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Már látható a mozikban Orosz Dénes új alkotása, a Hogyan tudnék élni nélküled? című, Demjén Ferenc slágereit felvonultató musical. Ennek apropóján beszélgetünk a hazai zenés filmekről Tőzsér Attilával, aki azon túl, hogy producerként tevékenykedik (Drakulics elvtárs, a Martfűi rém, Pappa Pia), több mint 80 filmben dolgozott hangmérnökként. -Csak az elmúlt években hallhattuk munkáját a KIX, a Cabin Pressure, a Nemzet aranyai, a Hat hét, és természetesen a Hogyan tudnék élni? című filmekben.
In this week's episode, we conclude our November Writing Challenge with questions from beginner writers. We also check in with our transcriptionist and see how she did with the challenge. Bonus! The transcriptionist's official Writing Playlist: Now I'm in It-HAIM Build Me Up From Bones- Sarah Jarosz Outnumbered- Dermot Kennedy Pain is Cold Water- Noah Kahan Orpheus- Vincent Lima Flight Risk- Tommy Lefroy If I Don't See You Again- Wyatt Flores Brink of Love- Teddy Thompson The Wire- Patrick Droney Coming Home- Leon Bridges More Love- Sara Bareilles White Flag-JOSEPH TRANSCRIPT 00:00:00 Introduction and Writing Updates Hello, everyone. Welcome to Episode 228th of The Pulp Writer Show. My name is Jonathan Moeller. Today is November the 22nd, 2024, and today we are discussing the fourth and final part of our November Writing Challenge, which will answer questions from beginning writers. Before getting into that, we will have an update on my current writing and audiobook projects and our Question of the Week. First up, Cloak of Illusion, as I mentioned last week, is now out. You can get it at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Google Play, Apple Books, Smashwords, and my Payhip Store. There was a bit of a processing glitch on Kobo that slowed it down this week, but now the book should be available at Kobo, so if you're a Kobo reader, you can buy it for your Kobo reader or read it in Kobo Plus without any difficulty. Now that Cloak of Illusion is out (and selling very well, thank you all for that), my next project is Orc Hoard. That will be the fourth Rivah Half-Elven Thief book and I am 44,000 words into it (on chapter 10 of 18, which means I'm over halfway through). I very, very much want to have this book out before Christmas and I will be doing my best to make that happen. I am also about 2,000 words into Shield of Deception, which will be the fourth Shield War book (and hopefully will be my first book in 2025). The outline has 31 chapters, which means this will be the longest book I have tackled in a while, so I'm glad I'm getting kind of a head start on it as the secondary project while I work on Orc Hoard. In audiobook news, as we mentioned last week, Shield of Conquest is out at all the audiobook stores (as excellently narrated by Brad Wills), and you can get that at your favorite audiobook store. In other good audiobook news, Cloak of Spears (as excellently narrated by Hollis McCarthy) is now out at all the audiobook stores and if you are looking for something to listen to on your long Thanksgiving drive or plane trip, I should mention that Cloak of Spears is about 12 hours long, so it will have you covered. 00:02:01: Question of the Week So that's where I'm at with my current writing and audiobook projects and let's move on now to Question of the Week. Question of the Week is designed to inspire enjoyable discussions of interesting topics and this week's question ties directly into what we just talked about: what do you do for entertainment while traveling (whether by car, plane, train or otherwise- podcasts, audiobooks, portable games, that kind of thing)? No wrong answers, obviously. The inspiration for this question, as you might guess, was the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday, which for many people was a great deal of travel and finding ways to amuse yourself while traveling. So in answer to this question, Justin says: music- classical, rock, movie scores, and video game tunes. If I'm traveling, I'm almost always driving. Music helps relax and entertain without demanding my attention. Brett says: I read- very often one of your books. You've published 100+ books, but because I've read them multiple times, I may be at 1,000 plus reads of your books. (I got to say Brett has a good taste here.) If I'm driving, I don't usually have any entertainment. Surabhi says: I love reading while traveling. Kindle is a nice advantage, being easy to carry, and I usually have easy to read books to read for traveling, which of course is why I have so many of your books in my Kindle Library. They're simple yet enjoyable to read. I got to say Kindle does make traveling with books a lot easier. I remember in the old days all I had was space for two books to bring on a trip, and so I was trying to pick out which two books to bring. Venus says: Reading and geocaching. Bonnie says: about all the traveling I've done recently is to work and back, usually local radio station and ‘80s music. Juana says: so my dad drove like he was in NASCAR. Consequently, I read books, because I was not brave enough to watch death coming for us. The habit is still with me. Darla says: riding in car listening to Sirius XM, looking at scenery or talking to the driver, driving by myself- listening to radio or CD music and singing. On an airplane, I read hard copy books or ebooks on my tablet, maybe try to sleep. Cheryl says: read the Kindle, but mainly keep an eye on the road, even as a passenger. You never know what is going to jump out into a country highway here in Australia. Ashley says: I listen to audiobooks while driving and that has made working overnights more bearable. Adeline says: Apple's Books app on my phone has been my best friend while on the move for years-planes, trains, London's public transportation. MW says: while driving, I listen to either music or a podcast. When I'm being a passenger, I love to read or draw. I'm always carrying my Kindle and my sketchbook everywhere, or I try to catch some sleep. I generally avoid conversing unless I'm actually traveling with someone, but even then I reserve some time for myself. John says: audiobooks while driving, Kindle on my phone while flying or lounging around, physical books while camping, though I use the phone at night. I like to hang out in restaurants and pubs at the bar, reading books and talking to strangers. If there's a beach or river, occasionally fish and walk around either the city, beach, or trail. Jenny says: all the books or podcasts/radio shows. BBC has a fun one I have on CD called Cabin Pressure. It's hilarious. And if I'm alone in the car, singing along at full volume with my singalong playlist. Just a comment quick, I did listen to all of Cabin Pressure in 2022 and early 2023, and it is indeed hilarious and I recommend listening to it if you get the chance. JT says: when I travel, I generally intend to read and thus take several books. Instead, I listen to YouTube videos, audiobooks, music, play games, or nap. It is rather frustrating. Brandy says: I haven't been able to drive myself since 2010, so I generally read books, coordinate meds, snacks, and travel stops since my partner is diabetic and I am epileptic. I navigate, take pictures of interesting scenery for attempted art later, bug people through texts, and Facebook. Barbara says: if I'm not driving, I usually just watch the traffic and scenery. Of course, depending on whom the driver is, I may just close my eyes so I don't panic. Unfortunately, I have to board an airplane in a couple of weeks for an out-of-state wedding. I'll distract myself from the agony of the flight by reading. Morgan says: I don't travel much, but I'm a delivery driver for work and I do a lot of audiobooks and podcasts, especially tabletop RPG actual play podcasts. And Rob says: usually talk to the driver/navigate. If it's by bus or train. I read. For myself, whenever I travel, most of the time I'm the one who's doing the driving, which obviously narrows down the entertainment options. So when I travel any long distances, I'm usually listening to audio books. A quirk I have with that is that I prefer to listen to audiobooks of books I've already read. So if I need to tune out the audiobook and focus on heavy traffic for a while, which happens often, then I don't feel like I'm missing anything. 00:06:30 Main Topic of the Week: November Writing Challenge Week 4 Now it's onto our main topic, the fourth and final week of our November Writing Challenge. As you know, if you've listened to the previous three episodes, our November Writing Challenge is sort of a let's call a low stress way to build a writing habit and get into writing and do writing because the traditional way of getting into writing in November, NaNoWriMo, may be a bit overwhelming for some people. If you feel like you're missing out when others are working on a bigger writing challenge this month, and if you want to start writing but feel overwhelmed, a smaller writing challenge for the absolute beginner- 300 words a day or some other small number of your choosing. The key is that it should be small and something you can manage daily. Follow along with our podcast transcriptionist who has never finished writing a book and feels overwhelmed at the idea of starting one. Follow her progress and see what advice I have for her and other beginner writers. So with that in mind, let's start with our transcriptionist update for the fourth and final week of the challenge. She says, “I completed another week of the challenge. I averaged 355 words per day, taking an average of 14 minutes per day. It's getting easier as the challenge goes on this month. For my overall challenge, I averaged 363 words per day, taking an average of 14 minutes per day to finish my daily word count. I finished three chapters of a rough draft even in a month where a lot of things happened in real life that ordinarily would've kept me from trying. I plan to keep going with the challenge in December since it feels like a habit at this point.” So as we can see, our transcriptionist had good results from the challenge and feels like she's gone a long way to build a consistent writing habit. As I've said before many times on the podcast, don't let the perfect be the enemy of the possible and the achievable. And if a 1,000 words or 1,600 words a day just seems overwhelming, 300 words a day might be far more achievable. So that might be something worth looking into. So now onto the questions I've been sent about writing from beginning writers. So we're going to go through these questions one by one. #1: Do you listen to music while you write? Yes, I do. My preferred genre is soundtracks from movies, TV shows, and computer games that I like. And my listening habits tend to be a bit eclectic and not transferable to other people because if I talk to other people about my age, they prefer listening to bands they remember from their teenage years or their twenties. It's true for everyone, whatever the music you were listening to when you were a teenager and in your early twenties becomes the gold standard for music for the rest of your life, and nothing else can quite live into that. But for me, I prefer listening to soundtracks from movies, TV shows, and especially computer games I enjoy. For example, yesterday I was working on chapters 9 and 10 of Orc Hoard, and during that time I listened to the main theme from Dragon Age: The Veilguard like 15 times in a row. Am I going to play Dragon Age: The Veilguard? No, I don't have time for another computer game of that size, but I like Han Zimmer's music and have many of his soundtracks and I like the main theme to Dragon Age: The Veilguard, so I listen to it like 15 times in a row. #2: Our next question: is writing fun for you most of the time? I would say it is fun for me most of the time. It's always an expenditure of energy, however. I mean there's always this temptation in the back of your mind or in my mind that I could knock off for the day and play Starfield all day, but then the words wouldn't get done, the books wouldn't get done, and then the books wouldn't sell, so I would have no money to pay my bills. So that is pretty good motivation to write for me. But we're talking about beginning writers here and I'd say it's important to recognize that writing should usually be fun, but it's not always going to be fun. Creating anything, whether writing a book or writing a song or painting a picture or building a cabinet, whatever it is, is always going to take an expenditure of energy and it is a form of work. Even if it's not as difficult as compared to say digging ditches or doing open heart surgery, it is still a kind of work and therefore there are times when it will feel like work and you have to make yourself do it. If you absolutely hate writing and don't enjoy doing it at all, then by all means you should not be doing it. Go find something else to do that you enjoy and you'll be happier and healthier for it, but if you do enjoy writing most of the time, then that is probably a good place to be. #3: Our next question: how do you know how much worldbuilding is too little or too much? That is a good question because worldbuilding is definitely one of those writing adjacent tasks that can really be something of a rabbit hole that writers go down and then don't actually get writing any writing done. And I would say the answer is simple. You need to do whatever the right amount of world building is just enough, which I realize is very glib and pat answer, but it's true. You just need to do just enough worldbuilding that the story will be interesting, so that there may be mysteries for the character to solve. Worldbuilding is a bigger deal in fantasy obviously, especially fantasy that deals entirely with secondary worlds where you've made up the entire world and the history and so forth. What you want to do is avoid info dumping. I did an earlier episode about that where the joke was that if contemporary novels written the way that a fantasy novel is written, when someone went to an American airport for the first time and they encountered the security checkpoint, one of the characters would stop and deliver a three page history of the TSA and airplane security procedures in the United States over the last 30 years, which is what you want to avoid. You want to do just enough world building that the story moves forward. You don't want to get bogged down into it. And depending on the nature of your story, you may want to keep some of the world building secret in order to help create a mystery that will hold the reader's interest and drive the plot forward. For fantasy novels, Brandon Sanderson is notoriously good at this where he'll design an elaborate magic system and keep part of it concealed from the reader, and then the reveal about the magic system or the nature of the world is part of the climax of the book. Even in contemporary novels like mysteries or thrillers, you can do that with world building since obviously mysteries and thrillers have their own fictional parts of the world that you construct as part of the world building and so you can have reveals about your fictional police department or fictional spy agency be part of the world building. So to sum up, just do enough world building that you can tell your story, but don't get bogged down in it. #4: Our next question: what's something no one told you about writing but you wish they had? Well, that's a good question. I think the biggest thing that I wish someone had told me, but it turns out I probably would've had to learn it myself, is the extreme value of persistence plus time plus experience. I saw an interesting Tweet the other day that said that your twenties are basically like being a level one character in an RPG where you have no skills, no experience, and you need to spend all your time level grinding on boring and repetitive tasks in order to acquire the experience and skills that will carry you through your thirties, forties, fifties, and hopefully onward. That struck me as very true because in my case, I started self-publishing when I was about 30 and I obviously spent all of my twenties essentially learning how to self-publish even though I didn't know that what is what I was doing at the time because self-publishing in this current form hadn't come along yet. So as I was teaching myself to write novels and with my technology blog, teaching myself about how to write for the internet and search engines and so