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Asmat Šanava, majitelka restaurace Pirosmani v Karlových Varech, patří mezi klíčové osoby napojené jak na ruský organizovaný zločin, tak na ruský stát. Zajišťuje platby, zakládá firmy a propojuje mocné – včetně šéfů zločineckých klanů a lidí spojených s kremelskou nadací Pravfond. Uniklé e-maily ukazují, že pomáhala s obcházením sankcí i s platbami za právníky pro obviněné Rusy. Zkoumáme její roli v kauzách jako obhajoba Alexandra Frančettiho nebo snahy ovlivnit osud hackera Jevgenije Nikulina. Co přesně „řeší“ žena, která si získala respekt ve světě mužů? Šéfredaktorky investigace.cz Pavly Holcové se ptá Petr Gojda .
El deshielo se acelera advierte la Organización Meteorológica mundial en este primer Día Mundial de los Glaciares, organizado este 21 de marzo para sensibilizar a la opinión pública sobre estos ecosistemas esenciales para los recursos hídricos. En la región andina, los glaciares han perdido cerca del 50% de su superficie desde los años 80. El glaciar de Humbolt en Venezuela, el Carihuairazo en Ecuador o el Chalcaltaya en Bolivia son algunos de los glaciares andinos que se extinguieron bajo el efecto del cambio climático causado por nuestras emisiones de gases de efecto invernadero. Según el Grupo Intergubernamental de Expertos sobre el Cambio Climático (IPCC), el calentamiento global ha provocado la desaparición de entre un 30% y un 50% de la superficie de los glaciares andinos desde la década de los 1980, una de las pérdidas más importantes a escala mundial. Y “entre 2022 y 2024, asistimos a la mayor pérdida de glaciares jamás registrada en tres años”, alertó Celeste Saulo, secretaria de la Organización Meteorológica Mundial (OMM) en el marco del primer Día Mundial de los Glaciares.Esta pérdida de masa glaciar a escala global amenaza el suministro de agua de cientos de millones de personas, dado que los glaciares cumplen un papel de reservas de agua. La cordillera de los Andes aporta por ejemplo la mitad del caudal del río Amazonas.Para la ONU, la única respuesta posible para frenar esta tendencia es combatir el calentamiento global reduciendo drásticamente las emisiones de gases de efecto invernadero.Alteración de los recursos hídricos en los AndesPara las poblaciones que viven en ciudades andinas de alta montaña, la dependencia a estos glaciares es aún mayor. Y los efectos del deshielo ya se hace sentir. Varios glaciólogos entrevistados por RFI concuerdan que, en Perú, el volumen de los glaciares en Perú ha retrocedido alrededor de un 40% que en los últimos 30 o 40 años“La contribución glaciar a los cauces de los ríos muchas veces es muy alta en los Andes [de Perú]. En algunas cuencas ya hay menos agua. Es lo que llamamos “el pico de agua”, o sea un punto de inflexión a partir del cual, a largo plazo, conforme el glaciar se va reduciendo, ya tenemos cada vez menos agua disponible, al menos en la época seca”, observa el glaciólogo de origen alemán Fabian Drenkhan, de la Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú.En la región andina, esta agua es crucial para el cultivo de alimentos básicos como la papa, el maíz y la quinoa.Y las previsiones para finales del siglo no son nada buenas: “al menos la mitad de todos los glaciares de Perú desaparecerán si contamos con un escenario de cambio climático optimista, con un mínimo calentamiento, es decir, si los acuerdos de París son implementados por todos los países y tenemos un incremento de temperatura de 1.5 grados Celsius máximo hacia el año 2100”, indica Randy Muñoz Asmat, geógrafo de la Universidad de Zurich.Riesgo de inundacionesEn paralelo, los volúmenes de algunas lagunas glaciares se expanden peligrosamente conforme se van derritiendo los glaciares río arriba. El reciente caso de la demanda judicial de Saúl Luciano Lliuya contra el gigante energético alemán RWE por las consecuencias del deshielo en Huaraz, es emblemáticode los riesgos de inundaciones. La laguna Palcacocha ha crecido 34 veces y amenaza a la ciudad de Huaraz.‘Muchas lagunas en el Perú que están creciendo en algunos casos constituyen un gran riesgo”, confirma el investigador Fabian Drenkhan. “Al crecer, la laguna puede llegar a niveles donde se queda cada vez menos estable. Podemos tener algunos eventos como un desprendimiento de un bloque de hielo o de una roca de la ladera que cae en la laguna y genera una ola de presión. Se puede incluso romper su dique el agua va hacia abajo. La laguna Palcacocha ha sido testigo de un de estos eventos que llamamos ‘GLOF', (Glacial Lake Outburst Flood en inglés), un aluvión en 1941, y ahí fallecieron casi 2000 personas en Huaraz”.Obras de adaptaciónPara limitar los efectos del deshielo, surgen varias técnicas de adaptación, muchas de ellas paliativas.Inspirándose en una técnica usada puntualmente en estaciones de esquí de países como Suiza, Italia o Francia el gobierno de Venezuela anunció en marzo de 2024 el despliegue con helicópteros de rollos de plástico de polipropileno sobre la superficie helada para protegerla de la radiación solar. Una técnica que suscita escepticismo entre ambientalistas y glaciólogos debido a los riesgos de contaminación plástica.Al este de La Paz en Bolivia, el cambio climático redujo la disponibilidad de agua para la comunidad de Cebollullo que depende del agua del glaciar Illimani para regar sus cultivos. Para remediar esta situación, los agricultores han recurrido a un antiguo sistema de riego que utiliza surcos en zigzag para ralentizar el flujo de agua y reducir la erosión.En la región de Huaraz en Perú, se ha instalado un sistema de drenaje del agua para reducir el volumen de la laguna Palcacocha.Por otra parte, en las regiones donde escasea el agua, el suministro de los embalses de las hidroeléctricas está en peligro. “En este caso la solución técnica que muchas empresas hidroeléctricas prefieren es construir más y más y más reservorios. Pero a nivel social y a nivel ambiental esos grandes reservorios muchas veces son muy cuestionables también”, advierte Fabian Drenkhan, que observa conflictos locales por el uso de los derechos de agua.Además, las obras de adaptación tienen sus límites: en la Cordillera blanca de Perú, siete de las nueve cuencas superaron el límite de las posibilidades de adaptación.
This week, Kate dives into an unsolved mystery, and a rather perplexing one, at that. This one is a great example/reminder of why colonialism is bad. When Michael Rockefeller (yes, of THE Rockefeller Family) disappeared during an expedition in the Asmat region of southwestern Dutch New Guinea (now South Papua), no one knew what had happened to him. There's a few theories. Some are simple, and some are sinister. Support the show
Michael Rockefeller was the great grandson of John D. Rockefeller, the founder of Standard Oil and the richest man in the world. He was also the son of Nelson Rockefeller, New York governor, Vice President of the United States, and a well known art collector. Michael had big shoes to fill. To do that, he followed in his father's art collecting footsteps, traveling to the Asmat region on the west coast of New Guinea to collect wood carvings for his father's Museum of Primitive Art in Manhattan. The Asmat people were hunter gatherers living in the jungle with almost no western contact. They led a very different life than Michael, practiced head hunting and cannibalism. Michael admired the Asmat, their culture, their art. But he never truly understood them. He couldn't. So when his sailboat capsized near the village of Otsjanep and he disappeared attempting to swim to shore, never to be seen again, his family assumed he had drowned. But did Michael Rockefeller really drown? Or was his fate far more violent? Let's fix that. Support the show! Join the PatreonBuy Me a CoffeeVenmo @Shea-LaFountaineSources: "Savage Harvest: A Tale of Cannibals, Colonialism, and Michael Rockefeller's Tragic Quest for Primitive Art" by Carl HoffmanSmithsonian Magazine "What Really Happened to Michael Rockefeller"The Met Museum "Bis Pole"Rockefeller Archive Center "John D. Rockefeller"PBS American Experience "Biography: Nelson A. Rockefeller"NPR Author Interviews "Cannibals and Colonialism: Solving the Mystery of Michael Rockefeller"Shoot me a message!
Plongez dans l'un des mystères les plus fascinants du 20ème siècle : la disparition de Michael Rockefeller en Nouvelle-Guinée en 1961. Héritier d'une puissante dynastie américaine, Michael disparaît mystérieusement lors d'une expédition à la recherche des bis poles sacrés des Asmat. Entre récits de cannibalisme et rites tribaux, découvrez les découvertes troublantes et les théories glaçantes qui entourent son dernier voyage. Rejoignez-nous pour explorer cette énigme captivante, où aventure et horreur se mêlent dans les profondeurs de la jungle de Nouvelle-Guinée.Pour plus d'infos : https://t.co/qoVKQXebwcHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Segment 3, May 18th, 2024 Helen Verkamp was introduced to travel at a young age while growing up in New England. She recently spoke with Carolina Outdoor host, Bill Bartee, about her life of travel. She's been to 53 countries & the number is growing. However, when Verkamp travels, she usually doesn't stay in a resort, lodge, or cruise ship. She immerses herself into the food, the culture, & the people of different places in the world. Recent footage of tribes like the Awa in the Amazon or The Asmat people live on the southwestern coast of western Papua are still reported as untouched tribes in the world. Helen, in your opinion, how untouched are some of these tribes. Show Highlights: Verkamp was inspired at a young age by the book, New Golden Vow by James George Frazer Southern Ethiopia alone is home to twelve, distinct tribes The Mursi tribe utilizes lip plates that expand the lower lip The Hamar tribe is simple & natural The Toarags are a nomadic tribe from the Sahara desert Dances & ceremonies are a part of the Woodaabe tribe. They pack up every few days & move Cultural differences in Papau New Guinea with tribes discovered in the twentieth century Her thoughts on missionaries going to different tribes in the world Many groups are attempting to protect tribes from being taken advantage of "untouched" tribes Things You'll Learn by Listening: Storyteller's Night at Jesse Brown's is upcoming on Thursday, May 30th, 2024, at 6 p.m. at the sponsor of the Carolina Outdoors, the local Charlotte outfitter, Jesse Brown's. If you plan on travelling remember to take comfortable footwear & wear sun protective clothing.
