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John & Heidi share funny stories of people doing weird things... plus we continue our segment #AsSeenOnTV as John chats with Joe Berlinger - Who Killed Jonbenet Ramsey (TV) Learn more about our radio program, podcast & blog at www.JohnAndHeidiShow.com
Send us a textThe JonBenét Mystery: Director Joe Berlinger Talks Netflix's Cold Case and Pursuit of Justice. Cinemondo interviews acclaimed director Joe Berlinger and dives deep into his latest Netflix documentary, Cold Case: Who Killed JonBenét Ramsey? Known for his riveting true-crime storytelling, Berlinger discusses the complexities of revisiting one of America's most infamous unsolved cases: the tragic 1996 murder of six-year-old JonBenét Ramsey. Kathy and Burk participated in Berlinger's award-winning documentaries about the West Memphis Three murder case, Paradise Lost: Revelations and Paradise Lost: Purgatory.Berlinger sheds light on the groundbreaking investigative techniques featured in the documentary, from advanced DNA analysis to behavioral profiling, while also examining the media frenzy and public scrutiny that have surrounded the case for decades. He reflects on the emotional weight of interviewing those closest to the tragedy and the challenges of balancing sensitivity with the pursuit of justice. Berlinger also explores the broader implications of the case, including its lasting impact on the justice system and the evolution of true-crime storytelling. Whether you're a longtime follower of the JonBenét Ramsey mystery or a newcomer to the story, this interview offers a compelling behind-the-scenes look at the making of a documentary that seeks to uncover the truth behind one of the most enduring questions in modern true crime.#jonbenetramsey #joeberlinger #coldcase #truecrime #jonbenet #netflix #filmmaking Cinemondo is excited to announce that co-host, Burk Sauls, book, One Hundred Movies: Burk's Favorite Movies Volume 1, is available on Amazon! https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DML5K363?ref_=pe_93986420_774957520Get early access to these reviews by joining Patreon or our YouTube channel! YouTube Membershiphttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvt8UhKoTahIIRGIwxzUVVA/joinPatreonhttps://www.patreon.com/CinemondoPodcastJoin this channel to get access to fun perks like exclusive content and private Discord channel!:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvt8UhKoTahIIRGIwxzUVVA/joinOfficial Swag https://shop.spreadshirt.com/cinemondoNew videos daily!!Subscribe for the latest movie reviewshttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvt8UhKoTahIIRGIwxzUVVA?sub_confirmation=1
On this week's Motivation Monday, we're talking with Joe Berlinger. He is a documentary filmmaker and producer, particularly focused on true crime documentaries. Berlinger's films and docu-series draw attention to social justice issues in the US. Mettailca: Some Kind of Monster, Brother's Keeper, Extremely Wicked; Shockingly Evil and Vile, Paradise Lost; The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills. Berlinger holds a streak of chart-topping work on Netflix, attracting enormous audiences with 16 Netflix productions under his belt that have all debuted in the Netflix Top Ten, often at #1. Berlinger is also the first filmmaker to simultaneously cover the same subject in scripted and unscripted forms with CONVERSATIONS WITH A KILLER: THE TED BUNDY TAPES and EXTREMELY WICKED, SHOCKINGLY EVIL, AND VILE, the latter of which starred Zac Efron, Lily Collins, and John Malkovich and sold to Netflix in a Sundance bidding war for almost $10 million. He is the Emmy-winning and Academy Award nominated director of the newly release this three-part docuseries investigates the mishandling of the case by law enforcement and the media on Netflix called Cold Case Who Killed JonBenet Ramsey.
Renowned filmmaker Joe Berlinger joins The Outlier to discuss his new Netflix docuseries, Cold Case: Who Killed JonBenét Ramsey. Twenty-eight years after the shocking murder of six-year-old JonBenét Ramsey, the case remains unsolved, clouded by law enforcement missteps, media frenzy, and endless speculation. Berlinger reveals the untold stories behind the investigation, explores the media's role in shaping public perception, and exposes the devastating impact of police errors on the pursuit of justice, plus some new details.... Don't miss this conversation that dives into America's most notorious cold case.www.joeberlingerfilms.comhttps://x.com/joeberlinger Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The mysterious Chinese-born criminal mastermind Tse Chi Lop didn't raise too many eyebrows when he was arrested in Canada in the 1990's for running heroin with the Hong Kong Triads known as the Big Circle Gang in a partnership with the Rizzuto family, a Canadian-Italian mafia clan. But after serving nearly a decade in prison, the laid back, soft-spoken and supremely confident drug lord went about setting up the biggest methamphetamine and synthetic drug cartel in Asia and some say, the world. Sitting atop Sam Gor, also known as the company, Chi Lop was apparently helping the Triad cartel bring in upwards of 17 billon dollars a year. Now awaiting trial in Australia after he was arrested in Amsterdam, what will Tse Chi Lop's trial reveal about the mysterious man alleged to be Asia's biggest drug lord? Reporter Josh Berlinger has been tracking him for years and brings us the story. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Chana Cohen, Illustrated by R. Berlinger
Felix Salmon, Emily Peck, and Elizabeth Spiers kick off Slate Money's series on some of the biggest financial scandals in recent history. This week they are joined by Joe Berlinger, director of “Madoff: The Monster of Wall Street”. Berlinger tells the Slate Money crew about Madoff and how his infamous Ponzi scheme ultimately came tumbling down. If you enjoy this show, please consider signing up for Slate Plus. Slate Plus members get an ad-free experience across the network and an additional segment of our show every week. You'll also be supporting the work we do here on Slate Money. Sign up now at slate.com/moneyplus to help support our work. Podcast production by Patrick Fort. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Felix Salmon, Emily Peck, and Elizabeth Spiers kick off Slate Money's series on some of the biggest financial scandals in recent history. This week they are joined by Joe Berlinger, director of “Madoff: The Monster of Wall Street”. Berlinger tells the Slate Money crew about Madoff and how his infamous Ponzi scheme ultimately came tumbling down. If you enjoy this show, please consider signing up for Slate Plus. Slate Plus members get an ad-free experience across the network and an additional segment of our show every week. You'll also be supporting the work we do here on Slate Money. Sign up now at slate.com/moneyplus to help support our work. Podcast production by Patrick Fort. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Felix Salmon, Emily Peck, and Elizabeth Spiers kick off Slate Money's series on some of the biggest financial scandals in recent history. This week they are joined by Joe Berlinger, director of “Madoff: The Monster of Wall Street”. Berlinger tells the Slate Money crew about Madoff and how his infamous Ponzi scheme ultimately came tumbling down. If you enjoy this show, please consider signing up for Slate Plus. Slate Plus members get an ad-free experience across the network and an additional segment of our show every week. You'll also be supporting the work we do here on Slate Money. Sign up now at slate.com/moneyplus to help support our work. Podcast production by Patrick Fort. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Felix Salmon, Emily Peck, and Elizabeth Spiers kick off Slate Money's series on some of the biggest financial scandals in recent history. This week they are joined by Joe Berlinger, director of “Madoff: The Monster of Wall Street”. Berlinger tells the Slate Money crew about Madoff and how his infamous Ponzi scheme ultimately came tumbling down. If you enjoy this show, please consider signing up for Slate Plus. Slate Plus members get an ad-free experience across the network and an additional segment of our show every week. You'll also be supporting the work we do here on Slate Money. Sign up now at slate.com/moneyplus to help support our work. Podcast production by Patrick Fort. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A Financial Sociopath/Serial Killer is how Jim Campbell, author of “Madoff Talks” described Bernie Madoff. Netflix acquired rights to Jim's book and Jim served as an Executive Producer on the docuseries ‘Madoff: The Monster of Wall Street which debuted Jan. 4th. I watched it last night. It's a 4 part series about the unimaginable corruption and fraudulent schemes committed by the globally infamous former chairman of NASDAQ and American financier Bernie Madoff who orchestrated the largest Ponzi scheme in world history fleecing thousands of investors out of $65 billion. It's also about ‘the willfully blind financial system that allowed it to flourish for decades' said the Netflix trailer. Jim Campbell, who joined me on The Debbie Nigro Show, was able to get the most comprehensive insider account of how this could happen, through his exclusive interviews with all the players including Madoff himself through personal communications with him while he was in prison. It's an incredible and outrageous story that Jim personally got the last word on. And honestly, the last word from Bernie Madoff from prison. Jim felt lucky that Joe Berlinger, the top Netflix true crime documentary director was behind it. He's the guy who did the Jeffrey Epstein, Elaine Maxwell, Ted Bundy, and Whitey Bulger documentaries too. Jim said, Joe actually took the story from the book and adhered to it, and to him, that was a great honor. “It's a very complex story, said Jim. And he told it basically like I did. He let me basically be able to do that. It's his thing. It's his show. He's done everything in it. The way he put it together, the recreations that are so creative, the two sets of the 19th, 17th floors that reflected Madoff's brain split between one totally legitimate, and one totally criminal enterprise. Berlinger did that. So it's been a big thrill for me. By the way, the co-executive producer credit, my contract said producer. So they promoted me without even telling me I didn't see it till I saw it on the screen. “ Jim Campbell wrote the book “Madoff Talks” and then Netflix optioned the rights for their docuseries, ‘Madoff: The Monster of Wall Street. ‘Optioning the Rights', means Netflix purchased exclusive access to his book for three years. Jim also had turned over 40,000 documents to them as well. So how long did it take for Jim to write the book ‘Madoff Talks'? “If you include the fact that I started talking to Bernie Madoff back in like 2011 it took about 10 years”. I wondered what it felt like for Jim the first time he spoke directly to Bernie Madoff? Jim said, ““Yeah, you know he just destroyed so many people's lives. And remember back at that time, he was like the biggest villain on the planet. And yet he was very charismatic, brilliant, had total recall. And you could see that his ego was so strong. What Madoff said to Jim was, “I had a legitimate business. I'm brilliant. My strategy, the fake one called split strike conversion actually worked except Jim, I know I wasn't doing real trading”. Jim in his conversations with Madoff described him as sort of delusional. “You know, justifying that it worked, but then he was not really doing it for real. He had an unfathomable brain that he could compartmentalize it the way he did. Madoff built the business from scratch, and was doing the number three volume on the New York Stock Exchange. And you think, well, then something must have happened over here. he must have lost some money and like a gambler, he made the classic mistake. He's told me that story. “ Recalling the conversation with Madoff, Jim says it was like, “Yeah, I was going to do a Ponzi scheme under the table. It was a mistake. I'd get the money back and no one would ever notice.” Jim shared that Madoff was building the legitimate business and the Ponzi business at the exact same time. Intentionally, intentionally. And at the same time. “It wasn't intentionally in terms of I'm a crook and I'm trying to steal your money, said Jim. It was he couldn't psychologically accept losses. The legitimate business is trading. You're making commissions markets up markets down. He suddenly saw he could lose money on trades and he could not deal with that. And that's what the genesis of it. But to do them at the same time, you have to have one screwed up mind.” I found it crazy that so many really smart people just kept handing Madoff money especially as the documentary pointed out, that there was no official letterheadon nice paper on the statements from the bogus company that was sent to customers. They were more like graph sheets from a laser printer and I found it t absurd no one ever questioned that? No one? Jim said, “No one. No. I never found anybody that understood what his strategy was, which was very simple conceptually and should have mirrored the stock market, which obviously it didn't because it always went up.” “They both bought this veneer of trust that it worked.” It's my experience that most people buy the person behind the brand in most categories in life. So here you have this monster who was once revered, who I guess people assumed could not do anything wrong, and he creates a bond scheme and ends up 65 billion dollars get lost and a zillion people's lives get wrecked. One poor guy featured in the Netflix series lost not only his money, but his house. It was hard to watch him speak through his tears. I'm aware some of Madoff's victims got recourse and retribution. In this podcast Jim speaks to where that money came from and admits its a sore subject for him because usually nobody gets money back in a ponzi scheme. Jim Campbell thought the documentary was really well done and enjoyed working with everyone involved out at a big studio in New Jersey where they built the sets. “I got to meet everybody out there and the interesting thing was, none of these guys came out of a serial killer documentary world. None of them knew a thing about finance. So they actually let me teach them for about five months before they start filming. Then they filmed for four or five months. And then Netflix took it to get it ready for the other countries for three or four months. And thats was the process. I do not know the Netflix people very well. But they, they treated me incredibly well. Radical Media is the name of the production company, and Joe Burland was the director. I met all their folks and all the other producers and other fabulous contributors. “ I brought up to Jim that the opening part of the first segment or the first portion of the documentary, the scene where a grown son and his mother who was invested with Bernie Madoff ran into him in Palm Beach at the golf course. The son says hey, you just ran into Bernie Madoff! And the mother responds, yes but did you notice he never looks directly at you?” I thought that was a very loud. I asked Jim if anybody else had said that along the way? “I haven't heard that, but what he did have was a series of ticks, that made him look real strange, like there was something that was in his brain that he was trying to keep down.” He went on to say about Madoff, “He didn't like to meet with any of the people in the dirty business, he loved to meet with the Presidents of the brokerage firms, for what his real legitimate business did which was trade for customers of Schwab and folks like that. And so he did all the execution for them. So yes, he was a strange guy. “ So did his family members know what was going on? “I did that in chapter 8 of my book, you know, I started my book with the Justice Department, the trustee, the media and the people all thinking that Mark, Andrew, and Ruth had to know or were involved. I did my own investigation. It literally came right down to the end because one of the things is Bernie took 800 million of customers money and stuck it into the back door of the legitimate business, when it had problems through the trading desk, calling them trading losses and covering up, etc. Well, who ran the trading desk, Mark and Andrew? So that didn't look good, but I did figure it out and I contrary to what all these other folks say they did not know about it. They were not involved. Does that mean they're they shouldn't have known about it? Well, shouldn't the SEC have known about it? “ “Now, the real story is the government failed, Wall Street failed, all these firms were shipping money, right? And Bernie gave them the fees back, which they explained as their job is only due diligence. Someone has money and they're is looking for these kinds of things, say, very conservative. And say Bob is a money manager and it's his job is to see that the other person is real, that he's doing what you say and puts the money with the person that matches. Bernie wouldn't allow any due diligence. So they took fees they would never get in order not to ask questions. Oh, that's called willful blindness. That's really loud. Some made over a billion dollars in fees.” Jim Campbell says Bernie Madoff had no empathy. Bernie Madoff would tell me, “Jim, my lawyers tell me I'm supposed to show empathy. I don't believe these people are living in dumpsters now like everybody is saying and they don't have and by the way, I don't see it happening it.” The other thing Jim said Bernie Madoff suffered from was narcissism.” “Always the victim and pathological lying and control and the ego just dominates you and both of those things were true in his life. “ “But I gotta tell you”, said Jim, “he came across very low key, charismatic, trusting. He ran his firm, particularly the legitimate side as a family. He paid for people's honeymoon. He paid for sudden emergencies. And this is before he stole the money to pay for it. So there were people that I know that stayed in that firm because he treated them well.” What has changed in terms of regulations in the financial industry since this story? Now, if you take Bernie's instance, they can catch the Ponzi scheme now, the SEC. They did five investigations back then and never saw it. They know how to look for Ponzi scheme. now except maybe if it's offshore, where a lot of the stuff is. But the SEC is not a cop, which is what people believe it is and what they try to tell you it is. They're not equipped to find these things upfront. And the crypto thing has been unregulated now for several years. Aware that Bernie Madoff died in prison I was curious where Bernie Madoff might be buried? Jim said nobody had ever asked that question. “Okay, if you know Jewish custom, you are supposed to be in the ground within 24 hours. His remains are cremated, which is also not in the Jewish faith or custom. His remains are in a jar in his lawyer's office because the family wouldn't take them.” This is the podcast of the insightful conversation I had with Jim Campbell on the Debbie Nigro show about the man behind the biggest Ponzi scam in history.
