American television series
POPULARITY
Hi Livvin for Food listeners! This week on the podcast I chatted with Ozoz Sokoh, a recent cookbook author, food blogger, and professor of Food and Tourism studies. We dove into Nigerian culture, the process of writing a cookbook, her time cooking for Anthony Bourdain, and much more. I loved this conversation, and I know you will too! Make sure to follow the podcast on Instagram or check me out on TikTok. Check out Ozoz on Instagram or shop her new cookbook on my Amazon Storefront.Watch Ozoz's episode on Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown. Recording by Riverside.fmMusic by Music_Unlimited from Pixabay
For the first episode of the new series, Louis sits down with influencer, fashion icon and former adult film performer, Mia Khalifa. Joining Louis in the studio, Mia discusses living with autism, receiving death threats for her outspoken views, and her experience of the adult film world. Warnings: Strong language, adult content and discussions of a sexual nature. Links/Attachments: ‘What is Anime? Everything You Need to know' - NFI https://www.nfi.edu/what-is-anime/ Louis Theroux: Extreme Love, Episode 1: Autism – BBC (UK only) https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01gk4xc Louis Theroux: Selling Sex – BBC (UK only) https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000dbcf Louis Theroux: Dark States, Series 1 Episode 2: Trafficking Sex – BBC (UK only) https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b099wspk Louis Theroux Specials: Twilight of the Porn Stars – BBC (UK only) https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b01j84qt/louis-theroux-specials-twilight-of-the-porn-stars ‘Beirut – beautiful and scarred – beckons Anthony Bourdain again' - CNN https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/beirut-bourdain-parts-unknown/index.html Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, S05 E08: Beirut – Banijay Documentaries (CNN production) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LptZ9E4ZG4 Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations, S02 E08: Beirut – Discovery (Discovery+ - Amazon Prime) https://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/B0919V38G1/ref=atv_dp_season_select_s2 Capernaum (2018), directed by Nadine Labaki – Trailer via YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ULUo0048xZE What does the term ‘incel' mean? - CNN https://edition.cnn.com/2023/03/16/us/incel-involuntary-celibate-explained-cec/index.html The Joe Rogan Experience, E1648: Abby Martin - YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=toBL3_nWpJU Call Her Daddy – This is Mia Khalifa (Full Interview) - YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlaEaN2sm14 ‘What's a Pick-Me Girl? Here's What You Need to Know' - Cosmopolitan https://www.cosmopolitan.com/sex-love/a42134933/what-is-a-pick-me-girl-definition/ The Girlfriend Experience (2009), directed by Steven Soderbergh – YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=euwBlSZVrtQ Entourage, Season 7 – HBO (Sky Comedy - Now TV) https://www.nowtv.com/gb/watch/home/asset/entourage/iYEQZ2uDbPiuTXWJFoHV9m?DCMP=WA Credits: Producer: Millie Chu Assistant Producer: Emilia Gill Production Manager: Francesca Bassett Music: Miguel D'Oliveira Audio Mixer: Tom Guest Video Mixer: Scott Edwards Show notes compiled by Sally McLennan Executive Producer: Arron Fellows A Mindhouse Production for Spotify www.mindhouse.co.uk Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Classic Episode originally dropped 2021Lady Imix & DJ Phatrick: Heartbreak Monday RadioIn this episode Lady Imix and DJ Phatrick share the show's origin story , show BTS, the importance of representation and investing in their community. They also take on a song challenge from Chef Roy Choi while challenging “the box of masculinity”.Questions/Comments from the audience:The VillianessMiracle Etim-AndyEp. 7 WTYM guest Colony LittleChef Roi ChoiDuring The Supernatural Bear corner, The SNB is asked to share his favorite sad song.Episode linksHeartbreak Monday Radio MixcloudHeartbreak Monday instagramDJ PhatrickKQBHBambu DePistolaBoyle Heights Bridge RunnersMotown MondaysLadies of SoundWu tang - After the Laughter Portishead - Glory BoxFetty Wap - My Way Sade - Is it a CrimeUB40-Red Red WineRobyn -Dancing on my ownJoy Division- Love Will Tear Us ApartAnthony Bourdain (Rest in Power) on Season 9 Episode 1 : Los Angeles of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. The Nerd OutLittle Brother from Phineas and FerbThe SkatesideWTYM LINKSRitzy PeriwinkleBook Ritzy P as a SpeakerWord To Your Mama Store: Use code WTYM at check out to receive 10% off any order YouTubeMental Health ResourcesWTYM Patreon PageDONATEMEDIA KITPodcasting EssentialsWTYM was recorded using Riverside.FM TRY NOWAVAILABLE WHERE EVER YOU CONSUME PODCASTS on socials @wtymama | email: hola@wordtoyourmama.com
Matt talks to Ed O'Keefe, CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library Foundation. The pair dive into everything from how a president, whose face is carved on Mount Rushmore, doesn't already have a library, to how one goes about starting and fundraising for, such a massive project. Additionally, they explore the conservation movement that TR started and the bipartisan support he, and the library named in his honor, have garnered in a divided Congress; the importance of knowing when it's time to walk away (and, conversely, when it's important to stay) Ed also sheds light on working for the Emmy winning Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown and discusses his newly published book, “The Loves of Theodore Roosevelt: the Women who Created a President”
EPISODE 1953: In this KEEN ON show, Andrew talks to Patrick Winn, author of NARCOTOPIA, about a south-east Asian nation the size of Belgium which controls the region's $60 billion meth trade.Patrick Winn is an award-winning investigative journalist. He mostly covers rebellion and black markets in Southeast Asia. Winn is the author of two narrative non-fiction books:Narcotopia: In Search of the Asian Drug Cartel that Survived the CIA (PublicAffairs / Icon Books) & Hello, Shadowlands: Inside the Meth Fiefdoms, Rebel Hideouts and Bomb-Scarred Party Towns of Southeast Asia (Icon Books). Winn is currently the Asia correspondent for The World, a radio program broadcast on more than 300 NPR stations across America. His writing and short documentaries have appeared in or on The New York Times, NBC News, the BBC, The Atlantic, NPR and many other outlets. He has received the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award (also known as the ‘poor man's Pulitzer') and a National Press Club award. He's also a three-time winner of Amnesty International's Human Rights Press Awards among other prizes. Winn has appeared on screen as an expert source on two documentaries.Narco Wars (National Geographic, broadcast on Hulu), Season Three, Episode Two: “Prince of Death” & The Business of Drugs (Netflix), the “Meth” episode. Winn was an associate producer on Hope Frozen, a Netflix original documentary, and a field producer for the debut Myanmar episode of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. Both won Emmys. Winn was raised in Eden, a dwindling North Carolina factory town that once manufactured carpets and beer. He graduated from UNC-Chapel Hill in 2003 with a journalism degree. His early reportage explored economic decay in the American south and crime within the US military. Since 2008, Winn has lived in Bangkok and reported on Southeast Asia. He reads and speaks Thai — and occasionally sings it, badly, in upcountry karaoke joints.Keen On is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Named as one of the "100 most connected men" by GQ magazine, Andrew Keen is amongst the world's best known broadcasters and commentators. In addition to presenting KEEN ON, he is the host of the long-running How To Fix Democracy show. He is also the author of four prescient books about digital technology: CULT OF THE AMATEUR, DIGITAL VERTIGO, THE INTERNET IS NOT THE ANSWER and HOW TO FIX THE FUTURE. Andrew lives in San Francisco, is married to Cassandra Knight, Google's VP of Litigation & Discovery, and has two grown children. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
Alex Roa, Director, Producer, and Fixer, joins Susan and Ben to discuss Cronos, a 1992 horror film. Alex shares what it's like having a career as a director, producer, and fixer for documentaries and travel shows. He discusses highlighting Mexico's culture on Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown and Somebody Feed Phil. He also describes starting his own production company, De Milagro Films. Alex plays our “Cult Classics” game. Follow Alex on Instagram @alexroa, Facebook at Alex Roa Director, or IMDb. To see more of Alex's work, visit alexroa.mx. Find out more about De Milagro Films at demilagrofilms.com Leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts to help us reach more listeners. Find out about our guests and upcoming events by following us at Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram, contribute to our Patreon, or shop at lifeinthecredits.com. Life in Our Credits Hosts: Susan Swarner and Ben Blohm Executive Producer: Michelle Levin Logo Art: Melissa Durkin Music Composer and Performer: Steve Trowbridge --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lifeinthecredits/support
Jason Lengstorf, a developer media producer and host of the show Learn with Jason, joins Corey on this week's episode of Screaming in the Cloud to layout his ideas for creative developer content. Jason explains how devTV can have way more reach than webinars, the lack of inspiration he experiences at conferences these days, and why companies should be focused on hiring specialists before putting DevRels on the payroll. Plus, Corey and Jason discuss walking the line between claiming you're good at everything and not painting yourself into a corner as a DevRel and marketer.About JasonJason Lengstorf helps tech companies connect with developer communities through better media. He advocates for continued learning through collaboration and play and regularly live streams coding with experts on his show, Learn With Jason. He lives in Portland, Oregon.Links Referenced:Learn with Jason: https://www.learnwithjason.dev/Personal Website Links: https://jason.energy/linksTranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. Before I went to re:Invent, I snuck out of the house for a couple of days to GitHub Universe. While I was there, I discovered all kinds of fascinating things. A conference that wasn't predicated on being as cheap as humanly possible was one of them, and a company that understood how developer experience might play out was another.And I also got to meet people I don't normally get to cross paths with. My guest today is just one such person. Jason Lengstorf is a developer media producer at Learn with Jason, which I have to assume is named after yourself.Jason: [laugh] It is yes.Corey: Or it's a dramatic mispronunciation on my part, like, no, no, it's ‘Learn with JSON' and it's basically this insane way of doing weird interchange formats, and you just try to sneak it through because you know I happen to be an XML purist.Jason: [laugh] Right, I'm just going to throw you a bunch of YAML today. That's all I want to talk about.Corey: Exactly. It keeps things entertaining, we're going to play with it. So, let's back up a sec. What do you do? Where do you start and where do you stop?Jason: I'm still learning how to answer this question, but I help companies do a better job of speaking to developer audiences. I was an engineer for a really long time, I went from engineering into developer advocacy and developer experience, and as of the last year, I'm doing that independently, with a big focus on the media that companies produce because I think that what used to work isn't working, and that there's a big opportunity ahead of us that I am really excited to help companies move into.Corey: It feels like this has been an ongoing area of focus for an awful lot of folks. How do you successfully engage with developer audiences? And if I'm being direct and more than a little bit cynical, a big part of it is that historically, the ways that a company marketed to folks was obnoxious. And for better or worse, when you're talking about highly technical topics and you're being loudly incorrect, a technical audience is not beholden to some of the more common business norms, and will absolutely call you out in the middle of you basically lying to them. “Oh, crap, what do we do now,” seemed to be a large approach. And the answer that a lot of folks seem to have come up with was DevRel, which… I've talked about it before in a bunch of different ways, and my one-liner is generally, “If you work in DevRel, that means you work in marketing, but they're scared to tell you that.”Jason: [laugh] I don't think you're wrong. And you know, the joke that I've made for a long time is that they always say that developers hate marketing. But I don't think developers hate marketing; they just hate the way that your company does it. And—Corey: Oh, wholeheartedly agree. Marketing done right is engaging and fun. A lot of what I do in public is marketing. Like, “Well, that's not true. You're just talking about whatever dumb thing AWS did this week.” “Well, yes, but then you stick around to see what else I say, and I just become sort of synonymous with ‘Oh, yeah, that's the guy that fixes AWS bills.'” That is where our business comes from, believe it or not.Jason: Ri—and I think this was sort of the heart of DevRel is that people understood this. They understood that the best way to get an audience engaged is to have somebody who's part of that audience engage with them because you want to talk to them on the level that they work. You're not—you know, a marketing message from somebody who doesn't understand what you do is almost never going to land. It just doesn't feel relatable. But if you talk to somebody who's done the thing that you do for work, and they can tell you a story that's engaging about the thing that you do for work, you want to hear more. You—you know, you're looking for a community, and I think that DevRel, the aim was to sort of create that community and give people a space to hang out with the added bonus of putting the company that employs that DevRel as an adjacent player to get some of that extra shine from wherever this community is doing well.Corey: It felt like 2019 was peak DevRel, and that's where I started to really see that you had, effectively, a lot of community conferences were taken over by DevRel, and you wound up with DevRel pitching to DevRel. And it became so many talks that were aligned with almost imagined problems. I think one of the challenges of working in DevRel is, if you're not careful, you stop being a practitioner for long enough that you can no longer relate to what the audience is actually dealing with. I can sit here and complain about data center travails that I had back in 2011, but are those still accurate in what's about to be 2024? Probably not.Jason: And I think the other problem that happens too is that when you work in DevRel, you are beholden to the company's goals, if the company employees you. And where I think we got really wrong is companies have to make money. We have to charge customers or the company ceases to exist, so when we go out and tell stories, we're encouraged by the company to focus on the stories that have the highest ROI for the company. And that means that I'm up on stage talking about some, like, far-future, large-scale enterprise thing that very few companies need, but most of the paying customers of my company would need. And it becomes less relatable, and I think that leads to some of the collapse that we saw that you mentioned, where dev events feel less like they're for devs and more like they're partner events where DevRel is talking to other DevRel is trying to get opportunities to schmooze partners, and grow our partner pipeline.Corey: That's a big part of it, where it seems, on some level, that so much of what DevRel does, when I see them talking about DevRel, it doesn't get around to DevRel is. Instead, it gets stuck in the weeds of what DevRel is not“. We are not shills for our employer.” Okay, I believe you, but also, I don't ever see you saying anything that directly contravenes what your employer does. Now, let me be clear: neither do I, but I'm also in a position where I can control what my employer does because I have the control to move in directions