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In this episode of Gangland Wire, retired Kansas City Police Intelligence Unit detective Gary Jenkins takes a deep dive with his guest Matt into the assassination of Carmine Galante—one of the most infamous mob hits in American history. Matt co-authored a book titled Made In Long Island Matt begins by analyzing the controversial footage captured at the Ravenite Social Club shortly after the murder. While federal investigators interpreted the scene as a celebration by those responsible, Matt challenges that narrative. He breaks down the body language and behavior of key figures, including Bruno Indelicato, suggesting the footage actually reflects anger and exclusion—not guilt. The episode introduces guest Matt, co-author of Made on Long Island, who provides an insider's perspective on the inner workings of organized crime. Matt prefers to not give his last name. Together, they explore how the Galante hit fit into a broader power struggle within the Bonanno crime family and beyond. Matt cowrote this book with Bartley Scarbrough. Matt tells a little-known story about Mob dealings with Fireworks around the 4th of July. One story is about a closed store and how they made up for the closed store and gave a fireworks show on the 5th and most of the kids never knew. The conversation expands to include major mob figures such as John Gotti and Sonny Red Indelicato, examining the shifting alliances and rivalries that shaped the events leading up to the assassination. Matt shares firsthand stories of mob life, detailing how communication relied on coded language and payphones—tools that kept operations hidden in plain sight. Gary and Matt dissect the planning behind the hit, revealing a calculated operation involving surveillance, weapon disposal, and carefully constructed alibis. They also address the aftermath, focusing on law enforcement's inability to definitively link the crime to certain suspects—raising questions about whether individuals like Indelicato were wrongly accused. A central theme emerges: the gap between official narratives and the complex realities of organized crime. Matt argues that investigative misinterpretations—particularly by federal authorities—led to flawed conclusions and, potentially, unjust prosecutions. This episode challenges long-held assumptions about the Galante murder, offering listeners a more nuanced view of Mafia politics, loyalty, and betrayal. It's a detailed reexamination of a landmark mob hit—and a reminder that the truth is often far more complicated than the headlines. Hit me up on Venmo for a cup of coffee or a shot and a beer @ganglandwire Click here to “buy me a cup of coffee” Subscribe to the website for weekly notifications about updates and other Mob information. To go to the store or make a donation or rent Ballot Theft: Burglary, Murder, Coverup, click here To rent ‘Brothers against Brothers’ or ‘Gangland Wire,’ the documentaries click here. To purchase one of my books, click here. Transcript [0:00] Yeah, if you could just hold the frame right there, I think it’s very important [0:03] to set the stage of what we have here. This is a meeting of Bonanno crime family members, very high up ones, in front of Neil Delacroche’s Gambino headquarters on Mulberry Street, known as the Ravenite. Now, the feds used this tape to say that Bruno Indelicato was part of a conspiracy to murder Galante and that this tape shows the celebration. It does not. This tape is an absolute beef being put in primarily by Sonny Red and Delicato because he was supposed to do the hit jointly with the Gambino family led by John Gotti. He’s furious because at this point in time, he thinks he’s left out of the head. And just before you roll it, this video basically proves to every law enforcement person and every Cosa Nostra member that the people in this video did not do the murder. You don’t go out in Cosa Nostra, commit one of the biggest hits ever, a triple homicide, and then show your face an hour later. It does not work that way. So if you roll the tape, we can see some of the body language on these guys as well. [1:08] The guy in the white is Stefano Canone. He is the family’s consigliere, [1:13] which is technically third in charge, an advisory role. He is already at the Ravenite when everyone else arrives. A key figure in this is Sonny Red in Delicato Wearing a black jacket you’ll see His son is in the white shirt there The younger fellow that’s Bruno in Delicato The only guy that was convicted of this crime Now look at what’s going on here This is not a celebration They’re in the face of him And they’re furious And stop right there if you could, The gentleman in the black jacket right there. [1:44] Sonny, Red, and Delicato, he takes a couple steps back from his consigliere, which is technically his boss, and he turns around in fury, and he’s angry because, again, his team, led by him, was left off the head. Notice also, if you want to keep rolling the tape, he goes to his glasses. This is an absolute sign of anger, as per our body language experts, who, by the way, don’t even know who these people are. The only thing they know is this is a dispute, not a celebration. You notice that when he puts his hand up by his glasses? Now he thinks a little bit better of it because that’s his boss he’s talking to. And that’s a very good sign here. Again, another angle of this is in the Pizza Connection case in 1985. [2:27] Not only in the indictment, but also in FBI testimony, when asked who killed Carmen Galante, they did not say it was Bruno and Delicato and two other masked assailants. They said it was three unknown masked assailants that killed him. That’s what their testimony was. Everybody on the Cosa Nostra side and on the law enforcement side knows what this is. No mob guy commits a triple murder and then goes out to run to a place that we used to refer to as the FBI screen test, which was the Ravenite in Lower Manhattan and Mulberry Street. Everybody knows it, and it’s about time the story gets told, [3:05] and you’re going to see a lot more of this. Hey, all you wiretappers. Good to be back here in studio of Gangland Wire. This is Gary Jenkins, retired Kansas City Police Intelligence Unit Sergeant, and I have a guy here who has a different story and what he would say the real story behind the murder of Carmine Galante. Now, guys, there’s three monumental hits in organized crime history, I would say. The Galante hit… [3:33] Big because of the cigar in his mouth and that picture that was captured, but he was also an important hit in Mob. Now we also had the Anastasia. Anastasia was important and it was also got important, more important because of the photographs. Paul Castellano was important, I think more because of John Gotti than anything, but Carmine Galante and Matt here knows a lot about that hit and a lot about an alternative story to what really happened as it was reported it in the media. So welcome, Matt. Thank you so much for having me on, Gary. I really love your program. I’m happy to be here. All right, Matt, you got a book made on Long Island. Let’s just show everybody the copy of that. There you go, guys. There’s a copy of the book. It’s available on Amazon right now, right, Matt? [4:25] It certainly is. Thank you for putting it up. And one little sentence I’ll draw attention to at the bottom is, no AI was used in this. I know a lot of books are coming out now and people using AI, which I personally think is garbage. This is all handwritten and 440 pages of story after story. Yeah, there’s a lot to it. I guess you were writing under the name of Bartley Scarborough. Yeah, Bart is a good guy. He’s a friend of mine who actually started organizing this with me literally about 15, 20 years ago. Just to give everybody the timetable, we could not release this stuff till now because everybody with criminal culpability is now deceased or one guy is doing life in jail without the possibility of parole for another crime. That’s why we waited so long. Bart organized this stuff. He had me go over the thoughts. And he actually, I don’t know how much he’s going to want to talk about it, but he actually was there when we spoke to some of our friends who gave us extreme detail about this. But in terms of the actual writing, I actually penned it all myself with Bart’s assistant. All right, great. And as you know by now, it’s no easy task to write, especially 400-some pages. That’s a lot of words. That’s a lot of work, guys. Trust me, that is a lot of work. [5:41] You’ve got to keep going over it. Good writing is hard because it takes about three rewritings to actually get it out. Did you find that? [5:51] I did. It’s definitely extremely hard to do with volumes like this going over the past so many years. And plus getting the information from our friends, it was extremely hard to do. It was very time consuming. And I need to stress for the audience, I was not present when any of these major crimes like the homicides went down. I was present for the other things in the book, horse racing, which I’m sure we’re going to talk about later, major fireworks sales. But I need the audience to know that I was not present when the homicides went down, even though I was a juvenile at the time, and that from the proceeds of the fireworks sale and the horse racing, I did not pocket the proceeds like other people did. I know there’s lawyers out there, and I’m paying some $1,000 an hour. I apologize to people, but the lawyers told me 100 times I need to make those facts clear. Okay. All right. You did not do any of this, but you were right next to people who did do this. So we’re talking about firsthand information, correct? That is correct. Now, again, I was there for some of the stuff. I was there for some of the entity in the book. I was definitely there for the major league fireworks deals and participated in those. The horse racing that we’ll get to later, I was there for that. But in terms of the hard stuff, the stuff with no statute of limitations, homicides, I was not there. [7:12] So tell me about these group of guys that you grew up with, that you started doing some of these things. We have some kind of interesting personalities in there. Tell us about those guys. Oh my gosh. We had a real collection of characters is the only way to put it. Now, growing up when we were very young, let’s call it 11, 12, 13, we all really had two goals in mind. We wanted to make money and we wanted to play sports at that age. And that’s what we did. We made money on anything, paper routes, shoveling snow, raking leaves. And what happened was being so competitive, we got into a feud with another group in the same town. Now, there’s no way around it. We were idiots at this age. Some of our guys were carrying guns. Two of the guys in particular, their parents, what we call, were on the job, which means they were cops. So they had access to guns. Another guy was able to get us guns. So the bottom line is you’ve got 13-year-old kids who… That have no fuse carrying guns. Here is where it all started. [8:11] My uncle, like my cousin’s dad, came to one of the baseball games, and we had no idea that he knew the other coaches. And all of a sudden, they realized these kids are carrying guns. They’re going to kill each other. So they sat us down, disarmed us. It’s a pretty funny thing that’s in the book. I remember my uncle saying, whoever has a weapon, you put it on the table right now. I take a sock out of my pocket. He’s, what’s wrong with you? He goes, I asked for weapons, not your dirty laundry. I go, there’s a 25 inside the sock. He was shocked. But what they did was this. They disarmed us. They said, you want to kill each other with fists? Go at it. But we have a better idea. Why don’t you sell fireworks? Why don’t you work for us? You’ll make money doing this. First year, we only had about a week before the 4th of July. We sold out a couple pallets that they had. Now, the second year, I said, can we get these same prices? They said absolutely We went nuts to sell this stuff We ended up with an order for $85,000, And that’s how the order was so big That John Gotti got brought into this He was their boss at the time That’s how we met him And again, people say John Gotti, John Gotti Well to us at the time John Gotti was the same as John Smith The name meant nothing to us. [9:26] So some of these guys, older guys that you started dealing with that sat you down were relatives. There were members of the Gambino family then of Gotti’s crew. That is correct. Yep. Yep. They actually had two guys out of the three guys that sat us down. And by the way, none of us, myself included, ever had even the slightest inkling that these guys were involved in organized crime. You actually had two guys that were Gambino guys and one guy who was also a coach who was with the Genovese. [9:54] That was the actual makeup of the three guys that sat us down. And this was that. What towns are you talking about out there in Long Island? Kind of guys that listen from New York. Sure. This is