POPULARITY
Novedades en Windows / Despedidas repentinas en OpenAI / Las dos velocidades de la industria espacial / Bloqueo de TikTok / La migración de X / Thunderbolt Share para conectar PCs En diciembre deje de publicar este podcast de forma abrupta. Tuve un brote agudo en mi depresión, y no pude tocar el ordenador durante más un mes. Desde entonces he limitado bastante el uso, pero ya estoy mejor y puedo volver a trabajar. Pido disculpas a los colaboradores, patrocinadores y lectores que se quedaron preocupados y sin saber nada.
In this episode, we explore a key component of parenting, intentionality, especially in the context of spiritual investment in our children. Guests Christina Brummel, a mother of ten, and Kayla Whittinghill, a mother of eight (all under twelve), share their valuable insights on making meaningful connections during mealtime. Time around the table provides a setting with a “captive” audience to not only feed your children physically but also spiritually, planting seeds from the Word of God that will bring forth fruit in the later years. Key Discussion Points: How Table Time started: Discover what inspired Christina and Kayla to leverage mealtime as a meaningful platform for spiritual growth and how this idea can be transformative for single and widow moms. Organic Teaching Moments: Explore the organic and intentional ways these moms incorporate spiritual discussions into their family meals. Learn how these conversations become powerful tools for nurturing faith. Practical Tips for Single Moms: Gain practical suggestions on how single and widow moms can integrate intentional table time into their daily routines, fostering a spiritually rich environment for their children. Other Resources: Daughters of the King special event for Single and Widow Moms and their fatherless daughters | May 4, 2024 | Acworth, GA Mom, you are not alone! Join our private Facebook group for more encouragement and community: https://bit.ly/widowmom For more information and helpful resources, check our website: PerspectiveMinistries.org & follow us on Instagram @PerspectiveMinistries.
We interview talented storytellers, musicians and stewards of the Catholic faith, Doug Brummel and Dave Wilson, who joined forces in 2018 to create “The Doug and Dave Show,” an endeavor that brings together fun, entertainment and faith. We discuss their signature presentation, “Mass Confusion,” and original music.
In this episode of the Private Practice Elevation podcast, host Daniel Fava sits down with Joshua Brummel, co-founder of Therapy Flow, to delve into the intricacies of using paid ads to elevate private practices. The conversation kicks off with a glimpse into Joshua's background and how Therapy Flow evolved from a marketing agency into a specialized service for therapists. The company now offers a "done for you" practice development program that focuses on implementing digital strategies like Google Ads and Facebook ads, along with a HIPAA-compliant CRM system. Their discussion covers crucial elements for success in paid advertising, emphasizing the importance of a website that converts traffic effectively. They highlight the need for clear tracking mechanisms to gauge the return on investment (ROI) from ads. Joshua stresses the significance of having a solid sales process in place before diving into paid advertising to ensure that potential client inquiries translate into actual conversions. The conversation extends to the expectations from the initial phase of running paid ad campaigns. They spotlight the learning period of 3-7 days where data acquisition occurs, advising patience and observation before making adjustments. They also explore the calculation of ROI from ads, emphasizing the importance of understanding the lifetime value of a client to accurately gauge the success of ad campaigns. Joshua emphasizes that while paid ads require meticulous attention to detail, they can serve as a powerful growth accelerator for practices, offering a rapid influx of inquiries and clients when managed effectively. He presents paid ads as a "dial experience," a tool that allows practices to control and intensify their referral volumes swiftly, complementing long-term strategies like SEO. In conclusion, the episode emphasizes the symbiotic relationship between long-term strategies like SEO and short-term boosts from paid ads, advocating for a strategic balance between the two for sustained practice growth. In This Episode, You'll Learn: The big picture of paid ads and user intent. Evolution and competition in paid ad platforms. Joshua Brummel's experience with managing ad spend. Recommended starting budget for Google Ads for therapy practices. Using Facebook and Instagram ads for lower budgets. Importance of having a website that converts before investing. Importance of website conversion for successful Google ads Evaluating the effectiveness of ads and sales process New, more, better framework for website and ads Learning period of 3-7 days for ads Tracking conversions and intake process for success Google ads work best for practices with existing clients Calculating return on investment for ads Determining lifetime value of therapy clients to determine ad budget Ads as a profitable source for consistent client acquisition How paid ads can provide a quick return on investment for therapy practices Technical details of running ads can be complex and time-consuming How using both paid ads and SEO can provide stability and growth
Running into teachers outside of school is high up there on the awkwardness scale...what do you call them? Is there a statute of limitations on what you can start calling them by their first name?
Enjoy my short interview with the intriguing Joshua Brummel from Therapy Flow who was a speaker at the 2023 Wise Practice Summit in Savannah, Georgia. Find out more about our products, programs and services at productivetherapist.com.
Learning to Glow: Tips for Women's Health, Optimal Wellness and Aging Gracefully
Today, we are joined by Carol Brummel, a breast cancer survivor. She graciously shares her inspiring journey, discussing how she coped with the stress and anxiety that accompanied her cancer diagnosis while navigating the challenges of single motherhood. Carol also reflects on her experience working with a trauma coach, shedding light on how this support assisted her in processing her emotions.In our conversation, we delve into the realm of parenting and the importance of authentically expressing emotions with our children. Carol emphasizes the value of modeling healthy emotional responses and emphasizes that it's perfectly acceptable to let one's feelings out. You can follow Carol on Instagram hereOur GIVEAWAY is still live! You can leave a review, screen shot it and send it me to be automatically be entered to WIN a free Simply Jess Skincare Product! Simply go to APPLE PODCASTS and leave a review! Giveaway ends MONDAY OCTOBER 23rd. Thank you for listening! Find Jess below!Website: Simply Jess Skincare SIMPLY JESS SKINCARE:Each and every product is naturally derived, highly concentrated and most importantly, super performing! Every product was born out of a need to have a truly pure product that met my high standards for efficacy. You can take 20% off Your Order of our all natural skincare line with code PODCAST Shop Now! Email Us! jess@learningtoglow.comFollow us! Instagram Tik Tok
Kaimana Brummel has long been a bridge builder, but in the aftermath of the Maui wildfires, that role took on a new life as she helped connect organizations and displaced residents with life-sustaining resources. Brummel has also been working with the People's Fund of Maui, a fund started by Oprah Winfrey and Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson that provides direct support to impacted Lahaina and Kula residents. Winfrey and Johnson together contributed $10 million. Brummel is part of a group of community members helping to convey what residents need. Brummel is the director of advancement at Seabury Hall, her alma mater where she helps students, alumni, parents and staff connect with the greater community and vice versa. Her community focus stems from being part of the first ‘Aha Pūnana Leo cohort on Maui. “So then we had friends who were from Ke‘anae, so we could go to Ke‘anae and be immersed in ‘āina there. We had friends who were hula practitioners, so then we could join hālau. We had friends who were experts in botany, and, you know, it became our community, they became our neighbors.”
In this episode of the "Psych in Business" podcast, your host, Dr. Ernest Wayde welcomes a distinguished guest, Dr. Bradley Brummel, who currently serves as the president of the Society for Psychologists in Leadership (SPL). Dr. Brummel, a seasoned professor of psychology at the University of Houston, brings a wealth of knowledge and experience in the field of Industrial Organizational Psychology.During the conversation, Dr. Brummel shares his journey from academia to leadership roles and discusses his passion for integrating psychological principles into the world of business and organizations. He highlights the importance of data in both individual and organizational contexts, shedding light on the nuances of employee engagement and the challenges of addressing workplace issues like sexual harassment. Dr. Brummel also delves into the significance of understanding the internal labor market within organizations and the value of promoting talent effectively. Join Dr. Wayde and Dr. Brummel as they explore the fascinating intersection of psychology and leadership, offering valuable insights and practical wisdom for leaders and professionals seeking to enhance their understanding of the psychology behind successful business practices.You can visit the Society for Psychologists in Leadership (SPL) website at: https://www.psychleaders.org/
In this special, mini episode of The Science of Personality Podcast, Ryne and Blake sit down with Bradley Brummel, PhD, Professor of Psychology at the University of Houston, to discuss the goals of personality-based team interventions.
Varón Dandy... está agotado en Amazon, normal porque solo los hombres lo usamos... por eso os dejo el Brummel. https://amzn.to/3YdCGl7 :) --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/carlos-castillo-fotografo/message
In a recent episode of The Real Estate Moguls Podcast, host Mark Grzymala had the pleasure of sitting down with Ashlii Brummel, a remarkable individual who is leaving a lasting mark on the construction industry. With her passion, determination, and involvement with the Associated Subcontractors of America (ASA), Ashlii is empowering professionals and bridging the gap between old and new ways in the field.Ashlii's journey with ASA began several years ago when she was invited to an award ceremony by Judy Tips from Langford Painting. She was instantly captivated by the organization's wealth of knowledge and the supportive community it provided. She explains, "Walking in, there was a lot of heart there. They were welcoming, and you could go to anybody and ask for help."Her dedication to ASA led her to join the Expo Committee, where she had the opportunity to interact with vendors, general contractors, and promote the annual expo. Ashlii's passion and commitment shone through, and she eventually rose through the ranks, becoming the Chair and later the Board Liaison for the Expo.Speaking about the success of the recent expo, Ashlii shares, "This expo was sold out completely. We had 151 vendors, and we had a waitlist of vendors wanting to get involved. We did even better than the year before, which was truly amazing." The expo, a two-day event in Oak Brook, brings together professionals from all sectors of the construction industry, providing a platform for networking, learning, and showcasing the latest innovations.Beyond her involvement with ASA, Ashlii has also made a significant impact through philanthropy work with a trade school called ACE Amandla. She explains, "ACE Amandla is a trade school in downtown Chicago geared towards the construction industry. We wanted to bridge the gap between old and new ways in the industry, and ASA raised money for ACE, donating laptops and providing hands-on experiences for the students."Away from her professional endeavors, Ashlii embraces a sense of adventure and fun. She recently purchased a dirt bike, which has become her escape and source of excitement. She shares, "I'm out in the Campton Hills area, and I bought a little land where I have chickens, ducks, and even a turkey. Riding the dirt bike and chasing the animals around brings me joy and encourages me to keep going."Looking ahead, Ashlii envisions herself as the President of ASA and continuing her journey with Christopher Glass Services, where she has experienced growth and loyalty. She expresses her gratitude for the opportunities she has had and her commitment to making a positive impact in the construction industry.Through Ashlii's inspiring story and involvement with ASA, listeners can find encouragement to pursue their passions, embrace opportunities for growth, and make a difference in their respective fields. As she emphasizes, "Learn to fall and get yourself back up. It's all about persevering and staying dedicated to your goals."Mark Grzymala, the host of The Real Estate Moguls Podcast, skillfully guides the conversation, allowing Ashlii's wisdom and experiences to shine. Together, they offer a valuable resource for anyone seeking inspiration and insights into the construction industry.In conclusion, Ashlii Brummel's dedication and impact on the construction industry through her involvement with ASA and philanthropy work highlight the importance of community, continuous learning, and making a difference. Her story serves as a reminder that with passion and perseverance, one can create a meaningful and fulfilling career while leaving a lasting legacy.
El pequeño Paco nació en Guipúzcoa el 18 de febrero de 1934. Hijo de la costurera jefa de la casa Balenciaga, sí, la que le vende a los famosos la ropa roía, y el malagueño Francisco Rabaneda Postigo, un coronel de las fuerzas republicanas al que un camarero un poquito facha le puso una tapa de anchoas con muchas espinas en la tasca “El Paredón” de Santoña el 15 de octubre de 1937; se le quedaron aquí pegaitas en la garganta porque el hombre se las comió como si fueran boquerones fritos. Entonces la madre se exilió junto a su pequeño de 5 años a Francia en 1939, que allí lo que se comía eran filetes de merluza sin espinas. Paco pasó su infancia buscando en la playa chapas de botellines y tapones de plástico de colores, que la madre cada vez que limpiaba le decía: “SI ESTO NO TE SIRVE, LO TIRO”. Entre 1951 y 1963 estudió arquitectura en París, que la madre se gastó más en los créditos de segunda matrícula que en la ortodoncia del niño. Al terminar la carrera no había dibujao ni un edificio, pero había gastao el relieve de todas las muñecas del diseña la moda. En 1959 publicó 7 vestidos en una revista de moda donde sólo sale gente muy rica con bolsos muy caros bajo el nombre de Frank Rabanne, que luego lo cambiaría por Paco, porque Frank le sonaba a carajote que chupa sapos en una jungla. Entre 1955 y 1963, diseñó bolsos y zapatos para dos diseñadores que diseñaban bolsos y zapatos, pero se ve que a lo Ana Rosa Quintana. En 1963 fue laureado en la Bienal de París por una escultura de jardín que hizo con tó los tampones de plástico de colore a la que tituló “¿ESTÁ VIENDO, MÁ? Hasta ese momento el mundo de la moda adornaba todo con mucho bordado a mano y botones forrados en tela que son redonditos y no veas el trabajo que cuesta meterlos en el ojal, así que Paco cogió el Loctite, tó las latillas que se encontraba y un montón de imperdibles y empezó a hacer botones, chapitas y bisutería que luego vendía a las grandes marcas como Balenciaga, que es la que le vende a los famosos la ropa roía. Embriagado de creatividad, no hacía ascos a nada, diseñaba pendientes, gafas, cascos, ruedines pa la bici de los niños pijos, naciendo así en 1956 la marca Paco Rabanne. 10 años después, crearía su 1ª colección con materiales que lo llevarían a la gloria: papel de estraza, anillas de latas y guantes de carnicero. Los vestidos eran más incómodos que un peo en un ascensor con poquita gente, pero gustaron. A Paco le pedía tú una aguja e hilo pa coserte un botón y er gashó te daba unas tenazas y un soplete. Coco Chanel lo llamaba el metalúrgico y su musa era Juana de Arco, porque a él parejas no se le conocieron, pero una cota de malla lo volvía loco. En 1960 hizo el vestido más caro de la historia hasta ese momento y en 1969 lanzó su primer perfume, “Calandre” que si feo es el nombre, más feo es el tarro. De 1971 a 1989 llegaron a sus colecciones los flecos, los pañuelos y los fulares, lo corpiños y los chalecos de plástico, que es tó lo que yo tengo guardado en el canapé pa disfrazarme en el carnaval de mamarracha. En 1973 sacó al mercado Paco Rabanne Pour Homme, que se calentaron la cabeza pa'l nombre lo mismo que pa'l tarro, que es así verde como el de Brummel. Viendo que donde se ganaba dinero era vendiendo perfumes a la gente corriente empezó a sacar perfumes a mansalva con tarros raros: roboces, lingotes de oro, trofeos de liga de veteranos… En esta época ya empezó su transformación a copito de nieve. De 1999 a 2009 la alta costura dio un salto al prêt-à-porter, haciendo ropa un poco más cómoda, pero que pitaba en el aeropuerto más que un socorrista con bandera roja. En 2015 abrió en París una tienda desas que tiene un segurata en la puerta que no te deja entrá ni porque te dé un golpe de caló. Paco afirmó haber visto a Dios en persona 3 veces, que hacía viaje astrales, que San Pablo era un misógino y que el LSD estaba mu rico. En 1999 anunció a partir de una profecía de Nostradamus que la estación internacional MIR caería sobre Francia y dejaría París como el edificio Windsor. La MiR cayó, pero en 2001 y controladita, como cuando tu mare te echa el canastito por el balcón con el dinero del pan un día de levante fuerte. En 2002, se emparanoió un poquito con lo de las torres gemelas y volvió a anunciar otra catástrofe, esta vez el fin del mundo en forma de 3ª Guerra Mundial entre Oriente y Occidente. El pobre Paco murió el 3 de febrero de 2023 en Francia a los 88 años sin saber si acabamos a tortas con los árabes aunque ustedes siempre podrán recordarlo cada vez a alguien le dé un golpe de caló o una madre diga “SI ESTO NO SIRVE, LO TIRO”
La pequeña Laura nació el 18 de febrero de 1931 en Sevilla, pero que podría haber nacido en Alcaudete, porque como su padre era militar y piloto de aviación comercial, que ya que estaba en la mili, se sacó tó los carné, se mudaban más que un americano con una arruló. La madre entonces decidió mandarla a un internado en Francia, donde aprendió a descargar fresas de un camión, a parecer que no se había duchado en dos semanas y a pronunciar perfectamente “quarante-deux”. Cuando tenía 10 años, Laurita pegó un estirón y llegó al 1,69 cm, que la madre le tuvo que comprar dos rodilleras por los viajes que le metía al pupitre. Menos mal que a los 13 paró en 1,71 cm, porque tenía ya las rodillas como los Borbones. Desde chiquitita soñaba con ser médico pero los padres le dijeron que económicamente sólo les llegaba pa que fuera practicante, así que se metió en la Escuela de Comercio, pero debido a su aversión a las matemáticas duró menos que Zaplana en la cárcel. Aún así, cambió su ocupación en el SAE y se pudo inscribir en una oferta, consiguiendo un trabajo de secretaria y archivera en una oficina. Al poco tiempo, a principios de los 50, Laura que tenía 21 años, dejó la oficina para trabajar en una boutique que había abierto una amiga, que por supuesto no desaprovechó la altura y las medidas de nuestra protagonista para usarla de maniquí. El trabajo en la boutique no le duró mucho porque un día entró la Duquesa de Alba a probarse un traje y Laura se lo dio sin quitarle la percha, que se enganchó en la espalda de la aristócrata como si fuera una mojarrita. Cayetana se puso en plan Neymar y Laura fue despedida ese mismo día. Pero ya grandes firmas de la alta costura madrileña se habían fijado en ella y Laurita acabó desfilando para grandes diseñadores como Asunción Bastida o Marbel. Pero Marbel con b, que son los malos de los otros, los que vestían a Carmen Polo. Ese mundo no le atrajo demasiado, porque pasaba más hambre que Carmen Sevilla, aunque le permitió conocer a mucha gente, como a su gran amigo José Luis Ozores, quien le animó a presentarse a las pruebas para la televisión en 1957, convirtiéndose en pionera como locutora y presentadora en una España donde sólo había 600 televisore, cobraba 380 pesetas y TVE era como el Mercadona, que lo mismo la ponían a presentar un concurso, que a hacer una actuación musical o un anuncio rancio de un coñac que era cosa de hombres. Pero Laura no era la primera vez que se ponía delante de una cámara, ya debutó en el cine en 1954 con “El pescador de coplas”, al que le siguieron otras producciones, llegando a trabajar incluso con Alain Delon o Sophia Loren. En 1957, con 26 años, conoce al amor de su vida, el guionista, productor y que olía a Brummel, José Luis Dibildos, que al principio parecía mu modenno porque no se quería casar, pero que cuando se casó, después de 13 años de noviazgo y 3 meses de embarazo, le dijo a la mujé que pa qué iba a trabajá. Por suerte, antes de la boda en 1971, pudimos verla en “Noches de Gala” con Joaquín Prats, antes de que llegara José Luis Moreno a quedarse con todo lo que empezara por “gala”, “sábado”, “noche” o “albanokosovar” . También nos dio tiempo a verla presentando la gala de Eurovisión de 1969 en Madrid, que a lo mejor si hubiera sabido que le iban a pagar con este fantástico viaje a Amsterdam para ver la gala del año siguiente, esa sí que la hubiera presentado José Luis Moreno. Ya en esta época tenía un aire a Ana García Obregón, posaba en las fotos como si fuera un clip de playmobil y se vestía con trajes de rombos rojos y naranjas, a juego con el papel pintao de la cocina. Así que La Valenzuela se retiró de las cámaras con tan sólo 40 años pa cuidá de su marido y de su hija, aunque volvió casi 20 años después con algunos filtros de instagram y el título de “Lady España” que le dieron en 1989, gracias al nacimiento en nuestro país de las televisiones privadas, y lo hizo presentando “Telecinco, ¿Dígame?” pero sin empanadillas. Más tarde, en 1996 y a sus espléndidos 65 años, dirigiría “Mañanas de Primera” en TVE junto a su hija Lara Dibildos, porque María Teresa Campos y Terelu se habían ido a Telecinco y los habían dejao más tiraos que Brandon Lee en el Cuervo. Luego Laura y su hija Lara estuvieron malitas, pero se fueron a Houston y se recuperaron más rápido que el poto que salen en los anuncios de las Apps de jardinería. En 2006, con 75 años, anunció su despedida de la vida pública, se puso el chándal y no volvió a maquillarse hasta el 2012 para recoger el Premio Iris por su trayectoria profesional. Desgraciadamente, el Alzheimer se llevó sus recuerdos y Laura nos dejaba el 17 de marzo de 2023, a los 82 años, aunque ustedes siempre podrán recordarla cada vez que vayan al practicante o alguien les deje más tirao que Brandon Lee en el Cuervo.