Professional tree planting is back breaking piecework—a combination of high intensity sport and industrial labor that requires both technical finesse and remarkable physical and mental endurance. Using techniques more often associated with high-performance athletes, experienced planters (commonly known as high-ballers) leap up and down through uneven and debris-strewn terrain, armed only with a shovel and 30-kg bags of seedlings on their backs. In recent years, tree planting has become a rite of passage among young Canadians not afraid of hard work and dirt under their fingernails. As seasonal work, it attracts many students from Canada's southern cities. Due to the brutal physical demands, most are under 30 years old. Out on the cut block inclement weather is common, and the swarms of biting insects are legendary. Working in—rather than on—the land for months on end, and sharing an isolated camp site creates a solid bond among planters. This has molded into a subculture of sorts, which is the subject of today's show. My guest for this episode is Canadian photographer and filmmaker Rita Leistner. Rita documents communities living in extreme conditions, typically investing months or years in a project. After spending a decade as a tree planter during her youth, Rita returned to the forest in 2016 to document a new generation. In 2021, she released her results as an Art Trifecta, featuring large fine art photographs, a 256-page photo book, and the documentary feature film “Forest for the Trees.” Equally in her element in forests and war zones, Rita's photographs and her writings about photography, art, and war have been published, exhibited, and collected worldwide. She is represented by the Stephen Bulger Gallery for art, and by Green Planet Films for film. If you haven't already listened, prior episodes of our podcast series Picturing World Cultures can be accessed at the links below: Wayne Quilliam discussing Australia's indigenous communities Kiana Hayeri reflecting on her work in Iran and Afghanistan Joshua Irwandi sheds light on his documentation of Indonesia's Asmat region Daniel Rosca describes the rustic landscape and old world traditions of rural Romania Guest: Rita Leistner Episode Timeline: 2:02: The backstory to Canadian tree planting as a business 5:21: Rita's interest in photography and her early days as a tree planter. 12:43: Comparisons and contrasts between Rita's early tree planting experiences and what she found when returning to the forest to document this subject. 18:21: A typical day in the life of a tree planter and the actual planting process 26:31: How Rita landed on her distinctive photographic style of capturing fast moving planters with a PhaseOne camera and Profoto lighting. 32:40: Rita talks about how the young planters responded to her sudden presence in the camp. 36:17: Rita's lighting set up with Profoto B1 lights and coordinating with an assistant to carry all the gear. 41:56: Episode Break 43:10: Rita talks about power consumption, batteries, generators, workflow, and more when working in remote locations. 45:03: Inclement weather, dirt, and bugs when shooting both stills and video footage out in the wilderness. 48:41: The lighting details behind Rita's enchanted forest nighttime images and timelapse footage. 53:38: How the work of tree planters is perceived by both the logging industry and environmentalists, and the effects this has on the planters themselves. 1:03:47: How Rita's Tree Planter project has affected her sense of Canadian identity. 1:06:04: Rita Leistner answers our PWC Visual Questionnaire. Guest Bio: Rita Leistner is a Canadian photographer and filmmaker who creates portraits of communities living in extreme conditions, typically investing months or years in a project. After spending a decade of her formative years as a tree planter in the Canadian wilderness, she returned to this theme to document a new generation of planters from 2016 to 2019. In 2021, she released the project as an Art Trifecta, featuring fine art photographs, a 256-page monograph, and the 91-minute documentary film Forest for the Trees. Additionally, Rita has been captured by insurgents, assaulted, and shot at, and she has run into gunfire to get a photograph. She has published four books of photography including Unembedded: Four Independent Photojournalists on the War in Iraq (2005), widely considered one of the most influential anti-war books to come out of the Iraq conflict. Rita's photographs and her writings about photography, art, and war have been published and exhibited worldwide, and are in major corporate and museum collections. From 2010 to 2016 she served as Associate Professor in the History of Photojournalism and Documentary Photography at the University of Toronto. She is represented by the Stephen Bulger Gallery for art, and by Green Planet Films for film. Stay Connected: Rita Leistner Website: http://ritaleistner.com/ Forest for the Trees Website: https://www.forestforthetreesdocumentary.com/ Rita Leistner Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ritaleistner/ Rita Leistner Twitter: https://twitter.com/ritaleistner/ Stephen Bulger Gallery Website: https://www.bulgergallery.com/artists/45-rita-leistner/overview/ Green Planet Films Website: https://greenplanetfilms.org/products/forest-for-the-trees?_pos=1&_sid=90a01a45d&_ss=r Canadian photographer Lorraine Gilbert: https://www.lorrainegilbert.com/
Michael Clark Rockefeller (born May 18, 1938; disappeared November 19, 1961) was a member of the Rockefeller family. He was the son of New York Governor and later U.S. Vice President Nelson Rockefeller, a grandson of American financier John D. Rockefeller Jr. and a great-grandson of Standard Oil co-founder John D. Rockefeller Sr. Rockefeller disappeared during an expedition in the Asmat region of southwestern Netherlands New Guinea, which is now a part of the Indonesian province of South Papua. * * * DISCLAIMER: This episode contains explicit content. Parental guidance is advised for children under the age of 18. Listen at your own discretion. #crimehub #truecrime #truecrimepodcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
There are many different ways to look at culture, and today we take a geographic approach, to distinguish people who live in rural mountain and hilly settings from those of the wider plains and urban areas. Our focus is the country of Romania, where we'll explore the rustic landscape of small farms, hand tilled fields, and local communities that still identify with the working methods and traditions of the past. Along the way, we'll follow the cyclical work of farmers and shepherds, gain insight into the Orthodox faith, explore vibrant holiday celebrations, and reveal unique rituals with pagan roots. In this fourth installment of our monthly series, Picturing World Cultures, we speak with Daniel Rosca, a Romanian photographer and travel guide specialized in photographic, cultural, and genealogical tours. As a child, Daniel experienced the age-old traditions of rural Romania first-hand during time spent on his grandparent's farm. Following university studies, he spent four years abroad, working in youth development, consulting, and corporate social responsibility. After living in Brussels, Warsaw, Istanbul, and Cairo, and travelling to another 40 countries on four continents, Daniel decided travel should become his full-time job. He chose to return to his homeland in 2011, where he founded Romania Photo Tours and True Romania Tours, to help curious travelers immerse themselves in—and capture images of—old-world Romanian culture. In summary, to quote the motto of his photo tour site: Veni, Vidi, Click! If you haven't already listened, prior episodes of our podcast series Picturing World Cultures can be accessed at the links below: Wayne Quilliam discussing Australia's indigenous communities Kiana Hayeri reflecting on her work in Iran and Afghanistan Joshua Irwandi sheds light on his documentation of Indonesia's Asmat region Guest: Daniel Rosca Episode Timeline: 2:07: The blend of various cultures and influences that make up Romanian culture, geographic distinctions between regions based on mountains, hills, and plains, Romania's historic regions, plus the country's widespread agricultural focus. 9:41: Common misconceptions about Romania: dispelling inaccuracies about Dracula and Romania's communist past, plus Romania's current strengths in tech, IT, and engineering. 12:34: Special considerations, both general and cultural, when photographing people in different regions, making pictures of the Roma, military, or police, plus Romania's strict policies that prohibit driving after even a sip of alcohol. 17:44: Romanian agricultural traditions of scything, haymaking, horse carts, blacksmiths, shepherding, plus the art of traditional egg painting. 23:24: Forging a human connection with local villagers and craftspeople, etiquette and logistics when making pictures, plus the issue of obtaining model releases for portraits. 30:14: Daniel's go-to photo gear: Nikon Z6 mirrorless and a 24-70 mm f/2.8 lens, the benefits to carrying a flash, plus recommendations for packing and benefits to traveling light 34:08: Episode Break 35:10: Romanian Orthodox churches, regional differences in appearance, rules of etiquette and respectful behavior when photographing, plus the many denominations of Orthodoxy, and details about holiday schedules. 44:42: Meaning of the word Orthodox, distinctions between Orthodox and Catholic faiths, plus Romania's Lutheran heritage, and fortified churches of Transylvania. 47:11: Romanian bear dance festivals of Moldova over New Year's, the festival's pagan roots, tips for getting good pictures by interacting and considering the background first, plus other year end celebrations 54:20: Romanian Easter traditions, a candle lit in Jerusalem on Easter morning and flown to all Romanian Orthodox churches, breaking the Lenten fast, plus Romania's little-known focus on vegan foods. 1:00:58: Romania's Dracula lure, distinguishing true cultural history from the literary myth, useful resources for more background about Romania, plus details about Daniel's genealogical tours. 57:22: Daniel Rosca answers our Picturing World Cultures Visual Questionnaire. Guest Bio: Daniel Rosca is a Romanian photographer and tour guide specializing in photographic, cultural, and genealogical tours. As a child, he spent a lot of time at his grandparent's subsistence farm and experienced many of the traditions of rural Romania. After university and four years abroad, he realized how interesting rural Romania and its traditions are and decided to return to his native country to help curious travelers discover them as well. Before setting down roots in travel, Daniel worked in youth development, consulting, as well as in corporate social responsibility for Microsoft. After living and working in Brussels, Warsaw, Istanbul, and Cairo, and travelling to another 40 countries on four continents, he decided travel should become his full-time job, in the country where he feels most connected. He founded Romania Photo Tours and True Romania Tours in 2011. In summary, to quote the motto of his photo tour site: Veni, Vidi, Click! Where click is not only about clicking the shutter, but also about clicking with the culture. Stay Connected: Romania Photo Tours Website: https://romania-photo-tours.com/ True Romania Tours Website: https://true-romania.tours/ Romania Photo Tours Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/romaniaphototours/ Romania Photo Tours Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/touroperatorRomaniaPhotoTours True Romania Tours Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TrueRomaniaTours/ Romania Photo Tours X: https://twitter.com/photo_romania True Romania Tours X: https://twitter.com/TRomaniaTours True Romania Tours Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/trueromaniatours/ Romanian photographer Sorin Onisor: https://www.instagram.com/sorin_onisor/
