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We briefly attempt to subdue and clown upon the so-called "news" before casting its mind-numbing insanity aside and delving into the subjects of doomsday prepping and eschatology via Bradley Garrett's excellent and beautifully-timed/-written culturo-geographic book on the phenomenon of rejecting the allure of the distant stars for the womblike safety of the soil, Bunker: Building for the End Times. Recorded on Saturday, May 24th, 2025 around 10.30 AM Korea Standard TimeCommiserate on Discord: discord.gg/aDf4Yv9PrYSupport: patreon / buzzsproutNever Forget: standwithdanielhale.orgGenral RecommendationsJosh's Recommendations: 1) Bunker: Building for the End Times by Bradley Garrett 2) 10 Cloverfield Lane 3) Blueprints of the Afterlife by Ryan Boudinot Tim's Recommendation: Babygirl Further Reading, Viewing, ListeningShow notes + Full list of links, sources, etcMore From Timothy Robert BuechnerPodcast: Q&T ARE / violentpeople.co Tweets: @ROHDUTCHLocationless Locationsheatdeathpod.comEvery show-related link is corralled and available here.Twitter: @heatdeathpodPlease send all Letters of Derision, Indifference, Inquiry, Mild Elation, et cetera to: heatdeathodtheuniversepodcast@gmailSend us a textSupport the show
Dr. Phil ventures into the wild world of prepping, where families and individuals are gearing up for doomsday scenarios amid political tension and global uncertainty. With the political climate boiling over and the specter of disaster looming, a surprising trend is taking root: prepping. Once dismissed as paranoid fringe behavior, preppers are now part of the mainstream. Dr. Phil delves into the psychology behind prepping, uncovering the motivations and fears that drive this growing movement. From nuclear war to civil unrest, the threats are real, and preppers are ready to face them head-on. Landon and Amanda are a prepper family, stocking their high-tech underground bunker in Indiana with enough supplies to withstand an apocalyptic event. Dr. Drew Miller says his Fortitude Ranch locations across the country are prepped for over 50 different scenarios that could collapse the US. Tylor is a survivalist in Utah who says preppers have been given a bad name. Dr. Bradley Garrett, a prepper researcher, gives insights on the psychology of prepping after studying people all over the world. But as tensions escalate and uncertainty mounts, Dr. Phil urges viewers to consider the true cost of preparedness. With humor and insight, he navigates the fine line between caution and obsession, reminding us all to live in the present while preparing for the worst. It's a gripping journey into the heart of survivalism, where the line between fear and foresight is razor-thin.
Can you imagine living in a city without roads on the surface? We've already put trains underground successfully, but the idea of building roads underground is now inspiring urban planners and engineers. Bradley Garrett, author of 'Subterranean London', says that there's something magical about things happening out of sight, that it "gives the illusion of seamlessness". So, how might underground roads reshape our cities and redefine the daily commute?你能想象生活在一个没有路面的城市里吗? 我们已经成功地将火车埋入地下,但在地下修建道路的想法现在正在激发城市规划者和工程师的灵感。 《伦敦地下》一书的作者布拉德利·加勒特 (Bradley Garrett) 表示,在视线之外发生的事情有一些神奇之处,它“给人一种无缝的错觉”。 那么,地下道路将如何重塑我们的城市并重新定义日常通勤?"If you want to revitalise the city centre, you pedestrianise the roads," says Tom Ireland, the director of tunnelling at engineering company Aurecon. Moving roads below the surface can free up space for parks, pavement cafes, and other public amenities, improving the urban environment and mental health of the population. Not only that, it could reduce traffic congestion above ground, and who doesn't want to be freed from noise pollution and the sight of gridlocked traffic? “如果你想振兴市中心,你就需要在道路上修建步行街,”工程公司 Aurecon 的隧道工程总监汤姆·爱尔兰 (Tom Ireland) 说道。 将道路移至地下可以为公园、路边咖啡馆和其他公共设施腾出空间,从而改善城市环境和人们的心理健康。 不仅如此,它还可以减少地面交通拥堵,谁不想摆脱噪音污染和交通拥堵的困扰呢?Underground roads could also make self-driving cars more popular, which are often more energy-efficient, and less prone to collisions. This, in a world trying to reduce its fuel consumption, is appealing. But if driverless cars end up becoming more attractive than public transport, it could actually make traffic worse, because cars take up more space than trains and buses.地下道路还可以让自动驾驶汽车更受欢迎,因为自动驾驶汽车通常更节能,而且更不容易发生碰撞。 在一个努力减少燃料消耗的世界中,这一点很有吸引力。 但如果无人驾驶汽车最终变得比公共交通更有吸引力,它实际上可能会使交通状况变得更糟,因为汽车比火车和公共汽车占用更多的空间。That's not the only drawback that may come with a motorised world beneath our feet. The construction and maintenance of underground infrastructure are both hazardous and energy-intensive processes. On top of that, most people don't like the feeling of confinement you get when you're travelling through underground tunnels, which may affect public perception.这并不是我们脚下的机动世界可能带来的唯一缺点。 地下基础设施的建设和维护既危险又耗能。 最重要的是,大多数人不喜欢穿过地下隧道时的封闭感,这可能会影响公众的看法。Dreams of roadless, car-free cities bring both excitement and scepticism. We may fantasise about cityscapes made for pedestrians, but perhaps getting more people to use public transport rather than private vehicles would be more worth our time and resources.无路、无车城市的梦想既让人兴奋,也让人怀疑。 我们可能会幻想为行人打造的城市景观,但也许让更多的人使用公共交通工具而不是私家车更值得我们花时间和资源。词汇表urban planner 城市规划师the illusion of seamlessness 完美连贯的假象,无缝的错觉commute 上下班往返,通勤pedestrianise 设立步行街free up space 腾出空间public amenities 公共设施congestion 拥堵,堵塞noise pollution 噪声污染gridlocked traffic 交通堵塞self-driving car 自动驾驶汽车energy-efficient 节能的collision(车辆)碰撞,相撞fuel consumption 燃油消耗量,耗油量motorised 机动(化)的infrastructure 基础设施hazardous 危险的energy-intensive 耗能的roadless 无道路的car-free 无车的,车辆禁行的vehicle 车辆,交通工具
Imagine sitting at your desk at work, a day like any other. All of a sudden you hear a rumbling that gets louder, and louder. Then you look out the window and see it: a massive tank (yes - TANK), covered in guns, coming straight towards your office. You get outside just in time to see this thing completely flatten your building to the ground, then drive away. Um… WHAT? That's exactly what happened in 2004 to the people in Granby, Colorado. Marvin Heemeyer, a local man, was angry at most people in town about a bunch of different nonsense, so he decided to take revenge by spending more than a year modifying a bulldozer into a weaponised war-like tank, which he then drove all over town for several hours destroying everything in his wake. As you do. Local businesses, the town hall, the library, even the police station - all flattened by the Killdozer. And because this thing was indestructible (bullet-proof, bomb-proof, unbreakable steel), there was nothing the police could do, but watch helplessly and hope something - anything - would