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Lorna Owens

http://www.andthewomengather.com


Country: United States

Language: English

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Comments

Lorna Owens

Lorna Owens

I would love to be on your show. Speak with you soon

ReDecorating by Rena

ReDecorating by Rena

Hi Lorna, Enjoyed your show tonight listening to the Miami authors. Rena

ReDecorating by Rena

ReDecorating by Rena

Hi Lorna, I listened to tonight's show. Great job! Rena

ReDecorating by Rena

ReDecorating by Rena

Lorna, your show sounds awesome! I'll be listening.

Lorna Owens

Lorna Owens

Thanks for listening to the show

Lorna Owens

Lorna Owens

Denise thank you so much for your support

IN THE SPIRIT

IN THE SPIRIT

Thanks for stopping by In The Spirit. Hope you enjoyed the show.

Make Me Over Eb

Make Me Over Eb

Thanks for listening to my latest show. Please rate the show.

THE RECIPE BOX

THE RECIPE BOX

Hello, welcome to BTR and thanks for stopping by by show! - Barbara

AND THE WOMEN GATHER  

Lorna Owens is an International Speaker, Life Coach,Attorney,Registered Nurse, Midwife, Gender Expert, Tv talkshow host and Author of Everyday grace Everyday Miracle. And the women gather is not just a radio show it is a movement. Women helping Women around the world. We have a yearly literary jazz brunch with five bestselling authors, proceed to benefit Women Behind Bars. Women Behind Bars is our foundation.We believe in giving back. We are also developing a talent bank, so we can support and help each other. We also have alot of fun so join us on our first Cruise this December. We need your help, not because we are weak but because we want to stay strong. Tell just one person about out show. AND THE WPMEN GATHER:THE GATHERING PLACE FOR WOMEN AROUND THE WORLD.It is a GIRLFRIEND KIND OF SHOW.

Show Notes

All our shows are designed to empower women around the world. We speak to all topics of interest to women. We encourage you to send us your ideas for shows and guests. We can change the world. As women we are the change makers. If you want to be apart of our movement let us hear from you.Please us with topics of interest to you. See you in our chat room, you are so welcome
  • On Demand Episodes

    Original Air Date:

    AMERICA' S FIRST LADY

    Do you like the way the Media portray Ms Obama? Let us hear from you. Our Guest Linda Lowen Linda is a former broadcast journalist and talk show host who's won local and national awards as a producer of women's issues programming. She's been featured in the New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and on NPR's Talk of the Nation. Linda is a commentator for 51% The Women's Perspective, a nationally-syndicated show heard on public broadcasting, ABC Radio Network, and Armed Forces Radio stations. Experience: Over the past decade, Linda has created, produced, and hosted women's issues radio and television programs for NPR and PBS station affiliates including the award-winning talk show "Women's Voices." She is a two-time recipient of the Clarion Award for Best Women's Issues Programming. Linda is also a member of the Women's Media Center Progressive Women's Voices program and the National Cancer Survivor's Day Speaker's Bureau. Education: Linda attended single sex Wells College (now coed) and graduated summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa with a B.A. in English. Her undergraduate studies included coursework in communications and broadcasting at Cornell University and graduate studies in communications design at Syracuse University. OUR SPOTLIGHT GUEST Marta Viciedo Executive Editor Moxxi Magazine PO Box 370730 Miami, FL 33137 The only Magazine for Women in South Florida. Please check out Moxxi Digital. Pick up a copy at Book and Books All about women and girls at the women gather

  • Date / Time:

    Sexism Sells

    Michelle Obama: America's Lady Diana?

    The First Lady has excited the fashion world, but like Diana she would rather champion the less fortunate than be a mere clotheshorse

    Michelle Obama wife of Barack Obama

    Michelle Obama’s flair for fashion has captivated Washington and set the hearts of glossy magazine editors aflutter. She has already eclipsed Carla Bruni, the super-model chanteuse and wife of Nicolas Sarkozy, the hyperactive French president. Not since Diana, Princess of Wales, has there been such a glamorous role model at the apex of society.

    In her white, one-shouldered chiffon gown, she boogied to Stevie Wonder’s Signed, Sealed, Delivered I’m Yours and slow-danced with her husband at a succession of inaugural balls. Barack Obama held her lovingly around the waist, clasping two fingers around her back, and nuzzled her. Women’s Wear Daily, the influential American fashion magazine, said her ball gown made the Obamas look like newlyweds.