forth, I didn't realize it at the time, but I was acquiring these skills that would be very valuable to me in my thirties and forties as I continue self-publishing. So to sum up that question, I would say what I wish I had been told and really understood in my twenties when I was starting out was the value of persistence over time. Because if you look at it, the Grand Canyon is essentially water exercising persistence over time. #5: Our next question: should I tell people I'm writing a book? Well, that is a tricky question and I would say the answer boils down to it depends, which again is a pat and glib answer, but it really does depend on your personal circumstances and your relationship with your family and friends as well. For one thing, a lot of people say they're going to do things and never do them. In fact, I'd say a lot of people who announced very loudly that they're going to lose weight or learn to draw or learn to write a book or learn to program, never actually get very far or give up on it. So there's something to be said for remaining quiet and just doing things and letting the results speak for themselves once they can no longer be kept quiet. I would also say it really does depend on your relationship with your family, friends, and spouse and/or life partner. If you have a spouse or life partner who is very supportive of your goals and is willing to encourage you, then it's a good idea to tell them. It's not a good idea to keep secrets in that kind of relationship. But if you suspect your spouse, boyfriend, girlfriend, or life partner is going to belittle and mock you, it might be a good idea to keep this to yourself. For your family and friends, it might, again, it really depends on the individual personalities involved in your relationship with them. Some friend groups and families have this very bad habit of crab bucket syndrome or tall poppy syndrome where if someone tries to exceed the overall average of the group, they try to pull them back down to their level. That's why you occasionally hear stories of someone who gives up drinking or loses a lot of weight ends up losing their friend group in their process because it turns out their friend group was based on excessive consumption of alcohol or excessive consumption of food and something like that might occur with your friends and family as well. So I would say, on balance, it probably would be best to keep it to yourself unless you think your friends, family, and a significant other would be encouraging and welcoming of your efforts in this endeavor. But as always, it depends and your mileage may vary. #6: Our next question is a pretty interesting one that people ask frequently: how long until I can become a full-time author? Now this is again a very complicated question that boils down to your circumstances, and once again, the answer is it depends. Terry Brooks, when he wrote a writing advice book about 20 years ago, said that his editor, Lester del Rey, advised him not to go full-time until he had a year's salary in the bank, and that was 40 years ago. Nowadays, I would say at the bare minimum of going full time is you want to have a year's full salary in the bank and you would want to be making at least 40% more than you would be from your day job. Why 40%? Because once you are self-employed, especially in the US, you are responsible for paying a lot of things that your employer usually does, such as a variety of taxes and insurance costs. Also it's a very good idea, especially in the US, to have some sort of savings for retirement such as a 401K or something similar because there's absolutely no guarantee Social Security is going to be around by the time you retire. So I would say those are the absolute bare minimum before you would even think about doing this is to have a year's salary in the bank and you are making 40% more than your day job on a consistent basis. Again, it might be something you don't want to consider doing at all and you would need to ask yourself, why do you want to be a full-time author? Would it be the prestige of it? Would it be the fact that you really hate your day job? I have to say the reality of being a full-time author is often quite different than the fantasy people have of it, and that there have in fact been many authors who very successfully wrote while also maintaining day jobs. Anthony Trollope very famously wrote for two hours every morning before he went to work for the British Postal Service, and he did that his entire career and some of his books are remembered as classics of English literature to this day. Glenn Cook the fantasy author worked at a GM plant the entire time he was a writer because the benefits and pension were quite good. J.R.R. Tolkien was famously a professor of philology for his entire professional career and he wrote on the side and that became Lord of the Rings. So there's absolutely nothing wrong with keeping a full-time job and also writing on the side as you're comfortable doing so. So some writers have gone full-time, especially since the indie revolution started, found they absolutely hated it and then went back to working a day job and working and writing on the side. And again, there's absolutely nothing wrong with that. And for many people it is in fact a very good idea, especially if you have children, more than one child (children are expensive) and they need medical care or if you or another family member has a sort of chronic condition and it helps to have it covered by your employer's health insurance. So again, I hate to keep saying this, but it really does boil down to your personal circumstances and whether it's the right fit for you and your family and your financial situation or not. For myself, I'll give a few examples for my own life here. For myself, I've been a full-time writer for over eight years now. I've been very fortunate to be able to do that. Thank you all for buying the books and helping me to do that. I think my personality is pretty well suited to that because I have absolutely no problems writing for most of the day the way when many writers would find uncomfortable, and I have no problem doing a 6,000 word days or higher on a regular basis. That said, it was not originally my plan to be a full-time writer. I had originally planned to keep my day job and write on the side, but due to family circumstances, I had to move to a different state. And at the time I thought I could look for a different job or I could give full-time writing a go and see what happens, and I gave full-time writing a go and it's worked out pretty well for the last eight years. Thank you. So for me, in my circumstances at the time and the time since going full-time made sense and was a good choice. But again, and I hate to keep saying it, but it really does depend on your personal circumstances, finances, and family situation. #7: Now our last question, does piracy and AI mean that people won't be able to make money writing anymore? The answer to that is a big old no. Let's address those one at a time-first, piracy. Piracy has been around since the existence of the internet. It is older than the internet. Both J.R.R. Tolkien and Charles Dickens had American publishers who ripped off their works and made bootleg copies of them that led to a bunch of lawsuits. So piracy is nothing new. The internet has just made it easier, and we know that the way to beat piracy is to make getting your books easier and more convenient than it would be to pirate them. There's always going to be a level of people who pirate stuff no matter what. And to be frank, you should not consider that being lost sales because the people who pirate everything are going to pay for anything anyway, though I've had a few readers email from me from time to time saying that they did pirate my stuff and felt bad about it and eventually went on to become regular readers and paying customers. So there's really nothing you can do to stop piracy and it's kind of futile to try and fight it. I do know one indie writer who spent hundreds of thousands of dollars trying to shut down pirate sites, and it was, in my opinion, while that was a noble fight, it was a tremendous waste of money. So piracy, it's best not to worry too much about it. It is one of those things like retail shrink (which is what the big box retailers call shoplifting) that is always going to be with us. The way as an indie author to fight that is to make your work as available as on many paying platforms as possible so that it's very easy for people to get it legitimately. While AI is a big deal, I think it is somewhat overrated, and I also think that it has some structural problems that it's going to run into sooner or later. For one thing when it comes to writing, while you could use AI to churn out an entire novel, it would require significant editing to make it palatable, in which case you might as well just write it yourself. For another thing, AI is very, very expensive mainly not for the individual users, but for the companies that run them. And I'm not at this point entirely convinced that AI has long-term profitability. I wonder if it's another tech bubble, like the way the Metaverse was at the start of the 2020s when Facebook thought that the pandemic restrictions were going to be permanent and that society was going to become entirely remote. Subsequent events proved otherwise, and Facebook ended up temporarily losing about two thirds of its company value on its whole Metaverse bet. Finally, this is a bit on the fluffier side, but novel writing's art and art is essentially about human emotion and human connection. And no matter how smart the AI gets, that is something that would be very difficult for it to copy -one's own unique voice, one's own unique writing style. Those are something that only humans can do. And so I don't think AI is a long-term threat to fiction. It might be a long-term threat to things like sports writing and instant news articles, but less so for fiction. So to sum up, I don't think piracy and AI mean that people will no longer be able to make money from writing. And now for the final segment of our writing challenge episode, Jon's Advice Corner. We'll start with editing tips, what to do once your rough draft is done. So first, what should I do to edit the book once it's done. For myself, what I usually do is I do a first read through using track changes in Microsoft Word, chapter by chapter. And what I focus on then is reducing length, getting rid of sections that don't make sense, reducing excess words, tightening up sentences, making sure there are no continuity errors. I very often in this phase will split up chapters and do smaller chapters or rearrange scenes or move things around. Once that's done, I do a second edit where I essentially have my computer read the book aloud to me, and that's for typo checking. And sometimes you notice things when read aloud that you wouldn't have noticed on the page. After that, I have a couple different people who check it for typos for me and then we publish. Then I do another typo check, and then any typos that I find after the publishing process, I upload and correct as I get them. So that's my process. People would say that you need to hire an editor, and I think for many people that's true, but for myself, after 157 books, I'm reasonably confident I know what I'm doing and so I am confident doing it myself, even as I recognize that's not good advice to give to younger writers. Our next question, how do drafts work? The standard term is the first draft is just the first writing you do, getting all the writing down on the page. Depending on the writer, some people do second, third, and fourth drafts where depending on the writer, they might rewrite it entirely from scratch or just do editing on what they've already written. And then the final draft is one you are done with and comfortable with. Next question, how do I know when I should stop editing? That's a tricky question because many beginning writers fall into the trap of endlessly polishing their book over and over and over rather than writing new things. I would say once you've done your edits, once you've had a couple of beta readers look at it, eventually just decide that it is done and that we are going to move on and write new things because no matter how well you write, it's never going to be quite as cool as it is in your head when you are imagining it. I mean, you can get close, but it's never going to be quite there. So I would say a quick rule of thumb is maybe do two drafts, have your beta readers go over it, and then that would be a good place to call it quits because the truth is you can endlessly repolish the same book over and over and over again, but that may not be the best use of your time. Next editing question, how many beta readers should I have? It depends. I heard of one writer who has like 30 or 40 beta readers, and I think that might be a bit excessive, but if you can do three to five people whose opinions you trust and who aren't going to just say complete nonsense, that would probably be a good idea to do. I'd say around three to five (though as I mentioned, some writers can go much higher). Once you're editing is done and you have a final draft, you decide if you want to self-publish it or look for an agent. Here are things to avoid while publishing. For one thing, you really need to avoid predatory publishers. If you are approached by a publishing company that wants you to pay in any capacity to publish, it is probably a scam and you should avoid it. If you are self-publishing, you will need to come up with your own cover design anyway. But if you are approached by a publishing company that offers you a package where you pay $1,000 or $3,000 or even more, that is probably a scam and you won't get good value for your money. This is again, my opinion. I think new writers and in fact writers at all levels of experience would be better off self-publishing, but I would recommend avoiding agents and avoiding publicists. Hiring a publicist for your book is just going to waste your money, and an agent will probably not get you anywhere these days. It really helps if you want to be traditionally published to be famous before you try to get traditionally published-like a former president of the United States. If a former president of the United States decides that he (or someday she) is going to write a book, the former president of the United States is going to have absolutely no trouble finding the book a publisher whatsoever. If a music star or a movie star on the level of someone like Taylor Swift or Tom Cruise decides they want to write a book, they also will have no trouble finding a publisher. But for regular people like you and me, you are probably better off self-publishing and learning the skills to market and the various related publishing skills yourself. Things you would want to understand well before proceeding with these is finding a cover designer. Unless you are proficient with Photoshop and familiar with book covers, you should probably hire a cover designer, and this can be very affordable since many of the big cover designers offer premades where they just drop in your name and title for around $150 to $200 (though custom cover can require more). Hiring editors-this is again, something probably you should research and check out various writing groups on Facebook for recommendations. You want someone who isn't that expensive. You'll want someone who comes with good client recommendations. Hiring narrators is also something to research well in advance. But it might be a little early with your first book because audiobooks are so expensive. So that's it for our questions, and that is it for our November Writing Challenge. As a bonus, our transcriptionist included her official writing playlist, which I'm not going to read here, but you can see it on the show notes if you are curious. And I would include my writing playlist, but as I said, it's mostly random computer game, movie, and TV show soundtracks that I enjoyed. So that is it for this week. Thank you for coming along for our November Writing Challenge. I hope you found it helpful and informative. Thank you for listening to The Pulp Writer Show. I hope you found the show useful. A reminder that you can listen to all the back episodes on https://thepulpwritershow.com. If you enjoyed the podcast, please leave a review on your podcasting platform of choice. Stay safe and stay healthy and see you all next week.