actually Syosset, believe it or not, which was a upper middle class area. Nice and calm, crime free. And again, most of everybody that was with us was from Syosset. [10:19] Interesting. So the fireworks thing, I’ve always wondered about that. I’ve noticed in Kansas City, the mob guys, several of them every year have these huge, big firework tents. And I started asking around. I found out that they might make $100,000 in about two or three weeks time off those fireworks. There must be immense profit in it. And it’s so that kind of profit and kind of a gray area crime, if you will, in some cities, they don’t allow fireworks to be sold or even to be shot off. Mob likes to get into that and make that money. So tell us a little bit more about how that worked. Who were your customers? You guys went out into the community and sold more. You were more like you weren’t retailers. You were more like found other people to retail. It sounds to me like tell me the nuts and bolts of how that worked. [11:05] That is exactly correct. Now, the first year when they gave us the two pallets with about five or six days, maybe a week before the 4th of July, we sold those strictly to local people we know. And by the way, as kids, we loved fireworks ourselves. We still do. I do. I can speak for myself. We love this stuff. Now, when I saw the prices, for example, that these guys can get us, and I’ll use a barometer, very common in New York, a mat of firecrackers, which is a pack of 80 packs inside, 16 firecrackers to a pack. You could buy that for $8 And it would just fly like hotcakes These guys were selling us the stuff At $3 a mat So all these prices Were anywhere from. [11:49] 70, sometimes even 80% cheaper than what we could sell them for. So the profit, like you said, was utterly enormous. Now we had a full year to work our second year because they said, yes, sell as much as you want, go ahead and get the pre-orders. We contacted everybody we knew. All of our guys had people in other places, Huntington, the town of Huntington, we did big business, other places out in Suffolk and even somewhere in the city. [12:13] And again, for young kids at that age to put together an order for $85,000. She knocked everybody. And that’s what really got their attention. And for that kind of money being fronted to us, that’s why they had to bring their boss in, which was John. The other thing that really shocked us too, I was worried about getting caught. Now the legal penalties for getting caught was nothing. Five or $10 fine, nothing on your record. It was nothing. However, the police could take all your firearms. If they took money like that from young kids, we’re finished. Our lives are over. and to be honest, the organization solved that for us. They sat us down with cops. The cops told us to our face, you will never have a problem. Don’t worry about it. And once I heard, that’s when I told our guys, go ahead and sell as much as you can, and that’s when we got the order for the two tractor trailers. I knew at that point in time, the risk is pretty much gone. Yes, there’s a risk of getting robbed, but we had two of our guys’ older brothers who were a really severe, a tough guy, one that’s referenced in the book a lot, Bubbles. And again, he’s a deceased, and we’ll talk about him more in terms of the Galante hit. So people that are going to rob us really would be like, why would I rob these guys? Look at who they’re with. So in my opinion, we had no risk, and that’s why we went nuts with this. [13:30] That’s the beauty of working with the mob. They usually had connections with law enforcement that could get you protected. Now, you brought Gotti into it. Tell us about meeting Gotti for the first time. [13:39] Was he all that, like they say? Was he just this real charismatic personality that you just wanted him to like you and wanted to do what he wanted you to do? What was that like? I’m glad you brought it up because I’m going to tell you that’s the funniest thing that ever happened to any of us in our lives. And I suspect it might have been one of the funniest things that ever happened to him. When we got this order for the two-tracked trailers, he wanted to meet us with some of his other people. One that turned out to be Angelo, quack, quack, Angelo Ruggiero. And we decided to meet at our friend’s house over in Syosset. It was during a school day, but we had no risk because his dad was a New York City cop. His dad wasn’t there. His mom would be out the whole day playing a card game she played called Mahjong. So we said, yeah, let’s do it at his house. Now, these guys show up. Again, we’re teens. We’re 13, 14, 15 in that range. One, a couple guys maybe a couple years older. And these guys were like in their low 30s. That’s all John Gotti was age-wise when we met him, I would say. [14:39] No older, I wouldn’t think, than 35. I could do the math, but right in that range. All nice cars, nice suits. They come in with all the samples. So we lay them all around my friend Jeff’s house I’m talking about in his stoves, his mother’s piano, the couches and everything And they’re going over stuff and they’re saying, look This stuff here comes $48 to a case Your price, I’m just making up numbers for argument’s sake Your price is $175 a case on this one You can easily sell this stuff for $600 or whatever the numbers were So we’re shocked Now to set the stage My friend’s mom was really A kind of a crazy lady she was very Loud and she was extremely Opinionated if not wild She would always kid my not kid She was serious to my friend Jeff saying You’re a no good bum this Boy’s gonna end up in jail she would berate Our friend into the ground I mean this kid was crazy believe me this kid was Driving us to school at 14 and 15 years Old didn’t have a worry in the world So Yeah. [15:40] This is where the humor came in. She came home unexpectedly. Apparently, one of the card players didn’t show up. They couldn’t do it. She walks into her house, and she sees fireworks all over. She sees us with guys who look like gangsters that are 35 years old, and she blows her stack. She screams, who are these hoodlums in my house? What are these devices these criminals have? What is this fool meaning her son done this time with nuts? And I’ll never forget John says to my uncle who was in there He says did you set this up as a gag? Very low so nothing we could hear except a few people And my uncle had a really weird look on his face He goes I wish I could get off that easy So we figure the deal is all over She’s going nuts I run up to her with the price lists And I say Mrs. Goldberg please I know we like to shoot a fire It’s not about that It’s about making money I show her the list And I reference before the matter firecrackers I point to it. I call these guys firework salesmen. That’s what I call John and Angelo. I go, these firework salesmen here can sell us this amount of firecrackers for $3. [16:49] We can sell it all day long for $8. There’s a fortune in this. So then instead of her blowing up, she goes, tell me more. So that was funny enough. So I go through more prices. And just to set the stage for your listeners, a lot of people in New York might know this term. People outside might not. I’m a Christian, but if you have a non-Christian, Jewish people call him Goy or Goyim. She’s looking at the lists, and she explodes in the loudest voice you’ve ever heard. If the Goyim will buy these devices, then sell them to the Goyim we were. We lost it. [17:24] She said that Angelo, my uncle, a bunch of the guys had to go outside. And I stepped outside with them, too, because they didn’t want to insult her and laugh in her face. I don’t know how John stayed in the house with her, but he did for a while. These guys were laughing so hard, tears were coming out of us. So the neighborhood girls that we knew saw these guys all dressed in suits. They thought we were crying, and they sincerely asked, are you guys okay what happened? It was because we were laughing so hard we started crying. So I said, let me get in here. The fireworks deal is more important. So she went over this stuff with us, telling us how we’re going to make money. Just insanity. The book really expands on this. And then afterwards, when John left the house, he also broke down in laughter. He didn’t want to do it in front of her. He couldn’t take it. Out of respect, he didn’t want to laugh in someone’s face like that. But he walked two doors down, and he freaking lost it. So I think it’s got to be one of the funniest things he’s ever had happen to him in his life. He said it was. And it just got crazier from there. [18:19] Now, was Angelo Ruggiero with him? He was his right-hand man. Was he there on this deal? Yeah, Angelo was there with him. Yep, he sure was. What was he like to deal with as a person? I’ve interviewed his son who has a show. What was he like? Was he funny? He seemed like he talked a lot and was a funny guy. I’m just curious. He did. And again, in the account that you guys are going to read about in the book, Tommy, who’s the main character in this book, who again, deceased and gave me all the interactions he had with him, explains what a nice guy he was. I know he had a violent side. I know he has a lot of hits under his belt, but he was apparently a ton of fun. [18:59] When I interacted with him, I thought he was freaking hilarious. And as you’ll see in the book, Angelo is really the one who fed all the inside information nonstop to our buddy Tommy, Tommy, who at that time was playing cards over at John’s Club in Ozone Park, the Bergen, very regularly at that point in time. And the book really traces Tommy about what happened, his interactions with Angelo, his interactions with everybody else. And when you get to the whole crux of the matter, Angelo is the one who told our good friend Tommy that, hey, the commission has authorized a hit on Galante. And the hit is to be done jointly with our family, meaning the Gambinos, and with the Bananos. And that John was going to be the leader of the Gambino faction. [19:48] Sonny Red and Delicato was going to be the leader of the Banano faction, and Joey Messino was not only the one taking the messages to and from Rusty, which is the Philip Mestelli in jail, but Joe Messino was going to supervise the entire operation. So that was the structure of it. Yeah, that’s what I’ve read about it. And also what you’re saying about Angelo Ruggiero is that’s one reason the Bureau was able to learn so much about Castellano because he would go to meetings at Castellano’s house, if I remember right, come back home and get on the phone or have some people come over. And he talked to him about, he said this and he said this and he said that and he said this. That gave him probable cause then to go into Castellano’s house. So he was known to be loose lips, and that’s why he got the moniker quack quack, I’ve heard. But I also heard it was because of the way he walked, so I’m not sure. No, that’s true. Both of what you’re saying is true. And just to touch on him one more time, very important. He loved my friend Tommy because Tommy got him out of more than a couple of jams. I’ll give an example. There was a guy in the Gambino family up in Connecticut. John always referred to him as the genius Tony Mungali And he put a firework sorter in with Angelo. [21:06] Now, this guy blew his stack because no fireworks came, and he had promised the entire neighborhood a gigantic fireworks show. He had his friends, his people of his family over there, neighbors and no fireworks. This guy blew his stack, and this story is detailed in the book. Tommy got a call from another Gambino guy the morning of July 5th, very early. He was still hungover from partying the night before. He said, oh, my God, what’s this about? It’s got to be something bad. Did somebody blow their hand off with fireworks? What’s going on? And the bad news was that this Tony had put a beef in saying, what’s wrong with you people? You didn’t do what you said. And he was blaming Angelo. Tony was all over Angelo. And the bottom line is Tony was right. It was Angelo’s fault. However, my friend Tommy never threw Angelo under the bus. My friend Tommy ate it. And he basically, it’s a real good recounting in the book. And there’s so many stories like this. There’s hundreds of them. But I’ll give you this one real quick. [22:03] Like, so Tommy basically told Tony Mengele, listen, how old are the kids that you promised this big fireworks show to? And Tony blew up. He’s like, what the F does it matter how old the kids are? But my friend Tommy was smart and he was going somewhere. He’s like, listen, these kids don’t know the difference between July 5th and July 4th. We’re going to come to your house tonight. We’re going to give it the most insane fireworks show anybody in your area has ever seen. We don’t want a dime. We’re so sorry this mistake happened They go up there I was with them at that point. [22:38] Nothing but fun. So welcoming. And again, my buddies, none of us would ever throw Angelo under the bus. And believe me, Tony