    By the time they reached the last ball in the marbled hall of Union Station after midnight, “Michelle looked absolutely exhausted but still managed to keep smiling. It was quite an intimate dance – they were either collapsed in each other’s arms or feeling very close to each other,” said another dancer.

    Michelle, 45, has a theatrical sense of style, from off-the-rack colourful clothes from J Crew at less than $100 a throw, to pricey designer outfits such as the sparkling lemongrass matching dress and coat that she wore to the inauguration ceremony. But she is determined to carve out a role at the White House that is more than national clothes horse.

    Diana, the mother of two young boys and ardent champion of the less fortunate, could prove to be an inspiration. In an interview on television immediately after the election, Michelle promised to make Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7, her priority. “The primary focus for the first year will be making sure that the kids make it through the transition,” she said. “But there are many issues that I care about . . . Both Barack and I believe we can have an impact in the DC area . . . in terms of making sure we’re contributing to the community that we immediately live in.”

    Michelle intends to become first lady of the forgotten of the city of Washington, which is brutally partitioned according to race and class. The political classes are segregated from the people who serve them. The city has the highest Aids rate in the country among African-Americans and more than one in three residents are “functionally illiterate”, according to a 2007 report.

    Semonti Mustaphi, a White House spokeswoman for Michelle Obama, said bringing the community together “was definitely one of her priorities”.

    “She grew up in a very close-knit neighbourhood on the South Side of Chicago. It was instilled in Mrs Obama and her brother Craig at a very early age that their neighbourhood was their community and it was all about giving back. It is a big part of who she is and who President Obama is.”

    On the face of it, Diana and Michelle – the one a blue-blooded English rose, the other a self-made African-American woman with slave ancestry – have little in common. Diana described herself as “thick as two short planks” while Michelle is an Ivy League-educated lawyer who was, until recently, earning considerably more than her husband working as a community adviser for the University of Chicago Hospitals.

    More than anyone, Barack Obama knows that the traditional role of first lady will not satisfy his wife. She gave up work at the prestigious law firm where they met and fell in love to help to found Public Allies, a programme that helps underprivileged young people to become community leaders.

    Michelle does not want to repeat the mistakes of Hillary Clinton, who thought she could be co-president until she made a hash of healthcare reform. Becoming community activist-in-chief as well as mom-in-chief to the girls could fill the gap in her glamorous, but potentially vapid new life. “I think Michelle’s gonna design her own role,” Obama said. “I think she’s going to set her own path.”

    The Obamas turned the national holiday for Martin Luther King, on the eve of the inauguration, into a call to “national service”, and the Obama campaign used its vast e-mail list of 13m supporters to coordinate volunteer activities all over America. In Washington, Obama visited a homeless shelter for teens and spruced up the walls with a paint roller.

    “Given the crisis that we are in and the hardships that so many people are going through, we can’t allow any idle hands,” Obama said. Michelle handed out food bags for US troops and has promised to make the welfare of military families serving in Iraq and Afghanistan a priority.

    Angela Kennedy Acree, Michelle’s roommate at Princeton University, predicted that the White House “will be much more accessible” now that Michelle is first lady.

    “She said to me before the election and since that she’s going to open up the White House to the community and particularly to children.” Malia and Sasha will have “friends in and out” and “there’ll be many, many more regular DC kids saying, ‘I went to the White House’ . . . Kids whose parents don’t have connections or money.”

    On the family’s first day at the White House, the “first tweens” invited some friends from their private school, Sidwell Friends, to a scavenger hunt at the White House. At the end of the hunt they found the Jonas Brothers, the boy pop band, lurking behind the door.

    But ordinary people got a look-in as well. Barack and Michelle Obama opened the doors of the White House to a few hundred wellwishers the day after the inauguration. Some had tickets, but Paula Peebles had turned up at the east gate on the spur of the moment.

    A Secret Service agent told her she couldn’t get in, but she stayed patiently in line anyway. Eventually a guard came. “He told us Michelle Obama looked out of the window and saw people waiting and told them to let the people in,” said Peebles.

    The Obamas greeted the visitors in the oval room. “Welcome, enjoy yourself. Don’t break anything,” Obama said.

