1968
POPULARITY
Go APES with The Franchyze Boiz!Shawn, Brad, and Aaron take a deep dive into one of the strangest, smartest, and most influential franchises in science fiction history: Planet of the Apes. In Part One of their epic discussion, they revisit all five films from the original series, from the groundbreaking 1968 classic starring Charlton Heston to the increasingly bizarre sequels that somehow become darker, stranger, and more politically charged with each installment.Along the way, they explore the franchise's unforgettable characters, groundbreaking makeup effects, civil rights allusions, nuclear anxieties, and the surprising emotional depth hiding beneath all that ape makeup.This franchise has it all: mutant cultists, ape revolutions, time travel, political allegory, and the literal end of the world. What's not to love?It's a madhouse! A MADHOUSE!!HOSTSShawn EastridgeBrad GullicksonAaron Prescott
On this day, 30 May 1968 in Senegal at 6 PM, unions announced plans for an indefinite general strike to begin at midnight in protest at police brutality against a school and university student uprising. Despite police repression, workers held firm until 12 June when the government caved in and offered a 15% increase in wages.More information, sources and map: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/article/10319/senegal-general-strikeOur work is only possible because of support from you, our listeners on patreon. If you appreciate our work, please join us and access exclusive content and benefits at patreon.com/workingclasshistory.See all of our anniversaries each day, alongside sources and maps on the On This Day section of our Stories app: stories.workingclasshistory.com/date/todayBrowse all Stories by Date here on the Date index: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/dateCheck out our Map of historical Stories: https://map.workingclasshistory.comCheck out books, posters, clothing and more in our online store, here: https://shop.workingclasshistory.comIf you enjoy this podcast, make sure to check out our flagship longform podcast, Working Class History
durée : 00:14:44 - par : Lionel Esparza - Le 26 mai 1926 naissait le trompettiste Miles Davis. Pour célébrer cet évènement, France Musique lui consacre une journée et Relax ! se plonge dans l'album "Nefertiti" - réalisation : Flora Sternadel Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
durée : 00:14:44 - par : Lionel Esparza - Le 26 mai 1926 naissait le trompettiste Miles Davis. Pour célébrer cet évènement, France Musique lui consacre une journée et Relax ! se plonge dans l'album "Nefertiti" - réalisation : Flora Sternadel Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
durée : 00:01:47 - Esprit sport - par : Cédric Guillou - A l'occasion des internationaux de Roland-Garros, Esprit Sport s'intéresse à l'évolution du tennis : De la création de l'ère Open en 1968 à la structuration du classement par l'ATP, Patrick Proisy, ancien numéro 1 français, détaille les évolutions qui ont professionnalisé ce sport au fil des années. - invités : Fabrice Abgrall Journaliste Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
Richard Vicek returns to Regional Rasslin to join Ray Russell as they discuss two more years of Chicago Wrestling Club history, covering the full years of 1967 & 1968. Including the first ever sellout crowd in Chicago, the legendary feuds between Dr. X vs. Verne Gagne and the tag feud of Larry Hennig & Harley Race vs. Dick the Bruiser & Da' Crusher, the makings of Blackjack Lanza, Bill Watts, the Japanese duo of Mitsu Arakawa & Mr. Moto, early Mighty Igor, Rock Rogowski (Ole Anderson), Bobby Heenan, & more!If you're enjoying WrestleCopia and interested in helping us continue to grow, please consider Subscribing to our Patreon to help us cover some of our costs! https://www.patreon.com/wrestlecopiaYOU CAN ALSO GIFT SOMEONE A PATREON MEMBERSHIP (OR ASK THEM TO GIFT YOU ONE) AT https://www.patreon.com/WrestleCopia/giftIncludes the $5 “All Access” Tier $9 "VIP Superfan" Tier, and "The ULLLTIMATE Tier", featuring our various VIDEO-CAST Series, Early Show Releases, our insanely detailed show notes (for the Grenade, Monday Warfare, Regional Rasslin, Puro Academy, & Retro Re-View), monthly DIGITAL DOWNLOADS for your viewing and reading pleasure, & more!HELP SUPPORT THE SELF-FUNDED WRESTLECOPIA BRAND, CONSIDER DONATING TO OUR PAYPALWRESTLECOPIA MERCHANDISE - https://www.teepublic.com/user/wrestlecopiaVisit the WrestleCopia Podcast Network https://wrestlecopia.comFollow WrestleCopia on “X” (Formerly Twitter) @RasslinGrenadeFollow & LIKE our FACEBOOK PAGE – https://www.facebook.com/RasslinGrenadeSubscribe to the WrestleCopia Youtube Channel at https://www.youtube.com/RasslinGrenade ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
On this day, 19 April 1968, while 6,000 textile workers were on strike against redundancies in Valdagno, northern Italy, scabs were sneaked into the factory under police protection. The workers were brutally charged by police leading to them fighting with the 1,000-strong police force, occupying the factory and toppling the bronze statue of the factory's founder, Count Gaetano Marzotto (an iconic moment, as Count Marzotto had until then had been widely depicted as an enlightened benefactor). 47 workers were arrested. More information, sources and map: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/article/9064/valdagno-textile-strikeOur work is only possible because of support from you, our listeners on patreon. If you appreciate our work, please join us and access exclusive content and benefits at patreon.com/workingclasshistory.See all of our anniversaries each day, alongside sources and maps on the On This Day section of our Stories app: stories.workingclasshistory.com/date/todayBrowse all Stories by Date here on the Date index: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/dateCheck out our Map of historical Stories: https://map.workingclasshistory.comCheck out books, posters, clothing and more in our online store, here: https://shop.workingclasshistory.comIf you enjoy this podcast, make sure to check out our flagship longform podcast, Working Class History
What really happened between Cream and promoter Bill Graham during their legendary March 1968 shows at the Fillmore West and Winterland Ballroom?These performances would go on to become some of the most iconic live recordings in rock history—but behind the scenes, tensions were building. Over the years, stories have circulated about a falling out between the band and Graham. But how much of that story is actually true?In this highlight from Booked On Rock, Nettie Baker—daughter of Ginger Baker—offers a rare, personal perspective on the events surrounding those shows. She addresses the long-standing rumors, sheds light on her father's experience, and helps separate myth from reality.This is a deeper look at Cream at their peak—and the conflict that has been debated ever since.Listen to Episode 372 - The Complete Cream Chronicles – Straight From Ginger Baker's Daughter Nettie
durée : 00:02:37 - L'info d'ici, ici Périgord Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.
