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This is your daily horoscope for Thursday, June 18, and the most important aspects of the day:Moon in Leo trine Saturn in Aries (3:30am PT)Moon in Leo square Mars in Taurus (7:30pm PT)Justice for Cyrus Carmack-BeltonSupport the Free Alabama MovementSupport Mutual Aid in Minneapolis
This week, Cy is joined by Cody Walker (BTK Painting, Occasional Producer) to reveal his grandfather's autograph forgery business and his brief stint as a fall-guy for a fraudulent company. Sign up for Chad's texting list here! Or, text the word CHAD to 208-379-6947! Sign up for Cy's texting list here! Or, text the word SHOW to 202-771-5171! This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp and Shopify! --- Follow us on Instagram! Chad Daniels (@ThatChadDaniels) is a Dad, Comedian, and pancake lover. With over 750 million streams of his 5 albums to date, his audio plays are in the 99th percentile in comedy and music on Pandora alone, averaging over 1MM per week. Chad's previous album, Footprints on the Moon was the most streamed comedy album of 2017, and he has 6 late-night appearances and a Comedy Central Half Hour under his belt. Cy Amundson (@CyAmundson) With appearances on Conan, Adam Devine's House Party, and Comedy Central's This is Not Happening, Cy Amundson is fast-proving himself in the world of standup comedy. After cutting his teeth at Acme Comedy Company in Minneapolis, has since appeared on Family Guy and American Dad and as a host on ESPN's SportsCenter on Snapchat. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
George Mack is a writer, marketer and an entrepreneur. Why does overthinking create more problems than it solves? If thinking helps us solve so much, why isn't more thinking always the answer? So how can we build a calmer mind without falling into smart-person traps? Expect to learn the price of overthinking and inaction, how music changes your personality, the largest gaps in British versus American cultures, why AI is getting really weird, why humans need stories, the traps that all smart people fall into, how to know if you're living in the decline of an empire, and much more... Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Gymshark's Summer Sale starts June 18th. Get up to 60% off sitewide at https://gym.sh/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM10) Get 35% off your first subscription on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom Get 160+ lab tests for just $365 and save an extra $25 at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Get up to $50 off the RP Hypertrophy App at https://rpstrength.com/modernwisdom Get ChatGPT to explore ideas, solve problems, and learn faster at https://chatgpt.com Timestamps: (0:00) Is Nickelback at 2x Speed the Optimal Workout? (4:18) Do American Introverts Actually Exist? (5:48) The Biggest Time-Waster For Single Men After 7pm (9:14) What Does the World Really Think of Britain? (17:48) Can You Sh*t Your Way to Savant Syndrome? (23:50) Why Everyone Should Learn How To Frivolously Spend (25:21) Why the Moon is the GOAT (33:01) What Would Life Be Like 5,000 Years Ago? (40:11) Why Can't Cows Go Downstairs? (43:50) Should We Be Retardmaxxing More? (53:29) Is Chris An American Sports Fan? (59:41) Was the British Empire the Most Powerful Ever? (01:04:39) Why Do People Love Arguing Online? (01:07:02) The Longest Traffic Jam Ever Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: lnkfi.re/SN-Goggins #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: lnkfi.re/SN-Peterson #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: lnkfi.re/SN-Huberman - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Send us Fan MailThis is your cosmic energy report for June 15-21, 2026.
Pete's come down with a wicked case of World Cup Fever, exacerbated by the rediscovery of his ceremonial Kevin Keegan rug that will surely have a part to play in this year's tournament. Just keep it away from electronics. Luke, meanwhile, has been to see Boyzone deliver two hours of consummate professionalism at the Emirates. Also present was Brian McFadden who, as Pete knows first-hand, is an excellent surrogate father. Elsewhere on today's show: how to manage conspiracy theorists, a look at the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics and yet more tales from the tip.Send us your latest stories, questions and comments here: hello@lukeandpeteshow.com.The Luke and Pete Show is the sometimes ridiculous, always funny podcast with Luke Moore and Pete Donaldson: two men who have time on their hands and a good idea of how to waste it. Subscribe to get your comedy podcast fix every Monday and Thursday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Venus, the goddess of love and money, is having a busy week. Her sextile aspect to Uranus offers an opportunity for radical change, and her trine to idealistic Neptune lends a pair of rose-colored glasses, at least until she opposes Pluto for a short but potent trip to the underworld. Embrace the Cancer Solstice, a moment to stop and contemplate where you're at and what lies ahead. A Libra First Quarter Moon initiates action in relationships, money, and getting life in balance. And a listener question about a jangly natal Sun and its impact on the annual Solar Return. Plus: A haircut, charm school, and feng shui! Read a full transcript of this episode. Have a question you'd like answered on the show? Email April or leave it here! Subscribe to April's mailing list and get a free lunar workbook at each New Moon! Love the show? Make a donation! Timestamps [1:41] Venus sextiles Uranus (Jun. 15, 3:53 pm PDT) at 2°54' Leo and Gemini. Venus' Sabian symbol is 3 Leo, A woman having her hair bobbed. New ideas may suddenly appear that are related to money, values, or relationships. The more equal two people are, the more united they can ultimately be. [4:13] Venus trines Neptune (Jun. 16, 8:41 pm PDT) at 4°18' Leo and Aries. This aspect reminds us that love, beauty, and creativity are at their richest when they open doors to both inspiration and connection. [5:48] Venus opposes Pluto (Jun. 17, 1:38 pm PDT) at 5°7' Leo and Aquarius. Love what and who we love, even when knowing that nothing lasts forever. Financial stress is possible, especially with the financial markets. [7:58] The Sun enters Cancer (Jun. 21, 1:24 am PDT) and it will remain in the sign until July 22, 2026. Happy Summer/Winter Solstice! This is a lovely season of the year to spend more time close to home with your family, with your loved ones, pets, and to let yourself be for a while. [10:23] Moon Report! The Libra First Quarter Moon (June 21, 2:55 pm PDT) at 0°32' Libra and Cancer. This is the first action point for the June 14 Gemini New Moon. This lunation could bring awareness about what's really going on with the people in our lives and the things that we value. This is a nice time to focus on beautifying your home and bringing it into balance. Check out Simone Butler's Astro Feng Shui book! [14:06] This is the First Quarter (first action point) in a Lunar Phase Family Cycle (LPFC) that began with the New Moon Solar Eclipse on Sep. 21, 2025, at 29°5' Virgo. The Full Moon (awareness point) in this LPFC is on Mar. 22, 2027, at 1°35' Libra. The Last Quarter (last action point) in this LPFC is on Dec. 20, 2027, at 28°14' Virgo. [15:42] Void-of-Course (VOC) Moon periods. The Moon conjoins the Sun (Jun. 14, 7:54 pm PDT), is VOC for 9 hours, 20 minutes, then enters Cancer (Jun. 15, 5:14 am PDT). Check out Ep. 348's VOC Moon segment for more details. [16:32] The Moon in Cancer conjoins Jupiter (Jun. 17, 12:41 am PDT). It's VOC for 4 hours, 24 minutes, then enters Leo (5:05 am PDT). Use this VOC Moon period to research how to reasonably make your home safe and secure. [17:48] The Moon in Leo sextiles the Sun (Jun. 19, 4:30 am PDT). It's VOC for 3 hours, 7 minutes, then enters Virgo (7:37 am PDT). Use this VOC Moon period to appreciate the gift of today and the simple joy of your beating heart. [18:40] The Moon in Virgo sextiles Jupiter (Jun. 21, 10:33 am PDT). It's VOC for 3 hours, 22 minutes, then enters Libra (1:55 pm PDT). Use this VOC Moon to catch up on household chores and repairs to make your home more comfortable and efficient. [19:36] Listener June asks about preparing for a Solar Return when the Sun has difficult placements in the Birth Chart. Check out Andrea Gehrz's book, Remediation: A Guide for the Modern Astrologer. [26:12] Leave a message of one minute or less at speakpipe.com/ bigskyastrologypodcast or email april (at) bigskyastrology (dot) com; put “Podcast Question” in the subject line. Free ways to support the podcast: subscribe, like, review and share with a friend! [26:47] A tribute to this week's donors! If you would like to support the show and receive access to April's special donors-only videos, go to BigSkyAstropod.com and contribute $10 or more. You can make a one-time donation in any amount or become an ongoing monthly contributor.