and his uncle, Sandalo, he tried to pin it on Angelo. We said, no, it’s not his fault. It’s not his fault. Bottom line is those guys loved us. One of Tony’s workers ended up being a gigantic fireworks customer of ours. And to the best of my knowledge to this day, and I’m not involved in it in the slightest, To this day, all one of his guys does is sell fireworks in the Connecticut region. Makes a fortune. Interesting. And so that’s a wild story. But again, Angelo loved Tommy because so many times Tommy would say, look, Angelo didn’t do this. I did. What did Angelo do in return? He gave Tommy so many different pieces of information. And again, I won’t bog you down, but each one of these stories is so interesting. Angelo had some fireworks clubs that he made money on. [23:32] There’s no other way to put it. Angelo was not working much at all. And then one of these meetings, John brought everyone in and said, listen, from now on, these clubs that sell fireworks, particularly Oceanside, New York, Long Beach, Bayville, Massapequa, he goes, I’m giving them to you guys to run. And now, obviously, none of us want anything to do like that. We’re going to cut out his friends. We’re going to end up in a freaking meat grinder or end up in a cement truck. So we all told John we didn’t want it. John said, that’s it. It’s over. It’s yours. so then our next step was to make sure we figured out how much roughly those guys were making. [24:05] I give my friend tommy all the credit in the world he ended up giving angelo more money by a lot, for using the place than angelo ever made doing work and this time angelo doesn’t have to do any work angelo loved us all these guys loved us because we paid them more than they made and now they didn’t have to do a damn thing so our guys were very smart and calculating particularly Tommy, but some of the other ones. And that was a good Angelo story. Yeah, it is. And I’ve read that not only Gotti and in his neighborhood, but other mob guys around in New York and their neighborhoods, they would put on a huge fireworks shows for everybody in the neighborhood every year. Gotti particularly was noted for that. That is interesting, their love for fireworks and fireworks shows. Did they ever front you these things? Did they front you money or did Did they buy the fireworks? [24:56] You guys made this money each year, but I’m sure you’d spend it all. Then the following year, you’d have to come up with money. How did that work? The money worked. You wanted to be able to pay them back if they fronted anything. [25:08] Yes. You have a bunch of good questions here. I’m going to backtrack one second on what you said about guys in the life loving fireworks. That is a hundred percent fact. Love the fireworks and the stuff that people see at some of the celebrations over at the Bergen. Yeah, that was rooted from our guys providing it. Now, here is one of the reasons why John turned over these four locations to us. He had complaints from multiple people. Castellano, I believe Michael Franzese people. These guys went to the fireworks locations on the best days, like July 2nd and July 3rd, and they were closed. And John blew up at that. He’s making me look like a freaking idiot. I’m telling Castellano’s people, it could have been his nephews or little cousins or whatever, go to this place to load up with fireworks for free. These guys go to the place and it’s closed that’s one of the motivating factors why john, turned that business over to us we had it open all the time now in terms of fronting stuff absolutely the money was enormous those guys fronted it to us all the time big loads that’s just how it was young kids like that we can come up with anything near that kind of money. [26:14] And just another tidbit too the lady i told you about who would go wild when we were doing the deal. She offered to fund some money up too. And that’s detailed in the book as well. But yeah, as we got it to like year number three, I don’t remember us ever putting a penny up after year three. It was all fronted to us. Was it all cash too? When you went out to these clubs and these people with the neighborhoods and stuff, would they always just give you cash each year? [26:40] That is a great question, and the answer is yes for the people we retailed to, yes for the people that walked into the stores. However, we had wholesale customers that we would give credit to. Now, I’ll give you this story, which is also detailed in the book real quick. There was a street gang in Huntington. They were known as the Huntington Hitters, primarily Hispanics. They gave us an order, and one of our good friends got back from a younger kid that he helped out before that his older brother was intending to rob us when we dropped off the fireworks. [27:14] So we had what I thought was a brilliant plan made. Tommy was very instrumental in this, and I gave some feedback too. We told these guys, come meet us at this bar out on Jericho Turnpike in Huntington. We have some additional fireworks we want to show you guys and see if you want it, which was a lie. But we knew that they wouldn’t rob us then because we didn’t have anything honest. Let me tell you what we brought to that meeting. We brought Bubbles and two of his guys that were freaking deadly people. And they had freaking gym bags with them. And they said, don’t worry anything about security when we do this deal. And they showed him stuff inside the bags, heavy duty weaponry. So right away, these Huntington hitter group said, these are the wrong people to rob. So sure enough, right on cue, a day or two later, they called my buddy and said, you know what? We don’t want to do the fireworks business. We can’t. That I petitioned, and I got a few of my friends to agree, and Tommy definitely went with it too. You know what? These guys can make a fortune doing this. Let’s front them five or ten grand worth of this stuff and see what happens. And I’m like, it’s not going to cost us anything. Number one, I don’t think they’re going to rob us. If they do, what did we lose? $1,500 at the most? My friends said we were nuts, but we went with it. And I want to tell you, smartest move we ever made. [28:29] As every year we went by, we fronted them more and more. They were our first customer that we ever fronted a full tractor trailer to. Never had a problem getting one cent from them. It’s funny how that evolved. It’s just absolute madness. But again, I give Tommy a lot of the credit here and some of the other guys very sharp to come up with a business plan like this. [28:52] I tell you, this little crew you got in with early on, they were a bunch of hustlers. But you also had this deal with Gotti and horse racing and getting inside information on horse racing. There’s some pretty good stories there that are in the book. Tell the guys a little bit about that point. Then we’ll move on to the Galante hit. [29:11] Absolutely. Now, horse racing was interesting. We would go to a place called Roosevelt Raceway, which is over in Westbury, Long Island. Really not that far from where we lived over in Syosset. Now, again, I know the law was probably you had to be 18 to make a bet. They didn’t care. I was making bets there at 12 and 13 years old. I’ll tell you this one time that they did care, and I’ll get to that at the end of the question you asked, and you’ll see why. So we were clowns, but even as clowns, we could see it. If a horse, these were harness racing, by the way. If a harness race is coming down the stretch, you didn’t have to be a genius to see that one or two of these horses would hold back, but the other two jockeys would whip the crap out of their horses. So naturally, we felt cheated, even at young ages. Our guys were definitely certified. There’s no question about that. Our guys would throw things at the freaking jockeys. I’m talking about golf balls, rocks. Our guys were insane. And a lot of that stuff is detailed in the book, how crazy we were. But to get to your point, after I think it was the third or fourth year, John walked with Tommy. [30:17] And he said, you guys are bringing in so much money and doing so well. I want to give you a gift. And I remember Tommy, because myself and a little bit of Bart, but myself, I had to pull all this out of my friend Tommy. He knew he was going to pass away. And he wanted this story out in the public. Now, this guy, Tommy, never wanted his real name used, but he gave me detail after detail. Some of the stuff, like I’m explaining with the fireworks and the horse racing, I was there myself to see. But on the heavy stuff, he gave me detail after detail. same with a little bit to Bart. So this is how Tommy explained it to us. John gave him a sheet of paper and Tommy being a smartest said, oh, what is this, John? You want me to go play the freaking lottery with these numbers? What do these numbers mean? John, you smartest. Here’s what the numbers mean. The first number was the number of the race at Roosevelt Raceway. The next four numbers were the only four horses that could win. Usually these races had eight horses in them. Once in a while, seven, once in a while, nine, but eight was the norm. Those are the only four horses that can win. And for the audience, I want to explain to them how that’s possible. [31:24] Let’s say you have an eight horse harness race and you tell four of the jockeys, no matter what happens, you are not to come in the top. They’ll hold the horses back. And by the way, this is not just conjectural rumor. These guys got locked up for it later on down the line, jockeys and everybody what they were doing is it hold the four horses back the organization would have no idea what horse was going to win they just knew which four wouldn’t so what did they didn’t bet winner plays to show they would bet exactus triples and sometimes super factors which means all four and box those four around some yeah so in your example. [32:03] Basically, John gave our buddy Tom three races, and Tommy knew that this has got to be damn better than a tip. It has to be rock solid. So what happened was we all went there, and we knew nothing about it. We didn’t know that we should just bet a small amount of money. We had no knowledge about damaging a pool, so I’ll make it easy for the listeners. Tommy overbet these races like crazy. For example, if a three combination triple should pay $1,500, the first thing the FBI and the New York Racing Authority would ask is, why did this $1,500 triple pay only $400? And the reason is, and they knew it because the race was fixed. So everybody was betting those combinations. Now, the organization was smart enough to only bet small amounts of money, and they used the term not to damage the pool. That was a term they used all the time. We don’t want to damage the pool. [33:04] Again, throw us in the mix. We had absolutely no idea. We didn’t know any of this. So Tommy bet the crap out of these races, and he did damage the pool. And that brought the attention of the authorities. But worse than that, another long story in the book goes back to the Connecticut people, because I think the genius Tony Mengele was the one helping to fix the races. So they figured there was a leak on their side. And John Gotti actually thought he was going to get killed over this. And he told people, including Angelo, I might not be coming back from this meeting. I got sent for here. The horse pulls bad because John was really running the horses with Tony and some other guys. Tony grabbed him by chance outside of the Ravenite, Mr. Neal’s club, and they walked. [33:52] And Tony apparently was furious, like, yeah, let’s kill whoever damaged the pool, whoever did this. And then John apparently told him it was us. And then Tony says, oh, man, those fireworks guys, I love those guys. He goes, okay, nothing’s going to happen here. So apparently Tony went into the meeting, and he basically lied to the people there, Castellano and Neil Delacroach, and he says, listen, I found out the leak. The leak is on our side, and I’ll take care of it. And that’s how it worked But again, that ties back to the fireworks If that never happened, I don’t know what would have happened John had every intention of going in there and saying he’s screwed up He didn’t explain to us And he had no business giving us the numbers And he knows that, He did not have permission to give us anything at the racetrack He took it on himself to do it, And he got saved by that stroke of luck Of meeting Tony in front of the club before the meeting Had someone been outside, whoever Tommy Bellotti or anybody said Hey, get inside, the meeting’s going on Those two would not have had a chance to talk. I don’t know what would have happened, but I think it would have been very bad for Sean. Yeah, would have been. Yeah, that’s interesting. Now, explain to the guys about the pool. Everybody doesn’t know about the pool. [35:04] These exactors and trifectas, how that pool works. That is a great question because we had to have it explained to us. Let’s take any racetrack, and the first number you’re