Blätter-Podcast – Über die Blätter für deutsche und internationale Politik – detektor.fm
Thema dieser Sonderfolge ist das Leben und Wirken des jüngst verstorbenen Sozialphilosophen und Blätter-Mitherausgebers ***Jürgen Habermas***, eine der wichtigsten intellektuellen Stimmen der Nachkriegszeit. Blätter-Redakteur ***Albrecht von Lucke*** spricht mit dem Soziologie-Professor und Habermas-Freund ***Hauke Brunkhorst*** über die weitreichenden Debatten, die der streitlustige Sozialphilosoph in der Bundesrepublik angestoßen hat, und was von seinem lebenslangen Ringen um die Konsequenzen aus dem Nationalsozialismus bleibt.
Richard Fleischer ist ein Regisseur, der nie wirklich berühmt wurde – im Gegensatz zu einigen seiner Filme wie zum Beispiel 20.000 MEILEN UNTER DEM MEER oder SOYLENT GREEN. Thomas und Gast Patrick Torma von journalistenfilme.de haben sich THE BOSTON STRANGLER ausgesucht. Die Verfilmung einer wahren Kriminalgeschichte. 13 Frauen wurden im Raum Boston in den 1960er Jahren vom „Boston Strangler“ ermordet. Bereits 1966 erschien ein Buch von Gerold Frank und schon 1968 der darauf basierende Film von Fleischer. Ein kurzer zeitlicher Abstand – mit Folgen. Der Mörder schien gefunden, aber vieles war noch nicht geklärt.Und so ist THE BOSTON STRANGLER mehr eine Interpretation als eine möglichst akkurate Wiedergabe eines echten Falls (wie zum Beispiel Finchers ZODIAC). Albert DeSalvo (Tony Curtis) wird gezeigt als ein Mörder mit Persönlichkeitsstörung, der erst in den Vernehmungen der Polizei ahnt, dass in ihm der Mörder steckt.Erst einmal nimmt sich der Film die Zeit, die mühsame und wenig erfolgreiche Ermittlungsarbeit zu zeigen – gerade hier wird sichtbar, dass der Film aus einer Zwischenzeit stammt: Die 1950er mit ihrem klaren Weltbild sind vorbei, es ist zu spüren, dass die Welt sich ändern wird, aber die „Revolutionen“ kommen erst noch. Die Polizisten (stark: Henry Fonda und George Kennedy) sind die Soldatengeneration des Zweiten Weltkriegs. Jetzt ist der Feind viel schwerer zu erkennen und zu finden.Im Podcast diskutieren wir die Stärken und Schwächen des Films, besprechen die Aufteilung des Films in zwei doch sehr unterschiedliche Hälften und Patrick erklärt en detail die beeindruckenden Split Screens.Über den Regisseur: Richard Fleischer gehört zu den Regisseuren, deren Filme berühmter sind als sie selbst. Vier Jahrzehnte hat er in Hollywood gearbeitet und dabei sehr verschiedene Genres bedient. Zu seinen Werken gehören unter anderem DIE WIKINGER mit Kirk Douglas, CONAN DER ZERSTÖRER und RED SONJA, der aufwändige Abenteuerfilm 20.000 MEILEN UNTER DEM MEER, DOCTOR DOLITTLE, der Kriegsfilm TORA! TORA! TORA! und der dystopische und erschreckend aktuelle Science-Fiction-Film SOYLENT GREEN. Unter dem Titel „Soylent Screen“ widmen wir uns in unregelmäßigem Abständen diesem SF-Meilenstein. Richard Fleischer starb im Alter von 89 Jahren vor 20 Jahren – am 25. März 2006 – in Los Angeles.