This episode features one of our BBB Luminare Award for Service winners, Emily Berliner. This award honors individuals who prioritize philanthropy and have made a meaningful impact through their charitable activities. Emily is the COO/Founder of EBO Consulting, Inc. In hopes of supporting a vital and sustainable business economy in Alaska, she founded EBO Consulting Inc. with the vision of entrepreneurship as a collaborative endeavor to bring great ideas to the community. Listen now to learn more about her work!
In this episode of the COVID Ethics Series Podcast, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks to bioethicist, Dr. Nancy Berlinger. Berlinger is a Research Scholar at The Hastings Center, an independent bioethics research institute based in Garrison, NY. Her current research focuses on ethical and societal challenges arising from population aging; the bioethics of migration, and responding to and learning from the Covid-19 pandemic.
Hour 2 of The Dawn Stensland Show: Joe Berlinger—Academy Award Nominated Filmmaker—joins the show to discuss his latest docu-series, “Shadowland.” Shadowland is a “deeply immersive” six-part series designed to reveal how dangerous conspiracy theories have migrated from the fringes of society to mainstream. Berlinger explains that instead of using this documentary to demonize people who believe conspiracies, he attempts to better understand the reason why the theories are appealing and how societally we can minimize the damage they may cause. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the food index has risen by 11.4% year-over-year. While appearing on Fox News, Sen. Joe Manchin said that Vice President Kamala Harris was “dead wrong” to say that America's Southern border is secure. Will Philadelphia be the next sanctuary city to receive busloads of undocumented migrants via Texas and Arizona? While appearing on MSNBC, Washington Post columnist George Will referred to Joe Biden's decision to embrace Elizabeth Warren/Bernie Sanders style progressivism as the president's greatest “unforced error.” Last week, Chief Justice John Roberts stated: "I don't understand the connection between opinions that people disagree with and the legitimacy of the Court.” Justice Elena Kagan, while speaking in New York on Monday, seemingly disagreed with Roberts suggesting that judges are creating “legitimacy problems for themselves.”
Joe Berlinger—Academy Award Nominated Filmmaker—joins the show to discuss his latest docu-series, “Shadowland.” Shadowland is a “deeply immersive” six-part series designed to reveal how dangerous conspiracy theories have migrated from the fringes of society to mainstream. Berlinger explains that instead of using this documentary to demonize people who believe conspiracies, he attempts to better understand the reason why the theories are appealing and how societally we can minimize the damage they may cause.
Tiller sits with Oscar nominated and Emmy winning filmmaker Joe Berlinger, whose iconic career includes landmark films such as the "Paradise Lost" series, "Metallica: Some Kind of Monster", "Crime Scene", and "Conversations With a Killer." In this conversation, Berlinger describes his unconventional journey to filmmaking (4:00), then discusses the making of his 1992 masterpiece "Brother's Keeper" and why crime is such a perfect genre for documentary filmmakers (28:48), before finally breaking down how the medium of documentaries has evolved since the late 1980s (47:40). ---------------- Films discussed in this episode: Endless Summer (1966) dir. Bruce Brown. Stranger Than Paradise (1984) dir. Jim Jarmusch. The Thin Blue Line (1988) dir. Errol Morris. Brother's Keeper (1992) dir. Joe Berlinger. Hoop Dreams (1994) dir. Steve James. Paradise Lost (1996 - 2011) dir. Joe Berlinger. Collective (2019) dir. Alexander Nanau. Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes (2019) dir. Joe Berlinger. Crime Scene: The Vanishing at the Cecil Hotel (2021) dir. Joe Berlinger.