While Joshua Irwandi was born and raised in Indonesia, the early pictures he made during his first visit to the region of Asmat, in the province of West Papua, were less than satisfying to him. Yet his fascination with the people and the place stuck, inspiring him to embark on the long-term project Not a Blank Canvas. In this third installment of our monthly series, Picturing World Cultures, we speak with Irwandi about his experiences documenting the people and landscape of Asmat, which offers a window into long-held traditions and the sweeping changes he's observed there over the past 10 years. Listen in as Irwandi describes how tapping into the region's rich history through museum collections holding Asmat art proved an important part of his background research. We also discuss the connections he forged with the local Catholic church, and how the many years an American missionary spent learning about and embracing local ways led to a blending of Catholic celebrations and iconography with traditional Asmat feasts. Contrary to western holidays, Asmat feasts are celebrated for months on end, and Joshua sheds light on their mystical origins through dreams, and the performative rituals that he was privileged to witness and photograph. In equal measure, he touches on the changing roles of a people who are essentially subsistence hunter gatherers within contemporary society, and the recent effects of transmigration and gentrification on the region's native inhabitants, which also forms a part of his documentation. Self-described as a naturally shy person, Irwandi's approach to making pictures for this project is to play the long game, while planning for longer visits that allow him to be a “constant observer,” as he describes it. “I don't pretend I have all the knowledge,” he says. “But I guess it's easier to come and connect with the locals when you walk in like a new blank piece of book, wanting to learn, rather than assume that you know about them already.” If you haven't already heard them, prior episodes of our podcast series Picturing World Cultures can be accessed at the links below: Wayne Quilliam discussing Australia's indigenous communities: https://www.bhphotovideo.com/explora/podcasts/photography/picturing-world-cultures-wayne-quilliam-australiatasmania Kiana Hayeri reflecting on her work in Iran and Afghanistan: https://www.bhphotovideo.com/explora/podcasts/photography/picturing-world-cultures-kiana-hayeri-iran-afghanistan Guest: Joshua Irwandi Above photograph © Joshua Irwandi For more information on our guest and the gear he uses, see: https://blogd7.bhphotovideo.com/explora/podcasts/photography/picturing-world-cultures-joshua-irwandi-indonesia Stay Connected: Joshua Irwandi Website: https://www.joshuairwandi.com/ Joshua Irwandi Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/joshirwandi/ Joshua Irwandi Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/joshua.irwandi/ Joshua Irwandi X: https://twitter.com/joshirwandi/ Asmat Museum of Culture and Progress: https://asmatmuseum.org/en/ Joshua Irwandi National Geographic Explorers Page: https://explorer-directory.nationalgeographic.org/joshua-irwandi Joshua Irwandi's story for The Globe and Mail: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/world/article-how-to-move-a-capital-city-an-exclusive-look-at-indonesias-plan-to/ Pulitzer Prize page for Irwandi's Photo The Human Cost of COVID-19: https://www.pulitzer.org/finalists/joshua-irwandi-freelance-photographer-national-geographic
Marilyn Adolph Scarabin gives an update on the giant 50 lbs. over-the-limit package that Helen Mae and the sisters sent. A great camera that D.D. wanted. So much bubble gum and balloons which she'll save most for Christmas instead of giving the kids all of it at once. Included too were many new cassette tapes to record on instead of recycyling the ones from Louisiana. Jason and Deron thank everyone for what they sent. Two-year old Josh Scarabin talks and says he went to Portsite. Louis M. "D.D." enjoyed getting all the "junk" but were really a bunch of "goodies" including some Milky Ways and Snickers. Marilyn and Jason smacking gum. Josh kept wanted to talk but then wouldn't. Happy to hear Saints won 4 preseason games - as usual. Time-Picayune is delivered over there two weeks late. Tell his family hello including Happy Birthday to his dad and sister Judy Willig. Said Marilyn seems to be doing ok despite Carolyn Bergeron reading her handwriting that she's "depressed." Thanked Uncle Emmett, Aunt Yvonne and Aunt Annie. Josh has a stone ax. Marilyn explains a visit from Don Richardson who was a missionary that bought machetes and tools for the native Asmat and Sawi tribes who were cannibals and they didn't kill him. Marilyn explains the tradition of eating their first born and breast-feeding pig then do the opposite for second born. Pig tusks through their noses. Natives digging in the garbage. Marilyn feels sympathy towards them. Josh tells MawMaw he ate some strawberry ice cream. Grateful for everything. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jason-scarabin/message
21 novembre 1961. Michael C. Rockefeller, vingt-trois ans, jeune héritier de la richissime famille Rockefeller, disparaît lors d'une expédition en Nouvelle-Guinée néerlandaise. Le jeune homme avait pour mission d'acheter des œuvres d'art tribales de l'ethnie Asmat destinées aux collections du musée d'Art primitif de son père, Nelson Rockefeller, gouverneur de New York. Alors que des millions de dollars sont investis dans la recherche de sa dépouille une rumeur se répand : Michael Rockefeller aurait tué puis dévoré par une tribu primitive de chasseurs cannibales, les Asmat de Papouasie...
REDIFF - 21 novembre 1961. Michael C. Rockefeller, vingt-trois ans, jeune héritier de la richissime famille Rockefeller, disparaît lors d'une expédition en Nouvelle-Guinée néerlandaise. Le jeune homme avait pour mission d'acheter des œuvres d'art tribales de l'ethnie Asmat destinées aux collections du musée d'Art primitif de son père, Nelson Rockefeller, gouverneur de New York. Alors que des millions de dollars sont investis dans la recherche de sa dépouille une rumeur se répand : Michael Rockefeller aurait tué puis dévoré par une tribu primitive de chasseurs cannibales, les Asmat de Papouasie... Retrouvez tous les jours en podcast le décryptage d'un faits divers, d'un crime ou d'une énigme judiciaire par Jean-Alphonse Richard, entouré de spécialistes, et de témoins d'affaires criminelles. Ecoutez L'heure du Crime du 02 août 2023 avec Jean-Alphonse Richard.
REDIFF - 21 novembre 1961. Michael C. Rockefeller, vingt-trois ans, jeune héritier de la richissime famille Rockefeller, disparaît lors d'une expédition en Nouvelle-Guinée néerlandaise. Le jeune homme avait pour mission d'acheter des œuvres d'art tribales de l'ethnie Asmat destinées aux collections du musée d'Art primitif de son père, Nelson Rockefeller, gouverneur de New York. Alors que des millions de dollars sont investis dans la recherche de sa dépouille une rumeur se répand : Michael Rockefeller aurait tué puis dévoré par une tribu primitive de chasseurs cannibales, les Asmat de Papouasie... Retrouvez tous les jours en podcast le décryptage d'un faits divers, d'un crime ou d'une énigme judiciaire par Jean-Alphonse Richard, entouré de spécialistes, et de témoins d'affaires criminelles. Ecoutez L'heure du Crime du 02 août 2023 avec Jean-Alphonse Richard.
Jokowi Resmikan Bandar Udara Ewer di Asmat, Papua Selatan | Dirjen Hubud: Bandar Udara Ewer Kini Bisa Layani Pesawat ATR-72 | Penyisihan AFF U-19: Timnas Putri RI Lumat Timor Leste 7-0 *Kami ingin mendengar saran dan komentar kamu terkait podcast yang baru saja kamu simak, melalui surel ke podcast@kbrprime.id
Grab a beer and join us tonight as we cover the disappearance of Michael Rockefeller! We'll start by covering the beliefs of the Asmat people, and where they live. Then we'll introduce Michael Rockefeller, his disappearance, and the investigation into what possibly happened to him. https://www.necronomipod.com https://www.patreon.com/necronomipod Sponsored by BetterHelp: https://www.betterhelp.com/necro Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What happened to Michael Rockefeller? The heir to the fortune went to New Guinea to document the Asmat tribe and has never been seen again. Was he lost, accepted into the tribe or eaten? Chris tells us all about it (Does he know more than he's letting on?)! Have you accepted the Flying Spaghetti Monster into your life? Find out about what makes a Pastafarian and how to follow the way of the noodle. Zach has all the savory details. Catch up on some World Records and find out about someone who isn't going to be able to perform at their own "No Snowflakes" Tour. Thanks for coming back! Follow and subscribe!! DON'T PASTOVER THIS EPISODE!!! Facebook: ENTER NAME HERE Instagram: @enternameherepodcast Email: enternameherepodcast@gmail.com
21 novembre 1961. Michael C. Rockefeller, vingt-trois ans, jeune héritier de la richissime famille Rockefeller, disparaît lors d'une expédition en Nouvelle-Guinée néerlandaise. Le jeune homme avait pour mission d'acheter des œuvres d'art tribales de l'ethnie Asmat destinées aux collections du musée d'Art primitif de son père, Nelson Rockefeller, gouverneur de New York. Alors que des millions de dollars sont investis dans la recherche de sa dépouille une rumeur se répand : Michael Rockefeller aurait tué puis dévoré par une tribu primitive de chasseurs cannibales, les Asmat de Papouasie... Retrouvez tous les jours en podcast le décryptage d'un faits divers, d'un crime ou d'une énigme judiciaire par Jean-Alphonse Richard, entouré de spécialistes, et de témoins d'affaires criminelles. Ecoutez L'heure du Crime du 23 mars 2023 avec Jean-Alphonse Richard.
21 novembre 1961. Michael C. Rockefeller, vingt-trois ans, jeune héritier de la richissime famille Rockefeller, disparaît lors d'une expédition en Nouvelle-Guinée néerlandaise. Le jeune homme avait pour mission d'acheter des œuvres d'art tribales de l'ethnie Asmat destinées aux collections du musée d'Art primitif de son père, Nelson Rockefeller, gouverneur de New York. Alors que des millions de dollars sont investis dans la recherche de sa dépouille une rumeur se répand : Michael Rockefeller aurait tué puis dévoré par une tribu primitive de chasseurs cannibales, les Asmat de Papouasie... Retrouvez tous les jours en podcast le décryptage d'un faits divers, d'un crime ou d'une énigme judiciaire par Jean-Alphonse Richard, entouré de spécialistes, et de témoins d'affaires criminelles. Ecoutez L'heure du Crime du 23 mars 2023 avec Jean-Alphonse Richard.
