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Watch this episode ad-free & uncensored on Patreon: https://patreon.com/dannyjones Max Lebow, former assistant to Oscar-winning filmmaker Bryan Fogel, uncovered a shadowy world of global espionage and cyber warfare to surveil the world after he was hacked & recruited by a foreign spy agency. SPONSORS https://manscaped.com - Use code DANNYJONES for 20% off + FREE shipping. https://acorns.com/danny - Start saving and investing for your future today. https://ver.so/danny - Use code DANNY for 15% off your first order. https://whiterabbitenergy.com/?ref=DJP - Use code DJP for 20% off EPISODE LINKS The Final War Podcast: https://bit.ly/3ArL1Kw https://www.instagram.com/thefinalwarpod FOLLOW DANNY JONES https://www.instagram.com/dannyjones https://twitter.com/jonesdanny OUTLINE 00:00 - Contacted by Chinese spies 08:33 - Huawei's 5G towers 21:20 - Psychological warfare 27:44 - Why Max went to Russia 34:26 - 5G total surveillance 42:47 - Misinformation campaigns 55:12 - Working on 'The Dissident' 01:08:14 - Chinese hackers predict the pandemic 01:17:33 - Nanobiologist caught working for China 01:26:45 - The 5G / Virus connection 01:36:19 - Recruited by Chinese Dissidents 01:41:06 - Why they wanted Max to be a mole 01:49:05 - Becoming a Chinese mole 01:55:21 - Biotechnology compatible with 5G 02:05:09 - 5G will lead to the ultimate evil 02:09:54 - AI / altered human hackers 02:19:40 - Non-human species 02:24:51 - Mind hacking 02:32:27 - Visited by FBI 02:40:20 - FBI investigation 02:46:26 - The final war Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dana tells a romantic tale from her youth... She once dated Bryan Fogel, an American film director, producer, author, playwright, speaker, and human rights activist. Bryan is best known for the 2017 documentary Icarus, which won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 90th Academy Awards in 2018.Icarus explores doping in amateur cycling races and stumbles upon a major international doping scandal with the help of Grigory Rodchenkov, the head of the Russian anti-doping laboratory.Lance Armstrong's friendship with Matthew McConaughey... What is Dana's Album of Love??Bryan Fogel's early career... Hardware computer cloning? What kind of podcast is this? Dana is a tech wiz?Her journey to South Africa with Bryan... Dana's life was changed forever...You'll never guess what business Bryan and Dana almost started... Dana recalls the tale of being attacked by a gaggle of monkeys...Dana gets emotional rehashing the past and the amazing pathway Bryan went down... Brian talks about his new film, The Dissident, on Joe Rogan's podcast here. Dana dives into the scandal that is the assassination of Jamal Khashoggi... Bryan's film covers the murder of Jamal, a Washington Post journalist, who was critical of his beloved Saudi Arabia and of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's policies. In 2018, Khashoggi entered the Saudi Arabian consulate in Istanbul and never came out. His fiancée and dissidents around the world are left to piece together clues to his brutal murder. **TRIGGER WARNING** Violent and disturbing imagery... Dana reads the final moments before Khashoggi's death... Gruesome details of the murder... What was the key to uncovering this international coverup? The importance and use of Twitter in Saudi Arabia... The use of the hacking program #Pegasus... #What_Do_You_Know_About_The_BeesA shocking major shareholder of Twitter...Check out thedissident.com for more info. Get Dishing Drama Dana Merch!https://represent.com/store/dishing-drama-dana-wilkeyFollow Dana: @Wilkey_DanaFollow Casey: @CaseyHanley$25,000 Song - Apple Music$25,000 Song - SpotifyTo support the show and listen to full episodes, become a member on Support the showGet Dishing Drama Dana Merch!https://represent.com/store/dishing-drama-dana-wilkeyFollow Dana: @Wilkey_DanaFollow Casey: @CaseyHanley$25,000 Song - Apple Music$25,000 Song - SpotifyTo support the show and listen to full episodes, become a member on PatreonTo learn more about sponsorships, email DDDWpodcast@gmail.comDana's YouTube Channel
Cyclist, playwright, author and Oscar-winning director Bryan Fogel is best known for his documentary "Icarus", which explored illegal doping in sports. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this episode of the podcast, we revisit conversations with documentarians. You'll hear portions of conversations with filmmakers Pedro Kos and Jon Shenk. Their documentary "Lead Me Home" shares stories of people living on the streets in Seattle, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. You'll also hear about combat camerwomen from documentarian Heather O'Neill, whose documentary "No Ordinary Life" was an official selection at the 2021 Tribeca Film Festival. Oscar-winning filmmaker Bryan Fogel also talks about his documentary "The Dissident," about the brutal murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi. Finally, Karis Jagger and Fabienne Toback talk about their Netflix documentary series, "High on the Hog: How African American Cuisine Transformed America."See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Our first two parter explores performance enhancing drugs in sports and fitness. Jason is joined by Rod once again to ask; What are steroids? Are their ever any benefits to using drugs? How common is the use of performance enhancing drugs in sport? We talk about the fascinating documentaries Icarus & Bigger, Stronger, Faster, both of which delve into steroids and PEDs revealing a world most of us never knew existed. Icarus filmmaker Bryan Fogel sets out to uncover the truth about doping in sports, a chance meeting with a Russian scientist transforms his story from a personal experiment into a geopolitical thriller. Dirty urine, unexplained death and Olympic gold are all part of the exposure of the biggest scandal in sports history. Bigger, Stronger, Faster presents the pervasive use of steroids in sports as an indication of the American obsession with winning at all costs. The Bell brothers have been sucked into the world of performance-enhancing drugs, thinking this is their ticket to realizing the American dream. Interviews with politicians, doctors, bodybuilders and coaches raise the question: Do the ends really justify the means? Because in the mad dash to win, an entire culture may be poised to lose. Get in touch with us via Instagram; @JustTheFitnessTip, @JasonProUnicyclist, @Rod_Penn Just the Fitness Tip, Edinburgh's no.1 fitness podcast.