that align with my beliefs.I'm not saying that it's impossible to be authentic and true to yourself if you work for an employer, but I have seen a couple of egregious examples of people changing companies and then their position on topics they've previously been very vocal on pulled an entire one-eighty, where it's… it really left a bad taste in my mouth.Jason: Yeah. And I think that's sort of the trick of being a career DevRel is you have to sort of walk this line of realizing that a DevRel career is probably short at every company. Because if you're going to go there and be the face of a company, and you're not the owner of that company, they're almost inevitably going to start moving in a direction as business develops, that's not going to line up with your core values. And you can either decide, like, okay that's fine, they pay me well enough, I'm just going to suck it up and do this thing that I don't care about that much, or you have to leave. And so, if you're being honest with yourself, and you know that you're probably going to spend between 12 and 24 months at any given company as a DevRel, which—by the history I'm seeing, that seems to be pretty accurate—you need to be positioning and talking about things in a way that isn't painting you into that corner where you have to completely about-face, if you switch companies. But that also works against your goals as a DevRel at the company. So, it's—I think we've made some big mistakes in the DevRel industry, but I will pause to take a breath here [laugh].Corey: No, no, it's fine. Like, it's weird that I view a lot of what I do is being very similar to DevRel, but I would never call myself that. And part of it is because, for better or worse, it is not a title that tends to engender a level of respect from business owners, decision makers, et cetera because it is such a mixed bag. You have people who have been strategic advisors across the board becoming developer advocates. That's great.You also see people six months out of a boot camp who have decided don't like writing code very much, so they're going to just pivot to talking about writing code, and invariably, they believe, more or less, whatever their employer tells them because they don't have the history and the gravitas to say, “Wait a minute, that sounds like horse pucky to me.” And it's a very broad continuum. I just don't like blending in.Jason: Where I think we got a lot of this wrong is that we never did define what DevRel is. As you say, we mostly define what DevRel is not, and that puts us in a weird position where companies see other companies do DevRel, and they mostly pay attention to the ones who do DevRel really well. And they or their investors or other companies say, “You need a great DevRel program. This is the secret to growth.” Because we look at companies that have done it effectively, and we see their growth, and we say, “Clearly this has a strong correlation. We should invest in this.” But they don't—they haven't done it themselves. They don't understand which part of it is that works, so they just say, “We're hiring for DevRel.” The job description is nine different careers in a trench coat. And the people applying—Corey: Oh, absolutely. It's nine different things and people wind up subdividing into it, like, “I'm an events planner. I'm not a content writer.”Jason: Right.Corey: Okay, great, but then why not bill yourself as a con—as an events planner, and not have to wear the DevRel cloak?Jason: Exactly. And this is sort of what I've seen is that when you put up a DevRel job, they list everything, and then when you apply for a DevRel job, you also don't want to paint yourself into a corner and say, “My specialty is content,” or, “My specialty is public speaking,” or whatever it is. And therefore you say, “I do DevRel,” to give yourself more latitude as an employee. Which obviously I want to keep optionality anywhere I go. I would like to be able to evolve without being painted into a small box of, like, this is all I'm allowed to do, but it does put us in this really precarious position.And what I've noticed a lot of companies do is they hire DevRel—undefined, poorly written job description, poor understanding of the field. They get a DevRel who has a completely different understanding of what DevRel is compared to the people with the role open. Both of them think they're doing DevRel, they completely disagree on what those fundamentals are, and it leads to a mismatch, to burnout, to frustration, to, you know, this high turnover rate in this field. And everybody then starts to say, well, “DevRel is the problem.” But really, the problem is that we're not—we're defining a category, not a job, and I think that's the part that we really screwed up as an industry.Corey: Yeah. I wish there were a better way around there, but I don't know what that might be. Because it requires getting a bunch of people to change some cornerstone of what's become their identity.Jason: This is the part where I—this is probably my spiciest take, but I think that DevRel is marketing, but it is a different kind of marketing. And so, in a perfect world—like, where things start to fall apart is you try to slot DevRel into engineering, or you try to slot it into marketing, as a team on these broader organizations, but the challenge then becomes, if you have DevRel, in marketing, it will inevitably push more toward marketing goals, enterprise goals, top-of-funnel, qualified leads, et cetera. If you put them into engineering, then they have more engineering goals. They want to do developer experience reviews. They want to get out there and do demos. You know, it's much more engineering-focused—or if you're doing it right, is much more engineering-focused.But the best DevRel teams are doing both of those with a really good measure, and really clear metrics that don't line up with engineering or marketing. So, in a perfect world, you would just have an enterprise marketing team, and a developer marketing team, and that developer marketing team would be an organization that is DevRel today. And you would hire specialists—event planners, great speakers, great demo writers, probably put your docs team in there—and treat it as an actual responsibility that requires a larger team than just three or four ex-developers who are now speaking at conferences.Corey: There were massive layoffs across DevRel when the current macroeconomic correction hit, and I'd been worried about it for years in advance because—Jason: Mm-hm.Corey: So, many of these folks spent so much time talking about how they were not marketing, they were absolutely not involved in that. But marketing is the only department that really knows how to describe the value of these sorts of things without having hard metrics tied to it. DevRel spent a lot of time talking about how every metric used to measure them was somehow wrong, and if you took it to its logical conclusion, you would basically give these people a bunch of money—because they are expensive—and about that much money again in annual budget to travel more or less anywhere they want to go, and every time something good happened, as a result, to the company, they had some hand in it nebulously, but you could never do anything to measure their performance, so just trust that they're doing a good job. This is tremendously untenable.Jason: Mm-hm. Yeah, I think when I was running the developer experience org at Netlify, most of my meetings were justifying the existence of the team because there weren't good metrics. You can't put sales qualified leads on DevRel. It doesn't make any sense because there are too many links in the chain after DevRel opens the door, where somebody has to go from, ‘I'm aware of this company' to ‘I've interacted with the landing page' to ‘I've actually signed up for something' to ‘now I'm a customer,' before you can get them to a lead. And so, to have DevRel take credit is actually removing credit from the marketing team.And similarly, if somebody goes through onboarding, a lot of that onboarding can be guided by DevRel. The APIs that new developers interface with can be—the feedback can come from DevRel, but ultimately, the engineering team did that work the product team did that work. So, DevRel is this very interesting thing. I've described it as a turbocharger, where if you put it on an engine that runs well, you get better performance out of that engine. If you just plop one on the table, not a lot happens.Corey: Yeah, it's a good way of putting it. I see very early stage startups looking to hire a developer advocate or DevRel person in their seed stage or Series A, and it's… there's something else you're looking for here. Hire that instead. You're putting the cart before the horse.Jason: What a lot of people saw is they saw—what they're thinking of as DevRel is what they saw from very public founders. And when you get a company that's got this very public-facing, very engaging, charismatic founder, that's what DevRel feels like. It is, you know, this is the face of the company, we're showing you what we do on the inside, we're exposing our process, we're sharing the behind the scenes, and proving to you that we really are great engineers, and we care a lot. Look at all this cool stuff we're doing. And that founder up on stage was, I think, the original DevRel.That's what we used to love about conferences is we would go there and we would see somebody showing this thing they invented, or this new product they had built, and it felt so cool because it was these inspirational moments of watching somebody brilliant do something brilliant. And you got to follow along for that journey. And then we try to—Corey: Yeah I mean, that's natural, but you see booths at conferences, the small company startup booths, a lot of times you'll be able to talk to the founders directly. As the booths get bigger, your likelihood of being able to spend time talking to anyone who's materially involved in the strategic direction of that company gets smaller and smaller. Like, the CEO of GitHub isn't going to be sitting around at the GitHub booth at re:Invent. They're going to be, you know, talking to other folks—if they're there—and going to meetings and whatnot. And then you wind up with this larger and larger company. It's a sign of success, truly, but it also means that you've lost something along the way.Jason: Yeah, I think, you know, it's the perils of scale. And I think that when you start looking at the function of DevRel, it should sort of be looked at as, like, when we can't handle this anymore by ourselves, we should look for a specialty the same way that you do for any other function inside of a company. You know, it wouldn't make sense on day one of a startup to hire a reliability engineer. You're not at the point where that makes sense. It's a very expensive person to hire, and you don't have enough product or community or load to justify that role yet. And hopefully, you will.And I think DevRel is sort of the same way. Like, when you first start out your company, your DevRel should be the founding team. It should be your engineers, sharing the things that they're building so that the community can see the brilliance of your engineering team, sharing with the community, obviously, being invested in that community. And when you get big enough that those folks can no longer manage that and their day-to-day work, great, then look into adding specialists. But I think you're right that it's cart before the horse to, you know, make a DevRel your day-one hire. You just don't have enough yet.Corey: Yeah, I wish that there were an easy way to skin the cat. I'm not sure there is. I think instead we wind up with people doing what they think is going to work. But I don't know what the truth is.Jason: Mmm.Corey: At least. That's where I land on it.Jason: [laugh] Yeah, I mean, every company is unique, and every experience is going to be unique, so I think to say, “Do it exactly like this,” is—that's got a lot of survivorship bias, and do as I say—but at the same time, I do think there's some universal truths. Like, it doesn't really make sense to hire a specialist before you've proven that specialty is the secret sauce of your business. And I think you grow when it's time to grow, not just in case. I think companies that over-hire end up doing some pretty painful layoffs down the road. And, you know, obviously, there's an opposite end of that spectrum where you can grow too slowly and bury your team and burn everybody out, but I think, you know—we, [laugh] leading into the pandemic, I guess, we had a lot of free money, and I think people were thinking, let's go build an empire and we'll grow into that empire. And I think that is a lot of why we're seeing this really painful downsizing right now, is companies hired just in case and then realized that actually, that in case didn't come to be.Corey: What is the future of this look like? Easy enough to look back and say, well, that didn't work? Well, sure. What is the future?Jason: The playbook that we saw before—in, like, 2019 and before—was very event-driven, very, like, webinar-driven. And as we went into 2020, and people were at home, we couldn't travel, we got real sick of Zoom calls. We don't want to get on another video call again. And that led to that playbook not working anymore. You know, I don't want to get on a webinar with a company. I don't want to go travel to a company event, you know, or at least not very many of them. I want to go see the friends I haven't seen in three years.So, travel priorities changed, video call fatigue is huge, so we need something that people want to do, that is interesting, and that is, you know, it's worth making in its own right, so that people will engage with it, and then you work in the company goals as an incidental. Not as a minor incidental, but you know, it's got to be part of the story; it can't be the purpose. People won't sign up for a webinar willingly these days, I don't think, unless they have exactly the problem that your webinar purports to solve.Corey: And even if they do, it becomes a different story.Jason: Right.Corey: It's [high buying 00:19:03] signal, but people are constantly besieged by requests for attention. This is complicated by what I've seen over the last year. When marketing budgets get—cut, arguably too much, but okay—you see now that there's this follow-on approach where, okay, what are we going to cut? And people cut things that in many cases work, but are harder to attribute success to. Events, for example, are doing very well because you have someone show up at your booth, you scan their badge. Three weeks later, someone from that company winds up signing up for a trial or whatnot, and ah, I can connect those dots.Whereas you advertise on I don't know, a podcast as a hypothetical example that I'm pulling out of what's right in front of me, and someone listening to this and hearing a message from a sponsor, they might be doing something else. They'll be driving, washing dishes, et cetera, and at best they'll think, “Okay, I should Google that when I get back to a computer.” And they start hearing about it a few times, and, “Oh. Okay, now it's time for me to go and start paying serious attention to this because that sounds like it aligns with a problem I have.” They're not going to remember where they initially heard it.They're going to come in off of a Google search, so it sounds like it's all SEO's benefit that this is working, and it is impossible to attribute. I heard some marketer once say that 50% of your marketing budget is wasted, but you'll go bankrupt trying to figure out which half. It all ties together. But I can definitely see why people bias for things that are more easily attributed to the metric you care about.Jason: Yes. And I think that this is where I see the biggest opportunity because I think that we have to embrace that marketing signal is directional, not directly attributable. And if you have a focus campaign, you can see your deviation from baseline signups, and general awareness, and all of the things that you want to be true, but you have to be measuring that thing, right? So, if we launch a campaign where we're going to do some video ads, or we're going to do some other kind of awareness thing, the goal is brand awareness, and you measure that through, like, does your name get mentioned on social media? Do you see a deviation from baseline signups where it is trending upward?And each of those things is signal that the thing you did worked. Can you directly attribute it? No, but I think a functional team can—you know, we did this at Netlify