In Part 2 of our in-depth conversation with Greg Taylor, we turn to Pink Floyd's concerts in 1968, as Greg recalls a series of extraordinary performances he witnessed during that transitionary year.At the centre of the episode is Greg's vivid recollection of the 19 January 1968 concert at Lewes Town Hall, a rare performance featuring the short-lived five-man Pink Floyd line-up with Syd Barrett and David Gilmour both on stage. Greg remembers the evening in remarkable detail, from the character of the hall itself and the local promoter who organised the event, to the backstage atmosphere and the stories that have survived from that night.Most striking of all is Greg's memory of David Gilmour positioned slightly behind Syd Barrett on stage, ready to step forward if Syd stopped playing. It is a fascinating glimpse of Pink Floyd at a fragile moment, still carrying Syd's creative, painterly vision while beginning to adapt to the possibility of continuing without it.The conversation then moves through recollections of several other memorable performances from 1968, including the Falmer House Courtyard show at the University of Sussex in May, the Midsummer High weekend concert in June at Hyde Park, (where Greg captured remarkable photographs of the band at close range), and Middle Earth at the Roundhouse in October.Greg also talks about taping some of the Floyd's BBC sessions, photographing concerts as a teenager, and the atmosphere of the British underground music scene in the late 1960s.If you are interested in early Pink Floyd, Syd Barrett, psychedelic London, and the live music culture of the late 1960s, Greg's memories offer a rare, intimate, first-hand window into that world.Subscribe for more episodes, and we would love to hear your own recollections or questions in the comments. Part 3 on Greg's journey through 1969 - 1971 premieres next month, so don't miss it!
Wir haben mit Michael Hewener und Felix Klopotek über die Gedanken Agnolis in seinem Aufsatz "Der Staat des Kapitals" gesprochen. Was kann man man diesem Vertreter marxistischer Staatskritik und auch der damaligen "Staatsableitungsdebatte" entnehmen? Wir sind 99 ZU EINS! Ein Podcast mit Kommentaren zu aktuellen Geschehnissen, sowie Analysen und Interviews zu den wichtigsten politischen Aufgaben unserer Zeit.#leftisbest #linksbringts #machsmitlinks Wir brauchen eure Hilfe! So könnt ihr uns unterstützen: Bitte abonniert unseren Kanal und liked unsere Videos. Teil unseren content auf social media und folgt uns auch auf Twitter, Instagram und FB Wenn ihr Zugang zu unserer Discord-Community, sowie exklusive After-Show Episoden und Einladungen in unsere Livestreams bekommen wollt, dann unterstützt uns doch bitte auf Patreon: www.patreon.com/99zueins Wir empfangen auch Spenden unter: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=NSABEZ5567QZE
Es gelte, den "Personenkult" um Stalin zu beenden. So sagte es sein Amtsnachfolger Chruschtschow 1956. Die Abrechnung mit dem Stalinismus löste im gesamten Ostblock Hoffnung aus. Aber sie blieb unvollendet – bis heute.
durée : 00:59:21 - Hommage à Brigitte Bardot chanteuse (4) : le show télévisé de 1968 avec Serge Gainsbourg - par : Martin Pénet - Cette série d'émissions nous montre combien Brigitte Bardot aimait chanter, que ce soit pour ses amis ou, à travers ses disques, pour son public. - réalisé par : Noé Mignard Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.
The squad boards up the windows & doors and discuss Gill's pick, NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (1968)! Does a film from the 60s still feel fresh today? Were some of us ashamed to have not seen such an iconic movie? And, is Ben justified in punching everyone!? Tune in to find out if we gave this film a NAY, OKAY, YAY, or SLAY!CHAPTERS:Theme/Intro (00:00:00)What We Been Consuming?/Why We Picked It (00:01:22)Trailer (01:01:00)Synopsis/First Experiences (01:01:28)Review (01:07:46)Rating/What Did You Think? (01:59:01)Horrific Hotline (02:09:48)Promotions (Horrific Hotline/Social Media/Patreon/It Slays Podcast's Horrific Playlist/Events) (02:13:39)Upcoming Episode/Outro (02:15:01)Follow us on all social media:FacebookTwitterInstagramTumblrYoutubeTikTokSlasherThreadsBlueskyWant some official Merch?!SHOP HERE!*Intro & Outro Music by Dylan Bailey (IG: @thedylanbailey)*Support the show
durée : 01:00:08 - Carlo Ossola, philologue, historien de la littérature - par : Priscille Lafitte - Professeur honoraire au Collège de France, Carlo Ossola se nourrit autant de littérature que de musique pour tenter d'habiter ce monde avec délicatesse, goûtant les vertus de l'inachevé et le mystère de l'ineffable. Il esquisse, par la musique, une idée de l'Italie, de la France et de l'Europe. - réalisé par : Claire Lagarde Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.
durée : 00:04:40 - Le Billet politique - par : Jean Leymarie - La France a-t-elle la fièvre ? En cinq épisodes, l'historien Michel Winock revient sur 150 ans de "fièvre hexagonale", ces moments de crise politique aigue. Aujourd'hui, mai 1968.
