Podcasts about break bad

American television series (2008–2013)

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Latest podcast episodes about break bad

Pirate Monk Podcast
450 | Art Blanchford | Transformation

Pirate Monk Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2025 56:50


Title: Transformation w/ Art Blanchford   Aaron talks about the awkwardness of candy crushing your penis. Nate is Live. The guys discuss goals, resolutions, perfectionism, gamifying recovery, and increased success with community, support and feedback.This week, Nate interviews Art Blanchford. Art is a recovering workaholic, Tennessee local, and host of the Life in Transition Podcast. He is also a business consultant, coach, and leads midlife transformational retreats. They discuss the depth, growth, and development of Christian relationship in recovery. Also talking about the topic that service or ministry doesn't have to be free, and the value of an investment. Art shares his experiences getting away and disconnecting from phones and tv and the refreshment that brings.Links: MidLife Transition Art Blanchford Art's Email Art on LinkedinBooks: Purposeful Living: Wisdom for Coming of Age in Complex Times, by Art BlanchfordAtomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad ones, by: James Clear Super Better: A Revolutionary Approach to Getting Stronger, Happier, Braver, and More Resilient - Powered by the Science of Games, by Jane McGonigal Renovated: God, Dallas Willard, and the Church That Transforms, by James WilderMay 4-7, 2025 Sarah Society Annual Retreat June 6-8, 2025 Samson Canadian Retreat Sept. 12-14, 2025 Austrian Retreat Nov 7-9, 2025 Santa Fe, NM Samson Summit Nov 7-9, 2025 The Wild & Sacred Journey, Womens RetreatSponsor: Life Works CounselingIf you have thoughts or questions and you'd like the guys to address in upcoming episodes or suggestions for future guests, please drop a note to piratemonkpodcast@gmail.com.The music on this podcast is contributed by members of the Samson Society.For more information on this ministry, please visit samsonsociety.com. Support for the women in our lives who have been impacted by our choices is available at sarahsociety.com.The Pirate Monk Podcast is provided by Samson Society, a ministry of Samson House, a 501(c)3 nonprofit. To enjoy future Pirate Monk podcasts, please consider a contribution to Samson House.   Art Blanchford | artblanchford.com Home - Art Blanchford | artblanchford.com Hello I'm ART BLANCHFORD #MY story ART BLANCHFORD During the height of the Covid pandemic, I found myself lying in bed, filled with fear and lacking the strength to even move. The worry consumed me – what would happen if my employer discovered I was sick? The thought of losing my job, running out of […]   linkedin.com Art Blanchford - Life in Transition Podcast | LinkedIn SENIOR EXECUTIVE LEADERSHIP High-performance business, operations, and sales… · Experience: Life in Transition Podcast · Education: University of Michigan - Stephen M. Ross School of Business · Location: Brentwood · 500+ connections on LinkedIn. View Art Blanchford's profile on LinkedIn, a professional community of 1 billion members.                

Go Fact Yourself
Ep. 165: Paula Poundstone & Open Mike Eagle

Go Fact Yourself

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2025 57:51


It's an X-tra special brand new episode of Go Fact Yourself! **Come see us in SF Sketchfest in San Francisco! Sunday 1/19 at 4pm! Tickets at bit.ly/GFYSketchfestIn this episode…Guests:Paula Poundstone is a comedian who's the creative voice behind the podcast “Nobody Listens to Paula Poundstone.” You can also find her on tour throughout the next few months. How does she have time to do so much? It turns out she has a lot of time on her hands thanks to some advice from a plumber. Open Mike Eagle is a rapper who's known for some very clever rhyming and word play. Turns out that he's been working on that ever since he was a kid! You can hear Mike's newest musical project, Previous Industries, and their debut album, Service Merchandise now.Areas of ExpertisePaula: The TV show “Breaking Bad,”  Drakes Cakes, and the desegregation of department store lunch counters in Nashville, Tennessee.Mike: The Attitude Era of professional wrestling, the Jonathan Hickman era of X-Men comics, and the anime “Jojo's Bizarre Adventure.”What's the Difference: Respect your EldersWhat's the difference between to respect someone and to honor someone?What's the difference between older and elder?With Guest Experts:Louise Simonson: Award-winning writer and editor who's worked in comic books for more than 50 years. Betsy Brandt: Actor whose career includes five seasons of playing Marie on “Breaking Bad.”Hosts: J. Keith van StraatenHelen HongCredits:Theme Song by Jonathan Green.Maximum Fun's Senior Producer is Laura Swisher.Co-Producer and Editor is Julian Burrell.Seeing our next live-audience shows by YOU!*Listen to Bonus Content from this episode*We make a monthly GFY Extras episode with BoCo from all of our episodes – just for Maximum Fun members! Info at: maximumfun.org/howtobocoYou can also hear a different version of our episodes – and play a corresponding trivia quiz – at laist.com/gofactyourself***Listen to GFY on the radio!***You can now hear the show LIVE on the radio in the Los Angeles area on NPR station LAist 89.3 FM. You can also stream the show live around the world at LAist.com (Click the big “Listen” button at the top of the page.)Airtimes: Saturdays at 10am & 5pm. Sundays at 8pm. (All times Pacific)

U105 Podcasts
5198: LISTEN¦ Is there a good way to break bad news? A man's gone viral after paying influencers to send his wife a video, saying he wanted a divorce. What's the worst way to tell someone news you know will upset them? Frank spoke to Malachi O'Doherty

U105 Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2024 15:38


Is there a good way to break bad news? A man's gone viral after paying influencers to send his wife a video, saying he wanted a divorce. What's the worst way to tell someone news you know will upset them? Frank spoke to Malachi O'Doherty Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Advisor Solutions Podcast
The Advisor Solutions Podcast EP 123- How to Break Bad News

The Advisor Solutions Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2024 30:10


Breaking bad news is never easy, especially when it comes to money, the market, or not getting the coverage that your client wants. But one thing is certain: at some point in your career, you are going to have to break bad news to someone. The real question is, has anyone ever expressed to you the best way to do that? Most financial advisors, insurance agents, wholesalers, branch managers, and even agency managers don't have a specific strategy to share bad news. The topic of “how to break bad news” benefits from a stepwise approach for an advisor to make difficult situations less challenging to discuss. Rather than merely telling people what is going wrong, having a process of how to break the bad news is essential. The delivery of bad news is important as a client might feel shocked, defensive, and, in some cases, angry- and you don't want to add to their angst because of how they heard about it.   This episode shares practical strategies successful advisors and agents have used to create a better connection when discussing difficult subjects. These are not just theoretical concepts but actionable steps you can implement in your practice.

Nerd of Godcast
When Good Guys Break Bad (and vice versa)

Nerd of Godcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2024 80:11


We're back for season nein (nine) and we're talking about heel turns (and face turns.)If Robert Downey Jr can go from being the MCU's greatest hero to its most feared villain, what is stopping any of us from doing the same? And if God's grace really is for everyone, no matter how far gone, then what's stopping hurting, broken, darkside us from becoming the good guy?

Just A Quick Pinch
how to break bad news, have tricky convos / the cases that haunt you, create patient loyalty: NEW GRAD 101 w. Dr. Rachel Ward

Just A Quick Pinch

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2024 38:36


One of my favorite episodes I've ever recorded, Dr. Rachel Ward DMD (@rachelwarddmd) is what this podcast is all about: being open and honest, helping one another, and becoming better for our patients. We break down: - Breaking bad news to patients - Asking the right questions to get the best insight - Having difficult conversations like telling someone they need a lot of treatment - Unresolved cases that haunt you and people you never hear from again - Saying I don't know - Creating patient loyalty when you're the new kid on the block and more! And Rachel has so graciously offered listeners a $500 discount if you are interested in signing up for Pankey Institute!!! When signing up mention Just A Quick Pinch Podcast or Dr. Rachel Ward and you will automatically get $500 off! https://pankey.org/ For more of the info we talked about today in bite sized readable format, sign up for our email newsletter HERE: https://just-a-quick-pinch.beehiiv.com/subscribe IG: @drconniewang, @justaquickpinch

Hearts of Oak Podcast
Topher Field - Good People Break Bad Laws: Civil Disobedience in the Modern Age

Hearts of Oak Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 55:07 Transcription Available


