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Good evening Cultists, and welcome to the third and final installment of our '90s Horror Cycle series. Mike Nichols's 1994 Supernatural Thriller, Wolf is the black sheep of the three films. Eschewing the 18th Century Gothic setting of the previous films for the backdrop of the New York publishing world. Instead of stalking across the foggy moors, this Wolfman prowls Central Park in pleated corduroys. So please join your Horror Hosts for this dissection of Wolf! Dissection Topic https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111742/?ref_=ext_shr Dark Tidings https://www.homedepot.com/p/Home-Accents-Holiday-5-ft-Poseable-Bat-Skeleton-with-LED-Eyes-23SV23636/324081088 https://movieweb.com/the-toxic-avenger-remake-first-reactions/ https://halloweendailynews.com/2023/09/nightmare-before-christmas-theaters/ Argyle Goolsby joins Calabrese on Cala-bass https://www.calabreserock.com/ Vault of Darkness https://renegadegamestudios.com/werewolf-the-apocalypse-5th-edition-core-rulebook/ https://www.disneyplus.com/movies/werewolf-by-night/J1sCDfT3MaDl Unholy Sacrament https://untp.beer/OpmPG Theme Music https://tridroid.bandcamp.com/album/crimson-shadows #wolf #mikenichols #jacknicholson #michellepfiefer #jamesspader #christopherplummer #davidhydepierce #davidschwimmer #enniomorricone #giusepperotunno #rickbaker #werewolf #wolfman #werewolfmovies #classicmonsters #horrormovies #monstermovies #creaturefeature #werewolves #justmarkingmyterritory
Los días 18 y 19 de diciembre llega a Baluarte 'Romeo y Julieta, el musical'. Hablamos con los intérpretes, Carlos J. Benito y Silvia Villaú.
Joining me this week is Kate Cherrell a PhD candidate specialising in 19th Century Gothic. Kate lectures widely on Victorian mourning cultures and the Spiritualist movement and will be sharing some of this insight with us in the podcast today as we discuss the wider Spiritualist movement, mediumship and seances popular in the 19th century. Guest Links www.burialsandbeyond.com www.patreon.com/burialsandbeyond Social Media: facebook.com/BurialsAndBeyond twitter.com/BurialsBeyond instagram.com/BurialsAndBeyond Thank you for listening. If you wish to support the Haunted History Chronicles Podcast then please click on the Patreon link. https://www.patreon.com/Haunted_History_Chronicles Please use the links below or on the website to keep in touch via our social media pages : to ask questions and review other content linked to this episode. Facebook: https://m.facebook.com/HauntedHistoryChronicles/?ref=bookmarks Twitter: https://twitter.com/hauntedhistory4 Instagram: instagram.com/haunted_history_chronicles Website: https://www.podpage.com/haunted-history-chronicles/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hauntedchronicles/message
Dawson, Philip, Jodi, and Hannah review and discuss 'Over the Garden Wall,' a 2014 musical limited series from Cartoon Network. Created by Pat McHale and Katie Krentz, the story originated as an idea McHale conceived in 2004. A veteran of animated shows like 'The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack' and 'Adventure Time,' McHale's concept of a pair of brothers on a journey through 19th-Century Gothic fantasy was realized as a 10-part miniseries, a first for the network. The show won two Primetime Emmys and continues to be a beloved staple of the fall/Halloween season. Follow The ThawedCast: Conversations About Animation: twitter.com/thawedcast and instagram.com/thawedcast. Find us at instagram.com/dawsondelwinehlke, instagram.com/jodipolasky, twitter.com/hannahsmart, instagram.com/philipehlke. Visit thawedcast.com
Enamorados se casaron disfrazados de dinosaurios en Pennsylvania
Shirley JacksonShirley Hardie Jackson was bon in 1916 in San Francisco, California and died in Vermont in 1965 aged only 48. Though born in California, she attended Syracuse University in New York where she became involved in literary affairs. She published her first novel in 1948 when she was 32, but it was her short story The Lottery that brought her to public attention. Published in The New Yorker it divided opinion between those who thought it bold and daring and those who found it macabre and disturbing. In essence, like a lot of Jackson's work, it starts out in a realist, every day setting of a folksy rural community where everyone behaves just like we know they would, and then it turns out they have a mysterious lottery where the winner (or loser!) gets sacrificed for some undisclosed reason -- maybe just because it's tradition. She puts in such everyday details of community life that it's a real switch and bait as we think we're getting a home-town story and then it turns weird. Jackson's work has more than a touch of the surreal and I was reminded of the Argentinian Jorge Luis Borges as I was reading her collection