In this episode, we are talking with Josh Berlinger about File Snakes.https://www.jerseysexoticreptilekeepers.comShow NotesZac Loughman @ dr_crawdad on IGhttps://www.instagram.com/dr_crawdad/On FB https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100011423011423Matt Most @ sarpamitrausahttps://www.instagram.com/sarpamitrausa/On FBhttps://www.facebook.com/SarpamitraLLCWebsitehttps://sarpamitra.comFollow MPR Network on:FB: https://www.facebook.com/MoreliaPythonRadioIG: https://www.instagram.com/mpr_network/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtrEaKcyN8KvC3pqaiYc0RQ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Aloha! Heute habe ich die deutsche Profitriathletin Lena Berlinger zu Gast im Podcast Gespräch! Lena habe ich das erste Mal beim Challenge Davos 2018 persönlich kennengelernt und war positiv überrascht, dass in einer so zierlichen, jungen Frau so viel Triathlonpower stecken kann! Sie hat das Rennen, was überhaupt kein leichtes ist selbstverständlich gewonnen. Und überhaupt scheint sie harte Streckenprofile zu lieben. Mit Lena spreche ich in den nächsten ca. 75 Minuten u.a. darüber wann und wie Lena zum Triathlonsport gefunden hat, warum ihr die etwas anspruchsvolleren Strecken eher liegen, wie so das Leben als Triathlonprofiathletin wirklich ist, über Ihre Saison 2021 und was sie sich für 2022 vorgenommen hat und so einiges mehr. Jetzt wünsche ich Dir viel Freude beim Anhören der heutigen Podcastfolge mit Lena Berlinger! Shownotes: Website von Lena Berlinger => https://lenaberlinger.de/ Lena in Instagram => https://www.instagram.com/lena.berlinger.justlena/ In eigener Sache: Wenn Dir der Podcast mit Lena Berlinger gefallen hat, dann freue ich mich über deinen Applaus, sprich eine Bewertung in Apple Podcast, ein Abo in Spotify und Co, oder wenn Du den Podcast in Steady unterstützt. Denn in Steady kommen demnächst auch physische Prämien wie z.B. Triathlon Podcast Badekappen und Co. als Prämien ins Programm, sowohl für bisherige, aktuelle und natürlich zukünftige Unterstützer des Podcasts. Vielen Dank bereits an dieser Stelle für den Support aller bisherigen und aktuellen Unterstützer und vielleicht bist Du ja einer der nächsten! Würde mich sehr freuen! Zum Schluss freue ich mich auch, wenn Du bei der nächsten Ausgabe von Triathlon-Podcast mit dabei bist. Bis dahin, bleib sportlich, Dir und Deiner Familie Frohes Weihnachtsfest und noch viel wichtiger in der aktuellen Zeit, bleib gesund! Dein Marco Folge direkt herunterladen
Karajan steigt ins Taxi … - 44 Musiker-Anekdoten | Hin- und hergerichtet von Joseph Berlinger | Mit Undine Schneider, Eva Sixt, Heike Ternes, Fritz Barth, Martin Hofer, Georg Lorenz, Heinz Müller … | 2 CDs, 2 Std. 37 Min. | 17,90 € (UVP) | TYXart / Chromart Classics ||
In this episode of LaPatty's Podcast, special guest Quinn Berlinger and I talk our Zoom college experiences, music we have been digging recently, Snapchat stories, and much more! New episodes with new guests twice a week! Intro Song - Lost by Cali Life Style Outro Song - Think Positive by RKL
A team of researchers from Harvard University's Wyss [veese] Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering has created underwater fish robots. Called the Bluebots, the robots are an imitation of blue tang fish, a species of small fish usually found in Indo-Pacific coral reefs. The 3D-printed Bluebots are about 10 centimeters long. They use cameras and LED lights to see and navigate, and their tiny fins help them maneuver through the water. According to one researcher, the team got inspiration for the Bluebots when they saw a school of fish while scuba diving. They were fascinated by the fish swimming together without explicit communication, and they wanted to replicate this behavior in the lab. Designer Florian Berlinger said the robots are capable of grouping together or dispersing as needed with little to no interaction from human controllers. Bluebots can navigate independently by calculating their neighbors' distance and direction. They are also capable of cooperating to complete tasks. For instance, a group may be assigned to find a red LED in their tank. Each Bluebot can search independently, but when one of them finds the red LED, that robot sends a signal to call the others. Berlinger said that other researchers had reached out to him about possibly using the Bluebots for studies about fish swimming and schooling. He said that it makes him happy to hear that they are open to the idea of including his invention among their laboratory fish. In the future, Berlinger expects that these robots could closely monitor fragile environments, such as coral reefs, without harming marine life. The Bluebots could also explore underneath docks and other spaces that humans cannot reach, and may even be helpful in locating people in distress during search-and-rescue missions.
Documentary filmmaker JOE BERLINGER joins Kathy, Mark and Burk for a deeper look into his Netflix documentary series CRIME SCENE: THE VANISHING AT THE CECIL HOTEL. It’s a fascinating look into how we see and understand films and series about true crime. What leads us to make our conclusions about the cases we follow and how important are our opinions and our speculation? Joe takes us into the process and the ups and downs of making a series like this one, and the sometimes frustrating ways viewers interpret crime stories. Is it irresponsible to share our theories with large online audiences? Are we being respectful and fair? Joe gives us a lot to think about.Kathy and Burk know Berlinger from their time working on the West Memphis Three case and they also appeared in PARADISE LOST 2 and 3. They talk to Joe about experiences in front of and behind the camera and how the Elisa Lam case has affected him.Music composed and performed by Burk Sauls.SPOILER WARNING: This episode contains MAJOR SPOILERS which means important story details will be revealed. We always advise listeners to: Watch First Listen Later.Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!https://youtube.com/channel/UCvt8UhKoTahIIRGIwxzUVVAWe're also on Patreon! Help support the show and get some cool swag.Become a Patron on PatreonJoin Cinemondo and over a hundred thousand podcasters already using Buzzsprout to get their message out to the world. Sign up here to get your podcast started! Cinemondo Podcast is a weekly show that's released every Monday. If you’d like to support our show, please subscribe to our podcast free in iTunes, and leave us a review! We want to hear from you so write in with more recommendations and comments. Email us: CinemondoPodcast@gmail.com Connect with us: CinemondoPodcast.com twitter.com/CinemondoPod facebook.com/CinemondoPodcast instagram.com/CinemondoPodcastSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/CinemondoPodcast)
On this week's show, if you go down to the woods today, you're in for a big surprise - the raging dumpster fire of a movie that is 2000's Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2, directed by Joe "Not really a narrative feature guy" Berlinger. Why does this movie ditch its only good idea in the first five minutes? Was the original a theatrically-released snuff film in this universe? How come we don't get to spend more time with that owl? Who thought this was a compelling way to expand the Blair Witch legend? All this, plus camping horror stories; Walmart psychics; how to play Monster Trucks, and the Blair Witch herself calls up for a quick chat! Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 is directed by Joe Berlinger and stars Jeffrey Donovan, Kim Director, Stephen Barker Turner, Erica Leerhsen and Tristine Skyler. Bad With Numbers is a weekly podcast from Toronto, Canada; hosted by Neth Knowles, Laura Medeiros, Rodey Gozum and Megan Swaine. Follow us on Twitter - @BadNumbersPod or drop us an email at bwnpod@gmail.com Oh, and don't forget to rate and review the show on Apple Podcasts - 5 stars please! It really does help! Thank you!
Vor über dreissig Jahren ging Daniela Berlinger auf eine abenteuerliche Reise. Mit Pferd und Kutsche quer durch Südamerika. Endstation war Puerto Montt im Süden von Chile. Heute lebt sie in der idyllischen Hafenstadt. Daniela Berlinger hat im Süden von Chile ihr Glück auf Erden gefunden. Viele Jahre führte sie mit ihrem damaligen Mann einen Hotel- und Restaurantbetrieb auf Chiloé, der zweitgrössten Insel im Süden Chiles. Vor zwei Jahren vermietete sie das Anwesen und lebt seitdem wieder auf dem Festland in Puerto Montt. Den stressfreien Alltag geniesst die ehemalige Gastronomin in vollen Zügen: «Endlich bin ich wieder Mama durch und durch und bekoche meinen Partner und meine Tochter!» Daniela Berlinger hat zwei erwachsene Töchter. Die jüngere Tochter Nicole lebt ebenso in der Hafenstadt. Musik ist wichtig im Hause «Berlinger» Tochter Nicole lebt für die Musik. Das Talent hat sich in Chile einen Namen gemacht. Als «Sol Berlinger» verzaubert sie mit ihren lateinamerikanischen Balladen die Herzen der Fans. Daniela Berlinger ist stolz auf ihre Tochter: «Sie singt mit Leidenschaft und hat das Zeug dazu.»
