A rock consisting of cryptocrystalline silica alternating with microgranular quartz
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Agate is a type of microcrystalline quartz that forms in a variety of colours and patterns. These semiprecious crystals are often used in jewelry and decorative items. Agate is characterised by its banded appearance, which is the result of alternating layers of different mineral compositions. It is believed to have various metaphysical properties and is valued for its beauty and uniqueness. This episode explore five very diiferent Agates: Blue Lace Agate Botswana Agate Fire Agate Moss Agate Crazy Lace Agate FOLLOW ADAM https://www.youtube.com/user/adambarralet https://www.facebook.com/mycrystalconnections/ https://www.instagram.com/adambarralet/ FREE weekly e-newsletter exploring crystals, essential oils and more http://www.adambarralet.com/ BRING MAGICK HOME My books, oracle cards and more https://www.adambarralet.com/offerings-from-adam-shop My favourite essential oils https://www.adambarralet.com/ordering-doterra KEEP IT SIMPLE! All my details and offerings can be found here http://linktr.ee/adambarralet
Don't miss out on the next #womenintech podcast episode, get notified by signing up here http://womenintechshow.com.Be featured in the Women in Tech Community by creating your profile here http://womenintechvip.com/“Agate Freimane of Norrsken VC: The Future of Impact Investing”#womenintech Show is a WeAreTech.fm production.To support the Women in Tech podcast go to https://www.patreon.com/womenintechTo be featured on the podcast go to http://womenintechshow.com/featureGuest Host,Marija Rucevska https://www.linkedin.com/in/marija-rucevska-970a248a/?originalSubdomain=lvGuest,Agate Freimanehttps://www.linkedin.com/in/agate-s-freimane-2375a811/Listener Spotlight,Adam Marx https://twitter.com/adammarx13In LA? Here's some awesome resources for you to become immersed in the LA Tech scene -For a calendar of all LA Startup events go to, http://WeAreLATech.comGet Podcast Listeners, http://getpodcastlisteners.com/Resources Mentioned:Norrsken VC, https://www.norrsken.vcMorgan Stanley, https://www.morganstanley.com/Credits:Produced and Hosted by Espree Devora, http://espreedevora.comStory Produced, Edited and Mastered by Cory Jennings, https://www.coryjennings.com/Production and Voiceover by Adam Carroll, http://www.ariacreative.ca/Team support by Janice GeronimoMusic by Jay Huffman, https://soundcloud.com/jayhuffmanShort Title: Agate Freimane
I love the nutsLets explore two different topics that share the color blue: Blue Jays and Blue Lace AgateGet ready to squawk as Macy takes us on a wild ride through the world of Blue Jays -Charlye joins in with Blue Lace Agate - Join us for a journey through the blues!**This episode has some echo in it, we did our best to get it all out, but the podcast gods were not on our side today, we hope you enjoy anyway!Jim & Jup Touranahataspurpose.com/tourSimply CaptivatingCheck it out on Patreon.com/wbahpodcast on Thursdays-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-wbahpodcast.com_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_Want to help support the Podcast? Consider becoming a Patron or OnlyFan!www.patreon.com/wbahpodcastonlyfans.com/wbahpodcastContact Us (Come Eat With Us)Instagram @WitchBitchAmateurHourTwitter @BitchHourFacebook @WitchAmateurHourOnlyfans.com/wbahpodcastwbahpodcast@gmail.comHandwritten letters are actual magic!PO Box 865Canton, Tx75103_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-Come Do Yoga With Macy:patreon.com/macyaniseyogaPlay The Sims With Charlyetwitch.tv/charlye_withawhyTwitter @charlyewithawhyOur Video EditorEldrich Kitchenm.youtube.com/channel/UC_CwBrVMhqezVz_fog716Ow_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-We are not doctors, lawyers, or professionals. We are amateurs, and nothing we say should be taken as advice, instruction, or seriously. Any action taken based on what we say or imply can and will lead to illness, existential crisis, injury, your pets no longer loving you, and death. We make no promise or guarantee, expressed or implied, and assume no legal liability or responsibility for any injuries resulting from the use of information contained within our media.Support the show
Juanma Rodríguez critica que el Barçagate esté perdiendo fuerza en alguno foros
On What's Your Work Fit we posed this question: How Can I Reimagine the Employee Experience? This week, former Dean of the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College and Professor of Strategic Communications Diane Gayeski and Agate Founder and CEO Corinne Murray answer this and other important questions. It's crystal clear: most workplace leaders get employee experience or "EX" wrong. It is not about staging fake summer camp spectaculars and birthday celebrations to pump up headcount. That doesn't work. However, when EX is done right, it helps talent do their jobs better and more meaningfully and values their off-the-clock time. Our guests provide solid rationale for building intentional EX programs that foster leadership, scale team and individual success, and make work part of a day doing many other wonderful things...and not the day. During this information packed episode, Diane and Corinne answer "what's your work fit?' Their personal visions surely will resonate with many career professionals. About our guests: Diane Gayeski is Professor of Strategic Communications at the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College. For several years, she served as the school's dean and oversaw its scale as the preeminent communications and media program in the United States. Diane lives and works in Ithaca, New York. Corinne Murray built a successful career in real estate and even worked for a time at WeWork. All of her work assignments provided a platform for her to advocate for better employee experiences. She is the founder and CEO of consultancy, Agate. Corinne lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. This episode originated as a live show on March 15, 2023. You can watch the show in its entirety on the What's Your Work Fit YouTube Channel. EPISODE DATE: March 24, 2023 Diane's social media: LinkedIn Website Corinne's social media: LinkedIn Website Please Subscribe to What's Your Work Fit on: – Apple Podcast – Android – Google Podcasts – Pandora – Spotify – Stitcher – TuneIn …or wherever you get your podcasts. You may also click HERE to receive our podcast episodes by email. Image credits: Queen Cuts Her Birthday Cake, BBC; portrait, Diane Gayeski; portrait, Corinne Murray; podcast button, J. Brandt Studio for The Dan Smolen Experience.
