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Use code YDSAMPLE for a free snack pack from Skratch Labs!Support us on Patreon!Is organic food actually healthier—or just more expensive? This week on Your Diet Sucks, Zoë and Kylee break down the real science behind organic food, including what “organic” really means for produce, meat, and packaged snacks. We cover nutrition claims, pesticide exposure, antioxidant levels, and whether organic food impacts inflammation, gut health, or performance. We also dive into the environmental trade-offs of organic farming, the high cost of certification, and why that $19 strawberry feels morally superior. Plus: the truth behind the Dirty Dozen list, who really benefits from organic labels, and how to make food choices that work for your body and your budget.Big thanks to Microcosm Coaching for supporting the pod! We coach humans, not just athletes. Reach out for a free consultation and meet someone who's genuinely on your team.ReferencesBaranski, M., Średnicka-Tober, D., Volakakis, N., Seal, C., Sanderson, R., Stewart, G. B., ... & Leifert, C. (2014). Higher antioxidant and lower cadmium concentrations and lower incidence of pesticide residues in organically grown crops: A systematic literature review and meta-analyses. British Journal of Nutrition, 112(5), 794–811. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114514001366Średnicka-Tober, D., Baranski, M., Seal, C., Sanderson, R., Benbrook, C., Steinshamn, H., ... & Leifert, C. (2016). Composition differences between organic and conventional meat: a systematic literature review and meta-analysis. British Journal of Nutrition, 115(6), 994–1011. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114515005073Seufert, V., Ramankutty, N., & Foley, J. A. (2012). Comparing the yields of organic and conventional agriculture. Nature, 485(7397), 229–232. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature11069Smith-Spangler, C., Brandeau, M. L., Hunter, G. E., Bavinger, J. C., Pearson, M., Eschbach, P. J., ... & Bravata, D. M. (2012). Are organic foods safer or healthier than conventional alternatives? A systematic review. Annals of Internal Medicine, 157(5), 348–366. https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-157-5-201209040-00007Tuomisto, H. L., Hodge, I. D., Riordan, P., & Macdonald, D. W. (2012). Does organic farming reduce environmental impacts? – A meta-analysis of European research. Journal of Environmental Management, 112, 309–320. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2012.08.018Clark, M., & Tilman, D. (2017). Comparative analysis of environmental impacts of agricultural production systems, agricultural input efficiency, and food choice. Environmental Research Letters, 12(6), 064016. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aa6cd5Kniss, A. R., Savage, S. D., & Jabbour, R. (2016). Commercial crop yields reveal strengths and weaknesses for organic agriculture in the United States. PLoS ONE, 11(8), e0161673. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161673
Podcast for a deep examination into the career and life choices of Eddie Murphy & Jim Carrey. Joe is spitting hot, spicy fire after a bad encounter at the cinema. In order to understand the middle class, Patrick buys a lawn and starts mowing it. Will Lev show him how to use the electric lawn mower? Find out on this week's episode of 'What the Hell Happened to Them?' Email the cast at whathappenedtothem@gmail.com Disclaimer: This episode was recorded in March 2025. References may feel confusing and/or dated unusually quickly. 'Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas' is available on Blu-ray, DVD, & 4K (if you believe in that): https://www.amazon.com/Seuss-Grinch-Stole-Christmas-Blu-ray/dp/B0122YCUJU/ Music from "Whovian Waltz" by Brandon Strader Artwork from BJ West quixotic, united, skeyhill, vekeman, murphy, carrey, versus, vs, grinch, seuss, howard, cumberbatch, karloff, CIA, christmas, flow, baranski, shannon
This week we interview paranormal investigator Kim Baranski with Rock City Paranormal! We chatted about her investigation methods, her recent trip to the Missouri State Penitentiary, her past trip to the Malvern Manor in Iowa, and many other experiences. Buckle up and join us on this dark and twisted ride through all things paranormal. Is there a spooky place in your state that you want to be investigated? Let us know! Be sure to like and follow Rock City Paranormal! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/unitedstatesofmurder/support
Comedy people Grace Bahler ("Live at Beauty Bar") and Sammie Crowley ("My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic") join Andy and Steph to unpack the gentlest piece of cinema that's ever existed: 2008's ABBA jukebox musical "Mamma Mia!" Grace walks us through her Mamma Mia-themed 11th birthday party; Sammie finds nothing but joy in this movie; Andy talks about watching this movie with a prison guard; and Steph once again brings up Baranski's BDE. check out our patreon at patreon.com/dumbfuncheck out our No Skips playlist on Spotify: Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ksenia Karelina, a U.S. citizen and amateur ballerina, was sentenced to 12 years in a Russian prison after pleading guilty to treason. Arrested earlier this year while visiting family in Russia, she was charged for a donation to a U.S.-based charity supporting Ukraine. Her boyfriend, Chris Van Heerden, spoke on "CBS Mornings."The World Health Organization has declared the spread of mpox — formerly known as monkeypox — in Africa as a global health emergency. There have been over 17,000 confirmed and suspected cases reported this year, surpassing last year's total. Health officials warn the potentially deadly virus could spread internationally.The Pan-Mass Challenge, America's most successful athletic fundraiser, celebrates its 45th anniversary and surpasses $1 billion raised for cancer research. Nancy Chen sits down with founder Billy Starr to explore his personal connection to cancer, the inspiration behind the event and the legacy of the bikeathon that has inspired participants worldwide for over four decades.Alexis Ohanian joins "CBS Mornings" to discuss an exciting track event he's launching for some of the fastest women in the world.John Cena stars alongside Awkwafina in the new comedy action film "Jackpot!" on Amazon Prime. As he announces his retirement from WWE after over two decades, Cena discusses his varied career — from acting and rapping to being a best-selling author and Mandarin speaker.Award-winning actor Christine Baranski, who just earned her 16th Emmy nomination for "The Gilded Age," joins "CBS Mornings." Baranski talked about how she seamlessly transitions from sassy and snobby to vulnerable within a single scene.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
July 26, 2024 ~ Phil Baranski General Manager Victor's Home Solution joins Paul W Smith.
In this episode, we continue our discussion of replications. We talk about how to analyze replication studies, which studies are worth replicating, and what is the status of replications in other scientific disciplines. Shownotes Mack, R. W. (1951). The Need for Replication Research in Sociology. American Sociological Review, 16(1), 93–94. https://doi.org/10.2307/2087978 Smith, N. C. (1970). Replication studies: A neglected aspect of psychological research. American Psychologist, 25(10), 970–975. https://doi.org/10.1037/h0029774 Sidman, M. (1960). Tactics of Scientific Research: Evaluating Experimental Data in Psychology (New edition). Cambridge Center for Behavioral. Ebersole, C. R., Mathur, M. B., Baranski, E., Bart-Plange, D.-J., Buttrick, N. R., Chartier, C. R., Corker, K. S., Corley, M., Hartshorne, J. K., IJzerman, H., Lazarević, L. B., Rabagliati, H., Ropovik, I., Aczel, B., Aeschbach, L. F., Andrighetto, L., Arnal, J. D., Arrow, H., Babincak, P., … Nosek, B. A. (2020). Many Labs 5: Testing Pre-Data-Collection Peer Review as an Intervention to Increase Replicability. Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science. https://doi.org/10.1177/2515245920958687 Isager, P. M., van Aert, R. C. M., Bahník, Š., Brandt, M. J., DeSoto, K. A., Giner-Sorolla, R., Krueger, J. I., Perugini, M., Ropovik, I., van 't Veer, A. E., Vranka, M., & Lakens, D. (2023). Deciding what to replicate: A decision model for replication study selection under resource and knowledge constraints. Psychological Methods, 28(2), 438–451. https://doi.org/10.1037/met0000438 Aldhous, P. (2011). Journal rejects studies contradicting precognition. New Scientist. https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn20447-journal-rejects-studies-contradicting-precognition/ Stanley, D. J., & Spence, J. R. (2014). Expectations for Replications: Are Yours Realistic? Perspectives on Psychological Science, 9(3), 305–318. https://doi.org/10.1177/1745691614528518 Simonsohn, U. (2015). Small telescopes: Detectability and the evaluation of replication results. Psychological Science, 26(5), 559–569. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797614567341 Nosek, B.A., Errington, T.M. (2017) Reproducibility in Cancer Biology: Making sense of replications. eLife 6:e23383. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.23383
PTSD and Beyond is #1 of Feedspots' 20 Best PTSD Podcasts in 2024! Support PTSD and Beyond with a small monthly donation to support future PTSD and Beyond Podcast episodes In this episode of PTSD and Beyond, we welcome Terry Baranski, an expert in Internal Family Systems (IFS) and Compassionate Inquiry. Terry discusses his journey from IT to becoming a practitioner of these therapies. We explore IFS, focusing on how it helps individuals understand and heal their internal parts by addressing trauma at its roots. Terry likens the mind's parts to orchestra members, each with its role. He highlights the importance of compassion towards these parts for healing. We share examples of how IFS has helped people overcome depression and anxiety by addressing underlying trauma. We also discuss the non-pathologizing nature of IFS, the mind-body connection, and self-healing mechanisms. Terry shares his upcoming events and workshops for listeners interested in IFS. This episode is essential for anyone seeking a deeper understanding of themselves and effective trauma healing methods. Discover how IFS can transform your approach to mental health. 03:59 " Getting to the root cause of issues can make all the difference 05:41 " The mind consists of parts rather than being a single thing 09:54 " An IFS session focuses on finding your parts, getting to know them 13:44 " Is there any connection between the mind, body, and the placebo effect 15:55 " Parts can play roles in mental illnesses 19:58 " For some, the relief of the undoing is life-changing 22:21 " Branching out to some online group work coming up 24:24 " Three things listeners should know about trauma healing Give a listen and remember to share with someone who may find this podcast episode valuable. Subscribe, like, comment and take what resonates and go beyond! In Love and Healing, Dr. Deb Connect with Terry Baranski at: Website: Healing the Self Instagram: @TerryBaranski Connect with Dr. Deb Lindh and PTSD and Beyond at: Website - Dr. Deb Lindh X formerly known as Twitter - @DebraLindh X formerly known as Twitter- @PTSDandBeyond Support our PTSD and Beyond Podcast - Buy us a Ko-fi cuppa
In the next two episodes, we will discuss replication studies, which are essential to building reliable scientific knowledge. Shownotes Mack, R. W. (1951). The Need for Replication Research in Sociology. American Sociological Review, 16(1), 93–94. https://doi.org/10.2307/2087978 Smith, N. C. (1970). Replication studies: A neglected aspect of psychological research. American Psychologist, 25(10), 970–975. https://doi.org/10.1037/h0029774 Sidman, M. (1960). Tactics of Scientific Research: Evaluating Experimental Data in Psychology (New edition). Cambridge Center for Behavioral. Ebersole, C. R., Mathur, M. B., Baranski, E., Bart-Plange, D.-J., Buttrick, N. R., Chartier, C. R., Corker, K. S., Corley, M., Hartshorne, J. K., IJzerman, H., Lazarević, L. B., Rabagliati, H., Ropovik, I., Aczel, B., Aeschbach, L. F., Andrighetto, L., Arnal, J. D., Arrow, H., Babincak, P., … Nosek, B. A. (2020). Many Labs 5: Testing Pre-Data-Collection Peer Review as an Intervention to Increase Replicability. Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science. https://doi.org/10.1177/2515245920958687 Isager, P. M., van Aert, R. C. M., Bahník, Š., Brandt, M. J., DeSoto, K. A., Giner-Sorolla, R., Krueger, J. I., Perugini, M., Ropovik, I., van 't Veer, A. E., Vranka, M., & Lakens, D. (2023). Deciding what to replicate: A decision model for replication study selection under resource and knowledge constraints. Psychological Methods, 28(2), 438–451. https://doi.org/10.1037/met0000438 Aldhous, P. (2011). Journal rejects studies contradicting precognition. New Scientist. https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn20447-journal-rejects-studies-contradicting-precognition/ Stanley, D. J., & Spence, J. R. (2014). Expectations for Replications: Are Yours Realistic? Perspectives on Psychological Science, 9(3), 305–318. https://doi.org/10.1177/1745691614528518 Simonsohn, U. (2015). Small telescopes: Detectability and the evaluation of replication results. Psychological Science, 26(5), 559–569. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797614567341
This week, John is joined by Dr. Kristin Baranski, Superintendent of the Santee School District! They discuss how the school has evolved through COVID, how well our students have continued to grow and achieve compared to the county, and the extracurriculars that the students have available to them.Stop by to see the student art display at the Santee Street FairSaturday, May 25th from 10am to 6pmTo learn more,Santee School District WebsiteTo contact John Olsen,619-855-1151John@MissionRealtyGroup.comJohn@TheSanteeGuy.comJohnOlsen.comJohn Olsen RE FacebookSantee Update Facebook
Join the secret society and take a ride around NYC in a sexy Jaguar convertible, because it's time to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the delicious movie Cruel Intentions! Mark welcomes friends and fellow Sarah Michelle Gellar stans Kit Sheehan and Jason Kashiwagi back on the show to discuss the beloved "Muppet Babies version" of Les Liaisons Dangereuses (Kit's the only one who knows French) that grabbed our attention in March 1999 and never let go. From Ryan Phillippe's beautiful butt to that lesbian kiss in Central Park to Christine Baranski stealing the spotlight, there's a lot to love. Gossip Girl, you wish you were this steamy! Also, Mark shares his thoughts on the TV sequel pilot that never went to series, and there's a bonus episode on the YouTube channel with even more thoughts and opinions from this trio.
In der heutigen Episode bekommen wir Besuch aus Deutschland, bzw. aus der Türkei, oder besser gesagt von Markus, der mit seinem Rad in einer viermonatigen Auszeit aus seinem selbständigen Berufsleben auf Radreise ging.Markus radelte entlang des Donauradwegs von Deutschland bis nach Bulgarien und dann in die Türkei, nahm dann noch spontan griechische Inseln und Zypern unter die Räder und durchquerte auf seinem Heimweg sämtliche Balkanländer. Als er von Straps eine Einladung zum Sitzfleisch Podcast in seinem Posteingang fand, antwortete er, dass er in etwa einem Monat Richtung Norden doch einfach nach Graz kommen könnte. Weil so ein kleiner Umweg nach Österreich ist eh quasi auf der Strecke. Und wenn man einerseits keinen Stress, aber auch keinen genauen Plan hat, ist die genaue Routenwahl eh schon wurscht. Und es geht Markus ja um den Weg, nicht das Ziel.Zwei Wochen später bimmelte es im Posteingang von Straps, weil Markus meinte, dass er schon übermorgen da wäre. Ob das eh passt?! Mit ein bisschen Stress bezüglich Organisation des Aufnahme Studios und den Arbeitszeiten von Flo haben wir es aber geschafft und können Markus persönlich begrüßen.Der Weltenbummler erzählt uns, wie er seinen normalen Alltag regelte, sich etwas angespart hat und dann einfach drauflos geradelt ist. Er hat bei einer früheren Reise nämlich ein Versprechen gegeben, jemanden in der Türkei zu besuchen, und so ein Versprechen hält man natürlich.Und weil wir schon ein bisschen in TCR Vorfreude sind, wollen wir von Markus wissen, wie es in der Türkei mit dem Rad eigentlich so ist? Straßenverhältnisse, Radwege, Verkehrsaufkommen?Wir unterhalten uns aber über Bikepacking generell, über die freundliche Mentalität der Menschen, das Campen im Wald, und alles, was ein Rad auf so einer Tour alles aushalten muss. Spoiler: Die Kette hat 12.000 Kilometer durchgehalten. Was da wohl der Baranski dazu sagen würde?Mit einem Ausblick auf das nächste Abenteuer, nämlich die Panamericana, verabschieden wir uns von Markus und wünschen weiterhin gute Fahrt. Bis nach Deutschland heim hat er ja noch ein bisschen was vor sich!Markus auf Instagram: www.instagram.com/_markus_bike_ +++++Gewinnspiel zum Live Podcast und zum Neusiedlersee Radmarathon: In der heutigen Sitzfleisch Episode haben wir eine Gewinnfrage für euch!Denn wir sind am 19.4. mit einem Live Podcast zu Gast beim Neusiedlersee! Ihr könnt Eintrittskarten zur Show sowie Startplätze für das Zeitfahren oder den Marathon gewinnen. Infos dazu hört ihr im aktuellen Podcast. Schickt uns die richtige Antwort an: sitzfleisch [ at ] christophstrasser.atEinsendeschluss: 31.3.2024 um 23:59 Uhr
Tom Hardwicke is a Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne. We talk about meta-science, incuding Tom's work on post-publication critique and registered reports, what his new role as editor at Psychological Science entails, and much more.BJKS Podcast is a podcast about neuroscience, psychology, and anything vaguely related, hosted by Benjamin James Kuper-Smith.Support the show: https://geni.us/bjks-patreonTimestamps0:00:00: What is meta-science/meta-research?0:03:15: How Tom got involved in meta-science0:21:51: Post-publication critique in journals0:39:30: How Tom's work (registered reports) led to policy changes at journals0:44:08: Tom is now the STAR (statistics, transparency, and rigor) editor at Psychological Science0:48:17: How to best share data that can be used by people with different backgrounds0:54:51: A book or paper more people should read0:56:36: Something Tom wishes he'd learnt sooner1:00:13: Jobs in meta-science1:03:29: Advice for PhD students/postdocsPodcast linksWebsite: https://geni.us/bjks-podTwitter: https://geni.us/bjks-pod-twtTom's linksWebsite: https://geni.us/hardwicke-webGoogle Scholar: https://geni.us/hardwicke-scholarTwitter: https://geni.us/hardwicke-twtBen's linksWebsite: https://geni.us/bjks-webGoogle Scholar: https://geni.us/bjks-scholarTwitter: https://geni.us/bjks-twtReferences & linksEpisodes w/ Nosek, Vazire, & Chambers: https://geni.us/bjks-nosekhttps://geni.us/bjks-vazirehttps://geni.us/bjks-chambersFoamhenge: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FoamhengeMETRICS: https://metrics.stanford.edu/AIMOS: https://www.youtube.com/@aimosinc4164Chambers & Mellor (2018). Protocol transparency is vital for registered reports. Nature Human Behaviour.Hardwicke, Jameel, Jones, Walczak & Weinberg (2014). Only human: Scientists, systems, and suspect statistics. Opticon1826.Hardwicke & Ioannidis (2018). Mapping the universe of registered reports. Nature Human Behaviour.Hardwicke, Serghiou, Janiaud, Danchev, Crüwell, Goodman & Ioannidis (2020). Calibrating the scientific ecosystem through meta-research. Annual Review of Statistics and Its Application.Hardwicke, Thibault, Kosie, Tzavella, Bendixen, Handcock, ... & Ioannidis (2022). Post-publication critique at top-ranked journals across scientific disciplines: a cross-sectional assessment of policies and practice. Royal Society Open Science.Hardwicke & Vazire (2023). Transparency Is Now the Default at Psychological Science. Psychological Science.Kidwell, Lazarević, Baranski, Hardwicke, Piechowski, Falkenberg, ... & Nosek (2016). Badges to acknowledge open practices: A simple, low-cost, effective method for increasing transparency. PLoS biology.Nosek, Hardwicke, Moshontz, Allard, Corker, Dreber, ... & Vazire (2022). Replicability, robustness, and reproducibility in psychological science. Annual review of psychology.Ritchie (2020). Science fictions: Exposing fraud, bias, negligence and hype in science.