stop it. It literally got to the point where the army considered dropping a bomb on it so strong it would also destroy the entire town. So what stopped the Killdozer in the end? We give you Just The Gist, but if you want more, there's this: Watch the 'Tread' documentary trailer https://bit.ly/tread-documentary . Watch this good Youtube breakdown 'KILLDOZER: How a Man Made His Own Tank' https://bit.ly/3IGzqbi . Watch News Footage from the day bootlegged on YouTube https://bit.ly/3MUF38r . READ Killdozer: The True Story of the Colorado Bulldozer Rampage https://bit.ly/killdozer-book written by Patrick Brower - the editor of the local paper and was in one of the buildings Marvin Heemeyer attacked Read 'Marvin Heemeyer And His 'Killdozer' Rampage Through A Colorado Town' from All That's Interesting https://bit.ly/45AkqFJ . Read 'Enter the Killdozer: how a 2004 rampage inspired today's right-wing preppers' from GQ by Bradley Garrett https://bit.ly/3MDufdm . Read 'Killdozer Day: The Story of Marvin Heemeyer' from Snopes.com https://bit.ly/424YVdf . Read Marvin's Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marvin_Heemeyer . FOLLOW THE SHOW: Follow @justthegistpodcast on Instagram https://bit.ly/jtg-gram . Check out @justthegistpodcast in TikTok https://bit.ly/jtg-tiktok . Follow @jacobwilliamstanley on Instagram https://bit.ly/jacobwilliamstanley-IG . Follow @rosiewaterland on IG https://bit.ly/rosiewaterland-ig . CREDITS Hosts: Rosie Waterland & Jacob Stanley Executive Producer: Elise CooperAudio Imager: Nat Marshall Social Producer: Zoe Panateros Managing Producer: Sam Cavanagh Find more great podcasts like this at www.listnr.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Meet Barrett Moore, the bunker-building bullshit artist who helps capitalists survive the apocalypse with beans, bullets, and bravado. Please share this episode with your friends and start a conversation.Warning: This podcast occasionally uses spicy language.For an entertaining deep dive into the theme of season five (Phalse Prophets), read the definitive peer-reviewed taxonomic analysis from our very own Jason Bradford, PhD. Sources/Links/Notes:History of the Kelly Butte Civil Defense CenterArticle on Kelly Butte in the Atlas ObscuraA Day Called X -- video of a dramatized atomic evacuation of Portland, OregonDonald Fagen's "New Frontier"Sam Biddle, "The Rise and Fall of the Ultimate Doomsday Prepper," The Intercept, July 5, 2021."Three Robots: Exit Strategies" -- episode 1 of season 3 of the Netflix series Love, Death & Robots.National Geographic produced the popular video series Doomsday Preppers.Molly Redden, "The American Elite Are Planning Their Escape — And It Starts With Paying For Passports," Huffington Post, March 19, 2023.John Ramey, "New statistics on modern prepper demographics from FEMA and Cornell," theprepared.com August 4, 2021.Bradley Garrett, "Living with bunker builders: doomsday prepping in the age of coronavirus,"The Conversation, May 14, 2020.Interview about Bradley Garrett's study of preppingJ. Oliver Conroy, "We mocked preppers and survivalists – until the pandemic hit," The Guardian, April 30, 2020.Walter Karp, "When Bunkers Last in the Backyard Bloom-d," American Heritage, February/March 1980.Red Cross's Preparedness ChecklistFEMA's 12 Ways to PrepareTom Prugh, "Democracy Rising 1 Introduction: Idiots R Us," Resilience, October 27, 2021.Jana Reiss, "For today's Latter-day Saints, it's food storage light," The Salt Lake Tribune, January 27, 2023.Support the show
Glenn and Stu discuss the odd ruling of former Clinton aide Mark Middleton's death as a suicide, especially given his connections to Jeffrey Epstein. Glenn asked the CDC why it recently updated its vinyl chloride profile, and the CDC has responded. Instead of debunking misinformation, there's now a push for “prebunking” arguments. The Washington Examiner's Gabe Kaminsky gives a big update to his exposé on the Global Disinformation Index. Are you prepared for a catastrophic event? “Bunker: What It Takes to Survive the Apocalypse” author Dr. Bradley Garrett joins with his best tips. Presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy debunks the biggest criticisms against him line by line. Glenn reviews Donald Trump's trip to East Palestine, Ohio, and Stu commits the sin of using a sports analogy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Washington Examiner's Gabe Kaminsky gives a big update to his exposé on the Global Disinformation Index. Are you prepared for a catastrophic event? “Bunker: What It Takes to Survive the Apocalypse” author Dr. Bradley Garrett joins with his best tips. Presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy debunks the biggest criticisms against him line by line. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Paul and Chris listen to Ian Punnett interview Bradley Garrett about his book, "Bunker: Building for the End Times." During this interview we will learn all about the world of doom's day preppers and bunker builders. We learn about the long, long history of humanity attempting to protect itself against outside dangers and what it says about our modern day society and its many ills. That and much on today's episode of Coast to Coast PM. Contact: c2cpmpod@gmail.com Weekly Reading Series: https://www.coasttocoastam.com/article/video-michigan-woman-calls-911-with-report-of-a-chupacabra-sighting/ Bunker: Building for the End Times: https://www.bradleygarrett.com/bunker/ Fortitude Ranch: https://fortituderanch.com/ Ancient Bunkers of Anatolia: https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20220810-derinkuyu-turkeys-underground-city-of-20000-people The Greenbrier Hotel/Government Bunker: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Greenbrier
Threat of nuclear war and a global pandemic have spurred a boom in individuals purchasing survival bunkers, says author Bradley Garrett. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/infocus
This week on Flightless Bird, David descends underground into the world of preppers and bunkers, learning that 40% of Americans believe that stocking up on supplies or building an underground shelter is a better investment than saving for retirement. Joined by Monica Mouse, David discovers that humans have wanted to live underground for the last 2000 years. David interviews ethnographic researcher Bradley Garrett about the mindset of the American bunker enthusiast since Covid and finds out why Brad was arrested on the tarmac back in 2012, spending two years marooned in the UK. David finds out about the American man who wanted to buy a nuclear bunker with 56 bedrooms and calls up a bunker company to find out what's in their million-dollar bunker package.
