Danny Dorling | People and Places, Brexit and Britain: the importance of immigration and empire
14-16 September 2018 | Meeting Minds in Oxford - Alumni Weekend
Professor Danny Dorling, Halford Mackinder Professor of Human Geography | School of Geography and the Environment, Lecture Theatre
How important was the British Empire in shaping today's map of ethnic identity in Britain, and forming contemporary attitudes to immigration, emigration and Brexit? In this talk Danny Dorling suggests that Brexit, like the Suez Crisis before it, is part of the slow unravelling required for the countries of the UK to eventually become normal.
6 go to Cornwall: Our first time camping! A UK family DITL
We didn’t manage 2 nights but it was amazing and has sparked what will hopefully be plenty of holidays to come! Join our family of six Padstow on one of our two day camping trips.
Emily Beatrice: mum of 4, wife, writer and all round creative, obsessed with special occasions, home decor and country life. I upload twice a week and can be found on
The book of faces
The bird one
And I mainly hang out in Instagram
You can read my blog at
Would love to hear you feedback and ideas do comment below with any future content you would like to see.
Take care xx
Music credit
Music by BENSOUND
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported— CC BY 3.0
Music promoted by Audio Library
Music by BENSOUND
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported— CC BY 3.0
Music promoted by Audio Library
Acoustic/Folk Instrumental by Hyde - Free Instrumentals
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported— CC BY 3.0
Music promoted by Audio Library
Take It Easy by MBB
Creative Commons — Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported— CC BY-SA 3.0
Music promoted by Audio Library
PACIFIC SUN by Nicolai Heidlas Music
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported— CC BY 3.0
Music promoted by Audio Library
The David Bowie Tour London | Total BS Episode 1
Our first ever episode of Total BS! Enjoy the noise of the wind and the shaky camera work - it's all intentional.
Book a Tour Here:
Nick's Website:
This is where we went for cupcakes!
☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
CAMPING PREP & BLOWING A GAIL!
For Daily Vlogs be sure to Subscribe!
OTHER PLACES TO FIND US | ♥
Email me here- clairenew7777@hotmail.co.uk
BLOG:
INSTAGRAM: claire_witt
FACEBOOK - thewittfamily
PINTEREST:
TWITTER-:
ZULILY:
SNAPCHAT: violetmae30
RECIPE playlist-
Violets hair bows- The Bow Boutique-
Royalty free music from Bensound.
The Making Of 'Hull - City of Culture' by St. Mary Queen of Martyrs
Our Budding Berries Filmmaking Workshop came to St. Mary Queen of Martyrs Primary School in Hull, where we made a great film about Hull's history in the lead up to City of Culture 2017!
The children learned about creating their own film - they planned their stories, designed and created their sets and props, and filmed and acted in their film!
The final film won the school a HOSCAR, at Hull's school filmmaking award ceremony!
David Bowie's Ziggy Stardust is returning to the Big Screen with a new documentary
Directed by DA Pennebaker, the concert movie Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars: The Motion Picture captures David Bowie and his band at the height of their powers on stage at London’s Hammersmith Odeon on July 3, 1973, the singer causing a furore with his announcement that the gig would be “the last show we’ll ever do.”
MOJO magazine returns to this moment of high drama with an exclusive companion film where Woody Woodmansey, the sole surviving member of the Spiders From Mars, re-lives the events of that fateful night, and chronicles Bowie’s rise from the fringes of the British underground scene to global superstardom.
This new film sees Woody return to London’s Trident Studios where he and his fellow Spiders - Mick Ronson (guitar) and Trevor Boulder (bass) - cut a number of classic albums with Bowie including The Man Who Sold The World (1970), Hunky Dory (1971) and, of course, The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars (1972).
In a wide-ranging conversation with MOJO’s Editor-In-Chief, Phil Alexander, Woody – whose acclaimed autobiography My Life With Bowie: Spider From Mars has just been published by Sigwick & Jackson – reflects on the most formative period in Bowie’s career, and provides a fascinating insight into the man’s impact as well as the star’s conflicted view of commercial success.
