutes and as it was going on. There's like this whole like crazy. Like david lynch style. Murder mystery going on Was presenting lady like trapped in like a weird neighborhood. No one lived in it anymore. It's like everybody off so weird. I wanna watch that again. I think i watched that. When i was sick and i was like on the cold medicine or something like how. It was such an ingenious constantly for those who don't know these videos would be air on adult swim at like three or four in the morning. The idea is that back in the day when people watch television usually tv channels would run out of content at a certain hour so would either run reruns of stuff or they would just run. These weird syndicated shows that came from another provider after their main programming. Were off a lot of times that will be like sitcoms or like infomercials noise so they made these videos to spoof that to get people to be like most most specifically people were doing drugs. I- acid who's watching cartoon network at four in the morning. We know who they'd be doing these things and then the video would come up and they're like oh some tv show and all the weird stuff will start happening with the x. Go what is this on record investment. They were intending to do with the mess with people like freak out like they want all. This is interesting. I've never seen this show before. Then like slowly. Something doesn't seem right. Peel off the layers this year. Well this this track anyway. Let's not talk about that anyway because this track always feels right. I i'm into. I'm into this mutsu cornell what's on the other side of this coin. What's up what's what's happening on the other side of the dark. The dark side of the moon. There's a vengeful struggle taking place between two individuals who are both connected to one woman that they both have affection for more specifically one has affected for the other one is just really cool with her but the other guy still really jealous in for some reason wants to kill him because why not it's video king host. What are we talking about. The joy of it right in doesn't make sense why it's great narrative this comes from a recent release game called cyber shadow and the track title was called subject to alpha two point. Oh and is composed by enrica. martin awesome. I wanted to listen to some of the soundtrack for a while. Because i've been watching the game in development and it looks apparently is all done by one guy. Yeah.

Miss Information: A Trivia Podcast
Who Was Thomas Becket?
"Thomas becket yes okay. Born around eleven twenty and died in eleven seventy. he's also known as saint thomas of canterbury or Sometimes who refer to him as thomas a becket. Okay yeah anyway. So thomas becket. He is venerated as a saint and martyr by both the catholic church and the anglican church He engaged in conflict with henry. The second king of england over the rights and privileges of the church and at one point excommunicated the archbishop of york so tough rain away to france for a bit under the protection of king. Louis the seventh of france but then he returned in eleven seventy two england so henry second in england said something to the effect of like ugh. This guy is driving me. Four of his knights interpreted this as a command to go. Get rid of thomas becket So on december twenty ninth seventy reginald fitz ertz huge morville william to tracy and richard le breton showed up at canterbury cathedral. According to accounts left by the monk jer vase of canterbury and i witnessed named edward grim. The knights placed their weapons under a tree outside the cathedral and hid their chainmail armor on your cloaks before entering the cathedral to challenge becket priest the night. He's hold beckett. They were taking him to winchester england to give count of all of his actions and kind of like hold him accountable in front of people but becket refused so the four nights retrieved their weapons and rushed back inside the cathedral. Oh my god. I beckett proceeded to the main hall for evening prayers and the other monks tried to like themselves into different parts of the joe for get said to them. It is not right to make a fortress out of the house of prayer in order them to reopen the doors so the four nights wielding they're drawn swords ran into the room saying like thomas becket. He's a traitor. To the king the knights found beckett in his spot near the door of the monastic cloister the stairs into the crypt and the stairs leading up to the choir of the cathedral where the monks were all. They're like still saying their prayers. Like oh no right. There's just four guys having running in with okay upon seeing them becca. I am no traitor. And i'm ready to die so Edward grandma eyewitness. He wrote a very extensive account of exactly what happened. I will save you all the details. Let's just say that for nights wielding swords kill the priest in canterbury cathedral. That's terrible so soon. After his death the faithful throughout europe european venerating beckett as a murder in february eleven seventy three which was just a little more than two years after his death. He was canonized by pope. Alexander the third and so sure typically like canonization of saints takes lake decades. Yeah stuff happened so the fact that this happened so quickly was kind of saying that. This guy was a big deal. So related trivia. Facts about thomas becket. Geoffrey chaucer's the canterbury tales. Ninety two is set in a company of pilgrims on their way from southern to the shrine of saint. Thomas becket in canterbury cathedral. Okay never made that connection no me neither ever okay So the schreiner was built between eleven eighty and twelve twenty and up to one hundred thousand. Pilgrims would have visited the shrine every year for more than three hundred years. That's my gosh locked. Yes it was adorned in marble gold and jewels and murdered saints. Tombs was one of unparalleled splendor in fifteen thirty eight. during the reformation. The shrine was destroyed following the orders of henry. The eighth who definitely be talking about in a little bit more twenty. Twenty researchers digitally reconstructed the raised sanctuary and available to view on the beckett story online and we'll share linked to that because it's really interesting how they did that. They took This thing had been such a big deal for more than three hundred years. And then it was raised more than four hundred and fifty plus years ago at this point and so they took accounts that the pilgrims had made that other monks had made in in digitally recreated which is pretty up and also modern works based on the story of thomas becket include. Tes elliott's nineteen thirty. Five play murder in the cathedral later adapted the opera assassination cutter. Dry ill the brando pizza'd in nine hundred fifty eight. You did that. Can i tell you flawlessly Also nineteen fifty-nine play by John we called beckett which was made into a movie with the same title and paul. Webb's play four nights in nair's borough which was written in one thousand nine hundred nine which recounts the aftermath of the murder of thomas becket by the four nights who made the worst career choice in history. Yeah that's goes without saying well if you don't if all of these facts don't stick in your head. Look at the name k. e. t. the cane. His name is right in the middle. And if you look at it. It looks like four blades. Good the name so four blades. Stuck together by the four to killed him in canterbury. That's thomas becket.