Heute widmen wir uns einem aktuellen Thema für den eiskalten Winter und den matschigen Frühling: Es dreht sich alles um die Technik, um den Antrieb, um die Wartung vom Fahrrad – vor allem im Winter, wo alles nass, dreckig, oder noch besser: salzig ist.Weil wir alle gerne Freude am Radfahren haben, ohne den liebsten Trainingspartner auf zwei Rädern dabei zu versauen, sprechen wir heute wieder mit unserem Material-Experten Marcus Baranski.Was sollten wir beachten, damit wir nicht unter rostigen Ketten und verdreckten Ritzeln leiden?Gibt es auch bei exzessivem Indoor Training etwas zu beachten, oder braucht es hier gar keine Pflege, weil alles trocken und sauber bleibt?Gewachste Ketten werden immer beliebter und die meisten Experten sind sich einig, dass damit der Verschleiß deutlich reduziert wird, die Komponenten länger halten und sich damit auch ein kleines Einstiegs-Investment zum "do-it-yourself-Wachsen" lohnt.Was muss beim Kettenwachsen beachtet werden, was braucht man dazu, und was sind die häufigsten Fehler? Wie werden die Ketten vom Industriefett befreit und wie kann man die Wachsbehandlung nach einigen hundert Kilometern erneuern?Wir sprechen aber auch über praktische Tipps für lange Touren, denn die wenigsten Bikepacker schnallen sich einen Kochtopf mit Kettenwachs an die Arschrakete. Jetzt kommt unser zweites Lieblings-Produkt ins Spiel, nämlich DryFluid vom Berliner Hersteller Rolf Jacobs.Hier werden feine Feststoff Partikel mit einer Flüssigkeit, die sich kurz später verflüchtigt, ins innere der Kette transportiert und sorgen dort für einen Gleitfilm. Im Gegensatz zu Öl ist DryFluid eine trockene Behandlung, wodurch anhaften von Dreck vermieden wird. Außerdem ist DryFluid eine passende Ergänzung zu Kettenwachs und kann zur Nachbehandlung, vor allem unterwegs, sehr gut eingesetzt werden.Besonders spannend ist die neue Entwicklung: Der Baranski und Rolf haben sich hier zusammengesetzt, ein neues hochwertiges Wachs entwickelt, das die beiden Philosophien perfekt kombiniert und exklusiv auf fertig präparierten Ketten im Baranski-Shop erhältlich ist.Fazit der heutigen Episode: Es gibt viele Möglichkeiten seinem Rad etwas Gutes zu tun, irgendwann muss man Dinge einfach ausprobieren und dann selbst entscheiden. Hauptsache viel fahren, wer mag auch bei jedem Wetter draußen, und am besten mit gut wärmender Kleidung – Stichwort Thermo Helmkondom!Links:Der Baranski Shop mit Schnellfahrzeugs und dem neuen Formula S Chain Ceramic: https://derbaranski.shop/Ultracyclingshop mit Baranski-approved Produkten für kurze Versandwege aus Österreich: https://www.ultracyclingshop.com/zubehoer/Blog #Fratzengeballer: https://www.derbaranski.de/blog.htmlWarmfahrhacks im Der-Baranski-Blog: https://www.derbaranski.de/blog/die-warmfahrhacks-fuer-kalt-und-nassBikeboard Workshop zum Thema Kettenwachsen: https://bikeboard.at/magazin/workshop-molten-speed-wax-kettenschmierung-th8861Das neue Formula S Chain Ceramic auf Bikeboard: https://bikeboard.at/magazin/formula-s-ceramic-ketten-mit-dryfluid-th10755+++++Werbung⏐Informiere dich jetzt auf drinkag1.com/sitzfleisch zu gesundheitsbezogenen Angaben und hole dir AG1 im Abo nach Hause, ganz ohne Vertragslaufzeit. Sichere dir bei deiner AG1 Erstbestellung einen gratis Jahresvorrat an Vitamin D3+K2 & 5 Travel Packs!+++++Bisherige Podcast Episoden mit Christoph Strasser, Flo Kraschitzer und Marcus Baranski:Sitzfleisch #S6E5: Der Baranski bei Straps und Flo, Teil 1/2: https://open.spotify.com/episode/0xqOdBsEVz1z8uimZpNePw?si=a40449eeb32a4bf3Sitzfleisch #S6E6: Der Baranski bei Straps und Flo, Teil 2/2:https://open.spotify.com/episode/69bZWAhcMuVwUADR0fJn6s?si=fd1e872dcfdf4b5fSitzfleisch #143: Der Baranski zu Gast beim King of the Lake (Live-Show): https://open.spotify.com/episode/6gz8QIHSRQsQKIAMP8DjTx?si=7cb5a9c50a8142e2 Kapitel und Inhalte:(00:00) Einleitung(03:30) Begrüßung Marcus Baranski: Hast du dein Rad heute schon geputzt?(05:00) Warum sollte man das Fahrrad auch nach dem Indoor-Training reinigen?(08:45) Tipps zur Fahrradreinigung, welche Reinigungsmittel sollte man verwenden? Wie reinigt man die Kette?(22:30) Warum sollte man die Kette wachsen? Vor- und Nachteile von Kettenwachs? Wie bereitet man die Kette für das Wachsen vor?(27:00) Warum ist minderwertiges Fett auf neuen Ketten? Wie entfernt man dieses Fett von neuen Ketten?(36:30) Wie wachst man die Kette? Kettenwachsen in der Praxis zum Selbermachen. Warum lohnt es sich, mehrere Ketten gleichzeitig zu wachsen? Wie kann man den Kettenwechsel vereinfachen?(40:30) Unterschiedliche Kettenstandards, Kompatibilität von Ketten und Schaltsystemen, Vorteile von breiten Ketten auf der Bahn(52:30) Kettenschlösser und deren Verwendung, wie oft kann man Kettenschlösser wiederverwenden? Messung des Kettenverschleißes, Auswirkungen auf andere Komponenten(01:07:00) Marginal Gains, die Aussagekraft von Messergebnissen und Marketing, wieviel Watt kann man sich ersparen? Langlebigkeit vs. Leichtgängigkeit, Verschleiß an Schaltröllchen(01:16:30) Der Einfluss des Reibungs-, Roll- und Luftwiderstands auf die Leistung, warum Reibung und Rollwiderstand nicht so wichtig sind(01:21:00) praktische Tipps für Langstrecken: Wie kann man seiner Kette unterwegs etwas Gutes tun? Was bietet sich bei mehrtägigen Touren und Rennen an? Die Kombination von DryFluid und gewachsten Ketten(01:25:00) Die Entwicklung und Wirkweise des DryFluid Bike: Einblicke vom Hersteller Rolf Jacobs, Anwendung und Haltbarkeit von DryFluid Bike, Entwicklung des neuen Formula S Chain Ceramic, Vorteile und Verfügbarkeit der neuen Formel(01:35:00) Umweltverträglichkeit, die Verwendung von Teflon/PTFE in Schmiermitteln, Vermeidung von Mikrokunststoffen(01:39:00) Wo gibt es diesen ganzen Kram eigentlich? Die Dienstleistungen von Der Baranski(01:42:00) Training im Winter und Outdoor-Fahren bei Minusgraden, Stichwort Thermo Helmkondom
As a child, Pat Baranski did not get the love he deserved and questioned whether his life was worth living. He found purpose in singing and starting his own family, but a life - threatening accident forced him to begin all over again. Don't miss his moving story, on UNSHACKLED!
Als Einsteiger beschäftigt man sich eher mit der Frage, welches Fahrrad für einen Triathlon wohl genügen könnte. Als ambitionierter Agegrouper geht es in der zweiten Disziplin ans Eingemachte und man schaut genauer hin, an welchen Stellschrauben noch gedreht werden kann, um schneller zu werden. Mit Marcus Baranski hat Team-Managerin Jule Bartsch einen Experten als Gesprächspartner, der dank seiner jahrelangen Erfahrung viele Trends miterlebt hat und genau weiß, worauf es wirklich beim Radfahren und der Ausstattung des eigenen Fahrrads ankommt. Vom Triathlon-Neuling bis zum erfahrenen Agegrouper gewinnt jeder von euch in dieser Podcast-Episode neue Erkenntnisse. Versprochen!
Our dear friend Christine Baranski stops and pays tribute to her late friend Stephen Sondheim and talks about sharing her “actor's dream” with him during one of their final conversations before he passed. Plus, Baranski's show "The Gilded Age" highlights the battle between old money and new money in 1880s New York City, and all of the costumes are painfully accurate to the time period (Original Air Date: January 19th, 2022). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Terry Baranski is a trauma-centric Internal Family Systems (IFS) practitioner that is helping spread the method of Internal Family Systems and help with trauma recovery using this exciting and powerful newer method of therapy and treatment. In this interview he explains what IFS is and how he and other ISF practitioners work with the subconscious to help relieve the symptoms of trauma. www.healingtheself.netInsta: Terry.BaranskiTwitter: @tbaranskiSupport the showPlease share to help spread awareness.If you'd like to come on the podcast and share your story please reach at to Stitchnormal@gmail.comUnedited versions of each episode can be found on our Patreon!https://www.patreon.com/NavigatingNormalPodcastNavigating Normal Podcast texting hotline: (971) 270-0886https://withkoji.com/@Navigating_NormalMusic courtesy of Chris Butler.Artwork courtesy of Taylor Long.https://smart.bio/taylored2art/Insta: Taylored2Art
On this week's Producers Picks, we revisit some stand out conversations from the last few episodes from our show's prior iteration - Buffalo, What's Next? We hear conversations from: Yanhong Baranski - Asian-American and former President of the Chinese Club of Western New York, Ryan Howze - Founder of Conscious Environment Creation and Say Whaaat? Podcast, and Nicholas Ramirez - Civil Rights attorney with the Legal Aid Bureau of Buffalo.