#trucknhustle #podcast #trucknhustlepodcast Shaquana Teasley of Agate solutions talks about Imports, Exports, and How International trade works. WATCH FULL EPISODE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OWuGl54HjyA CONNECT WITH SHAQUANA TEASLEY: https://www.agatesolutionsusa.com/ https://www.facebook.com/agatesolutionsllc/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/agate-solutions-82a2a41ba/ https://twitter.com/agatesolutions1 __________ GET RESET TICKET FOR ORLANDO, FLORIDA https://www.universe.com/events/truck-n-hustle-reset-tickets-VMZXBN GET EARLY BIRD TICKETS FOR FREIGHT FEST 2023!!: http://FreightFest.com FOR MERCH: http://www.trucknhustle.store FOR EXCLUSIVE CONTENT & MORE VISIT: https://www.trucknhustle.com/ __________ SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS!!: OTR SOLUTIONS https://otrsolutions.com/trucknhustle/ CALL (470)900-3338 GTT COMMERCIAL TIRES https://www.gttcommercial.tires/ CALL 1(800)991-6251 __________ MENTIONED ON TRUCK N' HUSTLE PODCAST: DAT POWER - The Industry's Most Advanced Load Board http://www.dat.com/power/0001922618 DAT TRUCKERS EDGE http://www.truckersedge.com/0001922618 DAT EXPRESS http://www.dat.com/express/0001922618 __________ THIS PODCAST WAS PRODUCED, RECORDED, SHOT & EDITED by Kweku KingNabi for Truck N' Hustle Media HERE IS WHAT WE USE: Blackmagic Design Pocket Cinema Camera 6K Pro: https://amzn.to/3BwRUYm Rode RODECaster Pro Podcast Production Studio: https://amzn.to/3Bw3cvW Electro-Voice RE320 DYNAMIC MICROPHONE: https://amzn.to/3BuhmxD Sigma 18-35mm F1.8 Art DC HSM Lens for Canon, Black: https://amzn.to/3FMqvUE Godox SL-60W CRI 95+ LED Video Light SL60W White 5600K Version: https://amzn.to/3HqXRtE __________ JOIN THE HUSTLE FAM ON SOCIAL MEDIA: Instagram: http://instagram.com/trucknhustle/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@trucknhustle Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/trucknhustle Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/tnhmedia/ Discord: https://discord.gg/g8kzDNu7 Twitter: https://twitter.com/TruckNHustle Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Trucknhustle Listen to the TRUCK N' HUSTLE PODCAST: iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/truck-n-hustle-1-trucking-podcast Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/55GP6pfA0RlmtEgNH70d5K _________ NOTE: This description contains affiliate links that allow you to find the items mentioned in this video and support the channel at no cost to you. While this channel may earn minimal sums when the viewer uses the links, the viewer is in NO WAY obligated to use these links. Thank you for your support!
Tertulia con Jaime Ugarte, Sergio Valentín, David Lacruz, José Puertas y Dani Blanco.
Sergio comenta con Trisac, Juanma, Domínguez y Blanco el BarçaGate y si la selección española es el mejor lugar para un jugador del Real Madrid.
María Trisac comenta con Pepe Herrero, Isidoro San José y Alfredo Somoza sobre cómo Carvajal se moja con el fuera de juego y el Barçagate.
Juanma Rodríguez dedica su comentario al escándalo del Barcelona, que sigue dando noticias
Sergio Valentín comenta la actualidad del fútbol con Juanma Rodríguez, Guillermo Domínguez, Dani Blanco y María Trisac.
Tertulia con Israel Iñiguez, Alfredo Somoza, Jose Puertas y Jose Miguelez
Sergio Valentín comenta toda la actualidad del fútbol con Pepe Herrero, Isidoro San José, Alfredo Somoza y María Trisac.
Sergio Valentín comenta toda la actualidad del fútbol con Dani Blanco, Juan Pablo Polvorinos, Jaime Ugarte y María Trisac.
Luis del Pino, Carmen Tomás y Carlos Cuesta analizan las novedades del caso Negreira, que podría afectar al Gobierno.
María Trisac comenta la actualidad del fútbol con Juanma Rodríguez, Dani Blanco y Pepe Herrero.
Sergio Valentín comenta la actualidad del fútbol con Isidoro San José, Luis Herrero, Juan Pablo Polvorinos, José Luis Garci y María Trisac.
In the grassy High Plains of Northwest Nebraska, the landscape is punctuated by flat top buttes, and a few isolated landforms reminiscent of the badlands. A layer of sandstone builds the foundation of the area, sitting over a remarkable bonebed. The grasslands provided good grazing, and James Cook acquired his ranch here, where the wetlands meet the prairie. Unbeknownst to him when he purchased the land, as his cattle grazed on the nodding heads of grain, beneath their feet lay a remarkable history of animals that came before them, the mammals of the Miocene Epoch. Dinosaur fossils tickle everyone's imagination – but other, more recent (albeit still ancient) paleontology discoveries give rise to a continuum of long extinct animals indigenous to a region. As much as we tend to think of museums as focusing on dinosaurs, with examples such as the Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton named Sue, which is housed at the Field Museum in Chicago, museums also have extensive displays on the history of the rise of mammals. Agate Fossil Beds tells the story of a treasure trove of mammal fossils in America's Midwest. Written By Lauren Eisenberg Davis Audio Editor and Theme Music: Peter Xiong Host: Jason Epperson Sponsored by LLBean www.llbean.com/guide and Campendium www.campendium.com
Federico analiza cómo Miquel Iceta, ministro de Cultura y Deportes, sigue guardando silencio sobre el caso de corrupción que afecta al Barça.
El senado paquete se vuelve a reunir, y esta vez lo hace con mayoría barcelonista. Iñaki San Román, Javier Iborra y Santi Rivas, junto a Álvaro Velasco, repasan en su habitual tono desenfadado todo lo que ha dado hasta el momento el Barçagate. ¡Apóyanos dándole a like, campanita y comentando! ¡Y suscríbete! Suscríbete al Balón de Oro de Raúl: https://www.ivoox.com/escuchar-balon-oro-raul_nq_1168582_1.html Si estás interesado en patrocinar uno de nuestros programas, escríbenos a la siguiente dirección eranmuymaloseranpaquetes@gmail.com
Federico comenta cómo algunos clubes de Primera División empiezan a reaccionar al escándalo de los pagos del Barça a los árbitros.
Luis Herrero analiza junto a Ignacio Cembrero, Laura Fábregas y David Jiménez las últimas informaciones del 'Barçagate'.