Sponsor Link:This episode of Space Nuts is brought to you by NordVPN, your trusted partner for online security. To take advantage of our exclusive offer, including four extra months for free, visit www.nordvpn.com/spacenuts.Q&A: Cosmic Queries and What If Scenarios In this thought-provoking episode of Space Nuts, hosts Andrew Dunkley and Professor Fred Watson dive into a range of intriguing questions posed by our curious listeners. From the mysteries of small celestial bodies to the hypothetical survival of humanity's legacy, this episode explores the cosmos through the lens of imagination and scientific inquiry.Episode Highlights:- Small Bodies in the Solar System: Bill's question about why small bodies aren't all fluffy leads to a fascinating discussion on the formation of planets and the role of gravity in shaping these celestial objects.- Leaving a Legacy:Peter's thought-provoking "what if" scenario about leaving something behind after Earth's destruction sparks a conversation about the Voyager spacecraft and humanity's enduring mark on the universe.- Saturn's Moons and Rings: Martin asks about the minimum size for an object to be classified as a moon, leading to an exploration of Saturn's numerous satellites and the dynamics of its iconic ring system.- Impact of a Space Station: Finn's imaginative query about a giant space station's effect on the Earth and Moon orbits prompts a discussion on gravitational dynamics and the stability of planetary systems.For more Space Nuts, including our continuously updating newsfeed and to listen to all our episodes, visit our website. Follow us on social media at SpaceNutsPod on Facebook, Instagram, and more. We love engaging with our community, so be sure to drop us a message or comment on your favourite platform.If you'd like to help support Space Nuts and join our growing family of insiders for commercial-free episodes and more, visit spacenutspodcast.com/about.Stay curious, keep looking up, and join us next time for more stellar insights and cosmic wonders. Until then, clear skies and happy stargazing.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/space-nuts-astronomy-insights-cosmic-discoveries--2631155/support.- Formation of Small Celestial Bodies- Humanity's Cosmic Legacy- Saturn's Moons and Ring Dynamics- Gravitational Effects of Space Structures- Listener Questions and Cosmic Curiosities
Join Rabbi Joey Rosenfeld as he guides us through the world and major works of Kabbalah, Hasidic masters, and Jewish philosophy, shedding light on the inner life of the soul. To learn more, visit JoeyRosenfeld.com
Connor Pugs tells a Storytime about a Gen Alpha Kid Claims “The Moon is Made of Cheese” Today i tell a story about this gen alpha kid has brainrot and thinks the moon is actually made of cheese bro... try not to laugh at this hilarious storyListen to my stories on Spotify:
This is your daily horoscope for Wednesday, June 17, and the most important aspects of the day:Moon in Cancer conjunct Jupiter in Cancer (1am PT)Moon enters Leo (5am PT)Moon in Leo sextile Uranus in Gemini (10am PT)Moon in Leo trine Neptune in Aries (12pm PT)Moon in Leo conjunct Venus in Leo (1:30pm PT)Moon in Leo opposite Pluto in Aquarius (1:30pm PT)Venus in Leo opposite Pluto in Aquarius (1:30pm PT)Justice for Cyrus Carmack-BeltonSupport the Free Alabama MovementSupport Mutual Aid in Minneapolis
Last week was a much needed vacation for all three of us. We are back, refreshed and ready for more fun and book reviews! Daughters of the Sun and Moon by Lisa See Sublimation by Isabel J. Kim The Iron Garden Sutra by A.D. Sui
Venus in Leo turns up the charm this week, bringing extra flirtation, creativity, and heart-centered expression as she moves through the first half of the week and makes powerful connections with all three outer planets. First, she shares an exciting conversation with Uranus, opening the door to surprises and fresh possibilities. The following day, she connects with dreamy Neptune, inspiring imagination, romance, and vision. Then the cosmic drama intensifies as the Moon joins Venus in Leo and together they oppose Pluto, creating sparks, passion, powerful emotions, and perhaps a few fireworks along the way. Meanwhile, Chiron takes its first steps into steady, value-oriented Taurus, beginning a new chapter in our collective healing journey around self-worth, security, and what we truly value. And as the weekend arrives, we bid farewell to Gemini season and welcome the Sun's entrance into Cancer, inviting us to slow down, reconnect with our hearts, and nurture what matters most. It's a juicy, dynamic, and transformative week ahead. Join me for all the details on The Golden Astrologer Podcast!
What if the greatest threat to our stories isn't forgetting, but losing the ability to read them? In this fascinating conversation, Helen speaks with Andrew Warner, Special Projects Director at the Long Now Foundation, an organisation dedicated to fostering long-term thinking over the next 10,000 years. They explore the Rosetta Project, endangered languages, the Digital Dark Age, the 10,000-Year Clock, and why preserving language may be one of humanity's most important acts of stewardship.Along the way you'll hear about the Rosetta Disc currently resting on a comet, another archive on the Moon, endangered languages, the Antikythera Mechanism, Voyager's Golden Record, and the remarkable human desire to leave something meaningful behind.This is a conversation about legacy, stewardship and the stories that connect past, present and future.You'll discover:✓ Why future generations may struggle to read our digital records✓ How the Rosetta Stone inspired a modern attempt to preserve the world's languages✓ Why linguists estimate that most of today's languages may disappear within the next century✓ How language carries ecological, medicinal and cultural knowledge✓ Why stories are some of the longest-lasting technologies humanity has ever created✓ What the Long Now Foundation means by “long-term thinking”✓ How ordinary people can help preserve cultural memory in their own communitiesResources & LinksThe Long Now FoundationLong Now FoundationThe Rosetta ProjectRosetta ProjectThe 10,000-Year ClockClock of the Long NowLong Now Seminars & TalksLong Now Talks ArchiveInternet ArchiveInternet ArchivePanLexPanLex Language ProjectEnjoyed the episode?If this conversation sparked your curiosity about language, story, legacy or humanity's future:⭐ Follow Words That Change Lives⭐ Share this episode with a friend⭐ Leave a rating and review on your favourite podcast platformEvery review helps more people discover the show and helps these important conversations travel further.Because the stories we preserve today may be the stories that help someone understand who we were tomorrow.
