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Jeff Styles does what he does best - tell stories and helps others share their story - good or bad! This is a conversation/episode I hope everyone listens to AND shares! - Eight months after Hurricane Helene destroyed Bat Cave, N.C., residents are still struggling for shelter, drinking water, showers and working toilets. The "Big Guns" are gone (FEMA, Red Cross, etc...). No aid $, Fed, State, even County assistance isn't anywhere to be found. First nature...then human predators. They're pulling themselves up by their own muddy boot straps but they need help. Now! A podcast to shock your faith in the system but rebuild your faith in the best of humanity. ===== THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS: Vascular Institute of Chattanooga: https://www.vascularinstituteofchattanooga.com/ The Barn Nursery: https://www.barnnursery.com/ Optimize U Chattanooga: https://optimizeunow.com/chattanooga/ Guardian Investment Advisors: https://giaplantoday.com/ Alchemy Medspa and Wellness Center: http://www.alchemychattanooga.com/ Our House Studio: https://ourhousestudiosinc.com/ ALL THINGS JEFF STYLES: www.thejeffstyles.com PART OF THE NOOGA PODCAST NETWORK: www.noogapodcasts.com Please consider leaving us a review on Apple and giving us a share to your friends! This podcast is powered by ZenCast.fm
Hour 3 of the Big Show with George Rusic & Matty Rose is on demand! To kick off hour the guys continue the conversation with Brent Krahn. Krahn and the guys turn their focus on the Stars vs Oilers series. Krahn speaks on the Oilers targeting Oettinger's blocker, the Oilers playing a dirty/ nasty style of play, the Stars depth needing to show up in this series and more!(22:34) Later, PGA of Alberta Pro Matt Seiffert joins the show for the Speargrass Golf Show! Matt tells us about the Grow the Game tour that he created to get more kids involved in the game of golf. The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.
#bitcoin (12-05-2025)You and I front ran the big guns - They fear missing out… More!MY VIEWS ARE MY OWN AND I MAKE NO PREDICTIONS OR GIVE ANY FINANCIAL ADVICE, SO DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING ANYTHING!Subscribe to my ‘UK Bitcoiner' Backup Channel:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3p4A_VqohTmbm44z4lgokgBy The Book Accountancy:Website: www.bythebookaccountancy.co.ukWebsite: www.cryptotaxhelp.co.ukGet 5,000 sats when you subscribe to Orange Pill App:https://signup.theorangepillapp.com/opa/UKBitcoinMasterUK Bitcoin Master Social Media Links:https://linktr.ee/ukbitcoinmasterNostr Public key:npub13kgncg54ccmnmvtljvergdvrd7m06zm32j2ayg542kaqayejrv7qg9wp2sUKBitcoinMaster video library:http://www.UKBitcoinMaster.comUKBitcoinMaster Interviews: http://www.BitcoinInterviews.comThe Best Of Exmoor:https://www.thebestofexmoor.co.uk/298.htmlThursdays Live Show: https://youtu.be/YCOpYZpFd8g
Action Movie Month is upon us! AND BETWEEN YOU AND ME, REALLY THE REST OF SPRING AND SUMMER IS ACTION FILMS GALORE! And how can we celebrate action movies without starting with Schwarzenegger, ! We review Commando, which has a lot more comedy than I anticipated and a lot more funny one-liners! Big GUNS, Big MUSCLES and Big FUN! We hope you enjoy! Music: https://jessejacethomas.bandcamp.com/album/want Coffee Affiliate Link: https://www.bonescoffee.com/ifinallywatched CODE: IFINALLYWATCHED Create your podcast today! #madeonzencastr
Ahead of the women's semi-finals and men's quarter-finals, Catherine, David and Matt discuss the last few days of action in Madrid since Monday's blackout.Part one - WTA Results. We discuss Iga Swiatek's fascinating week, look ahead to her intriguing semi-final against Coco Gauff, and wonder whether Elina Svitolina can keep her incredible run going against Aryna Sabalenka. Part two - ATP Results (from 24m39s). Who is the favourite for the title and which of the eight remaining players is most likely to carry this form into Roland Garros? Part three - News (from 48m07s). Max Purcell is banned for 18 months and Novak Djokovic pulls out of Rome. Become a Friend of the Tennis Podcast to receive exclusive access to bonus podcasts, including Tennis Re-Lived episodes, Grand Slam Review Shows, and monthly Live Shows on YouTube. Friends also get access to The Barge, Hannah's Column, and an ad-free listening experience to all episodes of The Tennis Podcast. Talk tennis with Friends on The Barge! Sign up to receive our free Newsletter (daily at Slams and weekly the rest of the year, featuring Matt's Stat, mascot photos, Fantasy League updates, and more)Follow us on Instagram (@thetennispodcast)Subscribe to our YouTube channel.Check out our Shop Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week on the Titans of Food Service podcast, Nick Portillo speaks with T. Shane Johnson, a Marine Corps veteran and the driving force behind Big Guns Coffee. T. Shane shares how he transformed a simple desire into a high-powered coffee brand inspired by his daughter's entrepreneurial spirit. Big Guns Coffee epitomizes innovation and resilience with a remarkable array of 38 coffee blends and the establishment of the first hydroponic coffee farm in North Carolina. T. Shane's narrative is one of overcoming adversity, from surviving life-threatening challenges to fostering a business that embodies motivation and community. Listen as Nick and T. Shane traverse the landscape of North Carolina's vibrant food service scene and uncover the profound impact of coffee on building connections and supporting local economies.TIMESTAMPS00:00 Intro10:36 The Journey into Coffee Entrepreneurship24:54 The Future of Hydroponic Coffee Farming34:01 Innovative Farming and Community ImpactRESOURCESPortillo SalesCONTACT Nick: nick.portillo@portillosales.com
Conversation with Nicole Laurent who is an experienced licensed mental health counsellor and is passionate about reducing psychiatric and neurological symptoms with powerful dietary interventions. We discuss the basic concepts of how metabolic health can affect mental health; the challenges of breaking out of the often limiting traditional treatment paradigm; and how low carbohydrate eating can be a powerful intervention to alleviate mental health problems.Nicole Laurent https://mentalhealthketo.com/ (W) @mentalhealthketo (IG)Spray Vandalz The Spray Vandalz - https://www.thesprayvandalz.com/ (15% Discount Code : TOYDIVISION)Toy Division @toydivision2 (IG) https://toydivisionpodcast.bigcartel.com/-ALSO MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE Metabolic Mind - https://www.metabolicmind.org/ Metabolic Collective - https://metaboliccollective.org/ Good Energy - https://www.booktopia.com.au/good-energy-dr-casey-means/book/9780008604288.html Living Well After Schizophrenia - https://www.youtube.com/@LivingWellAfterSchizophrenia-Music by Frenic from This One Records: http://www.thisonerecords.com/@djfrenic (IG)Podcast logo photograph by Alex Bartsch: http://www.alexbartsch.com/@alex.bartsch (IG)This podcast is not the usual Banksy book reading fan, it's about letter based graffiti writing. But if you like street art, then you'll probably want to learn more about graffiti culture, because that's where street art began. Join us for a conversation about writing on things; addressing mental health issues; and using lifestyle to improve our overall physical health at any age.
This week in sport: a half-episode with half the BALLS MotorSportNerdPod, where Doc previews the upcoming F1, Indycar, Supercars, Nascar, sportscar and MotoGP seasons with one key question: should you bother watching? Updated albums for next week’s music ep: The Wombats | Bad Bunny | Death By Unga Bunga Find us on: Spotify Podcasts | Apple Podcasts | Omny StudioRSS feeds: Just sports | Just music | EverythingSocials: Beeso on Bluesky | Doc on BlueSky | Pod Facebook | Pod emailSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
CCR Publisher David Corson sat down with with T. Shane Johnson from T. Shane Inspires & Big Guns Coffee on February 14th, 2025 who is a motivational speaker, bestselling author, and life coach extraordinaire.When Shane "T.Shane" Johnson was hit by a car of gang members and left for dead on the side of the highway, he faced a critical choice: succumb to victimhood or rise as a victor. A devoted and determined Marine, he chose the latter, defying the odds and igniting a flame of resilience within himself. Even amidst life-threatening injuries and unimaginable pain, T.Shane summoned the strength to crawl towards a fire station, flatlining three times before embarking on an arduous journey of recovery.Once his body had healed, Johnson made the courageous decision to retire from active service, determined to forge a new path for himself. With unwavering tenacity, he founded and became the CEO of a prosperous mortgage business, proving that setbacks were mere stepping stones to his ultimate success. However, fate had another test in store for him when the 2008 market crash struck, leaving him devastated and homeless for an agonizing stretch of over two years. Refusing to be defined by circumstances, T.Shane summoned the indomitable spirit that had carried him through his near-fatal encounter, working tirelessly to reclaim his life once more.Today, T.Shane stands tall as an esteemed entrepreneur and CEO of several thriving enterprises. But his journey hasn't been solely focused on personal accomplishments. Driven by an unwavering desire to give back, he has dedicated himself to raising funds for homeless veterans and shedding light on the tragic epidemic of veteran suicides. Through multiple treks across the country, he has amassed hundreds of thousands of dollars to support those in need. In a testament to his unwavering determination, T.Shane even set a world record for pushups, further inspiring others to transcend their limits and strive for greatness.Connect with T.Shane today and embark on a transformative journey that will ignite your passion, challenge your limits, and empower you to live the life you were meant to lead. Together, let us conquer obstacles, redefine our narratives, and create a world where the victors outnumber the victims. Enjoy the conversation. ✅ Guest: T. Shane Johnson▶ https://tshaneinspires.com/▶ https://www.biggunscoffee.com/▶ tshane@biggunscoffee.com
And we're moving right along with our BIG GUNS series as we make our way (eventually) to Captain America: Brave New World! The second film from our anchor in this MCU, Mr. Tony Stark. With Iron Man 2, this film didn't do much to wow us back then and the same holds true now. We feel like this is just a filler film to move us deeper into the MCU. But what do YOU think? TRACKLIST: 5:47 - Geek of the Week - Jasmin: American Manhunt: OJ Simpson; Mark: Big Little Lies, season 1 20:38 - Film summary and fun facts 31:37 - Iron Man 2 (2010) review You can follow us on X, Facebook and Instagram or if you would like to support us you can donate to our KoFi.
JG and Jimi lead the charge this week with some unscripted discussions. Ryan joins in for a few to tell his Lake St. Clair Muskie adventure! JG and Jimi recap their Opening day weekend camps and talks about their First times with a "Big Boy" Gun. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/theterribleoutdoorsman/support
A preview of Australia v India with THE BIG GUNS! World number 1 against World number 2. The worlds best are getting set to go head to head on Australian soil. Join Howie, David Warner, Usman Khawaja and Adam Gilchrist for a fun and comprehensive preview of one of the most anticipated Test Match Series' in recent memory. Watch the Border-Gavaskar Trophy on Fox Cricket via Foxtel or Kayo starting from Friday November 22. Thank you to the Fox Cricket team for making this special Test Match Series Preview episode of the Howie Games possible. *** Follow the Howie Games on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehowiegamespod/ Follow the Howie Games on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thehowiegames See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A preview of Australia v India with THE BIG GUNS! World number 1 against World number 2. The worlds best are getting set to go head to head on Australian soil. Join Howie, David Warner, Usman Khawaja and Adam Gilchrist for a fun and comprehensive preview of one of the most anticipated Test Match Series' in recent memory. Watch the Border-Gavaskar Trophy on Fox Cricket via Foxtel or Kayo starting from Friday November 22. Thank you to the Fox Cricket team for making this special Test Match Series Preview episode of the Howie Games possible. *** Follow the Howie Games on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehowiegamespod/ Follow the Howie Games on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thehowiegames See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to the celebration! That's right… this episode is a celebration of one of my favorite people in the worlds return home. Born into the Southern Baptist tradition of Christianity, my brother in Christ has been welcomed into the fullness of truth and is living the next chapter of his life sacramentally. The past few years have been a test of the metal to which he is made and I am more convince that he has the patients of a saint. Fitting for him, that is what he wants to be, a saint. Choosing the name Dismiss Dion as a confirmation name my friend Trace Chamberlain enters into the next part of his journey along the way. I am so proud of my friend who is a model of perseverance to me and anyone else that has the privilege of this man of God's wisdom.