Am Freitagabend wurde im Rahmen des Kick-Off im Hotel „Das Zeit“ Zeitfahrspezialist, Triathlon-Redakteur und Buch-Autor Marcus „Der Baranski“ zu einer Live-Session von Sitzfleisch, dem Podcast von Christoph Strasser und Florian Kraschitzer, eingeladen. Einstimmung auf das am nächsten Morgen startende Rennen also. Als passionierter Zeitfahrer beschäftigt sich Der Baranski seit über 20 Jahren intensiv mit dem eigenen Kampf gegen die Uhr. Ursprünglich startete er einen Blog mit Zeitfahrtipps und gründete neben seiner Sport- und Media Agentur später einen Shop für „Schnellfahrzeug“, wie er das Angebot mit seinem trockenen Humor selbst beschreibt. Wie viele Helme, Zeitfahranzüge und Räder Marcus mittlerweile getestet hat, können wir gar nicht mehr zählen, er war im Windtunnel und auf der Bahn.Als Sieger des Kotl von 2018 kann er auf viele Jahre und Anekdoten von Europas größtem Einzelzeitfahren zurückblicken, das die 1400 TeilnehmerInnen über 47,2 Kilometer rund um den Attersee führt. Die besten schaffen die Runde unter einer Stunde, und das ist auch das Ziel vom Straps, der sich nach dem TCR wieder gut in Form fühlt.Auch Flo wird erstmals angreifen, hat sich ein Scheibenlaufrad und den engsten Zeitfahranzug ausgeborgt und dessen Reißverschluss gleich auf seine Stabilität getestet. Dieser hat gehalten, daher steht einer schnellen Runde nichts im Wege.In entspannter Atmosphäre wurden Themen rund um Zeitfahren, Aerodynamik, Reifenwahl, Sitzposition, mentale Stärke (und Schwäche!) und formschönes Sabbern besprochen und Fragen aus dem Publikum beantwortet.Links:Der Baranski Blog #fratzengeballer: https://www.derbaranski.de/blogDer Der Baranski Shop: https://derbaranski.shop/Reifendruck Rechner: https://silcavelo.eu/pages/sppc-formReifendruck Rechner (herstellergebunden, auch mit hookless): https://axs.sram.com/guides/tire/pressureBuchtipp „Siegen ist Kopfsache“: https://derbaranski.shop/products/siegen-ist-kopfsache
In this episode, we discuss the replication crisis in psychology which has been an important topic of discussion for the last decade. We revisit some key events from the start of the replication crisis, such as the publication of Daryl Bem's studies on precognition, the paper False Positive Psychology, and the Reproducibility Project and share personal anecdotes about how it was to live through the replication crisis. Shownotes: Bem, D. J. (2011). Feeling the future: Experimental evidence for anomalous retroactive influences on cognition and affect. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 100(3), 407–425. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0021524 Ritchie, S. J., Wiseman, R., & French, C. C. (2012). Failing the Future: Three Unsuccessful Attempts to Replicate Bem's ‘Retroactive Facilitation of Recall' Effect. PLOS ONE, 7(3), Article e33423. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033423 Simmons, J. P., Nelson, L. D., & Simonsohn, U. (2011). False-Positive Psychology: Undisclosed Flexibility in Data Collection and Analysis Allows Presenting Anything as Significant. Psychological Science, 22(11), 1359–1366. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797611417632 John, L. K., Loewenstein, G., & Prelec, D. (2012). Measuring the prevalence of questionable research practices with incentives for truth telling. Psychological Science, 23(5), 524–532. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797611430953 Fiedler, K., & Schwarz, N. (2016). Questionable Research Practices Revisited. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 7(1), 45–52. https://doi.org/10.1177/1948550615612150 NOTE: Daniel says in the podcast the paper below is by Fiedler and Strack - but it is by Fiedler and Schwarz. Ebersole, C. R., Mathur, M. B., Baranski, E., Bart-Plange, D.-J., Buttrick, N. R., Chartier, C. R., Corker, K. S., Corley, M., Hartshorne, J. K., IJzerman, H., Lazarević, L. B., Rabagliati, H., Ropovik, I., Aczel, B., Aeschbach, L. F., Andrighetto, L., Arnal, J. D., Arrow, H., Babincak, P., … Nosek, B. A. (2020). Many Labs 5: Testing Pre-Data-Collection Peer Review as an Intervention to Increase Replicability. Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science. https://doi.org/10.1177/2515245920958687 Luttrell, A., Petty, R. E., & Xu, M. (2017). Replicating and fixing failed replications: The case of need for cognition and argument quality. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 69, 178–183. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2016.09.006 Simons, D. J., Shoda, Y., & Lindsay, D. S. (2017). Constraints on Generality (COG): A Proposed Addition to All Empirical Papers. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 12(6), 1123–1128. https://doi.org/10.1177/1745691617708630 Simonsohn, U. (2015). Small Telescopes Detectability and the Evaluation of Replication Results. Psychological Science, 26(5), 559–569. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797614567341
In this episode of the Influential U Podcast, we're thrilled to have Jade Baranski and Jerry Ramey, the dynamic Co-Founders of Mobilize, join us to unravel the secrets of scaling while learning how to scale a business at the same time.Mobilize utilizes the power of data and Artificial Intelligence to transform creativity into tangible results. At its core, Mobilize champions the idea that well-informed decisions are rooted in data-driven insights. By constructing software based on the bedrock of centralized, harmonious data structures, they empower organizations with a singular source of truth.In this episode, Jade and Jerry share their inspiring journey through the realms of entrepreneurship and how they've integrated what they've learned from Influential U programs into their lives and business. They've been able to achieve some incredible results on a short timeline and have some incredible insights to share.Whether you're a budding entrepreneur, a seasoned business professional, or simply curious about scaling, this episode promises not to disappoint. Tune in Wednesday at 2pm pacific for the live stream on YouTube, LinkedIn, and Facebook.Join us for our weekly live streams at 2pm pst every Wednesday.The Influential U Podcast is streamed live on our website, Facebook, Linkedin, and Youtube. If you enjoy this podcast, please share it with others. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, or any place you get your podcasts.Check out our show notes for links to connect with our guests - plus links to websites, books, or special downloads we talked about. If you haven't yet offered a rating or review, we ask that you take a moment go to Apple Podcasts or your podcast app of choice and let us know what you think. This helps us more than you knowPodcast BonusesMobilizeYourTech.com [https://www.mobilizeyourtech.com/]Connect with Jade on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jadebaranski/]Connect with Jerry on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jerryramey/]Download tools and resources mention in this episode [https://influentialu.global/tools/]Where are you in the stages of influence? Find out [https://influentialu.global/influencequiz/]Discover your influential superpower, and kryptonite. Take the quiz [https://quiz.influentialu.biz/]Try Our Thrive Course for FREE. Limited Time Only [https://influentialu.global/thrive/]Learn more about our programs and curriculum [https://influentialu.global/curriculum/]
Join us for another episode of AI Proficiency: Turning Tomorrow into Today to hear a conversation with Jade Baranski, Co-Founder and CEO of Mobilize. Since entering the world of technology, Jade has been inspired by the immense impact of innovation through collaboration and problem-solving. At Mobilize, this has been achieved by addressing the unknowns, making space to explore, and ensuring trustworthy data when training models. Listen in to learn more about Jade's approach to navigating the AI space with curiosity and why it's been so transformative in finding innovative solutions. CDAO: https://www.ai.mil/ Tradewind AI: https://www.tradewindai.com/ Alethia Labs: https://alethialabs.org/ ATARC: https://atarc.org/
Christine Baranski brings intelligence, energy, and impeccable timing to her narration of this tell-all memoir by Mary Rodgers. Host Jo Reed and AudioFile's Alan Minskoff discuss how Baranski captures the many Marys—the unliked daughter, the composer, the mother of six, the longtime companion of Sondheim and collaborator with Leonard Bernstein. Known for writing the musical ONCE UPON A MATTRESS, hundreds of songs, and the kids' book FREAKY FRIDAY, Rodgers is also witty, self-effacing, and a fine storyteller. Read the full review of the audiobook on AudioFile's website. Published by Spiegel & Grau by OrangeSky Audio. Find more audiobook recommendations at audiofilemagazine.com Support for AudioFile's Behind the Mic comes from A Soul of Ash and Blood. #1 New York Times bestselling author Jennifer L. Armentrout revisits Poppy and Casteel's epic love story in the next installment of the Blood and Ash series. Learn more at Audible.com/ASoulOfAshAndBlood Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to the Munsons at the Movies podcast. Each episode we delve into the filmography and impact of a randomly selected actor. In this episode, we explore the career of Christine Baranski. Best known for her roles as Tanya in the Mamma Mia! films, Martha May Whovier in How The Grinch Stole Christmas (2000), and Diane Lockhart in the Good Wife/Fight (2009-2022), Baranski has built a successful career on screen and on the stage. Joined once again by Krystal Clark, we discuss her stage acting roots inspired by her Polish grandparents, her transformation as a blue collar Buffalo native to a notoriously pompous character on-screen, contemplate what white people do on private islands, and marvel at how she classes up the joint on every one of her projects. How does she rank on the Munson Meter? Listen to find out.
Santa has stopped being polite - and just got real! Violent Night graphically demonstrates why you DO NOT want to be on his naughty list, while The Ref lays down some obscenity laced holiday judgements of his own – Ho Ho Ho! #violentnight #davidharbour #theref #denisleary #raisinets
The veteran stage and screen actress Christine Baranski first became a household name thanks to her Emmy-winning turn on the nineties sitcom “Cybill,” and her Tony-award winning work on Broadway. But “The Good Fight” took her to another level. As Diane Lockhart, a Chicago attorney and diehard liberal, Baranski captured the tensions of the political moment of Donald Trump, and the show ended its run this month. Emily Nussbaum could barely contain her excitement when sat down with Baranski at The New Yorker Festival in 2018 for a wide-ranging conversation about Baranski's career and the timeliness of “The Good Fight.” This segment originally aired April 12, 2019.
If you ask people to describe Christine Baranski, one word rises to the top: sophisticated. That's no accident; the actress has spent a lifetime refining her image and her craft.For the past 13 years, Baranski has played Diane Lockhart, a savvy and assertive attorney on the CBS television series The Good Wife and its spin-off The Good Fight. And just like her character, Baranski is a trailblazer herself. With women making up only 3% of major TV characters 60 and over, she's carved out a path for other actresses to follow.In this episode, host Brittany Luse talks with Baranski about The Good Fight for women in Hollywood.Follow us on Twitter @NPRItsBeenAMin or email us at ibam@npr.org.
Marcus Baranski, der "Mann hinter der Werbung" bei triathlon, zählte durch: Mit dem Ausflug nach Hawaii in diesem Jahr war er nun zum 15. Mal dort, um die Industrie zu treffen und auf der Messe nach den Neuheiten der Triathlonszene Ausschau zu halten. In der aktuellen Podcastfolge erhaltet ihr viele Einblicke in das Hawaii-Equipment, die tatsächliche Ausstattung einiger Profi-Bikes und ehrliche Ansichten zur WM auf Hawaii nach 2 Jahren Pause.
Emmy and Tony Award-winning actress Christine Baranski joins us on the Season 3 finale of SHUT UP EVAN to discuss her robust oeuvre, from 9 1/2 WEEKS AND JEFFREY to THE ADDAMS FAMILY VALUES and CRUEL INTENTIONS, and yes, we even discuss some of her deep cuts like BOWFINGER and MARCI X. We also chat about that viral Met Gala photo with Elon Musk, befriending Stephen Sondheim, her love of classical music, early lessons she got in her career as an actress, the possibility of MAMMA MIA 3 and so much more. Plus, we're joined by 6'5" actor Lee Pace, Selma Blair and Baranski's daughter, Isabel Cowles, all of whom are calling in with questions. All that, and journalist Jazmine Hughes joins us to discuss her poignant new profile of Whoopi Goldberg that appeared in THE NEW YORK TIMES.Host: Evan Ross KatzEditor: Sophia AsmuthShow links:Evan Ross Katz on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/evanrosskatz/Use code ERK50 for 50% off your first order from CANN using this link https://glnk.io/jr05/evanrosskatz2Get bonus content by joining us on Patreon http://patreon.com/shutupevanSee acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Lynn Baranski, Managing Director, is the Global Head of Investments for BlackRock Private Equity Partners (PEP) within BlackRock Alternative Investors (BAI). She is a member of the BAI Exco and PEP's Management Committee, Investment Committee, and Valuation Committee.Baranski discusses the macro environment in the first three quarters of 2022, the state of private equity deal flow and and shifting strategies in response. She then shares her thoughts behind the long-term growth of private equity, democratization of access and retail investors' under-allocation in PE relative to performance. ——————————————————————Watch this video on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/SALTTube/videosFor podcast transcripts and show notes, visit https://www.salt.org/Moderated by Anthony Scaramucci. Developed, created and produced by SALT Venture Group, LLC.
Christine Baranski is an actor with an impressive resume. She went to Julliard, performed on Broadway in shows like The Real Thing, Rumors, and House of Blue Leaves – she's won two Tony Awards. On the hit sitcom Cybil she played the title character's best friend, Maryann and won an Emmy award for the role. Baranski's an iconic character actor with a distinctive look that commands your attention on screen. In 2009, she got a part on The Good Wife as Diane Lockheart. The show's spin off The Good Fight is airing its final season now on Paramount+. Baranski reflects on her time portraying Diane on The Good Fight as the show wraps up. Plus, she talks about being one of the early graduates of Julliard, and her long-time collaborated relationship with Broadway legend Stephen Sondheim.
This week we review new movies Boreego and Alone with you, new series Suspicion and The Gilded Age, and the new seasons of Ozark and The Accidental Wolf.
Ho Ho Ho, Merry Chris(tine Baranski)mas. It's December and in case you missed it from that terrifically festive pun, we are talking about the marvelous Christine Baranski for our 20th episode. Christine has been on our list since the beginning and felt like the only choice for some party season frivolity, as the star of How The Grinch Stole Christmas, A Bad Moms Christmas, AND Dolly Parton's Christmas On The Square, how could we not!? We also took tremendous joy talking about Christine's other fabulous film roles from Chicago to Bowfinger whilst of course not missing out on the joys of the Mamma Mia movies. We could not discuss Christine Baranski without talking about and celebrating the great Stephen Sondheim, so we hope you enjoy joining in on that with a Sondheim-themed quiz. We round off as always with our wish lists for this iconic star's future film endeavors. Christine Baranski brought us the delightful times we needed during these chillier nights and we hope you can enjoy that with us. Follow @dontknow_her on Twitter and Instagram to keep updated on upcoming episodes and to have your say on future episodes. And why not give the greatest gift of all this Christmas by sharing our podcast with a friend or two. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dontknowherpod/message
Der King of the Lake ist mit 1400 Teilnehmern Europas größtes Zeitfahren und führt auf 47,2 Kilometer bei grandioser Stimmung rund um den Attersee. Vollgas-Radlfoan anstelle von Weit-Radlfoan ist das Motto, und Christoph Strasser war dabei. Nicht nur das, es kam zum Duell mit den besten Amateuren dieser Disziplin, und das Ziel lautete wieder, die Runde unter 1 Stunde zu schaffen – was schon einige Male nicht gelang. Wie wird es diesmal laufen, nachdem die Klettertour 14 Tage vor dem Rennen schwere Spuren hinterließ? Wie wird sich der Baranski schlagen, der vor einigen Wochen mit Zeitfahrtipps bei Flo und Straps in Sitzfleisch zu Gast war? Und vor allem, wann wird Flo sich auch endlich mal die Ehre geben? Das alles hört ihr in dieser 48,9 km/h schnellen Ausgabe von Sitzfleisch! Das neue Buch „Radfahren im Triathlon und Einzelzeitfahren - Mensch & Maschine optimal vorbereiten“ von Marcus Baranski gibt es ab sofort im Ultracyclingshop: www.ultracyclingshop.com Termine und Infos zu den Vorträgen von Christoph findet ihr unter: www.christophstrasser.at
Audrey Baranski, psychologue, thérapeute familiale et auteure du livre Renaître à soi-même, nous parle de connaissance et acceptation de soi. Comment apprendre à mieux se connaître ? Comment faire la paix avec soi-même ? À l'aide d'exercices et d'exemples concrets, Audrey nous donne tous ses conseils pour renaître à nous-même. Vous êtes prêts à aller mieux ?
Im zweiten Teil unseres aerodynamisch optimierten Podcasts setzen wir die Fragestunde und Fachsimpelei über schnelle Räder, technische Feinheiten und Aerodynamik an Kleidung und Körper mit dem Baranski fort. #fratzengeballer trifft #sitzfleisch!Außerdem klären wir die Frage, warum es an der „King-of-the-lake“ Strecke rund um den Attersee immer noch ein Loch in der Hecke gibt, und was das ganze mit Baranskis Sieg beim KotL zu tun hat.Wichtiger Ratschlag für Straps: Er sollte bis zum Rennen, wo der Baranski und der Strasser aufeinander treffen, noch mindestens 10 Kilo zunehmen. Das wäre nämlich die praktische Umsetzung des absurden Faktums, dass ein Bierbauch laut Windkanal Tests schneller ist, als ein Six-Pack (mit dem, um ehrlich zu sein, sowieso keiner von uns auftrumpfen kann)Ob eine nasse Straße tatsächlich weniger Rollwiderstand bietet, und was die besten Tipps fürs Zeitfahren sind, das hört ihr in dieser Episode! Charity-Versteigerung: Der King of the Lake ist seit vielen Wochen ausgebucht, die Startplätze sind vollständig vergeben. Auf dem Blog vom Baranski gibt es jetzt aber eine tolle Aktion: Der Höchstbietende kann einen Startplatz ersteigern, der vom Veranstalter noch zur Verfügung gestellt wurde – der Erlös geht an die Kinderkrebshilfe Oberösterreich. Eine Unterstützung für den guten Zweck und eine einmalige Gelegenheit, doch noch rund um den Attersee zu brettern. Hier geht's zur Versteigerung des KotL Startplatzes: www.derbaranski.de/blogHier geht's zum Baranski Shop: https://derbaranski.shop
While 1997's "My Best Friend's Wedding" may appear to be a romantic comedy starring Julia Roberts as our charismatic heroine, it's actually a psychological thriller in which Cameron Diaz as the kooky co-ed Kimmy becomes our heroine in peril, while the charismatic (and sultry) voice of reason is none other than George, an under-sung gay character (if not icon) of 90's cinema played by BAFTA-nominated Rupert Everett. Dermot Mulroney continues to be a delight to look at, even if his character might not be sharpest sports writer in the press box, Paul Giamatti pops up as a One Scene Queen, Susan Sullivan gives good Baranski, and dynamic duo Rachel Griffiths and Carrie Preston steal the show. We also have a lot to say about father of the bride Philip Bosco ("It Takes Two," anyone?), stressful kitchen scenes, Andy Garcia in "When a Man Loves a Woman," Lisa Ann Walter's wardrobe in "The Parent Trap," Cammy Diaz's big pork product energy, and feelings on the upcoming "My Best Friend's Wedding" musical. Email: thebsapod@gmail.com Twitter: @bsapod Colin Drucker Twitter: @colindrucker Instagram: @colindrucker_ Nick Kochanov Twitter: @nickkochanov Instagram: @nickkochanov
Nach einem kurzen Blick auf die letzten News aus der Welt des Ultra Radsports, Flos 24 Stunden Rennen in der Veloblitz Staffel und Straps Anekdote vom Besuch an der Strecke des Race Around Austria, dreht sich heute alles um Zeitfahren, Aerodynamik, schnelle Technik und Optimierungen am Rad. Marcus Baranski ist Blogger, Journalist, Experte für Aero- und Materialtests und vor allem: ein sehr schneller Zeitfahrer, der unter anderem den King of the Lake rund um den Attersee 2018 gewinnen konnte.Christoph Strasser und Florian Kraschitzer unterhalten sich mit „dem Baranski“ über alles Wissenswerte um sich und sein Rad schneller zu machen. Weniger Watt treten und trotzdem schneller fahren? Warum ist nicht immer derjenige der schnellste, der am härtesten ins Pedal tritt? Was sind die größten Mythen beim Zeitfahren, und weshalb sind die wichtigsten Verbesserungen am Setup kostenlos? Der Baranski Blog: https://www.derbaranski.deDer Baranski Shop: https://derbaranski.shop In der heutigen Episode wird auch das Fever-Tree Gewinnspiel aufgelöst und das Lemonade Paket unter allen durstigen TeilnehmerInnen verlost, die per Mail mitgemacht haben. Unser heutiger Werbepartner: Athletic Greens!Hol dir den Rabatt unter: www.athleticgreens.com/sitzfleisch
For today’s chat, I spoke with Charlie about his run for Morris County Freeholder, and how he ran for office as a socialist in one of America’s wealthiest and Republican-dominant areas. Charlie and I discuss the differences in changes one can make at a local vs federal level, political compromise, and more.Charlie Baranski is a progressive organizer and former candidate for New Jersey’s county government. Follow him on Twitter at @CharlieBaranski Get full access to All That to Say at ghorayeb.substack.com/subscribe
Kolejny odcinek podcastu poświęcony zostanie roli czasopism w kształtowaniu otwartej nauki. Porozmawiamy o złych, drapieżnych czasopismach i ich praktykach biznesowych oraz o strategiach walki z takimi czasopismami. Ważne dla nas będzie pokazanie w jaki sposób, za pomocą wytycznych dotyczących transparentności i otwartości, z problemem złych i drapieżnych czasopism starają się radzić sobie naukowcy. Gospodarzami podcastu są dr Katarzyna Jaśko (Uniwersytet Jagielloński) oraz dr Bartosz Janik (Uniwersytet Śląski w Katowicach). Dofinansowano z programu „Społeczna odpowiedzialność nauki” Ministra Nauki i Szkolnictwa Wyższego w ramach projektu „Otwarta Nauka w Centrum Kopernika”. Literatura: Grudniewicz et al., Predatory journals: no definition, no defence, Nature 576, 210-212 (2019) https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-03759-y Eriksson, S., & Helgesson, G. (2017). The false academy: predatory publishing in science and bioethics. Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy, 20(2), 163-170. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11019-016-9740-3 Stop this waste of people, animals and money https://www.nature.com/news/stop-this-waste-of-people-animals-and-money-1.22554 https://predatoryjournals.com/journals/ TOP Guidelines: https://osf.io/9f6gx/ TOP Factor: https://www.topfactor.org/ Kidwell, M. C., Lazarević, L. B., Baranski, E., Hardwicke, T. E., Piechowski, S., Falkenberg, L. S., ... & Nosek, B. A. (2016). Badges to acknowledge open practices: A simple, low-cost, effective method for increasing transparency. PLoS biology, 14(5), e1002456. https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.1002456 Social Psychological Bulletin: https://spb.psychopen.eu/index.php/spb Pojęcie „otwartej nauki” przywoływane jest nieustannie w aktualnych dyskusjach toczonych w środowisku naukowym. Rozumie się przez nie otwarty (nieodpłatny i nieograniczony czasowo ani terytorialnie) dostęp do publikacji naukowych, a także udostępnianie przez naukowców zarówno wyników badań, jak i zgromadzonych danych oraz algorytmów wykorzystanych do ich przetwarzania. Celem postulowanych przez zwolenników „otwartej nauki” praktyk i rozwiązań jest zwiększenie przejrzystości całego procesu prowadzenia badań naukowych i publikacji ich wyników, unikanie patologii (takich jak oszustwa naukowe) i zwiększenie społecznego zaufania do nauki. Postulaty te wyłoniły się m.in. w odpowiedzi na kryzys replikacyjny, który obejmuje coraz większą liczbę dyscyplin
“Three Women and a Dummy” (May 13, 1996) Alongside Murphy Brown, Designing Women and The Nanny, Cybill was one of CBS’s female-forward heavy-hitters in the 1990s. It didn’t last as long as the other three — and yes, there’s quite the story there — but in its four seasons it did manage to give us the Waiter. Played by Tim Maculan, he’s one of the more important queer characters to recurr on a popular sitcom in the decade. We discuss this, plus Alan Ball’s involvement, the whole Cybill vs. Baranski controversy and whether this show was a remake of Absolutely Fabulous or not. Listen to Smart Mouth’s episode with Nicole Georges, all about the history of tabouleh. Also listen to the new episode of Singing Mountain, Drew’s video game music podcast. Read Linda Bloodworth Thomason’s article recounting her experiences with CBS boogeyman Les Moonves. Listen to You Must Remember This’s season dedicated to Polly Platt. Glen is right: There was a Moonlighting-inspired episode of Alvin and the Chipmunks. Watch Drew’s video compilation of every LGBT joke ever on the history of The Simpsons. Buy Glen’s movie Being Frank. Support us on Patreon! Follow: GEE on Facebook • GEE’s Facebook Group • GEE on Twitter • GEE on Instagram • Drew on Twitter • Glen on Twitter Listen: iTunes • Spotify • Stitcher • Google Play • Google Podcasts • Himalaya • TuneIn This episode’s outro track is “Girl Dream” by Connie Hyland, which is actually not available on any streaming service but maybe just listen to it on YouTube?