Shownotes and Transcript On this episode of Hearts of Oak Podcast, we sit down with Topher Field, a prominent Australian libertarian commentator and activist. Topher shares his experience navigating the challenging landscape of media and activism during the COVID-19 lockdowns in Melbourne. He discusses the charges he faced for advocating peaceful protests against government actions and the importance of freedom of speech in the face of oppressive measures. The interview delves into the impact of lockdowns on mental health and relationships, which fuelled Topher's increased activism. He provides a detailed account of the progression of protests in Melbourne, highlighting the power of grassroots movements in challenging authority. The conversation also touches on leaderless movements, accountability in COVID inquiries, and the need to resist oppressive policies. Throughout the episode, Topher encourages listeners to question authority, uphold morality, and resist unjust laws and critiques the worship of government and the compliance of churches with oppressive regulations, advocating for spiritual autonomy and the purity of faith-based practices. Over 15 years Topher Field has accumulated over 2 Million video views, over 150,000 regular followers, 14 film awards, 2 Libertarian awards, and released his first book in 2023. But his proudest achievement is without doubt his two criminal charges for ‘Incitement'. During the world famous Melbourne Lockdowns Topher was awarded these charges by Victoria Police for encouraging people to exercise their Human Rights during the Covid era in 2021. Topher is a renowned public speaker, interviewer, podcaster, writer, satirist, and champion of Human Rights. Good People Break Bad Laws: Civil Disobedience in the Modern Age in paperback and e-book from Amazon   amzn.eu/d/09MJazgR Watch award winning 'Battleground Melbourne'   battlegroundmelbourne.com Connect with Topher... WEBSITE          topherfield.net X/TWITTER       x.com/TopherField INSTAGRAM     instagram.com/topherfield Interview recorded  16.7.24 Connect with Hearts of Oak... X/TWITTER        x.com/HeartsofOakUK WEBSITE            heartsofoak.org/ PODCASTS        heartsofoak.podbean.com/ SOCIAL MEDIA  heartsofoak.org/connect/ SHOP                  heartsofoak.org/shop/ Transcript (Hearts of Oak) And I'm delighted to have someone from down under that I've seen the name quite a bit in my feeds over the last couple of years. It's always great to talk to someone that you've watched from afar, and that's Topher Field. Topher, thank you so much for your time today. (Topher Field) Well, Peter, what a pleasure, and thank you for having me. Not at all, it's great to have you on. And obviously, people can follow you @TopherField on Twitter, and TopherField.net is your website. And of course you're, I mean I've seen you on twitter quite a bit and whenever Sam Sobel connected us, and I thought I kind of recognized that name, because Topher is not a name that's very popular. So, you're thinking that definitely sticks out but you're probably one of Australia's leading, I think most recognized libertarian political commentators. And you've, it's it's your work in in the media and I know that's your background from when you were younger and now you've really made a name for yourself winning awards: libertarian awards. Also that documentary Battleground Melbourne setting. The madness that you faced there in Australia and author of Good People Break Bad Laws which is a fascinating topic. I know we'll delve into that a little bit and loved, I think on your website you said that your proudest moment, proudest achievement is getting those incitements, those punishments for standing up against the COVID lockdown. Not just punishments, criminal charges. They chased me with criminal charges and tried to lock me away for two and a half years for the crime of encouraging people to exercise their human right to engage in peaceful political protest at a time when our government was violating human rights. So yeah, that is honestly, that is my proudest achievement and, I hope never to have to repeat such a thing in my, in the future, but unfortunately you and I both know this fight is far from over. Oh, absolutely. Could I tell them, I mean, leading, leading up to that, what, you're also your, your background, I mean, you grew up with your dad being involved in media and your understanding a little bit about the business. Some of us have been thrown into this and we've either sunk or swell or swum, but you kind of had a little bit of an understanding. Can you tell us about your role in the media leading up to, I guess, the COVID tyranny. What had been your primary focus in terms of putting a message out up until, I guess, up until 2020? Well, I'm probably the world's only accidental political commentator. I was driving a forklift in a warehouse, quite enjoying myself, making good money. I enjoyed the manual labor, the repetition of it, and I could go home. And I was working on a fiction novel at the time and doing a bit of acting. And just enjoying sort of creative expression. And my cousin came into work one day. Yes, I'm the cliche forklift driving cousin working at the same place, kind of life, very blue collar. And my cousin comes into work and he says, Topher, you should audition for project next. And I said, what's that? It was a project being run by a very respected Australian journalist where he was recruiting and looking for the next generation of news producers, presenters, writers, researchers, these sorts of things. And in order to audition, you had to submit a video. So I went, okay, my dad taught me how to do videos. He was involved in community television. He was in professional radio and then in community television. And I cut my teeth from the earliest ages that I can remember. There was a camera in the house and I've been editing and doing audio and all that stuff. I learned the craft from him. So, I put that to good use and I made a video as an audition. And I was deliberately quite controversial, because I didn't want to find that I got into this show and then had my wings clipped and they were telling me what I could say or what I couldn't say. So I was deliberately pretty provocative and I didn't get in. Surprise, surprise. And so then I was left with this video that I had nothing. This is 2009. I didn't even have a YouTube channel. In fact, in Australia in 2009, most people didn't have internet fast enough to play YouTube videos in real time. You had to let them buffer for a few minutes. So, I started a brand new YouTube channel with zero subscribers. I uploaded the video and I sent it to my mom and she must've watched that video 30,000 times because shortly afterwards, was I had 30,000 views, which is pretty extraordinary for 2009 in Australia, doing a 12 minute long political exploration of water supply issues into my home city of Melbourne. Tell me how a video like that gets 30,000 views, even in today's market, let alone back then. So, then people began asking me to do more videos and I'm going, this is absurd. I'm a forklift driver. What do you think I am? I'm nothing. And eventually someone came to me with a video. I said no to everybody, and then someone came to me with a video that I couldn't say no to, and I said yes to that second video, and then I said yes to a third video and a fourth video, and it became a bit of a thing. My main focus has actually been water and water supply issues, particularly to irrigation farmers in what's called the Murray Darling Basin in Australia. So, 40% of Australia's food comes from this part of the world, and our government is destroying farmers by regulating and restricting access to irrigation water. So, that's really what I've spent most of my time talking about. But I did a series on climate change where I partnered with Lord Christopher Monckton in the UK, and I travelled to the US and Canada, interviewed a bunch of people. Professor Fred Singer, before he passed away, is one of my sort of proudest achievements to have had the chance to speak to him while he was alive. I've done work on freedom of speech. I've done work on over-regulation, over-taxation, cost of living, and a range of other sort of topics along the way. Basically always on the I'm a libertarian. So, I'm always coming from that libertarian perspective, but I'm also a Christian. So, bringing those two together and that's a pretty rare thing in Australia there really isn't a lot of a lot of people in that space in Australia and broadly on the conservative side of politics. Oh that's fascinating. Water management and freedom of speech. How do those fit together? So, I've had to ask myself the same question and the best answer I've got for you, Peter, and it's not necessarily a good answer, but it's the best one I've got, is that I struggle to walk past an injustice. Once I see something and go, that's wrong. That should not be the way it is. I find it very difficult to just ignore it and pretend I didn't see. And so water management, I kind of fell into because my very first video was about water supply into Melbourne city, which is a 4.4 and a half million person city that was on heavy water restrictions. There was a drought at the time and they were building a desalination plant and I've said the desalination plant was a bad idea and we should instead build a dam on there's a particular river where there was a dam reservation set aside by engineers 100 years ago, but politics being what it is today they were refusing to build a dam there for greeny sort of reasons. So, that's that was my very first video and then someone said well if you think that's bad have a look at what they're doing down irrigators up on the Murray River. And I investigated that and boy, boy, is that is that bad and people are literally being pushed to suicide and despair and bankruptcy and everything. And of course, it impacts food prices and has a knock-on effect to us all. So for me, that was kind of a fight that I couldn't walk past. But as a political commentator, freedom of speech is essential to my work. It's a non-negotiable, and it should be a non-negotiable for us all, but it's especially a non-negotiable when that's your stock in trade, is the right and the ability to say, government, you're wrong. You're doing the wrong thing. And so I was already defending, I was defending freedom of speech before it was cool. And then, of course, COVID came along and we saw censorship just escalate to an entirely new level. But those two have really been two of my biggest topics along the way. Tell us about during the COVID tyranny. I saw a level, and probably you did as well in Australia, a level of frustration boiling over that we haven't seen in a long time. We saw demonstrations against the Iraq war back in Tony Blair's time, a million people on the streets. Since then, we hadn't seen anything else. It was the pool tax rats and Margaret Thatcher's time, going back to that. And suddenly this happens and you've got huge, huge crowds coming out and active, I guess not civil obedience, but beginning to beginning to walk towards that line. I mean were you surprised that certainly in Britain people seem to be pushed and pushed and pushed and the the frustration boils out at the pub over a couple of drinks and that's the the level of it. Yeah. But something happened to push people how did you see that and view that because I wasn't in media at that point. We had just started two months before, but you saw this through a perspective of someone in the media. Tell us how you viewed that in your country. Our experience was very different in Melbourne as compared to anywhere else in Australia, let alone anywhere else in the world. So, for those that don't know, Melbourne became the most locked down city in the world and remains that to this day with the exception of China. China then did go on to do even more extreme things, but for a long time, Melbourne was the most locked down and outside of China continues to be the most locked down city in the world. We had de facto house arrest. You could not leave your house unless you were leaving for less than one hour and for an approved set of conditions. They shut down schools. They shut down all but essential workplaces. They shut down even kids' playgrounds and things. You could not so much as go to a beach and sit on the beach to watch a sunset. Even in your one hour of yard time, you would be arrested if you were found to have left the house just to go and enjoy some sunshine. So we had a curfew, an 8 p.m. curfew that was enforced very, very vigorously, very, very violently. We had what was called a ring of steel. This was a series of checkpoints that separated metropolitan Melbourne from the rest of rural Victoria. And they had military manning that checkpoint and demanding that you show paperwork to prove that you had a need to travel across that artificial new border that they'd put up around the city. And we had protests being treated as completely illegal. So, I spoke at the very first anti-lockdown protest, and this was my first ever conscious act of civil disobedience. It was the first time I walked out my door. I was 38 years old or so. I was a clean skin, ex-Army Reserve, ex-I'd done a bunch of charitable work. I was a clean skin. You look at my police record, It was better than spotless. It was positive. I'd handed in wallets that I'd found on the street and all sorts of stuff, right? And then all of a sudden, here I am walking out my door to go and deliberately speak at a rally that had been declared to be illegal. And that was really a turning point in my life and took me in a whole new direction, because I live streamed that event and such was the hunger. People were desperate, but no one was yet willing to make any moves. By the time I got home from that event, that live stream had been watched over 100,000 times. And this is just a live stream on Facebook. I had a Facebook page with maybe 10,000 people on it. So, that was a pretty big deal for me at the time. And people, you know, I had a wave of abuse pour into my inbox, into my emails and so forth. People angry how dare you. You're killing grandma all that sort of stuff. Then shortly on the back of that there was a wave of support: thank you for speaking out I've been thinking the same thing, but I thought I was going crazy, now I know I'm not. And then on the back of that was a wave of despair, people reaching out in emails and in messages into my inbox just needing to tell me their story, because by this point in time we were about we were about by then we're about eight weeks in to lockdowns, seven weeks into lockdowns. And for anyone who was already at the margins financially, was already close to the wind, this was absolutely decimating them. For anyone whose mental health was already borderline, this was destroying them. Anyone whose marriage was close to breaking up, this was the final straw. And I just had people pouring their hearts out to me. And at first, I thought, why are you talking to me? I can't help you. I've got nothing. I'm in the same position as you. I've got a kid, a pregnant wife. My business is going down the tube, because I had I had another business separate to the political commentary at the time. My life is as much of a mess as yours. Why are you asking me for help? And then I realized they weren't asking me for help. Not one of them asked me to help them. What they wanted was someone to listen. And this is the tragedy of what happened, Peter, is all of the people that were supposed to be there for them had turned their back. The church pastors, the mental health counsellors, most of the politicians, a lot of people's families