Sonya Bara adalah seorang penyanyi yang berasal dari Asmat, Papua. Suara emasnya mampu memukau juri X-Factor Indonesia 2021. Kebanggannya dengan daerah ia tunjukkan dengan mengenakan mahkota Suku Asmat yang terbuat dari bulu kuskus. Saat menjelang babak final sebuah kompetisi ia merasa tak nyaman di mulutnya. Jangankan untuk bernyanyi, menelan makanan saja susah baginya. Ia pun berdoa sebelum naik ke atas panggung. Keajaiban Tuhan pun muncul saat itu. Bagaimana kisah selengkapnya? Selamat datang di Rumah Podcast! Sonya Bara - F**king Flowers (Wrap Wall Remix) --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rumahpodcast/message
November 19, 1961, Michael Rockefeller went missing in the Asmat region of then southwestern Netherlands New Guinea. A two-week investigation, involving ships, airplanes, helicopters, and an intense foot search ensued, but Michael was never seen again… or was he? Rumors flew around that he had assimilated, drowned, that he had been killed, and even worse, that he was eaten by a local tribe of cannibals. What happened to Michael Rockefeller?Become a PATRON and help us to make content and go crazy places: https://www.patreon.com/evppodcast Connect with us on social media: YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvpS_7TZj8aq1Pzst7ljG6wINSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/everythingvaguelyparanormal/ FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/everythingvaguelyparanormal TWITTER: https://twitter.com/evppodcast
We're back, babies! After taking a week off to rest and recuperate, Monique jumps right in with the various hauntings of “Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition,” including her personal experience when she visited the exhibition in 2009. Then Amy dives into the mysterious disappearance of Michael Rockefeller. Did he drown? Was he cannibalized? Or did he just start a new life with the Asmat people? If you liked this episode, please take a moment to rate, review, or subscribe. Edited by: LNC Sound ~ @lncsound
November 19, 1961. Netherlands, New Guinea. Michael Rockefeller, son of former US Vice President Nelson Rockefeller, went on an expedition to New Guinea to study the Asmat peoples and to collect art from them. On November 19. 1961 he disappeared after his canoe overturned. With him was a Dutch anthropologist named René Wassing who was rescued hours later. Did Michael Rockefeller drown? Or did something far more sinister happen to him?Carl HoffmanSavage Harvest: A Tale of Cannibals, Colonialism, and Michael Rockefeller's Tragic Quest for Primitive Art https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/What-Really-Happened-to-Michael-Rockefeller-180949813/Get bonus content from Generation Why at: patreon.com/generationwhyListen ad free with Wondery+. Join Wondery+ for exclusives, binges, early access, and ad free listening. Available in the Wondery App. https://wondery.app.link/generationwhy.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The Asmat are an indigenous people of Indonesian Papua and are renowned for their artistic carving flair and complex life-cycle rituals. They also have big ambitions that reach as far as the Vatican. Over the past five decades, pressures from the state, religious authorities, and the global art market, have led to profound cultural changes and a widespread sense of predicament, dysphoria and disempowerment among the Asmat. In this episode of SSEAC Stories, Dr Natali Pearson is joined by Dr Roberto Costa to discuss the social changes experienced by the Asmat people, and the material and ethical alternatives they are developing in response to a wide range of socio-cultural, religious, and ecological predicaments. About Roberto Costa: Roberto Costa (PhD in Anthropology, 2021) currently works as a sessional academic at the Department of Anthropology at the University of Sydney and the School of Social Sciences at Macquarie University. He has published in the areas of politics, religion, ethics, materiality and human-non-human relations, mainly on his research in Indonesia and Papua/Melanesia. His research interests also include digital activism, phenomenology, and visual and sensory anthropology, the latter stemming from his prior educational formation as a musician. His present project focuses on rewriting his doctoral thesis into a book. In his doctoral research, he looked at the efforts of the Asmat, a people group in the south of Indonesian Papua, to actualise material and ethical alternatives to socio-cultural, religious and ecological predicaments. For more information or to browse additional resources, visit the Sydney Southeast Asia Centre's website: www.sydney.edu.au/sseac. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
The Asmat are an indigenous people of Indonesian Papua and are renowned for their artistic carving flair and complex life-cycle rituals. They also have big ambitions that reach as far as the Vatican. Over the past five decades, pressures from the state, religious authorities, and the global art market, have led to profound cultural changes and a widespread sense of predicament, dysphoria and disempowerment among the Asmat. In this episode of SSEAC Stories, Dr Natali Pearson is joined by Dr Roberto Costa to discuss the social changes experienced by the Asmat people, and the material and ethical alternatives they are developing in response to a wide range of socio-cultural, religious, and ecological predicaments. About Roberto Costa: Roberto Costa (PhD in Anthropology, 2021) currently works as a sessional academic at the Department of Anthropology at the University of Sydney and the School of Social Sciences at Macquarie University. He has published in the areas of politics, religion, ethics, materiality and human-non-human relations, mainly on his research in Indonesia and Papua/Melanesia. His research interests also include digital activism, phenomenology, and visual and sensory anthropology, the latter stemming from his prior educational formation as a musician. His present project focuses on rewriting his doctoral thesis into a book. In his doctoral research, he looked at the efforts of the Asmat, a people group in the south of Indonesian Papua, to actualise material and ethical alternatives to socio-cultural, religious and ecological predicaments. For more information or to browse additional resources, visit the Sydney Southeast Asia Centre's website: www.sydney.edu.au/sseac. Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/southeast-asian-studies
The Asmat are an indigenous people of Indonesian Papua and are renowned for their artistic carving flair and complex life-cycle rituals. They also have big ambitions that reach as far as the Vatican. Over the past five decades, pressures from the state, religious authorities, and the global art market, have led to profound cultural changes and a widespread sense of predicament, dysphoria and disempowerment among the Asmat. In this episode of SSEAC Stories, Dr Natali Pearson is joined by Dr Roberto Costa to discuss the social changes experienced by the Asmat people, and the material and ethical alternatives they are developing in response to a wide range of socio-cultural, religious, and ecological predicaments. About Roberto Costa: Roberto Costa (PhD in Anthropology, 2021) currently works as a sessional academic at the Department of Anthropology at the University of Sydney and the School of Social Sciences at Macquarie University. He has published in the areas of politics, religion, ethics, materiality and human-non-human relations, mainly on his research in Indonesia and Papua/Melanesia. His research interests also include digital activism, phenomenology, and visual and sensory anthropology, the latter stemming from his prior educational formation as a musician. His present project focuses on rewriting his doctoral thesis into a book. In his doctoral research, he looked at the efforts of the Asmat, a people group in the south of Indonesian Papua, to actualise material and ethical alternatives to socio-cultural, religious and ecological predicaments. For more information or to browse additional resources, visit the Sydney Southeast Asia Centre's website: www.sydney.edu.au/sseac. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/anthropology
The Asmat are an indigenous people of Indonesian Papua and are renowned for their artistic carving flair and complex life-cycle rituals. They also have big ambitions that reach as far as the Vatican. Over the past five decades, pressures from the state, religious authorities, and the global art market, have led to profound cultural changes and a widespread sense of predicament, dysphoria and disempowerment among the Asmat. In this episode of SSEAC Stories, Dr Natali Pearson is joined by Dr Roberto Costa to discuss the social changes experienced by the Asmat people, and the material and ethical alternatives they are developing in response to a wide range of socio-cultural, religious, and ecological predicaments. About Roberto Costa: Roberto Costa (PhD in Anthropology, 2021) currently works as a sessional academic at the Department of Anthropology at the University of Sydney and the School of Social Sciences at Macquarie University. He has published in the areas of politics, religion, ethics, materiality and human-non-human relations, mainly on his research in Indonesia and Papua/Melanesia. His research interests also include digital activism, phenomenology, and visual and sensory anthropology, the latter stemming from his prior educational formation as a musician. His present project focuses on rewriting his doctoral thesis into a book. In his doctoral research, he looked at the efforts of the Asmat, a people group in the south of Indonesian Papua, to actualise material and ethical alternatives to socio-cultural, religious and ecological predicaments. For more information or to browse additional resources, visit the Sydney Southeast Asia Centre's website: www.sydney.edu.au/sseac. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/art
The Asmat are an indigenous people of Indonesian Papua and are renowned for their artistic carving flair and complex life-cycle rituals. They also have big ambitions that reach as far as the Vatican. Over the past five decades, pressures from the state, religious authorities, and the global art market, have led to profound cultural changes and a widespread sense of predicament, dysphoria and disempowerment among the Asmat. In this episode of SSEAC Stories, Dr Natali Pearson is joined by Dr Roberto Costa to discuss the social changes experienced by the Asmat people, and the material and ethical alternatives they are developing in response to a wide range of socio-cultural, religious, and ecological predicaments. About Roberto Costa: Roberto Costa (PhD in Anthropology, 2021) currently works as a sessional academic at the Department of Anthropology at the University of Sydney and the School of Social Sciences at Macquarie University. He has published in the areas of politics, religion, ethics, materiality and human-non-human relations, mainly on his research in Indonesia and Papua/Melanesia. His research interests also include digital activism, phenomenology, and visual and sensory anthropology, the latter stemming from his prior educational formation as a musician. His present project focuses on rewriting his doctoral thesis into a book. In his doctoral research, he looked at the efforts of the Asmat, a people group in the south of Indonesian Papua, to actualise material and ethical alternatives to socio-cultural, religious and ecological predicaments. For more information or to browse additional resources, visit the Sydney Southeast Asia Centre's website: www.sydney.edu.au/sseac.
