Podcasts about brian l

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Best podcasts about brian l

Latest podcast episodes about brian l

Occulture Youtube en Podcast
La Malédiction Winchester : TOUT est FAUX

Occulture Youtube en Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2025 33:51


La fameuse malédiction Winchester ! Cette malédiction qui aurait frappé cette famille héritière de l'usine de fabrication d'arme du même nom. Sarah Winchester, veuve et dernière héritière de cette industrie aurait tellement été affectée qu'elle aurait fait construire une maison pour occuper les esprits qui la tourmentait. Mais si on vous disait que tout ça n'est qu'une pure création ? Vous ne nous croyez pas ? Alors c'est partie pour un nouveau moment d'Occulte ! --------------------------- Devenez membre de cette chaine pour bénéficier d'avantages exclusifs : https://www.youtube.com/c/Occulture/membership --------------------------- Tous les liens utiles de la chaine (réseaux sociaux, boutiques, chaine secondaire...) : bento.me/occulture --------------------------- Sources : DOCUMENTATION Captive du labyrinthe : Sarah L. Winchester, Heiress to the Rifle Fortune - Ignoffo, Mary Jo Ghostland : Une histoire américaine en lieux hantés - Dickey, Colin Demystifying the Winchester Mystery House". Skeptoid 824 (22 mars) - Dunning, Brian L'histoire d'une femme : Sarah L. Winchester, héritière de la fortune des fusils. Révisé et mis à jour - University of Missouri Press, 2022 The Winchester Mystery House and other haunted places - McAndrew, Frank T. Winchester Mystery House : Fact vs. fiction Skeptical Inquirer (septembre/octobre) - Nickell, Joe. The Mystery Chronicles : More Real Life X-Files - The University Press of Kentucky Winchester Mystery House : San Jose California - Roberts, Mike. The Winchester Mystery House. Skeptical Inquirer (29 décembre) - Stollznow, Karen SITES https://skepticalinquirer.org/ https://skeptoid.com/ https://www.lefigaro.fr/ https://www.francebleu.fr/ https://www.lesechos.fr/ https://www.nationalgeographic.fr/ https://fr.wikipedia.org/ https://en.wikipedia.org/ https://winchestermysteryhouse.com/ https://www.psychologytoday.com Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

La Notte delle Creepypasta
3 creepypasta sui Griffin

La Notte delle Creepypasta

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2024 14:36


Ecco 3 creepypasta sui Griffin inventate. La morte di Brian (L'episodio perduto dei Griffin) https://lostepisodecreepypasta.fandom.com/wiki/Death_of_Brian_(Family_Guy_Lost_Episode) Il suicidio di Meg https://lostepisodecreepypasta.fandom.com/wiki/Family_Guy_-_Meg%27s_Suicide Family Guy Episodio X https://lostepisodecreepypasta.fandom.com/wiki/Family_Guy_Episode_X Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

TRIÓN Live con Luis Oleg
Entrevista con Scarlet Pérez y Brian López

TRIÓN Live con Luis Oleg

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2024 13:49


Scarlet Pérez y Brian López co dirigen el corto "Los De Siempre" y están participando en la edición 2024 del GIFF.

Small Business | Big Insights
Mastering Business Acquisitions and Roll-Ups with Brian L. Shields

Small Business | Big Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2024 43:27


In this episode, we dive deep into the world of business acquisitions with Brian Lee Shields, a seasoned business development and acquisition expert based in LA. With 15 years of experience, Brian has a rich background in private equity and has been involved in over $4 billion worth of investments across more than 15 industries. Listeners will gain valuable insights into business restructuring, turnaround strategies, and managing burnout.Brian and Eric cover a range of crucial topics including:Understanding the fit for business buyersNavigating cash flow investment dealsBuilding and maintaining a strong company cultureConducting thorough due diligenceBrian also shares practical advice for first-time business buyers, emphasizing the importance of:Partnering with a stellar business partnerRecognizing your strengths and weaknessesExamining 100 similar deals before making a decisionTune in to learn from Brian's extensive experience and gain actionable tips to help you succeed in the world of business acquisitions.0:00 Intro4:14 First acquisitions10:25 Integration, leadership, organizational development15:00 Tripling the value of a company18:50 Striking a deal22:40 Strategies to improve business29:00 Doing due diligence36:30 Advice to first-time business buyers40:15 Business partner42:10 Get ConnectedBrian Lee Shields https://www.linkedin.com/in/brianleeshields/BrianLeeShields.comResources Mentioned www.bizbuysell.com

Vietnam Veteran News with Mack Payne
Episode 2817 – Medal of Honor tribute to Army Special Forces SGT Brian L. Buker  

Vietnam Veteran News with Mack Payne

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2024 8:28


Episode 2817 of the Vietnam Veteran News Podcast will feature a story about Army SGT Brian L. Buker and his Congressional Medal of Honor award. The featured story appeared on the Greater Good News website and was submitted by Dan … Continue reading →

Cardboard of the Rings
Episode 230: Never Have I Ever

Cardboard of the Rings

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2024 111:47


Welcome to Jon, Chris, and Eric Thank you to Daniel G, Artur B, Brian L, Brandon A Announcements News Roam Across Rhovanion Retro pre-review Cotr, It's in the game AMA Seastan's Soliloquy

Franja Radial Educativa FIUSAC
Creación de una nueva técnica de remoción de metales pesados

Franja Radial Educativa FIUSAC

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2024 58:36


Creación de una nueva técnica de remoción de metales pesados Invitados: Ing. Brian López Campos (Polonia) y Dr. Edward Guerrero (Guatemala)

Meldon Law & Friends
Episode 135 - Brian L. Harris

Meldon Law & Friends

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2023 44:53


We are very excited about our guest this week on the Meldon Law & Friends Podcast!

Just Creepy: Scary Stories
True Scary CAMPING Stories For A Rainy Night | Hunting, Cryptid, Deep Woods, Scary Forest Encounters

Just Creepy: Scary Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2023 65:08


These are 3 True Scary CAMPING Stories For A Rainy Night | Hunting, Cryptid, Deep Woods, Scary Forest Encounters Linktree: https://linktr.ee/its_just_creepy Story Credits: ►D.D.Wikmanhttps://www.reddit.com/user/Saturdead/►https://www.reddit.com/user/Horror_writer_1717/ ►Brian L. Timestamps: 00:00 Into 00:00:18 Story 1 00:25:52 Story 2 00:59:42 Story 3 Business inquiries: ►creepydc13@gmail.com #scarystories #horrorstories #camping #forest #hunting #deepwoods

Everyday Driver Car Debate
830: SundaySundaySunday, Defy Everyone's Expectations, They're All Coming Soon

Everyday Driver Car Debate

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2023 53:11


The guys' longest film they've ever produced (so far) is released on Sunday, September 10, 2023. They debate brand perceptions for Eric A. and his wife, a bank VP in CA. Then, Brian L. in TN doesn't need 4 doors anymore and wants a fun car. Social media questions ask if the GR Supra is a good example of badge engineering, should sports car trailers become more prevalent, and what are some brands people are (or aren't) talking about? Please rate + review us on iTunes, and subscribe to our two YouTube channels. Write us with your Car Debates, Car Conclusions, and Topic Tuesdays at everydaydrivertv@gmail.com or everydaydriver.com. Don't forget to share the podcast with your car enthusiast friends! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Podcaster's Guide to the Conspiracy
Brian L. Keeley on Conspiracy Liars

The Podcaster's Guide to the Conspiracy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2023 61:25