Dark Tales recently. Her novel The Haunting of Hill House was published in 1958 and is considered the best haunted house story ever written. I enjoyed it very much. She also wrote We Have Always Lived In The Castle towards the end of her life and I must admit I haven't yet read it! Jackson didn't take care of her health and ate and drank too much. This led to heart disease which killed her in 1965. Jackson didn't get on with her mother who seems not to have wanted her much and this seems to be echoed in themes of mothers and estranged daughters in lots of her stories. Jackson was a wildly interesting character. She played the guitar, sang folk songs and could also play the zither. I wonder if she seems so interesting because we know more about her, being more recent, and I wonder if any of the old Victorian and older 18th Century Gothic writers were equally as quirky. Certainly Byron, Shelley and Mary Wollstonecraft seem a wild crowd, and we know about them because they were famous and rich. Jackson told people she was a practising witch and joked (?) that she put hexes on publishers and critics who offended her. This may not have been just a joke as these were the years of the first growth of Wicca and occultism was definitely a thing following Aleister Crowley, Jack Parsons and others. Jackson suffered from extreme anxiety and saw a psychiatrist who prescribed barbiturates and amphetamines, and then other meds to counteract the effects of these. This cocktail probably didn't help much. A new movie of her life Shirley has come out this year 2020 but I can't see it because all the cinemas are shut due to lock down... There is a nice review a biography of Jackson called A Rather Haunted Life by Ruth Franklin in the New Yorker, and you can find it here (https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/10/17/the-haunted-mind-of-shirley-jackson) A VisitA Visit was first published under the title A Lovely House in 1950, and then reissued after Jackson's death in 1968 as A Visit The horror literature critic S T Joshi describes it as a 'quiet weird tale at its pinnacle' and refers to 'manner in which a house can subsume its occupants.' At first listen, or maybe even second, I thought, what the heck is this story about? Like last week's story, Mr Jones, this is a gothic tale. We have a large and rambling house which is full of mystery, we have an imprisoned woman in the tower (old Margaret), we have unreliable witnesses, I told trust Mr and Mrs Montague, or Carla one inch. When Margaret is being shown around the mansion, Carla ignores all her questions about the Tower. In fact, it is Paul who answers her question about who lives in Support this podcast
Description “The sun did not shine. It was too wet to play. So we sat in the house all that cold, cold, wet day. I sat there with Sally. We sat there, we two. And I said, “How I wish we had something to do.”” Does that sound familiar? Is your family weary Of viral contagions and weather quiet dreary? Does schooling online seem unfun and boring? Are you finding at nine you’re still in bed snoring? Wake up! There’s a world of learning to learn! Who knows what awaits us at each learning turn? Today we have students who’ll bring you a smile. Instead of leaning ten feet, they learned a Cyber School mile! Discover that learning’s not something you’re given. Learning to learn is there for the driven. So drive with these students as they speak with some glee On learning to learn Epidemiology! Lessons Learned Dennis - Weiyun Cloud for sharing video in China. $158 RMB for 6TB for 6months Daniel – Google FI – Thank you! Within 2 months, I have been on 3 different continents, 5 different countries and 4 states - only one bill and unlimited data. Phenomenal! Chris – What time is it in your students’ time zones? Ask no more! https://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/personal.html Fun Fact The CDC On July 1, 1946 the Communicable Disease Center (CDC) opened its doors and occupied one floor of a small building in Atlanta. Its primary mission was simple yet highly challenging: prevent malaria from spreading across the nation. Armed with a budget of only $10 million and fewer than 400 employees, the agency’s early challenges included obtaining enough trucks, sprayers, and shovels necessary to wage war on mosquitoes. Today Budget is 1.2 Billion (Source: https://www.cdc.gov/about/history/index.html) Notes & Links GUESTS: High School Applied Learning Epidemiology Students - Kelly, Amy, Maddie, Corey One of the first covid-19 assignments was to create a timeline. These are two student examples: https://cdn.knightlab.com/libs/timeline3/latest/embed/index.html?source=1jnaPI3kBxxEmGb69dfD8aQ2LhlYJPEQgRH7ihz_02TY&font=Default&lang=en&initial_zoom=2&height=650 