Good evening and a huge welcome back to the show, I hope you've had a great day and you're ready to kick back and relax with another episode of Brett's old time radio show. Hello, I'm Brett your host for this evening and welcome to my home in beautiful Lyme Bay where it's lovely December night. I hope it's just as nice where you are. You'll find all of my links at www.linktr.ee/brettsoldtimeradioshow A huge thankyou for joining me once again for our regular late night visit to those dusty studio archives of Old Time radio shows right here at my home in the united kingdom. Don't forget I have an instagram page and youtube channel both called brett's old time radio show and I'd love it if you could follow me. Feel free to send me some feedback on this and the other shows if you get a moment, brett@tourdate.co.uk #sleep #insomnia #relax #chill #night #nighttime #bed #bedtime #oldtimeradio #drama #comedy #radio #talkradio #hancock #tonyhancock #hancockshalfhour #sherlock #sherlockholmes #radiodrama #popular #viral #viralpodcast #podcast #podcasting #podcasts #podtok #podcastclip #podcastclips #podcasttrailer #podcastteaser #newpodcastepisode #newpodcast #videopodcast #upcomingpodcast #audiogram #audiograms #truecrimepodcast #historypodcast #truecrime #podcaster #viral #popular #viralpodcast #number1 #instagram #youtube #facebook #johnnydollar #crime #fiction #unwind #devon #texas #texasranger #beer #seaton #seaside #smuggler #colyton #devon #seaton #beer #branscombe #lymebay #lymeregis #brett #brettorchard #orchard #greatdetectives #greatdetectivesofoldtimeradio #detectives #johnnydollar #thesaint #steptoe #texasrangers Dad's Army Dad's Army is a British television sitcom about the United Kingdom's Home Guard during the Second World War. It was written by Jimmy Perry and David Croft, and originally broadcast on BBC1 from 31 July 1968 to 13 November 1977. It ran for nine series and 80 episodes in total; a feature film released in 1971, a stage show and a radio version based on the television scripts were also produced. The series regularly gained audiences of 18 million viewers and is still shown internationally. The Home Guard consisted of local volunteers otherwise ineligible for military service, either because of age (hence the title Dad's Army), medical reasons or by being in professions exempt from conscription. Most of the platoon members in Dad's Army are over military age and the series stars several older British actors, including Arnold Ridley, John Laurie, Arthur Lowe and John Le Mesurier. Younger members of the cast included Ian Lavender, Clive Dunn (who, despite being one of the younger cast members, played the oldest guardsman, Lance Corporal Jones) and James Beck (who died suddenly during production of the sixth series in 1973). Other regular cast members included Frank Williams as the vicar, Edward Sinclair as the verger, and Bill Pertwee as the chief ARP warden. The series has influenced British popular culture, with its catchphrases and characters being widely known. The Radio Times magazine listed Captain Mainwaring's "You stupid boy!" among the 25 greatest put-downs on TV. A 2001 Channel 4 poll ranked Captain Mainwaring 21st on its list of the 100 Greatest TV Characters. In 2004, Dad's Army came fourth in a BBC poll to find Britain's Best Sitcom. It was placed 13th in a list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes, drawn up by the British Film Institute in 2000, and voted for by industry professionals. A second feature film of Dad's Army with a different cast was released in 2016. In 2019, UKTV recreated three missing episodes for broadcast in August that year on its Gold channel under the title Dad's Army: The Lost Episodes. It starred Kevin McNally and Robert Bathurst as Captain Mainwaring and Sergeant Wilson. Origins Co-writers David Croft and Jimmy Perry during a Dad's Army event at Bressingham Steam Museum, May 2011 Originally intended to be called The Fighting Tigers, Dad's Army was based partly on co-writer and creator Jimmy Perry's experiences in the Local Defence Volunteers (LDV, later known as the Home Guard) and highlighted a somewhat forgotten aspect of defence during the Second World War. Perry was only 16 when he joined the 10th Hertfordshire Battalion. His mother did not like him being out at night, and feared he might catch a cold; he partly resembled the character of Private Pike. An elderly lance corporal in the 10th Hertfordshire often referred to fighting under Kitchener against the "Fuzzy Wuzzies" (Hadendoa), and was the model for Lance Corporal Jones. Other influences included the work of comedians such as Will Hay, whose film Oh, Mr Porter! featured a pompous ass, an old man and a young man; together, this gave Perry the ideas for Mainwaring, Godfrey and Pike. Film historian Jeffrey Richards has cited Lancastrian comedian Robb Wilton as a key influence; Wilton portrayed a work-shy husband who joined the Home Guard in numerous comic sketches during World War II. Perry wrote the first script and sent it to David Croft while working as a minor actor in the Croft-produced sitcom Hugh and I, originally intending the role of the spiv, later called Walker, to be his own. Croft was impressed and sent the script to Michael Mills, the BBC's head of comedy, and the series was commissioned. In his book Dad's Army: The Story of a Classic Television Show, Graham McCann explains that the show owes much to Michael Mills. It was he who renamed the show Dad's Army. He did not like Brightsea-on-Sea, so the location was changed to Walmington-on-Sea. He was happy with the names for the characters Mainwaring, Godfrey and Pike, but not with other names, and he made suggestions: Private Jim Duck became James Frazer, Joe Fish became Joe Walker and Jim Jones became Jack Jones. He also suggested adding a Scot. Jimmy Perry had produced the original idea, but needed a more experienced partner to see it through, so Mills suggested David Croft and this launched the beginning of their professional association. When an episode was screened to members of the public to gauge audience reaction prior to broadcast of the first series, the majority of the audience thought it was very poor. The production team put the report containing the negative comments at the bottom of David Croft's in-tray. He only saw it several months later,[16] after the series had been broadcast and received a positive response. Situation The series is set in the fictional seaside town of Walmington-on-Sea, located on the south coast of England, not far from Eastbourne. The exterior scenes were mostly filmed in and around the Stanford Training Area (STANTA), near Thetford, Norfolk.[19] Walmington, and its Home Guard platoon, would be on the frontline in the event of a German invasion across the English Channel. The first series has a loose narrative thread, with Captain Mainwaring's platoon being formed and equipped, initially with wooden guns and LDV armbands, later on with full army uniforms; the platoon is part of the Queen's Own Royal West Kent Regiment. The first episode, "The Man and the Hour", begins with a scene set in the then-present day of 1968, in which Mainwaring addresses his old platoon as part of the contemporary '"I'm Backing Britain" campaign. The prologue opening was a condition imposed after initial concerns from Paul Fox, the BBC1 controller, that it belittled the efforts of the Home Guard. After Mainwaring relates how he had backed Britain in 1940, the episode proper begins; Dad's Army is thus told in flashback, although the final episode does not return to 1968. Later episodes are largely self-contained, albeit referring to previous events and with additional character development. As the comedy in many ways relies on the platoon's lack of participation in the Second World War, opposition to their activities must come from another quarter, and this is generally provided by Chief Air Raid Precautions (ARP) Warden Hodges, and sometimes by the verger of the local church (St Aldhelm's) or by Captain Square and the neighbouring Eastgate Home Guard platoon. The group, however, does have some encounters related to the enemy, such as downed German planes, a Luftwaffe pilot who parachutes into the town's clock tower, a U-boat crew and discarded parachutes that may have been German; a Viennese ornithologist appears in "Man Hunt" and an IRA suspect appears in "Absent Friends". The humour ranges from the subtle (especially the class-reversed relationship between grammar school-educated Mainwaring, the local bank manager, and public school-educated Wilson, his deputy at the bank) to the slapstick (the antics of the elderly Jones being a prime example). Jones had several catchphrases, including "Don't panic!" (while panicking himself), "They don't like it up 'em!", "Permission to speak, sir?", "Handy-hock!" and his tales about the "Fuzzy-Wuzzies". Mainwaring's catchphrase to Pike is "You stupid boy", which he uses in many episodes. Other cast members used catchphrases, including Sergeant Wilson, who regularly asked, "Do you think that's wise, sir?" when Captain Mainwaring made a suggestion. The early series occasionally included darker humour, reflecting that, especially early in the war, the Home Guard was woefully under-equipped but was still willing to resist the Wehrmacht. For instance, in the episode "The Battle of Godfrey's Cottage", the platoon believes the enemy has invaded Britain. Mainwaring, Godfrey, Frazer and Jones (along with Godfrey's sisters, who are completely unaware of the invasion) decide to stay at the cottage to delay the German advance, buying the regular army time to arrive with reinforcements; "It'll probably be the end of us, but we're ready for that, aren't we, men?" says Mainwaring. "Of course," replies Frazer. Characters Private Pike (Ian Lavender) ARP Warden Hodges (Bill Pertwee) Private Frazer (John Laurie) Private Godfrey (Arnold Ridley) Captain Mainwaring (Arthur Lowe) Private Walker (James Beck) Lance Corporal Jones (Clive Dunn) Sergeant Wilson (John Le Mesurier) Main characters Captain George Mainwaring (Arthur Lowe), the pompous, if essentially brave and unerringly patriotic local bank manager. Mainwaring appointed himself leader of his town's contingent of Local Defence Volunteers. He had been a lieutenant in the First World War but is embarrassed by the fact that he never saw combat, only being sent to France in 1919 after the Armistice as part of the Army of Occupation in Germany. The character, along with Wilson, also appeared in the original pilot episode of the radio series It Sticks Out Half a Mile. Sergeant Arthur Wilson (John Le Mesurier), a diffident, upper-middle-class chief bank clerk who often quietly questions Mainwaring's judgement ("Do you think that's wise, sir?"). Wilson had actually served as a captain during the First World War, but he only reveals this in the final episode. He does not live with the Pike family, but is implied to be in a relationship with the widowed Mrs Pike. Wilson also appears in the later radio series It Sticks Out Half a Mile. Lance Corporal Jack Jones (Clive Dunn), the local butcher, born in 1870. Jones is an old campaigner who enlisted as a drummer boy at the age of 14 and participated, as a boy soldier, in the Gordon Relief Expedition of 1884–85 and, as an adult, in Kitchener's campaign in the Sudan in 1896–98. Jones also served during the Boer War and the Great War. He often suffers from the effects of malaria caught during one of his campaigns and has to be calmed during his "shudders". Often seen as fastidious and a worrier, he has a number of catchphrases, including "They don't like it up 'em!" and "Don't panic, don't panic!", which he says whilst panicking. Dunn was considerably younger than his character, being only 46 when the series began. This meant he often performed the physical comedy of the show, which some of the older cast members were no longer capable of. Private James Frazer (John Laurie), a dour Scottish former chief petty officer on HMS Defiant in the Royal Navy. He served at the Battle of Jutland as a ship's cook and also has a medal for having served on Shackleton's Antarctic expedition. He grew up on the Isle of Barra and is prone to theatrical poetry. In episode one, he states that he owns a philately shop, but subsequently his profession is changed to an undertaker. His catchphrase is "We're doomed. Doomed!" Private Joe Walker (James Beck), a black market spiv, Walker is one of only two able-bodied men of military age among the main characters (the other one being Private Pike). In the first episode, Walker claims he was not called up to the regular army because he was in a reserved occupation as a wholesale supplier. In one of the missing episodes, it is revealed that he was not called up because of an allergy to corned beef. Although always on the lookout to make money, Walker is also seen to support local charities, including a children's home. Following James Beck's death in 1973, Walker was written out of the series. Private Charles Godfrey (Arnold Ridley), a retired shop assistant who had worked at the Army & Navy store in London. He lives in Walmington with his elderly sisters and serves as the platoon's medical orderly. He has a weak bladder and often needs to "be excused". A conscientious objector during the First World War, he was nevertheless awarded the Military Medal for heroic actions as a combat medic during the Battle of the Somme. He also demonstrates bravery during his Home Guard service, particularly during the "Branded" episode in which Mainwaring, unconscious in a smoke-filled room, is rescued by Godfrey. Private Frank Pike (Ian Lavender), the youngest of the platoon. He is a cosseted, somewhat immature mother's boy, often wearing a thick scarf over his uniform to prevent illness and a frequent target for Mainwaring's derision ("You stupid boy!"). Pike is not called up to the regular army due to his rare blood group (in series eight, he is excused for this reason). He works in his day job as an assistant bank clerk for Mainwaring. He frequently addresses Sergeant Wilson as "Uncle Arthur". However, on the last day of filming, David Croft confirmed to Lavender that Wilson was in fact Pike's father. Pike would later appear in the radio series It Sticks Out Half a Mile. Supporting characters Chief ARP Warden William Hodges (Bill Pertwee), the platoon's major rival and nemesis. He calls Mainwaring "Napoleon". Mainwaring looks down on him as the local greengrocer and dislikes that Hodges saw active service in the First World War. As an Air Raid Precautions (ARP) warden, he is always demanding that people "Put that light out!". He often calls the platoon "Ruddy hooligans!". The character of Hodges would later appear in the radio series It Sticks Out Half a Mile. Reverend Timothy Farthing (Frank Williams), the effete, petulant vicar of St Aldhelm's Church. He reluctantly shares his church hall and office with the platoon. In several episodes of the series, it was implied that the character was a non-active closet gay. Maurice Yeatman (Edward Sinclair), the verger at St Aldhelm's Church and Scoutmaster of the local Sea Scout troop. He is often hostile to the platoon while frequently sycophantic towards the vicar, who