You might find these three books inspirational or otherwise useful, according to a group of CEOs, researchers and career coaches.
Explore AXA’s “Great Global Adventure” competition video, capture the thrill of winning a dream trip. Check out this engaging graduate recruitment campaign.
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Students from Lethbridge College’s Multimedia Production and Digital Communications and Media programs were given the chance at some practical experience last week, Aaron Haugen has more. They were given the opportunity to develop a marketing and branding strategy for a local startup here in Lethbridge. Providing students with hands on real world experience has become a […]
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[video:6014]ALTON – Justin Sims and Joe Jack discussed their “Reason 2 Doubt” podcast and the upcoming third annual Reason 2 Doubt Weekend on a recent episode of Our Daily Show on Riverbender.com. The podcast, which is available on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts, features five friends from Alton offering their varying perspectives on current events and more. Sims, who hosts the show by the name “J. Sims,” described the Reason 2 Doubt podcast as a “podcast of five young Black men coming together and just giving their perspective on the world from where we see it.” The show was originally only about music, but several major news events (including a global pandemic) occurred in the four years since the podcast started, and Sims felt the conversation should expand to address those and other events.“We’ve been through a lot in four years, so of course the conversation can change,” Sims said. “We can’t be like, ‘Hey, you hear the new Drake song?’ It has to change up a bit.”Jack described the podcast’s format as a casual conversation between friends.“It was just really organic the way we put it together, so it’s really just a bunch of friends sitting around talking, having conversations, for real,” Jack said. “We’re all familiar with each other’s personalities and we kind of bounce off each other and stuff like that, so it’s pretty cool.”Sims noted listeners and viewers are most interested in hearing the show participants’ opinions – while they may be slightly toned down from the show’s earlier “raw, uncut” days, he said they still don’t shy away from offering their honest opinions. Even when things get heated, Jack said “it’s all love” between podcast members.“Overall, we’re like brothers – we love each other, we fight, we argue, we’ve all got differences of opinion. I think that’s what makes the podcast so dope, is because we’ve got five different perspectives,” Jack said, noting the cameraman even jumps into the discussion sometimes. “We have heated debates and stuff like that, but at the end of the day, it’s all love.”This year’s Reason 2 Doubt Weekend will be held from Friday, Sept. 8 to Sunday, Sept. 10. Day one will see a basketball game at James Killion Park in Alton, while day two on Sept. 9 brings the live podcast to The Conservatory in Alton at 7 p.m. Tickets for the live show are $20 each and can be purchased here. Day three wraps up the weekend festivities with a brunch, though further details on a location are still being worked out. “[The] first two went great,” Sims said of Reason 2 Doubt Weekend. “Great family events – well, not the live show, that’s adults only – but the first day of Reason 2 Doubt weekend, we do it at James Killion Park, we do a basketball game – but with that basketball game, you get your entertainment,” Sims said. While the podcast crew is in their early-to-mid 30’s and usually plays against younger athletes, Sims said Reason 2 Doubt is still 2-0 so far.The event also features free barbeque, drinks, and live music, and Sims said Reason 2 Doubt regularly gives back to the community. They’ve previously donated goods to local middle schools and raffled off bikes, new TVs, airpods, and more.“That’s the whole thing about it, it’s a community event, we’re just trying to give back,” Sims said. Jack added: “I’m big on community, big on giving back and stuff like that, so we just kind of pulled it all together and made a weekend out of it.”Reason 2 Doubt can be watched or listened to on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts, and more information is available on their Facebook and Instagram pages. The full interview with Sims and Jack can be watched at the top of this story or on Riverbender.com/video.
[video:6968]DOW – As Donna Kennedy prepares to release her fourth book, “The Last Time I Saw Her,” she has some advice for new writers.“Constructive criticism is a big thing, but don’t ever be told ‘no,’” Kennedy said. “There’s no ‘no.’ You just do it. And if it’s your story, there’s somebody who wants to hear it.”Kennedy, author of the popular “So Help Me God” series, speaks from experience. The author will celebrate “The Last Time I Saw Her” at a book launch on May 16, 2024, at the Do Drop Inn in Dow. People can purchase the book, enjoy a Q&A with Kennedy and find out once and for all what’s based in reality and what’s pure fiction in her books.That line sometimes blurs even for Kennedy herself. She shared that she began writing a few years ago when she decided she wanted to write a memoir based on her mother’s life. But as she went, the story took on a more fictional, mysterious bend. “I don’t know where it came from, but I started this mystery and it was fun,” Kennedy explained. “It’s based on my mom’s life and I just exaggerated it. [The main character is] a young author and she gets reunited with an ex and then she becomes this bestselling author and she starts getting stalked. She was in the military, which I was, and she kind of knew something was going on because she’s hypnotized in the military, which is true, and she finds out she has repressed memories. So it goes from there and it builds in each book.”The “So Help Me God” series has won several awards over the past few years. But “The Last Time I Saw Her” is a standalone thriller work about a deep, twisted friendship, and Kennedy is excited to share it with her readers.The book also represents a new chapter for the author. As her mother’s health declined, Kennedy read her all of the books in the “So Help Me God” series. On the day her mother died last December, Kennedy’s books were in the top two, three and four spots on the Amazon bestseller list. Starting in January, Kennedy wrote “The Last Time I Saw Her” in three months, completely reworking her draft after her mother’s passing. The book launch in Dow is on May 16, her mother’s birthday. It’s a full-circle moment for the writer, whose road to authorship has been long. But this path feels right to Kennedy. After her military career, she spent four years doing nothing but writing. As she nears her 60th birthday, she is proud of her books and prouder still of the time she spent working on herself so she could produce these books.“I just had to deal with me. I had to learn to like me and become this person. And it’s wonderful, and I got to get her out there,” Kennedy remembered. “I was telling my daughter and she said, ‘Mom, you cried writing those books.’ And I was like, ‘I did, and it was amazing how much I got out that I didn’t even know was still there.’”Kennedy is open about the growing pains she endured as she entered the publishing world, including taking out a second mortgage on her home in order to fund the publication of her first book. While she is proud to share that all of the “So Help Me God” book covers are illustrated by Murphy Rae, sister to the bestselling author Colleen Hoover, Kennedy is especially pleased that she designed the cover for “The Last Time I Saw Her” by herself.“Now I know what to tell you not to do,” Kennedy said. “I blew a lot of money that I didn’t know I didn’t need to blow. But I was learning and nobody was there to help me.”As she celebrates the release of her fourth book, Kennedy hopes to be that person for other new writers. She encourages writers to “just sit down and write.” Kennedy herself has five books in the works right now, and she can’t wait to see what comes next. So far, the experience has been “an amazing process.”“Do it now,” Kennedy added. “I said it from the time I was probably 25 — ‘I’m going to write a book, I’m going to write a book, I’m going to write a book.’ And I had kids, I had a life, I had all these things and I didn’t do it. I’ll be 60, and I’m finally doing it, and I wish I had done it all those years ago because it’s so cathartic. And the stories that you can tell to help other people is amazing.”For more information about Kennedy and her May 16th launch party at the Do Drop Inn, visit her official website at DFKennedy.com.
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Harris plans to call for expanding a tax reduction for costs associated with starting a business among other plans.