https://cdn.knightlab.com/libs/timeline3/latest/embed/index.html?source=13-Zgqyk-EXpXzznZwyZz_cA_6rqvsMfmxQBXMs-BMwg&font=Default&lang=en&initial_zoom=2&height=650 A student made a video including Tips on Mask Usage for our Community: https://youtu.be/BQUBe22P-i0?fbclid=IwAR0wt7QNg1U1nPxcWy2u0KtRXn10YvAoczd9XTmBWoNPGDQAPDD-DWp993k This is a video about the outbreak that a student made “for fun” - it was not part of any assignment. She does make a mistake that makes Todd grind his teeth but it’s still a great video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FSc3_Ic_pnk&t=128s&fbclid=IwAR0BrCEl5zPKH1hGqa3A8aowx17VnSnHoovX_MnZika2KW2FRE4criLToUI This is a longer video – we got a set of questions from a HS class in Washington state and our kids who are still in Shanghai answered their questions: https://ensemble.concordiashanghai.org/Watch/studentsanswercovidquestions
#0033 Sie sind 3 mal produktiver und bleiben entspannt Laut Studien, ist der größte Stressor Multitasking. Von einem 7 Stunden Tag, kostet Multitasking uns 4 Stunden produktive Zeit. Wissenschaftler haben gemessen, dass man im Durchschnitt 8-15 Minuten brauchen um uns die Aufgabe wieder ein zudenken, nachdem man herausgerissen wurden. Kein Wunder, dass man kaputt und unzufrieden nach Hause kommt. Hören Sie im Podcast, Strategien wie man produktiver und gelassen bleibt. Studie: Bibb/BAuA-Erwärbstätigenbefragung 2012 (N=17.500) Machen Sie jetzt den unverbindlich online Test und erfahren Sie zu welchem Typen Sie gehören und die für Sie passende Spannung für eine hohe Lebensqualität. http://www.stresstypentest.de. Dauerhaft mehr Lebensenergie, bessere Resultate und glückliche Beziehungen, dass Soetebier Konzept zeigt Ihnen, wie es möglich ist. Seminar Life Balance Mastery Wie hat Ihnen das Wissen geholfen? Lassen Sie uns im Austausch sein. Sein Sie in Verbindung mit mir auf: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rebecca-soetebier/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rebeccasoetebier/ Xing: https://www.xing.com/profile/Rebecca_Soetebier/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rebeccasoetebier/ Ihre Rebecca Soetebier Was konnten Sie sich mitnehmen? Bewerten Sie gerne mit der Anzahl der Sterne bei iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/de/podcast/stressfreie-f%C3%BChrung/id1448525622?mt=2 p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; text-align: center; font: 34.0px 'Century Gothic'; color: #262626} span.s1 {font-kerning: none} Folge direkt herunterladen
Authors Between the Covers: What It Takes to Write Your Heart Out
Hello and welcome to the Inkandescent Radio show, “Authors Between the Covers.” I'm your host, the founder of the Inkandescent Radio Network, Hope Katz Gibbs. I'm thrilled to be here today with Christine Mangan, author of Tangerine, the Hitchcockian tale of Alice Shipley and Lucy Mason — college roommates who reconnect in the Moroccan city of Tangier, 1956. Drama and intrigue ensue, and indeed this page-turner is incredibly hard to put down. In the last six months, “Tangerine” has gotten tremendous attention — having been a featured in The New Yorker, and reviewed in The New York Times. Also incredibly exciting is that it has been optioned for film by George Clooney's Smokehouse Pictures, and Scarlett Johansson is set to star. This is the first novel for the woman who has a PhD in English from the University College of Dublin, where her thesis focused on 18th century Gothic literature. She also has an MFA in fiction writing from the University of Southern Maine, and has spent much of her career traveling the world. Welcome to “Authors Between the Covers,” Christine! Before we get into our interview, I want to tell our listeners a little about this engrossing novel: The last person Alice Shipley expected to see since arriving in Tangier with her new husband was Lucy Mason. After the accident at Bennington, the two friends—once inseparable roommates—haven't spoken in over a year. But there Lucy was, trying to make things right and return to their old rhythms. Perhaps Alice should be happy. She has not adjusted to life in Morocco, too afraid to venture out into the bustling medinas and oppressive heat. Lucy—always fearless and independent—helps Alice emerge from her flat and explore the country. But soon a familiar feeling starts to overtake Alice—she feels controlled and stifled by Lucy at every turn. Then Alice's husband, John, goes missing, and Alice starts to question everything around her: her relationship with her enigmatic friend, her decision to ever come to Tangier, and her very own state of mind. Be Inkandescent: That description just makes you want to pick up the book! So, Christine, tell us about the story, your inspiration for it, and the journey you embarked on to take it from an idea to this 388-page hardback. Christine: Sure! The whole novel was inspired by a trip I took to the