often struggles to tolerate him and frequently employs the catchphrase "Oh do be quiet, Mr Yeatman!". He often sides with Hodges to undermine the platoon's activities. Mrs Mavis Pike (Janet Davies), Pike's overbearing widowed mother, who is often implied to be in a relationship with Sergeant Wilson. Liz Frazer replaced Janet Davies in the 1971 film version. Mrs Fox (Pamela Cundell), a glamorous widow. There is a mutual attraction with Corporal Jones and the couple marry in the last episode. Illicit little "extras" are passed across the counter on her regular visits to Jones's butcher's shop and she helps the platoon with official functions. In the episode "Mum's Army", she gives her first name as Marcia, but by the final episode she is addressed as Mildred. Colonel Pritchard (Robert Raglan), Captain Mainwaring's superior officer. A stern, serious man, he unexpectedly appeared to admire Mainwaring, frequently commenting on his successes and warning people not to underestimate him. Private Sponge (Colin Bean), a sheep farmer. He leads the members of the platoon's second section (the first section being led by Corporal Jones) and thus had only occasional speaking parts, although he became more prominent in later series. He appeared in 76 of the 80 episodes. Mr Claude Gordon (Eric Longworth), the Walmington town clerk often involved when the platoon is taking part in local parades and displays. Although generally civil with Captain Mainwaring and his men, he is an officious and somewhat pompous individual, and Hodges tends to use him to try and interfere with the platoon's activities. Private Cheeseman (Talfryn Thomas), a Welshman who works for the town newspaper. He joined the Walmington-on-Sea platoon during the seventh series only after the sudden death of James Beck, who played Private Walker. Captain Square (Geoffrey Lumsden), the pompous commanding officer of the rival Eastgate platoon, and a former regular soldier who served with Lawrence of Arabia during the First World War. He is frequently at loggerheads with Mainwaring (whose name he persists in mispronouncing as spelt, "Main-wearing", instead of the correct "Mannering") and has the catchphrase "You blithering idiot!". Mrs Yeatman (Olive Mercer), the somewhat tyrannical wife of Maurice Yeatman, the verger. Over the course of the series, her first name is given as either Beryl, Anthea or Tracey. Mr Sidney Bluett (Harold Bennett), an elderly local man who is occasionally involved with the antics of both the platoon and Hodges. He and Mrs Yeatman are implied to be having an affair. Miss Janet King (Caroline Dowdeswell), a clerk at Swallow Bank who works with Mainwaring, Wilson and Pike in the first series. Edith Parish (Wendy Richard), also called Shirley, a cinema usherette and girlfriend of Private Walker. Dolly (Amy Dalby and Joan Cooper) and Cissy Godfrey (Nan Braunton and Kathleen Saintsbury), Private Godfrey's spinster sisters, who reside with him at their cottage. Elizabeth Mainwaring (unseen character), George Mainwaring's reclusive, paranoid and domineering wife who is never seen onscreen in the TV series. (In the episode "A Soldier's Farewell" her "shape" is seen sleeping in the bunk above the captain while in their Anderson Shelter.) Her marriage to George is not a happy one and he does his best to avoid her at any opportunity. They have no children. Mrs Mainwaring had a significant on screen role in the 2016 film. Other actors who appeared in small roles include Timothy Carlton, Don Estelle, Nigel Hawthorne, Geoffrey Hughes, Michael Knowles, John Ringham, Fulton Mackay, Anthony Sagar, Anthony Sharp, Carmen Silvera and Barbara Windsor. Larry Martyn appeared as an unnamed private in four episodes, and later took over the part of Walker in the radio series following the death of James Beck. The former cricketer Fred Trueman appeared in "The Test". Opening and closing credits The show's opening titles were originally intended to feature footage of refugees and Nazi troops, to illustrate the threat faced by the Home Guard. Despite opposition from the BBC's head of comedy Michael Mills, Paul Fox, the controller of BBC1, ordered that these be removed on the grounds that they were offensive. The replacement titles featured the animated sequence of swastika-headed arrows approaching Britain.[25] Originally in black and white, the opening titles were updated twice; firstly in series three, adding colour and improved animation, and once again in series six, which made further improvements to the animation. There were two different versions of the closing credits used in the show. The first version, used in series one and two, simply showed footage of the main cast superimposed over a still photograph, with the crew credits rolling over a black background. The better-known closing credits, introduced in series three, were a homage to the end credits of The Way Ahead (1944), a film which had covered the training of a platoon during the Second World War. In both instances, each character is shown as they walk across a smoke-filled battlefield. One of the actors in Dad's Army, John Laurie, also appeared in that film, and his performance in the end credits of The Way Ahead appears to be copied in the sitcom. Coincidentally, the film's lead character (played by David Niven) is named Lieutenant Jim Perry. Following this sequence, the end credits roll, and the platoon is shown in a wide angle shot as, armed, they run towards the camera, while bombs explode behind them. As the credits come to an end, the platoon run past the camera and the all clear siren rings, before the screen fades to black. Music The show's theme tune, "Who Do You Think You Are Kidding, Mr Hitler?" was Jimmy Perry's idea, written especially for the show and intended as a gentle pastiche of wartime songs. The other songs were authentic 1940s music recordings. Perry wrote the lyrics and composed the music with Derek Taverner. Perry persuaded one of his childhood idols, wartime entertainer Bud Flanagan, to sing the theme for 100 guineas (equivalent to £2,400 in 2023). Flanagan died less than a year after the recording. At the time it was widely believed to be a wartime song. The music over the opening credits was recorded at Riverside Studios, Flanagan being accompanied by the Orchestra of the Band of the Coldstream Guards. The version played over the opening credits differs slightly from the full version recorded by Flanagan; an edit removes, for timing reasons, two lines of lyric with the "middle eight" tune: "So watch out Mr Hitler, you have met your match in us/If you think you can crush us, we're afraid you've missed the bus." (The latter lyric is a reference to a speech by Neville Chamberlain.) Bud Flanagan's full version appears as an Easter egg on the first series DVD release and on the authorised soundtrack CD issued by CD41. Arthur Lowe also recorded a full version of the theme. The closing credits feature an instrumental march version of the song played by the Band of the Coldstream Guards conducted by Captain (later Lieutenant Colonel) Trevor L. Sharpe, ending with the air-raid warning siren sounding all-clear. It is accompanied by a style of credits that became a trademark of David Croft: the caption "You have been watching", followed by vignettes of the main cast. The series also contains genuine wartime and period songs between scenes, usually brief quotations that have some reference to the theme of the episode or the scene. Many appear on the CD soundtrack issued by CD41, being the same versions used in the series. Episodes List of Dad's Army episodes The television programme lasted nine series and was broadcast over nine years, with 80 episodes in total, including three Christmas specials and an hour-long special. At its peak, the programme regularly gained audiences of 18.5 million.[35] There were also four short specials broadcast as part of Christmas Night with the Stars in 1968, 1969, 1970 and 1972; one of which was also restaged as part of the Royal Variety Performance 1975. Missing episodes Main article: Dad's Army missing episodes The first two series were recorded and screened in black-and-white, while series three to nine were recorded and screened in colour. Even so, one episode in series three, "Room at the Bottom", formerly survived only as a 16mm black-and-white film telerecording, made for overseas sales to countries not yet broadcasting in colour; and remains on the official DVD releases in this form. This episode has benefited from colour recovery technology, using a buried colour signal (chroma dots) in the black-and-white film print to restore the episode to colour and was transmitted on 13 December 2008 on BBC Two. The newly restored colour version of "Room at the Bottom" was eventually made commercially available in 2023, when it appeared as an extra on the DVD release Dad's Army: The Missing Episodes, with a specially filmed introduction by Ian Lavender. Dad's Army was less affected than most from the wiping of videotape, but three second-series episodes remain missing: episode nine "The Loneliness of the Long Distance Walker", episode eleven "A Stripe for Frazer" and episode 12 "Under Fire". (All three missing episodes were among those remade for BBC Radio with most of the original cast, adapted from the original TV scripts. Audio recordings of all three were included as bonus features on The Complete Series DVD Collection.) Two further series two episodes, "Operation Kilt" and "The Battle of Godfrey's Cottage", were thought lost until 2001.[8] Two of the three missing episodes have since been performed as part of the latest stage show. In 2008, soundtracks of the missing episode "A Stripe for Frazer" and the 1968 Christmas Night with the Stars segment "Present Arms" were recovered. The soundtrack of "A Stripe for Frazer" has been mixed with animation to replace the missing images.[36] The audio soundtrack for the "Cornish Floral Dance" sketch, from the 1970 episode of Christmas Night with the Stars, has also been recovered. Dad's Army: The Lost Episodes (2019) In 2018, UKTV announced plans to recreate the three missing episodes for broadcast on its Gold channel. Mercury Productions, the company responsible for Saluting Dad's Army, Gold's 50th anniversary tribute series, produced the episodes, which were directed by Ben Kellett. The recreations were broadcast in August 2019, coinciding with the 50th anniversary of their original broadcast by the BBC.[37] Kevin McNally and Robert Bathurst were the initial casting announcements as Captain Mainwaring and Sergeant Wilson, with Bernard Cribbins portraying Private Godfrey. The full cast was announced in January 2019, with McNally, Bathurst and Cribbins joined by Kevin Eldon, Mathew Horne, David Hayman and Tom Rosenthal. However, Bernard Cribbins subsequently withdrew from the project, and was replaced as Godfrey by Timothy West. Cast Kevin McNally as Captain Mainwaring Robert Bathurst as Sergeant Wilson Kevin Eldon as Lance Corporal Jones David Hayman as Private Frazer Mathew Horne as Private Walker Timothy West as Private Godfrey Tom Rosenthal as Private Pike Tracy-Ann Oberman as Mrs Pike Simon Ludders as ARP Warden Hodges David Horovitch as Corporal-Colonel Square John Biggins as the Verger Films 1971 film Main article: Dad's Army (1971 film) In common with many British sitcoms of that era, Dad's Army was spun-off as a feature film which was released in 1971. Backers Columbia Pictures imposed arbitrary changes, such as recasting Liz Fraser as Mavis Pike and filming locations in Chalfont St Giles, Buckinghamshire, rather than Thetford in Norfolk, which made the cast unhappy. The director, Norman Cohen, whose idea it was to make the film, was nearly sacked by the studio.: 168 Jimmy Perry and David Croft wrote the original screenplay. This was expanded by Cohen to try to make it more cinematic; Columbia executives made more changes to plot and pacing. As finally realised, two-thirds of the film consists of the creation of the platoon; this was the contribution of Perry and Croft, and differs in a number of ways from the formation of the platoon as seen in the first series of the television version. The final third shows the platoon in action, rescuing hostages from the church hall where they had been held captive by the crewmen of a downed German aircraft. Neither the cast nor Perry and Croft were happy with the result. Perry argued for changes to try to reproduce the style of the television series, but with mixed results. Filming took place from 10 August to 25 September 1970 at Shepperton Studios and on location. After shooting the film, the cast returned to working on the fourth television series. The film's UK première was on 12 March 1971 at the Columbia Theatre, London. Critical reviews were mixed, but it performed well at the UK box-office. Discussions were held about a possible sequel, to be called Dad's Army and the Secret U-Boat Base, but the project never came to fruition. Michael Gambon as Private Godfrey (2014) 2016 film Main article: Dad's Army (2016 film) A second film, written by Hamish McColl and directed by Oliver Parker, was released in 2016. The cast included Toby Jones as Captain Mainwaring, Bill Nighy as Sergeant Wilson, Tom Courtenay as Lance Corporal Jones, Michael Gambon as Private Godfrey, Blake Harrison as Private Pike, Daniel Mays as Private Walker and Bill Paterson as Private Frazer. Catherine Zeta-Jones, Sarah Lancashire and Mark Gatiss also featured. The film was primarily shot on location in Yorkshire. Filming took place on the beach at North Landing, Flamborough Head, Yorkshire and at nearby Bridlington. It opened in February 2016 to mainly negative reviews. Stage show Main article: Dad's Army (stage show) A poster advertising the stage show In 1975, Dad's Army transferred to the stage as a revue, with songs, familiar scenes from the show and individual "turns" for cast members. It was created by Roger Redfarn, who shared the same agent as the series' writers. Most of the principal cast transferred with it, with the exception of John Laurie, who was replaced by Hamish Roughead.[8] Following James Beck's death two years earlier, Walker was played by John Bardon.