Josh and M discuss M's interview with Brian L. Keeley, where Brian discusses conspiracy liars (who probably think M and Brian.. and Josh are the real conspiracy liars). — You can contact us at: podcastconspiracy@gmail.com Why not support The Podcaster's Guide to the Conspiracy by donating to our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/podcastersguidetotheconspiracy or Podbean crowdfunding? http://www.podbean.com/patron/crowdfund/profile/id/muv5b-79

THE NETWORK | Episode 40: "When Black Men Panic" featuring Dr. Brian L. Turner

"The Network" with Michael Prejean

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2023 43:13


Follow the podcast on social media: Instagram: @The_Network_Podcast Facebook: The Network With Michael Prejean Follow Dr. Turner: Instagram: @nojagr504 Website: www.drturnerspeaks.wordpress.com Email: drturner504@gmail.com This week's guest is Clinical Psychologist and Xavier University Department of Psychology Chair, Dr. Brian L. Turner. Lock in as we answer some key questions about what black men face in their daily lives, such as: --Do black men panic? --How do panic and anxiety manifest in black men? --What's wrong with black men? Of course, we hit the "Funky Four Corners of Life," and give you "One piece of unsolicited advice" that you didn't ask for, but we give it to you anyway. Subscribe to The Network! You never know, you might need it! Like and share with a friend. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mike493/message

Breakfast Leadership
Interview with Brian L. Slade

Breakfast Leadership

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2023 21:56


Brian L. Slade has held command positions in the Army and the Air Force and received the Distinguished Flying Cross, Bronze Star, and fourteen combat air medals. He attended Utah State, where he earned a BA and was commissioned as an Army Aviation second lieutenant. He's also earned an MA in aviation instruction. Brian currently serves as a lieutenant colonel for Air Force Combat Search and Rescue. Author of None Braver and The Liberators, journalist Michael Hirsh earned his Combat Infantryman Badge as an army combat correspondent with the 25th Inf. Div. in Vietnam. He has produced numerous documentaries and is the recipient of the Peabody and Writers Guild Awards and the Vietnam Veterans of America Excellence in the Arts Award. Buy the book Cleared Hot Today and be the Victor of your Own Story Get Your Copy of Cleared Hot TODAY Brian Slade Linkedin Brian Slade FB Brian Slade Insta www.clearedhot.info

You Are The Current Resident: An NALC Podcast
NALC President Brian L. Renfroe's remarks at the opening of collective bargaining

You Are The Current Resident: An NALC Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2023 9:30


On Feb. 22, 2023, NALC and the Postal Service opened negotiations for their sixteenth collective bargaining agreement. Listen to NALC President Brian L. Renfroe's opening remarks.

The Sensible Sociopath Podcast
Ep 150!! w/ Special Guest Brian L. Richie

The Sensible Sociopath Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2023 81:45


We throw a Pizza Party with our old friend Brian for episode 150. Warnings tale for people wanting to avoid massage parlor rackets. Merch Shop! https://www.thesensiblesociopathpodcast.com/shop Patreon for extra content! https://www.patreon.com/thesensiblesociopathpodcast Donate to help Roma https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=BQTKD2SK9RZAL LIKE, SHARE , SUBSCRIBE, FOLLOW, RATE 5 STARS, BINGE WATCH, WHISKEY, BLOOD SACRIFICE, OBTAIN DNA & CLONE US, REUBEN SANDWICH PARTY --- 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/the-sensible-sociopath/message

Taboo Trades
Bonus Episode: NFTs for Biobanking with Marielle Gross & Brian Frye

Taboo Trades

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 74:18


Today, I'm joined by two fabulous guests: Marielle Gross, Assistant Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh, and renaissance man, Brian Frye, the Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky.  Marielle provides clinical care at UPMC Altoona and her research focuses on the application of technology and elimination of bias as a means of promoting evidence-basis, equity and efficiency in women's healthcare. Today, we're discussing heny, Inc., a start up that Marielle founded that utilizes NFTs to allow breast cancer patients to remain connected to their biopsy results. When patients participate in research studies, their names and identifying features are taken off of their samples – in other words, they are deidentified. What this means is that if researchers find medically relevant information, they can't pass that on to the patient. Nor can patients share in any of the profits that research on their tissue might generate. As we discuss in this episode, Marielle was inspired by the infamous Henrietta Lacks case to create a non-fungible NFT-like token that allows breast cancer patients to track and learn about research on their donated tumor and tissues.  That's where Brian Frye comes in: he teaches courses on patent and intellectural property law, and has published widely about NFTs. Many of his articles are linked in the show notes. Brian is also a filmmaker. He produced the documentary Our Nixon (2013), which was broadcast by CNN and opened theatrically nationwide. His short films and videos have shown in the 2002 Whitney Biennial, the New York Film Festival, and the San Francisco International Film Festival, among other venues, and are in the permanent collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art. If you don't get enough of Brian in this episode, then make sure to listen to my earlier bonus episode: The Plagiarism Taboo with Brian Frye.  Further reading and listening: Marielle S Gross, MD; Amelia J Hood, MA; Robert C Miller Jr, BA, Nonfungible Tokens as a Blockchain Solution to Ethical Challenges for the Secondary Use of Biospecimens: Viewpoint, JMIR Bioinform Biotech 2021;2(1):e29905) doi: 10.2196/29905; https://bioinform.jmir.org/2021/1/e29905 This Pitt professor's startup applies NFTs to bioethics, Technical.ly, Sept. 13, 2022; https://technical.ly/startups/heny-nfts-bioethics-marielle-gross/ The Plagiarism Taboo with Brian Frye, https://www.buzzsprout.com/1227113/episodes/11050801 Frye, Brian L., NFTs & the Death of Art (April 19, 2021). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3829399 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3829399 Frye, Brian L., How to Sell NFTs Without Really Trying (September 25, 2021). 13 Harvard Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law 113 (2022), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3930430 Frye, Brian L., After Copyright: Pwning NFTs in a Clout Economy (November 25, 2021). 45 Colum. J.L.& Arts 341 (2022), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3971240 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3971240 Frye, Brian L., The Art of the Token (March 16, 2022). Stanford Journal of Blockchain Law & Policy, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4059574 

Collisions YYC
Follow the Money - Brian L'Heureux, Selling to Grow - From Marketing to Selling to Growing your Business with Venture Funding

Collisions YYC

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2023 45:45


As Linestar's business expands from a local to a national level, CEO Brian embraces the challenge with determination. With a deep understanding of the utility industry and confidence in Linestar's offerings, he has expertly navigated strategic partnerships to stay ahead of the competition in this rapidly evolving field. Learn the strategies and tactics Brian has employed to establish Linestar as a formidable player in the national utility market.

The Mindset Forge
The Military Mindset of an Apache Helicopter Pilot with Lt. Col. Brian L. Slade

The Mindset Forge

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2023 63:48


Barton and Brian sit down to discuss Brian's book “Cleared Hot: Lessons learned about life, love, and leadership while flying the Apache Gunship in Afghanistan and why I believe a prepared mind can help minimize PTSD”Lt. Col. Slade shares his experience serving in the Air Force and give a military-exclusive look at his book “Cleared Hot,” which details his time at war in Afghanistan and managing post-traumatic stress disorder.For more information on his book: Cleared Hot book, see links: Buy Cleared Hot HereBrian Slade LinkedinBrian Slade FBBrian Slade Instawww.clearedhot.infoBarton on Instagram @bartonguybryanPodcast Website is: https://www.podpage.com/the-mindset-forge-podcast/Join the Mindset Forge Premium membership for $3 / month (Donor Level) or $150 / month for Coaching: https://themindsetforge.supercast.com

WSBC 2.0
The Way of Love - 1 Cor 13 - Brian L.