Tomar Berlinger, Hipotecariofacil.com
Meet one of the best documentarians on the planet! Joe Berlinger! Emmy-winning and Academy Award®-nominated filmmaker Joe Berlinger has been a leading voice in nonfiction film and television for over two decades. A pioneer in the genre of true crime documentaries, Berlinger draws attention to social justice issues in the US and abroad with such landmark documentaries as Brother’s Keeper, Paradise Lost, and Crude. Highlighting the issue of oil pollution in the Amazon rainforest, Crudewon 22 human rights, environmental, and film festival awards and triggered a high profile First Amendment battle with oil-giant Chevron, while Brother’s Keeper and Paradise Lost influenced a generation of documentary filmmakers and are routinely studied in numerous film and law schools across the country. The New York Times included Brother’s Keeper in its guide to the 1000 best movies ever made, a list that represents all genres of film. Berlinger has received multiple awards from the Directors Guild of America, the National Board of Review and the Independent Spirit Awards. Whitey: United States of America v. James J. Bulger, is a feature-length documentary produced by CNN Films and theatrically released by Magnolia in 2014. Berlinger’s film captures notorious crime boss Whitey Bulger’s sensational trial, using it as a springboard to explore allegations of corruption within the highest levels of law enforcement. The film was one of six Berlinger features to have premiered at the Sundance Film Festival.In addition to social justice filmmaking, Berlinger has explored cultural icons in such documentaries as Metallica: Some Kind of Monster, a film that redefined the rockumentary genre, and Under African Skies, about the 25th Anniversary of Paul Simon’s Graceland album. The film was nominated for three primetime Emmy awards after its 2012 Sundance Film Festival premiere, including Outstanding Nonfiction Special. In the summer of 2016, Netflix released Berlinger's Tony Robbins: I am Not Your Guru, a riveting vérité film that goes behind the scenes of renowned life and business strategist Tony Robbins and his mega once-a-year “Date With Destiny” seminar. Also for Netflix, Berlinger directed and produced Hank: 5 Years From the Brink, a dissection of the actions taken by then Secretary of Treasury Hank Paulson to stave off a global meltdown during the financial collapse of 2008.In 2017, Berlinger completed Intent to Destroy, which pulls back the curtain on the violent history of the Armenian Genocide and legacy of Turkish suppression and denial over the past century. The film won numerous film festival awards after its Tribeca Film Festival world premiere and was broadcast on Starz. In 2018 Berlinger executive produced Paris to Pittsburgh for Bloomberg Philanthropies and National Geographic. The film highlights the impassioned efforts of individuals across the United States who are battling climate change despite the Trump administration’s decision to exit the Paris Climate Agreement. The film debuted in December of 2018 and aired globally in 172 countries.In addition to his feature documentary work, Berlinger, a two-time Emmy and Peabody award winner (with five additional Emmy nominations), has created hundreds of hours of television as both a producer and director, including the Emmy-winning History Channel series 10 Days That Unexpectedly Changed America and the Emmy-nominated Gray Matter. He directed and produced six seasons of the critically acclaimed Sundance Channel series Iconoclasts and directed/executive-produced the first two seasons of the Emmy-nominated Master Class, a series for the Oprah Winfrey Network. His numerous HBO productions include Addiction, Judgment Day andVirtual Corpse, and he has created series for VH1 and Court TV. Berlinger’s dramatic television directorial credits include NBC's acclaimed hit drama Homicide: Life on the Street, as well as the short-lived UPN/Dick Wolf series D.C.Berlinger’s multiple Emmy-winning Paradise Lost series for HBO helped spawn a worldwide movement to free the “West Memphis Three" from wrongful murder convictions, ultimately resulting in a death sentence and two life-without-parole sentences being vacated, allowing the men to finally be released from prison on August 19, 2011. The last film in the trilogy, Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory was nominated for an Oscar and two primetime Emmys in 2012.In 2015, the filmmaker finished directing and executive producing The System with Joe Berlinger, an eight-part series examining systemic problems within the American justice system for Al Jazeera America. Berlinger also directed and produced Judgment Day: Prison or Parole, an investigative series for Investigation Discovery that takes viewers inside the high stakes decisions made by parole boards everyday. Killing Richard Gossip, another Investigation Discovery series, tells the haunting story of a former motel manager sentenced to die for orchestrating a murder that he swears he had nothing to do with.In the summer of 2017 Berlinger’s eight-part docuseries for Spike TV premiered. Gone: The Forgotten Women of Ohio, about the deaths and disappearances of six young women in southern Ohio, is a tragic saga shrouded in a mystery that includes a dark underbelly of a struggling Midwest region plagued by drug and sex trafficking, and a system that seems to have failed to protect these women. In the fall of 2017 Berlinger’s four-part true crime documentary series Cold Blooded: The Clutter Family Murders reexamined the crime chronicled in Truman Capote’s landmark book and Oscar- nominated film.In 2018, Berlinger produced and directed Wrong Man, a documentary series for Starz. An investigation into three separate cases of wrongful conviction, the show seeks to bring three innocent people the justice that the American criminal justice system has denied them. Wrong Man has been greenlit for a second season, where Berlinger and his team will examine three new cases. His most recent series, Unspeakable Crime: The Killing of Jessica Chambers, is an investigative look into the brutal murder of a Mississippi teenager, which Berlinger directed and executive-produced. It debuted as Oxygen’s highest rated show since its true crime rebrand in 2017.Berlinger directed two projects which premiered days apart in early 2019. Conversations With a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes, a four part series for Netflix, examines notorious serial killer Ted Bundy through exclusive interviews with the killer himself after being sentenced to death in Florida. The series debuted on January 24, just two days before the Sundance premiere of Berlinger’s narrative feature film on the same subject: Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile. The film chronicles the life of Ted Bundy through the eyes of Liz Kloepfer, his longtime girlfriend, who refused to believe the truth about him for years. Starring Zac Efron, Lily Collins, John Malkovich, Jim Parsons, Haley Joel Osment, Kaya Scodelario and Angela Sarafyan, Extremely Wicked made its world premiere at the Eccles Theater in Park City on January 26. Netflix also aquired the film and released it globally in May of 2019. Berlinger’s articles and photographs have appeared in numerous publications, including The New York Times, ArtForum, Film Comment, and Aperture magazines. His book, Metallica: This Monster Lives, The Inside Story of Some Kind of Monster, was published in 2004 by St. Martin’s Press.Berlinger’s film and television development company, Third Eye Motion Picture Company, has had a long-standing unscripted production output deal with RadicalMedia, which also represents the director for commercial and branded-content production.Berlinger is a member of the DGA, PGA, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS), the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (ATAS) and the National Board of Review. He serves on the boards of the International Documentary Association, The Bedford Playhouse and the wrongful conviction nonprofit Proclaim Justice. Berlinger is on the Advisory Boards of the Jacob Burns Film Center, The Woodstock Film Festival and Rehabilitation Through the Arts. Welcome to Monday Morning Critic Podcast! 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Timestamps: 1:47 - What do Swiss startups often get wrong with boards of directors? 6:00 - What different skills need to be present in a board of directors? 12:06 - How to best compensate your board 18:52 - How can a board help your startup achieve success? 23:05 - How should a startup collaborate with a board? The Episode In 60 Seconds Setting up your Board of Directors - the right way. The right composition Get diversity of perspectives and skills, be sure you cover at least: legal, finance and your industry Don’t go for titles, go for people with time and expertise 4 is considered a good number to start Founders on the board In small companies where they hold a large stake, this may be appropriate In large companies, operations and board roles have to be separated Compensation Consider paying a fixed compensation in cash or equity and a variable compensation based on time invested Where to find the right board members Choose people you know you can work with If you have smart money investors, they will probably be a good addition to the board How boards change when companies grow Small company boards may be more operational As companies grow, boards necessarily have to professionalize and become less operational Meeting and decision making Meetings at most once a month and at least once a quarter If possible, decisions should be unanimous or more time should be invested into discussions If a board member dissents, be sure to note it in writing --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/swisspreneur/message
The fifth episode of our season on the awesome movie year of 1996 features our pick for the year’s most notable documentary, Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky’s Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills. The second feature collaboration between directors Berlinger and Sinofsky, Paradise Lost premiered at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival before airing on HBO in June 1996. The post Paradise Lost (1996 Documentary) appeared first on Awesome Movie Year.