had all turned their back on them to the point that they were digging up the contact details of a YouTube political commentator and pouring their heart out to me in emails and messages. Such was the isolation that they experienced. So in that context, you can understand that the protests remained very, very small for many, many months. We saw violent arrests where if someone was known to have been organizing protests, the police would show up at their door at six o'clock in the morning with a battering ram, smash their way through the door, violently tackle them to the ground, hospitalizing them in some cases. We saw extreme levels of violence that we're not used to in Australia. This is not the kind of place where these things happen. And so that kept our numbers really small, really down in the few hundreds. And myself and a number of other courageous people, we kept on getting out there and kept on doing it anyway, knowing the risks and getting attacked by riot squads and attacked by police on horses, and threats of arrest, and all sorts of things. And then the government made a tactical mistake. There was a woman by the name of Zoe Bueller, and she was out of town. She was outside of that ring of steel that I mentioned earlier. She lived in a rural town, and she said, hey, let's get together and do a protest at the local park during our one hour of yard time. Now, the thing with her was where she was, that was actually legal. But the police arrested her anyway. They went into her home and her husband live streamed, or she live streamed on her phone, her arrest. And that was her, you may be familiar with it, in her pyjamas. She's pregnant. There's a couple of kids in the home. And she's saying, being arrested for what? They were arresting her for incitement, the very same charge that they later charged me with. And that video went viral. And that really turned the movement from just a couple of hundred hardcore people doing what our conscience required us to do against all odds and all of a sudden we were getting a couple of thousand people. And then there was a year or so of that on and off increasing police violence ultimately leading to them shooting us with rubber bullets and then finally their conscience that they were shamed effectively, by us refusing to back down and their conscience got the better of them and the police finally said: hey we're not doing the violence anymore and then all of a sudden our numbers exploded into the hundreds of thousands it's. That accidental leadership which I think has been intriguing and probably is at the heart of what makes the establishment afraid, because when you look at all different demonstrations they kind of come from organizations that then push that agenda, that idea, and then arrange demonstrations, arrange rallies, arrange protests but this had; I mean the people that I'm sure it's same for you, that I've met, who've come from sports, from music, from different industry, from never done as you said a protest in their life suddenly come out. And it's been fascinating that accidental leadership that we have seen worldwide. Yeah, and you're absolutely right this is what makes them afraid. It's the hydra. And this is this really came out to me and I really bring this point out in battleground Melbourne the documentary which you can watch for free at battlegroundmelbourne.com The thing that I really wanted to bring out there was this isn't my story. I had the privilege of being the storyteller, but it's not actually my story. I didn't write that. That was written by the people of Melbourne, the people of Victoria, and the courage that they showed. And what we see time and again, the theme that I really sought to bring out in that documentary was we kept on being knocked down. And then without any structured leadership, there was no board of directors making decisions. People just got creative. And somehow the movement as a whole stood back up again. It might have been different people. It might've been in a different place and it might've been in a different form. But every time the government thought they'd finally knocked us down, we reappeared as a movement. We reappeared in some new form and we were continuously adapting our tactics and they were continuously adapting their tactics. And in the end, they got to the point where they couldn't escalate any further. And we still hadn't gone away. We still hadn't backed down. They literally got to the point where the only thing left for them to do was to start shooting with live ammunition. That was their last option. They had done everything else up to that point. Tear gas and riot police and mounted police and home invasions and rubber bullets onto, you know, shooting people in the back, unarmed people in the back with rubber bullets at the Shrine of Remembrance, a war memorial of all places. I mean, absolute disgrace. And then after doing that, thinking, oh, we finally got them. They're going to run away scared now. Well, then along came nurses and teachers who completely transformed the whole way the movement looked. They showed up in parks in their uniforms, wearing masks, socially distanced, with writing on their tops saying how long they'd been a teacher or how long they'd been a nurse and these sorts of things. And they just stood silently in the park. So, all of a sudden, now that they'd gone to the rubber bullets, et cetera, gone was the rabble rousing and the chanting and everything else. Now, all of a sudden, they're faced with a bunch of young women, mostly incredibly courageous, standing in parks, socially distanced, wearing masks and silent. And they show up with the rubber bullet guns and they show up with the riot police and they show up with the horses. And I think finally, it was like a mirror looking back at them. And suddenly they saw themselves and realized what they'd become. And it was shortly after that that they released, they leaked this letter to the public, which they'd sent to the premier saying, we're not doing this anymore. It's time to put away the tear gas. We're not doing the violence anymore. It's exactly what you're talking about. The way I paraphrase it is this. We were ordinary people who were faced with extraordinary times. All we did was make the decision to do what was right, even though it was our government that was wrong. That's it. That's it. That's all we are. Because there were enough of us and because we had the courage to keep coming back and to keep getting back up in spite of what we faced, in the end, we won. And that, I think, is a massive lesson and for all of humanity with everything that we're up against, because a leaderless, decentralized, organic movement is unstoppable for as long as we don't stop. It's up to us to just go, we're just going to keep going. A movement with leaders can be stopped if you take out the leaders, you know, strike the shepherd and the sheep will scatter. But what if there's no shepherd? What if the sheep have started to think for themselves? And that's what we created here in Melbourne. And I think that's a model. That's not to take anything away from people who do step into leadership, but I think that's a model for us. We become unstoppable if we adopt that model. And I want to pick up one of the two things we've learned. And I'm asking you that not just because it's a historical event that we can learn a lot from, but here in the UK, we right now have the COVID inquiry. I think in the next day or two, it's going to release its first findings. And the figures on the COVID inquiry here in the UK, it's thought it'll be the most expensive inquiry in British history. It's just going to be under just under 200 million pounds for the whole inquiry. I think I read something like cost of £130,000 or £140,000 a day. So, I'm asking you your experiences, because we are going through this charade of a COVID inquiry. Has there been, and of course, that's not going to lead to anything. But in Australia, have there been questions? We've seen a kind of slow change in the media on the right, but getting to say, actually, you know, we were always saying we shouldn't buy onto this. I said, uh-uh, no, you weren't. You had like an article every two months that might touch on another side. But what about you in terms of reckoning for the media, in terms of reckoning for politicians on what Australians were put through? Nowhere near enough. We've had a couple of really good politicians, particularly a couple of really good senators who have been relentlessly pursuing this. And they've had some small wins. But one of the things that is just a reality that we have to be willing to accept and push our way through is that the powers that be have a lot of layers of defence. So, they'll try and stop an inquiry from happening. And then once they can't stop the inquiry from happening, they try and rig the inquiry by, you know, rigging the terms of reference or rigging who the commissioner is or these sorts of things. We've just seen unfolding right now in Australia, we have a senator for the United Australia Party called Ralph Babbitt, Senator Ralph Babbitt, great guy. He managed to get a, I don't remember the technical term for it, but it's some form of inquiry and a bunch of people made submissions to that inquiry. And then the person running the inquiry has just announced they're not going to publish a lot of those submissions. They're taking them as almost like comments. Right. And they're not actually publishing them as part of the inquiry. It's like, well, no, you don't get to silence the Australian people like that. And so now Senator Babet is taking up that particular fight to try and make sure that this actually gets done properly, et cetera. So, they kind of have defence in depth, because there's a lot of tricks and tools that they get to use. And every single one of them is a new layer that we have to battle our way through. What I think though is is going to happen much faster than we've seen in history, so in history we saw for example the thalidomide debacle where for a very long time if you know thalidomide being dangerous was considered to be misinformation and you were uninformed and ignorant if you said that it was, or asbestos, and then all of a sudden everyone always knew that it was dangerous. Right? That was you know we saw that trend and we're watching that happen in some parts of the media now: oh, I've always said that we should be careful about an untested vaccine. No you didn't, you told everyone to go out and get jabbed, right? Yeah. So, we're seeing that revisionism is kicking in. But it took 40 years for thalidomide to finally get apologies and compensation and these sorts of things. But that happened before the internet. And that happened when we weren't as able to communicate with each other as what we are now and able to dig and discern the truth. The gatekeepers of old are no longer, they no longer hold the level of power that they used to have. And that allows us to accelerate the timelines. The other comment that I'll make, Peter, is people only start to pay attention to politics once it starts to hurt them. There's a thing called rational ignorance. It doesn't make sense. It's not rational for us to pay lots of attention to something that we can't really influence. Influence if we don't if we can't really control it well we should spend our time and focus you know invest that into the things that we can have more control over. So, there's a level of rational ignorance when it comes to politics. Why would I pay attention to politics when I can't really change anything anyway. And most Australians have that attitude until it hurts them and then all of a sudden they arc up. And then they can't understand why they can't get help from anyone else, well because it's not hurting them. So, the silver lining of something as tragic as what what we've seen during COVID, the silver lining is that it hurt a lot of people simultaneously. And a lot of people at the same time all stood up and said, hey, this isn't okay. I'm not happy with this. And then when they looked around for support, there were actually other people out there to support them because there was a lot of people standing up at the same time. And what's important now is that we maintain the rage, to use a tired old phrase. We cannot let up on this. We cannot let people take a revisionist view. Oh, we did the best we could with what we knew at the time. Any of that sort of, we cannot accept any of that. And we must just continue to relentlessly pursue justice and understand that this is a long-term project. We're not going to win this overnight. But what's happening now is we're getting organized at a level that we've never been before. And our pushback is getting sophisticated at a level that it never has been before. And more and more people are willing to take risks. And I'll use a local example to you, you, Peter. It would have been unimaginable in the 2000s for a situation to arise in a city like London where the ULEZ cameras would have been being vandalized on a widespread scale. That's unthinkable. The Blade Runner phenomenon, again, an example of a leaderless organic movement that just popped up where people used the internet and our ability to communicate with each other to find these cameras, to map them, to publish those maps. And then other people looked at those maps and made decisions about what they were going to do. I'm not condoning anything of course but observing what's happened that was unthinkable 20 years ago and now it's an ongoing phenomenon. So, I'm actually quite hopeful that a lot of these petty tyrants, these people who want to control and tell us how we're going to live, are going to find themselves bewildered by this array of pushback that seems to come out of nowhere. And they will go looking for the enemy and say, who's organized this? And the answer is no one. And that makes it really hard for them to stop. So, I'm actually really optimistic. And I think it was actually in the end, a good thing that COVID would hurt so many people and not good that they were hurt but it's good now that we live in a world where ordinary people are standing up in a way that we have not seen in my lifetime before. And that fits into your your book: Good People Break Bad Laws. Up until this point good people follow the law, good people call the police if there is a problem, good people vote for the the party that they think is best. Good people use the legal system for solutions to problems. And there's a whole list of what good people, and I always looked at CND, the anti-war people, or kind of stop oil people and thought that's so disruptive. How dare they do that? And now... Either maybe I was dumb, maybe I didn't get it before, maybe I trust the institutions. But I think a lot of people, certainly more on the right, trusted the institutions to a large degree. Now that trust has completely gone. That contract, I think, with the government has been completely broken. And we've gone from good people follow the law, even if it's not necessarily the best law, you do what you do as a citizen, to hell no. we're going to break. That's a huge change in society, in a democratic society. That's a massive change. Yeah, there's a number of layers to this. First and foremost, pretty much everybody on all sides of politics acknowledges that civil disobedience has been the right thing in various moments in history. One of the most obvious being, of course, the civil rights movement to end segregation in the US. That's sort of a pretty obvious contemporary example where we say, Martin Luther King and even many people, Malcolm X and a bunch of others, yes, that was the right thing for them