WSBC 2.0

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2023 37:48


An individual can speak in any language as eloquent as he'd like to be. But if it not infused with love, it's just white noise.   Intelligence minus love equals to ignorance.   Paul is saying it doesn't matter you even self-sacrifice, if you are doing this in order to make people to see you as holy, instead of loving others, sorry, you still gain nothing.   People who are serving in ministries, we should pray to God that, help us to experience his grace thru serving, help us to love others thru what is assigned to us.   With Jesus our love for others no longer is out of our limitation, no longer out of our own strength, we don't need to look inward, Instead we look to Christ.   We need to response in repentance, meaning turn away from our sins, and put our trust and faith in Jesus, then our identity is in Christ then we will be adopted into God's family, as his children and we will inherit a place in the heaven.   We don't love and care for others to expect personal gain, we won't able to do right away, slowly but surely thru the power of Holy Spirit will help us to be more Christ like.   We don't need to boost, we don't need to impress others, nor we need to envy, at church we don't need to proof your worth. We know we all are needy people that's why we need God and each other.   We turn from focus onto myself to focus others, that's how we grow.   Because we have hope in the future in mind, It should shape our everyday life differently.

You Are The Current Resident: An NALC Podcast
President Brian L. Renfroe's installation speech

You Are The Current Resident: An NALC Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2023 33:28


Listen to NALC President Brian L. Renfroe's speech at the installation ceremony on Dec. 17, 2022 in Washington, DC. 

Vertical Momentum Resiliency Podcast

Wow --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/richard-kaufman6/support

Author Hour with Rae Williams
Cleared Hot: Lt. Col. Brian L. Slade and Michael Hirsh

Author Hour with Rae Williams

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2022 39:02


One in three will experience a significant trauma in their life. For army Apache pilot, Brian Slade, his first was in Afghanistan, offering a unique perspective on preparing one's mind for trauma. Cleared ... The post Cleared Hot: Lt. Col. Brian L. Slade and Michael Hirsh appeared first on Author Hour.

WSBC 2.0
Our Gift Giving God - 1 Cor. 12:1 - 11 - Brian L.

WSBC 2.0

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2022 32:02


edit to Sherry's credit

Uncaged Show
UNCAGED With Dr Brian L Kent

Uncaged Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2022 14:33


Dr. Brian Kent is a global leader and senior consultant focusing on International and Domestic Operations. Over the past 3 decades he has worked in multiple levels of leadership with several government agencies to build partner capacity and provide strategy for integration across the Department of Defense and Department of State. This work in emerging technologies focuses in the areas of ISR, Data, Biometrics and Logistics.

Impact Media
Hunker Down 1.3 "Brian L Jones (PopCulture.com)"

Impact Media

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 44:00


Dawg fans! Join Jeremy "The Impact" York each and every week as he talks all things Georgia Bulldogs including highlights, scores, amazing performances and more! On episode 3, he welcomes in Brian L Jones (PopCulture.com) to review last week's win over Samford PLUS they preview the match up between the Dawgs and South Carolina! Bonus: They discuss the origins of Brian's UGA fandom! Come on in and Hunker Down, it's Georgia Bulldogs Football time!

WSBC 2.0
Give or take for the sake of gospel - 1Co. 9:1 - 18 - Brian L.

WSBC 2.0

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2022 38:14


TerraSpaces
Proton XPR Office Hours: Community Marketing

TerraSpaces

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 62:53


Today on the Ether we have a Proton XPR office hours space discussing community marketing hosted by Metal Pay & Proton Marketing Manager Will P Cleaver. You'll hear from Reedicus, vishal.xpr, Crypto Cyclops, Brian L., and more! Recorded on June 15th 2022. If you enjoy the music at the end of the episodes, you can find the albums streaming on Spotify, and the rest of your favorite streaming platforms. Check out Project Survival, Virus Diaries, and Plan B wherever you get your music. Thank you to everyone in the community who supports TerraSpaces.

The Wizard Scroll
Wizard Hang 11 (feat Saul B & Brian L)

The Wizard Scroll

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2022 61:45


Join my coworker Saul, his friend that I've never met & I as we take a jolly ol' wizard stroll down meme-ory lane...Links to everything: https://linktr.ee/thewizardscroll Songs used: Startup-> NEW GAME, Druids Encounter, & Birdman (from Pilotwings 64)- Equip ; Tutankoopa's Threats- Paper Mario OST ; Various Tracks by LiL Bizon ; Iceberg Lab- Crash Twinsanity OST

The Propaganda Report
Wartime Gullibility, The Atrocity Propaganda Playbook & The "Mystery" of Ukraine's "Lady Death" (DNB)

The Propaganda Report

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2022 37:18


Notes & Links from Today's Show Narrative Warfare Part 1: The Use of Narrative In Psychological Warfare | Rokfin Narrative Warfare Part 2: The Use of Narrative In Psychological Warfare | Rokfin   Part 3 of Narrative Warfare: The Use of Narrative In Psychological Warfare | Rokfin   Introduction to Narrative Warfare: A Primer and Study Guide: Maan, Dr. Ajit K, Cobaugh, Paul L: 9781721221417: Amazon.com: Books   Dangerous Narratives: Warfare, Strategy, Statecraft: Maan Ph.D., Ajit K, Clark Ph.D., Howard Gambrill, Steed Ph.D., Brian L., Drohan Ph.D., Thomas, Cobaugh, Paul, Nesic Ph.D., Aleksandra, Holshek, Christopher, Straub Ph.D., Frank G., Ronfeldt Ph.D., David, Arquilla Ph.D., John: 9780578812816: Amazon.com: Books Narrative Warfare: Maan Ph.D., Ajit: 9781986694957: Amazon.com: Books Biden says 'major war crimes' being discovered in Ukraine after he announces new sanctions on Russia | CNN Politics   Pentagon can't independently confirm atrocities in Ukraine's Bucha, official says | Reuters   London's National Gallery Renames Degas's "Russian Dancers" as "Ukrainian Dancers" (hyperallergic.com)   Kremlin explains why it may 'close window' with West — RT Russia & Former Soviet Union   Mystery of Ukraine's 'Lady Death' sniper who became national hero battling Putin's troops - but keeps identity secret (the-sun.com)   Ukraine crisis: China wants to avoid U.S. sanctions over Russia's war (cnbc.com)   Dead rapper's body propped up in club for 'disrespectful' viewing (nypost.com)   Author of ‘How to Murder Your Husband' now on trial for husband's murder - National | Globalnews.ca   News, sport, celebrities and gossip | The US Sun (the-sun.com)   What Jada Pinkett's Lover August Alsina Reveals About Fling in New Song (newsweek.com) Listen, Subscribe, Share the Show, Donate. Help us keep this train rollin! The Propaganda Report on Rokfin The CFR Plots To Shut Up Critically Thinking Americans | Rokfin The Propaganda Report on Patreon Propaganda Report Community (locals.com) The Propaganda Report Store Support Our Sponsors! Donate… If you find value in the content we produce and want to help us keep this train rollin, drop us a donation via Paypal or become a Patreon. (links below) Every little bit helps. Thank you! And thank you to everyone who has and continues to support the show. It's your support that enables us to continue producing shows. Paypal Patreon Subscribe & Leave A 5-Star Review… Subscribe on iTunes Subscribe on Google Play Music Listen on Google Podcasts Listen on Tunein Listen on Stitcher Follow on Spotify Like and Follow us on Facebook Follow Monica on Twitter Follow Binkley on Twitter Subscribe to Binkley's Youtube Channel https://www.paypal.me/BradBinkley https://www.patreon.com/propagandareport https://twitter.com/freedomactradio https://twitter.com/MonicaPerezShow https://www.youtube.com/bradbinkley https://www.youtube.com/monicaperez Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Classroom 127 Podcast
Pros & Cons of Artificial Intelligence

