Podcasts about Boucher

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The Calgary Sessions with Jeff Humphreys
Brent Boucher: Finding Your Strength in Uncomfortable Places

The Calgary Sessions with Jeff Humphreys

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2025 65:27


How do you build a life when your childhood is defined by instability?Brent Boucher is a Calgary entrepreneur who built a successful motorcycle shop and finance company from scratch. But his journey started in a place of deep trauma, navigating family mental health crises and leaving school in Grade 11 just to pay the bills.In this conversation, Brent shares the unconventional origin story of his career (which involves a stolen dirt bike) and his core philosophy: you have to seek discomfort to perform at your best. This is a raw conversation about prioritizing grit over talent and building a life by "feeling the end picture" rather than following a rigid plan.Follow The Calgary Sessions podcast for more stories like this.Connect with our guest, Brent Boucher:WebsiteFollow Jeff HumphreysWebsiteInstagramTikTokLinkedInPodcast Location & Production:Off Set Studios

Palmarès CHOQ
Ally Neah et Andréane Boucher: Entrevue avec Charles Kardos!

Palmarès CHOQ

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2025 56:51


 Cette semaine on vous introduit à nos deux nouvelles animatrices du lundi: Ally Neah et Andréane Boucher! On vous jase de la nouvelle chanson de Charles Kardos: « Close to the Sun », de sa passion pour la musique, de son expérience dans les concours de talents au Québec et ce qui l'attend pour la suite de sa carrière! Vous pouvez écouter sa chanson sur toutes les plateformes de streaming et le voir à l'émission Quel Talent!   Au palmarès CHOQ.ca, on vous fait écouter:    Conifère & Bayta - En avant pour tomber - La nuit le sait Avril Jensen (feat. Vincento Ivanov) - Parfois, les jours de vent - Parfois, les jours de vent Marcia - Marcia - Ivresse Calista Garcia - Animal Magnifique! - Animal Magnifique TOPS - Bury the Key - Falling on my sword Jules Encore - Poti le pothos - Pistache Simon Lachance - Cycle délicat - Cycle délicat Beat Sexü - Dernière chance - Catché de quoi Pierre Guitard - L'allée des melons - La promesse

Moncton Wildcast
Another Split for the Wildcats (Season 9 Episode 9)

Moncton Wildcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2025 58:07


Another Split for the Wildcats presented by Fabulous Flooring a Division of Discount Flooring Centre Quick Question as fan of the show Julien Robichaud asked for our thoughts on the officials on the ice compared to what we're seeing on the ice. News & Notes from around the League - Mik Drop as Lecompte is leaving the Sags, we had the 1st ever QMJHL Prospects game. Mixed reaction as our players represented well, but the event left something to be desired. QMJHL Team of the Week & Boucher's Team of the Week. Weekly Rewind (presented by Alphas Appliance Solutions) The Wildcats again get a split on the Week, as they go across the bridge to pick up the 2 points vs the Islanders, get 18 back on Sunday but it was no quite the Sunday Funday we wanted! Eric Murray Reality Stick Tap of the Week Rosemary Lynns Massage & Spa Wildcast Wildcat of the Week ENJOY!! Follow Wildcast Podcast across all social media platforms: Facebook: / wildcastpodcast Instagram: / wildcastpodcast Twitter/X: / monctonwildcast Tik Tok: / wildcastpodcast Our Podcast is brought to you by our wonderful sponsors: Discount Flooring Services: www.discountflooringcentre.ca Waterworks Pools & Spas: www.waterworkspools.com Alpha's Appliance Solutions: www.appliancesolutions.ca Eric Murray - Greater Moncton Realtor Facebook : www.facebook.com/ericmurrayrealtor Rosemary Lynn's Massage & Spa Facebook Page: / www.facebook.com/RLmassage1/ 

Escala en París
El rancho Izaguirre, campo de exterminio del narco, un 'antes y un después' para México

Escala en París

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2025 13:33


En marzo del 2025 se abren las puertas del infierno en México.  Indira Navarro, la líder de Guerreros Buscadores de Jalisco, un colectivo de familiares que buscan a sus desaparecidos haciendo el trabajo que las autoridades no hacen, dio a conocer la existencia del rancho Izaguirre en el Estado de Jalisco, en el oeste del país. Un rancho de adiestramiento, tortura y exterminio del cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, la organización criminal más peligrosa de México, catalogada como grupo terrorista por los Estados Unidos. ¿Qué se encontró en ese rancho? Sandra Romandía responde a esta pregunta en su libro "Testigos del horror: la verdad que se quiso ocultar en el Rancho Izaguirre". El hallazgo del Rancho Izaguirre ha estremecido a la sociedad mexicana, que pensaba estar acostumbrada al horror o por lo menos estar anestesiada en un país donde más de 130.000 personas han desaparecido en los últimos años, según cifras oficiales. La periodista de investigación y directora editorial de Eme Equis, Sandra Romandía recorrió este rancho. A pesar de un profundo conocimiento de los métodos del narcotráfico y del alcance de su violencia, lo que presenció ha dejado profundas marcas: “Para mí, lo importante es documentar lo que fue este rancho, dejar claro que fue un centro que funcionó como un lugar de reclutamiento forzado de jóvenes que obligaban a ser esclavos del crimen organizado y de los cárteles. Quien no quería entrar en el sistema de esclavitud era simplemente exterminado”. Este centro rodeado de balnearios y salas de fiesta a una hora de la capital de Jalisco, un Estado próspero y bien conectado funcionó durante más de una década, pero nadie “supo ni vio nada”. ¿Cuántos ranchos Izaguirre? El objetivo de Sandra Romandía es decir alto y claro que este rancho no es una anomalía, es la norma: “Hay varios ranchos en la misma zona de México que han estado funcionando o presumiblemente funcionan todavía con este sistema de reclutamiento forzado. A la mayoría los llevan con falsas ofertas de trabajo, aunque tienen otras técnicas, los obligan a ser sicarios y no vuelven a ver a sus familias, mientras miles de familias en México están buscando a sus jóvenes desaparecidos”. Este rancho se encuentra en el epicentro de las operaciones del Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG), uno de los más poderosos de México. No es una casualidad que sea el Estado donde más desapariciones se contabilizan en el país. “Son 15.000 personas desaparecidas. Ahí debió haber existido una alerta desde que se vieron crecer esos números y ahora entendemos con el hallazgo de este rancho y esta historia que yo puedo contar con diferentes ángulos para decir una historia completa”, precisa Romandía. De acuerdo con la Fiscalía Especial en Personas Desaparecidas en el estado de Jalisco, entre diciembre de 2018 y febrero de 2025 las autoridades han procesado 186 sitios de inhumación clandestina. Borrar pistas y quebrar protocolos de investigación Al ingresar al rancho, la periodista no ve exactamente lo que los colectivos de buscadores reportaron al descubrirlo. Las montañas de ropa, de zapatos, de mochilas, unas 200 prendas, que evocan imágenes de matanzas y los hornos crematorios –fosas en la tierra en las que quemaban los cuerpos- habían desaparecido. Los colectivos llegaron a este rancho siguiendo pistas que les habían comunicado de manera anónima. Ante la evidencia, “se dan cuenta de que a ese lugar llegaban jóvenes desaparecidos. Empiezan a buscar en la tierra porque tenían la información de que ahí incineraban cuerpos y los enterraban. Encontraron cuerpos humanos. Cuando los periodistas como yo logramos entrar, ya las autoridades habían prácticamente limpiado el lugar. Así se desvanecía la prueba de que ahí hubo asesinatos masivos. Todos los protocolos de investigación se habían roto”. De hecho, las autoridades, desde abajo, a nivel municipal, hasta la cima, niegan que se trate de un campo de exterminio privilegiando destacar las actividades de adiestramiento, a pesar de que existe una cantidad industrial de indicios: “Cuando estuve caminando por el rancho vi cepillos de dientes tirados que pudieron pertenecer a desaparecidos. Vi también una mochila todavía tirada en la tierra con un desdén por parte de las autoridades que muestra por qué en México no se encuentran los desaparecidos”. Es ese desprecio por las víctimas y por los protocolos forenses que denuncian los colectivos de buscadores. Colectivos que han sido clave en la escritura del libro "Testigos del horror: la verdad que se quiso ocultar en el Rancho Izaguirre" (Editorial Grijalbo Penguin Random House). Gracias a Guerreros Buscadores de Jalisco, la autora llega hasta María, un testigo clave. Contar el horror desde adentro “María estuvo esclavizada tres años en este rancho Izaguirre. Fue secuestrada y obligada a trabajar para el Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG). Cuenta que tenía prohibido ver al cielo, ver las puertas del rancho. Dormía encadenada y vivía bajo órdenes humillantes. Ella se logra escapar” y es por eso que puede contar su historia a la reportera. Ahora María vive resguardada con miedo sufriendo cada día las consecuencias psicológicas “brutales” de lo que hizo y de lo que vio. Quiere sin embargo contar la ferocidad del rancho Izaguirre para salvar a otras víctimas potenciales. Como María, varios testimonios desgarradores cuentan desde adentro, incluyendo a los propios sicarios, lo que pocos han contado – el proceso de reclutamiento, la tortura, la coerción, la trata de seres humanos, el tráfico de órganos y finalmente la desaparición de los cuerpos-armando un rompecabezas al que tantas piezas han faltado. De la misma manera, si es tan difícil que estos testimonios lleguen a los juzgados es porque las víctimas se convierten en victimarios para sobrevivir. En el momento de su reclutamiento forzado graban videos despidiéndose de su familia y declarando su alianza voluntaria al cártel y una vez dentro son filmados cometiendo crímenes. El cartel tiene un repertorio infinito para conseguir un silencio de tumba: “¿Cómo juzgar a las personas víctimas que se convirtieron en victimarios? Muchos de estos testimonios, y a lo mejor es lo más valioso del libro, logran contar su historia porque no quieren que se repita. Pero, por otra parte, tienen mucho miedo porque ellos también cometieron crímenes que les obligaron a hacer para mantenerse vivos, es decir, torturar a sus compañeros, asesinar a sus compañeros, descuartizar a sus compañeros”. Un cártel poderoso con alcance tentacular Mientras que el rompecabezas de las desapariciones forzadas se va armando a los ojos de México y el mundo, la respuesta de las autoridades se limita al control de daños y a arrestos espectaculares hechos a la medida para las cámaras. Según cuenta un sicario entrevistado por Sandra Romandía haría falta un operativo masivo por tierra, cielo y aire para tener resultados efectivos solamente en el Estado de Jalisco. Lo que muestra su trabajo de investigación es que el Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG) funciona como una transnacional que abre sucursales con vínculos directos en Colombia y en Estados Unidos, por mencionar solo algunos. Ni la guerra contra el narco de Felipe Calderón, ni la doctrina de abrazos no balazos de López Obrador han logrado disminuir la influencia del crimen organizado. Dos preguntas se plantean: ¿cómo luchar contra un cartel tan poderoso y sanguinario? Y ¿qué tan alto sube la red de complicidad que permite que el CJNG funcione? “Ningún gobierno de México ha podido hasta ahora luchar contra el monstruo que ha sido el narcotráfico y que ha crecido de más. Por supuesto, para mí la respuesta sería limpiar las instituciones desde lo local, estatal, federal porque actualmente están corrompidas por los criminales”, analiza Romandía. En Jalisco como en muchos Estados mexicanos donde las desapariciones alcanzan cifras desquiciantes las cámaras de seguridad de las ciudades nunca funcionan y los jóvenes se esfuman en la central de autobuses sin que nadie sepa lo que ocurre con las víctimas. “Esta colusión y corrupción gubernamental entre policías municipales, estatales, la Guardia      Nacional y los políticos fue lo que permitió que el rancho operara durante más de una década. No fueron ni dos policias municipales y un alcalde que son lo que actualmente están procesados, ni tres personas más los que estuvieron a cargo de este engranaje sofisticado de esclavitud. Debe haber personajes clave en diferentes puntos de gobierno”, agrega. Para la presidenta Claudia Sheinbaum, que enfrenta también la presión estadounidense para luchar contra el narcotráfico, el caso Izaguirre viene claramente a demostrar “el control que tiene el crimen organizado en México. El descubrimiento del rancho representa un antes y un después”. Entre el momento en que Radio Francia Internacional charló con Sandra Romandía y la publicación de esta entrevista, han pasado pocos días. Entre tanto, 48 bolsas con restos humanos fueron encontradas en una fosa clandestina de Zapopan, un municipio periférico de Guadalajara, la capital del Estado. Y una vez más es un colectivo de buscadores que realizó el hallazgo poniendo su vida en riesgo. Solo este año 27 madres buscadoras han sido asesinadas incluyendo a Teresa González Murillo, buscadora de Jalisco.   #EscalaenParís también está en redes sociales Un programa coordinado por Ana Maria Ospina realizado por Souheil Khedir y Jérémie Boucher.

Escala en París
El rancho Izaguirre, campo de exterminio del narco, un 'antes y un después' para México