[8] Dad's Army: A Nostalgic Music and Laughter Show of Britain's Finest Hour opened at Billingham in Teesside on 4 September 1975 for a two-week tryout. After cuts and revisions, the show transferred to London's West End and opened at the Shaftesbury Theatre on 2 October 1975. On the opening night there was a surprise appearance by Chesney Allen, singing the old Flanagan and Allen song Hometown with Arthur Lowe. The show ran in the West End until 21 February 1976, disrupted twice by bomb scares and then toured the country until 4 September 1976. Clive Dunn was replaced for half the tour by Jack Haig (David Croft's original first choice for the role of Corporal Jones on television). Jeffrey Holland, who went on to star in several later Croft sitcoms, also had a number of roles in the production. The stage show, billed as Dad's Army—The Musical, was staged in Australia and toured New Zealand in 2004–2005, starring Jon English. Several sections of this stage show were filmed and have subsequently been included as extras on the final Dad's Army DVD. In April 2007, a new stage show was announced with cast members including Leslie Grantham as Private Walker and Emmerdale actor Peter Martin as Captain Mainwaring. The production contained the episodes "A Stripe for Frazer", "The Loneliness of the Long Distance Walker", "Room at the Bottom" and "The Deadly Attachment". In August 2017, a new two-man stage show titled, Dad's Army Radio Hour, opened at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe It starred David Benson and Jack Lane. Between them, the pair voiced the entire cast of Dad's Army, including incidental characters. The episodes adapted from the original radio scripts were "The Deadly Attachment", "The Day the Balloon Went Up", "Brain Versus Brawn", "My British Buddy", "Round and Round Went the Great Big Wheel" and "Mum's Army". The production featured three episodes not adapted for the radio series "When You've Got to Go", "My Brother and I" and "Never Too Old". The show was well received by critics and the David Croft estate for its respectful and uncanny performances. In 2019, the production changed its name to Dad's Army Radio Show and continued to tour nationally throughout the UK until the end of 2021. Radio series List of Dad's Army radio episodes The majority of the television scripts were adapted for BBC Radio 4 with the original cast, although other actors played Walker after James Beck's death (which took place soon after recording and before transmission of the first radio series). Harold Snoad and Michael Knowles were responsible for the adaptation,[8] while wartime BBC announcer John Snagge set the scene for each episode. Different actors were used for some of the minor parts: for example Mollie Sugden played the role of Mrs Fox, and Pearl Hackney played Mrs Pike. The first episode was based on the revised version of events seen in the opening of the film version, rather than on the television pilot. The series ran for three series and 67 episodes from 1974-76.[8] The entire radio series has been released on CD. Knowles and Snoad developed a radio series, It Sticks Out Half a Mile, which followed Sergeant Wilson, Private Pike and Warden Hodges's attempts to renovate a pier in the fictional town of Frambourne-on-Sea following the end of the war. It was originally intended to star Arthur Lowe and John Le Mesurier, but Lowe died after recording the pilot episode in 1981. In consequence, Bill Pertwee and Ian Lavender were brought in to replace him. In the event the revised cast recorded a 13-episode series. John Le Mesurier died in November 1983, making another series impossible. The last radio recording of Dad's Army occurred in 1995, when Jimmy Perry wrote a radio sketch entitled The Boy Who Saved England for the "Full Steam A-Hudd" evening broadcast on BBC Radio 2, transmitted on 3 June 1995 on the occasion of the closure of the BBC's Paris studios in Lower Regent Street. It featured Ian Lavender as Pike, Bill Pertwee as Hodges, Frank Williams as the Vicar and Jimmy Perry as General Haverlock-Seabag. American adaptation A pilot episode for an American remake called The Rear Guard, adapted for American viewers by Arthur Julian, was produced by the ABC and broadcast on 10 August 1976, based on the Dad's Army episode "The Deadly Attachment".[8] Set in Long Island, the pilot starred Cliff Norton as Captain Rosatti, Lou Jacobi as Sergeant Raskin and Eddie Foy Jr. as Lance Corporal Wagner. The pilot was considered a failure, so the original tapes were wiped. However, director Hal Cooper kept a copy of the pilot, which was returned to several collectors in 1998. Though further storylines were planned, the series failed to make it past the pilot stage. Other appearances Lowe, Le Mesurier, Laurie, Beck, Ridley and Lavender (wearing Pike's signature scarf) appeared as guests in the 22 April 1971 edition of The Morecambe & Wise Show on BBC2 in the "Monty on the Bonty" sketch, with Lowe as Captain Bligh and the others as crewmen on HMS Bounty. Lowe, Le Mesurier and Laurie again made a cameo appearance as their Dad's Army characters in the 1977 Morecambe & Wise Christmas Special. While Elton John is following incomprehensible instructions to find the BBC studios, he encounters them in a steam room. On leaving, Mainwaring calls him a "stupid boy". Arthur Lowe twice appeared on the BBC children's programme Blue Peter. The first time, in 1973, was with John Le Mesurier, in which the two appeared in costume and in character as Captain Mainwaring and Sergeant Wilson. Together they viewed and discussed a mural painted by schoolchildren, featuring the characters from the show at a Christmas party, among whom was Mainwaring's unseen wife Elizabeth – or rather, what the children thought she looked like (Mainwaring remarks "Good grief. What a remarkable likeness!"). Arthur Lowe made a second appearance as Captain Mainwaring on Blue Peter with the Dad's Army van, which would appear in the forthcoming London-Brighton run, and showed presenter John Noakes the vehicle's hidden anti-Nazi defences.[29][59] Later that year, Lowe, Le Mesurier, Dunn, Lavender and Pertwee, along with Jones's van, appeared in character at the finish of the 1974 London to Brighton Veteran Car Run. The cast appeared in a 1974 public information film, in character but set in the modern day, in which the platoon demonstrated how to cross the road safely at Pelican crossings. Lowe and Le Mesurier made a final appearance as their Dad's Army characters for a 1982 television commercial advertising Wispa chocolate bars. Clive Dunn made occasional appearances as Lance Corporal Jones at 1940s themed events in the 1980s and 1990s and on television on the BBC Saturday night entertainment show Noel's House Party on 27 November 1993. Awards During its original television run, Dad's Army was nominated for multiple British Academy Television Awards, although only won "Best Light Entertainment Programme" in 1971. It was nominated as "Best Situation Comedy" in 1973, 1974 and 1975. In addition, Arthur Lowe was frequently nominated for "Best Light Entertainment Performance" in 1970, 1971, 1973, 1975 and 1978. In 2000, the show was voted 13th in a British Film Institute poll of industry professionals of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes. In 2004, championed by Phill Jupitus, it came fourth in the BBC poll to find Britain's Best Sitcom with 174,138 votes. Legacy Statue of Captain Mainwaring, erected in Thetford in June 2010 In June 2010, a statue of Captain Mainwaring was erected in the Norfolk town of Thetford where most of the exteriors for the TV series were filmed. The statue features Captain Mainwaring sitting to attention on a simple bench in Home Guard uniform, with his swagger stick across his knees. The statue is mounted at the end of a winding brick pathway with a Union Flag patterned arrowhead to reflect the opening credits of the TV series and the sculpture has been designed so that members of the public can sit beside Captain Mainwaring and have their photograph taken. The statue was vandalised not long after the unveiling by a 10-year-old boy, who kicked it for ten minutes and broke off the statue's glasses, throwing them into a nearby river. The statue has since been fixed. Several references to Dad's Army have been made in other television series. In a 1995 episode of Bottom, titled "Hole", Richie shouts Lance Corporal Jones's catchphrase while stuck up a Ferris wheel set to be demolished the following day. The British sitcom Goodnight Sweetheart paid tribute to Dad's Army in episode one of its second series in 1995, "Don't Get Around Much Any More". Here, lead character Gary Sparrow (Nicholas Lyndhurst) – a time-traveller from the 1990s – goes into a bank in 1941 and meets a bank manager named Mainwaring (Alec Linstead) and his chief clerk, Wilson (Terrence Hardiman), both of whom are in the Home Guard. When he hears the names Mainwaring and Wilson, Gary begins singing the Dad's Army theme song.[72] In addition, a brief visual tribute to Dad's Army is made at the start of the episode "Rag Week" from Ben Elton's 1990s sitcom The Thin Blue Line: a shopfront bears the name "Mainwaring's". In June 2018 the Royal Mail issued a set of eight stamps, featuring the main characters and their catchphrases, to mark the comedy's 50th anniversary. In 2020, Niles Schilder, for the Dad's Army Appreciation Society, wrote four short scripts which detailed how the characters from the series would have, in the author's opinion, dealt with the events of that year. Titles of the scripts included Dad's Army Negotiates Brexit and An Unauthorised Gathering. Cultural influence A pub in Shoeburyness named (albeit incorrectly) after Arthur Lowe's character The characters of Dad's Army and their catchphrases are well known in the UK due to the popularity of the series when originally shown and the frequency of repeats. Jimmy Perry recalls that before writing the sitcom, the Home Guard was a largely forgotten aspect of Britain's defence in the Second World War, something which the series rectified. In a 1972 Radio Times interview, Arthur Lowe expressed surprise at the programme's success: We expected the show to have limited appeal, to the age group that lived through the war and the Home Guard. We didn't expect what has happened – that children from the age of five upwards would enjoy it too. By focusing on the comic aspects of the Home Guard in a cosy south coast setting, the television series distorted the popular perception of the organisation. Its characters represented the older volunteers within the Home Guard, but largely ignored the large numbers of teenagers and factory workers who also served. Accounts from Home Guard members and their regimental publications inspired Norman Longmate's history The Real Dad's Army (1974). Media releases Main articles: List of Dad's Army books and memorabilia and List of Dad's Army audio releases The first DVD releases of Dad's Army were two "best of" collections, released by the BBC and distributed by 2 Entertain, in October 2001 and September 2002. The first series and the surviving episodes of the second series, along with the documentary Dad's Army: Missing Presumed Wiped, were released in September 2004,[80] while the final series was released in May 2007.[81] In November 2007, the final episodes, the three specials "Battle of the Giants!", "My Brother and I" and "The Love of Three Oranges", were released, along with Dad's Army: The Passing Years documentary, several Christmas Night with the Stars sketches, and excerpts from the 1975-76 stage show.[82] From the third series DVD, We Are the Boys..., a short individual biographical documentary about the main actors and the characters they portrayed on the programme, was included as a special feature. The Columbia film adaptation is separately available; as this is not a BBC production, it is not included in the box set. In 1973 the series was adapted into a comic strip, drawn by Bill Titcombe, which was published in daily newspapers in the UK. These cartoon strips were subsequently collected together and published in book form, by Piccolo Books, in paperback. sleep insomnia relax chill night nightime bed bedtime oldtimeradio drama comedy radio talkradio hancock tonyhancock hancockshalfhour sherlock sherlockholmes radiodrama popular viral viralpodcast podcast brett brettorchard orchard east devon seaton beer lyme regis village condado de alhama spain murcia #dadsarmy The Golden Age of Radio Also known as the old-time radio (OTR) era, was an era of radio in the United States where it was the dominant electronic home entertainment medium. It began with the birth of commercial radio broadcasting in the early 1920s and lasted through the 1950s, when television gradually superseded radio as the medium of choice for scripted programming, variety and dramatic shows. Radio was the first broadcast medium, and during this period people regularly tuned in to their favourite radio programs, and families gathered to listen to the home radio in the evening. According to a 1947 C. E. Hooper survey, 82 out of 100 Americans were found to be radio listeners. A variety of new entertainment formats and genres were created for the new medium, many of which later migrated to television: radio plays, mystery serials, soap operas, quiz shows, talent shows, daytime and evening variety hours, situation comedies, play-by-play sports, children's shows, cooking shows, and more. In the 1950s, television surpassed radio as the most popular broadcast medium, and commercial radio programming shifted to narrower formats of news, talk, sports and music. Religious broadcasters, listener-supported public radio and college stations provide their own distinctive formats. Origins A family listening to the first broadcasts around 1920 with a crystal radio. The crystal radio, a legacy from the pre-broadcast era, could not power a loudspeaker so the family must share earphones During the first three decades of radio, from 1887 to about 1920, the technology of transmitting sound was undeveloped; the information-carrying ability of radio waves was the same as a telegraph; the radio signal could be either on or off. Radio communication was by wireless telegraphy; at the sending end, an operator tapped on a switch which caused the radio transmitter to produce a series of pulses of radio waves which spelled out text messages in Morse code. At the receiver these sounded like beeps, requiring an operator who knew Morse code to translate them back to text. This type of radio was used exclusively for person-to-person text communication for commercial, diplomatic and military purposes and hobbyists; broadcasting did not exist. The broadcasts of live drama, comedy, music and news that characterize the Golden Age of Radio had a precedent in the Théâtrophone, commercially introduced in Paris in 1890 and available as late as 1932. It allowed subscribers to eavesdrop on live stage performances and hear news reports by means of a network of telephone lines. The development of radio eliminated the wires and subscription charges from this concept. Between 1900 and 1920 the first technology for transmitting sound by radio was developed, AM (amplitude modulation), and AM broadcasting sprang up around 1920. On Christmas Eve 1906, Reginald Fessenden is said to have broadcast the first radio program, consisting of some violin playing and passages from the Bible. While Fessenden's role as an inventor and early radio experimenter is not in dispute, several contemporary radio researchers have questioned whether the Christmas Eve broadcast took place, or whether the date was, in fact, several weeks earlier. The first apparent published reference to the event was made in 1928 by H. P. Davis, Vice President of Westinghouse, in a lecture given at Harvard University. In 1932 Fessenden cited the Christmas Eve 1906 broadcast event in a letter he wrote to Vice President S. M. Kinter of Westinghouse. Fessenden's wife Helen recounts the broadcast in her book Fessenden: Builder of Tomorrows (1940), eight years after Fessenden's death. The issue of whether the 1906 Fessenden broadcast actually happened is discussed in Donna Halper's article "In Search of the Truth About Fessenden"[2] and also in James O'Neal's essays.