all the time where we would go and look: what were the efforts that were made, what were the ones that got discussion on different social media platforms, and what was the change from baseline? And we saw certain things always drove a non-trivial deviation from baseline in the right direction. And that's one of the reasons that I think the future of this is going to be around how do you go broader with your reach?And my big idea—to nutshell it—is, like, dev TV. I think that developers want to see the things that they're interested in, but they want it to be more interesting than a straight webinar. They want to see other developers using tools and getting a sense of what's possible in an entertaining way. Like, they want stories, they don't want straight demos. So, my thinking here is, let's take this and steer into it.Like, we know that developers love when you put a documentary together. We saw the Vue documentary, and the React documentary, and the GraphQL documentary, and the Kubernetes documentary coming out of the Honeypot team, and they've got hundreds of thousands, and in some cases, millions of views because developers really want to see good stories about us, about our community. So, why not give the dev community a Great British Bake Off, but for web devs? Why not create an Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown-style travel show that highlights various web communities? Why not get out there and make reality competition shows and little docuseries that help us highlight all the things that we're learning and sharing and building?Every single one of those is going to involve developers talking about the tools they use, talking about the problems they solve, talking about what they were doing before and how they've made it better. That's exactly what a webinar is, that's what a conference talk is, but instead of getting a small audience at a conference, or you know, 15 to 30 people signing up for your webinar, now we've got the potential for hundreds of thousands or even millions of people to watch this thing because it's fun to watch. And then they become aware of the companies involved because it's presented by the company; they see the thing get used or talked about by developers in their community, I think there's a lot of magic and potential in that, and we've seen it work in other verticals.Corey: And part of the problem comes down as well to the idea that, okay, you're going to reach some people in person at events, but the majority of engineers are not going to be at any event or—Jason: Right.Corey: Any event at all, for that matter. They just don't go to events for a variety of excellent reasons. How do you reach out to them? Video can work, but I always find that requires a bit of a different skill than, I don't know, podcasting or writing a newsletter. So, many times, it feels like it's, oh, and now you're just going to basically stare at the camera, maybe with someone else, and it looks like the Zoom call to which the viewer is not invited.Jason: Right.Corey: They get enough of that. There has to be something else.Jason: And I think this is where the new skill set, I think, is going to come in. It exists in other places. We see this happen in a lot of other industries, where they have in-house production teams, they're doing collaborations with actors and athletes and bringing people in to make really entertaining stories that drive underlying narratives. I mean, there's the ones that are really obvious, like, the Nikes of the world, but then there are far less obvious examples.Like, there was this show called Making It. It was… Nick Offerman and Amy Poehler were the hosts. It was the same format as the Great British Bake Off but around DIY and crafting. And one of the permanent judges was the Etsy trend expert, right? And so, every single episode, as they're judging this, the Etsy trend expert is telling all of these crafters and contestants, “You know, what you built here is always a top seller on Etsy. This is such a good idea, it's so well executed, and people love this stuff. It flies off the shelves in Etsy stores.”Every single episode, just perfectly natural product placement, where a celebrity that you know—Nick Offerman and Amy Poehler—are up there, lending—like, you want to see them. They're so funny and engaging, and then you've got the credibility of Etsy's trend expert telling the contestants of the show, “If you do DIY and crafting, you can make a great living on Etsy. Here are the things that will make that possible.” It's such subtle, but brilliant product placement throughout the entire thing. We can do that. Like, we have the money, we just spend it in weird places.And I think that as an industry, if we start getting more creative about this and thinking about different ways we can apply these marketing dollars that we're currently dumping into very expensive partner dinners or billboards or getting, you know, custom swag or funding yet another $150,000 conference sponsorship, we could make a series of a TV show for the same cost as throwing one community event, and we would reach a significantly larger group.Corey: Yeah. Now, there is the other side of it, too, where Lord knows I found this one out the fun way, that creating content requires significant effort and—Jason: Yes.Corey: Focus. And, “Oh, it's a five-minute video. Great, that could take a day or three to wind up putting together, done right.” One of the hardest weeks of my year is putting together a bunch of five-minute videos throughout the course of re:Invent. So much that is done in advance that is basically breaking the backs of the editing team, who are phenomenal, but it still turns into more than that, where you still have this other piece of it of the actual content creation part.And you can't spend all your time on that because pretty soon I feel like you become a talking head who doesn't really do the things that you are talking to the world about. And that content gets pretty easy to see when you start looking at, okay, what did someone actually do? Oh, they were a developer for three years, and they spent the next seven complaining about development, and how everyone is—Jason: [laugh].Corey: Doing it wrong on YouTube. Hmm… it starts to get a little, how accurate is this really? So, for me, it was always critical that I still be hands-on with things that I'm talking about because otherwise I become a disaster.Jason: And I agree. One of the things that my predecessor at Netlify, Sarah Drasner, put in place was a, what she called an exchange program, where we would rotate the DevRel team onto product, and we rotate product onto the DevRel team. And it was a way of keeping the developer experience engineers actually engineers. They would work on the product, they didn't do any DevRel work, they were exclusively focused on doing actual engineering work inside our product to just help keep their skills sharp, keep them up to date on what's going on, build more empathy for the engineers that we talk to every day, build more empathy for our team instead of us—you know, you never want to hear a DevRel throw the engineering team under the bus for not shipping a feature everybody wants.So, these sorts of things are really important, and they're hard to do because we had to—you know, that's a lot of negotiation to say, “Hey, can we take one of your engineers for a quarter, and we'll give you one of our engineers for a quarter, and you got to trust us that's going to work out in your favor.” [laugh] Right? Like, there's a lot that goes into this to make that sort of stuff possible. But I absolutely agree. I don't think you get to make this type of content if you've fully stepped out of engineering. You have to keep it part of your practice.Corey: There's no way around it. You have to be hands-on. I think that's the right way to do it, otherwise, it just leads to, frankly, disaster. Very often, you'll see people who are, like, “Oh, they're great in the DevRel space. What do they do?” And they go to two or three conferences a year, and they have a blog post or so. It's like, okay, what are they doing the rest of that time?Sometimes the answer is fighting internal political fires. Other times it's building things and learning these things and figuring out where they stand. There are some people, I don't want to name names, although an easy one is Kelsey Hightower, who has since really left the stage, that he's retired, but when he went up on stage and said something—despite the fact that he worked at Google—it was eminently clear that he believed in what he was saying, or he would not say it.Jason: Right.Corey: He was someone who was very clearly aware of the technology about which he was speaking. And that was great. I wish that it were not such a standout moment to see him speak and talk about that. But unfortunately, he kind of is. Not as many people do that as well as we'd like.Jason: Agreed. I think it was always a treat to see Kelsey speak. And there are several others that I can think of in the community who, when they get on stage, you want to be in that audience, and you want to sit down and listen. And then there are a lot of others who when they get on stage, it's like that this book could have been a blog post, or this—you know, this could have been an email, that kind of thing. Like you could have sent me this repo because all you did was walk through this repo line-by-line, or something that—it doesn't feel like it came from them; it feels like it's being communicated by them.And I think that's, again, like, when I criticize conferences, a lot of my criticism comes from the fact that, coming up, I feel like every speaker that I saw on stage—and this is maybe just memory… playing favorites for me, but I feel like I saw a lot of people on stage who were genuinely passionate about what they were creating, and they were genuinely putting something new into the world every time they got on stage. And I have noticed that I feel less and less like that. Also, I feel like events have gotten less and less likely to put somebody on stage unless they've got a big name DevRel title. Like, you have to work at a company that somebody's heard of because they're all trying to get that draw because attendance is going down. And—Corey: Right. It's a—like, having run some conferences myself, the trick is, is you definitely want some ringers in there. People you know will do well, but you also need to give space for new voices to arise. And sometimes it's a—it always bugs me when it seems like, oh, they're here because their company is a big sponsor. Of course, they have the keynote. Other times, it's a… like, hate the actual shill talks, which I don't see as much, which I'm thankful for; I'd stop going to those conferences, but jeez.Jason: Yeah, and I think it's definitely one of those, like, this is a thing that we can choose to correct. And I have a suspicion that this is a pendulum not a—not, like, the denouement of—is that the right—how do you say that word? De-NOW-ment? De-NEW-ment? Whatever.Corey: Denouement is my understanding, but that might be the French acc—Jason: Oh, me just—Corey: The French element.Jason: —absolutely butchering that. Yeah [laugh]. I don't think this is the end of conferences, like we're seeing them taper into oblivion. I think this is a lull. I think that we're going to realize that we want to—we really do love being in a place with other developers. I want to do that. I love that.But we need to get back to why we were excited to go to conferences in the first place, which was this sharing of knowledge and inspiration, where you would go see people who were literally moving the world forward in development, and creating new things so that you would walk away with insider info, you had just seen the new thing, up close and personal, had those conversations, and you went back so jazzed to build something new. I feel like these days, I feel more like I went and watched a handful of product demos, and now I'm really just waiting to the hallway track, which is the only, like, actually interesting part at a lot of events these days.Corey: I really want to thank you for taking the time to speak with me. If people want to learn more, where's the best place for them to find you?Jason: Most of what I share is on learnwithjason.dev, or if you want a big list of links, I have jason.energy/links, which has a whole bunch of fun stuff for you to find.Corey: Awesome. And we will, of course, include links to that in the show notes. Thank you so much for taking the time to speak with me. I really appreciate it.Jason: Yeah, thanks so much for having me. This was a blast.Corey: Jason Lengstorf, developer media producer at Learn with Jason. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn, and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, along with an angry comment that will no doubt become the basis for somebody's conference talk.Jason: [laugh].Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business, and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.
We are reviewing the reality TV show bracket. Let us know what show should be number one. The Farmer Wants a Wife (2007)Penn & Teller: Fool Us (2011)Keeping Up with the Kardashians (2007)The Bachelor (2002)gHOST hUNTERS (2019)Survivor (2000)Bering Sea Gold (20120The Amazing Race (2001)Love it or List it (2008)Mythbusters (2003)Beyond Scared Straight (2011)Hell's Kitchen (2005)Judge Steve Harvey (2022)American Ninja Warrior (2009)I Love New York (2007)Project Runway (2004)Queer Eye (2003)Masterchef (2010)Trading Spaces (2000)Wipeout (2008)American Idol (2003)Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares (2005)Worst Cooks In America (2010)real chance of love (2008)Wife Swap (2003)Undercover Boss (2010)The Flavor of Love (2006)Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives (2007)The Great Food Truck Race (2010)Shark Tank (2009)The Bachelorette (2003)Judge Judy (1996)Nailed It! (2018)Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown (2013)90 Day Fiancé (2014) RuPaul's Drag Race (2009)Ghost Adventures: Where Are They Now? (2019)Hotel Hell (2012)Supernanny (2005)Big Brother (2000)Punk'd (2003)Cash Cab (2005)Battle of the Network Stars (1976)America's Next Top Model (2003)Making the cut (2020)The Voice (2011)Mythbusters Jr. (2018)Cops (1989)How To Build A Sex Room (2022)Dirty Jobs (2003)Guy's All-American Road Trip (2022)Top Chef (2006)The Challenge (1997)Chopped (2009)The Osbournes (2002)Legends of the Hidden Temple (2021)The Real Housewives of Orange County (2006)Pet Stars (2021)Extreme Couponing (2011)Last Comic Standing (2003)Next Great Baker (2010)Animal Cops: Houston (2003)My Lottery Dream Home (2015)Extreme Makeover: Home Edition (2004)Gordon Ramsay's 24 Hours to hell and back (2018)Jay Leno's Garage (2015)The Apprentice (2004)Iron Chef America (2005)Little People, Big World (2006)E! True Hollywood Story (1997)Cupcake Wars (2009)Fear Factor (2001)Hoarders (2009)The Masked Singer (2019)Toddlers & Tiaras (2009)MTv Cribs (2000)Tattoo Redo (2021)Impractical Jokers (2011)Yo! MTV Raps (2022)Antiques Roadshow (1979)House Hunters International (2006)Pawn Stars (2009)Duck Dynasty (2012)Dr. Pimple Popper (2018)The American Baking Competition (2013)Catfish: The TV ShowFace Off (2011)Ink Master (2012)Extraordinary Stories Behind Everyday Things (2021)Say Yes to the Dress (2007)Deadliest Catch (2005)House Hunters (1999)Baking Impossible (2021)American Pickers (2010)Design Star: Next Gen (2021)America's Got Talent (2006)A Shot at Love with Tila Tequila (2007)Primetime: What Would You Do? (2008)Fixer Upper (2014)Botched (2014)Dancing with the Stars (2005)Storage Wars (2010)Sex Sells (2021)The Real World (1992) --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mass-debaters/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mass-debaters/support
This week on Commonplace, we're joined by Chef Mike Costello who, along with his partner Amy Dawson, operate Lost Creek Farm (@lostcreekfarm) in Harrison County, West Virginia. The farm uses food as a vessel for storytelling, centering the cuisine in both its regional and economic contexts. The chefs and their Farm and Forage Supper Club has been a semi-finalists for the Beard Foundation Awards, and they've been featured in The New York Times and on Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. In our conversation we talk about combining journalism skills with cooking skills, how cooking can be a form of archival work, and the history and memories behind some of the dishes they serve. Find out how to support their kitchen and classroom project here.