Ennio Morricone nem akart a felesége nélkül élni WMN 2024-11-10 18:06:00 Film Ennio Morricone Hetven évig alkotott egy párt Maria Traviával a kilencvenhat éve született zeneszerző-karmester, Ennio Morricone. A Maestrónak – aki számos ikonikus film zenéjét komponálta – a felesége jelentette a támogató hátországot, és gyakran az inspirációt is alkotómunkához. Házasságuk évtizedei – saját elmondásuk szerint – végig harmóniában teltek, csak a k Már a Maxon: Winona Ryder misztikus thrillerét nem láthattad a mozikban, most streamingen pótolhatod Mafab 2024-11-11 04:00:03 Film Mozi Póker Winona Ryder tipikusan az a színésznő, aki szinte bármilyen műfajban, bármilyen szerepben megállja a helyét, de a misztikus horrorok és thrillerek állnak igazán közel hozzá. Láthattuk már horrorcsalád pókerarcú kislányaként, túlvilági szellemekkel haverkodó különcként, de jövőbeli szintetikusként is. 2022-ben is készült egy thriller, amelyben ő vol Egy afrikai expedíció változtatta meg az építészből természettudóssá lett Alfred Brehm életét kultura.hu 2024-11-11 07:03:07 Könyv Afrika Száznegyven éve, 1884. november 11-én halt meg Alfred Edmund Brehm német természettudós, zoológus, utazó, Az állatok világa című könyv szerzője. Heni, aki egy meleg orosz férfival vállalt gyereket 24.hu 2024-11-10 18:26:59 Film A Verzión bemutatkozó Cabin Pressure annak folyamatát mutatja be, mit tehet egy nő, aki a társszülőséget választja megoldásként, és milyen dilemmákkal, nehézségekkel találkozik ezen a nem mindennapi úton. Klaus von Dohnanyi megírta, miért ne vessük alá Európa érdekeit az amerikai védelmi potenciálnak Librarius 2024-11-11 07:59:18 Könyv USA Klaus von Dohnanyi alaposan foglalkozik az amerikaiak történelmileg kialakult oroszgyűlöletével. Figyelemre méltó mű. Emlékszik, amikor Dwayne Johnson még fenekéig érő hajjal hódított? – Mutatjuk azokat az időket Blikk 2024-11-11 08:01:52 Film Hollywood Dwayne Johnson Dwayne Johnson a világ egyik legünnepeltebb sztárja. Az egykori pankrátor már hosszú évek óta az egyik legjobban fizetett hollywoodi sztár, és bár az alakításaival sosem pályázik az Oscar-díjra, kétségtelen, hogy az emberek imádják, amit csinál. Mára a külseje is ikonikussá vált, kigyúrt, tökéletes teste, kopasz feje és tetovált karja a védjegyeine A ma 50 éves Leonardo DiCaprio tíz legjobb filmje Player 2024-11-11 10:00:14 Film Életmű Leonardo Dicaprio Leonardo DiCaprio ma ünnepli ötvenedik születésnapját, melynek örömére toplistába állítottuk a színész eddigi impozáns életművének tíz legjobb darabját. Hatalmas áldozat, ha nem kockáztatsz – Szőcs Gábor-interjú Roadster 2024-11-11 08:00:06 Film Interjú Vízilabda Szőcs Gáborral, a HOLD senior portfóliómenedzserével és partnerével, az Orion alap kezelőjével beszélgettünk arról, hogy milyen egy jó munkahely, mik a párhuzamok a vízilabda és a vagyonkezelés között, és hogy miért nem lenne jó film Az Alkotás utca farkasai. Taylor Swift tarolt az MTV Európai Zenei Díj átadóján Magyar Hírlap 2024-11-11 09:31:00 Zene Koncert Taylor Swift Megkapta a legjobb élő koncert, a legjobb videó (Fortnight) és a legjobb előadó kategória trófeáját is. Rita Ora könnyeivel küszködve emlékezett meg Liam Payne-ről az Mtv Ema-n refresher.hu 2024-11-11 09:24:00 Zene Manchester Díjátadó Taylor Swift Rita Ora A manchesteri díjátadón kiosztották az Ema díjait, amelyekből a legtöbbet Taylor Swift vitte el. A legemlékezetesebb pillanat azonban Rita Ora megemlékezése volt, aki korábban közös dalt is készített Liam Payne-nel. Vomberg Frigyes visszaszólt: "Az én korosztályomnak is joga van megélni dolgokat!" Story 2024-11-11 06:00:12 Bulvár Kikéri magának a tiszteletlenséget a séf. Nem csak magáért, de minden ötven pluszos ember mellett kiállt. A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon.
Ennio Morricone nem akart a felesége nélkül élni WMN 2024-11-10 18:06:00 Film Ennio Morricone Hetven évig alkotott egy párt Maria Traviával a kilencvenhat éve született zeneszerző-karmester, Ennio Morricone. A Maestrónak – aki számos ikonikus film zenéjét komponálta – a felesége jelentette a támogató hátországot, és gyakran az inspirációt is alkotómunkához. Házasságuk évtizedei – saját elmondásuk szerint – végig harmóniában teltek, csak a k Már a Maxon: Winona Ryder misztikus thrillerét nem láthattad a mozikban, most streamingen pótolhatod Mafab 2024-11-11 04:00:03 Film Mozi Póker Winona Ryder tipikusan az a színésznő, aki szinte bármilyen műfajban, bármilyen szerepben megállja a helyét, de a misztikus horrorok és thrillerek állnak igazán közel hozzá. Láthattuk már horrorcsalád pókerarcú kislányaként, túlvilági szellemekkel haverkodó különcként, de jövőbeli szintetikusként is. 2022-ben is készült egy thriller, amelyben ő vol Egy afrikai expedíció változtatta meg az építészből természettudóssá lett Alfred Brehm életét kultura.hu 2024-11-11 07:03:07 Könyv Afrika Száznegyven éve, 1884. november 11-én halt meg Alfred Edmund Brehm német természettudós, zoológus, utazó, Az állatok világa című könyv szerzője. Heni, aki egy meleg orosz férfival vállalt gyereket 24.hu 2024-11-10 18:26:59 Film A Verzión bemutatkozó Cabin Pressure annak folyamatát mutatja be, mit tehet egy nő, aki a társszülőséget választja megoldásként, és milyen dilemmákkal, nehézségekkel találkozik ezen a nem mindennapi úton. Klaus von Dohnanyi megírta, miért ne vessük alá Európa érdekeit az amerikai védelmi potenciálnak Librarius 2024-11-11 07:59:18 Könyv USA Klaus von Dohnanyi alaposan foglalkozik az amerikaiak történelmileg kialakult oroszgyűlöletével. Figyelemre méltó mű. Emlékszik, amikor Dwayne Johnson még fenekéig érő hajjal hódított? – Mutatjuk azokat az időket Blikk 2024-11-11 08:01:52 Film Hollywood Dwayne Johnson Dwayne Johnson a világ egyik legünnepeltebb sztárja. Az egykori pankrátor már hosszú évek óta az egyik legjobban fizetett hollywoodi sztár, és bár az alakításaival sosem pályázik az Oscar-díjra, kétségtelen, hogy az emberek imádják, amit csinál. Mára a külseje is ikonikussá vált, kigyúrt, tökéletes teste, kopasz feje és tetovált karja a védjegyeine A ma 50 éves Leonardo DiCaprio tíz legjobb filmje Player 2024-11-11 10:00:14 Film Életmű Leonardo Dicaprio Leonardo DiCaprio ma ünnepli ötvenedik születésnapját, melynek örömére toplistába állítottuk a színész eddigi impozáns életművének tíz legjobb darabját. Hatalmas áldozat, ha nem kockáztatsz – Szőcs Gábor-interjú Roadster 2024-11-11 08:00:06 Film Interjú Vízilabda Szőcs Gáborral, a HOLD senior portfóliómenedzserével és partnerével, az Orion alap kezelőjével beszélgettünk arról, hogy milyen egy jó munkahely, mik a párhuzamok a vízilabda és a vagyonkezelés között, és hogy miért nem lenne jó film Az Alkotás utca farkasai. Taylor Swift tarolt az MTV Európai Zenei Díj átadóján Magyar Hírlap 2024-11-11 09:31:00 Zene Koncert Taylor Swift Megkapta a legjobb élő koncert, a legjobb videó (Fortnight) és a legjobb előadó kategória trófeáját is. Rita Ora könnyeivel küszködve emlékezett meg Liam Payne-ről az Mtv Ema-n refresher.hu 2024-11-11 09:24:00 Zene Manchester Díjátadó Taylor Swift Rita Ora A manchesteri díjátadón kiosztották az Ema díjait, amelyekből a legtöbbet Taylor Swift vitte el. A legemlékezetesebb pillanat azonban Rita Ora megemlékezése volt, aki korábban közös dalt is készített Liam Payne-nel. Vomberg Frigyes visszaszólt: "Az én korosztályomnak is joga van megélni dolgokat!" Story 2024-11-11 06:00:12 Bulvár Kikéri magának a tiszteletlenséget a séf. Nem csak magáért, de minden ötven pluszos ember mellett kiállt. A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon.