Woody Womansey commented “Every so often an artist comes along and has that ability to really communicate – because that’s what art is – and it’s on such a high level. There’s good music, there’s better music, great music, and then you’ve got somebody who can deliver constantly. He was a cut above. I always thought that any time David Bowie wanted to write a hit song he could sit down and in 20 minutes he would have written one. He always had that about him. The fact that he didn’t do that was his choice. He came out at a point when the business and the world really needed brightening up. It needed a lift. He managed to do that, he managed to lift it, and then [his influence] went into all into the other arts and genres of music, and brightened all of their areas up. That’s one individual who managed to do that.”
Presented in association with CineEvents, the nationwide screenings of both films will take place across the UK on March 7, 2017. Participating cinemas include: Picturehouse, Everyman, Curzon, ODEON, Cineworld and Vue cinemas as well as a number of independent sites and chains.
Tickets can be purchased from ziggystardust-cinevents.com
Drive: How to drive on a multi-lane roundabout
For more info go to If you have any questions about the videos please send them to info@drive.govt.nz.
In this video, we'll look at how to drive on a multi-lane roundabout, including how to approach the roundabout and what to look for.
Drive.govt.nz is an innovative website and learning tool created by the New Zealand Transport Agency and ACC to help you become a confident and capable driver. These videos have been created our driving experts and driving instructors to show you everything you need to learn to become a safe and skilled driver.
HOLY HOLY at Sheffield Foundry
Just a few seconds of chanting for the legendary Woody Woodmansey
Best Restaurant in Flamborough | Video Marketing | Facebook Ads | Flamborough Restaurant
Best Restaurant in Flamborough 10,000 views on Facebook ► Click on the link and get the ultimate marketing package for your restaurant in Flamborough.
No one wants to read a laundry list of foods, so pick the foods that made the greatest impression on you (good or bad) and focus your writing on these dishes. Don't just say if they were good or bad. Strive to give details and reasons, naming each specific dish. As an outline, you should try and talk about the following three things in every food review:[2]
• Presentation: How'd the dish look when it arrived, and how did it make you feel? Excited? Hungry? Like royalty? Like you were in your family's kitchen again?
• Taste: The big, obvious one, but that is only because it is so important. Use descriptive language, metaphor, and simile to put your reader in your shoes, or mouth. Name spices or flavors when you can.
• Texture:This usually includes cooking process as well. Did it melt in your mouth? Was it still hot when it arrived? Was it juicy and tender or tough and brittle? Were their multiple textures (such as something soft with a crunchy crust), and did they work well together?
Flamborough is a village and civil parish in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It is situated approximately 4 miles (6 km) north-east of Bridlington town centre on the prominent coastal feature of Flamborough Head.
The most prominent man-made feature of the area is Flamborough Head Lighthouse. The headland extends into the North Sea by approximately 6 miles (10 km). To the north, the chalk cliffs stand at up to 400 feet (120 m) high. For information about its founding, see Thorgils Skarthi.
According to the 2011 UK Census, Flamborough parish had a population of 2,161,[1] an increase on the 2001 UK Census figure of 2,121.
The church of St Oswald stands in the village and was designated a Grade II* listed building in 1966 and is now recorded in the National Heritage List for England, maintained by Historic England. The village centre contains a number of shops and public houses. The Old Dog and Duck is at Dog and Duck Square.
In the village are the fragmentary remains of Flamborough Castle, a medieval fortified manor house.
In 1823 the village was a parish in the Wapentake of Dickering. Flamborough was recorded as merely a fishing village with a very ancient station, formerly of some note. The population at the time was 917, half of which constituted the families of fishermen. Occupations included eleven farmers, two blacksmiths, two butchers, two grocers, seven carpenters, four shoemakers, three tailors, a stone mason & flour dealer, a bacon & flour dealer, a weaver, a corn miller, a straw hat manufacturer, and the landlords of the Sloop, the Board and the Dog and Duck public houses. Also listed was a schoolmaster and a gentlewoman. Four carriers operated in the village, destinations being Hull and York twice a week, and Bridlington, daily. With St Oswald's Church was a Methodist and a Primitive Methodist chapel.[5]
According to local legend, the village is haunted by the ghost of a suicide known as Jenny Gallows.