city of Tangier back in the spring of 2015. I had just finished my PhD at the University College of Dublin, and had a little bit of time left on my visa, so I wanted to travel and see as much as possible before I returned to the states. One of the places I really wanted to go to was Tangier. I had been there once before but for about only 10 minutes when I passed through the city on an overnight train from Marrakesh. I hopped on a ferry and went back to Spain. It was one of those things I regretted, not being able to spend time there. When I finally did go, I discovered that Tangier was, and still is, unlike any place I've ever been to. There's a certain amount of romance to it, which is why a lot of creative people are drawn to live here — artists, writers, and travelers. But Tangier can also be entirely overwhelming. It's hot and chaotic, and the streets can be a nightmare, ranging from being frustrating to terrifying at moments. There's no place to stop and take a breath. I think that’s the reason people say, “You cry when you arrive in Tangier, and you cry when you leave.” You have to engage and overcome so many obstacles. But once you get accustomed to the rhythm of the place, you become enamored by it. I find myself still thinking about it, years after leaving. The people I met there, the stories they told me, in particular, the different ways people react to the city — it’s unforgettable. Be Inkandescent: Did you always want to be a novelist? C: I grew up in Metro Detroit, and lived on Long Island and in North Carolina for a bit. I went to Bennington College for a year, left, and went to Chicago where I lived for quite some time. Then I went to Dublin for four years and received my PhD before moving to Dubai to teach for a year. I always wanted to be a writer — but it was something that I never thought could happen — even after going to school for creative writing and receiving an MFA in fiction writing, and getting a PhD. That’s mostly because writing a novel and finding someone like it enough to publish it didn't seem like a possibility. That’s why I put all of my focus on academia. Be Inkandescent: So how was “Tangerine” born? Christine: It happened when I arrived back in the states, and found myself in the position of not studying or being in school or working. While I was applying for jobs, I took time to finally sit down and write this thing. Memories of Tangier were dancing in my mind, and the story began unfolding. Be Inkandescent: You have accomplished so much, and it seems like you have always trusted your guts to take you where you needed to go. Christine: It’s true. In fact, I loved working on my PhD because I got to spend my time researching 18th Century Gothic novels. I had hoped after graduating that I would be able to teach about these things that I have been studying — but the reality is that in academia it is really hard to find full-time positions, especially ones where you get to teach about your specialty. I was looking at were jobs that would mainly have me teaching composition, which I wasn't excited about. So I accepted a job in Dubai just as I found an agent. As I was preparing to leave for the United Emirates, the sale of the book happened so I was juggling a new job and the book sale. It was a very chaotic, exiting time. Be Inkandescent: It must have been fascinating! To go from zero to a thousand like that. Christine: Yeah, it was! I worked all day, then stayed up all night talking to people on the east coast. I remember during the auction, I got a terrible cold because I was adapting to being in air conditioning 24/7. It was very surreal, and I'm still processing it. Be Inkandescent: And then George Clooney optioned it as a film starring Scarlett Johansson, right? Congratulations! Christine: Yeah! Thank you! It just kind of added to everything. It seemed like it was happening to somebody else. Be Inkandescent: It is awesome but it happened to you, for it's every writer's dream to have that level of success. And, as always, with the highs there come lows, for when I was reading through some of the reviews of “Tangerine,” you got a couple of knocks. How do you handle the rollercoaster ride? Christine: I handle it by trying not to read the reviews. My editor knows not to send me anything, good or bad. It just makes me incredibly anxious. Still, I was aware of the bad ones when they came out in March 2018. It's really difficult and in the moment I thought to myself, “I don't want to do this again. I don't want to write a second novel.” But then I calmed down and realized I have to open myself up to the good and bad because that’s how this business works. I'm a very private person, though, and am still figuring out how to take it in, but not be taken down by the bad reviews. Be Inkandescent: It’s tough for anyone to handle that level of criticism, but