Los pagos que el FC Barcelona hizo durante más de 15 años a José María Enríquez Negreira, entonces vicepresidente del Comité Técnico de Árbitros, han desbordado esta semana los espacios deportivos. Mientras algunos periodistas se ven reforzados en sus habituales acusaciones de corrupción, otros intentar limpiar el nombre del Barça.Artistas invitados: Manolo Lama, Quim Domènech, Elías Israel, [Cabecera: Javier Herráez, Josep Pedrerol, Tomás Roncero, Juan Antonio Alcalá, Paco García Caridad, Julio Maldonado 'Maldini', Paco González, Felipe del Campo, Javier Gómez Matallanas, Alberto Arauz, Roberto Gómez, Manu Carreño, José Joaquín Brotons, José Damián González, José Manuel Monje] José Luis Sánchez, Jota Jordi, Tomás Roncero, José Damián González, Santiago Segurola, Juanma Castaño, Susana Guasch, Juanma Rodríguez, Manolo Lama, Manu Carreño, Sique Rodríguez, Paco González, Isaac Fouto, Pedro Martín, David Bernabeu, Pepe Pasqués, Paul Tenorio, Miguel Quintana, Alfredo Duro, Miguel 'Látigo' Serrano, Paco Buyo, Joan Laporta, Edu Aguirre, Antonio Romero, Juan Antonio Alcalá, Dani Senabre, Luis Medina Cantalejo, Cayetano Ros, Eduardo Iturralde González, Edu García, Enrique Marqués, Josep Pedrerol, Pipi Estrada, Juan Andújar Oliver, Edu Pidal, Adrià Soldevila, Roberto Palomar, David Sánchez, Susana Guasch, Paco González, Siro López, Alfredo Relaño, Marçal Lorente, Antonio Jesús López Nieto, Zinedine Zidane, Carles Fité, Pepe Herrero, Iván San Antonio, Jorge Calabrés, Joan Gaspart, Cristina Pardo, Joan Poquí, Felipe del Campo, Toni Freixa, Alfredo Martínez, Irene Junquera, Vicente Ruiz, Emilio Pérez de Rozas, Jordi Martí, Alexis Martín-Tamayo 'Mister Chip', Gerard Piqué, Joaquín Maroto, Lluís Mascaró, Paco 'Lobo' Carrasco, Víctor Fernández, Gerard Romero.Fuentes: El partidazo de Cope, Jugones (La Sexta), El chiringuito de jugones (Mega), A diario (Radio Marca), El larguero (Cadena Ser), Què t'hi Jugues! (Cadena Ser), Radioestadio noche (Onda Cero), El golazo de Gol, El primer palo (Es Radio), Marcador europeo (Radio Marca), Más vale tarde (La Sexta). Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Programa dedicado a la actualidad de la semana en la que se incluyen los rumores de venta de Joao Félix al Chelsea y la posible salida de Giménez a final de temporada. Por otro lado también opinamos sobre el caso BarsaGate y el escándalo del pago por parte del Barcelona al vicepresidente del Comité Técnico de árbitros Enriquez Negreira
Dieter Brandau analiza las noticias más relevantes de la actualidad.
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If you're looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often? Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ 0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Today I wanted to talk to you about the forest fires in Oregon, my parents called me they were living in Southern Oregon, and they were talking about the huge amounts of forest fires that came out, I think from a set of lightning strikes that occurred from a storm that passed through over the weekend, that's a really dangerous thing about summer storms that pass through those hills and Oregon off the coast, is that they bring with them some charge. And that ends up in lightning. And then we end up with some strikes. And these remote regions have hills out in the Siskiyou mountain range. And those start fires. In those rural, I mean, just like remote wilderness areas of forest. And that's where we've had a couple of burns over the last couple of decades that have been very seriously maybe some of the most serious forest fires in the nation of the United States have occurred in those locations outside of some of the places in California last year where we saw property damage, that sort of thing. But that is regions of acreage, I think some of the largest areas had been in the wilderness areas of Southern Oregon in the last couple of decades, I guess it is now but it's been kind of tough. We went out on a drive recently. And we were in Central Oregon, which is probably a couple of fires out there, which is you know, there's no shortage of timber and fire danger in some of those locations, especially because of you know, lightning strikes and that kind of activity like that. But last year was dense and difficult to get through the summer because of smoke and because of fires that were going on in the forest fire damage. But this year, too, it's tough. So hopefully this is maybe a shorter-lived experience. And I hope that the firefighters can get a handle on it and get containment on here pretty soon. But it was something that was affecting our ability to get out you know, there was like visibility down to just a couple miles. It was nice that it was at least that but there was a lot of interference from the smoke. That was out even up in Central Oregon, 2:12 I was surprised. You can see more of my work in Billy Newman's photo calm, 2:21 you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon, I think you can look at that Bitly numen under the author's section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism, camping, and cool stuff over there. I ran into another guy out there. And he was like an agate picker. This is something I want to get into too. I was talking a little bit about agates, how they're formed and how they show up and all that and I'd be interested to find out the geology of how some of these creeks have agates formed in him here along the west coast. I think it's kind of cool to the land formation I would the geology is over here. And however, that goes back to the history of the agate formation of what went on over at the coast. But I think just north of Newport there's a beach called agate beach, apparently a place where there's going to be agates found, but this guy that I was talking to was saying what he was saying like if you kind of Prowl around town in this kind of these older, smaller, you know, coastal cities here in Oregon and probably in Washington or wherever they might be. But if you kind of Prowl around the town you'll sort of see these almost kind of just it says rock shop or gem shop or something like that at some sort of little shack kind of place with the old sort of weathered sign on it that sort of looks goofy looks like an old-time prospector kind of just works there and kind of does it himself but I guess he did some of those people some of those guys there are some of the more invested rock towns in the area. And some of those guys if they've retired, I guess you know, the lead up some of their picking spots or their lead up some of their information on what they've done to collect some of these cool rocks and gems over the years. But some of those people in those local town spots, have some good kind of easy starter information for people that are getting into some of the rock counting stuff. But I was told recommended by a guy over Newport to try to find a man named rooster. So I could find out about the good rock hound in spots. Sounds fun, I haven't taken it up on it yet, but the guy gave me an agate that he had collected and I guess he was telling me that the good time to go is in the wintertime after some of the bigger winter storms come in off the coast and then dredge up well I guess not dredge up but I guess they wash out the light I guess like we were talking about the wash out the sand, it's kind of come into sandbars they wash out then it exposes some of the gravel beds, some of those rock beds that are a little bit lower down in the sediment, and that exposes some of the beds that have the agates in them and I guess those come out during low tied in the winter time, I guess after what January February, something like that. And that's when this guy has found most of the agates that he's spotted out there in areas like agate beach up to up to where I don't know what's up north of there is at the corner head or is that below it? I can't remember now but it's cool. Yeah, so it's fun going out and doing some agate-hounding stuff. 