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#Hendershot House
noahjnakamura · 2 years
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unlikelyjapan · 10 months
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s2e7 rewatch notes
Forks. Here we go...
Enters with Syd doing menu R&D with Coach K's interview layered on.
I'm going to be honest and say I hate inspirational sports narratives - years ago my husband used to work for a huge sports conglomerate, and I'm still finding and disposing of "TEAMS GO HARD - THERE ARE NO APOLOGIES" motivational-type swag to this day.
That being said, the interview is highly relative to Syd, foreshadows Richie's arc apex, Carmy's choice/fall/probable redemption, the teams learning curves, the restaurant's impending ebb and flow, so I've transcribed it for posterity:
So as you've been coaching over the years, what would you say are the most important lessons of leadership that you've learned?
The very first thing is that in order to get better you change limits. And when you change limits, you're going to look bad and you're going to fail. And at West Point I learned that failure was never a destination. In other words, when you are knocked back, you know, figure out why, then change.
The other thing is that you're not going to get there alone. You know, be on a team. You know, surround yourself with good people and learn how to listen. You're not going to learn with you just talking. And when you do talk, converse - don't make excuses. Figure out the solution. And you don't have to figure it out yourself.
I always wanted to be part of a team and obviously I wanted to lead that team. You know, what an interesting life it is to be a leader.
"That's something" Syd murmurs. The whole talk is the glue that holds her to RIchie and co. without Carmy in e10.
I do appreciate how they portray (with the aid of spooky music) Richie's wake-up, the city of Chicago, and the modernist restaurant as bathed in grey/blue hues and basically haunted at the jump. Richie as a shell, an angry ghost, terrified of his perceived lack of agency, his irrelevance, and whatever future fate Carmy has in store for him.'
"Chef Terry is always watching" contrasted with the initial starkness of "Every Second Counts" without context - so much has already been reported on this episode re: ritual/purpose, but I just relish watching Richie be in jail the first portion of this episode.
And don't worry, I'm not going to make any "OMG a fork! Remember when...." observations, this isn't the Reddit sub.
I do like the use of David Byrne's "Glass, Concrete & Stone" as Richie tucks into day two and three of his stage.
"Now, I'm wakin' at the crack of dawn, to send a little money home, from here to the moon...."
I mean, his conscious mind is screaming "I have to do this so Carmy will pay me", but some part of his lizard brain has to be cluing in at this point that this whole exercise/path might lead to a more lucrative life - so he can support the family he doesn't possess anymore.
Carmy, Syd, Tina, Marcus and Natalie are thrown into a restaurant montage overlapping RIchie's scene while the song continues to play out - it doesn't play in this lyrical order, so you know every note is intentionally directed at one/all:
Lookin' at happiness
Keepin' my flavor fresh
Nobody knows I guess
How far I'll go, I know
So I'm leavin' at Six O' Clock
Meet in a parkin' lot
Harriet Hendershot
Sunglasses on, she waits by this
Glass and concrete and stone
It is just a house, not a home.
And my head is fifty feet high
Let my body and soul be my guide
There's too many dual meanings /applications for these lyrics to even sift through here. Bravo, Christopher Storer.
In my last recap of Fishes, I had said a bit about how all the men in the Berzatto orbit can be ground down to a pulp by men they perceive as an authority/threat.
Garrett represents a beta-persona to Richie, someone he could easily go off on (with a "G or R" comment casually thrown in) when he starts lecturing him in the alley about his commitment/work ethic, but Garrett is so assured of his work, and more importantly assured of his mother-fucking purpose.
The obvious layer of this is that Richie's seeking his purpose, so it's a crystalizing moment. The secondary layer is that it reveals the kryptonite of the Berzatto(ish) men - people who have and are assured by their purpose, and who lead with that instead of myths and bluster.
This explains Carmy's early "othering" by the family, for better and for worse - he's not assured of that purpose because of all his enmeshment and hang-ups, but they caught a whiff of what it could lead to, and it brews a curiosity, mocking and quiet disdain.
It also explains Richie's bonkers hatred of Syd in season 1 (reciprocated in kind), as Sydney comes rushing out of the gate with assurance and purpose. It also explains the immediate tune-up their relationship undergoes as soon as Richie wanders back to The Bear. Same goes for Richie and Natalie's repair/sudden appreciation for one another by e8.
Re: the teachers who had saved up for a fancy dinner at the pre-service meeting:
"I want to go above and beyond tonight. Every supplement and caviar, a tour of the kitchen, a champagne tour in the gallery as well. And, guys, we're not going to let these people spend a dollar. Do not drop a check. I wanna blow their fuckin' minds."
I will cop to shedding a happy tear the first time I saw this. I really hope it changed some mid-American perspectives on what service work and hospitality can mean (across the board, but especially in its upper echelons), by what metrics they assess it, how they value the people who work purposefully to take care of them. So good! I'm glad it hit Richie like a ton of bricks.
