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Very Expensive Maps

Very Expensive Maps

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You get what you pay for: professional cartographer Evan Applegate interviews better cartographers. Listen to the best living mapmakers describe how they create worlds in pixels, ink, graphite, threads, film, paint, ceramic, wood and metal. For show notes and bonus content visit https://veryexpensivemaps.com
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Being a teacher is basically group therapy… if group therapy included standardized testing, last-minute meetings, and kids who treat your profession like a suggestion. Therapy is Expensive, So Here We Are is the unfiltered, slightly sarcastic, but ultimately real podcast where we break down mental health, education, and parenting—without the hefty co-pay. Hosted Isaac J. Medina, this is your weekly dose of insight, humor, and just enough cynicism to keep you sane.
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Expensive Science Baby

Amee and Christopher Banks

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We try to make a baby, on a podcast! One clueless couple's journey into the wonderful, confusing, and expensive world of infertility and IVF (In Vitro Fertilization). Come along with us on an honest and real-time journey using crazy-good science to create a baby. We'll even try to be funny.
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Kisi bhi ladki ke liye uski shaadi me sabse zyada zaroori hota hai uska wedding lehenga...phir chaahe wo koi actress hi kyu na ho...aaiye aaj hum is video me baat karte hai bollywood actress ke expensive and gorgeous wedding lehenge ke baare me...ki kis actress ne kya pehna tha aur wo wedding outfit ki price kya hai. Number 1 : Aishwarya Rai Bachchan Aishwarya rai bachchan is list me sabse top par hai...unka wedding outfit sabse mehenga tha...aish ka wedding outfit ka price tha 75 lakhs...je ...
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Welcome to our podcast, dedicated to a topic that may interest not only smokers, but also lovers of exclusive things. In the article https://www.wealthymint.com/most-expensive-cigarettes/ we will tell you about the most expensive cigarettes in the world - from traditional brands to real exclusives. You will learn which cigarettes top the price ranking. If you want to learn more about the most expensive cigarettes in the world, this podcast is for you!
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Trauma is Expensive" offers far more than just a podcast—it's a educational platform, a supportive community, and a catalyst for personal growth and development. Here's how we provide value to our listeners In-depth Discussions: Our 50-episode series provides compelling, empathetic, and informed discussions on the wide-ranging costs of trauma. We invite expert guests, including psychologists, researchers, and individuals who've navigated their own healing journeys. Inspiring Personal Stories ...
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Today, I’m joined by a very special guest—my niece! We’re sitting down to talk about mental health, how the importance of school has shifted over the years, and why those so-called “big” generation gaps don’t actually feel that big when we break it down. We’re diving into: 🧠 How mental health conversations have changed (or haven’t) between generati…
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Colorado Springs artist and arborist Reynold Mackey on his decade of hand-carving accurate physiographic globes out of solid wood, how to translate a 2D topobathymetric map onto a sphere, art as family business, casting globes in bronze, chainsaw-carving to Hendrix and dental pick-carving to Debussy, why hard work is an ally to meaning, learning we…
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In this episode, we dive into how education is evolving in the wake of the pandemic and the trends shaping the future of learning. We explore the reevaluation of traditional schooling, examining how hybrid and personalized approaches are reshaping the classroom experience. Next, we discuss the rise of asynchronous learning and its flexibility, empo…
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Gigg Cosco Cezwear Kaylow - Bless My Soul (Newton) DJ Tears PLK Let Me Know (feat. Da Gifto) Brandon Dhludhlu Clara La San- Want U (Mr Shane SA) Elementicsoul & Fnote Holy Water (feat. Munga) I'mGrateful (Original Mix) | Elementicsoul Ft Mogomotsi Chosen Sun Goes Down (Poizen & Tamie) Healing (feat Kevin Maduna) TimAdeep Tems - Free Mind (Soulfreak…
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Welcome back! It feels good to be back behind the mic and ready to take on a whole new topic about something that gets very little attention these days... Teaching and Mental Health... My name is Isaac Medina and you may have heard my old stuff as Negative Possibilities. However, I've since decided to change my whole trajectory and talk about somet…
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Oregon lead cartographer and product manager Neil Allen talks atlas production with East View Geospatial’s Benchmark Maps, the years of mapmaking and months of ground-truthing required to create a Texas atlas, adventures in custom cartography (clients include the U.S. Coast Guard, The Cascadia Institute and an eccentric millionaire’s treasure hunt)…
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What if the simple act of "spilling tea" could become a powerful metaphor for healing and transformation? Join us as we sit down with Elizabeth Gagnon, a courageous author whose journey through a tumultuous childhood and a 16-year abusive marriage led her to create a unique space for connection and recovery. Her grandmother's wisdom about tea cerem…
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This podcast episode examines the complex link between weed and schizophrenia, alongside its therapeutic uses. Experts discuss research showing potential mental health risks and benefits. Church leaders and ethicists explore the moral and ethical implications of weed use, balancing its accessibility and medicinal value. The episode offers guidance …