Timestamps: 2:00 - Going from journalism, to law, to business 13:22 - Being the youngest board member around 20:00 - Determining founding values 27:32 - Finding the balance between commitment and change 36:16 - Having a stay at home husband Biography Katja Berlinger is the CEO of Swiss Medi Kids and a professional board member. Katja started out as a journalist at the publication “Cash”. She quickly realized that she’d rather have an impact herself than write about people who do. Consequently, she turned to her law degree and became an associate at the law firm von der Crone, where she worked on the Swissair lawsuit. Once again, she concluded that this career path was not for her. She switched gears and joined a tech startup as their corporate sales manager. From there, she set herself up to become a professional board member and today holds more than 5 board member seats. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/swisspreneur/message
Poslední dva roky trávil přípravou Pilgrims od studia Amanita, před tím ve svém nezávislém studiu Circus Atos vydal Hravouku a Under Leaves a podílel se i na velkých projektech jako Mimpi nebo Blue Effect pro virtuální realitu. Je toho hodně. A to je i důvod, proč si Michal sedl do studia proti Pavlovi a popovídali si o všem možném i nemožném. Velkou část povídání zabrala problematika her, herního hardwaru a dětí z pohledu rodičů a na ní navázala debata o herních oborech na českých univerzitách. Michal se podílí na přípravě herního oboru na FAMU v Praze, společně s Helenou Bendovou, Jaroslavem Švelchem a dalšími. Zda je to zapotřebí, jak to bude vypadat a co mohou studenti očekávat? I to se dozvíte. Předchozí díly série Talk to… najdete ZDE! Podcasty Retro Nation můžete poslouchat na následujících službách: Anchor Spotify Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcasts Pocket Casts Radio Public RSS Anchoru pro vaše podcastové aplikace RSS Patreonu pro vaše podcastové aplikace O Talk to… Cyklus Talk to… je povídáním s vývojáři, kteří se otiskli do historie vývoje videoher v České republice. Novinář Pavel Dobrovský si s hosty povídá nejen o vývoji jejich starých hitů, ale i o životě, vesmíru a vůbec. Talk to… vychází nepravidelně. Na Retro Nation najdete ještě hardwarové Wolfcasty novináře Michala Rybka a Retro Noty o herní hudbě od hudebního publicisty Jardy Konáše. Obvykle 2x měsíčně vychází Retro noty, 2x měsíčně Wolfcast. Nové i starší podcasty najdete na výše uvedených odkazech vždy v pondělí. Podcasty a další obsah RetroNation.cz můžeme natáčet kvůli podpoře od komunity na Patreonu.Děkujeme vám za ni! Jakékoliv dotazy a připomínky pište na email retronationrulez@gmail.com.
Un balado réalisé par Simon Predj Avec la voix de Kim St-Pierre, réalisatrice du film "Réservoir" Produit par Marie-Ève Berlinger Sur une musique d'Eloi Ragot Une présentation Choq.ca Dès le 29 novembre Le film réservoir sort en salle le 6 décembre 2019, visitez la page Facebook pour les lieux et horaires de projections.
- Föräldralösa barn dog en masse i Warszawas getto. De var fullkomligt hjälplösa, de stod på gatan och tiggde en matbit. Dessa barn dog först. När jag såg ut från vårt fönster såg jag att människor försökte täcka över kropparna med tidningspapper och trasor. Inom kort blev det så många döda kroppar på gatorna att det inte fanns någon möjlighet att visa respekt för de döda. Men ganska snart satte de mest olycksdrabbade av alla judiska slavar igång med att varje dag gå ut i gettot, plocka ihop de döda kropparna, slänga upp de på sin kärra och forsla bort de, säger Ruth Berlinger. Foto: Cato Lein
In association with our friends at Click On This (www.clickonthis.tv) we present our exclusive red carpet interviews at the Tribeca Film Festival (www.tribecafilmfestival.com) in New York City. BTB's own Al Sotto attends the World Premiere of the Netflix film "Extremely Wicked Shockingly Evil and Vile and interviews the cast including Lily Collins, Zac Efron as well as director Joel Berlinger! Joel talks about directing Zac Efron in the Netflix film, whether new media films should be in contention for the Oscars and more! We talk to the amazing Lily about meeting the real life Elizabeth in preparation for her role
Confira os destaques do Caderno 2 desta quinta-feira (25/07/19)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Did Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil, And Vile live up to the hype? ...Not quite. Jeb rejoined me to discuss Berlinger's scripted take on Ted Bundy, or more accurately Bundy's corrosive effect on one of his living victims, his longtime girlfriend Liz Kendall. Did the film do what it set out to, or was the dark gravitational pull of the killer himself too strong? Should Terrence Malick have taken a run at the material? And what's with those lazy music cues? But Zac Efron's performance is pretty good...which is more than you can say for anyone's in the 1996 miniseries remake of In Cold Blood starring Anthony Edwards, Eric Roberts, and Kevin Tighe as Herb Clutter. It's slow, it seems table-read-y, the director -- veteran of several thrillers -- can't make it thrilling, and I for one found myself wishing I were watching something else...specifically, the Clutter-murders documentary Joe Berlinger made a while back. Good blocking, bad exposition, and new angles on old stories: it's The Blotter Presents, Episode 096. Support the pod/site on Patreon! SHOW NOTES Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil, And Vile on Netflix In Cold Blood (1996) TBP 032 on Cold Blooded: The Clutter Family Murders TBP 082 on The Ted Bundy Tapes Dave And Jeb Aren't Mean Five Actors Whose Ted Bundy IMDb Credits Might Surprise You Special Guest: Jeb Lund.