going to have is how many people bet on what’s focused on triples. Now, the definition of a triple is horses come in the order of one, two, three. So if you bet a 7-4-3 triple, the race must end 7-4-3 for you to hit that triple. Now, the next variation of that is if you like the 7-4-3, what most people will do is they will do what’s called boxing that triple, which means they have 7-4-3 and that’s a winner. [35:43] But so is 4-3-7. So is any combination. So is 2-7-4. [35:49] 3-7-4. Any of the combination of your three horses win. Now, they can tell what a triple should pay based on the amount that’s spent and what the odds are. Let’s say you have a horse that’s a mid shot, like an 8 or 10 to 1. You have a favorite in there and maybe a halfway of a little bit of a long shot. They know what that should pay in a certain range. Now, if you know that race was fixed, and by the way, it’s all pari-mutual, so the weighting is average. If you’ve got $10,000 in a triple pool and you have 10 winning tickets, each ticket’s going to get paid $1,000. And they would know that’s legitimate and that’s honest. And there should be about 10 people with those combinations. Now, if you have that same $10,000 worth of triple pool, and again, these are round numbers. It’s way higher, just for an example. and all of a sudden you’ve got 105 winning tickets when mathematically there should be 10 or 15 at the most the money drops that thousand dollar prize now might be 210 dollars and that’s what the feds and everyone new york racing authority looks for if you have a horse that’s eight to one first place let’s say ten to one second place and let’s say five to two third place that triple should pay something like, I’m guessing, $400, $500, $600 around that range. If that triple pays only $150, right away they know that somebody knew something. [37:16] Too many people bet on that combination. They know how many people probably will bet on any certain combination. And when that gets skewed, too many people bet on one combination, then they know something’s up. Interesting. That’s like these new sports prop bets in the apps on gambling, on the apps on sports. If all of a sudden there’s a whole lot of money goes out on some team on the spread and too much money goes down in one place, then they know there’s something going on. Somebody knows something and they start looking. [37:48] Exactly. They start looking and you make a great point about today’s sports betting. If you have a basketball player, and again, this is not conjecture. There’s already been indictments on this. Let’s say the guy is supposed to have 11 rebounds in a game. All of a sudden, when he has nine, he tells the coach, man, I hurt my ankle. I can’t play anymore. Now, if the balance was normal on his under and his over, no problem. What do we all know happens? The under money bet on this guy is radical. It’s a 95 to 5 ratio. They know right away it’s fixed. And that’s what I believe the guy in Toronto, the Toronto Raptors was doing. And so many other ones were too, but that’s everywhere. We were involved in that way, way back in the day as well, to some degree. We heard so much about it. Yeah, interesting. [38:34] Let’s get into Carmine Galante. The probably most famous, certainly the most famous image, even more famous than Albert Anastasia of Carmine Galante laying there. He was the Bonanno, longtime Bonanno capo and had risen up in the ranks. And he comes out of the penitentiary and Rusty Rustelli is supposed to be the next Bonanno boss. And Carmine decides that he’s going to act like he’s the boss. So let’s talk about how this whole thing started a little bit. That is a great observation. And that’s pretty much how the ball got rolling with those guys. Here’s how we got involved in this. [39:12] We had one of our good friends who was helping us with the fireworks and going to the clubs and having nothing but fun. And then the one night when Tommy was at the club, the cops came in. And I know a lot of people think, oh, Cosa Nostra doesn’t mix with the cops. People will think that they don’t know what they’re talking about. Look at the convictions with gas pipe cases and everybody else. John had guys on his payroll that ended up getting convicted and stuff. [39:39] The cops and Cosa Nostra do work together. despite what everyone else says. Look at us with the fireworks, for example. So anyway, at the card game, what I was told from Tommy is they kept getting messages after messages. And again, these messages at that time would come in over pay phones. There were no cell phones. So you’d have a guy sitting at the pay phone. And as I’m told, most of the messages would be coded numbers. Let’s say Angelo’s number was 167. The guy would just pick up the phone, tell number 167, which is Angelo. [40:11] Another set of code numbers and that might mean hey the cops are coming over now the cops came into the club they came into the bergen and apparently they told everybody listen nobody here is getting locked up we don’t want information we just need to give you some news and from what tommy says because he was there playing cards at the time they told him that our good friend michael had died in a car accident and they wanted to know should they go and wake his dad up and And his dad obviously was in the life made guy and do it that way. Or did John and Angelo perhaps want to go out to the house? They gave him the option to do it. And John and Angelo, of course, jumped at that. And they, whatever they did, they went at the house. I don’t know if they waited till they woke up in the morning, whatever it was and knocked on the door or whatever. But so that’s what happens now at the wake, by the way, just to make the story a little bit more clear, there. [41:09] This was probably our fourth year or so selling fireworks. And every year we sold fireworks, we met more and more people. So many of it is detailed in the book. I can’t even tell you the list of people we met. And you name it, Tony Ducks, Corralo, all these guys. So we’re meeting more and more people. Two in particular that we started hanging out with because they liked us because we were just crazy, drinking, women chasing maniacs, were Baldo and Chesery. And that’s Baldo Amato and Cheshire Bonventry. They were with the Bananos. And we were hanging out with them. They grabbed my friend Tommy at the wake and pulled him away. And everyone’s thinking, oh, they’re really Sicilian. We call them the Zips. They’re tough guys. They probably just don’t want to show their emotions because they love Michael in front of everybody. We didn’t know what was going on. They informed my friend Tommy that our friend, Michael, did not die in a car accident. It was a basic, supposed to be a warning that turned into a hit. [42:12] And Tommy’s, that’s nonsense. The cops told us the car was off the road. The car was a crumpled mess. That’s nonsense. But Baldo insisted and said, no, these guys shot him off the road. So nobody believed any of this. But we came up with the conclusion of, hey, we’re friends with the cops. The cops will take us to the impound yard. Let’s see for ourselves. House so those guys went over there and what tommy says they found bullet holes in like less than a minute they found a couple bullet holes so they knew right away that baldo was telling the truth now all this was going on other people would tell us don’t trust baldo don’t trust chesery the sicilians are the most ruthless cunning backstabbers you’re ever going to meet and i didn’t feel that way and neither did tommy or the other guys that were involved with us our other friends aunt and The whole gang, Gonzo, we didn’t feel that way at all. We thought they really had our best interest. So. [43:08] That stayed quiet, but two of our friends swore on that day, no matter who did this to our friend, Michael, no matter who they are, we don’t care what their rank or anything. [43:19] We’re going to make them pay for what they did. They’re going to have to answer for what they did to our friend. And we know the rules. You can’t touch a maid guy or an associate without getting permission. But we kept everything quiet for another reason. Michael’s dad I referred to as a maid guy. Now, you talk about crazy. This guy was nuts. This guy had no fuse. He’s detailed all over the book. For example, when John O’Neill would tell him to go out and just talk to a guy, don’t hurt him. This guy owes us a couple thousand. Just talk to him. The guy would end up with two broken arms. This guy had no fuse whatsoever. If he ever thought for a minute that somebody had killed his son, the worry was, and I think the worry is correct, he would have gone out and just killed better than adult targets all over the place. Whether they knew anything about it Which 99% of them knew nothing about this He would have just started killing people He would have started a war So that was the reason why the bosses, Did not want him And to his death he never knew that this happened They kept it from him for that reason There was no stopping this guy would have gone on a rampage So that was a big factor in that, So Then you talked before about the card games And Angelo. [44:30] More of these messages came in And my buddy Tommy noticed it And he said, Angelo, what’s going on? And so don’t worry after the card game, I’ll walk you down and we’ll talk to you. Apparently after the card games, Tommy and Angelo would walk down 101st Avenue and have these long talks. And Angelo said to Tommy, the commission has authorized a hit on Carmine Galante. We got the hit. John is our lead. [44:54] We have to do it jointly with the Bananas. Sonny Red is there, and Joe Massino is going to look at the whole thing and supervise the whole thing. So bells went off on my friend Tommy’s head. All of a sudden, he got everybody together. Not me, of course. I was not there when this transpired. I was not there when they organized the hit. But he got the other guys together, and he said, look, this is the guy who killed our friend. We have no risk now because the commissioner wants this guy dead. So these guys came out with what Tommy detailed to me. And by the way, it wasn’t just Tommy who detailed this to us. Bubbles detailed it to us. And there’s one big distinction I need to mention here. Tommy wanted all of this out. He did not want his real name used. [45:40] However, Bubbles wanted his real name used. He used to hang out with general views people. And he told me, he goes, use my name. I want people to know that I did this. And after he passed and that’s why inside the book we do reveal his real name and where he lived and the interesting thing for me was Bubbles and Tommy had no idea that each one of them was talking to me and to a small degree Bart about this so the details that they both gave were exactly the same the most ingenious hit I’ve ever heard of in my life they had police help from the 8-3 precinct over in Bushwick. Apparently, there was some cop over there that hated, I think it was a family dispute of some kind. The guy who was being, I think his grandmother or aunt or somebody was being shaken down by the bananas. So we had that asset. We now had Baldo and Chesery, who were Galante’s top bodyguards. So our guys went out on surveillance for months. And the funny thing about the surveillance was, who else was doing surveillance at the same time? [46:47] John Gotti was, and so was his people. So there was times like when Tommy and the guys would be close to a certain place. And by the way, he was killed at Joe and Mary’s. But that is not the only place that these guys did heavy surveillance on. And it’s not the only place that Galanti hung out at. So the book names a bunch of other places that the surveillance was done. So these guys would be there, and they’d look down the block, and possibly John and Angela were there doing the same surveillance. So they had to leave. Otherwise, John and Angela, what the hell are you guys doing over here? So that was funny to me on that regard But our guys in my opinion Put together the most ingenious hit Down to every single detail. [47:26] Basically took out the police help to help with the zips. The alibi is another crazy part of this. At that time, we would like to do a lot of fishing. We went off to a place called Sentinel Riches in Long Island. And one time we were night fishing over there and we saw guys jump off the boat, get onto smaller boats and come back an hour or two later with bundles. Now you don’t have to be Albert Einstein to realize what they were doing. They were running junk and they were Colombians. Yeah. So I discussed it a little bit with the boat’s captain and he said, just don’t say a word. Don’t go near him. Keep you guys away. We almost had a problem because again, our guys were drunk and our guys were carrying and our guys will, we came close to having a problem. But Tommy put this together. He had the boat captain go out one day and again, he didn’t tell all the people that were with, he didn’t tell his cousin’s crew for Shaw, who was with us that