Pagers carried by Hezbollah operatives explode in apparent attacks across Lebanon. Also, Sean “Diddy” Combs was denied bail after pleading not guilty to federal sex-trafficking and racketeering charges. Plus, new details emerge about a Delta flight that was forced to make an emergency landing shortly after takeoff, resulting in the injuries of multiple passengers. And, Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was placed on injured reserve after his latest concussion.
This week we jump back into the world of Batman Beyond for our antepenultimate episode of The Zeta Project. Join us as we discuss the seemingly increased animation budget, the fun action sequences & our predictions for the last few episodes!We've also both watched the entirety of the new Star Wars show The Acolyte, and it's actually quite good! We also have a nice chat about the last few episodes of HBO's House of the Dragon, which is also pretty good.Contact us:https://linktr.ee/theprojectprojectpod
Send your questions or provocations to Adam or Budi here!In this episode, Adam and Budi discuss their fifth book of the year, 'And Then, You Act' by Anne Bogart. Anne Bogart lives in New York City. She attended Bard College (BA) and New York University (MA). She is the co-artistic director of SITI Company, and her works there have included: Café Variations, Trojan Women, American Document, Antigone, Under Construction, Freshwater, Who Do You Think You Are, Radio Macbeth, Hotel Cassiopeia, Death and the Ploughman, La Dispute, Score, bobrauschenbergamerica, Room, War of the Worlds, Cabin Pressure, War of the Worlds: The Radio Play, Alice's Adventures, Culture of Desire, Bob, Going, Going, Gone, Small Lives/Big Dreams, The Medium, Noel Coward's Hay Fever and Private Lives, August Strindberg's Miss Julie, and Charles Mee's Orestes. She is a professor at Columbia University. She has also written four books: A Director Prepares, The Viewpoints Book, And Then, You Act and Conversations with Anne.Support the Show.If you enjoyed this week´s podcast, please leave a review on Apple Podcasts. To submit a question: Voice- http://www.speakpipe.com/theatreofothers Email- podcast@theatreofothers.com Show Credits Co-Hosts: Adam Marple & Budi MillerProducer: Jack BurmeisterMusic: https://www.purple-planet.comAdditional compositions by @jack_burmeister
Hour 2 of the Tuesday Bob Rose Show for 6-4-24
Sunday, October 28, 2018 It's part 2 of our Halloween podcast-o-rama with a look at Cabin in the Woods movies. This is particularly more defined than last time with the PG-fare -- and particularly more gruesome (with disturbingly more laughs too).0:00 -- Intro, last podcast recap, genre rant11:06 -- Evil Dead II44:52: -- Dead Snow1.02:02 -- The Cabin in the Woods1.23:44 -- Awards and rankings2.00:34 -- Next podcast planning2.04:04 -- Lots of random scary movie talk2.17:22 -- Outro and outtakesHey! Watch Siskel and Ebert's review of Swamp Thing!Hey! Be sure to watch Halloween, My Bloody Valentine, and Sleepaway Camp for next time!Hey! Subscribe in iTunes!Hey! Check out the Facebook page and vote on the next category!Hey! Check out Jon's YM&T Letterboxd list!Hey! Check out Roy's YM&T Letterboxd list!Hey! Email us at yoursminetheirspodcast@gmail.com! Send new topics! Send new theme songs!
1. What spoke to you the most in this message?2. Being planted in church, going to church, reading your bible, praying, and worshiping are things Pastor Rob mentioned to help secure your mask and allow you to breathe in God's spiritual air. Which one of these do you need to work on? Explain. 3. Being an example for others to follow doesn't have to be a scary thing. We are not perfect and that's okay. Which method of setting the example needs the most work, and how can we, as a church family, help you? Method: 1. We need to practice what we preach.2. We need to find joy in every Situation.3. We need to model Christlikeness.4. We need to invest in relationships.4. Are you ready to put on that mask, secure it, breathe in, be the example, and go and make disciples? Why or why not?
This week, Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz discuss Nikki Haley's progress and Ron DeSantis's stagnation in Iowa, Donald Trump's testimony in New York, and Dean Phillips's campaign in New Hampshire; the first social-media cases of the term at the Supreme Court; and Ours Was the Shining Future: The Story of the American Dream with author David Leonhardt. And you can be a part of the show: submit your Conundrum at slate.com/conundrum. Here are some notes and references from this week's show: Brianne Pfannenstiel for the Des Moines Register: “Donald Trump builds on big lead as Nikki Haley pulls even with Ron DeSantis in Iowa Poll” Jennifer Rubin for The Washington Post: “Nikki Haley has a shot. But a really, really long one.” Jonah E. Bromwich and Ben Protess for The New York Times: “Trump Civil Fraud Trial: Donald Trump Jr. Resumes Testifying in Fraud Case Aimed at His Father” Geoffrey Skelley for 538: The curious case of Dean Phillips's last-minute primary challenge 538: “How popular is Joe Biden?” Jeff Neal for Harvard Law Today: “The Supreme Court takes on (anti)social media” Adam Liptak for The New York Times: “Supreme Court Lifts Limits for Now on Biden Officials' Contacts With Tech Platforms” Amy Howe for SCOTUSblog: “Justices take major Florida and Texas social media cases” Ours Was the Shining Future: The Story of the American Dream by David Leonhardt Emily Bazelon for The New York Times's The Morning newsletter, November 2, 2023 David Leonhardt for The Atlantic: “The Hard Truth About Immigration” Peter Dizikes for MIT News: “Q&A: David Autor on the long afterlife of the “China shock”” History.com: “A. Philip Randolph” Natasha Singer for The New York Times: “This Florida School District Banned Cellphones. Here's What Happened.” and “New Laws on Kids and Social Media Are Stymied by Industry Lawsuits” Cristiano Lima and Naomi Nix for The Washington Post: “41 states sue Meta, claiming Instagram, Facebook are addictive, harm kids” Here are this week's chatters: Emily: The New Yorker's Poetry Podcast with Kevin Young: “Toi Derricotte Reads Tracy K. Smith” John: The Graham Norton Show: “Dame Judi Dench Masterfully Does A Shakespeare Sonnet”; BBC Radio 4's Cabin Pressure; Endeavour on PBS Masterpiece; John Dickerson for CBS News Prime Time: “Grammy-winning artist Jason Isbell talks about the craft of songwriting and his latest music”; and Ray Bradbury in the Los Angeles Times: “'Ice Cream Suit'--Touchstone for the Past and Present” David: Sarah Zhang for The Atlantic: “Everything I Thought I Knew About Nasal Congestion Is Wrong” Listener chatter from Albert Fox Cahn: N'dea Yancey-Bragg for USA Today: “Advocates say excited delirium provides cover for police violence. They want it banned” and John Dickerson for CBS News 60 Minutes: “How a questionable syndrome, “Excited Delirium,” could be protecting police officers from misconduct charges” For this week's Slate Plus bonus segment, Emily, John, and David talk about classroom cellphone bans. In the latest Gabfest Reads, David talks with Kristi Coulter about her book, Exit Interview: The Life and Death of My Ambitious Career. Email your chatters, questions, and comments to gabfest@slate.com. (Messages may be referenced by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.) Podcast production by Cheyna Roth Research by Julie Huygen Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week, Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz discuss Nikki Haley's progress and Ron DeSantis's stagnation in Iowa, Donald Trump's testimony in New York, and Dean Phillips's campaign in New Hampshire; the first social-media cases of the term at the Supreme Court; and Ours Was the Shining Future: The Story of the American Dream with author David Leonhardt. And you can be a part of the show: submit your Conundrum at slate.com/conundrum. Here are some notes and references from this week's show: Brianne Pfannenstiel for the Des Moines Register: “Donald Trump builds on big lead as Nikki Haley pulls even with Ron DeSantis in Iowa Poll” Jennifer Rubin for The Washington Post: “Nikki Haley has a shot. But a really, really long one.” Jonah E. Bromwich and Ben Protess for The New York Times: “Trump Civil Fraud Trial: Donald Trump Jr. Resumes Testifying in Fraud Case Aimed at His Father” Geoffrey Skelley for 538: The curious case of Dean Phillips's last-minute primary challenge 538: “How popular is Joe Biden?” Jeff Neal for Harvard Law Today: “The Supreme Court takes on (anti)social media” Adam Liptak for The New York Times: “Supreme Court Lifts Limits for Now on Biden Officials' Contacts With Tech Platforms” Amy Howe for SCOTUSblog: “Justices take major Florida and Texas social media cases” Ours Was the Shining Future: The Story of the American Dream by David Leonhardt Emily Bazelon for The New York Times's The Morning newsletter, November 2, 2023 David Leonhardt for The Atlantic: “The Hard Truth About Immigration” Peter Dizikes for MIT News: “Q&A: David Autor on the long afterlife of the “China shock”” History.com: “A. Philip Randolph” Natasha Singer for The New York Times: “This Florida School District Banned Cellphones. Here's What Happened.” and “New Laws on Kids and Social Media Are Stymied by Industry Lawsuits” Cristiano Lima and Naomi Nix for The Washington Post: “41 states sue Meta, claiming Instagram, Facebook are addictive, harm kids” Here are this week's chatters: Emily: The New Yorker's Poetry Podcast with Kevin Young: “Toi Derricotte Reads Tracy K. Smith” John: The Graham Norton Show: “Dame Judi Dench Masterfully Does A Shakespeare Sonnet”; BBC Radio 4's Cabin Pressure; Endeavour on PBS Masterpiece; John Dickerson for CBS News Prime Time: “Grammy-winning artist Jason Isbell talks about the craft of songwriting and his latest music”; and Ray Bradbury in the Los Angeles Times: “'Ice Cream Suit'--Touchstone for the Past and Present” David: Sarah Zhang for The Atlantic: “Everything I Thought I Knew About Nasal Congestion Is Wrong” Listener chatter from Albert Fox Cahn: N'dea Yancey-Bragg for USA Today: “Advocates say excited delirium provides cover for police violence. They want it banned” and John Dickerson for CBS News 60 Minutes: “How a questionable syndrome, “Excited Delirium,” could be protecting police officers from misconduct charges” For this week's Slate Plus bonus segment, Emily, John, and David talk about classroom cellphone bans. In the latest Gabfest Reads, David talks with Kristi Coulter about her book, Exit Interview: The Life and Death of My Ambitious Career. Email your chatters, questions, and comments to gabfest@slate.com. (Messages may be referenced by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.) Podcast production by Cheyna Roth Research by Julie Huygen Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week, Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz discuss