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In this podcast episode, we explore how the church can support followers experiencing loneliness. We highlight successful church initiatives, such as small groups, mentoring programs, and social events designed to foster connections. The episode emphasizes the importance of creating an inclusive, caring church environment that encourages open dialo…
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This podcast episode explores how the church and Christians should view climate change. It begins with a theological foundation, emphasizing stewardship of God's creation as a biblical mandate. The episode highlights practical steps for churches, such as reducing carbon footprints, advocating for policy changes, and educating congregations on susta…
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In this podcast episode, we delve into the church's perspective on mental health, exploring its evolution over time and its current stance. We start by discussing traditional views, where mental health issues were often misunderstood or stigmatized within religious communities. The episode highlights the shift towards a more compassionate and infor…
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In this insightful podcast interview with John Vince, we delved into his remarkable journey from educator to Worship Leader and Director. John shared candidly about the pivotal moments that led him to pursue his passion for music and ministry full-time. He reflected on how his background in teaching has shaped his approach to leading worship, empha…
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In this podcast episode, I delve into the transformative journey of starting over in various aspects of my life. I candidly discuss the challenges and joys of embarking on a new marriage, navigating the complexities of blending families, and reshaping my social circles. Sharing my experience of overcoming a devastating social media hack, I explore …
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Welcome to a special edition episode of "Covid and Coffee," where we delve into the emotional toll of the COVID-19 pandemic. This episode focuses on the widespread feelings of anxiety, loneliness, and grief experienced during these unprecedented times. We'll hear anecdotal stories of the brunt of isolation and uncertainty. Grab your coffee, and joi…
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"Covid and Coffee" is a special edition podcast exploring the challenges and triumphs of teaching online during the COVID-19 pandemic. This engaging series delves into the personal and professional lives of educators who adapted to remote instruction, balancing work and home life in an unprecedented global crisis. This episode features heartfelt an…
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I focus on "Ambivalence and Resolving" after a divorce. Post-divorce, ambivalence often engulfs us—a mix of relief and regret, freedom and loneliness. We’ll explore why these conflicting feelings arise, drawing on personal stories. First, we'll unpack ambivalence, discussing its roots in the profound life changes and the mourning of lost futures. T…
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I delve into the emotion of "Scanning"—that heightened state of vigilance where you find yourself constantly seeking signs of potential issues, validation, or change in your surroundings and relationships. After a divorce, scanning can become a habitual response to trauma, leaving you hyper-aware of social cues, financial stability, and personal sa…
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In the rebroadcasted episode titled "Emotions During a Divorce, Unpredictable Feelings," the episode delves into the four complex emotional landscapes that accompany the end of a marriage, specifically the early onset of unpredictable emotions. This episode offers listeners a compassionate and insightful exploration of the feelings and actions that…
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Ontario explorer, mapmaker, and conservationist Hap Wilson on drawing 400 guide maps across 50 years, traveling more than 40,000 miles of Canadian wilderness by canoe, the one digital tool he likes (it’s Google Earth), saving lives by creating a map that, unlike the one it replaced, did not send tourists over a waterfall, retracing thousand-year-ol…
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Colorado painter, illustrator and mapmaker Erick Ingraham on solving art directors’ problems, making it interesting for himself (“I’m known to make things more complicated than they might need to be”), spending eight years painting the Rockies’ western slope, working from his own photographs, taking inspiration from the past, getting into the cultu…
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London artist and mapmaker Stephen Walter on two decades of drawing and painting “the semiotic residues of humankind,” an invitation to map an Ivorian national park (and why you should wait for the dry season before attempting this), approaching six years of work on an NYC map, interpreting Michael Drayton’s 17th c. topographical poem Poly-Olbion i…
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Manhattan writer and cartographer John Tauranac on his first maps of Midtown’s pedestrian passages, a public debate with Massimo Vignelli (“His geography was egregious”), working at a very different MTA (they used to have an aesthetics committee?), the “no improvements” made to the subway map since he chaired the 1979 MTA map committee, guiding Yan…
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In early 2023 GIS analyst and cartographer Andrew Middleton saw a tweet about Andy Nosal’s search for someone to take over The Map Center, Nosal's map shop in Pawtucket, RI; six months later Middleton left California to move into one of the last map retail stores in the U.S. We discuss his goal of turning the shop into an inviting retail space and …