I sit down with Bryan Fogel, Oscar-winning director of Icarus and The Dissident. We discuss the creative processes behind his films as well as the political corruption exposed in them. Topics:The creative processes behind his filmsHow to build trust with film subjectsIs there anything to do about political corruption?The books that had an impact on Bryan FogelBryan Fogel's advice for teenagersResources:1984 - https://amzn.to/3N4MVliA Very Expensive Poison (Luke Harding's book about Alexander Litvinenko's murder) - https://amzn.to/3NiX3a4Bryan Fogel is the Award-winning Academy director of ICARUS, a documentary film about the whistleblower at the center of Russia's state-sponsored Olympic doping program. The film won the 2018 Oscar for Best Documentary and the 2017 Sundance Film Festival Special Jury Prize. He was awarded the Edward R. Murrow Award for Journalism, nominated for the BAFTA Award, three Emmys and the DGA Award for Best Direction. ICARUS contributed to Russia's ban from the 2018 Winter Olympics and 2020's Rodchenkov Anti-Doping Act. Most recently, Bryan directed The Dissident, a documentary feature about the murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in 2018, which was nominated for a BAFTA award, and the winner of the WGA award.Socials! -Website: https://www.aimingforthemoon.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aiming4moon/Twitter: https://twitter.com/Aiming4MoonTaylor's Blog: https://www.taylorgbledsoe.com/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6-TwYdfPcWV-V1JvjBXkAll Amazon Affiliate links help financially support "Aiming for the Moon" while you get a great read or product.
On our tenth episode, we go into the dark world of sports doping, and take a dive into the academy award winning documentary, Icarus. A fascinating story of intrigue, mystery, and politics, all intertwined into the world of sport. This is unlike any other documentary we've tackled. We now have a top ten, but just where will Icarus land in our rankings? Find out here...
In this week's podcast, Bradley talks about the winter Olympics & the latest winter Olympic controversy in figure skating, how to run during Canadian winters and why Wordle is a lifestyle choice. Brad also discusses, throwback technology such as Internet Explorer, the new Twitter NFT profile pictures, and why it's important to do what you love. Thanks for listening and if you enjoyed this episode please make sure you share it with the world, leave a review/comment and subscribe for future episodes! Also, feel free to check out the video version of the podcast (full episodes and clips) at youtube.com/bradleythompsonvlogs!
Florian SCHÄFER est un ancien athlète de haut-niveau en triathlon, aquathlon, duathlon, course à pied avec quelques jolies résultats à son actif
0:00 Intro2:16 Icarus54:00 Beyoncé
Catch the full show from Afternoons with Staffy for September 21st, 2021 including a chat with Oscar-winning film director Bryan Fogel - the man behind sporting documentary "Icarus". We also catch up with talkSPORT cricket commentator Jon Norman out of the UK after England announced their decision to withdraw from their Pakistan tour. Former Silver Ferns captain Anna Stanley talked through the team's win over the English Roses last night, and two-time Olympic gold medalist Eric Murray cast his eye over the Cycling NZ inquiry announced today.
Bryan Fogel, director and producer of award-winning documentary Icarus, joins Staf to talk about his storied career, how the filming of Icarus unfolded, his new documentary The Dissident, and life as a filmmaker.
