Podcast appearances and mentions of Cecil B Demill

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Best podcasts about Cecil B Demill

Latest podcast episodes about Cecil B Demill

Retro Radio Podcast
Lux Radio Theater – Captain Blood (Errol Flynn, Olivia DE Havilland). ep121, 370222

Retro Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2023


Features earol Flynn and Olivia DeHavilland, even Basil Rathbone makes an appearance. Herbert Marshall introduces the program as Cecil B DeMill is absent, making a film. The drama opens with…

Retro Radio Podcast
Lux Radio Theater – Petrified Forest (Herbert Marshall, Margaret Sullivan). ep151, 37112

Retro Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2023 59:07


Before the show, Cecil B Demill tells a brief history of featured star Margret Sullivan. In a little town in Arizona, bandits armed with machine guns barge into a bank.…

FAR eSTONE Podcast
Ep.26: Land of the Covenant [free ver.]

FAR eSTONE Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2022 104:07


*Looking back: week 4 of July, 2022 *Cast: @zi1ch and @nakazawa76 *Topics: #PR #Church #Hebrew #Egypt #Cairo #HPV #eggfreezing $MA #DMM #pharmacist #jubilee #TheTenCommandments #CharltonHeston #河野龍太郎 #成長の臨界 #詳説日本史 etc *Movie Remarks: The Ten Commandment (1956) dir. Cecil B. DeMill >[*raw ver.] audio + support us: https://www.patreon.com/far_estone *Twitter: https://twitter.com/far_estone *Carrd: https://far-estone.carrd.co *Music: https://free-sound.work/ https://otologic.jp/ https://vsq.co.jp/plus/ https://esffects.net/ *Voice-over: Microsoft Zira

What In The...? Podcast
S. 02, Ep. 71: Desert Stories

What In The...? Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2021 67:58


Tracy has a notorious migraine and has opted to stay home, so Kent and Adrianna have decided to comb the desert for tonight's stories. We'll search for the Lost Dutchman's Mine, unearth the set of Cecil B. Demill's "The Ten Commandments," watch the sailing stones race across the land and listen to the deep resonation of the singing sands of the booming desert (we'll also throw in a tale about a tower for good measure). Welcome to episode 71!

Daily GNT Bible Reading Podcast
GN-Day032 Exodus 3; Exodus 4; Job 32; James 1

Daily GNT Bible Reading Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2020 23:21


EXODUS 3-4:In yesterday's beginning to Exodus, we heard of Moses' birth and his young adulthood in Egypt. He murdered a man and had to flee for his life, going to Midian. We also read of his helping the seven daughters of Reuel, a scene that I can't read without thinking of the Cecil B. DeMill movie. JOB 32:Job having finished his defense, Elihu takes the stage. HC Mears says, Eliphaz basically said, “God never makes a mistake. What have you done to bring this on yourself?” Bildad essentially said, “God is just. Confess your sin.” Zophar suggested, “God is all-wise. He knows man.” Elihu’s name means, ‘My God is He’ or ‘He is my God.’ So Elihu is God's man, and he said the wisest thing: “God is good; look up, and trust Him.” Note that at the end of the book, Elihu is not mentioned as having misrepresented God— unlike Job’s three friends. He does seem to speak wisely, but we can fault him for his arrogance. JAMES 1:Yesterday in 1Peter 5, Peter gave a very stern warning to rich people, and also important encouragement to elders within the church. And among other things, he gave an important word about spiritual battle with Satan. I summarize his commands as Stay alert, Stand firm, and Remember. The letter of James is similar to 1 Peter in several ways. In the first verse of both letters, both mention that their audience is dispersed throughout the world. Both describe their audience using Jewish catchphrases. James’ style is also similar to Peter’s in the way he sets out several themes and keeps returning to them. Moyer says of this book, “As soon as we read through the letter of James we say to ourselves, ‘This man was a preacher before he was a writer.’” James is probably the oldest book of the New Testament, written perhaps only 15 years after Jesus' death and before the first council of Jerusalem in AD 50. This was written, not by the disciple named James, but by James the half-brother of Jesus. While Jesus was alive, his brother James was not a believer. But he came to believe when Jesus appeared to him shortly after His resurrection. Sometime after this and before his martyrdom in AD 62, James was the leader of the church in Jerusalem. James does not call himself ‘the brother of Jesus’ but His slave!

Daily Bible Reading Podcast
NL-Day032 Exodus 3-4; Job 32; James 1

Daily Bible Reading Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2020 22:52


EXODUS 3-4:In yesterday's beginning to Exodus, we heard of Moses' birth and his young adulthood in Egypt. He murdered a man and had to flee for his life, going to Midian. We also read of his helping the seven daughters of Reuel, a scene that I can't read without thinking of the Cecil B. DeMill movie. JOB 32:Job having finished his defense, Elihu takes the stage. HC Mears says, Eliphaz basically said, “God never makes a mistake. What have you done to bring this on yourself?” Bildad essentially said, “God is just. Confess your sin.” Zophar suggested, “God is all-wise. He knows man.” Elihu, God's man, said the wisest thing: “God is good; look up, and trust Him.” Note that at the end of the book, Elihu is not mentioned as having misrepresented God. He does seem to speak wisely, but we can fault him for his arrogance. JAMES 1:Yesterday in 1Peter 5, Peter gave a very important encouragement to elders within the church. And among other things, he gave an important words about spiritual battle with Satan. I summarize his commands as Stay alert, Stand firm, and Remember. The letter of James is similar to 1 Peter in several ways. In the first verse of both letters, both mention that their audience is dispersed throughout the world. Both describe their audience using Jewish catch phrases. James is also similar to Peter in the way he sets out several themes and keeps returning to them. Moyer says of this book, “As soon as we read through the letter of James we say to ourselves, ‘This man was a preacher before he was a writer.’” James is probably the oldest book of the New Testament, written perhaps only 15 years after Jesus' death and before the first council of Jerusalem in AD 50. This was written, not by the disciple named James, but by James the half brother of Christ. While Jesus was alive, James was not a believer. But he came to believe when Jesus appeared to him shortly after His resurrection. Some time after this and before his martyrdom in AD 62, James was the leader of the church in Jerusalem. James does not call himself ‘the brother of Jesus’ but His slave! GNT Translation notes:Job 32:10 So now [,//I want you to] listen to me;let me tell you what I think.13 How can you claim [that] you have discovered wisdom?God must answer Job, for you have failed.====Jam. 1:1 From James, a [slave//servant] of God and of the Lord [Christ Jesus//Jesus Christ}:Greetings to [the twelve tribes of//all] God's people scattered over the whole world.[With these words, James illustrates that all the followers of Jesus are like the twelve tribes of Israel that were scattered everywhere. The twelve tribes of Israel had scattered as a result of persecution, and it was the same with the followers of Jesus.]2 My brothers and sisters, consider yourselves fortunate when all kinds of trials come your way, 3 for you know that when your [belief in Christ//faith] succeeds in facing such trials, the result is the ability to endure. NLT Translation notes:Jam. 1:1 This letter is from James, a slave of God and of [our Lord Christ Jesus//the Lord Jesus Christ].6 But when you ask him, be sure that [you fully believe that God is willing to give you that wisdom you are asking for./ /your faith is in God alone.]Do not waver, for a person with divided loyalty is as unsettled as a wave of the sea that is blown and tossed by the wind.17 Whatever is good and perfect comes down to us from God our Father, who created all the lights in the heavens. [But unlike those heavenly lights, God//He] never changes or casts a shifting shadow.24 You see [that you have dirt on your face, and then just//yourself,] walk away, and forget what you [looked/look] like.