[3][4] An annotated argument supporting Fessenden as the world's first radio broadcaster was offered in 2006 by Dr. John S. Belrose, Radioscientist Emeritus at the Communications Research Centre Canada, in his essay "Fessenden's 1906 Christmas Eve broadcast." It was not until after the Titanic catastrophe in 1912 that radio for mass communication came into vogue, inspired first by the work of amateur ("ham") radio operators. Radio was especially important during World War I as it was vital for air and naval operations. World War I brought about major developments in radio, superseding the Morse code of the wireless telegraph with the vocal communication of the wireless telephone, through advancements in vacuum tube technology and the introduction of the transceiver. After the war, numerous radio stations were born in the United States and set the standard for later radio programs. The first radio news program was broadcast on August 31, 1920, on the station 8MK in Detroit; owned by The Detroit News, the station covered local election results. This was followed in 1920 with the first commercial radio station in the United States, KDKA, being established in Pittsburgh. The first regular entertainment programs were broadcast in 1922, and on March 10, Variety carried the front-page headline: "Radio Sweeping Country: 1,000,000 Sets in Use." A highlight of this time was the first Rose Bowl being broadcast on January 1, 1923, on the Los Angeles station KHJ. Growth of radio Broadcast radio in the United States underwent a period of rapid change through the decade of the 1920s. Technology advances, better regulation, rapid consumer adoption, and the creation of broadcast networks transformed radio from a consumer curiosity into the mass media powerhouse that defined the Golden Age of Radio. Consumer adoption Through the decade of the 1920s, the purchase of radios by United States homes continued, and accelerated. The Radio Corporation of America (RCA) released figures in 1925 stating that 19% of United States homes owned a radio. The triode and regenerative circuit made amplified, vacuum tube radios widely available to consumers by the second half of the 1920s. The advantage was obvious: several people at once in a home could now easily listen to their radio at the same time. In 1930, 40% of the nation's households owned a radio,[8] a figure that was much higher in suburban and large metropolitan areas. The superheterodyne receiver and other inventions refined radios even further in the next decade; even as the Great Depression ravaged the country in the 1930s, radio would stay at the centre of American life. 83% of American homes would own a radio by 1940. Government regulation Although radio was well established with United States consumers by the mid-1920s, regulation of the broadcast medium presented its own challenges. Until 1926, broadcast radio power and frequency use was regulated by the U.S. Department of Commerce, until a legal challenge rendered the agency powerless to do so. Congress responded by enacting the Radio Act of 1927, which included the formation of the Federal Radio Commission (FRC). One of the FRC's most important early actions was the adoption of General Order 40, which divided stations on the AM band into three power level categories, which became known as Local, Regional, and Clear Channel, and reorganized station assignments. Based on this plan, effective 3:00 a.m. Eastern time on November 11, 1928, most of the country's stations were assigned to new transmitting frequencies. Broadcast networks The final element needed to make the Golden Age of Radio possible focused on the question of distribution: the ability for multiple radio stations to simultaneously broadcast the same content, and this would be solved with the concept of a radio network. The earliest radio programs of the 1920s were largely unsponsored; radio stations were a service designed to sell radio receivers. In early 1922, American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T) announced the beginning of advertisement-supported broadcasting on its owned stations, and plans for the development of the first radio network using its telephone lines to transmit the content. In July 1926, AT&T abruptly decided to exit the broadcasting field, and signed an agreement to sell its entire network operations to a group headed by RCA, which used the assets to form the National Broadcasting Company. Four radio networks had formed by 1934. These were: National Broadcasting Company Red Network (NBC Red), launched November 15, 1926. Originally founded as the National Broadcasting Company in late 1926, the company was almost immediately forced to split under antitrust laws to form NBC Red and NBC Blue. When, in 1942, NBC Blue was sold and renamed the Blue Network, this network would go back to calling itself simply the National Broadcasting Company Radio Network (NBC). National Broadcasting Company Blue Network (NBC Blue); launched January 10, 1927, split from NBC Red. NBC Blue was sold in 1942 and became the Blue Network, and it in turn transferred its assets to a new company, the American Broadcasting Company on June 15, 1945. That network identified itself as the American Broadcasting Company Radio Network (ABC). Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS), launched September 18, 1927. After an initially struggling attempt to compete with the NBC networks, CBS gained new momentum when William S. Paley was installed as company president. Mutual Broadcasting System (Mutual), launched September 29, 1934. Mutual was initially run as a cooperative in which the flagship stations owned the network, not the other way around as was the case with the other three radio networks. Programming In the period before and after the advent of the broadcast network, new forms of entertainment needed to be created to fill the time of a station's broadcast day. Many of the formats born in this era continued into the television and digital eras. In the beginning of the Golden Age, network programs were almost exclusively broadcast live, as the national networks prohibited the airing of recorded programs until the late 1940s because of the inferior sound quality of phonograph discs, the only practical recording medium at that time. As a result, network prime-time shows would be performed twice, once for each coast. Rehearsal for the World War II radio show You Can't Do Business with Hitler with John Flynn and Virginia Moore. This series of programs, broadcast at least once weekly by more than 790 radio stations in the United States, was written and produced by the radio section of the Office of War Information (OWI). Live events Coverage of live events included musical concerts and play-by-play sports broadcasts. News The capability of the new medium to get information to people created the format of modern radio news: headlines, remote reporting, sidewalk interviews (such as Vox Pop), panel discussions, weather reports, and farm reports. The entry of radio into the realm of news triggered a feud between the radio and newspaper industries in the mid-1930s, eventually culminating in newspapers trumping up exaggerated [citation needed] reports of a mass hysteria from the (entirely fictional) radio presentation of The War of the Worlds, which had been presented as a faux newscast. Musical features The sponsored musical feature soon became one of the most popular program formats. Most early radio sponsorship came in the form of selling the naming rights to the program, as evidenced by such programs as The A&P Gypsies, Champion Spark Plug Hour, The Clicquot Club Eskimos, and King Biscuit Time; commercials, as they are known in the modern era, were still relatively uncommon and considered intrusive. During the 1930s and 1940s, the leading orchestras were heard often through big band remotes, and NBC's Monitor continued such remotes well into the 1950s by broadcasting live music from New York City jazz clubs to rural America. Singers such as Harriet Lee and Wendell Hall became popular fixtures on network radio beginning in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Local stations often had staff organists such as Jesse Crawford playing popular tunes. Classical music programs on the air included The Voice of Firestone and The Bell Telephone Hour. Texaco sponsored the Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts; the broadcasts, now sponsored by the Toll Brothers, continue to this day around the world, and are one of the few examples of live classical music still broadcast on radio. One of the most notable of all classical music radio programs of the Golden Age of Radio featured the celebrated Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini conducting the NBC Symphony Orchestra, which had been created especially for him. At that time, nearly all classical musicians and critics considered Toscanini the greatest living maestro. Popular songwriters such as George Gershwin were also featured on radio. (Gershwin, in addition to frequent appearances as a guest, had his own program in 1934.) The New York Philharmonic also had weekly concerts on radio. There was no dedicated classical music radio station like NPR at that time, so classical music programs had to share the network they were broadcast on with more popular ones, much as in the days of television before the creation of NET and PBS. Country music also enjoyed popularity. National Barn Dance, begun on Chicago's WLS in 1924, was picked up by NBC Radio in 1933. In 1925, WSM Barn Dance went on the air from Nashville. It was renamed the Grand Ole Opry in 1927 and NBC carried portions from 1944 to 1956. NBC also aired The Red Foley Show from 1951 to 1961, and ABC Radio carried Ozark Jubilee from 1953 to 1961. Comedy Radio attracted top comedy talents from vaudeville and Hollywood for many years: Bing Crosby, Abbott and Costello, Fred Allen, Jack Benny, Victor Borge, Fanny Brice, Billie Burke, Bob Burns, Judy Canova, Eddie Cantor, Jimmy Durante, Burns and Allen, Phil Harris, Edgar Bergen, Bob Hope, Groucho Marx, Jean Shepherd, Red Skelton and Ed Wynn. Situational comedies also gained popularity, such as Amos 'n' Andy, Easy Aces, Ethel and Albert, Fibber McGee and Molly, The Goldbergs, The Great Gildersleeve, The Halls of Ivy (which featured screen star Ronald Colman and his wife Benita Hume), Meet Corliss Archer, Meet Millie, and Our Miss Brooks. Radio comedy ran the gamut from the small town humor of Lum and Abner, Herb Shriner and Minnie Pearl to the dialect characterizations of Mel Blanc and the caustic sarcasm of Henry Morgan. Gags galore were delivered weekly on Stop Me If You've Heard This One and Can You Top This?,[18] panel programs devoted to the art of telling jokes. Quiz shows were lampooned on It Pays to Be Ignorant, and other memorable parodies were presented by such satirists as Spike Jones, Stoopnagle and Budd, Stan Freberg and Bob and Ray. British comedy reached American shores in a major assault when NBC carried The Goon Show in the mid-1950s. Some shows originated as stage productions: Clifford Goldsmith's play What a Life was reworked into NBC's popular, long-running The Aldrich Family (1939–1953) with the familiar catchphrases "Henry! Henry Aldrich!," followed by Henry's answer, "Coming, Mother!" Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman's Pulitzer Prize-winning Broadway hit, You Can't Take It with You (1936), became a weekly situation comedy heard on Mutual (1944) with Everett Sloane and later on NBC (1951) with Walter Brennan. Other shows were adapted from comic strips, such as Blondie, Dick Tracy, Gasoline Alley, The Gumps, Li'l Abner, Little Orphan Annie, Popeye the Sailor, Red Ryder, Reg'lar Fellers, Terry and the Pirates and Tillie the Toiler. Bob Montana's redheaded teen of comic strips and comic books was heard on radio's Archie Andrews from 1943 to 1953. The Timid Soul was a 1941–1942 comedy based on cartoonist H. T. Webster's famed Caspar Milquetoast character, and Robert L. Ripley's Believe It or Not! was adapted to several different radio formats during the 1930s and 1940s. Conversely, some radio shows gave rise to spinoff comic strips, such as My Friend Irma starring Marie Wilson. Soap operas The first program generally considered to be a daytime serial drama by scholars of the genre is Painted Dreams, which premiered on WGN on October 20, 1930. The first networked daytime serial is Clara, Lu, 'n Em, which started in a daytime time slot on February 15, 1932. As daytime serials became popular in the early 1930s, they became known as soap operas because many were sponsored by soap products and detergents. On November 25, 1960, the last four daytime radio dramas—Young Dr. Malone, Right to Happiness, The Second Mrs. Burton and Ma Perkins, all broadcast on the CBS Radio Network—were brought to an end. Children's programming The line-up of late afternoon adventure serials included Bobby Benson and the B-Bar-B Riders, The Cisco Kid, Jack Armstrong, the All-American Boy, Captain Midnight, and The Tom Mix Ralston Straight Shooters. Badges, rings, decoding devices and other radio premiums offered on these adventure shows were often allied with a sponsor's product, requiring the young listeners to mail in a boxtop from a breakfast cereal or other proof of purchase. Radio plays Radio plays were presented on such programs as 26 by Corwin, NBC Short Story, Arch Oboler's Plays, Quiet, Please, and CBS Radio Workshop. Orson Welles's The Mercury Theatre on the Air and The Campbell Playhouse were considered by many critics to be the finest radio drama anthologies ever presented. They usually starred Welles in the leading role, along with celebrity guest stars such as Margaret Sullavan or Helen Hayes, in adaptations from literature, Broadway, and/or films. They included such titles as Liliom, Oliver Twist (a title now feared lost), A Tale of Two Cities, Lost Horizon, and The Murder of Roger Ackroyd. It was on Mercury Theatre that Welles presented his celebrated-but-infamous 1938 adaptation of H. G. Wells's The War of the Worlds, formatted to sound like a breaking news program. Theatre Guild on the Air presented adaptations of classical and Broadway plays. Their Shakespeare adaptations included a one-hour Macbeth starring Maurice Evans and Judith Anderson, and a 90-minute Hamlet, starring John Gielgud.