Podcast appearances and mentions of Harry Harris

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Best podcasts about Harry Harris

Latest podcast episodes about Harry Harris

DESIGN POD
Episode 45: The UK Hospitality Industry: The Lay of the Land

DESIGN POD

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2024 60:00


During this episode of DESIGN POD, Harry Harris, Managing Director at SUSD, talks to Sophie Harper about the changes he's seen in the hospitality industry over the years and gives us his opinion on the investment market and disruptors affecting the current hospitality landscape in the UK... Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Reminding You Why You Love Football - The MUNDIAL Podcast

The main man, Owen Blackhurst, is back in the hosting hot seat and is with Seb White and Tommy Stewart to talk military history, gallivanting in Indonesia and Norfolk, middle-aged children, Owen's birthday, test tube babies, David Preece, Henrik Larsson, Celtic, Toni Duggan, Felix Magath, the Bundesliga, Antonio Conte, Rob Holding, Andros Townsend, Shane Warne, Pat Cash, Wayne Rooney, Jürgen Klinsmann, the Rolling Stones, Mick Jagger, Wesley Snipes, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Alan Shearer, GIANT, Harry Harris, pre-season, Football Manager, the EUROs final, Seb's bike crash, drink breaks, orange slices, Yorkshire Three Peaks, Sam Aiston, Ajax, Luís Figo at Millwall, Bolton, Hibs, Roy Wegerle, Goalie Wars, Landon Donavan, Iraq v Chelsea, Gareth Southgate, Reuben Dangoor, John Murray, Clinton Morrison, Lucy Bronze at Chelsea, Wild Dips and Waterfalls UK, no snotty admins, David Lynch, Twin Peaks, Hulk Hogan and somehow so much more.Get the latest issue of MUNDIAL Mag hereFollow MUNDIAL on Twitter - @mundialmagFollow MUNDIAL on Instagram - @mundialmag Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Spinning My Dad's Vinyl Podcast
Volume 170: Miller's White Album Record 5

The Spinning My Dad's Vinyl Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2024 36:34


We finish up a month of celebration for what would have been Glenn Miller's 120th birthday March first. And we finish by getting back to the man himself. We're not ending this memorial month with just any album in my dad's collection. I refer to it with the same name as a popular and influential Beatles record. This album has always caught my eye, and a few times my toe as it has the largest cover in the collection and sticks out beyond all the others, and it is made of a near-wood material. It also has one of the best selections of Glenn Miller's recordings. Some studio. Some from his live national radio broadcasts.  So get ready to hear the last two sides of this great compilation record set from the most famous big band conductor there was in Volume 170: Miller's White Album Record 5. More information about this album, see the Discogs webpage for it.  Credits and copyrights Glenn Miller And His Orchestra – RCA Victor Collectors Issue Second Pressing Label: RCA Victor – LPT 6700 Format: 5 x Vinyl, LP, Compilation, Reissue Released: 1960 Genre: Jazz Style: Big Band, swing Released in a binder with a 14 page liner notes booklet. The original release of this set was a limited edition in 1953, and the Second Pressing was actually first released in Canada in 1956. We will hear 6 of the 12 songs from record five of the collection, which is sides 5 and 6. Spindle numbering. The other side of the record is not the next side. The next side is the next record. Baby Me Vocals – Kay Starr Written-By – Archie Gottler, Harry Harris and Lou Handman January 26, 1939 Love With A Capital "You" Vocals – Kay Starr Written-By – Leo Robin and Ralph Rainger January 26, 1939 Oh So Good Written-By – Jerry Gray Broadcast September 5, 1941 Bobby Hacket on guitar Sun Valley Jump Written-By – Jerry Gray January 17, 1941 Rug Cutter's Swing Written-By – Horace Henderson January 29, 1940 King Porter Stomp Written-By – Jelly Roll Morton Broadcast March 12, 1940 I do not own the rights to this music. ASCAP, BMI licenses provided by third-party platforms for music that is not under Public Domain.

Sentimental Garbage
One Hit Wonders with Harry Harris

Sentimental Garbage

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2024 88:03


Musician and jingle-maker Harry Harris makes his SG debut by talking about One Hit Wonders! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Strawny's Breaky Show Catchup - Triple M Mid North Coast
Strawny chats to Former local Mark "Harry" Harris Live from Las Vegas ahead of Super Bowl 58

Strawny's Breaky Show Catchup - Triple M Mid North Coast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2024 2:03


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Blue Day Podcast
Episode 173: Terry Venables Special!

The Blue Day Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2023 65:33


This week on 'The Blue Day Podcast', we continue our special look back on the great Terry Venables with an depth conversation with journalist & author Mr Harry Harris about Terry's career on & off the pitch. Subscribe to 'The Blue Day Podcast', wherever you find your favourite podcasts for more past Chelsea FC player interviews & other content. Furthermore, find us on;Instagram- @thebluedaypodcast X- @TheBlueDayPod Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/BlueDayPodcastSubscribe to the Official The Blue Day Podcast channel on Youtube;https://www.youtube.com/@thebluedaypodcast7020If you have any questions or views you wish to share with us or give us your opinion on all things Chelsea FC or indeed this podcast, email us at thebluedaypodcast@gmail.com Carefree Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Non League Treatment Room
Harry Harris - Coventry City & Walsall days, Non league career & Journey as a young manager

The Non League Treatment Room

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2023 108:06


In the treatment room today, we have Newley Appointed Hednesford town Manager. Previously of Walsall Wood where he guided them to win the Midlands football premier division to move the club to step 4 of the non-league pyramid. Before Management he had an unbelievable playing career playing at some massive clubs. Harry tells us about his journey as a player and a manager. Talking about the togetherness a team needs to be successful. Support the podcast https://www.buymeacoffee.com/nonleaguetreatmentroomFOLLOW US ON!INSTAGRAM @nonleaguetreatmentroomTWITTER @nonleaguetreat  Podcast SponsorsTRED SOCKS - https://tredsocks.com/ Use Discount code PODCAST for 20% off!!KIT-STOP -  https://kit-stop.co.uk/CT ELECTRICAL - FOLLOW ON ALL SOCIALSPATHWAYS COVENTRY - FOLLOW ON ALL SOCIALS  Support the show Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Footy Talk - Rugby League Podcast
Woodsy's Club Tour: David Klemmer

Footy Talk - Rugby League Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2023 77:22


This week Aaron Woods is joined by one his best mates & former teammates David Klemmer. Klemmer takes us inside his obsession with footy, the challenges the Tigers are facing, some of the beefs he has had over the years & Woodys brings up the time red wine took down Klemmer!  ------

Heartland POD
The Flyover View, June 23, 2023 | Heartland Politics, News, and Views

Heartland POD

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2023 18:00


Host: Kevin Smith Dives into the weekly news most impactful to the HeartlandDANGER SEEKERS AUDIO REPERTORY COMPANY - https://www.youtube.com/@c.lanham1753/featuredHEADLINESMissouri judge orders end to GOP officials' standoff over proposed abortion rights ballot measureAssociated Press - https://apnews.com/article/missouri-abortion-ballot-measure-b3275e82ae6ea06336795902a7c19736?fbclid=IwAR1QfiaXjBpt3Zq6gNcl6QHwUQi62hWp9vX8RZ7M9I9JQOb48DZCttw-cGo_aem_th_AUJDWaQ53No1ikzf552O8bGLMbE-0U_0B0GjY3_kMDt0Av8NPcJw1F-UWKIgbUUOB88&mibextid=Zxz2cZSupreme court rules against Navajo nation in Colorado River water disputeThe Guardian - https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jun/22/supreme-court-navajo-nation-rulingLIGHTNING ROUNDMissouri,St. Charles County Library meeting sees hundreds for public forum on wardrobe choices.St. Louis Post Dispatch - https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/stcharles/more-than-350-people-pack-st-charles-library-meeting-in-fight-over-dress-code-lgbtq/article_363f3d66-1069-11ee-afd9-a7e1bfb0bc7d.htmlTexas,Texas' Senate voted Wednesday to start state Attorney General Ken Paxton's impeachment trial on Sept. 5.Axios - https://www.axios.com/2023/06/22/texas-ken-paxton-impeachment-trial-date-set-wife-blocked-votingParts of the South, especially Texas, remain in the midst of a record-breaking brutal, long-duration heat wave.NBC - https://www.nbcnews.com/news/weather/texas-continues-bake-blistering-heat-wave-shows-no-signs-letting-rcna90570Texas Governor Greg Abbott this week vetoed 76 bills in order to bully and blackmail fellow Republicans into supporting his school voucher scheme.MSN - https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/abbott-and-patrick-ramrod-rejected-bills-through-texas-legislature-killing-important-laws/ar-AA1cPI4n?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=6057d2708dce43b39257856a79686cf6&ei=17&fbclid=IwAR3N85j80Mp15ZnOXBKUgpOG4aAR9gKaVDrgq_BU1gufmvAHbAZWpRX70Is_aem_th_ART6YT1rS1rR-tQJVy5vwB5vXIjAVD1QnOB-UOJjO-3m10fGmwQvWuFKCqAQ3j5U52w&mibextid=Zxz2cZArkansas,A federal judge has permanently blocked the country's first law banning gender-affirming care for minors.NPR - https://www.npr.org/2023/06/20/1183344228/arkansas-2021-gender-affirming-care-ban-transgender-blockedAnd Lastly,An Iowan Meteorologist resigns, citing PTSD from threats over climate change coverageWashington Post - https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2023/06/22/meteorologist-climate-death-threat-iowa/ 