Olor de suat emmascarat amb desodorant Axe, smegma als calçotets, misogínia intensa, cryptos, tot plegat amb un micròfon en mà. Són els nous Mascles Alfa, els Santiagos Abascals i Bertins Osbornes joves del segle XXI a Internet. Han substituït el Brummel per l'olor a tancat de casa seva; ara ja no mengen filets de vedella amb Soberano, ara demanen hamburgueses insalubres per Glovo i beuen begudes energètiques; ja no van a caçar ni a córrer, ara són gymbros que fan mansplaining a qualsevol noia ambal gimnàs. La seva característica principal, a banda de no saber-se fer ni una truita o dormir amb els calçotets cagats després de tirar-se un pet pintor, és la misogínia. També l'homofòbia, l'anarcocapitalisme o el darwinisme social. Exemples? Andrew Tate, Victor Malatesta (conegut com a Wall Street Wolverine) o Jordi Wild (muy buenas tetas por cierto). En aquest episodi, l'Iñaki us portarà la guia definitiva del Sigma Male, el Marc us introduirà al món dels mascles alfa de Cuarto Milenio i l'Oriol us capbussarà en el dia a dia dels youtubers misògins andorrans.
Value is inherent and understood in any mental health therapy practice. So how can you stand out from the crowd?
There are many different avenues you may travel when it comes to your marketing journey... you may focus on getting on a variety of insurance panels, investing in online marketing, or taking a simple approach with local print advertisements. Today, we've brought in the expert to share exactly how to get the most bang for your buck in marketing your private practice.Joshua Brummel is the co-founder of Therapy Flow and is based out of Chicago with his wife and son. For the last 5 years, Joshua has been helping counseling practices develop modern marketing, create value-driven sales processes and build sustainable operations that produce 6 & 7-figure practices. His team has worked with over a thousand practices and has managed more than 3 million dollars of paid advertising for counseling practices.Pre-order your copy of Profit First For Therapists by clicking here!EPISODE HIGHLIGHTSDo you have to spend money to make money?No! There are plenty of ways to market your practice without having to invest a large (or even any!) amount of moneyThe key to "spending money to make money" is being intentional and strategic with where you're putting your dollarsStart with the basicsCalculate the lifetime value of your average clientSelect the correct platform that fits your values/intentionsGoogle Ads and Facebook Ads are the most commonKeep it simple!Keep your message short and sweetThe key to a good ad is to reel the viewer in with a pictureThe picture will lead them to the text, the text will lead them to a link, the link will engage their action item (booking a consult, signing up for your mailing list, etc.)LINKS & RESOURCESGreenOak Accounting - www.GreenOakAccounting.comTherapy For Your Money Podcast - www.TherapyForYourMoney.comProfit First for Therapists - www.ProfitFirstForTherapists.comTherapy Flow - www.MyTherapyFlow.comDeep Work by Cal NewportDigital Minimalism by Cal Newport
Stéphane Bern, entouré de ses chroniqueurs historiquement drôles et parfaitement informés, s'amuse avec l'Histoire – la grande, la petite, la moyenne… - et retrace les destins extraordinaires de personnalités qui n'auraient jamais pu se croiser, pour deux heures où le savoir et l'humour avancent main dans la main. Aujourd'hui, George Brummel.
Meervoudig Nederlands Kampioen Zwemmen, triatlete en schrijfster van het boek “Zwem”. Suzanne Brummel vertelt in deze podcast hoe zij in het zwemmen terecht kwam en welke keuzes zij moest maken om de beste te worden. Deze mentaliteit brengt haar tot grote hoogten maar kan soms ook te ver gaan. Het vinden van de juiste balans is daarin erg belangrijk! Benieuwd? Luister dan snel deze podcast! Ik ben Isabelle Feteris en ik zorg dat je topprestaties levert op alle vlakken van je leven door je mindset te veranderen. Wil je weten hoe het met jouw topsportmentaliteit staat? Doe dan deze gratis test en weet binnen 2 minuten exact hoe je mindset ervoor staat. https://score.isabellefeteris.com/p/test Wil jij ook presteren op de toppen van je kunnen? Wij helpen je om een topsportmentaliteit te krijgen voor energie in je lijf, groei in je leven, rust in je hoofd en zin in de dag. Inmiddels hebben we al duizenden mensen hierbij geholpen. Dit doen we onder anderen met 1-op-1 coaching, workshops en boeken. Een eerste stap kan zijn om een doorbraaksessie in te plannen met Isabelle. Dit is vrijblijvend en gratis. We gaan hierin kijken waar jij naartoe wil op het gebied van mindset, waar je nu staat en wat eventuele logische vervolgstappen zijn. Ook kan je al je vragen stellen. Keertje bellen? Ga dan naar https://www.isabellefeteris.com/gesprek-aanvragen Meer weten over het krijgen van een topsportmentaliteit? Ga dan naar: https://isabellefeteris.com Stoppen met uitstellen? Bestel mijn boek via: https://isabellefeteris.com/boek https://www.instagram.com/isabellefeteris https://www.linkedin.com/in/isabelle-feteris-a72578198 contact: info@isabellefeteris.nl
Lux Radio Theatre, sometimes spelled Lux Radio Theater, a classic radio anthology series, was broadcast on the NBC Blue Network (1934–35) (owned by the National Broadcasting Company, later predecessor of American Broadcasting Company [ABC] in 1943–1945); CBS Radio network (Columbia Broadcasting System) (1935–54), and NBC Radio (1954–55). Initially, the series adapted Broadway plays during its first two seasons before it began adapting films. These hour-long radio programs were performed live before studio audiences. The series became the most popular dramatic anthology series on radio, broadcast for more than 20 years and continued on television as the Lux Video Theatre through most of the 1950s. The primary sponsor of the show was Unilever through its Lux Soap brand. Listen to our radio station Old Time Radio https://link.radioking.com/otradio Listen to other Shows at My Classic Radio https://www.myclassicradio.net/ Podcast Service I Recommend https://redcircleinc.grsm.io/entertainmentradio7148 Remember that times have changed, and some shows might not reflect the standards of today's politically correct society. The shows do not necessarily reflect the views, standards, or beliefs of Entertainment Radio
Music with a smooth edge Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week at NSTA: The Bus Stop - NSTA Executive Director Curt Macysyn interviews A.J. Brummel and Rachel Wu, Project Managers with the Spectrum Consulting Group of Michigan State University. A.J. and Rachel outline the 2022 engagement with NSTA and provide insight on the scope of the project. The duo highlight what the team learned through this year's engagement. A.J. and Rachel then outline some of the challenges that team faced during their research. Finally, the group discusses what they learned about student transportation during this year's project. A special thank you to Dean Transportation and National Express for supporting this years engagement, as well at the Business Development Committee Subcommittee for their hard work . Student transportation professionals go to NSTA: The Bus Stop to find out the latest industry trends and news, and so should you. Become a subscriber and listen to a new episode every week - reasonable advertising packages are available too!Support the show
Music with a smooth edge Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SHAPE America's Podcast - Professional Development for Health & Physical Education Teachers
Sean is joined by Brad Brummel, coordinator of Physical Education, Health & Engagement Activities at Springfield Public Schools in Springfield, MO. Brad is also the co-chair of SHAPE America's National Physical Education Standards Task Force. Sean and Brad discuss the standards revision process — how it started, what has been accomplished, and next steps —as well as Brad's career and the changes he is implementing in his district.
Music with a smooth edge Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Music with a smooth edge Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Assistant Fire Chief Pete Brummel of East Jefferson Fire & Rescue discusses the importance of humility and focusing on the mission. He recommends always leaning forward and walking through doors of opportunities. The greatest leaders are the greatest listeners!
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***You can now support this podcast on Patreon! Come be a part of the Patreon Community! https://www.patreon.com/talkstudentmin*** We often spend lots of time working to maximize the effectiveness of our time that we have students within our building, but we are limited in that capacity often with most groups not being together more then 4-5 hours a week. How can we work towards spending more time with the students during the day and being a resource to the school around them as well? Come join the conversation as Brent sits down with Jeremy and they talk about the different opportunities that most youth pastors can get involved with on campus. From the large organizations to working alongside coaches, they talk through all of the different opportunities available. You can listen to this episode on all your preferred podcast providers. We would also love to have you join the conversation if you would like to be on the show! Click here to fill out our guest form. Show notes can be found on our website: www.studentministryconversations.org Video for this episode can be found here: https://youtu.be/8TpLFaSMS3c Connect With SMC Instagram – @talkstudentmin Twitter – @talkstudentmin Facebook – @talkstudentmin Youtube - "Student Ministry Conversations" Connect With The Hosts Russell Martin – @rgmmusic Brent Aiken – @heybrentaiken Support the Podcast! Buy Our Merch! www.studentministryconversations.org/shop Be A Patreon Subscriber! https://www.patreon.com/talkstudentmin
Music with a smooth edge Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Music with a smooth edge Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Music with a smooth edge Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Music with a smooth edge Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Music with a smooth edge Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Music with a smooth edge Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Drs. David Johnson (University of Texas) and Patrick Loehrer (Indiana University) host this live ASCO podcast with award-winning documentary producer/director Bill Brummel. After undergoing a laryngectomy in 2016, Mr. Brummel produced and directed a documentary film titled “Can You Hear My Voice?” that chronicles the one-of-a-kind Shout at Cancer choir, whose members have all had their voice boxes removed, as they prepare for the most ambitious concert. This podcast features audio clips from the film. Mr. Brummel, who is joined by his surgeon, Dr. Uttam Sinha, of Keck Medicine of USC, reflects on his own cancer experience and the psychosocial impact of losing one's natural voice. For more information about the film or hosting a screening, visit www.canyouhearmyvoice.com or email info@bbprods.com. If you liked this episode, please subscribe. Learn more at https://education.asco.org, or email us at education@asco.org. TRANSCRIPT Dr. Dave Johnson: So we're back here with another episode of our world-famous Oncology, Etc. podcast with two very distinguished guests, Pat. Dr. Pat Loehrer: Well, we're thrilled to be here to record this episode in front of an audience. Usually it's just Dave and I, and supposed to be a live audience. Although after three-and-a-half days of ASCO, I'm not sure if anybody's still alive. We have two very distinguished guests today. Mr. Bill Brummel is the award-winning documentary producer and director. He and his films have been recognized with the Peabody Award, two International Documentary Association Awards, five national Emmy nominations, and have been named for the Oscar shortlist. Many of Dr. Brummel's films have focused on civil rights and human rights issues. After having his voice box removed in 2016 due to complications from radiation therapy, which he received for his head and neck cancer, Bill produced and directed Can You Hear My Voice? This film, which has not yet been publicly released, was shown on Saturday afternoon here, chronicles London's Shout at Cancer Choir, whose singers are living without voice boxes. It's amazing. The ASCO Annual Meeting attendees saw this on Saturday, and today what we're going to do is hear and see some of the clips from the movie and hear from the director himself. Dr. Dave Johnson: We're also joined by Bill's physician Dr. Uttam Sinha who encouraged Bill to create this documentary about the psychosocial aspects of living without a voice box. Dr. Sinha is an Associate Professor of Otolaryngology at the University of Southern California where he tells us he spent the bulk of his life. He's also the Watt Family Endowed Chair for Head and Neck Cancer at his institution. Dr. Sinha's holistic medical approach was really truly critical, Bill tells us, to his both physical and emotional recovery following laryngectomy. So Bill, Dr.Uttam, welcome to Oncology, Etc. Mr. Bill Brummel: Thank you very much. But one thing your audience should know and you should know is that after having a laryngectomy, speaking with a voice prosthesis, we lose the ability to laugh out loud. So, Pat and Dave, if you happen to tell a joke or say anything funny, know that I'm laughing inside. Dr. Pat Loehrer: I think Dave and I think that most of the people that listen to our podcasts probably have had laryngectomies because we hear no laughter at all from anything we say. So, Bill, we're really here today to talk about your documentary. And we're going to show a few clips. But before we show the first clip, can you set this up for us? Mr. Bill Brummel: This clip sets up the choir and the premise of the film. We follow the choir as they prepare for the most ambitious concert they have ever attempted. So it's really just setting up the premise. Dr. Pat Loehrer: Now this is extraordinary. So if you could run the first clip for us. Appreciate it. [Clip starts playing] Speaker 1: I'll remember quite well, when I first suggested let's form a choir. They responded with laughter and surprise and disbelief. Speaker 2: It just seemed ridiculous that you would expect a group of people with no voice boxes to stand up and sing in a choir. It didn't seem realistic. But Thomas had confidence that we could do some things. We went along with his mad scheme. And then one day was sort of now, what about a concert? What? [Jazz playing] Speaker 3: Well, the people in the choir are just normal people. Speaker 4: I really admire the courage that it's kind of taken to come through all of their treatment. Speaker 5: After all the stuff they'd gone through, they're able to turn that into something creative and artistic. That's really, really impressive. Speaker 2: The concept is something new. It's almost a defiance, which is what people need, is to be defiant. Was that a F sharp I sang or what was it? You know, it doesn't matter. Speaker 6: Most of them never read poetry before. Most of them never sang before. Most of them never were on stage before. And they were going to put on a show. And they're going to add this other two or three layers of emotional vulnerability. Speaker 1: All right. Everyone, just like we prepared. We know what we're doing and we're going to enjoy ourselves. Yeah? Speaker 6: We're doing a concert. People have paid money to come and see us. The adrenaline rush is incredible. I can't describe it really. I never thought I would do something like this. [Applause] [Clip ends] Dr. Dave Johnson: Tell us a little bit about how this film came about. Obviously, you had a personal connection to it. But give us a little bit of background information, if you will. Mr. Bill Brummel: Well, about nine months after my laryngectomy and after getting through some of the emotional and psychological problems that a lot of people who've had the surgery experience, and we'll go into that later on, I went to an appointment with Dr. Sinha, a regular scheduled appointment. And out of the blue, he suggested that I make a documentary about the psychosocial aspects of recovering from and living with a laryngectomy. Now my first thought was stick to medicine, doc. I'm the professional here. Just kidding. It was an excellent idea. But why on Earth did you suggest that? Dr. Uttam Sinha: We never get to see the psychosocial aspect or the challenges or the suffering they go through, and most importantly, the head and neck cancer is not so well known in the society, unfortunately. So all my life, in my 25 years of practice, I always tried to promote head and neck cancer awareness in our society. One day I told my friends, 'I need to raise money for research for head and neck cancer.' So they asked me, 'What is head and neck cancer?' I said, 'This is head, this is neck – cancer of this area is called head and neck cancer. So anyway, so that was one of the driving forces then to create awareness within the society and also how the head and neck cancer patient live after going through the treatment and surviving the cancer. Mr. Bill Brummel: When Dr. Sinha suggested it, it was an excellent topic. But I knew I needed a story to illustrate it. So right after the appointment, I went home, fired up Google. And very quickly, I discovered the Shout at Cancer choir on a website. Shout at Cancer is a London-based nonprofit charity, that among other things, uses some breathing techniques and singing techniques to improve the vocal outcomes for laryngectomy. Now, I knew that if I could get all the pieces in line, that this would be a great way to produce the film that I wanted to produce, that of a group of people who've undergone a life-altering surgery, and all the hardships and drama that goes with that, but still leading a meaningful and productive lives in a very entertaining fashion. Dr. Dave Johnson: There's some really extraordinary people in this film from the Shout at Cancer choir. How did you happen to select the specific individuals within that choir group? Mr. Bill Brummel: Well, I took two production trips to the UK after we found funding and after I got the choir on board. I took two pre-production trips to the UK and went to every choir member's home individually and met with them and their spouses. Now, they all have compelling stories. But for reasons of time, I couldn't have personal profiles on all of them. But I eventually settled on five. And I knew even then, that only four would probably be included in the film. I say that they have compelling stories. I think I could have done a Netflix limited series 10 episodes, one on each choir member. Dr. Dave Johnson: I think you should consider doing that. Mr. Bill Brummel: That might be too late to do that. But they're really excellent and articulate and all have slightly different stories. Dr. Pat Loehrer: You told their stories. And again, for those who haven't listened to the documentary, I really encourage you to do this when this comes out. But just I have a question. You've done so many different documentaries about so many important things over the years. Do you think you would have done this documentary had you not had a laryngectomy? Mr. Bill Brummel: Definitely not. A laryngectomy was not even on my radar. I don't think I knew what it was before I was faced with having it. So no, I definitely wouldn't have done that. Dr. Pat Loehrer: It really is a terrific service that you've done. You've helped so many people. Dr. Sinha, there may be a listener or two that listens to the podcast that is not a physician. Can you explain just in lay terms what a laryngectomy is and what it means and the process behind it? Dr. Uttam Sinha: So, as you know, that larynx is an organ that produces sound. It doesn't produce speech. This a misconception within in our society that the patient undergoing laryngectomy they cannot talk. A laryngectomy patient, they talk well, but the patient when I remove a portion of the tongue for a partial glossectomy, then they have a hard time to speak because speech is produced within the oral cavity. So a laryngectomy is basically, the removal of the voice box removing the trachea from the esophagus so that they can breathe well and also they don't aspirate because that's a big challenge. Aspiration pneumonia, is a consequence to fibrosis induced by radiation. So early on in our practice at Keck School of Medicine, 25 years ago, we started this program where we decided to do neuromuscular electrical stimulation swallowing therapy to reduce the fibrosis so that there'll be less chance of aspiration, and aspiration-related pneumonia. So the laryngectomy we perform, especially in Bill's case, he's a cancer survivor, but he had a hard time breathing and talking and also mild aspiration. So that's why we had to do a laryngectomy where we remove the voice box, and that improved his overall quality of life. Mr. Bill Brummel: I remember as my breathing difficulties increased, Dr. Sinha advised me that a laryngectomy was in my future. And like I said, I didn't even know what it was. But he advised me that my quality of life would improve in the long term. But I was in denial. So I stalled. I didn't have it when he first advised that I have it. Dr. Pat Loehrer: Here at ASCO, we have 30,000 to 40,000 people there, many of them are cancer survivors, and I'm thinking about when we think about most cancer survivors, Dave is one of them, and we'll talk about that in a little bit, most of