The Sun’s closest planet is making a pretty good appearance in the early evening. As seen from Earth, it’s just about as far from the Sun as it ever gets. It looks like a bright star low in the west-northwest beginning shortly after sunset. Mercury is getting ready to cross between Earth and the Sun – a point known as inferior conjunction. In the meantime, it’ll drop closer and closer to the Sun as viewed from Earth. It’ll vanish in the twilight in a couple of weeks. Mercury’s orbit is carrying the planet closer to Earth. Tonight, it’s about 78 million miles away. At conjunction, it’ll close to just 53 million miles. On average, Mercury returns to conjunction every 116 days. But the gap varies by more than 10 days in either direction. That’s because Mercury’s orbit is more lopsided than that of any other planet. When Mercury is closer to the Sun it moves faster; when it’s farther it moves more slowly. So the gap between conjunctions varies depending on where Mercury is in its orbit when it passes Earth. For the next few nights, look for Mercury as evening twilight fades. Although the planet is bright, it’s so low that you need a clear horizon to spot it. It lines up to the lower right of the much brighter planets Venus and Jupiter. And the crescent Moon will join the lineup on Tuesday, helping point the way to the little planet. Script by Damond Benningfield
This week we're working with seven transits, headlined by Chiron crossing into Taurus for the first time in roughly fifty years and the Sun entering Cancer at the summer solstice. Venus moves first through Leo, opening the heart, before Chiron presses on the question Taurus knows best: what are we worth, and who taught us to measure it that way. As the Sun enters Cancer, the past rises up to meet us, the early memories that first shaped how we hold money, security, and our own value. What are we willing to value more than we fear losing it? That's the one we'll be sitting with together. We close with a free Substack essay, Chiron in Taurus, The Wound Is What We Value.(09:00) Venus in Leo Sextile Uranus in Gemini 2° – June 13 – 16 (Saturday – Tuesday) – Monday, June 15.(22:00) Venus in Leo Trine Neptune in Aries 4° – June 14 – 17 (Sunday – Wednesday) – Tuesday, June 16.(29:43) Venus in Leo Opposite Pluto Retrograde in Aquarius 05° – June 15 – 18 (Monday – Thursday) – Wednesday, June 17.(34:37) Chiron in Taurus – June 19 – September 17, 2026October 23, 2033 - May 5, 2034April 14, 2027 - July 19, 2033June 19 - September 17, 2026November 29, 1983 - April 10, 1984March 28, 1977 - June 21, 1983May 28 - October 13, 1976December 21, 1933 - March 23, 1934March 25, 1927 - June 6, 1933May 24 - October 19, 1926December 10, 1883 - March 30, 1884February 4, 1878 - June 14, 1883April 20 - December 13, 1877July 5 - August 31, 1876November 14, 1834 - April 21, 1835March 5, 1829 - July 3, 1834May 7 - May 11, 1828October 18, 1785 - May 6, 1786March 24, 1780 - July 24, 1785May 26 - October 17, 1779(49:58) The Sun in Cancer – June 21 – July 22The transits through Cancer every year from June 20/21 to July 22(59:49) The Sun in Cancer Square the Moon in Libra 00°32' at 2:55 PM PDT on Sunday, June 21.(1:02:31) The Sun in Cancer Sextile Chiron in Taurus 00° – June 18 – 22 (Thursday – Monday) – Sunday, June 21.(1:07:41) Substack Essay: Chiron in Taurus, The Wound Is What We ValueCheck out my next conversation with 5th Generation Psychic, Dallisa Hocking.Join my Substackhttps://www.theweeklytransit.com/
Welcome to the Celestial Insights Podcast, the show that brings the stars down to Earth! Each week, astrologer, coach, and intuitive Celeste Brooks of Astrology by Celeste will be your guide. Her website is astrologybyceleste.com.
This is your daily horoscope for Tuesday, June 16, and the most important aspects of the day:Moon in Cancer square Saturn in Aries (2am PT)Moon in Cancer conjunct Mercury in Cancer (1pm PT)Moon in Cancer sextile Mars in Taurus (3pm PT)Venus in Leo trine Neptune in Aries (8:30pm PT)Justice for Cyrus Carmack-BeltonSupport the Free Alabama MovementSupport Mutual Aid in MinneapolisSupport the show
This is your daily horoscope for Monday, June 15, and the most important aspects of the day:Moon enters Cancer (5am PT)Moon in Cancer square Neptune in Aries (12pm PT)Venus in Leo sextile Uranus in Gemini (4pm PT)Justice for Cyrus Carmack-BeltonSupport the Free Alabama MovementSupport Mutual Aid in MinneapolisSupport the show
Send us Fan MailTravel writer, guidebook author, former Big Sur ranger, and old friend, Stuart Thornton, returns to Big Sur—at least in spirit—to reflect on a career spent encouraging people to visit the very places he sometimes wishes they would leave alone. We talk about discovering California's coast, writing guidebooks, the challenge of over tourism, and whether AI will help travelers find deeper experiences or simply send more people to the same beautiful places. Along the way, Stuart shares stories from Big Sur, the road, and a lifetime of chasing the next hidden corner of the map.Stuart traces his path from a Richmond, Virginia upbringing to a campsite at Andrew Molera, a ranger job that came with a phone book and a dorm bed, years living in the old naval housing at Point Sur, and a writing career that runs from the Monterey County Weekly to National Geographic to a shelf of Moon guidebooks. Along the way: a condor egg airlifted from the backcountry, an interview with James Cameron fresh from the Mariana Trench, a settlement after Anthropic ingested four of his books, and the contradiction he's lived with for years — a man who spends his days off chasing empty beaches while writing the books that fill them. Plus monks and silence at New Camaldoli, Gary Clark Jr. winning over the Monterey Jazz crowd, and a novel about "Billy the Brewer."LinksStuart Thornton — personal site · Moon author pageJoe Burnett / Ventana Wildlife Society — condor biologist who got Stuart access to the egg storyGary Clark Jr at Albert HallJames Cameron — record Mariana Trench dive (National Geographic)Pico Iyer — author; wrote on New Camaldoli and on Henry MillerWilliam T. Vollmann — The Atlas — Stuart's early influenceRyan Masters — Monterey County Weekly writer; band SuborbitalsEric Johnson — longtime Monterey County Weekly editorKem Nunn — "surf noir" novelist (Tapping the Source, The Dogs of Winter, John from Cincinnati)Martin Gurri — The Revolt of the Public — Magnus's earlier guestHipólito Bouchard — Argentine raid on Monterey, 1818Kayla Anderson — Moon Northern California Road Trips (co-author)"Billy the Brewer" — California's first beer brewer; subject of Stuart's novel-in-progressPlacesHenry Miller Memorial LibraryNew Camaldoli HermitageAndrew Molera State Park (and Pico Blanco above the Big Sur River)Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park / Big Sur StationPoint Sur State Historic Park & Lighthouse — site of the former naval housingPartington Cove (Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park)Monterey State Historic Park — Custom House, Casa Serrano, California's First Theatre"Shipwrecks: Every Broken Piece Tells a Story" — Casa Gutiérrez exhibit (opened June 12; the Natalia, wrecked 1834)Monterey Bay Aquarium — Stuart's tip: Tue–Thu, 2–6 pmHenry Cowell Redwoods State Park (albino redwoods)The Dyerville Giant — Humboldt Redwoods State ParkMusic & eventsMonterey Jazz FestivalFolk Yeah! (Britt Govea)Pixies — played the Henry Miller LibraryBonnie "Prince" Billy / Will Oldham — the first Folk Yeah show at FernwoodGary Clark Jr. — Stuart wrote an early national profileRelix MagazineTaj Mahal — Magnus's Fiji/Stockholm anecdoteBooks, publishers & otherMoon Travel Guides (incl. Moon California Road Trip, IPPY Gold Medal 2016)Monterey County Weekly / Monterey County NOWNational Geographic EducationJohn Steinbeck — The Pastures of Heaven · Sweet Thursday · East of Eden — Netflix series, fall 2026The Anthropic copyright settlement ($1.5B; Bartz v. Anthropic)Support the show_________________________________________________This podcast is a production of the Henry Miller Memorial Library with support from The Arts Council for Monterey County! Let us know what you think!SEND US AN EMAIL!