The Heartland POD
The Flyover View, June 23, 2023 | Heartland Politics, News, and Views

The Heartland POD

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2023 18:00


Host: Kevin Smith Dives into the weekly news most impactful to the HeartlandDANGER SEEKERS AUDIO REPERTORY COMPANY - https://www.youtube.com/@c.lanham1753/featuredHEADLINESMissouri judge orders end to GOP officials' standoff over proposed abortion rights ballot measureAssociated Press - https://apnews.com/article/missouri-abortion-ballot-measure-b3275e82ae6ea06336795902a7c19736?fbclid=IwAR1QfiaXjBpt3Zq6gNcl6QHwUQi62hWp9vX8RZ7M9I9JQOb48DZCttw-cGo_aem_th_AUJDWaQ53No1ikzf552O8bGLMbE-0U_0B0GjY3_kMDt0Av8NPcJw1F-UWKIgbUUOB88&mibextid=Zxz2cZSupreme court rules against Navajo nation in Colorado River water disputeThe Guardian - https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jun/22/supreme-court-navajo-nation-rulingLIGHTNING ROUNDMissouri,St. Charles County Library meeting sees hundreds for public forum on wardrobe choices.St. Louis Post Dispatch - https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/stcharles/more-than-350-people-pack-st-charles-library-meeting-in-fight-over-dress-code-lgbtq/article_363f3d66-1069-11ee-afd9-a7e1bfb0bc7d.htmlTexas,Texas' Senate voted Wednesday to start state Attorney General Ken Paxton's impeachment trial on Sept. 5.Axios - https://www.axios.com/2023/06/22/texas-ken-paxton-impeachment-trial-date-set-wife-blocked-votingParts of the South, especially Texas, remain in the midst of a record-breaking brutal, long-duration heat wave.NBC - https://www.nbcnews.com/news/weather/texas-continues-bake-blistering-heat-wave-shows-no-signs-letting-rcna90570Texas Governor Greg Abbott this week vetoed 76 bills in order to bully and blackmail fellow Republicans into supporting his school voucher scheme.MSN - https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/abbott-and-patrick-ramrod-rejected-bills-through-texas-legislature-killing-important-laws/ar-AA1cPI4n?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=6057d2708dce43b39257856a79686cf6&ei=17&fbclid=IwAR3N85j80Mp15ZnOXBKUgpOG4aAR9gKaVDrgq_BU1gufmvAHbAZWpRX70Is_aem_th_ART6YT1rS1rR-tQJVy5vwB5vXIjAVD1QnOB-UOJjO-3m10fGmwQvWuFKCqAQ3j5U52w&mibextid=Zxz2cZArkansas,A federal judge has permanently blocked the country's first law banning gender-affirming care for minors.NPR - https://www.npr.org/2023/06/20/1183344228/arkansas-2021-gender-affirming-care-ban-transgender-blockedAnd Lastly,An Iowan Meteorologist resigns, citing PTSD from threats over climate change coverageWashington Post - https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2023/06/22/meteorologist-climate-death-threat-iowa/ 

Hugh Hewitt podcast
Special Counsel John Durham's investigation concludes

Hugh Hewitt podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2023 75:52


Reminding You Why You Love Football - The MUNDIAL Podcast

Owen Blackhurst, Seb White, James Bird, Asad Raza and Tommy Stewart discuss the return of football in Bury, making football fanzines in the early noughties, losing 6-0 on the astro, chips in a basket in nightclubs, Joe Cole at Lille, the best team to ever be relegated, the King of the golf course, vermicious knids, Englishmen doing bad accents, THAT Nike Portugal home shirt in 2004, Ricardo taking his gloves off, a young Dimitar Berbatov, smoking footballers, tobacco flavoured vapes, basketball documentaries, vodka pasta and somehow so much more.This episode is a Footballco and MUNDIAL Production. Hosted by Owen Blackhurst. Produced by Tommy Stewart and Seb White. Original music by Harry Harris.Subscribe to CLUB MUNDIAL nowhttps://mundialmag.coSign up for the Newsletterhttps://mundialmag.co/newsletterFollow MUNDIAL on Twitter - @mundialmagFollow MUNDIAL on Instagram - @mundialmag Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

JOWMA (Jewish Orthodox Women's Medical Association) Podcast
Specialty Spotlight: Dr. Richard (Harry) Harris, Anesthesiology

JOWMA (Jewish Orthodox Women's Medical Association) Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2023 63:04


Dr. Richard Harris is an anesthesiologist and professional cave diver who trained in Australia, the UK, and New Zealand. He has worked in diving and aviation medicine around the world. In 2019, Dr. Harris was named Australian of the Year in recognition of the role he played in helping orchestrate the rescue of a soccer team and their coach who were trapped in the Tham Luang Cave in Thailand. In this interview Dr. Harris discusses: - What physicians can do to avoid burnout. - How his training as an anesthesiologist prepared him to help save the lives of all thirteen people trapped in the cave. - How a support network can help you stay emotionally balanced during stressful times. - What it means to take healthy risks. Dr. Harris' Podcast https://realriskpodcast.com/ _______________________________________________________ Become a JOWMA Member! www.jowma.org  Follow us on Instagram! www.instagram.com/JOWMA_org  Follow us on Twitter! www.twitter.com/JOWMA_med  Follow us on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/JOWMAorg/ Stay up-to-date with JOWMA news! Sign up for the JOWMA newsletter! https://jowma.us6.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=9b4e9beb287874f9dc7f80289&id=ea3ef44644&mc_cid=dfb442d2a7&mc_eid=e9eee6e41e

The Blue Day Podcast
Episode 142: Pound Land- The Battle For Stamford Bridge

The Blue Day Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2023 39:10


This week on 'The Blue Day Podcast', filmmaker Caj Sohal & journalist Harry Harris join the show as we discuss the upcoming documentary called 'Pound Land- The Battle of Stamford Bridge'. A documentary highlighting the relationship between Ken Bates & Matthew Harding while at Chelsea FC in the mid 90s. Subscribe to 'The Blue Day Podcast', wherever you find your favourite podcasts for more past player interviews & content. Furthermore, find us on the following channels; Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/BlueDayPodcast Twitter- @TheBlueDayPod Instagram- @thebluedaypodcast If you have any questions or views you wish to share with us or give us your opinion on all things Chelsea FC or indeed this podcast, email us at thebluedaypodcast@gmail.com Carefree Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Heartland POD
Let's Have A Chat | Amy Easterling, Harry Harris, and Douglas Ziegemeier. A Grounded Trio of Candidates for the Francis Howell School Board

Heartland POD

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2023 44:38


HOST:Kevin Smith - https://twitter.com/KevINmidMOGUEST HOSTS:Amy Easterling - https://easterling4fhsd.comHarry Harris - http://www.harryforhowell.comDouglas Ziegemeier - https://www.douglas4howell.com/

The Heartland POD
Let's Have A Chat | Amy Easterling, Harry Harris, and Douglas Ziegemeier. A Grounded Trio of Candidates for the Francis Howell School Board

The Heartland POD

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2023 44:38


HOST:Kevin Smith - https://twitter.com/KevINmidMOGUEST HOSTS:Amy Easterling - https://easterling4fhsd.comHarry Harris - http://www.harryforhowell.comDouglas Ziegemeier - https://www.douglas4howell.com/

The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of
The Big Goodbye

The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2022 73:04


Could you imagine a time in your prop-collecting life when you would be ready to say goodbye to your things?  Dave and Ryan certainly cannot... but they are joined by Aliens super-collector Harry Harris who made such a decision and recently auctioned off most of his incredible precious-es.  What drives a collector to sell?  When is it time?  Are there regrets?  Will Ryan and Dave be buried with their collections like Egyptian pharaohs?

