POPULARITY
Today's Episode: From Female Feminist to Playboy to Modern Day Magic Living with Carrie Pitzulo Carrie is a professional tarot reader and the founder of Ancient Magic, Modern Living, a program of energetic, intuitive, and spiritual empowerment for women. She has a Ph.D. in American women's history, and is the author of Bachelors and Bunnies: The Sexual History of Playboy. Carrie has a forthcoming book exploring mystical lessons on life, death, and grief in a dying world. Carrie can be seen on CNN personality and comedian W. Kamau Bell's new Showtime documentary, "We Need to Talk About Cosby," and the new A&E documentary, "The Secrets of Playboy."In 2011, Carrie published her ground-breaking book on the history of Playboy magazine, Bachelors and Bunnies. Although she is a lifelong feminist, she discovered that in its heyday, Playboy was much more pro-woman than anyone had given it credit for (she was as surprised as anyone else!). Her book had a great impact on the ways in which we understand this important cultural institution of the late 20th century and she received international media attention - which continues! It seems we just can't get enough of Hugh Hefner.Let's Connect:Follow: Youtube Channel | Facebook | InstagramVisit Site: Empowered Within WorldThank you so much for sharing your LOVE for the Show by Sharing it with Friends, Subscribing, Rating & Leaving a Review. I am truly grateful for all of your love and support! With Gratitude - JenniferEmpowered Within Host:"Transforming Body, Mind & Spiritus Worldwide for 20+ Yrs" - Jennifer PilatesI'm a multi-passionate entrepreneur, mind-body expert, celebrity trainer, Intuitive advisor - animal communicator, top rated podcast host, coach & mentor, detail-loving stubborn-as-heck achiever, unshakeable optimistic, self-care activity, fur-baby momma and ocean loving empath! Empowering You To be You!Ego Lab - Our mission is to help people feeling alone, lost, or stuck in life. What is the ego anyway? Join Anthony and Brian as they explore philosophy, discuss...Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify Career SweetspotA Greenhouse Coaching podcast for career and leadership growth.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the show
Are you afraid of coming out of the spiritual closet? Then look no further, today's guest, Carrie Pitzulo shares her love for spirituality and how she went from being a lecturer in American women's history, gender and sexuality to tarot reader and coach for women.
Carrie Pitzulo is the founder of Ancient Magic, Modern Living, a program of energetic, intuitive, and spiritual empowerment for women. She has a Ph.D. in American women's history and is the author of Bachelors and Bunnies: The Sexual History of Playboy. She is currently working on a new book, Death is a Woman: Mystical Lessons on Life, Death, and Grief in a Dying World. In this episode, we talk about goddess worship as well as the very personal process of expressing our spirituality.More from Carrie:Nerd Witch Writing and Creative ConsultingFB/IG: @nerdwitchconsultingwww.nerdwitchconsulting.com Ancient Magic, Modern Living:FB: @ancientmagicmodernlivingwww.ancientmagicmodernliving.comMusic:"Ave Marimba"Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0Support the show
Stop and smell the roses and watch the purple flowers with this goddess, Carrie Pitzulo! Carrie is the founder of Ancient Magic, Modern Living, a program of energetic, intuitive, and spiritual empowerment for women. She has a Ph.D. in American women's history, and is the author of Bachelors and Bunnies: The Sexual History of Playboy. Carrie has a forthcoming book exploring mystical lessons on life, death, and grief in a dying world.Carrie's most influential book: The Color Purple by Alice WalkerCarrie on social media: Website, where you can get a free gift: www.ancientmagicmodernliving.comFB and IG: @AncientMagicModernLiving and @NerdWitchConsultingFB group "Cheers, Witches! Witchcraft and Tarot for Beginners.”Special thanks to our sponsor massage therapy and skin care spa, Lirios MassageMarcia's website: http://www.liriosmassage.comFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarciaChaves.LiriosMassageInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/liriosmassage/#lifecoaching #lifecoach #coaching #motivation #coach #mindset #inspiration #mindfulness #selflove #personaldevelopment #selfcare #love #mentalhealth #life #success #lifecoachingforwomen #meditation #personalgrowth #lifecoachforwomen #lifestyle #lifecoachingtips #happiness #lifecoaches #leadership #lifecoachinghappiness #goals #loveyourself #healing #selfdevelopment Subscribe To and Watch The Voices of The Goddess with Julietta Wenzel and Allyson Mancini on Youtube HERE:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJkusUQRFjoRa0oDQpCLAbA/videos Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Voices-of-the-Goddess-356165865475415Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/voicesofthegoddess/ Voices of The Goddess with Julietta the Magical PT and Allyson the Holistic Nutritionist is a show that supports modern day goddesses in developing their super powers and acquiring the tools they need to achieve all their desires. Join us each week as we interview amazing women in the community who share their insights and how they use their tools to make their dreams a reality. Allyson, a Michigander, moved to South Florida in 1993 with her fiancé, Nick. Married for 27 years with two children, Nicholas 24 and Lexi 21. A SAHM for 24 years and now an empty nester, she has found her true passion as a Holistic Nutritionist. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/healthylifestyleinandoutInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/allysonkmancini/?hl=en Julietta grew up in Wisconsin and graduated with a Physical Therapy degree from University of Wisconsin-Madison. When not busy treating patients or teaching Voila Method in the US and internationally, she is making healing crystal art and jewelry, creating spiritual/healing paintings, or planning underground dining experiences. A contributing author in the best-selling book UNSTOPPABLE: Leverage Life Setbacks To Rebuild Resilience For Success. https://bodyandsoul-pt.com/ & http://julietta.love/ & https://soulcandycrystals.com/ Facebook: /TheMagicalPT & /soulcandybyjulietta & Juliettalove-108449684234840Instagram: /themagicalpt & /soul_candy_ & /juliettadotlove
We'd like to welcome Carrie Pitzulo to the show today! Carrie defInes herself as an academic turned professional witch. After spending a career generating and sharing intellectual knowledge of women's past, she shifted to applying that knowledge to women's mystical present. Part of Carrie's focus right now has is working on her forthcoming book about life, death, and grief in a dying world.We have had death shoved in our faces every single day for the past two years because of the pandemic. Unfortunately, we live in a society where we are not taught from a young age how death works, and we aren't really “forced” to confront it the way we would have been hundreds of years ago. We're taught to shield our children's eyes from it, to lower our voices when we talk about it, or to simply not talk about it at all. We dive in deep in this episode to discuss death, and how using energy, spirit, and intuition can guide us in the grieving process.Because of this, many of us don't know what to do or how to react when it comes to death and losing people. We have no choice but to play a guessing game during the grieving process. Are we allowed to be angry? What if we can't stop crying? What if we don't cry at all? Can we talk to those who are no longer using their human bodies as vessels for their energy? When does it stop hurting — if ever?These questions are all things people think about then faced with death, and the harsh reality is that death should not be hidden. It's not taboo. We're all going to die one day(and if that sounds morbid, it's because you grew up in a society that asked you to look away from death!)Grief is not linear. And we want our listeners to understand this and be patient with themselves as they begin their journey of looking inward for answers, and outward at the world around them for communication from loved ones.Connect with us on Instagram: @thewitchfulthinkingpodcastBrooke: @lilwitchhhLiz: @elizrosetCarrie: @ancientmagicmodernlivingClick here to visit Carrie's website!Click here to join our Guided Meditation Journaling Group for $5/month, or buy us a Ko-fi!WE HAVE NEW MERCH! Click here!Click here to visit Liz's website and purchase her art.Liz's studio Instagram: @liz_thurston_Email us: thewitchfulthinkingpodcast@gmail.comCheck out our sponsors, With Love Candle Co. Use code WITCHFUL for $ off.