It looks like Tiff's been crying before she calls Richie in preparation. It's really sweet that Richie's first thought is obviously a worry about her health or something when she says she needs to tell him something, followed quickly by relief. I didn't question that there wasn't real love there, but it's nice to see it linger between the two of them in the aftermath....Ebon and GIllian both played this scene so sincerely.
As he re-enters the kitchen, Richie is watching the careful food prep and the FOH interactions with such a childlike intensity/wonder. I didn't realize that the "rebirth of Richie" happened in a day, not a week (which I felt was too fast already) but I actually find myself resenting it less at this clip. Basically all the things he held dear (being Van Halen, potential reconciliation with Tiff, the dishonesty of white collar life and dining/fraud Carmy) were obliterated in a single day, but a life that requires "someone who's good with people" has presented itself in tandem. (I...god....its a fork in the fucking road, ok? ugh.)
Just taking a beat to marvel over the Chicago cinematography in this episode. My God, the colors they were able to coax out of trains and the skyline at night, it's truly magnificent.
Some reddit gals were pointing out that Chef Jess' gold 'X' earrings are the exact same as Claire's, which indicated that she's marked as a love interest for Richie the same way Claire is marked for Carmy, everything being intentional and all that.
While I leave a slight amount of room to believe that a show about a group of kitchen rats doesn't have an overly-extensive jewelry collection to pull from in the wardrobe department, if it was intentional I think it says more about Richie's motivations than it does Carmy's.
Richie really wanted a Claire. Someone available, interested, someone he could regard as a "high-calibre woman" (I am not going to include any of the dialogue from Fishes, don't worry). I think the "X" could signify women who are emotionally open and available. What the men do with that is up to them - I don't think The Bear is going to fuck around with fatalistic narratives when it's actively trying to dispel them elsewhere.
I really love the sense of play as the staff gather around the perquod's pizza as the chef is preparing it - taking a minute to delight in it without it disrupting the urgency of the kitchen at rush. I can't wait until The Bear gains its sea legs and we see everyone BOH being afforded moments like this.
Deep dish is not "magic pizza" though. Far from it.
When Richie identifies the apple cider gastrique and Garrett cries "THATS MY FUCKING BOY RIGHT THERE!!" -
I mean, it's bro movie shit, and this would never happen in a week....but it is a truly charming context switch. The Taylor Swift bit was way too cloying for me, but I'm relieved to see Richie smile and Ebon really sells it all.
Shout out to the shot of Ceres.
It's been discussed, but Garrett's sobriety story re: acts of service for recovery/hospital-ity is a poignant add-on.
Every character featured on the show is tasked with providing service and taking care of people in either a hospital or hospitality setting, and it's the key to maintaining (or regaining) control of their lives.
Richie is a baby who's learning, we know this. This seems more like a direct shot across the bow at Carmy - even with the example of a girlfriend who's a doctor, he's negating taking care of people and providing acts of service for them to provide for himself (thinking it'll make him better at it). Carmy has dodged alcoholism through abstinence, but he's exhibiting addict behavior by abdicating his responsibilities to others in order to chase sensations. He dodges his AA meetings, neglects service to others, and ends up losing control of his life.
Aaannnd we're back to Berzatto patterns with Richie feeling like Carmy owns and controls him, once it's reinforced that Garrett/Chef Terry defer to Carmy re: Richie's working life. We all know Carmy would never deny him the opportunity to move on to another stellar job, which makes his call to him so annoying.
I like that the next morning Richie is shown to be 50% less self-destructive. He's bloodshot again and staring at Mikey's prayer card in the mirror, but he's also up in a flash, organizing Eva's crayons, cleaning the counters etc. instead of just fully dirt-bagging it out the door. He's not perfect, but he's changed.
Hmmm - Richie reveals to Chef Terry that he was a military brat.If he moved around a lot as the sole child (it's been established that his parents were shit), it definitely explains why he would gravitate towards Mikey's very rooted family to have an established sense of place, no matter how dysfunctional it is. He also seems to take it very personally that their dad was a deadbeat - I wonder if that was a secondary abandonment for him too.
Chef Terry - "I tried to open a place years ago. I had all these accolades, I was younger, I was on fire. I was arrogant and I tried to move too fast and I couldn't keep the place open, and the market crashed and I got killed.[......] the most public wipe-out.
Yikes. Followed by the story of her current place:
"That was on my 38th birthday. I was out walking all night, unemployed, angry, depressed - blaming everyone else for all the time I'd lost and all the money I'd lost, all of it. And it was raining - and I was walking through Lincoln Park - and my phone died. And so I stood under this awning waiting for the rain to stop - and I just stood there and stared - and then the sun came up, and it turns out I was right there.
And then I walked 'round to the front and I saw the sign. It was an actual sign. It was a restaurant for lease sign."
Richie - "Like a, uh, never too late...."
"Yeah. Never too late to start over."
Again, the meaning as it applies to Richie is pretty overt and obvious, but I wonder how they're going to tether this more to Syd or Carmy next season (or just rail them both equally with it, along with the fate of The Bear). There are also parallels of it being a family business, and the death of a family member that she didn't get the opportunity to know as well as she should have.
"He believes in you. He told me" - Aw, Carmy ❤️ I'll be mad at you again tomorrow.
