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Each episode of MIRANDA's podcast - Investing Beyond Borders will share business and legal and regulatory news from around the 16 Miranda Alliance jurisdictions and provide a listener experience with relevant information for their business.
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Fresh topics, hot takes! Your weekly go-to for spontaneous and lively discussion with hosts Raven-Symoné and Miranda Maday. Guests draw a random topic from a teapot, sparking fun and insightful conversations on everything from trending news to timeless curiosities.
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Subscribe for conversations that raise your consciousness. Previous guests include Gary Vaynerchuk, Alex Hormozi, Robert Greene, Seth Godin, Andy Frisella, Chris Williamson, Kamal Ravikant, Iman Gadzhi, Anthony Pompliano, George Heaton, Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, Miss Excel Kat Norton, Ariel Helwani, James Altucher, Sam Parr, Shaan Puri, Colin and Samir, Gay Hendricks, and 350+ incredible humans.
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Newer episodes: Katie Miranda interviews people who have overcome major obstacles in their lives and have gone on to do great things. Older episodes: Katie Miranda interviews scholars, journalists, authors and activists engaged in the struggle for Palestinian freedom.
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Parece que temos evitado pregar sobre Jesus, ou os pregadores que não conseguem mesmo montar um sermão sobre o Mestre. Aqui, vamos falar e muito sobre o Cordeiro de Deus. Vem comigo? Ah, não esquece de compartilhar esse PodCast com seus amigos! Edifique a vida de alguém. Vamos?
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Miranda & More

Miranda’s Vlogs

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Welcome to the Miranda & More podcast also known as M&M. I will be talking about conspiracies, random stories in my everyday life. However I will not be alone I will have special guests come and talk with me and my co-host Joshua. Stay tuned for more things to come.
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Caio Miranda Carneiro

Caio Miranda Carneiro

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São Paulo precisa funcionar! Sou vereador na capital paulista e convido toda semana pessoas que podem bater um papo comigo sobre o município: sociedade, sustentabilidade, juventude, cultura, emprego, mobilidade, segurança. Espero muito que você goste. Um bom programa e nos acompanhe toda semana. Tem o material em vídeo também no meu canal no YouTube.
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With This Channel And The Internet, I Teach Creative Entrepreneurs How To Gain More Time, Income, Freedom And Happiness Through Teaching Them How To Get Attention Simply By Sharing Their Stories On The Internet. If You Do Happen To Like Money, Time, Freedom And Happiness, And Want To DOMINATE Your Industry, I Recommend The Greatest Online Training In Internet History!!! - With Tony Robbins, Dean Graziosi and Russell Brunson!!! Book Yours Or Your Team's Virtual Seat NOW Here To Not Miss Out!! ...
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Level Up with Christi Miranda!

Level Up with Christi Miranda!

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If you are craving to believe bigger, then join host Christi Miranda each week as we talk faith, life & business. Th! podcast is for anyone who is tired of playing small. Each episode will help boost your faith & build confidence. God made you with purpose, for purpose, on purpose! Stop settling and start leaning in to the life God has called you to live! Christi brings other powerhouse women into the conversation because she believes together is better than alone. Christi is a mother, pasto ...
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Experienced radio and television host Bill Miranda brings you the inside stories of the goings on in the Santa Clarita Valley. As a community leader, former Mayor and current Councilmember, Bill has access to a wealth of inside stories that he shares in a very interesting and entertaining way. Bill’s guests include the movers & shakers in and about Santa Clarita plus everyday people making a difference in our community. Stay informed about the past, present, and future of Santa Clarita with ...
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Lawpreneur Radio - A New Practice Built A New Way with Entrepreneurial Attorney Miranda McCroskey

Successful lawyer and entrepreneur featuring Lawpreneur interviews weekly!