the truth is that “Tangerine” is so engrossing, and the characters so layered, that you can’t put it down. So tell us how you thought up the story and those complex characters. Christine: I'm drawn to places that are unique, and to the idea of what it means to be an outsider. This relates to the main characters, Lucy and Alice. Through them, I investigate how being a tourist or visitor or expat, can something exciting, unnerving, and quite lonely. You are in this new country and are very isolated — whether by language or otherwise. Investigating the journey of the outsider appeals to me as a writer, and a reader. Be Inkandescent: Tell us more about Lucy and Alice. Christine: I've always been drawn to stories about female friendship, especially those we make during our formative years. There's something so unique about that time where senses and experiences are heightened and intense. Because of youth, and often, circumstance, this time in a woman’s life seems like the most important in the world. As a result, boundaries are often crossed and identity is blurred. I'm interested in looking at the moments when friendships begin to shift and crumble, and how that changes the people involved. Be Inkandescent: Losing a friend, or feeling betrayed by them, can feel like the end of the world. Christine: Exactly. Plus, when I wrote “Tangerine,” I had just submitted my PhD thesis, so I had the gothic stories of the Blondie sisters and James Hogg and Ann Radcliffe and Eliza Parsons circling in my brain. I love the psychological suspense — in particular, ones that focus on the idea of one character being the other’s dark double. So I wrote about the relationship between Alice and Lucy in a similar vein. Where we see Alice unable to voice concerns and fears she has, Lucy is able to pick that up and deal with it in a way that Alice cannot. Gothic tales also have a strong sense of place, whether it's Manderley in “Rebecca” or Thornfield in “Jane Eyre.” That was on my mind as well. Tangier was a stand in for a haunted castle motif. In fact, the streets of that city can be just as frightening and threatening and overwhelming in the structure of the walls in those gothic novels. Be Inkandescent: The relationships are so intertwined and twisted, the reader doesn’t don't know who is sane. What was it like to write a story like that? Did you feel the characters? Did you become them? Christine: I found Lucy to be the more interesting character; she’s the one I had the most fun writing about because she gets things going. She’s the pusher, the doer. In many ways, Alice is simply a response to all of that chaos. It was a lot of fun plotting out what would happen next. And, there was a bit of tracking required to make sure that the story everything added up in the end. It was definitely interesting to jump into their world and flesh out the characters so they were as believable and real as possible. Be Inkandescent: There’s an air of mystery, too because you don't know who to fully trust and believe. Christine: Yes! Indeed that was something I really wanted to come across as I fleshed out these two characters. Neither was necessarily good or bad — they linger in between. There are things they can both be blamed for, and I wanted to make sure that there was something about each of them that was also relatable and likable. Be Inkandescent: I love the concept of having a dark double. It's fascinating how fiction takes you to all kinds of places — in the world, and in your mind. What are you working on now? Christine: I'm going back and forth between two different things. I'm a good ways into one project, but I'm not too sure about it yet. I have a habit of writing things and getting near the end, or even to the end, then deciding that it's not what I want to be working on. That said, I'm excited about what I'm writing and am hoping that by the end of it, I'll still feel that way. Be Inkandescent: What’s does your writing process look like? Christine: When I'm first putting something together, I tend to hand write everything. I buy a whole stack of journals that I’ll blow through as I write little pieces or scenes. When I have enough fleshed out, and feel there is a strong story there, that’s when I type it up and put it into a document that eventually becomes the book. Be Inkandescent: I had an editor once, I'm a journalist as well, and he said, “Writing is not typing.” Christine: Yes! Yes, I agree, exactly. *Be Inkandescent: Christine, I wish you only the best of success with “Tangerine,” your first novel and the “Costco Connection” January 2019 book pic. I really appreciate you being on “Authors Between the Covers” on the Inkandescent Radio Network. Thanks to all of our listeners listening to us and tune back in to the Inkandescent Radio Network for some more fascinating and fun interviews.