The Asmat are an indigenous people of Indonesian Papua and are renowned for their artistic carving flair and complex life-cycle rituals. They also have big ambitions that reach as far as the Vatican. Over the past five decades, pressures from the state, religious authorities, and the global art market, have led to profound cultural changes and a widespread sense of predicament, dysphoria and disempowerment among the Asmat. In this episode of SSEAC Stories, Dr Natali Pearson is joined by Dr Roberto Costa to discuss the social changes experienced by the Asmat people, and the material and ethical alternatives they are developing in response to a wide range of socio-cultural, religious, and ecological predicaments. About Roberto Costa: Roberto Costa (PhD in Anthropology, 2021) currently works as a sessional academic at the Department of Anthropology at the University of Sydney and the School of Social Sciences at Macquarie University. He has published in the areas of politics, religion, ethics, materiality and human-non-human relations, mainly on his research in Indonesia and Papua/Melanesia. His research interests also include digital activism, phenomenology, and visual and sensory anthropology, the latter stemming from his prior educational formation as a musician. His present project focuses on rewriting his doctoral thesis into a book. In his doctoral research, he looked at the efforts of the Asmat, a people group in the south of Indonesian Papua, to actualise material and ethical alternatives to socio-cultural, religious and ecological predicaments. For more information or to browse additional resources, visit the Sydney Southeast Asia Centre's website: www.sydney.edu.au/sseac. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/australian-and-new-zealand-studies
Op een ochtend in augustus 1961 vertrekt Michael Rockefeller, achterkleinzoon van de rijkste man ter wereld, samen met antropoloog René Wassink en twee lokale gidsen in een van twee kano's geknutselde catamaran vol camera's, geluidsapparatuur en tabak. De zee wordt ruw, de boot slaat om en de twee gidsen zwemmen naar de kant. Rockefeller en zijn begeleider, Wassink blijven achter op de boot. . Na een dag besluit Rockefeller dat hij ook naar de kant gaat zwemmen. René Wassink probeert het hem uit zijn hoofd te praten, maar Rockefeller is ervan overtuigd dat hij makkelijk de kant kan halen. Hij neemt twee lege jerry cans mee als drijvers en zwemt weg. Daarna is niets meer van hem vernomen. . De Nederlandse regering houdt het stug op een ongeluk, maar al snel beginnen er geruchten dat de jonge Amerikaan zou zijn gedood, geslacht en opgegeten door lokale kannibalen... Ik las voor deze aflevering, ondermeer, het boek De Harvard Peabody Expeditie van Jan Broekhuijse en daarnaast het boek Savage Harvest van Carl Hoffman. Allebei aanraders!
Da Michael Rockefeller blev til middag hos Asmat-folket var det nok ikke lige det, han havde tænkt. Michael, der var søn af rigmanden og senere vicepræsident, Nelson Rockefeller, havde altid haft en glødende interesse for guineiske stammefolk og deres kunst. Derfor besluttede han sig i 1961 for at besøge Asmat-folket på den vestlige side af Ny Guinea. Et folk, der tidligere havde ry for at være hovedjægere og kannibaler. Hvad Rockefeller ikke vidste var, at han vadede direkte ind i et lokalt hævnopgør mellem de indfødte og den lokale, hollandske kolonimagt. Et opgør, der måske betød at Michael endte med at blive hovedret for en sulten stamme... Afsnittet er optaget live på Bremen Teater d. 25. juni 2022. Dagens Øl: Polly 2020, Mikkeller Baghaven Som I nok har hørt, så ophører PIXI-formatet med at eksistere fra afsnit 100 og frem. Det betyder at dagens to afsnit er de allersidste PIXI-fortællinger, som vi kender dem. Fremadrettet vil der kun være nummerede afsnit hver uge. Men bare rolig - PIXI vender stærkt tilbage i et splinternyt, skarpere format inden længe
Dylan struggles at the waterfall after the Asmat perform rituals. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jason-scarabin/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jason-scarabin/support
Podcast Intro: Immunity refers to an organism's ability to withstand a specific virus or poison through the use of specialized antibodies or sensitized white blood cells. We prefer to sacrifice healthy selections for the sake of saving time in this fast-paced atmosphere where fast foods are abundant. On the other hand, what are the negative consequences of these actions? With many businesses competing with one another, and with the high demand for food relative to the continuous growth in population, companies are now churning out processed and cheap food rapidly. The lack of education and the rise of daily expenses on necessities, such as food, allowed people to compromise. Now, the pandemic accelerated and made things worse. What are the factors and effects that unhealthy food consumption leads to? Tune in as Dr. Emeran Meyer discusses the gut-immune relationship in this episode. What you'll get out of tuning in: What is the “One Health Concept” What is the importance of the soil microbiome for plant and human health What are the mind-gut microbiome system and its role in health and disease What is the key to longevity and good health How the microbiome determines the strength of your immune system and your immune resistance. How to increase the abundance of microbes in your gut. How lifestyle determines your chances of surviving pandemics that are about to come in the future. Links/CTA: Emeran Mayer, MD Instagram: @emeranmayer Youtube Channel: emeranmayermd The Mind Gut Connection book, Harper Wave 2016 The Gut Immune Connection book, Harper Wave 2021 Highlights: Cate talks about the case of Covid and an Elderly with regards to Microbiome Cate talks about perspective, our beliefs influence how we think and how we solve problems. Cate talks about the direct correlation between chronic systemic inflammation and the severity of symptoms Timestamps: 12:26 - Metabolic Syndrome 16:14 - Science and Practice of Mind-Body Interactions 22:23 - Cytokine Storm 27:10 - The “Gut Immune Connection” by Emeran Mayer 28:55 - Why do people fear when they hear “virus or bacteria” 33:41 - Scientific vs. Empirical Evidence 37:05 - Ancient vs. Modern Concepts 40:53 - Learning from the Ancient Sages Quotes: “The fact that today, we see this increasing prevalence of autoimmune diseases and allergies and food sensitivities. Many people think it has a lot to do with the altered interaction we have, as infants in a much more sterile environment. Where we have banned microbes from the time of deliveries, or C sections and sterile hospital environments, to antibiotics early on, prematurely born babies ending up in intensive care units being loaded with antibiotics for four weeks sometimes.” “Early in life in terms of the natural exposure, Homo sapiens have had to their environment, including going through the birth canal, and picking up some of the good bacteria in the birth canal, which helps start to build the baby immune system is even like upon injection, right from the mom's body to then what we do. And if we look back, historically, there was a lot of skin-to-skin contact with newborns. There's a lot of mixing of the environment with the infant. And that helped create a baseline immune system, an innate immune system that was stronger.” “When we look in any indigenous culture, usually there's some relationship with a specific type of traditional fermented foods. And so in ayurvedic medicine, it was always considered to pacify Vata, which is the wind force, which creates the issues primarily in the nervous system first, and then the digestive system second, and it's like the nerves that upset the digestive system, like just being nervous, being anxious, being worried more of the people that are on the lighter side have less consistency with digestive capacity.” “The immune activation happens in the gut. So, these microbes are only microns away from immune cells. And it's the only separation not even from the real physical barrier, but from this mucous layer produced by some cells in the gut in the colon. And so, the margin for error is pretty small, and if you change that mucous layer just a little bit, you will already get contact between microbes and these immune sensors.” “People always talk about how we need to boost our immune system. With COVID-19, it's the opposite. You want to prevent this excessive response. An excessive response happens because the immune cells are programmed in a non-adaptive way in their passage through the gut.” Guest BIO: Emeran Mayer Dr. Mayer is a Distinguished Research Professor in the Department of Medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, and Executive Director of the G Oppenheimer Center for Neurobiology of Stress & Resilience. He has been one of the pioneers in the science and practice of brain gut microbiome interactions with applications in a wide range of diseases in gastrointestinal, psychiatric, and neurological disorders. He has published close to 400 scientific papers and several books and has received multiple awards. In addition to his academic interests, Mayer has a longstanding interest in ancient healing traditions and has been involved in documentary film productions about the Yanomami people in the Orinoco region of Venezuela, and the Asmat people in Irian Jaya. He has recently co-produced the award-winning documentary “In Search of Balance” and is working on a new documentary “Interconnected Planet”. He is a strong believer in Buddhist philosophy and got married in a Tibetan monastery by Choekyi Nyima Rinpoche in Kathmandu. He regularly pursues meditative practices. He has spoken at UCLA TEDx on the Mysterious Origins of Gut Feelings in 2015 and has been interviewed on National Public Radio, PBS, and by many national and international media outlets including the Los Angeles and New York Times, the Atlantic, and Time magazine. He has appeared on numerous podcasts, including Lewis Howes' The School of Greatness, Tom Bilyeu's Impact Theory, and Mark Hyman's The Doctor's Pharmacy. He is the author of the 2016 bestselling book The Mind Gut Connection published by Harper&Collins and translated into 16 languages. In his new book, The Gut Immune Connection, Mayer proposes a radical, unifying concept about the chronic non-communicable disease epidemic we are finding ourselves in. He discusses how changes in our diet, lifestyle, and the way we interact with the world during the last 75 years have led to a profound dysregulation of the community of trillions of microbes living in our gut, resulting in a progressive chronic activation of our immune system. This aberrant immune system activation is emerging as the root cause of our current epidemic of interrelated chronic diseases affecting every part of our body. In addition, it makes us more vulnerable to viral pandemics. He uses the One Health concept to explain the intricate interconnectedness between the microbes living in our gut, in the soil, the health of our plants, and our own health.
▶️ PENJUAL: Ini patung Asmat. Karya seni tradisional Papua. ▶️ BILLY: Ini dibuat dari kayu? ▶️ PENJUAL: Ya, patung ini dibuat dari kayu dan diukir dengan alat sederhana. ▶️ JANE: Ada yang lebih kecil tidak? ▶️ PENJUAL: Ada. Ada yang tingginya 50 cm (lima puluh sentimeter) ▶️ BILLY: Oh ya? Berapa harganya? ▶️ PENJUAL: Harganya Rp.100.000 (seratus ribu rupiah). ▶️ JANE: Boleh kurang? ▶️ PENJUAL: Wah, di sini harga pas. ▶️ JANE: Kalau boneka kayu yang pakai baju itu apa? ▶️ PENJUAL: Yang itu? Oh, itu wayang golek, boneka kayu dari Jawa Barat. Wayang berbaju pangsi dan bersarung itu bernama Cepot. ▶️ JANE: Wow, lucu sekali. Bagaimana, Bill, kamu ambil yang mana? ▶️ BILLY: Saya ambil patung Asmat saja. ▶️ JANE: Pak, kami ambil yang ini. ▶️ PENJUAL: Baiklah. Terima kasih. Datang lagi ya! ▶️ JANE: Ya.