401 Hammerama Ep. 34 - Moon Zero Two Welcome to Hammerama! Hammerama is a subsidiary series of the DieCastMovie Podcast. Please join Alistair Hughes and Steven Turek as they analyze the wonderful movies of Hammer Films, from opposite ends of the world! Please send feedback to DieCastMoviePodcast@gmail.com.Al is the author of Infogothic: An Unauthorized Graphic Guide to Hammer Horror. A special thanks to Reber Clark for allowing us to use his music! You can purchase Mr. Clark's music at reberclark.bandcamp.com.
Tonight I circle around the small surrender of it is what it is, Sleepy. Weather, gravity, cold tea, ancient rocks, dogs, cats, seeds cracking open in the dark, and the strange comfort of being a tiny passenger on a planet that refuses to ask our permission.This is a soft, wandering journey to sleep about the things we can't control, the things growing quietly inside us, and the lighthouse keeper in all of us who can only keep the light going while the sea does what the sea does.So drift off to sleep, or just lie there with me for a while. What happens, happens. And right now, there is nothing we can do about it.Sleep Tight!More about Henrik, click here: https://linktr.ee/Henrikstahl Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Join Talk Cosmos, Sunday 14 JUNE 2026, 1–2 p.m. PDT as we explore the “GEMINI CAPRICORN MOON PHASES” about the upcoming New and Full Moon.Together, the theme of the two upcoming moon phases coincides with several big celestial turning points. In between the new and full moon, Chiron enters Taurus after its long 8-yr Aries transit. Taurus shifts us to begin its 7-year transit of healing self-worth where we shift perceptions from scarcity to abundance.Importantly, this month's pair of lunations suggests gathering information to activate new directions for healing our worth and environment. It begins June 14 with the 24°03' Gemini New Moon promoting deep activation, completing a powerful healing process of releasing what prevents us from nurturing our full identity.On June 29 the 8°15' Capricorn Full Moon occurs a week after the June 21 Summer Solstice, which falls on the first quarter moon. The next day, on the 30th, Jupiter enters its new year cycle in Leo! Shortly thereafter, Jupiter will square Chiron on July 1 to activate healing in a BIG way. Perhaps wounds surfacing of scarcity to be addressed with the intent of beginning to transmute these limitations towards an expanded perspective for experiencing abundance.It helps to remember that Gemini connects and gathers information, while Capricorn strips anything superficial away to find its fundamental basis. Together their energetic consciousness operates to achieve a sense of clarity; necessary for the spark of Mars activating the Uranian essence in the moment as they will soon be conjunct in Gemini the communicator.The Essence of the LuminaryThe second week of the month focuses on capturing the Moon's essence during its New and Full phases. As our most personal planet, the Moon regulates the past as it flows into the present, allowing us to experience emotions, habits, and feelings. Ultimately, it helps us piece together the meaningfulness of our life story. Each month offers the energetic input needed to grow, heal, and develop in mind, body, heart, and spirit.The Conversation Joining Sue Rose Minahan from Kailua-Kona, Big Island, Hawai'i, will be Talk Cosmos member Amanda Pierce of Seattle, Washington.Catch new weekly episodes and subscribe to TalkCosmos.com to access the latest content through YouTube, Facebook, radio, and podcast platforms.AMANDA PIERCE: blends her eclectic style of astrology and energy magic around a soul-centered approach to life and healing. With a B.A. in Psychology, Astrology and Energy Work Consultation | Meditation | Writing & Editing. Empowerment-based Meditation: teaching in-person 4-week series classes. Email: Amandamoonastrology@gmail.com Past WSAA Board Member | UAC 2018 Volunteer Coordinator.SUE ‘ROSE' MINAHAN: Evolutionary Astrologer Consultant, Speaker, Writer, Dwarf Planet University graduate; Vibrational Astrology student under Linda Berry, Kepler Astrology Toastmasters Charter member; Wine Country Speakers member; holds an Associate of Fine Arts Music Degree, & a Certificate of Fine Arts in Jazz. Artist & musician. Mythology enthusiast. Talk Cosmos weekly conversations awaken heart and soul consciousness since 2018. talkcosmos.com#GeminiNewMoon2026 #CapricornFullMoon2026 #ChironinTaurus #JupiterinLeo #Astrology2026 #TalkCosmos #SueRoseMinahan #AmandaPierce #SummerSolstice #MarsUranusSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
✨ Welcome to your #cosmicweatherreport for the week ahead.
Bob Zimmerman honors the late Alan Hale, co-discoverer of the record-setting Comet Hale-Bopp. He reviews the historical significance of the first image of the moon's far side taken by Luna 3 in 1959. The segment also explores current cosmological debates regarding dark energy and the existence of "little red dots" in the early universe. (8)1905 PERSIAN GULF
Welcome to Science Quest!
La venganza será terrible Alejandro Dolina, Patricio Barton, Gillespi Introducción • 0:01:14 Apertura y humor sobre bañarse, el pelo mojado y los encuentros amorosos • 0:02:28 Recomendación de la obra Amelia y la Eternidad • 0:03:22 Anuncio de funciones en Canning, Rosario y La Trastienda • 0:04:16 Presentación del tema del día: tirar cosas y cerrar etapas Segmento Inicial • 0:07:08 Debate sobre recuerdos, objetos guardados y arrepentimiento por haber tirado cosas • 0:15:36 Cassettes, grabaciones de radio y defensa de los viejos reproductores • 0:18:06 Sillas rotas, muebles, autos viejos y televisores como objetos difíciles de descartar • 0:24:08 Llaves, plantas secas, cajas vacías y radios viejas como ejemplos del acopio doméstico • 0:31:52 Cartas de amor y cartas de oyentes como recuerdos más valiosos que los mensajes digitales • 0:36:00 Reflexión sobre herencias, instrumentos de músicos y el valor histórico o emocional de los objetos • 0:39:44 Lectura de mensajes de oyentes y pedidos musicales Segmento Dispositivo • 0:52:30 Anuncio del tema: el nacimiento de Caín y Abel • 0:53:11 Samael, Eva y las versiones míticas sobre la concepción de Caín • 0:56:12 Parto de Eva, intervención de ángeles y sentidos atribuidos a los nombres de Caín y Abel • 0:58:48 Sueño premonitorio de Eva, separación de los hijos y versiones sobre gemelos • 1:01:28 Otros mitos sobre serpientes divinas y fecundación ritual • 1:03:10 Cierre con la fuente de Robert Graves y Rafael Patai y la canción Adán y Eva Segmento Humorístico • 1:07:10 Presentación de un verdadero o falso sobre caballos • 1:09:22 Visión, dientes, sueño de pie y curiosidades biológicas de los caballos • 1:12:24 Calígula, Gato y Mancha, Secretariat y expresiones faciales • 1:19:40 Polo, vómito de los caballos y discusión final sobre el resultado del juego Sordo Gancé / Manuel Moreira • 1:25:42 Presentación de Manuel Moreira • 1:25:56 “Añoranzas” ♫ • 1:29:05 Pedidos del público y anuncios de próximas funciones • 1:30:29 “María Ninguém” ♫ • 1:33:53 Preparación humorística de “How High the Moon” • 1:37:15 Homenaje al psicoanálisis y saludo a Gabriel Rolón • 1:38:03 “El pan dulce” ♫ (Resumen generado automáticamente con IA, puede contener errores)
Forget the "well, actually" crowd. Yes, the Germans were central to the space race, and host Matt Trump is leaning all the way into it. In Part I of this new series, Matt traces humanity's first object to ever cross into outer space back to a test launch from Peenemunde on June 20, 1944, two weeks after D-Day, and the weapon it became, the V2. But the real story starts decades earlier with Jules Verne, whose 1865 novel "From the Earth to the Moon" predicted Apollo and Artemis with eerie accuracy, and inspired a young Transylvanian Saxon named Hermann Oberth to turn science fiction into the actual rocket equation. Matt also dives into the strange, tangled connections between Oberth, Fritz Lang, Thea von Harbou, and the silent film "Metropolis," and what that film really reveals about how the Nazis saw themselves. Next week, the warriors arrive: Wernher von Braun.
