A Unitarian Sunday Service from Oxford
Recorded in the Chapel of Harris Manchester College, Oxford with the kind permission of the Chapel Society
Unitarian Church Service Sunday, June 23rd, 2019
Octagon Chapel, Norwich
A Unitarian Service lead by Kate McKenna
A Unitarian Children's Harvest Festival
Conducted by Rev Jean Bradley at Brook Street Unitarian Chapel, Knutsford, Cheshire
Founder's Day 2016 - 'Liberal Faith': An Oxymoron?
Does religion still have a role in promoting liberal values or has the torch passed to those who describe themselves as ‘non-religious’? Are secular rather than religious rites of passage now more appropriate in contemporary Britain? These and other questions are grappled with by the Gladstone's Library panel:
Zia Chaudhry
Andrew Copson
Martyn Percy
Linda Woodhead
Chaired by the Rt Revd Gregory Cameron.
standrewskw191027 - Service at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Kitchener - October 27, 2019
Service at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada. October 27, 2019 - Dr. Wilma Welsh preaching. standrewskw191027
Unitarian Service from Nottage, South Wales
Conducted by Rev Lewis Rees
Valensole - Imposter
Imposter.
Taken from the new mini album 'Imposter' available everywhere on 22nd February 2019!
STREAM IT HERE -
Produced by Elliott Jones
Drums - Tom Webb
Video Editing - Dave Parker
Camera's - Lukas Smith
Baptist Temple Church: Remembering the Past - Preparing for the Future
A documentary film about Baptist Temple Church of Fall River, MA.
Founded in 1846 by abolitionist pastor, Rev. Asa Bronson, the rich history Baptist Temple Church is featured in this 80 minute documentary. Filmed in 2006 for the church's 160th anniversary.
Town Hall: Disability, Race, and the Practice of Dance
Disability. Dance. Artistry. (Inter)national Voices Series
Town Hall: Disability, Race, and the Practice of Dance
September 20, 2016, at New York Live Arts, 219 W 19th Street New York, NY 10011
#DDAvoices #TownHall
Dance/NYC hosts a series of conversations at the intersection of disability and dance. Each event pairs a New York City dance leader with an (inter)national guest working at this nexus. Our goal is to forge a place for disabled artists/artistry in New York’s cultural ecosystem – a place where disabled artists can flourish. We invite you to work with us to create new places for disabled artists in NYC’s cultural landscape.
The series extends Dance/NYC's Disability. Dance. Artistry. initiative, which aims to advance professional development, and further the artistry of disabled dancers in integrated settings and in settings exclusively for disabled dancers. It will bring new (inter)national voices together with NYC dance leaders. It also coincides with a national initiative and set of convenings across the United States undertaken by AXIS Dance Company with support from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and Dance/USA, the national service organization for professional dance. Dance/NYC works in alliance with Dance/USA.
For this second Town Hall in the series, Dr. Carrie Sandahl and Dr. Aimee Meredith Cox explored the ways in which systemic forces of oppression have influenced dance practice and scholarship. They will consider such questions as: Whose movement is counted as dance? How do cultural biases around race, gender, class, and sexuality affect the creation and study of dance? How do aesthetics of the body inform the practice and scholarship of dance?
Moderator: DDA (Inter)national Voices Curator Alice Sheppard
Special thanks to Alice Sheppard, Dance/NYC Board Member and Disability. Dance. Artistry. Task Force Member, and Simi Linton, Disability. Dance. Artistry. Task Force Member, for their leadership in shaping this program as both curators and moderators for the series.
Protien shake of satan the second cumming
ryan got nek nominated, so we mixed up some shitty ball sweat and ass hair. feast your eyes on the filthiest video known to the depbay.... fuckedurbitch
The Choreography of Things with Sydney Skybetter
Sydney Skybetter, Lecturer of Dance and Fellow of Public Humanities at Brown, discusses his research into ways that movement generates meaning, for people and for machines in his talk entitled, “The Choreography of Things.”
For more info:
Thursday, December 7, 2017
Brown University
Prop 8 Trial Re-enactment, Day 3 Chapter 1 (re-edit)
Day 3 Chapter 1 of the Proposition 8 Trial Re-enactment presented by MarriageTrial.com. Produced by John Ainsworth & John Ireland.
Edited by Michael Legge.
THE JUDGE
Vaughn Walker, Chief Judge, U.S. District Court portrayed by Ted Heyck
THE PLAINTIFFS
Paul Katami portrayed by Woody Schultz
Jeffrey Zarrillo portrayed by Bryan Cuprill
Kristin Perry portrayed by Kitty Swink
Sandy Stier portrayed by Tess Harper
THE PLAINTIFF ATTORNEYS
David Boies portrayed by Jack Laufer
Theodore Olson portrayed by Clyde FT Small
Theodore Boutrous portrayed by Peter Cassone
Christopher Dusseault portrayed by Jon Keel
Matthew McGill portrayed by Mark Doerr
Ethan Dettmer portrayed by Shawn Ryan
THE PLAINTIFF-INTERVENOR ATTORNEYS
Dennis Herrera, S.F. City Attorney portrayed by Matt Pittenger
Therese Stewart, S.F. Deputy City Attorney portrayed by Sarah Gaboury
Christine Van Aken, S.F. City Attorney Portayed by Kate McNeil
Danny Chou, S.F. City Attorney portrayed by Peter James Smith
S.F. City Attorney Ronald Flynn portrayed by Todd Waring
THE DEFENDANTS
Arnold Schwarzenegger, California Governor Does not appear at trial.