Original Alice Cooper roadie Mike Allen opens up about the band's harrowing near-fatal car accident in 1968. Listen to Episode 342 - Alice Cooper Roadie On Near-Fatal Car Crash, 'Toronto Chicken Incident' & More15% OFF Any Purchase At Old Glory For Booked On Rock Listeners! — Over 300,000 officially licensed items. Featuring legendary music artists like Bob Marley, The Beatles,Grateful Dead, and more. Use the code "BOOKEDONROCK" or hit this link:https://oldglory.com/discount/BOOKEDONROCK----------Booked On Rock is part of The Boneless Podcasting Network BookedOnRock.com The Booked On Rock Store The Booked On Rock YouTube Channel Follow The Booked On Rock with Eric Senich:BLUESKYFACEBOOKINSTAGRAMTIKTOKX Find Your Nearest Independent Bookstore Contact The Booked On Rock Podcast: thebookedonrockpodcast@gmail.com The Booked On Rock Music: “Whoosh” by Crowander / “Last Train North” & “No Mercy” by TrackTribe
Chaque week-end, Fabrice Lafitte vous raconte la genèse des tubes qui vous ont fait danser et leurs petites histoires. Vous ne les écouterez plus de la même manière ! Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Acquista il mio nuovo libro, “Anche Socrate qualche dubbio ce l'aveva”: https://amzn.to/3wPZfmCL'avanzamento economico del dopoguerra aveva certo molte luci, ma anche molte ombre. Ombre che sfociarono presto nella contestazione giovanile.Diventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/dentro-alla-storia--4778249/support.
Send us a textWhat is spookier then "Night of the Living Dead" during the spooky season of October! That's right! We are bringing the 1968 George A. Romero cult classic review to your ears with special returning guest JIMBO! We learn during this episode, being the first zombies is hard, how to have an anxiety attack after seeing your brother get his head smashed in and why control freaks hate women named Barbara!AND THANK YOU FOR LISTENINGPLEASE FOLLOW THE INSTAGRAM:https://instagram.com/fromdusktilldonpodcast?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y
Il Sessantotto nella letteratura italiana: autori, opere più importanti, pensiero politico e la cultura dell'epoca in una fase storica di grandi cambiamenti. Pasolini e gli altri.
Cierra el Metro estaciones del Centro por marcha del 2 de octubre La matanza de 1968 fue un crimen de lesa humanidad: Sheinbaum Israel da por concluida la intercepción de la Flotilla Global Sumud hacia Gaza Más información en nuestro podcast
Edomex publica lista de beneficiarios de Apoyo al Desempleo EU enfrenta riesgo de despidos masivos por cierre de Gobierno El balero, juguete clásico con raíces prehispánicas Más información en nuestro podcast
Dans cet épisode, on reçoit Pierre "doc' Landry qui a publié chez Septentrion: Plume, Pierrot et moi: La véritable histoire de la Sainte Trinité.Acteur et témoin de la contre-culture québécoise de la fin des années 60 et du début des années 70, Pierre "doc" Landry nous raconte son parcours qui va le mener du collège classique à la Gaspésie contestataire des années 60 et jusqu'à l'underground musical du début des années 70 à Montréal en compagnie de Plume Latraverse!Crédit photo: Michel Gauthier
In this episode of Crazy Wisdom, host Stewart Alsop talks with Michel Bauwens, founder of the P2P Foundation, about the rise of peer-to-peer dynamics, the historical cycles shaping our present, and the struggles and possibilities of building resilient communities in times of crisis. The conversation moves through the evolution of the internet from Napster to Web3, the cultural shifts since 1968, Bauwens' personal experiences with communes and his 2018 cancellation, and the emerging vision of cosmolocalism and regenerative villages as alternatives to state and market decline. For more on Michel's work, you can explore his Substack at 4thgenerationcivilization.substack.com and the extensive P2P Foundation Wiki at wiki.p2pfoundation.net.Check out this GPT we trained on the conversationTimestamps00:00 Michel Bauwens explains peer-to-peer as both computer design and social relationship, introducing trans-local association and the idea of an anthropological revolution.05:00 Discussion of Web1, Web3, encryption, anti-surveillance, cozy web, and dark forest theory, contrasting early internet openness with today's fragmentation.10:00 Bauwens shares his 2018 cancellation, deplatforming, and loss of funding after a dispute around Jordan Peterson, reflecting on identity politics and peer-to-peer pluralism.15:00 The cultural shifts since 1968, the rise of identity movements, macro-historical cycles, and the fourth turning idea of civilizational change are unpacked.20:00 Memories of 1968 activism, communes, free love, hypergamy, and the collapse of utopian experiments, showing the need for governance and rules in cooperation.25:00 From communes to neo-Reichian practices, EST seminars, and lessons of human nature, Bauwens contrasts failed free love with lasting models like kibbutzim and Bruderhof.30:00 Communes that endure rely on transcendence, religious or ideological foundations, and Bauwens points to monasteries as models for resilience in times of decline.35:00 Cycles of civilization, overuse of nature, class divisions, and the threat of social unrest frame a wider reflection on populism, Eurasian vs Western models, and culture wars.40:00 Populism in Anglo vs continental Europe, social balance, Christian democracy, and the contrast with market libertarianism in