With Reegs having been thrashed by a golf ball wielded by his youngest and Sidey committing avicide earlier in the day, the stage is set for another perfect episode of Bad Dads Film Review. This week's show sees us shamelessly cashing in on the worlds coronavirus cycling boom as we discuss the Top 5 Movie Bicycles, and as only one of us is a self-confessed MAMIL (Middle Age Man In Lycra) we did actually find this wheelie hard. Bryan Fogel's Oscar winning 2017 movie ICARUS begins life as an exploration of doping in sport, in which the documentarian decides to cheat the doping system in the same way that Lance Armstrong did by injecting performance enhancing drugs including testosterone into his thighs and ass to expose how rife cheating is in cycling, even in the amateurs. When UCLA drug tester Don Catlin gets cold feet about the plan, Fogel asks for a referral to someone who could assist him and is introduced to Dr Grigory Rodchenkov, the director of Russia's national anti-doping agency AND the mastermind behind an extensive state-sanctioned doping program. The charismatic, Orwell-quoting Rodchenkov is willing to discuss the minutiae of the initiative on camera and the shocking detail of his whistleblowing reveals just how high the conspiracy goes, so as shadowy FSB/KGB agents begin following Rodchenkov it becomes imperative to get him out of Russia to avoid him dying of an "unexpected heart attack". An explosive and thrilling documentary, Bryan Fogel wisely follows the story and captures an incredible moment in sporting history. Unmissable. Netflix's RICKY ZOOM closes out the show. It doesn't even have a bicycle in it. Sorry about that. We love to hear from our listeners! By which I mean we tolerate it. Try us on twitter @dads_film, on Facebook Bad Dads Film Review or on our website baddadsfilm.com.Until next time, we remain...Bad Dads
Mohammed bin Salman made the Washington Post columnist pay in the worst way possible for his dedication to reform in his home country.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Zach Lamplugh (filmmaker, 15 Things You Didn't Know About Bigfoot) is with us to talk all things doping in sports with 2017's Icarus. Although we see shades of other docs we have covered here like Citizenfour and Inside Job, Icarus has enough going for it to stand out like Bryan Fogel's sly direction, how our first Trump-era oscar-winning doc affects this winning the oscar, and how Netflix pulled one of their first big wins at the academy awards --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/exitingthroughthe2010s/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/exitingthroughthe2010s/support
From August 12, 2017: The new Netflix documentary Icarus may seem at first glance off the beaten path for Lawfare. It's a film about doping in international sports, not national security law or policy. But as Benjamin Wittes explained when he reviewed it here, it's really about much more than that:Icarus is not about L'Affaire Russe or Russian interference with the 2016 election. But if you want to understand L'Affaire Russe, you should watch it. Because Icarus is the story of the Russian government's corruption of the integrity of supposedly neutral international processes and its use of covert action to tamper with those processes. If that sounds a little familiar, it should. It is easy to substitute in one's mind as one watches this film a foreign country's electoral system for the elaborate anti-doping testing regime whose systematic circumvention and undermining Icarus portrays. The corruption of process is similar. The motivation—the elevation of Russian national pride—significantly overlaps. The lies about it in the face of evidence are indistinguishable. And the result in both cases is a legitimacy crisis, of Olympic medals in one case and of a presidential election in another—a crisis that produces investigation and scandal.This week, Wittes asked Fogel to come on the podcast and talk about the film and its relationship to the broader concerns about Russia that have dominated public attention of late.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/lawfare. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On this episode Ric & Mat discuss; “The Dissident" This chilling documentary directed by the Oscar winning Bryan Fogel covers the Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi who disappeared in Istanbul. His fiancée and dissidents around the world piece together the clues to a murder and expose a global cover up. Rics knowledge on this story amazes Mat and this is the episode that will stop our hosts ever visiting the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. We learn about the powerlessness of us all and it's very sobering. The directors other documentary was the brilliant Icarus which was Discussing Documentaries episode 33. Links here; https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-7rfce-f34055 https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/twk2sm/S01E33Icarus.mp3 https://discussingdocumentaries.podbean.com/e/32-icarus/ *** As always each episode contains passion, anger, intelligence, opinions, spoilers and fear. Lots and lots of fear *** Join our Patreon for bonus content and help us to continue producing our Podcast https://www.patreon.com/DiscussingDocumentaries Or Support us with a Paypal donation; discussingdocumentaries@gmail.com Or by buying us a Coffee; https://ko-fi.com/discussingdocumentaries Reach us; Website = DiscussingDocumentaries.com Email = discussingdocumentaries@gmail.com FaceBook = https://www.facebook.com/DiscussingDocumentaries Tweet = @DiscussDocPod Instagram = @DiscussingDocumentaries
John Pollock & Wai Ting are joined by Academy Award-winning director Bryan Fogel (Icarus) to discuss ‘The Dissident', his 2020 documentary about the assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi and Saudi Arabia's attempts to silence international dissent. Bryan speaks about how the success of Icarus led him to this daunting project; the importance of earning the trust of Khashoggi's fiancée, Hetice Cengiz in its production; his thinking process behind the film's minimalist portrayal of the chilling, unreleased audio transcript of Khashoggi's murder; his struggles in finding a streaming service platform to support the film; and whether or not he has concerns for his own safety following its release. You can rent or purchase ‘The Dissident' on Apple TV, Amazon Prime Video and other VOD services. For more information: https://thedissident.com/ Patrons, listen to our review of ‘The Dissident' at postwrestlingcafe.com Subscribe: https://postwrestling.com/subscribe Patreon: http://postwrestlingcafe.com Forum: https://forum.postwrestling.com Discord: https://discord.com/invite/Q795HhR Merch: https://store.postwrestling.com Twitter/Facebook/Instagram/YouTube: @POSTwrestlingAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Academy Award-winning director Bryan Fogel discusses his latest film The Dissident, a documentary chronicling the life and work of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi Arabian journalist who was murdered at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, by agents of the Saudi government. Fogel speaks with Ploughshares Fund board member and actor Farshad Farahat on the making of and reaction to the film. Early Warning features Kingston Reif of the Arms Control Association on the Biden administration's current plans to pursue nuclear modernization, which is estimated to cost $634 billion over the next ten years.