Nikki Haley's progress and Ron DeSantis's stagnation in Iowa, Donald Trump's testimony in New York, and Dean Phillips's campaign in New Hampshire; the first social-media cases of the term at the Supreme Court; and Ours Was the Shining Future: The Story of the American Dream with author David Leonhardt. And you can be a part of the show: submit your Conundrum at slate.com/conundrum. Here are some notes and references from this week's show: Brianne Pfannenstiel for the Des Moines Register: “Donald Trump builds on big lead as Nikki Haley pulls even with Ron DeSantis in Iowa Poll” Jennifer Rubin for The Washington Post: “Nikki Haley has a shot. But a really, really long one.” Jonah E. Bromwich and Ben Protess for The New York Times: “Trump Civil Fraud Trial: Donald Trump Jr. Resumes Testifying in Fraud Case Aimed at His Father” Geoffrey Skelley for 538: The curious case of Dean Phillips's last-minute primary challenge 538: “How popular is Joe Biden?” Jeff Neal for Harvard Law Today: “The Supreme Court takes on (anti)social media” Adam Liptak for The New York Times: “Supreme Court Lifts Limits for Now on Biden Officials' Contacts With Tech Platforms” Amy Howe for SCOTUSblog: “Justices take major Florida and Texas social media cases” Ours Was the Shining Future: The Story of the American Dream by David Leonhardt Emily Bazelon for The New York Times's The Morning newsletter, November 2, 2023 David Leonhardt for The Atlantic: “The Hard Truth About Immigration” Peter Dizikes for MIT News: “Q&A: David Autor on the long afterlife of the “China shock”” History.com: “A. Philip Randolph” Natasha Singer for The New York Times: “This Florida School District Banned Cellphones. Here's What Happened.” and “New Laws on Kids and Social Media Are Stymied by Industry Lawsuits” Cristiano Lima and Naomi Nix for The Washington Post: “41 states sue Meta, claiming Instagram, Facebook are addictive, harm kids” Here are this week's chatters: Emily: The New Yorker's Poetry Podcast with Kevin Young: “Toi Derricotte Reads Tracy K. Smith” John: The Graham Norton Show: “Dame Judi Dench Masterfully Does A Shakespeare Sonnet”; BBC Radio 4's Cabin Pressure; Endeavour on PBS Masterpiece; John Dickerson for CBS News Prime Time: “Grammy-winning artist Jason Isbell talks about the craft of songwriting and his latest music”; and Ray Bradbury in the Los Angeles Times: “'Ice Cream Suit'--Touchstone for the Past and Present” David: Sarah Zhang for The Atlantic: “Everything I Thought I Knew About Nasal Congestion Is Wrong” Listener chatter from Albert Fox Cahn: N'dea Yancey-Bragg for USA Today: “Advocates say excited delirium provides cover for police violence. They want it banned” and John Dickerson for CBS News 60 Minutes: “How a questionable syndrome, “Excited Delirium,” could be protecting police officers from misconduct charges” For this week's Slate Plus bonus segment, Emily, John, and David talk about classroom cellphone bans. In the latest Gabfest Reads, David talks with Kristi Coulter about her book, Exit Interview: The Life and Death of My Ambitious Career. Email your chatters, questions, and comments to gabfest@slate.com. (Messages may be referenced by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.) Podcast production by Cheyna Roth Research by Julie Huygen Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Wiek gaat voor het eerst naar school. En daarom wordt er een uniform bijeen gekocht en brengen Wiek, Paulien en Chris een bezoekje aan de school voordat het schooljaar begint. Daarnaast bleek er een verontrustende brief te zijn bezorgd. Er kan namelijk ieder moment een inspecteur van de kijk- en luisterdienst langskomen. Er is namelijk geen geld betaald! Chris en Paulien praten kort over de BBC en Chris heeft zich verdiept in de zogenaamde British Light Music. Daar houdt hij dan ook een kleine spreekbeurt over. Tot slot horen we hoe Wiek het heeft gehad op zijn eerste schooldag. Ik kon geen link plaatsen naar de geweldige radiocomedy Cabin Pressure. Maar als je 'Cabin Pressure' intoetst in de podcastapp van Apple dan vind je 'm zo. Dit is het Instagram-account van Man met de microfoon.Wil je lid worden of een eenmalige donatie doen via petjeaf.com dan kan dat: hierEenmalig overmaken kan ook naar: NL37 INGB 0006 8785 94 van Stichting Man met de microfoon te Amsterdam.Wil je het boekje 'Hoe maak ik een podcast?' klik dan hierReacties: manmetdemicrofoon@gmail.comWil je adverteren, dan kun je een mailtje sturen naar: adverteren@dagennacht.nlZie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Thrilling news, beloved listeners - Helena is back, and we're spending her returning ep catching up on all the movies she's watched in her absence! After a brief explanation of where exactly Helena has been for the past couple of eps (theater!), we delve into Helena's extensive “What We Sneep” list. This covers everything from a wide variety of horror films, rewatches of the hits of the 80's, 90's and more, and ending with a group discussion of Barbie! The Sneople also ended up talking about movie musicals, the Good Omens show, and Doctor Who - none of which is probably surprising. I guess we also talk about what Matty and Ezra watched/did this ep but as expected: there was mostly a lot of video games involved.
The Club try to get some rest as the second Bodak hunts them. Meanwhile we learn the secrets behind the Cozy Cabin as we enter the Cabinverse! You can help us grow and get exclusive bonus content by visiting The Danger Club Patreon! Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Twitch and Discord! Music thanks to: Kevin Macleod, White Bat Audio, and Ross Bugden.
In this episode, Adam and Budi discuss their fourth choice for The Theatre of Others Book Club, A Director Prepares by Anne Bogart.Anne Bogart was the Co-Artistic Director for 30 years of SITI Company, which she founded with Japanese director Tadashi Suzuki in 1992. She is the recipient of four Honorary Doctorates from The Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, Skidmore College, Bard College, and Cornish College. She was a recipient of a Doris Duke Performing Artist Award, the Richard B. Fisher Award, a USA Fellowship, a Rockefeller Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and received the 2016 Alfred Drake Award from Brooklyn College. Recent works with SITI include Radio Christmas Carol, Falling & Loving, The Bacchae, Chess Match, The Theater is a Blank Page, Steel Hammer, Persians, A Rite, Café Variations, Trojan Women, American Document, Antigone, Freshwater, Under Construction, Who Do You Think You Are, Radio Macbeth, Hotel Cassiopeia; Death and the Ploughman, La Dispute, Score, bobrauschenbergamerica, Room, War of the Worlds, Cabin Pressure, The Radio Play, Alice's Adventures, Culture of Desire, Bob, Going, Going, Gone, Small Lives/Big Dreams, The Medium, Hay Fever, Private Lives, Miss Julie, and Orestes. Operas include Tristan and Isolde, The Handmaid's Tale, Alcina, Macbeth, Norma, Carmen, I Capuleti e iMontecchi, Nicholas and Alexandra, Marina: A Captive Spirit, Lilith, and Seven Deadly Sins. Bogart is the author of six books: A Director Prepares, The Viewpoints Book, And Then, You Act, Conversations with Anne, What's the Story, and most recently, The Art of Resonance.Support the showIf you enjoyed this week´s podcast, please leave a review on Apple Podcasts. To submit a question: Voice- http://www.speakpipe.com/theatreofothers Email- podcast@theatreofothers.com Support the Theatre of Others - Check out our Merch!Show Credits Co-Hosts: Adam Marple & Budi MillerProducer: Jack BurmeisterMusic: https://www.purple-planet.comAdditional compositions by @jack_burmeister
Today we're so excited to be joined by our dear friend, composer and musician, Dan Romer. We read pages 15-16 and discuss Dan's unique, POV-driven approach to composing scores for films and TV shows. Then we freefall through this week's prism: it's all about moments in Coens films when the tone shifts radically. Along the way we read from Carter Burwell's notes on how the films and their scores came together. Coens covered: Fargo, The Man Who Wasn't There, Intolerable Cruelty, The Big Lebowski If you're enjoying the show please follow us on social media, tell people about the show, and rate and review us on iTunes. Go crazy. You can also support us directly at https://ko-fi.com/tothewhitesea. For all things TTWS visit tothewhitesea.me
[00:03:38] NEWS [00:03:56] Niugini F70 at Port Moresby on Feb 20th 2023, Loss of Cabin Pressure [00:26:35] Network Australia F100 at Paraburdoo on Nov 22nd 2021, Descent Below Minimum Without Visual Reference [00:41:26] Hop! CRJX at Nantes on Oct 20th 2021, Wrong QNH Triggers MSAW [00:51:54] Final Report - Minnesota Mooney Crash [01:06:37] GETTING TO KNOW US [01:26:18] Greg - Big News!!! [01:29:04] Armando Re: APG 563 [01:39:46] Final Report - Accident: JAC AT72 at Kagoshima on Nov 7th 2022, Passenger Injured on Landing [01:44:38] Boeing Employee Bought Lottery Ticket Because It Was At $747M, a Nod to the Aircraft. She Won the Jackpot [01:52:52] COFFEE FUND [01:55:35] FEEDBACK [01:56:17] Scott - Cackalacky [02:01:04] Anders - First Time Feedbacker, Skydiving Accident Report [02:18:41] Robert - Mad Dogs Return To Service [02:21:02] Paul - Bride of Hot Mess - Portland OR Incident [02:23:40] Greg - ATC and Pilot Readback Responsibilities [02:30:05] Zeb - Flight Sim Questions VIDEO Don't see the video? Click this to watch it on YouTube! ABOUT RADIO ROGER “Radio Roger” Stern has been a TV and Radio reporter since he was a teenager. He's won an Emmy award for his coverage in the New York City Market. Currently you can hear his reporting in New York on radio station 1010 WINS, the number one all-news station in the nation. Nationally you can hear him anchor newscasts on the Fox News Radio Network and on Fox's Headlines 24-7 service on Sirius XM Radio. In addition Roger is a proud member of and contributor to the APG community. Give us your review in iTunes! I'm "airlinepilotguy" on Facebook, and "airlinepilotguy" on Twitter. feedback@airlinepilotguy.com airlinepilotguy.com "Appify" the Airline Pilot Guy website (http://airlinepilotguy.com) on your phone or tablet! ATC audio from http://LiveATC.net Intro/outro Music, Coffee Fund theme music by Geoff Smith thegeoffsmith.com Dr. Steph's intro music by Nevil Bounds Capt Nick's intro music by Kevin from Norway (aka Kevski) Doh De Oh by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100255 Artist: http://incompetech.com/ Copyright © AirlinePilotGuy 2023, All Rights Reserved Airline Pilot Guy Show by Jeff Nielsen is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License
Covering “Cabin Pressure” and “The River Rising.”
In an episode that lost all of it's structural integrity listen to Da boys hilariously struggle to make to it to the end of the episode. https://linktr.ee/danochillpodcast As as always thanks for your support and please like,share,and subscribe!