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Lyonnais illustrator and designer Lionel Portier on a mapmaking career that spans 30 years and five continents, accepting any map challenge an art director might conceive, a travel magazine gig that led to an Australian passport, painting 100 birds for a wetland park, his favorite territory to illustrate, spending three months on a 3x4-ft. map of B…
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Utah artist Isaac Dushku on how a map has to evoke either a feeling of adventure or a feeling of home, the best- and worst-selling states in his catalog (he drew all 50), taking his business Lord of Maps from being ghosted on Facebook Marketplace to supporting his family, creating a board book of America’s highest peaks with a “ridiculously complic…
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Urbanist and illustrator Sam Usle on designing human-scale communities and rendering them in watercolors, why theme parks reflect a yearning for human-scale towns, redesigning part of his high school campus before graduation, why you can thank Le Corbusier for hideous Revit-default cities, the axonometric map that sold Disneyland, storytelling with…
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Naomi Rosenberg, assistant director of the Media and Accessible Design Lab at San Francisco’s LightHouse for the Blind, discusses the art of making fingertip-readable maps: why clutter is the enemy of good tactile maps, the quest for an affordable embosser, being locked to 24 pt. type, creating large-scale accessible maps for the Golden Gate Nation…
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New Haven architectural designer and artist Matthew Dean Shaffer on balancing accuracy with art, taking a break from straight lines to draw birds, software-driven homogeneity in American architecture (“Straight-out-of-Revit, as we say”), why he draws the vegetation last, how anything’s better for the urban fabric than a surface parking lot, and sac…
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Arlington “reformed architect” and pictorial cartographer Jamshid Kooros discusses his 30 years of mapmaking based on photographs, sketching and “walking, walking, walking,” the end of the drop-in pitch, turning three-week hikes into maps of French cities and castles, doing his own paper engineering for a pop-up map of Washington D.C., spending nin…
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Stafford cartographer and entrepreneur David Kulbeth on reviving old map aesthetics with his digital-to-copperplate-to-print-to-watercolor technique, the (costly) difference between copperplate etching and engraving, finding a custom papermaker, keeping his art affordable, finding style inspiration in 12 moving boxes of cartography books, and makin…
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Fish Creek artist and gallery owner Sophie Parr on creating more than one hundred 0.5"-to-the-mile maps using aerial imagery and a 0.2mm-tip pen, why she only accepts 2x2" commissions (while working on her own 2x3 ft. map of Chicago), representing a variety of landscapes within the constraints of black ink, when returning a client’s deposit feels s…
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Sandpoint cartographer Lee France on making his first topos in Chile, spending months on a single map for National Geographic Trails Illustrated, the challenge of making an attractive interactive map that includes every scale from hilltop to hemisphere, how an up-to-date cadastral layer can make or break your hunting map, how his team of technical …
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Atlanta visual artist, sculptor and “topophiliac” Gregor Turk on walking 250 miles of the U.S./Canada border, creating landscapes with clay, wood and recycled inner tubes, turning Landsat imagery into hundreds of hand-painted ceramic tiles, making 1:1 scale maps, chasing phantom streets, fighting real estate developers’ efforts to erase Blandtown, …
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Leesburg cartographer Tom Patterson on his decades creating visitor maps for the National Park Service (there’s a good chance his work is crumpled in your glovebox), learning to draw terrain by corresponding with an artist in Scotland, why he doesn’t lament the passing of 70s-era production techniques, how to map a piedmont glacier using satellite …
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St Leonards map producer/founder Melinda Clarke and Melbourne illustrator Deborah Young Monk discuss their collaborations across more than three decades, how to tell an artist they need to redraw three months of work, scouting territory by car, helicopter and hot air balloon, more than a week spent editing a 4x3 ft. map with a scalpel, selling maps…
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Lewes/Berlin graphic artist and “exuberant mapmaker” Neil Gower on painting an estate plan when the grounds are unfinished, the work that gives him a “hum in the pelvis,” what Frank Zappa has in common with high-effort fake maps, an abandoned 5x5 ft. map of Venice that was more enjoyable to ground-truth than to draw, combining lunar toponymy with 1…
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New York City cartographer and QueensLink chief design officer Andrew Lynch on using library archives, train-mounted GoPro footage and his own two feet to plot every track in the New York City subway system, a brush with cubicle-based urban planning at the Port Authority, testy-yet-productive correspondence with railfans, the unshakable authority c…
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New Brunswick embroidery artist Danielle Currie discusses her fans among NASA’s Ocean Processing Group, spending more than 400 hours to render an Icelandic river in straight stitches, her hoops being mistaken for paintings, how you really have to enjoy the colors of a piece you’ll hold in your lap for months, pricing herself out of her own art, and…
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