5:32 You can check out more information at Billy Newman photo comm you can go to Billy Numan photo.com, forward slash support. If you want to help me out and participate in the value-for-value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support, you can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you're interested or feel more comfortable using Patreon that's patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo. And Lightroom stuff, I'm gonna try to like develop a lot of photos like with the travel stuff that we did the trip and like the trip that I did with my dad out to Christmas Valley, and some of the stuff around like the teepee rings that I was photographing. We're trying to like edit a few of those. And I've been doing most of that in Lightroom. But I've been trying a couple of different other pieces of software and haven't gotten super far with it. So we got to do more research, this will be an ongoing segment for our podcast, which will be fun, too, we should try out some betas I don't know where we can get a hold-up. But there's Lightroom. And see like, there's some news about how like Lightroom is switched over to the Lightroom Creative Cloud, which is going to be sort of a cloud-based photo editing system, I think it's going to be a little bit more lightweight, I think it's going to be a monthly subscription system. And then there's also going to be Lightroom classic, which is going to be the current Creative Cloud, a professional Lightroom system. And I think that's going to be like your disk management system, like how to put files onto your computer hard drive and how to edit them, and then how to like process them out and put them somewhere. So that's still going to be around and I guess going on, but it's only going to be a subscription system from now on. I think that's kind of pushed a lot of people including myself to consider what other editing options are going to be out there like file management systems for your photographs. And there are a few new other systems that are coming up that also seem a little bit more modern, in some ways, too. But I think it'd been kinda interesting. And it's been cool, checking them out a little bit. One of them was Capture One. And you and I had looked at that one a little bit. 7:46 Yeah, you showed me that one a little bit. When you put on your computer. 7:49 It's cool. I want to learn a little bit more about it. I know there's a lot of content out there about it. There's the phase, the phase one camera system, have you heard a little bit medium format, digital camera system, it's really expensive, real nice, apparently, I only know like a little bit about it. But those raw files, they're immense, medium format, digital, raw files. And so the processes, they kind of constructed their editing software, that was this Capture One software, and I think it was supposed to be a more modern system of rendering your raw file adjustments. And I think it's supposed to be kind of tuned specifically to the raw files produced by this phase one camera, which is an interesting piece of software, you know, it's technical. And I see like a lot of professional photographers kind of shifting over to it, but at least I see I see it popping up a little bit more in sort of a higher-end fashion system or like people that are using phase one systems or a lot of Sony systems because I think it's so specific to the Camera RAW file that's produced. It's sort of strange, right? I think it's built for the phase one camera. Right and like for a lot of other file types, yeah, for those file types and a lot of the Sony file types. So I think a lot of like the Sonyadditionalographers are getting the Capture One Pro software, and they make like a free Sony editing software that's a little bit stripped down. It's like the Sony Capture One express or something like that. Who knows what it is, but I pulled that on my computer, I've been messing with it and I pulled a demo for Capture One Pro. And it was cool kind of messing around with a different raw editor. It's different than Photoshop different than Lightroom. But it's, it's still kind of like the same panel and slider idea. You have a panel you have like hue and color and sharpness and haze and whatever. And you can kind of make some adjustments to it. But it was interesting, to do something different with the raw processing. And I guess it's supposed to be faster. So the idea is supposed to be a more modern system. It's one of those things where Lightroom was built years ago like back in 2006 and 2007. I guess there wasn't the ability to throw a lot of processing I went to the graphics processor. I don't think it was as important back then they use your graphics processor for rendering and processing and crunching some of the graphics stuff, the editing. So I think a lot of that was built to like run and process the raw files through the, just the main processor. So I guess there are a lot of things about Lightroom that just aren't made to run slow, given the modern computer architecture that people are using, and other people are developing. And so I think that's where like there's an advantage to maybe some future new Adobe software, but also for some of these current players that are trying to do some of this photo editing software stuff like the other one. Affinity Photo, which is one that I think you'd see 10:42 a little just a little bit. Yeah, I really, I've not put anything on my computer. 10:50 Yet, I haven't put anything on. I know, it looks like a lot is going on there It looks like and I hear a lot of people talking about how impressive the iPad app is if you have an iPad Pro, I guess the affinity pro app on an iPad is really powerful for tablets, tablets. And you can do a lot of stuff like with the pencil, the Apple Pencil, or with your finger to do like healing adjustments, a lot of stuff like that, that you really couldn't do with software outside of Photoshop before. So it's cool that they made some progress on that. And I guess Affinity Photo is also producing digital file management software to go along with Affinity Photo, which I like the Lightroom part of 11:32 it. Yeah. Yeah, kind of like Lightroom. 11:36 I think it's the Lightroom part and the part where you can apply adjustments to multiple files at the same time. Oh, sure. Stuff like that. I think it's like a lot of those features that they're trying to build out this year, because of the changes that Adobe has made to the Lightroom system. And how they're changing over to like the Creative Cloud system and the, you know, kind of Lightroom Express system. 12:00 Yeah, not as much of a pro tool. 12:02 That's what I've heard it sounds like yeah, so I think that's why a lot of professionals are a little bit unhappy with that adjustment into their workflow, you know, they're just looking for that, that professional system that they have to increase and get better in the ways they need. Yeah, I think I think Adobe is trying to hit a wider market of hobby photographers or Instagram, you know, kind of it's more about adjustments. Yeah, yeah. One-click kind of adjustments. Yeah, sort of thing. Yeah. 12:29 It'll be interesting to see how that ends up going. 12:33 Yeah, it will be interesting, you know, that that's sort of the shift in modern computers in a lot of ways. And if you were working on an iPad, I bet it'll swell a bit. It'll be pretty cool, you know, to run a bunch of photos off on an iPad through that system. You know, probably they work. Okay. I don't think it's the direction that I'm gonna go. I don't know, I just actually seem like it's the right, the right zone. 12:57 That was what I was thinking. I'm hoping that the change encourages these other companies to Oh, yeah, develop theirs, their products were, 13:07 I was, yeah, I 13:08 was hoping they'll be there'll be something to kind of replace what Lightroom is right now. They like Lightroom. 