to do. Civil disobedience, breaking those laws was a good thing for them to do. And when you look in a historical context, there's almost universal agreement about that. But there is certainly on the more conservative side of politics, a real discomfort about it in real time. And that's simply because conservatives have been used since the end of the Second World War to being the ones in charge, which means that when someone is disobeying, they're disobeying the conservatives, right? They're disobeying the establishment and the conservatives identify as that. They're disobeying us. What a bunch of rabble-rousing ratbags. Well, there's a right way to do it and there's a wrong way to do it. And just stop oil, et cetera. We see them doing it in very, very destructive ways. And my book does address that. I talk about the right way and the wrong way to do these sorts of things. But in principle, doing what's right is always right, even if the law is wrong, right? And we have to accept an uncomfortable truth for a lot of conservatives. And like I said, I'm a libertarian, so I have no issue with this, but a lot of conservatives struggle with this. When you change the law, you do not change what is right or wrong. What is right or wrong is already right or wrong. And when we change a law, we're either admitting that it used to be wrong and now it's right, or maybe that it used to be right and now we've got it wrong, or maybe that it was wrong both times. But we can't pretend that just because some people in a room stood around and approved the change of wording that we've changed the laws of nature and morality and what's right and wrong. We haven't. So, when we write laws, our task is not to define what's right and what's wrong. It is to discern what's right and what's wrong and to align the law as closely as possible to that. And that's a matter of conscience. And I have to do what's right according to my conscience, even if the people in that room have written laws that disagree with that particular point of view. And this is necessary. This is essential. People say: oh, we can't all just run around doing whatever we think is best. No, no, no. We all have to live our lives doing what we think is best. Because guess what? When I stand before God, I can't turn around and say: oh, but Peter made me do it. Peter told me it was the right thing to do. Nor can I say, oh, but a whole bunch of Peters in a house called parliament told me that it was the right thing to do. No, I don't get to outsource my morality. I'm accountable for my decisions, for the moral outcomes and the morality that is represented in the decisions that I make. And that's true, no matter what the law says. So what conservatives have to accept is that they are no longer in the majority. Okay. The cultural war has been lost. That's not to say that it's permanent. It's not permanently that way. But think about the sexual revolution and the aims of third wave feminism, the sexual revolution. They got everything they wanted, right? What we call conservative politics now is unrecognizable in the world of the 1950s. What we call conservative politics now is radical, progressive Marxist ideology. And we call that conservative now because we've completely lost track of how far we've slid. Conservatives have already lost the culture war. The culture war is over. Conservatives lost. What has happened now is that people who who believe in God. Who believe in family, who believe in what we would consider to be basic decency, basic morality, Judeo-Christian morals. We are now the revolutionaries. We are now the beatniks. We are now the hippies of our age. And we are the ones who are actually trying to bring about a revolution against an establishment that has rejected all of that morality. And we have to accept that that means that we need to adopt the tactics of the revolutionaries, the rebels. We're the cool kids now. That's the good news, Peter. We get to be the cool kids for a change rather than the stayed old, you know, the pearl clutches. The pearl clutches now are all on the left. Oh, you used the wrong pronouns. Oh, my heart, right? That's them now. We get to be the cool kids. And what that means is we have to accept and we have to move on from a lot of these old mindsets. And one of those mindsets was, oh, but it's the law. We all need to do what the law says. Well, that was always the wrong perspective. But not only now is it the wrong perspective, but it's also incredibly unhelpful. If the law is wrong, we have no obligation to obey and to do what's wrong. And in particular, I look at Psalm 94, I think it's verse 12, where it says that crooked leaders cannot be your friends. They use the law to cause suffering. And this is one of, I propose two tests for what a bad law is in my book, Good People Break Bad Laws. And one of them is a practical test, and one of them is a principles test. And the practical test is based on that verse in Psalm 94. Does this law cause suffering? Because that's the definition of a crooked ruler. A crooked ruler is someone who uses the law to cause suffering. And if the following or enforcing of a law causes more suffering than the breaking of that law would cause, then you are looking at a candidate for potentially a bad law. There's more to it than that. You have to read the book. But that becomes a candidate for this might be a bad law. And actually, my conscience might require me to disobey this law in order to do what's right. How, I will say I have not read the book, but I will be reading it. I'd encourage others because we are in different times and it's fascinating. And your comment about individual consciousness, individual responsibility, we seem to have contracted that out to a government that actually you're the ones that will decide what is good and what is bad, what's right and what's wrong. I no longer have to and we are in a completely different generation than previous generations in that there is no accountability. There's no right and wrong there's no accountability, and it's; yeah we have it we have to learn how to live as individuals within that new paradigm of actually people don't take personal responsibility for anything. And we'll see that in the COVID inquiry people say: oops. And what do you mean "oops"? How many people's lives were damaged? Destroyed? Kill? How many people were killed? This is not an oops and yet that seems to be where we are that there is zero personal responsibility for anything and certainly we see that in this in the States on obesity where actually you just take a drug, because that's just not nothing to your fault. And you just take a drug or it's your genes. No what about personal responsibility for lifestyle, but But that seems to have gone out the window completely. Peter, it's worse than that. So, I'm working on my second book, which will be out before the end of this year, which is titled Good Christians Break Bad Laws, Obeying God in a Fallen World. And it's specifically on the theology of civil disobedience. It looks at everyone from Dietrich Bonhoeffer and other sort of World War II heroes right back in history and then obviously diving deep into Scripture itself, Old Testament, New Testament, the words of Christ, et cetera, on this topic of obedience to government. Yes, I deal with Romans 13, 1 Peter 2. All of that is covered in this book. The reality of our situation, Peter, is that we actually now worship the government. And unfortunately, I have to include the church in that statement. What we saw during COVID, and I can't speak for where you are, but certainly where I am in the city of Melbourne, was almost every single church with a vanishingly small number of exceptions allowed the government to dictate to them whether or not they would open their doors,. Whether or not they would help the poor, whether or not they would gather and worship, whether or not they would take communion, how many people were allowed to sing etcetera. And and what they did was they turned around and said: oh no it's okay because we can we'll have a tiny skeleton crew in the building and we'll live stream church. You can do live stream church so this isn't a violation of our christian principles this isn't a violation of you know of the exhortation not to forsake the gathering together of the saints, because you can watch a video online. And of course when we look at the example: I'll just pull one example out, look at okay so we know that Daniel would pray multiple times a day he would open his window and he would. We pray in full public view. And when it was, I think, Nebuchadnezzar, I can always get mixed up between Darius and Nebuchadnezzar and all the others. I think it was Nebuchadnezzar was convinced by his secular advisors, his pagan advisors to make a law that said people could only pray to Nebuchadnezzar. Daniel didn't choose to keep praying in the privacy of his room and keep the door and the shutters closed. He could have done that. And he could have said, oh, well, I'm still practicing my religion. I'm just doing it in a way that's not going to provoke trouble. I don't want to cause any issues here. No, no, no. No, he opened those shutters and prayed in the same spot in full view because to go into hiding and say, oh, I'm still practicing my religion in secret is still saying to the government, you have the right to tell me that I can't do that. You're still conceding that ground to the government. And that means that you're giving the government more authority over your faith walk than God has. So, I believe that the church's biggest problem, and this is so funny because as a kid, you'd You'd read the Ten Commandments. You're like, oh, the idolatry one's out of date. Like, that doesn't apply anymore. Actually, I've realized, no, I'm completely wrong. Idolatry is the number one sin that we are facing in the church and in secular society here today. Specifically, we've made an idol with our own hands. Look at what the children of Israel did. They made calves with their own hands, and they fell down and worshipped them. When God designed government, God designed the system of judges. There was enough law that they could read it in three days, the whole thing. And they had a dispute resolution process. They could go to a judge to have a dispute be resolved. There was no other law and there was no other mechanism to make more law. And during the time of Isaiah, the children of Israel decided that that wasn't enough and they wanted a king. And they went to Isaiah and they demanded, oh, Samuel, was it? Excuse me, in the time of Samuel, I think it was. They demanded a king and they ended up getting Saul. When they went to Samuel and said to give us a king, Samuel was upset because he's being rejected as a judge and his children who are ungodly were being rejected as judges. And he takes it to God and God says to him, listen to what they're actually saying. They're not rejecting you. They're rejecting me as their king. And I'll cover all of this in the book, Good Christians Break Bad Laws. As their forefathers did in the wilderness, building golden calves and worshipping them. That's what God says in response. They are rejecting me as their king, as their forefathers did, building golden calves and worshipping them. God immediately equates creating a government that is beyond what God designed with idolatry. He immediately says, this is like worshipping a golden calf. And that's exactly where we are today. Look at the names of God in the Old Testament. Jehovah Jireh, my provider. Who do we look to for provision now? You know, the very Jehovah Nissi, Jehovah Tzidkenud, all the different names of God. They all have different meanings. My healer, my giver of wisdom, my protector, my refuge, my provider, et cetera. We look to the government for each and every one of those things now. We've literally worshipped government and allowed government to usurp God in every single part of our lives. And if it wasn't already obvious enough, it became glaringly obvious during COVID. And I think one of the most urgent needs in the world today is for Christians to get on our knees before God and repent of idolatry and worshipping government and obeying government, even where the government is the one causing misery. Even where the government has become crooked, like what Psalm 94 talks about. We've obeyed government instead of God. And the most urgent thing now is repentance in the church. I wasn't expecting us to go down this angle, but I'm enjoying this. You mentioned about not forsaking Hebrews 10, 25. It said, not giving up meeting together as some are in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another and all the more as you see the day approaching. And how much closer are we to that day 2,000 years later? And there's no opt-out. The Bible is full of laws, of ideals, of examples, of guidelines for us to live by because God knows best because God made us, and therefore he's the one that knows the best way to live. There are no opt-outs. And certainly I remember being in one church, Church of England Church, and they said, oh, we need to wait until the government announce their guidelines later this week to know if we can meet and sing in the park this weekend. I think, well, we've already been told not to forsake gathering. What's wrong with meeting out in the open? I mean, Jesus didn't stop going and speaking in synagogues because people had leprosy. Actually, no, he went there. And there were so few. I think in the UK, I don't know of any church that actually, there was one church that had a legal fight, but they still shut the doors. I know I went to a big event with a Pentecostal preacher, Rodney Howard Brown. He was the only person, I mean, the first pastor in America. And it was interesting that the more traditional evangelical part of the church said, we need to be good citizens, and that means doing what we're told to do. Then you have the more Pentecostal or charismatic said, no, no, no, the Bible says this, so we do this. I was interested in seeing that division. But certainly, I've seen hook, line, and sinker that churches across the UK accepted everything the government told us to do. And you're saying you saw exactly the same in Australia. And there's been no change of that. There's been no apology. As you said no repentance for saying we got it wrong but if this happens again we will follow god's law not man's law yeah this Is such a crucial thing, it's such a tragedy that I actually know the names globally of most of the pastors that really did stand up. John MacArthur in the U.S and I think he was in California. Arthur Polowski a Polish immigrant to Canada. Bishop Marmari in Sydney who actually since got stabbed. He survived and thankfully he's okay, but he was one of the correct, he was a Coptic, I think, no offense if I get this wrong, Bishop, but I believe he's a Coptic or an Orthodox Christian and was really speaking up. There was a Catholic church in Jindera that was really good in a remote Australian outback sort of town. But these are the exceptions, right? I shouldn't be able to name the ones that stood up and did the right thing. When I challenged my own pastor on this, he said, Topher, I can't do what you want me to do, because the government will take away our funding for the soccer academy that we run for the migrants. Right? Now, I, I've read my Bible from cover to cover in a couple of different translations. And I, I just, I've tried, but I can't remember the verse that says, go ye into all the world and run soccer academies. I've, I'm going to have to go back and just study again and just try and find that verse because what's happened now. I mean, there's a reason why