Bradley Garrett said this on the Russell Brand Podcast - "if you don't emerge from the bunker, it is a tomb". It was said in the context of the last few years. Here's my perspective on what it means for leaders.
Bradley Garrett is a social geographer, explorer and photographer based at University College Dublin in Ireland. From 2008 and his move to London, Bradley started sneaking into abandoned underground tube stations and many more off-limit places around the city and country. He is an author of many Urbex-related books: Explore Everything: Place Hacking the City (adventures of exploring ruins, tunnels, climbing skyscrapers and exploring with London Consolidation Crew), Subterranean London: Cracking the Capital (what lies underground of London city) and London Rising: Illicit Photos from the City's Heights, which documents the social, infrastructural and corporate verticalities of the city. In today's episode Professor Garrett tells his urban exploring stories and warns about the dangers of exploring as he reflects on his experiences with LCC and British Transport Police. Social media: Instagram: @goblinmerchant Website: bradleygarrett.com Crack the surface - Episode 1: here, Episode 2: here Chasing Bandos Podcast is available on chasingbandospodcast.com or your favourite podcasting app. Check out the pictures of our guest on Instagram at chasingbandospod. You can get in contact by email: contact@gregabandoned.com Why 'urbex explorers' don't share exact locations here: gregabandoned.com/urbex Intro song is Watcha Gon' Do is performed by Chris Shards [EPIDEMIC SOUND MUSIC LICENSE]. Rapid fire round background songs are: Greaser by TrackTribe and Bill Higley by Mini Vandals. Viewer discretion announcement at the beginning of the episode was done by Adrian Wunderler-Selby.
London is a layer cake of history — and we're burrowing in deep. We're purely going to stay underground to reveal bigger stories about this storied capital.But the thing is, the further deep you go, the newer the city's subterranean structures get. It's archaeology in reverse.
London is a layer cake of history — and we're burrowing in deep. We're purely going to stay underground to reveal bigger stories about this storied capital. But the thing is, the further deep you go, the newer the city's subterranean structures get. It's archaeology in reverse.
London is a layer cake of history — and we're burrowing in deep. We're purely going to stay underground to reveal bigger stories about this storied capital. But the thing is, the further deep you go, the newer the city's subterranean structures get. It's archaeology in reverse.
Dr Bradley Garrett joins the Darkside to talk about his journey to meet doomsday preppers all over the world. Dr Garrett is an American social geographer and explorer, and author of 5 books including his most recent Bunker: Building for the End Times. We conversed about psychology, disasters, the Denver airport conspiracy and growing your own brussels sprouts. Find out more about Bradleys work and his appearance on Joe Rogan...https://www.bradleygarrett.com/https://twitter.com/goblinmerchanthttps://open.spotify.com/episode/5tGqvxmKwyQO9N2RiD5HOoTo follow the Political Darkside and make a contribution...https://linktr.ee/politicaldarkside
The week Oliver spoke to Counselling Psychologist Niamh Delmar on how people are coping with the reopening of society; Siobhan MacDonald on her new book 'The Bride Collector'; Explorer and writer Bradley Garrett on the world of preppers and bunkers; Stephen Larmer on his Kinder Bueno sausages; And Claire Cullen on finding her way back to education.
Explorer and geographer, Bradley Garrett, is the author of 'Bunker: Building for the End Times' and he spoke to Oliver about the world of preppers and how they plan to survive the coming apocalypse in whatever form it takes.