[22] Recordings of many of these programs survive. During the 1940s, Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce, famous for playing Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson in films, repeated their characterizations on radio on The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, which featured both original stories and episodes directly adapted from Arthur Conan Doyle's stories. None of the episodes in which Rathbone and Bruce starred on the radio program were filmed with the two actors as Holmes and Watson, so radio became the only medium in which audiences were able to experience Rathbone and Bruce appearing in some of the more famous Holmes stories, such as "The Speckled Band". There were also many dramatizations of Sherlock Holmes stories on radio without Rathbone and Bruce. During the latter part of his career, celebrated actor John Barrymore starred in a radio program, Streamlined Shakespeare, which featured him in a series of one-hour adaptations of Shakespeare plays, many of which Barrymore never appeared in either on stage or in films, such as Twelfth Night (in which he played both Malvolio and Sir Toby Belch), and Macbeth. Lux Radio Theatre and The Screen Guild Theater presented adaptations of Hollywood movies, performed before a live audience, usually with cast members from the original films. Suspense, Escape, The Mysterious Traveler and Inner Sanctum Mystery were popular thriller anthology series. Leading writers who created original material for radio included Norman Corwin, Carlton E. Morse, David Goodis, Archibald MacLeish, Arthur Miller, Arch Oboler, Wyllis Cooper, Rod Serling, Jay Bennett, and Irwin Shaw. Game shows Game shows saw their beginnings in radio. One of the first was Information Please in 1938, and one of the first major successes was Dr. I.Q. in 1939. Winner Take All, which premiered in 1946, was the first to use lockout devices and feature returning champions. A relative of the game show, which would be called the giveaway show in contemporary media, typically involved giving sponsored products to studio audience members, people randomly called by telephone, or both. An early example of this show was the 1939 show Pot o' Gold, but the breakout hit of this type was ABC's Stop the Music in 1948. Winning a prize generally required knowledge of what was being aired on the show at that moment, which led to criticism of the giveaway show as a form of "buying an audience". Giveaway shows were extremely popular through 1948 and 1949. They were often panned as low-brow, and an unsuccessful attempt was even made by the FCC to ban them (as an illegal lottery) in August 1949.[23] Broadcast production methods The RCA Type 44-BX microphone had two live faces and two dead ones. Thus actors could face each other and react. An actor could give the effect of leaving the room by simply moving their head toward the dead face of the microphone. The scripts were paper-clipped together. It has been disputed whether or not actors and actresses would drop finished pages to the carpeted floor after use. Radio stations Despite a general ban on use of recordings on broadcasts by radio networks through the late 1940s, "reference recordings" on phonograph disc were made of many programs as they were being broadcast, for review by the sponsor and for the network's own archival purposes. With the development of high-fidelity magnetic wire and tape recording in the years following World War II, the networks became more open to airing recorded programs and the prerecording of shows became more common. Local stations, however, had always been free to use recordings and sometimes made substantial use of pre-recorded syndicated programs distributed on pressed (as opposed to individually recorded) transcription discs. Recording was done using a cutting lathe and acetate discs. Programs were normally recorded at 331⁄3 rpm on 16 inch discs, the standard format used for such "electrical transcriptions" from the early 1930s through the 1950s. Sometimes, the groove was cut starting at the inside of the disc and running to the outside. This was useful when the program to be recorded was longer than 15 minutes so required more than one disc side. By recording the first side outside in, the second inside out, and so on, the sound quality at the disc change-over points would match and result in a more seamless playback. An inside start also had the advantage that the thread of material cut from the disc's surface, which had to be kept out of the path of the cutting stylus, was naturally thrown toward the centre of the disc so was automatically out of the way. When cutting an outside start disc, a brush could be used to keep it out of the way by sweeping it toward the middle of the disc. Well-equipped recording lathes used the vacuum from a water aspirator to pick it up as it was cut and deposit it in a water-filled bottle. In addition to convenience, this served a safety purpose, as the cellulose nitrate thread was highly flammable and a loose accumulation of it combusted violently if ignited. Most recordings of radio broadcasts were made at a radio network's studios, or at the facilities of a network-owned or affil
Seasoned comedian Monty Franklin has us in awe when he name-drops some of Hollywood's biggest comedians. Hear how he hangs out with Adam Sandler and Rob Schneider's crew, and lived in a house with John Cleese! We also find out about how Monty grew up as a skip amongst w0g mates, in particular the difference between w0gs and skips going through puberty. Plus, the hilarious moments where Monty's been a misunderstood Aussie in the States. See you at one of our shows? Get tickets: https://www.sooshimango.com/ CREDITS Hosts: Joe Salanitri, Carlo Salanitri, Andrew Manfre Producer: Liza Altarejos Audio Imager: Kelli Foulstone Follow the Sooshi Mango Podcast page on Instagram @sooshimangopodcast and on Tiktok @sooshimangopodcast See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
CLR Show 1973. Air Date October 11, 2024. The democrats have more ammunition to hurl back at the republicans––in the form of easily exposed and debunked republican lies about everything–– than any other presidential campaign in modern American history. It's now a question of refining and perfecting the messages that reveal those lies to all of America: that republicans are pro-police; that democratic scientists can make hurricanes effect only republican districts; that illegal Haitians are eating cats and dogs in Michigan; and that Donald actually cares about America. His only reason for running is to stay out of jail. And it's so easy to convincingly argue that he's guilty of everything he's been accused of. Barack Obama's appearance on the campaign train is a positive sign that the best of the democratic messaging is still to come. With Friday Co-Host, David Bach.
SHOCKTOBER HAS BEGUN! Well, according to Vince it has, and this week the amazing mind behind horror publisher Afterlight Comics, Joey Oliveira rejoins the ACP crew to talk about becoming a full time comics publisher! From humble beginnings to dealing with amazing international artists, working with Diamond, the importance of support structures and tabling at LOTS of conventions. This ones got it all and more, and is also full of scary recommendations, an epic list of kickstarters to check out and discussion about heavy subject matter in comics. This episode is so packed with goodies it's scary! Great stuff to check out this week - Joey Oliveira, Afterlight Comics, Ghost Island, Elena, 3.33, The Walking Dead, Earth 2 Podcast, Comic Mart, Our Monsters, Let Us In, The Long Death, Time Served, Ten, Manchild, Romanus Magicka, Masters Vol 2, Mega Maiden, The Thug Nerds, Kaiju Blues, A Haunting of Mars, Frankenstein Unconquered, Geek Girl, Immortal Offerings, The Fox Came In From the Woods, Bad Natures, Sokyo X, Big Guns, Third Bear Press, Wesley Griffiths, Grotesk, Evil Undead, Asylum Press, Hyde Street, Ghost Machine, CROK, Blood on the Tracks,
The Independent Characters - A Warhammer 40k Podcast | Radio
Episode 236 of The Independent Characters has us bringing out the Big Guns! We have not only the return of none other than Justin Keefer to the program, but we also bring in Campbell McLaughlin from the 40k Badcast as well as Phil Hall from The Glacial Geek for a round of The Warrior Lodge! We will cover a variety of topics in this lengthy episode. It will be a long episode but one that we feel will bring you more entertainment than its length would imply. We hope you enjoy! Time Stamps: 0:00:00 - Show Intro and Elite Choice 0:00:17 - Workbench and Hobby Progress 0:41:45 - Warrior Lodge: Part 1 1:58:45 - Warrior Lodg: Part 2 2:42:45 - Final Discussion and Show Closing Relevant Links: The Independent Characters Patreon Tablewar! - SPONSOR Herrick Games & Hobbies - SPONSOR Games Workshop The Black Library Trench Crusade The 40k Badcast The Glacial Geek Goobertown Hobbies video on YouTuber Bias
Episode 236 of The Independent Characters has us bringing out the Big Guns! We have not only the return of none other than Justin Keefer to the program, but we also bring in Campbell McLaughlin from the 40k Badcast as well as Phil Hall from The Glacial Geek for a round of The Warrior Lodge! We will cover a variety of topics in this lengthy episode. It will be a long episode but one that we feel will bring you more entertainment than its length would imply. We hope you enjoy! Time Stamps: 0:00:00 - Show Intro and Elite Choice 0:00:17 - Workbench and Hobby Progress 0:41:45 - Warrior Lodge: Part 1 1:58:45 - Warrior Lodg: Part 2 2:42:45 - Final Discussion and Show Closing Relevant Links: The Independent Characters Patreon Tablewar! - SPONSOR Herrick Games & Hobbies - SPONSOR Games Workshop The Black Library Trench Crusade The 40k Badcast The Glacial Geek Goobertown Hobbies video on YouTuber Bias
The underground comics scene is stronger than ever, but what kind of comic reader checks out what happens beyond the panel borders of their 'regular' titles? The ACP are joined by the gang at Black Ink Comix and Junked to talk about that, getting your comics into different venues and so much more. It's a fascinating look at the art of just making comics and putting them out into the world. Plus great indie books to check out, chat about the preservation of classic cartooning and even more small press chat. Great stuff to check out this week - Black Ink Comix, Zine Tales, Junked Comics, Leslie Wenlock, Dan Hughes, Squarefaced Comics, Suburban Antichrist, The Far Side, Tech Noir, Hundo Industries, Paperjam Comics Collective, John Wagner, Giles, Spaceboy and the Future King, Sir Edward Grey: Witchfinder, Big Guns #3, Boo Rudetoons, Sokyo X, Blam and Glam, Omega Black: Threat Level Ultra, Zak Cahill, Fanzines: the DIY revolution, Behold Behemoth, Specs
#bitcoin (30-09-2024) Game theory is at play right now in the greatest wealth transfer in living history - Those big guns who have always made their money by being at the forefront of innovation will not want to miss this one! MY VIEWS ARE MY OWN AND I MAKE NO PREDICTIONS OR GIVE ANY FINANCIAL ADVICE, SO DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING ANYTHING... & ONLY INVEST WHAT YOU COULD AFFORD TO LOSE! Subscribe to my ‘UK Bitcoiner' Backup Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3p4A_VqohTmbm44z4lgokg Buy Me A Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/ukbm Get 10k FREE sats on the Orange Pill App: https://signup.theorangepillapp.com/opa/UKBitcoinMaster UK Bitcoin Master Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/ukbitcoinmaster Nostr Public key: npub13kgncg54ccmnmvtljvergdvrd7m06zm32j2ayg542kaqayejrv7qg9wp2s UKBitcoinMaster video library: http://www.UKBitcoinMaster.com UKBitcoinMaster Interviews: http://www.BitcoinInterviews.com The Best Of Exmoor: https://www.thebestofexmoor.co.uk/298.html Thursdays Live Show: https://youtu.be/09XGKtTcKVg
The seven deadly sins...what are they? who wrote them? why were they written? Do they work? How have they lasted so long in our consciousness? When you have a set of questions like those, you need to call in the Big Guns which is why we are joined by Jason Bateman* and Ugly Child...they help answer all those questions and many many more. Have a listen and draw your own conclusions, we hope you enjoyed the conversation as much as we did! #sevenmovie, #rubikscube, #ZYNS, #UFO, #Aliens, #God, #wrathofkhan, #melbrooks, #morganfreeman, #wonderlick, #billysquire, #ledzepplin, cslewis, #god, #jasonbateman, #teenwolf, #catholicguilt, #stepsister, #historyoftheworld, #bradpitt
Top players with shiny pedigrees moved on to the quarter finals in the UGA Senior State Am at Hubbard GC. Pod sponsored by Goldenwest Credit Union.
Day one of the US Open saw Coco Gauff and Novak Djokovic begin their title defences successfully, Zheng Qinwen fight back to beat Amanda Anisimova, brutal defeats for Holger Rune and Sloane Stephens, and the end of Dominic Thiem's grand slam career. Catherine, David and Matt discuss all of that and much more. Join The Barge!Become a Friend of the Tennis Podcast to also help us to produce the show year-round, receive exclusive access to bonus podcasts throughout 2024, including Tennis Re-Lived and Grand Slam review shows, read Hannah's Column and watch monthly live shows on YouTube. Sign up to receive our Newsletter (daily at Slams and weekly the rest of the year, featuring Matt's Stat, mascot photos, predictions, and more)Follow us on TwitterFollow us on Instagram (@thetennispodcast)Subscribe to our YouTube channel.Check out our ShopRead our New York Times profile Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Recorded in the Palm Street Studio, on a Sunday. Bandit and Cookie share stories from the past including bail outs, coin flip blues, Bandit's cars, weird neighbor request, travels to Canada, and those wacky Canadians and more!
On this episode of the Marc Cox Morning Show. Marc & Kim welcomes: Johnathan Savage, Jim Talent, Erika Sanzi, Shannon Bream, and Griff Jenkins. We also have Kim on a Whim and In Other News with Ethan . Topics for today include: Bill Clinton takes the stage at night 3 of the DNC The Media's bias is showing If RFK Jr. endorses Trump will it hurt or help Trump The WHO declaring monkey pox a global health concern Could you vote for someone without knowing their platform? Why Kamala hasn't made many public appearances Thanks for listening and make sure to visit 971talk.com for all the latest news.
One of the best things, if not the number one best thing about, about doing the Comic Book Yeti Cryptid Creator Corner podcast, is making new comic book friends, and boy oh boy did Austin Allen Hamblin and I hit it off in our conversation about Big Guns Stupid Rednecks. Austin talks about his life in Iowa and what led to his love of comics. His newest comic, BGSR, is out August 28th from Band of Bards. BGSR, with art by Mariana Meira, is Austin's love letter to brotherly conflict, big action, cool aliens, and, of course, rednecks. Austin and I talk comics, country music, pro wrestling. This conversation has it all. Oh, and BGSR is a whole mess of fun that I thoroughly enjoyed. From the publisher After a string of unexplained disappearances in the southern parts of the United States retired detective Clint searches for his white trash brother. While searching for him he ends up being abducted… by aliens! He is now in the arena for Big Gunes Stupid Rednecks. Intergalactic cable's newest hit show which puts humans in laser gun gladiatorial combat and his brother is the reigning champion with 27 kills! Our episode sponsor 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 could have been an incremental improvement on the legendary T-55 instead became a revolutionary tank as a string of weird co-incidences and sliding doors moments lead to a the end of cannon rifling and the invalidation of steel armour. Todays western tanks with their composite armours and smooth bore cannons are the response to the Soviets development of the T-62, a tank we're going to get to know a whole lot better in this episode!