Trump and Milei.45:00 Bauwens proposes cosmolocalism, regenerative villages, and bioregional alliances supported by Web3 communities like Crypto Commons Alliance and Ethereum Localism.50:00 Historical lessons from the Roman era, monasteries, feudal alliances, and the importance of reciprocity, pragmatic alliances, and preparing for systemic collapse.55:00 Localism, post-political collaboration, Ghent urban commons, Web3 experiments like Zuzalu, and Bauwens' resources: fortcivilizationsubstack.com and wiki.p2pfoundation.net.Key InsightsMichel Bauwens frames peer-to-peer not just as a technical design but as a profound social relationship, what he calls an “anthropological revolution.” Like the invention of writing or printing, the internet created trans-local association, allowing people across the globe to coordinate outside of centralized control.The conversation highlights the cycles of history, drawing from macro-historians and the “fourth turning” model. Bauwens explains how social movements rise, institutionalize, and collapse, with today's cultural polarization echoing earlier waves such as the upheavals of 1968. He sees our era as the end of a long cycle that began after World War II.Bauwens shares his personal cancellation in 2018, when posting a video about Jordan Peterson triggered accusations and led to deplatforming, debanking, and professional exclusion. He describes this as deeply traumatic, forcing him to rethink his political identity and shift his focus to reciprocity and trust in smaller, resilient networks.The episode revisits communes and free love experiments of the 1970s, where Bauwens lived for years. He concludes that without governance, rules, and shared transcendence, these communities collapse into chaos. He contrasts them with enduring models like the Bruderhof, kibbutzim, and monasteries, which rely on structure, ideology, or religion to survive.A major theme is populism and cultural polarization, with Bauwens distinguishing between Anglo-Saxon populism rooted in market libertarianism and continental populism shaped by Christian democratic traditions. The former quickly loses support by privileging elites, while the latter often maintains social balance through family and worker policies.Bauwens outlines his vision of cosmolocalism and regenerative villages, where “what's heavy is local, what's light is global.” He argues that bioregionalism combined with Web3 technologies offers a practical way to rebuild resilient communities, coordinate globally, and address ecological and social breakdown.Finally, the episode underscores the importance of pragmatic alliances across political divides. Bauwens stresses that survival and flourishing in times of systemic collapse depend less on ideology and more on reciprocity, concrete projects, and building trust networks that can outlast declining state and market systems.
durée : 00:58:45 - Ils ont changé le monde - par : Isabelle Lasserre - L'accord franco-algérien de 1968 qui réglemente la circulation, le séjour et le travail des ressortissants algériens en France est aujourd'hui contesté par une partie de la classe politique. Pourquoi se retrouve-t-il au cœur d'une crise franco-algérienne aux multiples facettes ? - réalisation : Laure-Hélène Planchet - invités : Xavier Driencourt Ancien ambassadeur de France en Algérie; Thierry Oberlé Grand reporter au Figaro
durée : 00:58:45 - Ils ont changé le monde - par : Isabelle Lasserre - L'accord franco-algérien de 1968 qui réglemente la circulation, le séjour et le travail des ressortissants algériens en France est aujourd'hui contesté par une partie de la classe politique. Pourquoi se retrouve-t-il au cœur d'une crise franco-algérienne aux multiples facettes ? - réalisation : Laure-Hélène Planchet - invités : Xavier Driencourt Ancien ambassadeur de France en Algérie; Thierry Oberlé Grand reporter au Figaro
durée : 00:58:45 - Ils ont changé le monde - par : Isabelle Lasserre - L'accord franco-algérien de 1968 qui réglemente la circulation, le séjour et le travail des ressortissants algériens en France est aujourd'hui contesté par une partie de la classe politique. Pourquoi se retrouve-t-il au cœur d'une crise franco-algérienne aux multiples facettes ? - réalisation : Laure-Hélène Planchet - invités : Xavier Driencourt Ancien ambassadeur de France en Algérie; Thierry Oberlé Grand reporter au Figaro
La lettura di due poesie dell'autrice italo cubana si unisce alle nostre esplorazioni musicali al chiaro di luna. Alla playlist musicale uniamo la lettura di due componimenti di Alba De Céspedes tratti dalla raccolta "Le ragazze di maggio" pubblicata da Mondadori.Qui il link per l'ascolto della playlist musicale >> https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4HSgv9vDjkJUlT84NZ1JpF?si=Lp4Va9tFRQWs1tpiHr7HnA&pi=wZOzBNxMRV-tuMoon Safari, esplorazioni musicali e poetiche al chiaro di luna - Stagione 12.Un programma di e con Claudio Petronella in onda su RBE radio TV ogni sabato alle 23 in replica ogni domenica alle 22. Info su podcast, frequenze FM, DAB, TV e audio video streaming su www.rbe.it
¿ Las personas que amamos se pueden comunicar con nosotros desde el más allá? Te compartimos una extraña pero bella historia de una de nuestras oyente enigmáticas.Además en las noticias paranormales te contamos de una luz misteriosa que sigue a una joven en una carretera de Santiago del Estero. Y la famosa leyenda de la UNAM de la mujer perro vuelve a aparecer.