Bryan Fogel is an American film director, producer, author, and 2018 Academy Award Winner in the Best Documentary Feature category for his revelatory film, Icarus.Icarus was released in 2017 and achieved huge critical acclaim having been described as “illuminating” by the New York Times and “Game Changing” by Variety due to its pivotal role in revealing evidence of systematic doping in Russia. Fogel’s Icarus premiered at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival, winning the first ever Special Jury "Orwell Award" as well as the first ever Audience Choice Award. The film was then acquired in a historic $5 million sale to media giant Netflix, before going on to secure Fogel the coveted Oscar, in what was the highlight of his career to date.As a former standup comedian and actor, and the writer of long-running Off-Broadway show, Jewtopia, Fogel describes himself as having a “goofy” personality, a characteristic in stark contrast to the serious, thrilling nature of his recent work. Fogel’s most recent film, The Dissident, follows the assassination of Jamal Khashoggi and Saudi Arabia's effort to control international dissent. It is currently available to watch in the UK on Amazon Prime.
This month’s media review and react episode is centered on the documentary “Icarus.” Dean Saddoris joins us to discuss this Oscar-winning 2017 documentary. This episode definitely contains spoilers. Filmmaker and cyclist Bryan Fogel made himself a guinea pig to learn if steroids would dramatically improve his race performance – and maybe more importantly, whether he could do it without being detected like Lance Armstrong. He ends up in the middle of a WADA and International Olympic Committee investigation acting as an intermediary for a man who has become his friend and steroid mentor – who also happens to be the head of Russia’s anti-doping laboratory. Dark forces within the highest levels of Russian government attempt to scare them off the path to exposing a massive cheating scandal – even though that appears to be the only shot at safety and survival. This film seemed particularly appropriate right now as the USAPL is locked in a dispute with International Powerlifting Association, in part because of anti-doping measures involving WADA. What happens when the decision to use steroids in competition is not so much personal, but expected as part of a nation’s drive to succeed on the world stage? Why would the lab director be so forthcoming about his role in a system of widespread cheating? And what drove an American filmmaker to put himself in the middle of an international incident? Is this the best sports documentary of all time? You can find Dean on Instagram @deansaddoris.ck, and at caffeineandkilos.com. Subscribe for updates about our new gym (Third Street Barbell) and apparel line at 3sb.co! Local memberships and international fresh fits! Get early access to our next drop! Hosted by Mike Farr (@silentmikke) and Jim McDonald (@thejimmcd). Produced by Jim McDonald Production assistance by Sam McDonald. Theme by Aaron Moore. Branding by Joseph Manzo.
Sylvain Louvet a reçu le prix Albert Londres en 2020 pour son film Tous surveillés - 7 milliards de suspects, réalisé avec Ludovic Gaillard. Il a été diffusé en avril 2020 sur Arte et est toujours disponible en replay. Le film explique comment, sous couvert de lutte contre le terrorisme, les grandes puissances se sont lancées dans une inquiétante course aux technologies de surveillance. Sylvain Louvet a mené une enquête mondiale sur cette surveillance 3.0 : des caméras de Nice, aux nouvelles techonologies israéliennes et aux systèmes de représsion chinoise des Ouïghours. Les trois recommandations de films de Sylvain Louvet : Sa “perle rare”: Pas vu, pas pris un film de Pierre Carles, disponible sur Youtube Sa “référence”: Icare, de Bryan Fogel disponible sur Netflix. Oscar du meilleur documentaire en 2018, le film raconte l'incroyable enquête du réalisateur dans le monde du dopage sportif, qui l'emmène des Etats-Unis en Russie. Le film qui lui a donné envie de réaliser : La Haine de Mathieu Kassovitz. Voir sur en VOD sur La cinetek ou sur Canal + Contactez-nous par email undocunsoir@gmail.com ou sur notre compte Instagram.