Jesus specifically warned, warned us and said, you cannot serve God and mammon. Why did he pick mammon? You can't serve God and sex. You can't serve God and bar. You can't serve, you know, God and your belly. Why did he pick mammon as the thing? Well, because that's going to be the key core temptation. And this is what we see, particularly in the established churches, because the business of church and the property and the building and the maintenance and the tithes and everything else is such an important thing. Governments have been very clever. They turned around a hundred odd years ago and said, oh, instead of you being excluded from the tax code entirely, let's give you a special charitable tax exempt status that brings you into the tax code. And then you'll be eligible for government funding for programs, for charitable stuff, right? We're doing it to help you. We're going to give you money and you can do more ministry, right? And luring churches with money into compromising and contracting with government and becoming just another civil, just another corporation, really, that just has a few special perks. Fast forward a hundred years and we get to a situation where pastors aren't willing to speak on transgenderism or abortion. Oh no, I better not talk about anything political. Oh no, I better not stand up for our right to actually worship God during a pandemic. I better not do those thing, because I'm going to lose these special privileges that the government has given me. Well, excuse me, who's your provider? What does the Bible say about that? And this is why I say, and I've ruffled a lot of feathers. I've got a lot of people's noses out of joint because I speak at the church and state conferences in Australia and elsewhere. And I challenge pastors and I challenge church guys. I'm not trying to cause damage to the church, but please hear me out. If your pastor compromised during COVID and has not repented, all right, I'm all about forgiveness, all about second chances. Is if your pastor made mistakes and then went, guys, I got that wrong. I'm so sorry. This is what I've learned. This is what I'm going to put in place to make sure I never do that again. Great. Great. All for it. But if your pastor still insists that shutting down was the right thing to do and turning away people who were in desperate need of help was the right thing to do right at a time when people needed the church the most. I mean, if your instinctive reaction when there is a threat to people's temporal lives is to lock the doors of the house that has eternal salvation, if that's your instinctive reaction, then you don't understand what it is that you do as a Christian pastor. You hold the keys to eternal life. When there is a temporal threat, when there is a pandemic, if it's the Black Death, for goodness sake, you should be throwing the doors of the church open, wheeling the speakers out onto the steps, cranking that thing up as loud as you can and saying: come one, come all, repent for your day of judgment could very well be at hand. And if you get word from the government, there's a pandemic coming and and your reaction is to shut your doors and turn people away, I put it to you that you are probably in the wrong profession. A hundred percent. We have pastors who want to be liked more than they want to do the right thing. And I'm a grew up pastor's kid. I've been involved in huge churches. And when you get to see behind the scenes, it is a desire to be liked and to do what you think the government. But it's this issue of which I think is the key issue and it's an issue that we will face here in the UK in the next five years. It's the tax exempt status. It's the charitable status, it is the money in the UK you get tax back. So, if you're a taxpayer, you give your 100 pounds to the church and then the church gets an extra 20 back. And most churches survive on that and if that was taken away they couldn't survive and this is why I've been at churches and pastors have have apologized for suggesting that abortion may be murder. They've apologized for saying that actually transgenderism may be wrong. I had a pastor who told me the way he combats the attack on sexuality is he has a bookmark in his Bible with man and woman in it. And that bookmark means that he is speaking truth. And of course, in the COVID, that's time and time again. And I can see, certainly in the UK with the Labour government, which we have a uni party, of course, it's no different than the Tory Labour Party. This is not on one side. It's the same thing. But I can see churches being told, unless you sign up to these pledges, the good citizen pledges, then you will lose your charitable status. And 99% of churches will happily sign up for the money. So you're 100% right. And this is the tragedy. So in Australia, we had a referendum recently around whether the government should redefine marriage to include same-sex couples, all right? And a lot of Christians, because the result was, yes, we should redefine marriage to include same-sex couples. And a lot of Christians said, oh, no, we lost the marriage debate. I say, well, no, no, no, hold on. We lost the marriage debate back in the 1950s when federal legislation was passed to create a federal marriage certificate. Because before then, you got a marriage certificate from your church. The government had nothing to do with marriage. And then in the 1990s, maybe early 2000s, then Prime Minister John Howard introduced legislation to introduce into the wording of the Marriage Act, man and woman. Because it didn't actually have it. It was assumed in the 1950s. They didn't have to define that in the 1950s. And then the church in the 1990s is like, yes, yes, yes, we've won. No, no. What we've said, what we've done is we've taken a sacred institution, marriage, and we've put it under a secular governance now. We've said this thing that God created can now be defined and redefined by government. I don't care whether you like the government's definition right now or not, the minute you concede to them the power to have a definition, then you've lost. And sure enough, 30 years later, there was a referendum and the definition was changed and all these Christians are like, oh no, we've lost the marriage debate. No, you lost that in the 1950s. We need to stop taking things that are sacred and putting them into the hands of secular governments. That is idolatry. We are worshipping government and it has to stop. Have you always been, I mean, from the beginning focused on the church being engaged and involved in society, because I think a lot of people have seen the collapse of the church during Covid, but then you go back further and you see at separate points in history of each of our countries you see the capitulation of the church to state mandates in varying degrees. But I've, it's you kind of, we've seen it very starkly with, we all thought, we all believed, actually, the state will not stop churches meeting. That'll be the last, you know, they may come in on what we believe on doctrine issues, on the culture wars, but actually, we'll still be allowed to meet on Sunday, so it's all good. And suddenly, that key right for Christians to gather together, share fellowship together, that's now taken away. Has that been partially the the last straw in people's engagements. I mean, how have you seen it in your involvement along that journey? Yeah, I'm going to answer something else before I answer your actual question. Let's stop and think for a moment what a low bar that is to set. Oh, at least the church allows us to meet. Well, the church in China is allowed to meet, right? You can be a Christian in the UK and in Australia and in Canada in exactly the same way that you can be a Christian in China. Just don't say the things that the government says you can't say. Your doctrine just has to to be the government approved doctrine. And then you can be a Christian. You can show up to church, you can wear a cross, you can call yourself a pastor, as long as you only preach the things that the government has approved. Look at how low we've already set the bar and what a terrible compromise that is. To your question, I was raised as a, I'm a pastor's kid. I'm actually, I'm a pastor's grandkid on both my mom and my dad's side. Both of them were pastors. My dad was a pastor, was raised in the church, of course, went through my phase of rebellion and trying to figure out what I actually believe, blah, blah, blah. And then I tried to prove that God didn't exist and I failed miserably. So, I've had to accept that he actually is real. And that the best thing I can do with my life is to pursue him. And as imperfect as I am and as flawed as I am and as a million different ways that I stumble, that's my life mission now. But I considered myself a political commentator. And then over time, I began to realize you can't, there's so many problems in politics that you can't fix without reference to faith, without reference to the underlying values, that inform political policy. So, I started to call myself a political commentator who's a Christian or, you know, a Christian political commentator. And I'm starting to realize, actually, I just need to drop the word political. And I think I'm actually, I actually just need to say, no, I'm a Christian commentator. And because that faith, what you believe about God informs what you believe about everything else. It involves culture. It involves politics. It involves commerce and employment and healthcare and anything you might want to commentate on is downstream of your belief in God. And so all I am is a guy to drive forklifts, who made a video, who somehow people found my work and said, hey, you keep talking. And now as I've pursued that, I've come to realize the most important thing that I can talk about, the most valuable thing that I can be talking about is faith and God and how best we live in a fallen world. And that's essentially the mission that I've set out to do. So that's why Good People Break Bad Laws is my first book is becoming Good Christians Break Bad Laws as my second book is the realization that I have to talk about the faith side of this, not to the exclusion of the politics. The politics does matter. The culture stuff does matter. But it's all informed by what you believe about God. And that's ultimately where the truth lies. And that's what we need to be talking about. Last question is in terms of you kind of don't think of Australia as being a out-and-out Christian country. Please correct me if I'm wrong. Never been down under, so I could be 100% wrong. But are we moving towards a church that is that is underground, a church that actually needs to separate itself from the state in a way that we haven't seen? I mean we have a we have a state church in the UK: church of England. And that's meant that the state have had 100 control and we now have 24 bishops in the lords that are wetter than any pathetic liberal you'll come across and are more concerned about environmental issues and plastic bags than they are actually about God and his position in society. Do you think in Australia you're moving towards actually the church will have to be underground and fairly separate? I think we were headed that way, but I think God is on the move. And I'm going to shamelessly name drop for a moment. Tucker Carlson was in Melbourne recently, and he met with me backstage. My wife and I chatted with him for about 25 minutes. Lovely, gracious man. I was very generous with his time. And we talked mostly about God. That was the number one thing that he and I, that we discussed. And he commented on how dark Melbourne felt spiritually compared to the rest of Australia. And he's absolutely right. Melbourne is a broken city, and there's a spiritual oppression, a spiritual aspect to it. But he also said, do you feel like God's doing something? I said, yes, thank you. We're not the only ones. And all over the place, I'm seeing what gives me huge encouragement is all over the place, including in my own personal faith walk, I'm seeing God calling people to prayer in a new and a fresh and a more powerful way than has been the case since probably the charismatic renewal. And prayer almost always precedes revival. Find me a revival that didn't have an enormous amount of prayer invested into it before it happened. I don't think there is one. And I believe that we're in a phase now where God is calling people to prayer and faithful people, the genuine Christians, the ones who aren't compromising, are coming to prayer. And yes, a lot of the church is falling into apostasy. A lot of the church is walking away from the basic fundamental tenets of the Christian faith and becoming more concerned about social justice and all this sort of stuff. And there will be a split. There will be a bifurcation. But I actually think there's going to be an enormous renewal and an enormous number of people who are just seeking the truth, seeking meaning, recognizing the meaninglessness of third wave feminism, culture war and politics and so much of this stuff, sport, money, all the rest of it. The meaninglessness is becoming really clear for a lot of people now. I think we're actually about to see an enormous revival where an enormous number of people are going to have a come to Jesus moment in the most real and literal sense. Yeah, 100%. I agree with you. And when it gets dark, it's time for the light of Christ to shine brightly. So, we are in that moment, certainly. Topher, really appreciate you coming on all the way over from down under. Thank you so much for your time, sharing a little bit about your story and fascinating how you see the church getting engaged, involved, and where that... Your book, you can obviously get as an e-book, you can get as a paperback. It's available here in the UK. As it will be down under. I'm sure it's available in the US. And Battleground Melbourne, what's the website again? So, the website for the book is goodpeoplebreakbadlaws.com. You can order it from Australia along with shirts and hoodies and things like that. Or you can go to Amazon and get it, and it'll just get printed in your local market, and you'll receive it that way. Or you can get an e-book, like you said. You can go to battlegroundmelbourne.com. Now, Battleground Melbourne is my multi-award winning documentary. It's an hour and 40 minutes long. It's a feature-length documentary. It's very high quality. It's won 14 awards around the world, and it tells the story of what happened in Melbourne at the most locked down city in the world. You can watch it for free. I don't need your money I don't even need your email address. Just go to battlegroundmelbourne.com. It's there. You can watch it. I highly recommend everyone do that. You will be shocked. Even people that lived through it in Melbourne but didn't step outside of their homes, they just did what they were told, they watch it and they're shocked at what happened on the streets of their own city on the other side of that door. And for people in London or around the world, the US, etcetera, I think it's worth seeing because this isn't unique to Australia. This is something that our governments all over the world, including in the US, would have loved to have done if they thought they could get away with it. And it's up to us to make sure that they know that they can't. 100 percent. Topher, thank you for joining us. And all the links for those are in the description. However, you're watching or listening to the podcasting apps. It will be all there in description, just click on and you can get the book, you can watch the film and everything is there. So don't for thanks for your time. Such a pleasure Peter. Thank you.