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Lawpreneur Radio is for entrepreneurial lawyers seeking change, driven to do something different, and hankering to hang out their shingle. We inspire vision and courage when you're wondering what's next, and how to get there. Host Miranda McCroskey interviews successful "lawpreneurs," entrepreneurs, and the companies and vendors that set them up for success. Their journeys will inspire, educate and entertain as they share their successes and failures along the way.
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Who is in the business of providing care? What does it mean to get paid to nurture strangers? And, what kind of support do these people need? In Care Work, author and diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging practitioner, Alida Miranda-Wolff, seeks answers to all of these questions with care workers of all kinds through discussions of their lived experiences. Learn how to create a culture of care in your communities and have your own care needs met through episodes that balance real-life ...
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I’m Miranda Black, the DeGrowth Diva. In this podcast I talk about my real life Degrowth journey with retailers, businesses and fashion influencers. How do we reduce our carbon footprint in retail? What alternatives are there...what are some easy solutions we can realistically apply to our lives without sacrificing style?Turns out, there are tons of lower carbon choices right here in Canada. Shopping is hard. Acquiring and ethically disposing all our STUFF has never been so complex and fraug ...
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SEEN is a show about identity that asks: How are you seen? Labels are complicated, communication is challenging, identity is nuanced. None of us are exactly as we appear to strangers, friends, or even ourselves. And yet, now more than ever we are all trying to be SEEN. Feeling seen is powerful. To honor that power, the SEEN podcast asks guests to prepare a list recounting the ways they been viewed, judged, rendered invisible, or wholly seen by themselves, their loved ones, and strangers. Wit ...
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This week we bring you news on the Portugal-IFC Partnership in Lusophone Africa, major infrastructure, agricultural, technology and energy investments in Angola, a brand-new technology park in Cape Verde, a landmark green energy project in Mozambique, the recently announced public-private partnerships Development Strategy for Senegal, and other maj…
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A cornerstone of the evangelization of early New Spain was the conversion of Nahua boys, especially the children of elites. They were to be emissaries between Nahua society and foreign missionaries, hastening the transmission of the gospel. Under the tutelage of Franciscan friars, the boys also learned to act with militant zeal. They sermonized and…
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Our guest on this episode of Checking Inn is Horace T. Brooks. He is a seasoned hospitality executive known for his expertise in hotel management, leadership, and team development. Through dedication and perseverance, he has advanced into various leadership roles within the industry. Horace is widely recognized as a leadership expert and speaker, w…
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In an age of growing wealth disparities, politicians on both sides of the aisle are sounding the alarm about the fading American Dream. Yet despite all evidence to the contrary, many still view the United States as the land of opportunity. The American Mirage: How Reality TV Upholds the Myth of Meritocracy (Princeton University Press, 2025) address…
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For nearly five decades after the Second World War, the Iron Curtain divided Europe, forming the longest and most heavily guarded border on earth. No physical combat would take place along this frontier: the risk of nuclear annihilation was too high for that. Instead, the war was fought psychologically. It was a battle for hearts, minds, and intell…
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On this episode of Checking In, Miranda and Leon welcome seasoned hotel executive Phil Haddad for an insightful conversation about the hospitality industry. With years of experience managing top hotel brands, Phil brings a deep understanding of hotel operations and sales. He’s also the creator of two popular series, Hotel Sales Leads by Phil and Ho…
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Linking histories of women, relationships to the natural environment, material culture and art, in Embroidering the Landscape: Women, Art and the Environment in British North America, 1740–1770 (Lund Humphries, 2023) Dr. Andrea Pappas presents a new, multi-dimensional view of eighteenth-century American culture from a unique perspective. This book …
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In an era of globalization, international communication constantly takes place across borders, defying sovereign control as it influences opinion. While diplomacy between states is the visible face of international relations, this “informal diplomacy” is usually less visible but no less powerful. Information politics can be found in propaganda, Int…
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While other ancient nonalphabetic scripts—Sumerian cuneiform, Egyptian hieroglyphs, and Mayan hieroglyphs—are long extinct, Chinese characters, invented over three thousand years ago, are today used by well over a billion people to write Chinese and Japanese. In medieval East Asia, the written Classical Chinese language knit the region together in …
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Filming in European Cities: The Labor of Location (Cornell University Press, 2025) explores the effort behind creating screen production locations. Dr. Ipek A. Celik Rappas accounts the rising demand for original and affordable locations for screen projects due to the growth of streaming platforms. As a result, screen professionals are repeatedly t…