Der Dokumentarfilm des Oscar-Preisträgers Bryan Fogel versucht den brutalen Mord an dem Journalisten Jamal Khashoggi von 2018 in der saudi-arabischen Botschaft in Istanbul zu rekonstruieren. Eine Besprechung von Markus Aicher. Außerdem: "Bleib zuhause, Mama!" - das erste Album von Vladimir Kaminer & die Antikörpers / Die Übersetzerin Heike Flemming erhält den Hieronymus-Ring / Englische Fußballclubs sperren ihre Social-Media Kanäle gegen Hass im Netz
Dan joins me again for another movie review. This time, we are giving our thoughts on Icarus (2017), which won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Icarus follows Bryan Fogel as he investigates illegal doping in sports. Does this film change Dan's growing love for bicycling? He tells us this and more. We also give some details on the return of crit racing to Texas as the state reopens. Then, Feats of Glory highlights a recent accomplishment by pro cyclist Lauren Stephens. Music: Back to the Woods by Jason Shaw --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dropbartexas/message
When filmmaker Bryan Fogel sets out to uncover the truth about doping in sports, a chance meeting with a Russian scientist transforms his story from a personal experiment into a geopolitical thriller. Dirty urine, unexplained death and Olympic gold are all part of the exposure of the biggest scandal in sports history (documentary description from google.com) Released: 2017
Als über den Tod des saudischen Journalisten Jamal Khashoggi berichtet wurde, habe er rasch begonnen zu sondieren, erzählt Bryan Fogel: Ob er den Fall filmisch umsetzen kann. "Ich sah einen Thriller", erinnert sich der US-Dokumentarfilmer. Bryan Fogel im Gespräch mit Susanne Burg www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Vollbild Hören bis: 19.01.2038 04:14 Direkter Link zur Audiodatei
We meet two Oscar nominated directors this week....Pete Docter (Up, Inside Out, Monsters, Inc.) who has made a new animated film for Disney + called Soul, and Bryan Fogel, who is behind a new documentary about the 2018 killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashogg.
We meet two Oscar nominated directors this week....Pete Docter (Up, Inside Out, Monsters, Inc.) who has made a new animated film for Disney + called Soul, and Bryan Fogel, who is behind a new documentary about the 2018 killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashogg.
We meet two Oscar nominated directors this week....Pete Docter (Up, Inside Out, Monsters, Inc.) who has made a new animated film for Disney + called Soul, and Bryan Fogel, who is behind a new documentary about the 2018 killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashogg.
We meet two Oscar nominated directors this week....Pete Docter (Up, Inside Out, Monsters, Inc.) who has made a new animated film for Disney + called Soul, and Bryan Fogel, who is behind a new documentary about the 2018 killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashogg.
We meet two Oscar nominated directors this week....Pete Docter (Up, Inside Out, Monsters, Inc.) who has made a new animated film for Disney + called Soul, and Bryan Fogel, who is behind a new documentary about the 2018 killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashogg.
On this edition of No Holds Barred, host Eddie Goldman once again spoke with our colleague Chris Baldwin on the WAAR Room. We spoke with her by phone Sunday, April 11. It was just confirmed a few days ago by both fighters' camps that Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua have been made several concrete offers for where and when their heavyweight title unification fight might be staged this summer. The reported favorite location is Saudi Arabia. One reason for this is the difficulty of holding this fight in a large venue in the U.K. or U.S., which usually holds such events, because of pandemic restrictions. Another is that the monarchs in Saudi Arabia are willing to overpay to host this fight in order to claim to the world that they are building a modern, tolerant country, despite their horrific record on human rights. When Joshua first fought in Saudi Arabia in December 2019, and Fury performed on a WWE show there in October of that year, there was limited and muted criticism of them for bringing their business to this despotic monarchy. But much has changed in the world since then. In February of this year, the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence, now under the Biden-Harris Administration, released a report on the 2018 assassination of the dissident Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi. The report concluded: "We assess that Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman approved an operation in Istanbul, Turkey, to capture or kill Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi," who was a long-term resident of the U.S. and wrote for the Washington Post. Muhammad bin Salman is the de facto ruler of this monarchy. In 2020, a documentary on the assassination of Khashoggi entitled "The Dissident" was released. It was directed and produced by Bryan Fogel, who also directed the award-winning documentary "Icarus" on the Russian state-sponsored doping scandal. "The Dissident" has already won several film awards and been nominated for others, but is now only available on video-on-demand because of the refusal of many large streaming sites to buy it so as not to upset their business dealings with the Saudi monarchy. Besides focusing on the story of the Saudi activist and video blogger Omar Abdulaziz, the film includes an interview with Hatice Cengiz, who was Khashoggi's fiancee. She is an academic, researcher, and writer. With the news that Saudi Arabia is the frontrunner to host the Fury-Joshua fight, which will be boxing's biggest fight in years and a major world sporting event, Hatice Cengiz has issued a statement to The Telegraph of the U.K. urging both fighters and their camps not to have this fight in Saudi Arabia: "Sports should not be used for politics, nor to whitewash atrocities. Jamal was brutally murdered and it would be shameful if the man who stands accused of ordering it were allowed to benefit from this famous and profitable boxing match. I urge the organisers not to give him this reward for his crimes. We should instead stand together for justice and humanity." Note also that The Telegraph regularly covers boxing. At the same time, there is a "Justice For Jamal" global campaign being organized that calls for a boycott of events hosted or supported by the Saudi dictatorship: "Until there is #JusticeForJamal, no government or company in the world should do business with Saudi Arabia's criminal regime." All of this, plus the silence of the boxing media on these issues, is the focus of this edition of No Holds Barred. (Photo of Tyson Fury from Mikey Williams/Top Rank. Photo of Anthony Joshua from Mark Robinson/Matchroom Boxing.) Please also subscribe to the No Holds Barred page on Patreon for much more No Holds Barred content.