day, our guys jumped off the boat onto a smaller boat, took that boat to the Oak Beach Inn, took stolen cars in on that day, the July 12th, 1979, and they did the hit. [48:35] So Tommy’s uncle was furious with him. He thought he was lying to him. He goes, you’re lying. You were not there. I put you on that boat, which he did. Our friends were drunk and they drove him there on the road. Morning and i picked you up when that boat doc said don’t lie to me you’re on the boat all day and that’s when tommy and again this is detailed in the book like crazy told everybody can you say alibi and what do you mean he goes yeah you just said we were on the boat all day that’s not true, jumped the boat went to the oak beach and took the stolen cars did the work and came back so that was that shocked everybody in the room apparently when tommy was forced to detail, everything that happened on the hit. He even detailed for them all the cars that were involved. He detailed how the marked police cars actually held parking spaces for our guys in front of the place. One was, my understanding, about a half a block north. The other one was about a half a block south of the location over there, which was 205 Knickerbocker. They held the parking spaces. Our guys rolled up. [49:37] And if there was something going on, like, for example, FBI surveillance or unmarked cops in the place, those cop cars were not giving up the space. Our guys would honk and flash at them. But if they did not give up the spaces, the signal to our guys was the place is dirty, leave. So we had a lot of built-in signals like that. And then when they gave up the parking spots, both of the cops moved from one north heading south, one south heading north. What did that do? That let them both take one more scan of the block. Is the block dirty? And if the block was dirty, they were going to blow the sirens and everything was off. But the details, again, that are in the book about this hit are freaking shocking how meticulous it was. [50:22] Interesting. I have one question that Galante’s guy, Cousin Moy, they called him, Angelo Prezzanzano, I probably butchered that, but he was off sick that day. Was he part of it or was he just off sick that day? I’m going to tell you, to be honest, I have no knowledge of that. I know that Boldo and Chessery were the primary bodyguards that day. Yeah, they were there that day. I actually have no knowledge, but the other couple of details that are just beyond fascinating, how our guys operated on this. For example, when the car pulled up with one driver and three shooters, one of the shooters, again, he wanted to be named, so we’re naming him. It was Bubbles. [51:01] And the other two guys, Bubbles was a very big-built guy. He would easily be spotted. Plus, he knew a lot of people in the city. He stayed in the car. The two guys that were normal-built, they went inside. And I want the listeners to understand how skilled these guys were at this hit. [51:19] They had provided Baldo and Chesery with dark jackets that day. Now, I’ve read some stuff that people said, oh, they had big, heavy leather jackets on. That’s a lie. They were lightweight summer jackets. And people said, why do that? The answer is because at that time, people were wearing white and pastels and light clothing. It was burning hot that day in the summer. And if you want to spot somebody in a restaurant, you want them to stick out like a sore thumb. So that was the motivation for those black jackets. Now, check this one out. And again, the book goes through this in so many more details. Our guys walked in prearranged with Baltimore Orioles baseball hats. Because again, keep in mind, Chesaree and Boulder did not have a great command of the English language. They didn’t really 100% know American customs. And we showed them Mets and Yankee hats that everybody has. So now we show them a distinctive bright orange baseball hat with a bird on it that nobody could mistake. Here was the signal. Our guys walked up to them face to face with these hats on. [52:22] Now, that was slick. That was slicker shit, man. It was smart because if the place was hot, if Boldo and Chesery realized there was too many maid guys in there or surveillance guys or FBI in there, they were to immediately tell our guys it’s too crowded today. Only get takeout. Only get takeout. The place is too crowded. That was a signal to our guys to walk out and to tell the people the place is hot. leave. These guys had multiple hot signals here that if something was wrong, they would do it. Now, if they didn’t give those signals, our guys were to turn their hats around. So they walked in with the hats like a normal baseball player. They walked out with the hats like a catch you would wear with his hat on backwards. That was to give Boulder and Chesery the signal, Boulder and Chesery the signal this thing was going down. Now, here’s the most fascinating thing about the story is Tommy recanted for us. That day, July 12th, 79, was supposed to be a dry run. [53:28] And they told everybody, just do it like it’s real. Now, we were all hoping that Bould on Chesaree would do it like it was real, and they did it. They walked out of the place, and they walked north. I believe in their minds, they said, this is a dry run. Nothing’s going to happen. Then they heard the shots, and that’s what happened. And I want to elaborate on this because, again, there’s so much built in here. One of the witnesses said that, and I’ll tell you who the witness was. It was one of the guys who killed his daughter, Torano. His daughter had said that, oh, I saw Baldo crouched over with a gun. Gary, you’re a former detective. You’ve got a scene with four people shot, three dead. And you have a witness saying that a guy was in there with a gun out. You tell me how the guy is not arrested at the very least and tried. And I’m going to give everyone the answer here of why that didn’t happen. And I think it’s pretty clear. [54:25] I’m convinced that the FBI had static surveillance on the place, just like they did to Mr. Neal’s club that we always call the, basically the FBI screen test. Yeah. That’s number one. And, or they had a guy up the street. So I believe what happened here was they looked at what this witness said, and then either their own cameras or a human agent that they had on the streets said, wait a second, we cannot charge these guys. I saw a bold on Chesaree, whatever the number would be, 200 feet up the street before the shots rang out. They’re innocent. They didn’t do the shooting. Otherwise, of course, you got a witness saying, I saw a guy behind a table in a gun in a quadruple shooting, triple homicide, and that guy’s not going to get arrested. So obviously there was something there. [55:16] I was wondering why. And I’m going to take another step for people, too. And again, terrible. Cosa knows the story ever told. But to take this one step further, the cop cars were there. There were two marked cars close in proximity when this went down. I think the FBI might have said, wait a second here. What just happened? One guy that we hate, Galante, is dead. Some other guy, a cap on a maid guy are gone. Look at our cameras. How could we do anything here? There’s marked cops here. I think the feds had to realize the cops played a role in this. [55:50] Let’s just kill it and move on. I think that’s possible. Now, the cop cars were also referenced by Tommy. He told us the meeting that they had. It was a life or death meeting, by the way. When John Gotti and other people went to that meeting, Tommy’s uncle and people like that, there was a good chance none of them were going to come out alive. The book details that Castellano, who everyone knows, wanted to kill John Gotti, had a cast of killers in that building. Roy DeMail’s people were in there. There were people in there that you couldn’t even believe. Nino Gadge’s people in there. Hardcore butchers. They knew how to dispose of and chop up bodies. So in that meeting, apparently what Tommy made clear, and again, we took notes, we went over this for hours, days, literally years. [56:36] Sonny Red and Delicato made the statement in that meeting because, again, Sonny Red and Delicato put in the beef, hey, you guys did this hit without us. John Gotti’s saying, fuck you. Excuse my language. Effu. You guys did the hit without us. Nobody knew who did this hit, and I’ll get to that later. What happened here was that Sonny Red and Delicato and his people made an immediate beef, and we’ll talk about that later, saying, hey, The commission said this is to be a joint hit Between the Bananos and the Gambinos And I can definitely confirm From what they told me, Banano people and Gambino people Were on this hit together and doing surveillance So when Galante got killed Sonny Red and his Banano people Were furious Because they thought John Gotti went off And did a hit against the commission’s wishes At the same time, John Gotti was furious At Sonny Red and his people Thinking they did the work Without them being notified But the thing that Tommy always stressed is, again, that meeting was a death trap. Castellano always hated Gotti. Castellano wanted Gotti out. And this was the chance to do it for breaking the commission rule. So Castellano had hardcore murderers there that day. Roy DeMeo and his crew. [57:49] Incredible. You know, Gadgi, a cast of murderers. And John Gotti being street smart. And again, this is fully detailed in the book. It’s just too much to talk about here. John Gotti had made some very heavy precautions himself. Going into that meeting. But what the catch for me was, Sonny Red and Delicato said something like, whoever did this hit was either the most incompetent hitman ever, or possibly they were zips from Montreal that couldn’t give a crap if they were shot at or in a police shootout or whatever. They just didn’t care. And then Tommy said, what if I tell you that those cops were in on the hit? And that silenced the room. And that’s when Tommy had to come clean and talk about everything about it. And it shocked the people that were in that run that this hit was done like that. But that’s, that’s really how this thing was done. Interesting. Guys, you got to get this book. I’m telling you, Made on Long Island. And there’s a whole lot more details, these behind the scenes details about the Galante hit with some real people involved. It’s a lot different story than what we’ve ever heard. I know that. And even people went to jail behind this. But it was mainly on the say-so of informants who, as we know, will pretty much say anything to g
Jean-François Poulin s'entretient avec Sylvain Melchior, pdg de Boldo, autour du design d'entreprise et de la façon dont cette approche permet de comprendre et d'orchestrer la complexité organisationnelle. Melchior explique comment son équipe transforme le design en outil stratégique plutôt qu'esthétique, pour faciliter la collaboration entre métiers et TI.
Stormy Daniel joins Boldo and Franko from the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks 'ET Stand Podcast' to talk through and preview the preliminary finals match between the Melbourne Storm and the Sharks. The boys look at the strengths, weaknesses and where the game could be won for both teams. Stormy Daniel shares his thoughts and opinions on how this Storm team will fair up against a Sharks team who has hit form at the right end of the season and is choc full of momentum and confidence, against a team who has been in this position many times before and will be relying on experience to get them victory. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
For the second time this season, Stormy Daniel joins Boldo from from the ET Grandstand (Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks) Podcast, in a collab, where the pair discuss all things Storm and Sharks. Previewing the upcoming clash in what is the second leg of this contest, where Melbourne will be hoping to atone from their Round 11 loss at Sharks Stadium earlier this season. Stormy Daniel also covers off on some listerner questions that came in late from earlier on in the week. Enjoy this chat. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Stormy Daniel joins Boldo, host of the ET Stand Podcast - a Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks podcast, to chat all things Sharks, Storm and preview the Round 11 clash between the 2016 Grand Final opponents. It's the first podcast collab with a second leg of the joint podcast episode taking place when Storm take on the Sharks in Round 17. Enjoy this bonus podcast episode Storm fans. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
A partir desta sexta (1º), novas regras do pix começam a ter validade para os usuários da ferramenta. De acordo com o Banco Central (BC), as mudanças estão relacionadas à segurança da forma de pagamento, a fim de dificultar fraudes de agentes maliciosos. Nesta edição de "Conversa de Boldo", o comentarista Felipe Storch explica quais são essas mudanças e como elas impactam a rotina do usuário. Ouça a conversa completa!