Rev. Alex HoltThis is the second of three services on topics often avoided in our congregations. Addiction to substances or behaviors is very common in the world. How do we as liberal religious people respond to such a pervasive issue as addiction?Listen here.
Rev. Alex HoltThere are topics generally not often heard in our congregations. One of them is mental illness even though mental health is a significant challenge in our culture and personal lives. How do we address mental illness in a compassionate way?Listen here.
Rev. Alex Holt"May you live in interesting times" is not an ancient Asian snippet of wisdom but it still speaks to the anxiety in our lives. How can Unitarian Universalism best respond to anxiety and change in a healthy way?Listen here.
Rev. Alex HoltThe third Sunday of Advent in the Christian tradition speaks to many symbols. One of them is Service. The Sixth Source reminds us to live in harmony. How do we care for others and for the entire planet?Listen here.
Rev. Alex HoltThe second theme of Advent in the Christian tradition is Hope. As we broadly explore the season of renewal how does hope become a powerful reminder of our future? Listen here
Rev Alex HoltThis is the first of four Sunday services using the Advent themes of Faith, Hope, Service, and Love. How do faith and gratitude walk together in our contemporary UU religious tradition?Listen here.
Rev. Alex HoltThe Fifth Source is hugely admired in our largely humanist movement. Does religious humanism become so orthodox that it presents us with an idolatry of mind rather than mind and heart?Listen here.
RAYOS C EN TUS OÍDOS, el programa semanal para oídos despiertos Nuevo programa de Rayos C en tus Oídos, esta semana el disco destacado nos llega de la mano de El Lado Oscuro de la Broca “Poderosa” (El Genio Equivocado 2016). Escuchamos novedades como The Magnetic Fields, Warhaus y LIV. Hablamos de la próxima edición del Cicle Indiscret el sábado 26 en Almo2bar y escuchamos a Comando Suzie, Antiguo Régimen y Espanto. Hablamos de las confirmaciones de los festivales VIDA y Bilbao BBK Live y escuchamos a Fleet Foxes y Phoenix. Recuperamos a The Jesus and Mary Chain con motivo de que en 2017 publicarán nuevo álbum. Nacho Ruiz nos presenta lo nuevo de Metro Verlaine. Buena escucha. TWITTER | BLOG | IVOXX | FACEBOOK | TWITTER
Electricitat | Mixcloud | Facebook | Twitter | Tumblr Edició del programa Electricitat a Raidió Na Life 106.4 FM amb novetats musicals dintre l'escena independent. Un programa musical presentat en català a l'emissora dublinesa. Bonzai - I Did Tuff City Kids - Tell Me (feat. Joe Goddard) Empire Of The Sun - Way To Go D.R.A.M. – Cute La Femme – Mycose The xx - On Hold Wildhart - Is It Possible James Vincent McMorrow - I Lie Awake Every Night Swet Shop Boys - T5 Goat - Try My Robe Regina Spektor - Bleeding Heart Carrero Blanco - Bombas de cristal Bantum - Feel It Out (feat. Farah Elle) Pional - As Time Was Passing By FaltyDL - Infinite Sustain C Duncan - Wanted To Want It Too Jamie Lidell – Julian The Flaming Lips - The Castle Radiohead - Present Tense (Radio Edit) Saint Sister – Corpses Leonard Cohen - On the Level Roman Flügel - Dust
RAYOS C EN TUS OÍDOS, el programa semanal para oídos despiertos Nuevo programa de Rayos C en tus Oídos, esta semana el disco destacado nos llega de la mano de Cómo Vivir en el Campo “CVEEC 3” (El Genio Equivocado 2016). Escuchamos novedades como The Japanese House y The XX. Hablamos de la próxima edición del Cicle Indiscret el viernes 18 en Almo2bar y escuchamos a Le Parody, Los Hermanos Cubero y The Birkins. El sábado 19 presentan en Moby Dick sus nuevos discos El Lado Oscuro de la Broca y Atención Tsunami. Y nos despedimos del gran Leonard Cohen recuperando una de sus grandes canciones. Nacho Ruiz nos presenta lo nuevo de Juniore. Buena escucha. TWITTER | BLOG | IVOXX | FACEBOOK | TWITTER
Jo Victoria, Representative Unitarian Universalist AssociationAs our Congregation embarks on a journey to call its next minister, Jo Victoria will challenge us to promote inclusive thinking and avoid unfair discrimination during our search process. We will be encouraged to put our Unitarian Universalist values into action as we find the minister who is the best fit for us. This service continues themes explored during a workshop on "Beyond Categorical Thinking" held the previous day.Listen here.