This week I spoke with Bradley Garrett. Bradley is a social geographer, explorer and photographer. He is author of Bunker: Building for the End Times and Explore Everything: Place-Hacking the City. Bradley talks to us about his time writing about and living with “DoomsDay Preppers,” people who are preparing for the end of the world as we know it. Bradley has visited billionaire bunkers and lived with off-grid communities. He found that these people transcend political ideology, identity politics, or any kind of ideals. Their aim is to be prepared to live self-sufficiently and in harmony--in order to survive the worst! What can we learn from this mentality and why has it come about? MORE INFO For more info on Bradley's work and book go here: https://www.bradleygarrett.com I'm doing live dates in the UK this autumn with my new stand up show, '33'. Tickets and info available at http://www.russellbrand.com/live-dates/ My new meditation podcast Above the Noise is out now only on Luminary, I will be releasing guided meditations every Wednesday, please check out it: http://luminary.link/meditate Elites are taking over! Our only hope is to form our own. To learn more join my cartel here https://www.russellbrand.com/join and get weekly bulletins too incendiary for anything but your private inbox. *not a euphemism Subscribe to my YouTube channel, I post four videos a week including video clips from these episodes! https://www.youtube.com/russellbrand Subscribe to my YouTube side-channel for more wellness and spirituality. https://www.youtube.com/c/AwakeningWithRussell Instagram: http://instagram.com/russellbrand/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/rustyrockets
LAist Studios Executive Producer and Norco 80 podcast host Antonia Cereijido takes an in-depth look at survivalism and preppers, past and present with special guests Paige Ferrari of National Geographic's Doomsday Preppers and Bradley Garrett, author of Bunker: Building for the End Times. This audio is from a live virtual event that aired on May 13, 2021, presented by LAist Studios and KPCC. BetterHelp and Norco ‘80 listeners get 10% off their first month at BetterHelp.com/laist This program is made possible in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a private corporation funded by the American people.
Blame it on the Pandemic, Zombie movies or video games, but today's doomsday preppers are a far cry from the paranoid persona from 10 years go. So what made preppers go mainstream? We talk to Bradley Garrett, social geographer, worldwide adventurer and author of Bunker: Preparing for the End Times (Scribner, August) about the rise of prepper culture in pop culture.
Bradley Garrett is the author of Bunker: Building for the Times. People have always built underground survival shelters to stay safe from things like plagues or hurricanes. But in modern history, we've really outdone ourselves. Garrett will be our guide to the fascinating world of architecture for the end times. And we're going to find out why today we're going through a true bunker renaissance. The Doom Boom
Bradley Garrett is the author of Bunker: Building for the Times. People have always built underground survival shelters to stay safe from things like plagues or hurricanes. But in modern history, we've really outdone ourselves. Garrett will be our guide to the fascinating world of architecture for the end times. And we're going to find out why today we're going through a true bunker renaissance. The Doom Boom
This week, news of the people catching coronavirus on purpose; those waiting-out the pandemic in an old nuclear bunker, and the good news that lullabies send babies to sleep regardless of what language they're in! Plus, "lockdown, or let rip?" what's the best way to control the coronavirus pandemic? Opinions are divided, and we're joined by four leading experts to debate the best solution... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
This week, news of the people catching coronavirus on purpose; those waiting-out the pandemic in an old nuclear bunker, and the good news that lullabies send babies to sleep regardless of what language they're in! Plus, "lockdown, or let rip?" what's the best way to control the coronavirus pandemic? Opinions are divided, and we're joined by four leading experts to debate the best solution... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Blade Runner 2049 proved itself almost immediately iconic in many ways: the otherworldly visual language, the intoxicating score, the characters we stayed up talking about till odd hours of the night, etc.For fans of architecture, the built environment of Blade Runner 2049 is particularly special. A fusion of past, present, and imagined, the architecture in the film is a wonderful glimpse into deeper truths within the world these characters inhabit.On this episode, Jaime and Patrick are joined by our ever-brilliant friend Dr. Robin Bunce. On its face, this episode is really an investigation into several key buildings in the film—but as you'll hear, things go quite a bit deeper than that.SHOW NOTESHere are some of Dr. Bunce's suggested reading materials, consulted in preparation for this recording:Bradley Garrett, Bunker: Building for the End Times (2020)Barnabas Calder, Raw Concrete: The Beauty of Brutalism (2016)Duncan Bell and Bernardo Zacka, Political Theory and Architecture (2020)And be sure to pick up Blade Runner 2049 and Philosophy: This Breaks the World, co-edited by Dr. Bunce and featuring written contributions from the Shoulder of Orion team!// iTunes: bit.ly/shoulderoforionitunes// Google Play: bit.ly/shoulderoforiongoogleplay// For more on this and our other projects, please visit www.bladerunnerpodcast.com // If you'd like to join the conversation, find us on our closed Facebook group: Fields of Calantha.// To support the show, please consider visiting www.bladerunnerpodcast.com/support. We've got some great perks available!// And as always, please consider rating, reviewing, and sharing this show. We can't tell you how much your support means to us, but we can hopefully show you by continuing to provide better, more ambitious, and more dynamic content for years to come.
When you think about bunkers, you might be apt to think of the 1950s and people building basement and backyard fallout shelters during the Cold War. But there's a second "Doom Boom" going on right now, and people aren't just burrowing into the earth to protect themselves from a nuclear bomb. My guest today traveled across four continents to explore what's driving this phenomenon and how it's manifesting itself in the modern age. His name is Bradley Garrett and he's a professor of cultural geography and the author of Bunker: Building for the End Times. We begin our conversation with the immersive dive Bradley took into urban exploration for his PhD, and how it led to his fascination with the building of underground bunkers. From there we dip into the history of bunkers, from the ancient subterranean cities built in Turkey to the governmental decisions made during the Cold War that led Americans to build blast shelters in their backyards. From there we dig into why a multi-billion dollar private bunker-building industry has emerged in the present day, and how it's not being driven by a specific threat, but instead a diffuse sense of dread. We discuss how bunker building breaks down into individual and communal approaches, and why the latter is currently ascendant. Bradley takes us on a tour of two underground communities: one a complex of over 500 subterranean cement rooms in South Dakota, and the other a former nuclear missile silo in Kansas which has been turned into a luxe, 15-story inverted skyscraper of survival condos, complete with swimming pool, dog park, movie theater, and grocery store. We then turn to the modern movement of backyard bunker building, and how it often represents an act of resistance against the surveillance state. We also look at the culture of prepping in different countries, including the building of bug-out vehicles and fire bunkers in Australia. We end our conversation with whether or not Bradley ultimately concluded that bunker building and survival prepping is a rational response to the state of the world, and whether he became a prepper himself. Get the show notes at aom.is/bunker. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dr. Bradley Garrett, author of “Bunker: Building for the End Times”, visited recently with Wake Up Princeton host Paul Bomleny on WZOE. Dr. Garrett has spent the last three years doing research with doomsday preppers around the world Right now, 3.7 million Americans are “prepping” on some scale, from stockpiling food and supplies during the coronavirus pandemic, to spending thousands or sometimes millions of dollars on a backyard bunker, to joining a prepper community that has already prepared shelters for the next apocalypse."Preppers", as they are known, are constructing elaborate bunkers in preparation for an impending apocalypse. Dr. Garrett says people now are prepping for situations they know they can handle, like social unrest, a blackout, natural disasters rather than a catastrophic event like a nuclear war.More information on “Bunker: Building for the End Times” and its author is available online at bradleygarrett.com.