The dogs are put on the chain and back under the mango tree, shark is now on the menu, and we're joined by Boldo from the ET Stand Podcast.Welcome to On The Ranch brought to you by Molly Malones Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Our beloved Wests Tigers head to the Shire to take on the Cronulla Sharks, with the help of ET Stand Podcast host Boldo, we preview the game. Can our boys beat the Sharks again? Plus our tips for the rest of the NRL round 19. Click here to check out all our content! Listen live to the WestsLife Podcast twice a week on YouTube, Facebook or Twitter. If you'd like to contribute to the show email us podcast@westslife.com We are also sponsored by Mobile Corp , which is a family-run tech company that supports Wests Tigers and was even the jersey sponsor back in 2007. MobileCorp is also passionate about helping protect businesses from cyber threats. For an affordable cyber security solution go to mobilecorp.com.au WestsLife is also sponsored by Shayne and the team at MG Pump Solutions. See us on the socials: WestsLife YouTube channel WestsLife.com @WestsLifePod on Instagram and Twitter Facebook.com/WestsLifePod Support and contribute to the show at Patreon.com/WestsLife
David Lewis sits down with Hector Boldo and Jacqueline Wooton. They talked about their work as artists, Hector's mural works in Hattiesburg, their joint endeavor with Tom Boldo to create the Mississippi Latinx Art Association and their new gallery Nuestro Arte. Hector and Jacqueline shared how they wound up in Mississippi and the importance of their community's support of the arts. If you enjoyed listening to this podcast, please consider contributing to MPB. https://donate.mpbfoundation.org/mspb/podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Gaúcha Hoje - Gaúcha Serra - Elton Boldo -Dir-Téc-Garden Engenharia - 20/05/2024 by Rádio Gaúcha
====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1=======================================================================EL FASCINANTE LABORATORIO DE DIOSDevoción Matutina para Adolescentes 2024Narrado por: Mone MuñozDesde: Buenos aires, Argentina===================|| www.drministries.org ||===================26 DE FEBREROMÁS DULCE QUE LA MIEL"Tu promesa es más dulce a mi paladar que la miel a mi boca". Salmo 119:103NECESITARÁS UN GOTERO, ZUMO DE LIMÓN, MIEL, SAL, TÉ AMARGO (como el té de Boldo) y salsa de soya. Pronto propondremos una prueba, ¿de acuerdo? Pero antes, es bueno que sepas que, aunque haya papilas gustativas repartidas por toda la lengua, debido a la concentración de algunas de ellas en regiones específicas, los sabores pueden ser mejor percibidos de la siguiente manera:-SALADO (Izquierda superior de la lengua)-AMARGO (Derecha superior de la lengua)-Ácido o agrio (Izquierda inferior de la lengua)-DULCE (Punta de la lengua)-UMAMI (Derecha central de la lengua)La leche materna es uno de los alimentos más ricos en sabor umami.Prueba los sabores según las regiones y nota cómo los sientes. A continuación, sécate la lengua con una servilleta hasta que apenas quede humedad en ella. Pon un poquito de azúcar en la superficie. ¿Sientes algún sabor? Probablemente no. Solo saboreamos los alimentos porque la saliva ayuda a descomponer las partículas que sensibilizan las papilas gustativas.Para el salmista, las palabras de Dios son más dulces que la miel. Ese sabor nos produce alegría y quienes lo prueban sienten el deseo de volver a probarlo. La verdad es que nadie seguirá las instrucciones de la Palabra de Dios con alegría a menos que pruebe su dulzura.Sin embargo, la sensación de dulzura no siempre es inmediata cuando leemos la Biblia. Hay periodos en los que no nos sentimos motivados; en otros momentos, sentimos que la Palabra de Dios nos reprende y nos corrige. En esos momentos, no debemos resentirnos; al fin y al cabo, un padre que ama también corrige.Pídele a Dios que agudice tu paladar espiritual y te ayude a sentir la dulzura de aprender en su Palabra.
Oi, você se lembra da nossa voz? Voltamos, com a cara mais lavada do mundo, e estamos aqui, entregando sem prometer. Entregando o que exatamente? Veja bem, é complicado...
Kate y José conversan con Josefina Schenke, profesora asociada de la Universidad Adolfo Ibañez, sobre una escultura de la Virgen del Boldo (s. XIX), conservada en el Museo de la Catedral de Concepción, Chile.
En este episodio, te invitamos a descubrir los poderosos beneficios del boldo, un componente clave en nuestro Té EasyDetox. Este maravilloso ingrediente es reconocido por su capacidad para combatir y prevenir enfermedades biliares, gracias a sus propiedades hepatoprotectoras y coleréticas. Acompáñanos mientras exploramos cómo el boldo puede ayudar a mantener tu sistema biliar saludable, facilitando la digestión y previniendo la formación de cálculos biliares. Además, te brindaremos consejos prácticos y remedios naturales que puedes incorporar en tu rutina diaria para potenciar los efectos del boldo y promover una salud biliar óptima. No te pierdas este episodio lleno de información valiosa que puede ser un cambio de juego en tu camino hacia una vida más saludable. Antes de despedirnos, te invitamos a explorar nuestra tienda online https://tienda.marcelabortoni.com donde encontrarás una gama de productos diseñados para nutrir tu bienestar. Además, te invitamos a visitarnos en el Centro Médico Ave, ubicado en la calle Dr. Guajardo #155, Col. Los Doctores, Monterrey, para una consulta personalizada que puede transformar tu salud. Para cualquier consulta o para programar una asesoría virtual con nuestra nutrióloga, que incluye un análisis detallado a través de la iridología, no dudes en contactarnos al teléfono +52 8111336531 o vía WhatsApp al 8126075900. ¡Esperamos poder servirte pronto!
It is an early August morning. There is some wind and the sky is cloudy. At this time of the year, the Mulungú blooms: there are several of them, full of red flowers. Now it also blooms the yellow Ipe and the Congea tomentosa, that brings a lot of lilac flowers. There are Embaúbas and a very big Ficus, Avocados, Boldo and Jabuticaba trees. Birds fly from one tree to another, moving their leaves and branches. The ground is full of dry leaves. Recording by Verónica Cerrotta In São José do Vale do Rio Preto, Río de Janeiro
Why your animal will love benefits of meadowsweetIn this episode learn about the herb meadowsweet and how it may help your animal.Research mentioned in the episode includes:Concurrent use of veterinary drugs and herbal medicines in racing standardbredsEvaluation of the in vitro effect of Boldo and Meadowsweet plant extracts on the expression of antimicrobial peptides and inflammatory markers in canine keratinocytes, Research in Veterinary Science, Volume 115, 2017, Pages 255-262,ISSN 0034-5288, Domenico Santoro, Mary Bohannon, Kim Ahrens, Christelle Navarro, Hugues Gatto, Rosanna Marsella, Evaluation on the effects of 0.1% Peumus boldus leaf and Spiraea ulmaria plant extract combination on bacterial colonization in canine atopic dermatitis: A preliminary randomized, placebo controlled, double-blinded study, Research in Veterinary Science, Volume 118, 2018, Pages 164-170, ISSN 0034-5288Zélie Triaux, Léa Briard, Odile Petit, Eric Marchioni, Diane Julien-David, Effect of simulated foregut digestion on the antioxidant capacity of plants naturally consumed by horses, Animal Feed Science and TechnologyGet more information on complementary therapies for animals online at https://www.taranet.co.ukYou can get more tips and info by on my Social Media or websites: Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Aloe Vera Health & Skincare For Your Animals
Forandring ER mulig, seier Kjell Aanensen. Det har han både sett i eige liv og i livet til mongolen Boldo som han no har skrive bok om. Han blir intervjua av Anne Birgitte Lillebø Bøe
Temporada 9 do Quadro Fale com a UNIFAL do projeto A voz da ciência. Respondido por Tati Ishikawa, docente do curso de Farmácia da UNIFAL-MG. Mande você também suas dúvidas aqui nos comentários ou no direct do Instagram @avozdaciencia. Estamos na Rádio Federal FM101,3 não deixe de acompanhar! http://www.radiofederalfm.com.br/ https://linktr.ee/avozdaciencia
Temporada 9 do Quadro Fale com a UNIFAL do projeto A voz da ciência. Respondido por Aline Resende Nogueira Reis, Pós-graduanda em Nutrição pela UNIFAL-MG. Mande você também suas dúvidas aqui nos comentários ou no direct do Instagram @avozdaciencia. Estamos na Rádio Federal FM101,3 não deixe de acompanhar! http://www.radiofederalfm.com.br/ https://linktr.ee/avozdaciencia
Suscríbase al nuevo proyecto "Veamos la Respuesta": https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGCxshFOwP2nDn2AO-j7m8Q 0:00 Bienvenida 1:27 Abejas mariolas-sin aguijón 5:31 ¿Cuál es el continente más pequeño? 10:59 Fobia a permanecer en lugares abiertos-Agorafobia 12:46 ¿Quién inventó el papel moneda o billetes? 18:17 ¿Cuáles son los beneficios de tomar té de la planta boldo? 19:40 Pestes en la historia Programa de radio "Oigamos la Respuesta" del Instituto Centroamericano de Extensión de la Cultura (ICECU). El programa se hace con las preguntas que envían nuestros oyente y las respuestas que se elaboran en el ICECU con un lenguaje claro y sencillo desde el año 1964.
Panorama Agrícola é o programa de Rádio da Epagri voltado para a agricultura familiar e a pesca artesanal. O programa existe desde 1978, Historicamente o Panorama Agrícola acompanha as mudanças no mundo e principalmente no setor agrícola catarinense, buscando tecnologia e dinamismo.