Escala en París

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2025 13:33


En marzo del 2025 se abren las puertas del infierno en México.  Indira Navarro, la líder de Guerreros Buscadores de Jalisco, un colectivo de familiares que buscan a sus desaparecidos haciendo el trabajo que las autoridades no hacen, dio a conocer la existencia del rancho Izaguirre en el Estado de Jalisco, en el oeste del país. Un rancho de adiestramiento, tortura y exterminio del cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, la organización criminal más peligrosa de México, catalogada como grupo terrorista por los Estados Unidos. ¿Qué se encontró en ese rancho? Sandra Romandía responde a esta pregunta en su libro "Testigos del horror: la verdad que se quiso ocultar en el Rancho Izaguirre". El hallazgo del Rancho Izaguirre ha estremecido a la sociedad mexicana, que pensaba estar acostumbrada al horror o por lo menos estar anestesiada en un país donde más de 130.000 personas han desaparecido en los últimos años, según cifras oficiales. La periodista de investigación y directora editorial de Eme Equis, Sandra Romandía recorrió este rancho. A pesar de un profundo conocimiento de los métodos del narcotráfico y del alcance de su violencia, lo que presenció ha dejado profundas marcas: “Para mí, lo importante es documentar lo que fue este rancho, dejar claro que fue un centro que funcionó como un lugar de reclutamiento forzado de jóvenes que obligaban a ser esclavos del crimen organizado y de los cárteles. Quien no quería entrar en el sistema de esclavitud era simplemente exterminado”. Este centro rodeado de balnearios y salas de fiesta a una hora de la capital de Jalisco, un Estado próspero y bien conectado funcionó durante más de una década, pero nadie “supo ni vio nada”. ¿Cuántos ranchos Izaguirre? El objetivo de Sandra Romandía es decir alto y claro que este rancho no es una anomalía, es la norma: “Hay varios ranchos en la misma zona de México que han estado funcionando o presumiblemente funcionan todavía con este sistema de reclutamiento forzado. A la mayoría los llevan con falsas ofertas de trabajo, aunque tienen otras técnicas, los obligan a ser sicarios y no vuelven a ver a sus familias, mientras miles de familias en México están buscando a sus jóvenes desaparecidos”. Este rancho se encuentra en el epicentro de las operaciones del Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG), uno de los más poderosos de México. No es una casualidad que sea el Estado donde más desapariciones se contabilizan en el país. “Son 15.000 personas desaparecidas. Ahí debió haber existido una alerta desde que se vieron crecer esos números y ahora entendemos con el hallazgo de este rancho y esta historia que yo puedo contar con diferentes ángulos para decir una historia completa”, precisa Romandía. De acuerdo con la Fiscalía Especial en Personas Desaparecidas en el estado de Jalisco, entre diciembre de 2018 y febrero de 2025 las autoridades han procesado 186 sitios de inhumación clandestina. Borrar pistas y quebrar protocolos de investigación Al ingresar al rancho, la periodista no ve exactamente lo que los colectivos de buscadores reportaron al descubrirlo. Las montañas de ropa, de zapatos, de mochilas, unas 200 prendas, que evocan imágenes de matanzas y los hornos crematorios –fosas en la tierra en las que quemaban los cuerpos- habían desaparecido. Los colectivos llegaron a este rancho siguiendo pistas que les habían comunicado de manera anónima. Ante la evidencia, “se dan cuenta de que a ese lugar llegaban jóvenes desaparecidos. Empiezan a buscar en la tierra porque tenían la información de que ahí incineraban cuerpos y los enterraban. Encontraron cuerpos humanos. Cuando los periodistas como yo logramos entrar, ya las autoridades habían prácticamente limpiado el lugar. Así se desvanecía la prueba de que ahí hubo asesinatos masivos. Todos los protocolos de investigación se habían roto”. De hecho, las autoridades, desde abajo, a nivel municipal, hasta la cima, niegan que se trate de un campo de exterminio privilegiando destacar las actividades de adiestramiento, a pesar de que existe una cantidad industrial de indicios: “Cuando estuve caminando por el rancho vi cepillos de dientes tirados que pudieron pertenecer a desaparecidos. Vi también una mochila todavía tirada en la tierra con un desdén por parte de las autoridades que muestra por qué en México no se encuentran los desaparecidos”. Es ese desprecio por las víctimas y por los protocolos forenses que denuncian los colectivos de buscadores. Colectivos que han sido clave en la escritura del libro "Testigos del horror: la verdad que se quiso ocultar en el Rancho Izaguirre" (Editorial Grijalbo Penguin Random House). Gracias a Guerreros Buscadores de Jalisco, la autora llega hasta María, un testigo clave. Contar el horror desde adentro “María estuvo esclavizada tres años en este rancho Izaguirre. Fue secuestrada y obligada a trabajar para el Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG). Cuenta que tenía prohibido ver al cielo, ver las puertas del rancho. Dormía encadenada y vivía bajo órdenes humillantes. Ella se logra escapar” y es por eso que puede contar su historia a la reportera. Ahora María vive resguardada con miedo sufriendo cada día las consecuencias psicológicas “brutales” de lo que hizo y de lo que vio. Quiere sin embargo contar la ferocidad del rancho Izaguirre para salvar a otras víctimas potenciales. Como María, varios testimonios desgarradores cuentan desde adentro, incluyendo a los propios sicarios, lo que pocos han contado – el proceso de reclutamiento, la tortura, la coerción, la trata de seres humanos, el tráfico de órganos y finalmente la desaparición de los cuerpos-armando un rompecabezas al que tantas piezas han faltado. De la misma manera, si es tan difícil que estos testimonios lleguen a los juzgados es porque las víctimas se convierten en victimarios para sobrevivir. En el momento de su reclutamiento forzado graban videos despidiéndose de su familia y declarando su alianza voluntaria al cártel y una vez dentro son filmados cometiendo crímenes. El cartel tiene un repertorio infinito para conseguir un silencio de tumba: “¿Cómo juzgar a las personas víctimas que se convirtieron en victimarios? Muchos de estos testimonios, y a lo mejor es lo más valioso del libro, logran contar su historia porque no quieren que se repita. Pero, por otra parte, tienen mucho miedo porque ellos también cometieron crímenes que les obligaron a hacer para mantenerse vivos, es decir, torturar a sus compañeros, asesinar a sus compañeros, descuartizar a sus compañeros”. Un cártel poderoso con alcance tentacular Mientras que el rompecabezas de las desapariciones forzadas se va armando a los ojos de México y el mundo, la respuesta de las autoridades se limita al control de daños y a arrestos espectaculares hechos a la medida para las cámaras. Según cuenta un sicario entrevistado por Sandra Romandía haría falta un operativo masivo por tierra, cielo y aire para tener resultados efectivos solamente en el Estado de Jalisco. Lo que muestra su trabajo de investigación es que el Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG) funciona como una transnacional que abre sucursales con vínculos directos en Colombia y en Estados Unidos, por mencionar solo algunos. Ni la guerra contra el narco de Felipe Calderón, ni la doctrina de abrazos no balazos de López Obrador han logrado disminuir la influencia del crimen organizado. Dos preguntas se plantean: ¿cómo luchar contra un cartel tan poderoso y sanguinario? Y ¿qué tan alto sube la red de complicidad que permite que el CJNG funcione? “Ningún gobierno de México ha podido hasta ahora luchar contra el monstruo que ha sido el narcotráfico y que ha crecido de más. Por supuesto, para mí la respuesta sería limpiar las instituciones desde lo local, estatal, federal porque actualmente están corrompidas por los criminales”, analiza Romandía. En Jalisco como en muchos Estados mexicanos donde las desapariciones alcanzan cifras desquiciantes las cámaras de seguridad de las ciudades nunca funcionan y los jóvenes se esfuman en la central de autobuses sin que nadie sepa lo que ocurre con las víctimas. “Esta colusión y corrupción gubernamental entre policías municipales, estatales, la Guardia      Nacional y los políticos fue lo que permitió que el rancho operara durante más de una década. No fueron ni dos policias municipales y un alcalde que son lo que actualmente están procesados, ni tres personas más los que estuvieron a cargo de este engranaje sofisticado de esclavitud. Debe haber personajes clave en diferentes puntos de gobierno”, agrega. Para la presidenta Claudia Sheinbaum, que enfrenta también la presión estadounidense para luchar contra el narcotráfico, el caso Izaguirre viene claramente a demostrar “el control que tiene el crimen organizado en México. El descubrimiento del rancho representa un antes y un después”. Entre el momento en que Radio Francia Internacional charló con Sandra Romandía y la publicación de esta entrevista, han pasado pocos días. Entre tanto, 48 bolsas con restos humanos fueron encontradas en una fosa clandestina de Zapopan, un municipio periférico de Guadalajara, la capital del Estado. Y una vez más es un colectivo de buscadores que realizó el hallazgo poniendo su vida en riesgo. Solo este año 27 madres buscadoras han sido asesinadas incluyendo a Teresa González Murillo, buscadora de Jalisco.   #EscalaenParís también está en redes sociales Un programa coordinado por Ana Maria Ospina realizado por Souheil Khedir y Jérémie Boucher.

Investor Fuel Real Estate Investing Mastermind - Audio Version
Tracking KPIs, Smarter Leads, and Real Mentorship (with Shadd Boucher)

Investor Fuel Real Estate Investing Mastermind - Audio Version

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2025 22:59


In this conversation, Shadd Boucher, a managing broker at Re/Max Alliance Group, shares his journey into real estate, discussing the evolution of the industry, the importance of leads and relationships, and the necessity of mentorship for new agents. He highlights the changing landscape of Florida's real estate market, including affordability issues and disaster resilience in housing. Shadd emphasizes the importance of tracking business metrics and being adaptable in a competitive market.   Professional Real Estate Investors - How we can help you: Investor Fuel Mastermind:  Learn more about the Investor Fuel Mastermind, including 100% deal financing, massive discounts from vendors and sponsors you're already using, our world class community of over 150 members, and SO much more here: http://www.investorfuel.com/apply   Investor Machine Marketing Partnership:  Are you looking for consistent, high quality lead generation? Investor Machine is America's #1 lead generation service professional investors. Investor Machine provides true ‘white glove' support to help you build the perfect marketing plan, then we'll execute it for you…talking and working together on an ongoing basis to help you hit YOUR goals! Learn more here: http://www.investormachine.com   Coaching with Mike Hambright:  Interested in 1 on 1 coaching with Mike Hambright? Mike coaches entrepreneurs looking to level up, build coaching or service based businesses (Mike runs multiple 7 and 8 figure a year businesses), building a coaching program and more. Learn more here: https://investorfuel.com/coachingwithmike   Attend a Vacation/Mastermind Retreat with Mike Hambright: Interested in joining a “mini-mastermind” with Mike and his private clients on an upcoming “Retreat”, either at locations like Cabo San Lucas, Napa, Park City ski trip, Yellowstone, or even at Mike's East Texas “Big H Ranch”? Learn more here: http://www.investorfuel.com/retreat   Property Insurance: Join the largest and most investor friendly property insurance provider in 2 minutes. Free to join, and insure all your flips and rentals within minutes! There is NO easier insurance provider on the planet (turn insurance on or off in 1 minute without talking to anyone!), and there's no 15-30% agent mark up through this platform!  Register here: https://myinvestorinsurance.com/   New Real Estate Investors - How we can work together: Investor Fuel Club (Coaching and Deal Partner Community): Looking to kickstart your real estate investing career? Join our one of a kind Coaching Community, Investor Fuel Club, where you'll get trained by some of the best real estate investors in America, and partner with them on deals! You don't need $ for deals…we'll partner with you and hold your hand along the way! Learn More here: http://www.investorfuel.com/club   —--------------------

Beaux-Arts de Paris
Penser le Présent avec Andrea Fraser et Marie Fraser

Beaux-Arts de Paris

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2025 94:27


Pour une lecture critique des cartelsCette rencontre est organisée en partenariat avec le programme de recherche « (D)écrire les œuvres, (re)penser les cartels », dirigé par Anne Dressen (ENS Ulm – SACRe – PSL) et Yaël Kreplak (Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne, HiCSA, Chaire Delphine Lévy).Au cours de cette rencontre, les cartels seront abordés depuis la perspective de la critique institutionnelle et de la muséologie critique, avec deux conférences : l'une d'Andrea Fraser (artiste, Los Angeles), et l'autre de Marie Fraser (théoricienne, Montréal). Ces deux interventions, introduites et modérées par Anne Dressen et Yaël Kreplak, seront suivies d'un temps d'échange avec le public.Dès que l'on évoque la question du cartel, il apparaît clairement que ce court texte apposé à proximité des objets exposés fait débat. Qu'il s'agisse de ses dimensions, de sa longueur, de son emplacement, de ce qui y est dit, par qui, comment et à l'intention de qui, voire de sa présence même : tous ces différents aspects suscitent de nombreuses discussions et ne font pas consensus. Car à travers le cartel se révèle une certaine compréhension du rôle du musée et de son rapport aux œuvres, de ses différents modes d'adresse à son ou ses public(s), et de ce qu'est une œuvre ou un objet de patrimoine.Initié en septembre 2024, le programme de recherche « (D)écrire les œuvres, (re)penser les cartels » vise à explorer les enjeux des cartels, ligne par ligne, en interrogeant ce qui se joue dans la précision d'une provenance, la description d'un matériau, la présence d'une date, la formulation d'un titre, ou encore la mention d'un nom d'auteur (ou de plusieurs). Dans un dialogue entre artistes, chercheurs et professionnels des musées, il s'agit de mettre en question nos façons d'appréhender et décrire les objets, et d'imaginer d'autres façons de nous y rapporter – de faire du cartel un support de réflexion et de création.Andrea Fraser est artiste, professeure à l'Université de Californie à Los Angeles (UCLA). Elle est une figure majeure du mouvement de la critique institutionnelle, du féminisme et de la performance. Depuis les années 1980, son travail élabore une réflexion sur l'art et ses institutions - dans leurs dimensions financières, politiques et affectives; comme dans la série de conférences-performances Museum Highlights : A Gallery Talk (1989), où elle se met en scène sous les traits d'une guide, ou à travers des installations qui questionnent les instruments habituels de la communication muséale – en particulier les textes d'exposition, comme dans Notes on the Margin (1990/2013) ou Collected : The Lady Wallace's Inventory (1997). Elle a également publié de nombreux textes critiques (par exemple, 2016 in Museums, Money and Politics, en 2018, et The Field of Contemporary Art: A Diagram, e-flux notes, en octobre 2024). Elle est actuellement en résidence à l'American Academy de Rome.Marie Fraser est historienne de l'art, professeure à l'Université du Québec à Montréal, où elle est titulaire de la Chaire de recherche en études et pratiques curatoriales. Cofondatrice du groupe international de recherche et de réflexion CIÉCO sur les nouveaux usages des collections, elle est l'autrice et la directrice de nombreuses publications, parmi lesquelles Réinventer la collection. L'art et le musée au temps de l'évènementiel (avec Mélanie Boucher et Johanne Lamoureux, PUQ, 2023) et L'Activisme dans les collections (avec Lisa Bouraly, Marges, 2025). Elle mène également des activités en tant que commissaire d'expositions : elle a été conservatrice en chef au Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal (2010-2013), ainsi que commissaire du pavillon du Canada à la 56e Biennale de Venise en 2015.Amphithéâtre d'HonneurLundi 20 octobre 2025Crédits photos : © Droits réservés

The Dump & Chase Phan Podcast
Punching Up w/ Owen Boucher

The Dump & Chase Phan Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2025 52:40


The Phantoms won 2 of 3 in their first 3 game weekend of the season! They even got a few extra minutes of play without needing overtime. We'll look back at how it all went down, and we welcome forward Owen Boucher to the show!Send us a textAsk A Question! Merch Store Official WebsiteFacebook This recording is the sole view of the members of the Dump & Chase Podcast. This is a non-commercial fan production. We are not affiliated with or compensated by the Youngstown Phantoms, the United States Hockey League, or any league, club, or team. © 2025 Dump & Chase Podcast. All Rights Reserved

Escala en París
Diplomacia feminista para responder a "amenazas" a los derechos de las mujeres

Escala en París

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2025 13:11


El 2024 fue marcado por una profunda desestabilización de los derechos de las mujeres. Las Naciones Unidas estiman que un país de cuatro ha registrado un retroceso neto del derecho de las mujeres, sin contar las que viven en un territorio marcado por la guerra. En este contexto, la diplomacia feminista intenta subsanar las inmensas grietas. A pesar de la urgencia, pocos países comparten esta visión. En Latinoamérica, solo México, Colombia y Chile han incluido en su diplomacia la perspectiva de género. En un momento en que el multilateralismo y los derechos de las mujeres retroceden, Gloria de la Fuente, viceministra de Relaciones exteriores de Chile, aboga por una diplomacia feminista para "enfrentar las amenazas". Fue en 1995 con la declaración de Beijing y una resolución del Consejo de seguridad de la ONU establecieron las bases de un compromiso colectivo de garantizar los derechos de las mujeres y eliminar todo tipo de violencia. Así se cimentó la diplomacia feminista con el objetivo de poner en el foco de las relaciones internacionales la perspectiva de género. Treinta años después, se celebra en París la cuarta Conferencia ministerial de diplomacias feministas organizada por el Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores francés. Es en este marco que la viceministra de Relaciones Exteriores, Gloria de la Fuente, expone la visión de Chile en materia de diplomacia feminista. Si bien la apelación data solamente del mandato Boric, de la Fuente, asegura que su "país viene comprometido desde los años 50 en avanzar en una agenda multilateral, sobre todo, pero también a nivel nacional sobre igualdad de género. Ha habido momentos de la humanidad, momentos de la agenda multilateral, donde ha habido un salto. El problema es que esos saltos, así como la democracia, no es un régimen que esté garantizado, los saltos en materia de igualdad de género tampoco están garantizados." ¿Qué cambia para las mujeres la diplomacia feminista?  Para Chile, promover una agenda internacional feminista es tener una mirada transversal que toca la agenda bilateral, la multilateral, la cooperación, el comercio internacional: "Nosotros somos uno de los primeros países que ha incorporado capítulos de género en los acuerdos comerciales. Esto ha significado en datos muy concretos que las personas o las mujeres hoy en día tienen la posibilidad de acceder a mercados internacionales con sus productos generando bienestar y desarrollo para la comunidad en su conjunto". Esta visión incluye también el ámbito consular "en la atención de nuestros connacionales en el exterior". En tiempos de desmantelamiento del multilateralismo y de ataque constante a los esfuerzos diplomáticos, el mensaje de una Conferencia sobre diplomacia feminista puede parecer inaudible. Gloria de la Fuente discrepa:  "Es más necesario que nunca empujar este tipo de conferencias, no solo para ver lo que hemos avanzado, porque yo creo que efectivamente hemos tenido avances importantes en nuestros países, quienes nos hemos comprometido con esta manera de mirar la política exterior, sino que sobre todo para entender que tenemos amenazas. Esas amenazas no solamente amenazan la vida de las mujeres o los derechos conquistados, sino que en muchos casos el futuro del desarrollo. En eso no solamente están afectadas las mujeres y las niñas, la sociedad en su conjunto se ve afectada." El balance de la presidencia feminista de Gabriel Boric A diplomacia feminista, presidencia feminista. Así lo declaró Gabriel Boric al asumir en el 2022. Ahora está por concluirse su mandato, los chilenos van a las urnas el próximo 16 de noviembre. Uno de los grandes proyectos de este mandato era ampliar el aborto hasta las 14 semanas de gestación sin necesidad de que esté en una de las tres causales por las cuales el aborto es permitido en Chile desde el 2017. Por ahora no se ha podido concretar: "Se requiere para aprobar ciertas iniciativas, grandes mayorías. Nosotros no tenemos hoy en día la mayoría que se requiere en el Congreso para avanzar en esta iniciativa. Ahora creo que sí ha sido muy importante reconocer que ha habido un avance importante. Nos demoramos muchos años en discutir el aborto en tres causales. Hoy en día estamos ampliando la discusión hacia un aborto en el Fondo libre en todas sus circunstancias. "[Es necesario] una política pública que le brinda a las mujeres que tienen que en el fondo tienen que optar por un aborto, por distintas circunstancias en su propia vida, que tengan las condiciones de que este sea de manera segura y realizada de manera segura y en igualdad de condiciones", explica Gloria de la Fuente. En las próximas elecciones chilenas se enfrentan la candidata del oficialismo y la Democracia Cristiana, Jeannette Jara, y el abanderado del Partido Republicano, José Antonio Kast, de extrema derecha. Si bien Jeannette Jara lidera las encuestas, en un eventual balotaje no llegaría a la presidencia. Pero si las urnas desmienten las encuestas, Jeannette Jara seguiría los pasos de Michelle Bachelet, presidenta del país en dos ocasiones. Dirigió ONU Mujeres, fue alta comisionada de la ONU para los derechos humanos y es ahora candidata a la sucesión de António Guterres. ¿Michelle Bachelet primera mujer Secretaria general de la ONU ? Gloria de la Fuente cree en la candidatura de Bachelet porque además de su experiencia "tiene una visión muy clara conociendo el sistema de Naciones Unidas desde dentro, pero también teniendo un compromiso muy férreo con los derechos humanos, con la sustentabilidad. Además, entendiendo que el multilateralismo hoy en día requiere justamente una mirada sobre la necesidad interna de Naciones Unidas de generar sin lugar a dudas, algunos ajustes en este sistema multilateral que ya lleva 80 años." El mandato de Guterres va hasta finales del 2026 cuando se sabrá si Bachelet agregará una nueva línea a su curriculum. Pero mucho antes se dará a conocer el nombre de la o del sucesor de Gabriel Boric. Según las encuestas, seis años tras el estallido social y tras esta presidencia, los chilenos no tienen la intención de reanudar con un proyecto de izquierdas. Si bien Gloria de la Fuente tiene un deber de reserva dice confiar en el proceso electoral y "en que la democracia en nuestro país, la sabiduría del pueblo chileno, de la ciudadanía en Chile, hará lo propio para poder tener un proyecto de futuro que finalmente donde finalmente quepan todas las personas en Chile." #EscalaenParís también está en redes sociales Un programa coordinado por Julia Courtois, realizado por Souheil Khedir y Jérémie Boucher