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Both humorous and shocking, Miracula: Weird and Wonderful Stories of Ancient Greece and Rome (Reaktion, 2025) by Paul Crystal is filled with astonishing facts and stories drawn from ancient Greece and Rome that have rarely been retold in English. It explores ‘the incredible’ as presented by little-known classical writers like Callimachus and Phlego…
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Whether it's pumping oil, mining resources or shipping commodities across oceans, the global economy runs on extraction. Promises of frictionless trade and lucrative speculation are the hallmarks of our era, but the backbone of globalisation is still low-cost labour and rapacious corporate control. Extractive capitalism is what made - and is still …
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We often think of reason as a fixed entity, as a definitive body of facts that do not change over time. But during the Enlightenment, reason also was seen as a process, as a set of skills enacted on a daily basis. How, why, and where were these skills learned? Concentrating on Scottish students living during the long eighteenth century, Media and t…
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Tattoos are not merely decorative; they contain deep meaning for individuals and communities. They document their wearers' personal histories and position in families or society, and they engage with a communal understanding of symbols. Stories on Skin: A Librarian's Guide to Tattoos as Personal Archives (Bloomsbury, 2025) by Terry Baxter & Libby C…
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Star. Stjarna. Setareh. Thousands of miles apart, humans look up at the night sky and use the same word to describe what they see. Listen to these English, Icelandic, and Iranian words, and you can hear echoes of one of history's most unlikely, miraculous journeys. For all of these languages – and hundreds more – share a single ancient source. In a…
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In barely three generations the Spanish diet has changed beyond recognition. The traditional concerns around nutritional health and scarcity have been mostly left behind, but they have given way to new problems linked to excess. In Milk in Spain and the History of Diet Change: The Political Economy of Dairy Consumption since 1950 (Bloomsbury, 2024)…
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Plants, Politics and Empire in Ancient Rome (Cambridge University Press, 2022) by Dr. Annalisa Marzano investigates the cultural and political dimension of Roman arboriculture and the associated movement of plants from one corner of the empire to the other. It uses the convergent perspectives offered by textual and archaeological sources to sketch …
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Emergency in Transit: Witnessing Migration in the Colonial Present (University of California Press, 2024) by Dr. Eleanor Paynter responds to the crisis framings that dominate migration debates in the global north. This capacious, interdisciplinary open-access study reformulates Europe's so-called "migrant crisis" from a sudden disaster to a site of…
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The history of queer politics in the United States since 1968 is commonly narrated as either a progressive campaign for state recognition or as a subcultural rejection of prevailing gender norms. But these accounts miss the true scale of queer politics in the post-war era. By centering transnational relations, practices, and infrastructures in the …
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We start this week’s episode with news that Angola's Ministry of Mineral Resources, Petroleum, and Gas has been celebrated for its crucial role in the creation of the African Energy Bank which is set to launch in June with an impressive initial capital of USD 5 billion. The African Petroleum Producers Organization highlighted the vital contribution…
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From the battles over Jerusalem to the emergence of the “Holy Land,” from legally mandated ghettos to the Edict of Expulsion, geography has long been a component of Christian-Jewish relations. Attending to world maps drawn by medieval Christian mapmakers, Cartographies of Exclusion: Anti-Semitic Mapping in Medieval England (Penn State University Pr…
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In Geographies of Gender: Family and Law in Imperial Japan and Colonial Taiwan (Cambridge University Press, 2024) Dr. Tadashi Ishikawa traces perceptions and practices of gender in the Japanese empire on the occasion of Japan's colonisation of Taiwan from 1895. In the 1910s, metropolitan and colonial authorities attempted social reform in ways whic…
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CrossFit in the United States has become increasingly popular, around which a fascinating culture has developed which shapes everyday life for the people devoted to it. CrossFit claims to be many things: a business, a brand, a tremendously difficult fitness regimen, a community, a way to gain salvation, and a method to survive the apocalypse. In Th…
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Every year, hundreds of billions of dollars' worth of farm machinery, fertilizer, seeds, and pesticides are sold to farmers around the world. Although agricultural inputs are a huge sector of the global economy, the lion's share of that market is controlled by a relatively small number of very large transnational corporations. The high degree of co…
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Jesus' Crown of Thorns has become one of the most ubiquitous features of Christian religious art, but was the original crown anything like the crown of popular medieval art and piety? The image conjured by art history is that of a bloodied, beaten Jesus, wearing a cruelly fashioned, woven crown made of sharp thorns. But this image is deeply mislead…