It's finally the end of the summer! We celebrate with a flight, a fistfight, some fast food, and body swaps! In our first bad idea, Gabriel brings the story of a mid-air flight between a plane's pilot and co-pilot. The gang turns it into a gritty, Martin McDonagh-esque suspense theater play about a situation doomed to blow up at just the wrong moment. Then, Zach horrifies Sarah and Gabriel with a story of little kids working at a McDonald's. The team pitches a new Freaky Friday-style story about adults and children swapping bodies and learning heart-warming lessons. All of that, plus: the Gods of Maximum Comedy, bars that are underground, the gritty Cabin Pressure reboot that we were all waiting for, a better boxing match, and our collective Sauron eye. Today's Bad Ideas™: Idea #1Idea #2Support the show: http://patreon.com/NoBadIdeasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ashley Quach, writer, director, and children's book illustrator joins me to talk about John Finnemore and his radio drama work, including Cabin Pressure. We chatted about media that helps you feel less lonely, the genius of two people plays, and how Benedict Cumberbatch should be doing more comedy. Tangents include the story of how we met, falling asleep to podcasts, and the horror of meeting strangers in real life. Sign up for my newsletter at our website, tandonproductions.com or on my Twitter (@marissakumari). We'll be back next week with Daniel Kibblesmith!
[00:04:12] NEWS [00:04:29] Preliminary Report - Missing Pilot En Route to RDU [00:10:55] Report: Southwest B737 at Santa Ana on Jul 1st 2022, Flight Attendant Receives Serious Injury on Touch Down [00:18:38] FINAL REPORT - Accident: Ryanair B738 Near Frankfurt on Jul 13th 2018, Loss of Cabin Pressure, 33 Passengers Feeling Unwell [00:41:31] Fixing Chronic Problems with Flying Training was RAF Chief's 'Only Priority' and Could Take Years to Resolve [00:51:58] FINAL REPORT - Incident: Thai A359 at Frankfurt on Jan 1st 2020, About 800 Feet AGL About 7nm from Touch Down [01:13:34] GETTING TO KNOW US [01:38:10] COFFEE FUND [01:40:19] FEEDBACK [01:40:35] Peter - RAF Tornado - YouTube Video [01:46:39] Tom T - Locking the Overhead Bins [02:01:54] Robert - Lufthansa Reactivates Airbus A380 [02:06:57] Texas Anla'Shok - By Air or by Rail? [02:16:57] Gary - Pilots at Fault??? [02:22:03] Larry - Tug? I Don't Need No Stinkin' Tug! [02:25:02] Robert - Salvaged Airframe Parts Allegedly Led to Haunted Future Flights [02:28:15] Josh from SoCal - Mystery Magic Fuel from Thin Air? [02:32:22] Mariano - RE: American Airlines Multiple Failues Discussed on 529 [02:36:56] Larry - SECURITY BREACH [02:38:41] Moshe - Multiple Pilots on the Flight Deck [02:50:50] Robert - Oklahoma City Sonic Boom Tests [02:55:47] Texas Charlie- Finally, Real Evidence VIDEO Don't see the video? Click this to watch it on YouTube! ABOUT RADIO ROGER “Radio Roger” Stern has been a TV and Radio reporter since he was a teenager. He's won an Emmy award for his coverage in the New York City Market. Currently you can hear his reporting in New York on radio station 1010 WINS, the number one all-news station in the nation. Nationally you can hear him anchor newscasts on the Fox News Radio Network and on Fox's Headlines 24-7 service on Sirius XM Radio. In addition Roger is a proud member of and contributor to the APG community. Give us your review in iTunes! I'm "airlinepilotguy" on Facebook, and "airlinepilotguy" on Twitter. feedback@airlinepilotguy.com airlinepilotguy.com "Appify" the Airline Pilot Guy website (http://airlinepilotguy.com) on your phone or tablet! ATC audio from http://LiveATC.net Intro/outro Music, Coffee Fund theme music by Geoff Smith thegeoffsmith.com Dr. Steph's intro music by Nevil Bounds Capt Nick's intro music by Kevin from Norway (aka Kevski) Doh De Oh by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100255 Artist: http://incompetech.com/ Copyright © AirlinePilotGuy 2022, All Rights Reserved Airline Pilot Guy Show by Jeff Nielsen is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License
Glukhovsky: Text, Kaidzsu Állatvédő Társaság, A hazugság tézisei, szárazföldi vitorlázás sebességrekord, támogatásmegvonás az 5th- Gen Kindle-től, e-paper laptop, home office-tól ideges középvezetők, Larry Ellison (Oracle) és Trump, Airtag gyilkosság, felszeletelt repülő, Dutra traktorok, Cabin Pressure, led lámpa, IKEA lemezjátszó.
Cabin Pressure is a radio sitcom written and created by John Finnemore and directed and produced by David Tyler.
A conversation changes Mariela's itinerary… forever.Oh, this is getting good! Now is the time for the real Adventure in Atacama to begin!!! Listen to Episode 36: Fasten your Seatbelt.***Play the game on our interactive page or on your favorite podcast app! Adventure in Atacama, an audio game from the creative minds at Studio Ochenta. For more information about the cast, and for bonus content including mad libs, crossword puzzles and downloadable art, check out our website www.ochentastudio.com. Our production team: Executive Producer: Lory Martínez Story by: Lory Martínez, Maru Lombardo, Jeremías Juárez, Luis López and Chiara Santella Lead Scriptwriter: Maru Lombardo Lead Sound Designer: Luis López Sound Design Team: Luis López, Jeremías Juárez and Chiara Santella Production Management: Catalina Hoyos VélezSocial Media and Promotion: Lisha López and Lucía RíosArt by: William GuevaraWeb Page: David Momodu See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
A man appears on Mariela's plane… and he's wearing aviator glasses?If you want Mariela to report the phone to airport security listen to Episode 30: This is your captain speaking. If you want to see what happens if Mariela keeps the phone instead, listen to Episode 8: Cabin Pressure.***Play the game on our interactive page or on your favorite podcast app! Adventure in Atacama, an audio game from the creative minds at Studio Ochenta. For more information about the cast, and for bonus content including mad libs, crossword puzzles and downloadable art, check out our website www.ochentastudio.com. Our production team: Executive Producer: Lory Martínez Story by: Lory Martínez, Maru Lombardo, Jeremías Juárez, Luis López and Chiara Santella Lead Scriptwriter: Maru Lombardo Lead Sound Designer: Luis López Sound Design Team: Luis López, Jeremías Juárez and Chiara Santella Production Management: Catalina HoyosSocial Media and Promotion: Lisha López and Lucía RíosArt by: William GuevaraWeb Page: David Momodu See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Mariela listens to a chilling voice message.Now is the time to Choo… Oh, wait… My bad. You don't have a choice here… Listen to Episode 8: Cabin Pressure.***Play the game on our interactive page or on your favorite podcast app! Adventure in Atacama, an audio game from the creative minds at Studio Ochenta. For more information about the cast, and for bonus content including mad libs, crossword puzzles and downloadable art, check out our website www.ochentastudio.com. Our production team: Executive Producer: Lory Martínez Story by: Lory Martínez, Maru Lombardo, Jeremías Juárez, Luis López and Chiara Santella Lead Scriptwriter: Maru Lombardo Lead Sound Designer: Luis López Sound Design Team: Luis López, Jeremías Juárez and Chiara Santella Production Management: Catalina Hoyos VélezSocial Media and Promotion: Lisha López and Lucía RíosArt by: William GuevaraWeb Page: David Momodu See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Today we're taking a trip. Please find your seats. Masks? No masks here! IT'S A PODCAST. Besides, who needs masks anymore? Right?Dan and Maureen process the surprise end of the mask mandate and delve into the weird goings on at the Happiest Place on Earth, where events continue to conspire to keep them away. They just want a Dole Whip. It's been six years. Disney is under attack by Governor DeSantis, as well as a gaggle of truly strange protesters. Florida continues to Florida. Also, Maureen talks about book banning, textbooks, and then balls come into the picture.Fasten your seat belts! This is going to be a bumpy flight!
Mel Hudson is an actress, comedian and writer. She was part of the double act Hudson and Pepperdine, with Vicki Pepperdine and wrote and starred in BBC Radio 4's The Hudson and Pepperdine Show. She performed multiple roles in Knowing Me, Knowing You with Alan Partridge, including Alan's French co-host Nina Vanier and has worked with the Alan Partridge team in a number of projects, including I'm Alan Partridge, The Friday Night Armistice and The Armando Iannucci Shows. Mel was Lauren Cooper's French teacher in The Catherine Tate Show, she's been in the Mary Whitehouse Experience, The Peter Principle, Smith & Jones, People Like Us, The Omid Djalili Show, the films Notes on a Scandal, Dolittle, Men in Black International and on the radio Cabin Pressure, Paperback Hell and Blue Jam. Mel Hudson is guest number 179 on My Time Capsule and chats to Michael Fenton Stevens about the five things she'd like to put in a time capsule; four she'd like to preserve and one she'd like to bury and never have to think about again .Mel Hudson's short film, Apex, is available here: https://vimeo.com/666547973Follow Mel Hudson on Twitter: @MelHudson1 .Follow My Time Capsule on Twitter, Instagram & Facebook: @MyTCpod .Follow Michael Fenton Stevens on Twitter: @fentonstevens and Instagram @mikefentonstevens .Produced and edited by John Fenton-Stevens for Cast Off Productions .Music by Pass The Peas Music .Artwork by Matthew Boxall .This podcast is proud to be associated with the charity Viva! Providing theatrical opportunities for hundreds of young people. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Episode 93, you remember it . . . Zac and Zach discuss airplane torture chambers. Zach receives a compliment from his plumber. And Zac loses everything.Tell us your anxiety, send us a postcard:postcard@exactlypodcast.com Show Notes:A government website!SusBig Interview sceneFree money with RakutenRakuten means “Optimism” in JapaneseJolene slowed downDO IT SLOWAlso: 45 by BleachersLike us? Then like us. Leave a rating and a review. It helps people find us — and we're desperate./IGˈZAK(T)LĒ/LEXICON: Intuit, EndeavorMusic: Cream & Sugar x Louie Zong
You've heard it before ‘Put your own oxygen mask on first'... and why's that? Because you are important? Yes! But also because you're no damn good to anyone if you can't function properly! Keeping that in mind why then do you make everyone else's happiness, joy and abundance in your life a priority over yours? If you're not taking care of yourself "you're no damn good to anyone and you can't function properly", sound familiar? Want to learn more about the Law of Attraction? Get in touch https://www.instagram.com/tarachatzakis/ or visit https://www.tarachatzakis.com
In this episode, Adam and Budi have a great conversation with Director and Author Anne BogartAnne Bogart is one of the three Co-Artistic Directors of the SITI Company, which she founded with Japanese director Tadashi Suzuki in 1992. She is a Professor at Columbia University where she runs the Graduate Directing Program. Works with SITI include Falling & Loving; The Bacchae, Chess Match No. 5; Lost in the Stars; The Theater is a Blank Page; Persians; Steel Hammer; A Rite; Café Variations; Trojan Women (After Euripides); American Document; Antigone; Under Construction; Freshwater; Who Do You Think You Are; Radio Macbeth; Hotel Cassiopeia; Death and the Ploughman; La Dispute; Score; bobrauschenbergamerica; Room; War of the Worlds–the Radio Play; Cabin Pressure; Alice's Adventures; Culture of Desire; Bob; Going, Going, Gone; Small Lives/Big Dreams; The Medium; Noel Coward's Hay Fever and Private Lives; August Strindberg's Miss Julie; and Charles Mee's Orestes. Recent operas include: Wagner's Tristan and Isolde, The Handmaid's Tale, Handel's Alcina, Dvorak's Dimitrij Verdi's Macbeth, Bellini's Norma, and Bizet's Carmen. She is the author of six books: A Director Prepares; The Viewpoints Book; And Then, You Act; Conversations with Anne, What's the Story, and The Art of Resonance. Mentioned in this episode:Leon IngulsrudElvira MadiganEinstein on the BeachTFANAOccupy WallstreetMark RylanceJoseph HajKristy EdmondsThe Extended MindDigital Theatre PlusMusic credit: https://www.purple-planet.com