Eating Habits for Life
Break Bad Eating Habits with Mindful Eating (Even with a Busy Schedule)

Eating Habits for Life

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 20:23


I'm diving into how you can break bad eating habits with mindful eating, even with a busy schedule. Especially eating habits like mindless eating, emotional eating, and overeating. Join me as I walk you through simple steps to become more mindful with your meals, from savoring flavors to tuning into hunger cues. I'll also address common challenges and share strategies to help you overcome them. Book a free consultation and get your personal plan to help you lose weight and get the healthy body you deserve.We do this mainly by changing your eating habits and mindset, so the weight stays off.How it Works:Book your free consultation HEREI listen, ask questions, and provide your personal planIf you like the plan, I can help you change your eating habits and lose weight for good.Book your free consultation Reserve your workshop spot here to conquer nighttime snacking habits for weight loss!

The Football Authorities
Is there a good way to break bad news?

The Football Authorities

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2024 48:56


As Gareth Southgate announces his Euro 2024 squad, Clive Tyldesley & Martin O'Neil ask 'Is there a good way to break bad news?' As well as, 'Is the England Manager's job the impossible job?'And the pair peak behind the curtain as Martin reveals what went into his interview process during 2006 after Sven-Göran Eriksson left the England camp.Remember to follow or subscribe, and give us a review too! You can get in touch, we'd love to hear from you! Email us: thefootballauthorities@global.comAnd you can follow Clive @clivetyldesley and Martin @martinoneill31

RNG Radio Show
Tenise Hordge, Visionary Leader, Empowering Speaker, and Coach Interview | RNG Radio Show | Ep. 238

RNG Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2024 20:11


Tenise N. Hordge's remarkable journey, defined by her visionary leadership, showcases her analytical awareness with a BSE in Industrial Engineering and strategic prowess reflected in her MBA. With over 18 years in the corporate world, Tenise courageously transitioned from her corporate career to transform her passion into purpose. As a dynamic and empowering speaker and coach, Tenise embodies the essence of leadership and empowerment. Through coaching and motivational speaking, she serves as a catalyst for personal and professional transformation, inspiring others to "Break Bad" and pursue their true calling. Tenise's story is a testament to the courage to break free from conventional paths, embrace one's passion, and foster unwavering determination. Her words, wisdom, and boundless energy inspire those fortunate enough to cross her path, motivating them on their unique journeys toward greatness. For more information, visit; http://www.tenisehordge.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rngradioshow/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rngradioshow/support

Bounty Hunt: A Star Wars Podcast by Youtini
Prison Break (Bad Batch S3E12)

Bounty Hunt: A Star Wars Podcast by Youtini

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2024 39:40


The Bad Batch is on a mission to save Omega from the hands of the Empire on Mount Tantiss. Meanwhile, Omega must adapt to her new reality as the Emperor's plans become realized. It's all coming to a head as we approach the series finale of Star Wars: The Bad Batch.

The XCandidates
Topher Field Interview - Good People Break Bad Laws - XCandidates Ep110

The XCandidates

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2024 78:45


We are joined by Australia's leading and most recognised Libertarian Political Commentators and Human Right's activists, along with the director of ‘Battleground Melbourne', Topher Field. For more than a decade, Topher has accumulated over 2 million video views, over 150,000 regular followers, 14 film awards and 2 Libertarian awards. He also authored the book, ‘Good People Break Bad Laws', which discusses when civil disobedience is necessary for good Governance. Topher is brilliant in this interview, as he delves deep into the psychology behind what makes certain types of political messages so effective. Topher also touches on his recent departure from the Aussie Wire and what he intends to do in the coming months. Topher is certainly one of the best thought leaders in Australian politics and his intelligence and insights are on full display during this interview. Follow or contact Topher Field at: https://www.topherfield.net https://goodpeoplebreakbadlaws.com https://battlegroundmelbourne.com https://www.facebook.com/TopherField To enter the NREN Reckless Renewables PHOTO COMPETITION, visit: https://www.nren.com.au SHOW YOUR SUPPORT for the X-Candidates at ‘Buy Me A Coffee' – Donate or Sign up for our Membership https://www.buymeacoffee.com/xcandidates TO GET YOUR X-CANDIDATES Merchandise, head to: https://xcandidates.tshirts.net.au Hosted by: • Adam Zahra - One Nation candidate for Macarthur (Federal) and Campbelltown (NSW) https://www.facebook.com/adam.zahra.3 https://twitter.com/AdamZahra2023 https://www.instagram.com/zahra4campbelltown • Steven Tripp – Former candidate for Warringah https://www.facebook.com/RealStevenTripp https://twitter.com/RealStevenTripp https://spectator.com.au/author/steven-tripp Follow us on: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4GIXhHBogM1McL5EPGP3DT Rumble: https://rumble.com/user/ExCandidates Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/XCandidates Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theXCandidates Twitter: https://twitter.com/theXCandidates YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@XCandidates Gab: https://gab.com/XCandidates Gettr: https://gettr.com/user/XCandidates Truth Social: https://truthsocial.com/@ExCandidates Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-ex-candidates/id1631685864 Please share and spread the word! #AusPol #nswpol #interview #podcast #politics #commentary #australia #independent #media #government #liberal #labor #nationals #steventripp #adamzahra #freedom #uap #united #australia #onenation #libertarian #covid #pandemic #topherfield #battlegroundmelbourne #civildisobedience #goodpeoplebreakbadlaws

Self Transformed - Healthy Habits, Time Management, Working Mom, Fitness Tips, Whole30, Easy Meal Prep, Weight Loss

Ooooh, this is a juicy one!  As we continue our HABIT LOOP BOOTCAMP series, I thought today we would cover bad habit loops!  When I work with my clients and take them through my atomic habit hacking system for women, many times the subject comes up as far as how to break bad habits.  This can be done with habit strategy and isn't very complicated!  Today I'm sharing some bad habit loops (or unhealthy or not serving you habits) and how to create healthier ones instead!  **I also just added a bonus module in our signature program the HEALTHY HABITS ACCELERATOR POD COURSE all about bad habit loops!Are you joining us for HABIT LOOP BOOTCAMP? Take the free challenge and create your own habit loops!***HABIT HACKS:-Access the signature program, the HEALTHY HABITS ACCELERATOR POD COURSE!-1:1 coaching more your jam?  Schedule a FREE DISCOVERY CALL to find out more!-CHECK OUT THE FREEBIE VAULT!: Access habit tools, self care checklist, ingredient meal tips, free workouts and more! SEND EMILY A HABIT HACKING QUESTION TO ANSWER ON THE SHOW!LET'S CONNECT:Connect with Emily:@emilynichols22@habithackyourhealthwww.emily-nichols.com JOIN US FOR HABIT LOOP BOOTCAMP LIVE!

Mindful Muslimah Speaks
The BEST way to break bad habit & welcome Ramadan

Mindful Muslimah Speaks

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2024 38:07


❤️Join us, this Ramadan with all of your Sisters www.mindful-muslimah.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mindfulmuslimah/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mindfulmuslimah/support

Maine Source of Truth Podcast
Topher Field - Good People Break Bad Laws

Maine Source of Truth Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 29, 2024 40:17


All the way from the other side of the globe, our next guest Topher Field from Melbourne Australia speaks to us about morality and how you can't outsource your conscience, it has to come from inside and it is something you need to protect inside yourself and then act upon it when the time comes.He gives us a clear warning that this type of lockdown that he experienced and that we did to some degree here in America could be coming again. “Topher is on a mission to empower people,” and I hope you have time to listen to our discussion and that it inspires you to take action. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xl3QV28my60TopherField.net and @TopherField on Twitter/X.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/maine-source-of-truth-podcast--5501107/support.

Intelligent Conversations
"Turn Outward to Break Bad Patterns" feat. Katherine Lewis

Intelligent Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2024 34:15


Listen to Katherine Lewis share how looking outward instead of inward will enhance your life. Katherine is a UX engineer, podcast host, executive director, and global partnership lead. She struggled with purpose, worth, perfectionism, and workaholism. Tune in now to learn how to be better! Hosted By: Josh Baker Guest(s): Katherine Lewis You can follow Katherine on LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram or YouTube! You can also learn more from Katherine at Medium, Spotify or visit https://www.opportunitymade.com/ Follow the Intelligent Conversations on Social Media to stay updated! Instagram Twitter LinkedIn TikTok Facebook Subscribe to Intelligent Conversations on Your Favorite Place to Listen! YouTube Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Spotify Audible Amazon Music

Ben Davis & Kelly K Show
Break Bad News With GIFs!

Ben Davis & Kelly K Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 4:05


Researchers from Chatham University found that using emojis or GIFs in work emails can soften the blow. Source: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-13103557/emoji-work-gifs-emails-colleagues.html

The Appalachian Podcast
Good People Break Bad Laws with Australian Film Director Topher Field

The Appalachian Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2024 118:17


This show we were joined by Director (Battleground Melbourne) and Author (Good People Break Bad Laws) Topher Field, along with Adrian [redacted] for one of the BEST shows we've ever recorded. Topher is an award winning film director who made a big name during the lockdowns, by standing up against the Covid Regime in his home country of Australia, and we jumped into all that along with talk of Appalachia, overreach, and a lot of fun in between. http://www.patreon.com/getontaphttps://www.appalachianpodcast.orghttps://www.facebook.com/AppalachianPodcasthttps://twitter.com/GetOnTaphttps://www.instagram.com/theappalachianpodcast/https://beinglibertarian.comhttps://www.libertycon.com/https://www.topherfield.net/https://twitter.com/TopherFieldhttps://twitter.com/theaussiewirehttps://www.crawfordandpower.com/https://www.facebook.com/harwellgriceSupport the show

Mornings with the Holy Spirit by Awakening Podcast Network
Prayers That Break Bad Evil Habits (Ep. 381)

Mornings with the Holy Spirit by Awakening Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2024 41:46


Get prophetic inspiration for victorious living. Jennifer LeClaire and others share now-messages, equipping you to overcome and walk in God's purpose for your life.

V SHRED: Better Body Better Life.
Special Episode with Dr. Drew: How to Break Bad Eating Habits and Start Over in the New Year

V SHRED: Better Body Better Life.

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2024 65:53


Happy New Year!!! We have a packed episode today with the great Dr. Drew! Dr. Drew Pinsky is an Addiction Specialist, Board Certified Internist, and today we dive deep into the science behind habit building, overeating, food addiction and share a whole host of wonderful tips to help you start the New Year off on the right foot! You can't afford to miss this one! Building a proper diet can be confusing! Let our V Shred Certified Coaches create a customized meal plan suited to your needs. Discover more by clicking here ⇒ https://vshred.fit/4C8 Special Guest: Dr. Drew.

The Daily Motivation
Break Bad Body Language Habits | Vanessa Van Edwards EP 479

The Daily Motivation

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2023 7:09


Vanessa Van Edwards details what body language conveys leadership. She recounts how Nixon lost his presidential bid by looking ready to flee while injured, versus Kennedy's open yet grounded posture. Van Edwards explains appearing confident comes from taking up relaxed space, with distance between ear and shoulder signaling authority. She advises avoiding nervous gestures like crossed arms that physically and mentally constrict strategic thinking. Van Edwards suggests displacement tactics like props to break bad habits. By settling into place, using humility hands, and speaking louder to project vocal power, she describes nonverbals that feel and appear confidently in command.LISTEN TO THE FULL EPISODE!Sign up for the Greatness newsletter!

Barrel Racing Tips Podcast
Create New Muscle Memory to Break Bad Riding Habits

Barrel Racing Tips Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2023 24:12


In this replay of episode NINE I described three different methods for effectively re-training your muscle memory to change specific riding habits in your competition runs. Find many more resources to help you be a better barrel racing jockey at BarrelRacingTips.com. Please subscribe, rate & review to help support on-going content and resources - thanks for listening! Click here to support the show.

CRAFTed Entrepreneur
5 Keys To Break Bad Money Habits (& What To Do Instead)

CRAFTed Entrepreneur

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2023 26:56


Get ready to reach next level wealth! It all starts with changing your identity and your habits around money. Links + Resources:Get executive coaching with Cayla Craft! - Submit Here!Increase your INCOME, PORTFOLIO, and IMPACT!https://caylacraft.com/Check out the program to Rewire YOU for Business & take your business to the next level!Caylacraftpodcast.comCONNECT WITH CAYLA!Follow Cayla on Instagram @cayla.craftWebsite https://caylacraft.com/Watch + Subscribe on YouTube - Cayla CraftToday we're talking about overcoming bad financial decisions that we've all made at some point. I'll share some of my own mistakes like overspending when money started coming in easily and the mindset and habit shifts to take your financial power back. I'm giving practical tips to live within your means, get out of debt, create a true emergency fund, avoid FOMO investing, and create a vision and plan for your money. My hope is that you take away some practical strategies to change your mindset and habits so you can avoid repeating those mistakes and truly prosper. 04:00 The biggest mistake we made when we first started making money.08:00 How to avoid FOMO investing.12:30 Overcoming overspending habits and building wealth. 17:15 Financial mindset and goal-setting that will set you up to create wealth.22:15 Saving money by gamifying spending habits. 27:30 How to build discipline to change poor money habits.36:00 The red flag I avoided when investing out of FOMO.40:45 Ways to find the root of poor financial decisions so you can change them.45:30 How is your inner circle impacting your wealth game? 50:30 Gamifying finances for better investment opportunities.