Vivemos num mundo com muito mais comodidades do que nossos pais ou avós. Estruturas complexas que nos oferecem uma série de facilidades e serviços. Tudo parece estar no lugar. Até que um vírus se espalha.Ainda estamos nos acostumando aos efeitos da pandemia, mas há um grupo que já previa não apenas esse, mas vários outros cenários de instabilidade, e está constantemente se preparando para enfrentá-los. Neste episódio, falamos dos preppers, indivíduos que jamais perdem de vista que a merda pode, a qualquer momento, bater no ventilador. O que há por trás dessa mentalidade? E o que nós, que não temos um bunker na floresta onde nos esconder, podemos aprender com eles?[SIGA NO TWITTER: https://twitter.com/RandomicoPod / https://twitter.com/josuedeOlivCOMPRE MEU CONTO NA AMAZON: https://amzn.to/31cHvOm] REFERÊNCIAS DESTE EPISÓDIO:We should all be preppers, por Bradley Garrett. https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/05/we-should-all-be-preppers/611074/ The Urban Prepper : https://www.youtube.com/c/TheUrbanPrepper/videosCity Prepping: https://www.youtube.com/c/CityPrepping/videos All-American Prepper (paródia): https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLC35FDJiECFT9NbY7quddU5eKW1cazPq2TRILHA SONORA:“Displaced Memories”, by David Hilowitz. https://freemusicarchive.org/music/David_Hilowitz/Film_Music/David_Hilowitz_-_Film_Cue_002_-_Displaced_Memories_Theme
On this episode of Going Underground, we speak to Professor Karl Friston of the UK’s independent SAGE Committee regarding the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic. He discusses Boris Johnson’s new measures, which include 10pm closing times for pubs and other businesses, and local lockdowns. Will these policies work? Boris Johnson’s claim that track and trace ‘has very little or nothing to do with the spread and transmission of Covid-19,’ why the key to beating back the coronavirus second wave is to provide support measures for those who need to self-isolate, the prevailing concept of the herd immunity approach, unnecessary polarization in the debate on measures to be taken against Covid-19, and more! Finally, we speak to Dr Bradley Garrett, author of ‘Bunker: Building for the End Times.’ He discusses the recent boom in the super-rich buying private bunkers in the event of a cataclysmic event such as biological warfare, natural disasters and nuclear war, the class dimension of disaster planning by the super-rich and governments, the bunkers of President Trump, why the private-bunker boom is a product of neoliberalism, the growing ‘prepper’ movement in the United States, and much more!
Dr. Bradley Garrett is a social geographer and author of Bunker: Building for the End Times, along with four other great books. In this interview, Nate and Dr. Garrett discuss his adventures doing archeological dives, exploring the literal underground of London, and so many more incredible stories! Follow Dr. Garrett: Instagram Twitter Bunker on Amazon BradleyGarrett.com Check out the show notes at Voxtur.Life/BradleyGarrett Background music: Drifting Korners - Joseph McDade --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
A thought-provoking, chilling, and eerily prescient look at "prepper" communities around the world that are building bunkers against a possible apocalypse. Currently, 3.7 million Americans call themselves preppers. Millions more prep without knowing it. Bradley Garrett, who began writing this book years before the 2020 Covid-19 pandemic, argues that prepping is a rational response to global, social, and political systems that are failing to produce credible narratives of continued stability. Left with a sense of foreboding fueled by disease outbreaks, increasing government dysfunctionality, eroding critical infrastructure, nuclear brinksmanship, and an accelerating climate crisis, people all over the world are responding predictably-by hunkering down. For this book, Garrett traveled across four continents to meet those who are constructing panic rooms, building underground backyard survival chambers, stockpiling supplies, preparing go bags, hiding inflatable rafts, rigging mobile "bugout" vehicles, and burrowing deep into the earth. He has returned with a brilliant, original and never less than deeply disturbing story from the frontlines of the way we live now: an illuminating reflection on our age of disquiet and dread that brings our times into new and sharper focus. The "bunker," Garrett shows, is all around us: in malls, airports, gated communities, the vehicles we drive. Most of all, he reveals, it's in our minds.