BOLDO: APRENDA A LIMPEZA ESPIRITUAL
Erva-cidreira, Arnica, Babosa, Cannabis, Cúrcuma, Boldo, Gengibre são só alguns exemplos da imensa variedade de espécies de plantas medicinais com que a natureza nos abençoa. O Brasil é um dos países com a maior diversidade genética vegetal do planeta e nós acreditamos que esse conhecimento deve ser propagado. Nesse episódio converso com a farmacêutica e herbalista Alline Cipriano sobre o poder das ervas medicinais e como incluir elas na nossa rotina. Dá o play!
Panorama Agrícola é o programa de Rádio da Epagri voltado para a agricultura familiar e a pesca artesanal. O programa existe desde 1978, Historicamente o Panorama Agrícola acompanha as mudanças no mundo e principalmente no setor agrícola catarinense, buscando tecnologia e dinamismo.
Os dejamos el audio de esta charla organizada por el CAUM. Que conto como ponente con: Juan José Tamayo - Teólogo. Profesor emérito de la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Presenta el acto: Antonio G. Boldo. Autor de "La internacional del odio": Este libro ofrece un riguroso análisis de la nueva relación entre religión y política en América Latina, Estados Unidos y Europa. La alianza entre la extrema derecha política y los movimientos cristianos fundamentalistas ha dado lugar al nacimiento de una nueva religión, la Internacional cristoneofascista, que se alimenta del odio, crece y disfruta con él, lo fomenta entre sus seguidores y lo inocula en la ciudadanía. Una correlación de fuerzas que está cambiando el mapa político y religioso.
Uma breve abordagem sobre o que são as ervas medicinais. Possíveis interações com medicamentos. Cinco ervas utilizadas por mim com os seus benefícios. Menção das contraindicações. E três delas também podendo usar na Ginecologia Natural. Nomes científicos: castanha da Índia- Aesculus hippocastanum / calêndula - Calendula oficinas / Barbatimão - Stryphnodendrom adstringens / Boldo do Chile- Peumus boldus/ Alho - Allium sativum. Fontes das fotos: Canva e Barbatimão - https://www.aplantadavez.com.br/2019/03/barbatimao-stryphnodendron-adstringens.html?m=1 / Boldo do Chile - https://www.google.com/amp/s/emtempo.com.br/saude/199439/conheca-os-beneficios-do-boldo-para-a-saude%3f_=amp . Nenhum tratamento substitui a busca da área médica se for necessário.
Doenças são um tipo de distúrbio que alteram as atividades de alguns órgãos ou de todo o organismo, gerando assim sintomas desagradáveis. Não há como negar que várias dessas doenças receberam alguns nomes um tanto diferenciados e curiosos. Entretanto, há aquelas que vieram para complicar a nossa vida ainda mais e seus nomes são praticamente impossíveis de se falar corretamente, mesmo após várias tentativas. Pensando nisso, no episódio dessa semana resolvemos trazer algumas dessas doenças com nomes dignos de ser o boss final de um soletrando. Certamente o episódio virou um show de falhas de dicção, com aquele humor e piadas de sempre e membros conflitando com suas outras personalidades. Dá o play e aproveita para treinar sua dicção após meses de isolamento. Elenco: Flavia Gan, Anderson Freitas, Gabriel Nunes e Victor Pessente. Music by: Kevin MacLeod - Wholesome.
Todos temos aqueles parentes que conseguem curar qualquer coisa com um chá de gengibre, conhaque de alcatrão, mel e uma folha de boldo (para acrescentar um ótimo retrogosto). Há quem jure que funcione e outros que não. Felipe Boladão adorava o boldo para não ficar louco, mas não sabemos ao certo se o chá de boldo ameniza esse quadro. Mas o que isso tem a ver com a química dos produtos naturais? Essa vertente da química atua para encontrar novos compostos que apresentem atividades biológicas. Mas será que essas tradições populares ajudam em algo para esses químicos? Talvez o pessoal do oriente tenha essa resposta. Esse episódio é uma, singela, homenagem aos falecidos professores Elisaldo Carlini e Otto Gottlieb e, o ainda em plena atividade, professor Raimundo Braz Filho Referências [1] Entrevista do professor Raimundo Braz Filho no Moléculas podcast https://open.spotify.com/episode/3oHuqf6zXVWe9DzBroyETo?si=uSXHcXAURgG7jzWoKRWC5Q; [2] Artigo debatendo a importância do Otto na UFRRJ http://static.sites.sbq.org.br/rvq.sbq.org.br/pdf/v3n3a09.pdf ; [3] A. D. Coutinho, A. L. C. Domingues, F. J. N, and A. ST, “Tratamento da esquistossomose masônica hepatosplênica com praziquantel,” Rev Inst Med Trop Sao Paulo, vol. 26, no. 1. pp. 38–50, 1984; [4]S. Ismail, W. Kamal, and H. Salem, “Schistosoma Prevalence World-wide,” SM Gr., pp. 1–8, 2016; [5] H. Liu, S. William, E. Herdtweck, S. Botros, and A. Dömling, “MCR Synthesis of Praziquantel Derivatives,” Chem. Biol. Drug Des., vol. 79, no. 4, pp. 470–477, 2012, doi: 10.1111/j.1747-0285.2011.01288.x. [6] D. J. Newman and G. M. Cragg, “Natural Products as Sources of New Drugs from 1981 to 2014,” J. Nat. Prod., vol. 79, no. 3, pp. 629–661, 2016, doi:10.1021/acs.jnatprod.5b01055; [7] D. J. Newman and G. M. Cragg, “Natural Products as Sources of New Drugs over the Nearly Four Decades from 01/1981 to 09/2019,” J. Nat. Prod., vol. 83, no. 3, pp. 770–803, 2020, doi: 10.1021/acs.jnatprod.9b01285.
Seguimos en la letra "T" del abecé de la música popular de Brasil. Intervienen: Trio Madeira Brasil, Trio Mocotó, Trio Mocotó & Dizzy Gillespie, Trio Tarrason, Trio Ternura, Trupe Chá de Boldo, Túlio Borges y Túlio Piva. Escuchar audio
Com medo de um dentista realizar uma obturação enquanto samba o samba enredo da mangueira de 1996 Dhiogo Revert, Evandro de Freitas e Gabriel Goes comentam as notícias bizonhas da semana.
Lembra do gosto desse chá ? Era ruim, mas ajudava a melhorar.
26 year old Hayden Mayberry went missing on November 19, 2019. He reportedly walked into the woods in the Boldo area of Walker County, AL from a home he was staying at on Pine Dr. His remains were found on February 2, 2020 under some unusual circumstances. Join us as we dig into the details of Hayden's disappearance and death. Episode 1 of a bonus mini-series.
O programa traz uma entrevista exclusiva com o infectologista Edmilson Migowski, professor da Universidade Federal do Rio. Neste sexto episódio da série especial sobre o novo coronavírus, os diretores da Lupa Natália Leal e Gilberto Scofield Jr. esclarecem os boatos sobre uma proibição do STF ao atendimento de civis com Covid-19 em hospitais militares; e sobre um suposto fim de internações pela doença em hospital de Porto Alegre. Eles explicam também por que o vírus mata mais homens; e por que não tem fundamento a nova cura milagrosa propagada nas redes sociais: chá de boldo. O Verifica destaca ainda, como sempre, uma boa notícia: professor da Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso ensina a fazer uma máscara simples, com garrafa pet. Acesse o site da Lupa (www.lupa.news) e leia mais conteúdos sobre fake news. O podcast Verifica tem produção de conteúdo da Agência Lupa. O roteiro e a edição são do Colmeia Podcast.
ainda quarentenados, um assunto que caiu como uma luva foi aula de música, já que tem sido a oportunidade de muita gente fazer alguma renda. papo muito bacana com o músico saxofonista Filipe Nader (Música de Selvagem, Trupe Chá de Boldo), sobre como é o processo de aprendizado de música, desde as primeiras notas até a faculdade, passando por questões sempre presentes no processo e que muitas vezes não são musicais. ainda, o pitaco especializadíssimo da educadora musical Cecília Cavalieri França. taí a playlist do episódio, feita colaborativamente por Filipe e Thiago: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/72mOsRRbWC4Vh24R4lWmdU?si=cGK2KMPqTOK3KLrur4EiJA pra saber um pouco mais dos assuntos debatidos aqui e pra ficar em contato direto com a gente, siga o perfil do podcast no instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sabesompodcast/
Boldo, benefícios, saúde, boldo baiano, boldo brasileiro, tapete de oxalá, boldo chinês, esoterismo, métodos, alternativo, informação.
11 de marzo de 2020. Descubre todas las propiedades y beneficios de esta planta con gran historia.
Freak Wars 2019 quiere decir hobby, entrevistas, risas, charla con vosotros, presentación de la Hermana Marina y mucho más. Incluso el Culo de Horus. Xandre, Byor, Logan, Marina, Brottor, Patryn, Alan y Karan estuvimos en las Freak Wars para compartir con gente del hobby y oyentes de todo tipo dos días intensos y divertidos. Este programa especial recoge los mejores momentos. Pedimos disculpas a algunos oyentes (por suerte, pocos) cuyos saludos o charlas coincidieron con tanto ruido de fondo del evento que no han podido entrar en el programa. Un saludo especial para vosotros, y ojalá en el próximo evento que nos veamos podamos compensaros. ¿Quieres participar en el sorteo del juego The Chronicles of Run, de Scale75? Con que dejes un comentario aquí en iVoox ya estarás participando (y también si dejas un comentario en www.lavozdehorus.com). ¿Te gusta lo que hacemos y quieres apoyarnos y de paso participar en el sorteo mensual de 260€ en material de Warhammer 40k? Dale al botón de "Apoyar" en iVoox. Tendrás una participación por 1,49€, tres participaciones por 2,99€, siete participaciones por 4,99€, y otras siete por cada bloque de 4,99€. Más detalle en nuestra web, lavozdehorus.com. 00:00:00 La intensa mañana del sábado de Freak Wars con Fanvención, Kill Team Castellano, Culo de Horus, Panzerhammer, Pablo Fernández, Waaagh Fest y Minero Blanco. 00:43:35 La interesante tarde del sábado de Freak Wars con Marco y el torneo de 40k, con Tere y Sergio de La Voz de Sigmar, Fenrik Studio, José Méndez Boldo de Scale75 (no os perdáis The Chronicles of Run y Fallen Frontiers) y Bohorque de La Cúpula del Cobrador. 01:30:19 Reunión en la Disformidad con Hydra Studio, autores de la Hermana Marina. 01:59:50 Saludos de oyentes, el chute de energía que nos hace ir siempre a las Freak Wars. 02:23:54 La desconcertante mañana del domingo de Freak Wars con Martillo del Inframundo, DEEP Games, Autoescuelas Antonio, los grandes Nico y Ross de Freak Wars y Warhammer grupal cosplay 2020. 03:08:24 El sprint final de la tarde del domingo de Freak Wars con Iván y el torneo de Kill Team, Manu y el I GT de Córdoba de Kill Team, Marco y el torneo de 40k, Trono de Hierro Podcast, Tank Girl, DEEP Games one more time, La Voz de Sigmar y el torneo de Age of Sigmar, Max, Marina, Brottor, Byor y el resto del equipo de La Voz de Horus. Todos los enlaces a los invitados están disponibles en la entrada de este podcast en www.lavozdehorus.com Escúchanos mientras pintas minis o mientras sacas el perro a pasear. No importa el momento, pero cuenta con nosotros para ser tu programa semanal de referencia sobre Warhammer 40.000. Toda la música de este podcast es licencia Creative Commons, compuesta e interpretada por ‘Royalty Free Kings' y Mark Petrie, o aparece con permiso expreso de su autor, Fernando Amat. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Marxismo é um conceito criado no século 19 que foi compreendido e aplicado no século 20. Para entendê-lo, e também tratar do seu uso indevido no debate atual da política nacional, o “Politiquês” conversou com o Celso Rocha de Barros, doutor em sociologia pela Universidade de Oxford e colunista do jornal Folha de S.Paulo, e com o Eduardo Wolf, doutor em filosofia pela USP e editor do blog Estado da Arte no jornal O Estado de S. Paulo. A dica de livro é da jornalista Priscila Pacheco e a trilha sonora é da banda Trupe Chá de Boldo. (álbuns "Verso", de 2017, e "Nave Manha", de 2012).