The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of
The Big Goodbye

The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2022 73:04


Could you imagine a time in your prop-collecting life when you would be ready to say goodbye to your things?  Dave and Ryan certainly cannot... but they are joined by Aliens super-collector Harry Harris who made such a decision and recently auctioned off most of his incredible precious-es.  What drives a collector to sell?  When is it time?  Are there regrets?  Will Ryan and Dave be buried with their collections like Egyptian pharaohs?

Anesthesia and Critical Care Reviews and Commentary (ACCRAC) Podcast
Episode 242: The Rescue with Harry Harris

Anesthesia and Critical Care Reviews and Commentary (ACCRAC) Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2022 70:39


In this 242nd episode I welcome Dr. Richard "Harry" Harris to the show to discuss his incredible experience saving the lives of the Thai boys soccer team that was trapped in a flooded cave in Thailand in 2018.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Popcorn and Soda
Thirteen Lives (2022)

Popcorn and Soda

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2022 37:55


We don't typically cover based-on-a-true-story films, but Thirteen Lives (2022) directed by Ron Howard seemed worth a watch. A retelling of the June 2018 incident where twelve Thai adolescents and their soccer coach were trapped in a flooded cave for 18 days and in need of rescue. Jason Furie and Adam Roth break it down and try and figure out why Viggo Mortensen and Colin Farrell are so unrecognizable here.Visit Website | Join Newsletter | Support | Facebook | Instagram

Music Therapy Conversations
Ep 65 Tilly Mütter interviews students at #emtc2022

Music Therapy Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 63:56


The interviews in this episode were recorded at the conference of the European Music Therapy Confederation at Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh in June 2022. Tilly Mütter is a student on the MSc Music Therapy Course at QMU. She completed her degree in music at Canterbury, where she first became aware of music therapy. After graduating, Tilly became the Music Lead at The Sunflower Federation Schools in Hertfordshire, for students with additional needs and profound multiple learning disabilities. This role inspired her to study music therapy. This episode was edited by Tilly from conversations with twenty-one music therapy students across Europe, sharing their journeys. She asked each person four questions: 1. Please introduce yourself: what course are you on? 2. What have you found challenging and rewarding about your course so far? 3. What have you enjoyed about the EMTC conference? 4. What advice would you give to someone wanting to study music therapy? She spoke to Folke Wiemann, Marie Winneke. Laura O'Neill, Harry Harris, Clare Woodham, Lona Frießner, Hannah Quigley, Dorothy Ogilvy, Megan Thomas, Lisa Johnston, Kelly Nga-Ying Luk, Erin McGonigle, Karen Biørnskov Christensen, Phoebe Janisch , Alice Paine, Emma Keeling , Hiu Tung Yan, Tao-Deva Stingl, Susanne Gruss, Calum Frame and Alphonso Archer.

Maritime Nation
Commemorating the Korean War

Maritime Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2022 77:12


This episode of Maritime Nation is a special tribute to those who served and fought during the Korean War. Adm. James Foggo, Dr. Steve Wills and Andrew Park are joined by Adm. Harry Harris (ret.), Montford Point Marines Sgt. Ivor Griffin and Staff Sgt. Eugene Groves (ret.) and Ned Forney to discuss the heroes of the Korean War, the critical importance of our allies and the relevance of the Indo-Pacific region to America today. Part one examines U.S.-South Korea alliance and America's policies toward Indo-Pacific region, People's Republic of China and Taiwan. Part two discusses segregation within the U.S. Marine Corps before and during the Korean War and the Battle of Chosin Reservoir, which was the first battle between the U.S. military and the Chinese People's Liberation Army in modern history. Part three deals with the Hungnam Evacuation, the greatest rescue operation ever by a single ship by evacuating more than 100,000 American service members and 14,000 refugees.

The Proceedings Podcast
Proceedings Podcast Ep. 269: Ambassador and Admiral Harry Harris on Indo-Pacific Security

The Proceedings Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 35:47


Retired Navy Admiral Harry Harris, former U.S. Ambassador to South Korea and PACOM Commander, discusses security challenges on the Korean Peninsula and across the broader Indo-Pacific region.