The Stuph File Program Featuring creative entrepreneur, Paul Pape; comic Leah Renee; & science writer Andrew Fazekas, author of National Geographic’s Backyard Guide to the Night Sky and National Geographic's Stargazer Atlas: The Ultimate Guide To The Night Sky Download Paul Pape is a creative entrepreneur who operates Paul Pape Designs and Gamify. Leah Renee is a standup comic. She also does a weekly podcast that you can find on YouTube. Science writer, Andrew Fazekas, The Night Sky Guy, author of National Geographic’s Backyard Guide to the Night Sky and National Geographic's Stargazer Atlas: The Ultimate Guide To The Night Sky, is back on the show. One of the things he's talking about is the recent Blue Origin launch pad explosion.(Patreon Stuph File Program fans, there is a Patreon Reward Extra where we'll continue to discuss the race to the Moon with lunar bases; correcting the orbit of a space telescope and more). This week's guest slate is presented by Kim Handysides, an award winning voice over specialist and voice coach, and someone I worked with as a fellow broadcaster back in the day. Part of the success of this show depends on the generosity of its listeners worldwide. If you enjoy the program please feel free to make a donation in any amount, no matter how small, in any denomination of $1, $5, $10, $20 or more. Just click on the donate button to the left. It will be greatly appreciated. This website is powered by PubNIX a boutique Internet service provider with great personalized service that was instrumental in helping to structure the look of this very site! The computer used for this site was built by InfoMontreal.ca, serving individuals, commercial & industrial companies in Quebec with computers, software and networks. Your needs are unique and InfoMontreal.ca believes the solutions should be too.
**THEY JUST REVEALED XRP'S ENDGAME** Most people still think XRP is about payments. But this week, Ripple revealed a much bigger picture. From AI agents transacting autonomously with XRP and RLUSD, to enterprise stablecoin settlement, quantum readiness, and the continued expansion of the XRP Ledger ecosystem, the pieces are starting to fit together. While much of the crypto market remains focused on price action, Ripple appears to be building infrastructure for a future where machines, businesses, and financial institutions exchange value at internet scale. In this episode, we break down Ripple's new XRPL AI Starter Kit, the launch of Bitso's MXNB stablecoin on XRPL, Fortune's recognition of XRP among the most influential blockchain projects, Ripple's multi-phase approach to quantum security, and Hugo Philion's comments on why the entire industry now seems to be chasing the very role XRP was originally designed to play. If these developments are connected, then XRP's endgame may be far bigger than most people realize.
Is Elon Musk's SpaceX leading humanity to Mars? Or is that just grandiose window-dressing for an A.I. company leading several other A.I. companies to IPOs? Guest: Max Chafkin, reporter with Bloomberg Businessweek and cohost of the Everybody's Business podcast.Want more What Next TBD? Subscribe to Slate Plus to access ad-free listening to the whole What Next family and across all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts by clicking “Try Free” at the top of our show page. Sign up now at slate.com/whatnextplus to get access wherever you listen.Podcast production by Evan Campbell, Madeline Ducharme, Patrick Fort, Rob Gunther and Paige Osburn. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Somehow we've already reached the point where the conversation spirals from Steven Spielberg's new alien movie into whether Lear's digestive system could accidentally start an interplanetary war.Just another totally normal morning.The gang kicks things off with a packed weekend preview, including Lear's big Pageant event, Moon's soccer watch party in Illinois, and the upcoming Night at the Rizzlies. Then things take a sharp left turn into the great extraterrestrial debate after discussion of Spielberg's latest sci-fi blockbuster sparks a surprisingly deep conversation about intelligent life beyond Earth.Do aliens exist? Are they already here? Is Earth basically the North Sentinel Island of the galaxy? Could heaven secretly be a spaceship? These are apparently the questions that happen when you give a radio show access to microphones before coffee fully kicks in.The crew dives into theories ranging from religion and simulation concepts to alien overlords, government coverups, and whether any of us would voluntarily board a mysterious spacecraft in the middle of nowhere. Some members of the show are ready to leave Earth immediately. Others have follow-up questions about bathrooms.There's also a healthy amount of celebrity and entertainment chaos. Learn breaks down the new Sublime album featuring Jakob Nowell, Fleetwood Mac's upgraded greatest-hits collection, Motley Crue's theatrical return, Sammy Hagar's upcoming tour, and Larry David's newest HBO project. Along the way, the gang somehow turns a discussion about classic rock into a deep dive on band members dating each other, divorcing each other, and then somehow continuing to make hit records together.The movie conversation keeps rolling with discussions about Spielberg's return to alien storytelling, the highest-rated films of the last 25 years, Christopher Nolan's domination of IMDb rankings, and why Whiplash remains one of the most stressful movies ever made.Plus:The Blues' Stanley Cup anniversary memoriesO.J. Simpson jokes that somehow still happenThe weirdest alien theories you've ever heardWhy Moon thinks Earth might just be a tiny forgotten corner of something much biggerMotley Crue appreciation hourTom Hanks versus voice acting categoriesAlan Tudyk getting the respect he deservesLarry David being Larry DavidBirthday shoutouts and Crap on CelebritiesIt's the kind of daily comedy show episode that starts with local events and ends with humanity questioning its place in the universe.If you enjoy pop culture commentary, weird news, celebrity gossip, classic rock debates, science-fiction rabbit holes, and a daily comedy show that never stays on topic for more than three minutes, Episode 200 delivers exactly the kind of beautiful disaster you'd expect from The Rizzuto Show.Thanks for making this daily comedy show part of your day.Follow The Rizzuto Show → https://linktr.ee/rizzshow for more from your favorite daily comedy show.Connect with The Rizzuto Show Comedy Podcast online → https://1057thepoint.com/RizzShow.Hear The Rizz Show daily on the radio at 105.7 The Point | Hubbard Radio in St. Louis, MO.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Today's episode starts exactly where every responsible adult conversation should: arguing about soap. Not just any soap—man soap. The gang dives headfirst into a surprisingly passionate debate about Dr. Squatch, exfoliating gravel bars, suspiciously delicious-sounding soap scents, and whether smelling aggressively clean is actually a good thing. Somehow, this spirals into discussions about farmer's market soap, Bigfoot marketing, and the lengths men will go to avoid using the word "exfoliate."Then things get serious... sort of.A listener writes in with a family dilemma after her boyfriend receives an unexpected work bonus. Should they save the money for their future, start a college fund, or take their five-year-old to Disney World right now? The crew debates memories versus money, experiences versus savings accounts, and whether a five-year-old is even going to remember spending thousands of dollars chasing Mickey Mouse around Florida. The results? Surprisingly thoughtful advice mixed with the usual chaos.Speaking of questionable life decisions, the crew reacts to the wild story of a family stranded 120 feet in the air on the SkyScreamer ride at Six Flags St. Louis. Three hours. A storm rolling in. Zero chance Moon would ever get on that ride