Classroom 127 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 9:07


By Anish K, Jeremy O, Sheetal P, and Brian L

Your Brain on Facts
Earth's Unsung-est Heroes: Black Inventors, pt. 3 (ep. 183)

Your Brain on Facts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 27:22


Congrats to Hearts & Wheels, who won week 2 of #moxiemillion, by sharing the show to help it reach 1 million downloads this month! Necessity is the mother of invention and who was in a more necessitous position than victims of the Atlantic slave trade?  You may revolutionize industries, but good luck getting a patent. 00:47 Patents and law  06:40 Benjamin Bradley 09:10 Benjamin Montgomery 16:30 Thomas Jennings 23:15 Henry Boyd Links to all the research resources are on the website. Hang out with your fellow Brainiacs.  Reach out and touch Moxie on Facebook, Twitter,  or Instagram.  Become a patron of the podcast arts! Patreon or Ko-Fi.  Or buy the book and a shirt. Music: Kevin MacLeod, David Fesilyan, Dan Henig. Sponsors: History's Trainwrecks, What Was That Like, Sambucol Want to start a podcast or need a better podcast host?  Get up to TWO months hosting for free from Libsyn with coupon code "moxie."   The U.S. legal system has both helped and hindered racial justice through our history.  – high points like Brown v. Topeka Board of Education, which said that separate but equal inherently isn't equal, and one of my favorites, Loving v. Virginia. This aptly titled ruling finally overturned laws against interracial marriage, and low points like the notorious Dredd Scott decision, which said that no Black person could be a citizen or sue someone in court.  It's not just the Supreme Court.  As above, so below and that trickles all the way down to the USPTO.  My name's Moxie…   Real quick before we get stuck in: what is a patent?  A patent is a type of intellectual property that gives its owner the legal right to exclude others from making, using, or selling an invention for a set period of time.  Not to be confused with trademark or copyright, which you can hear more about in the episode Copy-wrong, link in the show notes.  Do you *need a patent to sell an invention?  No, but you need one if you want to be the only one to sell your invention.  A patent can't actually stop other people before they steal your idea, as anyone whose had to deal with cheap foreign knockoffs knows.  (That happened to a fellow who designed these amazing motion-sensing LED eyelashes I bought back in my burlesque days; the Chinese knockoffs hit Amazon before his Kickstarter had even finished.)  What the patent does is gives you ammo to go to court for legal remedy… if going to court is fiscally feasible and for most people it's not.   Patents are a form of property, a thing you can own.  When you live in a place were certain people, specifically those from Africa and their descendants kept in bondage in the US, are barred from *having property, that means no patents for enslaved people.  A 19th century law specified that patent applicants had to sign a Patent Oath that, among other things, attested to their country of citizenship.  When the Dredd Scott decision effectively denied Black Americans any citizenship at all, that meant an automatic dismissal of patent applications by slaves.   Nonetheless, Black inventors persisted and were often successful at the patent office despite staggering legal impediments.  As a well known example, George Washington Carver was born a slave but was still issued three patents in his lifetime, a number that is but a shadow of his inventive genius.  The first known patent to a Black inventor was issued to Thomas Jennings in 1821 for a dry cleaning method.  And the first known patent to a Black woman inventor was issued to Martha Jones in 1868 for an improved corn husker and sheller. Well, she might be the first, she might not be; more on that later and by later I mean next week, because my research exceeded my grasp again.   Despite being removed from their homes, intentionally mixed with people from other regions with whom they had no common language, denied an education or even the right to educate themselves, and of course all the outright abuse and atrocities, the enslaved people of America were no less clever than their white counterparts and no less driven to improve their lives.  More so, likely.  When a white man invented a new farming tool, it was saving his tired back.  When a black slave invented a new and improved tool, he was saving his family.  The new idea could save him from lashings, spare his wife working herself to death, save the limbs of his children from the machines of the time.  And of course making yourself more valuable to the person who dictates your fate doesn't hurt.      You'll notice a certain pattern to the stories today, not that that means the stories need telling any less.  And there are always individual details, though most of them will make you face-palm so hard you'll get a cyst.  That's a real thing that happened to my sister back in like 1990 when you made fun of someone else's intelligence with a dramatic slap to your own forehead.  And my husband thinks I'm the critical one.  There are face-palmy stories like a man named Ned, who invented the cotton scraper.  The man who kept Ned in bondage, Oscar Stuart, tried to patent Ned's invention, but was denied because he couldn't prove he was the inventor, because he wasn't.  Stuart went as far as to write to the Secretary of Interior in 1858, asserting that “the master is the owner of the fruits of the labor of the slave, both manual and intellectual.”  Enslaved people weren't actually barred from getting a patent…until later that year, when it was codified that enslaved Blacks were barred from applying for patents, as were the plantation owners.  Undeterred by his lack of patent, Stuart began manufacturing the cotton scraper and reportedly used this testimonial from a fellow plantation owner, and this is the bit where you might do yourself a minor battery: “I am glad to know that your implement is the invention of a Negro slave — thus giving the lie to the abolition cry that slavery dwarfs the mind of the Negro. When did a free Negro ever invent anything?”  Oy vey.     Free Blacks invented *tons of things.  For further reading, look up Granville T Woods, often called “the black Edison,” Woods was a self-taught engineer who received over 50 patents, which is over 50 more than most of us have, but he was clearly able to get patents, so he's outside our focus today.  We're looking at people like Benjamin Bradley, born a slave around 1830 as a slave in Maryland.  Unusually, and illegally, he was able to read and write.  While being made to work in a print shop as a teenager, Bradley began working with some scrap materials, modeling a small ship.  He quickly built his skills until he'd graduated from model ships to building a working steam engine from a piece of a gun-barrel and some random handy junk.  You can't not be impressed by that and the people around Bradley suitably were.  He was placed in a new job, this time at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland as a classroom assistant in the science department.  He helped to set up and conduct experiments, working with chemical gases.  The faculty were also impressed with Bradley in his understanding of the subject matter and also with his preparedness in readying the experiments.     Praise is nice, but a paycheck is even nicer.  Bradley was given a salary but he still “belonged” to a white man, who took most of his money; Bradley was allowed to keep about $5.00 a month, or about $180 today.  Despite having a pretty good set-up at Annapolis, Bradley had not forgotten his steam engine.  He'd sold an early prototype to a student and used that and the money he'd been able to squirrel away from his pay to build a larger model.  He worked his way up to an engine large enough that his engine became the first to propel a steam-powered warship, he was with Navy types after all, at 16 knots, which is about 18 mi/29km.  Because Benjamin Bradley was a slave, he was unable to secure a patent for his engine. His master did, however, allow him to sell the engine and he used that money to purchase his freedom.  So if you have an idea you really believe in, stick with it.   Another Benjamin with a penchant for tinkering was Benjamin Montgomery, born in 1819 in Loudon County, Virginia.  A *lot of these stories start in my home state.  He was sold to Joseph E. Davis of Mississippi planter, the older brother of Jefferson Davis, future President of the Confederate States of America.  Joseph must have been more liberal than Jefferson, because he recognized Montgomery's intelligence and tasked him to run the general store on the Davis Bend plantation.  Montgomery, who'd been taught to read and write by Davis' children, excelled at retail management and Davis promoted Montgomery to overseeing the entirety of his purchasing and shipping operations.     Montgomery also learned a number of other difficult tasks, including land surveying, flood control, drafting, and mechanics.  The golden spike wouldn't be driven in the transcontinental railroad until four years after the end of the civil war, so that meant that natural waterways were still the best and most important way to get widgets, kajiggers, and doodads from A to B.  This wasn't as as simple as those of us of the interstate highway system epoch might imagine.  Nature, in her beauty, is inconsistent and varying and variable depths of rivers made them difficult to navigate.  Heavy spring rains could cause sand bars to shift and, boom, now the boat is stuck and your cargo is delayed.  They lacked the benefit of the comparatively tiny backhoe that tried to dig the Ever Given out of the Suez canal.   Montgomery set out to address that problem – he was in shipping & receiving after all – and created a propellor that could cut into the water at different angles.  With it, boats could easily and reliably navigate through shallow water.  Joseph Davis attempted to patent the device in 1858, but the patent was denied, not because Davis wasn't the inventor, but because Montgomery, as a slave, was not a citizen of the United States, and thus could not apply for a patent.  If this were a YT video, I'd use that clip from Naked Gun of a whole stadium of people slapping their foreheads.  You can actually listen to the podcast on YT, btw.  Later, both Joseph *and Jefferson Davis attempted to patent the device in their names but were denied again.  