them fit in with the crowd. The cancer survivors with laryngectomies something that doesn't. This is something that not only have you survived it, but you have the wounds to show for this. Can you tell us a little bit about that and briefly the thought processes of 'Listen, someone's going to take out my voice box. I'm a director. I need to have this.' I'm sure you stalled making this decision. And what was the final tipping point for you to have this done? Mr. Bill Brummel: Well, as my condition got worse and worse, it was really hard to speak. And it was really hard to breathe. At times, my wife could hear my labored breathing from the other rooms of the house. I couldn't even climb maybe three or four stairs without getting winded. And then I remember the date of March 10th of 2016. I went to another appointment with Dr. Sinha. And I don't think I got two sentences out before he interrupted me and said rather firmly and with a good sense of urgency, 'Bill, we have to do the surgery now.' He was obviously concerned that I would have a breathing emergency at home or in the market, paramedics will be called in, they do an emergency trach on me. I knew that Dr. Sinha would do a much better job than a paramedic. But I remember sitting in that exam room with Dr. Sinha and my wife, and the Dr. Sinha was basically telling me I was risking my life if I didn't have the surgery. My wife was worried sick. And although I was frustrated, I couldn't come up with any more excuses. So I said, 'Yes, let's do the surgery.' Dr. Sinha wanted to admit me right then and there, and not send me home, but the OR was booked on the next day. So Dr. Sinha, bless his heart, called an OR to come in to do the surgery on a Saturday. I was the only one in the recovery room or the pre-op room. And I remember that when we arrived at the hospital, I think we have a clip of our kids, my wife, and I, we were sitting in the admissions waiting room. And my wife got out her cell phone and asked if she could record my natural voice, although wheezy and weak, one last time. And this is the 35 seconds. [Recording starts playing] Frances Fitzgerald: Okay. What's happening today? Mr. Bill Brummel: It's 5:30 in the morning, March 12th, 2016. And today, I'm giving away my vocal cords. And walk out of here, hopefully within a few days, with voice prosthesis and a new voice. Although I won't be able to test the voice for several weeks, I'll have to be silent, which will please many people around me. So that is what is happening. Last time you'll hear this voice. So to all of you, I love you. Thank you for all your support and prayers. Here we go. [Recording stopped] Dr. Dave Johnson: So I'm sure that that probably brings back some very emotional memories to you, Bill, and as Pat asked, post-operatively, what did you think about your future? What was your psychological state at that time? And how did you feel physically? Mr. Bill Brummel: Well, physical recovery from the surgery was hard. And I vacillate by saying it was hard and it's awful, but it was physical recovery. But worse yet, I was saddled with insecurity and fear and doubt. People who have had the surgery can often lose confidence. They can sometimes retreat from society and withdraw into a world where we don't have to be seen in public. But when we do that, lonesomeness and depression are sure to follow. There were times I found it easier to isolate myself rather than navigate. I didn't want to go out. I didn't want people to see me. And I got depressed. It was just natural. Losing your natural voice is really traumatic. From the time we learn to speak, much of how we perceive ourselves is wrapped up in the unique tone of our voices. It expresses laughter and happiness. And with that gone, many patients really struggle with anxiety, self-doubt, and doubting their self-identity. Dr. Dave Johnson: So, Dr. Sinha, is that a common reaction amongst your patients post-surgery? Dr. Uttam Sinha: Yes, it's fairly common. That's why I started 16 years ago with my colleagues a survivorship program to support the psychosocial aspect of these patients. Whenever we can, we mentor the newly diagnosed patient with the established patient. Bill has done many, many mentoring for those patients who underwent laryngectomy after his laryngectomy. And I'm so grateful that our patients are so supportive to each other for the whole organization. So yes, this is very common and that's why we always talk about not just the physical but psychosocial aspects of our health. And also in our practice, we always try to promote not only the health of the patient but also health of the caregivers and the family to improve health. I think it depends on all four dimensions of health, which is the WHO definition of health, the best state of physical, mental, spiritual wellbeing, and not a mere absence of a disease process. Dr. Dave Johnson: You mentioned the family. We want to get back to that in a moment. I think we have a clip from Sara. She was one of the patients that was featured in his film, and there's a wonderful clip. I want to get to that in just a moment. But I just have an important question to ask Dr. Sinha. Was Bill a good patient? Mr. Bill Brummel: Was I a good patient? Dr. Uttam Sinha: I have to think about that. Dr. Dave Johnson: That's what I thought. We'll watch this clip while you think about that. [Video clip playing] Sara Bowden-Evans: I have two vivid memories of those moments just before going down to theater and having the realization that when I came back out, I wasn't going to be the same person. I would never be me again because they would taken my personality which would mean my voice. And then when I came around, I couldn't call for help. And that was so frightening, really scary. That was pretty awful actually coming to terms with all of this. I lost all my confidence and didn't want to speak. You can sound very angry all the time, even when you're not. I didn't want anybody else to really see me or hear me and all the other things to contend with as well, not being able to swallow properly and losing all my taste with radiotherapy, suddenly gone. I think the loss of laughter is one of the most difficult things for me. So it's just one thing after another after another and it just made me angry all the time. Speaker 7: Emotional changes were quite dramatic. She was very, very moody at times. She just felt that everybody was staring at her. And it just changed her personality. Speaker 8: We know from evidence that people who've had a laryngectomy can be much more likely to experience anxiety, depression, social withdrawal that can have a really important impact on relationships. Speaker 7: The emotional side is the hardest part of caregiving. That's part of a relationship. You take the bad times with the good times. Sara Bowden-Evans: I know that I wasn't a very good patient because I know that there were times when I was really horrible to him because I was dealing with my situation, and I took it out on him. But he's still here. He stayed with me regardless. [Video clip stopped] Dr. Pat Loehrer: As you watch this film, you realize what a remarkable human being Sara is. She's a writer, she's a poet, and even the title of your documentary comes from her. Mr. Bill Brummel: I stole it from her. Dr. Pat Loehrer: Yeah, it's extraordinary. Mr. Bill Brummel: It's one of the poems she wrote and we use in the film. Dr. Pat Loehrer: The question I'd asked Dr. Sinha, if you don't mind just following up on this, when a woman is diagnosed with breast cancer, as my wife was, there's this wonderful support community, and they even have a color of their own. And the women get together and they have runs and they do all the stuff. Similarly for several other cancers. I think with head and neck cancer, the inclination, I think, as Bill mentioned earlier, is to be isolated and almost withdraw yourself. This was a unique group of individuals that got together for this project. We'll hear about it more. But how common is it for laryngectomy patients to actually bind together? Or do they typically fight this battle alone? Dr. Uttam Sinha: So they feel very isolated, no question, and depressed. That's why it's very important to have that kind of support system. Head and neck cancer is very unique. Most other cancers, squamous cell carcinoma, the same cancer when it happens in the lung, and you remove half of the lung, nobody would know and person's quality of life would not be compromised. On the other hand, if same squamous cell carcinoma happens in the head and neck area, it compromises quality of life because all the function that makes us human beings - speech, swallowing, hearing, balance, smell, taste, all those things happen in this area. So when this area is damaged, whether by cancer itself or treatment related, that causes tremendous depression as their functional status goes down, and also they get isolated because they cannot go to the society freely, like to go to a restaurant and feeding himself with a G-tube with the rest of their friends or family are eating by their mouth. So that's quite depressing. In fact, I have patients, couple of patients who committed suicide because they were G-tube dependent. So head and neck cancer in that regard is very unique compared to other cancers. Mr. Bill Brummel: I would say, to just add one point in regards to Sara and other women who have a laryngectomy, obviously, we don't have a lot of breakage in our voice. Our voices are very low. And it's really the same for women as it is for men. But men's typical voices are lower and women's are not. So that is a factor in their emotional recovery. They really don't sound how they used to when speaking with a voice prothesis or through an electrolarynx. So it's really difficult for women. Dr. Pat Loehrer: As humans, we think in the past and the future, we go back and forth, but you've had a life as a very successful film producer, director. And I think in many ways, this is probably one of the most unforgiving professions for any kind of disability, whether it's even putting on some weight or having an accident. But tell me a little bit about your life before laryngectomy and after laryngectomy. How has this changed your life as a professional? What has happened? Mr. Bill Brummel: Well before even my laryngectomy, before cancer, I was originally diagnosed in 1997 with tonsil cancer. It was treated by neck dissection, not by Dr. Sinha, and seven weeks of radiation antidotes over wide fields. I had been in television production for about 10 years prior to that. And I was doing mostly silly reality shows, or music video shows, stuff that didn't have really any substance to it. I had started my own production company about a year before, but after my cancer diagnosis, I really thought to myself that if, God forbid, the cancer comes back and my life is cut short, do I want to spend my days, my effort in terms of my work life producing shows with no substance. And I said, 'No, I don't want to do that. I want to produce shows that feed the soul as much as the wallet.' Unfortunately, 20 years after that, my soul got a lot better than my wallet. But I wouldn't change it for the world. But having cancer, having that diagnosis definitely changed the trajectory of my career. I wanted to have a legacy and something that my children would be proud of. Dr. Pat Loehrer: Just a follow-up question, I had a very good friend of mine who had a glioblastoma. After his diagnosis, he said he learned things about friends. He said, there were three kinds of friends. There were these friends who were the loyal friends who he'd always had, who really were with him. There were the people that he had thought were friends that just disappeared. And then there was a third group of people who we never ever dreamed would be friends, but they came out of nowhere to become new friends for him. So reflect a little bit on that. Does that resonate at all with you? Mr. Bill Brummel: It definitely resonates. After my laryngectomy, and I went through this period of emotional difficulty, I was still one of the fortunate ones. I was blessed to have a supportive network that included family and friends, others, colleagues aided my recovery. And obviously, the medical team at Keck Medicine of USC, a lot of them became my friends and are still my friends. So they came out of the woodwork. My laryngectomy buddies are close friends. We have a supportive group that meets two times a month. They become real good friends. I can't imagine my life without them. But Dr. Sinha talked about his supportive care. It was really important to me. He's always preached about a hollistic response approach to health that includes traditional medicine, exercise, nutrition, physical therapy, mindfulness, and a bunch of other things, occupational therapy, speech therapy. To varying degrees, I embraced each of those modalities. But back to your original question, certainly, some friends fell off the map. I made new ones, the family and friends that I had, the relationships became really strong and a really important and critical part of my life. Dr. Dave Johnson: That certainly resonates with my own experience as a cancer survivor as well. And you've mentioned your family more than a few times. I'm confident that they were a very important part of that support system. Could you speak to that a bit? Mr. Bill Brummel: Well, they understood what I was going through. And if they didn't understand, they asked questions. They didn't ignore the elephant in the room. My wife, as a caregiver, I really don't know what I would have done without her after my laryngectomy. She was changing all my dressings, cleaning out the stoma, stuff that I assume if I was alone, I could have done it, but I didn't want to. I didn't want any part of it. So she got me the physical recovery. And then she started getting me the emotional recovery. When I was feeling sorry for myself and sitting at home, she very politely kicked me out of the house. And she said, 'If you want a cup of coffee, you get it.' I would drive down to Starbucks. It took me three months to speak because the swelling wasn't going down. But she kicked me out of the house and said 'Go to Starbucks' And I would just write on my phone my order and show it to them. And that seems like a very easy thing to do, but it was a big step for me. But it also started me thinking, well, maybe people are going to stare. But it seems like most people are understanding. And that's been my experience. I get stared at a lot all the time. And when I speak, people turn their heads. But most people are really understanding and want to help. In fact, they might even take the extra step for me that they wouldn't for some other person. Dr. Uttam Sinha: We established a caregiver support group, Coffee with Caregivers, and Frances is the president. Mr. Bill Brummel: Frances, my wife, yes, she facilitates the weekly meetings. Dr. Dave Johnson: Well, there's so many rich aspects of your film. For those who have not seen it, you really do need to see this film. But there are a couple of areas that really resonated with me and reflected my experience, one of which we have a clip from this family. But I have a daughter, who was 10 at the time that I was diagnosed with lymphoma. And my wife and I did our best to shield her from the possibility that I might not survive that. In retrospect, I'm not sure we handled it quite the right way. But you have a clip from Pug and his wife, Kat, and their daughter, Lily. And I think it so reflects my own personal experience with my daughter and her reaction to me. So maybe you might want to just comment on that before we show the clip. Mr. Bill Brummel: In the pre-interviews I did and selected a choir member for shooting, I developed an outline of what I thought the segment with life would look like. And you know when you do documentaries, you had to be able to change it at a moment's notice. So I had three interviews with Pug and Kat and came up with a sweet story that involves just them. When we recorded the interview, I was just blown away by Pug's daughter, 12-year-old Lily, and completely changed the focus of Pug's presence in the film to illustrate the impact that a cancer diagnosis and a laryngectomy has on families. [Video Clip Playing] Interviewer: When your dad got the laryngectomy, how did you deal with it? Lily: I think I was probably more upset than dad seemed because I thought he was really going to die. Pug Halliday: It's hard because we were always honest with Lily. But no matter how many times we said it was going to be all right, you know, you were worried, weren't you? Kat: Basically after the operation, Pug had a lot of black, like Frankenstein stitching and drains and tubes. And Lily hadn't really seen that sort of thing before. Because she was younge,. I didn't want her to be frightened, so I waited and I spoke to Pug. 'When shall I bring her up?' And he said, 'Why don't you take a photo?' Pug Halliday: The drain's around, so that would be five, seven days after my operation. Mr. Bill Brummel: And Lily, so that didn't scare you, the photo? Lily: No, because he was—well, I think that yeah, it scared me a little bit, but in that photo, he's like really happy, so- Pug Halliday: By the time when we asked Lily, she said, 'You were smiling and had both thumbs up.' So, you were reassured a bit by that, weren't you? Lily: Yeah. Mr. Bill Brummel: Lily, what did you do to try and make your dad feel better during his recovery? Lily: I made tea for him. Pug Halliday: Yeah, you came and you read me stories instead the other way around. Lily: I read you stories, and I made him lots of things as well. Like, I don't know, like little books where he was really amazing. To you, my favorite person in the world. You are the best. You're my inspiration. I love your facial hair and your mustache presentation. When you were ill, feeling depressed, I knew you'd make it because you're the best. You're kind. You're brave. You're funny, too. I'm so happy I have you. I can't believe that you're my dad. It turns out that you're not so bad. [Giggles] Pug Halliday: I keep these by my bed. And when she turns into a teenager and hates me, I shall read them regularly. [Video clip stopped] Dr. Dave Johnson: If that poem doesn't melt your heart, you have a heart of stone. Dr. Pat Loehrer: What you can't appreciate on a podcast this incredible poem. It's just incredible. Mr. Bill Brummel: He's a marvelous character. You know, you're mentioning your daughter, my daughter was eight years old. And my son was five-and-a-half in terms of when I had my original cancer diagnosis. In fact, we celebrated his sixth birthday in the hospital. On the last day of my radiation treatment I had to be hospitalized three times because I couldn't keep anything down. But my daughter commented, this was when she was graduated from high school, I think, that she really thought that I was going to die. And we said no such thing. In fact, like Pug, we tried to reassure her that my tonsil cancer diagnosis was not life-threatening. But in her mind, she remembers it as being a case that my dad might die. Dr. Dave Johnson: Yeah, my daughter reacted the same way. And she kept a diary at the time. When we went back and read her diary, she actually wrote, 'My dad is going to die.' Yeah. The other clip that really stood out to me also involved a poem, and it comes from Sara. Sara is a real star in this. It's a poem to her husband, Nigel. It's a cancer survivor's reflection on how they dealt with their cancer and their spouse during the intensity of the treatment. I wonder maybe if you could make a few comments and maybe we could show that clip. Mr. Bill Brummel: Well, definitely. The spouse or partner, the impact can be great. And in Sara's case, in her words, she took out her frustrations on Nigel. And Nigel was a great caregiver and just dealt with it and never stopped loving her. Interesting thing about this poem, it was not a poem for the choir. It was after we finished shooting one of the rehearsals. I was talking to Sara, and she casually mentioned that, “Oh, I've written a poem to Nigel, but I'm scared to show it to him. Like he hasn't seen it or heard it.” And being a film producer, I said, “Wait. Don't read it to him. Don't show it to him.” We were scheduled to go out and shoot the segment with her at her home in a week or two. So I said, 'If you would read it on camera, I would love you forever.' I would have loved her forever anyway. So what you see, it's almost one take of her reading the poem to Nigel. And none of us in the room, of the crew and me, Nigel, had ever read the poem. And Nigel had never heard of the poem. Dr. Dave Johnson: This is very real and in many ways, raw. I think it really illustrates that relationship. Again, not to talk about my own illness, but I felt the same way Sara did. [Video clip playing] Sara Bowden-Evans: So I need to read you something. Nigel: You need to read me something? Sara Bowden-Evans: Yeah. Nigel: Go on then. Sara Bowden-Evans: I wrote another poem that is for you. Nigel: For me? Sara Bowden-Evans: Yeah. I'm going to try to read it very easily now. Nigel: When did you write this? Kept that very secret. Sara Bowden-Evans: Because I don't know how else to say what I needed to say. Nigel: Okay. Sara Bowden-Evans: I'm sorry for the pain I caused. I'm sorry for the hurt. You were always in the firing line To take the brunt of course It's not that I'm actively directing it to you. It's just you're the one that's always there. And that's the truth. They say we always hurt the ones we love. And there's a reason. And