This ended up being more enjoyable than I remembered. I think Pop and Fishes just did a number on me.
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mariacallous · 2 years
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Since you’re posting about old Republican/“Classical Liberal” thinkers and personalities, are there any works that you would recommend from them? My family leans heavily conservative, and I’ve actively been trying to branch my reading outside of that mindset (especially since most of their is all post Rush Limbaugh). I might be ready to take a look at Buckley and Luce though, and you’ve made me more interested in the early Republican Party and how their philosophies have developed and shifted. Also I’d love to get your opinions on P. J. O’Rourke, since he’s another figure that I often hear mentioned alongside them.
Cancel Your Own Goddam Subscription: Notes and Asides from National Review is an interesting and fun collection of William F. Buckley's responses to special and unique or outrageous letters sent to National Review, and it also helps provide an entrée or primer to both the time periods covered as well as what was driving conservative thought and actions, and it goes back to the 60s and up to the mid 2000s.
God and Man at Yale is the book that helped put Buckley on the map, so to speak, and so much of his core thinking and arguments is present here (I will be honest and say that I didn't care much for it). The Unmaking of a Mayor is, to me, a "better" and more enjoyable book, and helps capture the moment in the 60s when the shift begins and conservatives start to better respond and tap into concerns and thinking that mainstream America has, and the start of the unraveling of the New Deal-New Frontier-Great Society security and support, and you can see the path that they'll take moving forward.
Open to Debate: How William F. Buckley Put Liberal America on the Firing Line by Heather Hendershot does something similar (looks at conservative thinking over the decades through the framing of Buckley and his show Firing Line) but is both more objective and goes into more detail and specifics about different topics or issues and conservative thinking, and it's also very enjoyable to read.
A classic, for better or worse (and depending on who you ask), is Peggy Noonan's What I Saw at the Revolution, which is both a moment in time look at the Reagan Administration and the changes and challenges conservatism was facing at that time and what it meant for someone like Noonan to end up a Republican, but it also shows a lot of how that administration worked (or didn't) and the dysfunction and rivalries at play and the tensions within conservatism which, to me, helped us end up where we had Trump 2016. (Her collection of essays, The Times of Our Lives, is another one I might recommend, since those are decidedly post-Reagan and charts some conservative thinking and issues up to the 2016 election).
You could try Kissinger's White House Years, which is his diaries/memoirs from his time in the Nixon and Ford administrations, although it's both a brick and incredibly self-serving (then again, what else is new)
I've read some of PJ O'Rourke's work, and thought Parliament of Whores was kind of entertaining and sometimes made valid points, but otherwise I don't really think much about him and find his whole deal kind of tiresome at this point.
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thebowerypresents · 8 months
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Les Claypool’s Fearless Flying Frog Brigade Deliver at Brooklyn Steel
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Les Claypool’s Fearless Flying Frog Brigade – Brooklyn Steel – October 22, 2023
The Frog Brigade are the jam-band-iest of Les Claypool’s many thrilling projects. Or they’re a jammy band with a love of funk, prog, psychedelia and Frank Zappa that would be surfing the big waves out near the edges of sanity anyway but just so happen to get their marching orders from Claypool. (That is, not unlike all the musical projects the relentlessly quirky, generationally talented bassist puts his name on.) Either way — or, more likely, both — they’re a force, and what a treat to have them back, 20 years after their heyday and any semblance of regular touring — and in midseason form, to boot. 
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At Brooklyn Steel on Sunday, the Frog Brigade were on the attack. As in most of the shows during this year’s reunion tour, this one housed a full, go-for-it, manic-jammy full reading of Pink Floyd’s Animals. But what came before and after the Floyd excursion over the course of two sets and nearly three hours was just as delectable. And maybe marching orders isn’t the right way to describe the Claypool effect on a band like this. Claypool himself would seem like the command-and-control boss of this outfit but in practice he’s more the chief creative officer, giving like-minded creators enough room to be their zany selves in the framework he’s created. 
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This version of the Frog Brigade is assembled and plays like a Frankenstein’d version of the original — many of the same players, yes, from the heady days of ought-three, but also coconspirators from other Claypool bands like the Claypool Lennon Delirium (whose other namesake, Sean Lennon, now has the guitar chair for the Brigade). Sax sorcerer Eric “Skerik” Walton is here, and so is Mike Dillon, the percussion-and-vibes madman. Keys are handled by the prog-inclined Harry Waters (son of Roger), and Paolo Baldi, the Claypool regular and former skins-man for Cake, is on the drums. Together, as in all Claypool bands, they create a cauldron of sonics to which the listener and concertgoer aren’t so much witnesses as they are plunged in, the band driving up the intensity using aggressive, nudging rhythms, often sinister (but not untender) melodies, and free reign to, y’know, beat and blow shit up. This year’s repertoire overall is polyglot Claypool, and on Sunday, that meant plenty of Brigade cuts, but also tunes from Sausage (“Riddles Are Abound Tonight”), from the Holy Mackerel, from the Delirium (“Blood and Rockets”), and from the Bucket of Bernie Brains (a fizzy “Thai Noodles” in the encore), plus covers as varied as Prince Buster (“One Step Beyond”) and the English Beat (“Mirror in the Bathroom”).