Bunkers: The bunker has become the extreme expression of our greatest fears: from pandemics to climate change and nuclear war. Laurie Taylor talks to Bradley Garrett, Assistant Professor in Human Geography at University College Dublin, about the global movement of 'prepping' for social and environmental collapse, or 'Doomsday'. They're joined by Diane Morgan, Lecturer in Cultural Studies at the University of Leeds and author of a study examining the symbolic meaning of the bunker and the way in which demilitarised bunkers have taken on a new cultural life. Producer: Jayne Egerton
Bunkers: The bunker has become the extreme expression of our greatest fears: from pandemics to climate change and nuclear war. Laurie Taylor talks to Bradley Garrett, Assistant Professor in Human Geography at University College Dublin, about the global movement of 'prepping' for social and environmental collapse, or 'Doomsday'. They're joined by Diane Morgan, Lecturer in Cultural Studies at the University of Leeds and author of a study examining the symbolic meaning of the bunker and the way in which demilitarised bunkers have taken on a new cultural life. Producer: Jayne Egerton
Bunkers: The bunker has become the extreme expression of our greatest fears: from pandemics to climate change and nuclear war. Laurie Taylor talks to Bradley Garrett, Assistant Professor in Human Geography at University College Dublin, about the global movement of 'prepping' for social and environmental collapse, or 'Doomsday'. They're joined by Diane Morgan, Lecturer in Cultural Studies at the University of Leeds and author of a study examining the symbolic meaning of the bunker and the way in which demilitarised bunkers have taken on a new cultural life. Producer: Jayne Egerton
A thought-provoking, chilling, and eerily prescient look at "prepper" communities around the world that are building bunkers against a possible apocalypse. Currently, 3.7 million Americans call themselves preppers. Millions more prep without knowing it. Bradley Garrett, who began writing this book years before the 2020 Covid-19 pandemic, argues that prepping is a rational response to global, social, and political systems that are failing to produce credible narratives of continued stability. Left with a sense of foreboding fueled by disease outbreaks, increasing government dysfunctionality, eroding critical infrastructure, nuclear brinksmanship, and an accelerating climate crisis, people all over the world are responding predictably-by hunkering down. For this book, Garrett traveled across four continents to meet those who are constructing panic rooms, building underground backyard survival chambers, stockpiling supplies, preparing go bags, hiding inflatable rafts, rigging mobile "bugout" vehicles, and burrowing deep into the earth. He has returned with a brilliant, original and never less than deeply disturbing story from the frontlines of the way we live now: an illuminating reflection on our age of disquiet and dread that brings our times into new and sharper focus. The "bunker," Garrett shows, is all around us: in malls, airports, gated communities, the vehicles we drive. Most of all, he reveals, it's in our minds.
'We have allowed ourselves to be duped into thinking that everything can be provided for us and that we are going to get by in that way. The real reckoning is really thinking whether this is the best way to live'Dr. Bradley Garreyy is an American social and cultural geographer at University College Dublin in Ireland and a writer for the Guardian newspaper in the UK. He describes his research interests as being at the intersections of cultural geography, archaeology and visual methods and writes that his research is about "finding the hidden in the world". Connect with Bradley by visiting his website: bradleygarret.com following him @Goblinmerchant on Twitter & Instagram.***If your enjoying the podcast, would you consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts / iTunes. This will really help the podcast grow and convince hard to get guests.For show notes past episodes, please visit chasingpassionpodcast.comFollow Dom @domsniezka on:Instagram: instagram.com/domsniezkaTwitter: twitter.com/domsniezkaFacebook: facebook.com/domsniezka See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Bradley Garrett's website info on Bunker: https://www.bradleygarrett.com/bunker BardleyGarrett on Twitter: @Goblinmerchant Talk Radio 98.5 WRTA Altoona PA www.wrta.com
Dr. Bradley Garrett has spent years among the ranks of “doomsday preppers” who are planning for the end of days. He joins the Nick Digilio Show to discuss his time exploring underground bunkers, interviewing preppers across the country and discovering what lies beneath the cities of the world.
Hour 1: + John Stangeland, Atlas Comics Hour 2: + Dr. Bradley Garrett, author of Bunker: Building for the End Times Hour 3: + Are we better off without technology? + Classic Carson: A. Whitney Brown, 1985 Hour 4: + Craig Glenday, Editor-in-Chief of the Guinness Book of World Records Hour 5: + Products that […]
Join urban explorer Bradley Garrett and acclaimed author and academic Robert Macfarlane for a thrilling and timely discussion. Bradley Garrett is a geographer and urban explorer based at University College Dublin, and is ‘the world’s leading expert on survivalists’ (the Times). His work has been featured on Channel 4, ITV and the BBC. Garrett was a postdoctoral fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford, and has spoken at the Tate Modern and Barbican galleries, the Sydney Opera House and Google. He climbed London’s Shard before it was open to the public. Robert Macfarlane is a fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and the author of prize-winning and bestselling books about nature, place and people including Mountains of the Mind, The Old Ways and Underland, which won the 2019 Wainwright Prize and was shortlisted for the 2020 Orwell Prize for Political Writing. His work has been translated into many languages and adapted for film, television, radio, stage and music. In 2017 he was awarded the E.M. Forster Prize for Literature by the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Wayne Chambliss is a landscape extremophile, theoretical geographer, and poet. 5x15 brings together outstanding individuals to tell of their lives and inspirations. This talk was recorded at the online 5x15 event on 12th August 2020. Learn more about 5x15 events: 5x15stories.com Twitter: www.twitter.com/5x15stories Facebook: www.facebook.com/5x15stories Instagram: www.instagram.com/5x15stories
It started as an exhibition during the 1964 World's Fair, now bunkers are everywhere as people prepare for the end. Author Bradley Garrett breaks it down in his book “Bunker: Building For The End Times.” He takes us underground in the Beyond the Mic: Short Cut Beyond the Mic with Sean Dillon is the conversation series where actors, artists, authors, and more go deeper than a traditional interview. They go “Beyond the Mic”.
Dr. Bradley Garrett from the School of Geography at UCD and author of “Bunker: Building for the End Times” joins Tom on the show.
The fragility and weak points in societal structures may cause worry and consternation in most. But, some individuals respond instead by building. On this episode, Bradley Garrett discussed his new book, Bunker: Building for the End Times.
Bradley Garrett talks about his new book "Bunker: Building for the End Times."
August 6, 2020 Bunker Building Bradley Garrett and Accountable Michael OLeary
The Mike Calta Show Featured Cut
It's primary night and Ryan is keeping an eye on the incoming results. Today there was a massive blast in Beirut and Ryan has sound from the event and it unreal!. Finally, Bradley Garrett the author of Bunker: Building for the End Times joins Ryan to talk about his book which is out starting today!