8/06/2024 PODCAST Episodes #1515 - #1517 GUESTS: Michael Faulkender, Corey Lewandowski, Dave Brat, Mike Brown, Rick Potter, Michael Patrick Leahy + YOUR CALLS! at 1-888-480-JOHN (5646) and GETTR Live! @jfradioshow #GodzillaOfTruth #TruckingTheTruth Want more of today's show? Episode #1515 Trump Aims Big Guns on the Communist and the Marxist Episode #1516 The Three Pillars of a Successful Economy All Collapsing Episode #1517 Go To Work https://johnfredericksradio.libsyn.com/
In this week's Take Your Power Back Show, “The Binding Oath: A Border Patrol Journey and the Mayorkas Effect” Kim Yeater speaks with freedom-loving Patriot, Joel Maldonado 28 year retired Supervisory Border Patrol Agent and Immigration Law expert. We are bringing in the Big Guns experts to our Texas Take Our Border Back Summit Saturday July 27th at Colonel Phil Waldrons“One Shot Distillery” in Dripping Springs and Joel is one of them. You want to know what's really going on with the border and why we have this National breech of security, a Dereliction of a duty and manufactured crises, then listen on in and join us in Texas!!! SUBSCRIBE & SHARE Take Our Border Back SummitGo to:https://TakeOurBorderBack.com GET YOUR RAFFLE TICKETS HEREDonate & Support The Take Our Border Back Summit at:https://GiveSendGo.com/TakeOurBorderBack SPONSOR, DONATE AND KEEP FREEDOM ALIVE:TakeYourPowerBackShow.com Get Access to Joel Maldonado's Book at:https://www.amazon.com/Binding-Oath-Border-Journey-Mayorkas/dp/1478781173
PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/SolelySingleton POORHAMMER MERCH! https://orchideight.com/collections/poorhammer HORDE MODE: https://discord.gg/ZwASQMqQZS On this week's episode, Brad and Eric are joined by Bricky to discuss the latest Dataslate changes for Warhammer 40k 10th Edition. Tune in to find out all about the second biggest game update of the week, only behind Elden Ring. THIS EPISODE: Warhammer Metawatch Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UhtLbiUne8o Dataslate Warhammer Community post: https://www.warhammer-community.com/2024/06/20/warhammer-40000-metawatch-downloading-the-new-balance-dataslate/ All the PDFs: https://www.reddit.com/r/WarhammerCompetitive/comments/1dk8tkj/june_24_dataslates_and_mfm/ TIMESTAMPS: 00:15 - Intro 02:35 - The DLC Delivery 10:30 - CORE RULES UPDATES 10:52 - New Movement 16:14 - Rules Clarifications 21:10 - Command Reroll 22:42 - Overhanging Models 25:40 - Dev Wounds and Hazardous 26:45 - Changes to Strats 28:43 - Infantry Movement and Big Guns never Tire 29:45 - Stratagems 37:12 - Adepta Sororitas 37:41 - Adeptus Custodes 40:04 - Adeptus Mechanicus 51:58 - Aeldari 52:04 - Agents of the Imperium 52:11 - Astra Militarum 55:42 - Space Marines Chapters 56:17 - Chaos Knights 59:12 - Chaos Space Marines 59:42 - Chaos Daemons 01:03:04 - Dark Angels 01:07:20 - Death Guard 01:08:24 - Deathwatch Drukhari and Genestealers 01:08:25 - Grey Knights 01:08:49 - Imperial Knights & Votann 01:08:55 - Necrons 01:09:57 - Tyranids Legend Units 01:10:30 - Orks 01:14:05 - Space Marines 01:15:34 - Space Wolves 01:19:16 - Tau Empire 01:19:39 - Thousand Sons 01:24:01 - Tyranids 01:32:30 - World Eaters 01:32:36 - Points Sororitas 01:37:12 - Points Custodes 01:37:58 - Points Mehcanicus 01:39:45 - Pointsdari 01:40:20 - Points of the Imperium 01:40:27 - Astra Milipoints 01:43:26 - Space Points 01:45:07 - Chapoints Knights 01:45:48 - Chaos Space Points 01:47:59 - Points Daemons 01:49:40 - Death Points 01:50:47 - Drupoints 01:52:02 - Pointstealer Cults 01:53:43 - Grey Points 01:54:22 - Imperial Points 01:54:31 - Leagues of Points 01:54:57 - Necroints 01:56:14 - Porks 01:57:41 - T'oints 02:00:21 - Thousand Points 02:02:34 - Pointnids 02:04:10 - Points Eaters 02:04:33 - Final Thoughts 02:11:12 - Outro SHOW LINKS: Poorhammer YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@thepoorhammerpodcast Poorhammer Website: https://www.solelysingleton.com/feed/poorhammer Our Producers for June: Blizted_Brain Brandon Janky DemolitionMann Doug Mielke DrLace Jan Geisse Joel Rachels Kiwifruitbird Matel Michael DiLullo Michael Sullivan Noel Rock Rook The Fucking God Emperor of Mankind Wargame Simulator Our Biggest Supporters: 4K_Fart 99Nines Adrian Franke Alex Fuja All knighter Andreas Andrew Kubicek BedlamsNemesis Beff Jezos Cameron R Christopher Gargagliano Chroma Veil Craig Judge Cube1359 Dash Gaming Devin Voiles Dominick Colacicco DragonEgg Duskers Edward Lawrence Ellis Corten Ethan Gerard Ezelvor Finn Smailes Gathering Clouds gungame4453 HappyBrontosaurus HypherionTV Iaian Iron Father Jacob Gibson Jarrett DiPerna Jaydon Joell kalex kevin colclough kylethewarrior L'Etranger (Lukus) Le BloupBloup Logan Bannach Madison Ramanama Matthew Tsushima Michael Melcher Mixolydius Monkey218 morfiel55 Nick DeFeo Nicky Nj harlan OwlBeeBark Pierce Protius7331 RetardedGyarados Retr0Brave Rookie XP RossWarlock Samuel Summerfield Sarah Hanson Scott Gray SeveredSage Sophia Of Luna Squerson The Marine who plays Tau Thecrusader13 TheUlamog VarthaMark Vaultguardian Warm Hotcakes Yassir ZAZOU Our Supporters: 10,001 Games 100 jonny Ace admiral stiffplank Aizengale Aizetsu Alan Townshend-Carter Alexander Prentiss Always go full OwO AMF2032 Andres Cedillo Andrew Pope anpespi Antares Anthony Annweiler Aristedes Hristopoulos ArmTheHomeless Asuka Lang.String Austin Baker Austin J Bell BadBadger Bald Blart BallisticLex Banana Dad Ben Benjamin Nafziger bigb293 Bitterness745 BlankSlate Brother Captain Corskadai BrownDog2 Bryan BulletSponge7 Caboose Call-me-vito Cameron Rigby cecropic Cephalopope Certified Unfunny César Almeida Chad Blackford Chaosheaven234 Chris Compton Chris H. 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Zachary Haben Zaveris Zeed Zeffy Zenith Contact Information: You can interact with Solely Singleton by joining the hosts on discord and Twitter to give input to improve the show. Feel free to email more detailed questions and suggestions to the show's email address. Your Hosts: Brad (DrRuler) & Eric (OnekuoSora) Brad's Twitter: https://twitter.com/DrRuler Eric's Twitter: https://twitter.com/OnekuoSora Show Email: thepoorhammerpodcast@gmail.com Show Website: http://www.poorhammer.com/ Edited by: Menino Berilio Show Mailing Address: PO Box 70893 Rochester Hills, MI 48307 Licensed Music Used By This Program: “Night Out” by LiQWYD CC BY “Thursday & Snow (Reprise)” by Blank & Kytt CC BY “First Class” by Peyruis CC BY “Funky Souls” by Amaria CC BY
PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/SolelySingleton POORHAMMER MERCH! https://orchideight.com/collections/poorhammer HORDE MODE: https://discord.gg/ZwASQMqQZS On this week's episode, Brad and Eric are joined by Bricky to discuss the latest Dataslate changes for Warhammer 40k 10th Edition. Tune in to find out all about the second biggest game update of the week, only behind Elden Ring. THIS EPISODE: Warhammer Metawatch Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UhtLbiUne8o Dataslate Warhammer Community post: https://www.warhammer-community.com/2024/06/20/warhammer-40000-metawatch-downloading-the-new-balance-dataslate/ All the PDFs: https://www.reddit.com/r/WarhammerCompetitive/comments/1dk8tkj/june_24_dataslates_and_mfm/ TIMESTAMPS: 00:15 - Intro 02:35 - The DLC Delivery 10:30 - CORE RULES UPDATES 10:52 - New Movement 16:14 - Rules Clarifications 21:10 - Command Reroll 22:42 - Overhanging Models 25:40 - Dev Wounds and Hazardous 26:45 - Changes to Strats 28:43 - Infantry Movement and Big Guns never Tire 29:45 - Stratagems 37:12 - Adepta Sororitas 37:41 - Adeptus Custodes 40:04 - Adeptus Mechanicus 51:58 - Aeldari 52:04 - Agents of the Imperium 52:11 - Astra Militarum 55:42 - Space Marines Chapters 56:17 - Chaos Knights 59:12 - Chaos Space Marines 59:42 - Chaos Daemons 01:03:04 - Dark Angels 01:07:20 - Death Guard 01:08:24 - Deathwatch Drukhari and Genestealers 01:08:25 - Grey Knights 01:08:49 - Imperial Knights & Votann 01:08:55 - Necrons 01:09:57 - Tyranids Legend Units 01:10:30 - Orks 01:14:05 - Space Marines 01:15:34 - Space Wolves 01:19:16 - Tau Empire 01:19:39 - Thousand Sons 01:24:01 - Tyranids 01:32:30 - World Eaters 01:32:36 - Points Sororitas 01:37:12 - Points Custodes 01:37:58 - Points Mehcanicus 01:39:45 - Aelpoints 01:40:20 - Points of the Imperium 01:40:27 - Astra Milipoints 01:43:26 - Space Points 01:45:07 - Chapoints Knights 01:45:48 - Chaos Space Points 01:47:59 - Points Daemons 01:49:40 - Death Points 01:50:47 - Drupoints 01:52:02 - Pointstealer Cults 01:53:43 - Grey Points 01:54:22 - Imperial Points 01:54:31 - Leagues of Points 01:54:57 - Necroints 01:56:14 - Porks 01:57:41 - T'oints 02:00:21 - Thousand Points 02:02:34 - Pointnids 02:04:10 - Points Eaters 02:04:33 - Final Thoughts 02:11:12 - Outro SHOW LINKS: Poorhammer YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@thepoorhammerpodcast Poorhammer Website: https://www.solelysingleton.com/feed/poorhammer Our Producers for June: Blizted_Brain Brandon Janky DemolitionMann Doug Mielke DrLace Jan Geisse Joel Rachels Kiwifruitbird Matel Michael DiLullo Michael Sullivan Noel Rock Rook The Fucking God Emperor of Mankind Wargame Simulator Our Biggest Supporters: 4K_Fart 99Nines Adrian Franke Alex Fuja All knighter Andreas Andrew Kubicek BedlamsNemesis Beff Jezos Cameron R Christopher Gargagliano Chroma Veil Craig Judge Cube1359 Dash Gaming Devin Voiles Dominick Colacicco DragonEgg Duskers Edward Lawrence Ellis Corten Ethan Gerard Ezelvor Finn Smailes Gathering Clouds gungame4453 HappyBrontosaurus HypherionTV Iaian Iron Father Jacob Gibson Jarrett DiPerna Jaydon Joell kalex kevin colclough kylethewarrior L'Etranger (Lukus) Le BloupBloup Logan Bannach Madison Ramanama Matthew Tsushima Michael Melcher Mixolydius Monkey218 morfiel55 Nick DeFeo Nicky Nj harlan OwlBeeBark Pierce Protius7331 RetardedGyarados Retr0Brave Rookie XP RossWarlock Samuel Summerfield Sarah Hanson Scott Gray SeveredSage Sophia Of Luna Squerson The Marine who plays Tau Thecrusader13 TheUlamog VarthaMark Vaultguardian Warm Hotcakes Yassir ZAZOU Our Supporters: 10,001 Games 100 jonny Ace admiral stiffplank Aizengale Aizetsu Alan Townshend-Carter Alexander Prentiss Always go full OwO AMF2032 Andres Cedillo Andrew Pope anpespi Antares Anthony Annweiler Aristedes Hristopoulos ArmTheHomeless Asuka Lang.String Austin Baker Austin J Bell BadBadger Bald Blart BallisticLex Banana Dad Ben Benjamin Nafziger bigb293 Bitterness745 BlankSlate Brother Captain Corskadai BrownDog2 Bryan BulletSponge7 Caboose Call-me-vito Cameron Rigby cecropic Cephalopope Certified Unfunny César Almeida Chad Blackford Chaosheaven234 Chris Compton Chris H. Christopher Andrews Christopher Hutchinson Christopher Polly Christopher Winn CodyHawk Caster Cole Robotshenanigans Con Connor Melville Corran Gautier CrankDaddy Crisis Faith Damian Preciado Dan H. Bentsen Daniel Ashe DankBonkRipper69 DaRobotGuy13 Dicedragon777 dixoniii Dr. Battle Drad DrCake Drowsy Eamon echoes act zero Ed Yoon Edgemassa EldritchBee Emily Sturdy EnchanterAedan Eric Kelly Eric Lapchenko Ethan Mazurek Evan Langlois Falcon Kirby Fedora Appreciator Floof_Marine Florian A. Fooby Gaige Parrott Gareef Garrett Seaton Gaterpiller gbrell Geoffrey Bowser George