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Justin Pollard Film & TV Historian / Writer
Justin Pollard Film & TV Historian / Writer Agents Thea Martin [email protected] Credits In Development Production Company Notes OPIUM Tiger Aspect Exec Producer and Historical Consultant UNTITLED PROJECT Mandabach TV Historical Advisor UNTITLED PROJECT STX Historical Advisor 12 CAESARS Green Pavilion Co-Writer Television Production Company Notes VALHALLA MGM Associate Producer and Historical Consultant BROOKLYN HBO Historical Advisor 2018 BORGIA Company of Wolves Research Consultant. BRITANNIA Vertigo Films Historical Consultant United Agents | 12-26 Lexington Street London W1F OLE | T +44 (0) 20 3214 0800 | F +44 (0) 20 3214 0801 | E [email protected] Production Company Notes WILL Monumental / TNT Historical Consultant THE VIKINGS, Series MGM/ History Channel Associate Producer & Historical 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 Consultant. 10 part drama series based on Viking Europe in the 9th century. PAGE EIGHT Carnival Films/ BBC Research Consultant. Film noir thriller starring Ralph Fiennes and Rachel Weisz. Directed by David Hare. QI Quite Interesting Ltd/ Talkback Writer/ Associate Producer. (Series 2 Thames/ BBC1 onward). PEAKY BLINDERS Tiger Aspect/ BBC Research Consultant. Drama series set amongst Birmingham gangs in the early 1920s. THE DRAGONS OF National Geographic Television Writer. MIDDLE EARTH Animated special on the symbolism of the dragon in the medieval Christian world. CAMELOT Starz/ GK-TV Script Consultant. 10 part drama series based on the Morte D’Arthur, starring Joseph Fiennes and Eva Green. THE TUDORS: SERIES Reveille/ Working Title/ TM Research Consultant. I-IV Productions/ Peace Arch Drama series starring Jonathan Rhys Entertainment Group, Inc. for Meyers as Henry VIII. Showtime ALEXANDRIA, Lion Television/ Channel 4 Writer/ Producer. -
George Floyd Protests Lead to Reckoning As Black Employees Speak out on Racism and Discrimination in the Workplace Jessica Guynn USA TODAY
George Floyd protests lead to reckoning as Black employees speak out on racism and discrimination in the workplace Jessica Guynn USA TODAY Last week, Apple CEO Tim Cook posted a video on Twitter announcing a $100-million initiative to fight racism and break down barriers to opportunity, including inside his own company. Tanya Faison, who is Black and for five years worked in technical support at Apple, says she’s skeptical of these expressions of solidarity from corporations that for years stayed silent on systemic racism while perpetuating racial inequality by failing to hire, promote or fairly pay Black people and people of color. “It’s very nice that he’s decided to take this moment to start focusing on Black folks, when he is in a company with Black employees who are not being taken care of,” Faison said of Cook. From Silicon Valley to Wall Street, corporations from nearly every sector of the American economy have taken to social media proclaiming their support for the Black Lives Matter movement and condemning police killings as protests over the death of George Floyd still flood American streets. Seizing an opportunity to be heard, Black employees are responding on social media with painful stories of workplace racism that they say they were too fearful to discuss before. The wave of firsthand accounts and activism has led to resignations, drawing parallels to the #MeToo movement. “We need more than performative, symbolic or superficial statements. We need action,” says Aerica Shimizu Banks, one of two former Black employees who went public this week with charges of racial discrimination against social media service Pinterest. -
Maidstone Area Archaeological Group, Should Be Sent to Jess Obee (Address at End) Or Payments Made at One of the Meetings
Maidstone Area Archaeological Group Newsletter, March 2000 Dear Fellow Members As there is a host of announcements, I will hold over the Editorial until the next Newsletter, due in May (sighs of relief all round). David Carder Subscriptions and Membership Cards Subscriptions for the year beginning 1st April 2000 are now due. Please use the renewal form enclosed with this Newsletter, and complete as much as of it as possible - that way we can establish what members' interests really are. Return the form with your cheque by post to Jess Obee (address at end), or hand it with cheque or cash to any Committee Member who will give you a receipt. Renewing members will receive a handy Membership Card with the May Newsletter, giving details of indoor meetings, subscription rates, and contacts. In order to comply with the data protection legislation, we have included on the form a consent that your details may be held on a computer database. This data is held purely for membership administration (e.g. printing of address labels and registration of subscription payments). It will not be used for other purposes, or released to outside parties without your express consent. If you have any queries or concerns over this, please write to the Chairman. Notice of Annual General Meeting - Friday 28th April 2000 This year's AGM will be held at 7.30 pm on Friday 28th April 2000 (not 21st as previously published) at the School Hall, The Street, Detling. The Agenda is as follows : 1. Chairman's welcome 2. Apologies for absence 3. -
MINT YARD York Conservation Management Plan
