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Psychic cyborg stripper twins VS the Blue Death! Otherwise known as I Know Who Killed Me... a notorious film from 2007 starring a young and rebellious Lindsay Lohan. Known to some as one of the worst movies ever made, but to others a skillful modern take on the classic 70's italian Giallo genre - I Know Who Killed Me is a breath of fresh air for us! Prepare for an unpredictably gory, strangely funny, and absurdly edited flop-turned-masterpiece!
Cholera was knocking on practically every other door
It can kill you in a matter of hours. And it's a horrible way to go.
In Episode Two, co-hosts Gina and Christyn help you figure out how to think outside the box when school moves off the beaten path and it feels like education has taken a back seat. They assure you it hasn't! By using the two Magic Questions, you can relax, knowing that learning has taken place – you just have to change the context. 1:10 – Will it blend?2:15 – When homeschool moves off the beaten path, we often question “Will it count?”3:44 – Education happens around us all the time4:04 – Gina's “a-ha!” moment about homeschooling: birdwatching7:22 – Christyn's “a-ha!” moment: infectious disease9:06 – Just because you didn't plan it doesn't mean it doesn't count9:30 – Differentiating between “school” and “education”12:18 – The Magic Questions14:00 – Jotting down all your daily activities gives you a baseline for seeing where the learning happened15:00 – The craziest thing Christyn counted as homeschool hours: Marvel movies19:26 – Gina plays “Will it count?” in high school with geocaching and writing25:03 – Change the context to switch a subject from elective/non-core hours to core subjects25:40 – Gina's superpower of making any learning count as core hours helps Christyn switch an elective30:23 – Asking yourself “Will it count?” opens up all the possibilities Links from this episode:Will It Blend?: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnFP0IU4gpnmcLnVzDLUtfwGeocaching.com: https://www.geocaching.comThe Great Trouble: A Mystery of London, the Blue Death, and a Boy Called Eel, by Deborah Hopkinson: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17061488-the-great-troubleCrash Course Sociology videos: https://thecrashcourse.com/courses/sociology Thanks so much for joining us today. If something we've said made an impression, please leave us a review on iTunes or Stitcher or anyplace you listen to this podcast. Reviews are how we can share about the podcast with others and create a stronger community, so just go to the app and drop us a line.If you'd like to continue the conversation, you can find us on Facebook and Instagram – our handle is OnlySchoolers.If you'd like to support the podcast financially, we invite you to join our OnlySchoolers Patreon community at www.patreon.com/onlyschoolers where you have access to special content, posts, downloads, and other goodies.
Frank and Heather discuss more about a mid-80's episode of The Equalizer, The Goop Lab, Blue Death, and Yellow Fever.
It is 1918. As ships sail up the Clyde bringing soldiers home for leave in the final months of the First World War, soldiers step onto home soil for the first time in months. Something else steps off the ships with them the Blue Death... the Spanish Flu has arrived in Scotland. -- -- -- -- -- -- -- CREDITS This episode was written and produced by Michael Park for Be Quiet Media. Additional voices in this episode were Jamie Mowat, Chris Moriarty and Mitch Bain. Mitch is taking a well earned break so the music for this episode was provided by Amulets, Loopop and of course our Bubbly Snake break music is by Mitch Bain.