In this episode of Soft But Stronger, David interviews Carrie Pitzulo. Carrie is a women's transformation coach and helps people to access their inner guidance to live their most powerful and authentic life. .Topics include:._ Resurrecting ancient voices; restoring relationship with the earth and the feminine _ How to build trust in your intuition _ Rites if initiation and the value of ritual .Get in touch with Carrie here:._ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AncientMagicModernLiving_ Website & Manifestation Mindset 2022: https://ancientmagicmodernliving.com.>> Access the episode link in my bio!.http://softbutstronger.transistor.fm ..#ancientMagic #modernLiving #transformationCoach #podcast #softButStrongerPodcast .Message me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/droojitsu/
1.79 Using Magic to Love Your Life and Yourself with Carrie Pitzulo and Susan Jane. After 17 years as a university professor with a PhD in women's history, Carrie wanted a change but no one thought she would become a professional witch. The blend of logic and magic comes together beautifully within Carrie as she explains her story and throws in a Playboy Magazine or two. Discover how you can use magic to love your life and yourself, and what Playboy has that got to do with that. The Art of Intuition The Website Facebook – The Art of Intuition Instagram – Intuitive Nature by Susan Jane Pinterest – The Art of Intuition Susan Jane Twitter – The Art of Intuition with Susan Jane
A delicious deep dive with spiritual witch, Carrie Pitzulo reveals how caring for oneself leads to caring for others and carrie for others, leads to carrying for mother earth. We discuss the spiral effect that is possible when we dare to think well of ourself, so that we make decisions in our best interest, and if you get into that pattern, that it naturally expands to include making decisions in the best interest of your neighbors and planet. Good stuff. Learn more about her work here: https://ancientmagicmodernliving.com/ and download her 5-step guide to living your best life! Carrie and the rest of the Pink Noise Posse can be found here: https://www.pinknoiseposse.com/
Weaving in topics that range from the sexual politics of Playboy Magazine, witchcraft, guiding death, and healing the planet, this guest Carrie Pitzulo has a voice that will not be silenced... and THANK GOODNESS! Host Sheri asks for guidance on how we can learn to listen more to our own intuition and answer the call to stand for global healing. We can take baby steps towards appreciating what's happening with all living things here on planet earth, it begins by slowing down enough to NOTICE. Produced for Cafe Racer Radio, original broadcast April 25, 2021. LINKS https://ancientmagicmodernliving.com/ https://www.instagram.com/ancientmagicmodernliving/ https://www.amazon.com/Bachelors-Bunnies-Sexual-Politics-Playboy/dp/0226670066
In today's episode, Jesse is joined by Carrie Pitzulo who shares her Springsteen journey. A University Professor from Colorado, she recently did a guest blog on Blogness on the Edge of Town. They discuss that along with other fun Springsteen topics. Please download and share. https://ancientmagicmodernliving.com/ https://northofboston.wickedlocal.com/news/20181223/guest-blogger-what-bruce-springsteen-taught-me-about-motherhood?fbclid=IwAR0XaKLnmfSOs2ykEkb-ifUfgJzczhdjgu15f83GG6uHb51zEEHxtQLUn_E Carrie's Twitter @AncientMagicML Jesse's Twitter @JesseJacksonDFW
In this episode, I invite three members of the Earth Home Team to discuss real world challenges in the workplace with practical feng shui solutions. Whether you work from home or a corporate office, you face everyday challenges with space, not to mention energy of coworkers. Carrie Pitzulo of www.HarmonyHomeFengShui.com shares her experience of working amongst hundreds of people daily as a history professor juxtaposed with challenges of creating space at home with a family. Sara Nelson of www.thedreamydragonfly.com discusses tips on carving out a home office, in addition to a holistic office outside the home and the challenges and solutions that come with each scenario. Eils Lotozo of www.TrulyHomeRedesign.com provides tips on how to arrange and organize your home office for optimal impact and success with experiences from clients and her own home.