On this edition of No Holds Barred, host Eddie Goldman once again spoke with our colleague Chris Baldwin on the WAAR Room. We spoke with her by phone Sunday, April 11. It was just confirmed a few days ago by both fighters' camps that Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua have been made several concrete offers for where and when their heavyweight title unification fight might be staged this summer. The reported favorite location is Saudi Arabia. One reason for this is the difficulty of holding this fight in a large venue in the U.K. or U.S., which usually holds such events, because of pandemic restrictions. Another is that the monarchs in Saudi Arabia are willing to overpay to host this fight in order to claim to the world that they are building a modern, tolerant country, despite their horrific record on human rights. When Joshua first fought in Saudi Arabia in December 2019, and Fury performed on a WWE show there in October of that year, there was limited and muted criticism of them for bringing their business to this despotic monarchy. But much has changed in the world since then. In February of this year, the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence, now under the Biden-Harris Administration, released a report on the 2018 assassination of the dissident Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi. The report concluded: "We assess that Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman approved an operation in Istanbul, Turkey, to capture or kill Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi," who was a long-term resident of the U.S. and wrote for the Washington Post. Muhammad bin Salman is the de facto ruler of this monarchy. In 2020, a documentary on the assassination of Khashoggi entitled "The Dissident" was released. It was directed and produced by Bryan Fogel, who also directed the award-winning documentary "Icarus" on the Russian state-sponsored doping scandal. "The Dissident" has already won several film awards and been nominated for others, but is now only available on video-on-demand because of the refusal of many large streaming sites to buy it so as not to upset their business dealings with the Saudi monarchy. Besides focusing on the story of the Saudi activist and video blogger Omar Abdulaziz, the film includes an interview with Hatice Cengiz, who was Khashoggi's fiancee. She is an academic, researcher, and writer. With the news that Saudi Arabia is the frontrunner to host the Fury-Joshua fight, which will be boxing's biggest fight in years and a major world sporting event, Hatice Cengiz has issued a statement to The Telegraph of the U.K. urging both fighters and their camps not to have this fight in Saudi Arabia: "Sports should not be used for politics, nor to whitewash atrocities. Jamal was brutally murdered and it would be shameful if the man who stands accused of ordering it were allowed to benefit from this famous and profitable boxing match. I urge the organisers not to give him this reward for his crimes. We should instead stand together for justice and humanity." Note also that The Telegraph regularly covers boxing. At the same time, there is a "Justice For Jamal" global campaign being organized that calls for a boycott of events hosted or supported by the Saudi dictatorship: "Until there is #JusticeForJamal, no government or company in the world should do business with Saudi Arabia's criminal regime." All of this, plus the silence of the boxing media on these issues, is the focus of this edition of No Holds Barred. (Photo of Tyson Fury from Mikey Williams/Top Rank. Photo of Anthony Joshua from Mark Robinson/Matchroom Boxing.) Please also subscribe to the No Holds Barred page on Patreon for much more No Holds Barred content. The Podomatic Podcast Player app is available for free, both for Android at Google Play, and for iOS on the App Store. The No Holds Barred theme song is called "The Heist", which is also available on iTunes by composer Ian Snow. No Holds Barred is sponsored by: LenneHardt.com, the home of Lenne Hardt, the legendary MMA and sports announcer, voice actor, singer, actress, and comedienne. Lenne is also known for her jazz vocals with her Lenne Hardt Jazz Cabaret Band. For more information, to book her, or to order a custom message from her, go to LenneHardt.com. Skullz Fight Shop, home of the Skullz Double-End Bag, the perfect punching bag for your combat sports training. Skullz Double-End Bags provide a realistic striking target, and help improve speed, distance, and timing skills. Hang it and hit it right out of the box! No pump required. Skullz Fight Shop - Advancing combat sports equipment for the next generation of fighters. For more information, go to https://skullzfightshop.com. Adolphina Studios. Original art prints and handcrafted fine jewelry. For more information, go to https://www.etsy.com/shop/AdolphinaStudios. Thanks, Eddie Goldman EddieGoldman.com
Authoritarian regimes around the world, such as China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia, are increasingly using technology to spy on journalists, dissidents, and activists. From basic phishing emails to sophisticated malware, these methods violate personal privacy and endanger the lives of individuals who dare to stand up against dictators and freely express their opinions. The Human Rights Foundation, which produced THE DISSIDENT — a new documentary highlighting the labyrinth of deceit behind the high-profile murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi — and the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) are co-hosting a virtual panel to discuss the invisible digital threat that is placing press freedom and access to information at risk. The conversation will feature Saudi activist, blogger, and close friend of Jamal Khashoggi, Omar Abdulaziz; THE DISSIDENT’s Award-winning director Bryan Fogel; Al Jazeera journalist Ghada Oueiss; and CPJ Senior Africa Researcher Jonathan Rozen. Panelists will unpack the most pressing questions about spyware: How is spyware used to silence dissidents and journalists? How is it falling into the hands of bad actors? How widespread is the danger? And how should concerned governments respond? This conversation will be moderated by Courtney Radsch, CPJ Advocacy Director.