What We Covered:00:51 – Introducing today’s guest, Jade Baranski, who shares their background as a serial entrepreneur 04:58 – Jade speaks to the importance of mentorship 08:18 – Building a network of contribution and how being queer has been one of Jade’s most powerful traits 12:24 – Jade provides their thoughts on the stigma of queer people pursuing money and power 15:57 – Jade talks about why they build companies with the intent of exiting and selling 19:47 – Best practices for building a sellable business, the importance of hiring and finding the right business partner 26:30 – Jade opens up about the challenges and difficulties of entrepreneurship Tweetable Quotes:“I think, at this point, I’ve mentored three younger folks who have since started businesses. So I feel like that’s a huge win.” (08:09) (Jade) “I used to talk about this a lot when I was younger in my career how me being queer really set me up in a unique way in business to really – you call it hustle – I call it power through.” (10:15) (Jade) “Someone is going to get the money, so why not you? Because what you’re going to be able to do with that money is unique. So go get the money!” (14:01) (Jade) “The two businesses I own now I know the exit strategies. And they’re both about five to seven years. And I feel great about that because building wealth and creating business opportunities for other people is part of what I do.” (19:11) (Jade) “What I’ve found that’s even more important than how I’ve created my team is getting everyone’s feedback and being really open to it.” (27:54) (Jade) Links Mentioned:Jade’s LinkedInJade’s WebsiteMichelle’s Website
In this episode, Lewis and Danny talk about the classic Christmas movie How The Grinch Stole Christmas, as well as the worst Christmas gifts they've received and aggressive soup distribution. We now have merch! Make sure to check out what we've got on offer at teespring.com/stores/shouting-into-the-void as well as https://www.redbubble.com/people/Merch-Void/shop?asc=u Like what we do? We do a lot more! Check us out at http://www.patreon.com/shoutingintothevoid to see everything else we do, and consider supporting us there as well! If a monthly donation isn't your thing, but you'd still like to support us, then please consider donating to us through paypal: paypal.me/VoidPodcast Music from https://filmmusic.io: "Acid Trumpet" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) Licence: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
There was Before the birth of Christine Baranski, and there was After the birth of Christine Baranski. And, God? Las Culturistas is so happy we all live in the After time. The two hosts of Las Cultch, Bowen and Matt, discuss Baranski's impact on both regular and Christmas culture, and run through her seminal work as Mary Sunshine, Martha May Whovier, and as whoever she plays in Mamma Mia! This day, Day 6 of the 12 Days of Culture, is one that will go down in history as the day a true consummate professional thespian was given to the world, and we are damn grateful. Name another legend! Also, isn't it fucked up that the person who is gonna do your autopsy one day is gonna see more of your body than you ever will? Have you been spicing up your quarantine with candles and scents? How's your skin? All this, and Matt and Bow find out where they stand in the vaccine line, on this celebratory and revelatory (hello!) episode of Las Culturistas. Listen....now! Augh!
As a child, Pat Baranski did not get the love he deserved, and he questioned whether his life was even worth living. He found purpose in singing and starting his own family, but a life-threatening accident forced him to begin all over again. Don't miss his moving story right now on UNSHACKLED!
To support this ministry financially, visit: https://www.oneplace.com/donate/110/29 3647 Pat Baranski (Abuse, Suicidal, Tragedy, Rehabilitation) Pats dad left his mother to raise him and his siblings alone. Her anger manifested itself in beating her children, and Pat often wondered if life was worth living. In fact, as a young teenager, he contemplated jumping off a bridge near the freeway multiple times. But he also talked to God and heard God respond. As a high schooler, two big events shifted his outlook on life: he fell in love and he got chosen for a select singing group. Pat threw himself into these new adventures and grew to be a talented singer, performing in many Off-Broadway shows. He and his wife started a family of their own and he was able to show them the love he had not received as a child. But a life-threatening accident changed everything, forcing Pat to find the strength to begin again and rely on God and the faith of his community in brand new ways.
Jade Baranski the CEO of Mobilize Comms tells you how to innovate with purpose, vision, and accountability. You can check her out at https://MobilizeComms.com/
DER BARANSKI zu Gast, es geht um das größte Zeitfahrevent Europas den KOTL bzw King of the Lake. Wer hätte gedacht, dass man über BMX fahren zu einem Fahrradtuning Freak wird. Ich habe mir erklären lassen, wie man am Attersee möglichst ein knapp 48er Schnitt fährt und wie man mit vielen Kleinigkeiten überall ein paar Watt sparen kann. Funktioniert aber auch nur "wenn der Klops oben drauf" gut auf dem Rad sitzt. #fratzengeballer https://www.derbaranski.de/ https://derbaranski.shop/ https://www.instagram.com/der_baranski/?hl=de https://www.kotl.at/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OLmx9j4581s
Are you having trouble when it comes to understanding your clients? Are you being too ideologically driven that it’s drifting you away from the reality slowly? Arrogance and close-mindedness are some of the things you need to avoid when leading your business. Problems and issues may arise because of those. It is a must for business owners to stick their heads into reality and objectively lead their business in order to avoid future conflict and issues that may end up being connected with higher-level issues. Tibor Baranski is a counsel at Jun He LLP, the first private law firm in mainland China, post-1949. Tibor has also been a member of the Asian ex-pat community in China and in Japan for almost 35 years. In fact, he was the legal counsel to Japanese business interests regarding China since before people even realize that it existed. In this episode, Tibor explains the importance of understanding the reality and being ideologically driven in leading your business in order to avoid future issues that may arise and to make your clients happy. What you will learn from this episode: Discover the impact of legal issues on your business Learn how having a solid business plan can help you understand your clients’ problems and help you stay in the reality of your business Know more on how accepting the reality can help avoid future conflict and issues “Avoid being trendy, keep your eyes on reality.” - Tibor Baranski Topics Covered: 02:01 - Tibor defines his ideal client 02:27 - Problems that Tibor solves for his clients: Legal issues at the operational level, Connecting legal issues to higher-level issues 02:49 - Denial of reality, lack of understanding of the objective reality, and being ideologically driven, typical symptoms that people with that problem experience 03:25 - Lack of understanding and arrogance are one of the common mistakes people make 04:00 - Tibor’s valuable free action: “Well get a very solid business plan and strategy in place, and this should be founded on scenario planning, both in positive and negative circumstances and avoid being trendy. Keep your eyes again on reality.” 04:16 - Tibor’s valuable free resource: Grab a copy of China Into the Future: Making Sense of the World’s Most Dynamic Economy by W. John Hoffmann and Michael J. Enright 05:48 - Mentor Alert: Professor K.H. Ting 06:32 - Question: Why did I choose my profession? 08:45 - Bonus Question: Why do you believe it's so important to be realistic when it comes to dealing with things in China particularly? Key Takeaways: “Well get a very solid business plan and strategy in place, and this should be founded on scenario planning, both in positive and negative circumstances, and avoid being trendy.” - Tibor Baranski “Oftentimes the failures come from unrealistic expectations.” - Tibor Baranski “Non-Chinese people, especially in the business area when coming into China tend to be rather detached, sometimes very detached from reality. So, expectations become such that the Chinese people simply cannot deliver on that for a variety of reasons, and it's something that we should be cognizant of when doing business.” - Tibor Baranski People / Resources Mentioned: China Into the Future: Making Sense of the World’s Most Dynamic Economy by W. John Hoffmann and Michael J. Enright Professor K.H. Ting Ways to Connect with Tibor Baranski: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tiborjr Ways to Connect with Howard Whiteson: Website: http://www.wealthwithoutborders.net Podcast: https://wealthwithoutborders.net/podcast/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/howardwhiteson
Marci Baranski destroys greenhouse gases for a living. After getting her PhD in biology and society, Marci became a Presidential Management Fellow and pursued a career as public servant, working for the US Department of Agriculture as a climate change specialist. Due in part to the Trump administration’s systematic rollback of climate policies, Marci transitioned … Continue reading "Episode #16: Marci Baranski"
Today, we can’t stop watching Christine Baranski as the passionate feminist lawyer Diane Lockhart on the CBS All Access series “The Good Fight.” Baranski talks about singing "Ladies Who Lunch" with Meryl Streep and Audra McDonald for Stephen Sondheim's virtual birthday party, her next project with Julian Fellowes and the TV shows she loved as a kid.
Is organic food better than conventionally grown food? Find out why supporting organic farming might just benefit both you and the planet. - Why is it important to eat/buy organic? - How do organic & sustainable farming practices benefit the environment? - How does organic farming help human health? - What's soil got to do with it? - Can bacteria be good? - Are all celery stalks equal? - Does Starbucks sell Kumquats? OTHER HELPFUL NOTES: 1. Can I wash OFF pesticides? Yes. Kind of. Thoroughly rinsing can help reduce pesticide residues. You can also soak in white vinegar or try this produce spray: a. Biokleen Produce Wash: https://biokleenhome.com/produce-wash 2. There are farmers out there who may not be "certified organic" but who are still practicing sustainable and regenerative agriculture modes of farming, like the folks at Skinny Kitty Farms (https://www.skinnykittyfarms.com/about.html) Talk to your farmers about their farming techniques! 3. References about benefits of Organic: a. Baranski , Srednicka-Tober D, Volakakis N, et al. Higher antioxidant concentrations and less cadmium and pesticide residues in organically-grown crops: A systematic literature review and meta-analyses. British J Nutr. 2014; DOI:10.1017/ S0007114514001366. b. Das A, Patel DP, Kumar M, et al. Impact of seven years of organic farming on soil and produce quality and crop yields in eastern Himalayas, India. Agr Ecosyst Environ. 2017;236:142-153. c. Dangour AD, Lock K, Hayter A, Aikenhead A, Allen E, Uauy R. Nutrition-related health effects of organic foods: a systematic review. Am J Clin Nutr. 2010;92:203-210. d. Delate K, Cambardella C, Chase C, Johanns A, and Turnbull R. 2013. The Long-Term Agroecological Research (LTAR) experiment supports organic yields, soil quality, and economic performance in Iowa. Online. Crop Manag. 2013. DOI:10.1094/CM-2013- 0429-02-RS. e. Forman J, Silverstein J, et al., Committee on Nutrition, Organic Foods: health and environmental advantages and disadvantages. Pediatrics. 2012;130:1406-1415 f. Gabriel D, Sait SM, Kunin WE, Benton TG, Steffan‐Dewenter I. Food production vs. biodiversity: comparing organic and conventional agriculture. J App Ecol. 2013;50:355-364. g. Gomiero T, Pimentel D, Paoletti MG. Environmental impact of different agricultural management practices: Conventional vs. organic agriculture. Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences. 2011;30:95-124. Rodale Institute
On this episode, we discuss two topics that are top of mind. First, is the Coronavirus and how it's impacting the bourbon industry. Then we take a look at the hype and hysteria that surrounds Blanton's. We dive into the recent news of Blanton's Gold making its way to the US and if we think $120 SRP is a deal you should jump on. You will hear a new voice for a few minutes and that is Aaron Goldfarb. You may have seen his work on various publications around the web. He wasn’t able to stay on due to some technical difficulties, but we hope to have him on again soon. Show Partners: The University of Louisville has an online Distilled Spirits Business Certificate that focuses on the business side of the spirits industry. Learn more at uofl.me/bourbonpursuit. Barrell Craft Spirits has a national single barrel program. Ask your local retailer or bourbon club about selecting your own private barrel. Find out more at BarrellBourbon.com. Receive $25 off your first order at RackHouse Whiskey Club with code "Pursuit". Visit RackhouseWhiskeyClub.com. Show Notes: Barrel Shortage: https://www.thedailybeast.com/is-there-a-bourbon-barrel-shortage-on-the-horizon This week’s Above the Char with Fred Minnick talks about taxes. What are distilleries doing for coronavirus? History of Blanton's. How did Blanton's become so popular? Will limiting the purchases of allocated items work? Why don't distilleries use technology to manage this problem? Blanton's Gold coming to the US. Is it because of tariffs? Are they taking away from the European allocation? How can you make more product with only one warehouse? Will quality suffer with increased production? What other companies have a similar strategy to Blanton's? What do you think of the price point? Will Straight from the Barrel ever come to the U.S.? Thanks to Blake from bourbonr.com, Jordan from BreakingBourbon.com , Brian from sippncorn.com, and Aaron Goldfarb for joining. 0:00 Have you ever thought about a career in the whiskey industry? I'm not talking about being the next master distiller. But if you want a leg up on the competition, you need to take a look at the distilled spirits business certificate from the University of Louisville. This six course program will prepare you for the business side of the spirits industry like finance, marketing and operations. This is 100% online, meaning that you can access the classes at anytime, anywhere. So what are you waiting for? all that's required is a bachelor's degree, go to U of l.me. Slash bourbon pursuit. 0:35 So if you think back in the 1980s it was a bleak period for bourbon. 0:39 Thanks, thanks, Ryan. 0:43 Is poppin bottles they don't their shit what's going on around here? I'm listening really. I thought it was a good timing. 1:01 This is Episode 245 of bourbon pursuit. I'm one of your hosts Kenny. We've got a lot of news to cover. So let's hit it. Cova 19 are the corona virus is hitting everyone extremely hard. Now, I'm not sure why people are stocking up on toilet paper like they don't plan on leaving the bathroom anytime soon. But I'm sure most of us have enough bourbon to get us through this time. At this point, every major distillery has shut down tours. So if you had plans to visit the bourbon trail, please make sure you do your research before coming to see what is and what is not open. likely it's going to be nothing because even at this time, all bars and restaurants in the city of Louisville are admitted to shut down in person patrons. And in more coronavirus news. We've talked about this before about one of the benefits of having a state run liquor is that the product is always sold at SRP. Well, who could have predicted this but Pennsylvania one of those states where all spirits are government sanctioned and controlled have closed 2:00 All liquor stores in the state in definitely on Tuesday this past week. This also includes all online orders. So that means the entire state of Pennsylvania has literally zero access to bourbon. I guess after all this time we call them bourbon bunkers for a reason. 2:17 In a shocking vote, a bill is passed by the House licensing and occupations committee that allows Kentucky residents to get alcohol shipped to their door, but get this directly from the producer and wait for it without going through a distributor or retailer. This is a huge modernization and reform that could lead to a larger domino effect across the nation. Now this bill would require alcohol shipments meet very clearly labeled and an ID check and signature upon delivery. The producer would still have to pay the excise tax on all inbound shipments coming to Kentucky. However, retailers testified in front of the committee to express concerns about how the bill would negatively impact their businesses because people would be able to 3:00 for alcohol from their homes, and have it shipped to their door instead of going to the local retailer. In my head, I'm thinking, Well, yeah, that's kind of the whole point, right? However, that didn't matter. And now this amended House Bill 415 is going to the full house. We're going to keep you updated as this progresses. Is there a barrel shortage on the horizon? Well, Lou Bryson over the Daily Beast wrote an article where he interviews everyone from Cooper's to loggers and Miller's themselves. The loggers fear a shortage of white oak while the Cooper's really don't. Wood scientists see wetter conditions now than they have in previous years. And the increased deer populations actually eating acorns, which means less trees, and at this time, there's no plan to actually manage oak populations so it could lead to more maple and pure white oaks. However, independent Steve company says that they are coming off to rainy years where prices for logs were high, but now they see plenty of oak across 20 different states. Brown Forman cooperage says that they see more white oak now. 4:00 They have in the past 40 years, and the industry is doing better sustainability by harvesting oak at the right time to allow newer growth to form loosens up the pose talking about the coop urges only using about 2% of the hardwood industry. But he reflected upon his time spent with the logger. And he said that there is a lot of oak out there, but it's actually impossible to mill it because there's no Mills around and it's hard to get it out of the forest as well. So bourbon is gonna continue to be produced, but we'll have to see what the future entails. For the barrels themselves. You can read this story over the daily beast with the link in our show notes. Can bourbon be made in US territories like Puerto Rico and Guam? Well, Josh Peters over at the whiskey jug took this question to the TTB regulations division to see if it actually still would be legally called bourbon. Sure enough, they confirmed it that bourbon whiskey can be produced in Puerto Rico and Guam with reference to 27 CFR five dot 11 where the USA is defined 5:00 As the United States, the several states and territories and the District of Columbia, and the term state includes a territory and the District of Columbia, and the term territory means the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. So there you have it. 5:15 Booker's bourbon batch 2020 dash one also known as Granny's batch will be released at 63.2% ABV or 126.4 proof. It is named after the sixth generation master distiller Booker knows mom, Margaret beam note. Although she never worked in the bourbon business herself, she certainly played an important role in keeping the bourbon family tradition alive, carrying the legacy on from the fifth to the sixth generation. She was very close with her oldest son Booker, who was instrumental in getting him his first job at the distillery where he would eventually go to become the master distiller. This bourbon is be released at six years, four months and 21 days in age. It would be available sometime around this month for around $90 for real 6:00 is setting aside six barrels to be chosen for and exclusively sold to the four roses mellow moments members. mellow moments is a special club organized by four roses that allows members of the general public to be a part of special gatherings, tastings. And you can stay up to date on for roses news. Plus get some cool trinkets sent in the mail every once in a while. new members can apply at select times during the year when the window opens, and the window to join when that membership does open is only for a handful of minutes so you better at quick. You can see their website for more details at mellow moments club.com. Now some pursuit series news episodes 22 and 23 are now available on sale box comm so if you're looking to get some killer bourbon shipped to your door during this time, head on over there and get stocked up. Episode 23 I'm super excited about because it's our oldest release ever at 15 years old. 6:57 Now today's show, we talk about two things 7:00 Things that are top of mind. First, it's that Corona virus, we had to talk about it. But we decided to change topics up a little bit because you've been hearing all about it on the news. So we got to kind of break away from it. And what are the bourbon is out there that can be just as argumentative. It's got to be bland. So we take the whole entire episode and talk about it. We take a look at the hype and the hysteria that surrounds it. we dive into the recent news of Blanton's gold making its way to the US and it do we think of $120 SRP, there's a deal that you should be jumping on. You're also going to hear a new voice for a few minutes when we start this. And that's Aaron Goldfarb. Now, you may have seen his work on various publications around the web, but due to some technical difficulties, he wasn't able to stay on for the entire podcast, but we hope to have him on again once in the future. All right, it's show time. Here's Joe from barrel bourbon. And then you've got Fred minich, with above the char, and remember, Go wash your hands. 7:58 Hey everyone, Joe here again. 8:00 I know I talk a lot about blending here. But we also have a national single barrel program, ask you a local retailer or bourbon club about selecting your own private barrel. Find out more at barrel bourbon calm. 8:12 I'm Fred MiniK. And this is above the char, death and taxes. So those are the two things that we are guaranteed in life to have to do taxes. April 15 comes around and every year I'm like son of beep, beep beep, had a night not remember to put all this together. And every year from a business perspective, I tell myself, I'm going to do a better job of keeping my books. And I never do. I never do I just focus on what I do. And then toward the end of the year, I rush and do all my books and well, I'm a procrastinator, if you will when it comes to the accounting side of my world. I need to get better at it. I will. But you know what, at least I don't have to pay 60 to 80% 9:00 Have taxes on everything that I do. And that, my friends is what Kentucky distillers have to pay about 60% of every bottle of bourbon that you buy, if you tally up all of the 60% of that goes to taxes. What's interesting about this is that Kentucky bourbon gets taxed six to six different times off the still in the barrel in the case in the bottom, and then the consumers pay a sales tax and in Kentucky, they have to pay a wholesale tax as well. So you have all these different taxes that they have to pay, that leads to leads to basically more more and more money that has to go to the government just for them to produce whiskey. Now, here's what's messed really, really messed up is that the distillers don't mind paying the taxes necessarily. They actually look at it as like hey, you know what? 10:00 This is not necessarily a bad thing. All that money a lot of that money gets earmarked to go to roads and schools of Kentucky. So like in Anderson County, you drive through there, and you see the nice roads and schools. Those were basically built by wild turkey and for roses, which puts a lot of money into that government infrastructure. Also Kentucky bourbon, the taxes are specifically earmarked for education. I think a couple years ago, when when things started, you know riling up with the teachers here, it became public that bourbon pumped $30 million into the education system. So I've always said like, if you want to, if you want to improve the Kentucky education system, buy more Kentucky bourbon. In fact, when you buy Kentucky bourbon no matter where you are, you are actually helping the roads, the schools, the children, the teachers, you're helping our entire state. So thank you 11:00 Because we have pretty nice roads out in the rural areas because people buy a lot of bourbon. But here's another fun fact, it wasn't until 2011 that the distillers were even allowed to write off their, the fact that they were paying these taxes, they would have to wait too until they bottled it and put it in the market before they could write off the expense of the the out of alarm tax that they were facing. So American whiskey has all these weird, awkward tax laws, that every time I start complaining about having to do taxes or do my books, I kind of look at myself in the mirror and say, Well, at least I'm not a distiller. So remember that this year, as you're going to put your taxes together, however you do it. At least you're not having to do 60 to 80% on the taxes and you get to write everything off when it's time to write it off. And that's this week's above 12:00 The char Hey, if you have an idea for above the char hit me up on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram, until next week, cheers 12:11 Welcome back to another episode of bourbon pursuit the official podcast of bourbon Kinney and Fred here tonight people's champ isn't able to make it because of Corona virus things that are happening. So we'll go ahead and, you know, we'll send our best wishes to Ryan, he doesn't have a Corona virus. I don't want to make that make that clear. The way I said that probably sounded like really dire. No, he's actually trying to do some things for his for his job and set up daycare because we've got a lot of things happening where schools can be shut down for the next few weeks here in Kentucky. So he's got to make sure that he's taking care of his employees tonight. So we're gonna miss Ryan tonight, but we will go on without him. So before we kind of introduce everybody here, I kind of want to talk to Fred Are you are you Doomsday prepared? You guys got enough bourbon and toilet paper to get you through for the next month? Well, you know, 13:00 Like today was you know, I wasn't supposed to be on today because I'm supposed to be in San Francisco for the competition but last minute 13:08 you know we had a scare ourselves and my wife she's the on the committee for like getting the Louisville VA hospital prepared for the coronavirus. So we've been getting prepared I think for the last three months in fact, we we thought there's a tornado coming. Yeah, there might be a tornado coming. So we had a little tornado drill with a family. We all went down to the basement and I was really proud. We brought chips and toilet paper and you know, the baby had something to play with. So we got this. You Baby could play with toilet paper too. Well, he went he went down there and he went straight for the bourbon. I'm like, this is my kid. 13:48 It's in the DNA. Yeah. Alright, so let's go ahead. Let's go around the horn real quick. And but first before we hit some of our regulars, I want to introduce somebody that's new to the podcast and we have a special 14:00 And tonight so Aaron Goldfarb, who you will have probably seen from a lot of articles out there online. So Aaron, welcome to the show. Thanks for having me even though I don't know how to use a computer apparently so 14:14 it's okay. Well let it slide this time. We'll we'll do some tech support next time when you do calling a pinch hitter here. Absolutely. So just kind of give everybody a quick recap or kind of summary of like, who you are, where you write and everything like that. Yeah, I'm a, you know, accidentally fell into becoming a blues writer. I write a lot of whiskey articles, but I write cocktail articles, beer articles and food articles for places like Esquire punch, fine pair whiskey advocate, bourbon, plus my favorite place to write. 14:48 I've written a few books to hacking whiskey, most notably for your audience. Gather around cocktails was my most recent book and 14:57 just learned that my kid has been 15:00 next two weeks off school. So I think this is the end of my writing career for a while, at least. 15:05 We're all trying to set up some sort of daycares at home or, I don't know, maybe we should just like go out and like, buy the like 5000 piece puzzles off of Amazon and be like, here you go. This is your next two weeks. Exactly. 15:18 Alright, so, Blake, how you doing tonight? Doing well? Yeah, always good to be back. Just straight into my intro. I feel like we're kind of changing things up. So, you know, do I give the regular Hey, I'm Blake from bourbon or do I just talk about coronavirus or, I mean, you can talk about what's happened in your area. I mean, it's ya know, our craziness happening. No, it's well, I had the flu last week. So I feel like I was out and wasn't the corona virus was just the flu. So we're not we're not born. Yeah, yeah, I got tested. I got tested. I tested positive for the flu. So I decided, I guess I didn't test negative for Corona. But there's been no cases in Florida that I'm aware of. But no, it's just it's crazy. I mean, 16:00 The TPC, that's a huge thing in this area. And so they actually announced today that they're suspending all all fans from the tournament. And you know, this golf tournament will bring in over 100,000 people to come and watch it. So it was pretty disappointing. You know, I was supposed to be 16:21 I was supposed to be going out to a tournament with my son tomorrow. So that's a little disappointing. And it's spring break for us. And as you can see, my daughter's like in the background. So they're talking about extending spring break here as well. 16:39 But yeah, yeah, this should be interesting. I don't know. I'm, I'm one who, I just think you've got like a 1% chance of actually hitting and being devastated. So I'm like, I'll just be unprepared and 99% of the time, I'd be correct. So it's just that 1% gets me But no, so 17:00 lost interest for the longest episode we're about to get into. 17:04 You're right on point there. So So Jordan, what's happening? You're part of the world. Well, the Quran hasn't been declared so Western Eastern pa right. There's a bunch of cases nothing in Pittsburgh. So Pittsburgh's I wouldn't say naive, but like right around today was the first time a little bit of unease and unsettledness kind of kicked in. Right? And now that the NHL canceled the penguins, right, people are super upset. But I'm sure we'll be seeing cases pop up super soon. I don't really even know if they're testing or if they have test kits here in Pittsburgh yet so I'm sure there's cases that we don't know about. So I don't know. Thankfully, it's a state run liquor system. So there's tons of tons of bottles still on the shelves. I think people want to buy that one. But it's there slowly. And Brian in our part of the world Yeah, you're part of the world. Thanks for having me again, Brian with sipping corn Find me a bourbon justice calm. And I my only effect so far is tonight. Instead of doing this, I was going to be 18:00 Drinking an Evan Williams 23 year old old fish Gen 15 in the in the 101 12 year Evan Williams with a client and client had travel restrictions and wasn't supposed to go anywhere and so got my thing cancelled so now it's personal because it kept me from ever. But other than that, it's it's hasn't really affected me. I've got my daughter home from Dayton. They kick them out early. They won't be going back 18:28 to just I've got my bourbon Splott I'll be alright. And at one point for Aaron Aaron, I have to tell you this before I forget I tried to do from hacking whiskey the the bacon infused bourbon. It was probably the biggest flop that I have ever created in my life. I will need to talk offline. I need to know the secret because theoretically, everything about that I should just love and I ruined both urban and bacon doing. That's funny. I always tell people it sounds harder to do. 19:00 Fat washing that it is and it's almost impossible to screw up. But I guess 19:06 I've actually had a very similar experience, Brian, so I have a few minutes. You don't you want to slowly render the bacon made the mistake of like, crispy and I think just the brightness came through so that's what I yeah, yeah. Can't get black. Yeah, absolutely no Okay, good bacon pursuit come and say, 19:29 Hey, I'd go for I'd listen to that it sounds delicious peppercorn all over. So Fred, you've been kind of close to this, because I know at least with the corona stuff, you've been actually reaching out for distilleries kind of give us the latest on what's been happening with what the Steelers are doing for preparing for this? Well, I mean, you ask them personally, a lot of them will say it's all bullshit. And then when it comes to like a corporate message, they'll come out and say, 19:56 well, we're closing visitations starting 20:00 Monday so beam has closed visitations for you know Maker's Mark and the other properties. Starting on Monday, 20:11 brown Forman announced the closures of their Kentucky facilities for visitations on Sunday. And jack daniels on Monday. New rep has made similar announcements I have not heard yet back from heaven Hill. I've reached out to them a couple times. I've not heard back from them yet. Interestingly, places like the smaller distillers seem to be the ones that are kind of like, you know what, we're still doing tours like NB Rolen 20:40 in Western Kentucky was very proud to say that, you know what, we're still doing this. And, you know, so a lot of them have these kinds of plans in place, or for the visitor side, and they're all continuing production. I think production is like I think that's one of the 21:00 The hardest questions answers like what if one of the workers gets test test positive? what's what's the protocol? They're like? I mean, I really don't know what the manufacturing protocol is for when you have a pandemic and someone tests positive for something that gets out into the market. You know, do you have a recall? I mean, 21:19 I mean, those are the kinds of questions that they have to be taking. But at the same time, the Kentucky distillers association is meeting with the governor's office who has been meeting with the vice president. So I mean, we're like three degrees away from, you know, the highest office in the land here, when it comes to what can affect the Kentucky distilleries. So I'm not a I'm not an expert. And I'm not going to claim to be but from what I understand is that this is all basically through respiratory and oral is kind of how it gets transferred really easily. So unless people were like spitting in the mash tubs, I'm not too sure exactly. Even that it's probably because he's in a hallway. Yeah, and so I'm not too sure. Honestly, if even if 22:00 worker does, you know, come in and it actually is affected. I think the only thing that it might actually affect is just the production. Probably just send everybody home do shut down production for X amount of days, come back, do a deep clean, you know, go back, go back to work. Yeah, but there is this whole thing where you have to 22:19 the government's issue, like, where people had it, what would what they touched where they went, you know, I was, you know, I was somewhere and got it in and someone was there the day after me and I got an email about it. And, you know, that was kind of one of the personal scare for me, but, you know, I don't know, like, if somebody works in a factory, you know, does the government then require the that factory to issue a statement to its consumers, and I just don't know it. There's not really a precedent for any of this. 22:54 It's very, very scary. And I think it's more so right as much as they might want to keep many 23:00 fracturing right there just one part of the manufacturing puzzle. So if a farmer who distills the grains and drops them off, right not to sales, I'm sorry for the farmer harvests the grains and drops them off for the trucking company, he drops them off, or they can't drop them off because they have the colonel virus. Got any random ash, you're not doing much, right? Same with barrel, stuff like that. So I think it goes the whole or friends point, maybe you don't have to notify consumers, but then you got to notify your whole manufacturing chain, right. And maybe folks then don't want to drop off supplies because they're afraid that they're going to catch it for their employees. So I think it's just not as simple as you know, the virus doesn't survive much longer. You know, once it's out of somebody's system in the air wasn't just something for more than a few hours. So consumers should be safe, but it's more How does it impact everyone they interact with up and down the whole supply chain? Yeah, I think probably the biggest issue that's really is facing right now is the tourism aspect, which has been really it's been what the industry has been hanging his hat on, you know, with the with the rise of these like, the trade wars, you know, 24:00 This was the one thing that everyone said, Well, we still got like, domestic growth and we got tourism. And so you know, this is you take out the more than 2 million people coming here to visit Kentucky distilleries. I mean, my god there, there are talks in town about impacting the derby. I mean, I can't even imagine not having the derby. Brian, can you? I mean, I just can't I can't, I can't envision it. Now. I heard that today, too. They're talking about maybe postponing and it's, you know, they're still looking at it. No decisions made yet but that's, it's just crazy talk. I mean, let's face it, Churchill. I mean, there'll be like, I just bet from home. Oh, 24:44 yeah. Where's that from all right, no, fancy sign up for twin spires club and they'll give you you know, $50 free or whatever, and they'll be laughing all the way to the bank. 24:56 The other the other component of this, that 25:00 should be getting Blake excited, actually because a sale box is that this is going to be one of the moments where we see an enormous increase of shipments and people don't want to get out of their house. So they're not going to go to a liquor store. What are they gonna do? They're gonna buy, like, going to visit seal box calm or wherever. And 25:25 go Fred. Yeah. 25:29 It's 40 like 40 25:33 but uh, you know, that's that's what's going to happen. Is there going to get deliveries? I mean, we're all right. We're getting deliveries from, from Whole Foods and Kroger right now. So it's crazy. Yeah, I think there was somebody had actually talked about on our discord chat a little bit earlier through Patreon. And they were saying, Well, what happens if Corona gets spread into Amazon into these delivery services? And it was like, yeah, it's 26:00 It's a true concern. The other part of this is thank god they're heavily automated, right? There's robots that basically pack those boxes for everybody. But when someone sneezes on a robot, 26:11 what 26:14 are they ended to? Whatever this was all just a way for the robots to take control, actually run a virus. I'm with you on that. Now. I mean, everyone's talking about walking dead. But what if this is really Terminator about to happen? 26:29 They planted the seed. 26:32 conspiracies, Fred. What? 26:35 Surprise now pushing back in conspiracies speaking of vodka conspiracy, Jordan was today's email like a backhanded compliment to 26:44 Tito's yesterday What are we taught Hey, hold on. Let's let's set the stage here because I have no idea what 26:51 newsletter right for whiskey Wednesday, I went out and it was a PSA on how to make your own hand sanitizer. So he did give Tito's the nod and the fact that they are 27:00 aggressively letting consumers know whenever they tweet or interact with them on social media that no you cannot use Tito's for hand sanitizer because it's not 60% alcohol right so we did harm we do give them credit on that one right but I mean, let's be real if you're going to use hand sanitizer and you must use bourbon we prefer you drink it, but at least use 120 proof bourbon to do something right. But there's a comment in there too. Tito's about like, well, at least they're clearing some of the facts up and 27:27 crafted you know, made in Texas kinda 27:31 just made sure wasn't reading into it. But once again vodka fails. I mean, you look at it it's like everyone's like starting to champion it for something that it can make me be valuable for and again even do handsome. 27:46 That's that's a perfect way to end this. I don't really talk about coronavirus anymore, do you? Oh, yeah. No, no, no, that was much hysteria. Yeah, that was a nine. All right, good. So let's move on to the kind of the meat of the show here. Let's Shall we 28:00 Wait for Blake to open his bottle here because we can all hear it all that loud. 28:06 He had the mute control to hear it immediately. It's like gay. There we go. I'll mute him. Alright, perfect. 28:15 before the show started, you know, Aaron, you would think 42 times into this he would have figured it out. 28:23 But this is this is just like it's everything about get sanctioned. Yeah, it's it's either that his Wi Fi dies. I mean, it's, it keeps going. So, Alright, so let's kind of get into the meat of the show. Because the one thing that we've all kind of seen is just the hysteria that is surrounded Blanton's. And to kind of just give a little bit of background and context there is a great article that was posted by Chuck Cowdery back in 2013. And he gave a history of bland so I'm just gonna go ahead and just take like a minute or two just to read this just so everybody kind of gets up to speed on it because I know we've had people requests 29:00 Like, Hey, why don't you do an episode on the history of blends? Come to find out. There's probably not a whole lot that we could do a whole episode about. So this is gonna be it right here. So if you think back in the 1980s it was a bleak period for bourbon. thankthank Ryan 29:18 is poppin bottles they don't. They're shit what's going on around here? I'm listening Really? I thought it was a good timing. See, Aaron? This is what I'm talking about. Nobody, nobody's learned the proper or how to pour their PR, or I've got my mute button. I'll use camera but I pre poured everything and sure your next go. I've already popped a bottle or two on the show. So I think we're good. All right. I think everybody's got their bottle pops out of the way. Alright, so in the 90 or sorry, in the 80s. sales were down. inventories were high profits were under intense pressure and whiskey assets were changing hands. Most large producers were no longer independent. Instead they were part of conglomerates and with a portfolio of a household names back then. 30:00 Back then F Ross Johnson was the powerful CEO of Nabisco. Nabisco had a subsidiary called standard brands that included fleshman distilling. 30 Falk was the CEO of Fleischmanns and Bob Brandt and this guest Moran discuss my I'm gonna screw that up was the president. In 1983, Johnson decided to sell standard brands to Grand Metropolitan. A few years later, green Metro Metropolitan merged with Guinness to form biagio. Green Metropolitan already had a thriving drinks business that included JMP scotch and Smirnoff vodka, assuming they would be replaced after the sale folk and burnt Miranda's kiss. I know that's bad, resigned and started to start their own company. fulke was previously an executive with schenley. So he approached Muslim reckless, whose conglomerate own schenley about selling some assets Falk and Baranski has originally tried to acquire old charter, but reckless always needed money, so he agreed to sell ancient age bourbon brand and the distillery that produced 31:00 It then it was called the Albert B Blanton distillery. Today's Buffalo Trace folk and Baranski is called the new company h International. As the name suggests, they believe Bourbons future was outside of the US. One of the first moves was to enlist the master distiller at the time Elmer T. Lee with the creation of Blanton's single barrel bourbon to appeal to the Japanese market, but with multiple extensions in Japan and the US in 1991, fulke and Burns has sold 22 and a half percent interest in Asia international to Japan's to current shoes a with the right of first refusal to purchase the remaining shares in 1992, Fulk and Burns has sold their shares to Tucker for $20 million to car immediately sold the distillery to Sazerac but retain the corporate entity and brand trademark. Today Sazerac still owns Buffalo Trace and Buffalo Trace still produces all the whiskey for agent age, Blanton's and other age international products and brands using Nashville number two, which is also being used for Bourbons like Rock Hill farms as well. 32:00 Well, Chris Phalke commented on the article, and he said that that was his father ferdie had passed away from cancer in 2000. But Blanton's was the original super premium brand. And he said he can remember watching him draw the packaging idea on a napkin back in 1983. So follow all of that. Very. So. Yeah, I'd like to add, I'd like to add to that, because this is something that gets really lost in the history of that brand. And I would argue we could have a whole show on the history of it. 32:31 But in the 90s, basically, when the Albert Blanton was was head of the distillery he used to, 32:42 he used to take people out, and he used to pick barrels for him. And then he would actually put that into the Kentucky retail market, effectively making it like a single barrel asset, but they weren't really calling him single barrels back then. And so people you know, Sazerac were always you to use 33:00 It in their marketing that it was the first commercially available single barrel that often got pushback by people. But indeed, it was, but that brand had a huge impact on the world. You know, in my book bourbon I wrote about like how important it was for Japan and how it kind of opened that market up. Another thing that Blanton's did that was really important is it pissed off Maker's Mark and it started making fun of Maker's Mark and advertisements for the saying like, Oh, you have to talk about your wax because your whiskey isn't any good. So they kind of like you know, played with Maker's Mark in their own game and they went back and fourth. And so they had like this state, but blends created this statewide tasting competition, in which they selected tasers and Lexington and Louisville to to have a taste up between makers and blends. Blanton's one Lexington and makers one Louisville so plans is a really really important brand. 34:00 The return of bourbon and this Return of the the introduction of the gold. Blanton's is like For God's sake, it's about time. You know, it's about I want to want to get to that, because that's a that's a big part of today's show. But what I want to do is I kind of want to just trace this back about two years. And I want anybody that has a theory on why the hell did Blanton's just skyrocket in popularity? I know that we've seen it on some TV shows and everything like that, but was there was there something that happened that I missed that all of a sudden this round bottle the horse on top just just went crazy? I have a theory. So I want to jump in, but I guess I will. So I think it's and I wish I had notes because I talked to Chris Comstock about this the other day about 35:00 There's supply the supplies, not 35:04 the supplies, basically, I think it's like five x of what it was a few years ago, is what they're producing now. So it's not nearly as bad as people think. But in my opinion, what started to happen was a lot of these distributors in the store started seeing what was happening with Pappy and you know, the antique collection. And so they started allocating on the distribution side. So then instead of stores just like yeah, or whenever you want, they'd say, Oh, we can only give you two bottles. Well, then the stores start telling the customers Hey, look, I'm only getting two bottles of this. It's at that price point that makes it you know, the high end the bottles cool, it's it's, it tastes good. And so then as you know, that started building, you go into a store and see two bottles, you grab them and then there's an empty shelf. So then the I think the hype just started building and scarcity sells. So now every time people see it on the 36:00 shelf, it's like, oh, I've got to grab as many bottles as I can find or as I can get, because who knows when I'll see it again. 36:07 And that all seems to be happening happening over the last two to three years. I tell the story of that blanes was actually the first barrel pick I ever did for bourbon er, and that was back in 2015. And I remember the the retailer marked it up to I think it was $64. And I lost, you know, so many people saying that they're not going to work with a retailer that was trying to gouge like, I bought five cases, I had a few friends buy a bunch of cases. And now if I got a Blaine's barrel, you know, it'll be gone in a day and you could probably sell for 100 bucks a bottle or something crazy like that. But I still think it's all kind of like a an artificial demand or artificial shortage created by that middle tier. But that's just my opinion. I think it also has to do with the fact that right, so around that time, and don't get me wrong. We've been fans of Blanton's I think back in 2014 we caught 37:00 Call it out on the site that we weren't sure why people were overlooking up. But then is Buffalo Trace in general, right? So all their Bourbons started becoming more known to folks people started realizing Oh, pet Van Winkle comes from Buffalo Trace. Oh BTC What's that? Okay. And then Elmer got really big, right? And then others started getting big. So especially if they wanted a single barrel, right, they go in Hey, can I get an armor? Oh, you can't get an armor. But look at this cool bottle. You get this little horse top or his little wax on little bags, and I'm just finding the box. Why don't you go for that instead? Right? And it was just one of the it's just one of those things where people just want the next thing right so all right, so I can't get any other Buffalo Trace product. What else you got? You got plans, you can get that pretty easy. I'll take one of those. Right and then people start doing a little research, especially if people are really into bourbon. They realize that there's Blanton's gold, there's plans straight from the barrel, which used to be again, easy to find. So two years ago, it was what around two years ago I think master mouth stop shipping right and a lot of store shop stopped shipping from over in Europe. And it was just that snowball effect, right? There's no rhyme or reason to a lot of stuff. It's just people like to hoard people like to know what's cool. 38:00 Blanton's cannon right? Everyone, I'm sure has friends who asks, What should I buy in the store used to be really simple to say, Oh, just pick up a bottle of blends. It's great bourbon, reasonably priced. Just go for it. Right. I still say that. And then I catch myself going, except you're not gonna be able to find anymore, which stinks. But I think a lot of it is just that snowball effect that took place with consumers, especially around Buffalo Trace products. You brought up something very important. Jordan, as you brought up, Elmer T. Lee, and I've been thinking about this a lot since Kenny posed the question to us before the show about why did planes take off and I remember specifically after Elmer died, you could not find a martini you could not find it. And the one bottle that everybody recommended after that, because it was accessible was Blanton's, you know, it was a Rock Hill farms. It was always Blanton's was the was the bourbon that people recommended after Elmer T. Lee passed away. There couldn't be a more fitting bourbon to recommend since that was the 39:00 One that he brought, you know, he brought to life. And, you know, Elmer kinda gets forgotten. You know, Elmer doesn't get talked about as much as you know, some of the other deceased distillers like Booker know and Parker beam. And it's a real shame because he was a Titan of a distiller and I think that he would be, you know, smiling quite happily to know that his stuff was being It was very difficult to get he wouldn't be very happy with the price gouging. But I do believe that that is when it all started was in the in the quest to find Elmer. They got Blanton's and liked it. Fred, I kind of remember a little there was a at least a couple year time period where to me it was the opposite of that. People wanted Blanton's and and Elmer was aged couple of years more than Blanton's and I couldn't figure out why people wanted Blanton's instead of Elmer. I mean they're 40:00 is a time period where it over took Elmer. And I don't know anything about the production. I don't know anything about what's being withheld. But it it to Blake's point, it sure looks that way. So there's another thing that's sort of happening right now. And that is Buffalo Trace and heaven Hill are implementing new systems where you can only purchase allocated items that haven't healed sometimes it's once a month. And in the case of Blanton's at Buffalo Trace, they're now doing this once every three months of actually scanning your driver's license and turning people away. And this is because if anybody is unaware, the line that has been growing for Blanton's at the distillery has just gotten chaotic. I'm talking like two to 300 people that are waiting at six o'clock in the morning to get a bottle of regular Blanton's at the distillery. And so, you know, Aaron, kinda want to pose this question to you and get you get you involved here. Do you think this new system has a chance to actually succeed and work 41:00 Well, I was gonna 41:03 Aaron, you're cutting out, buddy. I think we lost him. Yeah, he and Blake or Sharon schleifer. 41:10 Want to bring them on camera? Yeah. 41:15 Yeah. Try to try to drop and come back on and come back if you can like maybe plug in or something. I'm not too sure. We'll, we'll get you. We'll get you in here. 41:26 All right, so so we'll take that in a different direction. So, Blake, do you think that has an actual chance to succeed with this particular kind of system? So what's the actual system again, sorry, I was typing whatever you know. 41:43 Loud they're only allowed how many bottles like one a month or something? It's this is what happens when like the teacher calls in you and you weren't paying attention. 41:53 Helen has placed they've had an in place for like two years they haven't held where they scan your license when you buy. Like buffalo grease implemented the same 42:00 Yeah, I mean you know you think about will it did that for a while and then they had their their do not sell to lists and everything, it'll, it'll definitely slow things down but I don't know. I mean, I think that's good because 42:15 ultimately you want some bottles at the distillery whenever people come and visit you. I had this experience a few weeks ago and we're up there and a friend of mines like, man, none of these, you know, these distilleries have any bottles like I thought it'd be able to get something cool. You know, heaven Hill, at least had. I remember what we got. I think that William heaven hill there. So at least there was something but that's the hard part is you don't want just the locals to come grab everything that is available. Turn around and throw it up on Craigslist or wherever people are selling these days. We don't do that in Kentucky man. Yeah, it's never happened. Right? Yeah. But you know, so you kind of want to spread it out a little bit. So I think that'll help. Um, but you know, it's 43:00 Like anything else, people are going to do what they want to do, they're going to send their sister they're going to send their cousin they're going to send, if they really want it that bad, but overall, hopefully it kind of spreads the allocation a little bit further. And I'll say, since I'm not located in Kentucky, right, I, at least from heaven Hill standpoint, I actually appreciate that they do that now, because it seems more often than not, whenever I go down to Heaven, Hell, and I always stop by when I'm in town, these tend to have a few bottles, right? That's, I think, based on the fact that they're helping to limit people from buying them. So from that standpoint, I think it's fantastic, right, especially being somebody who's visiting Kentucky and wanting to go I make sure to stop by the distilleries and buy stuff, but now they have stuff to buy, which I'm super appreciative. Yeah, and that's actually part of the reason this was actually implemented was Freddy Johnson was on the stage with Fred at legend series recently, and he talked exactly about this that this is all because of just trying to counteract the flipping game. And if you can limit of what people can get, then you can do that. And plus, they want to 44:00 Word people that are traveling from all around the country to go and visit the distillery and they want to get something unique while they're there. And this is an opportunity to actually make that happen. It's you know, they could release a lot more bottles to 44:15 we'll get to that option. Yeah. It's a difficult it's difficult, you know, I look at it, I look at it from the perspective of like, every time, you know, they, they, the distillers, like, wish for something and then they get it. And then like, five years later, they're like, Oh, shit. Yeah, like net. Like, I remember when they were lobbying for this. They were like, begging to have special bottles. They were begging to have this attention and this FaceTime with the consumers. And now you hear them and they're like, crap, what are we going to do? You know, like now they're facing some of the same problems at their retailer partners have so a lot more headaches for them for sure. 45:00 him personally, you know, three months is, I think a little bit generous. I would have rather seen a year. Because if there's two to 300 people lining up to do this, and they're bringing their brothers, their sisters, their cousins or aunts and their uncles to get a bottle of Blanton's. Like, let's just nip this, like it's Blanton's after all right, like it is it's good whiskey. But let's let's try to let's try to curb this because I don't see a reason why people should be going this nuts over and if they have a bottle of bourbon. And I think I remember seeing a lot of comments when people announced that this system is getting put in place. They're like, Oh, like why are you gonna hurt your you know, your biggest consumers and your cheerleaders and I'm like, they make a lot of different whiskey. There's a lot of different bourbon out there on the market. Like don't pin yourself into just like that one bottle. You know like that Nashville makes a lot of different stuff, right? So like you don't you don't need to be pigeon holing yourself and it just one particular kind of whiskey for everything. 46:00 You drink? Yeah, I was at a store one time and a guy was asking the clerk for it he's like you guys got any Blanton's as a total wine and and so everyone having plantains and I was like hey man like actually they've got a Hancock single barrel pick that they've done and it was like I think seven years old or something 46:20 the exact same mash bill you know, maybe it wasn't in warehouse H or whatever it is, but pretty much the exact same thing is like I don't want that crap. I'm like, Okay, nevermind. No, I mean why bother? No, you bring up a really good point though Brian right? The whole point the whole reason they had the horse in the first place right and way back when wanted spelled lens which is cool, but to entice people to keep buying it. So then you do find people who actually you know, for multitude of reasons right and I'm not judging whatsoever who once they find something and they do want to collect it just for that purpose. I realized you can buy the stopper from Buffalo Trace itself right? But they actually didn't want to start collecting the bottles just to get the topper so not only do they like up and other like corn 47:00 I need to get all the rest of them. Right. So now their demand is well, I just don't need one or two. Now I got to find all I got to the letters, I got to fill it out. Exactly. Right. So it's it's, they've kind of created a little bit of a headache in that sense for themselves. If there was no letters on the bottle, that would definitely eliminate a little bit of that from some well, and a lot of people in the comments have said that the dump date being on every bottle, you know, how many posts have you seen, you know, oh, my kid was born or you know, oh, I'm looking for this dump date. Yeah, work on whatever they want. Yeah, whatever it is, they they want that data on there. I mean, it's it's marketing genius is what it is. It's a product of success. You know, I think Fred alluded to this a little bit of they worked really hard to make these things popular and, you know, get special releases out of the distillery. And then I don't want to say it backfire, but I think it caused them more headaches, and they probably they were thinking it would but it's a product of success. So at the end of the day, I don't think they mind it. 48:00 No no no one thing that none of these companies are doing is they're not utilizing technology you know and Kenny I'd like to get your your thoughts on this because you're the tech guy but How hard would it be for them to like create like an order and hold or some some kind of system for online to connect with a point of sale where someone could plan their trip and then come pick up a bottle I just I just feel like there's so many opportunities to alleviate these problems that they never seem to explore they they're stuck in these inundated antiquated stand in line look at an ID kind of crap. I think it's just simple ecommerce is that a lot of and I think we've touched on a lot of times, even just retailers and everybody else in general, like this type of market is is behind the curve of what we see in every other type of industry. And so if they don't take the initiative to try to figure out like, how do we get our hands in the how do we get our product into the hands of consumers faster, easier, and less friction and make them 49:00 A happy consumer. If you don't take that into account, then they're not gonna do anything about it. You know, the other thing is, is that if you look at what the SAS rack is building with blends and Buffalo Trace and everything, like, they don't really, I mean, they're gonna sell out no matter what. So do they need to go through all that extra effort to invest in an e commerce platform to invest in something where like, I don't know whether they have their own online, put your email in a database and come and pick your bottle up on this date kind of thing? I don't know if they really need to. So it kind of like I said, there's there's, it's a double edged sword from there. And you do actually so Fred, I mean, that's a great point that you make both Kenny and Fred but you do see some distilleries doing that, right. So look at new ref. Look at angels MD with their main club, right? They both do that when they have special releases come out, you can pre buy and they give you a 30 days to pick them up or X number of days to pick up. I think that's it's great. And it's also great for again, if somebody is out in town to be like, Alright, I got a month to go pick this up. I'll plant quickly. 50:00 trip around this or something like that, right? And it drives people there. And then I'm sure once they're there, they're like, Well, shit, I'm here by some other stuff, whether it's from that distillery or local store around there, whatever. But it's just great for the local economy in general. And I wish more distilleries did that. He was envies absolutely crushing their special bottles. People make events out of that. And I have never talked to one unhappy person out of there. I mean, I hear I hear so many unhappy people coming out of heaven Hill, there's so many people, unhappy people coming out of out of SAS, right. Really no one from being but I don't think anyone's necessarily going there for special releases. But the key distilleries that have special releases of all them angels envy is crushing it by far that program that they have people love it. Yep. And plus, it's an easy way for you to kind of like allocate these things online. And not only that is you basically sell it before anybody actually picks it up. So it's, it's, it's instead of like putting it out there and hoping people come like, it's all online if you make it easy and frictionless 51:00 Then you're gonna have a much better way to you don't have that kind of like cash flow in that pipeline coming into man. What if they did like bourbon futures where you could like, you know, buy like a case of Blanton's five years from now. So technically that's kind of what Bardstown bourbon company is doing. So they their barrel pick now is you pay $1,000 deposit to get it, and then which I guess not technically futures, but then you let it age as long as you want. And essentially you just pay the same price for whatever the standard bottling is whether you let it go to 10 years or you let it go six months. 51:39 Yeah, yeah, I'm familiar with that. It's just not it's not proven, but like Blanton not nearly as exciting to Yeah, I mean, that it is it is a concept for sure. But like, I mean, imagine like if you could, if you could buy a futures, Pappy 23 right now when your child is born, 52:00 or something like that. You do it in a heartbeat. Yeah. Now, right now I would nobody would want to track that accountant. Somebody put in the or Aaron put in the chats about basically that's how Bordeaux works and yeah, you know the it's not like a Pappy 23 where you're waiting 23 years but there is some time there and it is interesting to see how that whole market works and I mean, it's pretty crazy. We may get there one day, the ghosts Yes, that's the one thing that we don't that we don't have that the wine world has is like these really high level business people call negotiators who basically broker every single thing. And I think that's why angels envy so successful with that program as West Henderson is kind of like a hybrid, you know, in this world. He's such a business forward leaning mind and you know, it has his dad's DNA. Anyway. All right, I want to shift topic a little bit because this is still gonna be Blanton's, but the biggest news 53:00 That happened last week or was it two weeks ago whatever it was was the idea and the announcement of Blanton's gold coming to the US 53:11 What do you get if you mix Seattle craft, Texas heritage and Scottish know how that's to bar spirits to bar spirits traces its roots to a ranch in rural Texas run by the founder, Nathan kaisers family for six generations. Nathan grew up on the ranch with stories of relatives bootlegging moonshine, and after moving into Seattle, he wanted to keep the family tradition alive any open to bar spirits in 2012. They're very traditional distillery making everything from scratch and each day starts by milling 1000 pounds of grain. Their entire product lineup consists of only two whiskies, their moonshine, and the only bourbon made in Seattle. Both bottles are being featured in rack house whiskey clubs. Next box, rack house whiskey club is a whiskey of the Month Club. And they're on a mission to uncover the best flavors and stories that craft distilleries across the US. 54:00 Have to offer rack house ships out to have the feature distilleries finest bottles, along with some cool merchandise in a box delivered to your door every two months. Go to a rack house whiskey club comm to check it out and try some to bar for yourself. Use code pursuit for $25 off your first box. 54:21 The biggest news that happened last week or was it two weeks ago, whatever it was, was the idea and the announcement of Blanton's gold coming to the US. And for anybody that has been a bottle chaser or you've been into bourbon for a little bit. We've all known that. Blanton's gold and Blanton straight from the barrel are something that we gravitate towards because you like oh, it's higher proof and, and now we're all like oh, and it's got a shiny gold horse. So of course I want all these. As Ryan said earlier, I want the I want the ski with all the gold letters on it now. So the there's a few questions that arise with this and the first one. I'm going to 55:00 Come to his tariffs, because one thing that we've seen is that tariffs are being it's being catastrophic to the whiskey industry in regards of just it's both sides of the coin here. Now, there is the idea that people are saying, Okay, well, if we are going to have to pay tariffs, then let's go ahead and hold more whiskey back that we know that we can sell to our existing consumer base here in the US. Do you all think that this is a reaction to that? Or do you think this was planned out a little bit further in advance? And they said, You know what, we're going to just do this because we're, let's go ahead and make some more headlines. I'll go first, right. I think 100% has to do with tariffs, right? I think they are looking in real time and how to react. I think they saw a business opportunity. And they're going for it right. They don't want to have products sitting there, or they don't want to overcharge consumers, 55:55 to needlessly sell to no one in Europe, if no one's gonna be paying that price. 56:00 They saw Hey, Blanton's is hot, let's make it happen. And 100% that played into it, whether there's a little pre work behind the scenes going into it potentially. But don't get me wrong, that current tariff situation 100% played into this. I also want to mention that in the press release, they also said that this is going to be an SRP of $120 for this particular bottle too. So don't forget that. 56:21 I like to say that at the top of Buffalo Trace is probably the single smartest person in the entire spirits industry, Mark Brown. That man had this plan probably five years ago and had a rollout leading up to it. And this year is probably going to be like, like some additional Weller products, maybe a single barrel or something like that. I mean, you're going to start seeing like Buffalo Trace, kind of like, take their super premiums and dice them up into more limited edition releases. And it's it's all about getting another skew getting another press release at another company. 57:01 They they own a lot of the conversation market, they own a lot of the store they own almost all the skews that all the retailers want. And if they every time they add one, they've got another one. So they have another reason to have a meeting with a retailer they have another meeting to have a meeting. Another reason to have a meeting with a an on premise person plans goal, in my opinion, is probably just one of the actually well they're foolproof last year was the beginning of the rollout of seeing the kind of evolution of what Buffalo Trace is planning to do with their premium product. They're dicing them up gradually raising those price raising the prices up a little bit more and making them even more valuable. Yeah, and I don't know that's a it's looking at it from a marketing standpoint. Genius. Yeah. 57:57 I don't know there's there's a lot better 58:00 Values out there in my book and I just I I try to resist so much of the hype and I I like the ancient age products probably better than than their other mash bill and and other than some Weller 12 or the the B tech, William LaRue Weller the ancient age math is my favorite Mossville. 58:25 But the marketing just it rubs me the wrong way. I get it. And I wish Aaron was able to stay on because he could speak very highly to this with his experience at Esquire and some of the other more industry facing publications. I'm just telling you, man, you could just throw you could you could dangle any Weller Blanton's, even Buffalo Trace, you know outside of a Manhattan window and you'll have like 50 bro dudes chasing it down. It's the stuff is crazy. And it's genius. And congratulations to them for doing it. It's absolute genius. 59:00 But there's so much for roses and wild turkey out there that that in other brands that are so much better and so much more of a value, I just don't get it personally. So so then that then that then that that's not really a knock on them. That's basically that's our job to say, hey guys can't get this, you know, try this and i and i think Jordan does a great job of that. I think Blake does a great job of that. Kenny, you really just drink it all. So 59:30 Equal Opportunity drinker. That's right. 59:33 And so Fred, I kind of want to like take a counter argument to kind of what you said a little bit, because there was something that came up in the chat by Dave Preston. And he had mentioned that, you know, he thinks that this has to do with like, increased stock that's resulting from ramped up production. However, I kind of look at it and think like, well, maybe they're just taking and to take Jordan's side of this. Maybe they're taking away from the European allocation now and just shifting to the United States, because we've all been 1:00:00 on tours here, right. And we all know we've been in the Blanton's bottling Hall, every day you're in there. They were bottling plants, and they're doing it around the clock every single day. And it doesn't seem that they can keep up with the demand. So where is all this extra inventory coming from? If you don't think it's just like taking away from European allocation and from tariffs, if, like how to keep pumping out more product. So again, this is my opinion, this is all been planned. These are not knee jerk business people. These are very smart strategic, especially when it comes to marketing, and they happen to have great whiskey. And I just think this was a part of it. Did they change their European allocation? Hey, maybe they did, but I think this product was always planned. Maybe Maybe it got bumped up a little bit for for anticipation of more terrorists or continued tariffs. But I think this has always been in, in creation. And I think we're going to see a lot more 1:01:00 from, from that distillery with new products coming out of their heavyweight prop brands like Weller and Blanton's, and, you know, I don't think we'll see anything added to the Buffalo Trace antique collection. But I think you'll start seeing more limited releases. I got to push back just a little bit on that too, though, Fred. So I think, don't get me wrong. I think it's super smart if they were planning this for a few years, right. But I think I would categorize them just as smart for being a very smart businessman. If they read the current situation. They read the current landscape, the current tariffs and said, Alright, how can we capitalize this? Right? How can we turn this around and make it so that it works in our favor? Right, I'd say that'd be a just a smart individual and just a smart move. So while it may be planned, right, I got to give them I hope I'd give them credit for reading the current landscape and saying, what can we do to make this work in our favor? And hey, maybe both are Right, exactly. You know, so like, what I know is I'm not running a billion dollars. 1:01:56 I'm sitting here. So I am, this isn't 1:02:00 Confirm, but it was basically like kind of backdoor confirmed of Buffalo Trace production. So they were producing about 12,000 barrels a year in 95 by 2010, that was around 100,000 barrels. And by 2018, it was 250,000 barrels. 1:02:17 So may not be exact, but gives you an idea of the ramp up. They've been doing over the last, you know, two decades. So when you talk about they may not have had to steal from the European allocation. That's where I think there is more barrels that are going around now whether or not it's just a you know if it's really because of tariffs or is just because, you know, take advantage of the US market a little more. I think it could be a little bit of both, maybe it turned out to be good timing. But at the end of the day, I think they love the new press releases, they love the new brand extensions. You know, what was it 1:02:54 is it benchmark that's getting the next redo You know, we've seen them do it with well are now the 17 1:03:00 to benchmark and I think well, you know, they've kind of evolved the H Taylor brand to have a new release every year. I think we'll just like Fred said, we'll just keep seeing new bit several new releases each year because they want to be able to go back to t
Iturup on Kuriilide suurim saar, seal on vaheldusrikas loodus ja rohkesti vulkaane. Saates kõneldakse Kurilski linnast ning retkedest Valgetele Kaljudele ja Baranski vulkaanile.
Iturup on Kuriilide suurim saar, seal on vaheldusrikas loodus ja rohkesti vulkaane. Saates kõneldakse Kurilski linnast ning retkedest Valgetele Kaljudele ja Baranski vulkaanile.