McC GilgameshVS. Gort Grant Lambert grenade0219 Gunfrigginbelieveable Harlan Swiftmane64 Henry Podgorski IMayBeCanadian Imogen Islingr317 Ivan Kong J Jabbar Haider Jack Clifford Jack Porter Jack Saggese Jacob Cantor Jake Lancaster Jake Palicki James Abell James W. Orkshop Jared Kemmerling Jarrod Williams Jawnny JC Jeff JeFF Stumpo Jeff Wong JimElone Joey Weela John Lillo John Nakar Jonathan Novak Jordan Strunk Joshua Galvez Joshua Rosenthal Julie Low Justen Davidson Kaalia Kaden Matuszewski Kawaii demon cat AJ Kazarik Killian715 Killowatt KitsuneCurator Kizna Kory Anderson Krashnox Krimpey Krippe kyhariel Lame One Landscape Laurie Ruberl LB Trooper Leo Boyce Leopard Local Thallid lordmilitant Louis Finney LuckyLexi Maciej Piwowarczyk MadMax997 Mae Ember Malte Mao Marco Fubini Marcos Pereira Mason lloyd Mathieu Rodrigue Matthew Burke Max McFloss michael ernst Michael Frazier Michael Kratochvil michael robinson Michael Vincent Mikal Mandichak Nathan Simas Nicholas Nussbaum Nick Podrebarac Night Running NightTrace Norman Conquest OG Fili Ol' Slappy OlivierSC oreio8991 Otto Canon P1 Press Start Patrick Patrick Moore Paul Skonieczny Paul Wilson Peter Bennett Phrenologer Planetgirl Platinum Alias Pokemon12602 PrawnPapi Promethius Ramen kun Rasmus Eriksson ratbeast83 Red_Tx RevolverGunman Riley Westfall Robb H McConnell Robert Leasure RPGrenade Ryan Shaw Sailehaem Samdroid Scrubbing SCRUNGUS Sean Lein Selcar Seraph XIII Shady Cyanide shashi Sidertrune Sir Nicolas des Cocotiers Sleazy P Martini Snot Lite SofaLordOfCouch Sol SolidBlock Solonite Someradom Person Soupy Sucks Spencer Noell Spootyone Stephen Witham Steven Walsh Stinger123 Stormy superkeaton T-Diddy Teodor Mintov That Little Skaven thatmoiety The2player TheBustinJustin themooserix Thenoble117 TheNuclearEagle TheOOFVideoWasPOGSoThisIsWhy Thomas Williams tim albon TMD Gaming tongole Karanu Trey Holguin Trog Turbo Waifu TurquoiseTempest TyrisUnbreakable UnkindlyRook VinosScum Voegelnator VValmartgreeter Waymaker Werner 'Illindi' Wallman WhiteHammer Will Miller Will Wagner willisbetter XsandmanunitedX . Zachary Haben Zaveris Zeed Zeffy Zenith Contact Information: You can interact with Solely Singleton by joining the hosts on discord and Twitter to give input to improve the show. Feel free to email more detailed questions and suggestions to the show's email address. Your Hosts: Brad (DrRuler) & Eric (OnekuoSora) Brad's Twitter: https://twitter.com/DrRuler Eric's Twitter: https://twitter.com/OnekuoSora Show Email: thepoorhammerpodcast@gmail.com Show Website: http://www.poorhammer.com/ Edited by: Menino Berilio Show Mailing Address: PO Box 70893 Rochester Hills, MI 48307 Licensed Music Used By This Program: “Night Out” by LiQWYD CC BY “Thursday & Snow (Reprise)” by Blank & Kytt CC BY “First Class” by Peyruis CC BY “Funky Souls” by Amaria CC BY
On this hour of the W&J show, the boys talk bisexual men in college, and the age old question with men and their pistols.
Mariners win again- that's TWO straight at Yankee Stadium, securing a split of the series at the very worst. How does Bucky classify Tuesday's win? Bucky brought out the Magic Shell chocolate sauce. Now that's BIG! The team is 27-22 :30- Angie Mentink (ROOT Sports) makes her weekly visit to talk unexpected heroes and Julio's struggles. :45- Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever are in town to face the Storm in front of a sellout crowd at CPA. And Chuck has an idea for Jaxen Mentink's Bachelor party… we didn't say it was a good idea.
Javon Roberts with the Bermuda PGA tournament tries to convince Wiggy golfers are athletes
Big Wednesday! We want to hear your bad pet names, and it's time to break out the Big Guns... Jack's out tonight delivering bin stickersSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Gav and Murray discuss all the latest team news ahead of a compelling weekend of rugby in the Champions Cup and Challenge Cup. The lads also chat about Antoine Frisch's declaration that he wants to play for France and what it means for Munster.
On Thursday's Rugby Daily, Richie McCormack brings you the team news ahead of Good Friday's top of the table clash in the URC with Leinster up against the Bulls. Louis Rees-Zammit appears to be entering the NFL right at the top. And Danny Care has shunned the chance to join the Premiership exodus to France.
In this month's episode we look at some saucy nuns with horrific habits, in the movies Torn Priestess, Satánico Pandemonium, Benedetta, Nude Nuns with Big Guns and The Other Hell. Plus we deal with one listener's sticky problem in our Horror Helpdesk segment, which YOU can contact at dx5podcast@gmail.com!
#bitcoin (26-02-2024) They are not gonna shout it from the roof tops, but the big guns are not only here, they are championing Bitcoin more and more… and even though some are doing all they can to discredit Bitcoin, we are most definitely winning. Maybe not today, tomorrow, next week or next month, but for sure we will win! MY VIEWS ARE MY OWN AND I MAKE NO PREDICTIONS OR GIVE ANY FINANCIAL ADVICE, SO DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING ANYTHING... & ONLY INVEST WHAT YOU COULD AFFORD TO LOSE! Subscribe to my ‘UK Bitcoiner' Backup Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3p4A_VqohTmbm44z4lgokg Get on the Orange Pill App: https://signup.theorangepillapp.com/opa/UKBitcoinMaster All UK Bitcoin Master Links: https://linktr.ee/ukbitcoinmaster Nostr Public key: npub13kgncg54ccmnmvtljvergdvrd7m06zm32j2ayg542kaqayejrv7qg9wp2s UKBitcoinMaster video library: http://www.UKBitcoinMaster.com UKBitcoinMaster Interviews: http://www.BitcoinInterviews.com The Best Of Exmoor: https://www.thebestofexmoor.co.uk/298.html Thursdays Live Show: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L65FlZG2fuY
DownloadWelcome to LOTC episode 359!! This week we are back with Black Glove Mysteries and Mortis Vision. First up is Ian Irza and GregaMortis finishing their two part series of Director Duccio Tessari's films 1974 Puzzle and 1973 Big Guns. Are these films worth the watch? Do they stack up in the world of Giallo? Listen and see what Ian and Greg think. Lastly, GregaMortis and the Twisted Temptress finish their look into Stephen Kings Kingdom Hospital. You will want to listen to the end as Pearl and Greg are asking for your input and feedback for upcoming episodes. Please leave all your feedback here or email GregaMortis at gregamortis666@gmail.com. We want to thank each and every one of you for your continued love and support for LOTC. Be sure to get your favorite snacks and beverages ready and journey with us through Land Of The Creeps!!HELP KEEP HORROR ALIVE!!BLACK GLOVE MYSTERIESMOVIE REVIEWS1974 PUZZLEIAN : 8GREG : 81973 BIG GUNSIAN : 9GREG : 9.5LINKS FOR DOUBLE DOUBLEGregaMortisFacebookTwitterLand Of The Creeps Group PageLand Of The Creeps Fan PageJay Of The Dead's New Horror Movie PodcastYoutubeInstagramEmailLetterboxdTwisted Temptress LinkLetterboxdIAN IRZA LINKSBLOG SITEFACEBOOKTWITTERINSTAGRAMLOTC Hotline Number1-804-569-56821-804-569-LOTCLOTC Intro is provided by Andy Ussery, Below are links to his social mediaEmail:FacebookTwitterOutro music provided by Greg Whitaker Below is Greg's Twitter accountTwitterFacebookLespecial FacebookLespecial Website
Howard. Jordan and Lloyd talk FA Cup draws, straying captains, and preview the match against Burnley as Vinny returns once more. Some big calls for Pep. *This is the first 15 minutes of the show. For the full episode, and all our other content on the 93:20 player, you can join below - for less than the price of a pint of beer each month.* ninetythreetwenty.com/9320-player/about-9320-player/
On Thursday's Rugby Daily, Richie McCormack brings you news of the doping ban meted out to Springbok World Cup winner, Elton Jantjies. Connacht have named their team for Friday night's big reunion with Pat Lam and Bristol, and we hear from Finlay Bealham ahead of that game. Plus, Joe Schmidt is set to land a major international job.
The first round is finally over! Catherine, David and Matt look back on day three which saw Iga Swiatek come through a tough test against Sofia Kenin, Carlos Alcaraz and Elena Rybakina headline the night session, Jack Draper win his first ever five set match and then vomit into a bin, and Emma Raducanu making a winning Grand Slam return. There's also discussion about ATP players 'no commenting' questions about Alexander Zverev being elected to the ATP player council and news that Rafael Nadal has become an ambassador for the Saudi Tennis Federation. On LocationWe are proud to be sponsored by On Location, the premium hospitality and experience provider, throughout the Australian Open.And for the first time ever, On Location will be the Official Hospitality Provider of The Olympic and Paralympic Games Paris 2024.That means that you can gain unparalleled access to the Olympic Games when they take place in Paris from Friday 26th July to Sunday 11th August 2024.Packages can be purchased online, or a dedicated On Location team member can contact you directly to create your perfect package.On Location at The Olympic GamesOUR LINKS:Become a Friend of the Tennis Podcast to help us to produce the show year-round, and receive exclusive access to bonus podcasts throughout 2024, including Tennis Re-Lived and Grand Slam review shows, as well as monthly live shows on YouTube. Sign up to receive our Newsletter (daily at Slams and weekly the rest of the year, featuring Matt's Stat, mascot photos, predictions, and more)Follow us on TwitterFollow us on Instagram (@thetennispodcast)Subscribe to our YouTube channel.Check out our ShopRead our New York Times profileTennis Podcast Terminology Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, Sean, Leedham, and Tim strap on their servo harnesses and grab for the BIG GUNS, we review the heaviest weapons available; the heavy weapons of Necromunda.Episode Contributors:Seanhttps://www.instagram.com/alwaysstrikesfirst/Leedhamhttps://www.instagram.com/leedhamtekani/Timhttps://www.instagram.com/eyeofhoruspod/Gang Bang Group:https://www.facebook.com/groups/166222270782073/EOH Patreon:https://www.instagram.com/eyeofhoruspod/
Time Stamps: 00:00:00 Community Guest Intros 00:05:00 Phil Spencer CONFIRMS NO Xbox Game Pass On Playstation or Nintendo, IGN Doesn't Retract Their Story, WHY? 00:50:00 Phil Spencer Confirms Starfield Now Has 12M+ Players 01:15:00 Xbox Bringing Their BIG GUNS To Game Awards! What Do WE WANT To See? 01:45:00 Panel Outros and Special Message to the Community! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/craig-ravitch/support
With his back against the wall, and really not wanting another "paranormal" case Brandon decides to call in the "Big Guns"........ well not really that big.
The Dadley Boyz preview tonight's Tuesday Night War and discuss...WWE bring the big guns to NXT!Title Tuesday on AEW Dynamite!Adam Copeland's first AEW match!Swerve Strickland vs. Bryan Danielson!Who will win the war?!ENJOY!Follow us on Twitter:@AdamWilbourn@MichaelHamflett@MSidgwick@WhatCultureWWEFor more awesome content, check out: whatculture.com/wwe Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.