Only Murders In The Building is back for a third season of death, mayhem, and...theatre? New guest David Wiebe joins us to discuss all the players new and old. Around The Dial takes us through Physical, Letterman Originals on YouTube, Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, and Star Trek's Paramount+ branding. Julie pitches The Bear's Season 1 episode "Dogs" for induction into The Canon. Then after naming the week's Winner and Loser, it's on to a highly questionable Game Time. Grab your Beats and listen! GUESTS
This week Tayla is joined by Ken Hopkins Jr., Director of the Cranston Career and Tech Center to talk about their program and how it can allow young people to get hand-on career experience before they graduate. They talk about new and old HBO shows, travel food shows, and Star Wars. During The Last Chapter they discuss: If you had to read outside your comfort zone, what genre would you want to explore? Podcast disclaimer Like what you hear? Rate and review Down Time on Apple Podcasts or your podcast player of choice! If you'd like to submit a topic for The Last Chapter you can send your suggestions to downtime@cranstonlibrary.org. Our theme music is Day Trips by Ketsa and our ad music is Happy Ukulele by Scott Holmes. Thanks for listening! Books Fire & Blood by George R. R. Martin Plague Wars by Tom Mangold and Jeff Goldberg Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond Humans of New York by Brandon Stanton AV The Last of Us (2023- ) The Office (2005-2013) Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown (2013-2018) Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations (2005-2012) Taste the Nation with Padma Lakshmi (2020- ) The Mandalorian (2019- ) Knights of the Old Republic (2003 videogame) Andor (2022) Other Cranston Area Career and Technical Center
Lady Imix & DJ Phatrick: Heartbreak Monday RadioORIGINALLY DROPPED APRIL 2021In this episode Lady Imix and DJ Phatrick share the show's origin story , show BTS, the importance of representation and investing in their community. They also take on a song challenge from Chef Roy Choi while challenging “the box of masculinity”.Questions/Comments from the audience:The VillianessMiracle Etim-AndyEp. 7 WTYM guest Colony LittleChef Roi ChoiDuring The Supernatural Bear corner, The SNB is asked to share his favorite sad song.Episode linksHeartbreak Monday Radio MixcloudHeartbreak Monday instagramDJ PhatrickKQBHBambu DePistolaBoyle Heights Bridge RunnersMotown MondaysLadies of SoundWu tang - After the Laughter Portishead - Glory BoxFetty Wap - My Way Sade - Is it a CrimeUB40-Red Red WineRobyn -Dancing on my ownJoy Division- Love Will Tear Us ApartAnthony Bourdain (Rest in Power) on Season 9 Episode 1 : Los Angeles of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. The Nerd OutLittle Brother from Phineas and FerbThe SkatesideWTYM LINKSWord To Your Mama Store: Use code WTYM at check out to receive 10% off any order WTYM Patreon PageDONATEBuy WTYM a WhiskeyMEDIA KITFiona Through Children's Eyes relief project NFT project Donate to Flor de Loto Montessori directly via PayPal AVAILABLE WHERE EVER YOU CONSUME PODCASTSNOW PART OF THE LATINA PODCASTERS NETWORKon socials @wtymama | email: hola@wordtoyourmama.com
We're chatting with Recho Omondi, a fashion designer and the host of the incredible podcast The Cutting Room Floor, and you're going to want to hear her Thingies (and everything else she's interested in, honestly). Also: a tattoo that got our wheels turning. If you're looking for a follow-up to our convo about living with longing, check out this this New Yorker article about choose your own adventure books by Leslie Jamison. See also: Lois Lowry on the 70 Over 70 podcast. Hit play on Recho's podcast The Cutting Room Floor; do all your chores! A recent cool guest: Mina White. A few dream guests: Mel Ottenberg and Piergiorgio Del Moro. And if you're YouTube-curious, Colin and Samir is a Recho-recommended channel. Recho's Thingies include Kinn fine jewelry, Camber hoodies (more ℅ a recent GQ story) Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown (specifically the Massachusetts ep), Parachute linen bedding (our other recs: Linoto, and Merci), and her Jenni Kayne Home bed. Do you have dream Thingies guests? Share them with us at 833-632-5463, podcast@athingortwohq.com, or @athingortwohq. And try out a Secret Menu membership for more recommendations. Treat your curls to LUS and take 15% off your first purchase of $50 or more with the code ATHINGORTWO. Get the ecomm support you need with Shopify. Snag a free 14-day trial with our link. Feel your best in Honeylove and get 20% off with the code ATHINGORTWO. YAY. Produced by Dear Media
SIGN UP TO MAKE SURE BIGTECH CANT SHUT ME DOWN SO WE CAN STAY IN CONTACT HERE: derek-oshea-show.mailchimpsites.comSupport the SHOW https://www.buymeacoffee.com/derekosheashowWANT A MUG WITH MY FACE ON IT?https://store.streamelements.com/theoneminutenewsAnthony Bourdain final texts before death revealed: ‘I hate being famous'#anthonybourdain #bourdain #suicide Source:https://pagesix.com/2022/09/27/anthony-bourdain-final-texts-before-death-revealed-in-book/Anthony Bourdain struggled with fame and heartbreak in the days leading up to his death by suicide, a new book reveals.In an unauthorized biography titled “Down and Out in Paradise: The Life of Anthony Bourdain,” journalist Charles Leerhsen includes text messages sent by the late celebrity chef in his final days that give insight into his mindset.“I hate my fans, too. I hate being famous. I hate my job,” Bourdain wrote to his ex-wife Ottavia Busia-Bourdain, who had become one of his close confidants, per an excerpt published by the New York Times. “I am lonely and living in constant uncertainty.”Leerhsen also notes in the book, due out Oct. 11, that Bourdain and his then-girlfriend of two years, Asia Argento, often had fits of jealousy. - Eileen ReslenSUPPORT THE SHOW : https://streamelements.com/theoneminutenews/tipPolitically Homeless Daily Comedy News Show#breakingnews #politics #politicallyhomelessEmail: derekosheashow@gmail.comYoutube: https://www.youtube.com/derekosheashowRumble : https://rumble.com/c/c-624233Podcast Audio Webpage: https://derekosheashow.buzzsprout.comApple Podcast : https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/derek-oshea-show-comedy-news-show/id1508917484Spotify : https://open.spotify.com/show/3BNCK8HjbDOtyOlHMOVGTXOdysee: https://odysee.com/@DerekOsheaShowWebsite : https://theoneminutenews.wixsite.com/derekosheashowTwitter: https://twitter.com/DerekOsheaShowInstagram : https://www.instagram.com/derekosheashow/Bitchute: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/LgKyzhcXmm52/Gab: https://gab.com/TheOneMinuteNewsFacebook : https://www.facebook.com/DerekOsheaShowTikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@derekosheashow?Breaking News Live,Breaking News Today,Anthony Bourdain final texts before death revealed: ‘I hate being famous',anthony bourdain parts unknown,anthony bourdain death,anthony bourdain waffle house,anthony bourdain final texts,anthony bourdain final interview,anthony bourdain final days,anthony bourdain final episode,mens health,suicide rate of menSupport the show
Welcome to CHEF's TABLE, a new podcast series presented by KISS MY MIKE.This is Part 3 of the series featuring Hieu Gray!In this episode, learn more about Hieu's culinary journey. Find out about her work in the fields of television, food, social media, and journalism. In addition, learn about her work as a former CNN senior producer for such shows as Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown and Larry King Live. Lastly, we talked about Hieu's background as a Filmmaker and Director, including her latest film, Quan 13, which is currently screening at select film festivals around the world!Available on Spotify, YouTube, or any other platforms!
Tony and PK share many traits and maybe some of this is due to the amount of content PK consumed from the late great chef and TV host. Either way one thing he did do for PK was show him that anything was possible. From traveling the globe trying new cuisines to even leaving one career and taking a stab at something he only dreamt of. Some would say PK is just as crazy as Tony when he started his first novel, “Kitchen Confidentials” but in both of their minds they share that drive to go one step outside the norm and try new things. So, this episode is dedicated to Tony and what he meant to PK.#weeklypodcast #podcastshow #backyardsandbevvies #backyards #bevvies #bottomsup #midweektreat #marriage #comedy #parenting #life #drama #interview #friends00:00 Welcome to Backyards & Bevvies Podcast00:11 Better Help #ad01:40 Whooooo, Ric Flair 03:59 The book that was not fiction but felt like it at times11:35 The way that he talked18:50 People who go to Antarctica28:52 Post me going to Vienna 38:27 Always had to top the last story46:48 I will always talk highly of Anthony50:40 Cheers & Bottoms UP!Podcast https://backyardsandbevvies.simplecast.com/YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/c/BackyardsBevviesPodcastInstagram https://instagram.com/backyardsbevviesFacebook https://www.facebook.com/backyardsbevviesTwitter https://twitter.com/backyardbevviesTikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@backyardsandbevvies?lang=enLiquid IV (25% off + free shipping) https://glnk.io/75r0/backyardsandbevviesBetter Help (10% OFF) #ad https://betterhelp.com/backyardsEtsy https://www.etsy.com/shop/BackyardsandBevviesPatreon https://www.patreon.com/backyardsbevvies
Morgan Fallon is a nine-time-Emmy-nominated executive producer, director, and cinematographer. He played a pivotal role in bringing Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown to T.V. screens around the world. Morgan traveled with the renowned host to many different corners of the earth, including a visit to West Virginia in the debut episode of season eleven. He joins the pod to recount his experiences with the show, growing up for a time in WV, what it's like to come back, his most recent work on United Shades of America, including an episode with former MM guest Crystal Good, and much more! Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown: Season 11, Ep. 1 Set your calendars to watch Crystal on an upcoming episode of United Shades of America releasing July 17th @ 10 p.m ET! ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Get merch and more at our website! Check out our Linktree! Mountaineer Media's Producer is Mason Jack and its Co-Hosts are Cooper Simmerman and C.J. Harvey. Special thanks to our bloggers and live events members: Joe Justice, Shannon Stowers, Jessica Riggins, Katherine Allen, Travis Khale, Laura Jackson Roberts, Mackenzie Holdren, Joslyn Barnhart, Andrew Montes and Logan Garrison. Know someone we should have on the podcast? Send us a note here!
Morgan Fallon — 10 Years on the Road with Anthony Bourdain, 9 Emmy Nominations, Lessons from Michael Mann, Adventures with Steven Rinella, High Standards, Wisdom from West Virginia, and More | Brought to you by Gravity weighted blankets, Athletic Greens all-in-one nutritional supplement, and Helix Sleep premium mattresses.Morgan Fallon (@diamondmofallon) is a nine-time-Emmy-nominated executive producer, director, and cinematographer. He was born and raised in New England and studied film at Emerson College in Boston. After graduating, he spent three years working for his mentor, director Michael Mann, and in 2007, he began a long-term working relationship with producers Chris Collins and Lydia Tenaglia and their New York-based production company, Zero Point Zero Productions.Through his tenure at ZPZ, Morgan focused primarily on work with ZPZ creative partner Anthony Bourdain on several episodic series and documentaries produced by Bourdain, including the Emmy-winning Mind of a Chef, the theatrically distributed documentary The Last Magnificent, and the Emmy-, Peabody-, PGA-, TCA-, and ACE-award-winning series Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, which Morgan shot, directed, and produced throughout the series' one-hundred-and-three-episode run.Currently, he is a director and executive producer for the Emmy-winning series United Shades of America with W. Kamau Bell.He lives in California with his wife and production partner, Gillian Brown, and his two children.Please enjoy!This episode is brought to you by Gravity! I place sleep at the top of my list for optimizing health, energy, and performance. If good sleep is in place, it helps everything else; if not, it hurts everything else. I've had sleep issues almost my entire life, which is why I'm always experimenting and adding great sleep aids. One of my new favorites is the Gravity Weighted Blanket. 72% of Gravity users have reported better, more restful sleep, and 76% have reported falling asleep faster and feeling more rested in the morning.Gravity has been named “Best Weighted Blanket” by CNN, Business Insider, Good Housekeeping, and many more. Gravity is offering my listeners a special discount: order a blanket of any size or weight and receive 15% off your order. Just go to GravityBlankets.com/Tim, and the discount will be automatically applied.*This episode is also brought to you by Helix Sleep! Helix was selected as the #1 overall mattress of 2020 by GQ magazine, Wired, Apartment Therapy, and many others. With Helix, there's a specific mattress to meet each and every body's unique comfort needs. Just take their quiz—only two minutes to complete—that matches your body type and sleep preferences to the perfect mattress for you. They have a 10-year warranty, and you get to try it out for a hundred nights, risk-free. They'll even pick it up from you if you don't love it. And now, Helix is offering up to 200 dollars off all mattress orders plus two free pillows at HelixSleep.com/Tim.*This episode is also brought to you by Athletic Greens. I get asked all the time, “If you could use only one supplement, what would it be?” My answer is usually AG1 by Athletic Greens, my all-in-one nutritional insurance. I recommended it in The 4-Hour Body in 2010 and did not get paid to do so. I do my best with nutrient-dense meals, of course, but AG further covers my bases with vitamins, minerals, and whole-food-sourced micronutrients that support gut health and the immune system. Right now, Athletic Greens is offering you their Vitamin D Liquid Formula free with your first subscription purchase—a vital nutrient for a strong immune system and strong bones. Visit AthleticGreens.com/Tim to claim this special offer today and receive the free Vitamin D Liquid Formula (and five free travel packs) with your first subscription purchase! That's up to a one-year supply of Vitamin D as added value when you try their delicious and comprehensive all-in-one daily greens product.*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.Sign up for Tim's email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim's books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Ever Better Podcast | Inspiring Stories | Motivating | Transition with Grace | Fulfillment | Wisdom
Our behaviors are impacted by what we see and experience in our environment every day. Consider mentally switching up your geography to see how that might impact or affect your life and decisions. ==== Welcome to Ever Better Today: the daily podcast for creating your optimal business, career, or overall life in ten minutes or less. I'm Lisa Conners Vogt, Executive and Leadership Coach and founder of Ever Better Coaching and Consulting. Let's jump in! ==== Do this mental exercise: 1. Think about the goal that you want to achieve. 2. Consider the options that you've already come up with to reach your goal. Notice that the options are informed by your previous experiences, the people around you, and social and behavioral norms based on where you live. 3. Now, imagine that you are living in a city with a completely different vibe and energy. How would your actions and mindset shift to match what's happening there 4. Block time on your calendar to put yourself in the mindset of someone in that location. For inspiration, watch a travel show such as Parts Unknown or Rick Steves' Europe. (See links below.) ==== Resources: Some resources to support your solo mental exercise: Anthony Bourdain “Parts Unknown” Rick Steves “Rick Steves' Europe” ================ To learn more about working with Ever Better, send me an email here or book a complimentary call with me here.
David and Perry talk about their favourite TV and movies they saw in 2021; and Perry talks at length with W. H. Chong about the new Dune movie. News (04:19) Philip K. Dick Award (01:34) 2022 Hugo Nominations open (01:20) Vale Bill Wright (01:21) Perry's Overview of TV and Movies 2021 (04:29) Perry's Best Movies 2021 (24:24) The Dig (05:04) Emma (03:52) Green Book (04:54) The Father (05:16) Dune Part 1 (01:48) Nomadland (02:28) Perry's Honourable Mentions in movies (05:52) Echo in the Canyon (01:08) Trial of the Chicago Seven (01:11) The Power of the Dog (03:24) David's movies 2021 (00:36) Perry's Best TV 2021 (14:50) Hemmingway (02:26) Midnight Diner (03:31) Succession (03:21) Anthony Bourdain : Parts Unknown (01:52) Upright (03:26) Perry's Honourable Mentions in TV(03:49) Mare of Easttown (01:26) The Chair (01:17) Bodyguard (01:04) David's Best TV 2021 (08:39) The Expanse (00:42) The Umbrella Academy (00:51) The Wrong Mans (02:09) Get Back (Beatles) (03:00) Hanna (01:43) David's Honourable Mentions in TV (01:19) Broadchurch (00:14) Maigret (01:01) Discussion with W. H. Chong on Dune (41:24) Windup (01:04) Illustration: generated by wombo.art. Episode title: from a quote by Federico Fellini.
David and Perry talk about their favourite TV and movies they saw in 2021; and Perry talks at length with W. H. Chong about the new Dune movie. News (04:19) Philip K. Dick Award (01:34) 2022 Hugo Nominations open (01:20) Vale Bill Wright (01:21) Perry's Overview of TV and Movies 2021 (04:29) Perry's Best Movies 2021 (24:24) The Dig (05:04) Emma (03:52) Green Book (04:54) The Father (05:16) Dune Part 1 (01:48) Nomadland (02:28) Perry's Honourable Mentions in movies (05:52) Echo in the Canyon (01:08) Trial of the Chicago Seven (01:11) The Power of the Dog (03:24) David's movies 2021 (00:36) Perry's Best TV 2021 (14:50) Hemmingway (02:26) Midnight Diner (03:31) Succession (03:21) Anthony Bourdain : Parts Unknown (01:52) Upright (03:26) Perry's Honourable Mentions in TV(03:49) Mare of Easttown (01:26) The Chair (01:17) Bodyguard (01:04) David's Best TV 2021 (08:39) The Expanse (00:42) The Umbrella Academy (00:51) The Wrong Mans (02:09) Get Back (Beatles) (03:00) Hanna (01:43) David's Honourable Mentions in TV (01:19) Broadchurch (00:14) Maigret (01:01) Discussion with W. H. Chong on Dune (41:24) Windup (01:04) Click here for more information and indexes. Illustration: generated by wombo.art. Episode title: from a quote by Federico Fellini.