Escala en París
Diplomacia feminista para responder a "amenazas" a los derechos de las mujeres

Escala en París

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2025 13:11


El 2024 fue marcado por una profunda desestabilización de los derechos de las mujeres. Las Naciones Unidas estiman que un país de cuatro ha registrado un retroceso neto del derecho de las mujeres, sin contar las que viven en un territorio marcado por la guerra. En este contexto, la diplomacia feminista intenta subsanar las inmensas grietas. A pesar de la urgencia, pocos países comparten esta visión. En Latinoamérica, solo México, Colombia y Chile han incluido en su diplomacia la perspectiva de género. En un momento en que el multilateralismo y los derechos de las mujeres retroceden, Gloria de la Fuente, viceministra de Relaciones exteriores de Chile, aboga por una diplomacia feminista para "enfrentar las amenazas". Fue en 1995 con la declaración de Beijing y una resolución del Consejo de seguridad de la ONU establecieron las bases de un compromiso colectivo de garantizar los derechos de las mujeres y eliminar todo tipo de violencia. Así se cimentó la diplomacia feminista con el objetivo de poner en el foco de las relaciones internacionales la perspectiva de género. Treinta años después, se celebra en París la cuarta Conferencia ministerial de diplomacias feministas organizada por el Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores francés. Es en este marco que la viceministra de Relaciones Exteriores, Gloria de la Fuente, expone la visión de Chile en materia de diplomacia feminista. Si bien la apelación data solamente del mandato Boric, de la Fuente, asegura que su "país viene comprometido desde los años 50 en avanzar en una agenda multilateral, sobre todo, pero también a nivel nacional sobre igualdad de género. Ha habido momentos de la humanidad, momentos de la agenda multilateral, donde ha habido un salto. El problema es que esos saltos, así como la democracia, no es un régimen que esté garantizado, los saltos en materia de igualdad de género tampoco están garantizados." ¿Qué cambia para las mujeres la diplomacia feminista?  Para Chile, promover una agenda internacional feminista es tener una mirada transversal que toca la agenda bilateral, la multilateral, la cooperación, el comercio internacional: "Nosotros somos uno de los primeros países que ha incorporado capítulos de género en los acuerdos comerciales. Esto ha significado en datos muy concretos que las personas o las mujeres hoy en día tienen la posibilidad de acceder a mercados internacionales con sus productos generando bienestar y desarrollo para la comunidad en su conjunto". Esta visión incluye también el ámbito consular "en la atención de nuestros connacionales en el exterior". En tiempos de desmantelamiento del multilateralismo y de ataque constante a los esfuerzos diplomáticos, el mensaje de una Conferencia sobre diplomacia feminista puede parecer inaudible. Gloria de la Fuente discrepa:  "Es más necesario que nunca empujar este tipo de conferencias, no solo para ver lo que hemos avanzado, porque yo creo que efectivamente hemos tenido avances importantes en nuestros países, quienes nos hemos comprometido con esta manera de mirar la política exterior, sino que sobre todo para entender que tenemos amenazas. Esas amenazas no solamente amenazan la vida de las mujeres o los derechos conquistados, sino que en muchos casos el futuro del desarrollo. En eso no solamente están afectadas las mujeres y las niñas, la sociedad en su conjunto se ve afectada." El balance de la presidencia feminista de Gabriel Boric A diplomacia feminista, presidencia feminista. Así lo declaró Gabriel Boric al asumir en el 2022. Ahora está por concluirse su mandato, los chilenos van a las urnas el próximo 16 de noviembre. Uno de los grandes proyectos de este mandato era ampliar el aborto hasta las 14 semanas de gestación sin necesidad de que esté en una de las tres causales por las cuales el aborto es permitido en Chile desde el 2017. Por ahora no se ha podido concretar: "Se requiere para aprobar ciertas iniciativas, grandes mayorías. Nosotros no tenemos hoy en día la mayoría que se requiere en el Congreso para avanzar en esta iniciativa. Ahora creo que sí ha sido muy importante reconocer que ha habido un avance importante. Nos demoramos muchos años en discutir el aborto en tres causales. Hoy en día estamos ampliando la discusión hacia un aborto en el Fondo libre en todas sus circunstancias. "[Es necesario] una política pública que le brinda a las mujeres que tienen que en el fondo tienen que optar por un aborto, por distintas circunstancias en su propia vida, que tengan las condiciones de que este sea de manera segura y realizada de manera segura y en igualdad de condiciones", explica Gloria de la Fuente. En las próximas elecciones chilenas se enfrentan la candidata del oficialismo y la Democracia Cristiana, Jeannette Jara, y el abanderado del Partido Republicano, José Antonio Kast, de extrema derecha. Si bien Jeannette Jara lidera las encuestas, en un eventual balotaje no llegaría a la presidencia. Pero si las urnas desmienten las encuestas, Jeannette Jara seguiría los pasos de Michelle Bachelet, presidenta del país en dos ocasiones. Dirigió ONU Mujeres, fue alta comisionada de la ONU para los derechos humanos y es ahora candidata a la sucesión de António Guterres. ¿Michelle Bachelet primera mujer Secretaria general de la ONU ? Gloria de la Fuente cree en la candidatura de Bachelet porque además de su experiencia "tiene una visión muy clara conociendo el sistema de Naciones Unidas desde dentro, pero también teniendo un compromiso muy férreo con los derechos humanos, con la sustentabilidad. Además, entendiendo que el multilateralismo hoy en día requiere justamente una mirada sobre la necesidad interna de Naciones Unidas de generar sin lugar a dudas, algunos ajustes en este sistema multilateral que ya lleva 80 años." El mandato de Guterres va hasta finales del 2026 cuando se sabrá si Bachelet agregará una nueva línea a su curriculum. Pero mucho antes se dará a conocer el nombre de la o del sucesor de Gabriel Boric. Según las encuestas, seis años tras el estallido social y tras esta presidencia, los chilenos no tienen la intención de reanudar con un proyecto de izquierdas. Si bien Gloria de la Fuente tiene un deber de reserva dice confiar en el proceso electoral y "en que la democracia en nuestro país, la sabiduría del pueblo chileno, de la ciudadanía en Chile, hará lo propio para poder tener un proyecto de futuro que finalmente donde finalmente quepan todas las personas en Chile." #EscalaenParís también está en redes sociales Un programa coordinado por Julia Courtois, realizado por Souheil Khedir y Jérémie Boucher

Chroniques
Artiste en lumière: Emmanuelle Boucher

Chroniques

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2025 11:55


Réécoutez l'entrevue complète de notre artiste en lumière de cette semaine ! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Culturels
Artiste en lumière: Emmanuelle Boucher

Culturels

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2025 11:55


Réécoutez l'entrevue complète de notre artiste en lumière de cette semaine ! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Les pieds sur terre
Le boucher végé et le pilote éco anxieux

Les pieds sur terre

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2025 31:03


durée : 00:31:03 - Les Pieds sur terre - par : Sonia Kronlund, Rémi Dybowski Douat - Anthony a quitté son poste de pilote chez Air France, rongé par l'écoanxiété. Mathias, ancien boucher, est devenu végan. - réalisation : David Jacubowiez

France Culture physique
Le boucher végé et le pilote éco-anxieux

France Culture physique

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2025 31:03


durée : 00:31:03 - Les Pieds sur terre - par : Sonia Kronlund, Rémi Dybowski Douat - Anthony a quitté son poste de pilote chez Air France, rongé par l'écoanxiété. Mathias, ancien boucher, est devenu végan. - réalisation : David Jacubowiez

The Promise Church
The Church Being an Influence | Daryl Boucher

The Promise Church

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2025 62:28


Longview Campus | Guest speaker Daryl Boucher teaches on what it looks like to live a life on the offense for the Lord, influencing those around us to draw to Jesus.

CRIMES • Histoires Vraies
[INÉDIT] Fritz Haarmann, le boucher de Hanovre • L'Intégrale

CRIMES • Histoires Vraies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2025 49:44


Né en 1879 à Hanovre en Allemagne, et exécuté le 15 avril 1925 dans la même ville, Fritz Haarmann, connu aussi comme « le Boucher de Hanovre » et « le Vampire de Hanovre », était un tueur en série considéré comme l'auteur des meurtres de vingt-sept garçons et jeunes hommes entre 1918 et 1924. Il fut déclaré coupable de vingt-quatre meurtres et guillotiné. L'affaire fit scandale, d'autant plus que Haarmann était indicateur de police.

CRIMES • Histoires Vraies
[INÉDIT] Fritz Haarmann, le boucher de Hanovre • 5/5

CRIMES • Histoires Vraies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2025 10:19


Né en 1879 à Hanovre en Allemagne, et exécuté le 15 avril 1925 dans la même ville, Fritz Haarmann, connu aussi comme « le Boucher de Hanovre » et « le Vampire de Hanovre », était un tueur en série considéré comme l'auteur des meurtres de vingt-sept garçons et jeunes hommes entre 1918 et 1924. Il fut déclaré coupable de vingt-quatre meurtres et guillotiné. L'affaire fit scandale, d'autant plus que Haarmann était indicateur de police.Les partis se déchirent. Les monarchistes hurlent : « Sous l'Empire, cela ne serait jamais arrivé. » Les sociaux-démocrates se défendent : « C'est l'héritage du système impérial. » Les nazis, encore marginaux, s'emparent de l'affaire comme d'un symbole. Pour eux, Haarmann incarne tout ce qu'ils vomissent : l'homosexuel, le criminel, le parasite, le républicain. La communauté homosexuelle, déjà criminalisée par l'article 175 du Code pénal, vit dans la peur. Beaucoup fuient, se cachent, brûlent leurs lettres d'amour. Mais certains répliquent. Des voix s'élèvent. Des militants rappellent que la violence de Haarmann n'est pas liée à son orientation, mais à sa solitude, à sa haine, à ses souffrances.

CRIMES • Histoires Vraies
[INÉDIT] Fritz Haarmann, le boucher de Hanovre • 4/5

CRIMES • Histoires Vraies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2025 11:02


Né en 1879 à Hanovre en Allemagne, et exécuté le 15 avril 1925 dans la même ville, Fritz Haarmann, connu aussi comme « le Boucher de Hanovre » et « le Vampire de Hanovre », était un tueur en série considéré comme l'auteur des meurtres de vingt-sept garçons et jeunes hommes entre 1918 et 1924. Il fut déclaré coupable de vingt-quatre meurtres et guillotiné. L'affaire fit scandale, d'autant plus que Haarmann était indicateur de police.Pendant l'enquête, on retrouve des vêtements vendus au marché noir par Hans Grans. Certains ont été identifiés par les familles. Hans apparaît dans le dossier comme une silhouette secondaire. Un nom dans les marges, un compagnon, un témoin. Puis, peu à peu, son ombre se densifie.

CRIMES • Histoires Vraies
[INÉDIT] Fritz Haarmann, le boucher de Hanovre • 3/5

CRIMES • Histoires Vraies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2025 11:44


Né en 1879 à Hanovre en Allemagne, et exécuté le 15 avril 1925 dans la même ville, Fritz Haarmann, connu aussi comme « le Boucher de Hanovre » et « le Vampire de Hanovre », était un tueur en série considéré comme l'auteur des meurtres de vingt-sept garçons et jeunes hommes entre 1918 et 1924. Il fut déclaré coupable de vingt-quatre meurtres et guillotiné. L'affaire fit scandale, d'autant plus que Haarmann était indicateur de police.Haarmann n'a jamais été condamné pour meurtre. On l'a vu, il est même utile à la police. Mais il est aussi connu pour sa brutalité, ses accès de rage, ses séjours en hôpital psychiatrique. Il a été arrêté plusieurs fois pour attentat à la pudeur. Il rôde souvent autour de la gare. Et surtout, des témoins l'ont vu partir avec certains des jeunes. Mais personne n'agit. En juin 1923, un jeune garçon signale une tentative de viol. Il dit avoir fui l'appartement de Haarmann de justesse. On ouvre une enquête. On fouille rapidement. Mais rien.

Moncton Wildcast
Thankful for W's (Season 9 Episode 7)

Moncton Wildcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2025 60:11


Thankful for W's presented by Discount Flooring Centre Quick Question Final Four style, who wins of these Wildcats teams 2006-2010-2020-2025.. ? News & Notes from around the League (Presented by Waterworks Pools & Spa) - The QMJHL Cup was in Dieppe this weekend, so Boucher gets to talk a little draft class, Prospect Rosters were announced, the Q team of the Week & Bouchers Team of the Week Weekly Rewind (presented by Alphas Appliance Solutions) The Wildcats got back to their winning ways over the Thanksgiving weekend, with a complete effort Friday & a weird one on Saturday! We look ahead to Foreurs & Tigres coming in while underpreforming, and will we see Jakoby in the crease..? Eric Murray Reality Stick Tap of the Week Rosemary Lynns Massage & Spa Wildcast Wildcat of the Week ENJOY!! Follow Wildcast Podcast across all social media platforms: Facebook: / wildcastpodcast Instagram: / wildcastpodcast Twitter/X: / monctonwildcast TikTok: / wildcastpodcast Our Podcast is brought to you by our wonderful sponsors: Discount Flooring Services: www.discountflooringcentre.ca Waterworks Pools & Spas: www.waterworkspools.com Alpha's Appliance Solutions: www.appliancesolutions.ca Eric Murray - Greater Moncton Realtor Facebook : www.facebook.com/ericmurrayrealtor Rosemary Lynn's Massage & Spa Facebook Page: / www.facebook.com/RLmassage1/ 

Truck Stop Quebec
14 Octobre 2025 Pierre-Hugues Boisvenu – Claudia Boucher et Yves Charlebois

Truck Stop Quebec

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2025 122:59


CRIMES • Histoires Vraies
[INÉDIT] Fritz Haarmann, le boucher de Hanovre • 2/5

CRIMES • Histoires Vraies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2025 11:45


Né en 1879 à Hanovre en Allemagne, et exécuté le 15 avril 1925 dans la même ville, Fritz Haarmann, connu aussi comme « le Boucher de Hanovre » et « le Vampire de Hanovre », était un tueur en série considéré comme l'auteur des meurtres de vingt-sept garçons et jeunes hommes entre 1918 et 1924. Il fut déclaré coupable de vingt-quatre meurtres et guillotiné. L'affaire fit scandale, d'autant plus que Haarmann était indicateur de police.Fritz Haarmann a déménagé. Il occupe désormais une petite chambre au 8 Neuestraẞe, au coeur de ce que l'on appelle le « quartier hanté ». Il vit là avec Hans Grans, par intermittence. Le jeune homme le quitte, revient, exige, menace. Et Haarmann accepte tout, pourvu qu'il reste.

Le Stream
Quelle voiture avez-vous possédé? Avec Alexandra et Sébastien Boucher

Le Stream

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2025 140:01


Quelle voiture avez-vous possédé? Avec Alexandra et Sébastien Boucher------------------------------------------------------------------Pour suivre FAF - http://fafhumoriste.comPour suivre Will - http://willpaq.comPATREON - http://yantheriault.com/PatreonDiscord - http://yantheriault.com/discordTwitter - http://yantheriault.com/twitterInstagram - http://yantheriault.com/instagramFacebook - http://yantheriault.com/facebook

CRIMES • Histoires Vraies
[INÉDIT] Fritz Haarmann, le boucher de Hanovre • 1/5

CRIMES • Histoires Vraies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2025 13:06


Né en 1879 à Hanovre en Allemagne, et exécuté le 15 avril 1925 dans la même ville, Fritz Haarmann, connu aussi comme « le Boucher de Hanovre » et « le Vampire de Hanovre », était un tueur en série considéré comme l'auteur des meurtres de vingt-sept garçons et jeunes hommes entre 1918 et 1924. Il fut déclaré coupable de vingt-quatre meurtres et guillotiné. L'affaire fit scandale, d'autant plus que Haarmann était indicateur de police.Il est six heures du matin, le 15 avril 1925. Dans la cour austère de la prison de Hanovre en Allemagne, l'ambiance pèse comme une chape de plomb. Le ciel est bas, les murs de pierre luisent sous l'humidité de la nuit. Le vent qui remonte de la Leine, chargé de brume et de froid, pénètre les manteaux et mord les os. Une quarantaine d'hommes sont là. Juges, gardiens, représentants de l'État. Aucun journaliste, tous tenus à l'écart. On murmure, on attend.

