caba, the occupational charity supporting Icaew chartered accountants and Aca students, has today launched a new financial health podcast series, The Cash Conversation, aimed at young accountants looking to get on top of their personal finances.
It forms part of a wider financial health campaign for young accountants, which includes online help content and tools from its financial experts.
Each episode will focus on a different topic around the theme of financial health such as savings, budgeting and debt management.
The podcast series will be hosted by social media star Gabriel Nussbaum (aka That Money Guy), who’s known for his personal finance content on TikTok where he has over 1.3M followers.
Gabriel will be joined each week by a caba expert and a special guest from across the accounting and financial services sector.
Two episodes are available to listen to now via all major podcast platforms and The Cash...
It forms part of a wider financial health campaign for young accountants, which includes online help content and tools from its financial experts.
Each episode will focus on a different topic around the theme of financial health such as savings, budgeting and debt management.
The podcast series will be hosted by social media star Gabriel Nussbaum (aka That Money Guy), who’s known for his personal finance content on TikTok where he has over 1.3M followers.
Gabriel will be joined each week by a caba expert and a special guest from across the accounting and financial services sector.
Two episodes are available to listen to now via all major podcast platforms and The Cash...
- 9/22/2023
- Podnews.net
As the definition of an independent film has shifted with the ever-expanding budget divide in American filmmaking — particularly Hollywood cutting back on its mid-range projects — when it comes time for awards season, it’s often only the highest profile of “indie films” that get recognized. While we do our best to recognize the films that often get unfortunately, a new awards has launched that honors the best of truly independent American cinema, featuring films all under a $1 million budget.
Aptly titled the American Independent Film Awards (aka AIFAs), they were voted on by international film festival programmers, U.S. based film festival programmers, and North American film critics (including yours truly.) “First and foremost, we would like to thank all film producers and distribution companies who helped us identify qualifying films and outline the categories. We’d also like to thank the international and American based film festival programmers, and...
Aptly titled the American Independent Film Awards (aka AIFAs), they were voted on by international film festival programmers, U.S. based film festival programmers, and North American film critics (including yours truly.) “First and foremost, we would like to thank all film producers and distribution companies who helped us identify qualifying films and outline the categories. We’d also like to thank the international and American based film festival programmers, and...
- 2/20/2017
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
Tough times for indie distributors? Not when it’s FilmRise. Earlier this month, the Brooklyn-based distributor raised an additional $27 million led by Harlan Capital Partners, the investment firm that initially backed FilmRise by leading a $25 million investment a year ago.
What’s more: FilmRise plans to spend the $27 million in the next six months, and co-founder and CEO Danny Fisher says he already has offers for more.
FilmRise is using its latest capital injection to double down on its aggressive acquisition strategy, which will see the company release around 24 movies theatrically during the next year, plus many more digitally. While the majority of FilmRise’s revenue comes from digital releases, the company moved into releasing films theatrically last year with Amy Berg’s Janis Joplin documentary “Janis: Little Girl Blue.”
While FilmRise’s expansion into theatrical distribution might sound like a major milestone, a competing distributor said that without the boost of a theatrical release,...
What’s more: FilmRise plans to spend the $27 million in the next six months, and co-founder and CEO Danny Fisher says he already has offers for more.
FilmRise is using its latest capital injection to double down on its aggressive acquisition strategy, which will see the company release around 24 movies theatrically during the next year, plus many more digitally. While the majority of FilmRise’s revenue comes from digital releases, the company moved into releasing films theatrically last year with Amy Berg’s Janis Joplin documentary “Janis: Little Girl Blue.”
While FilmRise’s expansion into theatrical distribution might sound like a major milestone, a competing distributor said that without the boost of a theatrical release,...
- 10/20/2016
- by Graham Winfrey
- Indiewire
Marvel appears to be establishing a clear formula for the creative roster attached to and sought for its feature adaptation of the one-time Ms. Marvel property, and misters need not apply. Recent developments in Marvel Studio’s process of vetting prospective directors for its 2019-slated Captain Marvel seem to reinforce suspicions that they’re intent on selecting a largely untapped female filmmaker to helm the project.
While several news outlets speculated on the studio approaching Emily Carmichael in early May, our sources are telling us that a private meeting was held last week between Marvel representatives and independent filmmaker Elizabeth Wood in order to discuss potential directorial duties. It’s believed that the meeting was brokered by Wood’s producer-husband, Gabriel Nussbaum, with whom Wood has worked on all her professional projects.
More News From The Web
For those who aren’t familiar with Wood, she’s garnered a considerable...
While several news outlets speculated on the studio approaching Emily Carmichael in early May, our sources are telling us that a private meeting was held last week between Marvel representatives and independent filmmaker Elizabeth Wood in order to discuss potential directorial duties. It’s believed that the meeting was brokered by Wood’s producer-husband, Gabriel Nussbaum, with whom Wood has worked on all her professional projects.