The guys cover all the bases. The dark web is never a place to explore and guys should be able to paint their nails. Email us stories or just say hey to get a shoutout on an episode at unpluggedofficialemail@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Well! This was a different one wasn't it? Doom, doom, DOOM! The team is divided again on this one and have lots of fun discussing and dissecting.Things mentioned on the show:The article on Mr Cumberbatch's American accent - kindly provided by Steve @zincstoatBenedict Cumberbatch reading the Aubrey-Maturin novels by Patrick O'Brian - The Surgeon's Mate and Far Side of the World. Sadly the Googles have let us down on finding a linkPotentially the best audio sitcom ever Cabin Pressure, which was broadcast on Radio 4 and can be purchased various places, including Audible. You can get a taster here.Variety's article on abandoned What If concepts - which includes the potential entry of the Rocketeer to the What If menagerieAnd while we're talking about the most charming caper that ever capered, the announcement of the Rocketeer sequelCome and say hi! We're on Twitter @eloquentgushing, or directly @matthewvose, @thisaeshaw and @laurageeksoutSubscribe using any of the below options to get new episodes delivered straight to you:Apple PodcastsAmazon MusicSpotifyGoogle PodcastsStitcherRSS
Show Notes:Intro - On the Needles - Dami - ~NoneC.C. -~Wyatt's Birthday Cowl (Oats Cowl by TinCanKnits) on US8 (5mm), Vidalana by KnitCrate Ambient Worsted in the Michelangelo colourway & Vidalana by KnitCrate Celestial in the Ganymede colourwayFinished Projects - Dami - ~NoneC.C. -~2021 Preemie Hat #26 on US6 (4mm), Lily Sugar'n Cream in the Swimming Pool colourway & Lily Sugar'n Cream in the Squishy Twists colourwayFlosstube - Begins at timestamp 5:56Dami - ~Rose bookmarkProject bag by Fat Cat CreatesNeedle Minder from SewHappyMailBristolSnipattie from cattycrosstitchesC.C. - ~Dreaming Girl by Barbara Ana DesignsProject Bag from The Black Needle Society~Edinburgh Castle by Terra Luna StitcheryUsing Pattern Keeper software on Kindle Fire 7Needle Minder from TopKnotStitcherProject Bag from KnitRunDigGrime Guard from Crab Shack StitcheryBitzy Bob Basic from That's So Kelly Co.Silicone tiesYummies (our current favourite things) - ~Custom Sleeve from Love You More Studios~They/Them pattern from Abby Top Knot StitcherWhat We're Watching, Reading, + Listening To - Please be aware that we do discuss recent tv show episodes that have aired in the last week or so. This is your spoiler warning!Episode 450 Bookshop List~Blood Water Paint by Joy McCullough - Dami is readingApril / May / June 2021 RAL winnersJuly / August / September 2021 RAL - 15 minutes of reading daily challenge* 88-92 of 92 days - 1 or more giveaways for eBook, everyone gets $1.20 off any single pattern coupon code & 88+ days RAL virtual badge* 61-87 of 92 days - 1 or more giveaways for single pattern, everyone gets 61+ days RAL virtual badge* #GGKRAL21* #GGKRAL21~ July / August / September* 92 days - 10 entries* 88-91 days - 8 entries* 61-87 days - 5 entries~ October / November / December* 92 days - 10 entries* 88-91 days - 8 entries* 61-87 days - 5 entries~ Read All 365 days - 10 bonus entries~ Complete the Modern Mrs. Darcy 2021 Reading Challenge - 12 bonus entries [all or none] (we'll open a thread for you to post this in December 2021)~The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel van der Kolk - C.C. is reading~Untamed by Glennon Doyle - C.C. finished rereading~Becoming Eve: My Journey from Ultra-Orthodox Rabbi to Transgender Woman by Abby Stein - C.C. is reading~A People's History of Heaven by Mathangi Subramanian - C.C. finished reading~The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell - C.C. finished reading~Anne of Manhattan by Brina Starler - C.C. finished reading~Boyfriend Material by Alexis Hall - C.C. is reading~Law & Order: Special Victims Unit - watching Season 21 & episodes for That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast~Gilmore Girls - rewatching Season 1 with the I Am All In With Scott Patterson Podcast~Grace and Frankie - finished watching Season 5 & watching Season 6~Queer Eye~Secrets of Great British Castles~My Favourite Murder podcast~Cabin Pressure~Random Spotify PlaylistsJune / July / August Summertime and the Living is Easy AL -*Runs from 1-June through 31-August*Details - any project you knit/crochet/weave/spin/stitch/sew that you can convince us relates to summertime*No WIPS - Your project must be begun no earlier than 1-June and finished no later than 31-August*Each project that you knit/crochet/weave/spin must be at least 20yds/18.3m that you finish and post in the Facebook Group FO Thread counts as 1 entry into the giveaways. If your project is not at least 20yds/18.3m, you need to group it in a single post with other projects that together total at least 20yds/18.3m. For stitching/sewing projects, we'll leave it to your best judgment. If you wanted our official ruling, PM email us at ggkcspodcast@gmail.com*Feel free to poly-dip in other ALs as long as it fits in with other rules*Please complete our Google form in order to help us make sure you are receiving a prize that you'll actually enjoy using.*Prizes: If you'd like to donate one, email us at ggkcspodcast@gmail.comKnitCrate - 2 skeins of 2-ply superwash undyed sock yarn (fingering weight, 399 yd / 365 m, 100g) & Kool-Aid to dye it with - 2 winners will each win 1 setMineville Wool Project Super Sock 80/20 in the 2909-36-4 colourwayI'd Rather Be Buying Cross Stitch WalletCountess Ablaze Braid - Geeks Like Rainbows TooYarn Squad Drawstring Backpack*Must be a member of the our Facebook group ~ GGKCS Podcast / FlossTube to participate*Social Media Hashtag: #GGKCSSummertime21*Thread will be locked the morning of 1-September and winner(s) drawn on the next podcast following that*For any and all giveaways, prizes, competitions, ALs, etc. that we host, the winner(s) have 30 days from the date of announcement (the date the podcast episode in which the winner was announced goes live) to contact us to claim their prize or it will be forfeited. If this occurs, the prize will be used for another giveaway at our discretion. Thanks for understanding!*There is a Chatter Thread in our Facebook group so we can encourage each other along the way.Ask the Geeks - Originally asked/answered in 2017:Elizabeth asks:What got you interested in knitting preemie hats? Have you found a different place to send them to since moving back to the US?We mention: Hats4HopeMisc. - ~Pride AL - Runs from 17-May-2021 [The International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT)] through 30-June-2022. #GGKCSPrideAlong2122~Support the Podcast, Become A Patron~Support the Podcast, Join us on YouTube~Each week, we create a list on Bookshop of all the books we talk about in that week's episode. Bookshop is an online bookstore with a mission to financially support local, independent bookstores. If you purchase a book from our list, we earn a commission & local, independent bookstores also earn money from your purchase.~Want another way to help support our podcast? Throughout our website, links to books, tv shows, movies, etc. are Amazon Affiliate Links. We receive a portion of what you spend when you click through our website to shop on Amazon. What we receive helps us with the costs associated with producing this podcast as well as with prizes & shipping for giveaways. Thanks in advance for your support!If you are in the UK, please click this link, Amazon.co.uk, or the banner below to shop:If you are in Canada, please click this link, Amazon.ca or the banner below to shop:~For any and all giveaways, prizes, competitions, ALs, etc. that we host, the winner(s) have 30 days from the date of announcement (the date the podcast episode in which the winner was announced goes live) to contact us to claim their prize or it will be forfeited. If this occurs, the prize will be used for another giveaway at our discretion. Thanks for understanding!Find Us Online -C.C. - (she/her)~ on Instagram as CC_JavaPurlDami - (they/them)~ on Instagram as damisdoodlesPink Purl - ~on Instagram as pinkiepurlJavaPurl Designs~ JavaPurl Designs websiteGGKCS -~ our Facebook group ~ GGKCS Podcast / FlossTube~ our Facebook page~ email us: ggkcspodcast@gmail.com~ on Apple Podcasts~ on YouTube~ Support the Podcast, Become a PatronUntil next time,
Our crew today: Dr. Steph, Captains Nick and Jeff, Producer/Director Liz. Join us for the latest in aviation news, your feedback, and this week's Plane Tale: "Check-In Confessions Part One, The Good." Photo Credit: Nick Anderson [00:03:32] NEWS [00:03:49] Accident: Mocambique Expresso E145 at Maputo on Sep 30th 2019, Runway Excursion on Landing [00:07:45] Updated Report - Serious Incident ATR 72-500 (72-212A) YR-ATI, 13 Oct 2016 [00:13:00] Accident: Express Freighters B733 near Canberra on Aug 15th 2018, Loss of Cabin Pressure, First Officer Incapacitated [00:31:41] Delta Plans to Hire 1,000 Pilots by Summer of 2022 [00:39:36] 2 Passenger Misbehavior Incidents at LAX [00:44:14] Ex-APD Officer, Wife Among 5 Killed in Hot Air Balloon Crash on West Side of Albuquerque [00:48:14] GETTING TO KNOW US [01:25:16] COFFEE FUND [01:27:13] FEEDBACK [01:28:18] Jeffrey - Aerotow via Hot-Air Balloon [01:31:11] Andy - My First Biennial Flight Review [01:38:51] CJ - Back on the Line [01:42:22] Larry - New Logo Suggestion for Acme [01:45:15] Greg - Big Ass Fans - Making Waves as Usual [01:54:35] PLANE TALES - Check-In Confessions Part One, The Good [02:14:16] Logan - Microsoft Flight Simulator 2020 Feedback [02:19:07] Mark - The Man, The Voice, The Legend.... [02:25:48] Rob - Pilots Helping Pilots [02:30:03] Philip - Airline Hires and Airline Charters VIDEO Don't see the video? Click this to watch it on YouTube! Don't see the video? Click this to watch it on YouTube! ABOUT RADIO ROGER “Radio Roger” Stern has been a TV and Radio reporter since he was a teenager. He's won an Emmy award for his coverage in the New York City Market. Currently you can hear his reporting in New York on radio station 1010 WINS, the number one all-news station in the nation. Nationally you can hear him anchor newscasts on the Fox News Radio Network and on Fox's Headlines 24-7 service on Sirius XM Radio. In addition Roger is a proud member of and contributor to the APG community. Audible.com Trial Membership Offer - Get your free audio book today! Give us your review in iTunes! I'm "airlinepilotguy" on Facebook, and "airlinepilotguy" on Twitter. feedback@airlinepilotguy.com airlinepilotguy.com "Appify" the Airline Pilot Guy website (http://airlinepilotguy.com) on your phone or tablet! ATC audio from http://LiveATC.net Intro/outro Music, Coffee Fund theme music by Geoff Smith thegeoffsmith.com Dr. Steph's intro music by Nevil Bounds Capt Nick's intro music by Kevin from Norway (aka Kevski) Doh De Oh by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100255 Artist: http://incompetech.com/ Copyright © AirlinePilotGuy 2021, All Rights Reserved Airline Pilot Guy Show by Jeff Nielsen is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License
Brandon and Sarah come up with some celebrity names they think sound truly evil, ruining some innocent reputations in the process. Tune in and play along!