Midnight Train Podcast
Episode 150! Who Was Jack the Ripper? Part 1

Midnight Train Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2022 110:54


ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY FRIGGIN' EPISODES! Thank you all so much!! Consider becoming a Patreon POOPR! www.themidnighttrainpodcast.com  London in 1888:   Victorian London was not a happy place to be, and the facts speak for themselves. Prostitution was rife, poverty and crime were prevalent, and 19th-century housing was barely habitable. Finding work in 1888 was extremely difficult for the residents of Whitechapel, feeding into the cycle of poverty and depravity.   Soot and smoke generally filled the air, and there were still grazing sheep in Regent's Park in the mid-Victorian period — it was said that you could tell how long the sheep had been in the capital by how dirty their coats were. They went increasingly from white to black over days.   The nights were riddled with gas lamp-lit streets and dark, foggy alleyways.   The city was steeped in poverty and all manner of crime and disease.   Many children were seen as a strain on their parents' resources, and it is believed that two in every ten died before reaching five years old.   breeding ground for crime and poor behavioral habits, including murder, prostitution, and violence – and vicious circles like these were rarely broken in such poor districts   Streets were dirty, and fresh food was scarce. Pollution and sewage smells filled the air.   Urine soaked the streets. There was an experiment in Piccadilly with wood paving in the midcentury. It was abandoned after a few weeks because the sheer smell of ammonia coming from the pavement was horrible. Also, the shopkeepers nearby said that this ammonia was discoloring their shop fronts.   London in the 19th century was basically filled with cesspools.   There'd be brick chambers, maybe 6 feet deep, about 4 feet wide, and every house would have them.   It was more common to have a cesspool in the basement in central London and in more crowded areas.   Above the cesspool would be where your household privy, or toilet, would be.   These made the general smell in crowded London pretty awful.   There would have been horses everywhere. By the 1890s, there were approximately 300,000 horses and 1,000 tons of horse droppings a day in London. The Victorians employed boys ages 12 to 14 to dodge between the traffic and try to scoop up the excrement as soon as it hit the streets.   Shit everywhere.   The streets were lined with "mud,"... except it wasn't mud.    Life was much harder for women than men generally.   The lack of proper work and money led many women and girls into prostitution, a high-demand service by those wishing to escape their grim realities.   These women were commonly known as "unfortunates,"   They owned only what they wore and carried in their pockets - their dirty deeds would pay for their bed for the night.   There was an extraordinary lack of contraception for women.   Doctors performed unorthodox abortions in dirty facilities, including the back streets.   Many women would die of infection from these ill-performed surgeries or ingesting chemicals or poison.   The insides of the houses throughout the borough were no less uninviting and more reminiscent of slums.   Many of these dilapidated homes were makeshift brothels.   Prostitution was a dangerous trade, as diseases were passed from person to person very quickly, and doctors did not come cheap.   Most work came through casual or 'sweated' labor, like tailoring, boot making, and making matchboxes.   There was very little job security, and the work premises would more than likely be small, cramped, dusty rooms with little to no natural light.   Workhouses were another alternative, set up to offer food and shelter to the poorest of the community in return for hard, grueling labor in even worse conditions.   large portions of the population turned to drinking or drugs to cope with everyday life   Pubs and music halls were abundant in the East End, and booze was cheap, too, making it a viable means of escapism for many.   Crime rates spiraled and were unmanageable by London's police force in 1888. Petty crime like street theft was normality.   High levels of alcohol-related violence, gang crime, and even protection rackets were everywhere.   The high level of prostitution meant that vulnerable women were often forced to earn a living on the streets, leaving them easy targets for assault, rape, and even murder.   Police stations and the detectives at the helm lacked structure and organization, with many crimes being mislabelled, evidence going missing, or being tampered with was common.    The maze of dingy alleyways and dark courtyards, each with multiple entrances and exit points, made the district even more difficult to police. There were even some parts of Whitechapel that police officers were afraid to enter, making them crime hotspots.   With that brief look into what it was like in Whitechapel, it is no wonder that Jack the Ripper could get away with his crimes. That being said, let's look at the crimes and victims.   Mary Ann Nichols:   Mary Ann Nichols led a brief life marked with hardships. Born to a London locksmith in 1845, she married Edward in 1864 and gave birth to five children before the marriage dissolved in 1880.   In explaining the roots of the separation, Nichols' father accused Edward of having an affair with the nurse who attended one of their children's births. For his part, Edward claimed that Nichols' drinking problem drove them to part ways.   After separating, the court required Edward to give his estranged wife five shillings per month, over 600 pounds today— a requirement he successfully challenged when he found out she was working as a prostitute.   Nichols then lived in and out of workhouses until her death. She tried living with her father, but they did not get along, so she continued to work as a prostitute to support herself. Though she once worked as a servant in a well-off family home, she quit because her employers did not drink.   On the night of her death, Nichols found herself surrounded by the same problems she'd had for most of her life: lack of money and a propensity to drink. On 31st August 1888, she left the pub where she was drinking and walked back to the boarding house where she planned to sleep for the night.   Nichols lacked the funds to pay for the entrance fee, so she went back out to earn it. But, according to her roommate, who saw her the night before someone killed her, she spent whatever money she did earn on alcohol.   That night Mary was wearing a bonnet that none of the other residents of the lodging house had seen her with before. Since she intended to resort to prostitution to raise the money for her bed, she felt this would be an irresistible draw to potential clients. So, she was escorted from the premises by the deputy lodging housekeeper. She laughed to him, "I'll soon get my doss money, see what a jolly bonnet I have now."   At 2.30 on the morning of 31st August, she met a friend named Emily Holland by the shop at the junction of Osborn Street and Whitechapel Road.   Mary was very drunk, and she boasted to Emily that she had made her lodging money three times over but had spent it.   Concerned at Mary's drunken state, Emily tried to persuade her to come back to Wilmott's with her. Mary refused, and, telling Emily that she must get her lodging money somehow, she stumbled off along Whitechapel Road.   That was the last time that Mary Nichols was seen alive.   At 3.45 a.m., a woman's body was found with her skirt pulled up to her waist, lying next to a gateway in Buck's Row, Just off Whitechapel Road. This location was around a ten-minute walk from the corner where Mary met Emily Holland.   According to some newspaper reports, the woman's throat had been cut back to the spine, the wound being so savagely inflicted that it had almost severed her head from her body.   Within 45 minutes, she had been placed on a police ambulance, which was nothing more than a wooden hand cart. She had been taken to the mortuary of the nearby Whitechapel Workhouse Infirmary.   Here, Inspector Spratling of the Metropolitan Police's J Division arrived to take down a description of the, at the time, unknown victim, and he made the horrific discovery that, in addition to the dreadful wound to the throat, a deep gash ran along the woman's abdomen - The killer had disemboweled her.   The funeral of Mary Ann Nichols took place amidst great secrecy to deter morbid sightseers on Thursday, 6th September 1888.   Strangely, the ruse used to get Mary Nichols's body to the undertaker's could be said to have included an element of foreshadowing.   Mary Nichols's body was brought out of the mortuary's back gate in Chapman's Court, from where it was taken to the undertaker's premises on Hanbury Street.   Two days later, the murderer struck again and murdered Annie Chapman in Hanbury Street.   Annie Chapman:   Annie Chapman didn't always lead a hard life. She lived for some time with her husband, John, a coachman, in West London.   However, after the couple had children, her life began to unravel: Her son, John, was born disabled, and her youngest daughter, Emily, died of meningitis. She and her husband both began to drink heavily and eventually separated in 1884.   After the separation, Chapman moved to Whitechapel to live with another man. While she still received ten shillings per week from her husband, she sometimes worked as a prostitute to supplement her income.   When her husband died from alcohol abuse, that money stopped. According to her friends, Chapman "seemed to have given away all together." Then, a week before she died, Chapman got into a fistfight with another woman over an unreturned bar of soap.   At 5 p.m. on Friday, 7th September, Annie met her friend, Amelia Palmer, in Dorset Street. Annie looked extremely unwell and complained of feeling "too ill to do anything."   Amelia met her again, ten minutes later, still standing in the same place, although Annie was trying desperately to rally her spirits. "It's no use giving way, I must pull myself together and get some money or I shall have no lodgings," were the last words Amelia Palmer heard Annie Chapman speak.   At 11.30 p.m. that night, Annie turned up at Crossingham's lodging house and asked Timothy Donovan if she could sit in the kitchen.   Since he hadn't seen her for a few days, Donovan asked her where she had been? "In the infirmary," she replied weakly. He allowed her to go to the kitchen, where she remained until Saturday morning, 8th September 1888.   At 1.45 a.m., Donovan sent John Evans, the lodging house's night watchman, to collect the fourpence for her bed from her. He found her a little drunk and eating potatoes in the kitchen. When he asked her for the money, she replied wearily, "I haven't got it. I am weak and ill and have been in the infirmary."   Annie then went to Donovan's office and implored him to allow her to stay a little longer. But instead, he told her that if she couldn't pay, she couldn't stay.   Annie turned to leave, but then, turning back, she told him to save the bed for her, adding, "I shall not be long before I am in. I shall soon be back, don't let the bed."   John Evans then escorted her from the premises and watched her head off along Dorset Street, observing later that she appeared to be slightly tipsy instead of drunk.   At 5.30 that morning, Elizabeth Long saw her talking with a man outside number 29 on Hanbury Street. Since there was nothing suspicious about the couple, she continued on her way, hardly taking any actual notice.   Thirty minutes later, at 6 a.m., John Davis, an elderly resident of number 29, found her horrifically mutilated body lying between the steps and the fence in the house's backyard.   Annie had been murdered, and her body mutilated. She had a cut across her neck from left to right and a gash in her abdomen made by the same blade.   Her intestines had been pulled out and draped over her shoulders, and her uterus had been removed. The doctor conducting the post-mortem was so appalled by the damage done to her corpse that he refused to use explicit detail during the inquest. Police determined that she died of asphyxiation and that the killer mutilated her after she died.    She was later identified by her younger brother, Fountain Smith.   The severing of the throat and the mutilation of the corpse were similar to that of the injuries sustained by Mary Ann Nichols a week previously, leading investigators to believe the same assailant had murdered them.   At this point, the killings were known as 'The Whitechapel Murders."   Elizabeth Stride:   The Swedish-born domestic servant arrived in England in 1866, at which point she had already given birth to a stillborn baby and been treated for venereal diseases.   Stride married in 1869, but they soon split, and he ultimately died of tuberculosis in 1884. Stride would instead tell people that her husband and children (which they never actually had) were killed in an infamous 1878 Thames River steamship accident. She allegedly sustained an injury during that ordeal that explained her stutter.   With her husband gone and lacking a steady source of income, like so many of Jack the Ripper's victims, Stride split the remainder of her life living between work and lodging houses.    On Saturday, 29th September 1888, she had spent the afternoon cleaning two rooms at the lodging house, for which the deputy keeper paid her sixpence, and, by 6.30 p.m., she was enjoying a drink in the Queen's Head pub at the junction of Fashion Street and Commercial Street.   Returning to the lodging house, she dressed, ready for a night out, and, at 7.30 p.m., she left the lodging house.   There were several sightings of her over the next five hours, and, by midnight, she had found her way to Berner Street, off Commercial Road.   At 12.45 a.m., on 30th September, Israel Schwartz saw her being attacked by a man in a gateway off Berner Street known as Dutfield's Yard. Schwarz, however, assumed he was witnessing a domestic argument, and he crossed over the road to avoid getting dragged into the quarrel.   Schwartz likely saw the early stages of her murder.   At 1 a.m. Louis Diemschutz, the Steward of a club that sided onto Dutfield's Yard, came down Berner Street with his pony and costermongers barrow and turned into the open gates of Dutfield's Yard. Immediately as he did so, the pony shied and pulled left. Diemschutz looked into the darkness and saw a dark form on the ground. He tried to lift it with his whip but couldn't. So, he jumped down and struck a match. It was wet and windy, and the match flickered for just a few seconds, but it was sufficient time for Diemschutz to see a woman lying on the ground.   He thought that the woman might be his wife and that she was drunk, so he went into the club to get some help in lifting her.   However, he found his wife in the kitchen, and so, taking a candle, he and several other members went out into the yard, and, by the candle's light, they could see a pool of blood gathering beneath the woman.   The crowd sent for the police, and a doctor was summoned, pronouncing the woman dead. It was noted that, as in the cases of the previous victims, the killer had cut the woman's throat. However, the rest of the body had not been mutilated. This led the police to deduce that Diemschutz had interrupted the killer when he turned into Dutfield's Yard.   The body was removed to the nearest mortuary - which still stands, albeit as a ruin, in the nearby churchyard of St George-in-the-East, and there she was identified as Elizabeth Stride.   