Discutimos os maiores encontros cinematográficos deste ano: tem cinema pré-AI 5, papo sobre os Black Panthers e cinema antipolícia, terror indiano e guerra civil na Geórgia e Libéria. Contamos com a presença ilustre de Ganso (editor de vídeo), Guilherme Henrique (editor) e Jacó (tradutor). 0:00 Introdução 0:55 Desesperato (Brasil, dir. Sérgio Bernardes Filho, 1968) 11:50 Marighella (Brasil, dir. Wagner Moura, 2019) 13:09 Judas and the Black Messiah (EUA, dir. Shaka King, 2021) 35:29 Taipei Suicide Story (Taiwan, dir. KEEF, 2020) 50:05 Hyper Hardboiled Gourmet Report (Japão, Kazutoyo Koyabu, 2017) 1:01:24 Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. Malaysia (EUA, 2013-2018) 1:04:32 À Nos Amours (França, dir. Maurice Pialat, 1983) 1:10:45 Boomika (Índia, dir. R. Rathindran Prasad, 2021) 1:20:12 Trzecia część nocy (Polônia, dir. Andrzej Żuławski, 1971) 1:26:46 Mandarinebi (Geórgia, dir. Zaza Urushadze, 2013) Curso Cinemas Asiáticos (CEA-UFF) com profa. Cecília Mello | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=enjQX6gn29w Repertório #17 com Iva Vukusic | https://podtail.com/podcast/repertorio-xadrez-verbal-entrevista/repertortio-17-iva-vukusic/ Revolutionary Left Radio | (sobretudo episódios de 24/02/2019 e 19/fev/2021) https://revolutionaryleftradio.libsyn.com/
Tom Vitale is a producer and director, known for Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, Gourmet's Diary of a Foodie and Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations
ABOUT OUR GUEST: Malik Kenyatta Yakini is an activist and educator who is committed to freedom and justice for African people in particular and humanity in general. Yakini is a co-founder and the Executive Director of the Detroit Black Community Food Security Network, which operates a seven-acre farm in Detroit and spearheaded efforts to establish the Detroit Food Policy Council, which he chaired from December 2009 - May 2012. He served as a member of the Michigan Food Policy Council from 2008 - 2010. From 2011 - 2013 he served on the steering committee of Uprooting Racism Planting Justice. He is a co-founder of the National Black Food and Justice Alliance.From 1990 - 2011 he served as Executive Director of Nsoroma Institute Public School Academy, one of Detroit's leading African-centered schools. In 2006 he was honored as "Administrator of the Year" by the Michigan Association of Public School Academies. He served as a member of the Board of Directors of Timbuktu Academy of Science and Technology from 2004 - 2011. He is C.E.O. of Black Star Educational Management.He is dedicated to working to identify and alleviate the impact of racism and white privilege on the food system. He has an intense interest in contributing to the development of an international food sovereignty movement that embraces Blacks farmers in the Americas, the Caribbean and Africa. He views the "good food revolution" as part of the larger movement for freedom, justice and equality.Yakini has presented at numerous local community meetings and national conferences on creating a racially just food system and implementing community food sovereignty practices. In 2017 and 2018 he co-led the course “Food Literacy for All” at the University of Michigan. He is featured in the book "Blacks Living Green," and the movies "Urban Roots" and “Tomorrow”. He has appeared on the nationally televised Tavis Smiley Show and Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. He served as an Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy "Food and Community Fellow" from 2011- 2013, and a Business Alliance for Living Local Economies (BALLE) Localist Fellow from 2014 - 2015.He is the recipient of numerous awards including the prestigious James Beard Leadership Award. He holds a B.A. degree in Broadcasting from Eastern Michigan University.Yakini is a musician who plays guitar, bass and dundun drums. He currently leads the Detroit-based band Mollywop! He has traveled to Ghana, Mali, Senegal, Gambia, Cote d'Ivoire, Jamaica, Italy, France, Spain and the U.S. Virgin Islands. He is the father of three and the grandfather of one. He is a vegan and an avid organic grower.SUBSCRIBE AND WATCHSubscribe to the show on your favorite video and podcast platforms. Or watch or listen on our website.LIKE, FOLLOW, SHARE!Please share this episode your your social media and like and subscribe to ours: Facebook * Twitter * Instagram * Pinterest * TikTokVOLUNTEERIf you'd like to help, email info @ fjpodcast . com (no spaces). BECOME A PATRONVisit Brenda's Patreon page to support her work on the show and other food justice projects.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/BrendaSanders)
ABOUT OUR GUEST: Malik Kenyatta Yakini is an activist and educator who is committed to freedom and justice for African people in particular and humanity in general. Yakini is a co-founder and the Executive Director of the Detroit Black Community Food Security Network, which operates a seven-acre farm in Detroit and spearheaded efforts to establish the Detroit Food Policy Council, which he chaired from December 2009 - May 2012. He served as a member of the Michigan Food Policy Council from 2008 - 2010. From 2011 - 2013 he served on the steering committee of Uprooting Racism Planting Justice. He is a co-founder of the National Black Food and Justice Alliance.From 1990 - 2011 he served as Executive Director of Nsoroma Institute Public School Academy, one of Detroit's leading African-centered schools. In 2006 he was honored as "Administrator of the Year" by the Michigan Association of Public School Academies. He served as a member of the Board of Directors of Timbuktu Academy of Science and Technology from 2004 - 2011. He is C.E.O. of Black Star Educational Management.He is dedicated to working to identify and alleviate the impact of racism and white privilege on the food system. He has an intense interest in contributing to the development of an international food sovereignty movement that embraces Blacks farmers in the Americas, the Caribbean and Africa. He views the "good food revolution" as part of the larger movement for freedom, justice and equality.Yakini has presented at numerous local community meetings and national conferences on creating a racially just food system and implementing community food sovereignty practices. In 2017 and 2018 he co-led the course “Food Literacy for All” at the University of Michigan. He is featured in the book "Blacks Living Green," and the movies "Urban Roots" and “Tomorrow”. He has appeared on the nationally televised Tavis Smiley Show and Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. He served as an Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy "Food and Community Fellow" from 2011- 2013, and a Business Alliance for Living Local Economies (BALLE) Localist Fellow from 2014 - 2015.He is the recipient of numerous awards including the prestigious James Beard Leadership Award. He holds a B.A. degree in Broadcasting from Eastern Michigan University.Yakini is a musician who plays guitar, bass and dundun drums. He currently leads the Detroit-based band Mollywop! He has traveled to Ghana, Mali, Senegal, Gambia, Cote d'Ivoire, Jamaica, Italy, France, Spain and the U.S. Virgin Islands. He is the father of three and the grandfather of one. He is a vegan and an avid organic grower.SUBSCRIBE AND WATCHSubscribe to the show on your favorite video and podcast platforms. Or watch or listen on our website.LIKE, FOLLOW, SHARE!Please share this episode your your social media and like and subscribe to ours: Facebook * Twitter * Instagram * Pinterest * TikTokVOLUNTEERIf you'd like to help, email info @ fjpodcast . com (no spaces). BECOME A PATRONVisit Brenda's Patreon page to support her work on the show and other food justice projects.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/BrendaSanders)
节目摘要 看完纪录片《流浪者:一部关于安东尼·波登的电影》之后,我们都获得了哪些启示? 节目备注 支持我们 订阅听友通讯请点击这里。 欢迎通过微博关注我们的节目@不丧Podcast和女主播@constancy好小气。 关于线上读书微信群:由于目前群人数超过100人,无法继续通过扫码入群。想要入群的朋友可以先加我的微信号(ID: hongming_qiao),然后再拉你入群。 我们的电报(Telegram)听友群:不丧电报群 我们播客的邮箱地址:busangpodcast@gmail.com 这集播客中提到的相关作品的介绍和链接: John Wilson, Episode 136 of Conan O'Brien Needs A Friend 《约翰·威尔逊的十万个怎么做 第一季》(How to with John Wilson Season 1)(2020) Anne Helen Petersen, "You Own Harriet" 《流浪者:一部关于安东尼·波登的电影》(Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain)(2021) 不丧,"Depression Does Not Discriminate"——从Kate Spade和Anthony Bourdain的自杀说开去 Anthony Bourdain, "Don't Eat Before Reading This" 安东尼·波登,《厨室机密:烹饪深处的探险》 安东尼·波登,《半生不熟:厨室的黑暗与光明》 《安东尼·波登:未知之旅》(Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown) 下面是一些有关安东尼·波登的引用: "If I am an advocate for anything, it is to move. As far as you can, as much as you can. Across the ocean, or simply across the river. Walk in someone else's shoes or at least eat their food. It's a plus for everybody." “I want to be happy,” Tony told me. “It's a perilous, selfish, foolish enterprise, believing in such things. But I think those platonic ideals are worth pursuing, in spite of everything that I've learned and done and seen.” He added, “Life makes cynics of us all, especially when you travel as much as I do.” "Life is good. The world is filled with people doing the best they can, you know, who loves their kids and would like to live their lives with a little dignity and hope, just like everybody else." To illustrate the point, he draws my attention to lettering tattooed on his arm. “It's from the Greek skeptics,” he says. “The translation is ‘I am certain of nothing. I'm not even sure I'm certain of that.' If I believe in anything, it is doubt. The root cause of all life's problems is looking for a simple fucking answer.” It is by maintaining his integrity (a word he hates) that Bourdain has found his audience. Not that he cares. “Look,” he says. “I appreciate my fans, but I don't feel any obligation to give them what they want or expect. I don't feel any obligation to live up to anybody's expectation of me.” 如何收听「不丧」 任何设备都可以通过访问「不丧」的网站在线收听 我们推荐使用泛用型播客客户端收听「不丧」 泛用型播客客户端直接通过播客上传者提供的RSS向用户提供播客内容和信息,不会有第三方的干涉;并且只要上传者更新了Feed,就能在客户端上收听到节目。 iOS平台上我们推荐使用Podcast(苹果预装播客客户端),Castro,Overcast和Pocket Casts。 Android平台上收听方式可以参照这里。 macOS和Windows平台可以通过iTunes收听。 现在你也已经可以在小宇宙、Spotify和Google Podcast平台上收听我们的节目。
节目摘要 看完纪录片《流浪者:一部关于安东尼·波登的电影》之后,我们都获得了哪些启示? 节目备注 支持我们 订阅听友通讯请点击这里。 欢迎通过微博关注我们的节目@不丧Podcast和女主播@constancy好小气。 关于线上读书微信群:由于目前群人数超过100人,无法继续通过扫码入群。想要入群的朋友可以先加我的微信号(ID: hongming_qiao),然后再拉你入群。 我们的电报(Telegram)听友群:不丧电报群 我们播客的邮箱地址:busangpodcast@gmail.com 这集播客中提到的相关作品的介绍和链接: John Wilson, Episode 136 of Conan O'Brien Needs A Friend 《约翰·威尔逊的十万个怎么做 第一季》(How to with John Wilson Season 1)(2020) Anne Helen Petersen, "You Own Harriet" 《流浪者:一部关于安东尼·波登的电影》(Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain)(2021) 不丧,"Depression Does Not Discriminate"——从Kate Spade和Anthony Bourdain的自杀说开去 Anthony Bourdain, "Don't Eat Before Reading This" 安东尼·波登,《厨室机密:烹饪深处的探险》 安东尼·波登,《半生不熟:厨室的黑暗与光明》 《安东尼·波登:未知之旅》(Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown) 下面是一些有关安东尼·波登的引用: "If I am an advocate for anything, it is to move. As far as you can, as much as you can. Across the ocean, or simply across the river. Walk in someone else's shoes or at least eat their food. It's a plus for everybody." “I want to be happy,” Tony told me. “It's a perilous, selfish, foolish enterprise, believing in such things. But I think those platonic ideals are worth pursuing, in spite of everything that I've learned and done and seen.” He added, “Life makes cynics of us all, especially when you travel as much as I do.” "Life is good. The world is filled with people doing the best they can, you know, who loves their kids and would like to live their lives with a little dignity and hope, just like everybody else." To illustrate the point, he draws my attention to lettering tattooed on his arm. “It's from the Greek skeptics,” he says. “The translation is ‘I am certain of nothing. I'm not even sure I'm certain of that.' If I believe in anything, it is doubt. The root cause of all life's problems is looking for a simple fucking answer.” It is by maintaining his integrity (a word he hates) that Bourdain has found his audience. Not that he cares. “Look,” he says. “I appreciate my fans, but I don't feel any obligation to give them what they want or expect. I don't feel any obligation to live up to anybody's expectation of me.” 如何收听「不丧」 任何设备都可以通过访问「不丧」的网站在线收听 我们推荐使用泛用型播客客户端收听「不丧」 泛用型播客客户端直接通过播客上传者提供的RSS向用户提供播客内容和信息,不会有第三方的干涉;并且只要上传者更新了Feed,就能在客户端上收听到节目。 iOS平台上我们推荐使用Podcast(苹果预装播客客户端),Castro,Overcast和Pocket Casts。 Android平台上收听方式可以参照这里。 macOS和Windows平台可以通过iTunes收听。 现在你也已经可以在小宇宙、Spotify和Google Podcast平台上收听我们的节目。
#TheSotaPod Podcast Episode 186
#TheSotaPod Podcast Episode 186
Adonis and Matt head back to the theater for this week's Spotlight Movie Discussion. They have a conversation the new Nicolas Cage film, "Pig." They also discuss emotional movies, specifically movies that made them cry, in their "Let's Talk About Segment." At the end of the episode, they give "Good Movie" recommendations for anyone watching "Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown."