Sporting Max
Dillon Boucher: Rebuilding the New Zealand Breakers | #216

Sporting Max

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2025 45:49


In episode 216, Max chats with New Zealand Breakers GM Dillon Boucher! Dillon takes us through how the Breakers are reconnecting with their origins - bringing back core Kiwi talent and redefining what it truly means to be a Breaker. We dive into his early playing days in the NZNBL, his time with the Breakers before being told he was no longer required at the club he loved, and the journey that followed - including a move to Perth, a 21-game winning streak with the Brisbane Bullets, and the defining words Andrej Lemanis shared with him after winning their first championship back in New Zealand. Now in the front office, Dillon discusses the mindset behind rebuilding the Breakers' culture, the return of import Parker Jackson-Cartwright, and the building blocks being laid for long-term success. All this and much more in episode 216 of Sporting Max!

Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 378 – Unstoppable Voices: How Walden Hughes Keeps Old Time Radio Alive

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2025 64:31


If you love great storytelling, you'll connect with this conversation. I sit down with Walden Hughes, a man whose Unstoppable passion has kept Old Time Radio alive for decades. As the voice behind YESTERDAY USA and a driving force with REPS, Walden has dedicated his life to preserving the art, sound, and soul of classic radio. We talk about what made those early shows so timeless, the craft of the actors, the power of imagination, and how simple audio could create entire worlds. Walden also shares how modern technology, archives, and community support are bringing these programs to new audiences. This conversation is about more than nostalgia. It's about keeping storytelling alive. Walden reminds us that great radio never fades and that imagination will always be Unstoppable. Highlights: 00:10 – Discover why Old Time Radio still captures the imagination of listeners today. 01:19 – Hear how the end of an era shaped the way we think about storytelling. 02:32 – Learn what made the performances and production of classic radio so unique. 04:25 – Explore how legendary shows left a lasting influence on modern audio. 05:16 – Gain insight into what separates timeless audio drama from today's versions. 08:32 – Find out how passion and purpose can turn nostalgia into something new. 12:15 – Uncover the community that keeps classic radio alive for new generations. 16:20 – See how creativity and teamwork sustain live radio productions. 24:48 – Learn how dedication and innovation keep 24/7 classic broadcasts running. 33:57 – Understand how listener support helps preserve the magic of radio history. 37:38 – Reflect on why live storytelling still holds a special kind of energy. 41:35 – Hear how new technology is shaping the future of audio storytelling. 46:26 – Discover how preservation groups bring lost performances back to life. 50:29 – Explore the process of restoring and protecting rare audio archives. 55:31 – Learn why authenticity and care matter in preserving sound for the future.     About the Guest: From a young age, Walden Hughes developed a lifelong love for radio and history. Appearing in documentaries on “Beep Baseball,” he went on to collect more than 50,000 old-time radio shows and produce hundreds of live nostalgic broadcasts. His work celebrates radio's golden era through events, celebrity interviews, and re-creations performed nationwide. His deep family roots reach back to early American history — from a Mayflower ancestor to relatives who served in major U.S. wars — shaping his respect for storytelling and legacy. With degrees in economics, political science, and an MBA in finance, he built a successful career in investments before turning his passion into purpose. As general manager and producer for Yesterday USA and longtime board member of SPERDVAC, he's preserved classic entertainment for future generations. Honored with awards like the Herb Ellis and Dick Beals Awards, he continues to consult for icons like Kitty Kallen and the Sinatra family, keeping the voices of radios past alive for audiences today.   Ways to connect with Walden:   Cell:  714/454-3281 Email:  waldenhughes@yesterdayusa.com or www.yesterdayusa.com Live shows are Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights beginning at 7:30 PDT.     About the Host:   Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog.   Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards.   https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/   accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/       Thanks for listening!   Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below!   Subscribe to the podcast   If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can subscribe in your favorite podcast app. You can also support our podcast through our tip jar https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/unstoppable-mindset .   Leave us an Apple Podcasts review   Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts.       Transcription Notes:   Michael Hingson ** 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us.   Michael Hingson ** 01:20 Well, hello everyone, and welcome to another episode of unstoppable mindset. Wherever you are listening from, we're really glad you're here, and we are going to have a guest who we've had on before we get to have him on again, and we're going to grill him really good. I want you to remember that a few weeks ago, we talked to Walden Hughes. And Walden is a collector of old radio shows. He's been very involved with organizations that help promote the hobby of old radio shows, and old rate Old Time Radio, as I do, and I thought it would be kind of fun to have him back, because there are a number of events coming up that I think are very relevant to talk about, and so we're going to do that. So Walden, welcome back to unstoppable mindset. We're glad you're here. Michael, been such a long time, and glad you invited me back. Well, I know it's been so long well, so tell me, let's, let's go back again. You know, radio people talk about the golden days of radio, or the time of old radio. When do we think that? When do we say that officially ended, although I think it went beyond   Walden Hughes ** 02:29 it. I though I jumped 30th, 1962, I'm, yeah, I I think the style changed a little bit, I'm probably a romantic somewhat. I love the style of old time radio. I love how it sound. Yeah, I think in in the 3040s and 50s, the studios and the theater that they use sounded great for radio, and it disturbed me, and I bet you have the same feeling, Michael, that when you get new production and new the new studio, it just doesn't sound right. I feel the equilibrium is not quite the way. I love old time radio. I think Old Time Radio A prime web. I think a lot of new productions out there that, you know, release their podcasts and things on a weekly basis. I think they're handicapped. They just don't have the budget to really create and build a studio the way I think it should be, that if they have, it sound just natural and just right.   Michael Hingson ** 03:43 And I think that's part of it, but I think the other part of it is that people today don't seem to know how to act and create the same kind of environment with their voice that Old Time Radio actors did in the 30s, 40s and 50s and into into the early 60s, even we had Carl Amari on several weeks ago. And of course, one of the things that Carl did was, did complete recreations of all of the Twilight Zone shows. And even some of those are, are they sound sort of forced? Some of the actors sound forced, and they they haven't really learned how to sound natural in radio like some of the older actors do.   Walden Hughes ** 04:34 Yeah, and I know Bob we call did it for a bike I get thrown off when he generally way. Did have the highway stars remote end, and he had a Stock Company of Chicago after, and I could hear the equilibrium just not quite right. That bothers me. I don't know if the average person picks up on that, and you're right. I don't know if. Is it the style of acting that they teach in film and TV? It needs a radio acting different in a lot of ways, and you got it as you point. It's got to be realistic into the environment. And actors don't get that for radio,   Michael Hingson ** 05:25 yeah, and you talked about the last day for you of real radio was September 30, 1962 and we should probably explain why that is   Walden Hughes ** 05:36 diet throughout the CBS your Troy John and suspense as the two main keys of old time radio. And that was the last day of old time radio out of New York. And I hardcore Lacher sister. Think that's one radio Shane died per se   Michael Hingson ** 05:58 Gunsmoke and Have Gun Will Travel were gone, right,   Walden Hughes ** 06:01 and the soap operas ended in November 2560 I like soap operas. I know a lot of people do not, but there's something can't there's something campy about it that I like. I would, I would like, I prefer to listen to somebody also proper than do some of the new production and make sure the acting style,   Michael Hingson ** 06:27 but I think there's a lot to do with it that that makes that the case. And I think you're absolutely right that so many things are different, but at the same time, radio did sort of continue. And there was, there were some good shows zero hour, the Hollywood radio theater that Rod Serling did later. And of course, NPR did Star Wars.   Walden Hughes ** 06:58 And I like that I did.   Michael Hingson ** 07:02 Yeah, I think that was done pretty well. And what do you think of CBS mystery theater? Honestly, CBS mystery theater, I thought that generally, CBS mystery theater had some good actors, and they did a pretty good job. I I can't complain too much about that, and it was on for a long time.   Walden Hughes ** 07:18 But what do you think of the script, though?   Michael Hingson ** 07:22 Well, part of the problem for me and CBS mystery theater is, and I'm sure it was a cost issue. There weren't very many people in most of the scripts. There was like two or three or so and and that was a problem. But I think that that the scripts suffered because there weren't more people in the scripts to really make it again sound pretty natural. I think that was a problem.   Walden Hughes ** 07:52 Yeah, Hyman Brown really knew how to crank it out. I think it has a good, solid B production, you know, the scripts. And I think the scripts are quite hampered. You couldn't, actually couldn't knock the actors. I thought the actors were Mercedes McCambridge and all those were terrific actors, but you're right. Sam dam wrote a lot of them, yeah, and things like that. But I   Michael Hingson ** 08:21 think, I think they would have been nicer to have more people in the scripts. But I understand that, that that probably was more difficult to do just because of union and scale and the cost. But gee, I think it would have made a big difference in the shows. But Hyman Brown really knew, as you said, How to crank them   Walden Hughes ** 08:39 out. Yeah, that's why, in some ways, I think the series, radio theater, the way 70 is a it's a terrific series. Didn't have the financial backing to make it last longer than the two years I was   Michael Hingson ** 08:52 on. Now, one show I really liked on in PR later was alien world, which I thought was good. I'd never heard any of them, so they were good, yeah, yeah, okay. I'm very happy with alien worlds. There were some actors from radio and in early television and so on. Hans con read, for example, was on some, yeah, I thought alien worlds went really well. I guess we're gonna have to get you some and get you to lose, Okay, interesting.   Walden Hughes ** 09:21 I just got done taking a eight week course on entrepreneurship for disabled people, and my idea is to pitch that we should be doing audio theater as a podcast. I think if it's big enough, it attracts national sponsors. And if you look at the numbers, everybody podcasting, 135 million people in the USA download a podcast once a week. Revenue, $2.46 billion yeah. Worldwide, 5 billion people download a podcast once a week. Revenue, three. $4 billion and so she had a well known he had a podcast with well known stars. I think she could get that 1% in that market, and then you can generate between the 24 to 40 million, $40 million in revenue a year. That would easily sure be a good financial model, and that's what I'm pitching. But when I went to the court, they asked me what to analyze, what's wrong with my what obstacles I have. And one of the things I put down is besides the studio we talked about and the acting, which a really good actor, actress, everybody, like a Beverly Washburn can pick up a script and knock it out of the park right away. Most actors are not able to do that. That's a real gift, as Michael was pointing out. But the other thing most scripts are written for film and TV, which is a verbal which is a eye medium, and a radio script is written for the ear, and I have produced enough the ear is faster than the eye. If you take like a TV script and a book and read it out loud, the mind wander. It has to have a faster pace for the ear. And I don't think more people notice that when they're analyzing a script,   Michael Hingson ** 11:31 yeah, but you you're sort of treading around the edges of something else. I think that is fascinating, that we can start to talk about one of the things that has occurred some over the past few years, and whether it be with a podcast or even just with the mechanisms we're using today, is there are some attempts to recreate some of the old radio shows and and you and I have both Well, we Have to get you acting in one of those shows, Walden. But I have, I've acted in the shows Walden works behind the scenes, and there are a number of people who have been involved with him. And you really can tell some of the good actors who performed in old radio as you said, Beverly Washburn, Carolyn Grimes and others. Carolyn, of course, is Zuzu from It's A Wonderful Life, and by the way, she's going to be coming on unstoppable mindset in the not too distant future. But, but the point is that you can tell those people because they've done it, and they're very comfortable with it, and they know how to make it come across really well. So for example, you're the president of the radio enthusiasts of Puget Sound. Now you're down here in Southern California. How did you work out being the president of reps?   Walden Hughes ** 13:01 Why my closest friends a hobby, Brian Haygood, and Brian's been one of the big movers and shakers of reps over the years. And when the founder, Mike Sprague, decided to step down, they were looking for new people to run showcase back in 2007 so Brian asked me, because I'm the one that has the contacts, you know, I'm the one booking guests for y USA rep, I'm sure the go to person with contacts and phone numbers, everybody. And so I just wound up doing the CO produced showcase back in 2007 with Brian. So that's been one of the things I wound up doing.   13:50 I produce   Walden Hughes ** 13:52 almost 30 923, or four days events of All Time Radio around the country. So tell us about showcase, showcase. It will be September 18, 19/20, 21st is a big event for us, for reps, and we got funding thanks to Ford culture and the state of Washington to do this. And it's free. You can go to reps online.org, and RSVP and come. And people that you get to see this time around are Beverly Washburn from Star Trek, when the bear ministry shows, yeah, when, when the bear man a good, solid voice actress, and also is a coach. Carolyn Grimes, as you mentioned, Margaret O'Brien, of course, you know Margaret from Oscar war winner from meet me in St Louis, Gigi Perot, and she goes back to the 40s and 50s. And did the belly hunting TV show, Tommy cook and Lacher Riley, a radio show. Ivan Kirk. Troy. Bobby Benson. Bill Owen, who you had on ABC TV announcer, author of The Big broadcast, Ron cocking. He and his great wife, Gloria Macmillan ran acting school for children.   Michael Hingson ** 15:15 Bill Ratner Miller, of course, is famous for radio.   Walden Hughes ** 15:18 Right arm is Brooks. Bill Ratner from GI Joe. Bill Johnson, who does Bob Hope around the country. John provoke to Timmy Lacher. Chuck Daugherty, the announcer for second announcer for Sergeant president of the Yukon King and discover the Beach Boys. David Osman from fire sign theater. Phil prosper from fire sign theater. John Iman, who was from the TV show Lacher. And there was Larry Albert and John Jensen, the big band Lacher. John Laurie gasping, and Dan Murphy used to be the program director ki Xi out in Seattle. And so that's gonna be a great weekend. We'll produce close to it, I think, 1819 radio recreation that's still negotiating. And we have several interviews and panel. It's all free. So you can go to repsonline.org, and that's one of our two major events, the other major events at the Christmas show in December, the first week in December. I'm hoping Mike can make it up that   Michael Hingson ** 16:31 weekend, I was hoping to be able to come to the Showcase. And one of my favorite shows, and Walden and I had talked about doing it, is Richard diamond private detective. And I actually asked to be cast as Richard diamond, but then a speaking engagement came up. So unfortunately, rather than being in Washington, I am going to be in Minnesota, I'm sorry, in Pennsylvania, speaking. So I won't be able to be there, but we'll do Richard diamond. That's gonna be a fun show one of these days. We'll do it.   Walden Hughes ** 17:06 We'll put we put it aside. So when Mike can can do it, we can do it so but no, really blessed to have the financial grants to keep audio theater live on a nonprofit basis, and that that that's a great board, and cannot every group's had that financial abilities right now to do that, and it's so expensive around the country to do it, terms of airfare, hotel commitments and Just meeting room costs, I mean, for people who may or may not know, when you go to a hotel a live event now, a lot of hotels expect that that meeting room needs to generate at least $10,000 of income per day. That that's a lot of money. And so we have a place that doesn't, that doesn't do that, and we're able to produce that. And so rep definitely focus on the live, live audio theater part, and also has a large library, like 33,000 shows I heard where we have so people can download, and we're also aggressively buying discs and things to add to the library. And I remember spur back I part of and I'll tell you some of the latest news and that when we talk to that topic, but it's just old time radio is in really good   Michael Hingson ** 18:41 shape at the moment. You mentioned Larry Albert, and most people won't know, but Larry Albert's been in radio for what, 40 years, and has played Detective Harry Niles that whole time, and he's also Dr Watson on Sherlock Holmes again, there are some really good professionals out there, which is cool, yeah, yeah, who understand and know how to talk in a way that really draws people in, which is what it's all about,   Walden Hughes ** 19:15 absolutely. And considering Larry and a co founder, they run all vacations, sure, the after of imagination theater. Sure they carry the banner up in Seattle, and it's pretty amazing what they're able to produce.   Michael Hingson ** 19:32 Yeah. Now, in addition to the Showcase and the Christmas show that reps is going to be doing, reps also does some other shows, don't they, during the year for like veterans and others up in the Seattle area, Tulsa, right?   Walden Hughes ** 19:46 We I thought that idea down here at spur back in 2017 the Long Beach Veterans Hospital, they still have the original theme. Leader, Mike, that Jack Benny and Bob Hope did their shows in front of the Vets at Long Beach. And I know you and I have radio shows from the Long Beach Veterans Hospital. Yes, and the stage is still there. It's the biggest stage I've ever seen. Mike, the seating area is mobile, so that way they can bring patients in who are wheelchairs or whatever, or in bed. They still have the 1940 film projectors and booth up above that they want to run movies in there, and it's just a remarkable feeling to be on stage that Bob Hope and and Jack Bailey did a show, and then the famous broadcast were Ralph Edward consequences, yeah, the Hubert Smith, who was A patient at the hospital and and so in 2017 we did. It's a Wonderful Life. And we had a gigantic crowd. I think it was almost 200 people came to that. And I was for the public and people inside the hospital. And it was, it was a exciting event to have deluxe version of It's a Wonderful Life, which was the 70th anniversary of the broadcast, right? And so I decided to take that concept and take up to Seattle and start performing shows inside the VA hospital system in Seattle. It took a while. It's hard, it's hard to get into the VA, VA system to put on shows, because you got to talk to the right people, and you gotta get a hold of PR and not always easy. So I found the right contacts, and then the state awards, and then has a grant for for veterans or veteran family member to be in shows, and so we're able to get some funding from the state for that so, and then we will also encourage them to come to showcase in September so. But no, that's that's another program we got going for that,   Michael Hingson ** 22:20 someone who I unfortunately never did get to meet, although I heard a lot of his shows, and he helped continue to bring memories of radio to especially the military. Was Frank brazzi, who was around for quite a while, and then he he was also on yesterday USA, a lot. Wasn't he sure where he's   Walden Hughes ** 22:46 from, from 1993 until 2018 so he had a good 25 year run on why USA, Frank and I co host the Friday night show for many years, until he passed away in 2018 show from 2000 to 2018 Frank was amazing guy. He was. He owned his own radio station in South Carolina, South Carolina Island. When he was 19, he had to form the first tape course in Hollywood show Bob Hope would hire him, and he would record all Bob stuff at Paramount Studio and sit to radio station and travel with Bob to record his radio Show. He also was Jim Hawthorne producer for television, Frank wound up developing board games a pass out sold 6 million copies in the new wedding the dating game. He had a company that got gift for game shows on television. He also set up a brother in a company to monitor when commercials were run on TV. Frank also produced record albums every day. He had Walter Winchell record the life of Alex joelson. Met with Jimmy Durante, had Jimmy Durante do an album, Eddie Cantor and so frank is one of these great entrepreneurs that was able to make a lot of money and spend a lot of it on his love for radio. He was the substitute for little beaver, for example, on Red Rider so and he loved doing the show the golden days of radio, which started in 1949 and from 1967 on, it was part of the Armed Forces Radio Service, which was put on 400 stations. And I'm the, I'm the care caregiver, caretaker of. All that items. So I have all the shows and getting them transferred and play them on y USA and Frank wanted to make sure his entire collection was available to collectors. So we want to make sure things were copied and things like that for people to enjoy. But no big part of old time radio, in a lot of ways, not behind the scene a little bit. You know, wasn't a big name person during the golden days of radio, but afterwards, wound up being a major person that carried the fire Troy, full time radio.   Michael Hingson ** 25:35 I know we talked about a little bit, but talk to us about yesterday, USA, that has been around quite a while, and in general, for those who don't know, yesterday, USA is an internet radio station, actually two, if you will. There's a red and a blue network of yesterday USA, and they both stations broadcast to old radio 24 hours a day, although conversations and up to date conversations are interspersed, it still primarily is a a vehicle for playing old radio shows, right?   Walden Hughes ** 26:13 Yeah, been around since 1983 founded by its start. Yeah. Founded by Bill Bragg, Bill started the largest communication museum in the world back in 1979 in Dallas, Texas, and he had a film exchanger. And there was a TV station called a nostalgia channel, and it had these films of old TV shows, but they didn't have the media to transfer it, and so they contacted Bill. Bill agreed to transfer the film. He asked what it is exchanged for him. They said, we can give you an audio channel on satellite. And they gave that to him. And so he tried to decide what to do. So he started a broadcast Old Time Radio over satellite, and he was over the big C span satellite   Speaker 1 ** 27:12 until Oh into the 2005   Walden Hughes ** 27:16 era or so. Wound up being the audio shop carrier for WGN got it high in 2000 at the third most popular internet broadcast site in the world, behind the BBC and CNN around the Lacher saw around 44 that's not too bad, with 15,000 stations online.   Michael Hingson ** 27:41 I remember, I remember it was probably like 1998 or so, maybe 97 we were living in New Jersey, and I was doing something on my computer. And I don't even remember how I discovered it, but suddenly I found yesterday, USA, and at that time, yesterday, USA was one channel, and people could become DJs, if you will, and play old radio shows. You could have an hour and a half slot. And every other week you updated your broadcast, and they put on your shows at different times during the the two week period. But it was a wave that, again, a lot of people got an opportunity to listen to radio, and I'm sure it was very popular.   Walden Hughes ** 28:32 Yeah, yeah, if they'll to Lacher show, we don't, we don't get 40,000 to 60,000 listening hours a month, with it a lot, because a lot, maybe some people might listen to seven minutes, some might people listen to a half hour and all that accumulative, it's almost 60,000 hours a month. So that's a lot of hours that people are accessing in it, there's something nice about being alive. I don't know what you think Mike, but doing something live is pretty special, and that's, that's the nice thing about what yesterday USA can provide, and we can talk, take calls, and then, you know, in the old days, you have more and more people talk about Old Time Radio. No doubting, but a lot of new people don't have those memories, so we we might do some other things to keep it interesting for people to talk about, but it's still the heart and soul. Is still old time radio in a lot of ways, and we're definitely the fiber, I think for new people to find old time radio.   29:43 How did you get involved with it?   