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Alice Bellette

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Pods Against Tomorrow: Reinvestigating Film NoirPods Against Tomorrow: Reinvestigating Film NoirMystery Road (2013) with Alice BellettePods Against Tomorrow reinvestigates the noir genre one film at a time. Join our hosts, Hugh Manon and Abe Doubleday-Bush, along with a rotating guest — our "Ace in the Hole" — as they delve into an analysis of classic, neo-, and pastiche films noir. Each episode explores the timeless themes that shaped the film noir genre and changed American pop culture forever.This week's Ace in the Hole is Alice Bellette, a writer, researcher, and Palawa descendent based in Naarm, Australia. Alice has a PhD in Australian literature focused on Aboriginal women’s writing, and she is currently undert...2025-05-071h 28Ending Body Burnout ShowEnding Body Burnout Show24. Find Your Spark: An Inside Look Into The Ending Body Burnout MethodStruggling to get out of bed in the morning? Feeling like a crabby Dragon or brainfoggy Zombie? Gut screaming out with pain? Body feeling inflamed? Your body burnout quite literally sucking your soul & your life? Are you ready to get to the root of it all once and for all? If you’re feeling a gut-wrenching YES! You’ll want to tune into today’s episode where Chris & Filly give you an inside look into their multi award-winning Ending Body Burnout Method. Doors close to the Ending Body Burnout Method on 29th Aug - last...2023-08-2240 minEnding Body Burnout ShowEnding Body Burnout Show12: Breast Implant Illness, Mystery Symptoms & Unconscious Wounds - Alice's StoryFilly is joined by Alice, one of our beautiful clients, who shares her own ending body burnout story. Brace yourself - Alice’s story is wild (think only being able to eat asparagus & mushrooms at her lowest point)!   In this episode, Alice chats with Filly about:   How her health had always been problematic, starting right back as a kid when she would experience chronic throat infections. As an adult, Alice developed inflammatory conditions - herpes in the oesophagus, endometriosis attributed to the contraceptive pill, then a TIA (mini-stroke) which left half her face...2023-05-3042 minEnding Body Burnout ShowEnding Body Burnout Show11: “Connect The Dots” - Food Sensitivities, Grave’s Disease, Chronic CoughIn this “Connect The Dots” episode, Chris & Filly dive into a listener's case around food sensitivities and other “mysterious” symptoms, including chronic cough, fatigue, insomnia, brain fog, dry skin and Graves disease. They talk about food sensitivities, including the pros and cons of doing food allergy testing, and the more effective lab tests to use when it comes to addressing food sensitivities. They also analyse other symptoms to identify possible body system imbalances that are causing an abnormal immune response to foods in the first place.  They also dive into potential root-causes, including the listener’s internal...2023-05-2244 minThe Invisible Skyscrapers PodcastThe Invisible Skyscrapers PodcastEpisode 11. Catch up w/ cadet RikkiH6 hired Rikki as a cadet from 42 Adelaide – an exciting enterprise (with a lot of Macs) that provides free coding tuition. Brad and Erika learned more about Rikki during the in-person  H6 conference held in Alice Springs in August.2022-09-0816 minThe Invisible Skyscrapers PodcastThe Invisible Skyscrapers PodcastEpisode 7. Why we support grassroots organisationsBrad flies solo this episode to talk about a topic close to his heart: grassroots organisations and why we choose to support them. Brad is tied to his local community of Alice Springs in several ways, not just business. Whatever you do to support grassroots organisations, Brad reckons you should never expect anything in return, but that you can measure success.2022-06-2912 minWelcome?Welcome?Beyond Kokoda II: Welcome to KokodaSince the early 1990s Kokoda, in Papua New Guinea’s Oro Province, has become a site of intense national feeling for many Australians. Thousands travel to Oro each year to complete the 96km track that runs from Kokoda Station to Port Moresby, in an act of remembrance of the conflict waged there in 1942 between Australian and Japanese forces. More than 45 years after the end of Australian colonial administration of PNG, the Kokoda Track is one of the few spaces when ordinary Papua New Guineans and Australians have much to do with one another.In this episode, we...2021-03-0532 