again. The gang breaks down the rescue operation, amusement park nightmares, and somehow ends up discussing roller coaster accidents, rescue blankets, and surviving things that absolutely sound unsurvivable.As if that wasn't enough, social media's latest trend enters the chat: Tan Maxxing. Yes, apparently people are intentionally chasing the deepest tan possible while documenting every minute of it online. The crew dives into tanning bed memories, spray tan horror stories, suspicious tanning lotions, and revisits one of the most legendary moments in Rizz history: the time Rizz spray-tanned himself into another dimension.You'll also hear stories about Hot or Not ratings from the early internet days, bizarre beauty trends, celebrity-level tanning mistakes, window-seat radiation fears, Six Flags identity crises, and enough random side quests to make GPS navigation give up entirely.This episode is a perfect example of why this daily comedy show somehow survives every day despite itself. One minute we're discussing family finances, the next we're debating whether Six Flags could successfully pretend to be Disney World for a five-year-old. Logic is optional. Laughs are mandatory.If you love a daily comedy show filled with ridiculous stories, unexpected debates, and a group of friends who can turn literally any topic into a disaster, this episode delivers.Thanks for listening to another daily comedy show from The Rizzuto Show. We appreciate your poor decision-making.Follow The Rizzuto Show → https://linktr.ee/rizzshow for more from your favorite daily comedy show.Connect with The Rizzuto Show Comedy Podcast online → https://1057thepoint.com/RizzShow.Hear The Rizz Show daily on the radio at 105.7 The Point | Hubbard Radio in St. Louis, MO.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Andrea Ferrara proposes building a 40-meter telescope on the lunar surface to succeed the James Webb Space Telescope. This moon-based facility would avoid atmospheric interference, allowing scientists to directly detect the universe's first stars and resolve long-standing mysteries regarding the aftermath of the Big Bang. (8)1919
Is Elon Musk's SpaceX leading humanity to Mars? Or is that just grandiose window-dressing for an A.I. company leading several other A.I. companies to IPOs? Guest: Max Chafkin, reporter with Bloomberg Businessweek and cohost of the Everybody's Business podcast.Want more What Next TBD? Subscribe to Slate Plus to access ad-free listening to the whole What Next family and across all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts by clicking “Try Free” at the top of our show page. Sign up now at slate.com/whatnextplus to get access wherever you listen.Podcast production by Evan Campbell, Madeline Ducharme, Patrick Fort, Rob Gunther and Paige Osburn. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today's poem is i love you to the moon & by Chen Chen. The Slowdown is your daily poetry ritual. In this episode, guest host Diannely Antigua writes… “The moon is about 238,855 (two hundred thirty-eight thousand, eight hundred fifty-five) miles away from Earth, which is roughly 30 Earths lined up end to end. But moonlight only takes about 1.3 seconds to reach us.The distance feels impossible, and yet the light arrives almost instantly. It makes me think about how love can work like that, too. How it can stretch across time and space and still arrive right when we need it.” This show is supported by gifts from listeners. Support The Slowdown with a donation and get access to the sponsor-free version of The Slowdown today. Slowdownshow.org/donate
Is Elon Musk's SpaceX leading humanity to Mars? Or is that just grandiose window-dressing for an A.I. company leading several other A.I. companies to IPOs? Guest: Max Chafkin, reporter with Bloomberg Businessweek and cohost of the Everybody's Business podcast.Want more What Next TBD? Subscribe to Slate Plus to access ad-free listening to the whole What Next family and across all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts by clicking “Try Free” at the top of our show page. Sign up now at slate.com/whatnextplus to get access wherever you listen.Podcast production by Evan Campbell, Madeline Ducharme, Patrick Fort, Rob Gunther and Paige Osburn. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Tenpenny Files – Dr. Rainer Zitelmann explores how private space exploration is reshaping wealth, ownership, and power beyond Earth. From asteroid mining and Moon settlements to artificial intelligence, robotics, space debris, and China's ambitions, the conversation examines who controls future resources and whether entrepreneurs or governments lead humanity's next expansion into the stars...
What happens if two diamond core stars collide? Will the Moon drift away from Earth? Why is there motion in the universe? And why we need a space AND time machine. Izzie, Dr Becky and Robert dive into The Supermassive Mailbox to answer your questions. For ad-free listening and to view Izzie's trajectory to becoming a better astronomer, join The Supermassive Club. Every member helps keep the show running, so thank you! Send us your astronomy attempts, questions (and nonsense!) to podcast@ras.ac.uk, on Instagram at @supermassivepod or post in The Supermassive Club. The Supermassive Podcast is a Boffin Media production. The producers are Izzie Clarke and Richard Hollingham. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Is Elon Musk's SpaceX leading humanity to Mars? Or is that just grandiose window-dressing for an A.I. company leading several other A.I. companies to IPOs? Guest: Max Chafkin, reporter with Bloomberg Businessweek and cohost of the Everybody's Business podcast.Want more What Next TBD? Subscribe to Slate Plus to access ad-free listening to the whole What Next family and across all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts by clicking “Try Free” at the top of our show page. Sign up now at slate.com/whatnextplus to get access wherever you listen.Podcast production by Evan Campbell, Madeline Ducharme, Patrick Fort, Rob Gunther and Paige Osburn. Need to set up your Slate Plus feed? If you subscribed through Slate.com, check out our FAQ at slate.com/podcastfaqs for easy instructions. Members subscribed via Apple Podcasts get automatic access—no setup required. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
Sponsor Link:This episode of SpaceTime is brought to you by NordVPN, where your online security starts. To check out our special offer for SpaceTime listeners, visit www.nordvpn.com/stuartgarySpaceTime Series 29 Episode 70 *The Small Magellanic Cloud is being ripped apart A new study reveals that the Small Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way, is slowly being torn apart by gravitational forces from the Large Magellanic Cloud. Researchers have utilised over a decade of observations to uncover the galaxy's dynamic state, challenging previous models of coherent rotation. *Blueprint for a lunar base NASA's plans for a lunar base at the Moon's South Pole are sparking innovative proposals for construction using local lunar materials. The Texas A&M Space Institute is leading research into using lunar regolith, a challenging construction material, to develop habitats for future lunar missions. *Meteor rocks New England A recent meteor explosion over New England has been confirmed as a sonic boom from a meteor entering the Earth's atmosphere, sending shockwaves across Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The meteor, travelling at 121,000 kilometres per hour, likely fragmented before falling into the North Atlantic Ocean. *The Science Robert Increased wildfire risks are predicted across parts of Australia, while a study reveals that Iceman Otzi's microbiome remains active even after 5,300 years. Additionally, video technology may allow for heart rate monitoring through facial recognition.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/spacetime-with-stuart-gary--2458531/support.