that's because the ones you love the most know all your feelings. You've suffered with me. All the pain, the sadness, and my darkest days. You forgive whatever nastiness I throw. But I don't know how to ever repay all the things you've done, apart from writing down in words. Nigel: That was so beautiful. Thank you. That's amazing. [Video clip stopped] Dr. Dave Johnson: I know that there are no words that can describe that. Mr. Bill Brummel: Yes. Sara really is the emotional center of the film. And from a producer's standpoint, I don't mean to sound crass, but you always can get behind a person cry on camera. Dr. Pat Loehrer: When I was watching the movie, though today, could you get behind me because I was crying. Mr. Bill Brummel: Well, I usually, at any public screenings, and because of COVID, there hasn't been a lot of them, but I try and view the film from the back of the audience. And I'm scouring the audience to make sure they're laughing or crying at the appropriate places. And they usually are. Dr. Dave Johnson: So Bill, what message would you like for oncologists to take away from your documentary? Mr. Bill Brummel: Well, very simply. It's the message I would like oncologists to hear and implement, and a lot of them do, but it's to treat the patient and not just the disease. And that's it in a really simple form. The psychosocial consequences of any cancer diagnosis are challenging, and especially as Dr. Sinha said, in head and neck patients, where the treatments often leave a patient disfigured in a noticeable and visible way. Shame, anxiety, and depression are common enemies. Support the psychosocial health of your patients. And I'm convinced that if you do that, their physical condition will improve. Dr. Pat Loehrer: Well said. We certainly can't let you out of here without showing a clip from the choir's performance at the concert that you filmed. In fact, there were several, several songs. I think we're going to show one of them there. But can you tell us a little bit about the film distribution plans, the business of this, how will the public be able to see this film? What's happening on that end? Mr. Bill Brummel: Well, we have a commitment from PBS if I want to show it on the PBS network of stations. We're aiming for a 2023 broadcast, probably spring. Currently, I really want to maximize the impact the film will have with the general cancer community. And for the last six months or so, we've initiated impact and outreach campaigns. And by that I mean we're doing branded screenings and webinars and speaking and showing films at conferences. We're aiming at the cancer advocacy and support communities, universities, medical schools, clinician associations. We've done a bunch so far. We're doing more. We're also trying to partner with corporations or nonprofits to bring these screenings to cancer advocacy and organizations that might not be able to afford a screening. And we're looking for underwriters with the PBS podcast. But the film will get out there. I just really, for the time being, want to concentrate on the cancer community. Dr. Pat Loehrer: That's terrific. So we're going to show a one of the performance clips. Do you want to set that up for us, there. Mr. Bill Brummel: COVID shut down the choir. So every time I see a performance, it makes me long for more and more performances. But this clip is as rendition of Ain't Got No, which was popularized by Nina Simone in the ‘60s. It was originally written for the musical 'Hair', but one of the unique things about the choir is that they at times rewrite lyrics to songs to make them more illustrative or the lyric to explain the full impact of having a laryngectomy. So this is the song we're playing last, it's the finale of the concert and the film. The first half of the song speaks to all the things we've lost by not having a voice box. Second half, which we'll see, speaks to all the things we still have, can still do in life. Sara helped adapt the words. It was a group effort. [Video clip playing] Singer: [singing] What have I got? Why am I alive anyway? Yeah. What have I got? Nobody, nobody can take it away. I… Choir: [singing] got my hair, got my head, got my brains, got my ears, got my eyes, got my nose, I got my mouth. I got my smile. Got my health, got my tongue, got my teeth to make these sounds, in my head I change my breath, I got control. I got voice. I got poems, I got friends, got my songs, got my limbs, got my heart, got my soul, got my pride. I got my voice. Opera Singer: [singing] What have they got? Sing, what have they got? Choir: We've found our voice. [Applause] [Video clip stopped] Mr. Bill Brummel: Obviously, the woman that sang at the end did not have a laryngectomy. She's a professional opera singer. Dr. Dave Johnson: I think I can safely say, for all of us here today, that we thank you for producing such an inspirational film, and one that really I think captures the emotions that go along with, one, being diagnosed with cancer, two, going through treatment, three, experiencing survivorship and the support. And Dr. Sinha, to you, thank you for inspiring Bill to doing that. We have maybe just a couple of minutes if there any questions from the audience. We haven't received any via the text. So if there's any questions, there's a microphone here. And as an added incentive, if you ask a question, you get a free Oncology etc. t-shirt. Dr. Pat Loehrer: Better yet, we may not give them. That might be a great incentive. Dr. Dave Johnson: Don't trample one another running to the microphone. I see, there are people who want their t-shirt. So please. Question 1: Thank you so much. That was a beautiful film. I'm a nurse, and it's a great inspiration. And I'm sure it's a great inspiration to the patients. Are there any similar organizations in the United States doing a choir? Mr. Bill Brummel: Not that I know of to the extent that Shout at Cancer does. There's several laryngectomy support groups or laryngectomy clubs around the United States. And every once in a while, you'll see one that the patients get together and sing for fun or they do a Christmas performance at some event. But Shout at Cancer takes it really to an unheard of level. I've never heard of anybody doing this in the world as much as they do in terms of the original writing, the professional musicianship, the rehearsal. So I'm not aware of any that take it to that extent. Dr. Pat Loehrer: I just want to say from my own behalf, we're in this world. The best thing you can do at the end of your life is to say that you made a difference. And this film, what you have done has made a difference. As long as I have the capacity to remember, I will remember you and I will remember this film. So thank you very much. Mr. Bill Brummel: You're welcome. And thank you for saying that. I'm touched. And that exactly was the point. I think that was the point when Dr. Sinha said, 'You should do a documentary about the psychosocial effects of having a laryngectomy recovery and living with a laryngectomy.' I don't know that he thought I'd do it to this extent, but that is the message I want to inspire people who've had a laryngectomy, and I want the world to know and to relate better to people and understand people. Dr. Uttam Sinha: That gives me a lot of joy in what it means to recognize leaders like you and the society of head and neck cancer patients. And Bill has been a driving force for me to stay in head and neck cancer surgical oncology care. Dr. Pat Loehrer: The world's a better place because of both of you. Dr. Dave Johnson: Yeah, for sure. Dr. Pat Loehrer: For those that were here in the audience and those at home, don't forget, you can claim credit for this. Provide feedback. And if you could, I really would like to have a little bit about who's the best-looking podcaster, if you could. Dr. Dave Johnson: I think that's critically important. And I appreciate Dr. Sinha's recommendation. It's made me rethink my take two aspirin and call me in the morning recommendations. So I'll have to be more productive in the future. But this brings us to the end of this podcast. I don't know if any of you in the audience have listened to our previous Oncology, etc. podcasts. We hope that you did. And we hope that you will. As we've said at the end of each of our podcasts, we welcome ideas. We will literally talk about almost anything oncology related or not. That's why we have the 'etc.' on and it's been a great joy for Pat and me. Both of us enjoy doing this. We've been great friends for over 40 years. And it's a wonderful way of cementing the friendship. So thank you for all of you who are here in the audience. It'll take about an hour to file out with this large crowd so please be careful as you move to the doors. Thank you. Thank you for listening to the ASCO Education podcast. To stay up to date with the latest episodes, please click subscribe. Let us know what you think by leaving a review. For more information, visit the Comprehensive Education Center at education.asco.org. The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. Guest statements on the podcast do not express the opinions of ASCO. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement.
This week we're back in School and being Student Body Snatchers with The Faculty. Learning about the worst College Football team names, loads of behind the scenes and alternate Casting as well as what a piece of dirt Harry Knowles was and we assume still is. Should you want to see anunedited videocast of this week's episode you can join us on the Patreon for just a quid at https://www.patreon.com/100thingsfilm full episode Auto transcription: Hey, guys, are the sure? We're looking at harness usher, Stuart Jansen, Patrick, hi, heartnet Edward. We're looking at years the faculty. Hello everyone, and welcome to another action packed episode of a hundred things we learned from film. I'm one of your host my name's plenty and I'm a body snatcher. Oh and I'm John. I'm the JOCK. You absolutely are, quarterback prick. Very well, very well indeed. I was gonna say it's gorgeous outside, pishing it down raining just now and it's still red. Well, I would have had my taps off, but for the very first time we are recording in video for our patrons. So if you fans, only fans, only pals, more like. So, if you want to see John's beautiful new kitchen behind him, potentially some Colin Robinson later on, as he likes to jump in, and my big fat face, you can get involved by giving us a quid a month. It is not going to be a permanent thing, but we're going to throw it up completely unedited, so you get to hear what a fucking pigs here. John just waits of the of the preamble. Anyway. It is what it is, John What what was happening that year? Well, Lord, just what was happening that year, and I'll tell you what. As that, you can't addit, any of it out. When it's the video, patrons are getting all this. Yeah, be fair. I think we've done nine. Hit Me, but I'll go to it again. Oh God, lords of crackers, the Truman show, and that's good. I know you love it. You love it, roaring, Robert, Robert, you maybe need to watch it again. Sort of a plane I wasn't on board with. I just didn't don't like it. Snake eyes, where you're Nicholas? All right, yeah, very good. For List Cage. You don't know. A few of them didn't. The city avengers, biggest pointless fellow I've ever seen in life. Nick Nicholas Cage, the Crow, the crow, five patch Adams, oh Jesus, yeah, because because cancer can be cured with laughter. Exactly, exactly, and you know this. You know this. And Fallen, which is about a weird one. I remember watching this way Denzel, and it's about a sort of mother that sort of goes between bodies. Nope, you have that's absolutely lost on that one night. John Goodman is good crack. John Goodman. Yeah, court John Goodman and of them. That's what that's you. I'll meet John Black, Claire Flanni, though, true, and you get to see Brad Peck getting run over, don't you? Yeahie Hopkins, Athone Hopkins, round the horn. Anyway, by the bye, I saw this in ninety nine, so that's got a release in I want to say, February ninety nine in Australia. To cinema in Australia see this and had a great time. I think I might have seen this as part of a double bill with the First Guy, Ritchie film lock stock, is part of a double bill, and with lock stock, which is pretty good double bill. Anyway. You know, listeners, you don't want to hear about through the miss of time with an old hey everyone, an old man's talking should be the alternate name for this podcast. Anyway, right with the podcast that tries to an hundred things. John's got a list of things, I've got a list of things. I'm going to talk us through the film. John's gonna add some funny bits and we're gonna go from there. Happy to go, Big Fella, I'm happy brilliant stuff. Okay, so we start with Mirrormax and dimension films. Now, we did to mension films before, didn't we? So we're not gonna do it again. But I've certainly can tell you a little bit about mirrormax films. Their first film was good year, called Rock Show, Paul McCartney and Wings Concert Film. Jesus, who are Mirrormax Youn? Only the distributor paramount could have been right. Now this year Mirrormax, and this blew me away, have got a fletch film coming out. Remember fletch ship? Yeah, but it's John Hamm. I mean I loved John Hamm. Jesus, he makes some ship decisions. to WHO's standing for fletching? Two, like there's surely nobody going. Do you know what film I really liked? Fletch lives. I dug him wrong. I loved him, but I can you recreate that? Can? You wouldn't have thought so, mate. You wouldn't have thought anything for money. We open with this really angry coach, that always brilliant Robert Patrick, and again he's in on this and he he knows what a kind of film he's in. He screaming, scimming Blue Eyes. Yeah, absolutely, he doesn't look much older here and we're what six years on, seven years on from judge mcday? Yeah, absolutely screaming at his team and stand his quarterback and it's proper heart attack behavior, this, isn't it? Yeah, did you catch the song in the background? Oh God, no, I was. It was the next but I was blew me. Was Really, really annoyed it the next. The song was the kids aren't all right by the offspring from that American album which I've got CD somewhere behind. Meeting in the car tomorrow and I got CD player again. I'M gonna throw it in the car. It September one. It's high was eleventh in the US and the UK, Sixty nine in Australia, nice and forty three in Belgium's alter a pub, fifty wiland there. I don't know what then that is. It went gold in the UK, Platinum in Italy and the USAF. So we did alright. It's done, all right. They were they were big, weren't they? They were really big at that point. I went to see them, I want to say in two thousand, a couple of days after my birthday, so like the next year. Um, and there were great, fantastic and it's Colin Robinson. Fella. Um Again, listeners, if you want to see Colin Robinson walking all over the laptop, my notes, yeah, then you're gonna need to making techniques. Yeah, yeah, so they were. They were huge chill children at the time and a great zone. Yeah, there were a green deal of time. Yeah, yeah, arguably better anyway. So what's the what? What's the next song? That that got you going? As soon as I heard the REF coming in, I'm like what they're doing? I see right, yeah, we'll come to that. Yeah, we will come to that. Yeah, that fucked with me. You know what I'm talking about? Yeah, yeah, yeah, and he's approached by this unseen character. He's like, what do you want? And we fade out. That night there's a meeting of staff. There's no money for Ms Brummel. Miss Brummels just about million years old, the Blair which, no money for her computers, no money for Mr Take's trip to NYC. Now, Mr Take, the actor that played Mr Tate, we have seen in a number of things, but on this podcast he was the opposing COP chief two, Brian Cox's COP chief. Yeah, yeah, Johnny chimpo brilliant in this as well. And again. I know I mentioned every time the bad guy in masters of illusion. Oh God, yeah, yeah, yeah, I forgot about that. Actually, yeah, that's who's WHO's the WHO's the good guy? WHO's the good magician in that? Scott Bacula, is it? Is it a master of illusion? I'm making that. Yeah, as long as it's no masters universe. That's no, that's a very but the bad guy, that's skeletor it's friend. Yeah, anyway. Um, and they can't get this money. He wants stay to New York and Mrs Olsen wants to do a mute Zical, but there's no money, because I'm sure the football team will get get their kit. Yeah, and she's like they will get whatever town. You've seen what it's like on a Friday night here. Principal Drake, maybe new with by the way, you know who she is. Big Fan of cheers Lilith. Yeah, brilliant, Foxy Ist. fucking this, by the way. Yeah, appeal, complained and no, does it for me, mate, does it? Does it for me? Your Scotty, she's got to do it for you and she's my hands are tied. So No, guys and dolls. Use last year's set from our town. Now a couple of things. Guys and dolls. It was a nineteen fifty Broadway show by Frank Losser. It won the Tony that year and got a film version in nineteen in Frank soon after Marlon Brando and Gene Simmons, not the sticking out yeah, sticking out face makeup love gun one. Obviously, the famous song that we all know from it, of course, is guys and dolls were just a bunch of crazy guys and dolls. It's not. It's an episode of the Simpsons, but you get the idea. Just the joke here is, by the way, using the set from our town. Our town famously doesn't have a set, and kind of budge the joke, you know. Yeah, I liked that. I liked it. Yeah, it's good, isn't it? Yeah, and there's a lot of kind of there's a lot of funny little bits in this. I think this is probably going to be quite a long episode because I think we both love this, didn't we? Yeah, I think it's aged brilliantly well, except for some of the CG which will come to they're leaving. She says she's forgot her keys and she needs to go back into the darkened school because all the lights are off and you can't put lights back on. Apparently. Oh yeah, that's that's a rule. Yeah, she figured she she goes into her office, gets the keys and coach Willis Robert Patrick's there. He won't let it leave without a pencil. It's like, you look really pretty and I really want to borrow a pencil. Yeah, okay, and do you know what, here's your pencil. Why don't you and your pens are going to sleep it off. And what does he do? Text through her hand. Plunges it right through her hand. I looked this up. Good, I'm glad you did, because, well, just to see if I was looking at and since we're people, put pencils through hands. The only thing I can find recently, because there was an an eight year old in California's hospitalized after a billy stabbed a pencil through his knee. She that's that's just the idea of broken knees and ship is no good. I would not be a good mob enforce I couldn't find any. What all I found was bloody assholes doing magic tricks on Youtube, and I stand by this. It's not magic if you could edit a video. Yeah, to Piss off. Yeah, you need to see it in the flash if you did bud upon but what I thought was, and again for the video, this works like there's bones there, there's like there's a is there a? Yeah, yeah, there's Ale. Yeah, all right, fucking Jesus God. Yeah, alright, in the hands and fenails. And it's a good effect though, this putty hand. I liked it. She needs him in the plums and runs for it. Finds the door chained. Where is the door? The doors chained out of nowhere, and you kind of like, I don't know how's that happened, and we can kind of guess in a moment or two. She knocks coach the ground and escapes the set of scissors once again, finds that she's keyless. She's fucking useless. She makes it out and locks coaching, losing the scissors. Ms Olsen picks them up and stabs at the death of them. Is fucking slow motion. What's wrong with the face thing, Pretty Graham? Yeah, now this massive long opening scene. You had an issue with the music. Yes, what's the crack? I just there's bad enough for we're trying to get pink floyd to put music on streaming media and stuff like that. They can. They completely take a cracking song like breaking the wall and just ref it and just and get other people to sing. Don't they like it? Leave it alone. It's a perfect piece of music. Yet, Hey, class of ninety nine, leave that song along, that song on your class of night in night. John. I'm looking at it because I didn't write it down. So what's the point? Short term, American alternate rock Super Group, Super Group bunny ears, inverted commas right, consisting of members of notable rock bands. Okay, and there's a couple of notable rock bands here and some ship Lane Staley of Alice in change, I don't know, Tom Morrello, raged against some machine. You know him, Stephen Perkins, Anthony to his mates from Jay's addiction, Martin Lynn, noble novel, from the Novel Porno for Pyros, I don't know, and Matt Serlick, from one of Rachel's favorite bands, matchbox twenty. Water load of fucking bollocks they are. And that is it. They got together for that, just giving rap. Yeah, and in fact it's so good, such a good song, John. I'm gonnaice to get some facts about it. Another brick and all. Part two is the one that we know of the three parts, written as a protest song against corporate punishment, which was out ard in state schools in the UK, nine six and private schools in which explains so much of what is wrong with our current government. Yeah, it was number one in deep breath, Australia, Canada, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Israel, New Zealand, Norway, Portugals said it again, Sweden, Switzerland, UK, USA, and sold four million copies worldwide. Not Too Shabby. That's that's physical copies. Yeah, well, yeah, yeah, would have all been physical copies, but none of this streaming bollocks here. Mate. So it was three part of composition by Pink Floyd from nineties, seventy nine, and it was classed as a rock opera. Yeah, I love that. Have you? Have you seen another brick in the what have you seen? Is it another brick in the world the film? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, horrifying stuff. It really was going to back in the day. I love that. Scary, scary Shite. A little bit of background on this school, by the way. Harrington high not real. Herrington as a town also not real. Filmed in western Lockhart, Texas, which is known as the barbecue capital of Texas, which I assume that's the next town along from Cowboyville and ship larger county. Probably definitely come at me, Texans, because you wear those healed boots, don't you either, Go Ching, Ching Ching everywhere you walk, sports pose, Tottingham Hotspurs. Yeah, but I like the fact that it's not a real place. Yep, right, this bit we go through here with with the kids. You kind of meet them all and you get their names, which is brilliant if you're doing a podcast about this, because he gets it right down who they are. Number one is Zeke Josh Hartnett and written in his Mustang, and I'm fucking wrong. I know it's not a Mustang. Now I've written it down, but nice one, pacy, I mean Casey Elijah. Would he gets rammed at this post ball's first Danny. Yeah, it's kind of like Shit. That is pretty nasty. testical trauma is a great name for a band. Is when testicles are hurt by force, the cover gets torn or shattered and blood can leak into the scrotum until it becomes tense, which can lead to infection. God, just don't keep seeing it. Stop saying testical trauma. This Delilah, my least favorite character this whole yes, yes, Georgana bet brewster, right, good looking lassie, which is on about these stay Lorder lips take seventy two hours to apply. Could not find anything state Lawder Lips, by the way. However, I did find out State Lawder was found in New York City by the woman of the same name. She was the only female to feature in the twenty most influential business geniuses of the twentieth century, as published by Time magazine. What. Yeah, so everybody else? That's amazing. Probably trump was in that. I assumed so. And she she was a sister. In the fast few days, didn't she state Lauder fucking else, she did Jordans in front of all my bowels. Of all you're paying friends, and that's the thing, John, nothing about paying. But you know she was the sister because, as we noticed, all about firmly ward, firmly, this leaders a Zi family and respect. Get my pub stand is the quarterback that we saw before and Delilah's boyfriend. Yeah, stokely clear devalt go, kind of bit bit goth kids. You know, like really low budget out of the fact of the craft. Yes, yeah, I always forget her name and listeners are screaming boys in water boys. She isn't water boy. Yeah, and that Nicholas Cage Um port of call, you know, the Fred Lieutenant bad lieutenant potkole rotten, absolute piece of ship, that film. Anyway. Elijah Wood was the first person, apparently, to cross Niagara Falls by rope as part of an adrenaline challenge. Went. Don't ask. Josh Hartnett turned down the following rolls. whoever. This kid's brilliant spider man, Super Man and Batman. Do you know what he didn't turn down, though? A film about a haircutting competition in Keith Lee, West Yorkshire. I think it's called blow dry or blow job or something. Seriously, yeah, Alan Rickman's Dad Jesus because, yeah, yeah, when we do a Yorkshire Month we'll do that. Cleared about is named after the last volume in author Lawrence de Moles, the Alexandria Quartet novels. I don't know what they are. I didn't look into them, I was busy looking at the other books. Jordana Brewster, the faculty was the first film yet know what facts, but sorry, mate. Yeah, we've got to get that, we've got to get right. And then there's this new kid, Mary Beth something, something, something's got about seven hundred names and she yeah, yeah, God, and a new kid. I've got a clue. KLEX Klan Sense Zeke, selling fake ID of the brother from that seventies show. Yeah, yeah, I was. I was looking up by misdemeanors or possession of fake ideas in America, Da up to one year's jail term, summary Probation, community service and or money toor finds up to you a thousand dollars. They'll put you in prison for fucking out, won't they? Because it's a business loving, loving. I smoked cigarettes and then everything, just sitting there smoking, just getting it on. So I'll double checked this as well, because I was unsure to this. Remember that you used to be able to smoke around about hospitals, and then he stopped all that. Yes, apparently it was the same in schools. Adults could smoke in around schools and then my support portion of the districts prohibited it from the short of phased out from sixte Al Right. Well, it was the same sort of idea, because I was. I was always wondered that. I was like, I don't actually they smoke rear schools, but apparently not. You could. You could smoke in our school staff room when I was a kid. I think it's just must be the American ones, because it just comes. So you can't smoke. You text many guns in as you want. Yeah, yeah, you have to, you can. Need to protect us over the smokers. I'm gonna Kill Cancer, I'm gonna Kill Cancer, I'm going to shoot it in the fucking face. And basically all the kids in the background are absolute pricks, all fighting, arguing, these lasses, crashing the car. And we learned that Zeke is selling this stuff. He's throwing in this drug, isn't he? Inside? Yeah, Scat, he calls it, which makes anything else any other name other than like ship. Yeah, go on, anything else. But they were in Blue Biros. In fact, I'm waving at the screen now, a green one and a black one, blue one big crystal, which I'm using to keep track of. The hanks introduced nine and in two thousand and six they sold their hundred billion. One Jesus crazy that the best selling pen in the world and the Manhattan Museum of Modern Art has made it a permanent fixture because this fuck all else going on. And I guess there are six types of point with eighteen coors. There you go. And, as I say, Black Green, I think that might be. That's a purple one. It's not a blue one anyway. But using all my wife's good pens, kicking off right in the faculty room, there's this teacher, Harry Ah and you we're gonna me all the teachers as we go on, all the faculty, and I'll kind of cover them when we cover them, but Harry was one that I was particularly interesting. Did you recognize this guy? Is that? Is that the guy with the Gender Big Fat Guy? Yeah, so it was. I felt it was a film critic when he well, yeah, kind of. Yeah, Harry Knowles, he's called. So he was. He was in the Austin Film Critic Association and you go and kicked it for sexual harassment and correct. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, AIn'tick. Cool news was his website and yeah, he got he got kicked out for assault, sexually assaulting Jasmine Baker in two thousand at the Alamo drafthouse in Austin. Apparently he was also very easily bought by studios for reviews around about the timing of this. So I can't help thinking he might have been given this role, not speaking role, for that to bump up. Yeah, absolutely, if I don't think you needed it, and it's a lot of fun. Yeah, it was. Then a couple of things and it was like he's an alien in Phantom menace as well. Apparently, apparently he's talking the nurse. The nurse is sick, Salmahayak war. Yeah, I love the way you looked into the living room there and make sure Kirsty wasn't hearing you talk about Salmahayak. So, yeah, the she says because she's full of full of cold, and if you're sick, why don't you take take a day off? It's just I'm saving all my sick days for when I feel better. We've all been there. That's a good show. So she's trying to quiet. She's doing a ship job. Sick days. John, would you believe in America, in the in in jobs and work in America, the average for an American worker in the private sector is seven six days a year, just seven, which is astonishing. It starts in the first year at seven and it builds up, which is astonishing, astonishing, astonishing, and the reason that is so astonishing is I get I get six months paid, six months unpaid, and I've only been in my job. When you're going to use all that tomorrow. So all that, we kind of meet all these staff, I like the science teacher who's basically trying to chat up sell Ma hi, ex nurse, isn't it? And then he's a line is. Well, I might as well put a penny in my eye, which is this brilliant kind of foreshadowing of what's going to happen to again. Oh, he was John John Stewart of the whatever the American things called that. I don't think I'll watch a lot of we didn't really get it over it, did we? No, did you? Did you catching the NEMES character? Yes, but it's later on. Go for it, and I was asking. All right, yes, yes, I did. Yes, so he is. She's a nurse, Harper, you put me on the spot here, Lad Edward. All right, Edward, Edward Furlong, Edward like that, Edward Furlong. Yeah, that Edward for a long who's been clean for four years, by the way. That's enough factor throwing. But I just read Edward for long has been has been clean for the last four years. Okay, result, yeah, exactly, but jild actor going wrong, and that's actor actor inverted. Commas so, Ms Olsen comes in looking less dowdy. Her and coach are drinking all the water in the class. We've got MS Burke, Fam Ka Jansen. We only we only looked at two weeks ago and she's very different in this, isn't she nervous? Dowdy, nobody, confident. No, talking about Robinson crusoe and she said what was crusoe most afraid of? And he says callous is she said, well, no, it was the isolation. Robinson crusoe is obviously everybody's favorite dilute injuice book by Daniel don't call me Willem Dafoe from sevent and a castaway that spends twenty eight years on a remote island without a volleyball called Wilson. Well, that means cry at least seventeen for that ball. He's rude, he's a smart ass. They claim that. You know, Stan tells Delilah that that he's quitting the team and she's worried he's throwing away his chance at a scholarship. But also she's more worried that she's head cheerleader. He's the quarterback and them's the rules. You can't break, break the rules of high school. DICKHEAD. Yeah, he's a load of things as well, that boy. He's been in launce. I didn't recognize him out of a thing it was. I'm sure he was in a wheezer video. Al Right, okay, well, what him and Fonzie? A little respect? I'm sure it was that. A little respect, all right, okay, Alright, oh, he's maybe it's maybe, maybe he's in that, that loser film. You know that they did spurt bag for maybe that with the guy that fucked the pie and the lassie that got the rose petals on the tits, Dana Kroyd. Thanks to Joshin Amanda Wilson for in forming me that the FBS, who are the governing body of schools colleges, allows eighty five scholarships each year for sports. Sorry, for football it's not many, not many, so thanks very much for that. That's how I would have got my education. Yeah, yeah, but we don't need no education. Mr Take Daniel von Bergen. As we said, super troopers really boring history lesson drinking boost from this Cup, isn't he? Yeah, and stand Correctis as you want to be. On chapter five, Mary Beth approaches Stokes Lee at break. She's Reading Double Star by Robert Heinlan. Robert Heinland was a sci Fi writer. He wrote starship troopers. Previous episode won four Hugo Awards for double stance, starship troopers, stranger in strange land, which is the only one of his I've read, and the moon is a harsh mistress, and then I get that one by the rest or just Martin is reel. Okay. Delilah comes along and basically says don't, don't hang around with stokes lead because she's wearing different shades of black and calls her a violent lesbian, so which stokes stokes storms off. Basically she's a piece of ship. She goes from being a piece of ship to being a piece of ship to then not being a character. Yes, you're pointless, absolutely pointless. Casey's eating lunch alone on the bleachers and finds this insect pod's approached by the coach Um and he says, have you ever considered trying out? He says I don't think a person should run unless he's being chastede. It's a great line. And then there is for shadowing. He's not happy about running. He doesn't think anyone should run, but he's quite happy to walk to fucking more door. He really has it. Walks at pistol, he walks at Pacy, I mean Casey. He does like Harold from neighbors in the science class. Casey approaches Mr Edward Furlong with the pod. Well Stokes, he tells Mary, but she's not gay. She just doesn't like people and that's her way of keeping because in apparently people didn't want to anger out anybody. This pod look like fucking Cocuna out of pokemon. What's going on there? Furlong suggests it could be a new species. And then they spill a bit of water on it and it comes back to life. Put it in this aquarium and it grows these tendrils. Done it and as he's about to kind of put his finger and it reproduces and when he gets his finger near it, this massive teeth, like C G I teeth, didn't look great and bit him at the pool. STANTELL's coaches quitting. A coach who has gone from basically up fucking here. At the start of the movie he's just like well, you know, you're just gonna do what you're gonna do. I can't I can't do anything about that. You're telling me this the day before, you know, this the day of my daughter's wedding. And Yeah, he just basically lets him get on with it and stand saves Casey from usher in the locker room. Yeah, exactly. I mean I think he's maybe in a couple of other films as as she got like twenty kids or something. I'm sure that's the thing I heard once. I didn't do any looking into rusher. I've done all my looking into everybody else, but yeah, I'm sure I think you've got about twenty kids. Jesus here must be he was ushered. He goes into he heads into the shower. I noticed he'd got some soap on a rope. It's kind of kind of it. I haven't seen soap in the rope for ages still widely available, but in two thousand and nine the Catholic Church stopped companies selling soap on a rope or, as it was known, as pope on a rope, because Holy Father only wants his facing under age genitals. I mean might not be true. Are you liking these Catholic Church jokes? Listeners for you? Are we getting canceled? Yeah, we might be. When he's in the shower, here comes Mrs Brummel with like a Meltie face, a face like one of the aliens out of they live, and she's just going they want everyone. I can't breathe, I can't breathe. And he grabs her like, hugs her, and scalp comes away in his hand just it slops all the folio. Fantastic. Olsen explains she has cancer, because cancer makes your scalp come away from your head. And at Zeke's car he's selling this vhs of Nev Campbell and Jennifer Love Hewittt fully frontal naked. Now, of course, me being me, I had to have a little bit of a look to find out what that could be. The only thing Nev Campbell and Jennifer love Hewett have been in together. It's part of five. No Fall Front. No Fall Front, only party of five. Certainly not in the first two series I watched there wasn't. He didn't feel front of Nive Campbell. And was it world things? No, Denise Richards. You got to see her. She did for them to everybody was getting to see that. Absolutely money well spent. Ye, Delilah and Casey are in the Faculty Lounge Looking for Goss for the school paper. He says you could be a cool human when you're not being a grade a bitch. Okay, and she's like are you hitting on me? Not, everyone's fucking hitting on your doll, Olsen and the coach. They come back. Casey and Delilah locked themselves in the cupboard. Brummel died because she was too old. Almost the full faculty have now been commuted. I just thought it's so good. Here's nurse Harper. She's still sick, so we know that something wrong with her. They grab her, knock at the ground and spit this bug into her. He was like in the cupboard. The kids find brummels corps and then burst out. Not Robert Patrick and this stunt double. It was blatantly Robert Patrick. Then up to the ground and this old lady stunt double up to the ground. They're running away. Casey slips over and Delilah keeps on running because obviously she's she can be pretty cool when she's not being a grade a coward. So that night the cops, case and his parents are looking for the body. Now, did you spot this nineties power suit the dad was where? Casey's Dad was wearing shoulder pads like him? Okay, I think I think he thought he was in swingers. I think he thought he was in swing but no, deditly not. They go in with the cops and they find resuscitation Annie in the closet, this thing that I've never had to use because I don't think we ever did this at school. Don't know if you do. I think we did it in first in but yeah, never, never in school. Yeah, resuscitation Annie, developed by Norwegian toymaker Asmund lateral and Peter Safer. Good, yeah, and absolutely freaky looking fucking thing. They explain that that they also hurt the nurse and said no, we didn't. She's epileptic and she suffers from Grand Maus. Grand Maus are seizures the last only a matter of minutes but can be so severe they cause a victim to harm themselves during today they're known as tonic clonic seizures, which I think sounds like something you clean your asshole out with. I know it as an im a, actually stealing off me. What about cleaning your asshole out as well? Okay, the parents take him home after drake has taken this cop into the office and he comes out like subtly changed a hunt of a wink, as if, yeah, Alien Wink. They get him home. They said no phone, no int ripping out this physical mode. Yeah, musical music. So it is getting blast and she's got the porno under the bed, the Hump, the phone, Humph, and it was boobs magazine, not a real magazine, but just got a lot of Ms Bok A. You. Yeah, but then he's got a print, and then he's got to retaining print. Yeah, I never seen that, my laef. No, I had no idea. And then for some reason he does something and he's got this walking like what was that about? Like this walking Meccanno animal thing didn't make any sense. And then he jumps out the window. He spots the faculty as and then slips off this fucking Verandam thing and his dad calls him in, but the faculty aren't there. You know, his dad was still holding NIMBIMBS, was he? Yeah, he was. Then we see the kind of the blind coming down and it's the outline of one of the teachers, isn't it one of the faculty? or so they're going to get mom and dad the next day as they drop him off, as dad drops him off at school, Dad and culture talking, Delilah Grabs Casey. She's got glasses on and her hair tied up. Yeah, and commit a call. Exactly who she's hardly Martin landow in, that mission, impossible TV show, and he's again a reference for fucking nobody. that. Yeah, we know. Sunday morning, sixties TV in the faculty lines. are going through all this water and not drinking coffee anymore and your man's off the booze. Maybe that's what I maybe that's I've stopped drinking booze because I'm an alien. I will be doing a lot more fucking better stuff with my time than this fucking you know you've been probing left, Rinde, center. Stan tells stokes that he's quit. The team explains that he got an a on biology instead of a d because of his winning arm, because he had a good arm. Stokes, he's been watching him, following, following him, and he says I want to be a D student. I deserve that D I love the D is not quite what he says. Mr Take says he wants to live in history of the family. UH, stands like, is this going to be on the test? And it's just this line of this isn't the test. Brilliant, fantastic character. There's a cure. Kids waiting for Ers here exam in a class and the police are helping. So it's all starting to look a little bit shady. Now zeke spots that there's a couple who were scrapping previously. The LAD's chill to fuck. She's like shouting at him, screaming at him. Do you know how his lad was? I remember his face and like I know that guy was in their scream movies. Hang what was a parody of it, a scary movie. Get a movie. He was a boyfriend in the first one that shot her. What these two boys are back for some scat. They want all he's got and he gives them a load, but they keep asking. They're blating the aliens. Yeah, have you got any more in your car? Have you got any more at home? So he keeps put some in his pocket. Ms Burke's now dressed like she's going to a fucking cocktail party right. She plays three characters in this. She played he's the Mousey one. She plays shouty, Screamy, fucking nutty teacher here as the alien. She calls him a diculous excuse for a little boy and storms off. Yep Um when he tries to offer a chocolate flavored laxatives, which is the last thing I need, and some Cherry Johnny's. Yeah, magnums, weren't he there were. Yeah, so I'll look this up because I thought Magnum was to do with the size it, but no, it's it's I think that Americans think Magnum's apparently the size, but it's the same lengths and standards. circumferences are normal journey. So I don't really understand why either go or is that magnums, because it's pretty much the same size as standard johnny bags. I tend to always put