We talk about Joe Berlinger’s Netflix film EXTREMELY WICKED, SHOCKINGLY EVIL AND VILE, and we conclude that it’s a very effective and unusual serial killer film. It may not be what you’re expecting, but it’s an honest look into what was happening back when Ted Bundy was around and on trial and being discussed by everyone with a TV. Was he a charming genius attorney who got railroaded, or a vicious serial killer. Back before the verdicts that was an actual question. Berlinger’s film lets you experience that part of the 70s and the strange magnetism Ted Bundy used to get what he wanted, but his charm and charisma couldn’t outshine the evidence against him.Join Cinemondo and over a hundred thousand podcasters already using Buzzsprout to get their message out to the world. Sign up here to get your podcast started!We're also on Patreon!Become a Patron on PatreonSPOILER WARNING: This episode is SPOILER LIGHT which means some story details will be revealed but not all. We still advise listeners to: Watch First Listen Later. Cinemondo Podcast is a weekly show that's released every Monday. If you’d like to support our show, please subscribe to our podcast free in iTunes, and leave us a review! We want to hear from you so write in with more recommendations and comments. Email us: CinemondoPodcast@gmail.com Connect with us: CinemondoPodcast.com twitter.com/CinemondoPod facebook.com/CinemondoPodcast instagram.com/CinemondoPodcastSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/CinemondoPodcast)
In this final 2019 Atlanta Film Festival focused Between Takes episode, Shawn Eastridge compiles all his red carpet interviews into one epic supercut. Interviewees include: - Lulu Wang: Writer/Director of The Farewell - Joseph Cross, Audrey Tommassini and Hayden Szeto: Director, Producer and Star of Summer Night - Joe Berlinger: Director of Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Vile, and Evil - Dan Madison Savage: Co-writer and co-director of Them That Follow To learn more about the Atlanta Film Festival, visit atlantafilmfestival.com.
In this final 2019 Atlanta Film Festival focused Between Takes episode, Shawn Eastridge compiles all his red carpet interviews into one epic supercut. Interviewees include:- Lulu Wang: Writer/Director of The Farewell- Joseph Cross, Audrey Tommassini and Hayden Szeto: Director, Producer and Star of Summer Night- Joe Berlinger: Director of Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Vile, and Evil- Dan Madison Savage: Co-writer and co-director of Them That FollowTo learn more about the Atlanta Film Festival, visit atlantafilmfestival.com.
In our latest episode of The Pop Disciple Podcast, we are joined by Justin Melland, the innovative composer behind Netflix's haunting docuseries, Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes. ABOUT POP DISCIPLE Pop Disciple is a storytelling platform, exploring the creative work of entertainment industry professionals. With a focus in music in media, we present in-depth interviews with world-class music supervisors, film and television composers, and influencers in the realms of film and music. Visit PopDisciple.com. Follow @PopDisciple on Instagram. Music Credits Podcast Theme & Outro Music: Goldo Cues Throughout Episode: Justin Melland
Joel worked on the Netflicks Movie about Ted Bundy and the Zac Efron movie that coming out. Watch the Ted Bundy tapes!
Joel worked on the Netflicks Movie about Ted Bundy and the Zac Efron movie that coming out. Watch the Ted Bundy tapes!
"Conversations with A Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes" brings the infamously twisted mind of serial killer Ted Bundy into the light for the very first time. This unique and gripping docuseries directed by Joe Berlinger focuses on a man whose personality, good looks and social graces defied the serial-killer stereotype, allowing him to hide in plain sight. Berlinger joined BUILD to discuss the Netflix docuseries and his new film on Bundy, "Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile."
Award-winning filmmaker Joe Berlinger (Brother's Keeper, The Paradise Lost trilogy) reexamines America's most notorious serial killer on the 30th anniversary of his execution in his new Netflix documentary Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes. He discusses how one of Bundy’s first jobs gave him an inside view of the flaws in America’s law enforcement system, how Bundy exploited those weaknesses to his own devilish advantage, and how it led to dramatic changes in how the FBI hunts serial killers and how state and local police share information. We talk about how Ted Bundy’s clean cut good looks helped him elude capture, and the movie heart-throb who Joe Berlinger cast as Bundy in his new feature film Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile. We talk about the media circus that turned Ted Bundy into a household name, the influence that the Bundy trial had on the true crime genre, and why Berlinger, known as the father of the true crime documentary, doesn’t actually like the term "true crime." Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes is available on Netflix beginning January 24 and look for Joe's feature film Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile at the Sundance Film Festival this weekend and in theatres soon. Keep up with Joe at www.joeberlinger.com or on Twitter at @JoeBerlinger. Today's episode is sponsored by Betterhelp. Subscribe to Kickass News on Apple Podcasts, visit our website at www.kickassnews.com, and follow us on twitter at @KickassNewsPod.
My final radio show in high school is sadly here. During this show, I celebrate my four years on air with Noah Lofman and Jacob Berlinger during The Huddle! There was an error with recording early on, so the podcast will start in the middle of our NBA postseason discussion. However, after the NBA, there should be about 40 minutes of the more sentimental aspect of looking back at the time us three had doing radio together.