minWelcome?Welcome?Beyond Kokoda I: KapurakamboCommunities across Papua New Guinea’s Oro Province were profoundly affected by the Second World War, and the fighting between Australia, American, and Japanese forces that was waged on their lands. In the years since, the Kokoda Track has become a focal point for many Australian tourists looking to commemorate the war. But there are many other communities across PNG whose wartime experiences don’t attract that same kind of attention or recognition.In this episode we travel to one of these lesser-known places, a small village called Kapurakambo in PNG’s Oro Province. The co...2021-03-0530 minWelcome?Welcome?Nubian Nostalgia: Part 2This is part two of a two part episode. Head to our feed for part one.Kenya’s Nubians are an ethnic minority who found themselves in the country after having served the British as soldiers during the colonial period and in both World wars. They were originally from Sudan, but over many generations have come to see themselves as Kenyan, even though the Kenyan government has only recently recognised them as citizens.The story of Kenya’s Nubians illustrates the impossible positions that so many people were put in by Imperial powers: brou...2021-03-0523 minWelcome?Welcome?Nubian Nostalgia: Part 1This is part one of a two part episode. Head to our feed for part two.Kenya’s Nubians are an ethnic minority who found themselves in the country after having served the British as soldiers during the colonial period and in both World wars. They were originally from Sudan, but over many generations have come to see themselves as Kenyan, even though the Kenyan government has only recently recognised them as citizens.The story of Kenya’s Nubians illustrates the impossible positions that so many people were put in by Imperial powers: brou...2021-03-0528 minWelcome?Welcome?Radical Poetics: Writing Forward, Writing BlakThe English language is an import to this country. As with the foreign flora and fauna brought by the boats to the shores, language spread where the speakers settled; thrown over like a blanket on the same bed where the pillows of the ‘dying race’ were being smoothed.And yet, we survived.Indigenous poets who have been published since owe a lot to the landmark publication of Oodgeroo Noonuccal’s 1964 collection We are Going, the first published collection of poetry from an Aboriginal person in this country. In the time since...2021-03-0529 minWelcome?Welcome?On the RoadListeners are warned that the episode includes the name of an Aboriginal person that has died. His name is used with permission.Native title in Australia is sometimes celebrated as a successful form of recognition for Indigenous people. But the way the law works means the rights of Indigenous people are required to co-exist with those of settlers and their descendants. This is the case in Wilinggin in the Kimberley region of North West Australia. Here, Ngarinyin people who never ceded their land live alongside cattle station owners, tourism operators and other Aboriginal people, and though...2021-03-0550 minWelcome?Welcome?The Longing of Like Souls: Part 2This is part two of a two part episode. Head to our feed for part one.In this episode, we explore Africa as not some out of the way place riddled with poverty and conflict, but as a more ordinary place that is home to ordinary people, and the place from which they welcome – or not – their many and varied visitors. We explore the human connections that are possible, and those that have been made more difficult by traumatic colonial pasts. But we also talk about Africa, and Africans, as inherently worldly, both bigger and older than...2021-03-0424 minWelcome?Welcome?The Longing of Like Souls: Part 1This is part one of a two part episode. Head to our feed for part two.In this episode, we explore Africa as not some out of the way place riddled with poverty and conflict, but as a more ordinary place that is home to ordinary people, and the place from which they welcome – or not – their many and varied visitors. We explore the human connections that are possible, and those that have been made more difficult by traumatic colonial pasts. But we also talk about Africa, and Africans, as inherently worldly, both bigger and older than...2021-03-0427 minWelcome?Welcome?TrailerA podcast telling stories about colonised landscapes, and the people who meet in them. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.2020-11-0302 min