In this episode of Intelligence Matters DECLASSIFIED: Spy Stories from the Officers Who Were There, host Michael Morell interviews former FBI agent Bradley Garrett, who recounts one of the most high-profile homicide cases he worked over the course of his career at FBI. He describes the global manhunt for Mir Aimal Kansi, who was put to death for killing two CIA officers outside Langley headquarters in 1993. Garrett tells Morell how he forged a relationship with Kansi to extract his confession -- and wound up being, at Kansi's request, one of few people present at his execution in 2002. Intelligence Matters DECLASSIFIED is new series dedicated to featuring first-hand accounts from former intelligence officers.
Dr. Bradley Garrett is an American social and cultural geographer at University College Dublin in Ireland and a writer for The Guardian newspaper in the United Kingdom. His new book "Bunker: Building for the End Times" is now available.
Dr. Bradley Garrett is an American social and cultural geographer at University College Dublin in Ireland and a writer for The Guardian newspaper in the United Kingdom. His new book Bunker: Building for the End Times is available August 4, 2020.
In this episode, we're going to discuss the Atlantic article, "We Should All Be Preppers," by Bradley Garrett. Come along and see what he got right and what may be a little off-target. Never forget, you’re just one prep away. If you have any other thoughts or questions about social isolation mindset, please leave a comment… The post M4S 108: The Atlantic Says “We Should All Be Preppers” appeared first on Mind4Survival.
Doomsday peppers consider the COVID-19 pandemic a 'mid-level' event that they are well-prepared for. We're talking with Bradley Garrett about Doomsday peppers, underground bunkers and COVID-19. Doomsday prepping is the practice of anticipating and adapting to an imagined impending crisis, ranging from low level crises to extinction-level events "The inability to know which disaster is being prepared for, or at what scale, coupled with the perceived inevitability of catastrophe, has created the palpable affect of dread that preppers are acting on." Bradley Garret. Based on three years of detailed ethnographic research, we're talking with Bradley about a recent paper - ahead of his forthcoming book with more case studies - where he traces the activity of a single bunker builder in Kansas in the United States. Following its construction in the Cold War this missile silo was purchased by civilian Larry Hall in 2008. Hall is an ex-government contractor, property developer and doomsday ‘prepper’. Since purchasing the missile silo, Hall has transformed it into a 15-story inverted tower block, which Hall calls the Survival Condo, but Brad calls a geoscraper. A community of up to 75 individuals can live in this geoscraper for up to five years. Inside, Hall has created a subterranean, sealed, self-sufficient and luxury habitat. Bradley theorises this type of architecture as the Architecture of Dread, drawing on the work of Søren Kierkegaard’s 1844 The Concept of Dread and Sigmund Freud. "The ‘objectless anxiety’ at the core of contemporary prepping, in contrast to the specific nuclear anxieties driving survivalism, is a ‘sense of existential dread we experience on many fronts’, without ‘much specification of particular risks’." Bradley Garret, citing Mills and Campbell. Guest Bradley Garrett is a cultural geographer based at University College Dublin. His new book Bunker: the Architecture of Dread is based on a three-year ethnographic study with people preparing for social, environmental and political collapse. The research was funded by the University of Sydney and will be published in August by Penguin in the UK and Commonwealth and Simon and Schuster in the USA.
Adam has a fascination with serial killers. Who knew? He explains where it came from. Former FBI agent. profiler and hostage negotiator Bradley Garrett, known as Dr. Death to the DC homicide detectives sits down to talk. Adam and the crew worry that Phil may be hiding something. Please consider supporting the good people who support us. Thanks for all the love! https://cruzintowellness.com/contact-us http://www.betinispirits.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Bradley Garrett explores ‘doomsday prepping’, a multi-billion dollar industry driven by dread (R)
Active duty SSG Garrett shares of his time in OEF, OIF as well as his experiences in the military's toughest schools.
Dr Bradley Garrett has been exploring the forbidden parts of cities since he was a teenager. He talks to Stephen Moss about scaling skyscrapers, sneaking into sewers and the two-year court trial that almost ended it all • Find out how to experience Underworld, the Guardian's virtual reality exploration of the sewers, guided by Bradley Garrett
Russell, Matt and Mr Gee are joined by professional urban runner Bradley Garrett who shares his 'Place-Hacking' experience and gives Russell advice on his new feature - As The Crow Flies. #russellbrandpodcast Contains Explicit Content
On this show: Russell, Matt and Mr Gee are joined by professional urban runner Bradley Garrett who shares his 'Place-Hacking' experience and gives Russell advice on his new feature - As The Crow Flies. If anyone wants to donate even a pound to help with the costs of hosting the podcasts it would be much appreciated! PayPal is Bellybouncelinglongling@gmail.com.
Russell, Matt and Mr Gee are joined by professional urban runner Bradley Garrett who shares his 'Place-Hacking' experience and gives Russell advice on his new feature - As The Crow Flies. #russellbrandpodcast Contains Explicit Content
Place hacking the hidden city. Laurie Taylor talks to Bradley Garrett, Lecturer in Geography and Environment at the University of Southampton, about his research into the world of urban exploration. Bridges, sewerage and underground rail systems are just a few of the sites penetrated by crews of place hackers who want to journey beyond the boundaries of everyday metropolitan life. They are joined by writer and film maker Iain Sinclair whose work also involves uncovering unseen layers of the city. Also, Julia Twigg, Professor of Social Policy and Sociology at the University of Kent, discusses the role of handbags in the lives of women with dementia. How do they function as memory objects and sources of identity, particularly in the transition to care homes? Producer: Torquil MacLeod.