On the night of her burial, a lady went to a police station in Cardiff, and made the bizarre claim that she had spoken with the spirit of Elizabeth Stride. In the course of a séance, the victim had identified her murderer.   Nothing ever came of this…obviously.   CATHERINE EDDOWES:   Unlike the other Jack the Ripper victims, Catherine Eddowes never married and spent her short life with multiple men.   At age 21, the daughter of a tin plate worker met Thomas Conway in her hometown of Wolverhampton. The couple lived together for 20 years and had three children together. But, according to her daughter, Annie, the pair split "entirely on account of her drinking habits."   Eddowes met John Kelly soon after. She then became known as Kate Kelly and stayed with John until her death.   According to her friends and family, while Catherine was not a prostitute, she was an alcoholic. The night of her murder — the same night Elizabeth Stride was killed — a policeman found Catherine lying drunk and passed out on Aldgate Street.   She was taken to Bishopsgate Police Station, locked in a cell to sober up. But instead, she promptly fell fast asleep.   By midnight, she was awake and was deemed sober enough for release by the City jailer PC George Hutt. Before leaving, she told him that her name was Mary Ann Kelly and gave her address as 6 Fashion Street.   Hutt escorted her to the door of the police station, and he told her to close it on her way out. "Alright. Goodnight old cock" was her reply as she headed out into the early morning.   At 1.35 a.m., three men - Joseph Lawende, Joseph Hyam Levy, and Harry Harris saw her talking with a man at the Church Passage entrance into Mitre Square, located on the eastern fringe of the City of London.   Ten minutes later, at 1.45 a.m. Police Constable Alfred Watkins walked his beat into Mitre Square and discovered her horrifically mutilated body lying in the darkness of the Square's South West corner. The killer had disemboweled her. But, in addition, the killer had targeted her face, carving deep "V"s into her cheeks and eyelids. He had also removed and gone off with her uterus and left kidney. Finally, he had cut open her intestines to release fecal matter.   Dr. Frederick Brown, who performed the post-mortem examination of Eddowes' body, concluded that the killer must have some knowledge of anatomy if he could remove her organs in the dark. Mary Jane Kelly:   She is the victim about whom we know the least.   We know virtually nothing about her life before she arrives in the East End of London. What we do know is based on what she chose to reveal about her past to those she knew, and the integrity of what she did tell is challenging to ascertain. Indeed, we don't even know that her name was Mary Kelly.   According to her boyfriend, Joseph Barnett, with whom she lived until shortly before her death, she had told him that she was born in Limerick, in Ireland, that her father's name was John Kelly, and that she had six or seven brothers and one sister.   The family moved to Wales when she was a child, and when she was sixteen, she met and married a collier named Davis or Davies. Unfortunately, her husband was killed in a mine explosion three years later, and Mary moved to Cardiff to live with a female cousin who introduced her to prostitution.   Mary moved to London around 1884, where she met a French woman who ran a high-class brothel in Knightsbridge, in which establishment Mary began working. She told Barnett that, during this period in her life, she had dressed well, had been driven about in a carriage, and, for a time, had led a lady's life.   She had, she said, made several visits to France at this time, and had accompanied a gentleman to Paris, but, not liking it there, she had returned to London after just two weeks.   She began using the continental version of her name and often referred to herself as Marie Jeannette Kelly.   After that, her life suffered a downward spiral, which saw her move to the East End of London, where she lodged with a Mrs. Buki in a side thoroughfare off Ratcliff Highway. Soon after her arrival, she enlisted her landlady's assistance in returning to the West End to retrieve a box that contained dresses of a costly description from the French lady.   Mary had now started drinking heavily, which led to conflict between her and Mrs. Buki. Relations between them became so strained that Mary moved out and went to lodge at the home of Mrs. Mary McCarthy at 1 Breezer's Hill Pennington Street, St. George-in-the-East.   By 1886 she had moved into Cooley's typical lodging house in Thrawl Street, and it was while living here that, on Good Friday, 6th April 1887, she met Joseph Barnett, who worked as a porter at Billingsgate Fish Market.   The two were soon living together, and, by 1888, they were renting a tiny room at 13 Miller's Court from John McCarthy, who owned a chandler's shop just outside Miller's Court on Dorset Street.   She and Barnett appear to have lived happily together until, in mid-1888, he lost his market job, and she returned to prostitution, which caused arguments between them. During one heated exchange, a pane in the window by the door of their room had been broken.   The precariousness of their finances had resulted in Mary falling behind with her rent, and by early November, she owed her landlord twenty-nine shillings in rent arrears.   On 30th October 1888, Joseph Barnett moved out, although he and Mary remained on friendly terms, and he would drop by to see her, the last time being at around 7.30 on the evening of Thursday 8th November, albeit he didn't stay long.   Several people claimed to have seen her during the next fourteen hours.   One of them was George Hutchinson, an unemployed laborer, who met her on Commercial Street at 2 a.m. on 9th November. She asked him if he would lend her sixpence, to which he replied that he couldn't as he'd spent all his money.   Replying that she must go and find some money, she continued along Commercial Street, where a man coming from the opposite direction tapped her on the shoulder and said something to her, at which point they both started laughing.   The man put his arm around Mary, and they started walking back along Commercial Street, passing Hutchinson, who was standing under the lamp by the Queen's Head pub at the junction of Fashion Street and Commercial Street.   Although the man had his head down with his hat over his eyes, Hutchinson stooped down and looked him in the face, at which point the man gave him what Hutchinson would later describe as a stern look.   Hutchinson followed them as they crossed into Dorset Street, and he watched them turn into Miller's Court. He waited outside the court for 45 minutes, by which time they hadn't reemerged, so he left the scene.   At around 4 a.m., two of Mary's neighbors heard a faint cry of "Murder," but because such cries were frequent in the area - often the result of a drunken brawl - they both ignored it.   At 10. Forty-five on the morning of the 9th November, her landlord, John McCarthy, sent his assistant, Thomas Bowyer, round to Mary's room, telling him to try and get some rent from her.   Bowyer marched into Miller's Court and banged on her door. There was no reply. He tried to open it but found it locked. He, therefore, went round to the broken window pane, reached in, pushed aside the shabby muslin curtain that covered it, and looked into the gloomy room.   Moments later, an ashen-faced Bowyer burst into McCarthy's shop on Dorset Street. "Guvnor," he stammered, "I knocked at the door and could not make anyone answer. I looked through the window and saw a lot of blood."   "Good God, you don't mean that," was McCarthy's reply, and the two men raced into Miller's Court, where McCarthy stooped down and looked through the broken pane of glass.   McCarthy would later recall the horror of the scene that greeted him. "The sight we saw I cannot drive away from my mind. It looked more the work of a devil than of a man. I had heard a great deal about the Whitechapel murders, but I declare to God I had never expected to see such a sight as this. The whole scene is more than I can describe. I hope I may never see such a sight as this again."   Someone immediately sent for the police, and one of the first officers at the scene was Walter Dew, who, many years later, would recall the horror of what he saw through that window:- "On the bed was all that remained of the young woman. There was little left of her, not much more than a skeleton. Her face was terribly scarred and mutilated. All this was horrifying enough, but the mental picture of that sight which remains most vividly with me is the poor woman's eyes. They were wide open, and seemed to be staring straight at me with a look of terror."   Possible victims:   Martha Tabram   On Tuesday 7th August, following a Monday bank holiday, prostitute Martha Tabram was murdered at about 2:30 a.m. Her body was found at George Yard Buildings, George Yard, Whitechapel, shortly before 5:00 a.m. She had been stabbed 39 times about her neck, torso, and genitals with a short blade. With one possible exception, a right-handed individual had inflicted all her wounds.   Based on statements from a fellow prostitute and PC Thomas Barrett, who was patrolling nearby, Inspector Reid put soldiers at the Tower of London and Wellington Barracks on an identification parade, but without positive results. Police did not connect Tabram's murder with the earlier murder of Emma Smith, but they did connect her death with later murders.   Most experts do not connect Tabram's murder with the others attributed to the Ripper because she had been repeatedly stabbed, whereas later victims typically suffered slash wounds and abdominal mutilations. However, investigators cannot rule out a connection.   Rose Mylett   On Thursday 20th December 1888, a patrolling constable found the strangled body of 26-year-old prostitute Rose Mylett in Clarke's Yard, off Poplar High Street. Mylett (born Catherine Millett and known as Drunken Lizzie Davis and Fair Alice Downey) had lodged at 18 George Street, as had Emma Smith.   Four doctors who examined Mylett's body thought she had been murdered, but Robert Anderson thought she had accidentally hanged herself on the collar of her dress while in a drunken stupor. At Anderson's request, Dr. Bond examined Mylett's body, agreeing with Anderson. Commissioner Monro also suspected it was a suicide or natural death as there were no signs of a struggle. The coroner, Wynne Baxter, told the inquest jury that "there is no evidence to show that death was the result of violence." Nevertheless, the jury returned a verdict of "wilful murder against some person or persons unknown," and the case was added to the Whitechapel file.   Alice McKenzie:   Alice McKenzie was possibly a prostitute and was murdered at about 12:40 a.m. on Wednesday 17th July 1889 in Castle Alley, Whitechapel. Like most of the previous murders, her left carotid artery was severed from left to right, and there were wounds on her abdomen. However, her injuries were not as deep as in previous murders, and the killer used a shorter blade. Commissioner Monro and one of the pathologists examining the body, Bond, believed this to be a Ripper murder. However, another of the pathologists, Phillips, and Robert Anderson, disagreed, as did Inspector Abberline. Later writers are also divided and either suggest that McKenzie was a Ripper victim or that the unknown murderer tried to make it look like a Ripper killing to deflect suspicion from himself. At the inquest, Coroner Baxter acknowledged both possibilities and concluded: "There is great similarity between this and the other class of cases, which have happened in this neighbourhood, and if the same person has not committed this crime, it is clearly an imitation of the other cases."   Pinchin Street torso:   A woman's torso was found at 5:15 a.m. on Tuesday 10th September 1889 under a railway arch in Pinchin Street, Whitechapel. Extensive bruising about the victim's back, hip, and arm indicated that the killer had severely beaten her shortly before her death, which occurred approximately one day before discovering her torso. The victim's abdomen was also extensively mutilated in a manner reminiscent of the Ripper, although her genitals had not been wounded. The dismembered sections of the body are believed to have been transported to the railway arch, hidden under an old chemise. The age of the victim was estimated at 30–40 years. Despite a search of the area, no other sections of her body were ever found, and neither the victim nor the culprit were ever identified.   Chief Inspector Swanson and Commissioner Monro noted that blood within the torso indicated that death was not from hemorrhage or cutting of the throat. The pathologists, however, pointed out that the general bloodlessness of the tissues and vessels told that bleeding was the cause of death. Newspaper speculation that the body belonged to Lydia Hart, who had disappeared, was refuted after she was found recovering in hospital after "a bit of a spree." Another claim that the victim was a missing girl called Emily Barker was also refuted, as the torso was from an older and taller woman.   Swanson did not consider this a Ripper case and instead suggested a link to the Thames Torso Murders in Rainham and Chelsea and the "Whitehall Mystery". Monro agreed with Swanson's assessment. These three murders and the Pinchin Street case are suggested to be the work of a serial killer, nicknamed the "Torso killer," who could either be the same person as "Jack the Ripper" or a separate killer of uncertain connection. Links between these and three further murders—the "Battersea Mystery" of 1873 and 1874, two women were found dismembered, and the 1884 "Tottenham Court Road Mystery"—have also been postulated. Experts on the murders—colloquially known as "Ripperologists"—such as Stewart Evans, Keith Skinner, Martin Fido, and Donald Rumbelow, discount any connection between the torso and Ripper killings based on their different modi operandi.   Monro was replaced as Commissioner by Sir Edward Bradford on 21st June 1890, after a disagreement with Home Secretary Henry Matthews over police pensions.   Frances Coles:   The last murders in the Whitechapel file were committed on Friday 13th February 1891, when prostitute Frances Coles was murdered under a railway arch in Swallow Gardens, Whitechapel. Her body was found only moments after the attack at 2:15 a.m. by PC Ernest Thompson, who later stated he heard retreating footsteps in the distance. As contemporary police practices dictated, Thompson remained at the scene.   Coles was lying beneath a passageway under a railway arch between Chamber Street and Royal Mint Street. She was still alive but died before medical help could arrive. Minor wounds on the back of her head suggest that she was thrown violently to the ground before her throat was cut at least twice, from left to right and then back again. Otherwise, there were no mutilations to the body, leading some to believe Thompson had disturbed her assailant. Superintendent Arnold and Inspector Reid arrived soon afterward from the nearby Leman Street police station, and Chief Inspectors Donald Swanson and Henry Moore, who had been involved in the previous murder investigations, arrived by 5 a.m.   A man named James Sadler, who had earlier been seen with Coles, was arrested by the police and charged with her murder. A high-profile investigation by Swanson and Moore into Sadler's history and his whereabouts at the previous Whitechapel murders indicates that the police may have suspected him of being the Ripper. However, Sadler was released on 3rd March for lack of evidence.   https://www.imdb.com/list/ls079111466/?sort=user_rating,desc&st_dt=&mode=detail&page=1&title_type=movie&ref_=ttls_ref_typ