Ironically and surprisingly, when Jefferson Davis later assumed the Presidency of the Confederacy, he signed into law the legislation that would allow a slaves to receive patent protection for their inventions.  It's like the opposite of a silver lining and honestly a bad place for an ad-break, but here we are.   MIDROLL   After the civil war and the emancipation proclamation, when Montgomery, no longer a slave, he filed his own patent application… but was once again rejected.  Joseph Davis sold his plantation as well as other properties to Montgomery and his son Isaiah on a long-term loan in the amount of $300,000.00.  That's a big chunk of change if that's in today dollars, but back then?  Benjamin and Isaiah wanted to use the property to establish a community of freed slaves, but natural disasters decimated their crops, leaving them unable to pay off the loan.  The Davis Bend property reverted back to the Davis family and Benjamin died the following year.  Undeterred, Isaiah took up his father's dream and later purchased 840 acres of land where he and other former slaves founded the town of Mound Bayou, Mississippi in 1887, with Isaiah as its first mayor.   My research didn't indicate why the free Montgomery's application was refused, but oe assumes racism.  The new language of patent law was written to be color-blind, but it's humans reading the applications, so some black inventors hid their race by doing things like using initals instead of their name if their name “sounded black.”  Others “used their white partners as proxies,” writes Brian L. Frye, a professor at the University of Kentucky's College of Law, in his article Invention of a Slave. This makes it difficult to know how many African-Americans were actually involved in early patents.  Though free black Americans like Jennings were able to patent their inventions, in practice obtaining a patent was difficult and expensive, and defending your patent?  Fuggedaboutit.    “If the legal system was biased against black inventors, they wouldn't have been able to defend their patents,” says Petra Moser, a professor of economics at New York University's Stern School of Business.  “Also, you need capital to defend your patent, and black inventors generally had less access to capital.”  If an issue were raised, credibility would automatically go to the white man.     It's impossible to know how many inventions between the 1790 establishment of the patent office and the 1865 end of the Civil war were stolen from slaves.  For one thing, in 1836, all the patents were being kept in Washington's Blodget's Hotel temporarily while a new facility was being built, when a fire broke out, which is bad.  There was a fire station next door, which is good,  but it was winter and the firefighters' leather hoses had cracked in the cold, which is bad.  They tried to do a bucket brigade, but it wasn't enough, and all 10k patents and 7,000 related patent models were lost.  These are called X-patents not only because they'd been lost but because, before the fire, patents weren't numbered, just their name and issue date, like a library without the Dewey decimal system.  They were able to replace some patents by asking inventors for their copy, after which they were numbered for sure.  As of 2004, about 2,800 of the X-patents have been recovered. The first patent issued to a black inventor was not one of them.   That patent belonged to one Thomas Jennings, and you owe him a big ol' thank you card if you've ever spilled food on your favorite fancy formalwear and had it *not been irrevocably ruined.  Jennings invented a process called ‘dry scouring,' a forerunner of modern dry cleaning.  He patented the process in 1821, to wit he is widely believed to be the first black person in America to receive a patent, but it can't really be proved or disproved on account of the fire.  Whether he was first or not, Jennings was only able to do this because he was born free in New York City.     According to The Inventive Spirit of African-Americans by Patricia Carter Sluby, Jennings started out as an apprentice to a prominent New York tailor before opening his own clothing shop in Lower Manhattan, a large and successful concern.  He secured a patent for his “dry scouring” method of removing dirt and grease from clothing in 1821, or as the New York Gazette reported it, a method of “Dry Scouring Clothes, and Woolen Fabrics in general, so that they keep their original shape, and have the polish and appearance of new.”  I'll take eight!     What was this revolutionary new method?  No freaking clue.  Because fire.  But we do know Jennings kept his patent letter, signed by then Secretary of State and future president John Quincy Adams, in a gold frame over his bed.  And that Jennings put much of his earnings from the invention towards the fight for abolition, funding a number of charities and legal aid societies, the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, and Freedom's Journal, the first black-owned newspaper in America.  Dry-scouring put all of his children through school and they became successful in their careers and prominent in the abolition movement.  His daughter Elizabeth, a schoolteacher, rose to national attention in 1854 when she boarded a whites-only horse-drawn streetcar in New York and refused to get off, like Rosa Parks 101 years before Rosa Parks, except she fought bodily the effort of the conductor to throw her off, hanging on to the window frame.  A letter she wrote about the incident was published in several abolitionist papers, and her father hired a lawyer to fight the streetcar company.  Amazingly, they won – again this was before the civil war, let alone civil rights.  The judge ruled that it was unlawful to eject black people from public transportation so long as they were “sober, well behaved, and free from disease.”  Their lawyer was a young Chester A. Arthur, who would later be the 21st president.   [segue] review   Henry Boyd's story began like the others we've heard, but in Kentucky in 1802.  He was apprenticed out to a cabinet maker, where he displayed a tremendous talent for carpentry.  So proficient and hard-working was Boyd that he was allowed to take on other work of his own, a side hustle as we say these days, and earn his own money and Boyd eventually made enough to buy his freedom at age 18.     At 24-years-old, a nearly-penniless Boyd moved to Cincinnati.  Ohio *was a free state, but Cincinnati sat too close to slave state of Kentucky to be a welcoming city for blacks, and I'm sure a few Cincinnatians would say it's too close to KY for their liking nowadays too.  Our skilled carpenter Boyd couldn't find anyone willing to hire him.  One shop had considered hiring him, but all the white employees threatened to quit, so no joy there.  Boyd finally found work on the riverfront, with the African Americans and Irish immigrants working as stevedores and laborers; Boyd himself was a janitor in a store.   One day, when a white carpenter showed up too drunk to work, Boyd built a counter for the storekeeper. This impressed his boss so much that he contracted him for other construction projects. Through word of mouth, Boyd's talent began to bring him some of the respect he deserved and a good amount of work.  He diligently saved up to buy his brother and a sister out of bondage too and purchase his own woodshop.  Not just a corner garage space; his workshop grew to spread across four buildings.  This was where came up with his next big idea - a bedframe.  Wait, it's interesting, I promise.  Everybody needs a bed and a bed needs a frame.  The Boyd Bedstead was a sturdier, better designed bedframe that was an immediate success…that he couldn't a patent for.  But a white cabinetmaker named George Porter did.  It is not known if Boyd was working with Porter and Porter was his white face for the patent office or if Porter ripped Boyd off.  Either way, the Boyd bedstead became extremely popular, with prominent citizens and hotels clamoring to get them.  The H. Boyd Company name was stamped on each one to set them apart from the knockoffs that such success inevitably breeds.   Not only was his bedstead breaking new ground, but his shop of up to 50 employees was racially integrated.  This social advance was, politely put, not popular.  The factory was the target of arsonists and was burnt to the ground.  Twice.  Twice Boyd rebuilt, but after a third fire, no insurance company would cover him and in 1862 the doors closed for good.  But don't worry about Boyd.  He'd saved enough to live out his retirement comfortably, but he wasn't lounging around.  Boyd had been active in the Underground Railroad and housed runaway slaves in a secret room.  His home was welcoming to the needy as well.  Henry Boyd passed away at the age of 83 and was laid to rest in an unmarked grave in Spring Grove Cemetery.  While you may not be able to find Boyd's grave, you can easily find original Boy bedsteads fetching high prices in antique stores and auctions.   And that's…You might have noticed today's episode was a bit of a sausage party so it's a good thing we'll pick up again next week with the stories, triumphs and tribulations of female inventors of color.  The world has so many fascinating facts in it and I am just a humble weekly half-hour podcaster, so see you next week for part two.  Remember…Thanks     Sources: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/with-patents-or-without-black-inventors-reshaped-american-industry-180962201 https://atlantablackstar.com/2014/02/11/5-inventions-by-enslaved-black-men-blocked-by-us-patent-office/4/ https://www.blackenterprise.com/black-history-month-inventions-black-slaves-denied-patents/ https://amsterdamnews.com/news/2021/08/05/sarah-boone-inventor-ironing-board-and-first-black/ https://theconversation.com/americas-always-had-black-inventors-even-when-the-patent-system-explicitly-excluded-them-72619 https://www.blackenterprise.com/black-history-month-inventions-black-slaves-denied-patents/ http://www.blackpast.org/aah/reed-judy-w-c-1826 https://web.archive.org/web/20180802193123/https://www.uspto.gov/about-us/news-updates/uspto-recognizes-inventive-women-during-womens-history-month https://www.yesmagazine.org/health-happiness/2016/03/21/10-black-women-innovators-and-the-awesome-things-they-brought-us https://www.nkytribune.com/2019/02/our-rich-history-henry-boyd-once-a-slave-became-a-prominent-african-american-furniture-maker/ https://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/first-african-american-hold-patent-invented-dry-scouring-180971394/ https://blackinventor.com/benjamin-bradley/ https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/goode-sarah-e-c-1855-1905/