Walden Hughes ** 29:47 I became aware of it in the early 80s when sperback mentioned it in the news trailer, so I knew it's out there. And I called, and Bill returned my call. I said, I would like my cable TV. A company to play it, and I contacted my cable TV. They couldn't get to that channel that was on the satellite, so they put big band music on those dead on the community board. And so at the same time as you about 1998 I had a good enough computer with a good enough sound card I could pick up yesterday, USA. I was aware of it. It started on the internet in 1996 I started to listen, and then I would sort of call in around 2000 they would ask a question Bill and Mike and not really know the answer, so I will quickly call and give the answer, then leave. Eventually, they realized that I knew kitty Cowan, the big band, singer of the 40s and 50s. They asked me to bring on and do the interview, which we did September 17 of 2000 and then they asked, Could I do interviews on a regular basis? And so when a kiddie friend who I knew, Tess Russell, who was Gene Autry's Girl Friday, who ran kmpc for the audience, that was the station with the stars down the road, easy listening music,   Michael Hingson ** 31:21 golden broadcasting, and that was the station Gene Autry owned, yep.   Walden Hughes ** 31:26 And I think everybody in the music business but the old touch rush all favor. So she she hooked up, she signed up. She gave me set book 17 guests for me, right away from Joe staff or the Troy Martin to Pat Boone Patti Page, who wrote them all out. So I had a major start, and then I started to contact people via letters, celebrities and things. And I think it's a really good batting average. Mike, I had a success rate of 20% Wow. Wish it was a person that didn't I had no contact with that I could turn into a guess. I always thought I was a pretty good batting average. Yeah, and I got Margaret Truman that way. I mean, she called me, said, Wong, I forgot I did this radio show with Jimmy Stewart. She did jackpot, you know, the screen director of Playhouse. And we talked about her time on The Big Show with Tallulah Bankhead. They said, a big help with Fred Allen to her. She we talked about she hosted a show, NBC show called weekday with what the weekday version of monitor was, Mike Wallace. And she talks about how Mike had a terrible temper, and if he got upset with the engineer, she has to grab his jacket and pull him back in his chair just to try to cool them off. And so we had a great time with Margaret O'Brien, Margaret Truman, but, but I always thought that would a pretty good bat Navy getting 20% and in those days, in early 2000 a lot of celebrities would be were willing to interact with the through the website, with you, and so I did that. So I booked hundreds of celebrity interviews over the years, and so it's been a, I think, an important part what I do is trying to preserve people's memories, right that way we have the recordings.   Michael Hingson ** 33:43 And so how long was Bill with yesterday, USA.   Walden Hughes ** 33:49 I passed away in 2019 so Bill from 83 to 2019, to us, 10 years or so of his wife, though he had   Michael Hingson ** 34:05 Alzheimer's and dementia, and so you could tell he was he was sounding older, yeah, and   Walden Hughes ** 34:11 he wasn't behind the scene. He was really erratic in a lot of ways. So Kim, Kim and I wound up his wife, and I wound up running the station for the last 10 years, behind the scene, okay, Bill wasn't able to do it, and so I would be the one handling the interaction with the public and handling the just jockeys, and Kim would do the automation system and do the paperwork. So she and I pretty much ran the station.   34:43 And now you do   Walden Hughes ** 34:45 it, I do it, yeah, and so I think Bill always had in mind that I'd be the one running the station in a lot of ways. And think to the listeners, we've been able to pay the bills enough to keep it. Going, I would love to generate more income for it.   Michael Hingson ** 35:03 Well, tell us about that. How are you doing the income generation? And so most of it is through   Walden Hughes ** 35:09 a live auction that we have in November this year, will be on Saturday, November 22 and people donate gift cards or items, and people bid on it, or people donate, and that money we basically use to help pay the monthly bills, which are power bills and phone bills and things like that, and so, which is a remarkable thing. Not every internet radio station has a big enough fan base to cover the cost, and so all the internet stations you see out there, everybody, the owners, sort of really have to pull money out of their own pocket. But why USA been around long enough, it has enough loyal following that our listenership really kicks in. I mean, we built a brand new studio here with the with the audience donating the funds, which is pretty remarkable. You know, to do that,   Michael Hingson ** 36:16 yeah, you got the new board in, and it's working and all that. And that's, a good thing. It really is. Well, I have been a listener since I discovered y USA. When we moved out to California for a while, I wasn't quite as active of a listener, but I still worked at it as I could. But then we moved down here, and then after Karen passed, was easier to get a lot more directly involved. And so I know I contribute to the auction every year, and I'm gonna do it again this year.   Walden Hughes ** 36:49 So would you, when you were after what you knew, why you said, Did you did you come with your question still quite a bit when you were working and traveling all the time over the years.   Michael Hingson ** 37:01 Oh, yeah, yeah, oh, I did a lot of times, and still, do I listen to some internet radio stations? Why USA among them when I travel, just because when I go to a new hotel, sometimes I can make the TV work, and sometimes I can't, but also sometimes finding the stations that I want to listen to is a little bit more of a challenge, whereas I can just use my my smartphone, my iPhone, and I've got a number of stations programmed in the only time I have had A little bit of a challenge with some of that is when I travel outside the US, sometimes I can't get direct access to some of the stations because of copyright laws. They don't they don't allow them to be broadcast out of the US, but mostly even there, I'm able to do it. But I do like to listen to old radio when I travel, typically, not on an airplane, but when I when I land, yes, yeah.   Walden Hughes ** 38:08 I think that's one thing that they ended up taking over. I think a lot of people grew up listening to the radio. Enjoy the uniqueness of radio station had. I don't know if you see that today, but I think the internet have replaced that.   Michael Hingson ** 38:24 Well, somewhat, I've seen some articles that basically say that there is a lot more shortwave listening and actual radio listening to radio stations than there is through the internet, but there is an awful lot of listening to the radio stations through the internet as well, but people do still like to listen to radio.   Walden Hughes ** 38:50 What do you think podcast? How you think podcasts fit in? I mean, you'd be hosting your own show. How you think that fit into the overall consumer questioning habit?   Michael Hingson ** 38:59 Well, I think then, what's going on with podcasts is that, like with anything, there are some really good ones. There are a lot of people who just do do something, and it's not necessarily really great quality. They think they're doing great, and they maybe are, but, but I think that overall, podcasting is something that people listen to when they're running, when they're walking, when they're doing exercising, when they're doing something else, running on a treadmill or whatever, a lot More than listening to a radio program that probably requires a little bit more concentration. But make no mistake about it, podcasts are here to stay, and podcasts are very dominant in in a lot of ways, because people do listen to them   Walden Hughes ** 39:56 a niche audience. So you find you find your audience who. Are looking for that particular topic, and so they tune into that their favorite podcast that they knew there really might be covering that topic.   Michael Hingson ** 40:07 Sure, there is some of that. But going back to what you were talking about earlier, if you get some good audio drama, and I know that there are some good podcasts out there that that do some things with good drama, that will draw in a wider audience, and that gets to be more like radio and and I think people like radio. People like what they used to listen to, kids so much today, don't but, well, they never heard old they never heard radio. But by the same token, good acting and good drama and good podcasts will draw people in just like it always has been with radio.   Walden Hughes ** 40:54 What I'm also noticing like the day the disc jockeys are, they somewhat gone. I mean, we grew up in an era where you had well known hosts that were terrific Dick jockey that kept you entertained. And I make it, I don't listen to too much because, for example, everybody the easy listening big band era, pretty much not in LA in the La radio market right now, right and I missed it.   Michael Hingson ** 41:23 I miss it too. And I agree with you, I think that we're not seeing the level of really good radio hosts that we used to there are some on podcasts. But again, it is different than it used to be. And I think some podcasts will continue to do well and and we will see how others go as as time passes, but I think that we don't see a Gary Owens on television on radio anymore. We don't see Jim Lang or Dick Whittington and whitting Hill and all those people, we don't see any of that like we used to. And so even Sirius XM isn't providing as much of that as as it used to.   Walden Hughes ** 42:20 And so what do you think AI is going to fit? I was listening to, I'm a sport fan, and Mike is a sport fan, so I like listening to ESPN and Fox Sports Radio.   Michael Hingson ** 42:32 And I was listening to a discussion over the weekend that they are, they are working some of the immediate it to replace the play by play announcer they're working with. Ai, can I figure eventually that can be a caution. It to do away with all announcers. I'm not sure that's going to happen, because I don't know. It doesn't seem like it could. I'm not sure that that will happen. I think that even if you look at the discussions about audible and other organizations providing AI voices to read books, what people say, and I'm sure over time, this will change a little bit, but and I'll get back to the button in a moment, people Say, I would much rather have a human narrated book than an AI narrated book, and the reason is, is because AI hasn't captured the human voice. Yet you may have somebody who sounds like an individual person to a degree, but you don't have the same pauses, the same intonations, the same kind of thing with AI that you do with humans. Now, will that get better over time? Sure, it will. But will it get it to be as good as humans? I think that's got a long way to go yet, and I don't think that you're going to see AI really replacing people in that regard. I think AI's got a lot that it can do, but I actually had somebody on the podcast last year, and one of the things that he said is, AI will never replace anyone. People will replace people with AI, maybe, although that may or may not be a good thing, but nobody has to be replaced because of AI, because you can always give them other jobs to do. So for example, one of the discussions that this gentleman and I had were was about having AI when you have autonomous vehicles and you have trucks that can drive themselves, and so you can ship things from place to place, keep the driver in the truck anyway. And instead of the driver driving the vehicle, the driver can be given other tasks to do, so that you still keep that person busy. And you you become more efficient. And so you let i. I do the things that it can do, but there are just so many things that AI isn't going to do that I don't think that AI is ever going to replace humans. The whole point is that we make leaps that AI is not going to be able to do.   Walden Hughes ** 45:15 Yeah, I think a good example in the audio book field, a really great reader can give you emotion and play the characters and make it realistic. And I don't know AI ever going to reach that point to bring emotions and feelings into a reading of story   Michael Hingson ** 45:32 not the same way. And as I said, I've been involved or listened and watched discussions where people say, for example, I might use AI to read a non fiction book because I'm not really paying so much attention to the reader and I'm just getting the information. But when it comes to reading a fiction book, and when it comes to really wanting to focus on the reader, I don't want AI is what I constantly hear. I want a person, and I understand that,   Walden Hughes ** 46:00 yeah, I think what you'll see AI, especially, take over the drive thru when people go to a fast food place. I can see AI replacing the interaction and trying to get those things corrected. I can see that   Michael Hingson ** 46:14 maybe, maybe, I mean, you know some of that to a degree, but I think that people are still going to rule out in the end, for quite a while. Well, you know, in talking about all the different radio organizations, I know we talked about a little bit last night last time, but tell me about spurt back.   Walden Hughes ** 46:36 Yeah, I can give you some new updates. Spoke actually been around to 1974   Michael Hingson ** 46:42 I remember when spurred back began a person who I knew, who was a listener to my radio program, Jerry Hindi, guess, was involved with with all of that. My problem with attending spurred back meetings was that it was they were way too far away from me at UC Irvine to be able to do it, but I joined by mail for a while, and, and, and that was pretty good. But by the same token, you know, it was there,   Walden Hughes ** 47:11 it was there. And spur back. Have honored over 500 people who worked in the golden days of radio. A lot of district donated. They had the meetings in the conventions now we're evolving very quickly this year into more preservation work. So we have bought over $10,000 in computers here recently. We bought and we donated, actually, we won a prize, although the first Lacher disk turntables from Japan, which is over a $10,000 turntable, we'll be using that to help dub disc. And the board is just voted in. It's going to increase the board to at least 11 people next year who will have a carryover of the seven board member and we want to have no new board members. So maybe you and I can talk about that Mike for you to be on for next year, because we'll be definitely expanding the board with 11 one. So I think it'd be really strong in the preservation stuff, because perfect got 20 to 30,000 deaths that need to get out there. And with all your new equipment, it's amazing how full time radio sounds so good today terms of the new technology, and compare where I started collecting the 70 and I ran into a lot of even commercial stuff really muddy in those days. Mike, I bet you did too, and it's a remarkable difference. Spur back is planning to be at the Troy Boston festival next April, what does spread back? Stand for the society to preserve and encourage radio drama, variety and comedy. And you can go to spur back.com Join. You can go to repsonlect.org to join. And we then mentioned yesterday, USA. Yesterday usa.com or.net and can go there and listen away and participate in the auction, which will be coming up November 22 Yeah, very important to do as well. But anyway, I really think full time radio is in a really good spot. Mike. I think if it was for the internet, I don't know if we would find all the young people who are interested in it. I think it then it been a double edged sword. It knocked out a lot of dealers. You know, they used to make money selling their tapes and CDs and everything, and I bought a lot. I know you did too over the years, but those days are pretty. Pretty much done, and but if found a lot of new younger people to find the stations or find podcast and they get to learn about yesterday USA and Old Time Radio, and all the different radio ones more and all the different internet station are playing it until they can expose and I don't think that would have happened before the internet, so I think it'll always have it created a whole new listenership.   Michael Hingson ** 50:30 I am still amazed at some of the things that I hear. I remember once when somebody found a whole bunch of old Petri wine sponsored Sherlock Holmes with basil, Rathbone and Nigel Bruce. They were horrible quality. Was it Chris who   Walden Hughes ** 50:50 found? Yep, Chris one best founded me up and found me a bookstore.   Michael Hingson ** 50:55 And the quality wasn't wasn't good at all, but they were remastered, and they sound incredible. They do how they do it, because I'd love to be able to do that with shows that I have, and like to remaster them.   Walden Hughes ** 51:13 Yeah, what happened was, you know, they were two writers, green and Boucher, Lacher, Lacher, right, and Boucher was a famous bachelor Khan. The famous mystery convention is named after him. And Dennis Green was an actor on radio, and he was also a historian. He knew, like all everything about Sherlock Holmes. And so they created the new venture who saw a comb based upon maybe a scene from a previous right story and gets expanded upon it. And so when it when one of them passed away, the collection wound up in a bookstore in Berkeley, California, and crystal investor found out. And so there became a buying group led by John tough fellow, Kenny Greenwald, Dick Millen, Joey brewing and others, got in a bidding war with the Library of Congress, and they outbid and won. They paid $15,000 for the sets of Sherlock, Holmes and so and Shirley Boone was an NBC audio engineer and chief film engineer. He really knew how to dub, and so they they did a terrific job. And then they decided to put out a record album on their own with the first two episodes. And then after that, they decided to market it to Simon Schuster, and they decided to do small vignettes. They could copyright the vignette. These were quite three minutes introduction, so they would get Ben Wright, who wanted to always Sherlock Holmes and Peggy Webber in order to reminisce and or create little scenes to set up the stories that way they could copyright that part. They couldn't copyright the show because they fell in the public domain, right? But they wound up paying the estates of everybody anyway. But that's what how they all came out, and they were hoping to do Gunsmoke. We talked to Kenny Greenwald and others, but that never, that never came off and but that's part of the remarkable thing that Karl Marx done. He's been able to get into CBS, and I think he's working on NBC, and he licensed them, so he'll be able to get into the vault and get more stuff out for all of it to enjoy. And that's an amazing thing that Carl drives for the hobby is to get new stuff out there. It's been locked away for all these years.   Michael Hingson ** 53:53 I am just amazed at the high quality. I'd love to learn more about audio engineering to be able to do that, because I have a lot of recording I'd love to make a lot better than they are.   Walden Hughes ** 54:05 Yeah, Jerry Henry used to use a software called Diamond Cut, ah, and I would the those originally was used for the Edison solder records. And the guy who issued this, Joe, they developed the software. And that's where Joe, hi, who did so much transfer work, that was the program he wound up using to create good sound,   Michael Hingson ** 54:32 yeah, and, and did a lot of it,   Walden Hughes ** 54:36 yep, see there, see, there was a software, everybody, I think original is hardware. And I think originally almost was a $50,000 piece of equipment, harder before 2000 now it's gone to software base and a couple $1,000 that's another way. That's another program that people use to clean disk. Now. Crackles and pop out of the recording.   Michael Hingson ** 55:02 So but it's not just the snap crackle and pop. It's getting the the real fidelity back, the lows and the highs and all that you said, what was the one he used? Diamond Cut. Diamond Cut, yeah. Diamond Cut, yeah. But yeah. It's just amazing. The kinds of things that happen, like with the Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and and others.   Walden Hughes ** 55:23 But you also have good ears for that. Because, yeah, I remember about 2025, years ago, it was serious. XM. Everybody has this stereo sound, I know, if you're shooting, has a certain ambiance about it. And there were companies that were taking old time radio and creating that same effect, and that could bug me. I was so used to listen to old radio show in an analog feel about it. And they when they try to put false stereo in a recording, yeah, oh my gosh. It just didn't sound right. And so they've gotten away from that pill, a lot of new dubbing. They do don't have that. So it sounds terrific now, yeah,   Michael Hingson ** 56:15 sounds a lot better. What do you think is the future of the hobby?   Walden Hughes ** 56:19 I think more and more stuff are coming out. A lot of stuff that were with agreements to hold on to the material have disappeared, because a lot of it is passing from generation to generation. And so I think over the next 10 years, you see so much more stuff coming out. In some ways, that's sort of what you John Larry and I do. We collect almost everything, just because you got to make sure it's captured for the for the next generation, even though we might not be listening to it. There's so much stuff we don't listen to do everything. But I think we're, we're short of the wide billions of old time radio so we try to capture all of it and preserve it on hard drives, yeah, but eventually it'll go to future generations. But I really think more and more stuff are coming out. I think with the yesterday USA, more and more people will find it. And I'm hoping, with creating new audio theater, I would like to reproduce the great radio scripts we have no recordings for, like one man, family, I love, a mystery, all those things. That's sort of what I want to do, is one of my goals. And I think be great to hear stories that we've all collected, that we wonder about, and to get audio production behind some of these scripts. And I think it's in very good shape. It will all come down to money, Michael, as you know, you know,   Michael Hingson ** 57:58 but I also think that it's important that we, as we're recreating the shows, that while we can, we have people who understand what we really need for actors who are going to be recreating the shows, are able to find the right people to do it, train them how to do it. I think that's so important.   Walden Hughes ** 58:19 I think so. I think, I think you find a lot of young people who like theater, who are not necessarily radio fan, if they came, if the radio fan, like Brian Henderson and people like that, they become really good actor because they love to listen to the shows ahead of time. Yeah. Beverly Washburn does the same. She likes hearing the original performances that way. She get field for me to the show. And I think you and I think Larry does it that way. And you might not necessarily want to copy everything, but you got a benchmark to work from, and you sort of know what, with the intent when   Michael Hingson ** 59:01 you say Larry, which Larry? Larry Gasman,   Walden Hughes ** 59:03 great, yeah. And I think that's a great help to study and listen how people did it, because I think a lot of old time radio, it's like the prime rib. It was the best of the best of all time of radio drama, and it's a great way to learn the craft, by listening to it and absorbing it.   Michael Hingson ** 59:30 Well, if people want to reach out to you and maybe learn more about yesterday, USA or reps and just talk with you about radio, how do they do that, they can give me a   Walden Hughes ** 59:41 call at 714-545-2071, that's my studio number for the radio stations. Lot of times I can, I'll pick it up and talk to on air, off air. They can always drop me an email Walden shoes at yesterday. Us. Dot com and happy the answer, you can always call my cell phone at 714-454-3281,   Walden Hughes ** 1:00:11 you can chase me down at over, at reps, at reps online.org. You know, get forward to me or spur vac at S, P, E, O, D, V, A, c.com, or you can even get hold of Michael Henson and Mike.   Michael Hingson ** 1:00:26 You can always get a hold of me. And people know how to do that, and I will get them in touch with you as well, you bet. So I'm glad to do that. Well, I want to thank you for being here, and I want to thank all of you for listening. I hope you've enjoyed this. This is a little bit different than a lot of the podcast that we've done. But it is, it is so important to really talk about some of these kinds of concepts, and to talk about old radio and what it what it still adds and contributes to today. So I hope that you enjoyed it. I'd love to hear from you. Feel free to reach out to me. Michael H, i@accessibe.com that's m, I, C, H, A, E, L, H, I at accessibe, A, C, C, E, S, S, i, b, e.com, love to hear from you. Wherever you're listening, please give us a five star rating. We value that a lot, and I hope that you'll go listen to YESTERDAY usa.com, or.net then again, in both, there's the red and the blue Network, or repsonline.com, and we, we have a lot of fun. Every so often we do trivia contests, and we'll take hours and and gentlemen in New Jersey and his wife, Johnny and Helen Holmes, come on and run the trivia, and it's a lot of fun, and you're welcome to add your answers to the trivia questions, and you can come on in here and learn how to even do it through the chat.   Walden Hughes ** 1:01:51 But my kids watch this every Friday night on, why USA too?   Michael Hingson ** 1:01:56 Yeah, I get to be on every Friday night, and that's a lot of fun. Yeah. So we'd love to hear from you, and we'd love you to to help us further enhance the whole concept of old radio show. So I want to thank you again. And if you know of other people who ought to be on the podcast, Walt, and of course, you as well as you know, please introduce us. We're always looking for more people to talk to us about whatever they want to talk about. So I want to again. Thank you all and for being here. And Walden, thank you for being here as well.   Walden Hughes ** 1:02:27 All right, Mike, I'll be talking a little while.   Michael Hingson ** 1:02:33 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cast an initiative of accessiBe and is sponsored by accessiBe. Please visit www.accessibe.com . AccessiBe is spelled a c c e s s i b e. There you can learn all about how you can make your website inclusive for all persons with disabilities and how you can help make the internet fully inclusive by 2025. Thanks again for Listening. Please come back and visit us again next week.