The Blue Day Podcast
Episode 84: The Demise Of The Roman Empire!

The Blue Day Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 43:47


This week on 'The Blue Day Podcast', renowned author & journalist Harry Harris joins the show & discusses the fallout from Roman Abramovich sanctions & the subsequent troubles that have affected Chelsea Football Club. Subscribe to 'The Blue Day Podcast' wherever you find your favourite podcasts for more ex Chelsea FC player interviews & other content. Furthermore, find us on Twitter, Instagram & Facebook. Simply search 'The Blue Day Podcast'. If you have any questions or views you wish to share with us or give us your opinion on all things Chelsea FC or indeed this podcast, email us at thebluedaypodcast@gmail.com Carefree Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The General and the Ambassador: A Conversation
The Republic of Korea: US Dip-Mil engagement during the Trump Administration with General Robert Abrams and Ambassador Harry Harris

The General and the Ambassador: A Conversation

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2022 50:29


General Abrams and Ambassador Harris discuss their partnership,  the treaty alliance with the ROK,  the shift under the Trump Administration to a top down approach to foreign policy and to a transactional relationships with allies, US summitry efforts with North Korea, managing  ROK initiatives, the storming of the Ambassador's residence, the threat of the PRC and the value of the Quad and AUKUS.  

Asia Matters
Is there a Transatlantic Approach to China and the Indo-Pacific?