    Prince Charles was never comfortable with Diana’s visits to Aids sufferers and the homeless, regarding it as a sign of her neediness, not theirs. The opposite is true with Obama. He will have his hands full with two wars and the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

    “For as much as government can do and must do, it is ultimately the faith and determination of the American people upon which this nation relies,” Obama said in his inaugural address. “What is required of us now is a new era of responsibility.”

    And for that, the new president is going to rely on his wife.

  • Date / Time:

    MADNESS UNDER THE ROYAL PALMS BY Laurence Leamer

    About the Author

    Laurence Leamer
    Early on in my life I decided that I wanted to experience as many kinds of lives as I could, and my years in Palm Beach and Madness Under the Royal Palms is another step in my journey. I went to Antioch College which had a work-study plan. I worked in several places including the What Cheer, Iowa Patriot-Chronicle, a factory in France, and educational television in Boston. After graduating, I joined the Peace Corps and was one of the earliest volunteers to Nepal where I had a remote placement two days walk from a road.

    After two years in the mountain kingdom, I was awarded a Ford Fellow in International Development that I used at the University of Oregon. I started writing magazine articles with enough success that it led me to an International Fellowship at the Columbia University School of Journalism. Upon graduation I spent an immeasurably unhappy year as an associate editor at Newsweek. That convinced me that I didn’t want a boss, and bosses didn’t want me. That period was the end of the golden age of literary journalism and I began writing magazine articles for many publications including Harper's, The New York Times Magazine, New York, Playboy, and the Washingtonian. I worked incognito in a West Virginia coal mine where I broke my finger and wrote a piece that my agent sold to Harper’s. That led to an assignment covering the war in Bangladesh for Harper's. That article won a citation from the Overseas Press Club for "Best Magazine Reporting."

    I couldn’t write quickly enough to make a living in the declining world of general interest magazines, and I turned to books. My study of the power players in the capital, Playing for Keeps in Washington , was named a notable book of the year by the New York Times. In 1979 I moved to Peru where I got to know one of the biggest drug dealers and wrote a novel, Assignment, about the cocaine traffic. Back in the United States I wrote Ascent: The Spiritual and Physical Quest of Willi Unsoeld, a biography of the man who climbed Everest in 1963 and had been the director of Peace Corps Nepal when I was there. Robert Redford and Columbia purchased the book for a movie that was never made. Ascent was reissued in paperback a few years ago.

    I have many immensely talented friends who can barely make livings writing books. I’ve been fortunate. I’ve had a number of bestsellers starting with my book on the Reagans, Make-Believe: The Life of Nancy and Ronald Reagan. My 1989 bestseller, King of the Night: The Life of Johnny Carson, is generally considered the definitive portrait of the late star and has been reissued in mass paperback. I suppose I’m best known for my trilogy on the Kennedys, The Kennedy Women, The Kennedy Men, and Sons of Camelot. My controversial biography of Arnold Schwarzenegger, Fantastic, led me to living in LA for a while, but now I am back in Washington and Palm Beach looking for new lives to explore.

    I am married to the former Vesna Obradovic and have one daughter, Daniela Mantilla, and two grandchildren, Alejandro and Emilia.

    View the Author Video


  • Original Air Date:

    WAR IN GAZA

    Gaza. What now OUR GUESTS 1. ROY GUTMAN Roy Gutman is currently foreign editor for McClatchy newspapers. He has been a foreign affairs journalist in Washington and overseas for four decades and has spent more than twenty years at Newsday, twelve at Reuters and briefer stints at Newsweek and UPI 2. PATRICIA DeGennaro Patricia DeGennaro (New York, NY) is a professor, writer, analyst and consultant. DeGennaro’s extensive experience in international relations and economic development makes her a sought-after source on US foreign policy and national security topics. Within the last year, she has spent time working in Afghanistan on provincial governance, capacity building, parliamentary reform and public policy development in the Office of the President of Afghanistan. Currently, DeGennaro serves as a Senior Fellow at the World Policy Institute, Senior Research Fellow for the Center for the Study of Democracy at Queens University in Canada and an Adjunct Assistant Professor at New York University’s Center for Global Affairs. DeGennaro also guest lecturers at several universities including the US Military Academy at West Point. She holds an MPA in International Security and Conflict Our spotlight. Laurence Leamer. Author. Madness Under The Royal Palms.Early on in my life I decided that I wanted to experience as many kinds of lives as I could, and my years in Palm Beach and Madness Under the Royal Palms is another step in my journey. I went to Antioch College which had a work-study plan. I worked in several places including the What Cheer, Iowa Patriot-Chronicle, a factory in France, and educational television in Boston. After graduating, I joined the Peace Corps and was one of the earliest volunteers to Nepal where I had a remote placement two days walk from a road.