Playboy is having (another) moment. Since its fiftieth birthday in 2003, the brand’s relevance has risen after a period of decline. The Girls Next Door, a reality television show about the goings-on at Hugh Hefner’s Los Angeles mansion, was a breakout hit starting in 2005, and it eventually spawned two spin-offs and a lot of merchandise. Though The Girls Next Door and the second coming of Playboy clubs suggest that the brand has a place in the twenty-first century, reflections on its place in the twentieth are even more numerous. Hefner’s impact has been reconsidered in several documentaries, the most recent of which is Brigitte Berman’s acclaimed Hugh Hefner: Playboy, Activist, and Rebel (2009). More recently, NBC picked up The Playboy Club for Fall 2011, which is set in the Chicago club in the 1960s. Ads for the show proclaim the brand’s importance: “A provocative drama about a time and place in which a visionary created an empire, and an icon changed American culture.” Scholars too are reconsidering Hefner and Playboy‘s contribution to American literature, art, politics, and, of course, sexuality, in the twentieth century. On the heels of Elizabeth Fratterigo’s Playboy and the Making of the Good Life in Modern America and Steven Watts’s Mr. Playboy: Hugh Hefner and the American Dream, historian Carrie Pitzulo’s new Bachelors and Bunnies: The Sexual Politics of Playboy (University of Chicago Press, 2011) explores the pages of the magazine from its inception in 1953 to the end of its heyday in the 1970s. Pitzulo offers fresh and provocative readings of the notorious Playmates, but also discusses aspects of the magazine that have garnered less attention, including the popular Playboy Advisor column of the 1960s-70s. Bachelors and Bunnies is an exciting new feminist entry into the ever-broadening scholarship on Playboy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Playboy is having (another) moment. Since its fiftieth birthday in 2003, the brand's relevance has risen after a period of decline. The Girls Next Door, a reality television show about the goings-on at Hugh Hefner's Los Angeles mansion, was a breakout hit starting in 2005, and it eventually spawned two spin-offs and a lot of merchandise. Though The Girls Next Door and the second coming of Playboy clubs suggest that the brand has a place in the twenty-first century, reflections on its place in the twentieth are even more numerous. Hefner's impact has been reconsidered in several documentaries, the most recent of which is Brigitte Berman's acclaimed Hugh Hefner: Playboy, Activist, and Rebel (2009). More recently, NBC picked up The Playboy Club for Fall 2011, which is set in the Chicago club in the 1960s. Ads for the show proclaim the brand's importance: “A provocative drama about a time and place in which a visionary created an empire, and an icon changed American culture.” Scholars too are reconsidering Hefner and Playboy‘s contribution to American literature, art, politics, and, of course, sexuality, in the twentieth century. On the heels of Elizabeth Fratterigo's Playboy and the Making of the Good Life in Modern America and Steven Watts's Mr. Playboy: Hugh Hefner and the American Dream, historian Carrie Pitzulo's new Bachelors and Bunnies: The Sexual Politics of Playboy (University of Chicago Press, 2011) explores the pages of the magazine from its inception in 1953 to the end of its heyday in the 1970s. Pitzulo offers fresh and provocative readings of the notorious Playmates, but also discusses aspects of the magazine that have garnered less attention, including the popular Playboy Advisor column of the 1960s-70s. Bachelors and Bunnies is an exciting new feminist entry into the ever-broadening scholarship on Playboy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Playboy is having (another) moment. Since its fiftieth birthday in 2003, the brand’s relevance has risen after a period of decline. The Girls Next Door, a reality television show about the goings-on at Hugh Hefner’s Los Angeles mansion, was a breakout hit starting in 2005, and it eventually spawned two spin-offs and a lot of merchandise. Though The Girls Next Door and the second coming of Playboy clubs suggest that the brand has a place in the twenty-first century, reflections on its place in the twentieth are even more numerous. Hefner’s impact has been reconsidered in several documentaries, the most recent of which is Brigitte Berman’s acclaimed Hugh Hefner: Playboy, Activist, and Rebel (2009). More recently, NBC picked up The Playboy Club for Fall 2011, which is set in the Chicago club in the 1960s. Ads for the show proclaim the brand’s importance: “A provocative drama about a time and place in which a visionary created an empire, and an icon changed American culture.” Scholars too are reconsidering Hefner and Playboy‘s contribution to American literature, art, politics, and, of course, sexuality, in the twentieth century. On the heels of Elizabeth Fratterigo’s Playboy and the Making of the Good Life in Modern