Asia Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2021 45:54


We're heading to familiar territory again on this week's podcast - the Indo-Pacific. Increasingly, the area is becoming the centre of the geopolitical conversation being had all around the world.  China's showcasing of its increasing might there is a big reason for this of course. But the sheer size of this complex region and the wealth of its resources means the Indo-Pacific's many other diverse players cannot be overlooked. How can the United States and its European allies best manage relations with the powers in this all-important region - and how should the transatlantic allies work together to best serve their respective goals? Our guests this week could not be better placed to answer those questions. Admiral Harry Harris was US ambassador to South Korea from 2018 to 2021. Before that he served as the commander of the US Pacific Command, which has now been renamed the Indo Pacific Command, and also served as direct representative to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to the Secretaries of State, Hillary Clinton, and John Kerry. We're also delighted to welcome Dr Michael Reiterer back to Asia Matters, who has an equally distinguished career as a long term diplomat. He has worked for his own national service, and also the European External Action Service. He served as EU ambassador to Korea, from 2017 to 2020 - where he crossed over with Admiral Harris. He is now a distinguished professor at the Centre for Security, Diplomacy and Strategy at the Brussels School of Governance.This episode is a recording of a webinar held in collaboration with the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) in London, and Senior Associate Fellow Raffaello Pantucci is our host for this episode. The podcast is part of a project on transatlantic dialogue on China that RUSI is running at the moment with Chatham House, which has been generously supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York.As ever, you can find more information on our website -  www.asiamatterspod.com 

The Korea Society
U.S. Diplomacy and Security in Korea 2021

The Korea Society

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2021 97:02


Korea Society Inaugural Van Fleet Policy Signature Event November 17, 2021 - Former Ambassador and Admiral Harry Harris, UNC/CFC/USFK Commander General Robert Abrams, Pacific Fleet Commander Admiral Scott Swift will sit down with Korea Society Board Director and former UNC/CFC/USFK Commander General Walter “Skip” Sharp for a discussion exploring Northeast Asia geopolitical and Korean Peninsula security and diplomatic opportunities and challenges from the perspectives of the longstanding ROK - U.S. Alliance. Featuring introductory remarks by Young Woon Kong, President of the Strategic Planning Division of Hyundai Motor Group. Limited in-person audience by invitation, and live webcast. The Korea Society is grateful to Premium Sponsor Hyundai Motor Company for its generous support of The Inaugural Van Fleet Policy Signature Event. For more information, please visit the link below: https://www.koreasociety.org/policy-and-corporate-programs/item/1516-u-s-diplomacy-and-security-in-korea-2021

The John Batchelor Show
1722: Admiral Harry Harris USN (ret.) and the Great Wall of Sand. @FRoseDC @FedScoop

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2021 10:55


Photo: Some of Hong Kong's New Territories were created with landfill. Today, Beijing is using an updated method to create militarized islands where never there was one before in order to arrogate enormous swaths of ocean to the south, southwest and southeast of the Chinese mainland.   Photo here: British take over the New Territories CBS Eye on the World with John Batchelor CBS Audio Network @Batchelorshow Admiral Harry Harris USN (ret.) and the Great Wall of Sand. @FRoseDC @FedScoop https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/17-adm-harry-harris-usn-ret-on-the-aukus-agreement/id1567303578?i=1000536541844 "Great Wall of Sand" is a name first used in March 2015 by US Admiral Harry Harris, who was commander of the Pacific Fleet, to describe a series of uniquely large-scale land reclamation (the process of creating new land from oceans, seas, riverbeds or lake beds) projects by the People's Republic of China (PRC) in the Spratly Islands area of the South China Sea in the period from late 2013 to late 2016.  

Four Star Forum
#17: Adm. Harry Harris, USN ret. on the AUKUS agreement & its messages for allies and adversaries

Four Star Forum

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2021 27:50


The Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Michael Gilday, says it may take decades for nuclear attack submarines to deploy for the country of Australia. The subs are part of an agreement the US, Australian, and British governments announced September 15th. Admiral Harry Harris (US Navy ret.) is former commander of United States Indo-Pacific Command. He's former U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Korea. Admiral Harris explains what the agreement means for US interests in the Pacific, for the participants, for other allies, and for potential adversaries like China.

Life Goals with Theo Delaney
Life Goals with Theo Delaney - Harry Harris (Part 2)

Life Goals with Theo Delaney

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2021 39:59


Part two of Theo Delaney's conversation with the remarkable Harry Harris who has written 80 books on football and tells of his tempestuous relationship with Piers Morgan and drinking champagne with Robert Maxwell and Elton John. Among his scorers are Shearer, Owen and Solskjaer. His New books ‘Sir Alex - Simply The Best' and ‘Saved: Overcoming 47 years of Gambling Addiction' written with Peter Shilton and his wife Steph are out imminently.@FLegends100@LifeGoalsTD @theodelaneyhttps://www.amazon.co.uk/Harry-Harris/e/B001K89L7Y/ref=dp_byline_cont_pop_book_1https://www.theodelaney.com/life-goalshttps://www.11-29media.com/life-goals

Life Goals with Theo Delaney
Life Goals with Theo Delaney - Harry Harris (Part 1)

Life Goals with Theo Delaney

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2021 42:00


Theo Delaney's guest is the legendary football writer Harry Harris who had a highly successful career in newspapers before leaving to concentrate on writing books. He has written 80 to date and his latest ‘Sir Alex - Simply The Best' is an acclaimed tribute to Alex Ferguson. Also imminent is the release of ‘Saved: Overcoming 47 years of Gambling Addiction' written with Peter Shilton and his wife Steph. His tales of his illustrious career feature Bill Nicholson, Glenn Hoddle, Pele and Maradona. And this is only part one!@FLegends100@LifeGoalsTD @theodelaneyhttps://www.amazon.co.uk/Harry-Harris/e/B001K89L7Y/ref=dp_byline_cont_pop_book_1https://www.theodelaney.com/life-goalshttps://www.11-29media.com/life-goals

大紀元新聞
前美軍太平洋司令:美應改變台海戰略模糊 | 大紀元 | 大纪元

大紀元新聞

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2021 1:40


日裔的前美軍太平洋司令部司令哈里斯(Harry Harris)接受日本共同社專訪指出,中共藉在國際社會孤立台灣以達控制台灣目的,呼籲美國應改變對台海的「戰略模糊」。 更多內容請見:https://www.epochtimes.com/b5/21/9/6/n13213595.htm 大纪元,大纪元新闻,大紀元,大紀元新聞,台海, 戰略模糊, 台海戰略模糊, 戰略清晰, 武統 Support this podcast

Talkback
Why is England vs Germany such a special match and what does it take to overcome your biggest rivals?

Talkback

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2021 12:23


We speak to Harry Harris and German football journalist Manuel Breuer

American Ambassadors Live! Podcast
From the Sea to Seoul

American Ambassadors Live! Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2021 36:09


Former Ambassador to South Korea, Harry Harris, joined American Ambassadors Live! Podcast host Ambassador Jim Rosapepe to discuss his experience at post and the critical importance of the U.S.-South Korean partnership.

Lowy Institute: Live Events
The Director’s Chair: Admiral Harry Harris on his life and career, the United States and China

Lowy Institute: Live Events

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 39:12


In this episode of The Director’s Chair, Michael Fullilove speaks with Admiral Harry Harris, the former US commander and diplomat. Harry served as the Commander of the US Pacific Fleet, Commander of the US Indo-Pacific Command, and as President Trump’s Ambassador to South Korea. Harry discusses his military career, which took in postings from Guantanamo Bay to INDOPACOM headquarters in Honolulu, when he led nearly 400,000 military personnel. They also discuss his time as a diplomat, when he grappled with issues including Black Lives Matter and President Trump’s attempts to cut a deal with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. Harry recounts his ‘Sliding Doors’ moment, when he was meant to serve as Ambassador to Australia.

The Director's Chair
Admiral Harry Harris on his life and career, the United States and China

The Director's Chair

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2021 39:12


In this episode of The Director's Chair, Michael Fullilove speaks with Admiral Harry Harris, the former US commander and diplomat. Harry served as the Commander of the US Pacific Fleet, Commander of the US Indo-Pacific Command, and as President Trump's Ambassador to South Korea. Harry discusses his military career, which took in postings from Guantanamo Bay to INDOPACOM headquarters in Honolulu, when he led nearly 400,000 military personnel. They also discuss his time as a diplomat, when he grappled with issues including Black Lives Matter and President Trump's attempts to cut a deal with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. Harry recounts his ‘Sliding Doors' moment, when he was meant to serve as Ambassador to Australia.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Tea Leaves Podcast
Admiral Harry Harris on South Korea and U.S. Strategy in the Indo-Pacific

The Tea Leaves Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2021 44:40


Admiral Harry Harris served as U.S. Ambassador to South Korea from 2018 to 2021, before which he was a four-star admiral in the U.S. Navy, commanding the U.S. Pacific Fleet and U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (USINDOPACOM). Admiral Harris was also the first American of Japanese descent to lead USINDOPACOM. Ahead of South Korean President Moon Jae-in's visit to the White House on May 21, Rexon and Shery spoke with Admiral Harris about his expectations for the Moon-Biden summit, U.S. military capabilities and strategic competition with China, and his views on the Quad and other U.S. partnerships in the Indo-Pacific region.