magnums on my p I. Robert Homden. Yeah, if you wanted John You could indeed by twenty more Cherry Johnny's five pounds. THIRD FROM CONDOM OUTLET DOT COM. How do we know there are more cherries? May I am not buying Johnny from Condom Outlet Dot Com. Nope. Casey explains to Stokes Lee what's going on and she said it sounds like pod people from the body snatches. Body snatches are rip off from the Puppet Masters, from Robert Heinlein. Which one is your body snatchers film, John Leland? Okay, yeah, I think that was the scariest. The dog with the person's face was just freaking yeah, yeah, yeah, just the end, the fact that it's kind of like fuck, yeah, yeah, he just points at her. screeture noises horrific, don't I mean, I'm sure I will watch it again at some point, but I saw that probably as a teenager, scared the shit that. I prefer the fifties one. Yeah, where at the end he looks in the he looks in the wagon and it's these prop pods. I love that and that's that's so cute. Writer. Today standards, it was, even though it was the subject was quite horrephic. It was quite quite felt quite hormly in the it. This, this bit ripped my fucking knitting. By the way, Casey explains he thinks film directors are aliens setting us up for a proper invasion. Spielberg's Et and son and felds get shorty, I'm sorry, I mean men in black, and I'm kind of like yeah, okay, I get it. That Robert Rodriguez. He's kind of going, I'm a director, I'm talking about film directors. Give me a fucking dump truck full of cash to make more of these. No, don't totally tot when he was seen, the whole gang head to science class to see the creature is now gone. Casey explains his theory on Aliens. Zeke and Mary Beth head to this the labs oars, which is the next room across which is where he gets his stuff for SCAT, and they're about to snug to garbagees medication, which I know that song very, very well. Off Two point oh to the garbage album of the same year. It's not a single. I thought it was number one in the UK and Iceland album but nowhere else. That's a great album. It's their teacher comes in and yeah, John Stewart comes in, but not before Zeke's come in trying to make a tweat of himself, pretending like or whatever. They've heard, and Casey explains that you think that that the that they're aliens. He attacks them Zeke's rips off this fucking this blade yellow teen things, slices off his fingers, which looks great for a second and then you see the fingers crawling across the floor. Ray Harry housings crying, and then they smash him in the eye with the with the I've written, shot penning shot nail, which basically melts his face. Yes, and again it's back to what he says. I might as well stick a penny in my eye or yeah, it was coming. This is a bit of Stokes, he said. Isn't this a bit where someone says, let's get out here and stand, let's get out of here. Casey grabs the weak Acuna thing and they had for the car. Everyone's acting calm and weird and scary as they kind of head out. Yeah, they get out of dodge in the car. There's nothing on the radio and like a police roadblock, isn't there? That they speed away from. was just leading shimming show. It was a little bit like show white beetle. They get to his place. He's got an apothecary in the garage like something he's turning fucking leading a gold or something, an episode of friends. He's rich and a prick and he's been grinding up caffeine pills for I took a lot of pro plus in college. I think everybody did. Forward when it we're coffee, just for that extra kick, that's right. Yeah, just because you've done a full out of college and you're going out that night. Yeah, there isn't any touch things is an energies just wasn't red from you. If you were lucky, you got Lucas aid sport, because it's ISOTONIC. We find out that he owns a gun, which is basically Chekhov's gun maybe, and he cuts a bit off the pod and puts it in with Oscar, that wait mace. It takes over the poor thing and he wrings its neck. He could to play three blind maze, lay down and wait again, which is monthy python reference for nobody. He cuts it open to find that it's a dried out the little mouse, and he empties a penn of scat onto this rest in this pod that melts like salt on a slug. stokesly explains you've got to get the master and that will free everyone else, because school kids are fucking geniuses. Yes, they're basically figuring out that the alien people are emotionless, the puppets. It's a puppet master. They argue amongst one another. Any one of them could be an alien. Zeke solution is for them to snort a Byro. So there's obviously homost the other thing, yes, one like that scene. It's not a homage. It's fucking robbed, robbed off this thing, isn't it? Yeah, I went to school with and I do put by rows up his nose. He lays tarmac for a living now, so really just old it. Casey takes it and starts giggling, because caffeine bills do that. Oh No, it's great cackle. As little radio flyer stand grabs the gun and threatened Zeke, who takes it and stand does the same stokes. He says I'm not putting up that on my nose. Zeke says aliens are taking over. Weigh it up. It's quite a good lie actually. Delilah and Marybeth in the last two, and they won't do it. Mary Beth claims to BE ALLERGIC TO ASPIRIN. There's no aspirin in that. She does it, tips her head back and snorts. Delilah doesn't, and we get to see her with all these crawley things which look good. Casey grabs the gun but won't shoot her. stokesly does missus, and Delilah basically smashes up this drugloud throwing herself about. She's forgotten out to walk, and then she jumps in the waiting school learning car being driven by Mr Tate. What's going on? It's like as if there have been the speaking teachers. Hi've mimed, of course. So they head back to the school, which is Friday Night Lights. It's huge crowd at the game, with the Fart Rock version of another brick in the walls. Back as far as the team goes, they're called the Hornets. A spot. They were called the Hornets. There's only one or Charlotte Hornets. Charlotte Hornets, yeah, yeah, that's good to basketball. Hornets are the largest of the wasps and massive fucking assholes. The Asian giant Hornet stings cause thirty to fifty deaths annually in Japan. Would, yeah, would you believe it? And of course all American football teams have got stupid names. So, John, with that in mind, I want you to tell me if the next seven ones that I mentioned are a football team or a ship ball team? All right, football team if it's real, shipball team if it's not. Didn't really figure out the title, so you know whatever. Number one, the Minnesota Golfers. A. The Minnesota Golfers. Oh, it's a team. A. Number two, the Maryland terrapins, not sty. So it's a real football team. Yes, correct, it's a real football team. Number three, the Chicago outfits. Shut correct, it's not real. I made that one up. Number four, the wake forest demon deacons, real fucking writers, one of their shirts. Number five, the Kingston Cong's. Oh God, not made. That's a good name. Get out getting glace. Get that team made. Number six, the Martha's vineyard seamen. You're right, Rad number seven, the South Carolina Game Cocks. It is. Yeah, the job about. And so when this is going on it's funnish to where you're talking about Hornets. I've I've picked up a wee think about bees, because we're saying killed the queen and everybody go back to normal. So I just for some reason looked out to queen bees and seeing what would happened to be killed a queen. Okay, so that's what I got. So, unfortunately, queenless Corny cannot survive or for a sustained paid and absolutely queen bee effects of behavior working the worker bees. They's become aggressive. Worker bees may continue to lay eggs, but because there's no queeny finalizing, they're all drones instead of workers. All Right, knew that, you scientists, obviously, but that's that sounds pretty cool, man. Well, look, no, cool, don't. Don't kill Queen Bees. Don't, don't. You don't kill any bees place. All through the game the team are putting bugs in the ears of the other team and the tackle. It's good. This better, like Robert Patrick's doing. Amazing facial word, brilliant and yeah, yeah, fantastic stuff, like Henry clearing the water boy whenever. Yeah, in the gym. Principal Drake's here, by the way, Principal Drake, that the first person approached me. Principal Drake, did you see? This was Gillian Anderson. Oh, good, yes, yeah, yeah, again, would have been a great choice. Yeah, I think they tire up because they're certain that she's the she's the queen in this badminton net. She needs to snort the thing that she's not going to do it. So she woke some Zeke shoots are between the eyes. Yeah, just that. Nowhere. BLAMO as cases about to stab her. She comes back to life and Mary Beth throws the whole case of spun. Yes, yes, I'm melting, melting world. What the world? Good affection? There's a lot of it Israel. Where was you? Throw? Well, why? Now he knows. He's seen the end of the film. Games over in the town's heading home. Stand heads out to get the coach because there's certain now it's going to be him. Stokes. He grabs, grabs him and snugs him before he goes because she doesn't want him to die. Having not done that. Outside in the rain, coaching, the players have got their mouths open, tendrils out to the rain. Looks Great. It's like a lightning strike and you see like the alien behind yeah, and that still looks amazing. It's a really good gift as well, so I'll have to do that when I'm posting about it. Stands back at the door. They throw him a Biro wonder and he empties it away. It's beautiful. There's no pain, no fear. Se Open the door. Zeke threatens him through the door with a gun. Mum, he explains that he's got Schumer left in his car on the land and that's the stuff out of sky. Rim stiff. They head out him and Casey threw through the lot full of school busses. I was going, look at all those school busses, loads school busses there. We haven't seen a school bus in something for ages and ages and ages. By the way, remember we used to see loads of loads of them in films and it's been a while since. Yeah, yeah, I think the last probably we've seen it was in a trip. Yeah, I think so. Bigger score bus manufacturer in the US is the R E V group. They earned two point four billion revenue per year. It's astonishing. It's amazing. You can, you can, fucking you can get a contract doing anything in America. Really can. Oh, I missed this, but you can reattach fingers a maximum twelve hours after they have been slashed off. Throw that in UM cases. The Decoy was a coach and the team, because he can run, that's and he gets caught on the bus wagons by Delilah and as the team start coming through the windows, he escapes out through this. Not only can he run, but he can also fucking jump. You can jump. I thought I was watching again. I thought home coming, as Zeke said, his car and he grabs the shaiser or whatever we're calling it. Miss what's her face? Comes back now, Ms Burke, and again she's still dressed in this gear and everything. Um, she said, I don't want Cherry condoms, but I do want something cherry flavored, and you're like wow, and I think they've kind of got around this by explaining earlier on in a throwaway comment, that he's had to stay back a year, like eighteen or nineteen. Makes Sense. He jumps in the car and she jumps in the back and as he peels away she's trying to worm his ear. He throws his seatbelt on and rams this bus. She is flying out the window. Now what doesn't happen when you fly out a window, John? You don't lose your hand, you don't get get capapitated. You don't get copapitated. That's right. Yeah, but she does. And another rep off of the thing. Very much so. Yeah, and it looks like fucking garbage because they don't have her talking or anything. They just have this. They don't even have her looking at him. The photograph of her face, isn't it? Photograph of the face going along, not even moving eyes, and just as she kind of finds the rest of the body, he's like, fuck this, I am out here. It was obviously that unimpressed with the effect. Exactly in the gym, Mary Beth and Stokes, they are talking in I know you're proud of being the outsider, but aren't you tired of being something you're not? I know I am. And then she gets all wavy arms and sucking licorice whips, because it turns out she's the massive squids. It turns out this huge fucking squid thing. She chases stokes Lee and the just arrived Casey into the pool. And she jumps into this pool and she's she's sacking super swimmer, like old Phelps, isn't she? The Queen Drags stokes the under the water, but Casey throws a rope and saves her. In the Locker Room, Z comes in, stokes. He calls out to him, but Mary Beth also calls out to him as Human Mary Beth, naked with the Nipples, naked with, yeah, with Photoshop Nipples, out answer me this. Why are you naked? It's q good he takes stokes as his side, but it turns out stokes he's got squid snogs it does. He locks her in this equipment cage. Casey's made to take some more of the fucking Skank by Zeke, who then gets thrown across the locker room and knocked out. Mary best calling after Casey, explaining her world was endless oceans till it dried up and she escaped. She wanted to make her very much like home, part of the same one feeling. One Mass Mary Beth becomes a true form and chases him into the gym. Now I love this because he sets this bleacher to retract and a great strategy and then nearly gets fucking caught himself. But it just so happens that he's a really strong athletic nerdy, so he kind of runs out just as it gets caught U he stabs her in the eye and she spits jazz written Jizz Tadpoles here in his face, which is who practical effics. YEA, they fall out. As she dies. He heads over at stokely she's alive, with some dead ones next to her, and we got one last jump scare. Zeke smashes on the batting cage. Do we really need that? Do we really need it? One month later? One month later, and just just because we're doing fucking show not tell. So we do tell, not show. In this we've got news reporter going. It's a month or since the and give you away. Zeke's on the team. Uh, and fucking we miss fucking Burke's watching from the bleach. Did he lay up that factual quickly? Yeah, what the fuck? And he's said and he gets put out that cigarette and get back on the team like that is surely that would surely get you fucking kids. Yeah, these reporters are doing a new story. Stokesle and scatter and stand a winching. It turns out Casey and Delilah a thing as well. And he is Time magazine Man of the year. I think. Sure have changed, haven't they? No, no, no, no, no, no, it's a bad old wasts song and nw to do. Yeah, man, time, man of the year night in ninety nine, John Jeff Bezos. What for? Taking Daddy's money? Probably, yeah, bad year. Yeah, bad indeed. What else have you got? That's that? Let's say that your neck and main left branch center. I was deleting them left her Queen B thing at the India. Oh, I'm sorry, mate, we need to get a bit better at this night at least. No, it's nous. Were just doing a thing. The facts are a harsh mistress. Oh No, I've got one thing, John, I've got one thing. Hang on, hang on, the car. Oh, yes, so you did. We both of the car. Sure as H Nineteen Seventy pointy act here, nice sexy machine and absolutely astonished. John, you didn't have the gun. I think we've covered a gun. It's not like you do not have the good one. We have, but it's a cult detective special. Yes, but there, there it is. I'm putting it on there, and it's only because I remember seeing that gun. So smashing Um Asian giant Hornet. We have done sick days. We've done replicating a numbals, snakes, sharks and commode or dragons have been known to birth without aid from males. Bacteria and cells are the only things that can replicate. No bother. No, there was horseplay written on the shower wall. No, horseplay. Horseplay is defined as rough, boisterous play. Horses rough and boisterous. I don't get that. No, that's a weird one. A couple of facts from the back of the making of the film, released Christmas Day night in the US, grossed forty point three million domestic and sixty three million worldwide, from a budget of just fifteen. Mel Zeke is the only character not to get infected throughout the film. Oh Yeah, Tommy Hill figure provided clothing for the film in exchange for the cast to feature in an advert. That's a good one. Well, they're all good ones, aren't they? If you don't know them. We've got outtown. We've got Jillian Anderson. Oh, the tattooed girl, Mary Beth Askeworth, the office is, is Robert Rodriguez Sister, Jessica Alba, was considered for Delilah, but she was too good an actor. I added that last bit. Sherylyn Fenn was Rodriguez first choice to play burke in a while. Yeah, and that is usher's dew film. Right. There you go that that ushered him into star in other films. How do you think we got on Gordo? Oh, little bit higher, seventy six. Yeah, bad, because we always as I was going through my facts in my head and like he's got this, he's got this he's got this. So, yeah, we doubled up a lot, didn't we? To be honest, that has a good farming. A lot of the things you back up on. You really do holding on because there's a lot of specific things that you see. So that's that's what I think. You Pack Up, won't you be fair? Absolutely, absolutely. Oh, we have got a lot of patrons to thank. Again this week we've got new ones as well. Newest Patron Ian mccomish, all around Nice Guy and long term pal. Thanks you. Rachel plant. You know her. It's her birthday today as this goes live. Happy Birthday plenty. Fifty again. How many years has that been that you've been saying you're fifty? I am going to get bad for that. That's fine. Nigel Davis is the owner of wonder emporium. He does accessories for tabletop and mini games. Get Him on facebook by searching for wondering porium and buy a lot of his ship. Dan Belson. He's the red half of the B there with Belson podcast, and Gavin Belson is the blue half of the B there with Belson podcast. Aaron, Aaron from Z what? Yeah, don't kill the Queen Bee h I wonder which one of those two is. The Queen Lads. You tell US Aaron from the Z one podcast. It's an audio drama about love, life, the undead and hamsters. You can keep that, by the way. I wrote that for today. Joe Higgins, Christ we know him hallmark of greatness. Weird thing about that damnit Vince podcast. He's back on here in September for an episode. Phil fairish friend and first ever patron, picks me up on loads and stuff that we miss, but then he does pay for the luxury. I'm not sure what his excuse was the past eighteen months, but you know, hey, punk from what the funk do you want? You know him currently shouting at guests on the Monday. He's also doing this semi regular chat about Elden Ring with filthy, which I'm enjoying. has made me want to try elden ring. I like a bit of ringsting. We've got SAS. Thanks for you continued listens and support. Mono and Kira from Mono rants the boys podcast. They've got season three summary Episode, which is live now that that series has finished. Amazing crack those two. We've got biggie, comedy genius and fake scale. Sir Stigg, film reviewer, extraordinary, and next week's guest, by the way, gadget, who's a God, Tier D and d dungeon master, and there from modern escapism podcast, and do dragons deem of Scotch Sheep, which is a hears God to yeah, yes, stick is a lot of fun to build him up now so it can come crashing them. Ian From court connections PODCAST, three different media linked by one common thread. Fantastic idea for a podcast, done really well by a nice guy. He won't like me saying that. Gavin McGill, long term support of the POD, long suffering Falkirk Fan, and, of course, Josh Wilson, lovely man, terrible impressions with a great family podcast. Super knows a lot bit wetter than Miami. He does moment. It's just we didn't ask him. Ah. So next week we will be back with stigg from modern escapism and the dragon's dream of scorch sheep, talking about Oh spade, why did you leave Farley with the Queen Bees? Talking about Tommy boy? Yeah, I haven't seen this in ages and stigss what to do it again. I hope it's not shocking. I hope it's not really really bad, stig, because that would be bad crap. John. Final words, mate, guys, patrons, pen peen, guests, thank you for all your cash. Money is it's going to be a good homes and production value stuff, and thanks for everybody ever for the listening, thanks for supporting again, and thanks for your votes. Have you voted for us? So? Oh yeah, in the podcast awards? Yeah, hopefully will have. Will have won least votes for a podcast. That's a dream. That's that's all we can hope for. Yeah, fantastic. For those that are not patrons and we're not able to watch, you just miss me windmilling my knob above my head. Did all that. So give us a quid and see me windmilling my very small, thin penis above my head from there. Not Really, but you will get to see all of this nonsense. So until next week. He's been, John, I've been plenty and we have been seventy six things we learned from the faculty. See, yeah, see you, guys. --- The Faculty is a 1998 American science fiction horror film directed by Robert Rodriguez and written by Kevin Williamson. It stars Jordana Brewster, Clea DuVall, Laura Harris, Josh Hartnett, Shawn Hatosy, Famke Janssen, Piper Laurie, Bebe Neuwirth, Robert Patrick, Usher Raymond, Jon Stewart, and Elijah Wood. The film was theatrically released on December 25, 1998, by Miramax Films through Dimension Films. It grossed $63.2 million and has developed a cult following since its release.