En un entrevista amena que tuve con mi amigo Ricardo Asmat, él nos comparte su experiencia durante todos estos años en el ambito laboral y lo importante que es el conocimiento para la formación de uno mismo. Durante esta conversación que tuvimos, Ricardo me comentó todas las situaciones que tuvo que pasar para llegar al nivel que hoy en día tiene, siendo un empresario y a la vez un lider que sabe como manejar a su equipo de trabajo y a la vez tener esa visión para poder impactar en ellos. Además de visionar una nueva perspectiva para los clientes con los que trabaja en su emprendimiento. Aprendamos a vivir intensamente!.
Menurut Wikipedia, Michael Clark Rockefeller (18 Mei 1938 – diduga meninggal 19 November 1961) Dan dinyatakan meninggal secara resmi pada 1964. Michael menghilang selama ekspedisi di wilayah suku Asmat, tepatnya di barat daya Nugini Belanda (sekarang Provinsi Papua, Indonesia). Michael adalah anak kelima dari Nelson Rockefeller dan merupakan generasi keempat anggota Keluarga Rockefeller. Wait, Nelson Rockefeller? Yap, buat kalian yang suka sejarah mungkin udah ngga asing sama nama Nelson Rockefeller. Beliau adalah Wakil Presiden Amerika Serikat ke 41. Kakek buyut Michael adalah John D. Rockefeller, salah satu pria terkaya yang pernah ada. Buat kalian mau request atau cerita tentang pengalaman berhantu kalian. Bisa kirim lewat DM atau email. ------------------------------------------------------------------ Instagram : _ardiwibowo Email : mrardi157@gmail.com Youtube : Ardi Wibowo ------------------------------------------------------------------ Jangan lupa berlangganan yaaa…. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bermalam/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bermalam/support
Michael C. Rockefeller went missing in November of 1961 while travelling in Western Netherlands New Guinea. There have been many stories about what happened to Michael, such as he drowned, that he was eaten by predators, that he was rescued and held captive by tribespeople or that he was eaten by cannibals. However, reported sightings and recently discovered footage from 1969 of a tall, thin, white man within a group of 800+ tribesmen may hold the key to what really happened to Rockefeller. Join us as we delve into the story of Michael C. Rockefeller and his mysterious disappearance.
Riad Asmat, CEO of Air Asia Malaysia joined @therealashagill & @iamjasondesmond on #TheLITEBreakfast this morning to talk about the SOP's and the high volume of customers traveling during this travel bubble.
Guest Name and Bio: Emeran Mayer, MD Dr. Mayer is a Distinguished Research Professor in the Department of Medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Executive Director of the G Oppenheimer Center for Neurobiology of Stress & Resilience and Founding Director of the UCLA Brain Gut Microbiome Center. He has been one of the pioneers in the science and practice of brain gut microbiome interactions with applications in a wide range of diseases in gastrointestinal, psychiatric and neurological disorders. He has published more than 388 scientific papers and co-edited 3 scientific books. He is the recipient of the 2016 David McLean award from the American Psychosomatic Society and the 2017 Ismar Boas Medal from the German Society of Gastroenterology and Metabolic Disease. His current research interest is focused on the role of brain gut microbiome interactions in human diseases, including Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease, autism spectrum disorders, obesity and inflammatory bowel disease. In addition to his academic interests, Mayer has a longstanding interest in ancient healing traditions and affords them a level of respect rarely found in Western Medicine. He has been involved in documentary film productions about the Yanomami people in the Orinoco region of Venezuela, and the Asmat people in Irian Jaya. He has recently co-produced the award winning documentary “In Search of Balance” and is working on a new documentary “Interconnected Planet”. He is a strong believer in Buddhist philosophy, was a member of the UCLA Zen Center for several years, and got married in a Tibetan monastery by Choekyi Nyima Rinpoche in Kathmandu. He regularly pursues meditative practices. He has spoken at UCLA TEDx on the Mysterious Origins of Gut Feelings in 2015 and have been interviewed on National Public Radio, PBS and by many national and international media outlets including the Los Angeles and New York Times, Atlantic magazine and Stern and Spiegel Online. He is the author of the 2016 bestselling book The Mind Gut Connection published by Harper&Collins and translated in 16languages. In his recent book, The Gut Immune Connection, Mayer proposes a radical, unifying concept about the chronic disease epidemic we are finding ourselves in. He discusses how changes in our diet, lifestyle and the way we interact with the world during the last 75 years have led to a profound dysregulation of the community of trillions of microbes living in our gut, resulting in a progressive chronic activation of our immune system. This aberrant immune system activation is emerging as the root cause of our current epidemic of interrelated chronic diseases affecting every part of our body. In addition, it makes us more vulnerable to viral pandemics. He uses the One Health concept to explain the intricate interconnectedness between the microbes living in our gut, in the soil, the health of our plants and our own health. He proposes a solution to the chronic disease epidemic, which emphasizes the implementation of major lifestyle changes, and focuses on a radically different approach not only to our diet but to the world. What you will learn from this episode: 1) How the gut is connected to the immune system 2) How the gut is actually our first brain, not our second brain 3) How changes in the gut microbiome can lead to conditions like Parkinson's Disease and Alzheimer's disease 4) How the gut microbiome can impact mental health 5) How the serotonin in our gut microbiome can influence our health and how we feel How to learn more about our guest: emeranmayer.com uclacns.org microbiome.ucla.edu Facebook: @emeranamayer IG: #emeranamayer Linkedin: @emeranamayer Please enjoy, share, rate and review our podcast and help us bring the message about precision health care to the world!
SEMI TRUCK HITS STOPPED TRAFFIC 10 DEAD. On June 19th, along Interstate 65 in Alabama at mile post 138 near the bridge over Pigeon Creek was the location of a deadly scene. Ten people were killed, including 8 children, teenagers and 2 adults, when a semi truck failed to stop at a queue, as the result of a series of accidents. A second semi truck also failed to stop, which also struck vehicles. Initial reports said that 10 people were killed and 26 people were injured when rain from a tropical storm made the road slick and hard to navigate. But since then, there has been several lawsuits filed, claiming negligence on the part of the truck drivers and the trucking companies that are named as defendants. The report from the accident is described as a Hansen & Adkins tractor-trailer, caught up to a queue of vehicles, striking a 2020 Ford Explorer from behind, then veered left and struck the Tallapoosa County Girls Ranch van. The Hansen & Adkins tractor-trailer struck other vehicles and the left rail of the bridge before coming to a stop in the roadway, the NTSB report says. The Ford Explorer overturned and struck several other vehicles. Two passengers in the Ford Explorer died. Following those collisions, an Asmat tractor-trailer came upon the stopped vehicles, veered left, mounted the left bridge rail, and struck a Girls Ranch van, which wound up in the median between the two tractor-trailers. The van and other vehicles caught fire. The Beasley-Allen law firm in Montgomery is representing Mrs. Candice L. Gulley. “The defendants, in this case, were negligent and displayed a complete disregard for the lives of fellow travelers around them,” Allen said in the release. “As a result, 10 people died that day, including eight children who were trapped in a van driven by Gulley. Those children burned to death needlessly. It is hard to imagine a more tragic and gut-wrenching set of circumstances, which demand justice and accountability to the fullest measure.” A statement from Tom Terry who works for Hansen & Adkin is as follows “Our hearts go out to everyone involved in the tragic accidents of June 19th and those affected by them,” “We believe the investigations will show there was a series of near-simultaneous accidents that stopped traffic on the bridge and that were caused by a number of different factors, including heavy rains from the remnants of a tropical storm. We also believe that the investigations will show that our driver was traveling at or under the speed limit. Click here to read the full story. TalkCDL Interviews TalkCDL is once again looking for great people in trucking to interview. If you are somewhat tied to the trucking industry and have a great story or have a subject you would like to talk to us about on the show, contact us at Ruthann@TalkCDL.com SEMI TRUCK HITS STOPPED TRAFFIC 10 DEAD. National Carriers Trucking Company (Students, Solos Teams)Cocoon MDR the Ap that Pays TruckersJJ Keller the Truckers Best FriendTrucking news with ruthannMolesters, Truck parking scam, Trucking newsTrucking Back In The DayIs Trucking Getting Better
Michael Rockefeller only went to Asmat for the stripper poles, tell me I'm wrong.. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/What-Really-Happened-to-Michael-Rockefeller-180949813/
With a unique combination of researcher, doctor, and Buddhist practitioner, Dr. Emeran Mayer has been leading the movement to “bring the brain back into medicine” for the past 40 years. His work at the David Geffen School of Medicine has illumined the mysterious connection between the mind and the gut, which Mayer understands to be the body's "second brain". “The gut contains wisdom,” Mayer says, and we’d do well to pay attention to it. In his best-selling book, The Mind-Gut Connection: How the Astonishing Dialogue Taking Place in Our Bodies Impacts Health, Weight, and Mood, Mayer explains how microbes in the human gut outnumber human cells 10:1. Imagine a world of darkness, nearly void of oxygen, where 100 trillion microbe inhabitants have been learning the art of peaceful coexistence and perfecting the science of wordless communication for billions of years. This is the mysterious ecosystem of the gut. So when the brain sends signals to the gut and the gut sends signals to the brain in a two-way conversation, occurring 24-7 and even when we’re sleeping, this micro-ecosystem—influenced by what we eat, drink, think, feel, and inherit—functions as the most sophisticated information gathering organ in our bodies. It influences our overall health, moods, appetites, and personalities. Mayer grew up in the Bavarian Alps in a line of four generations of German confectionery storeowners. Until he was 17, he worked in the family business and made pastries and cakes for all sorts of occasions. He recounts: ”I started to associate the sweet aromas of chocolate and vanilla and other ingredients with the seasons and the major holidays, without conscious awareness that I was laying the blueprints for my future career studying the complex interactions between food, the mind, and the gut.” When it was time for Mayer to go to college, he agonized over the decision to follow in the family tradition or pursue other interests. Pro-and-con lists proving futile, he chose to follow his “gut feeling.” He studied science at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich and went on to Ludwig Maximilian University Medical School. Upon graduating, Mayer followed his passion in documentary filmmaking and traveled the world to study and film native healers in the Yanoama tribes of the Amazon rainforest and the Asmat people in current-day Papua New Guinea in Indonesia. Across cultures, he explored his interest in the gut-brain connection. At UCLA, Mayer runs the G. Oppenheimer Center for Neurobiology of Stress and Resilience and co-directs the Digestive Diseases Research Center (CURE). He has published more than 370 scientific papers, co-edited 3 scientific books, and received numerous awards, including the 2016 David McLean Award from the American Psychosomatic Society. His current research focuses on the role of brain-gut interactions in Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s, autism, obesity, and inflammatory bowel disease. Mayer co-produced the award-winning documentary “In Search of Balance,” an exploration of a new paradigm of health, science, and medicine, based on the interconnections between us and Nature. He is currently working on a new documentary, “Interconnected Planet,” and a forthcoming book, The Gut-Immune Connection. In addition to his intellectual pursuits, Mayer is a deep student of Buddhism. He was a member of the UCLA Zen Center for several years, and he and his wife were married by Choekyi Nyima Rinpoche in a Tibetan monastery in Kathmandu. He has also practiced other mind-based strategies like Ericksonian hypnosis and autogenic training, a relaxation-desensitization technique. Please join Andrew Kim and Cynthia Li in conversation with this pioneering doctor, scientist, and teacher.