Ipse Dixit
Rebecca Curtin on Fanny Holmes's Impact on Bleistein

Ipse Dixit

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2022 31:01


In this episode, Rebecca Curtin, Professor of Law at Suffolk University Law School, discusses her article "The Art (History) of Bleistein," which will be published in the Journal of the Copyright Society. Curtin begins by explaining why Justice Holmes's opinion in Bleistein v. Donaldson Lithographing Co., 188 U.S. 239 (1903) is such a landmark of copyright doctrine. She observes that Holmes made many unusual and unnecessary observations about the nature of art in the opinion, and argues that his perspective was influenced by his wife, Fanny Holmes, who was a successful artist, working in the medium of embroidery. She describes Fanny Holmes's work, why it has been largely lost to history, and how it might have affected Holmes's opinion. Curtin's scholarship is available on SSRN.This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

BLive Media Podcasts
Writers Corner: Brian L. Tucker with “The Scary, Gray Shark”

BLive Media Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2022 33:00


Oceanic life is beautifully captured in this new children's book written by local author Brian L. Tucker. “The Scary, Gray Shark” is the adventure of Zella, a fourteen foot bull shark alone at sea. Zella pulls readers along on a quest to find a friend, including an octopus, and a manatee. With unexpected luck, Zella swims upon Leah, a kind-hearted dolphin. Children will love seeing the unlikely pair meet, and the book is a perfect instructional aid for children who've experienced bullying firsthand. A new father himself, Tucker has garnered quite a few recent children's books in their home library. Combining his love of the ocean with the message of anti-bullying, he decided to write a book showcasing how a shark might handle adversity at sea. “Many children do not get to see what a truly special gift friendship is. I wanted to create a book that would be fun and imaginative while also encouraging children to explore what makes friendship work and bullying never okay,” Tucker said. Visit www.brianltucker.com for more details and to follow along. Get the book on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3FTQEhX #Ad --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/blivemedia/message

Mary English Astrologer Blog

This week I am covering the charts of a number of people who have Sun square Ascendant, or Ascendant square Sun and have committed a homicide/murder. As mentioned here is my interview with Emily Wyatt on her podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gr/podcast/episode-12-astrology-with-mary-english/id1555955671?i=1000545371626 PLEASE NOTE this is NOT a signature of 'being a killer' What I found was these people had Ascendant = how-I-display-myself-to-others  ...in conflict with their: Sun = who-I-am.   Here are links to the actual chart mentioned https://www.astro.com/astro-databank/LaPlante,_Daniel https://www.astro.com/astro-databank/Baldwin,_Richard https://www.astro.com/astro-databank/McCra,_Gerald_Jr. https://www.astro.com/astro-databank/Rey,_Florence https://www.astro.com/astro-databank/Rooney,_Brian_L. https://www.astro.com/astro-databank/Rex,_John_Jr. https://www.astro.com/astro-databank/Parsons,_John https://www.astro.com/astro-databank/Maso,_Pietro

Ipse Dixit
NFT Notes 5: Mitchell F. Chan on Conceptualizing the Blockchain

Ipse Dixit

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2021 51:50


In this episode, Mitchell F. Chan, a prominent conceptual artist, describes his experiences creating conceptual art on the blockchain and reflects on why it is such a perfect medium for a conceptual art practice. Chan begins by explaining how he made the transition from creating works of conceptual art as large-scale installations into creating them on the blockchain. He describes how he decided in 2017 to translate Yves Klein's pioneering work of conceptual art "Zones of Immaterial Pictorial Sensibility" into an entirely new work that existed as a function of the blockchain and commentary on the relation between the art experience and art object: "Digital Zones of Immaterial Pictorial Sensibility." He reflects on the initial reception of that work, and how it came to be seen as a pioneering work of blockchain art. Among other things, he discusses his "Blue Paper" essay explaining the work. He also reflects on his more recent work, and on the future of NFTs. Chan is on Twitter at @mitchellfchan.This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Unarmored Talk
14 Died During Exercise Purple Star: A Marine Reflects

Unarmored Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2021 30:15


Listen to Andrew Bryson, a United States Marine Corps (veteran), reflect on his experience when a training mission ended after two United States Marine Corps helicopters collided, just after midnight on May 10, 1996, over Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.This episode is dedicated to the Marines, Soldier, and Sailor who died while training for operations overseas:     1. LtCol. Michael D. Kuszewski, of Westminster, Mass.     2. Capt. Scott T. Rice, of Springfield, Mo.     3. 1st Lt. Joseph R. Fandrey, of Norfolk, Mass.     4. 1st Lt. Arthur J. Schneider, of Livingston, N.J.     5. Staff Sgt. Sean W. Carroll (USA), of Newburgh, N.Y.     6. Cpl. Brandon J. Tucker, of Gaston, N.C.     7. Cpl. Brian L. Collins, of Louisville, Ky.     8. Cpl. Britt T. Stacey, of Roanoke, Va.     9. Cpl. Erik D. Kirkland, of Lewisburg, Pa.     10. Lance Cpl. John P. Condello, of Rochester, N.Y.     11. Lance Cpl. Jackie D. Chidester, of Newark, Ohio     12. Lance Cpl. Jose L. Elizarraras, of Orange, Calif.     13. Lance Cpl. Jorge E. Malagon, of Melrose Park, Ill.     14. HM Brent W. Garmon (USN), of New Bern, N.C.     Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, share and follow me at:.       Mario P. Fields - YouTube·       Instagram·       Facebook·       LinkedIn.       Unarmored TalkEmail me at host@unarmoredtalk.comSponsored by Global Inspirational Speakers