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In late nineteenth-century Latin America, governments used new scientific, technological, and geographical knowledge not only to consolidate power and protect borders but also to define the physical contours of their respective nations. Chilean and Argentine authorities in particular attempted to transform northern Patagonia, a space they perceived…
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This week we bring you news on the Lobito Corridor project and the Natural Gas Masterplan in Angola, a new airport in Gabon, port infrastructure in Equatorial Guinea and Mozambique, a growth in FDI in Portugal, tourism sector incentives in Timor-Leste, and other major developments in our jurisdictions. Sit back, relax, and enjoy Investing Beyond Bo…
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Monsters, in all their terrifying glory, have preoccupied humans since we began telling stories. But where did these stories come from? In Monsterland: A Journey Around the World’s Dark Imagination (Scribe, 2025), award-winning author Nicholas Jubber goes on a journey to discover more about the monsters we’ve invented, lurking in the dark and the w…
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Art has long played a key role in constructing how people understand and imagine America. Starting with contemporary controversies over public monuments in the United States, in Temporary Monuments: Art, Land, and America’s Racial Enterprise (University of Chicago Press, 2024), Dr. Rebecca Zorach carefully examines the place of art in the occupatio…
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Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) never signed a painting, and none of his supposed self-portraits can be securely ascribed to his hand. He revealed next to nothing about his life in his extensive writings, yet countless pages have been written about him that assign him an identity: genius, entrepreneur, celebrity artist, outsider. Addressing the ethic…
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The United States is widely recognized as the quintessential consumer society, one where huge companies like Walmart and Amazon are famous for enticing customers with cheap goods and speedy delivery. Attention, Shoppers!: American Retail Capitalism and the Origins of the Amazon Economy (Princeton University Press, 2025) traces the origins and evolu…
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Eufrasia Burlamacchi (Getty Publications and Lund Humphries, 2025) by Dr. Loretta Vandi is a timely exploration of the skilful illuminated manuscripts of Sister Eufrasia Burlamacchi (1478–1548) demonstrates her artistry within this sometime neglected artistic medium. Within the convent walls of San Domenico in Lucca where she lived and worked, Burl…
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Of all interstate conflicts across the last two centuries, two-thirds have ended through negotiated agreement. Wartime diplomacy is thus commonly seen as a costless and mechanical process solely designed to end fighting. But as Dr. Eric Min argues in Words of War: Negotiation as a Tool of Conflict (Cornell University Press, 2025), that wartime nego…
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Apprenticeship dominated training and skill formation in early modern Europe. Years spent learning from a skilled master were a nearly universal experience for young workers in crafts and trade. In England, when apprenticeship reached its peak, as many as a third of all teenage males would serve and learn as apprentices. In The Market for Skill: Ap…
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Nick Sweeney is a breathwork coach and cofounder of Coherence (https://www.coherencebreath.com). In this conversation, we spoke about launching a breathwork app, how to breathe to improve cardio, ChatGPT, and how running Alignment Academy for the first two months of the year impacted us. My X: https://x.com/heydannymiranda My Instagram: https://www…
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Menus are invaluable snapshots of the food consumed at specific moments in time and place. Tastes and Traditions: A Journey through Menu History (Reaktion, 2025) by Nathalie Cooke provides glimpses into the meals enjoyed by royalty and rogues, and by those celebrating special occasions or sampling new culinary sensations. It describes food prepared…
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In The Internal Colony: Race and the American Politics of Global Decolonization (University of Chicago Press, 2025), Dr. Sam Klug reveals the central but underappreciated importance of global decolonization to the divergence between mainstream liberalism and the Black freedom movement in postwar America. Dr. Klug reconsiders what has long been seen…
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In Menstrual Myth Busting: The Case of the Hormonal Female (Policy Press, 2025), Dr. Sally King interrogates the diagnostic label of premenstrual syndrome (PMS) to expose and challenge sexist assumptions within medical research and practice. She powerfully demonstrates how the concept of the ‘hormonal’ premenstrual woman is merely the latest iterat…
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When the Safavid dynasty, founded in 1501, built a state that championed Iranian identity and Twelver Shi’ism, it prompted the more established Ottoman Empire to align itself definitively with Sunni legalism. The political, religious, and military conflicts that arose have since been widely studied, but little attention has been paid to their diplo…
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Between 1840 and 1860 the British Empire expanded rapidly in scale, with rampant annexation of territory and ruthless suppression of rebellion. These decades also witnessed an unprecedented movement of people across the Empire and around the world, with over 2.6 million emigrants leaving Britain in the 1850s alone. Managing Mobility: The British Im…
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