Magazine cultural radiofónico dirigido por Roser Ribas con la compañía de Paco Atero. Emisión desde los estudios de Bellvei Ràdio con la producción de David Canto. Contenido del programa dedicado a LA LIBERTAD DE INFORMACIÓN: • ACTUALIDAD CULTURAL - [LIBERTAD DE EXPRESIÓN] El Consejo de Europa pide cambios legales a España. - [LIBERTAD DE EXPRESIÓN] 2020 fue el año con más ataques a la libertad de expresión artística. • CINE Y SERIES EN STREAMING - [PELÍCULA] LENNY (1974, Filmin). Dirección: Bob Fosse. - [DOCUMENTAL] El disidente (2020, Filmin). Dirección: Bryan Fogel. • PÍLDORA CULTURAL: Confío en ti. - A cargo de Diego Manzanares. • SOBRE LA DESINFORMACIÓN: ¿QUÉ ES? • PERSONAJE DE LA SEMANA - Julian Assange. - https://www.dw.com/es/nils-melzer-relator-sobre-la-tortura-de-la-onu-los-derechos-de-julian-assange-son-violados-sistem%C3%A1ticamente/a-56128509 - https://wikileaks.org/What-is-Wikileaks.html • RECOMENDACIONES LITERARIAS - Vigilancia permanente, de Edward Snowden. - Fahrenheit 451, de Ray Bradbury. • DESPEDIDA - Avance del próximo programa: asesinos en serie. Sorteo: A propósito de nada, de Woody Allen. Pregunta: ¿Con qué personaje se compara Dani Rovira en su monólogo Odio? Envíanos un correo con tu respuesta a cultura2@negraymortal.com Suscribíos a nuestro canal para recibir de la manera más cómoda todos nuestros podcasts. Nos podéis escuchar en Ivoox, Apple Podcast, Spotify, Podimo y en nuestra sección de Podcast en negraymortal.com Os invitamos a dejar vuestros comentarios tanto en nuestras cuentas en RRSS como enviando un correo electrónico a: cultura2@negraymortal.com ¡Gracias por vuestras escuchas!
Anson & Branan take time between seasons to discuss all the things they've been reading, hearing and seeing. In Episode number 9 of THE DROP we discuss: QUEEN'S GAMBIT and Anya Taylor-Joy's eyeballs , Bryan Fogel's THE DISSIDENT, Netflix' series of lockdown shorts, HOMEMADE, Darius Marder's SOUND OF METAL, HBO's The Lady and the Dale, The educational streaming platform Curiosity Stream , The Afrofuturism collection on the Criterion channel featuring John's Coney's whacked-out Space is the Place YouTube Link) starring Sun Ra and John Akomfrah's inventive documentary The Last Angel of History (YouTube Link), Ramin Bahrani's THE WHITE TIGER, The German electronic music pioneers Kraftwerk and their surprising relationship to Afrofuturism Letters to a young poet by Rainer Maria Rilke, A reading from HARPER's in which a college professor does a very bad job at apologizing for offensive remarks, Jonathan Meiburg's book A MOST REMARKABLE CREATURE the fun of one-star google reviews, and we read listeners feedback!
2 oktober 2018 mördas Jamal Khashoggi inne på Saudiarabiens konsulat i Istanbul medan hans flickvän väntar utanför. I filmen The Dissident skildras bakgrunden till mordet, efterspelet och kopplingen till saudiske kronprinsen Muhammad Bin Salman. Hör regissören Bryan Fogel och vår Mellanösternkorrespondent Cecilia Uddén. STRIDEN OM SUPERHJÄLTEFILMERNA Ironman, Hulken, Batman... skildringar av superhjältar i trikå med superkrafter är en mångmiljonindustri. Och kampen utspelas mellan två konkurrerande bolag: Marvel och DC. I helgen har bolagen varsin premiär. Vår reporter Joakim Silverdal guidar oss in i superhjältestriden om publiken. VECKANS KLASSIKER: ETT ANSTÄNDIGT LIV AV STEFAN JARL. Igår fyllde filmaren Stefan Jarl 80 år. Vi säger grattis i efterskott med en inkännande återblick på filmen signerad Gunnar Bergdahl. Filmen kom 1979, och följer modsen Kenta och Stoffe. NY MUSIK FRÅN LANA DEL RAY Hur låter det och vart är hon på väg med nya albumet "Chemtrails over the country club"? Musikkritikern Tali da Silva har lyssnat. BRASILIANSK FRAMTIDSFILM I FESTIVALFOKUS Just nu pågår film- och musikfestivalen South by southwest i Austin i USA. Vår korrespondent Roger Wilson har fastnat för den Brasilianska filmen The Executive, och intervjuat skådespelaren Alfred Enoch. Programledare: Lisa Bergström Producent: UIph Nyström
We speak to Oscar-winning director Bryan Fogel about his new BAFTA-nominated film ‘The Dissident’, which focuses on the life and murder of Saudi-American Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi. He discusses his motivations to make the film as a journalist, Israeli software that the Saudis used to hack into the phone of Jamal Khashoggi, allegations that MBS was behind the hack of Jeff Bezos’ phone as revenge for its reporting of the Jamal Khashoggi murder, Saudi Arabia’s massive social media bot campaign, the CIA report on Khashoggi’s murder which points at Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman being behind the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, the Biden administration’s refusal to impose sanctions on Mohammed bin Salman himself and much more! Finally, we speak to President and Founder of the Saudi-American Public Relations Affairs Committee, Salman Al-Ansari. He argues that the Jamal Khashoggi case has been politicised to damage Saudi Arabia, and that the US and human rights organisations should not be lecturing Saudi Arabia after the US’ numerous wars in the Middle East, he denies Saudi Arabia’s alleged links to Al-Qaeda and ISIS, the proposal for Iran-Saudi Arabia peace and much more!