The Thomistic Institute
No Justice Without Mercy; No Mercy Without Justice | Prof. Gary Anderson

The Thomistic Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 65:52


This lecture was given on March 30th, 2023, at Harvard University. For more information on upcoming events, please visit our website: thomisticinstitute.org/upcoming-events Speaker Bio: Professor Gary Anderson is the Hesburgh Professor of Catholic Theology at Notre Dame University. He holds a B.A. from Albion College, an M.Div. from Duke University, and a Ph.D from Harvard University and previously taught at the University of Virginia and Harvard Divinity School Prof. Anderson has won numerous awards including most recently grants from the American Philosophical Society, Lilly Endowment and the Institute for Advanced Study at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Prof Anderson's is well known for his books Sin: A History and Charity: The Place of the Poor in the Biblical Tradition (Yale University Press, 2009 and 2013). His newest book, That I May Dwell among Them: Incarnation and Atonement in the Tabernacle Narrative will appear this coming November. Some recent articles include: “To See Where God Dwells: The Tabernacle, Temple, and the Origins of the Christian Mystical Tradition;” “The Roman Church as Casta Meretrix;” and “God Doesn't Break Bad in the Old Testament.” Anderson served as President of the Catholic Biblical Association from 2013-14.

Church Life Today
Meth, Money, and Marriage, with Gary Anderson

Church Life Today

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2023 42:08


Once when my eldest son was about five years old, we happened to be reading the first chapter of Mark's Gospel when we came upon the account of a man with an unclean spirit. My son asked me what that meant. I didn't know how to answer so I said: “What do you think?” He didn't know. So we read it again. He noticed that the unclean spirit did not want to be near Jesus, and he knew that Jesus was God with us. I asked my son, “well, what do you think an unclean spirit is now?” And he replied: “I guess it is wanting to live in the world without God.”My guest today on the show is not a five year old child, but rather Gary Anderson, the Hesburgh Professor of Catholic Thought in the Department of Theology at the University of Notre Dame. We are going to talk about his read of the show Breaking Bad and its central character, Walter White, whom Professor Anderson sees as a profile in the determined resolution to live in the world without God. But unlike the unclean spirit in Mark's Gospel, Walter White doesn't even acknowledge God or recognize the possibility of his presence. For him, “there is nothing but chemistry here.”My conversation with Professor Anderson follows a lecture that he delivered for a conference on the shows Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul that was hosted at Notre Dame in May of 2023. His lecture at the conference bore the title “Science and Marriage in the Life of Walter White.”Follow up Resources:●     Webpage for “Gilligan's Archipelago” conference, where videos from each of the five lectures will be posted when available.●     “Men and Women in Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul, with Francesca Murphy” podcast episode via Church Life Today●     “God Doesn't Break Bad in the Old Testament,” essay by Gary Anderson in Church Life JournalChurch Life Today is a partnership between the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame and OSV Podcasts from Our Sunday Visitor. Discover more ways to live, learn, and love your Catholic faith at osvpodcasts.com. Sharing stories, starting conversations.

English Academic Vocabulary Booster
2082. 125 Academic Words Reference from "Elizabeth Lyle: How to break bad management habits before they reach the next generation of leaders | TED Talk"

English Academic Vocabulary Booster

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2023 113:29


This podcast is a commentary and does not contain any copyrighted material of the reference source. We strongly recommend accessing/buying the reference source at the same time. ■Reference Source https://www.ted.com/talks/elizabeth_lyle_how_to_break_bad_management_habits_before_they_reach_the_next_generation_of_leaders ■Post on this topic (You can get FREE learning materials!) https://englist.me/125-academic-words-reference-from-elizabeth-lyle-how-to-break-bad-management-habits-before-they-reach-the-next-generation-of-leaders-ted-talk/ ■Youtube Video https://youtu.be/Ytxjw5BaIB8 (All Words) https://youtu.be/2CEAUreMqKI (Advanced Words) https://youtu.be/E7rGxyWki6I (Quick Look) ■Top Page for Further Materials https://englist.me/ ■SNS (Please follow!)

Ben Davis & Kelly K Show
Doctors Using AI To Break Bad News

Ben Davis & Kelly K Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2023 4:35


We learned that some doctors are starting to incorporate emojis and some even using AI to help with breaking news to patients. We wondered what that would sound like!

Body Habit Rescue | Mom Health and Fitness, Burnout, Self-Care, Mindset, Strategic Habits and Routines

Are you trying to DIY your way to better health, and whatever you do, however many times and ways you try, you just can't seem to figure out how to gain traction? Are you trying all the things - the diets, the workouts, the juices, the smoothies, and nothing seems to work? In this episode, we talk about what may be getting in the way of your progress, and 4 ways to get you gaining traction on your healthy habits. Let's move, Lu   JOIN the Online Community -> https://facebook.com/groups/bodyhabitrescue Be an INSIDER -> https://bit.ly/bhrinsider Get UNSTUCK in your health goals - http://bodyhabitrescue.co

Parenting is Heart Work
42. How to...Coach Teenagers to Break Bad Relationships

Parenting is Heart Work

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2023 17:58


During this episode, Dr Scott and parenting coach Elena Zwetsloot will talk about how to teach teenager to choose healthy friendships as well as to stop the bad relationships they are in. Friendships are very important for our children and it is important to be wise when choosing friends, because they have a lot of influence on our kids. This is such an important concept for parents as affirmation brings hope and trust in the hearts of children - an parents! Each child is unique and requires a different approach and strategy to help them learn and develop. Using wise practices can help create a strong relationship between parents and siblings. Listen and pass it along!

Women in Sales and Leadership
42. How to...Coach Teenagers to Break Bad Relationships

Women in Sales and Leadership

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2023 17:58


During this episode, Dr Scott and parenting coach Elena Zwetsloot will talk about how to teach teenager to choose healthy friendships as well as to stop the bad relationships they are in. Friendships are very important for our children and it is important to be wise when choosing friends, because they have a lot of influence on our kids. This is such an important concept for parents as affirmation brings hope and trust in the hearts of children - an parents! Each child is unique and requires a different approach and strategy to help them learn and develop. Using wise practices can help create a strong relationship between parents and siblings. Listen and pass it along!

Treasures of our Town
The Boys Break Bad in New Mexico

Treasures of our Town

Play Episode Play 23 sec Highlight Listen Later May 15, 2023 66:45 Transcription Available


Send us a Text Message.Welcome to "Treasures of Our Town," the podcast that explores the hidden gems and unique stories of communities across America. In this episode, we're taking a deep dive into the enchanting state of New Mexico, where we'll be discussing one of the most iconic TV shows of all time - Breaking Bad.Join us as we explore the real-life locations and landmarks that were featured in the hit series, including Walter White's house, Los Pollos Hermanos, and the famous car wash.But we won't just be talking about Breaking Bad - we'll also be exploring the rich culture and history of New Mexico, from its breathtaking landscapes and vibrant art scene to its fascinating Native American heritage. So sit back, relax, and get ready to discover the treasures of our town, New Mexico, and Breaking Bad.LINKSAlbuquerqueRoswellWhite Sands NPCarlsbad NPSanta FeRV TourJoshua InstagramCraig InstagramJoshua's RV VideoBreaking Bad NetflixSupport the Show.FacebookInstagramTwitterYoutube

The Alan Cox Show
Wet Jet/ RIP, MTV News/ Dolly Rock/ Vague Heart/ A.I. Girlfriend/ Breeding Rainbow/ Brit Annoyed/ Poundcake Sports Break/ Bad Gum It!

The Alan Cox Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2023 165:15


Killer Destinations
WHEN GOOD GUYS BREAK BAD: Christopher Dorner - Big Bear Lake, CA 2013

Killer Destinations

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2023 46:53


In 2013, southern California residents were scared. The Los Angeles PD was scouring the region for a suspect who was targeting members of law enforcement and their families. For more than a week he eluded authorities, popping up in a different county every day or so. And you never knew where he would strike again. It took the largest manhunt in southern California's history to bring an end to his reign of terror. 

2 Feet In
Chrisean and Blueface Baby

2 Feet In

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2023 71:29


We are finally back for season 3! In this episode we discuss Chrisean and Blueface's relationship, our shenanigans, and Break Bad relationship between Walter and Skyler.   Rate, Review, and Share if you enjoy. 

Motivation | Health | Self Help with JV Impacts
E1436 | 3 Steps to Break Bad Cycles!

Motivation | Health | Self Help with JV Impacts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2023 8:05


Private Coaching with CJV to become a Generational Shifter! Click Here! to Learn More! E1436 | 3 Steps to Break Bad Cycles! Cycles are going to keep coming up over and over again. Relationships, Money, Relationships etc. We are continuing going through cycles. How do you break them? Listen Now! The #XRP King is Here! https://xroyalty.io/ Free Discord | https://3twarrior.com/discord49541345 Linqto: https://www.linqto.com/?cjevent=b65ecbbec46011ec81b91b3a0a1c0e10 JOIN TODAY! (CRYPTO/MINDSET) | https://3twarrior.com/sales-page-515930741636122245022 3T Warrior Academy YouTube! | https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_e0zCKJyBdLYAvTQBgQrPw 3T Labs Gear and Supplements |https://www.3twarriorlabs.com #podcasting #motivation #health #crypto #cryptocommunity #cryptocurrency #fitness #wealth #generationalwealth #investing #entrepreneurship Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Plumbing the Death Star
How Would You Break Bad?

Plumbing the Death Star

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2023 53:56


Oh no! The boys have some terrible news and need to make money quick to avoid the dreaded Stage 5: Heaven! An honest living is out of the question so hold up and let them crook, the boys are about to break bad. Jackson's inability to swallow a pill once more ruins his life, Zammit decides to embezzle from a podcast company (like in real) and Duscher makes the perfect Kickstarter. Full of impeccable impressions, pickmans and Tax Goodmans, this episode really asks the important question if we've hit a creative height or creative low. Let us know what you think! And of course, house turd fish.Buy our terrible merch here and check out the Bad Brain Boys on Apple Podcasts at apple.co/badbrainboys. Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/plumbingthedeathstar. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Code Freedom
3 Things to Break Bad Paradigms Episode 220

Code Freedom

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2023 10:49


We want to change but we don't know why we constantly slip back into old behaviors. In this episode we'll share 3 things to help you break bad paradigms. Connect with us https://linktr.ee/ebailsjr Code Freedom Podcast http://CodeFreedom.Live Code Freedom Community Fb Group http://www.thewaytofreedom.info Free 30 days of Audible https://audibletrial.com/codefreedom Instagram www.instagram.com/eddiebailsjr Tik Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@freedom_coach Youtube https://www.youtube.com/user/ebailsjr EddieBails.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/eddie-bails/message

WIRED Tech in Two
It's Time to Break Bad Pandemic Learning Habits

WIRED Tech in Two

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2022 10:56 Very Popular


Schools adapted to remote learning, but students also got used to seeking easy answers instead of real understanding. Thanks for listening to WIRED. Check back in tomorrow to hear more stories from WIRED.com.