On today's What to Watch: Roswell, New Mexico is back for season 3, revealing the aftermath of season 2's Crash Con mayhem; the Men Tell All on the Bachelorette, and one of the final four man has an emotional breakdown with Katie; and fire alarms are ringing on the yacht on Below Deck Meditteranean. EW's Tyler Aquilina tells us about his binge of Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown. Plus, entertainment headlines — including news about the final season of Lucifer and The Simpson's music-filled season 33 premiere — trivia, and This Week in Entertainment History. More at ew.com, ew.com/wtw, and @EW. Host: Gerrad Hall (@gerradhall); Editor/Producer: Joshua Heller (@joshuaheller); Writer: Tyler Aquilina (@tyler_aquilina); Executive Producers : Shana Naomi Krochmal (@shananaomi) and Carly Usdin (@carlytron). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's not where you go. It's what you leave behind . . . Chef, writer, adventurer, provocateur: Anthony Bourdain lived his life unabashedly. Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain is an intimate, behind-the-scenes look at how an anonymous chef became a world-renowned cultural icon. From Academy Award-winning filmmaker Morgan Neville (20 Feet From Stardom, Won't You Be My Neighbor?), this unflinching look at Bourdain reverberates with his presence, in his own voice and in the way he indelibly impacted the world around him.FOLLOW USFollow Daniel on Twitter, Instagram, and LetterboxdFollow Shahbaz on Twitter, Instagram, and LetterboxdFollow Anthony on Twitter, Instagram, and LetterboxdFollow The Movie Podcast on Twitter, Instagram,TikTok,Discord, and YouTubeANNOUNCEMENTSNEW EPISODES:112: Cinemas Reopen in Ontario and Remembering Richard Donner111: Interview with Nobody's Billy MacLellan and Independence Day Turns 25110: Interview with Black Widow Cinematographer Gabriel Beristain and Transformers Rise of the Beasts Revealed109: Interview with Tara Strong, Voice Acting Legend and Miss Minutes in Loki108: Interview with Tony Bancroft, Disney Animation Veteran, Director of Mulan, and Creator of Pumbaa from The Lion KingREVIEWS: Black Widow, The Tomorrow War, Zola, Fear Street 1994 and 1978, F9, Loki, Luca, Hitman's Wife's Bodyguard, A Quiet Place Part II, In The Heights, The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It, Spiral, Friends Reunion, Cruella, Army of The Dead, Riders of Justice, MODOK, Master of None Season 3, Those Who Wish Me Dead, Wrath of Man, Without Remorse, Mortal Kombat, The Falcon and The Winter Soldier Recaps, Mythic Quest: Everlight, Love and Monsters, Shiva Baby, The Unholy, Godzilla vs Kong, and more are available now on The Movie Podcast feed! The Movie Podcast is on a mission to hit 200 Apple Podcast reviews before September, click here to head over to our show page on APPLE PODCASTS and leave us a 5 STAR review!
This week I sit down with David who is has been a photographer for Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, Impractical Jokers, Monster Garage, Anderson Cooper and many more. We get to talk about his start as a photographer in the skate world, the willingness to take chances and take advantage of opportunities as they arise and when it's too late to start (hint: never). So sit back and enjoy some laughs and some great stories. Follow David Holloway at www.instagram.com/davidscottholloway Follow Look What I Did at www.instagram.com/lwidproject Be sure to rate, review and subscribe!
#59 - Doug Hughmanick - ANML Design Doug Hughmanick is the founder and creative director of ANML Design that has work with clients like: Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, Roads & Kingdoms, JennAir, Yummly, and Whirlpool. In our conversation, Doug talks about ANML's style of work, what he looks for in a team member as well as the potential adjustment he sees for ANML in the remote-work atmosphere. On working with clients: "What are the attributes that we're trying to hit on? How do we want it to feel? What are the emotions we want to have surfaced when you look at this work? You get some key attributes, keywords, and principles. And then look at that and go, okay is this hitting those, and if it's not, then something's not right. So you have to take a step back." - Doug Hughmanick On finding inspiration for creativity: "If you're doing web work and all you're looking at is web work it's hard to be innovative. If you're following best practices and doing the stuff you see everywhere, you can find inspiration for digital through a piece of print" - Doug Hughmanick anml.com dribbble.com/anml Instagram: anml & douglas_hughmanick Read more about Doug journey in issue 7.4, "Phase" ________________ This episode's music in "Tang" by Chris Emond. Follow Chris on Spotify, http://bit.ly/ChrisEmond Featured in issue 13.2 "Sight and Sound" 2021 https://www.content-magazine.com/issue/issue-13-2/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/content-magazine/support
Sudhir Thomas Vadaketh is the author of 'Floating on a Malayan Breeze: Travels in Malaysia and Singapore' and co-author of 'Hard Choices: Challenging the Singapore Consensus'. He is currently working on a book about China and India. From 2006-13 Sudhir worked for the Economist Corporate Network and Economist Insights [units of The Economist Group] in Hong Kong and Singapore. He continues to work freelance for the company. He has moderated and spoken on panels across Asia for the firm, most recently at The Economist’s Open Future Festival in Oct 2019 in Hong Kong. In his personal capacity as an author, Sudhir has spoken at numerous institutions and events around the world, including Columbia University, Harvard University, The World Bank, Yale-NUS, the Georgetown Literary Festival and the Singapore Writers Festival. He is currently a contract-based supervising editor at DBS’s Asian Insights Office, as well as a senior writer at WildType Media. Sudhir has written for a variety of publications, including The Economist, Foreign Affairs, Nikkei Asian Review and The Straits Times. He has appeared on numerous regional and international video shows, including CNN’s Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. Born and schooled in Singapore, Sudhir has bachelor’s degrees from the University of California at Berkeley and a master’s degree from the Harvard Kennedy School. Shownotes at https://www.jeremyau.com/blog/sudhirtv
Ep. 27 Lady Imix & DJ Phatrick: Heartbreak Monday RadioIn this episode Lady Imix and DJ Phatrick share the show’s origin story , show BTS, the importance of representation and investing in their community. They also take on a song challenge from Chef Roy Choi while challenging “the box of masculinity”.Questions/Comments from the audience:The VillianessMiracle Etim-AndyEp. 7 WTYM guest Colony LittleChef Roi ChoiDuring The Supernatural Bear corner, The SNB is asked to share his favorite sad song.Episode linksHeartbreak Monday Radio MixcloudHeartbreak Monday instagramDJ PhatrickKQBHBambu DePistolaBoyle Heights Bridge RunnersMotown MondaysLadies of SoundWu tang - After the Laughter Portishead - Glory BoxFetty Wap - My Way Sade - Is it a CrimeUB40-Red Red WineRobyn -Dancing on my ownJoy Division- Love Will Tear Us ApartAnthony Bourdain (Rest in Power) on Season 9 Episode 1 : Los Angeles of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. The Nerd OutLittle Brother from Phineas and FerbThe SkatesideWTYM is brought to you byWord To Your Mama Store: Use code WTYM at check out to receive 10% off any order ritzyperiwinkle.comWTYM Patreon PagepanoplyBPO : Mention WTYM and get your 13th month of service free.DONATEAVAILABLE WHERE EVER YOU CONSUME PODCASTS
In today’s episode of Tips Appreciated, we’ll be discussing Anthony Bourdain – his life, his works, and his legacy. To say that Anthony Bourdain was an iconic figure would be an understatement. More than that, though, his legacy isn’t limited to just the industries that he worked in; rather, he inspired people of all ages, of all backgrounds, and from all walks of life. But how exactly did he become this extraordinary, larger than life man? We wanted to learn more about him and wanted to hear his life story, so we did some research on things that shaped him into the person he is and the legacy he created. Timestamp 0:00 Intro 1:35 Anthony’s Childhood 2:23 College years 2:51 Career after College 3:40 Anthony’s start in journalism 4:25 A Cook’s tour - In Search of the Perfect Meal 5:06 Travel Channel’s series Anthony Bourdain No Reservation 5:40 Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown on CNN 6:36 Focusing on the food and the people behind it 8:37 Anthony’s advice 12:50 Rival Chefs 14:34 His Death 15:36 Conclusion 16:13 Our thoughts ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Welcome to the 60th episode of Yesterday's Capers. Every week, Abdullah Moallim will be reviewing and looking back at some of the most memorable and well known tv shows and cartoons.
In this episode we talk with Matt Appleton about pivoting. Matt's storied career is a captivating success story. He is a Vermont based saxophonist and multi-instrumentalist record producer best known as the saxophone player and vocalist for ska legends Reel Big Fish. He graduated from Skidmore College in 2003 with a BA in Music and Full Sail University in 2004 with an AS in Recording Arts. He is the recipient of a 2019 Grammy Award nomination for his work on “Made an America” by The Fever 333 as well as two ARIA awards for his work on Silverchair’s “Young Modern” (Album of the Year and Rock Album of the Year). Matt began his recording career as an engineer for legendary English producer Nick Launay. He then spent many years as head engineer for producer John Feldmann. In the studio Matt has engineered, produced, and performed on a variety of instruments for records by Rachel Platten, Panic! At the Disco, The Used, Good Charlotte, Silverchair, Refused, Gavin Degraw, Anti-Flag, Set it Off, Von Smith, The Veronicas, The Mowglis, Foxy Shazam, Story of the Year, and Atreyu, to name a few. As a member of Reel Big Fish, Matt plays approximately 200 shows a year worldwide, including extensive tours of Europe, Russia, South America, Japan, and Australia. He has performed at the Vans Warped Tour, Reading and Leeds Festivals, Sonisphere, Boomtown, Give it a Name, and Slam Dunk festivals among others. In addition to his career as a touring musician, Matt is also a member of the pop songwriting duo Peter Panic and composes for Extreme Music, Superpop, and the Kingdom 2 Division of APM. Their work can be heard regularly on a number of cable and network TV shows, including “Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown,” “Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon,” “Girl Meets World,” and “So You Think You Can Dance.” They are also the creators of DreamworksTV's "Sung History" and "Sung Science" series, which make learning about the past and the natural world fun for kids through catchy musical cartoons.
Stuart and Eamonn are joined by musician and broadcaster Ricky Ross to discuss the findings of a recent BBC Disclosure investigation into the Scottish Government’s lockdown timeline, Facebook’s new Oversight Board and controversial remarks made by Bryan Adams on Instagram. Stuart, Eamonn and Ricky also share their personal media recommendations.Stuart's recommendation: 'Subculture: The Meaning of Style' book by Dick Hebdigehttps://www.amazon.co.uk/Subculture-Meaning-Style-New-Accents/dp/0415039495Ricky: 'National Theatre at Home: Antony & Cleopatra'https://www.nationaltheatre.org.uk/shows/nt-at-home-antony-and-cleopatraEamonn: 'Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown' serieshttps://www.amazon.co.uk/Anthony-Bourdain-Parts-Unknown/dp/B07V3BFP4FSupport the podcast and gain access to bonus content: www.patreon.com/talkmediaKeep up to date with the show on Twitter: @TBLTalkMediaFor more information, visit: www.thebiglight.com/talkmedia See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Coming at you direct from the middle of nowhere to the center of everywhere, it's the Beneath the Surface Podcast with BOTE CEO and Co-Founder, Corey Cooper, along with world-renowned photographer and BOTE Director of Photography, Sean Murphy. In the pilot episode, Corey and Sean take a walk down memory lane, taking you behind the scenes to introduce you to names, places, and inspiration behind the BOTE brand.“We say it all the time. We design cool shit, for us.” - Corey Cooper, BOTE CEO and Co-FounderMore than a stand up paddle board company, BOTE is a lifestyle. For people who like to get outside and do cool shit. For people who appreciate design and quality. For people who invest in brands with soul.The BOTE creative team is the driving force behind the brand you see on our website, in stores, in advertising, and everywhere else. Through wild adventures, shelved products that never made it to market, countless photoshoots, and exponential growth, it all goes back to who we are as a brand: we make cool shit, for us.LINKS FROM THE EPISODEThe home of BOTE Board: Destin, Florida.Sean's kind of a big deal, just ask the guys at Tenacious D, Weezer, and Tool.Check out Sean's killer portfolio at SeanMurphyPhoto.com.The worst and best experience of all time: the Florida Everglades.Adventures inspired by Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown.“We at BOTE understand what Sean Murphy brings to the table. Yes, he brings ridiculiously creative ideas and a barrage of insane imagery, but he also brings with him an infectious energy and a laugh that can only come from the kind of crazy that we here at BOTE celebrate. The past four years has been a roller coaster of bad-assery, and I like to think that as a creative team, we have developed one of the strongest, most recognizable brand in the industry. Sean Murphy is a huge part of that team. Here is to many years, road trips and radness to come.” – Rob McAbee / BOTE Creative Director
Currently touring with Amy Ray and a fixed part of Mark Lanagan’s touring & studio band for a while now.. Jeff has also played with Dave Abbruzzese, Star Anna, Stone Gossard, Duff McKagan and others & was on the Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown episode with Mark Lanegan Jeff talks about some of the family hardships he had early on and their impact… Playing with Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi, Joe Walsh, Robbie Robertson & Chrissie Hynde… most influential musical experience (NOT what you’d think)... favorite guitar players (again, NOT who you’d think)... mistakes made & lessons learned. VERY candid convo, great guy, incredibly grateful, optimistic and driven: Support this Show: http://www.everyonelovesguitar.com/support Subscribe https://www.everyonelovesguitar.com/subscribe/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EveryoneLovesGuitar/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everyonelovesguitar/
One episode and a wake-up is left! In the penultimate episode of In Country, I take time out from comics, movies, and the Vietnam War to talk about the war's aftermath and Vietnam itself. The episode begins with the history of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. along with descriptions of two other Vietnam War memorials that I've been to on Long Island and in Charlottesville. I then talk about the postwar history of Vietnam and U.S. relations with Vietnam as well as look at the country in the present day via season 8, episode 1 of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. Plus, listener feedback!
One episode and a wake-up is left! In the penultimate episode of In Country, I take time out from comics, movies, and the Vietnam War to talk about the war's aftermath and Vietnam itself. The episode begins with the history of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. along with descriptions of two other Vietnam War memorials that I've been to on Long Island and in Charlottesville. I then talk about the postwar history of Vietnam and U.S. relations with Vietnam as well as look at the country in the present day via season 8, episode 1 of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. Plus, listener feedback!
Welcome to We Love Blank, a podcast that asks the question "What is a thing you love so much you could talk about it for almost an hour straight?" In this episode, my friend Elizabeth came over to share her experiences living abroad, climbing stairs, and taking the bus. Follow the podcast on Twitter https://twitter.com/wlbpod or join the Facebook group., We Love Blank Podcast Interested in appearing on the show? Send an email to WeLoveBlankPodcast@gmail.com Atlas Obscura: https://www.atlasobscura.com/ Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown is on Netflix and clips can be found at https://explorepartsunknown.com/watch/ And have a good day!
Joe McPherson is a Food Writer and Korean Cuisine Consultant who works out of Seoul, South Korea, and operates Korea's longest running food blog, ZenKimChi. He has consulted for the likes of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown and Bizarre foods with Andrew Zimmern, while his work has been sourced and featured in publications such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and many more. For his work or for upcoming food tour dates, take a look at zenkimchi.com. "Something serious is happening. We are in a Golden Age in South Korea". On this episode of the podcast, Konner and Joe discuss the history, complexities and importance of Korean food in Asia and on the world stage. Joe tells of some of the behind the scenes moments in a few the western shows he has consulted for, such as Anthony Bourdain's Parts Unknown and Andrew Zimmern's Bizarre Foods. They also talk about the success of these shows, and how food is a window into different cultures across the world. Joe also talks about his secrets for Korean food etiquette as well as the different Korean foods everyone should try. Finally, the guys discuss smelly cheese, strong flavours and the personality of chefs.