You might remember the story of Jamal Khashoggi, the Washington Post reporter killed in a grisly manner by operatives of the Saudi royal family. It sounds wild, but last week a US intelligence report was released, showing Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman himself had approved Khashoggi's murder. The killing is the basis of a new documentary by Bryan Fogel .. who is the director of Icarus .. The Oscar winning doco about the Russian doping scandal. His new film is called The Dissident. Bryan joins Jack Tame to talk about the film.LISTEN ABOVE
Dave chats to Director, Bryan Fogel about his new documentary, 'The Dissident' which follows the assassination of Jamal Khashoggi and Saudi Arabia's effort to control international dissent!
Welcome to Backstage, the film and TV podcast from Sky News with Claire Gregory, Stevie Wong and Bethany Minelle.This week we debrief following the Golden Globes and speak to Kingsley Ben-Adir about his Bafta Rising Star nomination.Eddie Murphy explains why he decided to make Coming 2 America - the sequel to the cult classic which has just come out on Amazon Prime Video.We review new Disney film Raya and the Last Dragon, Netflix’s Moxie and Deutschland 89 on All 4.Plus we discuss documentary awards contender The Dissident and hear from its director Bryan Fogel.Enjoy! Please do subscribe if you like what you hear and do get in touch using backstage@sky.uk – we love emails!
Bryan Fogel is probably one of the most important filmmakers alive today. The Academy-Award winning documentary maker ventures into deeply unchartered territories where no one else dares to go. Following up on his enormous success with the 2017 documentary Icarus, here Ari Stein discusses his latest offering, an examination into the heartbreaking assassination of Saudi Arabian citizen and a well-known writer for the Washington Post, Jamal Khashoggi.
Jason and Academy Award winner Bryan Fogel (Icarus, The Dissident) examine how creating stories with an impact come with global ramifications and unforeseen repercussions.For a D'USSE cocktail recipe inspired by this episode visit https://www.sohohouse.com/projects/the-backstory-with-jason-bentley/episode-5
Filmmaker Bryan Fogel's "Icarus" won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 2018. His newest documentary, "The Dissident", is an investigation of the death of Saudi Arabian "Washington Post" journalist Jamal Khashoggi, murdered at the hands of his own government. "The Dissident" is now available On Demand and in theaters.
In 2017, Bryan Fogel made “Icarus,” a film about Russia, sports, and doping. It was a highly consequential film. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Now Fogel has made “The Dissident,” about Jamal Khashoggi and his murder by the Saudi government. Jay talks with Fogel about his life and his work. An interesting, admirable fellow, Fogel. Source
Widow of Jamal Khashoggi Hatice Cengiz joins Christiane Amanpour to discuss her husband’s legacy and new documentary “The Dissident.” Bryan Fogel, the film’s director himself, talks about his powerful work and the murder of Khashoggi. Then, New York Times reporter Ronen Bergman tells Amanpour why he thinks the White House is using the time it has left to exercise a tougher Iran policy than they expect from Joe Biden. Michel Martin speaks to Black Lives Matter Co-Founder Patrisse Cullors about how they mobilized the black vote in the U.S. presidential election.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
On Twitter: @yford @StrongIslandDoc @bryanfogel @IcarusNetflix @chasingcoral @thompowers @PureNonfictionPure Nonfiction is distributed by the TIFF podcast network.
Now that Russia has been banned from the upcoming Winter Olympics, we thought it would be a good time to revisit our interview with ‘Icarus' director Bryan Fogel. We talk about his crazy journey of meeting, befriending, and then very likely saving the life of Dr. Grigory Rodchenkov, the architect of Russia's state-run Olympic doping program. Plus, an all-new Banter about the effort to keep the #MeToo momentum going.
Bryan Fogel is an American film director, producer, author and playwright. His documentary "Icarus" available now on Netflix, documents the uncovering of the Russian doping scandal. GoFundMe Page for Dr. Grigory Rodchenkov https://www.gofundme.com/how-is-grigory
Bryan Fogel's original plan for his documentary Icarus was to investigate pervasive doping in cycling by becoming a human guinea pig. He recruited chemist Grigory Rodchenkov in Moscow to guide him. Then Rodchenkov was revealed as the architect of Russia's state-run doping program -- and he was ready to blow the whistle. Fogel helped Rodchenkov flee, and then things got really scary.