I'm Stat, and this is Chilled. Listen in as I take on the story of the Goiania Disaster, one of the worst radiological disasters in history! If you wish to support Chilled, please leave a 5-star rating and review on iTunes, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. If you wish to directly support the growth of the show, please visit us at Patreon and consider giving a small monthly donation. I will be donating 10% of everything earned over $1,000 to charity. Follow us on Instagram and Twitter, and please tune in weekly every Tuesday wherever you listen to podcasts. Email me at statchilledpodcast@gmail.com Check out the 157-page report on Goiania HERE --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/chilled-with-stat/support
The disease detectives investigate the theory that the Spanish flu originated in Etaples, Northern France in 1916. Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum and Hannah Mawdsley @HannahMawdsley With: Professor John Oxford, Blizzard Institute, Queen Mary College, London. Scientific Director, Oxford Media Medicine www.oxfordmediamedicine.co Glyn Prysor, Chief Historian at the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. @glynprysor Find out more about Etaples Military Cemetery: www.cwgc.org/find/find-cemeteries-and-memorials/56500/etaples-military-cemetery Dr. Michael Worobey, Louise Foucar Marshall Science Research Professor, Department Head Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona. www.eeb.arizona.edu/people/dr-michael-worobey-department-head The series is produced by Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com Readings by: Jessie Brooks www.jessiebrooks.co.uk and Will Huggins https://voiceovers.mandy.com/uk/voice-artist/profile/will-huggins-1 ‘Going Viral’ is supported by Wellcome www.wellcome.ac.uk / @wellcometrust Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod
The disease detectives investigate the theory that the Spanish flu originated in Etaples, Northern France in 1916. Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum and Hannah Mawdsley @HannahMawdsley With: Professor John Oxford, Blizzard Institute, Queen Mary College, London. Scientific Director, Oxford Media Medicine www.oxfordmediamedicine.co Glyn Prysor, Chief Historian at the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. @glynprysor Find out more about Etaples Military Cemetery: www.cwgc.org/find/find-cemeteries-and-memorials/56500/etaples-military-cemetery Dr. Michael Worobey, Louise Foucar Marshall Science Research Professor, Department Head Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona. www.eeb.arizona.edu/people/dr-michael-worobey-department-head The series is produced by Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com Readings by: Jessie Brooks www.jessiebrooks.co.uk and Will Huggins https://voiceovers.mandy.com/uk/voice-artist/profile/will-huggins-1 ‘Going Viral’ is supported by Wellcome www.wellcome.ac.uk / @wellcometrust Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod
The disease detectives investigate the theory that the Spanish flu originated in Etaples, Northern France in 1916. Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum and Hannah Mawdsley @HannahMawdsley With: Professor John Oxford, Blizzard Institute, Queen Mary College, London. Scientific Director, Oxford Media Medicine www.oxfordmediamedicine.co Glyn Prysor, Chief Historian at the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. @glynprysor Find out more about Etaples Military Cemetery: www.cwgc.org/find/find-cemeteries-and-memorials/56500/etaples-military-cemetery Dr. Michael Worobey, Louise Foucar Marshall Science Research Professor, Department Head Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona. www.eeb.arizona.edu/people/dr-michael-worobey-department-head The series is produced by Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com Readings by: Jessie Brooks www.jessiebrooks.co.uk and Will Huggins https://voiceovers.mandy.com/uk/voice-artist/profile/will-huggins-1 ‘Going Viral’ is supported by Wellcome www.wellcome.ac.uk / @wellcometrust Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod
In this episode, Tori Lieggi introduces us to a unique and quirky travel book (9:31), and Kristi Cates recommends a stack of young adult historical fiction (17:16). Plus, we interview visiting antique and fine art appraiser Mark Moran (11:17). Mark Moran's website is here. Tori recommends: Atlas Obscura by Joshua Foehr, Dylan Thuras, and Ella Morton Kristi recommends: The Great Trouble: A Mystery of London, the Blue Death, and a Boy Called Eel by Deborah Hopkinson The Wicked and the Just by J. Anderson Coats Flygirl by Sherri L. Smith Under a Painted Sky by Stacey Lee Email us! Tweet at us!
The Fat-Burning Man Show by Abel James: The Future of Health & Performance
Do you know how much sleep you really need? I’m here today with sleep specialist Dr. Roger Washington, MD to help figure it out.
Fat-Burning Man by Abel James (Video Podcast): The Future of Health & Performance
Do you know how much sleep you really need? I’m here today with sleep specialist Dr. Roger Washington, MD to help figure it out.
The Fat-Burning Man Show by Abel James: The Future of Health & Performance
Did you know that koalas sleep 22 hours every night? On the other hand, giraffes sleep just under 2 hours, usually in brief 5-10 minute snooze sessions. So, how do you know how much sleep you really need? I'm here today with sleep specialist Dr. Roger Washington, MD to help figure it out.
“Pas de Deux a music box for two” – our dance by the light of the moon, Indi reviews Cathie Sue: “The Notorious Pagan Jones” by Nina Berry Jenny: “The Great Trouble: A Mystery of London, the Blue Death, and…Read more →
Hopkinson, Deborah. THE GREAT TROUBLE : A MYSTERY OF LONDON, THE BLUE DEATH, AND A BOY CALLED EEL
We talk with Deborah Hopkinson, author of Into the Firestorm and A Boy Called Dickens, about her brand new novel, The Great Trouble: a Mystery of London, the Blue Death, and a Boy Called Eel.
Join us this week as we share some podcasting from the Las Vegas Strip, test/taste of Eli Roths Blood and Blue Death, interview with fellow Hoodslammer El Chupacabra while Shelly does cardio the entire time! #makeitwork
The Lone Reader; one librarian talks about the books he reads. The Blue Death by Robert D. Morris Music: Quintet No. 3, by Giovanni Cambini Performer: Soni Ventorum Woodwind Quintet time: 0:01:44 size: 1.625 mb