收听提示 1、中国学校流行的陪餐制是什么? 2、日本和法国的学校何以成为午餐制度的典范? 3、美食大国如何实行餐桌上的教育? 本集书目 《法国餐桌上的10堂食育课》作者: 凯伦·勒比永(Karen Bakker Le Billon) 内容简介 因为向往老公家乡的生活,凯伦兴冲冲地拖着老公跟两个女儿飞抵法国,正当以为全家即将展开梦幻美好的异国生活之际,怎料自己与两个女儿的饮食习性,竟成了亲朋好友、甚至陌生人群起围剿的标的!一场高潮迭起、机锋幽默的饮食文化洗礼就此展开…… 本集视频 1、Kyushoku: The Making of a Japanese School Lunch 链接:https://youtu.be/fze5s1SlqB8 https://www.bilibili.com/video/av31693543 2、Anthony Bourdain breaks bread with Lyon's second graders (Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown) 链接:https://youtu.be/0Nth_j2jhsM https://www.bilibili.com/video/av9890496?from=search&seid=9247917471515122040 全新《八分》每周三、周五更新 欢迎留言与我们互动
收听提示 1、中国学校流行的陪餐制是什么? 2、日本和法国的学校何以成为午餐制度的典范? 3、美食大国如何实行餐桌上的教育? 本集书目 《法国餐桌上的10堂食育课》作者: 凯伦·勒比永(Karen Bakker Le Billon) 内容简介 因为向往老公家乡的生活,凯伦兴冲冲地拖着老公跟两个女儿飞抵法国,正当以为全家即将展开梦幻美好的异国生活之际,怎料自己与两个女儿的饮食习性,竟成了亲朋好友、甚至陌生人群起围剿的标的!一场高潮迭起、机锋幽默的饮食文化洗礼就此展开…… 本集视频 1、Kyushoku: The Making of a Japanese School Lunch 链接:https://youtu.be/fze5s1SlqB8 https://www.bilibili.com/video/av31693543 2、Anthony Bourdain breaks bread with Lyon's second graders (Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown) 链接:https://youtu.be/0Nth_j2jhsM https://www.bilibili.com/video/av9890496?from=search&seid=9247917471515122040 全新《八分》每周三、周五更新 欢迎留言与我们互动
Inspired by an episode of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, we travel all the way to Antarctica to learn about mysterious community radio station, Ice Radio. Sadly, we learned of Anthony Bourdain’s death on the day that we recorded this episode. Ice Radio is the latest iteration of a radio station that began more than 50 […] The post Podcast #182 – Volunteer Radio in Antarctica (rebroadcast) appeared first on Radio Survivor.
Inspired by an episode of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, we travel all the way to Antarctica to learn about mysterious community radio station, Ice Radio. Sadly, we learned of Anthony Bourdain’s death on the day that we recorded this episode. Ice Radio is the latest iteration of a radio station that began more than 50 […] The post Podcast #182 – Volunteer Radio in Antarctica (rebroadcast) appeared first on Radio Survivor.
Happy Thanksgiving, everybody! It's turkey week and, while you're stuffing your face while arguing with that crazy uncle of yours, enjoy sneaking an earbud into your ear to take a listen to our wild and crazy show. Oh, and we ate some Crack Pie, courtesy of Momofuku Milkbar. And it was fuuuuckin' tasty. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS THIS WEEK: "Big Mouth" has been renewed for a third season. Jon Cryer has been cast as Lex Luthor on "Supergirl." Benedict Cumberbatch was almost cast as Vampire Bill in HBO's "True Blood." A "Jack Reacher" TV series is in the works at Paramount Television. According to TV Line, the books' author, Lee Child, said, “for all his talent, [Tom Cruise] didn’t have that physicality.” So, for the TV series, they’re looking for someone who more closely matches the books’ description of Reacher. Basically, to sum up, Tom Cruise is too short. SYFY announced its first original late-night animated series, "Alien News Desk." Set to debut early 2019, the series is a weekly, half-hour topical animated series set in an extraterrestrial newsroom. Voiced by Will Forte (as alien news anchor “Drexx Drudlarr”) and “Saturday Night Live’s” Heidi Gardner (alien co-anchor “Tuva Van Void”), the 12-episode series will cover up-to-the-minute news and commentary about the universe’s most baffling species - the inscrutable Humans of Planet Earth. AARON'S LOSERS: "American Horror Story: Apocalypse"JACK'S LOSERS: "Super Drags" AARON'S FENCERS: "Saturday Night Live," "The Kominsky Method" and "Dirty John"JACK'S FENCERS: "The Kominsky Method" and Origin" AARON'S WINNERS: "Salt Fat Acid Heat," "Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown," "Supernatural," "Dogs" and "Sally4Ever"JACK'S WINNERS: "Dogs," "Daredevil," "Haunting of Hill House," "Sally4Ever," "Follow This," "The Other Side of the Wind Documentary" and "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs" Be sure to subscribe on iTunes and comment! Find us on Twitter: @PunchDrunk_TV, @flatlinejack and @aaronflux Join the conversation on Facebook. Welcome to Episode 114.
Currently touring with Amy Ray and a fixed part of Mark Lanagan’s touring & studio band for a while now, and was on the Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown episode with Mark, as well… Jeff’s an incredibly hard working player out of Seattle. He’s also played with Dave Abbruzzese, Star Anna, Stone Gossard, Duff McKagan and others Jeff talks about some of the family hardships he had early on and their impact… Playing with Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi, Joe Walsh, Robbie Robertson & Chrissie Hynde… most influential musical experience (NOT what you’d think)... favorite guitar players (again, NOt what you’d think)... mistakes he made and lessons learned. VERY candid convo, great guy, incredibly grateful, optimistic and driven: Subscribe https://www.everyonelovesguitar.com/subscribe/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EveryoneLovesGuitar/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everyonelovesguitar/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/ELovesGuitar
It's time for a bonus review! Leigh picked the excellent show Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown to discuss it as a masterpiece of its genre. This provides excellent counterbalance to the experimental movie they covered, Heaven and Earth Magic. They also listened to the smooth sounds of Steely Dan and David Essex to distract themselves from the Life and Loves of a She-Devil. Also there's a big announcement! Get excited! Intro / "Off the List" 0:00 - 8:04 Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown 8:04 - 33:09 Heaven and Earth Magic 33:09 - 42:51 Aja 42:51 - 48:48 Arctic Char 48:48 - 50:53 Rock On 50:53 - 58:54 The Life and Loves of a She-Devil 58:54 - 1:04:00 Outro 1:04:00 - 1:09:48 --Leave your own henge ratings at TheArtImmortal.com --Be sure you leave an iTunes review Twitter iTunes YouTube Join us next time as we discuss more random things. Until then, email or tweet us your thoughts, leave a review on iTunes and other crap every podcast asks you to do. (But we love that you do it!) Artwork by Ray Martindale Opening tune and clips by Adam Lord
Pod for One has its first guest - Jen Lopes aka Sabrina's co-cat mom, aka co-habitant aka girlfriend / partner. Jen is an audiobooks producer and discusses some books she worked on like Bruce Soringsteen and Theresa Guidice. The couple mentions the Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown release date which is September 23rd and not "yesterday" as Jen thought. They discuss their favorite Trader Joe's products, typical lesbians. They inform us of their cameo appearances in different reality shows. In LGBTQ+ news... a teacher had to switch jobs because parents were mad that she told the class she was a lesbian... our thoughts on that all in this episode. Please subscribe, rate, review, and refer a friend! Find @podforone on all the social media platforms.
Paul and Rachel are back for more! This time we talk about Carter, Ugly Delicious, Impulse, Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, The Hollow, Elementary, Cloak and Dagger, and America's Got Talent! That's The Show, a podcast about TV shows we love and don't love and think you should, too! Hosted by Paul Roth (@paulidin) and Rachel Pierce (@thejuniebird). Produced by Danny Agama (@dannyagama). Music by Mary Kate Jiménez-Wall (@revensings). Join our Patreon! - https://www.patreon.com/thatstheshowpod 00:00 Previously on... 00:34 Intro 11:24 Hot Takes! 11:56 Hot Take: Carter - Paul 18:17 Hot Take: Ugly Delicious - Rachel 26:47 Hot Take: Anthony Bourdain's Parts Unknown - Rachel 34:04 Hot Take: Impulse - Paul 41:11 Hot Take: Elementary - Rachel 46:55 Hot Take: The Hollow - Paul 51:34 Fake Commercials! 52:38 FOCUS: Marvel's Cloak & Dagger - Paul 1:01:11 FOCUS: America's Got Talent - Rachel 1:18:41 Mail Bag 1:26:00 Outro #tv #television #reviews
Paul and Rachel are back for more! This time we talk about Carter, Ugly Delicious, Impulse, Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, The Hollow, Elementary, Cloak and Dagger, and America's Got Talent! That's The Show, a podcast about TV shows we love and don't love and think you should, too! Hosted by Paul Roth (@paulidin) and Rachel Pierce (@thejuniebird). Produced by Danny Agama (@dannyagama). Music by Mary Kate Jiménez-Wall (@revensings). Join our Patreon! - https://www.patreon.com/thatstheshowpod 00:00 Previously on... 00:34 Intro 11:24 Hot Takes! 11:56 Hot Take: Carter - Paul 18:17 Hot Take: Ugly Delicious - Rachel 26:47 Hot Take: Anthony Bourdain's Parts Unknown - Rachel 34:04 Hot Take: Impulse - Paul 41:11 Hot Take: Elementary - Rachel 46:55 Hot Take: The Hollow - Paul 51:34 Fake Commercials! 52:38 FOCUS: Marvel's Cloak & Dagger - Paul 1:01:11 FOCUS: America's Got Talent - Rachel 1:18:41 Mail Bag 1:26:00 Outro tv #television #reviews
HOLY BAJOLY - PAPA STEVE AND THOM ARE BACK AGAIN 2X IN A ROW - HOPE YOU BROUGHT SPARE PANTS. WHAT DID YOU THINK?Dale@1890Studios.comAdam@1890Studios.comPatrick@1890Studios.comWe love to hear from you! 1890Studios.comFACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/thenetflixexplorersTWITTER: @TheNetExITUNES: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/netflix-explorers-podcast/id1200124353?mt=2Leave a comment on Facebook and review us on iTunes!Advertising inquiries: dale@1890Studios.com
节目摘要 为什么有那么多的人喜欢看美食类的节目?美食类的节目又能给我们带来哪些有关人生和世界的思考?这期节目也许能给你提供些回答这些问题的灵感。 节目备注 欢迎通过微博关注我们的节目@不丧Podcast和女主播@constancy好小气。 关于线上读书微信群:由于目前群人数超过100人,无法继续通过扫码入群。想要入群的朋友可以先加我的微信号(ID: hongming_qiao),然后再拉你入群。 这集播客中提到的相关作品的介绍和链接: 电影&电视 《安东尼·波登:未知之旅》(Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown)(2013) Huang's World 《美食不美》(Ugly Delicious)(2018) 《街头美食斗士》(2018) 《拜托了冰箱 第四季》(2018) 音乐 "Lollipop", Mika "Strawberry Swing", Coldplay 其他 游戏策划:为什么我的儿子不沉迷游戏? 任天堂Switch游戏:Just Dance 2018 如何收听「不丧」 任何设备都可以通过访问「不丧」的网站在线收听 我们推荐使用泛用型播客客户端收听「不丧」 泛用型播客客户端直接通过播客上传者提供的RSS向用户提供播客内容和信息,不会有第三方的干涉;并且只要上传者更新了Feed,就能在客户端上收听到节目。 iOS平台上我们推荐使用Podcast(苹果预装播客客户端),Castro,Overcast和Pocket Casts。 Android平台上收听方式可以参照这里。 macOS和Windows平台可以通过iTunes收听。
节目摘要 为什么有那么多的人喜欢看美食类的节目?美食类的节目又能给我们带来哪些有关人生和世界的思考?这期节目也许能给你提供些回答这些问题的灵感。 节目备注 欢迎通过微博关注我们的节目@不丧Podcast和女主播@constancy好小气。 关于线上读书微信群:由于目前群人数超过100人,无法继续通过扫码入群。想要入群的朋友可以先加我的微信号(ID: hongming_qiao),然后再拉你入群。 这集播客中提到的相关作品的介绍和链接: 电影&电视 《安东尼·波登:未知之旅》(Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown)(2013) Huang's World 《美食不美》(Ugly Delicious)(2018) 《街头美食斗士》(2018) 《拜托了冰箱 第四季》(2018) 音乐 "Lollipop", Mika "Strawberry Swing", Coldplay 其他 游戏策划:为什么我的儿子不沉迷游戏? 任天堂Switch游戏:Just Dance 2018 如何收听「不丧」 任何设备都可以通过访问「不丧」的网站在线收听 我们推荐使用泛用型播客客户端收听「不丧」 泛用型播客客户端直接通过播客上传者提供的RSS向用户提供播客内容和信息,不会有第三方的干涉;并且只要上传者更新了Feed,就能在客户端上收听到节目。 iOS平台上我们推荐使用Podcast(苹果预装播客客户端),Castro,Overcast和Pocket Casts。 Android平台上收听方式可以参照这里。 macOS和Windows平台可以通过iTunes收听。
节目摘要 为什么有那么多的人喜欢看美食类的节目?美食类的节目又能给我们带来哪些有关人生和世界的思考?这期节目也许能给你提供些回答这些问题的灵感。 节目备注 欢迎通过微博关注我们的节目@不丧Podcast和女主播@constancy好小气。 关于线上读书微信群:由于目前群人数超过100人,无法继续通过扫码入群。想要入群的朋友可以先加我的微信号(ID: hongming_qiao),然后再拉你入群。 这集播客中提到的相关作品的介绍和链接: 电影&电视 《安东尼·波登:未知之旅》(Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown)(2013) Huang's World 《美食不美》(Ugly Delicious)(2018) 《街头美食斗士》(2018) 《拜托了冰箱 第四季》(2018) 音乐 "Lollipop", Mika "Strawberry Swing", Coldplay 其他 游戏策划:为什么我的儿子不沉迷游戏? 任天堂Switch游戏:Just Dance 2018 如何收听「不丧」 任何设备都可以通过访问「不丧」的网站在线收听 我们推荐使用泛用型播客客户端收听「不丧」 泛用型播客客户端直接通过播客上传者提供的RSS向用户提供播客内容和信息,不会有第三方的干涉;并且只要上传者更新了Feed,就能在客户端上收听到节目。 iOS平台上我们推荐使用Podcast(苹果预装播客客户端),Castro,Overcast和Pocket Casts。 Android平台上收听方式可以参照这里。 macOS和Windows平台可以通过iTunes收听。
Inspired by an episode of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, we travel all the way to Antarctica to learn about mysterious community radio station, Ice Radio. Sadly, we learned of Anthony Bourdain’s death on the day that we recorded this episode. Ice Radio is the latest iteration of a radio station that began more than 50 […] The post Podcast #146 – Volunteer Radio from Antarctica appeared first on Radio Survivor.