MINT YARD York Conservation Management Plan FINAL DRAFT Simpson & Brown Architects With Addyman Archaeology August 2012 Contents Page 1.0 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 3 2.0 INTRODUCTION 11 2.1 Objectives of the Conservation Plan ...............................................................................11 2.2 Study Area ..........................................................................................................................11 2.3 Heritage Designations.......................................................................................................13 2.4 Structure of the Report......................................................................................................14 2.5 Adoption & Review...........................................................................................................15 2.6 Other Studies......................................................................................................................15 2.7 Limitations..........................................................................................................................15 2.8 Orientation..........................................................................................................................15 2.9 Project Team .......................................................................................................................15 2.10 Acknowledgements...........................................................................................................16 2.11 Abbreviations and Definitions.........................................................................................16 -
Character Area 22: Railway Archaeological Background
City of York Historic Characterisation Project - 2013, Character area statements Character area 22: Railway Archaeological background Roman Beneath the Cedar Court Hotel architectural fragments including stone capitals and a stone lined well were exposed The archaeological record is dominated by various examinations during building work in 1901(MYO2166, 2162 and 2165). of a substantial cemetery (MYO2010) containing both A conduit and timber lined pit was also located; the pit was inhumations and cremations, principally during construction recorded as c.2.5m below ground level (MYO2167-8). of the current railway station, the Royal Station Hotel and Scarborough Bridge in the late 19th century. In addition, burials, The former railway station located within the walled city structures and occupation evidence were discovered in the area, now West Offices, was subject to several archaeological area towards the riverside. It is believed that the cemetery investigations including five evaluation trenches (EYO4271) in may extend to the south bank of the Ouse (EYO114). More 2009. This evaluation revealed a complex sequence of Roman recently, a watching brief in 1983 at the Railway Station structures c.0.9m+ below ground level, beneath the former revealed disarticulated remains at 1.2m below ground level. station platform some of which are almost certainly associated Contemporary (1876 and quoted in RCHME, Roman York) with the baths complex recorded during the construction of the accounts identified a number of large pits into which had railway station (EYO2580-81). Potential Roman deposits were been ‘thrown’ several bodies in a random manner (EYO418). identified at 1.30m below ground level during a watching brief at Station Rise (EYO431) while a possible Roman courtyard or The location of the character area within the historic core. -
Annual Report 2018
Channel Four Television Corporation Report and Financial Statements 2018 Incorporating the Statement of Media Content Policy Presented to Parliament pursuant to Paragraph 13(1) of Schedule 3 to the Broadcasting Act 1990 Channel 4 Annual Report 2018 Contents OVERVIEW FINANCIAL REPORT AND STATEMENTS Chair’s Statement 4 Strategic Report Chief Executive’s Statement 8 Financial review and highlights 156 The heart of what we do 13 Our principal activities 159 Remit 38 Key performance indicators 160 At a glance 40 People and corporate annualreport.channel4.com social responsibility 162 STATEMENT OF MEDIA CONTENT POLICY Risk management 164 Strategic and financial outlook 2018 programme highlights 42 and Viability statement 167 4 All the UK 46 Please contact us via our website (channel4.com/corporate) if you’d like this in an alternative Governance format such as Braille, large print or audio. Remit performance The Channel 4 Board 168 Investing in content 48 © Channel Four Television Corporation copyright 2019 Printed in the UK by CPI Colour on Report of the Members 172 Innovation 56 FSC® certified paper. CPI Colour’s Corporate governance 174 The text of this document may be reproduced free environmental management Young people 64 of charge in any format or medium provided that it is Audit Committee Report 179 system is certified to ISO 14001, reproduced accurately and not in a misleading context. Inclusion and diversity 70 and is accredited to FSC® chain of Members’ Remuneration Report 183 The material must be acknowledged as Channel Four custody scheme. CPI Colour is a Supporting creative businesses 78 ® Television Corporation copyright and the document certified CarbonNeutral company Talent 84 Consolidated financial statements title specified. -
Musei Virtuali.Indb
Archeologia e Calcolatori Supplemento 1, 2007, 31-63 ARCHAEOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE, VIRTUAL EXHIBITIONS AND THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF MEANING 1. INTRODUCTION The use of the World Wide Web as a public communication vehicle has been a widespread phenomenon among museums since the 1990s. The semi- official Virtual Library museum pages directory (BOWEN 1994), supported by the International Council of Museums, lists nowadays thousands of museum websites from almost a hundred countries; the Museums and the Web inter- national conference, organised on a yearly basis, recently celebrated its tenth birthday, having so far yielded hundreds of contributions on the theory and practice of museum web communication (COPELAND 2006; SUMPTION 2006). While among websites commonly associated with the name “museum” most belong to museum organisations, there is an increasing number of such web- sites not based on physical space – in the sense of a building with a material collection and an exhibition gallery – but existing solely in cyberspace, and challenging established notions of authenticity, materiality and scholarly me- diation (TRANT 1998, 110-113; DIETZ et al. 2004). These exclusively virtual museums, and increasingly their hybrid counterparts, offer to their visitors the experience of “armchair travel” to a collection presented through a digital surrogate, i.e., to a virtual exhibition. Among disciplines occupied with the material traces of human existence, archaeology is probably the one that has been most open to the application of information and communication technologies; indeed, the rise of statistical and computer-based approaches in the period of neo-evolutionism and the New Archaeology has not slowed down even after the post-modern turn and post-processual methodological alternatives of the last twenty years. -
The Revenge of the Racists and the Silence of Those Who Worship the Lamb
Temple Tracts: Issue 1, Volume 4 The Revenge of the Racists and the Silence of those who Worship the Lamb Greg Smith The Revenge of the Racists and the Silence of those who Worship the Lamb Greg Smith Temple Tracts: Issue 1, Volume 4 Shelf Reference: Book 17 Sign-up for our free e-newsletter at: williamtemplefoundation.org.uk © William Temple Foundation 2018 2 Greg Smith has worked for over forty years in urban mission, community development and social research in London and Preston. He has published extensively on religion in the inner city, faith involvement in urban regeneration, and urban theology. Greg is Development Officer for Together Lancashire, a joint venture of Church Urban Fund, Diocese of Blackburn and the Lancashire Methodist District supporting faith based social action and urban churches in the western half of the county. He is active in the City of Sanctuary movement in Preston, and works with food banks, inter-faith networks and projects serving the homeless. From 2011 to 2016 he also worked for the Evangelical Alliance managing the 21st Century Evangelicals research programme and continues to analyse and publish academic papers based on the data. See more on Greg’s work and publications. In his spare time he volunteers with Lancashire Wildlife Trust and enjoys photography, railways and walking with his dog. 3 Contents Introduction .................................................................................................................... 5 Political resurgence of the populist right and its religious correlates .............................. 6 Brexit and Religion .......................................................................................................... 7 And across the pond ..................................................................................................... 10 Persistence of white male privilege and institutional racism ......................................... 13 Changing dimensions of diversity: globalisation and intersectionality ......................... -
Reports from the Environmental Archaeology Unit, York 2000/04, 51 Pp
Reports from the Environmental Archaeology Unit, York 2000/04, 51 pp. Assessment of biological remains from 41-49 Walmgate York (site code 1999.941) by Cluny Johnstone, John Carrott, Allan Hall, Harry Kenward and Darren Worthy Summary Excavations carried out at 41-49 Walmgate, York, as part of the Time Team Live programme, yielded a total of 34 samples and a single box of bone and shell. Of the samples, 22 (SRS and BS samples) were processed on site and eight GBA samples were processed at the EAU. Analysis was limited to Anglo- Scandinavian and medieval deposits with secure dating evidence. Preservation of biological remains within these deposits was exceptional in a number of ways, particularly the presence of dried (and not rewetted) plant remains and charred insects in association with waterlogged material. The range of plant and insect species was very similar to that observed in Anglo-Scandinavian deposits in other areas of York. The species present were indicative of the interiors of buildings, including moist floor environments and possibly also thatch. Dyeplants and invertebrates associated with wool were present in several deposits, as in many Anglo-Scandinavian deposits from York, suggesting textile processing in the vicinity. The shell and vertebrate assemblages, whilst being well preserved, were too small to provide any useful insights into the economy of the site, other than that they mainly represent food waste. The exceptional preservation of all bioarchaeological remains from this site and the quantity of information gained from such a small scale intervention, has once again highlighted the potential of deposits in this area for yielding a wealth of information on the environment and economy of Anglo- Scandinavian York. -