Street Cop Podcast
Asking People Out of Motor Vehicles

Street Cop Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2021 12:25


In this archive episode, Dennis stresses the importance and legality of separating drivers and passengers during interdiction. Recorded on 04/17/2018. Pennsylvania V. Mimms - (1977)https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/434/106/case.html?fbclid=IwAR2UlUeWsXT98SEPMIVa_7tmRu3G-u7U49pcKasF24DE88T_YL577J2XCXY (https://supreme.justia.com/.../federal/us/434/106/case.html) Police may order driver out of the vehicle without criminal activity or RAS. Bare this in mind…..if you do not suspect the vehicle of criminality don't get into the habit of ordering driver out of vehicle. State v Brian K. Smith (1997) – Once the vehicle was stopped, Trooper Long was permitted to request Smith to exit the vehicle for the purpose of investigation of the suspected motor vehicle violation. https://law.justia.com/cases/new-jersey/appellate-division-published/1997/a3449-95-opn.html?fbclid=IwAR0QU7NVw_7fR6K0D1OWxyjm-tFmrIcAP48aMuiHNapD2yv9-DE_99a-j_o (https://law.justia.com/.../appella.../1997/a3449-95-opn.html) See State of NJ v. Brian L. Smith (1994) that stated that the Mimms test, as applied to drivers, satisfies the NJ constitution as well. https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Flaw.justia.com%2Fcases%2Fnew-jersey%2Fsupreme-court%2F1994%2Fa-28-93-opn.html%3Ffbclid%3DIwAR1pyM1cEa2oMhmhIkcbE_h06cfVHZG8SCMhkwcVxeqvGkO2T0dTSExfYAU&h=AT2R_tB-87Fff7lRVzLP53IGu2xof6XJUWWNAP60GEskLMq_IvTDOd5uvvlsAwCjj8VWlTT3LO5z5dKYX8HdwiE6LbaN_tMV8sT7JYFPJ5R3zbZUjwEG7JaQBMxVtf76b9HL0lPC1a5a5PXovw&__tn__=-UK-R (https://law.justia.com/.../supreme.../1994/a-28-93-opn.html) The court stated that “Instances will surface in which police officers, with less than a reasonable suspicion that a passenger is engaged in criminal activity or is armed and dangerous, may reasonably order a passenger to step out of a car.” The officer does not need to point out specific facts that the occupant is armed and dangerous rather the officer needs only to point out some fact or facts in the totality of the circumstances that would warrant a heightend caution. Examples…. Proximity to traffic. Bad weather; Poor visibility. Suspicious gestures by passenger(s) (Never say furtive movements, explain what you saw in detail). Ability to control the movements of several occupants. Ability to control the actions of bystanders. Suspicion of Criminal Activity. NOT ONLY LIMITED TO THE ABOVE LISTED REASONS. STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS BRIAN K. SMITH, ET AL :: 1997 :: New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division - Published Opinions Decisions :: New Jersey Case Law :: New Jersey Law :: US Law :: Justia Police may not routinely ask passengers out of a vehicle that has been stopped for a traffic violation. HOWEVER, NJ law states passengers can be asked out of the vehicle, when an officer is able to point to some specific fact(s) that would warrant a heightened caution. This can be anything to include R.A.S. (State v. Brian L. Smith 1994). This does not have to include a danger factor. https://law.justia.com/cases/new-jersey/supreme-court/2017/a-9-15.html?fbclid=IwAR26bOyVmaAauWtJ54XX_Xva9JUsVpW06fTymmW7T5BWhbkCh-IRPf2mk8A (https://law.justia.com/.../supreme-court/2017/a-9-15.html)

Newsradio 1070 WKOK
10/15/21 WKOK Sunrise: Brian Kerstetter

Newsradio 1070 WKOK

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2021 13:15


Brian L. Kerstetter, Lewisburg, Attorney, Law Office of Brian L. Kerstetter, Republican Court of Common Pleas Judicial Candidate Union/Snyder County, 17th Judicial District on his success in the spring primary, why he is running, how judge candidates can campaign, what are his key issues in the campaign, and how can he differentiate himself in the election for judge. We'll discuss his background, qualifications, and goals if elected. We can't discuss specific cases, but we'll mention his familiarity with the judicial system, mentors, endorsements and temperament.

Ipse Dixit
Thomas J. Tobin on Copyright & Higher Education Quality

Ipse Dixit

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2021 39:30


In this episode, Thomas J. Tobin, an author, speaker, and scholar of higher education quality discusses his work on copyright education and distance learning. Among other things, he discusses how became interested in distance learning, how it lead to an interest in copyright policy and education, and the different ways in which he has advanced that conversation. He also describes the process of creating his comic book "The Copyright Ninja," and how it is used by copyright educators. Tobin is on Twitter at @ThomasJTobin. He has also shared the following links:UW-Madison Center for Teaching, Learning, & Mentoring: https://ctlm.wisc.edu/ The Pre-Raphaelite Critic: https://mathcs.duq.edu/~tobin/PR_Critic/ "Copyright for Distance Educators" (2000), Distance Learning Administration conference: http://mathcs.duq.edu/~tobin/cv/essay.dla.02.ppt"Copyright for Distance Education" (2001), Intellectual Property and Digital Information in Higher Education: Problems and Solutions. Temple University: http://mathcs.duq.edu/~tobin/cv/essay.temple.01.rtfCopyrightx: https://cyber.harvard.edu/teaching/copyrightx"Training Your Faculty about Copyright when the Lawyer Isn't Looking" (2014), Online Journal of Distance Learning Administration: https://www.westga.edu/~distance/ojdla/summer172/tobin172.htmlKneece, M. (2015). The Art of Comic Book Writing: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/220559/the-art-of-comic-book-writing-by-mark-kneece/Michael Watson, comic-book artist: https://www.facebook.com/5KWATTSThe Copyright Ninja (2017): https://squareup.com/store/thomasjtobin (US), http://mathcs.duq.edu/~tobin/cv/copyright.ninja.canada.html (Canada)This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Street Cop Podcast
Ordering Passengers Out of Vehicle / Heightened Caution