Trump Set To Repeal 1968 Gun Control Act Using Power Of Mass Pardons As The Globalist-Controlled Rating Agency Moody's Engages In Open Economic Warfare With US In Desperate Attempt To Derail Trump's Winning Trade Policy
durée : 00:23:03 - "Mam'zelle Nitouche" de Hervé, enregistrement de 1968 avec Fernandel - Denise de Flavigny est surnommée Nitouche par Célestin, l'organiste du couvent des Hirondelles. Denise a découvert que Célestin mène une double vie : il compose la nuit des opérettes pour sa maîtresse, une jeune chanteuse nommée Corinne.
In 2011, retired Memphis cop Earl Clark admitted on tape: “I was the sniper. Ray was the fall guy.” This episode features graphic crime scene photos suppressed by the FBI, showing MLK's jaw shattered by a high-velocity rifle—not Ray's .30-06. Learn how Clark's unit tampered with the bullet trajectory report and why the King family paid him hush money until 2006.
This groundbreaking 1989 documentary resurfaces with lost courtroom tapes from the King family's 1999 wrongful death lawsuit, where a jury ruled MLK's murder was a conspiracy involving the FBI, mafia, and Memphis police. Hear James Earl Ray's brother confessing, “We were pawns,” and the deathbed admission of Loyd Jowers, who claimed he hired a Memphis cop as the real triggerman. Discover how FBI bugs planted in MLK's motel room went silent minutes before the shot—and why the rifle's fingerprints were “too perfect” to be real.
Uncover the censored truth behind Bobby Kennedy's assassination in this deep dive into the Ambassador Hotel's bloodstained kitchen. Featuring never-broadcast audio of Sirhan Sirhan's hypnosis sessions, where he repeats “RFK must die” like a programmed mantra, and explosive interviews with Sandra Serrano, the key witness who saw the “polka-dot dress girl” fleeing the scene screaming, “We shot him!” This episode reveals how the LAPD destroyed ballistic evidence showing 13 bullets—five more than Sirhan's gun could hold—and exposes CIA operatives caught on film at the hotel that night. Was RFK's death a hit ordered to stop his anti-Vietnam crusade?
JLP Tue 1-28-25 Country & Western Tuesday… HOUR 1 Hell on Earth. 1968 black couple. Calls // HOUR 2 Trump is back! Calls: Israel. Cryin': Lyin'. Identity // HOUR 3 Appearing passive? Lyft anti-fat discrimination. Calls // Biblical Question: Are you a memory worshiper? ⏰ TIMESTAMPS (0:00:00) HOUR 1: Deportation fear? Listen to JLP! (0:05:21) Country & Western (0:07:51) Does Satan own the Earth? … Satan has you doing stuff … (0:19:25) From 1968, husband-wife (0:31:23) Choose life… Announcements (0:33:00) LOLA, VA: Dad just died (0:36:06) You can change… Evil people judge: Pete Hegseth (0:39:35) BRENDA, ME: Forgive people who don't change (0:45:50) DUSTIN, UT: Mental health issues; Father, Mother (0:55:00) NEWS (1:00:55) HOUR 2: As you're getting beat … (1:04:20) Again, 1968 (1:08:43) Trump vs Colombia… blacks, Christians "helping" (1:15:16) GEREMY, Israel… That ain't no deal! (1:25:20) Supers… BREAK (1:33:40) CHRIS, Vegas: Keep wife, children far away from families! (1:37:35) ROBIN, VA, 1st: On crying, "grandmother" self, no love (1:51:15) NUSH, Canada, 1st: "Entrepreneur" identity… (1:55:00) NEWS (2:00:55) HOUR 3 (2:04:40) NUSH: Coming off as passive? … There is no you (2:22:45) Rapper sues Lyft, denied ride … (2:32:55) Supers: BQ … (2:39:36) JACK, FL: Being Christian in the military? (2:50:30) RIVER, CA: Mom cried "false prophet"! Ex on my mind (2:53:40) MIKE, NJ: Watching thoughts? Father died… (2:56:30) Be free: Closing
Read by Terry Casburn Production and Sound Design by Kevin Seaman
Rio Reiser wird am 9.1.1950 geboren. In seinem kurzen Leben wird er zur musikalischen Ikone der 68er, zum Popstar, zum queeren Vorreiter und zum Meister des tragischen Chansons auf Deutsch. Von Bock/Biermann.