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L'heure du crime
L'INTÉGRALE - Angélique Chauviré : la suppliciée du boucher des Caraïbes

L'heure du crime

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2025 39:57


Angélique Chauviré, 31 ans, indépendante et aventurière. Depuis quelques années, elle avait trouvé son paradis sur l'île de Saint-Martin, dans les Antilles, mais c'est le diable qu'elle a croisée ici. Le colosse Kathron Fortune dont on va découvrir qu'il est un tueur en série. Sanguinaire, brutal, effrayant. Retrouvez tous les jours en podcast le décryptage d'un faits divers, d'un crime ou d'une énigme judiciaire par Jean-Alphonse Richard, entouré de spécialistes, et de témoins d'affaires criminelles.Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

The Land Podcast - The Pursuit of Land Ownership and Investing
#188 - Why Right Now Is The BEST Time To Spray Cool Season Grasses with Kent Boucher and Nickolas Lirio of Hoksey Native Seeds

The Land Podcast - The Pursuit of Land Ownership and Investing

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2025 69:05


Welcome to the land podcast, a platform for people looking to educate themselves in the world of land ownership, land investing, staying up to date with current land trends in the Midwest, and hearing from industry experts and professionals. On today's episode, we are back in the studio with Kent Boucher and Nickolas Lirio of Hoksey Native Seeds. We discuss: Spring planning is crucial for establishing warm season grasses and pollinators. Assess current vegetation before planting; it affects your success. Spray cool season grasses in fall and spring to prepare for planting. Glyphosate is effective for controlling invasive grasses like brome. Timing is key; spray before plants go to seed to prevent future issues. Interseeding can be challenging; consider burning or grazing to create space. Diverse prairies support healthier deer populations and ecosystems. Managing land can be more rewarding than just hunting; it fosters a deeper connection. Use herbicides carefully; some can target specific invasive species effectively. Establishing a prairie can reduce long-term maintenance compared to food plots. And so much more! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Get Pre-Approved to Purchase a farm with Buck Land Funding ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.whitetailmasteracademy.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Use code '⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠HOFER' to save 10% off at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠www.theprairiefarm.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Massive potential tax savings: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ASMLABS.Net⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ -Moultrie: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/moultrie_⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ -Hawke Optics: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/hawkeoptics_⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ -OnX: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/onX_Hunt⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ -Painted Arrow: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/PaintedArrow

ESPIONS - Histoires Vraies
[INÉDIT] Opération Anthropoid : la fin du boucher de Prague • L'Intégrale

ESPIONS - Histoires Vraies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2025 19:09


Lorsqu'il prend ses fonctions au château de Prague en septembre 1941, le SS-Obergruppenführer allemand Reinhard Heydrich a déjà du sang sur les mains. Bras droit d'Himmler, il a bâti la machine policière du Reich, organisé les unités mobiles qui massacrent les populations juives à l'Est et participé à la mise en place de la Solution finale. Dans la capitale tchécoslovaque, il poursuit son règne de terreur et gagne bientôt le surnom de « Boucher de Prague ». Le Special Operations Executive britannique veut le neutraliser au plus vite, et pour ça, il faut un plan d'envergure…

Jamie Orque Podcast
#490 - Dorian Boucher

Jamie Orque Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2025 84:41


Dorian Boucher plays guitar in Gleanhttps://www.instagram.com/glean_sd/

En Primera Plana
La gastronomía en la sociedad del espectáculo

En Primera Plana

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2025 27:00


Estrellas michelín, ránkings, puntuaciones, realities de cocina...¿Se ha convertido la cocina en un espectáculo en la era de los influencer? En la sociedad del espectáculo hoy analizamos la cocina como escenario de teatro. La excelencia en la cocina, ¿funciona igual que antes?  Vivimos en una sociedad en la que todo se evalúa, hay que poner notas a todo y un ejemplo por antonomasia es la cocina. ¿Quién no ha mirado la calificación de un restaurante y los comentarios antes de reservar una mesa?  La presión por la nota y el márketing de los influencers muchas veces nos distrae de lo esencial. La guía Michelin lleva años otorgando estrellas, es un clásico y aquí en Francia una institución pero ¿tienen el mismo valor que antes? ¿qué diferencia a un restaurante con estrella de otro estrellado? Y en cuanto al boom de los realities televisivos sobre cocina. ¿Ser un master chef es ahora tener un buen community manager?  Nos acompañan en esta edición: -Bibiana Vileilla, profesora en la escuela de gastronomía Ferrandi   -Abraham Guzmán, especialista en economía del turismo  -Mercedes Ahumada, chef mexicana restaurante Chicahualco en París -Estrella Maillet, fundadora de Talent Developer. Es la primera agencia que acompaña a los estudiantes de gastronomía del mundo entero a venir en Francia para hacer prácticas en las mejores brigadas.      Coordinación editorial:  Florencia Valdés  Realización: Souheil Khedir, Jérémy Boucher, Steven Elsly Presenta: Carlos Herranz. 

ESPIONS - Histoires Vraies
[INÉDIT] Opération Anthropoid : la fin du boucher de Prague • 2/2

ESPIONS - Histoires Vraies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2025 10:43


Lorsqu'il prend ses fonctions au château de Prague en septembre 1941, le SS-Obergruppenführer allemand Reinhard Heydrich a déjà du sang sur les mains. Bras droit d'Himmler, il a bâti la machine policière du Reich, organisé les unités mobiles qui massacrent les populations juives à l'Est et participé à la mise en place de la Solution finale. Dans la capitale tchécoslovaque, il poursuit son règne de terreur et gagne bientôt le surnom de « Boucher de Prague ». Le Special Operations Executive britannique veut le neutraliser au plus vite, et pour ça, il faut un plan d'envergure…Au matin du 27 mai 1942, Jozef Gabčík, Jan Kubiš et Josef Valčík prennent position dans le virage de l'avenue Kirchmayerova. Il est 10h30. La Mercedes décapotable noire du Reichsprotektor doit arriver d'une minute à l'autre. Conformément au plan, Valčík est dissimulé plus haut et guette le véhicule. À l'aide d'un petit miroir, il donne le signal à ses camarades.

ESPIONS - Histoires Vraies
[INÉDIT] Opération Anthropoid : la fin du boucher de Prague • 1/2

ESPIONS - Histoires Vraies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2025 10:13


Lorsqu'il prend ses fonctions au château de Prague en septembre 1941, le SS-Obergruppenführer allemand Reinhard Heydrich a déjà du sang sur les mains. Bras droit d'Himmler, il a bâti la machine policière du Reich, organisé les unités mobiles qui massacrent les populations juives à l'Est et participé à la mise en place de la Solution finale. Dans la capitale tchécoslovaque, il poursuit son règne de terreur et gagne bientôt le surnom de « Boucher de Prague ». Le Special Operations Executive britannique veut le neutraliser au plus vite, et pour ça, il faut un plan d'envergure…L'assassinat d'Heydrich, ce n'est pas seulement un devoir de liberté pour les Tchèques. C'est aussi une question de souveraineté nationale. Après la prise de pouvoir d'Hitler en Tchécoslovaquie, l'ancien président Edvard Beneš s'est exilé en Grande-Bretagne. À Londres, il observe avec inquiétude le classement que les Alliés établissent entre les pays occupés, selon la force de leur résistance contre l'Allemagne. La Tchécoslovaquie figure toujours en fin de liste.

Truck Stop Quebec
1er octobre 2025 Doc Denis Boucher, Laurie Brouillet et Jean Raymond

Truck Stop Quebec

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2025 127:28


On ouvre l'émission avec le Dr Denis Boucher, spécialiste du métabolisme et de l'entraînement, qui nous parle de santé et de nutrition. Avons-nous plus de pouvoir qu'on l'imagine sur notre santé et notre vie? Selon lui, la réponse est oui. Mais pour y arriver, encore faut-il faire le choix de se prioriser et d'adopter un... The post 1er octobre 2025 Doc Denis Boucher, Laurie Brouillet et Jean Raymond appeared first on Truck Stop Québec.

Le 5/7
Jean-François Boucher, fleuriste du château de Chenonceau.

Le 5/7

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2025 4:57


durée : 00:04:57 - Déjà debout - par : Mathilde MUNOS - Ce matin dans Déjà Debout : Jean-François Boucher, fleuriste du château de Chenonceau. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

Le 5/7
Le 5/7 du mardi 30 septembre 2025 : Jean-François Boucher / Flore Berlingen

Le 5/7

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2025 120:05


durée : 02:00:05 - Le 5/7 - À 5H45, L'invité Déjà debout ! : Jean-François Boucher, fleuriste du château de Chenonceau. À 6H20 : Flore Berlingen, coordinatrice de plaidoyer du collectif En mode climat Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

Les interviews d'Inter
Jean-François Boucher, fleuriste du château de Chenonceau.