Street Cop Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2021 8:22


In this archive episode, Dennis talks about ordering passengers out of vehicles and the meaning of heightened caution. Recorded on 08/17/2017. State v Bacome 2017 http://law.justia.com/cases/new-jersey/supreme-court/2017/a-9-15.html?fbclid=IwAR2Zpok_sEctBhLVUZX3smxpBP3RjU6APUlt8XZtxnRNAX5pYZhN9EPvgfc (http://law.justia.com/.../supreme-court/2017/a-9-15.html) In April 2011, detectives were engaged in an undercover drug patrol in Woodbridge when they observed defendant Taiwan Bacome driving a blue Ford Bronco. S.R., the owner of the Bronco, was riding in the front passenger seat. Having previously encountered both men, detectives knew the men used and dealt narcotics. The police department had also received complaints from defendant's neighbors of a lot of traffic coming and going from [his] apartment, which, in the detectives' experience, is often indicative of narcotics activity. In their unmarked vehicle, the detectives followed the Bronco, losing sight of it shortly after arriving in an area of Newark known for crime and drug trafficking. In an attempt to pick up the Bronco's trail, the detectives drove back to Woodbridge, presuming that defendant and S.R. would return there with newly purchased drugs. About an hour later, the detectives observed the Bronco re-enter Woodbridge. The detectives resumed surveillance and, after they both observed S.R. in the passenger seat not wearing his seatbelt, they conducted a traffic stop. In this appeal, the New Jersey Supreme Court clarified the circumstances under which police officers may require a passenger in an automobile to exit a vehicle after a valid stop. The first detective reported that he saw defendant lean forward as if he were reaching under his seat and immediately ordered defendant to exit the vehicle. The second detective then ordered S.R. out of the passenger's seat. Both occupants complied. Defendant specifically challenged S.R.'s removal from the vehicle. The trial court found that defendant's reaching under the seat created the heightened caution that warranted S.R.'s removal. The Appellate Division reversed, finding the detectives failed to prove "heightened caution." The Supreme Court reversed, finding that while the heightened caution standard remained the proper test for determining the appropriateness of ordering a passenger from a car, defendant's movements inside the stopped car was an objectively reasonable basis to justify removal of the passenger. State v Brian L. Smith 1994 Although the per se rule under Mimms permits an officer to order the driver out of a vehicle incident to a lawful stop for a traffic violation, we decline to extend that per se rule to passengers. Instead, we determine that an officer must be able to point to specific and articulable facts that would warrant heightened caution to justify ordering the occupants to step out of a vehicle detained for a traffic violation.http://law.justia.com/cases/new-jersey/supreme-court/1994/a-28-93-opn.html?fbclid=IwAR29npF5cXbcyx62Hj_z1Tq_WIqj0_5rQO0d8PK3Og9Tj1W1SOvZI5C7TsU (http://law.justia.com/.../supreme.../1994/a-28-93-opn.html)

Ipse Dixit
Ben Edwards on Self-Regulatory Organizations & Judicial Risk

Ipse Dixit

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2021 36:55


In this episode, Benjamin P. Edwards, Associate Professor of Law and Director of the Public Policy Clinic at the University of Nevada Las Vegas William S. Boyd School of Law, discusses his draft article "Supreme Risk." Edwards explains that the United States financial markets are regulated primarily by self-regulatory organizations or "SROs" supervised by government agencies. He discusses his history of SROs, and observes that they can insulate financial markets from systemic political risk. But he notes that they are vulnerable to judicial risk, especially now that the Supreme Court seems poised to question the constitutional legitimacy of their structure. He reflects on the different potential constitutional problems, and explains how SROs can help mitigate judicial risk. Edwards is on Twitter at @BenPEdwards.This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Redeemer Theological Academy
Galatians Chapter One Verse One

Redeemer Theological Academy

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2021


Rev. Brian L. Kachelmeier  Galatians Chapter One Verse One In this lecture, we begin our discussion on Paul’s letter to the baptized in Galatia. Download this lecture by clicking on the link below: Galatians 1 Verse 1

Ipse Dixit
Ashley Rubin on Qualitative Research Methodology

Ipse Dixit

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2021 40:46


In this episode, Ashley T. Rubin, Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, discusses her new book, "Rocking Qualitative Social Science: An Irreverent Guide to Rigorous Research," which is published by Stanford University Press. Rubin begins by explaining what qualitative research is, how it differs from quantitative research, and why qualitative research can answer questions that quantitative research can't. She describes what qualitative researchers do and why they do it. She covers key concepts in producing reliable qualitative data and meaningful assessment of that data. And she explains why objections to qualitative research misunderstand its methodologies and goals. Rubin's website is here, and she is on Twitter at @ashleytrubin.This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Ipse Dixit
Zachary Kaufman on Digital Bad Samaritans

Ipse Dixit

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2021 45:54


In this episode, Zachary D. Kaufman, Associate Professor of Law and Political Science at the University of Houston Law Center, discusses his article "Digital Age Samaritans," which is published in the Boston College Law Review. Kaufman begins by describing "bad samaritan" laws that impose liability on certain people who fail to report crimes or other harms. He observes that these laws are common, but rarely used, and poorly suited to modern form of digital communication. He discusses a case study of a sexual assault that was videostreamed live, and how bad samaritan laws could apply to digital bypasses. He also presents a model bad samaritan law for the digital age. Kaufman is on twitter at @zacharykaufman.This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Ipse Dixit
Eric Segall on the Hubris of the Chief Justice

Ipse Dixit

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2021 45:29


In this episode, Eric J. Segall, Ashe Family Chair Professor of Law at Georgia State University College of Law, discusses his forthcoming essay "John Roberts: Hubris-in-Chief." Segall reflects on the tension between Chief Justice Roberts's reputation as an institutionalist and the radical positions he has taken in many cases. He argues that this reflects a hubris that is bad for the Supreme Court as an institution, and reflects poorly on Roberts. In particular, Roberts's opinions in cases involving affirmative action and voting rights adopt aggressive positions and distort precedent in order to reach a desired result. Segall is on Twitter at @espinsegall. This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Ipse Dixit
Joan Howarth on Lesbian History

Ipse Dixit

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2021 30:32


In this episode, Joan Howarth, Distinguished Visiting Professor at University of Las Vegas William S. Boyd School of Law and Dean Emerita of Michigan State University College of Law, discusses her article "First and Last Chance: Looking for Lesbians in Fifties Bar Cases," which is published in the Souther California Review of Law and Women's Studies. Howarth begins by discussing the cases and archival records she used to tell the stories of lesbians living in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1950s. She reflects on the dehumanizing language police, prosecutors, and judges used to describe gay people at the time, and how the cases still preserve a valuable record of the lives and experiences of gay people. She also discusses the process of archival research and how it can helpfully inform legal scholarship. Howarth is on Twitter at @JoanHowarth1.This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Podcaster's Guide to the Conspiracy
In conversation with Brian L. Keeley

The Podcaster's Guide to the Conspiracy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2021 82:00


M talks with Brian L. Keeley (Pitzer College), and Josh wonders where M has got to... — Josh is @monkeyfluids and M is @conspiracism on Twitter You can also contact us at: podcastconspiracy@gmail.com Why not support The Podcaster's Guide to the Conspiracy by donating to our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/podcastersguidetotheconspiracy or Podbean crowdfunding? http://www.podbean.com/patron/crowdfund/profile/id/muv5b-79

Intentional Man Project
Brian interviews L-Word star, Leo Sheng

Intentional Man Project

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2020 71:03


This week Brian Michael Smith interviews fellow L-Word: Generation Q actor, Leo Sheng. They discuss the controversial character of Max from the original L-Word and the dramatic cultural shift with Generation Q. Listen to hear about Leo's first sex scene, life as an activist, coming out at the age of 12 as trans, and their first big role in the 2019 movie, Adam. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/improject/support

The Max Theories Podcast
The Max Theories Podcast Episode 6 Brian L

The Max Theories Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2020 19:57


In this episode, we talk about Brian's door of mugshots,  OJ,  why Brian quit Madden Mobile, and much more!!!!!!!!!!

11:11 Talk Radio
Brian L. Crissey, Ph D and Pamela Meyer Crissey, Common Sense in Uncommon Times

11:11 Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2014 55:04


If a flood, drought, storm, fire, earthquake, accident, tornado, or act of terrorism struck your home or family… Would you be prepared to survive?

love positivity common sense uncommon simran brian l pamela meyer voiceamerica empowerment