The Tea Leaves Podcast
Admiral Harry Harris on South Korea and U.S. Strategy in the Indo-Pacific

The Tea Leaves Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2021 44:40


Admiral Harry Harris served as U.S. Ambassador to South Korea from 2018 to 2021, before which he was a four-star admiral in the U.S. Navy, commanding the U.S. Pacific Fleet and U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (USINDOPACOM). Admiral Harris was also the first American of Japanese descent to lead USINDOPACOM. Ahead of South Korean President Moon Jae-in's visit to the White House on May 21, Rexon and Shery spoke with Admiral Harris about his expectations for the Moon-Biden summit, U.S. military capabilities and strategic competition with China, and his views on the Quad and other U.S. partnerships in the Indo-Pacific region.

The Tea Leaves Podcast
Admiral Harry Harris on South Korea and U.S. Strategy in the Indo-Pacific

The Tea Leaves Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2021 44:40


Admiral Harry Harris served as U.S. Ambassador to South Korea from 2018 to 2021, before which he was a four-star admiral in the U.S. Navy, commanding the U.S. Pacific Fleet and U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (USINDOPACOM). Admiral Harris was also the first American of Japanese descent to lead USINDOPACOM. Ahead of South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s visit to the White House on May 21, Rexon and Shery spoke with Admiral Harris about his expectations for the Moon-Biden summit, U.S. military capabilities and strategic competition with China, and his views on the Quad and other U.S. partnerships in the Indo-Pacific region. You can access a video of the full conversation at theasiagroup.com/tea-leaves-podcast.

Sentimental Garbage
Sentimental in the City 8: Sex and the City The Movie 2 (2010)

Sentimental Garbage

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2021 133:44


This episode was edited by Caroline O'Donoghue, mixed by Hannah Varrall, with music by Harry Harris and artwork by Gavin Day. Dolly Alderton is the author of two books, Everything I Know About Love and Ghosts. Caroline O'Donoghue is the author of Promising Young Women and Scenes of a Graphic Nature. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Blue Day Podcast
Episode 32: Exclusive Harry Harris Interview Part 3!

The Blue Day Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2021 86:57


This week on 'The Blue Day Podcast', top journalist & renowned author Harry Harris returns to complete the 'Trilogy' of Interviews. This episode we discuss his books on Jose Mourinho, his newest book 'The Boss' which is available now & so much more!!! Subscribe to The Blue Day Podcast on Apple Podcasts & YouTube for more interviews which include former Chelsea FC players. Furthermore, find us on Instagram, Facebook & Twitter!!! The Blue Day Podcast!! If you have a question you want to ask our co hosts, Gary Chivers & Ron 'Chopper' Harris, YOU can email us at thebluedaypodcast@gmail.com, your questions will be answered on the show!! Carefree Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sentimental Garbage
Sentimental in the City 6.5: Sex and the City, Season Six, Part 2

Sentimental Garbage

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2021 153:28


It's the winter of this content, and we're debating Aleksandr Petrovsky (call me Bob) so hard that it risks ending our friendship entirely. We discuss the Paris episodes, the infamous demise of Lexi Featherstone, the Wizard of Oz journey each of the girls go on, and the astounding fashion of the final few episodes. We're back for the movies and a Q&A soon, if you want to join in, email us on sentimentalpod@gmail.com. This episode was edited by Caroline O'Donoghue, mixed by Hannah Varrall, with music by Harry Harris and artwork by Gavin Day. Dolly Alderton is the author of two books, Everything I Know About Love and Ghosts. Caroline O'Donoghue is the author of Promising Young Women and Scenes of a Graphic Nature. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Blue Day Podcast
Episode 29: Exclusive Harry Harris Interview Part 2

The Blue Day Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2021 77:54


This week on 'The Blue Day Podcast', top author & journalist Harry Harris returns to the show to discuss Chelsea FC & the stories & news from the 90s. We discuss the other books he has done such as 'Zola, The thrilling inside story of football's Numero Uno' & 'Vialli's- A Chelsea Diary. We also discuss individuals such as Ken Bates, Ruud Gullit, Gianluca Vialli, Graham Rix & so much more!! Find us on Instagram (thebluedaypodcast), YouTube (The Blue Day Podcast), Twitter (@bluedaypodcast) & Facebook (The Blue Day Podcast). If you have a question for our new co-hosts Gary Chivers & Ron 'Chopper' Harris that you want to ask, email us at thebluedaypodcast@gmail.com Carefree Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Blue Day Podcast
Episode 27: Exclusive Harry Harris Interview

The Blue Day Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2021 65:42


This week on 'The Blue Day Podcast', we interview author & journalist Harry Harris. We discuss just some of the books he has written about Chelsea Football Club. We discuss news & stories relating to his books & so much more!! Find us on;Facebook- The Blue Day PodcastYouTube- The Blue Day Podcast Instagram- thebluedaypodcast Twitter- @bluedaypodcast Send in your comments & views to thebluedaypodcast@gmail.com Carefree Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Global Affairs Live
Deterring Revisionist Powers With Admiral Harry Harris

Global Affairs Live

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2017 58:01


Please join Harry B. Harris, Jr., the commander of US Pacific Command, for a public program at the Council in which he will share his insights on how the United States military can deter threats and ensure security in the Asia Pacific region.

Townhall Review | Conservative Commentary On Today's News
THR 12/10/16: America Commemorates the 75th Anniversary of Pearl Harbor

Townhall Review | Conservative Commentary On Today's News

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2016 39:39


Author and seminary president Albert Mohler on his Briefing program gives his analysis of Pearl Harbor on its 75th anniversary. Dennis Prager argues that the war on Christmas is a war on joy itself. Michael Medved reports on Donald Trump's “thank you” tour. Hugh Hewitt converses with Van Jones about the state of the two major political parties. Admiral Harry Harris gives an inspirational speech at the 75th Anniversary of Pearl Harbor Day. Mike Gallagher speaks with the grandson of Admiral Husband Kimmel who was wrongly blamed for the Pearl Harbor attack. Bill Bennett talks with businessman Steve Wynn about immigration.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Spurs Show
Big November

The Spurs Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2016 32:22


Host Ciaran Brennan is joined by guests Simon Kanter, Marc Trainis and Harry Harris on the phone. The guys discuss the latest result against Leicester at home and look ahead to Bayer Leverkusen in the champions league and then the North London derby at the Emirates.For your chance to win a copy of the new Football Manager, tweet us your answer to @spursshow!On Monday December 12th we bring you another Spurs Live Show with special guest David Pleat! More information and tickets can be found at live.spursshow.netSign up to a new kind of fantasy football at fanduel.co.uk with our promo code SPURSSHOW, FanDuel will refund your entry fee up to £10 if you lose!spursshow.net Produced by Paul Myers and Mike LeighEngineered by Oli Slack A Playback Media Production playbackmedia.co.uk Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Spurs Show
Good Times

The Spurs Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2016 41:54


Host Mike Leigh is joined by special guests Norman Jay, Nathan Kosky and Harry Harris on the phone. The guys discuss the draw at West Brom and look ahead to the game against Bayer Leverkusen in the Champions League.The book launch of ‘Down Memory Lane' by Harry Harris is taking place at Planet Hollywood London on Tues November 1st. For your chance to win tickets for the event tweet us your answers to @spursshowOn Monday December 12th we bring you another Spurs Live Show with special guest David Pleat! More information and tickets can be found at live.spursshow.netSign up to a new kind of fantasy football at fanduel.co.uk with our promo code SPURSSHOW, FanDuel will refund your entry fee up to £10 if you lose!spursshow.net@spurrsshowProduced by Paul Myers and Mike LeighEngineered by Oli SlackA Playback Media Productionplaybackmedia.co.uk Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Spurs Show
Champions League Special

The Spurs Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2016 45:49


On tonight's show host Mike Leigh is joined by guests Dan Louw, Rob Nathan and Harry Harris on the phone. The guys discuss the great result at the Britannia Stadium and look ahead to the exciting fixture against Monaco at Wembley in the week.To submit your spurs dream team 11 drop us a tweet @zapsportzSign up to a new kind of fantasy football at fanduel.co.uk with our promo code SPURSSHOW, FanDuel will refund your entry fee up to £10 if you lose!spursshow.net@spursshowProduced by Paul Myers and Mike LeighEngineered by Oli SlackA Playback Media Productionplaybackmedia.co.uk Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices