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Dr. Carla Barstow explains the clinical signs and best practices for dealing with common emergency conditions in females including pyometra, dystocia and post-partum complications. Dr. Barstow also addresses common emergencies in males.Watch the video version of this presentation here.
Dark Horse-O-Rama: FML by Kelly Sue DeConnick, David Lopez, and Cris Peter, Ripperland #2 by Steve Orlando, John Harris Dunning, Alessandro Oliveri, and Francesca Vivaldi, Into the Unbeing, and Barstow by David Ian McKendry, Rebekah McKendry, and Tyler Jenkins, and Bird the Tattoo by Carlos Trillo and Juan Bobillo, plus Jim Curious: A Voyage to the Heart of the Sea in 3D by Matthias Picard from Abrams Books, Absolute Wonder Woman, more What's the Furthest Place from Here?, Michel Fiffe and Copra, Elric: The Ruby Throne, plus a whole mess more!
On episode 150 of This Week in Space, it's our Listener Special edition! Not only do we answer your questions and respond to your comments, but we lined up a number of your most tummy-tickling space jokes in the humor shooting gallery. This one is more fun than wearing new shoes! Join us as we talk about asteroid 2024YR4, the Space Launch System's prospects, Katy Perry in space, the newest lunar missions, the X-37B "secret shuttle," Apollo-era flight director Gene Kranz and astronaut Buzz Aldrin, solar sails, the cage match between Elon and astronaut Andreas Morgenson, and the best meteor shower of the year! Headlines Asteroid 2024 YR4 no longer a threat - The Earth-shattering asteroid that briefly had a record high 3.2% chance of impact has been downgraded to a 1 in 20,000 risk after pre-discovery data was analyzed, sparing Barstow and the rest of Earth. SLS faces uncertain future - Even long-time supporters like Scott Pace (former National Space Council secretary) are suggesting an "off-ramp" from the SLS rocket to commercial providers, signaling a potential shift in NASA's approach to lunar missions. Lunar Trailblazer mission communication issues - The recently launched lunar orbiter briefly lost contact after launch on a Falcon 9 but has since established a heartbeat. Blue Origin announces all-female crew for NS-31 - The upcoming mission will feature singer Katy Perry, Lauren Sanchez, and four other accomplished women, marking the first all-female crew since Valentina Tereshkova's solo flight in the 1960s. Blue Ghost lunar landing imminent - Firefly Aerospace's first moon lander is scheduled to touch down on March 2nd, joining two other private landers (from Intuitive Machines and ispace) headed to the moon in the coming weeks. Listener Questions X-37B space plane purpose - The hosts discussed the secretive Space Force vehicle that's been in orbit for 908 days, likely testing technologies like hall thrusters and conducting reconnaissance. Elon Musk vs. astronauts controversy - The hosts addressed the Twitter/X confrontation between Elon Musk and astronauts (including Andreas Morgensen) regarding claims that astronauts were "stranded" on the ISS for political reasons. Gene Kranz's impact during Apollo - Rod shared his experience interviewing the legendary flight director, highlighting Kranz's "dictum" speech after the Apollo 1 fire and his transition to a more reflective persona later in life. Meeting Buzz Aldrin - The hosts described Aldrin as passionate, technically brilliant, and candid about his personal struggles, with Tariq sharing how Aldrin was the subject of his first professional space article in 1999. Solar sail technology potential - They discussed the success of Planetary Society's LightSail 2 and other solar sail missions, lamenting that the technology hasn't been utilized more extensively for deep space missions. Best meteor showers to observe - The hosts recommended the Perseids (August), Geminids (December), and Leonids (November) as the most impressive annual meteor showers, emphasizing the importance of dark skies for optimal viewing. Convincing moon landing deniers - They discussed the challenge of persuading conspiracy theorists, citing evidence including Soviet tracking confirmation and modern lunar reconnaissance photos showing Apollo landing sites. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Download or subscribe to This Week in Space at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Join Club TWiT for Ad-Free Podcasts! Support what you love and get ad-free shows, a members-only Discord, and behind-the-scenes access. Join today: https://twit.tv/clubtwit
On episode 150 of This Week in Space, it's our Listener Special edition! Not only do we answer your questions and respond to your comments, but we lined up a number of your most tummy-tickling space jokes in the humor shooting gallery. This one is more fun than wearing new shoes! Join us as we talk about asteroid 2024YR4, the Space Launch System's prospects, Katy Perry in space, the newest lunar missions, the X-37B "secret shuttle," Apollo-era flight director Gene Kranz and astronaut Buzz Aldrin, solar sails, the cage match between Elon and astronaut Andreas Morgenson, and the best meteor shower of the year! Headlines Asteroid 2024 YR4 no longer a threat - The Earth-shattering asteroid that briefly had a record high 3.2% chance of impact has been downgraded to a 1 in 20,000 risk after pre-discovery data was analyzed, sparing Barstow and the rest of Earth. SLS faces uncertain future - Even long-time supporters like Scott Pace (former National Space Council secretary) are suggesting an "off-ramp" from the SLS rocket to commercial providers, signaling a potential shift in NASA's approach to lunar missions. Lunar Trailblazer mission communication issues - The recently launched lunar orbiter briefly lost contact after launch on a Falcon 9 but has since established a heartbeat. Blue Origin announces all-female crew for NS-31 - The upcoming mission will feature singer Katy Perry, Lauren Sanchez, and four other accomplished women, marking the first all-female crew since Valentina Tereshkova's solo flight in the 1960s. Blue Ghost lunar landing imminent - Firefly Aerospace's first moon lander is scheduled to touch down on March 2nd, joining two other private landers (from Intuitive Machines and ispace) headed to the moon in the coming weeks. Listener Questions X-37B space plane purpose - The hosts discussed the secretive Space Force vehicle that's been in orbit for 908 days, likely testing technologies like hall thrusters and conducting reconnaissance. Elon Musk vs. astronauts controversy - The hosts addressed the Twitter/X confrontation between Elon Musk and astronauts (including Andreas Morgensen) regarding claims that astronauts were "stranded" on the ISS for political reasons. Gene Kranz's impact during Apollo - Rod shared his experience interviewing the legendary flight director, highlighting Kranz's "dictum" speech after the Apollo 1 fire and his transition to a more reflective persona later in life. Meeting Buzz Aldrin - The hosts described Aldrin as passionate, technically brilliant, and candid about his personal struggles, with Tariq sharing how Aldrin was the subject of his first professional space article in 1999. Solar sail technology potential - They discussed the success of Planetary Society's LightSail 2 and other solar sail missions, lamenting that the technology hasn't been utilized more extensively for deep space missions. Best meteor showers to observe - The hosts recommended the Perseids (August), Geminids (December), and Leonids (November) as the most impressive annual meteor showers, emphasizing the importance of dark skies for optimal viewing. Convincing moon landing deniers - They discussed the challenge of persuading conspiracy theorists, citing evidence including Soviet tracking confirmation and modern lunar reconnaissance photos showing Apollo landing sites. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Download or subscribe to This Week in Space at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Join Club TWiT for Ad-Free Podcasts! Support what you love and get ad-free shows, a members-only Discord, and behind-the-scenes access. Join today: https://twit.tv/clubtwit
- Bug Wars #1. Jason Aaron (W), Mahmud Asrar (A), Matthew Wilson (C). (Image). - Doom Academy #1 (de 5). Mackenzie Cadenhead (W), Pasqual Ferry (A), Edgar Delgado (C). (Marvel). - Green Lantern Corps #1. Morgan Hampton y Jeremy Adams (W), Fernando Pasarin (A), Oclair Albert (I), Arif Prianto (C). (DC). - Let This One Be a Devil #1. James Tynion IV y Steve Foxe (W), Piotr Kowalski (A), Brad Simpson (C). (Dark Horse). - Mine is a Long, Lonesome Grave #1. Justin Jordan (W), Chris Shehan (A), Alessandro Santoro (C). (Oni Press). - One World Under Doom #1 (de 9). Ryan North (W), R.B. Silva (A), David Curiel (C). (Marvel). - Zatanna #1. Jamal Campbell. (DC). - Aquaman #2. Jeremy Adams (W), John Timms (A), Rex Lokus (C). (DC). - Barstow #2 y #3. David Ian McKendry y Rebekah McKendry (W), Tyler Jenkins (A/C). (Dark Horse). - The Lucky Devils #2. Charles Soule (W), Ryan Browne (A/C). (Image). - Those Not Afraid #2. Kyle Starks (W), Patrick Piazzalunga (A), Marko Brakko (C). (Dark Horse). - When I Lay My Vengeance Upon Thee #2. Gus Moreno (W), Jakub Rebelka (A/C). (Boom!).
Join us as we look at a 219-year-old business. Since 1806 Barstow's Longview Farm has been in Denise Barstow Manz's family. That's a long time to keep a farm going in Hadley, MA. Denise is the most public facing member of the team and glad to be a contributing member of the dairy farm. With 600 cows (300 milking currently) there is always a lot to do between the cows, the farm tours, the anaerobic digester, the technology (robotic milkers), compost, construction projects, and more the farm is a very busy place. We had a great time discussing climate and land conservation, family business, how the work has changed over the years, belonging to a Co-Op with Cabot (and 500 farm families), and why we need to drink more milk. Check out www.barstowslongviewfarm.com for more information.
Join us as we look at a 219-year-old business. Since 1806 Barstow's Longview Farm has been in Denise Barstow Manz's family. That's a long time to keep a farm going in Hadley, MA. Denise is the most public facing member of the team and glad to be a contributing member of the dairy farm. With 600 cows (300 milking currently) there is always a lot to do between the cows, the farm tours, the anaerobic digester, the technology (robotic milkers), compost, construction projects, and more the farm is a very busy place. We had a great time discussing climate and land conservation, family business, how the work has changed over the years, belonging to a Co-Op with Cabot (and 500 farm families), and why we need to drink more milk. Check out www.barstowslongviewfarm.com for more information.
Join us as we look at a 219-year-old business. Since 1806 Barstow's Longview Farm has been in Denise Barstow Manz's family. That's a long time to keep a farm going in Hadley, MA. Denise is the most public facing member of the team and glad to be a contributing member of the dairy farm. With 600 cows (300 milking currently) there is always a lot to do between the cows, the farm tours, the anaerobic digester, the technology (robotic milkers), compost, construction projects, and more the farm is a very busy place. We had a great time discussing climate and land conservation, family business, how the work has changed over the years, belonging to a Co-Op with Cabot (and 500 farm families), and why we need to drink more milk. Check out www.barstowslongviewfarm.com for more information.
Join us as we look at a 219-year-old business. Since 1806 Barstow's Longview Farm has been in Denise Barstow Manz's family. That's a long time to keep a farm going in Hadley, MA. Denise is the most public facing member of the team and glad to be a contributing member of the dairy farm. With 600 cows (300 milking currently) there is always a lot to do between the cows, the farm tours, the anaerobic digester, the technology (robotic milkers), compost, construction projects, and more the farm is a very busy place. We had a great time discussing climate and land conservation, family business, how the work has changed over the years, belonging to a Co-Op with Cabot (and 500 farm families), and why we need to drink more milk. Check out www.barstowslongviewfarm.com for more information.
Patrick and Rob were somewhere around Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold. Download this episode here. Listen to F This Movie! on Apple Podcasts. Also discussed this episode: La Bonheur (1965), Beau Travail (1999), Notorious (1946), A Woman Under the Influence (1974), Kinda Pregnant (2025), Great Expectations (1998), Apt Pupil (1998)
Barstow, California natives Dusty York & Tommy Shoemake originally formed Katfish as an acoustic duo that performs a variety of Outlaw Country, Southern Rock and contemporary and classic Pop and Rock hits. Over the years, they expanded to a 4-piece band by adding J.J. Garcia on drums & percussion and Lee Boren on bass, and have become favorites throughout the High Desert region and expanded touring the surrounding states (California, Nevada and Arizona) to packed venues and a faithful following.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/arroe-collins-like-it-s-live--4113802/support.
Barstow, California natives Dusty York & Tommy Shoemake originally formed Katfish as an acoustic duo that performs a variety of Outlaw Country, Southern Rock and contemporary and classic Pop and Rock hits. Over the years, they expanded to a 4-piece band by adding J.J. Garcia on drums & percussion and Lee Boren on bass, and have become favorites throughout the High Desert region and expanded touring the surrounding states (California, Nevada and Arizona) to packed venues and a faithful following.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/arroe-collins-unplugged-totally-uncut--994165/support.
Last episode, we read the Gothic horror You'll Like My Mother by Naomi A. Hintze, which was recently re-released with Valancourt Books. In it, a pregnant widow named Francesca is trapped in her mother-in-law's home and must escape. This episode, we are discussing The 1972 film adaptation of You'll Like My Mother, starring Patty Duke. Recommended in this episode: Barstow by David Ian McKendry and Rebekah McKendry, Forget This Ever Happened by Cassandra Rose Clarke, and The Mimicking of Known Successes by Malka Older NEWS: We have a Bookshop.org shop now! Find all of our favorite books at our shop–and help out small businesses. UP NEXT: Linghun by Ai Jiang Buy our books here, including our newest Toil and Trouble.
In episode 130, we visit Calico Ghost Town in California. If you've ever made the drive from Los Angeles to Las Vegas, you might have passed right by this historic gem, tucked away just off Interstate 15 near Barstow. It's an iconic pit stop for road-trippers, and for good reason – Calico is an authentic Old West ghost town with a fascinating history and plenty to see. Episode Highlights In this episode, we discuss: The history of Calico, California Restoration of the town What to expect when visiting Calico Ghost Town The Places Where We Go Travel Resources The Places Where We Go Travel Resources TRAVEL BOOKS: While planning your travels, you can find links to several books to get you in the travel mindset on our Amazon Store Page - check out the section: Books That Inspire Travel GEAR: Visit our Amazon Storefront for more travel resources - all we use personally. GET YOUR TRAVEL GEAR HERE! - The Places Where We Go Amazon Storefront Thanks for your support! Inspiring Your Future Travels We hope this episode inspires you to consider visiting Wyoming. The Places Where We Go PODCAST: Released every other week in your favorite podcast app WEBSITE & BLOG www.theplaceswherewego.com SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/theplaceswherewego TWITTER: https://twitter.com/theplaceswhere1 EMAIL: Write to us at comments@theplaceswherewego.com We'll see you at the places where we go. Julie & Art AFFILIATE LINK DISCLOSURE The Places Where We Go contains affiliate links and is a member of the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. If you make a purchase using one of these Amazon links, we may receive compensation at no extra cost to you. Read our disclaimer and privacy policy for more information.
February 2025 Solicits Part II Comic Reviews: DC o Milestone Universe: The Shadow Cabinet 1 by Joseph Illidge, Darryl Banks, Atagun Ilhan, Christopher Sotomayor o Question: All Along the Watchtower 1 by Alex Segura, Cian Tormey, Romulo Fajardo Jr. Marvel o Star Wars: Battle of Jakku – Republic Under Siege 1 by Alex Segura, Stefano Raffaele, Alex Sinclair; Alex Segura, Jethro Morales, Jim Campbell o Venom War: It's Jeff 1 by Kelly Thompson, Gurihiru o What If…Minnie Became Captain Marvel? 1 by Steve Behling, Luca Barbieri, Giada Perissinotto, Lucio Ruvidotti o Marvel Unlimited § Beastly Buddies 6 by Steve Foxe, Armand Bodnar § Marvel Meow 23 by Nao Fuji Archie o Archie is Mr. Justice 1 by Tim Seeley, Mike Norton, Glenn Whitmore Dark Horse o Barstow 1 by David Ian McKendry, Rebekah McKendry, Tyler Jenkins o Imbokodo 1 by Thabo Rametsi, Thabiso Mabanna, Katlego Motaung o You Never Heard of Me 1 by Iolanda Zanfardino, Elisa Romboli IDW o Godzilla Rivals: King Ghidorah vs. SpaceGodzilla 1 by Dave Baker, Kevin Anthony Catalan, Heather Breckel o Sonic the Hedgehog: Knuckles' 30th Anniversary Special by Ian Flynn, Aaron Hammerstrom, Rik Mack, Valentina Pinto o Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles x Naruto 1 by Caleb Goellner, Hendry Prasetya, Raul Angulo Image o Moon Dogs 1 by Tananarive Due, Kelsey Ramsay, Jose Villarrubia o Rocketfellers 1 by Peter Tomasi, Francis Manapul Mad Cave o Spectrum 1 by Rick Quinn, Dave Chisholm OGN Countdown o Last Man Vol 6 by Balak, Michael Sanlaville, Bastien Vives o Team Unihorn and Woolly Vol 2: Revenge of the Unicorn by Alexis Frederick-Frost o Wingbearer Vol 2: Wingborn by Marjorie Liu, Grace Kum o Horse Trouble by Kristin Varner o Hungry Heart by Jem Milton o Cat's Cradle Vol 3: Suri's Dragon by Jo Rioux o Stand Up by Tori Sharp Additional Reviews: Alien vol 1 by Phillip Kennedy Johnson, Salvador Larroca Crimson Casebook of Sherlock Holmes: The Masquerade by Daniel Kalban The Deliverance It's What's Inside Time Cut Spellbound Gladiator II Wicked Arcane s2 Art of Murder pilot News: Slott at DC, Scout kicked out of new distributor, Predator vs. Spider-Man, Sgt. Rock film, Boom cuts Buffy and Firefly, Black Mirror comic from T-Pub, David Pepose writing Speed Racer Trailers: How to Train Your Dragon Live-Action, Dream Productions, Bad Guys 2, Elio, Minecraft, Snow White, Lilo and Stitch, Sonic 3 Comics Countdown (20 November 2024): 1. Wonder Woman 15 by Tom King, Daniel Sampere, Tomeu Morey 2. Department of Truth 27 by James Tynion IV, Alison Sampson, Jordie Bellaire 3. Ultimate Spider-Man 11 by Jonathan Hickman, David Messina, Matt Wilson 4. Power Fantasy 4 by Kieron Gillen, Caspar Wijngaard 5. Venom War: It's Jeff by Kelly Thompson, Gurihiru 6. Geiger 8 by Geoff Johns, Paul Pelletier, Andrew Hennessy, John Kalisz 7. Question: All Along the Watchtower 1 by Alex Segura, Cian Tormey, Romulo Fajardo Jr. 8. Moon is Following Us 3 by Daniel Warren Johnson, Riley Rossmo, Mike Spicer 9. Ice Cream Man 42 by W. Maxwell Prince, Martin Morazzo, Chris O'Halloran 10. Batman and Robin: Year One 2 by Mark Waid, Chris Samnee, Giovanna Niro
The Professor Frenzy Show Episode 333 Epitaphs From The Abyss #5 (EC Comics) from Oni Press | Writer(s):Matt Kindt | Artist(s): Kano | $4.99 The Moon is Following Us #3 from Image Comics (W) Daniel Warren Johnson (A) Riley Rossmo, Daniel Warren Johnson $3.99 Prodigy: Slaves of Mars #4 from Dark Horse Comics (W) Mark Millar (A) Stefano Landini $4.99 Archie is Mr. Justice #1 from Archie Comics (W) Tim Seeley (A) Mike Norton $4.99 Minor Arcana #3 from BOOM! Studios | Writer(s): Jeff Lemire | Artist(s): JeffLemire | $4.99 Barstow #1 from Dark Horse | Writer(s): Rebekah McKendry | Artist(s): Tyler Jenkins | $4.99 Ice Cream Man #42 from Image | Writer(s): W. Maxwell Prince | Artist(s):Martin Morazzo Chris O'Halloran | $3.99 The Rocketfellers #1 from Image Comics (W) Peter J. Tomasi, Francis Manapul (A) Francis Manapul $3.99 Vicarious #2 from BOOM! Studios (W) Ryan Parrott (A) Eleonora Carlini $4.99 Arkham Horror The Terror At The End Of Time #3 from Dark Horse | Writer(s):Cullen Bunn | Artist(s): Andrea Mutti | $3.99 Where Monsters Lie Cull-De-Sac #2 from Dark Horse | Writer(s): Kyle Starks | Artist(s): Piotr Kowalski | $3.99 Horizon Experiment Moon Dogs #1 (One Shot) from Image | Writer(s):Tananarive Due | Artist(s): Kelsey Ramsay Jose Villarrubia | $3.99 Autumn Kingdom #3 from Oni Press | Writer(s): Cullen Bunn | Artist(s):Christopher Mitten | $4.99 House Of Slaughter #27 from BOOM! Studios | Writer(s): Sam Johns | Artist(s): Letizia Cadonici | $3.99 This Weeks Best New Comics Creepshow #3 from Image Comics (W) John Arcudi, Chris Condon (A) Shawn McManus, Martin Morazzo $3.99 Feral #8 from Image Comics (W) Tony Fleecs (A) Trish Forstner, Tone Rodriguez, Brad Simpson $3.99 Universal Monsters Frankenstein #4 from Image Comics (W) Michael Walsh (A) Michael Walsh, Toni Marie Griffin $4.99 Welcome To The Maynard #1 from Dark Horse | Writer(s): James Robinson | Artist(s): J. Bone | $4.99 Babs #4 from Ahoy Comics | Writer(s): Garth Ennis | Artist(s): Jacen Burrows $3.99 Nostalgia This week's that guy that was in that show is Ina Balin Today our Frenzy Faves is a favorite Twilight Zone episode The Night of the Meek, Season 2 Episode 11, Original air date December 23, 1960
The Professor Frenzy Show Episode 332 Helen Of Wyndhorn #6 from Dark Horse | Writer(s): Tom King | Artist(s): Bilquis Evely | $4.99 G.I. Joe #1 from Image Comics (W) Joshua Williamson (A) Tom Reilly, Jordie Bellaire $4.99 Lady Mechanika: The Devil in the Lake #3 from Image Comics (W) Joe Benitez, M.M. Chen (A) Siya Oum $3.99 Hard Case Crime Minky Woodcock The Girl Called Cthulhu #2 from Titan Comics | Writer(s): Cynthia von Buhler | Artist(s): Cynthia von Buhler | $3.99 Transformers #14 from Image Comics (W) Daniel Warren Johnson (A) Jason Howard, Mike Spicer $3.99 Witchblade #5 from Image Comics (W) Marguerite Bennett (A) Giuseppe Cafaro $3.99Arcbound #1 from Dark Horse Comics (W) Scott Snyder; Frank Tieri (A) Ryan Smallman $4.99 Borderlands Moxxis Mysterious Memento #1 from Dark Horse | Writer(s):Amy Chu | Artist(s): Mike Norton | $3.99 Groo Minstrel Melodies #3 from Dark Horse | Writer(s): Sergio Aragones | Artist(s): Sergio Aragones | $4.99 Hard Case Crime Heat Seeker Combustion A Gun Honey Series #1 from Titan Comics | Writer(s): Charles Ardai | Artist(s): Ace Continuado | $3.99 Today's Best New Comic Books Archie is Mr. Justice #1 from Archie Comics (W) Tim Seeley (A) Mike Norton $4.99 The Rocketfellers #1 from Image Comics (W) Peter J. Tomasi, Francis Manapul (A) Francis Manapul $3.99 The Moon is Following Us #3 from Image Comics (W) Daniel Warren Johnson (A) Riley Rossmo, Daniel Warren Johnson $3.99 Vicarious #2 from BOOM! Studios (W) Ryan Parrott (A) Eleonora Carlini $4.99 Arkham Horror The Terror At The End Of Time #3 from Dark Horse | Writer(s):Cullen Bunn | Artist(s): Andrea Mutti | $3.99 Barstow #1 from Dark Horse | Writer(s): Rebekah McKendry | Artist(s): Tyler Jenkins | $4.99 Where Monsters Lie Cull-De-Sac #2 from Dark Horse | Writer(s): Kyle Starks | Artist(s): Piotr Kowalski | $3.99 Horizon Experiment Moon Dogs #1 (One Shot) from Image | Writer(s):Tananarive Due | Artist(s): Kelsey Ramsay Jose Villarrubia | $3.99 Ice Cream Man #42 from Image | Writer(s): W. Maxwell Prince | Artist(s):Martin Morazzo Chris O'Halloran | $3.99 Autumn Kingdom #3 from Oni Press | Writer(s): Cullen Bunn | Artist(s):Christopher Mitten | $4.99 Epitaphs From The Abyss #5 (EC Comics) from Oni Press | Writer(s):Matt Kindt | Artist(s): Kano | $4.99 House Of Slaughter #27 from BOOM! Studios | Writer(s): Sam Johns | Artist(s): Letizia Cadonici | $3.99 Minor Arcana #3 from BOOM! Studios | Writer(s): Jeff Lemire | Artist(s): JeffLemire | $4.99 Nostalgia This week's that guy that was in that show is Jack Dodson Today our Frenzy Faves is a favorite Twilight Zone episode The Encounter ,Season 5 Episode 31, Original air date May 1, 1964
#funny #trending #viral
Read by Juliet Prew Production and Sound Design by Kevin Seaman
The Fellowship of Christian Athletes' exciting local radio program, Heart of the Athlete, airs Saturdays at 9 am MST on KBXL 94.1 FM. The show is hosted by local FCA Director, Ken Lewis. This program is a great opportunity to listen to local athletes and coaches share their lives, combining sports with their faith in Jesus Christ each week!Our relationships will demonstrate steadfast commitment to Jesus Christ and His Word through Integrity, Serving, Teamwork and Excellence.NNU Box 3359 623 S University Blvd Nampa, ID 83686 United States (208) 697-1051 klewis@fca.orghttps://www.fcaidaho.org/Podcast Website: https://941thevoice.com/podcasts/heart-of-the-athlete/
The Fellowship of Christian Athletes' exciting local radio program, Heart of the Athlete, airs Saturdays at 9 am MST on KBXL 94.1 FM. The show is hosted by local FCA Director, Ken Lewis. This program is a great opportunity to listen to local athletes and coaches share their lives, combining sports with their faith in Jesus Christ each week!Our relationships will demonstrate steadfast commitment to Jesus Christ and His Word through Integrity, Serving, Teamwork and Excellence.NNU Box 3359 623 S University Blvd Nampa, ID 83686 United States (208) 697-1051 klewis@fca.orghttps://www.fcaidaho.org/Podcast Website: https://941thevoice.com/podcasts/heart-of-the-athlete/
The Fellowship of Christian Athletes' exciting local radio program, Heart of the Athlete, airs Saturdays at 9 am MST on KBXL 94.1 FM. The show is hosted by local FCA Director, Ken Lewis. This program is a great opportunity to listen to local athletes and coaches share their lives, combining sports with their faith in Jesus Christ each week!Our relationships will demonstrate steadfast commitment to Jesus Christ and His Word through Integrity, Serving, Teamwork and Excellence.NNU Box 3359 623 S University Blvd Nampa, ID 83686 United States (208) 697-1051 klewis@fca.orghttps://www.fcaidaho.org/Podcast Website: https://941thevoice.com/podcasts/heart-of-the-athlete/
We were somewhere around Barstow, when the drunk began to take hold.Okay, so we are doing Mescal instead of some sort of drug, but we all know what Mexican spirits will do. So buckle up and join us on our journey as we take a shot at this episode, and Have a Drink. [Can't stop here . . . this is worm country] Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hey—come out and play! Creative Director (and international Five Guys diner) David Chathas joins Sean to talk about what's missing from Barstow, testing your apple expertise, and becoming The Caveman. Just don't forget about us—we have ideas!David can be found all over the internet, including his incredibly named website, bestgraphicdesignerintheworld.com. He can also be found on the website formerly known as Twitter as @ModDadPomoSon and (much more quietly) on Instagram @yallseenfutumbo. Fruit Freaks Coffee, David's coffee brand, is not yet out in the world, but ask him about it the next time you see him! You can also learn more about it @fiveguyseater69 on OnlyMargins (only $9.99 to subscribe)!This episode was recorded October 5, 2024 in the Rat's Nest. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We were trying to figure out what to do to celebrate Halloween on the podcast and fortuitously Dark Horse marketing reached out and asked if we had anything planned. I cooked up the idea to have an episode featuring horror movie recommendations from some of the best comics writers in the business chatting about the movies that have inspired and scared them the most, plus to promote their new books of course. Both Kyle Starks (Peacemaker Tries Hard, Sex Castle, Where Monsters Lie) and John Harris Dunning (Wiper, Summer Shadows, Ripperland) have been on the show previously but we brought in a sacrificial... I mean newbie, award winning horror writer and filmmaker David Ian McKendry (Barstow, Found, All The Creatures Were Stirring) into the fray. I don't think I've ever had this much fun hosting an episode which was honestly more like herding cats, but it was an absolute blast and a privilege to get a glimpse into how the genre has influenced them and their work. Make sure to check out their projects: Kyle's Those Not Afraid A new crime series from three-time Eisner nominee Kyle Starks for fans of true crime and murder fiction. Two serial killers discover they are within reach of the state record for kills and enter a terrible competition to see who gets there first. Featuring amazing and stylish noir art from Patrick Piazzalunga (Monsters Are My Business) and incredible covers from the legendary Glenn Fabry (Preacher, Hellblazer). John Harris Dunning's Ripperland The year is 2188 and Jack the Ripper has returned to London. For the last century, a shattered post-Brexit England has operated as a massive Victorian theme park in exchange for American military and financial protection. But when an American mogul's grandson is killed in the heart of London, the delicate status quo is threatened. Is the killer a brilliant maniac? Americans taking advantage of their superior technology? Or the English Underground Resistance, wishing to throw off the yoke of American oppression and re-join the modern world? American Special Agent Jesse Holden and local British Police Detective Edwin Fogg must overcome their clashing ideologies in order to find the truth in the foggy streets of 22nd Century London. David Ian McKendry's Barstow At the center of the Mojave Desert, at the crossroads between hell and gone, lies Barstow. Agent Miranda Diaz is in this godforsaken land on the trail of a missing agent. He's a man she's never met, and yet her name was the only clue he left behind. Something dark . . . something demonic . . . lurks beneath this oddball town, but can Miranda unravel the mystery before all hell breaks loose? • Award-winning horror writing and filmmaking team David Ian McKendry and Rebekah McKendry team-up with Eisner-nominated artist Tyler Jenkins for this all-new comedy-horror series! NEW PATREON CryptidCreatorCornerpod Our episode sponsors From Within on Kickstarter From Within is a martial arts revenge graphic novel about a slave fighting his way through a deadly tournament where the rules shift at the whims of a tyrannical emperor. It's a mash-up of the high-impact action sequences of Bruce Lee's films with the paranoid thriller undercurrent found in Ed Brubaker & Sean Phillips' Sleeper series. Late pledges are enabled if you happen to hear about it after the campaign officially ends. Arkenforge Play TTRPG games? Make sure to check out our partner Arkenforge. They have everything you need to make your TTRPG more fun and immersive, allowing you to build, play, and export animated maps including in person fog of war capability that let's your players interact with maps as the adventure unfolds while you, the DM get the full picture. Use the discount code YETI5 to get $5 off your order. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What if your toughest challenges became the stepping stones to your greatest triumphs? Join us as we sit down with Ben Grunenwald, a remarkable figure in the trucking industry, who shares his incredible journey from hardship to success. From dropping out of high school and facing homelessness to becoming the youngest driver in his company, Ben's story is a testament to resilience and determination. Listen as he recounts his early fascination with trucking, inspired by his grandfather, and his rise through the ranks to become an expert in safety management.Ever wondered how a roadside breakdown could lead to an encounter with automotive legends? Ben takes us through his adventurous six years on the road, including a memorable breakdown near Barstow, California, that serendipitously led him to a Carroll Shelby car museum in Las Vegas. There, he met Michael Shelby and got a sneak peek at the unreleased Shelby Series 7. Beyond his professional adventures, Ben also shares a heartwarming tale of reconnecting and marrying a former girlfriend after 20 years apart, highlighting the unexpected twists and personal milestones that define a trucker's life.Curious about the future of the trucking industry? Ben delves into the rise of autonomous trucks and technological advancements shaping the field. Hear his thoughts on how these changes could impact drivers and the benefits they might bring. Learn about his transition from night shifts to higher education in criminal justice and supply chain management, all while maintaining a growth mindset and positive outlook. This episode is packed with practical strategies for personal and professional development, making it a must-listen for anyone in the trucking community or those interested in the evolving landscape of this essential industry.Send us a textEnjoying Life OTR: conversations that inspire curiosity, adventure, and resilience. We're honoring drivers, sharing their adventures and becoming healthier truckers. Stay tuned to discover creative life hacks and practical strategies for enhancing our well-being and making the most of our time on the road. So many exciting things are happening in our community, and we are grateful that you are a part of it. Welcome to Enjoying Life OTR! Join the Movement! See the sights, enjoy the food, take the pic and share with our community! Make the most of the opportunity and share ways to save money doing it!You are invited to share your journey with other drivers who are Enjoying Life OTR.Join "Heathier Truckers" Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/share/juAyihrBSY5kALp6/?mibextid=lOuIew Join "Enjoying Life OTR" Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/share/RstyK3SgWaKLm9Qf/?mibextid=lOuIew#HealthierTruckers#EnjoyingLifeOTRIf you have questions or would like information about being on our podcast, contact our hosts:Cindy Tunstall: EnjoyingLifeOTR@gmail.comMalinda Fox Wellington: Malinda@NomadTLC.org
Days 97 & 98 of my Around the World Ride: I rode 322 miles (518 km) from Barstow, California to Seligman, Arizona, USA.
Day 96 of my Around the World Ride: I rode 172 miles (277 km) from Malibu to Barstow, California, USA.
Earthquake Gary and Shannon talk about last night's earthquake centered in Barstow. Gary and Shannon also have an update on the Tom Girardi trial.
Gary and Shannon begin the show by talking about last night's earthquake centered in Barstow, California and Kamala Harris and Tim Walz holding a rally in Pennsylvania.
Kris Adler talks about the gas shutoff on Portuguese Bend // The North bound freeway reopens between Barstow and Baker after fiery truck rollover/ Sam Rubin receives posthumous honor at 76th Los Angeles Area Emmy Awards // Tim goes to Carmax; in search for a new car/ Tim's sobriety checkpoint experience in the Valley // Olympics 2024: Smash & Grab and Karen competition
GUEST: Alex Stone on Trump assassination attempt update / Preliminary magnitude 4.9 earthquake struck the Barstow area // Conway Team is heading to Huntington Beach at BJs restaurant // Guest: Jason Nathanson on the new Marvel; Deadpool + Wolverine film. // Barstow 4.9 quake rattles California
Extreme land movement has forced gas utility shut offs in Rancho Palos Verdes. An earthquake near Barstow is felt from L.A. to Las Vegas. Covered California health insurance rates are going up. Plus, more. Support The L.A. Report by donating at LAist.com/join and by visiting https://laist.com. Support the show: https://laist.com
Our voyage as a church through the big, beautiful biblical story has thus far been like every long road trip I've ever been on: the very first part is a thrill! You cross the city limits, begin to feel like you're on vacation, out of the same-old, same-old, and your eyes look to the horizon with optimism and energy as you consider the grand journey you are undertaking. Then, after a couple hours, your initial enthusiasm is slowly and inevitably smothered by Barstow. Your trek's terrain moves from promising and dynamic to monotonous and monochromatic. You begin to wonder if you should have just flown instead. For many of us following the “You are Here” series, episodes of Creation, Fall, Promise, and Exodus are the interesting scenic spots early in the trip. Biblical Law—our destination for this week—on the other hand, can easily fall into that “Barstow” category: “thou shall, thou shall not”; technical iron-age instructions on everything from oxen and food purity to hygiene and scheduling. What do we do with these long scrolls besides speed through or skip right over them? This Sunday, we are going to discover that what at first appears to be a long, strange stretch of ritual literature was absolutely treasured by our ancient ancestors in the faith for a reason. Let's explore the power and purpose of torah in the larger story and in the story of our lives as followers of Jesus! -James
Can you believe we're halfway through 2024?(I'll pause to let that sink in.)This is a moment to reflect on what's worked so far and where adjustments may need to be made. I know I might sound a little crazy, but I believe reflection has the power to reshape your perspective and reignite your motivation…and that's EXACTLY what we're going to do today.In this episode, I'm “bringing back” some powerful insights from two of the most popular guests we've had on the Jasmine Star Show this year: Sahil Bloom and Dan Martell.Both Sahil and Dan shared their frameworks for remaining resilient and taking action towards your goals and we're going to hone in on a few key things they discussed today so we can make the most out of 2024 and finish stronger than we started.Click play to hear all of this and…(00:00:00) How a visit to a McDonald's train in Barstow, CA helped me learn about the power of “halfway” points.(00:06:31) How small, consistent actions can unlock your ability to achieve long-term goals.(00:09:16) How you can reframe the meaning of discipline in your day-to-day life and actually see results.Listen to Related Episodes:Map Out Your Next 3 Months in Less Than 30 MinutesChange Your Life in One Year with Sahil BloomHow to Push Past Your Revenue Ceiling with Dan MartellDownload the workbook so you can start taking action right away at jasminestar.com/productivity.For full show notes, visit jasminestar.com/podcast/episode449
On this introspective episode of Crazy Money, Paul sits alone in his empty Atlanta house and talks openly about the thoughts and feelings that drew him back to Atlanta, and the head trauma that may or may not have initiated his desire to sell everything and move to New York City. Oh, by the way, my name is Mike Carano and I'm writing these surely-to-be-deleted episode notes. Paul is occupied with the chaos of moving, but I suspect he's more likely trying to get to the bottom of the, “which Ray's Pizza is the REAL Ray's Pizza.” In between mumbling, “miles to go before I sleep,” he asked if I could handle this writing task. Inspired by he and Stacey's decision to embrace a big change and wring every drop out of this thing called life, I said uhh, okay. In this intimate podcast Paul talks about how this move came about, how he, Stacey, and their two kids, kid #1, and kid #2, ended up in Atlanta, and his plan to put the pedal to the metal and maximize opportunity, expand horizons, and have coffee with the dude from TED. I found this be be genuinely inspiring, and I've decided to do the same thing. Only I'm going to Barstow, because I'm broke. Please enjoy this thoughtful episode. HEY - want to help Paul grow this great podcast? DO THESE THINGS:
There are many things to consider when choosing a trustee or successor trustee for a trust. The trustee will face a number of challenges over the course of their service and will need to plan ahead to avoid the inevitable pitfalls. In this episode of Trust Me!, we discuss a proactive plan for a trustee to successfully administer a trust, and an overview of primary things to consider to mitigate the risk of adverse action against a trustee. About out Guests: Herbert A. Stroh, Esq. is a partner at McCormick and Barstow in San Luis Obispo, California, where he assists clients in trust and estate litigation, administration, planning, and conservatorships. He has also served as a mediator in trust and estate disputes. Josh Yager, Esq., CFP is the managing partner of Anodos Advisors, a fiduciary consulting firm in Santa Barbara, California, where he is a recognized content expert on the issues of fiduciary duties relating to the management and oversight of trust assets. About Our Host:Daniel C. Lorenzen is a partner in the Los Angeles office of Venable LLP, where he advises individuals, families, and closely held businesses that have contacts in California, the United States, and around the world. He advises clients on all of the traditional tools of wealth planning, with an eye for holistic planning to minimize federal, international, state, and local taxes.Thank you for listening to Trust Me!Trust Me is Produced by Foley Marra StudiosEdited by Todd Gajdusek
On Part 2, 1982 Brewers yield to Billy Ball, the early 80s Oakland A's, and how Rickey Henderson redefined the meaning of a hero to Adam. We raise the stakes on our trade proposals, pushing bigger ticket items into the middle. Adam and I then move to 1987, remembering Adam's exile to Barstow, California, and the oasis of being able to listen to KNBR's Hank Greenberg calling Giants games way far away at Candlestick. For the Giants, their big trade in 1987 was their acquisition of Kevin Mitchell and Dave Dravecky. Dravecky's dramatic comeback from shoulder cancer, his subsequent reinjury, and his ultimate amputation give us a lot to talk about and two amputees in one show. Finally, Adam steers us toward the King of Late Night, David Letterman. He goes with a special episode where Dave featured Harmon Killebrew and I went with one featuring Joe Niekro.
An international team of researchers has successfully used NASA's James Webb Space Telescope to map the weather on the hot gas-giant exoplanet WASP-43 b.Precise brightness measurements over a broad spectrum of mid-infrared light, combined with 3D climate models and previous observations from other telescopes, suggest the presence of thick, high clouds covering the nightside, clear skies on the dayside, and equatorial winds upwards of 5,000 miles per hour mixing atmospheric gases around the planet.The investigation is just the latest demonstration of the exoplanet science now possible with Webb's extraordinary ability to measure temperature variations and detect atmospheric gases trillions of miles away.WASP-43 b is a “hot Jupiter” type of exoplanet: similar in size to Jupiter, made primarily of hydrogen and helium, and much hotter than any of the giant planets in our own solar system. Although its star is smaller and cooler than the Sun, WASP-43 b orbits at a distance of just 1.3 million miles – less than 1/25th the distance between Mercury and the Sun.With such a tight orbit, the planet is tidally locked, with one side continuously illuminated and the other in permanent darkness. Although the nightside never receives any direct radiation from the star, strong eastward winds transport heat around from the dayside.Since its discovery in 2011, WASP-43 b has been observed with numerous telescopes, including NASA's Hubble and now-retired Spitzer space telescopes.“With Hubble, we could clearly see that there is water vapor on the dayside. Both Hubble and Spitzer suggested there might be clouds on the nightside,” explained Taylor Bell, researcher from the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute and lead author of a study published today in Nature Astronomy. “But we needed more precise measurements from Webb to really begin mapping the temperature, cloud cover, winds, and more detailed atmospheric composition all the way around the planet.”Although WASP-43 b is too small, dim, and close to its star for a telescope to see directly, its short orbital period of just 19.5 hours makes it ideal for phase curve spectroscopy, a technique that involves measuring tiny changes in brightness of the star-planet system as the planet orbits the star.Since the amount of mid-infrared light given off by an object depends largely on how hot it is, the brightness data captured by Webb can then be used to calculate the planet's temperature.The broad spectrum of mid-infrared light captured by Webb also made it possible to measure the amount of water vapor (H2O) and methane (CH4) around the planet. “Webb has given us an opportunity to figure out exactly which molecules we're seeing and put some limits on the abundances,” said Joanna Barstow, a co-author from the Open University in the U.K.The spectra show clear signs of water vapor on the nightside as well as the dayside of the planet, providing additional information about how thick the clouds are and how high they extend in the atmosphere. Surprisingly, the data also shows a distinct lack of methane anywhere in the atmosphere. Although the dayside is too hot for methane to exist (most of the carbon should be in the form of carbon monoxide), methane should be stable and detectable on the cooler nightside.“The fact that we don't see methane tells us that WASP-43b must have wind speeds reaching something like 5,000 miles per hour,” explained Barstow. “If winds move gas around from the dayside to the nightside and back again fast enough, there isn't enough time for the expected chemical reactions to produce detectable amounts of methane on the nightside.”The team thinks that because of this wind-driven mixing, the atmospheric chemistry is the same all the way around the planet, which wasn't apparent from past work with Hubble and Spitzer.
Lichen is a strange presence on this planet. Traditionally, scientists have understood lichen as a new organism formed through symbiosis between a fungus and an algae. But the science is evolving. It seems that there may be more than one species of fungus involved in this symbiosis, and some scientists have suggested that lichen could be described as both an ecosystem and an organism. Lichen may even be immortal, in some sense of the word.In lichen, the poet Forrest Gander finds both the mystery of the forest and a rich metaphor for our symbiosis with one another and with the planet, for the relationship between the dead and the living, and for how our relationships with others change us indelibly. In his poem, “Forest,” lichen are a sensual presence, even erotic, living in relationship to the other beings around them. They resemble us, strangely, despite our dramatic differences.The words of the poem teem with life, like the forest they explore, and Forrest's marvelous reading of the poem adds a panoply of meanings and feelings through his annunciation, his breaths, his breaks. It's phenomenal.This poem, and his work more broadly, is about nothing less that who we are on this Earth and how we live—how we thrive—in relationship.Forrest Gander writes poetry, novels, essays, and translations. He is the recipient of many awards and honors, including a Guggenheim Fellowship and the Pulitzer Prize in poetry for his book, Be With. As an undergraduate, like me, he studied geology, which became foundational to his engagement with ecological ethics and poetics.Forrest often collaborates with other artists on books and exhibitions, including a project with the photographer Sally Mann. His latest book of poetry is a collaboration with the photographer Jack Shear, called Knot (spelled with a “k”). He recently collaborated with artist Ashwini Bhat on an exhibition at the Shoshana Wayne Gallery in Los Angeles, called “In Your Arms I'm Radiant.”His poem, “Forest,” is from his 2021 collection of poems, Twice Alive.Forrest has taught at Harvard University and Brown University. He spoke to me from his home in Northern California, where he now lives.This episode of Chrysalis is part of the Chrysalis Poets series, which focuses on a single poems from poets who confront ecological issues in their work.You can listen on Substack, Apple Podcasts, and other podcast platforms.Please rate, review, and share to help us spread the word!Forrest GanderBorn in the Mojave Desert in Barstow, California, Forrest Gander grew up in Virginia. He spend significant years in San Francisco, Dolores Hidalgo (Mexico), Eureka Springs, and Providence. With the late poet CD Wright, he has a son, the artist Brecht Wright Gander. Forrest holds degrees in both Geology and English literature. He lives now in Northern California with his wife, the artist Ashwini Bhat. Gander's book Be With was awarded the 2019 Pulitzer Prize. Concerned with the way we are revised and translated in encounters with the foreign, his book Core Samples from the World was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award. Gander has collaborated frequently with other artists including photographers Sally Mann, Graciela Iturbide, Raymond Meeks, and Lucas Foglia, glass artist Michael Rogers, ceramic artists Rick Hirsch and Ashwini Bhat, artists Ann Hamilton, Tjibbe Hooghiemstra, dancers Eiko & Koma, and musicians Vic Chesnutt and Brady Earnhart, among others. The author of numerous other books of poetry, including Redstart: An Ecological Poetics and Science & Steepleflower, Gander also writes novels (As a Friend; The Trace), essays (A Faithful Existence) and translates. Recent translations include It Must Be a Misunderstanding by Coral Bracho, Names and Rivers by Shuri Kido, and Then Come Back: the Lost Neruda Poems. His most recent anthologies are Pinholes in the Night: Essential Poems from Latin American (selected by Raúl Zurita) and Panic Cure: Poems from Spain for the 21st Century.Gander's books have been translated and published in more than a dozen other languages. He is a United States Artists Rockefeller Fellow and has received fellowships from The National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim, Whiting, and Howard Foundations. In 2011, he was awarded the Library of Congress Witter Bynner Fellowship. Gander was the Briggs-Copeland poet at Harvard University before becoming The Adele Kellenberg Seaver Professor of Literary Arts and Comparative Literature at Brown University where he taught courses such as Poetry & Ethics, EcoPoetics, Latin American Death Trip, and Translation Theory & Practice. He is an Emeritus Chancellor for the Academy for the Academy of American Poets and is an elected member of The Academy of Arts & Sciences.Gander co-edited Lost Roads Publishers with CD Wright for twenty years, soliciting, editing, and publishing books by more than thirty writers, including Michael Harper, Kamau Brathwaite, Arthur Sze, Fanny Howe, Frances Mayes, Steve Stern, Zuleyka Benitez, and René Char.“Forest”By Forrest GanderErogenous zones in oaks slung with stoles of lace lichen the sun's rays spilling through leaves in broken packets a force call it nighttime thrusts mushrooms up from their lair of spawn mycelial loam the whiff of port they pop into un- trammeled air with the sort of gasp that follows a fine chess move like memories are they? or punctuation? was it something the earth said to provoke our response tasking us to recall an evolutionary course our long ago initation into the one- among-others and within my newborn noticing have you popped up beside me love or were you here from the start a swarm of meaning and decay still gripping the underworld both of us half-buried holding fast if briefly to a swelling vastness while our coupling begins to register in the already awake compendium that offers to take us in you take me in and abundance floods us floats us out we fill each with the other all morning breaks as birdsong over us who rise to the surface so our faces might be sprungRecommended Readings & MediaForrest Gander reading his poem “Unto Ourselves” from Twice Alive.TranscriptIntroJohn FiegeLichen is a strange presence on this planet. Traditionally, scientists have understood lichen as a new organism formed through symbiosis between a fungus and an algae. But the science is evolving. It seems there may be more than one species of fungus involved in this symbiosis. And some scientists have suggested that lichen, and could be described as both an ecosystem and an organism. Lichen may even be immortal in some sense of the word. In lichen, the poet Forrest Gander finds both the mystery of the forest and a rich metaphor for our symbiosis with one another and with the planet, for the relationship between the dead and the living, and for how our relationships with others change us indelibly. In his poem, "Forest," lichen are an essential presence, even erotic, living in relationship to the other beings around them. They resemble us strangely, despite our dramatic differences. The words of the poem teem with life, like the forest they explore, and Forrest's marvelous reading of the poem as a panoply of meanings and feelings through his enunciation—his breaths, his breaks; it's phenomenal. This poem in his work, more broadly, is about nothing less than who we are on this earth, and how we live; how we thrive in relationship. I'm John Fiege, and this episode of Chrysalis is part of the Chrysalis Poets series. Forrest Gander writes poetry, novels, essays, and translations. He is the recipient of many awards and honors, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Pulitzer Prize in poetry for his book Be With. Forrest often collaborates with other artists on books and exhibitions, including a project with a photographer Sally Mann. His latest book of poetry is a collaboration with a photographer Jack Scheer called Knot. He recently collaborated with artist Ashwini Bhat on an exhibition at the Shoshana Wayne Gallery in Los Angeles, called In Your Arms I'm Radiant. His poem, "Forest," is from his 2021 collection of poems, Twice Alive. Forrest has taught at Harvard University and Brown University. He spoke to me from his home in Northern California, where he now lives. Here is Forrest Gander reading his poem "Forest."PoemForrest Gander“Forest”Erogenous zones in oaks slung with stoles of lace lichen the sun's rays spilling through leaves in broken packets a force call it nighttime thrusts mushrooms up from their lair of spawn mycelial loam the whiff of port they pop into un- trammeled air with the sort of gasp that follows a fine chess move like memories are they? or punctuation? was it something the earth said to provoke our response tasking us to recall an evolutionary course our long ago initation into the one- among-others and within my newborn noticing have you popped up beside me love or were you here from the start a swarm of meaning and decay still gripping the underworld both of us half-buried holding fast if briefly to a swelling vastness while our coupling begins to register in the already awake compendium that offers to take us in you take me in and abundance floods us floats us out we fill each with the other all morning breaks as birdsong over us who rise to the surface so our faces might be sprungConversationJohn FiegeThank you. It's so wonderful hearing you read it, the intonation and the flow of the words and your emphasis is just like completely new hearing you read it, rather than just reading it myself. I want to start with the sexual imagery. You begin with "erogenous zones in oaks, slung with stoles of lace lichen." And that last line, "stoles of lace lichen the," that was one of the things that jumped out to me, is the is at the end of the line there. And you read it as if it was the end of the line rather than pausing and using it as part of the next stanza. But in addition to these, this erogenous zone, you've got thrusting mushrooms in a layer of spawn, and sexual imagery doesn't often accompany decomposition, and decomposers like lichen and in fungi, but this combination brings a strong sense of the interconnectedness of life and death of reproduction and decomposition. And so this is the cyclical world we live in, even though we're often myopically or delusionally, focused on some kind of progressive, linear, supernaturally immortal view of our lives. How are you imagining the reader encountering the beginning of this poem, and its images of sexually charged decomposition?Forrest GanderI'm, uh, trying to connect decomposition and eros, or the merging of more than one species, one individual, into a community. And I'm trying to use a syntax, which you notice, that also doesn't easily separate itself into clear, discrete sentences, but seems to be connected at both ends. And the sense is for us to lose our security in reading our feeling that we dominate the reading that we can figure it out quickly and divide it up into these parcels, and instead, create a kind of reading experience that mimics the kind of experience that we actually live, where everything is connected, and, and where the erotic and the decomposing are involved in the same processes.John FiegeYeah, and thanks to Governor Jerry Brown, lace lichen is now the official California state lichen making...Forrest Gander(Chuckles) Isn't that great? John Fiege...making California the first state to recognize a lichen as a state symbol. And the poem, like you were saying, how the syntax is mimicking the organic world. Visually, the line breaks and the varied intended indentations appear as local lace lichen itself. Can you talk about your relationship with lichen?Forrest GanderYes. You know, I think like you think, which is why you're doing these podcasts, that we're in an exigent historical moment where the environment is rapidly changing, and species are rapidly disappearing. And we've been hearing about this for decades without really responding in a sufficient way to the exigency of our situation. So I'm trying to find models of, instead of just heaping on more climate information horror, I'm trying to find models of other ways of thinking about our relationship with the world. And one, since I have a background in science—I have a degree in geology—is a scientific one. And I worked with a mycologist, named Anne Pringle, who taught me to see fungus and lichen in places where I hadn't been seeing them before. And it turns out lichen covers about 92% of the world you can find lichen in. And despite that, most people know what it is. They've seen, like on rocks, green, brown, little spots. It turns out, scientists don't really know what lichen is.John FiegeIt's cool to find something that scientists don't feel like they know that much about.Forrest GanderIt is! And yet, it seems like there's more more of those things that we don't really know that we can't measure, that we can't feel like we are in control of it all. And lichen is these two—more actually, it's not just an algae and cyanobacteria, or Sienna bacteria and fungus that get together it there's more organisms that are involved that come together, and are transformed completely and can't go back to what they were. And they formed this new organism that acts completely differently. And we're not so different from that, that our own bodies are full of other organisms, and even our DNA contains DNA of parasites that long ago became incorporated into our system. So lichen gives us a way of thinking about the mutualities that our lives are really made of.John FiegeYeah, and this poem, "Forest," is part of that collection, Twice Alive, where you have "Post-Fire Forest" and other poems related to wildfire and the aftermath of them, and that collection follows on the heels of your previous collection, Be With, which, you know this moving series of eulogistic poems to your late wife. It seems that Be With wrestles with and processes personal grief, while "Twice Alive" adds the element of ecological trauma. How are those two realms of trauma-related phenomena—the personal and the ecological? And how do they play out in the poem?Forrest GanderThe poems of "Be With”… they are so personally painful to me, I couldn't even read from the book after I published it. I think I read twice and then stopped reading from it. And one, as Albert Camus says, you can't live on in a grief or depression that's so terrible that it doesn't leave you with any openings. And so I wanted to find positive things to write about. But we're living during an ecological crisis. So I'm, and I've been writing about that crisis through really most of my adult life. But I wanted to find positive ways of reimagining our relationship with the world and maybe with death also. Because in lichen, and in the metaphor of like, and work, to two or more things come together and are transformed. I thought of human intimacy and the way that my relationship, my close relationships, I'm transformed in those relationships, I become something else. And that thing, which is welded in love, has a durability, and lasts. And in the same way, scientists—some scientists are saying that our whole idea of death comes out of our mammalian orientation. And that may be because some things don't die, and have theoretical immortality, and lichen, given enough nutrients, may be one of those things.John FiegeThat's amazing. How does it make you feel to think about the possibility that there's something that actually has some kind of immortality?Forrest GanderHow does it make us feel? I think it checks what we have always thought we've known. And it checks our instinctual perspective. And that kind of check, I think, is really helpful in terms of how we begin to reimagine our place in a world of other species that are completely different from us, and yet, share so much DNA.John FiegeCan you tell me about the Sangam literary traditions that you've referenced as an important element of your recent work in Eco-poetry?Forrest GanderSure! What brought me to Sangam was looking for other models of relationships between the human and the nonhuman. And it turns out that, you know, 2000 years ago, in Southern India, there was a blossoming of literature, which came to be called Sangam, which means convergence, and that one of the two styles of that poetry, which is called Akam, it was considered not only unethical but impossible to write about human emotions, as though they were independent of the landscape around us, which affects our perceptions. And, it impacts how and what we feel. And so, using that model for poems and finding that the same five landscapes that come up in the Sangam poems are the same five landscapes that one can find in California, where I live, I used those Sangam poems as a kind of model for writing poems that expressed that mutuality of, of the human and the nonhuman in the five landscapes of California in my home.John Fiegeisn't that so satisfying on so many levels to be able to look so far back in history? And to see people encountering the world in ways that are so resonant with the ways you are, we are encountering the world today in a completely different part of the planet, even? It's kind of amazing.Forrest GanderIt is! And yeah, I think it's what we will find everywhere that, you know, the Native Americans in what we now called the United States. They didn't think that these European invaders would last very long because the European invaders hadn't lived for thousands of years, with animals and plants of this continent. And so they thought we would fail. And we have failed, we've failed to live in a way that takes into account our interdependence with the nonhuman world.John FiegeWell, jumping back into the poem, your word choices and juxtapositions and the sounds, and the rhythms of the words in the poem are so powerful. Here's a section that begins at the end of a stanza and carries on to the next, "a force call it nighttime thrusts mushrooms up from their lair." I like this idea of nighttime as a force that has the power to push things up out of the earth. And nighttime is when we rest, but also maybe when we have sex, or maybe when we don't have sex often enough. But how is nighttime of force for you?Forrest GanderBecause there are so many processes, especially plant processes, that take place after the sun goes down. And that often, we're not thinking about night being a reenergizing process for other species. And also, I'm connecting nighttime, and that darkness with the half-buried to the things that go on in the dark, the things that go on underground.John FiegeRight! Well, here's another section I'd like to dig into. If you don't mind me reading, I feel bad reading your poem as you read it so beautifully, but just to go through it again. Like memories, are they or punctuation? Was it something the earth said to provoke a response, tasking us to recall an evolutionary course, our long-ago initiation into the one among others? So in this section of the poem, you shift from third person into first person plural, and we don't exactly know what the 'we' or the 'us' is, but I'm imagining it to be our species collectively speaking with the earth here. I personified a personified Earth. And each of us is merely one among others, one person among other people, but also humans are just one among many other species on the earth. So what's going on here, with the earth being provocative, the shift to first person plural, and to us thinking about our evolutionary course?Forrest GanderSo I'm thinking of mushrooms as kind of exclamation marks that come up and call our attention to the nonhuman, and also how memories are like that, that they pop up from the darkness of our mind into our conscious mind. And that, what they remind us of, what any contact with a nonhuman reminds us of, is our involvement with them; our long ago initiated course as an interdependent species, as a community in a community, that we are one among many others, as you say, and that if we forget that, then we don't take care of the earth because we don't recognize that it's part of taking care of ourselves. And for many human communities and cultures earlier, this was de rigueur, it was understood that, that we were involved. Our lives were educations in how to live with the world around us. But we've become so separated from that in our urban cultures that we need reminding.John FiegeRight, right. Well, and that reminds me of another section of the poem, we have this phrase "newborn noticing." So the stanza it's in is, "and within my newborn noticing, have you popped up beside me, my love? Or were you here from the start?" And I love this idea of newborn noticing it suggests that we're noticing a new, but also noticing, as a newborn does, like Lao says—‘newborn baby, unbiased, undistracted, nonjudgmental.' And this section feels like it touches on our deeply ingrained, anthropocentrism and ignorance of other species, and maybe how poetry can help us notice the world around us more fully, especially the other-than-human world. What is this 'newborn noticing' to you?Forrest GanderRight, I'm so glad you bring up Lao Tzu, also. Lao Tzu says, "Those who are not in constant awe; surely some great tragedy will befall them." And hear the 'newborn noticing,' again, that earlier passage you mentioned, that connects the punctuation to coming out of the ground of the mushrooms, to memories that come out of the darkness of our mind into our conscious mind. That's also the birth of something.John FiegeSo here's... oh, go ahead.Forrest GanderI just like that you've been, I mean, some people ask, you know, what can we do in this environmental crisis, and one of the things we can do is to try to have a chorus of not just scientists and biologists, but a chorus of artists and priests, and poets. And that's what you've been doing: putting together that chorus of responses to our crisis. And I think it's going to take the voices of a lot of people from a lot of different trajectories, to affect any kind of change. So I'm proud of what you're doing.John FiegeYeah, I totally agree. And I'm glad you notice and appreciate that (chuckles). You know, one thing I say all the time is, you know, our environmental discourse is dominated by science, economics, and policy. And those three things are all extremely important, and we have to keep on top of all of them. But it's leaving out the whole rest of the human experience. And if we are not all focused on this problem, and dealing with it in the ways that we know how, and the ways that we know how to interact with the world, we just... we can't get there because the problem is... it's so overwhelming as it is to leave it up to a small portion of the population to address is not sufficient,Forrest GanderRight? Or it would have changed already. And I think what art and poetry and literature can do is add a kind of an emotional and psychological approach to it, that can add it to the science, and can be more convincing,John FiegeRight? And not even just like, a way to convince people, but just a way to, to understand and feel the problem is so much beyond, you know, just a reason-based problem that you can solve or not, you know, but that it's part of who you are and what you value in the world and what you know, get you up out of bed every morning.Forrest GanderThat's beautifully put. Yeah, I agree with you.John FiegeWell, here here's another line I love from the poem, "A swarm of meaning and decay." And this goes back to that cyclical view of life and death; birth and decomposition. And it also brings in this concept of meaning—this thing that humans are obsessed with. Our perpetual question of why—what is the meaning of life? And so much of the foundation of our understanding of meaning is bound up in the perpetuation of life. And oftentimes, in the avoidance of death, despite the need for death to bring life. Can you talk more about this "swarm of meaning and decay?"Forrest GanderSo the "swarm of meaning and decay" comes just a moment after my "newborn noticing." And here, the poem merges the human—we don't really know for sure whether I'm talking about human beings, or I'm talking about other forms of life that are emerging from the underworld, like fungus, for instance. And in that merging of subjectivity and world, I'm trying to emphasize how the human life and the processes of the life—lives that aren't human—are completely related to each other. It's interesting to me that the kind of poetry that I write is sometimes categorized as eco-poetry, the idea of Eco-poetry is that there might be a way of writing in which human subjectivity and the non-human aren't so discrete from each other and that we might be able to show in writing, a different way of experiencing, or really, the real way of experiencing our relationships with otherness, which is that our subjectivities merge into otherness. That we're made of multiple creatures and were made by multiple interactions with the world. And I think that's what art has always done, is that it's expanded our way of thinking of the human.John FiegeDefinitely, definitely. Well, let me jump into the last two stanzas in the poem, which read, "And abundance floods us floats us out, we fill each with the other all morning breaks as songbird over us who rise to the surface, so our faces might be strong." And again, there's so much richness in this language. But to start off with, how does abundance, both flood us and float us?Forrest GanderWell, our lives are abundant; the world is abundant. And that sense of merging with another in intimacy, in love, and merging with the world is a sense of expanding. This, you know, the notion of the self, and that's an abundance, it's recognizing our collaborative relationship with otherness. And it floats us out of ourselves so that we're not locked into our own minds, our own singular psyches, we fill with each other. And then again, here, the syntax is working in two ways. We fill with each other, we fill with the other "all morning". And then we revise that as we, as we make that break. We fill with the other "all morning breaks as birdsong over us." And I'm thinking here about how human beings, Homo sapiens, from the start, almost all of human beings have experienced birdsong since we were born, since early in our lives. We've grown up with the songs of birds infused in our minds, in our hearing. And how much of a part of us birdsong is. We're rising to the surface like the mushrooms coming from underground to blossom so that our faces might be sprung. And here again, the human and the nonhuman? Am I talking about mushrooms here? Or am I talking about human beings? I'm purposely talking about both in a way that is perhaps indistinguishable.John FiegeAnd as you mentioned, the poem starts with the imagery of the mushrooms thrusting upward. And then, at the end here, it seems that the we in the poem rises to the surface. And the last line of the poem is, so our faces might be sprung. This sense of emergence comes to that most intimate thing—our faces—and this vague 'we' suddenly has a face. And we are like flowers or emergent mushrooms in the nighttime. Where does this poem leave you? And how do you think about where you'd like to leave the reader at the end?Forrest GanderI think in that uncertainty about where the human and where the non-human begins, I think that's the strategy of the poems, which is presenting not some romantic notion of our involvement with others, but I think a form of realism, it's recognizing that our involvement with otherness is entire, that were composed of otherness. So I think the feeling of what a mushroom is, is just the face, it's this little—fruited body, they call it—of an organism that's underground that we don't see at all. And, in a way, that's what our lives are also: this brief flourishing of the face of something that's connected to a body that's much larger than ours. And that ambiguous space is what I'm interested in, in thinking about.John FiegeAnd does that noticing or that knowledge calls us to do something? In particular, do you think?Forrest Gander 32:43Well, I don't want to turn the poem into a didacticism. But the poem presents a vision. And that vision can contribute to the way that we see ourselves in the world. And the way we see ourselves in the world forces us to make ethical decisions about how we are and what we do. So in, I want to provide a vision or share a vision. And I want readers to do with it what they feel called upon to do. There have been different ways that we've understood our relationship and our role in a living Earth, through time and in different cultures. And the worldview that we have now, which is using the Earth very transactional, can be changed. And that art can inspire us to imagine those kinds of changes. In some ways, we're like the yeast that gets put with grapes to make wine. The yeast, which is a fungus, eats the sugar, and it secretes basically alcohol. That's what where we get alcohol from, and it proliferates and proliferates, and keeps producing alcohol until at about 13%. The yeast kills itself it dies because it can't live with an alcohol content greater than that. And we're like that yeast on this earth. We're using up all of the resources, and we're proliferating, and pretty soon, there's not going to be room for us to live on the world will pollute ourselves out of existence, and the world will go on. It's just that we won't be part of it.John FiegeThat's a beautiful place to end; with yeast, and lichen, and erogenous zones. All swirling around together. Can you end by reading the poem once again?Forrest GanderSure. So, 'forest' is one of the five major landscapes that appear in the Sangam poems.[See poem as transcribed above]John FiegeForrest, thank you so much. This has been wonderful.Forrest GanderThanks a lot, John. I'm really pleased to be a part of your series and to be part of the chorus of voices that you're putting together.John FiegeAnd it's a beautiful voice that you've brought to it. OutroJohn FiegeThank you so much to Forrest Gander. Go to our website at chrysalispodcast.org, where you can read his poem "Forrest" and find our book and media recommendations. This episode was researched by Elena Cebulash and edited by Brody Mutschler and Sophia Chang. Music is by Daniel Rodriguez Vivas, mixing is by Juan Garcia. If you enjoyed my conversation with Forrest, please rate and review us on your favorite podcast platform. Contact me anytime at chrysalispodcast.org, where you can also support the project, subscribe to our newsletter, and join the conversation. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.chrysalispodcast.org
In today's episode, I share my experience of The Speed Project, one of the toughest, grittiest, and most disruptive races. We gathered six runners who had never worked together before to participate in an unsupported 300-mile relay race through some of the most unforgiving terrains in the country. The course was full of inclines and declines, with thousands of feet of elevation gain and loss through mountains and deserts, and we had to plot our own route with precision and speed. This was an unparalleled experience for me, and I can't wait to share some of the stories that came out of it with you all. Enjoy! Save 10% at BPN Supps: https://bit.ly/nickbare10audio Follow for more: IG: https://www.instagram.com/nickbarefitness/ YT: https://www.youtube.com/@nickbarefitness Topics: 0:00 Intro 0:29 Welcome 3:08 The background of The Speed Project 8:46 BPN's involvement 12:53 June is going to be a big month at BPN 14:59 What has made The Speed Project unique 17:15 The logistics 22:59 The start of the race 28:26 Our approach of the route 38:32 Barstow and the dogs 45:29 The difficulty of planning the course 49:24 Our fuel strategy 54:43 Where it got really interesting 1:02:33 The last 40 miles 1:06:07 Doing the hard things
Unless you've been living under a rock or in Barstow, you probably know all about the solar eclipse on Monday. Rod will be going to Austin, likely to be staring at ever-darkening clouds, and Tariq will be headed to the eclipse path in the Northeast. Where will you be? On today's episode, we're talking to astronomer and meteorologist Joe Rao about the solar eclipse of 2024--what is it, where the moon's shadow cross Earth, how can you maximize what you see (or don't see), and how to view partial phases safely. This last bit is important, and we're going to give you an earful about "solar safety"--the effects of improper viewing can be catastrophic. And, of course, Rod's bringing a terrible eclipse-oriented space joke! Join us. Headlines: Chinese Space Debris Sighting: China's Shenzhou-15 crew capsule's orbital module made an uncontrolled reentry, lighting up the skies over California without prior warning. Space Junk Hits a Florida Home: A story of a mysterious cylinder, believed to be part of a NASA battery pallet jettisoned from the ISS, crashing through a Florida man's home, illustrating the unpredictable nature of space debris re-entry. Main Topic: The Solar Eclipse of 2024 Introduction to Joe Rao: Introduction of Joe Rao, his background, and his excitement for the upcoming eclipse, his 14th total solar eclipse viewing. Eclipse Overview: Joe provides an in-depth look at the upcoming solar eclipse, discussing its path across North America, from Mexico through the United States to Canada, and highlighting its significance compared to past eclipses. Viewing Tips: Discussion on safe viewing practices, including the importance of using certified eclipse glasses and other methods to safely observe the eclipse without damaging one's eyes. Weather Considerations: Joe offers advice on how to choose the best viewing locations based on weather patterns and suggests resources for last-minute location adjustments to avoid cloud cover. Personal Stories and Plans: Tariq shares his plans to view the eclipse with his family, emphasizing the personal significance and communal aspect of experiencing such a rare event. Final Thoughts and Advice: The episode wraps up with Joe stressing the unparalleled experience of witnessing a total solar eclipse firsthand, urging listeners not to miss the opportunity to be in the path of totality. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Joe Rao Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: wix.com/studio
Unless you've been living under a rock or in Barstow, you probably know all about the solar eclipse on Monday. Rod will be going to Austin, likely to be staring at ever-darkening clouds, and Tariq will be headed to the eclipse path in the Northeast. Where will you be? On today's episode, we're talking to astronomer and meteorologist Joe Rao about the solar eclipse of 2024--what is it, where the moon's shadow cross Earth, how can you maximize what you see (or don't see), and how to view partial phases safely. This last bit is important, and we're going to give you an earful about "solar safety"--the effects of improper viewing can be catastrophic. And, of course, Rod's bringing a terrible eclipse-oriented space joke! Join us. Headlines: Chinese Space Debris Sighting: China's Shenzhou-15 crew capsule's orbital module made an uncontrolled reentry, lighting up the skies over California without prior warning. Space Junk Hits a Florida Home: A story of a mysterious cylinder, believed to be part of a NASA battery pallet jettisoned from the ISS, crashing through a Florida man's home, illustrating the unpredictable nature of space debris re-entry. Main Topic: The Solar Eclipse of 2024 Introduction to Joe Rao: Introduction of Joe Rao, his background, and his excitement for the upcoming eclipse, his 14th total solar eclipse viewing. Eclipse Overview: Joe provides an in-depth look at the upcoming solar eclipse, discussing its path across North America, from Mexico through the United States to Canada, and highlighting its significance compared to past eclipses. Viewing Tips: Discussion on safe viewing practices, including the importance of using certified eclipse glasses and other methods to safely observe the eclipse without damaging one's eyes. Weather Considerations: Joe offers advice on how to choose the best viewing locations based on weather patterns and suggests resources for last-minute location adjustments to avoid cloud cover. Personal Stories and Plans: Tariq shares his plans to view the eclipse with his family, emphasizing the personal significance and communal aspect of experiencing such a rare event. Final Thoughts and Advice: The episode wraps up with Joe stressing the unparalleled experience of witnessing a total solar eclipse firsthand, urging listeners not to miss the opportunity to be in the path of totality. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Joe Rao Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: wix.com/studio
Unless you've been living under a rock or in Barstow, you probably know all about the solar eclipse on Monday. Rod will be going to Austin, likely to be staring at ever-darkening clouds, and Tariq will be headed to the eclipse path in the Northeast. Where will you be? On today's episode, we're talking to astronomer and meteorologist Joe Rao about the solar eclipse of 2024--what is it, where the moon's shadow cross Earth, how can you maximize what you see (or don't see), and how to view partial phases safely. This last bit is important, and we're going to give you an earful about "solar safety"--the effects of improper viewing can be catastrophic. And, of course, Rod's bringing a terrible eclipse-oriented space joke! Join us. Headlines: Chinese Space Debris Sighting: China's Shenzhou-15 crew capsule's orbital module made an uncontrolled reentry, lighting up the skies over California without prior warning. Space Junk Hits a Florida Home: A story of a mysterious cylinder, believed to be part of a NASA battery pallet jettisoned from the ISS, crashing through a Florida man's home, illustrating the unpredictable nature of space debris re-entry. Main Topic: The Solar Eclipse of 2024 Introduction to Joe Rao: Introduction of Joe Rao, his background, and his excitement for the upcoming eclipse, his 14th total solar eclipse viewing. Eclipse Overview: Joe provides an in-depth look at the upcoming solar eclipse, discussing its path across North America, from Mexico through the United States to Canada, and highlighting its significance compared to past eclipses. Viewing Tips: Discussion on safe viewing practices, including the importance of using certified eclipse glasses and other methods to safely observe the eclipse without damaging one's eyes. Weather Considerations: Joe offers advice on how to choose the best viewing locations based on weather patterns and suggests resources for last-minute location adjustments to avoid cloud cover. Personal Stories and Plans: Tariq shares his plans to view the eclipse with his family, emphasizing the personal significance and communal aspect of experiencing such a rare event. Final Thoughts and Advice: The episode wraps up with Joe stressing the unparalleled experience of witnessing a total solar eclipse firsthand, urging listeners not to miss the opportunity to be in the path of totality. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Joe Rao Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: wix.com/studio
Big Bro Jake went on location to San Diego, California and finally got his big sister, "Hey Sis" aka Tracie Woodley to come on the show. They broke down all of the madness surrounding Diddy aka Sean Combs and all of the allegations that surround him "allegedly". They also do America's Favorite Segment, Big Bro Jake's Bae Bites of Love. They also reminisce about old times growing up in Barstow, California and Tracie drops a bombshell about BBJ. He may never show his face again!
This week, one of the good Dodgers fans returns to the pod to talk about the upcoming season in the NL West, the Ohtani Scandal, and the Padres organization moving forward without Peter Seidler. Then Dallas and Nick chat for a bit at a Tesla charging station in Barstow.
Elizabeth Drew Barstow Stoddard (1823-1902) was a poet, fiction writer, and essayist born and raised in Mattapoisset, Massachusetts. The daughter of a shipbuilder, Stoddard was educated at Wheaton Female Seminary.She married poet Richard Stoddard in 1851 and together they had three children, two of whom died as infants. The Stoddards' New York City home was a gathering place for local poets, and Elizabeth began to submit her own poetry, fiction, and social commentary to journals. From 1854 to 1858, Stoddard contributed a bimonthly column to the San Francisco newspaper Daily Alta California.Stoddard wrote three novels, including The Morgesons (1862), and many short stories, essays, children's tales, and poems. Uncommon for her time, her work questions the conventions of gender roles and is rooted in an unsentimental, irreverent realism. Her poetry, gathered in Poems (1895), often examines a fragile domestic realm.-bio via Poetry Foundation Get full access to The Daily Poem Podcast at dailypoempod.substack.com/subscribe
Nocatee: Is Nocatee, Florida paradise on Earth!? According to Jacksonville Tom, IT IS! 2023 MOVIES: It's about that time! Gotta start stacking that TOP 10 list, meanwhile Jeff says MOVIES ARE OVER. Barry Keoghan's Penis Brands You Don't Like: What brand just rubs you the wrong way? FUCK YOU WATCH THIS!, THE BEAR!, BON JOVI!, RUNAWAY!, FLORIDA GATORS!, JACKSONVILLE!, HAWAII TOM!, FBI AGENT!, NOCATEE!, FLORIDA!, GOON!, TENNIS COURTS!, HURRICANES!, PARADISE!, PERFECT!, COMMUNITY!, SUBURBIA!, PARKS!, JASON CHRISTOPHERS!, RILEY!, BIG CITY!, CHEESEBURGER SPRING ROLLS!, PEPPERONI PIZZA!, MOVIE THEATER!, CINEMARK!, REGAL!, MOVIES!, GHOSTFACE!, WAWA!, BUC-EES!, THE IRON CLAW!, KINO!, A24!, VON ERICHS!, TEXAS TORNADO!, POPPY'S PLAYTIME!, KRISTIN!, SALTBURN!, BARRY KEOGHAN!, EMERAL FENNELL!, POOR THINGS!, FASSBENDER!, HYPE!, PROSPHETIC!, FISH TANK!, EPISODE EDITS!, SEASON 2!, FRANK HASSLE!, SURVIVOR!, AUSTRALIAN SURVIVOR!, BLACKFACE!, ZACK SNYDER!, BIG BROTHER FOR EDGE LORDS!, CELEBREALITY!, AMERICA'S GOT TALENT!, DC!, MARVEL!, THE FLASH!, SHAZAM 2!, AQUAMAN!, BLUE BEETLE!, JAMES WAN!, FRANCHISES!, UPGRADE!, SCI-FI!, ARROWHEAD!, DEL TACO!, BARSTOW! You can find the videos from this episode at our Discord RIGHT HERE!
This episode of the Wisdom Podcast features Geoffrey Barstow. Geoff is an assistant professor of Philosophy and Religion at Oregon State University. He has been a student of Choky Nyima Rinpoche for more than 20 years and he spent over six years conducting research in Nepal, China, and Tibet. His studies focused on animal ethics, […] The post Geoffrey Barstow: Was the Buddha Vegetarian? (#177) appeared first on The Wisdom Experience.
Happy Halloween!! It's 9021Booooo!Costumes in this episode are amazing. Jason Priestley directing is always a "Treat"! (shout out to the underwater apple bobbing shot!)We aren't really sure there are UFO's in Barstow.Donna seems to be "juggling" two bad boys.Valerie has disappointed us. Dylan is a mess.Are Dylan and Brandon really best friends???See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.