Episode 152 - Interview with Dr. Turi King at Who Do You Think You Are? Live in London

Published: March 8, 2013, 11:25 p.m.

b'Show Notes Lisa Louise Cooke I am back from speaking at the Who Do You Think You Are? Live conference in London, and I\\u2019ve brought back some gems for you for this episode which I\\u2019m excited about. I got to spend about a week in England and this time around got to do some touring with my friend Janet Hovorka owner of Family ChartMasters. We went to Windsor castle which I\\u2019ve always wanted to see, and it did not disappoint. What windsor castle can teach us about family history. It\\u2019s all in the details! The highlight for me was going to Jane Austen\\u2019s house in Chawton, Hampshire. I\\u2019m an Austenphile, and I soaked in nooks and crannies of the home where she lived with her sister Cassandra. It was fantastic seeing the little desk where she worked on her books like \\u201cPride and Prejudice\\u201d and \\u201cEmma.\\u201d Janet and finished up the tour with tea at across the street, where hundreds of china tea cups hang from the ceiling, and where I had the best bowl of tomato soup in my entire life! Oh yeah, I was there for a genealogy conference. And yes, WDYTYA Live lived up to all expectations. Janet and I had a booth and I taught classes on Google Search and using your iPad and tablet for genealogy. The classes were sold out and people were lined up around the walls. The turn-out they get for this event is just incredible. I haven\\u2019t heard the final numbers, but word is it was well over 12,000 people over the three days. So here\\u2019s my own genealogy story from the event. Now, if you\\u2019ve been listening to the podcast for a while then you may remember me telling you about my first trip to WDYTYA Live and how after one of my presentations several of my husband\\u2019s distant English Cook cousins met up with us and we sort of had an impromptu family reunion upstairs in the expo hall. One of those in attendance was Louise Cook (without the \\u201ce\\u201d) who is married to my husband\\u2019s cousin Peter. I know, it gets a little confusing with Louise Cook and Lisa Louise Cooke! But anyway, Louise and I stay regularly in touch, and we met up at the conference this year.\\xa0 She found me after one of my classes and we got to visit, and she told me that she was going to help out with her friend\\u2019s society booth. So we are walking back to my booth, and when we arrive, she looks up and laughs because the Lincolnshire booth was right next to ours and there was her chair!\\xa0 Can you imagine if we had not already met, that Lisa Louise Cooke, and Louise Cook would have been sitting right next to each other throughout the conference not knowing that our husbands were related by way of their third Great Grandfather? ! The moral of the story: Next time you sit down at a genealogy conference introduce yourself to those next to you, you never know who you might be related to. \\xa0 \\xa0 NEWS: Find My Past Series now on the website Find My Past, the hit UK television show, is now available to view via . Find My Past, now entering its second season, links living individuals to real historical events found in their family tree and now on for free and watch Find My Past episodes that aired in the last 30 days at no cost. Missed an episode or want to watch your favorites again? Findmypast subscribers can watch all episodes for an unlimited time. Every episode will be available to watch on a week after it airs.\\xa0 \\xa0 \\xa0 MAILBOX: Delray wants to know where the Family History Podcast Show Notes have gone... \\u201cI\'ve been listening to your podcasts for over two years now:\\xa0 GenealogyGems and GenealogyGems Premium.\\xa0 ALL of the podcasts are on my iPod, so that I can listen to them over and over.\\xa0 It seems each time I listen to your podcast, I learn something new that I missed last time.\\xa0 Somehow I missed the fact that you used to have a podcast called Family History: Genealogy Made Easy.\\xa0 I\'m going to be teaching a class to genealogy newbies in April, so I\'ve been listening to these older podcasts to see what you shared with beginners.\\xa0 You mention the "show notes" like you do in GenealogyGems, which are always a life saver when I miss a web address or something; however, I cannot locate any "show notes" for the Genealogy Made Easy show.\\u201d Lisa\\u2019s Answer: The Family History podcast is in a bit of transition right now. We are no longer part of the Personal Life Media network and so all of the show notes pages that they previously hosted have been removed from their website. We are now working to transition the Tunes podcast feed. As soon as that happens, we will start republishing the show on the Genealogy Gems website. Gus chimes in on Genealogy Podcast No. 148 \\u201cHere are my thoughts on internet rip offs. I have both a blog and a web site and my feelings are that if I put anything up there, people will steal anything and use it for their own use. I have copied myself from two books, one published in 1888 and another published in 1895, I don\'t feel that I am really stealing from these old books. In the book from 1888, I gave credit to the original author, (my ancestor) in a new book." Dan shares his experience with copyright: \\u201cWhen rock legend Ronnie James Dio died in 2010 I used his obituaries as a starting point for genealogical research on his ancestry, blogging about what I found at "". \\xa0Two people contacted me politely requesting permission to reprint the information, so in my experience people have been quite respectful of copyright. \\xa0One of those people wanted to add my findings to the Hungarian Wikipedia page on Dio, increasing my reach as a blogging genealogist beyond my wildest dreams.\\xa0 Getting the Word out on a Genealogy Blog \\u201cI regularly listen to your podcast through iTunes and see that sometimes you feature blogs on your show.\\xa0 I\'ve been meaning to write to you for quite some time now and am hoping you can let your audience know of my genealogy blog. My blog, called \\u201c,\\u201d features a family history of the Breeding family.\\xa0 Our roots are specifically in the following areas: Wythe County, VA; Overton County, TN; Carroll County, AR and Tulsa, OK.\\xa0 Over the past two years, I have tackled genealogy from a different perspective: that of looking at my great-grandpa Hugh Breeding\\u2019s trucking company.\\xa0 At first, I merely intended on putting together some basic facts and figures on the company and calling it a day.\\xa0 However, I have really gotten into the history of the company and the place it held in the trucking industry\\u2026the employee vignettes featured throughout my company research really drives home the story of the company on a more personal level as well as adding much more color to the overall history of the firm. \\xa0 GEM: WDYTYA Round Up Interview with Dr. Turi King Full interview on Premium Episode 97 \\xa0 Lisa\\u2019s Articles: Check out my two article in the March / April 2013 issue of Family Tree Magazine The Evernote vs. Microsoft OneNote Quick Guide\\xa0 and The Toolkit Tutorial Using the David Rumsey Map Collection'