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This is where we start to get to know the future King George IV, in the time when he became Prince Regent. We also meet his friend ‘Beau' Brummel and talk about the disastrous way that friendship ended. Disastrous, that is, for poor old Beau. This was during the premiership of Spencer Perceval. It was while he was in office that the Peninsular War really started to get some momentum, behind Arthur Wellesley, by now Viscount Wellington (he would become Duke later). Even so, Britain's war effort against France was still mostly economic , through its blockade of French ports. That blockade, however, hurt Britain too, as well as neutral nations whose ships were being intercepted. Among those neutral nations, the United States were particularly resentful of British actions, and relations were swiftly deteriorating to a point where war seemed imminent. Indeed, the blockade became such a double-edged sword that Perceval was on his way to the Commons to debate whether it was time to slacken off a bit, when a waiting assailant turned him into a unique figure among British Prime Ministers: the only one to have been murdered. Which is practically the only thing people remember about him, if they remember anything at all. Illustration: Spencer Perceval, by George Francis Joseph, 1812 National Portrait Gallery 1031 Music: Bach Partita #2c by J Bu licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivatives (aka Music Sharing) 3.0 International License
"The joy that I felt when I found out that I was going to be a part of Green Eyes. It was it all had come full circle. It was like, now I could be the person scaring people." This episode features Anne Brummel who played Grizabella on the US National Tour 5. Hear Anne discuss being traumatized seeing the show as a kid, how CATS compare to Wicked characters, and her passionate defense of Grizabella based on her theory that Grizabella wouldn't have made it a full year. Plus, hear how Anne went from being terrified of Green Eyes as a kid to scaring kids in Green Eyes. Check out Anne on Instagram: @annebrummel Produced by: Alan Seales & Broadway Podcast Network Instagram & Twitter: @TheWrongCatDied Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Great Plains Master Beekeeping: https://gpmb.unl.edu Now Vertakking: https://nowvertakking.com/about/ Lil Dudes Insect Academy was created by me and is ran by me! If you don't know who I am, “Nice to meet you! I'm Bradon”. My passion is to learn more about bugs and teach others about them! In my Podcasts we will be talking about everything bug-related! From best places to visit to putting them in your salad, we will just talk bugs! I will also be interviewing some professional Entomologists! Hope you stick around! Website: lildudesinsectacademy.com Donate to the Academy: https://www.lildudesinsectacademy.com/donate.html ✌️Follow us on: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lildudesinsectacademy Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lil.dudes.insect.academy/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lildudesacademy
Choice Classic Radio Mystery, Suspense, Drama and Horror | Old Time Radio
Choice Classic Radio presents to you Lux Radio Theatre which aired from 1934 to 1955. Today we bring to you the episode titled "Beau Brummel.” We hope you enjoy the show! Please consider supporting our show by becoming a patron at http://choiceclassicradio.com
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Era muy tarde cuando llegó el autobús de los jugadores. Vi claramente cómo me rodeaba una nube de humo. Se había formado en la estación de Getafe Central y bajaba recorriendo la calle Ramón y Cajal. Terminaría envolviendo toda la plaza General Palacio, incluida la propia Cibelina. Aquella nube era una mezcla de olor a Brummel y Farias avainillado. Dejábamos atrás el sonido de las planchas grasientas y el aroma a bocadillo de panceta. Estábamos en Primera y el presidente nos prometía jugar en Europa. «Eso tiene que oler de la hostia», pensé. Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de Paquetes. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/856265
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Era muy tarde cuando llegó el autobús de los jugadores. Vi claramente cómo me rodeaba una nube de humo. Se había formado en la estación de Getafe Central y bajaba recorriendo la calle Ramón y Cajal. Terminaría envolviendo toda la plaza General Palacio, incluida la propia Cibelina. Aquella nube era una mezcla de olor a Brummel y Farias avainillado. Dejábamos atrás el sonido de las planchas grasientas y el aroma a bocadillo de panceta. Estábamos en Primera y el presidente nos prometía jugar en Europa. «Eso tiene que oler de la hostia», pensé. Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de Paquetes. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/856265
Daniel Brummel plays bass and sings in the band Ozma. In this episode, Daniel talks about: being a musician from a young age, the formation of Ozma, getting his masters degree in music composition, playing shows & writing songs with Weezer, the future of Ozma, and answers great fan questions. Also I re-cap a quick tour with Piebald, including Furnace Fest. Listen to Ozma on Bandcamp: https://ozmamusic.bandcamp.com/ | Follow Ozma on Instagram: @ozmaofficial | Follow Dana B (podcast host) & the Two Week Notice Podcast on Instagram: @danafuggenb & @twoweeknoticepodcast --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dana-bollen3/message
One of my best travel mates and I recorded this episode 2 years ago in Portugal! She's from the Netherlands and had ben traveling for 4 years on her own as a solo woman!! She tells us how to live a carefree lifestyle and get out of your comfort zone. The sacrifices you have to make as a traveler. The fear of taking risks and the “I can't do that” “I can't quit my job.” We chat on how to be deal with challenges as being a solo women traveler. We look at how being independent at a young age taught us to be good problem solvers. How to not feel lost when traveling. How to choose the power of your thoughts. Get more Bo: https://www.instagram.com/bo.brummel/ More Heart Snuggles with Lexy: 1-on1 Self Discovery Coaching: https://www.alivetoenjoy.com/service-page/your-integrated-self?referral=service_list_widget Instagram: Alivetoenjoy (https://www.instagram.com/alivetoenjoy/) Donations to help spread the heart snuggles: https://www.alivetoenjoy.com/heartsnuggles Email: alivetoenjoy@outlook.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/heartsnuggles/message
BRUMMEL:500ml: https://amzn.to/3t1ZF25250ml: https://amzn.to/3wAT6Wl125ml: https://amzn.to/3wvW66BSET: https://amzn.to/3cYi2zBDESODORANTE: https://amzn.to/3uxLl1OSET ANDROS: https://amzn.to/3sRqwho
#StremingPerfume #PerfumeHombre #PerfumeManESTE DIRECTO ES SOLO PARA PERFUME-MAN ES así que ya sabéis os lo dedico con amor y mucha quietud
Es gibt Geschichtennachschub! Und zwar eine Frühlingsgeschichte passend zu den blühenden Obstbäumen um uns herum. Nach einer Geschichte von Elke Bräunling. Photo by Polina Litus on Unsplash
On this episode Andrea hosts Tim and Thad from Rev Music out of Revolution Church in Canton, GA. They share their experiences of intentionally writing music for their ministry and cultivating community by building and developing artists within their own church. You can check out their latest music release "Alive in You" by clicking the link now!- https://revmusic.fanlink.to/RM Show Notes Check out Rev. Music https://music.revolution.church/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/revmusic.official/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/revmusic.official/ Stay in touch with the Overflow Worship team by emailing info@overflowworship.com or by visiting us on Instagram and Facebook: @overflowworshipofficial @andreaolsonmusic
Lux Radio Theatre - Beau Brummel
Anna soll aufräumen. Will aber nicht. Deswegen krempelt Brummel die Ärmel hoch. Nach einer Geschichte von Elke Bräunling
Ich freue mich unglaublich auf die heutige Episode, da ich die Möglichkeit bekomme mit einem Menschen zu sprechen, welcher sich aktuell in seinem Leben an einem extrem interessanten Punkt befindet. Die Rede ist von Felix Brummel. Vom Fussball, über Triathlon, hin zu Wasserball, kam Felix durch einen guten Freund schliesslich zum Rudern. Was zuerst nur ein Hobby war, entwickelte sich relativ schnell zum Hochleistungssport – denn das Talent von Felix wäre sogar für einen Blinden ersichtlich gewesen. Nachdem der 1.91m-Hüne bereits im Junioren-Alter Medaillen an Weltmeisterschaften gesammelt hatte, war es nur eine Frage der Zeit, bis der heute 26-Jährige ganz oben ankommen würde. 2019 holte er schliesslich im Deutschen-4er EM-Bronze und wurde in Münster zum Sportler des Jahres gewählt. Viele Experten haben wohl damit gerechnet, dass der Weg des Maschinenbau Studenten, steil nach oben weitergehen würde. Doch nach der verpassten direkten Olympia-Qualifikation bei den darauffolgenden Weltmeisterschaften und der Nichtnominierung für die deutschen Grossboote, gekoppelt an weitere persönliche Rückschläge, wendete sich aber das Blatt. Im darauffolgenden Jahr lief praktisch nichts wie geplant. Der Ausnahmeruderer träumte davon, in Tokio seinen olympischen Traum wahr werden zu lassen – doch der Traum platzte frühzeitig. Und nun kommt dieser Move, den ich persönlich so unbeschreiblich bewundere. Als Felix durch Corona schon fast gezwungen wurde seinen Alltag «ruhiger» zu gestalten», sowie das Streben nach «höher, schneller, weiter» zu unterbrechen, veränderte sich seine Perspektive auf seine Ziele komplett. Er blickte für einmal von aussen auf sein aktuelles Tun und musste feststellen, dass sich seine Vorstellungen und Ziele immer mehr veränderten. Felix zog die Reissleine und beendete im besten Alter seine Leistungssportkarriere. Er schnappte sich einen Rucksack und lief von Basel nach Pforzheim – 289km abseits von allem! Keine Medien, kein Social Media, kaum Kontakt zu anderen Menschen, kein Wetterbericht– nur er, seine Gedanken, Emotionen, Gefühle und die Natur. Wind, Regen, Sonne, Tiere, Zeltaufbau, Zeltabbau. Das alles ist erst der Anfang! Der inspirierende Junge wird definitiv nicht mit der Chips-Tüte, auf dem Sofa, vor dem Fernseher enden. Er träumt von langen Radtouren (wo er übrigens bereits einige verrückte Distanzen hinter sich gebracht hat), von Wanderungen in Amerika und vielem mehr. Aber vor allem versucht er sich aktuell so oft wie möglich in der Gegenwart, dem Jetzt, dem einzigen Moment der wirklich existiert, aufzuhalten. Ich bin so dankbar, dass ich heute mit diesem coolen Typen sprechen darf! [Instagram von Felix](https://www.instagram.com/felixbrummel/?hl=de) Mehr von HeadCoach: [Homepage](https://www.headcoach.ch/) [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/headcoach_glenn_meier/?hl=de) [Podcast](https://www.headcoach.ch/#podcast ) [Coaching](https://www.headcoach.ch/#headcoaching) [Kostenlose 8-Punkte Champions Morgenroutine](https://www.headcoach.ch/#newsletter)
Ich freue mich unglaublich auf die heutige Episode, da ich die Möglichkeit bekomme mit einem Menschen zu sprechen, welcher sich aktuell in seinem Leben an einem extrem interessanten Punkt befindet. Die Rede ist von Felix Brummel. Vom Fussball, über Triathlon, hin zu Wasserball, kam Felix durch einen guten Freund schliesslich zum Rudern. Was zuerst nur ein Hobby war, entwickelte sich relativ schnell zum Hochleistungssport – denn das Talent von Felix wäre sogar für einen Blinden ersichtlich gewesen. Nachdem der 1.91m-Hüne bereits im Junioren-Alter Medaillen an Weltmeisterschaften gesammelt hatte, war es nur eine Frage der Zeit, bis der heute 26-Jährige ganz oben ankommen würde. 2019 holte er schliesslich im Deutschen-4er EM-Bronze und wurde in Münster zum Sportler des Jahres gewählt. Viele Experten haben wohl damit gerechnet, dass der Weg des Maschinenbau Studenten, steil nach oben weitergehen würde. Doch nach der verpassten direkten Olympia-Qualifikation bei den darauffolgenden Weltmeisterschaften und der Nichtnominierung für die deutschen Grossboote, gekoppelt an weitere persönliche Rückschläge, wendete sich aber das Blatt. Im darauffolgenden Jahr lief praktisch nichts wie geplant. Der Ausnahmeruderer träumte davon, in Tokio seinen olympischen Traum wahr werden zu lassen – doch der Traum platzte frühzeitig. Und nun kommt dieser Move, den ich persönlich so unbeschreiblich bewundere. Als Felix durch Corona schon fast gezwungen wurde seinen Alltag «ruhiger» zu gestalten», sowie das Streben nach «höher, schneller, weiter» zu unterbrechen, veränderte sich seine Perspektive auf seine Ziele komplett. Er blickte für einmal von aussen auf sein aktuelles Tun und musste feststellen, dass sich seine Vorstellungen und Ziele immer mehr veränderten. Felix zog die Reissleine und beendete im besten Alter seine Leistungssportkarriere. Er schnappte sich einen Rucksack und lief von Basel nach Pforzheim – 289km abseits von allem! Keine Medien, kein Social Media, kaum Kontakt zu anderen Menschen, kein Wetterbericht– nur er, seine Gedanken, Emotionen, Gefühle und die Natur. Wind, Regen, Sonne, Tiere, Zeltaufbau, Zeltabbau. Das alles ist erst der Anfang! Der inspirierende Junge wird definitiv nicht mit der Chips-Tüte, auf dem Sofa, vor dem Fernseher enden. Er träumt von langen Radtouren (wo er übrigens bereits einige verrückte Distanzen hinter sich gebracht hat), von Wanderungen in Amerika und vielem mehr. Aber vor allem versucht er sich aktuell so oft wie möglich in der Gegenwart, dem Jetzt, dem einzigen Moment der wirklich existiert, aufzuhalten. Ich bin so dankbar, dass ich heute mit diesem coolen Typen sprechen darf! [Instagram von Felix](https://www.instagram.com/felixbrummel/?hl=de) Mehr von HeadCoach: [Homepage](https://www.headcoach.ch/) [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/headcoach_glenn_meier/?hl=de) [Podcast](https://www.headcoach.ch/#podcast ) [Coaching](https://www.headcoach.ch/#headcoaching) [Kostenlose 8-Punkte Champions Morgenroutine](https://www.headcoach.ch/#newsletter)
Ich freue mich unglaublich auf die heutige Episode, da ich die Möglichkeit bekomme mit einem Menschen zu sprechen, welcher sich aktuell in seinem Leben an einem extrem interessanten Punkt befindet. Die Rede ist von Felix Brummel. Vom Fussball, über Triathlon, hin zu Wasserball, kam Felix durch einen guten Freund schliesslich zum Rudern. Was zuerst nur ein Hobby war, entwickelte sich relativ schnell zum Hochleistungssport – denn das Talent von Felix wäre sogar für einen Blinden ersichtlich gewesen. Nachdem der 1.91m-Hüne bereits im Junioren-Alter Medaillen an Weltmeisterschaften gesammelt hatte, war es nur eine Frage der Zeit, bis der heute 26-Jährige ganz oben ankommen würde. 2019 holte er schliesslich im Deutschen-4er EM-Bronze und wurde in Münster zum Sportler des Jahres gewählt. Viele Experten haben wohl damit gerechnet, dass der Weg des Maschinenbau Studenten, steil nach oben weitergehen würde. Doch nach der verpassten direkten Olympia-Qualifikation bei den darauffolgenden Weltmeisterschaften und der Nichtnominierung für die deutschen Grossboote, gekoppelt an weitere persönliche Rückschläge, wendete sich aber das Blatt. Im darauffolgenden Jahr lief praktisch nichts wie geplant. Der Ausnahmeruderer träumte davon, in Tokio seinen olympischen Traum wahr werden zu lassen – doch der Traum platzte frühzeitig. Und nun kommt dieser Move, den ich persönlich so unbeschreiblich bewundere. Als Felix durch Corona schon fast gezwungen wurde seinen Alltag «ruhiger» zu gestalten», sowie das Streben nach «höher, schneller, weiter» zu unterbrechen, veränderte sich seine Perspektive auf seine Ziele komplett. Er blickte für einmal von aussen auf sein aktuelles Tun und musste feststellen, dass sich seine Vorstellungen und Ziele immer mehr veränderten. Felix zog die Reissleine und beendete im besten Alter seine Leistungssportkarriere. Er schnappte sich einen Rucksack und lief von Basel nach Pforzheim – 289km abseits von allem! Keine Medien, kein Social Media, kaum Kontakt zu anderen Menschen, kein Wetterbericht– nur er, seine Gedanken, Emotionen, Gefühle und die Natur. Wind, Regen, Sonne, Tiere, Zeltaufbau, Zeltabbau. Das alles ist erst der Anfang! Der inspirierende Junge wird definitiv nicht mit der Chips-Tüte, auf dem Sofa, vor dem Fernseher enden. Er träumt von langen Radtouren (wo er übrigens bereits einige verrückte Distanzen hinter sich gebracht hat), von Wanderungen in Amerika und vielem mehr. Aber vor allem versucht er sich aktuell so oft wie möglich in der Gegenwart, dem Jetzt, dem einzigen Moment der wirklich existiert, aufzuhalten. Ich bin so dankbar, dass ich heute mit diesem coolen Typen sprechen darf! [Instagram von Felix](https://www.instagram.com/felixbrummel/?hl=de) Mehr von HeadCoach: [Homepage](https://www.headcoach.ch/) [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/headcoach_glenn_meier/?hl=de) [Podcast](https://www.headcoach.ch/#podcast ) [Coaching](https://www.headcoach.ch/#headcoaching) [Kostenlose 8-Punkte Champions Morgenroutine](https://www.headcoach.ch/#newsletter)
Mein Ruderkamerad Felix Brummel hat vor kurzem seine Leistungssportkarriere beendet und quasi die Riemen an den Nagel gehängt. Seitdem ist er auf der Reise zu sich selbst. Er berichtet von einer hunderte Kilometer langen Wanderung, die er vor kurzem alleine absolviert hat. Im tiefgründigen Gespräch erzählt Felix aber auch von seinem Weg zu sich selbst und lässt dabei tief in sein Seelenleben blicken. Natürlich hat er auch echte Gamechanger-Tipps parat. In dieser Folge lernt ihr den Mensch hinter einem Leistungssportler kennen. Ein "must-hear" für alle von euch, die Deeptalk lieben!