Esta semana dramatizamos tres relatos cortos que nos presentan nuevos personajes y lugares de Warhammer 40.000. Son los ganadores del concurso de relatos del VIII GT de Talavera, y además de dramatizarlos hablaremos con sus autores. Boldo, Víctor y Rafa nos deleitan con sus tres breves pero intensas historias ambientadas en el siniestro futuro donde sólo hay guerra. Junto a Marina las dramatizamos y hablamos con los tres autores de la situación actual de la ficción en Warhammer 40k. 0:00:00 Presentación y pequeño debate inicial 0:15:52 La Caída del Alcázar de Horus, de José Méndez "Boldo" 0:31:53 El Fin del Honor, de Víctor González 0:48:45 Armas y Municiones, de Rafael Barbudo 1:04:30 Charla con los tres autores Escúchanos mientras pintas minis o mientras sacas el perro a pasear. No importa el momento, pero cuenta con nosotros para ser tu programa semanal de referencia sobre Warhammer 40.000. Toda la música de este podcast es licencia Creative Commons, compuesta e interpretada por ‘Royalty Free Kings' y Mark Patrie, y la detallada en https://lavozdesigmar.com/temas-musicales-lvds/ Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Entrevista com a banda brasiliense Distintos Filhos, novidades de PJ Harvey e das bandas Trupe Chá de Boldo e Queens Of the Stone Age, comemoração do aniversário dos 20 anos do álbum Ok Computer do Radiohead, saiba sobre o projeto do filme Faça Você Mesma, que conta a história do Movimento Riot Grrrl brasileiro, conheça o projeto musical alagoano Ethereal e nossa nova descoberta musical, o duo de indie folk britânico, The Happy Couple.
O Tá Massa Show está de volta com mais um arrasa quarteirão! Pois no episódio de hoje vamos descer o verbo e trazer verdades acerca de produções aclamadas pelo público mas que com certeza, na nossa opinião, merecem uma segunda, digamos, interpretação… Não acredita que a força do ódio pode unir as pessoas? Neste programa iremos mostrar que nem tudo é preto no branco e que “mimimi” dá muito o que falar! Apresentamos a vocês, queridos ouvintes, nossas desindicações!! Um apurado de tudo aquilo que consumimos e infelizmente não podemos desconsumir, coisas que um dia passaram e agora não passam mais, coisas que simplesmente “não deu” do começo ao fim, e coisas que “poderiam ter ficado sem essa”. Conduzindo a conversa, na mesa temos nossa equipe “ranço power” comandada por nossa host maravilhosa Júlia Clemente (@juliaclemente89), Caio Santos (@mandume__) e Igor Salgueiro (@igorsalgueiro). Aperta o play e nos conta o que você achou!! Você diria não para esse episódio?? Não desiste da gente e se for nos desindicar, bem, entendemos, às vezes o ranço fala mais alto… Pauta Principal: 00:01:30 Indica Aí: 01:24:13 Indica Aí • Cinema da Fundação Joaquim Nabuco • Good Girls (Série) • Hannah Gadsby: Nanette (Stand Up) Banda da Semana: Trupe Chá de Boldo
La primera Gran FAQ de esta edición ha llegado, y trae cambios generales y concretos para todos los jugadores de 40k. Los analizamos junto a Fher y Boldo para saber qué cambia y cómo afecta eso a las distintas facciones del juego. Además aprovechamos para saber cómo fue el MiniGT de Valladolid y la Adepticon, teniendo en cuenta que además lo que pasó en Chicago fue una de las razones de retrasar la Gran FAQ para controlar cierto tipo de listas del juego competitivo. Escúchanos mientras pintas minis o mientras sacas el perro a pasear. No importa el momento, pero cuenta con nosotros para ser tu programa semanal de referencia sobre Warhammer 40.000. Toda la música de este podcast es licencia Creative Commons, compuesta e interpretada por ‘Royalty Free Kings' y Mark Patrie. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Atriz que assumiu o namoro com a cantora Ana Carolina reflete sobre sexualidade, gênero e preconceito e conta sobre seus novos trabalhos Letícia fez teatro infantil, estudou cinema, trabalhou como diretora de arte, mas foi protagonizando vídeos de humor no Youtube que conquistou o Brasil. Ao lado do amigo - e então marido - Ian SBF ela criou o site Anões em Chamas, um dos canais pioneiros em comédia na internet brasileira e embrião do hoje mega-bombado Porta dos Fundos. No Porta, fez parte da formação original e protagonizou vídeos memoráveis como o Na Lata e o Rola, que juntos somam aproximadamente 50 milhões de visualizações. Em 2015, trocou a internet pela Rede Globo para protagonizar a novela A Regra do Jogo, onde viveu a funkeira Alisson. Em 2017, ela tem focado sua atenção no cinema. No primeiro semestre lançou o filme Ninguém Entra, Ninguém Sai. No dia 28 de setembro estreia o Duas de Mim. E tem ainda o 98%, que deve pintar logo mais nas salas de todo o Brasil. Além de chamar a atenção pelo talento e pela beleza, mais recentemente Letícia mostrou coragem e personalidade ao assumir publicamente o namoro com a cantora Ana Carolina. Expondo sua intimidade, Letícia se junta a outras personalidades na construção de uma barreira contra a maré do retrocesso e do preconceito que assola o Brasil e o mundo. Na conversa com o Trip FM, a atriz reflete sobre esse momento, fala de cinema e televisão, relembra alguns trabalhos no Porta dos Fundos e revela sua paixão pela marcenaria.ESCUTE A ENTREVISTA COMPLETA NO PLAY ABAIXO: [AUDIO=https://p.audio.uol.com.br/trip/2017/9/leticialima_pod.mp3; IMAGE=https://revistatrip.uol.com.br/upload/2017/09/59c57e0a2052d/1120x630x960x540x79x33/leticialima03.jpg] SET LISTThe Glimmers — PhysicalPeter Tosh — Can't You SeeTrupe Chá de Boldo — Na GarrafaDire Straits — Southbound Again Ouça todas as músicas que rolaram no Trip FM em 2017
El podcast de esta tema toca temas importantes para los pacientes con cirrosis hepática, el primero de ellos es sobre el riesgo que tiene el aceite de coco, y de la mano de ese tema, que tan útil es tomar un té muy famoso en México que se llama Boldo, y también comento los problemas de la automedicación y los remedios naturistas o herbales.
El té de boldo ha sido por años un remedio naturista para cuidar la salud del hígado ¿Realmente es bueno? El aceite de coco y si mejora nuestro sistema inmunológico y el daños hepático que pueden causar ciertos medicamentos, nunca hay que automedicarse.
Another ten episodes down, 931 to go! This week the Immortals continue to try to find Bethany in the Old God's dimension and watch Sarah's pick for The List: A Few Good Men. Then, they touch on super-beings in their review of Alien. They find that Young Gods are waaay better than Old Gods, and Life In A Northern Town isn't so bad. Gargling with Jelly is literally and figuratively explored, and finally, Austin once again delivers a tour de force monologue when he discusses yet another obscure TV show that no one else watched, Intro 0:00-10:25 BONUS: A Few Good Men 10:25 – 36:00 Alien 36:00 – 1:00:35 L'Eau Rouge 1:00:35 – 1:06:46 Boldo Leaf 1:06:46 – 1:07:05 Life In A Northern Town 1:07:05 – 1:12:32 Gargling With Jelly 1:12:32 – 1:19:37 Dae Jang Geum 1:19:37 – 1:24:17 Outro 1:24:17 – 1:29:01 --Leave your own henge ratings at TheArtImmortal.com --Be sure you leave an iTunes review so Pedro can give you a compliment on air. --Also, Austin is a dummy and Alien is Ridley Scott's second film. Email Twitter iTunes YouTube Join us Thursday next as we discuss more things. Until then, email or tweet us your thoughts, leave a review on iTunes and other crap every podcast asks you to do. (But we love that you do it!) Artwork by Ray Martindale Opening tune by Adam Lord Edited by Adam Lord
É Natal no Bumbumcast! Nesse episódio, Hell Ravani, Gustavo Suzuki e Vitor Brandt contam com a ajuda da atriz Marianna Armellini para falar de temas festivos! Conversamos sobre filmes de natal, patinação no gelo e amigo secreto!Temas sugeridos por Arrigo Araújo, Arthur Didier, Hugo Alexandre, Karen Kings e pela banda Trupe Chá de Boldo.Edição e gravação: Matheus Leston.Quer participar do próximo programa com sugestões de temas ou perguntas? Escreva para bumbumcast@srbumbum.com.brhttp://www.facebook.com/srbumbumhttp://www.srbumbum.com.br