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The Pink Floyd stuff? Yeah, totally fun, as advertised. I could listen to Claypool and Co. pillage their way through “Sheep” for hours (and their “Dogs” is just as on point). But no matter what it is, these guys kick up a mighty groovy racket. Late in the second set came “Precipitation” (from the Holy Mackerel back pages), which built to a whirring, stab-syncopation solo-fest around its “Rain, rain, rain” refrain. “Hendershot,” another Claypool staple, had a bit of ragtime piano from Waters thrown in before it became a surf-rock adventure, Skerik’s sax screaming over it. The tale of “David Makalaster” (both parts!) had the band at a steady-rolling chant, pushing, pushing, pushing its stabbing rhythm.
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There’s a tendency to call this music wacky but that kind of misses the musicality in it, especially when each of these songs gets a healthy work-through. The six of them don’t for a second lose the collective sonics — if you really listen closely, you hear them playing off one another with subtle asides, even when one of them is blasting away out in front of the jam. —Chad Berndtson | @Cberndtson
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Photos courtesy of Dana Distortion | distortionpix.com
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dollypopinspiration · 2 years
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Richard Neutra's Hendershot House
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mscoyditch · 5 months
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"Quarry House". 2023.
By Bradley Hendershot. American. b. 1958-
> Robert B Petitt > The Other Side of Art
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karismed4 · 6 months
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With an estimated 3.3 million Texas residents without a primary care physician, the state’s family physicians are working hard to bring back a patient-centered health care system. The newly installed president of the Texas Academy of Family Physicians, Terrance Hines, MD, is using his presidential year to promote a patient-centered primary care delivery model that will reduce administrative burden on physicians and improve patient outcomes.
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ivanreydereyes · 7 months
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The FINAL STORM de LUKE PERRY [que en la película tenía tatuajes apocalipticos] acaba con su muerte y el FIN DEL MUNDO.. y empieza con que se escapo de una PRISION x los destrozos de las CATASTROFES APOCALIPTICAS donde llevaba 20 Años xq ASESINO A SU PADRE [lo dejó colgado 3 dias] xq era un BORRACHO que perdió la GRANJA FAMILIAR y también asesina al del BANCO q venía a EMBARGARSELA..y durante una Tormenta APOCALIPTICA llega a una casa donde le acogen porque la ESPOSA dice que le vendrá bien para ayudarla en las tareas del HOGAR aunque el MARIDO sospecha de él [todo esto sin que den importancia a todos los eventos que se están produciendo que indican el FIN DEL MUNDO como clama LUKE PERRY] que va a la ciudad vacía y va a investigar descubriendo el pasado de LUKE PERRY al que se encuentra con su MUJER SEMIDESNUDA en el BAÑO:
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The plot concerns a mysterious character named Sylas Hendershot (Luke Perry), who takes refuge from a ravaging thunder storm in a small farm in rural Washington state which is owned by Tom (Steve Bacic) and Gillian Grady (Lauren Holly). He claims that he should stay and that they should watch after each other. Over the next few days, Tom quickly starts to dislike Sylas and becomes suspicious of him and his past.
Tom travels to the town police station to look for records regarding Sylas after he finds a newspaper clipping about him and his father in the attic. Tom finds the whole town deserted (including the police station) as well as 'manditory evacuation' notices posted on every building. Suddenly, Tom is attacked by two deranged men after finding an article showing Sylas as the actual killer of his father. Tom fights off the two looters and flees the town.
When Tom is save outside of the town he reads the newspaper article and It shows that Sylas' father lost the farm because he was drunk and this enraged Sylas so much that he hung him from a tree and left him there for days. When a bank foreclosure agent came by to foreclose on the house, Sylas slit his throat as well. It is then found out that Sylas has been in prison for the last 20 years related to the two deaths.
Tom returns to the farm and, after finding his wife half naked with Sylas in the bathroom, kicks him out at gun point and tells him never to return. Sylas does return however, and starts a fire as a distraction outside which makes Tom run out to look for Sylas. Sylas traps a rope around Tom's neck and drags him up in the tree to hang, just like he did with his father. Sylas then goes into the house to talk to Tom's wife and try to persuade her to become his new wife. Sylas claims that the biblical so-called 'Rapture' has arrived due to the world's weather phenomena and that everyone in the rest of the world is gone to prepare for the comming of the end of the world.
Tom's son comes to his rescue and cuts Tom down from the tree moments before he loses consciousnesses. A battle then ensues between Tom and Sylas. Tom burns Sylas alive by pushing him into the fire Sylas created as the distraction.
After the battle, Tom, Gillian and their son are relived that Sylas is dead when they look up into the night sky and see the stars in the sky start to glow and then disappear just like it was depicted in the bible as Sylas earlier explained. Just before the ending credits role, the entire universe is shown glowing very brightly then disappearing signifying the world's end.