America and Steven Watts’s Mr. Playboy: Hugh Hefner and the American Dream, historian Carrie Pitzulo’s new Bachelors and Bunnies: The Sexual Politics of Playboy (University of Chicago Press, 2011) explores the pages of the magazine from its inception in 1953 to the end of its heyday in the 1970s. Pitzulo offers fresh and provocative readings of the notorious Playmates, but also discusses aspects of the magazine that have garnered less attention, including the popular Playboy Advisor column of the 1960s-70s. Bachelors and Bunnies is an exciting new feminist entry into the ever-broadening scholarship on Playboy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Playboy is having (another) moment. Since its fiftieth birthday in 2003, the brand’s relevance has risen after a period of decline. The Girls Next Door, a reality television show about the goings-on at Hugh Hefner’s Los Angeles mansion, was a breakout hit starting in 2005, and it eventually spawned two spin-offs and a lot of merchandise. Though The Girls Next Door and the second coming of Playboy clubs suggest that the brand has a place in the twenty-first century, reflections on its place in the twentieth are even more numerous. Hefner’s impact has been reconsidered in several documentaries, the most recent of which is Brigitte Berman’s acclaimed Hugh Hefner: Playboy, Activist, and Rebel (2009). More recently, NBC picked up The Playboy Club for Fall 2011, which is set in the Chicago club in the 1960s. Ads for the show proclaim the brand’s importance: “A provocative drama about a time and place in which a visionary created an empire, and an icon changed American culture.” Scholars too are reconsidering Hefner and Playboy‘s contribution to American literature, art, politics, and, of course, sexuality, in the twentieth century. On the heels of Elizabeth Fratterigo’s Playboy and the Making of the Good Life in Modern America and Steven Watts’s Mr. Playboy: Hugh Hefner and the American Dream, historian Carrie Pitzulo’s new Bachelors and Bunnies: The Sexual Politics of Playboy (University of Chicago Press, 2011) explores the pages of the magazine from its inception in 1953 to the end of its heyday in the 1970s. Pitzulo offers fresh and provocative readings of the notorious Playmates, but also discusses aspects of the magazine that have garnered less attention, including the popular Playboy Advisor column of the 1960s-70s. Bachelors and Bunnies is an exciting new feminist entry into the ever-broadening scholarship on Playboy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Playboy is having (another) moment. Since its fiftieth birthday in 2003, the brand’s relevance has risen after a period of decline. The Girls Next Door, a reality television show about the goings-on at Hugh Hefner’s Los Angeles mansion, was a breakout hit starting in 2005, and it eventually spawned two spin-offs and a lot of merchandise. Though The Girls Next Door and the second coming of Playboy clubs suggest that the brand has a place in the twenty-first century, reflections on its place in the twentieth are even more numerous. Hefner’s impact has been reconsidered in several documentaries, the most recent of which is Brigitte Berman’s acclaimed Hugh Hefner: Playboy, Activist, and Rebel (2009). More recently, NBC picked up The Playboy Club for Fall 2011, which is set in the Chicago club in the 1960s. Ads for the show proclaim the brand’s importance: “A provocative drama about a time and place in which a visionary created an empire, and an icon changed American culture.” Scholars too are reconsidering Hefner and Playboy‘s contribution to American literature, art, politics, and, of course, sexuality, in the twentieth century. On the heels of Elizabeth Fratterigo’s Playboy and the Making of the Good Life in Modern America and Steven Watts’s Mr. Playboy: Hugh Hefner and the American Dream, historian Carrie Pitzulo’s new Bachelors and Bunnies: The Sexual Politics of Playboy (University of Chicago Press, 2011) explores the pages of the magazine from its inception in 1953 to the end of its heyday in the 1970s. Pitzulo offers fresh and provocative readings of the notorious Playmates, but also discusses aspects of the magazine that have garnered less attention, including the popular Playboy Advisor column of the 1960s-70s. Bachelors and Bunnies is an exciting new feminist entry into the ever-broadening scholarship on Playboy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Carrie Pitzulo, the author of a new history of Playboy claims it has "a surprisingly strong record of support for women's rights and the modernisation of sexual and gender roles". Are Bunny Girls and Playmates of the Month really allies of the feminist cause? Laurie is joined by the author Carrie Pitzulo and the sociologist Angela McRobbie to discuss the secret and surprises of the bunny brand. Also, why do young people trust popular entertainers more than politicians? Sanna Inthorn discusses her new research into celebrity politics. Producer: Charlie Taylor.