Show Notes:Intro - On the Needles - Dami - ~NoneC.C. -~Lola's Birthday Cowl (Oats Cowl by TinCanKnits) on US8 (5mm), Audine Wools Chill in the A Little Cabinectomy colourwayFinished Projects - Dami - ~NoneC.C. -~2021 Preemie Hat #24 on US6 (4mm), Uru.Yarn Sugared Worsted in the Roses colourway & Berroco Vintage DK in the Black colourwayFlosstube - Begins at timestamp 4:33Dami - ~Rose bookmarkProject bag by Fat Cat CreatesNeedle Minder from SewHappyMailBristolSnipattie from cattycrosstitchesC.C. - ~Dreaming Girl by Barbara Ana DesignsProject Bag from The Black Needle Society~Edinburgh Castle by Terra Luna StitcheryUsing Pattern Keeper software on Kindle Fire 7Needle Minder from TopKnotStitcherProject Bag from KnitRunDigGrime Guard from Crab Shack StitcheryBitzy Bob Basic from That's So Kelly Co.Silicone tiesYummies (our current favourite things) - ~Bag from JasmineRavenclaw on IG~Just CrossStitch August 2021What We're Watching, Reading, + Listening To - Please be aware that we do discuss recent tv show episodes that have aired in the last week or so. This is your spoiler warning!Episode 448 Bookshop List~Blood Water Paint by Joy McCullough - Dami is readingApril / May / June 2021 RAL - 15 minutes of reading daily challenge* 87-91 of 91 days - 1 or more giveaways for eBook, everyone gets $1.20 off any single pattern coupon code & 86+ days RAL virtual badge* 60-86 of 91 days - 1 or more giveaways for single pattern, everyone gets 59+ days RAL virtual badge* #GGKRAL21* #GGKRAL21~ April / May / June* 91 days - 10 entries* 87-90 - 8 entries* 60-86 - 5 entries~ July / August / September* 92 days - 10 entries* 88-91 days - 8 entries* 61-87 days - 5 entries~ October / November / December* 92 days - 10 entries* 88-91 days - 8 entries* 61-87 days - 5 entries~ Read All 365 days - 10 bonus entries~ Complete the Modern Mrs. Darcy 2021 Reading Challenge - 12 bonus entries [all or none] (we'll open a thread for you to post this in December 2021)~The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel van der Kolk - C.C. is reading~Untamed by Glennon Doyle - C.C. is rereading~Kitty Saves the World by Carrie Vaughn - C.C. finished reading~Kitty's Mix-Tape by Carrie Vaughn - C.C. is reading~A People's History of Heaven by Mathangi Subramanian - C.C. is reading~Then She Was Gone by Lisa Jewell - C.C. finished reading~The Hellion's Waltz (Feminine Pursuits #3) by Olivia Waite - C.C. finished reading~Yes, Daddy by Jonathan Parks-Ramage - C.C. is reading~House Hunters~Law & Order: Special Victims Unit - watching Season 20 & episodes for That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast~Gilmore Girls - rewatching Season 1 with the I Am All In With Scott Patterson Podcast~Grace and Frankie - finished watching Season 1 & watching Season 2~The Handmaid's Tale - watching Season 4~My Favourite Murder podcast~Cabin Pressure~Random Spotify PlaylistsJune / July / August Summertime and the Living is Easy AL -*Runs from 1-June through 31-August*Details - any project you knit/crochet/weave/spin/stitch/sew that you can convince us relates to summertime*No WIPS - Your project must be begun no earlier than 1-June and finished no later than 31-August*Each project that you knit/crochet/weave/spin must be at least 20yds/18.3m that you finish and post in the Facebook Group FO Thread counts as 1 entry into the giveaways. If your project is not at least 20yds/18.3m, you need to group it in a single post with other projects that together total at least 20yds/18.3m. For stitching/sewing projects, we'll leave it to your best judgment. If you wanted our official ruling, PM email us at ggkcspodcast@gmail.com*Feel free to poly-dip in other ALs as long as it fits in with other rules*Please complete our Google form in order to help us make sure you are receiving a prize that you'll actually enjoy using.*Prizes: If you'd like to donate one, email us at ggkcspodcast@gmail.comKnitCrate - 2 skeins of 2-ply superwash undyed sock yarn (fingering weight, 399 yd / 365 m, 100g) & Kool-Aid to dye it with - 2 winners will each win 1 setMineville Wool Project Super Sock 80/20 in the 2909-36-4 colourwayI'd Rather Be Buying Cross Stitch WalletCountess Ablaze Braid - Geeks Like Rainbows TooYarn Squad Drawstring Backpack*Must be a member of the our Facebook group ~ GGKCS Podcast / FlossTube to participate*Social Media Hashtag: #GGKCSSummertime21*Thread will be locked the morning of 1-September and winner(s) drawn on the next podcast following that*For any and all giveaways, prizes, competitions, ALs, etc. that we host, the winner(s) have 30 days from the date of announcement (the date the podcast episode in which the winner was announced goes live) to contact us to claim their prize or it will be forfeited. If this occurs, the prize will be used for another giveaway at our discretion. Thanks for understanding!*There is a Chatter Thread in our Facebook group so we can encourage each other along the way.Ask the Geeks - Originally asked/answered in 2017:Ruth asks:What is the first musical you remember watching or listening to and was that the one that started you on your love of musicals?Misc. - ~Pride AL - Runs from 17-May-2021 [The International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT)] through 30-June-2022. #GGKCSPrideAlong2122~Support the Podcast, Become A Patron~Support the Podcast, Join us on YouTube~Each week, we create a list on Bookshop of all the books we talk about in that week's episode. Bookshop is an online bookstore with a mission to financially support local, independent bookstores. If you purchase a book from our list, we earn a commission & local, independent bookstores also earn money from your purchase.~Want another way to help support our podcast? Throughout our website, links to books, tv shows, movies, etc. are Amazon Affiliate Links. We receive a portion of what you spend when you click through our website to shop on Amazon. What we receive helps us with the costs associated with producing this podcast as well as with prizes & shipping for giveaways. Thanks in advance for your support!If you are in the UK, please click this link, Amazon.co.uk, or the banner below to shop:If you are in Canada, please click this link, Amazon.ca or the banner below to shop:~For any and all giveaways, prizes, competitions, ALs, etc. that we host, the winner(s) have 30 days from the date of announcement (the date the podcast episode in which the winner was announced goes live) to contact us to claim their prize or it will be forfeited. If this occurs, the prize will be used for another giveaway at our discretion. Thanks for understanding!Find Us Online -C.C. - (she/her)~ on Instagram as CC_JavaPurlDami - (they/them)~ on Instagram as damisdoodlesPink Purl - ~on Instagram as pinkiepurlJavaPurl Designs~ JavaPurl Designs websiteGGKCS -~ our Facebook group ~ GGKCS Podcast / FlossTube~ our Facebook page~ email us: ggkcspodcast@gmail.com~ on Apple Podcasts~ on YouTube~ Support the Podcast, Become a PatronUntil next time,
I absolutely loved recording this episode with Liz. She came CORRECT with her stats and facts. Are you an aspiring cabin crew, does travelling the world and getting paid for it sound like the opportunity of a lifetime? if Yes, then this is the podcast for you. Liz gave us an in-depth take of the highs and lows of being a flight attendant. Hope you learn as much as I did and please do not forget to hit SUBSCRIBE. Luv from Amaka. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/yvette027/message
Motto for us all: You're fine, just keep the plane from crashing into the mountain! She's dishing on Jimmy extra today! How would you describe the grossest looking baby you've seen?
Are you a people pleaser? Has your altruism gone too far? The relationships that we've committed to will require most of our time. Attempting to raise well-balanced children or bring unprecedented profits to your company are noble tasks. Unfortunately, devoting yourself to others can leave you depleted. Taking On The Challenge: Figure Out Which Program Is Suitable For You Stick To Your Routine Without Fail Use Others To Help Hold You Accountable In this episode of “Build And Serve,” Andrew and Dru explore the benefits of embracing an individual health challenge for one month. A strict diet and exercise plan replenishes the body and focuses the mind. Destroy your old habits and discover untapped energy and clarity through positive selfishness. “I can't take care of all the people I love when I'm down.” Check out more episodes and other valuable resources by visiting http://www.residualbulldog.com
This week Matt and Andy give a quick Christmas message and also share a little resource as a gift for you! Cabin Pressure is a radio sitcom written and created by John Finnemore and directed and produced by David Tyler. It follows the exploits of the eccentric crew of the single aeroplane owned by "MJN Air" as they are chartered to take all manner of items, people or animals across the world. The show stars Finnemore, Stephanie Cole, Roger Allam and Benedict Cumberbatch.The series was first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 2008. Wikipedia https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/cumberbins-treasure/id1018144672?mt=2
Writer Laura Chanoux talks about the hilariously entertaining BBC radio drama Benedict Cumberbatch did *before* he became famous as Sherlock Holmes. She also shares who would be at her best-ever dinner party, and who her #1 celebrity crush is. Follow Laura on Twitter @LauraChanoux and read her stuff on The Billfold and The Belladonna Comedy! Theme song: "Sleeper Hold," by Saintseneca (@saintseneca) http://www.saintseneca.com/
In Episode 15, ~fanspeak, Elizabeth and Flourish interview Gretchen McCulloch, a linguist who studies the way people speak online. Topics covered include Cabin Pressure, the use of the tilde, ship and fandom names as linguistic markers, and why linguists are so incredibly chill about everything! Plus she answers some listener questions—and throws a few unanswered ones back out to the audience.
Real Husbands of Hollywood After Show – AfterBuzz TV Network
AFTERBUZZ TV – Real Husbands Of Hollywood is a weekly “after show” for fans of BET’s Real Husbands Of Hollywood. In this show, hosts Janeisha John and Robin Ayers break down the episode 4 & 5 from season 4. There … Read the rest The post Real Husbands Of Hollywood S:4 | Hart Medication Part 2; Cabin Pressure E:4 & E:5 | AfterBuzz TV AfterShow appeared first on AfterBuzz TV Network.
Cabin Pressure star and writer John Finnemore, and Peter Hitchens, columnist and author, talk about the books they love to presenter Harriett Gilbert. Who did murder the Princes in the Tower? For Peter Hitchens Josephine Tey still has the answer, in The Daughter of Time. John Finnemore loves A Landing on the Sun by Michael Frayn, which provokes argument as to whether it is a happy book or a terribly sad one. And Harriett Gilbert chooses something that makes her laugh: What's My Motivation? by Michael Simkins, his self-deprecating memoir of the life of an actor who's never made it to the big time. Producer: Beth O'Dea