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bobofaegean · 2 years
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Physicist Lester Hendershot created generators with no visible source of energy and he was immediately accused of quackery. Lester took the public's reaction into account and by 1960, in addition to two new generators, gave out 56 pages of documentation explaining to humanitarians that the Earth is a giant magnet, which every day is able to give mankind hundreds of billions of volts. After the public documentation of the devices, explaining how to use the "power of the Earth" for free and efficiently, a beautiful thing begins: Dr. Hochstetter bought the invention and died suddenly in a train wreck. The only passenger who died during the accident. A couple of years later, Hendershot is found dead in his house and it is impossible to say whether it was suicide or something else, because for some reason the investigation into the cause of death was never carried out. In fact, as in the case of other deaths of inventors engaged in the production of free energy. forbidden truth of ancient world https://www.instagram.com/p/Ce3x8gFsumD/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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wordsforyoungmen · 2 years
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Justin at the Robert Hendershot House in Los Angeles
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Tamara lives in this sweet cottage on her Magic City Farm in Florida. She makes a living by renting out every part of the land, and lives with a whole slew of animals that she rescued. 
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The little cottage is a mash up of BoHo chic. 
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One of the rescued ducks. 
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Her home is so colorful & cozy. 
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She found this kitchen set in a dumpster. It’s fits beautifully here.
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I love when I see house by someone with a flair for BoHo design. This little house is so special. 
https://www.homedit.com/tamara-hendershots-magic-city-farm/
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noahjnakamura · 2 years
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pinkydoodlepoodle · 3 years
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Upcoming gigs in U.S.A.
[Based in Athens, GA - via - Tokyo, JP since August 2018 to 2021] - Booking by ourselves Hope to see you soon! ++ "PDP online LIVEs" : : HERE !!! ++ Virtual Tip Jar : PayPal - https://www.paypal.me/pinkydoodlepoodle Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/pinkydoodlepoodle
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NUVO Salt Lake City Mini/Junior Results 2019
Mini Solos:
1. Stella Condie - Glass (Center Stage)
   Taylor Harrison - Little Party (Center Stage)
2. Olivia Leavitt - Dichotomy (Creative Arts Academy)
3. Harley Burbach - Territory (Creative Arts Academy)
4. Mia Olson - Beauty Inside (The Winner School)
5. Kamri Peterson - 1977 (Center Stage)
6. Brooke Dubbs - Time To Say Goodbye (Center Stage)
   Boston Woolley - Almost Over (The Dance Centre)
7. Ava Lawson - She Let Go (Creative Arts Academy)
8. Mya Tuaileva - Written In Stone (Center Stage)
9. Vivienne Mitchell - Youth (The Pointe Academy)
   Journey Dye - Into The Night (Dye’n 2 Dance)
   Anna Hendershot - Everglow (Center Stage)
   Jordynn Migliaccio - Apollo (Artistic Dance Project)
10. Grace Stephenson - New Theorem (Creative Arts Academy)
Junior Solos:
1. Brightyn Brems - Solitude (The Pointe Academy) DJP
2. Hailey Bills - House of The Rising Sun (Center Stage) DJP
    Sabine Nehls - Embrace The World (The Rock Center for Dance) DJP
3. Allie Andrew - Exfora (Creative Arts Academy) DJP
4. Chayse DeVore - Keep Me Sane (Center Stage)
5. Ceilidh McSeveney - Home (Center Stage)
6. McKinley Tidwell - Nothing Is Better (Creative Arts Academy)
    Sofia Andrus - Ghost (Michelle Latimer Dance Academy)
    Kate Deshler - Blessing (The Pointe Academy)
7. Rainee Allred - Undone (Creative Arts Academy)
    Indy Benson - Tiny Cities (The Winner School)
8. Gabriella Jensen - Under The Moon (Creative Arts Academy)
    Leah Tovey - Reminiscence (Artistic Dance Project)
    Oana Barber - Follow Me Down (The Winner School)
    Camryn Page - Avant Gardener (Creative Arts Academy)
9. Vanessa Beach - When The Lights Go Down (Utah Dance Artists)
    Ava Box - Oddity (Creative Arts Academy)
10. Mia Peterson - Waende (Creative Arts Academy)
     Ava Leavitt - Unuttered (Creative Arts Academy)
     Tanley McCurdy - Hope Where Have You Gone (Ignite Dance Company)
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The Best Side of Patio Dining in Sunset Hills
A pepper tree supplies gentle shade at sizzling times. To complement the tree―as well as the backyard garden's Overall glimpse―Hendershot also planted boxwood, 'Provence' lavender, Myrtus communis 'Compacta' (which he likes for its scent), and upright rosemary.
You already know exactly how you wish your patio to look and feel. Should you be searching for a comforting, quiet retreat, or If you need your out of doors region to be the entertaining go-to spot, Poynter Landscaping can supply you with the correct patio and outdoor dwelling space which you drive. We're the popular patio builders in Sunset Hills because of our awareness of detail, exceptionalism in layout, and unparalleled craftsmanship.
The cruise runs for two hours and departure times change depending upon the time of the calendar year. Test the website for pricing and additional information.