Folge Deinem Herzen - Der Befreiungspodcast für bewusstes Familienleben
Florian lebt sein Leben. Nicht gerade so wie es sich viele vorstellen, jedoch in seinen Augen erfolgreich, denn er hat unendlich viel Spaß dabei. Authentisch zu leben ist ihm total wichtig, dabei begleiten ihm viele Tätigkeiten: Familienvater, Ehemann, Fitnesscoach mit Studio und im Seniorenheim, Kochen, Spielereien im Online-Business-Bereich, Reisen und ganz neu Klavier spielen. Im Online Bereich hat ihm das System „Online Kongress“ total geflasht. Mit den Erfahrungen aus 7 Online Kongressen coacht er nun Menschen die ihr eigenes Online Business aufbauen wollen. Den Herzensweg finden und gehen kann jeder! Im Befreiungspodcast - Folge deinem Herzen von Doro, erfährst Du wertvolles Wissen zu den Themen: Selbstfindung, Selbstliebe, Selbstvertrauen, zurück zum Ursprung finden und seine Leidenschaft entdecken, ausgraben und leben. Authentische und lebensnahe Interviews und Herzensgespräche, stärken Dich, Emotionen zu fühlen, anzuschauen und zuzulassen. Du lernst wertvolle, sofort umsetzbare Schritte kennen, wie Du Glaubenssätze, Prägungen und Muster erkennst und verabschiedest. Finde Deinen Ursprung. Erlebe Schritt für Schritt Befreiung. Finde Dein selbstbestimmtes und glückliches Leben. Finde auf Deinen Herzensweg und zurück zu Dir - Deinem selbst! Du bist wertvoll. Lebe Deine Träume. Gehe Schritte und komme ins Tun. Nutze die Zeit und lebe Dein Leben. Erlebe was es bedeutet in tiefen, authentischen Beziehungen zu leben, Verantwortung zu übernehmen und zu erleben, wie dadurch, ungeahntes möglich wird! Ermutigung durch zuhören! Motivation, Inspiration. Einschalten und Zuhören! Erfahre jetzt alltagstaugliche und praktische Tipps für Deine persönliche Weiterentwicklung. Exklusiv von Experten für Dich. Lebensnahe, persönliche Geschichten und Erfahrungen durch persönliche Herzensgespräche. Aus dem Leben für das Leben - Solo-Episoden von mir für Dich! Viele Herzenswege der Interviewpartner sind inspiriert durch Namen wie: Gerald Hüther, Katie Byron, Tony Robins, Tim Ferris, Tom Kaules, Stefan Hiene, Veit Lindau, Gordon Neufeld, André Stern, Lienhardt Valentin und viele mehr... Besonders für Menschen, die sich nach einem freien, selbstbestimmten und glücklichen Leben sehnen. Die spüren es gibt mehr, als das in dem sie sich derzeit befinden. Die sich wünschen ohne Erwartungen von aussen, ihre Fähigkeiten und Stärken zu leben und dadurch sich selbst und andere beschenken zu können Folge Deinem Herzen! Es wird Zeit - DICH SELBST ZU SEIN!
Jacob Berlinger, who also co-hosts The Huddle and The Rant with me, guest hosts Reality Check today for the first time in what feels like far too long to discuss the 2017 year in terms of movies on topics ranging from sequels lowering the quality of films to our favorite pictures of the year!
Vi frykter fullmånen, hører en rar lyd, ser på stygge juletrær og baker en Smultkrans. Eller en Berlinger-ring.
AJN editor-in-chief Shawn Kennedy speaks with author Nancy Berlinger about her article, which discusses how nurses can be creative problem solvers without resorting to workarounds that may be ethical in intent yet potentially harmful in their consequences.
Monty Ashley joins me this week to take a look at TV's second run at the murders in Chillicothe, Ohio. Paradise Lost's Joe Berlinger comes in with a hot serial-killer theory, then shifts gears -- but not before giving airtime to a grieving aunt's crackpot theory (and wasting some on chopper shots of a cemetery). Will we keep watching? And how does Berlinger's 2014 series on breakdowns in American criminal justice, The System, stack up? All this, plus the supernatural hypothesis Monty hopes Gone ends up with, on an all-new episode! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Joe Berlinger says his mind is boggled by the criticism of his new film, Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru. Some critics think Berlinger should have approached his subject with a more skeptical eye, but the award-winning veteran documentarian says that was never the point of the movie.
This week Kris shares his revolutionary idea for a new mobile game before he and Evan jump right into the new GHOSTBUSTERS (at 3:24). Kris tends to be more negative about it, but Evan also reveals some aspects that don’t work for him. They try to take time to talk about the things in it they enjoy though, like the gadgets, the camaraderie between the characters and individually hilarious players like Kate McKinnon and Leslie Jones. After covering this film about women made by a man, Kris transitions into commentary on CHEVALIER (at 25:52), a Greek movie about men made by a woman. He describes why this “bone dry” comedy is a metaphorical dick joke and tells Evan and Dave why they absolutely need to see it. Next up is Dave to discuss TONY ROBBINS: I AM NOT YOUR GURU (at 35:00), a Netflix documentary directed by Joe Berlinger. Dave describes why it’s a concert movie, while sharing insights from his recent interview with Berlinger. Finally, Evan closes with THE INFILTRATOR (at 49:38), a tense undercover caper with Bryan Cranston. He catches Kris and Dave’s interest with his commentary on how the cops are always barely one step ahead of the criminals they’re chasing in the picture.
Hundreds of thousands of people have attended Tony Robbins programs, but there's an event that only takes place once a year in the States, where 2,500 people from all over the world come to Florida to experience one of his most intimate and intensive seminars — Date with Destiny. It's six days of total immersion, and the people who take that journey discover who they are, what drives them, and their ultimate purpose, and they dive deep into how they interact and relate with others. In short, this is the place where they deal with the hard stuff. And with thousands of people in a room, digging into their pasts, envisioning their future, you name it -- you can imagine how emotionally charged the room gets, and how personal of an experience Date with Destiny is. So it's not hard to understand why Tony never allowed cameras in to document the event. But that all changed when he met acclaimed documentary filmmaker, Joe Berlinger. Tony and Joe were first introduced to each other by two other heavy-hitters in the entertainment industry -- Brian Koppelman and David Levien -- who themselves had attended Date with Destiny and ultimately went on to executive produce the documentary. For those of you familiar with Joe's body of work, you may be surprised that Joe would have pursued a subject like Date with Destiny in the first place. And you may be especially curious as to why he felt so strongly that he pressed Tony for years to say agree to it. After all, Berlinger is known for investigative films like the Paradise Lost trilogy about the West Memphis Three, exposing cracks in the criminal justice system, and “Crude,” which is about pollution in the Amazon from giant oil companies. His work, for the most part, has been geared toward taking us into the issues of the world that are often obscured by media or politics, and the uncovering disturbing truths. So for this film, it's a bit of a departure in subject. But the motivation, the storytelling, and the deep dive into parts unknown — that's all there. And that's what made the endeavor a clear choice for Joe. The film is called “Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru” and it premiered at South by Southwest in March, followed by a string of showings at film festivals. The documentary has been picked up by Netflix and will premier to members worldwide on July 15th. For more information about the documentary visit: tonyrobbins.com/documentary
Alec talks with director Joe Berlinger about his latest film for HBO Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory -- the third film in a series of documentaries about a crime that took place 18 years ago in rural Arkansas. Berlinger says, “We made these three movies as acts of advocacy” – which is not his usual style as a long-time documentary filmmaker. “I believe the audience should be treated like a jury. You give them the information, you weigh both sides, and you let them come to their own conclusion.” These films were different, acknowledges Berlinger: “We clearly have a point of view that there is a huge injustice.” Early in his career, Berlinger worked for famed documentarians David and Albert Maysles. He says the Maysles brothers taught him about “The act of faith about making a film about real life as it's unfolding.” Berlinger is known for his documentary work, has dabbled in features, but says he'd “love another opportunity to do a feature at some point, but, you know, I'm just used to being the author of my own work, being totally in control.” Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Medizinische Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 12/19
Thu, 9 Dec 2010 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/12534/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/12534/1/Berlinger_Konstanze.pdf Berlinger, Konstanze
This week Dr. Norman T. Berlinger shares how to help your depressed teen. Leonard Felder, author of Wake Up or Break Up, shares steps to strengthen your relationship. Dr. Paul Pearsall challenges the common "truths" we learn from self-help books.