In Episode Nineteen, DDSWTNP turn outward to a discussion of Rachel Kushner, whose Booker Prize-nominated Creation Lake, a 2024 novel about the folly of espionage, revolutionary violence, life underground, and confronting modernity with ancient practices in rural France, solidifies its author's reputation as a key inheritor of DeLillo's influence and themes. Creation Lake is narrated by a nihilistic spy named Sadie Smith who infiltrates a farming commune called Le Moulin and grows enchanted with the claims of their cave-dwelling philosophical advisor, who argues that Neanderthal life thousands of years ago holds the key to reshaping humankind. In it Kushner explores the legacy of France's 1968 while echoing The Names, Great Jones Street, Ratner's Star, Mao II, and other DeLillo works, as we outline in our discussion. We find rich references as well in Creation Lake to Nathaniel Hawthorne, Joan Didion, Michel Houellebecq, and Kushner's own previous works, especially The Flamethrowers and The Mars Room. Listeners looking for new writing reminiscent of DeLillo and those already knowledgeable of Kushner's works will find plenty here, and we hope this episode will be the first of several over time dedicated to DeLillo's massive influence on exciting new world literature. Texts and quotations mentioned and discussed in this episode, in addition to Creation Lake and those by DeLillo: Joan Didion, Play It As It Lays (1970) and Slouching Towards Bethlehem (1968) Dana Goodyear, “Rachel Kushner's Immersive Fiction,” The New Yorker, April 23, 2018 (includes discussion of Kushner's friendship with DeLillo) Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Blithedale Romance (1852) and The Scarlet Letter (1850) Michel Houellebecq, Serotonin (2019) Rachel Kushner, The Flamethrowers (2013) and The Mars Room (2018) ---. “Rachel Kushner: ‘The last book that made me cry? The Brothers Karamazov,” The Guardian, October 5, 2018 (source of this answer: “The book that influenced my writing: Probably novels by Joan Didion, Denis Johnson and Don DeLillo. But a whole lot of other books, too”) “In a real dark night of the soul, it is always three o'clock in the morning, day after day.” (F. Scott Fitzgerald, “The Crack-Up” (1936)– a line mangled slightly in the episode)
Come hangout with us as we revisit one of the most influential horror film's ever made. Chris & Wes not only chat about 1968's ‘NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD' but they also breeze through tons of exciting upcoming movie news, as well as recommendations! Stay safe and keep being spooky all year around. Mixed and edited by: Wesley Swanson.
Join us as Wes & Chris return to the studio with a review for 1968's ‘ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST.' + Pop culture news and weekly recommendations. Thanks for listening! Mixed and edited by: Wesley Swanson.
Welcome to The Georgia Politics Podcast! On today's special episode, we are once again joined by two delegates from Georgia to the most famous party convention in American history. Parker Hudson and Taylor Branch, both graduates of Westminster Schools, were delegates from Georgia to the 1968 DNC supporting Sen. Eugene McCarthy because of his anti-Vietnam War position. The convention, held in Chicago, was a turning point in U.S. political history, marked by violent protests, police brutality, and deep divisions within the Democratic Party. The backdrop of the Vietnam War, the Civil Rights Movement, and the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy fueled a highly charged atmosphere. Inside the convention, the Democratic Party was divided between establishment figures supporting Vice President Hubert Humphrey and more progressive, anti-war factions backing Senators Eugene McCarthy and George McGovern. Georgia played a distinct role in the convention as it represented the conservative, pro-segregation wing of the party. Governor Lester Maddox, a vocal segregationist, led the Georgia delegation. Maddox was known for his staunch opposition to the Civil Rights Movement and had famously closed his restaurant rather than comply with integration laws. He and other Southern Democrats, sometimes referred to as Dixiecrats, resisted the party's growing embrace of civil rights and its increasingly liberal stance on social issues. At the convention, the Georgia delegation stood with the conservative elements of the party, opposing the anti-war platform and pushing back against the civil rights advancements. Maddox and other Southern leaders were aligned with George Wallace's independent campaign, which sought to appeal to disaffected white voters in the South, capitalizing on fears of racial integration and opposition to federal intervention in state matters. This ideological split within the Democratic Party, exemplified by the clash between conservative Southern Democrats like Maddox and the more progressive northern and western factions, highlighted the fractures that would soon lead to a realignment in American politics. Georgia's role in the 1968 DNC represented the old guard of Southern Democrats, clinging to segregationist values in the face of a rapidly changing political landscape. You can connect with Parker Hudson online, here. You can buy We Asked, “Why Not?” online, here. You can connect with Taylor Branch online, here. You can buy the Pulitzer Prize winning Parting the Waters, here. Connect with The Georgia Politics Podcast on Twitter @gapoliticspod Preston Thompson on Twitter @pston3 Hans Appen on Twitter @hansappen Craig Kidd on Twitter @CraigKidd1 Proud member of the Appen Podcast Network. #gapol