Inspired by an episode of Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, we travel all the way to Antarctica to learn about mysterious community radio station, Ice Radio. Sadly, we learned of Anthony Bourdain’s death on the day that we recorded this episode. Ice Radio is the latest iteration of a radio station that began more than 50 […] The post Podcast #146 – Volunteer Radio from Antarctica appeared first on Radio Survivor.
节目摘要 在过去一周的时间里,Kate Spade和Anthony Bourdain两位大师相继选择以自杀的方式离我们而去。这一期我们聊了聊抑郁和自杀这些事。在自杀率高涨的阴影笼罩之下,我们不仅要更多地去关爱身边人,同时也要学会关爱自己。 节目备注 欢迎通过微博关注我们的节目@不丧Podcast和女主播@constancy好小气。 关于线上读书微信群:由于目前群人数超过100人,无法继续通过扫码入群。想要入群的朋友可以先加我的微信号(ID: hongming_qiao),然后再拉你入群。 美国National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-8255 北京心理危机研究与干预中心 座机用户拨打:800-810-1117 手机用户拨打:010-82951332 这集播客中提到的相关作品的介绍和链接: 书籍 Kitchen Confidential, Anthony Bourdain Medium Raw, Anthony Bourdain Appetites, Anthony Bourdain 《自杀作为中国问题》,吴飞 《博尔赫斯谈话录》,博尔赫斯 《房思琪的初恋乐园》,林奕含 People's Republic of Amenesia: Tiananmen Revisited, Lousia Lim 电影&电视 A Cook's Tour(2002) Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations(2005) 《中转站》(The Layover)(2011) 《安东尼·波登:未知之旅》(Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown)(2013) 音乐 "1-800-273-8255", Logic "I Lived", OneRepublic 其他 Anthony Bourdain and the Power of Telling the Truth, Helen Rosner 林奕含在自己婚礼上的演讲 Samaritan Patrols Bridge for China's Lost Souls, Louisa Lim The Masterclass Podcast, Louisa Lim 如何收听「不丧」 任何设备都可以通过访问「不丧」的网站在线收听 我们推荐使用泛用型播客客户端收听「不丧」 泛用型播客客户端直接通过播客上传者提供的RSS向用户提供播客内容和信息,不会有第三方的干涉;并且只要上传者更新了Feed,就能在客户端上收听到节目。 iOS平台上我们推荐使用Podcast(苹果预装播客客户端),Castro,Overcast和Pocket Casts。 Android平台上收听方式可以参照这里。 macOS和Windows平台可以通过iTunes收听。
节目摘要 在过去一周的时间里,Kate Spade和Anthony Bourdain两位大师相继选择以自杀的方式离我们而去。这一期我们聊了聊抑郁和自杀这些事。在自杀率高涨的阴影笼罩之下,我们不仅要更多地去关爱身边人,同时也要学会关爱自己。 节目备注 欢迎通过微博关注我们的节目@不丧Podcast和女主播@constancy好小气。 关于线上读书微信群:由于目前群人数超过100人,无法继续通过扫码入群。想要入群的朋友可以先加我的微信号(ID: hongming_qiao),然后再拉你入群。 美国National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-8255 北京心理危机研究与干预中心 座机用户拨打:800-810-1117 手机用户拨打:010-82951332 这集播客中提到的相关作品的介绍和链接: 书籍 Kitchen Confidential, Anthony Bourdain Medium Raw, Anthony Bourdain Appetites, Anthony Bourdain 《自杀作为中国问题》,吴飞 《博尔赫斯谈话录》,博尔赫斯 《房思琪的初恋乐园》,林奕含 People's Republic of Amenesia: Tiananmen Revisited, Lousia Lim 电影&电视 A Cook's Tour(2002) Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations(2005) 《中转站》(The Layover)(2011) 《安东尼·波登:未知之旅》(Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown)(2013) 音乐 "1-800-273-8255", Logic "I Lived", OneRepublic 其他 Anthony Bourdain and the Power of Telling the Truth, Helen Rosner 林奕含在自己婚礼上的演讲 Samaritan Patrols Bridge for China's Lost Souls, Louisa Lim The Masterclass Podcast, Louisa Lim 如何收听「不丧」 任何设备都可以通过访问「不丧」的网站在线收听 我们推荐使用泛用型播客客户端收听「不丧」 泛用型播客客户端直接通过播客上传者提供的RSS向用户提供播客内容和信息,不会有第三方的干涉;并且只要上传者更新了Feed,就能在客户端上收听到节目。 iOS平台上我们推荐使用Podcast(苹果预装播客客户端),Castro,Overcast和Pocket Casts。 Android平台上收听方式可以参照这里。 macOS和Windows平台可以通过iTunes收听。
节目摘要 在过去一周的时间里,Kate Spade和Anthony Bourdain两位大师相继选择以自杀的方式离我们而去。这一期我们聊了聊抑郁和自杀这些事。在自杀率高涨的阴影笼罩之下,我们不仅要更多地去关爱身边人,同时也要学会关爱自己。 节目备注 欢迎通过微博关注我们的节目@不丧Podcast和女主播@constancy好小气。 关于线上读书微信群:由于目前群人数超过100人,无法继续通过扫码入群。想要入群的朋友可以先加我的微信号(ID: hongming_qiao),然后再拉你入群。 美国National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-8255 北京心理危机研究与干预中心 座机用户拨打:800-810-1117 手机用户拨打:010-82951332 这集播客中提到的相关作品的介绍和链接: 书籍 Kitchen Confidential, Anthony Bourdain Medium Raw, Anthony Bourdain Appetites, Anthony Bourdain 《自杀作为中国问题》,吴飞 《博尔赫斯谈话录》,博尔赫斯 《房思琪的初恋乐园》,林奕含 People's Republic of Amenesia: Tiananmen Revisited, Lousia Lim 电影&电视 A Cook's Tour(2002) Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations(2005) 《中转站》(The Layover)(2011) 《安东尼·波登:未知之旅》(Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown)(2013) 音乐 "1-800-273-8255", Logic "I Lived", OneRepublic 其他 Anthony Bourdain and the Power of Telling the Truth, Helen Rosner 林奕含在自己婚礼上的演讲 Samaritan Patrols Bridge for China's Lost Souls, Louisa Lim The Masterclass Podcast, Louisa Lim 如何收听「不丧」 任何设备都可以通过访问「不丧」的网站在线收听 我们推荐使用泛用型播客客户端收听「不丧」 泛用型播客客户端直接通过播客上传者提供的RSS向用户提供播客内容和信息,不会有第三方的干涉;并且只要上传者更新了Feed,就能在客户端上收听到节目。 iOS平台上我们推荐使用Podcast(苹果预装播客客户端),Castro,Overcast和Pocket Casts。 Android平台上收听方式可以参照这里。 macOS和Windows平台可以通过iTunes收听。
"The politics of peripheral vision." As we close in on the Oscars, we take some time to talk about Sean Baker's brilliant film The Florida Project, one of our favourites of 2017. Also discussed: grey hair, Anthony Bourdain & the Murphy Brown reboot. Show notes: Chrissy Teigen Twitter Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown Sean Baker IMDb Tangerine trailer The Florida Project trailer Bria Vinaite Instagram Recommendations: Lisa Christiansen: Elton John & Slayer farewell tours Andrea Warner: Murphy Brown reboot Music credits: "Flutterbee" by Podington Bear From Free Music Archive CC BY 3.0 Theme song "Pyro Flow" by Kevin Macleod From Incompetch CC BY 3.0 Intro bed:"OLPC" by Marco Raaphorst From Free Music Archive CC BY-SA 3.0 NL Pop This! Links: Pop This! on TumblrPop This! on iTunes (please consider reviewing and rating us!) Pop This! on Stitcher (please consider reviewing and rating us!) Pop This! on Google PlayPop This! on TuneIn radioPop This! on TwitterPop This! on Facebook Logo design by Samantha Smith Pop This! is two women talking about pop culture. Lisa Christiansen is a broadcaster, journalist and longtime metal head. Andrea Warner is a music critic, author and former horoscopes columnist. Press play and come hang out with your two new best friends. Pop This! podcast is produced by Andrea Gin and recorded at the Vancouver Public Library.
In this episode of The Netflix Knowhow Podcast, Josh and Sabrina talk about Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown.
In this episode of The Netflix Knowhow Podcast, Josh and Sabrina talk about Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown.
hey. its me. ur friend. tony bourdain. i love food. r u a serial killer?? i love weed. ru a tech bro?? mind if i watch porn in this bar?? p.s. r u a serial killer tho, like for real? || Theme Song: "Crooked Mile (slinky rock mix)" by Hans Atom || Outro: "I dunno" by grapes
Seth takes a closer look at special counsel Robert Mueller's first charges in his investigation of the Trump campaign's potential ties to Russia.Then, Anthony Bourdain tells Seth about the difficulties of filming Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown and why Romanian newspapers accused him of being a Mossad agent. He also discusses the troubles Puerto Rico faced before and after the hurricane, and why he's apologized about perpetuating the oppressive "meathead culture" in cuisine.After that, Bourdain talks to Late Night producer Henry Melcher about how hipsters have shaped food culture and his meal with President Obama.LATE NIGHT ON SOCIALRate the Late Night Podcast on Apple Podcasts: applepodcasts.com/LateNightSethSubscribe to Late Night on YouTube: youtube.com/LateNightSethFollow Late Night on Twitter: twitter.com/LateNightSethLike Late Night on Facebook: www.facebook.com/LateNightSethLike Late Night on Instagram: www.instagram.com/LateNightSethFind Late Night on Snapchat: snapchat.com/add/LateNightSethGet more Late Night with Seth Meyers: www.nbc.com/late-night-with-seth-meyers/Watch Late Night with Seth Meyers weeknights 12:35/11:35c on NBC.
Food Republic Today is a new daily podcast focused on everything that's happening in the world of food and drink. Co-hosts Richard Martin (creator and editor of FoodRepublic.com) and Krista Ruane (Culinary Creative Director at Zero Point Zero) discuss the day's headlines, then Richard digs a little deeper into a subject in his topic of the day. The centerpiece is a 10-15 minute interview with a guest -- be it a chef, restaurateur, author, musician, vintner, farmer, or heck, someone who just loves food. Every episode will end with something that tries to make you laugh because while some people take food so seriously, this is a podcast, and we're here to entertain your ears. Food Republic Today is produced by Zero Point Zero Production, the creators of "Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown" and "The Mind of a Chef." The first episode premieres November 2.
It's finally here! Halloween week is upon us which means, after this episode airs, DJ SpookNasty and MC Tummy Troubles will go back into hibernation. In this episode, Aaron shares a few odd experiences he had at horror haunts this past week and, later, he has an intimate chat with "Channel Zero" creator and showrunner, Nick Antosca. Let's get ready to spooooky! NEWS: "The Walking Dead" Season 8 premiere brought in a five-year low in ratings with 11.4 million viewers tuning in. That’s compared to 17 million tuning into the Season 7 premiere. Netflix has renewed "Big Mouth" for a second season An authorized autobiographical Hunter S. Thompson series, titled "Fear and Loathing," is being developed by "Get Shorty" showrunner Davey Holmes at MGM TV. CBS renewed "Star Trek: Discovery" for a second season has canceled "Zoo" after three seasons and is developing a reboot of "Magnum P.I." because, sure. The CW has teamed with "Stranger Things" executive producer Shawn Levy for a new haunted house series called, "Epiphany." The series is described as "being in the vein of the works of Stanley Kubrick and Agatha Christie." According to THR, "the drama is a psychological thriller about a group of gifted strangers recruited to a Gilded Age mansion to solve a complex code that lies within the structure's walls." AARON’S LOSER: "Designated Survivor" JACK’S LOSERS: "Loudermilk," "Hit the Road," "The Jellies" and "The Simpsons: Treehouse of Horror" AARON’S FENCERS: "The Walking Dead" JACK’S FENCERS: "Kevin (Probably) Saves the World," "Channel Zero: No End House," "Superstition" and "LORE" AARON’S WINNER: "Patton Oswalt: Annihilation," "Brooklyn Nine-Nine," "American Horror Story: Cult," "Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown" and "Too Funny to Fail"JACK’S WINNERS: "The Mayor," "Bob's Burgers," "Too Funny To Fail" and "Voltron: Legendary Defender" Be sure to subscribe on iTunes and comment! Find us on Twitter: @PunchDrunk_TV, @flatlinejack and @aaronflux Join the conversation on Facebook. Welcome to Episode 73. As always, #ClinktheDrink
On today's episode of THE FOOD SEEN, we settle into the world of fermentation, preservation and curing, with Darra Goldstein, the well cultured EIC of CURED. Her past publication, Gastronomica, was and will always be the go to journal for critical food studies. She now pairs with Zero Point Zero, one their first print production (they're the company behind television programs Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, and The Mind of Chef), to bring us insights and stories behind our favorite cheeses, charcuterie, and drinks, all time-honored and worth waiting for.
It takes more than a traveling chef and great pork buns to conquer the global restaurant and media markets. In this episode of Tech Bites, the studio is jam packed with the social ninjas that run the digital presences for Momofuku Restaurants worldwide and Zero Point Zero Productions (the creative powerhouse behind Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown, PBS’s Mind of A Chef, MeatEater, Apex Predator and Food Republic). Listen in on Helen Cho, Danny Carnaje from ZPZ and Marguerite Mariscal and Rebecca Palkovics from Momofuku talk tweets, paper cuts and pork belly. This program was brought to you by Cain Vineyard & Winery. “We very intentionally kept everything [social media] super consolidated. We find across all our restaurants there’s a ton of overlap in demographics. Also, it allows us to put out more content in a way that if it was coming out of an individual restaurant they wouldn’t have the time or capacity.” [17:10] “We’ve had a Facebook renaissance. I think video on Facebook is the fastest growing demo that they have, actually.” [31:30] —Marguerite Mariscal on Tech Bites