WIRED Tech in Two
It's Time to Break Bad Pandemic Learning Habits

WIRED Tech in Two

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2022 10:56


Schools adapted to remote learning, but students also got used to seeking easy answers instead of real understanding. Thanks for listening to WIRED. Check back in tomorrow to hear more stories from WIRED.com.

The Brett Johnson Show
#37 When Good Guys Break Bad

The Brett Johnson Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 62:21


What happens when the companies and organizations we Trust turn bad? Uber was recently in news for engaging in criminal activities in order to build its ride-sharing empire. Execs at Uber loved that their own drivers were being attacked. And they joked about the crimes they were breaking. While Uber is an extreme example, it isn't the only company or service doing bad things. In this episode, Former US Most Wanted Cybercriminal Brett Johnson touches on Uber, Zelle, Facebook, IDme, and others while asking the questions: Does anyone care? Why doesn't anyone speak up? Are these corporations any different then millions of cybercooks on the darkweb?

RetireMentorship
How to Break Bad Financial Habits

RetireMentorship

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2022 12:33


The Secret Origins of Mint Condition
83. Mint talks Breaking Bad with guest Keith Tarnowski

The Secret Origins of Mint Condition

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 82:20


In this episode, James, Joe and guest Keith Break Bad by talking all things about Break Bad. They talk about favorite characters, was Walt always a “bad guy”, the rouges gallery of Breaking Bad villains, favorite moments on the show and more. WARNING SPOILERS AHEAD! If you haven' watched Breaking Bad then wait before listening to this episode. Also as a bonus part added to the end of this episode we answer audience questions from July. We are joined by another special guest Richie Garofalo and answer questions from Arco Esposito, Tony Anselmo and Robert Spinelli. 00:00 James opens the show about Breaking Bad, Joe starts off talking about his thoughts on the show after recently finishing watching it, then Keith weighs in with his thoughts, and James gives his overall thought so the show. 4:00 we talk about how you can watch and get invested in the story of people who are criminals, we then talk about how Walter always wanted to be the “bad guy”. 9:35 We talk about our favorite characters in the show 17:40 We discuss the “Monster” that Walter is by letting Jane die, when then move to the most shocking moment in the show. 21:23 Joe talks about the rouge's gallery on the show, and we move into talking about some of the best crime shows on TV. 30:00 Keith asks James about some of his favorite moments in the show, and about how important setting is for a TV series. 36:00 We talk about El Camino, and where the characters would wind up at the end of the series. 46:00 Keith talks about his favorite Jesse scene, we talk about the acting talent of Arron Paul, the awards that Breaking Bad won, and our top 5 TV shows. 1:00:26 We give our audience recommendations.

The AM Podcast: K-Pop & More
99. A2K, BTS' “Break”, Bad Decisions, BM's Strangers, Huh Yunjin

The AM Podcast: K-Pop & More

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 78:04


K-Music Picks: Blue.D Feat. MINO- Nobody: https://youtu.be/rJOdXEJ2gmU Ready to Love - Seventeen: https://youtu.be/yCvSR4lSqTg Connect with us! Youtube: https://youtube.com/channel/UCbZC5JJFo9ECY3g9N0yVK2w Instagram: https://instagram.com/the_ampodcast Twitter: https://twitter.com/The_ampodcast Black into K-pop Coalition (BKC) Links: Twitter: https://twitter.com/blackintokpop?s=21 References https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/981735-bts-jin-turns-office-worker-for-maple-story-s-video-game https://www.billboard.com/music/music-news/republic-records-jyp-entertainment-new-girl-group-partnership-1235117464/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The Infinite Taylorverse Podcast
IT Ep. 76 - Live from Fountain City Con - We Roll Out With a Transformer, We Break Bad, We Meet Some Creators, and So Much More! **SPOILERS!**

The Infinite Taylorverse Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2022 49:28


Welcome to the Infinite Taylorverse!  Here at the Infinite Taylorverse, we talk about all things nerdy and pop culture! Movies, TV, cartoons, comics, books, video games, tabletop games, and so much more! We talk about the latest pop culture news as well as rumors and fan theories.  Be advised that spoilers are eminent! In this, our seventy-sixth episode, we are coming at you LIVE from Fountain City Con.  We roll out with a Transformer!  We Break Bad!  We talk shop with some amazing comic book creators, and so much more! Thank you for strapping in for a ride through The Infinite Taylorverse!

10% Happier with Dan Harris
481: How to Break Bad Mental Habits | Carol Wilson

10% Happier with Dan Harris

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 63:22 Very Popular


There are so many benefits to mindfulness with one of the biggest being the cultivation of more self-awareness. This cultivation can lead to identifying the unhelpful mental habits that can develop over the years.Today we're going to talk to Carol Wilson who offers very clear and practical ways that Buddhist meditation can help us turn down the volume on our unproductive mental habits and be less reactive.Wilson is a guiding teacher at the Insight Meditation Society, where for many years she has taught their annual three-month retreat. She began her insight meditation practice in 1971 in India and in the 1980s she spent a year in Thailand as a Buddhist nun. In this episode we talk about:How to be mindful throughout the dayThe concept of 360 degree awarenessNoticing when one experiences wanting or aversion Why Wilson believes that the root of suffering comes from making it all about usHow seeing torment can help us experience freedom from the selfThe benefits of reflecting on your past acts of generosity Bringing awareness to your motivationsAnd doing a gratitude practice regularly to change the weather pattern in your mindFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/carol-wilson-481See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Unofficial Intelligence
Let's Be Frank

Unofficial Intelligence

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 83:09


This week the guys talk about Little Debbie and all her creme pies. Ben almost ruins his pants, but is able to keep his streak alive and out of his underwear. What's your go-to cocktail? Some alcohols have fallen from the top shelf and are fighting to stay relevant. Juan Soto turns down record contract for 440 million dollars over 15 years and Steve speculates his troubled past. Are sports contracts getting crazy? The guys crunch the numbers and agree that streamers are the problem. Let's be Frank about hot dogs… our apologies for that one… Anthony declares Ball Park franks are the king of the grill! From milk challenges to Sprite challenges, the younger generations are still trying to chug stuff. Shout out Manhattan Special and Snapple Apple. Ben admits he's taking pre-workout and the guys are worried it may lead to meth. Thankfully Ben's trainer won't let him Break Bad. Shout out Better Call Saul!  Unofficial Links: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/unofficial_pod/ (@unofficial_pod) Website - https://www.unofficialpod.com (www.unofficialpod.com) Email - Hi@uipodcast.com https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxb295LgOPGf3AnpMnVwz8g (UI Podcast on YouTube) Unofficial Sponsors: https://www.amazon.com/Aluminum-Minimalist-Integrated-Expanding-Capacity/dp/B09L49NFY3/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?m=A1CSRHDH2QPKAY&marketplaceID=ATVPDKIKX0DER&qid=1649779502&s=merchant-items&sr=1-1 (Vaulted Wallets) https://www.shopzealcbd.com/ (Zeal CBD)

Mind of the Prophet Meditation Hour
An Experiment to Break Bad Cycles in Your Life.

Mind of the Prophet Meditation Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2022 15:23


Welcome, good citizens of Creation, to the 7th episode for The Mind of the Prophet Meditation Hour Season 4! This episode explains another metaphysical magic trick to illuminate your daily dance with Creation. If you are currently experiencing recurring negative cycles, this is the perfect episode for you. Listen in. Apply. Enjoy! To listen to previous Season 4 episodes and experiments, follow The Mind of the Prophet Meditation Hour on any major podcast platform. A video version of this episode is on YouTube. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mindoftheprophet/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mindoftheprophet/support

Being Bumo
How To Break Bad News To Kids

Being Bumo

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2022 39:59 Very Popular


Life is full of ups and downs, and becoming a parent does not exempt you from going through hard times. The question is, how do we talk to our children about difficult topics or hardships that we are going through? Can they handle difficult news? In this episode we discuss how we have handled having to give our children bad news and how our parents handled it when we were little. We also share the "sandwich method" and why we think it's important to talk to our children even if it is to give them bad news.    Be a part of our community and follow us HERE:   www.instagram.com/bumoparent   To connect with Sara Sohn:   https://www.instagram.com/mommasohn   To connect with Chriselle Lim: www.instagram.com/ChriselleLim   Come visit us at BumoWork: https://www.bumowork.com     Head to vincecamuto.com/podcast and use promo code PODCAST for 20% off your next purchase      Get 25% off Block Star Daily Mineral Sunscreen when you go to www.blissworld.com and use code BUMO     Get 35% off site wide when you go to www.cozyearth.com and use code BUMO     Produced by Dear Media   

Blood Lines
Break Bad, Bowl Good

Blood Lines

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2022 70:34


The Blood Lines podcast is your one-stop-shop for sports news as fresh as Subway bread. Co-hosted by Brad Kirshenbaum and his brother-in-law Tyler Hamik & supervised by the Sergeant of Swag, Producee Ollie “The Sandro-Man” Godfrey! Intro (0:00-1:50) Gang Catches Up (1:51-30:55) Masters Champions Meal (30:56-42:11) BLSC 4 (42:12-44:00) General Picks (44:01-51:06) Clickbait Something (51:07-56:40) Unhinged (56:41-1:06:31) Outro (1:06-31-1:10:34)

Millennial Money
4 Steps to Break Bad Money Habits You Learned From Your Parents

Millennial Money

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2022 33:36 Very Popular


Did you know that 30% of your money behaviors today can be attributed to how you were raised and your genetics according to a study done by the University of Washington? It doesn't matter how old you are, your parents are a big influence on how you manage your money as an adult, the good, the bad, and everything in between. In this episode, I'm sharing my top 4 steps to recognize and break bad money habits that you learned from your parents. LinksRisk Tolerance QuizEpisode SponsorsThanks to Issuu for sponsoring the show. Get started with Issuu today for FREE or if you sign up for a premium account you will get 50% off when you go to ISSUU.com/mymoney.Thanks to OurCrowd for sponsoring the show. Now, you can invest in EduNav, whose patented technology uses machine learning and combinatorial algorithms to guide every student along the optimal path to graduation. Invest in EduNav at http://www.ourcrowd.com/mymoney. Go to http://www.Ladderlife.com/mymoney to see if you're instantly approved for Life Insurance to provide for your family if the unthinkable happens.Shopify is more than a store. Connect with your customers. Drive sales. Manage your day-to-day. Go to http://www.shopify.com/mymoney for a FREE fourteen-day trial and get full access to Shopify's entire suite of features.If you're the type of person who's like me and always thinking about new business ideas and startup ideas, start listening today to the My First Million podcast on any podcast player.FOLLOW & SHARELeave us a 5-star review. Head to this link and let us know why you love the show. Reviews help us continue to grow and bring on more amazing guests. Thank you in advance! http://bit.ly/millennial-money.Love this episode? Share it with a few friends so they can learn these valuable money concepts as well.Be sure to FOLLOW and SUBSCRIBE to never miss an episode!Sign up for my weekly Let's Talk Money email newsletter https://bit.ly/letstalkmoneyemailShannah Shares: Community Q&AHave a Shannah Shares question, submit it here https://www.mmoneypodcast.com Follow Me Here for More Money TipsShannah on Twitter https://twitter.com/shannahgame Shannah on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/shannahgame/See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.