13:15 Before Lightroom, there was an aperture that was built by aperture, and then they stop producing aperture. I don't know what's gonna happen with Lightroom. I'm sure that it's going to stick around. And I'm sure it's going to be like the top of market share for a long time for photographers editing software, it'll likely kind of remain in my workflow for a long time, too. I was looking around at Capture One, it's not the thing I want to use. Yeah. affinity there's some future, you know, but I haven't any, there's not the thing that I'm looking to use in the way that I use Lightroom right now, 13:47 that was what I noticed when I was looking through other photo editing software. There really, there are a lot of things that look cool. And like they could be something useful. Yeah. But it's just not realistic. It just doesn't seem like it's there yet. Kind of editing. I'm trying to go for it. 14:06 We'll see what pops up in the next year. And I you know, I guess the cool thing is like the given version of Lightroom that I have right now is it's totally fine for me. 14:15 Yeah, this old version of Lightroom. Anyway, 14:18 yeah, they come out, but I'm still always happy with the older ones for a long time. So I'm kinda interested. I'm only interested in buying software that I own. I'm not interested in leasing software, even as a working professional, even if I'm making money from using the software. Yeah, it's got to be a really special kind of business software license that I'm working on. But it can't I don't want to rent software. It can't be my color correction software for my photographs. I need to own that database. Yeah, it's a really good thing. Yeah. And for as much as I'm working it, I think I need to I mean habits, no service. 14:56 Right? Yeah. It's just something that is part of your daily 14:59 work. I get Paying for storage, paying for the website paying for hosting paying for processing, and something like that. But then I don't want to pay for the thing in total, if it's just raw processing and color correction, cropping, and exporting of a file like there are a lot of image editing systems out there. And everything I can do, I can do on an older system. But I'm interested if we go forward with some new software, I'm interested in trying like, like affinity, or you know, one of these other more modern just buy outright systems. It's like, yeah, it's like $100. It's not like there's Pixelmator Pro. That's it a new program coming out. Yeah. And that's supposed to be kind of a Photoshop-level replacement for stuff. I think that's like, definitely when you're like, working with layers working with, you know, textures. And so yeah, you can do a lot with it. Yeah. 15:45 I think that I had looked at that one briefly. And yeah, that one is more like Photoshop. Yeah. Or has more Photoshop capability? Yeah. 15:52 Yeah. I've heard people are really into that and are like really surprised with the level of quality that they can do and the speed that they're able to process that stuff. As an as like were we talking about? It's built to work on metal? Like, I think a couple of these things that we've been talking about are Apple apps. And I think metal is that system where it writes, it writes quickly to the graphics card. Right? Yeah. So what is that I can't remember, I can't remember the names of these, like these graphic layers, these graphic options used to work. But yeah, this is supposed to be a way faster system of processing some of that graphic stuff. And guys, this was to be a big benefit. But that's the sort of thing I want to try out with you is that, and I want to try to kind of invest in that stuff, just because we would own it, we have a license, we get to use it for as much as we'd want to. But yeah, we should try and check it out a little bit. Also, I kind of think it'd be kind of fun to get some of the software, and just do like little videos about 16:46 it. Oh, that'd be fun. Yeah, I'm just like, trying it out checking it out. Like hey, like we're, yeah, we capture one. Yeah. 16:55 We just kind of check out. Yeah, yeah. But I want to try some of these. I want to try, like, you know, tech checks out and, and see if some of these other tools are better, or more modern, or kind of make a different, more creative result. Yeah, a bit of that in Lightroom, where you seem to kind of fall in like a little bit of a rut of like, how Lightroom edits a photo? Oh, my 17:19 gosh, Yeah, no kidding. Yeah, you can get a little stuck in routines, or just like how you kind of have to adjust it? 17:26 Yeah, yeah, there's a little bit of that. And I'd like to see if there's some new thinking around that workflow that makes it a little bit or breaks up my creativity a little bit, make something a little different. So I think it's worth it just in the sense of that kind of investment. But, but yeah, overall, I think I mean, you know, everything's fine. So I'm one of those people that kind of says, Yeah, I usually use the old or use. I don't know, Adobe Camera Raw, if you have to, it's probably like most of the adjustments that you need to do anyway, I think I'm not big into retouching stuff. You know, but like, I think you need to like work a raw file. Yeah. process its color. Correct. It makes sense it. So yeah, I think there's a lot you can do just with about anything, but it's kind of interesting, just seeing like, some of these new software's come out and how they're being developed. There's another one like one, it's up in Portland. Yeah. Seems like a Lightroom competitor. So the idea behind it, I've not gotten into it, I think that like a beta comes out. And I was a little confused about how to use some of it. But, again, like that's the main thing I'm saying is all these new photo editing software's it's like, I'm kind of confused how to use them. So grants are ingrained in using the stuff in Oh, yeah, just the layer? Yeah. Yeah. It's been cool. He's just been like, what I've gotten used to for a long time. So I know, we're kind of making a transition. But it's that bad. 18:46 Yeah, it'll be interesting. Just check out some of these new things. Yeah. Alright, 18:51 check out more stuff with you. I don't know. We'll have to figure it out. We got to figure out some new editing stuff. But really, I think for a long time, I want to want to jump into a bunch of these raw files that we have from the last month or so. One of them is I want to try and compare presets. This is something we haven't done much before. But I want to try and get into some presets for Lightroom stuff. Yeah, and I want to try and do a little investment into like affinity or into Pixelmator or you know, one of those other alternatives. I think with affinity at least there are a bunch of preset systems for the photo editing stuff there too. I want to try and compare them a little bit or run some of our other photos through it and see what kind of creative results we get. I like working with some of these preset packets over in Lightroom or some of the new stuff that you could do over in affinity just be kind of cool to try and experiment a little bit with that. 19:40 Yeah, I think that would be cool to get into the preset stuff a little bit. I see that as like a huge part of a lot of photographers' workflow. Yeah, I'm curious about like, what, what that is like to use 19:51 um, yeah, I'm pretty interested too I see tons of people on the Instagram kind of promoting their preset systems. 19:57 Oh yeah. selling their preset time. 20:01 I don't know if I'll do that so much as watching a YouTube video about how one built such and such preset package. 20:10 What I'm interested in, 20:11 there's lots of stuff out there, we can find that that could kind of be a creative start for us to find something to do. But it's interesting to see the levels of editing that go into some of the color corrections that happen on these photographs. Oh, yeah, yeah, some levels of editing that I'm not familiar with. So I guess there's a lot that I should learn about it. You know, 20:29 really, like, that's a big part of why I'm interested in seeing other people's preset packages. Yeah, I just want to understand like, four presets that are for photos that I think look better. Oh, yeah, like, Good, right. I'm just, I'm just interested in seeing like, what does that look like? I'm trying to figure out when someone else is putting a photo together. Like, 20:50 I'm trying to figure it out, too. Yeah. What is the system of stuff on the side that you're looking at? What are the adjustments that are going on? Like, what hue and tint stuff is being pulled around? It seems like there's a lot of stuff going on in there. Like there are a few kinds of granular changes in color correction stuff that I'm probably not getting into, in my photographs. And I bet there's a lot of stuff that could be pretty cool. 21:12 Yeah, I think it'd be really interesting to get into 21:15 Yeah, I want to do some imagination, some photographs that have, yeah, 21:19 I've been going back through really like my portfolio, I guess, and trying to reevaluate what my best photos are, and also just re-edit a lot of stuff. Oh, that's great. Yeah, but yeah, I'm trying to get into better finer editing. 