The Post Hole Issue 15
The Post Hole Issue 15 2 An Interview with Dr Alice Roberts Maximillian Elliot Dr Alice Roberts is one of the country's foremost osteoarchaeologists, as well as being a leading figure in anatomy and anthropology. She has appeared on numerous television programmes, including Time Team and Coast, as well presenting her own documentaries; Digging for Britain, Dr Alice Roberts: Don't Die Young and The Incredible Human Journey which have won her critical acclaim. ME-Was it difficult to break into the world of archaeological media? AR-I fell into archaeology on television almost by accident. I was producing bone reports for archaeological units in the South West, and Time Team asked me if I could write up some reports on skeletons from previous excavations. I produced some reports for them, and was then asked to come on a dig where I'd be looking at bones as they were excavated. It was an Anglo-Saxon burial site in Hampshire, which formed the focus of the Time Team Live dig in 2001. After that, I was invited back to join the team whenever there was a possibility of finding human remains, working with Professor Margaret Cox, which was a great privilege. ME-Your career has encompassed many different disciplines within modern science including, Anatomy, Anthropology and Osteoarchaeology. What made you want to study these particular branches of science? AR-These disciplines might seem very diverse, but the thing which links them all is a fascination with the structure of the human body. Anatomy was my favourite subject when I was an undergraduate studying medicine, but I didn't really expect it to become my career! ME-During your tour of the archaeological sites of Britain in your amazing series, Digging for Britain, what was your favourite site or artefact and why? AR-I loved being able to see the objects and bones in the archive at the Mary Rose Trust. -
Mediatique Report
Examining trends in editorial standards in coverage of transgender issues IPSO November 2020 Mediatique Limited 65 Chandos Place London WC2N 4HG UNITED KINGDOM www.mediatique.co.uk 2 Contents A. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ....................................................................................................................................... 7 1. INTRODUCTION AND PROJECT OBJECTIVES ....................................................................................................................... 7 2. QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF COVERAGE ......................................................................................................................... 8 3. QUALITATIVE CASE STUDY ANALYSIS ............................................................................................................................ 11 a. Coverage types .............................................................................................................................................. 12 b. Our analysis of the articles ............................................................................................................................ 12 c. Terminology ................................................................................................................................................... 14 d. Accuracy (rights and legislation).................................................................................................................... 14 e. Accuracy (statistics) ...................................................................................................................................... -
Regia Anglorum Media CV
Regia Anglorum Media CV Digging for Britain August 2021 BBC (TX BBC2, scheduled for late 2021) Supply: A demonstration of beer brewing. 2 specialists for a day's shoot at Avalon Marshes Archaeology Park in Somerset. Walks with My Dog July 2017 True North (TX More4, early 2018) Supply: A traders display of an early 10th century Hiberno-Norse trader with trade route specific trade goods, on location in Chester. 4 fully-equipped warriors, 3 civilians, and a trader, all fully costumed. 1 large authentic tent. L'histoire dans la peau October 2016 Groupe PVP, Québec (TX Canadian TV5, November 2017) Supply: Follow 1 re-enactor preparing for the Battle of Hastings 950th anniversary. Interviews with two others on the day. Combat demonstrations. This Week October 2016 BBC2 (TX 6 October 2016) Supply: Two fully armed warriors for half a day's work in Kent. Shed of the Year June 2016 Channel 4 (TX July 2016) Supply: Wychurst Longhall shortlisted for historical shed of the year (and won!). Two fully costumed interviewees. A few extras in the background. Great Army and Alfred work April 2016 World Rights Media Supply: Longhall used as backdrop for this work. 1066: A Year to Conquer England February 2016 BBC (3 × 60 minute episodes) (TX February to March 2017) Supply: Twelve fully equiped warriors and one ship replica on location both at our permanent site in Kent and in Oxfordshire totalling 3 days. Seige of Rochester Castle September 2015 For Medway Council Supply: 70 man-days work over a weekend. Fully armoured warriors and a trebuchet on location at our permanent site in Kent and at Rochester Castle.