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Upon getting all the things settled, prepare your Sunset Hills transfer-in date thoroughly. It is necessary to contemplate weather conditions in Sunset Hills as They could be erratic. The town shares the county's continental climate with frequent heat temperatures throughout the year, the most popular staying in July and early August.
HB's about the Gulf is found in the Naples Beach Lodge & Golfing Club. The restaurant serves clean seafood and other options every day for lunch and meals. If you would like to stake out a place for sunset Be sure to arrive early so that you can seize a desk.
The downtown-based Caffe Molise features a number of the best possible Italian food items in all of SLC. Consider this great sponsor next time you’re downtown. sponsored ad
Our Patio Contractors in Sunset Hills use a large choice of goods within their patio builds to ensure you get the precise patio you want. No matter if you'd like an all-stone patio, a concrete patio, or if you want a mix of a number of various components to realize that best seem, our patio builders in Sunset Hills may help you.
However it doesn’t make any difference: Each seat is a great one, assuming that it’s struggling with the waves and surf that’s pretty much hitting the setup outside. The chilled seafood towers with billowing dry-ice clouds, bone-in rib eye, lobster mashed potatoes and butter cake are nearly as good as at any time.
There’s not a bad seat in your house for spying the waves, While any alongside the open Home windows are awesome in Patio Dining in Sunset Hills the event the Sunshine is shining. The menu is out to please Every person, but follow shellfish: linguine and clams, mussels in tomato-fennel broth, or simply just oysters within the Uncooked bar.
The roadside patio of the Most important Street location has been missed, so its return is Great news. E-mail them to reserve your seats. Tapagria
To discover if we supply for you, check out our shipping deal with the lookup webpage and enter your deal. In the event you checked your address in the past and were beyond the supply zone, you could be in the supply radius within your closest bakery-café now!
Wij ondervinden op dit second technische problemen Voer uw e-mailadres in en wij sturen u een link om uw wachtwoord te herstellen
Do-it-yourself jobs aren't constantly simple, at times they may be a little in excess of what they originally surface the be. In case your Do-it-yourself project is from hand, give our Patio Builders in Sunset Hills a simple call.
Seem no even more than our sponsor Whiskey Road for outstanding downtown dinings like this ahi poke with cucumbers, avocado, Chuka ika salad, wasabi lime aioli, and sesame wonton chips*
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talabib · 3 years
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How To Improve Your Time Management Skills
Modern life is full of time thieves. Whether it’s your phone buzzing in your pocket with the latest tweet, a colleague interrupting you in the middle of an important task or the daily barrage of emails, your time is constantly being stolen from you, minute by minute, hour by hour. And once you’ve lost that time, you can never get it back again.
To remain focused and make sure these time thieves don’t get the upper hand, you need to keep a few tricks up your sleeve.
Here are a few ways to improve your time management skills
Do you ever wish you could have an extra hour in the day to read, exercise or hang out with the people you love? Well, you can and there’s no magic required! But first, you need to understand how precious time is.
That’s why the first secret of time management is learning that time is your most valuable asset and that, once it’s lost, you can never get it back. A good way to monitor this precious resource is by breaking it down. For instance, there are 1,440 minutes in a day, each of which should be invested wisely.
To remind yourself of this fact, you can tape a” 1,440” poster to your office door. It would remind you of the limited time in each day. But why use minutes? Why not think about the 86,400 seconds that every day offers?
Well, there are a bunch of daily tasks that you can actually do in a minute, like knocking out 30 sit-ups, reading a poem or watering a plant. This fact makes minutes key to monitoring your time.
Okay, now that you appreciate how valuable time is, it’s time to start prioritizing it. This is where the second secret comes in: determine and prioritize your most important task, or your MIT. This is the single task that will have the biggest impact on your life or work.
Just take Therese Macan, a professor at the University of Missouri-St Louis. She found that one of the most important productivity determinants is the ability to identify priorities. So pinpointing an MIT is central to time management.
For instance, if a senior executive sets a goal of developing a new app, her MIT might be to hire a new programmer. Or the MIT for a start-up CEO could be to prepare a great presentation to land a major investment. Research has shown that having a daily MIT, whatever it is, results in greater levels of happiness and improved focus.
Never-ending to-do lists weigh down lots of people. Take a look at yours. How many of the tasks have been lingering there for weeks, unnecessarily stressing you out?
You probably have at least a few such tasks, and the best way to deal with them is by pulling out a good old fashioned calendar. Here’s where the third secret comes into play: ditch your to-do list and pick up your calendar to de-stress your day.
Research has found that an average of 41 percent of items on to-do lists never actually get completed. One of the reasons for this shocking statistic is that a note stating how long it’ll take to complete them usually doesn’t accompany the tasks on such lists. As a result, tasks that are more difficult or less important generally get left undone.
That might not be such a problem, except for the fact that the unfinished items on your to-do list will inevitably produce a lot of stress that could just as easily be avoided. In fact, researchers from Florida State University discovered that you can avoid this stress by simply coming up with a plan to complete a task.