21:36 See, yeah, I'd like to try and figure that out, too. Yeah, I've noticed that that's like an element of the post-processing, post-processing stuff that I want to get into, more heavily is like the level of editing stuff that I'm able to do, or just the level of choices I'm able to make when I get into something like Lightroom, or affinity in the future. So it'd be cool that we should develop on that it'd be cool to try and push ourselves on that a little bit and see if we can learn some new tricks. Yeah, man, I like that I process probably 200,000 and 300,000 photos, and the last couple of years. I usually export stuff. And so with that, I don't know what I did, or, you know, there's not, it's just, it's just sort of automatic. Or, you know, like there's a lot of things that like aren't setting now. It's a weird thing. Like, I've just kind of moved through Lightroom for a long time. 22:25 Yeah, I know, there's a lot of stuff that you probably kind of just like, auto-work through. I know, that's how it is for me. Yeah, a lot of pictures. And I think it's fun as much time on. 22:35 It's like, it's when like when Tiger Woods was playing golf. And like halfway through, he needed to get a new coach for swing. I don't know, golf. But yeah, you're like any coach, because he was like hurting his shoulder. After all, his swing was wrong. So we need to like to correct his swing. But it's one of those things where it's like muscle memory, right? It's like so ingrained in like the way you do something, I should hold something. So it takes a lot to kind of break that habit of yourself that muscle habit yourself and then kind of figure out a new way to do the thing that you do. So we got to kind of break ourselves a little bit, but I want to do a bunch. Like as we get more and more into wedding photographs, I want to try and figure out some interesting stylistic things that we can do in those photographs through our post-processing. 23:16 Absolutely. Yeah, I've been really because that's what I've been doing for photo editing. Yeah, mostly the last couple of months as well like wedding photo stuff from work that we've been doing. Yeah. And yeah, I want to get into more of a stylized way of doing that. A little bit more of a particular kind of quality. Yeah, I like their photos are awesome. They're so good. But I want to, I mean, that's kind of what I like about going back to like the Sony cameras and stuff like, like, they don't even have to be edited. They look beautiful, already. But I want to get into making them look a little bit more like a style. Yeah, not just that it's a really beautiful photo, but that it's like, 23:58 No, I want to work in a good way, I want to be selective about our lens use. 24:04 Oh my gosh, I 24:05 think there's a lot that we know to do in that that we're not able to execute right now for some of our projects. And that's something I want to change, you know where we go, we get some stuff in there. But that's that, that right piece. So I want to focus on that. And then I want to focus on our post-processing element on top of that, to get the right kind of texture in the file when we make it and the right kind of colors and you know, just that the right photo. And then I want to try and do a great job in Lightroom or our post-processing stuff to kind of pull that out and make it the most and make it look a little style is a little different, and a little better. Yeah, it'll be cool. I think we've got a pretty distinct style with the things that we've been working on over the years. I want to try and push that visually into just the new directions. 24:55 Thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Hope you guys Check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo.com a few new things up there some stuff on the homepage some good links to other outbound sources. some links to books and links to some podcasts. Like these blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy numina photo.com. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode at the back end.
Pam and Steve Hecht are super passionate rock, agate, gem, and mineral pickers and collectors. Their knowledge of this world is unreal. They are also the owners of Miners Cafe in Laurium, Michigan.
Analitzem la derrota d'Argentina, la primera gran sorpresa del Mundial de Qatar, amb Juan Irigoyen, Marcos López, Jordi Martí i Lluís Flaquer. Connectem amb els enviats especials a Doha. Expliquem que Jaume Roures té deu dies per acusar Bartomeu i Masferrer pel Barçagate. Analitzem la situació del Barça de bàsquet amb Àlex Gozalbo, periodista del Diari ARA. Pucurull, que amb 83 anys ha corregut 46 maratons, és protagonista a 'Remember when...'
Iolite, Dumortierite, Purple Cow Agate. We talk about those gemstones purple cow agate is actually a newer discovery we're gonna talk about massive Jim stone finding in Australia about 50 fun facts about rocks talk about a new bird discovered in Mississippi that related to the ostrich as big as a giraffe other fossil finds volcanoes on the moon Michigan's mineral worth billions of dollars will talk about A gold mine and much much more thanks for tuning into radical rocks until next time remember rockhounds don't die they petrify.
Live from Frankfurt, Germany, we explore hosted trips for journalists, working with local PR representatives, and the secret conversations that travel journalists have when destinations aren't around. Jacqui Agate is a freelance travel journalist whose work appears in The Eye, The Times, National Geographic, Wanderlust, and more.
Here are the top stories to look out for in Friday's paper: Homecoming King and Queen announcements United Way of Douglas and Pope counties 23rd annual Chili Cook-Off. After two years of a levy decrease, the Alexandria School District will see a levy increase. The Minnesota Supreme Court backed a court-appointed referee who determined state Sen. Torrey Westrom, lives within the boundaries of the new Senate District 12. In life, 'agate man' from Sauk Rapids to present at the Douglas County Library. In sports, $700,000 has been raised already for the construction of a new par-three course in Alexandria at Alexandria Golf Club. To read more from these stories and others, look for them in our print edition and online at echopress.com. The Echo Press is proud to be a part of the Trust Project. Learn more at thetrustproject.org. Stay connected to your community with local news! Get your first month of access to ECHOPRESS.COM for only ninety-nine cents for the first three months! Visit ECHOPRESS.COM/subscribe for this great offer! You can also stop by our office at 225 7th Ave E or give us a call at 320-763-3133.
Kyle Hanson, the recently-named Executive Director of Agate Housing and Services, as well as Michelle Perrin, the nonprofit's Director of Outreach and Shelter, join this week's episode of "Build Me Up"! They tell us about the organization's recent merger and name change (Fun fact: The Lake Superior agate is Minnesota's state gemstone!), dive further into the services and programs provided, and explain how businesses and individuals can volunteer or make donations.
Moon rocks discovered gardening on the moon agate creek Australia bloody basin plume agate rhodochrosite dinosaurs fossil and more, Thanks for stopping bye until next time remember Rockhound's don't die we petrify.