More of us now live in cities than ever before, and the spaces we live in are increasingly governed by agendas of safety and security. Arguing against safety may seem counter-intuitive. However, a culture of safety brings limitations and fears that have the capacity to turn us into passive spectators in our own lives, especially in cities where high land values create dense areas of exclusion. Yet there is always a city within the city to explore. Underground and in the sky, the secret arteries of infrastructure and the forbidden heights of buildings are open to urban explorers who want to reclaim lost history and their right to roam the urban wilds. Bradley Garrett argues that rather than accepting the pre-packaged, safe, passively consumed entertainment on offer, we must make our own adventures by embracing the unsafe city as our playground.Bradley Garrett is an American researcher, explorer and social/cultural geographer at the University of Oxford. He is the author of Explore Everything: Place-hacking the city, an ethnographic account of the activities of urban exploration group London Consolidation Crew (LCC).
Big stories and dangerous ideas sometimes can come our way because someone had an idea, and sat down and thought about it. But some important stories, can only be found in forbidding environments and with dangerous consequences. For Lydia Cacho, death threats have been the result of her reporting on violence against women in Mexico. Outspoken journalist Masha Gessen left Russia when changes to Russian law meant that her children might be taken away because she was gay. Climbing London’s tallest buildings to chronicle urban exploration has seen Bradley Garrett arrested for his place-hacking efforts. For our panel of speakers, to pursue their dangerous ideas, living dangerously has been part of everyday life. Lydia Cacho is an award-winning investigative journalist, writer and activist, and is the author of Slavery Inc.: The untold story of international sex trafficking. Bradley Garrett is an American researcher, explorer and social/cultural geographer at the University of Oxford and the author of Explore Everything: Place-hacking the city. Masha Gessen is a Russian journalist and the author of a biography of Vladimir Putin, The Man Without a Face and Words Will Break Cement: The passion of Pussy Riot.
More and more of the world is living in cities, yet we rarely stop to examine how our spaces are organised and controlled. In a remarkable new book, Explore Everything: Place-Hacking the City (Verso, 2013), Bradley Garrett tells the story of his urban explorations that attempt to show the space from an entirely new viewpoint. The book draws on ethnographic fieldwork with a community of urban explores that begins in London and takes on global sites in the development of what the book refers to as ‘place hacking'. The explorers unearth the hidden histories of the London Underground, experience sites (and sights) of seemingly closed neo-liberal capital's constructions and point to ways that the city could be a space for creativity beyond the blandness of coffee and consumer culture. Fundamentally Explore Everything aims to ensure we never look at our city spaces in the same ways again. Unusually for a book informed by critical theory, the text is richly illustrated with photographs taken as part of the place hacking activities, connecting the theoretical underpinnings of the text with the breathtaking excitement generated in the act of exploration. The text is also a record of the engagement with activism, police forces and security, as well as the media, raising profound questions as to the future role of the university and scholarship in an age where academia is encouraged and expected to have much more visible public impact. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
More and more of the world is living in cities, yet we rarely stop to examine how our spaces are organised and controlled. In a remarkable new book, Explore Everything: Place-Hacking the City (Verso, 2013), Bradley Garrett tells the story of his urban explorations that attempt to show the space from an entirely new viewpoint. The book draws on ethnographic fieldwork with a community of urban explores that begins in London and takes on global sites in the development of what the book refers to as ‘place hacking’. The explorers unearth the hidden histories of the London Underground, experience sites (and sights) of seemingly closed neo-liberal capital’s constructions and point to ways that the city could be a space for creativity beyond the blandness of coffee and consumer culture. Fundamentally Explore Everything aims to ensure we never look at our city spaces in the same ways again. Unusually for a book informed by critical theory, the text is richly illustrated with photographs taken as part of the place hacking activities, connecting the theoretical underpinnings of the text with the breathtaking excitement generated in the act of exploration. The text is also a record of the engagement with activism, police forces and security, as well as the media, raising profound questions as to the future role of the university and scholarship in an age where academia is encouraged and expected to have much more visible public impact. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
More and more of the world is living in cities, yet we rarely stop to examine how our spaces are organised and controlled. In a remarkable new book, Explore Everything: Place-Hacking the City (Verso, 2013), Bradley Garrett tells the story of his urban explorations that attempt to show the space from an entirely new viewpoint. The book draws on ethnographic fieldwork with a community of urban explores that begins in London and takes on global sites in the development of what the book refers to as ‘place hacking’. The explorers unearth the hidden histories of the London Underground, experience sites (and sights) of seemingly closed neo-liberal capital’s constructions and point to ways that the city could be a space for creativity beyond the blandness of coffee and consumer culture. Fundamentally Explore Everything aims to ensure we never look at our city spaces in the same ways again. Unusually for a book informed by critical theory, the text is richly illustrated with photographs taken as part of the place hacking activities, connecting the theoretical underpinnings of the text with the breathtaking excitement generated in the act of exploration. The text is also a record of the engagement with activism, police forces and security, as well as the media, raising profound questions as to the future role of the university and scholarship in an age where academia is encouraged and expected to have much more visible public impact. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
More and more of the world is living in cities, yet we rarely stop to examine how our spaces are organised and controlled. In a remarkable new book, Explore Everything: Place-Hacking the City (Verso, 2013), Bradley Garrett tells the story of his urban explorations that attempt to show the space from an entirely new viewpoint. The book draws on ethnographic fieldwork with a community of urban explores that begins in London and takes on global sites in the development of what the book refers to as ‘place hacking’. The explorers unearth the hidden histories of the London Underground, experience sites (and sights) of seemingly closed neo-liberal capital’s constructions and point to ways that the city could be a space for creativity beyond the blandness of coffee and consumer culture. Fundamentally Explore Everything aims to ensure we never look at our city spaces in the same ways again. Unusually for a book informed by critical theory, the text is richly illustrated with photographs taken as part of the place hacking activities, connecting the theoretical underpinnings of the text with the breathtaking excitement generated in the act of exploration. The text is also a record of the engagement with activism, police forces and security, as well as the media, raising profound questions as to the future role of the university and scholarship in an age where academia is encouraged and expected to have much more visible public impact. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dr Bradley Garrett (Researcher in Technological Natures at the University of Oxford)