  • Date / Time:

    AND THE WOMEN GATHER

    As you know women have been gathering for years. We would love for you to share your stories of women gathering with us. You might just end up a guest on an upcoming show..Also we might just feature your story in our new book. So email your story to info@andthewomengather.com or call us at 305-573-8423

    Blessings

    Lorna Owens  

  • Original Air Date:

    Professional Women marrying Blue Collar Men

    You make more money than your husband. He is not as educated as you. We want to hear your story. You could be on our show. Email us at contact@lornaowens.com Our Guests Mary Ann Reid In 2002, Maryann Reid was invited by USATODAY to write a novella for the acclaimed Open Book section of their website. In Jan/Feb, her series, "Single Black Female" ran for several weeks and attracted a whole new audience to her already popular first book, Sex and the Single Sister. In 2003, Reid wrote Use Me or Lose Me, a spin off to Sex and published by St. Martins. Jane Straus Jane Straus is a nationally renowned relationship expert, bestselling author, radio host, and popular media guest for network television as well as for syndicated radio programs and print publications. In January of 2003 she was diagnosed with a brain tumor, which began her journey of deeper self-reflection. Not knowing if she would live or die, she asked herself, Is there anything I have been too afraid to do in my life? Any regrets? Although she was grateful for her loving, supportive family and friends and for challenging work, she admitted to herself that, out of fear of rejection and failure, she had avoided writing Enough Is Enough!. Like many of us, she had let her excuses dampen her spirit's longings. So she made a pact with herself that if she made it through the surgery and were given a second chance, she would stop listening to her fears and excuses and begin writing. Thankfully, the brain tumor was successfully removed. The next two years of writing helped her discover the crucial distinction between endurance and perseverance and the wisdom to understand that we are all greater than our fears and more worthy than our to-do lists. These insights and more can be found in her remarkable book, Enough Is Enough! Stop Enduring and Start Living Your Extraordinary Life. Maya Breuer I I am Maya Breuer, a modern day Yogini and teacher of Hatha Yoga and Pranayama. I hav

  • Original Air Date:

    MIS EDUCATION OF THE PROFESSIONAL WOMAN

    You went to school, you make a six figure income, you have the corner office, the big house, the fabulous vacation. Are you happy? Our Guests NORAH VINCENT Author Voluntary Madness. My Year Lost and Found in the Loony Bin Vincent, the bestselling author of Self-Made Man, in which she wrote about disguising herself as a man, decided to have herself voluntarily committed to three different institutions. (She declined to provide their real names to protect the privacy of doctors and patients she met there.) She first faked her way into a big city public hospital by pretending to have a recurrence of her previous depression. She then intentionally caused a relapse of her depression by going off her antidepressant, which led to her being admitted to a small private hospital. Finally, she tried a recovery facility replete with yogaclasses, gym, and facials Avis Jones-DeWeever, Ph.D. DC): Dr. Jones-DeWeever is the director of the National Council of Negro Women’s Research, Public Policy, and Information Center. Erica Gonzalez: Erica Gonzalez is the opinion page editor for El Diario/la Prensa, the third largest Spanish-language daily newspaper in the country. As the opinion page editor, Erica develops and writes the paper’s editorial position on local and national issues. She edits weekly columnists, recruits guest writers, and initiates editorial board meetings with candidates for elected office and an array of organizations and leaders. Gonzalez received an award from the National Association of Hispanic Publications for an editorial on fear-mongering around former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer’s driver’s license initiative. She regularly represents El Diario/la Prensa on media panels and has appeared on Good Day Street Talk and Air America’s Grit TV. Linda Lowen: Linda Lowen covers Women's Issues for About.com, one of the top fifteen most-visited sites on the Internet and a New York Times Company-owned website. A former radio and televisio

Extras

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