News: Emily will be vending at the Witches Ball at the Art Sanctuary in Louisville on 9/3 from 6pm till Midnight https://www.art-sanctuary.org/event/witches-ball-presented-by-ravens-roost-boutique-and-pale-moon-tattoo/ - Lauren's yarn will be featured at Knits and Knots Tahoe for the Sierra Nevada Yarn Crawl which is from 9/15- 9/18 FO: Lauren -Mosaic Crochet large zippered project bag using Knit Picks Palette (video tutorial available for patrons!) - Ripple Bralette in Big Little Yarn Co. Merry Go Round Life colorways on the Trusty Sock Set base Emily - A beautiful skein of handspun DK made from a batt composed of Malabrigo Nube and fluff from Emily's angora bunny, Oswald. WIPS: Emily - Vanilla Socks in Regia - Mount Pleasant crop top https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/mount-pleasant in light grey-purple Knit Picks Capretta Lauren - Ripple Bralette in Big Little Yarn Co. Merry Go Round Life colorways on the Trusty Sock Set base (another one!) - Avatar Colorwork Design using Valkyrie Fibers Avatar colorways Acquisitions: Emily acquired many treasures on her trip to Seattle Yarn: The Tea Cozy - https://teacozyyarn.com/ - tote bag with the shop's adorable logo - a sweater quantity of Hedge Hog Fiber's DK tweed - natural colored Falkland base with bright colored production scrap tweedy bits - Sugarplum Circus, Aran weight, Midnight Monsoon colorway https://sugarplumcircus.com/ MJ Yarns - https://shop.mjyarns.com/ - Merino Squish Bulky base, NaCl Colorway - Kuan Yin worsted base, Corundum colorway Urban Craft Uprising - Little Woman Goods, Boo-Bee enamel pin https://www.littlewomangoods.com/ - Luminary Labs, Saturn Candle https://www.etsy.com/shop/LuminaryLabs - Shishido Creative, enamel pins including a Tanuki and Calcifer https://www.shishidocreative.com/ - Crinkle Crow Studio, cauldron metal pin https://www.crinklecrowstudio.com/ - Nature's Twist, Agate mountain necklace with moonstone https://shopnaturestwist.com/ - Graphic Anthology, various greeting cards for all occasions https://graphicanthology.com/ - Mrs. Robinson's Affair, a malachite necklace for a friend and a moonstone necklace for herself https://www.mrsrobinsonsaffair.com/ - It's Cathy Wu, egg tart enamel pin https://www.etsy.com/shop/itscathywu - Glassy Rock Arts, stained glass window hanging with leaves and agate https://glassyrockarts.com/ Push/Pull Art Supplies - https://www.pushpullseattle.com/ - Beam paint stones, assorted colors https://www.beampaints.com/ - Landscape orientation sketchbook by Talens Art Creation Kinokuniya Bookstore - https://usa.kinokuniya.com/ - Gigi crystal mini puzzle - Silicone cat pencil case and assorted pens to go in it - mini narwhal plushie - Palette Perfect for Graphic Designers and Illustrators by Sara Caldas https://bookshop.org/books/palette-perfect-for-graphic-designers-and-illustrators-colour-combinations-meanings-and-cultural-references/9788417412944 - Japanese Stitches Unraveled by Wendy Bernard https://www.abramsbooks.com/product/japanese-stitches-unraveled_9781419729065/ Marnin Saylor - https://www.marninsaylor.com/ - two small handmade plush donut cats - vinyl donut cat toy - peach colored donut cat sweatshirt - honey bun enamel pin Occult Corner: Rock talk continues with a brief discussion of Obsidian, which humans have valued for both its usefulness and beauty since the Neolithic Era! Self Promotion: There will be a 13 day Halloween Advent set available from Emily on Tuesday 5/17 at noon eastern! This amazing countdown calendar will feature 12 cute halloween themed lobster claw charms that clip onto a charm bracelet and the 13th day will feature a brand new enamel pin. There will be add on options for a project bag featuring Emily's art and/or a totally unique sock set from Valkyrie Fibers. www.kittywithacupcake.com The Fiber Coven will be hosting Lauren's There And Back Again KAL for all of 2022, see the public blog post on our Patreon for all the details!
The choices we make now impact our future and shape us into who we will become. Josh interviews entrepreneur, software engineer, fitness buff, and life coach Chad Agate. Chad shares how the choices he made in his past ultimately pushed him to become a better version of himself and truly test the meaning of self-discipline.
Di episode ini bertemu dengan Bulan Aulia Agate, juara 1 dari Barista Innovation Challenge 2021. Bulan bercerita soal awal mula masuk industri kopi, pertapaannya di gunung, sampai perspektifnya soal cinta di QOL goreng. Lebih detailnya bisa langsung didengarkan podcastnya, selamat mendengarkan!
Follow us on Twitter: @TrailsInThePod Email us: TrailsinthePod@Gmail.com Intro 00:00 Prologue and the Masked Man 2:25 Goodbye to Kloe 5:15 Meeting Tita and education in Liberl 7:00 Tita as a unit 10:30 Zeiss, its soundtrack and technology 12:20 Difficulty, damage sponges, and bosses 17:30 Estelle, Joshua, and Tita's relationship 23:00 Hot springs bath 28:00 Are Estelle and Joshua's feelings incestuous? 29:30 Professor Russell is kidnapped 33:45 Agate berates Tita 37:00 Zin and saving Agate 43:30 Size of the Bracers Guild 47:30 Medicine to save Agate 49:00 Leiston Fortress and the military mutiny 52:00 Sidequests and a connected world 1:04:00 Predictions 1:05:30 Audience Question: Favorite and Unfavorite Quests 1:06:15
On the 30th anniversary of his death, we look at the life and struggle of anti-mafia investigative magistrate Paolo Borsellino up to his tragic killing and how he crossed path with a brave young girl of only 17, willing to give up the life she had known in search of justice, Rita Atria.