The Olympic gymnast Shannon Miller offers a good example. She succeeded at spending time with her family, completing her school obligations, training for the Olympics and even doing media interviews, all by scheduling time for important tasks.
This strategy is known as time blocking or time boxing and, incredibly, all it requires is maintaining a detailed calendar. By doing so, Miller forced herself to prioritize tasks that would bring her closer to achieving her goal and, to this day, she keeps an almost minute-by-minute schedule.
However, you’ll inevitably encounter tasks on your calendar that you can’t accomplish. When this happens, instead of letting them drift into the past, simply reschedule. For example, if you usually make it to the gym at noon, but have a flight to catch at the same time, simply move your workout to earlier in the day.
Everyone’s been there: an important deadline is creeping up and, instead of working on the project at hand, you’re planted in front of a screen – scrolling through Facebook, texting a friend or watching your favorite TV show. Procrastination is a tough one, but, luckily, there are strategies to break free from it and start getting things done.
This is where the fourth secret comes in: procrastination can be overcome by imagining your future self. After all, you don’t procrastinate because you're lazy, but because you don’t have sufficient motivation. Imagining yourself in the future can fix this problem and it’s as simple as asking yourself two questions: “What pleasure will I get by doing this thing?” and “What pain will I feel if I don’t do it?”
For instance, if your goal is to work out every single day, but you can’t get yourself to exercise, just imagine having a huge beer belly and feeling totally sluggish. Such a mental routine will get you off the couch and onto the treadmill.
At the same time, being honest about the actions your future self will take can also help you achieve your goals. For example, if you know you’ll be inclined to eat unhealthy snacks during a future break, you can protect yourself by throwing out all the junk food in your house. You could even go a step further by filling the house with healthy options like baby carrots and hummus.
From there, you can move on to the fifth secret: there will always be more to do; you can’t do everything. And, actually, that’s fine!
In fact, prioritizing and scheduling the tasks you want to do is much more valuable than crossing off as many items as possible. Just take President George W. Bush as an example. He knew there would always be more to do. So instead of trying to do everything, he made it his priority to read tons of books, since he found it therapeutic and educational. As a result, he read some 95 titles during his presidency!
Have you ever had an incredible idea while shopping for groceries or walking the dog? Wouldn’t it be great if, instead of straining to remember it later, you could just jot it down right then and there?
That’s why the sixth secret is to always have a notebook handy. After all, writing down your thoughts helps you hold onto them. Virgin Group founder Sir Richard Branson says he never would have built his business empire without his trusty notebook.
He was so committed to writing down his ideas that, one time when he had a business idea and no notebook, he wrote down the thought in his passport! For him, if an idea doesn’t get written down, it could be lost forever.
Taking notes by hand also helps your memory. For instance, the psychologists Pam Mueller and Daniel Oppenheimer found that students who hand wrote their notes during a TED talk were better able to recall the material than students who took notes on their laptops.
Writing down your thoughts is crucial – as is maintaining control over your schedule, which is where the seventh secret comes into play. It says that you should avoid checking your email too often, lest other people dictate how you spend your time.
In fact, contrary to popular belief, constantly checking emails is unproductive. That’s because the anticipation felt when checking your inbox is comparable to pulling the handle of a slot machine. Often, you check your messages, and there’s nothing new. But sometimes there is a new message. This unpredictability is addictive, and one begins to check more and more often, hoping for the hit of dopamine that a message affords. Obviously, this costs you time and interrupts your focus.
A good way to untether yourself from your email is by unsubscribing from newsletters by using a program like unroll.me. But you can also adopt the 321-Zero system. To do so, just limit yourself to three email checks per day, while trying to get your inbox to zero in just 21 minutes.
If you’ve ever had an office job, you know how incredibly boring meetings can be. But that’s not the only problem with meetings. The eighth secret is that most meetings are inefficient and you should only schedule them as a last resort.
In fact, a 2015 survey found that 35 percent of respondents considered weekly status meetings to be a waste of time, for these two primary reasons:
First, in accordance with Parkinson’s law of triviality, meeting participants tend to waste lots of time on insignificant issues. Second, extroverts usually dominate meetings, making others less likely to participate. As a result, valuable information might not be shared during such gatherings.
That being said, if you absolutely have to have a meeting, opt for a stand-up affair rather than a sit-down one. This might seem odd, but researchers at Washington University found that meetings during which participants stand result in better collaboration, less attachment to ideas, higher levels of engagement and more effective problem-solving.
The Yahoo CEO, Marissa Mayer, offers another good tip: by scheduling meetings based on increments of five or ten minutes, she’s able to have up to 70 meetings a week. If she stuck with the standard 30-minute block she would never be able to accomplish this.
In other words, controlling the timing of meetings will prevent people from sucking up your time. This is key since other people will constantly ask you for things, a fact that dovetails nicely with the ninth secret: achieve your immediate goals faster by saying no to most things.
After all, every time you say yes to something, you’re saying no to something else. The Olympic rower Sara Hendershot is a good example. She’s a pro at saying no to social and other engagements. This hard-learned skill enabled her to keep her eyes on the prize in the lead up to the 2012 Olympics in Rio, where she qualified for the finals.