Jake and Anthony are joined by Jonathan Goff, Director of Advanced Concepts at Gravitics, and Mike Loucks, CEO at SEE, to talk about where to put orbital depots, trajectories from there to the Moon and Mars, and to otherwise set the record straight on their papers after Anthony's poorly-remembered-and-even-more-poorly-explained mention. Topics Off-Nominal - YouTube Episode 245 - Polar Bears and Penguins (with Jonathan Goff and Mike Loucks) - YouTube AAS Paper Review: RAAN Agnostic 3-Burn Departure Methodology for Deep Space Missions from LEO Depots (Part 1 of 2) | Selenian Boondocks AAS Paper Review: Practical Methodologies For Low Delta-V Penalty, On-Time Departures To Arbitrary Interplanetary Destinations From A Medium-Inclination Low-Earth Orbit Depot | Selenian Boondocks An Updated Propellant Depot Taxonomy Part V: Human Spaceflight Fixed Depots (Low-Orbit) | Selenian Boondocks Follow Mike Mike Loucks (@Astrogator_Mike) / X Home - Space Exploration Engineering Follow Jon Jonathan A. Goff (@rocketrepreneur) / X Gravitics Follow Off-Nominal Subscribe to the show! - Off-Nominal Support the show, join the Discord Off-Nominal (@offnom) / Twitter Off-Nominal (@offnom@spacey.space) - Spacey Space Follow Jake WeMartians Podcast - Follow Humanity's Journey to Mars WeMartians Podcast (@We_Martians) | Twitter Jake Robins (@JakeOnOrbit) | Twitter Jake Robins (@JakeOnOrbit@spacey.space) - Spacey Space Follow Anthony Main Engine Cut Off Main Engine Cut Off (@WeHaveMECO) | Twitter Main Engine Cut Off (@meco@spacey.space) - Spacey Space Anthony Colangelo (@acolangelo) | Twitter Anthony Colangelo (@acolangelo@jawns.club) - jawns.club
This is your daily horoscope for Sunday, June 14, and the most important aspects of the day:Moon in Gemini sextile Saturn in Aries (3am PT)New Moon in Gemini (7:54pm PT)Justice for Cyrus Carmack-BeltonSupport the Free Alabama MovementSupport Mutual Aid in MinneapolisSupport the show
Two women set sail on a tiny boat embarking on a journey to freedom that takes them across the globe. And a Hungarian composer dreams of changing the world… he did. This episode contains strong language, violence, and mentions suicide. Sensitive listeners please be advised.From Russia With LoveTwo women, a tiny boat, the wide-open ocean… and kismet.Elena has written a book about their adventure, called Talking to the Moon. You can read the story on the couple's website.Produced by Liz Mak, original score by Leon Morimoto, artwork by Teo Ducot.Gloomy SundayHungarian composer Rezső Seress dreamed of changing the world with his music. He did.Produced and scored by Davey Kim.Season 17 Episode 27 Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
If you've ever wondered how a perfectly normal conversation can derail into a heated debate over Chinese food, porta potty etiquette, and whether anyone should willingly climb the Eiffel Tower, congratulations—you've found your people.On today's episode of The Rizzuto Show, the gang celebrates National Corn on the Cob Day by immediately attacking corn on the cob. Riz admits he shaves his corn like a man trying to avoid commitment, while everyone else questions his methods and his patriotism.Then things get weird.Moon shares a story about accidentally going full grumpy-grandpa on a door-to-door pest control salesman, proving that "No thanks, no time" might be the most Midwestern insult ever invented. The crew debates whether random conversations with strangers are charming or terrifying, and Chris Kerber joins the show to discuss everything from smartphone dependency to Stanley Cup Finals chaos.Speaking of chaos, Chris breaks down one of the wildest championship series hockey fans have seen in years, complete with comebacks, questionable goaltending, and enough drama to keep sports radio employed through the summer.The emails somehow crank the insanity up another level.Rafe receives support for creating a birthday registry despite being a fully grown adult. Then we uncover one of the greatest stories in show history: a decades-old football game against a tiny Illinois town called Oblong that ended with a bench-clearing brawl, police escorts, and Rafe personally taking responsibility for nearly starting an interstate incident.As if that wasn't enough, a listener asks whether it's acceptable for random neighbors to use a contractor's porta potty sitting outside your house. This sparks an unexpectedly passionate discussion about public restroom rights, weighted-vest walkers, and why nobody wants to think too hard about what may have happened inside that portable toilet.The international portion of today's program features travel advice for Riz's upcoming trip overseas, including warnings about European air conditioning, neck fans, and why apparently everyone except Riz thinks he should go to the top of the Eiffel Tower.Finally, the crew closes things out with an all-time food debate: if you could only eat one cuisine for the rest of your life, what would it be? Mexican food gets passionate support, Chinese food launches a counteroffensive, Mediterranean food sneaks into the conversation, and friendships are tested in ways no one could have predicted.It's another completely normal day for your favorite daily comedy show—which means absolutely nothing about it is normal.Whether you're here for the hockey talk, the weird news, the food arguments, or just watching grown adults passionately debate miniature corn cobs, this episode delivers exactly the kind of beautiful nonsense you've come to expect from The Rizzuto Show.Thanks for making us part of your routine. This daily comedy show continues to prove that no topic is too small, no argument is too ridiculous, and no email is safe once it hits the studio. If you love a daily comedy show packed with sarcasm, stories, sports, and complete derailments, you're in the right place.Follow The Rizzuto Show → https://linktr.ee/rizzshow for more from your favorite daily comedy show.Connect with The Rizzuto Show Comedy Podcast online → https://1057thepoint.com/RizzShow.Hear The Rizz Show daily on the radio at 105.7 The Point | Hubbard Radio in St. Louis, MO.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
There are episodes where everything stays on track, and then there are episodes like this one.The gang kicks things off with an innocent conversation about National Corn on the Cob Day, which immediately reveals that Riz may be consuming corn in a way that should probably be investigated by professionals. From there, things somehow get even weirder.Moon recounts an encounter with a door-to-door pest control salesman that quickly escalated from a simple sales pitch into a full-blown neighborhood showdown. Was Moon justified? Was the scooter involved? Did anyone actually have time for that conversation? The answers are exactly as ridiculous as you'd expect.The crew also dives into the lost art of talking to strangers, debating whether smartphones have completely ruined human interaction or if we're all just looking for an excuse not to make awkward elevator small talk. Chris Kerber joins the conversation with thoughts on community, technology, and the strange ways people navigate the modern world.Meanwhile, a simple discussion about navigation apps turns into a surprisingly passionate defense of Waze, complete with police reports, traffic alerts, and the realization that some people trust their phones more than their own instincts.As if that wasn't enough chaos, the show detours into dream backyards featuring lazy rivers, hot tubs, waterfalls, catios, secret tunnels, fire pits, hidden rooms, underground bunkers, Japanese gardens, and enough unnecessary luxury to make every HOA president faint. If money were no object, apparently everyone on the show would immediately become either a billionaire recluse or a cartoon villain.Then comes one of the episode's unexpected highlights: food. Lots of food. Sandwiches are analyzed, Penn Station is put under investigation, onion-related crimes are documented, and the crew somehow finds themselves in yet another debate that nobody asked for but everyone has strong opinions about.Throw in sports talk, summer plans, random observations, and the kind of conversational detours that only happen when the microphones are live, and you've got exactly what listeners have come to expect from this daily comedy show.Whether you're here for the weird news, the food arguments, the backyard dreams, or just to hear grown adults passionately discuss topics that absolutely do not matter, this episode delivers the signature chaos that makes The Rizzuto Show a daily comedy show unlike any other.Grab some corn, avoid unsolicited sales pitches, and settle in for another completely normal episode of your favorite daily comedy show.Follow The Rizzuto Show → https://linktr.ee/rizzshow for more from your favorite daily comedy show.Connect with The Rizzuto Show Comedy Podcast online → https://1057thepoint.com/RizzShow.Hear The Rizz Show daily on the radio at 105.7 The Point | Hubbard Radio in St. Louis, MO.Invasive hammerhead worm spotted at St. Louis County parkHeard about the gas station ‘screw method' scam? It's totally fakeAuditor Fitzpatrick finds insufficient vetting led to $229,167 payout to former Francis Howell superintendentA Utah high school removed the mirrors from all its bathrooms. Has