Special Episode! It's cohost Christina's birthday, and as is tradition, she's making her cohost Brian watch a movie he's never seen before. Christina's pick this year is Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Is the Dick Van Dyke classic a favorite of Christina's? Nope. Has the 1968 musical held any sentimental value for Christina over the years? Nah. Did the Ian Fleming story give Christina pop-culture PTSD for decades? Yep. Join the Old Roommates as they revisit the traumatic classic through a middle-aged lens ... "Child Catcher" be damned. Listen to this.Old Roommates can be reached via email at oldroommatespod@gmail.com. Follow Old Roommates on Instagram and YouTube @OldRoommates for bonus content and please give us a rating or review!#DickVanDyke#SallyAnnHowes#BennyHill#IanFleming#RoaldDahl
BrownTown talks all things DNC aftermath with US Palestinian Community Network (USPCN) organizers Nesreen Hasan and Nadiah Alyafia. The new friends breakdown DNC week from the formal mass March on DNC protests, autonomous disruptions, anti-war/genocide political education programming, to the convention spectacle itself and what it meant (or didn't mean) for Chicago on the national scale. Originally recorded September 7, 2024. GUESTSNesreen Hasan is a Chicago-based Palestinian community organizer with USPCN who has been organizing for nearly 15 years. Nadiah Alyafai is a proud Yemeniyeh who also has been organizing with USPCN for 8 years, and advocating for her people ever since she was little.Learn more about USPCN's work on their website, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. Mentioned in or related to episode:Ep. 111 - Palestinian Liberation: Anti-Zionism & Jewish Solidarity ft. Rabbi Brant Rosen & Lesley WilliamsEp. 110 - Democratic National Convention: From 1968 to 2024, Pt. 1 ft. Bill AyersEp. 102: Palestinian Liberation: In this Moment ft. Muhammad SankriMarch on the DNC 2024F*** the GNC Convention from the DissentersAhead of the DNC, City Hall spent $814,000 on a fence to lock out homeless people, (Chicago Sun-Times)Ana Navarro (1, 2)Active vs. Passive voice breakdown from @sunnmcheauxCorrection: Atlanta Olympics were in 1996, not 1994--CREDITS: Intro and outro soundbites from the March on DNC protests filmed by David and Caullen. Audio engineered by Kiera Battles. Episode photo by Jordan Esparza.--Bourbon 'n BrownTownFacebook | Twitter | Instagram | Site | Linktree | PatreonSoapBox Productions and Organizing, 501(c)3Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Site | Linktree | Support
Today I ask Craig about the year 1968 and the Democratic National Convention. He gives me a history lesson on the year leading up to the riots in Chicago. References: Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez 2024 DNC speech. Senator Raphael Warnock's 2024 DNC speech. The Executive Summary of the “Rights in Conflict” report regarding indiscriminate police violence at the 1968 DNC. The dates discussed in 1968 came from “1968” from Wikipedia. The Catonsville 9 issued a report on their actions. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. addressed both the civil rights movement and his opposition to the Vietnam War in his April 4, 1967 speech at Riverside Church in New York City. Robert Reich describes the Social Security cap on payroll taxes which corrects Craig's statement about the cap in our previous podcast.
It's a presidential election year, and a deeply divisive imperialist war has split the public. As the Democratic National Convention gathers in Chicago, anti-war organizers vow to be in the streets to protest US responsibility for a genocide overseas. No, this isn't 2024. It's 1968. And the police riot that follows in the city of Chicago has effects on US politics that will reverberate for decades to come. Former member of the Weather Underground Bill Ayers joins The Marc Steiner Show for a timely look back on the events of the 1968 Chicago DNC, and its resonance with the current Chicago DNC happening amid the genocide in Gaza funded and perpetuated by the Biden-Harris administration.Studio Production: Cameron GranadinoPost-Production: Alina NehlichHelp us continue producing The Marc Steiner Show by following us and becoming a monthly sustainer.Sign up for our newsletterLike us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterDonate to support this podcast
In episode 1670, Jack and guest co-host Andrew Ti are joined by host of Glamorous Trash: A Celebrity Memoir Podcast and author of I Shouldn't Be Telling You This: (But I'm Going To Anyway), Chelsea Devantez, to discuss… Joe Biden Has Always Hated Protesters, The Bluey Episode That Was Mysteriously Banned By Disney Is Now On YouTube, A Kid Complaining About “Monsters” In The Wall Really Heard 50,000 Bees and more! Bail Funds for Campus Encampments Unity: Pro-Palestine and Pro-Israel Protestors Chant ‘F*ck Joe Biden' in Unison NYPD's Action Movie Twitter "Trailer" Order must prevail, Biden says, after police dismantle Gaza protest Biden: Violent protests ‘not protected' Echoes of Vietnam era as pro-Palestinian student protests roil US campuses Columbia University protests look increasingly like those in 1968 as police storm campuses nationwide Gaza war protests are modern-day Vietnam – and could open the door to Trump Many Universities Calling in Police Today Also Celebrate Campus Protests of the Past A New Perspective on 1968 Joe Biden's Record on the Vietnam War Joe Biden's Non-Radical 1960s When Joe Biden Was the Candidate of the Young Joe Biden, not a protest guy AHEAD OF SOUTH CAROLINA VOTE, JOE BIDEN FACES QUESTIONS OVER CLAIMS OF CIVIL RIGHTS ACTIVISM Dad Baby | Full Episode | Bluey The forbidden episode of Bluey is forbidden no more The one where Bandit gives birth: is America ready for the banned Bluey episode? A Kid Complaining About “Monsters” In The Wall Really Heard 50,000 Bees LISTEN: Chamber of Reflections COVER (ODNP Remix) by LumïSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In episode 1595, Jack and Miles are joined by author of If We Burn: The Mass Protest Decade and the Missing Revolution, Vincent Bevins, to discuss… The Spirit of 1968, Could Raider Nation Help Win A Proletarian Victory? Fascism Playbook, Is Social Media Part Of The Problem? One Universal Truth Seems To Be ACAB and more! LISTEN: leavemealone by Fred again.. & Baby KeemSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.