Lux Radio Theatre, sometimes spelled Lux Radio Theater, a long-run classic radio anthology series, was broadcast on the NBC Blue Network (1934–35) (owned by the National Broadcasting Company, later predecessor of American Broadcasting Company [ABC] in 1943 /1945); CBS Radio network (Columbia Broadcasting System) (1935-54), and NBC Radio (1954–55). Initially, the series adapted Broadway plays during its first two seasons before it began adapting films. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sherlock Holmes Radio Station Live 24/7 Click Here to Listen https://live365.com/station/Sherlock-Holmes-Classic-Radio--a91441 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/lux-radio-theatre/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Guest Amanda Brummel, Pharm.D.; Fairview Health Services by GTMRx Institute
Join us in interviewing season 2 of Siesta Key's Canvas Brummel as she shares all the secrets behind the famous MTV reality show! Canvas gives us the inside scoop about casting, who was actually fighting behind the scenes, and who she MAY have hooked up with...a few times... Dont forget to subscribe and rate us to see more! Give Canvas a follow here: https://www.instagram.com/babycanvas/?hl=en Youtube of this Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SkFX_uLASPI --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/madison-victoria/support
In this episode, Amanda Brummel, Pharm.D., vice president of clinical ambulatory pharmacy services at Fairview Health Services, discusses the difference between MTM and CMM, successful implementation of CMM services plus some of the associated challenges and integrating services to make sure that the program follows throughout a patient's health care journey regardless of their level of care, among other things. She has published multiple articles on CMM and pharmacy’s role in the care team and currently has responsibility for the CMM program—the clinical development and integration of pharmacy services in the Fairview Health Network including the transitions of care approach and retail clinical services. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen/
Diese Woche hat NDR 1 Lieblingsplatz-Reporter Andi Gervelmeyer Alexander Gotthard in Upgant-Schott in Ostfriesland besucht. Sein Lieblingsplatz ist sein alter Post-Golf.
Diese Woche hat NDR 1 Lieblingsplatz-Reporter Andi Gervelmeyer Alexander Gotthard in Upgant-Schott in Ostfriesland besucht. Sein Lieblingsplatz ist sein alter Post-Golf.
STAY PLUGGED IN! -- Subscribe and turn ON notifications to keep up to date with all new SPINCasts! -- Subscribe to our website: www.staypluggedin.com to be informed of all upcoming events and content here at SPIN! Follow the guest speakers here: Marshal & Aquinas College: @AquinasEsports https://aqsaints.com/sports/esport Nick & Grand Valley State @GVSUesports gvsesports.org Follow all SPIN socials here: Twitter: @Stay_Plugged_In Instagram: @stay_pluggedin Discord: https://discord.gg/hTfGbzt
Vivía por encima de sus posibilidades, elegante y con trajes caros que apenas podía pagar. Murió solo, sin amigos, con sífilis e ingresado en un manicomio francés
Vivía por encima de sus posibilidades, elegante y con trajes caros que apenas podía pagar. Murió solo, sin amigos, con sífilis e ingresado en un manicomio francés
Vivía por encima de sus posibilidades, elegante y con trajes caros que apenas podía pagar. Murió solo, sin amigos, con sífilis e ingresado en un manicomio francés
Suzanne Brummel is veelvoudig Nederlands Kampioen Open Water Zwemmen. Tijdens haar actieve zwemcarrière liep Suzanne soms wat kilometers maar pas daarna ontdekte ze écht de liefde voor lopen. Begin 2019 meldde ze zich bij een looptrainer, in het najaar van hetzelfde jaar ging ze voor haar eerste SUB3-marathon. Met Suzanne […]
Musician, Husband, Father and Entrepreneur, Tim Brummel visits Game Changing Dads to share his story behind his popular YouTube video of how his wife found out she was pregnant...again!
A performance by Emily Lacy and Daniel Brummel. The performance was recorded live at a Casa Berenice Recordings house concert on October 5, 2019. An interview with Emily Lacy and Daniel Brummel follows the performance.…
Chris Brummel has used the divine gift of his "healing hands" to bring back to life his girlfriend Amber after a heroine overdose, and heal his grandmother literally right in front of his entire families eyes! Listen to these two tell the stories, and how they have battled addiction and helped find clarity in their trials and tribulations as well! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In de regio Zwolle kunnen middelbare scholieren als bijbaantje aan de slag op een basisschool. Ze doen zo niet alleen werkervaring op, ze maken kennis met het vak van leerkracht en verdienen er een mooi zakcentje mee. Een innovatief en spannend project dat het lerarentekort op een andere manier aanpakt. En met succes! Middelbare scholieren... Het bericht Hoe krijg je scholieren geïnteresseerd in het vak van leerkracht? Tjipcast 040 met Inge Brummel en Joyce van Dam verscheen eerst op Tjipcast.
Doug Brummel and Dave Wilson feel strongly that while there are many valuable ways to evangelize and teach about the Mass, an imaginative setting, filled with laughter, storytelling and music can help take things from a strictly academic setting to a comprehensive one that filters through the mind, heart and soul of those who participate.
First year teacher, Delaney Brummel, chats with us about being cool with being "the loud one" in her school, helping kids get comfortable sharing failures with each other, and focusing on keeping things student-centered. Delaney shares how she keeps a smile on every day, the power of remembering there are actual humans in our classrooms, and reminds us that you don't need to be a veteran teacher to bring value to others. More at www.teachbetter.com/podcast/delaneybrummel Episode Highlights 1:44 - Rae talks about what it was like having Delaney as a student teacher. 5:05 - Chatting about education organizations and the value they can offer. AMLE NEA NAGC IDEA (Come see us at IDEAcon in February 2020!) AIMS SECO NSTA OAGC 8:48 - Previewing the episode with Delaney Brummel 13:43 - Delaney introduces herself. 15:22 - Delaney's failure: Failing her lesson on failure. 17:36 - Delaney's success: Her students writing "books" and throwing a "publishing party." 22:57 - How Delaney keeps her smile on every day: Truly excited to see her students every day. 25:14 - What's got Delaney excited about education: Making things student-centered. 26:41 - Delaney's advise for teachers: Don't forget that these are actual humans in front of us. 28:42 - Jeff yells at Delaney. 30:05 - 6 questions answered in 15 seconds or less. 32:28 - How to connect with Delaney. Delaney's Recommendations EdTech Tool: Grammarly Book: "Miles Morales: Spiderman" by Jason Reynolds Who to Follow on Instagram: ELA TEACHERS should follow @texaslonestarteacher. Into teacher fashion? Follow @teacherdresscode YouTube/Podcast/Website/Blog: monicagenta.com Daily/Weekly/Monthly Routine: Let you kids know they should ask WHY what they’re learning is important. Best piece of advice you've ever received: "You don't have to grade everything!" - Rae Hughart Links to Connect With Delaney Instagram: @ms.brummel --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/teach-better-talk/message
Dan talks story with outrigger canoe racer Kaimana Brummel, and learns about her family's ties to canoe paddling. At age 22, Kaimana became the Executive Director of Hawaiian Canoe Club, continuing the legacy of being deeply involved in this Kahului-based canoe club. Through her work with the club, Kaimana has organized the Pailolo Challenge outrigger … Continue reading "Episode 6: Outrigger Canoe Paddling History and Culture with Kaimana Brummel" The post Episode 6: Outrigger Canoe Paddling History and Culture with Kaimana Brummel appeared first on Maui Online.
This coming Saturday, almost a thousand canoe paddlers from across the globe will gather in west Maui for the start of the Pailolo Challenge, a 26 mile outrigger canoe race that crosses the Pailolo Channel between Maui and Moloka'i. And this week's guest will fill us in on exactly what that means for the paddlers … Continue reading "Episode 5: Pailolo Challenge with Kaimana Brummel" The post Episode 5: Pailolo Challenge with Kaimana Brummel appeared first on Maui Online.
Volvemos después de 4 meses de inactividad y lo hacemos en pleno comienzo del verano ¿A qué huelen las nubes, y la lluvia, y a qué huelen los hombres machos en verano?Ojo ojito, que además de este tema tocamos otros muy diversos desde mal más pura improvisación, como siempre!!! :DAndrea va a abrir nuevo podcast ¿lo desvelará en este episodio? Tendréis que escucharlo para averiguarlo.-Music from https://filmmusic.io:"Happy Boy, Meatball Parade, The Builder, The Show Must, Upbeat Forever" -By Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com)Licence: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
In Episode 8 of Beyond the Blue Badge, alumnae Dawn Trudeau and Lisa Brummel talk about teaming up at the “nexus of business, sports and social justice” when they bought the Seattle Storm. They talk about the business challenges of running a professional sports franchise and what it’s like to win multiple Women’s National Basketball League challenges.
Cole and Bryan welcome 3rd Chair and very special guest, Katherine aka "Brummel" aka "Brums" as they break down "Preemptive Strike", Episode 24 from Season 7 of Star Trek: The Next Generation. They also jump into a brief recap of Star Wars (not Star Trek) The Last Jedi - SPOILER ALERT! Theme music credit: Eagle Over Mount Fuji by Taseh
A talk with AGO Assistant Curator of Modern Art, Kenneth Brummel, about his recent reinstallation of the AGO’s Modern Collection galleries.
A talk with AGO Assistant Curator of Modern Art, Kenneth Brummel, about his recent reinstallation of the AGO's Modern Collection galleries.
Ami Mariscal of Love Community Group interviews Therese Brummel and Lorena Palacios about their beliefs about community, what gets in the way and what principles successful communities use. Then we take a trip to the Pasadena Post Office Community Garden that Therese, Lorena and their neighbors built together to see how they made it happen.
Louisville Lectures Internal Medicine Lecture Series Podcast
Dr. Brummel is a Pulmonary and Critical Care physician on faculty at Vanderbilt University and is an expert in delirium and the patient experience in ICU outcomes with a focus on debility or post-ICU syndrome. Dr. Brummel begins his presentation by reviewing long-term cognitive impairment and disability associated with survival from critical illness. He then explains the vulnerability hypothesis his team uses to understand risk factors for the development of these poor outcomes after critical illness. After, he describes preliminary trials of rehabilitation for long-term cognitive impairment after critical illness. Dr. Brummel is a Pulmonary and Critical Care physician on faculty at Vanderbilt University and is an expert in delirium and the patient experience in ICU outcomes with a focus on debility or post-ICU syndrome. Dr. Brummel begins his presentation by reviewing long-term cognitive impairment and disability associated with survival from critical illness. He then explains the vulnerability hypothesis his team uses to understand risk factors for the development of these poor outcomes after critical illness. After, he describes preliminary trials of rehabilitation for long-term cognitive impairment after critical illness.
Award winning author of 5 books, Lillian Brummet also produces and hosts the Conscious Discussions talk rado show, and manages the Brummet's Conscious Blog in partnership with her husband and business partner Dave Brummet. The main focus of everything the Drummets do is to inspire hope in individuals, helping them realize the value of their efforts and encouraging them to become more psoitive and productive in life. The topic we will be discussing is HOW WRITERS CAN HAVE A POSITIVE IMPACT ON THE WORLD. Go to http://cncbooksblog.wordpress.com/2013/03/08/writing-blessings-of-psoitive-change/ that is an article she wrote on the topic so it will give you some insight. Check out her other websites: http://.Brummel.ca. http://consciousdiscussions.blogspot.com, You can also find them on blog talk radio at http://blogtalkradio.com/consciousdiscussions and on twitter as brummet and on facebook as lillian.brummet They are also always looking for articles or poetry for their bog or contact them about being a guest on their radio show. Take time when on their site to check out the new edition of: Purple Snowflake Marketing - How to Make Your Book Stand Out In A Crowd via the store page on their site.
Dr Erik Dane and Dr Bradley J. Brummel discuss their research on workplace mindfulness, published in Volume 67 Issue 1. http://hum.sagepub.com/content/67/1/105.full
I found myself in Chicago for Riot Fest in 2012, I somehow jumped into a cab with Springa from SSDecontrol aka SSD and Tony Brummel, the owner of Victory Records and headed to a punk rock bar called The Exit. This interview with Springa happened in front of The Exit. We talked about who he is, the straight edge movement, his new band Springa Sonic Droogs & the documentary ALL AGES on Boston Hardcore. Tony Brummel took my recording device and quized me about 80's wrestling. It's as bizarre as you expect, and fun too!
Beau Brummel 7/5/37 Lux Radio Theater, one of the genuine classic radio anthology series (NBC Blue Network (1934-1935); CBS (1935-1955), adapted first Broadway stage works, and then (especially) films to hour-long live radio presentations. It quickly became the most popular dramatic anthology series on radio, running more than twenty years. The program always began with an announcer proclaiming, "Ladies and gentlemen, Lux presents Hollywood!" Cecil B. DeMille was the host of the series each Monday evening from June 1, 1936, until January 22, 1945.