Les interviews d'Inter

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2025 4:57


durée : 00:04:57 - Déjà debout - par : Mathilde MUNOS - Ce matin dans Déjà Debout : Jean-François Boucher, fleuriste du château de Chenonceau. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

Northforker Presents On
Southforker Stories: Sail Away with Kiki Boucher -- and her ship house

Northforker Presents On

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2025 17:08


Southforker Stories: Sail Away with Kiki Boucher -- and her ship house by Northforker Presents On

En Primera Plana
La condena a Bolsonaro agita Brasil: ¿fin del bolsonarismo?

En Primera Plana

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2025 27:01


Una condena histórica: 27 años de cárcel para el expresidente Bolsonaro por golpismo. De poco le sirvieron al político ultraderechista las presiones de Trump con aranceles y sanciones a Brasil ante lo que calificó como “una caza de brujas”. Hoy nos preguntamos qué cartas puede jugar aún el expresidente ultraderechista, quién podría tomar su relevo y sobre todo, si hay "bolsonarismo" sin Bolsonaro.  Nos acompañan en esta edición:  -Willy Delvalle, periodista corresponsal en París, doctorando en la cátedra geopolítica de riesgo en la Escuela Normal Superior -Jean-Jacques Kourliandsky, director del Observatorio América en el Instituto Jean Jaurès  -Thomás Zicman de Barros, doctor en el Centro de Investigaciones políticas SciencePo en Paris, el CEVIPOF.   Coordinación editorial:  Florencia Valdés  Realización: Souheil Khedir,Jérémy Boucher, Steven Elsly Presenta: Carlos Herranz. 

Best of Kfm Mornings with Darren, Sherlin & Sibs
Kfm Mornings speak to the legendary Judy Boucher

Best of Kfm Mornings with Darren, Sherlin & Sibs

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2025 14:50 Transcription Available


Kfm Mornings with Darren, Sherlin and Sibs caught up with legendary singer, Judy Boucher... or aunty Judy as she says Darren can call her. Click on the audio player for the full conversation. This initially aired on Thursday, 25 September 2025.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Béarn Gourmand France Bleu Béarn
A la Maison Flament à Tarbes, Mathéo dévoile sa pièce du boucher pour le barbecue

Béarn Gourmand France Bleu Béarn

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2025 2:01


durée : 00:02:01 - A la Maison Flament à Tarbes, Mathéo dévoile sa pièce du boucher pour le barbecue Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

Lost On Lost
The End - Who's Weedmore?

Lost On Lost

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2025 132:26


Don't cry because it's ending, cry because it happened. JP & Adam finally arrive at The End, the final episode of the television program Lost. And returning to shepherd them through, the Christian to their Jack and Locke, Monsignor Worldwide himself, out of all the celebrities, he's the local-est, Noah B. Totzke. But since Totz is sort of a huge clown himself, the three of them mostly just holler about Heat and True Detective. And piss and feet and wigs. And apologies in advance, there was a thunderstorm happening outside JP's place during the show, so there are some weird background noises. Both from the storm and Ted hiding under JP's desk. Boucher would have edited them out, but after five years he's sort of started phoning it in. It's The End, here on Lost On Lost. Love you all. Stay tuned.

Vol State: It's All About the People
Season 2 - Episode #7 - Brad Boucher

Vol State: It's All About the People

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2025 67:05


Brad is a lot of funbut also a man with a purpose. He raised over $25,000 for Tennessee Baptist Children's Home. And talk about pressure…he's from Union City so everyone alongthe course knew him and was cheering for him You can donate hereif you'd like TennesseeChildren.org

Les matins
Un boucher à Budapest

Les matins

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2025 4:02


durée : 00:04:02 - La Chronique du Grand Continent - par : Gilles Gressani - Gilles Gressani nous parle d'un passe-temps surprenant de Viktor Orbán, l'abattage de porcs.

Flavor of Italy podcast
Pasta Shapes and Tools - 
creations by Laurie Boucher

Flavor of Italy podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2025 34:56


If you've ever fallen down the rabbit hole of pasta shapes on Instagram and wondered, “Who dreams this stuff up?”—meet Laurie Boucher. She's a pasta artist, a generous teacher, a fearless tinkerer with tools, and a former attorney who flipped her life to follow flour, water, and imagination. Laurie doesn't just make pasta; she invents pasta shapes and the tools to create them—then shows the rest of us how to do it, too. AND…. One of her pasta shapes was just featured on the award winning series, THE BEAR!

The Wraparound by Porch
Franchises... and why they work! Featuring Nate Boucher from Mike Holmes Inspections in CA

The Wraparound by Porch

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2025 44:21 Transcription Available


Franchises... do they work? Are they better than starting independently? Are they worth the cost? We get into all of that and MORE with Nate Boucher of Mike Holmes Inspections! If you've followed the HGTV/DIY space for the past 20 years, the name Mike Holmes should be familiar to you. Pivoting off of his on-screen success, he launched his home inspection franchise in Canada where inspectors like Nate have been thriving. And Mike Holmes Inspections is one of the largest groups using Home Inspector Pro! There are an abundant amount of franchise options if you've ever considered it as a foot into the inspection space, so if you've been wondering how/if they work and whether they're worth it... then maybe Nate's story will help. The Links: Register for Inspection Fuel (September 8-10 in New Orleans) here: https://www.inspectionfuel.com/register Sign up for our newsletter here: https://pages.theridealong.show/newsletter Leave us a voicemail here: https://www.theridealong.show Learn more about Home Inspector Pro: https://homeinspectorpro.com  

Long Ash Podcast
Episode 270: Conor Boucher of Glenbrook Brewery

Long Ash Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2025 70:43


This week, Chris sits down with the General Manager of Glenbrook Brewery, Conor Boucher, to talk about his journey in the brewery world. They also try out some beer and cigar pairings. Glenbrook Brewery is located in Morristown, NJ.

A Little More Courage
Transforming Cities Through Prayer With Renee Boucher

A Little More Courage

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2025 65:55


In this powerful episode, Jack and Riley sit down with Renee Boucher, a leader with 24/7 Prayer International, to uncover how prayer changes cities and breaks spiritual strongholds. Renee shares the remarkable story of how God led her to pray over the former Rashneesh cult property in Oregon after Young Life acquired it—and the spiritual cleansing that followed. We also dive into stories of revival in Portland, the transformation of entire neighborhoods, and why persistent, unified prayer is critical in this dark hour. If you've ever doubted the impact of prayer, this conversation will reignite your faith.

Stuff You Missed in History Class
Unearthed! in July 2025, Part 2

Stuff You Missed in History Class

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2025 43:11 Transcription Available


This edition of Unearthed! continues, this time covering the mixed items we call potpourri, shipwrecks, edibles and potables, books and letters, and exhumations. Research: Agencia Brasil. “Cave Paintings Discovered in Rio de Janiero Park.” 4/13/2025. https://agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br/en/educacao/noticia/2025-04/cave-paintings-discovered-rio-de-janeiro-park Anderson, R. L., Salvemini, F., Avdeev, M., & Luzin, V. (2025). An African Art Re-Discovered: New Revelations on Sword Manufacture in Dahomey. Heritage, 8(2), 62. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8020062 Archaeology Magazine. “5,000-year-old Bread Buried in Bronze Age House.” 6/4/2025. https://archaeology.org/news/2025/06/04/5000-year-old-bread-buried-in-bronze-age-house/ Archaeology Magazine. “Fried Thrush Was a Popular Street Food.” 6/6/2025. https://archaeology.org/news/2025/06/06/fried-thrush-was-a-popular-roman-street-food/ Arnold, Paul. “Dentist may have solved 500-year-old mystery in da Vinci's iconic Vitruvian Man.” Phys.org. 7/2/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-07-dentist-year-mystery-da-vinci.html Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO). “New revelations on sword manufacture in 19th-century Dahomey, West Africa.” Phys.org. 5/11/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-05-revelations-sword-19th-century-dahomey.html Black, Jo. “Cut-price Magna Carta 'copy' now believed genuine.” BBC. 5/15/2025. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cm23zjknre7o Boucher, Brian. “Antique Condom on View at the Rijksmuseum Riles Christian Group.” ArtNet. 6/26/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/antique-condom-rijksmuseum-christian-protest-2661519 Brown, Mark. “Rare wall paintings found in Cumbria show tastes of well-off Tudors.” The Guardian. 4/4/2025. https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025/apr/04/rare-wall-paintings-found-in-cumbria-show-tastes-of-well-off-tudors Carvajal, Guillermo. “The Oldest Vanilla Pod in Europe, Used in Alchemical Experiments, Discovered at Prague Castle.” LBV. 3/31/2025. https://www.labrujulaverde.com/en/2025/03/the-oldest-vanilla-pod-in-europe-used-in-alchemical-experiments-discovered-at-prague-castle/ Carvajal, Guillermo. “Thrushes Were the “Fast Food” of Romans in Imperial Cities, Not an Exclusive Delicacy for Banquets.” LBV. 6/3/2025. https://www.labrujulaverde.com/en/2025/06/thrushes-were-the-fast-food-of-romans-in-imperial-cities-not-an-exclusive-delicacy-for-banquets/ Carvajal, Guillermo. The Spectacular Tomb of the Ice Prince, a Medieval Child Buried in an Ancient Roman Villa, Frozen for Study.” LBV. 5/25/2025. https://www.labrujulaverde.com/en/2025/05/the-spectacular-tomb-of-the-ice-prince-a-medieval-child-buried-in-an-ancient-roman-villa-frozen-for-study/ Chen, Min. “Roman Villa in Spain Yields More Than 4,000 Painted Wall Fragments.” ArtNet. 4/21/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/roman-villa-villajoyosa-wall-fragments-2634055 Chen, Min. “These Medieval Manuscripts Were Bound With an Unlikely Animal Hide.” ArtNet. 4/12/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/clairvaux-medieval-manuscripts-sealskin-2630996 Chen, Min. “Think Shakespeare Left His Wife? This Newly Discovered Letter Tells a Different Story.” ArtNet. 4/28/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/shakespeare-anne-hathaway-marriage-letter-2636443 Chen, Min. “This 6th-Century Bucket Discovered at Sutton Hoo Is More Than It Seems.” ArtNet. 5/22/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/sutton-hoo-bromeswell-bucket-not-bucket-2648124 Dartmouth College. “Archaeologists uncover massive 1,000-year-old Native American fields in Northern Michigan that defy limits of farming.” Phys.org. 6/5/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-06-archaeologists-uncover-massive-year-native.html Davis, Josh. “Ancient humans ritually feasted on great bustards as they buried their dead.” Phys.org. 4/17/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-04-ancient-humans-ritually-feasted-great.html Drenon, Brandon. “Tulsa plans $105m in reparations for America's 'hidden' massacre.” BBC. 6/2/2025. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9dqnz37v1wo Equal Justice Initiative. “City Announces Reparations for Tulsa Race Massacre.” https://eji.org/news/city-announces-reparations-for-tulsa-race-massacre/ “Researchers estimate that early humans began smoking meat to extend its shelf life as long as a million years ago.” 6/3/2025. https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1086138 Fox, Jordan. “Anthropologist uncovers the 11,000-year history of avocado domestication.” Phys.org. 6/24/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-06-anthropologist-uncovers-year-history-avocado.html Fratsyvir, Anna. “Ukraine grants Poland permission to exhume 1939 war graves in Lviv.” The Kyiv Independent. 6/11/2025. https://kyivindependent.com/ukraine-grants-poland-permission-to-exhume-1939-war-graves-in-lviv/ Giuffrida, Angela. “Two near lifesize sculptures found during excavations of Pompeii tomb.” The Guardian. 4/1/2025. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/apr/01/two-near-lifesize-sculptures-found-during-excavations-of-pompeii-tomb Guardian staff and agencies in Lima. “Peru drops plan to shrink protected area around Nazca Lines archaeological site.” The Guardian. 6/9/2025. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jun/09/peru-nazca-lines-protected-area Hamilton, Eric. “Ancient Andes society used hallucinogens to strengthen social order.” EurekAlert. 5/5/2026. https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1082461 Hashemi, Sara. “Ancient Chinese Poems Reveal the Decline of a Critically Endangered Porpoise Over 1,400 Years.” Smithsonian. 5/6/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/ancient-chinese-poems-reveal-the-decline-of-a-critically-endangered-porpoise-over-1400-years-180986570/ Hung, Hsiao-chun. “Remote cave discovery shows ancient voyagers brought rice across 2,300 km of Pacific Ocean.” Phys.org. 6/26/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-06-remote-cave-discovery-ancient-voyagers.html Hunt, Katie. “125,000-year-old ‘fat factory’ run by Neanderthals discovered in Germany.” CNN. 7/4/2025. https://www.cnn.com/2025/07/04/science/neanderthal-fat-factory-germany Hurriyet Daily News. “5,000-year-old bread unearthed in Küllüoba goes on display.” 5/23/2025. https://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/5-000-year-old-bread-unearthed-in-kulluoba-goes-on-display-209487 Jarus, Owen. “We finally know why Queen Hatshepsut's statues were destroyed in ancient Egypt.” LiveScience. 6/23/2025. https://www.livescience.com/archaeology/ancient-egyptians/we-finally-know-why-queen-hatshepsuts-statues-were-destroyed-in-ancient-egypt Kuta, Sarah. “Did a Neanderthal Who Lived 43,000 Years Ago Paint a Red Nose on a Rock That Looked Like a Face?” Smithsonian. 6/2/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/did-a-neanderthal-who-lived-43000-years-ago-paint-a-red-nose-on-a-rock-that-looked-like-a-face-180986704/ Kuta, Sarah. “How Researchers Discovered a 168-Year-Old Dutch Shipwreck Off the Coast of Australia in Underwater ‘Blizzard’ Conditions.” Smithsonian. 5/16/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/how-researchers-discovered-a-168-year-old-dutch-shipwreck-off-the-coast-of-australia-in-underwater-blizzard-conditions-180986637/ Kuta, Sarah. “Tourists Are Stuffing Coins Into the Cracks of the Giant’s Causeway, Damaging the Iconic Site in Northern Ireland.” Smithsonian. 6/4/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/tourists-are-stuffing-coins-into-the-cracks-of-the-giants-causeway-damaging-the-iconic-site-in-northern-ireland-180986745/ Kuta, Sarah. “Why Was a 1940s Car Discovered in the Wreck of an American Naval Ship That Sank During World War II?” Smithsonian. 4/23/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/why-was-1940s-car-discovered-wreck-american-naval-ship-that-sank-during-world-war-ii-180986485/ Larson, Christina. “Ancient DNA confirms New Mexico tribe's link to famed Chaco Canyon site.” Phys.org. 4/30/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-04-oral-histories-dna-picuris-pueblo.html Lawson-Tancred, Jo. “A Life-Sized Statue of a Bejeweled Ancient Priestess Is Unearthed in Pompeii.” ArtNet. 4/2/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/a-life-sized-statue-of-a-bejeweled-ancient-priestess-is-unearthed-in-pompeii-2627176 Lawson-Tancred, Jo. “Rare Artwork by Emily Brontë Scooped at Auction by Museum.” 4/11/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/rare-artwork-by-emily-bronte-scooped-at-auction-by-museum-2631133 Lawson-Tancred, Jo. “Vatican Brings ‘God’s Architect’ Antoni Gaudí One Step Closer to Sainthood.” ArtNet. 4/15/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/vatican-antoni-gaudi-one-step-closer-to-sainthood-2632185 Leahy, Diana. “Depictions of the Milky Way found in ancient Egyptian imagery.” 4/30/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-04-depictions-milky-ancient-egyptian-imagery.html MacKay, Mercedes. “'It's a mystery that's hung over our area for 50 years': Salem, Illinois, exhuming grave of unknown Amtrak train derailment victim.” KDSK. 3/13/2025. https://www.ksdk.com/article/news/local/salem-illinois-exhuming-grave-of-unknown-amtrak-train-derailment-victim/63-2770a303-4e54-4647-8b13-dff304b93e30 net. “Magna Carta at Harvard dates to the Year 1300, historians find.” 5/2025. https://www.medievalists.net/2025/05/magna-carta-at-harvard-dates-to-the-year-1300-historians-find/ net. “Medieval Merlin Manuscript Fragment Revealed Through Digital Unfolding.” 5/2025. https://www.medievalists.net/2025/04/medieval-merlin-manuscript-fragment-revealed-through-digital-unfolding/ net. “Medieval Mystery Solved: Sutton Hoo Bucket Was a Cremation Vessel.” 6/2025. https://www.medievalists.net/2025/06/medieval-mystery-solved-sutton-hoo-bucket-was-a-cremation-vessel/ net. “Rethinking Rye: Study Reveals Medieval Cultivation Was Intensive and Strategic.” 5/2025. https://www.medievalists.net/2025/05/rethinking-rye-study-reveals-medieval-cultivation-was-intensive-and-strategic/ net. “Tudor Wall Paintings Uncovered in Northern England Lodge.” 4/2025. https://www.medievalists.net/2025/04/tudor-wall-paintings-uncovered-in-northern-england-lodge/ Mira, Chad. “Multiple bodies found in exhumed Salem, Ill., grave.” Fox2. https://fox2now.com/news/illinois/multiple-bodies-found-in-exhumed-salem-ill-grave/ Organization of American Historians. “Statement in Response to Secretary Order 3431 and Censorship of History in the National Park Service.” 6/18/2025. https://www.oah.org/2025/06/18/statement-in-response-to-secretary-order-3431-and-censorship-of-history-in-the-national-park-service/ Oster, Sandee. “New Holocene Aboriginal rock art style identified in recent study.” Phys.org. 4/29/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-04-holocene-aboriginal-art-style.html#google_vignette Oster, Sandee. “Study provides new insights into medieval sex workers and childcare.” Phys.org. 5/22/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-05-insights-medieval-sex-workers-childcare.html “Exhumations in Volhynia. Wróblewska on the beginning of work in Zboiska.” 6/23/2025. https://www.pap.pl/aktualnosci/ekshumacje-na-wolyniu-wroblewska-o-poczatku-prac-w-zboiskach org. “Race to save Sweden's 17th century warship in preservation project.” 4/9/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-04-sweden-17th-century-warship.html Pinotti, Thomaz et al. “Picuris Pueblo oral history and genomics reveal continuity in US Southwest.” Nature. 4/30/2025. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08791-9 Public Library of Science. “Italians spent thousands of years perfecting grape cultivation, ancient seeds show.” Phys.org. 4/23/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-04-italians-spent-thousands-years-grape.html Radio Prague International. “Rare Roman soldier’s wrist purse discovered in South Moravia.” 6/24/2025. https://english.radio.cz/rare-roman-soldiers-wrist-purse-discovered-south-moravia-8854920 Shams, Housnia. “Work begins to exhume remains of 800 dead babies at unwed mothers’ home in Ireland.” 6/17/2025. https://www.irishstar.com/news/ireland-news/work-begins-exhume-remains-800-35409145 SO 3431 - Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History https://www.doi.gov/document-library/secretary-order/so-3431-restoring-truth-and-sanity-american-history Sweeney, Rory Mac. “Leonardo's Vitruvian Man: modern craniofacial anatomical analysis reveals a possible solution to the 500-year-old mystery.” Journal of Mathematics and the Arts. 3/28/2025. https://doi.org/10.1080/17513472.2025.2507568 The History Blog. ‘Installation of Vasa’s new support structure begins.” 4/14/2025. https://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/72910 The History Blog. “16th c. mural found on the Grand Canal.” 4/15/2025. https://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/72918 The History Blog. “3,500-year-old bronze daggers found in corn field.” 4/1/2025. https://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/72799 The History Blog. “First English cheese treatise digitized, transcribed.” 5/1/2025. https://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/73045 The History Blog. “Life and death of little “Ice Prince” revealed.” 5/26/2025. https://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/73246 The History Blog. “Oldest baked bread flying off the shelves.” 5/29/2025. https://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/73273 The History Blog. “Roman soldier’s bronze wrist purse found in Czech Republic.” 6/25/2025. https://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/73467 University of Leeds. “Curd your enthusiasm: Secrets of oldest book on cheese revealed.” Phys.org. 4/28/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-04-curd-enthusiasm-secrets-oldest-cheese.html University of St. Andrews. “New tool to identify toxic pigments in historic books.” Phys.org. 6/6/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-06-tool-toxic-pigments-historic.html#google_vignette Vargas Ariza, Daniela et al. “The Cobs in the Archaeological Context of the San José Galleon Shipwreck.” Antiquity (2025): 1–6. Web. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/antiquity/article/cobs-in-the-archaeological-context-of-the-san-jose-galleon-shipwreck/66532DCA302A8C08A1EBFE4AC7E4E6C1 Wexler, Ellen. “The Only Black, All-Female Unit to Serve Overseas in World War II Receives the Congressional Gold Medal.” Smithsonian. 4/30/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/the-only-black-all-female-unit-to-serve-overseas-in-world-war-ii-receives-the-congressional-gold-medal-180986528/ Whiddington, Richard. “A 19th-Century Condom With a Bawdy Print Makes Its Museum Debut.” 6/3/2025. ArtNet. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/old-condom-erotica-rijksmuseum-show-2652526 Whiddington, Richard. “A Lost WWI Submarine Is Discovered ‘Remarkably Intact’ After 100 Years.” ArtNet. 5/27/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/a-lost-wwi-submarine-is-discovered-remarkably-intact-after-100-years-2649437 Whiddington, Richard. “Archaeologists Identify France’s Deepest Shipwreck.” ArtNet. 6/20/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/france-deepest-shipwreck-camarat-4-2659029 Whiddington, Richard. “Nazca Lines Under Threat? Peru’s Downsizing Plan Sparks Alarm.” Artnet. 6/3/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/nazca-lines-reduced-reserve-plan-2652342 Whiddington, Richard. “Who Designed the Bayeux Tapestry? Its 93 Penises Offer Clues.” 5/2/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/bayeux-tapestry-93-penises-offer-clues-2639001 Wizevich, Eli. “By Shoving a Bed Frame Against the Door, This Pompeii Family Tried to Survive Mount Vesuvius’ Eruption.” Smithsonian. 5/13/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/by-shoving-a-bed-frame-against-the-door-this-pompeii-family-tried-to-survive-mount-vesuvius-eruption-180986608/ Wizevich, Eli. “It could take years for archaeologists to properly excavate and preserve the delicate wooden vessel, which likely became shipwrecked.” 4/30/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/see-the-rare-medieval-boat-discovered-over-18-feet-below-sea-level-in-barcelona-180986524/ Wong, Jun Yi. “The Afterlife of Hatshepsut’s Statuary.” Antiquity 99.405 (2025): 746–761. Web. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/antiquity/article/afterlife-of-hatshepsuts-statuary/F22D001E29438008136B6DA04F57C627 Zeilstra, Andrew. “Mediterranean hunter gatherers navigated long-distance sea journeys well before the first farmers.” EurekAlert. 4/9/2025. https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1079385 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Stuff You Missed in History Class
Unearthed! in July 2025, Part 1