it made a difference?The Nerdy Escorts Cashing In On Silicon Valley's AI BoomFormer Air Canada pilot charged after allegedly flying without proper license for 16 yearsSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The Rizzuto Show accidentally becomes the FBI of lunch when Rafe embarks on a highly scientific sandwich reconnaissance mission that quickly spirals into one of the greatest culinary betrayals of modern history.After yesterday's LeGrand's sandwich feast, questions remained. Important questions. Questions like: Who ate the last sandwich? Why did Rafe immediately end up at Penn Station? And most importantly, why was every sandwich somehow loaded with onions despite specifically trying to avoid onions?This episode begins with a completely normal discussion about Letterkenny Live coming to town before veering directly into a full-blown sandwich investigation. Rafe reports back from his undercover visit to Penn Station, where he encountered slippery floors, mysterious customers, questionable air conditioning, suspicious fries, and enough onions to launch an international incident. Moon defends his beloved Penn Station while everyone else attempts to determine whether the establishment is a restaurant, a social experiment, or a front for something far stranger.As the evidence piles up, the crew debates bread quality, sandwich chain rankings, air fryers, and whether Jimmy John's bread should be classified as food, flotation device, or building material.Then it's time for Crap on Celebrities, featuring Green Day's upcoming movie New Year's Rev, Christopher Nolan movie rankings, the ongoing Beckham family feud, Home Improvement reboot rumors, and a look at the upcoming Social Network sequel starring Jeremy Strong as Mark Zuckerberg.The chaos continues when the gang dives into a debate over the greatest TV and movie vehicles of the 1980s. The General Lee, Ecto-1, KITT, the Family Truckster, Christine, Ferris Bueller's Ferrari, and more all enter the conversation as Moon somehow finds a way to turn the segment into a masterclass on obscure movie cars nobody else remembers.Along the way you'll also hear:Letterkenny Live excitementBret Michaels coming to townThe world's saddest Penn Station dining roomThe mystery of the fake-bearded customerWhy fries belong in cupsChristopher Nolan argumentsProperty Brothers confusionDavid Beckham's Hollywood honorThe Skarsgård family group chatWeirdly passionate bread discussionsClassic movie car nostalgiaAnd enough sarcasm to power an entire cityIf you're looking for a daily comedy show packed with ridiculous stories, pop culture commentary, food reviews gone wrong, celebrity gossip, and absolutely unnecessary debates about sandwich bread, you've come to the right place.This daily comedy show proves once again that no topic is too small to become a full-blown argument. Whether it's onions, movies, family feuds, or fictional vehicles, the crew somehow finds a way to make everything significantly more complicated.Thanks for making The Rizzuto Show part of your routine. We remain committed to delivering the finest daily comedy show content that can somehow turn a lunch order into a 45-minute conspiracy theory.Follow The Rizzuto Show → https://linktr.ee/rizzshow for more from your favorite daily comedy show.Connect with The Rizzuto Show Comedy Podcast online → https://1057thepoint.com/RizzShow.Hear The Rizz Show daily on the radio at 105.7 The Point | Hubbard Radio in St. Louis, MO.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
If you've ever stared out into your backyard and thought, "You know what this place needs? A lazy river, a Japanese meditation garden, a Batcave, and a giant statue of Reba McEntire with questionable design choices," congratulations—you think exactly like The Rizzuto Show.On today's daily comedy show, the gang goes all-in on designing their ultimate fantasy backyards. Moon dreams of peaceful creeks, multiple fire pits, pools maintained by somebody else, and enough room for dogs to roam free. Lern builds a bluff-top paradise complete with waterfalls, outdoor movie screens, retro hot tubs, and a luxury catio because apparently the cats deserve vacation property too. Rafe creates a property that somehow combines Jurassic Park, Feudal Japan, Batman, and a corn maze. Scott turns his backyard into a beach resort, transportation museum, BMX park, and cow sanctuary. And Rizz? Let's just say his backyard includes holographic dragons, robotic guard dogs, stealth drones, concert-grade sound systems, and enough security measures to make a Bond villain blush.As if that wasn't ridiculous enough, the conversation takes a sharp turn into nightmare fuel when invasive hammerhead worms are reportedly spotted in South County. These creepy little monsters can regenerate if chopped up, secrete toxins, and apparently look like something that escaped from an alien science experiment. Naturally, the gang responds with the appropriate level of panic, sarcasm, and confusion.Then there's the mysterious gas pump screw scam. Is it real? Is it fake? Did the internet invent another thing for us to worry about? The crew investigates, debates, and slowly realizes that maybe not every viral warning deserves immediate panic. Still, check your gas pump...or don't. We're not lawyers.The show also dives into one of the wildest local stories you'll hear this year: a superintendent hired by a Missouri school district who never worked a single day but still walked away with roughly a quarter-million dollars. It's the kind of story that makes every employed person immediately reconsider their career choices.Plus: secret bunker stories, hidden rooms behind bookshelves, locker memories, school bathroom mirror controversies, trampoline debates, old-school pranks, and a glimpse into the absurdly expensive world of Silicon Valley luxury escorts because apparently that's where the conversation ended up.It's another completely normal day on The Rizzuto Show. Which means absolutely none of it is normal.If you're looking for a daily comedy show packed with hilarious conversations, weird news, local stories, and the kind of chaos that only happens when six friends are handed microphones, you're in the right place.Thanks for making The Rizzuto Show part of your daily comedy show routine.Follow The Rizzuto Show → https://linktr.ee/rizzshow for more from your favorite daily comedy show.Connect with The Rizzuto Show Comedy Podcast online → https://1057thepoint.com/RizzShow.Hear The Rizz Show daily on the radio at 105.7 The Point | Hubbard Radio in St. Louis, MO.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Host Meg Wolitzer presents two unconventional love stories, one classic, one contemporary, that avoid the usual tropes of “meet cute,” “opposites attract,” or “happily ever after” but are still engaging. In “Love in the Slump,” by Evelyn Waugh, clueless upper-crust newlyweds are sent on a comic odyssey. The reader is Jane Kaczmarek. And Esther Yi's “Moon” explores something we often mistake for love—obsession--as a young woman is drawn farther and farther into K-Pop fandom. The story was selected by guest editor Min Jin Lee for Best American Short Stories 2023. It's read by Hettienne Park. And we hear Lee's and Park's thoughts about the story. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Tell me your favorite episode for the 6th anniversary show! At the height of the Cold War, the United States considered a plan so audacious that it sounds like science fiction: detonating a nuclear weapon on the Moon. Known as Project A119, it was born from fear, prestige, and the urgent need to answer the Soviet Union's early lead in space. The plan was real, the scientists involved were some of the most noteworthy of the 20th century, and the implications were enormous. Learn more about Project A119 and the quest to nuke the Moon on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors ButcherBox Get your choice between chicken breast or top sirloin for a year OR ground beef for life, PLUS $20 off when you go to ButcherBox.com/everything Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Save 50% on Unlimited premium wireless plans starting at $15/month at MintMobile.com/EED TrueWerk Get 15% off your first order at truewerk.com with code everything DripDrop Go to dripdrop.com and use promo code everything for 20% off your first order! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/Ds7Rx7jvPJ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dave Rubin of "The Rubin Report" gives a first look to the stories you need to know to start your day including the conviction of Karmelo Anthony for the murder of Frisco track star Austin Metcalf after jurors rejected Anthony's self-defense claim and found him guilty of first-degree murder in the fatal stabbing that shocked Texas; growing backlash after some activists attempted to frame the case as a racial issue despite the jury focusing on the facts of the confrontation itself; "The Daily Show's" Jon Stewart unexpectedly mocking NBC's Kristen Welker over her reaction to President Trump's viral "Meet the Press" walkout; and NASA unveiling the Artemis III crew, Randy Bresnik, Andre Douglas, Frank Rubio, and Luca Parmitano, who will help lead America's next major step toward returning astronauts to the Moon, and much more.