More News From The Web
For those who aren’t familiar with Wood, she’s garnered a considerable...
- 5/15/2016
- by Josh Wilding
- We Got This Covered
While the issue of gender disparity in the film industry remains a hot topic issue, when it comes to the approach of Sundance Film Fest programmers, I’d argue that its equal opportunity friendly when servicing original newbie filmmaker voices. I wouldn’t be surprised to see the likes of Elizabeth Wood being harnessed into a Park City chairlift seat. With a docu feature and three short films under her belt, Wood managed to find executive producers in Killer Films and Catfish’s Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman service her biographical debut. The filmmaker named the Christine Vachon produced Kids as a life altering film and from the sounds of it — this might be a shit disturbing title as well. With Jamie Marks Is Dead‘s Morgan Saylor in the lead, White Girls went into production in late 2014 and is currently in the mixing stages. Michael Simmonds (The Lunchbox) was...
- 11/26/2015
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
DVD Playhouse September 2010
By
Allen Gardner
The Girl Who Played With Fire (Music Box Films) Follow up to the hit The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo finds Lisabeth Salander (Noomi Rapace) and Mikael Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist) joining forces once again as Blomkvist is about to break a story on Sweden’s sex trade, which leads unexpectedly to a dark secret from Elizabeth’s past. Starts off well, then quickly nose-dives into sensationalism and downright silliness, with a pair of villains who are straight out of a Roger Moore-era James Bond film. A real letdown for those of us who felt Dragon Tattoo had finally breathed life into the cinema’s long-stagnant genre of the thriller. Bonuses: English language track; Trailer. Widescreen. Dolby 5.1 surround.
The Killer Inside Me (IFC Films) Michael Winterbottom’s adaptation of Jim Thompson’s classic, and notorious, novel about the psychotic mind of a small town sheriff (Casey Affleck,...
By
Allen Gardner
The Girl Who Played With Fire (Music Box Films) Follow up to the hit The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo finds Lisabeth Salander (Noomi Rapace) and Mikael Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist) joining forces once again as Blomkvist is about to break a story on Sweden’s sex trade, which leads unexpectedly to a dark secret from Elizabeth’s past. Starts off well, then quickly nose-dives into sensationalism and downright silliness, with a pair of villains who are straight out of a Roger Moore-era James Bond film. A real letdown for those of us who felt Dragon Tattoo had finally breathed life into the cinema’s long-stagnant genre of the thriller. Bonuses: English language track; Trailer. Widescreen. Dolby 5.1 surround.
The Killer Inside Me (IFC Films) Michael Winterbottom’s adaptation of Jim Thompson’s classic, and notorious, novel about the psychotic mind of a small town sheriff (Casey Affleck,...
- 9/25/2010
- by The Hollywood Interview.com
- The Hollywood Interview
Wade in the Water, Children is a poignant compilation of unscripted videos shot almost exclusively by the 6th-8th grade documentary film students from The Singleton Charter School at the local Ymca in Central City, New Orleans, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Filmmakers Gabriel Nussbaum and Elizabeth Wood did not at first set out to make a full length feature. They travelled to New Orleans from New York City to bring free arts programs to students in need, gave each child in their film class a video camera, and told them to go home and document their day to day lives. Only then did the film start to take shape.
The film is unscripted, uncensored, and raw. It’s told on the students own terms, in their own words. Students show their dilapidated homes that have been ravaged by Katrina, pictures of deceased loved ones, and sing songs in...
The film is unscripted, uncensored, and raw. It’s told on the students own terms, in their own words. Students show their dilapidated homes that have been ravaged by Katrina, pictures of deceased loved ones, and sing songs in...
- 9/13/2010
- by Marissa Quenqua
- JustPressPlay.net
The Gulf Region simply can’t catch a break. As the clean-up from the most recent disaster continues, Wade in the Water, Children offers a poetic and devastating look at life in the Crescent City through the eyes of its youngest citizens utilizing a passionate mixture of private videos, uncensored interviews and school-day adventures. Following the 5th Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, the film is a “devastating, first-hand account of life in post-Katrina New Orleans, told from the mouths of babes who are surviving it under outrageous living conditions.”
No one set out to make a film: six months after Katrina, filmmakers Elizabeth Wood and Gabriel Nussbaum moved to New Orleans with a free art program, intended to help students creatively express their thoughts in response to the chaos of the storm. Their documentary-film class at Singleton Charter School at the local Ymca invited students to take video-cameras home and tell...
No one set out to make a film: six months after Katrina, filmmakers Elizabeth Wood and Gabriel Nussbaum moved to New Orleans with a free art program, intended to help students creatively express their thoughts in response to the chaos of the storm. Their documentary-film class at Singleton Charter School at the local Ymca invited students to take video-cameras home and tell...
- 9/11/2010
- by Lex Walker
- JustPressPlay.net
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