Flamborough, with its holiday camps and a caravan park, is a holiday destination during the summer months.
►
►
►
©
1) YouTube has over 1 BILLION Users - 33% of everyone online uses YouTube - It has incredible reach and is only getting bigger.
2) Super cheap + Free Traffic - Compared to FB, Yahoo and Bing, Youtube traffic is uber-cheap and when done right you can get tons of free traffic
3) Hyper targeted - YouTube Users search very specific items. It’s one of the most targeted community based hangout places on the planet for any niche
4) Video is very engaging - Video is a more more powerful and engaging way to attract viers than a boring email or traditional ad
5) The Future is Video - Video is becoming the way we communicate. iPhones, Smart TV’s Tablets - it’s all video.There has never been a better time to start using video to market your business, re-engage old and welcome new customers.
Then contact me today and I’ll talk you through my services and how I can help. No obligation. No hard sell. That’s a promise
Local Business Images YouTube Channel
►
For more information go to
►
Local Business Images
07809 237354
or you can email me at admin@localbusinessimages.com
3183 - Public House in Hull East Yorkshire For Sale
3183 - Public House in Hull East Yorkshire For Sale
To view all of this business's details click here
If you would like to see all of the businesses we have for sale follow this link
Business Details
Public House in Hull East Yorkshire For Sale
Hull, East Yorkshire, England
Advert Ref: 3183
Business Description
Preferred Commercial is delighted to offer for sale this traditional public house, which was established in 1820 and which has been in our client's hands since 2004. The business is only now being placed on the market due to our client's wish to retire. The Holderness Hotel is run at a pace to suit, opening lunch times and only 2 evenings a week and generating a turnover in the region of £195,000 per annum with a gross profit of 45%, derived from wet sales only. The pub is host to a darts team and there is potential to introduce pool teams and further darts teams. A new owner could increase turnover by opening every night. There are popular karaoke evenings and a new owner could build upon these. The Holderness Hotel benefits from a loyal customer base from the surrounding area. There is spacious owners' accommodation to the first floor and a large beer garden to the rear. Our client caters for private functions, such as parties, wedding receptions and wakes and we feel a new owner could promote this side of the business further. There is potential to introduce a web site offering information about the pub and any events, which we feel will help to promote the business. This is an ideal opportunity to acquire a well-established public house business with scope for future growth. Early viewing must come recommended.
Business Status
Price Reduction
Property
Leasehold
Lease Terms
Original length: 5 years Remaining: 2 years Rent: £320 per week
Location
The Holderness Hotel occupies a prominent trading position at a busy junction on the A165, on the outskirts of the city of Hull in the East Riding of Yorkshire. The public house is surrounded by predominantly commercial properties with some residential. The pub benefits from much passing trade and a high footfall. The city centre, which boasts a wealth of amenities, is approximately half a mile away, as is the local college. Hull is a popular city, set on the River Humber, boasting many historic buildings and attractions, 2 rugby teams, a football team and a ferry port. The city is easily accessed via the M62 motorway.
Premises Details
2-storey traditional style public house premises set on a prominent corner location with 3-bedroom owners' accommodation to first floor. Briefly comprising: Ground Floor Bar with tables and chairs for approximately 60, Cd player, flat screen TV, games and quiz machines (leased), air filtration system, central bar servery with 12 points of dispense, 1 x 2-door bottle chiller, 2 x single door bottle chillers, 2 x cash registers, sink, glass washer, ice machine and optics display Storage/electric cupboard Cleaning locker Staff cloakroom & WC Gents WCs Ladies WCs Function & games room with seating for approximately 40 Lower Ground Floor Beer cellar fitted to suit trade First Floor Kitchen with a range of fitted wall and base units Bathroom 3 x double bedrooms Large lounge Storage/office, which was originally a separate function room External Single garage used as storage Beer garden to rear with patio area and lawn, bench seating for approximately 48, serving hatch to main bar Smoking shelter with light and heating
Trading Hours
Mon - Thurs: 12.00pm - 1.00pm Fri -Sat: 12.00pm - 2.00pm & 6.00pm - 1.00am Sun: Closed Scope to increase opening hours