With a unique combination of researcher, doctor, and Buddhist practitioner, Dr. Emeran Mayer has been leading the movement to “bring the brain back into medicine” for the past 40 years. His work at the David Geffen School of Medicine has illumined the mysterious connection between the mind and the gut, which Mayer understands to be the body's "second brain". “The gut contains wisdom,” Mayer says, and we’d do well to pay attention to it. In his best-selling book, The Mind-Gut Connection: How the Astonishing Dialogue Taking Place in Our Bodies Impacts Health, Weight, and Mood, Mayer explains how microbes in the human gut outnumber human cells 10:1. Imagine a world of darkness, nearly void of oxygen, where 100 trillion microbe inhabitants have been learning the art of peaceful coexistence and perfecting the science of wordless communication for billions of years. This is the mysterious ecosystem of the gut. So when the brain sends signals to the gut and the gut sends signals to the brain in a two-way conversation, occurring 24-7 and even when we’re sleeping, this micro-ecosystem—influenced by what we eat, drink, think, feel, and inherit—functions as the most sophisticated information gathering organ in our bodies. It influences our overall health, moods, appetites, and personalities. Mayer grew up in the Bavarian Alps in a line of four generations of German confectionery storeowners. Until he was 17, he worked in the family business and made pastries and cakes for all sorts of occasions. He recounts: ”I started to associate the sweet aromas of chocolate and vanilla and other ingredients with the seasons and the major holidays, without conscious awareness that I was laying the blueprints for my future career studying the complex interactions between food, the mind, and the gut.” When it was time for Mayer to go to college, he agonized over the decision to follow in the family tradition or pursue other interests. Pro-and-con lists proving futile, he chose to follow his “gut feeling.” He studied science at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich and went on to Ludwig Maximilian University Medical School. Upon graduating, Mayer followed his passion in documentary filmmaking and traveled the world to study and film native healers in the Yanoama tribes of the Amazon rainforest and the Asmat people in current-day Papua New Guinea in Indonesia. Across cultures, he explored his interest in the gut-brain connection. At UCLA, Mayer runs the G. Oppenheimer Center for Neurobiology of Stress and Resilience and co-directs the Digestive Diseases Research Center (CURE). He has published more than 370 scientific papers, co-edited 3 scientific books, and received numerous awards, including the 2016 David McLean Award from the American Psychosomatic Society. His current research focuses on the role of brain-gut interactions in Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s, autism, obesity, and inflammatory bowel disease. Mayer co-produced the award-winning documentary “In Search of Balance,” an exploration of a new paradigm of health, science, and medicine, based on the interconnections between us and Nature. He is currently working on a new documentary, “Interconnected Planet,” and a forthcoming book, The Gut-Immune Connection. In addition to his intellectual pursuits, Mayer is a deep student of Buddhism. He was a member of the UCLA Zen Center for several years, and he and his wife were married by Choekyi Nyima Rinpoche in a Tibetan monastery in Kathmandu. He has also practiced other mind-based strategies like Ericksonian hypnosis and autogenic training, a relaxation-desensitization technique. Please join Andrew Kim and Cynthia Li in conversation with this pioneering doctor, scientist, and teacher.
Diep in de jungle van Nieuw-Guinea leven de Asmat. Een inheems volk dat bekend staat om hun prachtige houtsnijwerk, maar ook om hun inmiddels verdwenen traditie van het koppensnellen. Conservator Wonu Veys van het Tropenmuseum laat je aan de hand van zes metershoge bisjpalen kennismaken met hun bijzondere cultuur.Beeld: Ben GrishaaverDe podcast Topstukken wordt je aangeboden door de VriendenLoterij, dé cultuurloterij van Nederland. Ontdek meer over deze podcast op topstukkendepodcast.nl.
AirAsia Malaysia's CEO, Riad Asmat joined Asha and JD on #TheLITEBreakfast this morning
Guest Name and Bio: Emeran Mayer, MD Emeran A Mayer is a Gastroenterologist, Neuroscientist and Professor in the Departments of Medicine and Psychiatry in the Division of Digestive Diseases at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. He is the Executive Director of the G. Oppenheimer Center for Neurobiology of Stress and Resilience at UCLA, and co-director of the CURE: Digestive Diseases Research Center. As one of the pioneers and leading researchers in the role of mind-brain-body interactions in health and chronic disease, his scientific contributions to U.S. national and international communities in the broad area of basic and translational enteric neurobiology with wide-ranging applications in clinical GI diseases and disorders is unparalleled. He has published more than 350 scientific papers, and co edited 3 books. He has published the bestselling book The Mind Gut Connection, and is currently working on a second book to be published in early 2021. He is the recipient of the 2016 David McLean award from the American Psychosomatic Society and the 2017 Ismar Boas Medal from the German Society of Gastroenterology and Metabolic Disease. His research interest is focused on the role of brain gut microbiome interactions in human diseases, including Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease, autism spectrum disorders, obesity and inflammatory bowel disease. Mayer has a longstanding interest in ancient healing traditions and affords them a level of respect rarely found in Western Medicine. He has been involved in documentary film productions about the Yanomami people in the Orinoco region of Venezuela, and the Asmat people in Irian Jaya. He has recently co produced the award winning documentary “In Search of Balance” and is working on a new documentary “Interconnected Planet”. He is a strong believer in Buddhist philosophy, was a member of the UCLA Zen Center for several years, and got married in a Tibetan monastery by Choekyi NyimaRinpoche in Kathmandu. He regularly pursues meditative practices. Dr. Mayer has been interviewed on National Public Radio, PBS and by many national and international media outlets including the Los AngelesTimes, Atlantic magazine and Stern and Spiegel Online. He has spoken at UCLA TEDx on the Mysterious Origins of Gut Feelings in 2015, and his bestsellingbook The Mind Gut Connection was published by Harper&Collins in July of 2016 and has been translated into twelve languages. What you will learn from this episode: 1) What the best diet for the gut microbiome is 2) How to optimize the mind-gut connection 3) What impacts food cravings and the desire to eat comfort foods 4) Which microbes are the most important to us 5) What can cause certain good bacteria to turn into bad or harmful bacteria in the gut microbiome How to learn more about our guest: emeranmayer.com uclacns.org microbiome.ucla.edu Facebook: @emeranamayer IG: @emeranamayer Linkedin: @emeranamayer Please enjoy, share, rate and review our podcast and help us bring the message about precision health care to the world!