Chad Agate has over two decades of experience as a serial entrepreneur, tech innovator, and disciplined coach and mentor. He has started and exited four businesses and is currently CEO of Spinach Pay, a privately owned company focused on building innovative solutions in payment processing. Agate has achieved success and inspired others to follow their dreams. He has earned his stellar reputation through focused determination and relentless discipline. Most recently, USA Today recognized Agate as one of the top 10 entrepreneurs to watch. Chapter Summaries0:45 - Introducing Chad Agate1:45 - Big Mistakes4:01 - Life After Prison6:31 - Lessons Learned9:44 - Have a Strong Call to Action12:48 - Next Business14:30 - Morning RoutineCONNECT WITH MILLION DOLLAR MONDAY!Follow us on Instagram | Follow us on YouTubeKey TakeawaysLet's figure out what I need to do to stop feeling sorry for myself and change the situation.You're going to do something a lot of the times that either hasn't been done before, it's massive amounts of risk and we have to be optimistic. We have to believe we're going to be successful.A lot of people, for whatever reason, find themselves in the prison of their own mind. They go through painful divorces. Maybe they had difficult childhood…whether they're real prisons or prisons in their mind, breaking free and just realizing there are other people that maybe have it worse. And that there's a brilliant path forward is a great learning lesson for all of us.An entrepreneurial mindset is the belief that I can do this. Answer real questions that real people are asking, give them answers and create value and have a strong CTA, pull them through your sales funnels. As soon as you get after the tough stuff, the sooner you're going to achieve successSo I start my day, every single day, I'm out of bed by 3:00 AM. I think that's the first opportunity for me to win when that alarm clock goes off, I'm up. Immediately, I start my training routine, then I tackled the most difficult task of the day, whatever that may be. And I'm usually able do that before anybody else is awake. Start with the hard things. Do this one important thing…Eat the frog. Do the tough thing first. So important. There's no secret. It's grit, it's persistence. It's sticking to it and not giving up. It's being wanting to work harder than anyone seems thinks as rational. Just keep going.As soon as you get after the tough stuff, the sooner you're going to achieve successResource Links https://www.chadagate.com/https://www.instagram.com/chad_agate/
Colin and Kevin have finished playing through chapter 2, and now we're gonna talk about it. Intro 00:00 Overarching thoughts on chapter 2 1:30 Mysterious prologue 2:20 Krone pass checkpoint and Agate as an in-game unit and as a character 5:20 Estelle's self-conceptualization when criticized and praised 9:00 Kloe as a unit and a character 11:45 The helmet crab sidequest and managing arts in combat 12:30 Experience and leveling disparities 16:00 The first signs of Estelle and Joshua's burgeoning romance 17:45 Start of the orphanage plot 20:15 Sex and Sexuality 23:00 Nobility, being “wellbred,” and the inherent qualities of the aristocracy 27:00 The orphanage burns down, Joshua's knowledge, and the silver-haired man 30:30 Kloe joins the party 35:00 Bracers and the normalization of violence 37:00 Agate takes over the case 40:30 The first Phantom B sidequest and replayability of puzzles 41:45 Quest markers in games 43:30 Beginning of the Royal Academy 46:00 Rundown of the play 48:20 Why Kevin hates Sieg the falcon 59:00 Matron Theresa gets robbed 61:30 Gameplay/story dissonance in time-sensitive events 63:30 The fight at the lighthouse 65:00 Kloe acting megasus 68:30 The final boss fight 72:00 Confrontation with Mayor Dalmore 74:00
Does anyone actually want to stay on this timeline?Join as we discuss some useful dudes during these trying times, Yung Gravy, and smooth jazz voices.Our SponsorBlessed Be Magickblessedbemagick.comWITCHBITCH for 15% offinstagram @blessedbemagick--------------------------------------------Hex the Patriarchy: 26 Days of Rage and PowerOnline eventfacebook.com/events/1697044150673062--------------------------------------------Advertise with us!Just shoot us an email over to wbahpodcast@gmail.comSnag yourself some WBAH Merch!teespring.com/stores/wbah-podcast-storeContact Us (Come Eat With Us)Instagram @WitchBitchAmateurHourTwitter @BitchHourFacebook @WitchAmateurHourDiscord https://discord.gg/DBhCw9vZwbahpodcast@gmail.comWant to help support the Podcast? Consider becoming a Patron!www.patreon.com/wbahpodcastHandwritten letters are actual magic!PO Box 865Canton, Tx75103_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-Play The Sims With Charlyetwitch.tv/charlye_withawhyTwitter @charlyewithawhyOur Video EditorRichards's Kitchhttps://m.youtube.com/channel/UC_CwBrVMhqezVz_fog716OwTheme music by:www.fiverr.com/master_serviceWe are not doctors, lawyers, or professionals. We are amateurs, and nothing we say should be taken as advice, instruction, or seriously. Any action taken based on what we say or imply can and will lead to illness, existential crisis, injury, your pets no longer loving you, and death. We make no promise or guarantee, expressed or implied, and assume no legal liability or responsibility for any injuries resulting from the use of information contained within our medias.Support the show
6 Plays (Agate Press, 2022) collects six plays written over a twenty year period by playwright Mickle Maher. Maher is a legend of the Chicago theatre. He is a founder of Theater Oobleck, which has produced many of his plays since their founding as a student theatre group at the University of Michigan in the 1980s. Maher's plays often riff on an existing literary or theatrical classic (Shakespeare's The Tempest in Spirits to Enforce, Chekhov's Cherry Orchard in The Hunchback Variations) but they're never inaccessibly academic. Rather, they invite audiences into a playful, funny, profoundly moving dialogue with canonical works. In this discussion, we talk about the founding of Theater Oobleck, Maher's teaching methodology, and why the Faust myth spoke to him so profoundly during a time of personal crisis. Andy Boyd is a playwright based in Brooklyn, New York. He is a graduate of the playwriting MFA at Columbia University, Harvard University, and the Arizona School for the Arts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/performing-arts
6 Plays (Agate Press, 2022) collects six plays written over a twenty year period by playwright Mickle Maher. Maher is a legend of the Chicago theatre. He is a founder of Theater Oobleck, which has produced many of his plays since their founding as a student theatre group at the University of Michigan in the 1980s. Maher's plays often riff on an existing literary or theatrical classic (Shakespeare's The Tempest in Spirits to Enforce, Chekhov's Cherry Orchard in The Hunchback Variations) but they're never inaccessibly academic. Rather, they invite audiences into a playful, funny, profoundly moving dialogue with canonical works. In this discussion, we talk about the founding of Theater Oobleck, Maher's teaching methodology, and why the Faust myth spoke to him so profoundly during a time of personal crisis. Andy Boyd is a playwright based in Brooklyn, New York. He is a graduate of the playwriting MFA at Columbia University, Harvard University, and the Arizona School for the Arts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literary-studies
6 Plays (Agate Press, 2022) collects six plays written over a twenty year period by playwright Mickle Maher. Maher is a legend of the Chicago theatre. He is a founder of Theater Oobleck, which has produced many of his plays since their founding as a student theatre group at the University of Michigan in the 1980s. Maher's plays often riff on an existing literary or theatrical classic (Shakespeare's The Tempest in Spirits to Enforce, Chekhov's Cherry Orchard in The Hunchback Variations) but they're never inaccessibly academic. Rather, they invite audiences into a playful, funny, profoundly moving dialogue with canonical works. In this discussion, we talk about the founding of Theater Oobleck, Maher's teaching methodology, and why the Faust myth spoke to him so profoundly during a time of personal crisis. Andy Boyd is a playwright based in Brooklyn, New York. He is a graduate of the playwriting MFA at Columbia University, Harvard University, and the Arizona School for the Arts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies
6 Plays (Agate Press, 2022) collects six plays written over a twenty year period by playwright Mickle Maher. Maher is a legend of the Chicago theatre. He is a founder of Theater Oobleck, which has produced many of his plays since their founding as a student theatre group at the University of Michigan in the 1980s. Maher's plays often riff on an existing literary or theatrical classic (Shakespeare's The Tempest in Spirits to Enforce, Chekhov's Cherry Orchard in The Hunchback Variations) but they're never inaccessibly academic. Rather, they invite audiences into a playful, funny, profoundly moving dialogue with canonical works. In this discussion, we talk about the founding of Theater Oobleck, Maher's teaching methodology, and why the Faust myth spoke to him so profoundly during a time of personal crisis. Andy Boyd is a playwright based in Brooklyn, New York. He is a graduate of the playwriting MFA at Columbia University, Harvard University, and the Arizona School for the Arts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
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