Stuff You Missed in History Class

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2025 45:15 Transcription Available


This installment of Unearthed! starts with lots of updates! And then some art-related unearthings, and a few things at the end that fall under the category of adult content. Research: Agencia Brasil. “Cave Paintings Discovered in Rio de Janiero Park.” 4/13/2025. https://agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br/en/educacao/noticia/2025-04/cave-paintings-discovered-rio-de-janeiro-park Anderson, R. L., Salvemini, F., Avdeev, M., & Luzin, V. (2025). An African Art Re-Discovered: New Revelations on Sword Manufacture in Dahomey. Heritage, 8(2), 62. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8020062 Archaeology Magazine. “5,000-year-old Bread Buried in Bronze Age House.” 6/4/2025. https://archaeology.org/news/2025/06/04/5000-year-old-bread-buried-in-bronze-age-house/ Archaeology Magazine. “Fried Thrush Was a Popular Street Food.” 6/6/2025. https://archaeology.org/news/2025/06/06/fried-thrush-was-a-popular-roman-street-food/ Arnold, Paul. “Dentist may have solved 500-year-old mystery in da Vinci's iconic Vitruvian Man.” Phys.org. 7/2/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-07-dentist-year-mystery-da-vinci.html Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO). “New revelations on sword manufacture in 19th-century Dahomey, West Africa.” Phys.org. 5/11/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-05-revelations-sword-19th-century-dahomey.html Black, Jo. “Cut-price Magna Carta 'copy' now believed genuine.” BBC. 5/15/2025. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cm23zjknre7o Boucher, Brian. “Antique Condom on View at the Rijksmuseum Riles Christian Group.” ArtNet. 6/26/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/antique-condom-rijksmuseum-christian-protest-2661519 Brown, Mark. “Rare wall paintings found in Cumbria show tastes of well-off Tudors.” The Guardian. 4/4/2025. https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025/apr/04/rare-wall-paintings-found-in-cumbria-show-tastes-of-well-off-tudors Carvajal, Guillermo. “The Oldest Vanilla Pod in Europe, Used in Alchemical Experiments, Discovered at Prague Castle.” LBV. 3/31/2025. https://www.labrujulaverde.com/en/2025/03/the-oldest-vanilla-pod-in-europe-used-in-alchemical-experiments-discovered-at-prague-castle/ Carvajal, Guillermo. “Thrushes Were the “Fast Food” of Romans in Imperial Cities, Not an Exclusive Delicacy for Banquets.” LBV. 6/3/2025. https://www.labrujulaverde.com/en/2025/06/thrushes-were-the-fast-food-of-romans-in-imperial-cities-not-an-exclusive-delicacy-for-banquets/ Carvajal, Guillermo. The Spectacular Tomb of the Ice Prince, a Medieval Child Buried in an Ancient Roman Villa, Frozen for Study.” LBV. 5/25/2025. https://www.labrujulaverde.com/en/2025/05/the-spectacular-tomb-of-the-ice-prince-a-medieval-child-buried-in-an-ancient-roman-villa-frozen-for-study/ Chen, Min. “Roman Villa in Spain Yields More Than 4,000 Painted Wall Fragments.” ArtNet. 4/21/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/roman-villa-villajoyosa-wall-fragments-2634055 Chen, Min. “These Medieval Manuscripts Were Bound With an Unlikely Animal Hide.” ArtNet. 4/12/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/clairvaux-medieval-manuscripts-sealskin-2630996 Chen, Min. “Think Shakespeare Left His Wife? This Newly Discovered Letter Tells a Different Story.” ArtNet. 4/28/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/shakespeare-anne-hathaway-marriage-letter-2636443 Chen, Min. “This 6th-Century Bucket Discovered at Sutton Hoo Is More Than It Seems.” ArtNet. 5/22/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/sutton-hoo-bromeswell-bucket-not-bucket-2648124 Dartmouth College. “Archaeologists uncover massive 1,000-year-old Native American fields in Northern Michigan that defy limits of farming.” Phys.org. 6/5/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-06-archaeologists-uncover-massive-year-native.html Davis, Josh. “Ancient humans ritually feasted on great bustards as they buried their dead.” Phys.org. 4/17/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-04-ancient-humans-ritually-feasted-great.html Drenon, Brandon. “Tulsa plans $105m in reparations for America's 'hidden' massacre.” BBC. 6/2/2025. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9dqnz37v1wo Equal Justice Initiative. “City Announces Reparations for Tulsa Race Massacre.” https://eji.org/news/city-announces-reparations-for-tulsa-race-massacre/ “Researchers estimate that early humans began smoking meat to extend its shelf life as long as a million years ago.” 6/3/2025. https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1086138 Fox, Jordan. “Anthropologist uncovers the 11,000-year history of avocado domestication.” Phys.org. 6/24/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-06-anthropologist-uncovers-year-history-avocado.html Fratsyvir, Anna. “Ukraine grants Poland permission to exhume 1939 war graves in Lviv.” The Kyiv Independent. 6/11/2025. https://kyivindependent.com/ukraine-grants-poland-permission-to-exhume-1939-war-graves-in-lviv/ Giuffrida, Angela. “Two near lifesize sculptures found during excavations of Pompeii tomb.” The Guardian. 4/1/2025. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/apr/01/two-near-lifesize-sculptures-found-during-excavations-of-pompeii-tomb Guardian staff and agencies in Lima. “Peru drops plan to shrink protected area around Nazca Lines archaeological site.” The Guardian. 6/9/2025. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jun/09/peru-nazca-lines-protected-area Hamilton, Eric. “Ancient Andes society used hallucinogens to strengthen social order.” EurekAlert. 5/5/2026. https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1082461 Hashemi, Sara. “Ancient Chinese Poems Reveal the Decline of a Critically Endangered Porpoise Over 1,400 Years.” Smithsonian. 5/6/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/ancient-chinese-poems-reveal-the-decline-of-a-critically-endangered-porpoise-over-1400-years-180986570/ Hung, Hsiao-chun. “Remote cave discovery shows ancient voyagers brought rice across 2,300 km of Pacific Ocean.” Phys.org. 6/26/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-06-remote-cave-discovery-ancient-voyagers.html Hunt, Katie. “125,000-year-old ‘fat factory’ run by Neanderthals discovered in Germany.” CNN. 7/4/2025. https://www.cnn.com/2025/07/04/science/neanderthal-fat-factory-germany Hurriyet Daily News. “5,000-year-old bread unearthed in Küllüoba goes on display.” 5/23/2025. https://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/5-000-year-old-bread-unearthed-in-kulluoba-goes-on-display-209487 Jarus, Owen. “We finally know why Queen Hatshepsut's statues were destroyed in ancient Egypt.” LiveScience. 6/23/2025. https://www.livescience.com/archaeology/ancient-egyptians/we-finally-know-why-queen-hatshepsuts-statues-were-destroyed-in-ancient-egypt Kuta, Sarah. “Did a Neanderthal Who Lived 43,000 Years Ago Paint a Red Nose on a Rock That Looked Like a Face?” Smithsonian. 6/2/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/did-a-neanderthal-who-lived-43000-years-ago-paint-a-red-nose-on-a-rock-that-looked-like-a-face-180986704/ Kuta, Sarah. “How Researchers Discovered a 168-Year-Old Dutch Shipwreck Off the Coast of Australia in Underwater ‘Blizzard’ Conditions.” Smithsonian. 5/16/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/how-researchers-discovered-a-168-year-old-dutch-shipwreck-off-the-coast-of-australia-in-underwater-blizzard-conditions-180986637/ Kuta, Sarah. “Tourists Are Stuffing Coins Into the Cracks of the Giant’s Causeway, Damaging the Iconic Site in Northern Ireland.” Smithsonian. 6/4/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/tourists-are-stuffing-coins-into-the-cracks-of-the-giants-causeway-damaging-the-iconic-site-in-northern-ireland-180986745/ Kuta, Sarah. “Why Was a 1940s Car Discovered in the Wreck of an American Naval Ship That Sank During World War II?” Smithsonian. 4/23/2025. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/why-was-1940s-car-discovered-wreck-american-naval-ship-that-sank-during-world-war-ii-180986485/ Larson, Christina. “Ancient DNA confirms New Mexico tribe's link to famed Chaco Canyon site.” Phys.org. 4/30/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-04-oral-histories-dna-picuris-pueblo.html Lawson-Tancred, Jo. “A Life-Sized Statue of a Bejeweled Ancient Priestess Is Unearthed in Pompeii.” ArtNet. 4/2/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/a-life-sized-statue-of-a-bejeweled-ancient-priestess-is-unearthed-in-pompeii-2627176 Lawson-Tancred, Jo. “Rare Artwork by Emily Brontë Scooped at Auction by Museum.” 4/11/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/rare-artwork-by-emily-bronte-scooped-at-auction-by-museum-2631133 Lawson-Tancred, Jo. “Vatican Brings ‘God’s Architect’ Antoni Gaudí One Step Closer to Sainthood.” ArtNet. 4/15/2025. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/vatican-antoni-gaudi-one-step-closer-to-sainthood-2632185 Leahy, Diana. “Depictions of the Milky Way found in ancient Egyptian imagery.” 4/30/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-04-depictions-milky-ancient-egyptian-imagery.html MacKay, Mercedes. “'It's a mystery that's hung over our area for 50 years': Salem, Illinois, exhuming grave of unknown Amtrak train derailment victim.” KDSK. 3/13/2025. https://www.ksdk.com/article/news/local/salem-illinois-exhuming-grave-of-unknown-amtrak-train-derailment-victim/63-2770a303-4e54-4647-8b13-dff304b93e30 net. “Magna Carta at Harvard dates to the Year 1300, historians find.” 5/2025. https://www.medievalists.net/2025/05/magna-carta-at-harvard-dates-to-the-year-1300-historians-find/ net. “Medieval Merlin Manuscript Fragment Revealed Through Digital Unfolding.” 5/2025. https://www.medievalists.net/2025/04/medieval-merlin-manuscript-fragment-revealed-through-digital-unfolding/ net. “Medieval Mystery Solved: Sutton Hoo Bucket Was a Cremation Vessel.” 6/2025. https://www.medievalists.net/2025/06/medieval-mystery-solved-sutton-hoo-bucket-was-a-cremation-vessel/ net. “Rethinking Rye: Study Reveals Medieval Cultivation Was Intensive and Strategic.” 5/2025. https://www.medievalists.net/2025/05/rethinking-rye-study-reveals-medieval-cultivation-was-intensive-and-strategic/ net. “Tudor Wall Paintings Uncovered in Northern England Lodge.” 4/2025. https://www.medievalists.net/2025/04/tudor-wall-paintings-uncovered-in-northern-england-lodge/ Mira, Chad. “Multiple bodies found in exhumed Salem, Ill., grave.” Fox2. https://fox2now.com/news/illinois/multiple-bodies-found-in-exhumed-salem-ill-grave/ Organization of American Historians. “Statement in Response to Secretary Order 3431 and Censorship of History in the National Park Service.” 6/18/2025. https://www.oah.org/2025/06/18/statement-in-response-to-secretary-order-3431-and-censorship-of-history-in-the-national-park-service/ Oster, Sandee. “New Holocene Aboriginal rock art style identified in recent study.” Phys.org. 4/29/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-04-holocene-aboriginal-art-style.html#google_vignette Oster, Sandee. “Study provides new insights into medieval sex workers and childcare.” Phys.org. 5/22/2025. https://phys.org/news/2025-05-insights-medieval-sex-workers-childcare.html “Exhumations in Volhynia. 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