Marcus Baranski zählt zu den größten Fahrradkennern in Deutschland und ist seit 1983 wettkampfmäßig auf zwei Rädern unterwegs: erst BMX, dann auf dem Mountainbike und schließlich auf allem, was richtig schnell ist. Über den Straßenradsport kam er 2002 zum Zeitfahren und ist dieser Disziplin bis heute treu. Er war „King of the Lake", ist Vizeweltmeister seiner Altersklasse und bei der Challenge Roth gehört er Jahr für Jahr zu den schnellsten Staffelfahrern über die 180 Kilometer durchs Frankenland. triathlon-Chefredakteur Nils Flieshardt hat sich mit Marcus über die heißesten Rad-Trends und -Entwicklungen für 2020 ausgetauscht. Die beiden Experten diskutieren über Vor- und Nachteile von Einfach-Schaltungen, sprechen über den Trend zum Custom-Cockpit, spekulieren über das Triathlonrad der Zukunft und klären, wann es eine dumme Idee ist, auf Latex zu vertrauen.
Actress Christine Baranski sat down with HFPA journalist Ana Maria Bahiana to discuss the latest season of her topical CBS All Access series The Good Fight. They also discuss the evolution of her character Diane Lockhart from inception on the hit Golden-Globe-nominated series The Good Wife almost ten years ago until today, what she loves about theater versus television, how she co-starred in musicals like Mamma Mia and Chicago, how Hollywood's landscape has changed amidst the #MeToo movement, and more.
Die dritte Staffel rund um die Anwaltskanzlei Reddick, Boseman und Lockhart mit Diane Lockhart (Christine Baranski) in der Hauptrolle dreht sich weiterhin um die politischen, gesellschaftlichen und rechtlichen Themen zumeist im Zusammenhang mit der Trump-Regierung oder aktuellen Entwicklungen in den USA. Im Podcast besprechen Nadja, Adam und Hanna die bedeutsamsten Themen der dritten Staffel, welche Charaktere wurden vermisst und welche Plot-Entwicklungen haben besonders gut funktioniert. Wir danken unserem Sponsor Fox. Dort könnt ihr ab dem 3. Juli immer mittwochs ab 21 Uhr die neuen Folgen der dritten Staffel Legion schauen. Danke Fox! Feedback, Anregungen, Kritik und mehr könnt Ihr uns via Mail über podcast@serienjunkies.de zuschicken. Wir freuen uns auch über positive Bewertungen und Zuschriften auf iTunes!
This week we are discussing new show The Red Line, reviewing the third season of The Good Fight, recommending 90s movie The Devil’s Arithmetic, and giving you a head’s up about HBO series Chernobyl, as well as the third season of The Handmaid’s Tale and other exciting upcoming shows from Hulu. Of course, we also have Mimi’s weekly review of the latest Game of Thrones episode.
This week we are discussing new show The Red Line, reviewing the third season of The Good Fight, recommending 90s movie The Devil’s Arithmetic, and giving you a head’s up about HBO series Chernobyl, as well as the third season of The Handmaid’s Tale and other exciting upcoming shows from Hulu. Of course, we also have Mimi’s weekly review of the latest Game of Thrones episode.
Christine Baranski was a successful theatre actor who would never stoop to do television in the old days. But when she got the pilot script for “Cybill,” and had two daughters to put through school, she took the role of Marianne, the tough-talking best friend of Cybill Shepherd’s character. “Who goes to Hollywood at forty-two and becomes an overnight star?” Baranski asks the critic Emily Nussbaum. What made her such a sensation? “No one had seen that woman on American television” before, she notes, of her character, a badass with a Martini and an attitude. “Sex and the City” came later. Playing strong women seems to come naturally to Baranski; since 2009, she’s portrayed the capable, elegant Diane Lockhart, in “The Good Wife” and then “The Good Fight.” She talked with Nussbaum in a live conversation at the 2018 New Yorker Festival. Plus, Amanda Petrusich talks with the musician Kurt Vile, who performs his song “Pretty Pimpin” live.
A quick interview with Tibor Baranski Jr., lawyer and expat of nearly 40 years, on the current state of the world.
SHS teacher Conor Baranski brings two of his students, Seth McCutchan and Mya Darling into the studio to talk about the new class Performance Psychology. They just completed semester number one of this new class and we get the details!
We talk Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again (2018), the songs, the flashbacks, and who got the short end of the stick. Question of the Week: Could the song choices have been better? If you could have taken out one song and replaced it with another, which would it be? Follow us! Blog: http://adaptationpodcast.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AdaptationPodcast Twitter: https://twitter.com/AdaptationCast Tumblr: http://adaptationpodcast.tumblr.com/ YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/adaptationpodcast
Conner Baranski joins Steve in the studio to give us an update on girls soccer as well as tell us about a new class the he is co-teaching with Scott Fitchett. The class is titled Performance Psychology and it is full!
Morning Service - Sunday 5th August 2018 This talk is by Tad Baranski
In this installment of our periodical "In Theaters" segment, we give you our immediate reaction to seeing a new movie on the big screen. This time, we travel back to Island Kalokairi to see what happened to our favorite love quadrangle in, "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again." **NOTE: THIS EPISODE CONTAINS SPOILERS** Quick Facts Release date: July 20, 2018 Runtime: 1 hour, 54 minutes Starring: Lily James, Amanda Seyfried, Meryl Streep, Dominic Cooper, Pierce Brosnan, Stellan Skarsgård, Christine Baranski, Colin Firth, Cher, Julie Walters, Jeremy Irvine, Andy Garcia, Josh Dylan, Hugh Skinner, Jessica Keenan Wynn, Alexa Davies Directed by: Ol Parker Tell us what you think by chatting with us (@filmsnuff) on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, or by shooting us an email over at mailbag@filmsnuff.com. Visit our website at https://www.filmsnuff.com.
Does Your Mother Know you're listening? Well, we're glad that you decided to Take a Chance on us this episode, you little Chiquititas. We don't Lay All Our Love on the 2008 smash hit "Mamma Mia!" Audiences lost and studios won as this movie made $615.7 million at the box office, but, as they say, The Winner Takes It All and the loser has to fall. A lot of people think this movie is Honey, Honey, but we think it's vinegar, vinegar. We thought this might be Our Last Summer after watching this drivel, but we were Super Troupers and powered through it without letting a single scene Slip Through Our Fingers. When All Is Said and Done, not even underrated Meryl Streep could keep us from thinking that this was the cinematic equivalent of Waterloo. Tell us what you think by chatting with us (@filmsnuff) on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, or by shooting us an email over at mailbag@filmsnuff.com. This episode is sponsored by The Poor Person's Almanack. Visit our website at https://www.filmsnuff.com.
This week, Guy, Karen, Wynter and Margaret bare their souls and confess their problematic faves. Not sure what that means? Don’t worry. They break it down. Wynter Mitchell is all about Cynthia Nixon running for governor of New York. Margaret Wappler is all about Nina Riggs’ memoir The Bright Hour. Karen’s digging CBS All Access’ The Good Fight, and Guy has just discovered The Supersizers Go With Karen Tongson, Guy Branum, Margaret Wappler and Wynter Mitchell. That’s My Jam: Margaret Wappler - Led Zeppelin - Good Times Bad Times Karen Tongson - Tove Styrke - I Changed My Mind Guy Branum - Topsy Turvy - Three Little Maids (The Mikado) Each week we’ll add everyone’s jams to our Spotify playlists. You can let us know what you think of Pop Rocket and suggest topics in our Facebook group or via @PopRocket on Twitter. Produced by Laura Swisher for MaximumFun.org.
This week we make a movie with Steve Martin and two Eddie Murphys. There's also the surprise appearance of a Purple Aki. Join us for...Bowfinger. If you want to contact the show, or simply have a chinwag with the chaps, then please pop by our Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/isawthatyearsago or follow us on Twitter: @istyashow Join in the conversation on our Reddit page https://www.reddit.com/r/isawthatyearsago/ You can even contact us on good old email by sending your missives to - show@isawthatyearsago.com Also, check out our new YouTube channel and let us know what you think.
Presents! Decorations! The Roast Beast! We're stealing all of it with Jim Carrey in DR. SEUSS' HOW THE GRINCH STOLE CHRISTMAS. Adapted from the classic children's book and Chuck Jones TV special and directed by Ron Howard, this movie combines two of my favorite holiday traditions, misanthropy and larceny. Also featuring Taylor Momsen, Jeffrey Tambor and Christine Baranski, this movie filled us with cheer when we were younger, but how does it hold up today? Listen below to find out. Also, please Subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher. Also, follow us on Twitter. And please consider supporting our Patreon campaign. Special Thanks to our sponsors, Hello Fresh! To receive 50% off your first Hello Fresh box, use this code: REWATCH50 WARNING: this podcast contains strong language and immature subject matter, please be advised.
The boys begin the endeavour started by the legends known as Tim Batt and Guy Montgomery. What awaits these three men as they stare down the barrel of 52 watches of Bad Moms 2? Only time will tell, but for now the acting of Christine Baranski is keeping them going. That and Alisdair's intriguing educational system for children.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Puedes ver el video completo de esta conferencia en: https://www.mindaliatelevision.com/transforma-emociones-perturbadoras-en-sabiduria-por-marcin-baranski/ Transformando emociones perturbadoras en sabiduría por Marcin Baranski, que tuvo lugar en la Stupa de la Iluminación (Benalmádena, Málaga) el 12 de Marzo 2017. ————————————INFORMACION SOBRE MINDALIA—————————— Mindalia.com y Mindalia Televisión son una ONG SIN ANIMO DE LUCRO Si te ha gustado este video, APOYANOS CON UNA DONACION: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=G58CS4AVKC6BU SUSCRIBETE AL CANAL DE YOUTUBE para no perderte ningún video: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=mindaliacom AYUDA A MINDALIA, SIN PAGAR NI UN SÓLO CÉNTIMO MÁS, CON TUS COMPRAS Y RESERVAS ONLINE: http://helpfree.ly/j20544 MILES DE VIDEOS de conferencias y entrevistas de interés en https://www.mindaliatelevision.com Participa en las CONFERENCIAS EN DIRECTO: http://television.mindalia.com/category/conferencias-en-directo/ -Puedes escuchar este y otros audios en Ivoox: http://mindaliacomradio.ivoox.com PIDE O ENVIA AYUDA http://www.mindalia.com – La Red Social de Ayuda a través del Pensamiento SIGUENOS EN REDES SOCIALES: -Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/mindaliacom -Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mindalia.ayuda/ -Twitter: http://twitter.com/mindaliacom -Pinterest: https://es.pinterest.com/mindaliacom/ DESCARGATE LAS APLICACIONES MOVILES GRATUITAS: Mindalia Multimedia https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=es.app.mindalia_television Mindalia Red de Ayuda https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=es.app.mindalia_ayuda&hl=es CONTACTA CON NOSOTROS: http://television.mindalia.com/contacto/ -Skype: mindalia.com ¿Tienes un video que te gustaría que publicáramos? Envíanoslo!!
Puedes ver el video completo de esta conferencia en: https://www.mindaliatelevision.com/transforma-emociones-perturbadoras-en-sabiduria-por-marcin-baranski/ Transformando emociones perturbadoras en sabiduría por Marcin Baranski, que tuvo lugar en la Stupa de la Iluminación (Benalmádena, Málaga) el 12 de Marzo 2017. ————————————INFORMACION SOBRE MINDALIA—————————— Mindalia.com y Mindalia Televisión son una ONG SIN ANIMO DE LUCRO Si te ha gustado este video, APOYANOS CON UNA DONACION: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=G58CS4AVKC6BU SUSCRIBETE AL CANAL DE YOUTUBE para no perderte ningún video: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=mindaliacom AYUDA A MINDALIA, SIN PAGAR NI UN SÓLO CÉNTIMO MÁS, CON TUS COMPRAS Y RESERVAS ONLINE: http://helpfree.ly/j20544 MILES DE VIDEOS de conferencias y entrevistas de interés en https://www.mindaliatelevision.com Participa en las CONFERENCIAS EN DIRECTO: http://television.mindalia.com/category/conferencias-en-directo/ -Puedes escuchar este y otros audios en Ivoox: http://mindaliacomradio.ivoox.com PIDE O ENVIA AYUDA http://www.mindalia.com – La Red Social de Ayuda a través del Pensamiento SIGUENOS EN REDES SOCIALES: -Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/mindaliacom -Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mindalia.ayuda/ -Twitter: http://twitter.com/mindaliacom -Pinterest: https://es.pinterest.com/mindaliacom/ DESCARGATE LAS APLICACIONES MOVILES GRATUITAS: Mindalia Multimedia https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=es.app.mindalia_television Mindalia Red de Ayuda https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=es.app.mindalia_ayuda&hl=es CONTACTA CON NOSOTROS: http://television.mindalia.com/contacto/ -Skype: mindalia.com ¿Tienes un video que te gustaría que publicáramos? Envíanoslo!!
Puedes ver el video completo de esta conferencia en: https://www.mindaliatelevision.com/transforma-emociones-perturbadoras-en-sabiduria-por-marcin-baranski/ Transformando emociones perturbadoras en sabiduría por Marcin Baranski, que tuvo lugar en la Stupa de la Iluminación (Benalmádena, Málaga) el 12 de Marzo 2017. ————————————INFORMACION SOBRE MINDALIA—————————— Mindalia.com y Mindalia Televisión son una ONG SIN ANIMO DE LUCRO Si te ha gustado este video, APOYANOS CON UNA DONACION: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=G58CS4AVKC6BU SUSCRIBETE AL CANAL DE YOUTUBE para no perderte ningún video: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=mindaliacom AYUDA A MINDALIA, SIN PAGAR NI UN SÓLO CÉNTIMO MÁS, CON TUS COMPRAS Y RESERVAS ONLINE: http://helpfree.ly/j20544 MILES DE VIDEOS de conferencias y entrevistas de interés en https://www.mindaliatelevision.com Participa en las CONFERENCIAS EN DIRECTO: http://television.mindalia.com/category/conferencias-en-directo/ -Puedes escuchar este y otros audios en Ivoox: http://mindaliacomradio.ivoox.com PIDE O ENVIA AYUDA http://www.mindalia.com – La Red Social de Ayuda a través del Pensamiento SIGUENOS EN REDES SOCIALES: -Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/mindaliacom -Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mindalia.ayuda/ -Twitter: http://twitter.com/mindaliacom -Pinterest: https://es.pinterest.com/mindaliacom/ DESCARGATE LAS APLICACIONES MOVILES GRATUITAS: Mindalia Multimedia https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=es.app.mindalia_television Mindalia Red de Ayuda https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=es.app.mindalia_ayuda&hl=es CONTACTA CON NOSOTROS: http://television.mindalia.com/contacto/ -Skype: mindalia.com ¿Tienes un video que te gustaría que publicáramos? Envíanoslo!!
49 episodes into the Next 100 Project and now we tackle a racy, lurid and ultra-fun Oscar-winner. T’was a controversial choice for Best Picture in 2002, but the flick has some tremendous song-and-dance numbers and some excellent performances. Zellweger & Zeta-Jones are dynamite, while Gere offsets those bad girls with loads of panache. Caffeine up your blood with some Sparkplug Coffee, then hunker down with this deliciously mean musical from 15 years ago!
This week I interviewed Celeste Baranski. She's VP of Engineering at Numenta, a company that develops machine intelligence technology.
For Tibor Baranski Jr. ’80, coming to Princeton was one part of a remarkable journey. Baranski, whose family emigrated from Hungary, developed a love of Asian languages and cultures as a teen. He immersed himself in both at college, and since graduation has lived and worked in Asia.
Terry Baranski is a trauma-informed Internal Family Systems (IFS) practitioner who focuses on root causes rather than symptoms. IFS is a non-pathologising, powerfully transformative, evidence-based model of psychotherapy that believes we are all made up of several parts. In today's episode, we dive deeper into the modality, specifically the concept of the True Self.Ep 129 - Internal Family Systems, Parts Work & Procrastination w/ Terry BaranskiTerry's Website⬇️DAMN THE JOIN SHITSHOW - ADULT CHILD HEALING COMMUNITY⬇️https://theshitshow.mn.co✅ 4 weekly zoom support groups (Sun 3: 30 pm EST, Mon 8:30 pm EST, Tues 1 pm EST, & Thurs 8:30 pm EST)✅Support community at your fingertips with discussion boards and chat
Terry Baranski is a trauma-informed Internal Family Systems practitioner who focuses on root causes rather than symptoms. In today's episode, we dive deep into the IFS modality - what it is and why it works - and even do a mini-IFS session with yours truly (Andrea) as the client.Terry BaranskiNo Bad Parts: Healing Trauma and Restoring Wholeness with the Internal Family Systems Model by Dick Schwartz⬇️DAMN THE JOIN SHITSHOW - ADULT CHILD HEALING COMMUNITY⬇️https://theshitshow.mn.co✅ 4 weekly zoom support groups✅ Support community at your fingertips with discussion boards and chat