Edmund G. Brown, California Attorney General Does not appear at trial.
Linette Scott, Deputy Director of Health & Strategic Planning for the California Department of Public Health Does not appear at trial.
Patrick OConnell, Clerk-Recorder County of Alameda Does not appear at trial.
Dean Logan, Clerk-Recorder County of Los Angeles Does not appear at trial.
THE DEFENDANT ATTORNEY
Tamar Pachter, Deputy Attorney General portrayed by Susyn Duris
THE DEFENDANT-INTERVENOR ATTORNEYS
Charles Cooper portrayed by Julian Simmons
David Thompson portrayed by Scott Kradolfer
Nicole Moss portrayed by Judith Hoag
Howard Nielson portrayed by Jon Acosta
Brian Raum, Alliance Defense Fund portrayed by John Ainsworth
Andrew Pugno, Protect Marriage.com portrayed by Brian Poth
James Campbell, Alliance Defense Fund portrayed by Victor Warren
Terry Thompson, Attorney for William Tam portrayed by Tuc Watkins
Peter Patterson, Alliance Defense Fund portrayed by Len Cordova
Vincent McCarthy, American Center for Law & Justice portrayed by William Charlton
THE WITNESSES
Dr. Nancy Cott, Professor of History, Harvard University portrayed by Nicole Hoelle
Dr. George Chauncey, Professor of History, Yale University portrayed by John Ireland
Dr. Letitia Peplau Professor of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles portrayed by Adrienne Barbeau
Edmund Egan, Chief Economist, City of San Francisco portrayed by Jim Abele
Dr. Ilan Meyer, Professor of Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia University, portrayed by Arye Gross
Helen Zia, Journalist based in San Francisco, portrayed by Sachie Alessio Heath
Dr. Michael Lamb, Professor of Economics, Cambridge University, portrayed by Basil Smith
Jerry Sanders, Mayor, City of San Diego portrayed by Peter Jason
Dr. M.V. Lee Badgett, Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, portrayed by Pamela Reed
Ryan Kendall, Conversion Therapy Survivor portrayed by Jarod Einsohn
Dr. Gary Segura, Professor of Political Science, Stanford University, portrayed by Sean Stanek
Hak-Shing William Tam, Businessman based in San Francisco, portrayed by Gedde Watanabe
Dr. Gregory M. Herek, Professor of Psychology, University of California, Davis, portrayed by Scott Lowell
Dr. Kenneth Miller, Assoc. Professor of Government, Claremont McKenna College, portrayed by Kasey Mahaffy
David Blankenhorn, Founder & President, Institute for American Values, portrayed by Gregory Itzin
© 2010 by John Ireland Productions, LLC
Oxford Unitarians speak of their faith
From the chapel of Harris Manchester College Oxford
Colin Dye Resurrection Encounters
Chon live at bottom lounge i chicago
super chonbros tour
ArtPrize Panel Discussion 2018
A panel discussion of artist featured at ArtPrize venues on the campus of Grand Rapids Community College
#QuakerService: Pat Hunt- The Legacy of Quaker Service
Quaker Voluntary Service is part of a long history of Quaker action and witness in the world. We want to honor that legacy and help our young adults see and frame where they fit into this story.
In this second video of our Quaker Service Testimonies video series, Pat Hunt shares about her lifetime of service working with AFSC international workcamp programs in many countries around the world, during and after WWII.
For more information about Pat, and for the full transcript, please visit
THE BUSK: Rubylux - Mr. Blue Sky
Performing for charity following the devastation that Hurricane Sandy brought, THE BUSK presents RUBYLUX
Location: Brighton Unitarian Church, Jubilee Street, New Road, Brighton
24 November 2012
Photography: Jay Light
Video: Alex Burchfield
Edit: Mark Kozlowski (BoxFly Media)
Morality, Contraception & Religion in Post-War America
Samira Mehta discussed the history of contraception and religion in America, the subject of her recent research at the Library. Some clergy in post-World War II America framed the need for contraception in theological terms, including morally-inflected understandings of marriage and the family and Biblically-based commandments to care for the earth. Mehta's talk forefronts the role of ministers and rabbis in using their clerical authority to make contraception socially acceptable, but also in creating a moral language that would be used in support of birth control long after religious voices were the movement's strongest advocates.
Speaker Biography: Samira Mehta is wrapping-up her year as a David Larson Fellow at the Library's John W. Kluge Center, where she has been studying the history of contraception and religion in America for a new book, God Bless the Pill: Sexuality, Contraception and American Religion.
For transcript and more information, visit