As a cherry on top, research has even found that people who tend to say no in response to requests for their time are happier and have more energy. 
By now you know that it’s essential to spend your limited time on tasks that will have the greatest impact. The tenth secret can help you do that. It says that by applying the Pareto Principle you can uncover shortcuts to success. Here’s what that means:
In the 1890s, the Italian philosopher and economist Vilfredo Federico Damaso Pareto found that 20 percent of the pea plants in his garden produced 80 percent of his healthy peapods. He extrapolated this 80/20 rule into the general principle that now bears his name. It can be applied to a number of areas.
For instance, by applying the 80/20 rule to your employees, you might decide that the majority of your salespeople should be let go since they’re your lowest performers. From there, you could focus your energy on the remaining 20 percent, who already generate 80 percent of your sales, by giving them rewards and greater levels of support. The end result will likely be an overall improvement in sales.
Or you could use the 80/20 rule in your personal life by analyzing the tasks you do on a weekly basis, then identifying which of them has the greatest impact.
That being said, you can also accomplish more by critically assessing the tasks in front of you. The eleventh secret is designed to help you do that. It says that leveraging your skills and delegating work will increase your productivity. Just take a 2013 experiment published in the Harvard Business Review by the professors Julian Birkinshaw and Jordan Cohen. It found that 43 percent of workers were unsatisfied with the tasks they do at work.
By simply training employees to slow down and ask themselves a few questions, the study’s authors were able to identify important tasks, freeing up an extra eight hours per week. The first question they had people ask themselves was, “How important is this task to the company?” Then, “Is there anyone else who can complete it?” And finally, “How could this task be accomplished if I had half as much time?”
On a normal day in the office, do you ever have difficulty focusing? Most people do and a little bit of advice here can go a long way. This is the twelfth secret, which says that grouping your work into recurring themes each week will make you more effective.
A great example comes from Jack Dorsey, the co-founder of Twitter and founder of Square. He says that the secret to running both his companies was to have a theme for each day. For instance, on Mondays, he would focus on management; Wednesdays would be dedicated to marketing; and Sunday would be reserved for reflection, feedback and strategy for the next week.
Or take the entrepreneurial coach Dan Sullivan. He recommends theming each week based on three types of days to stay focused and remain invigorated. The first type is called a focus day, which is for vital activities like revenue-growing tasks. The second type is called a buffer day, which is for catching up on emails, returning calls, having meetings, delegating tasks and doing paperwork. And finally, a free day is one on which no work should be done. This last type is reserved for vacation, family time and charity work.
Another simple way to boost your efficiency has to do with tackling small tasks. This is the thirteenth secret, which says that you should immediately take action on tasks that’ll take fewer than five minutes to accomplish and avoid returning to the same task over and over.
Just consider the straight-A student Nihar Suthar. He completes five-minute assignments right away, avoiding a long list of tiny tasks.
Or take Jeff. His sister Debbie recently emailed him, but instead of writing her back, he called her to make sure they could talk. By scheduling a call in his calendar and thereby saving the mental energy he would otherwise spend trying to remember to get back to her, he decided to handle this task immediately. If he had instead put it on a to-do list or left it in his inbox, he probably would have never remembered to address it.
Imagine waking up at six in the morning, working out for 45 minutes and then whipping together a delicious, high-protein breakfast. It might sound difficult but the fourteenth secret shows why it’s essential. It says that dedicating the first hour of each day to a morning routine will enhance your health – mind, body and soul. In fact, starting the day with a workout is a great way to get your creative juices flowing.
Just consider the New York Times best-selling author Dan Miller, who starts off each day by meditating for half an hour, then working out for 45 minutes while listening to audio programs. He avoids checking the news or looking at his phone during this time, devoting his first hour to positive and inspirational experiences. He even claims that his most creative ideas come to him during this daily “me time.”
From there, you can further increase your energy and well-being by eating a healthy breakfast and drinking lots of water. This is huge for the best-selling author and podcast host Shawn Stevenson. He considers energy to be everything, and so he starts off each day with what he calls an inner bath. He simply drinks 30 ounces of purified water to jumpstart his metabolism by flushing out waste.
In fact, according to the fifteenth secret, energy is paramount. The secret is that productivity isn’t about time, but about maintaining focus and energy.
That’s why Francesco Cirillo came up with the Pomodoro Technique – a method designed to reduce distractions and boost productivity. His approach involves setting a timer for 25 minutes, devoting your full attention to a single task for the full 25 minutes and then taking a five-minute break before repeating the cycle.
Author Monica Leonelle found ample success with the Pomodoro Technique after realizing that she didn’t have a single spare hour in the day. By using the Pomodoro Technique, she recharged during her breaks, maintaining steady energy throughout the day and, with the help of other techniques, went from writing 600 words per hour to 3,500!
Highly successful people consider time to be their most valuable asset. By applying their most effective life hacks – which do everything from prioritizing tasks to boosting your energy and keeping you focused – you too can make the most of your time.
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