Kool FM AG, Haiza, Muaz Bersama Tetamu Jemputan Riad Asmat (CEO) Air Asia Malaysia
What can we keep in this life? Ultimately we are called to give our lives away for God. Listen to an amazing interview with the Bruce family, serving among the Asmat people in the swamps of Papua among unreached people. You won't want to miss this amazing testimony in this show's special interview! Also hear some inspiration and other inspiring thoughts and testimonies of those who are giving their lives away for the Lord, for the lost, and treasuring up the things which will never fade away. You may not have riches or a platform of someone famous, but you might have five loaves and two fishes, and if you allow the Lord to use your life, just watch and see what He will do with it. Revelation 21:7-8"He who overcomes shall inherit all things, and I will be his God and he shall be My son. But the cowardly, unbelieving, abominable, murderers, sexually immoral, sorcerers, idolaters, and all liars shall have their part in the lake which burns with fire and brimstone, which is the second death.”Matthew 5:13-16“You are the salt of the earth; but if the salt loses its flavor, how shall it be seasoned? It is then good for nothing but to be thrown out and trampled underfoot by men. “You are the light of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden. Nor do they light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on a lampstand, and it gives light to all who are in the house. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven."Thank you for joining us on this episode of Spirit of Adoption Radio! Make sure to subscribe on the podcast platform of your choice so you won't miss next week's exciting episode!You can visit us at AdoptionAirfare.com/SOAR
Michael Rockefeller wanted to live the life of adventure & exploration, something far different from his well known wealthy family in New York. Michael would get the opportunity to join an expedition in the Asmat region of New Guinea, with the prospect of bringing back art from the headhunting & cannibalistic tribes of the Dani, to display at his fathers museum. In 1961, Michael would disappear without a trace, prompting a wide spread search, theories, & the high possibility he was eaten by cannibals. What really happened to Michael Rockefeller?[FOLLOW US and BONUS CONTENT]Join our Patreon, for just $5/month, get elbow deep! you will get access to our after show "After the Podcast is Afraid" plus more bonus episodes & content, just visit patreon.com/ordisstudios Visit Our Website: eventhepodcastisafraid.comFollow us on Twitter @PodcastAfraid Follow us on Instagram @PodcastAfraid Part of the Crawlspace Media Network [THIS EPISODE is SPONSORED BY]PODGO.CO is the easiest way for you to monetize your podcast, apply today to become a member & immediately be connected with advertisers that fit your audience P-O-D-G-O DOT C-O[FURTHER READING] "Savage Harvest: A Tale of Cannibals, Colonialism, & Michael Rockefeller's Tragic Quest" by Carl Hoffman [https://amzn.to/38JUZVu][MUSIC USED in this EPISODE] Music from https://filmmusic.io"In Your Arms" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com)License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)Mister Exposition by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://filmmusic.io/song/4061-mister-expositionLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
https://twitter.com/ChristianAsmat Una semana más con un invitado TOP, aunque en este caso no es tan visible o mediático como otros a los que he entrevistado. Sin embargo, genera unas cifras de ingresos con sus nichos que si fueran públicas, dejarían helado a más de uno. No he conocido a nadie hasta hoy que genere más dinero con sus nichos que Christian, o como nosotros le llamamos en la oficina, Dios del SEO. Christian nos contará cuáles son los pros y los contras de los nichos frente a los servicios SEO. Hablaremos también de la marca personal dentro de nuestro sector. A lo largo de la entrevista expresa de forma abierta cuánto dinero ha llegado a generar, al mes, con sus nichos de Adsense. Solo te adelanto que fliparás con el nivel al que se puede llegar cuándo las cosas se hacen bien. Compartimos impresiones sobre los últimos updates y nos cuenta sus conclusiones desde su experiencia montando nichos durante estos años. Christian será profesor dentro de SEOWarriors y hablaremos sobre una metodología muy original que enseñará a los alumnos para encontrar nichos rentables, adelantándose a las tendencias…
[Correction: I've replaced the original audio file because I forgot to insert the Nimoy Fashion Alert! I feel like mission control launching the Apollo mission and then turning to ask the astronauts how the flight was going - then doing a spit-take as I see they're not on the space ship. Sorry!] Jeb and Blake look into the mysterious (well, not THAT mysterious) disappearance of Michael Rockefeller who disappeared while researching the Asmat people of New Guinea. (Watch the ISO episode on YouTube) Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic among the Azande by E. E. Evans-Pritchard Thinking with Things by Esther Pazstzory The ISO episode title card: The original photo the title card is based on: Milt Machlin - the guy who goes looking for Rockefeller, former editor of Argosy men's adventure magazine. Machlin on location looking for Rockefeller Just saying... (Harcourt Fenton Mudd) Machlin investigated the theory that Rockefeller had been taken to the Trobriand Islands, a thousand miles from where the boat had capsized. The shots of the island reminded me of another fateful trip. Interior and Exterior Nimoy Fashion: The woodwork of the Asmat people is very impressive: Carl Hoffman on the case for cannibalism. Ostjanep chief Ajam of the Asmat region, who says that his tribe did not kill Rockefeller. Asmat person chewing gum. The writer of this episode, Alex Pomasanoff, also produced a NatGeo special called The Invisible World.
In 1961, Michael Rockefeller went on an adventure and was never heard from again. Theories and speculation have been plentiful since then but one man went to check it out for himself and came back with horrifying answers. What happened to Michael? What Really Happened to Michael Rockefeller. Carl Hoffman. Smithsonian Magazine. March 2014. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/What-Really-Happened-to-Michael-Rockefeller-180949813/ The Story of Michael Rockefeller and the Cannibals Behind his Disappearance. Gabe Paoletti. November 28th, 2017. https://allthatsinteresting.com/michael-rockefeller New Documentary Said to Confirm that one of the Rockefellers Was Eaten By Cannibals. Hunter Walker. December 23rd, 2014. https://www.businessinsider.com/michael-rockefeller-eaten-by-cannibals-2014-12 The Mysterious Disappearance of Michael Rockefeller. Tim Sohn. February 9th, 2015. Outside Online. https://www.outsideonline.com/1929556/mysterious-disappearance-michael-rockefeller How a Young Rockefeller Died at the Hands of Cannibals. Susannah Cahalan. March 15th, 2014. The New York Post. https://nypost.com/2014/03/15/how-a-young-rockefeller-died-at-the-hands-of-cannibals/ Savage Harvest. Carl Hoffman.
Asmat Hussain, Corporate Director of Governance tells Rachael Tiffen of CIFAS what happened next after the High Court's overturn of its 2014 mayoral election The former mayor was found guilty of corrupt and illegal practices, including vote-rigging, by an election court in 2015, so the council needed to rebuild trust with the authorities, staff and local residents. Asmat became Tower Hamlets' statutory monitoring officer after the fraud had happened, along with a whole new leadership team including chief executive William Buckley and a new financial director. With commissioners in charge following a PriceWaterhouseCoopers investigation, the council developed a delivery plan, putting in place measures to ensure members' decisions were made within the rules; greater transparency and openness around mayoral decisions; relaunch of whilstleblowing procedures; staff training and a website where members of the public can report concerns about fraud. Tower Hamlets underwent a Peer Review conducted by the LGA in June 2019, which concluded among more detailed findings that they were now ‘a normal council'. At the time of this interview, in November 2019, the council was just starting preparations for the December 2019 general election.
Ranying Hatalla Langit, Puang Matua, dan Fumeripits adalah kunci dari semesta Mitologi Dayak, Toraja, dan Asmat. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/podcastmitologi/message
Weird History: The Unexpected and Untold Chronicles of History
Explore the compelling theories surrounding the disappearance of Michael Rockefeller in New Guinea. Delve into the possibility that he met a tragic fate with the Asmat people. Uncover the mystery and the chilling rumors in this intriguing episode. #MichaelRockefeller #disappearance #NewGuinea #Asmatpeople #cannibals #unsolvedmystery #theories #tragicfate Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
"Nystarterna som jag tvingats in i.. dem tog det tid att landa i och förstå hur de ändå ledde mig dit jag skulle. Tilltufsad och med insikter jag ibland velat slippa - men på väg in i nuet." Stina Söndagens gäst Asmat Fikrat har gjort många nystarter både för att det ibland har varit nödvändigt och för att han har velat. Han fick t.ex. börja om i och med att han lämnade sitt hemland, när han kom ny till Sverige, när han fick veta att han skulle få stanna, började skolan i Sverige, lärde sig ett nytt språk, påbörjade universitetsstudier och när han började jobba. Idag är han elevstödjare och finns till för dem som är i samma situation som han en gång var, där så mycket är nytt. Men det blir fler nystarter; Asmat har studerat kriminologi och hoppas en dag arbeta förebyggande för andra unga människor - som kriminolog. Hör Stina och Asmats möte på söndag kl 22.05-23. Du som lyssnar, vilka nystarter har du gjort? Tvingats till? Valt att göra? Hur har dom förändrat dig som person? Eller föranleddes nystarten av en förändring? Hur ser du på det idag? Vem hade du varit utan denna eller dessa nystarter? Hur vill du arbeta för och med dagens unga människor? Ring nr 018 17 40 20 på söndag kl 22-00 för att dela med dig per telefon i ett samtal med Stina efter kl 23. Du kan när som helst maila till sondagsstina@sverigesradio och skicka med ditt telefonnummer om du vill bli uppringd.
O setorista do C.D. Universidad César Vallejo nos apresenta o adversário do São Paulo F.C.
Lawrence Blair has been an explorer for the past 35 years and is best known for his highly acclaimed TV series, Ring of Fire, which documented he and his late brother's 10-year odyssey throughout the Indonesian Islands-- an exploration that has made the annals of history. In the 35th episode of SRO Conversations, Lawrence gives us an intimate view of his travels -- including his encounters with the Asmat peoples, who he says are given both the "distinction of cannibals and head hunters"; the discovery of Homo floresiensis on the island of Flores; the discovery of novel species-- from a venomous bird to a vampire moth; and how the loss of animist religions and imposition other religions has led to the destruction of the Indonesia ecosystems. When asked if he feels as if he has sufficiently explored Indonesia he remarks, "I've only been exploring for 35 years. It would take lifetimes!" Listen to his tales of Indonesia and where he wants Richard Branson to travel to.To see more podcasts, visit www.summerrayne.net or follow on Twitter @sroakes.(This episode will be the second of five final podcasts before a major revamp of SRO Conversations. Stay tuned for more details).
Lawrence Blair has been an explorer for the past 35 years and is best known for his highly acclaimed TV series, Ring of Fire, which documented he and his late brother's 10-year odyssey throughout the Indonesian Islands-- an exploration that has made the annals of history. In the 35th episode of SRO Conversations, Lawrence gives us an intimate view of his travels -- including his encounters with the Asmat peoples, who he says are given both the "distinction of cannibals and head hunters"; the discovery of Homo floresiensis on the island of Flores; the discovery of novel species-- from a venomous bird to a vampire moth; and how the loss of animist religions and imposition other religions has led to the destruction of the Indonesia ecosystems. When asked if he feels as if he has sufficiently explored Indonesia he remarks, "I've only been exploring for 35 years. It would take lifetimes!" Listen to his tales of Indonesia and where he wants Richard Branson to travel to.To see more podcasts, visit www.summerrayne.net or follow on Twitter @sroakes.(This episode will be the second of five final podcasts before a major revamp of SRO Conversations. Stay tuned for more details).
Deuxième volet de notre exploration de la Nouvelle-Guinée Occidentale, avec cette fois la rencontre du peuple Asmat, au sud. Thierry Robinet nous explique comment vit ce peuple papou aujourd'hui, et comment il vivait autrefois, entre guerres de clans et anthropophagie. Avec une bonne dose d'histoires comme celles de Michael Rockefeller, John Wolf et Alphonse Sowada, partez pour un vrai voyage d'aventure.