Rev. Alex HoltToday the sun rose in red states and blue states alike. Today many are in despair and disbelief in those states. How do we own our feelings? How do we as religious liberals respond to our fellow citizens not as the enemy but as seekers of happiness? Listen here.
Electricitat | Mixcloud | Facebook | Twitter | Tumblr Edició del programa Electricitat a Raidió Na Life 106.4 FM amb novetats musicals dintre l'escena independent. Un programa musical presentat en català a l'emissora dublinesa. The Radio Dept. - We Got Game Amber Coffman - All to Myself Hotel Del Salto - Bigger Than Elvis Hamilton Leithauser + Rostam - Sick as a Dog Angel Olsen - Not Gonna Kill You The Goon Sax – Boyfriend Les Sueques – Res Mr Huw - Can Iw Thaflu La Casa Azul - Podría Ser Peor Kate Tempest - Ketamine For Breakfast Trentemøller - River In Me (feat. Jehnny Beth) Bantum – Move Bon Iver - 8 (circle) Saint Sister - Tin Man Nicolas Jaar – Wildflowers Lambchop – Flotus Devendra Banhart - Fig in Leather Doble Pletina - La Progresión Exponencial The Hidden Cameras - Day I Left Home Sean Nicholas Savage - Maybe Chain Swords – Battle Lia Pamina - Walking AwayMachinedrum - Angel Speak (feat. MeLo-X)
RAYOS C EN TUS OÍDOS, el programa semanal para oídos despiertos Nuevo programa de Rayos C en tus Oídos, esta semana el disco destacado nos llega de la mano de The Radio Dept. “Running Out Of Love” (Labrador 2016). Escuchamos novedades como Foxygen, Xenia Rubinos, The Shins y Cineplexx. Recuperamos a Le Parody por su participación el viernes 16 en el Cicle Indiscret, también a Roosevelt que viene de gira en diciembre, Linda Guilala por su concierto del sábado 12 en Madrid y además hablamos de la fiesta Hijauh USB? en La Capsa del sábado 12 y escuchamos a: Neleonard, Tirana, Gabriel y Vencerás y Las Ruinas. Nacho Ruiz nos presenta lo nuevo de Goat girl. Buena escucha. TWITTER | BLOG | IVOXX | FACEBOOK | TWITTER
Rev. Alex HoltWhat are the Buddhist perspectives on death and the self? Rev. Alex will address this question and offer stories from his own experience as someone whose life is deeply aligned with Buddhist teachings. In addition, this service will offer an "In Memoriam Tribute" to the loved ones of members and friends who passed-on during the year.Listen here.
RAYOS C EN TUS OÍDOS, el programa semanal para oídos despiertos Nuevo programa de Rayos C en tus Oídos, esta semana el disco destacado nos llega de la mano de Las Ruinas “100 % Maximum Heavy Pop” (El Genio Equivocado 2016). Realizamos un especial del 5º Aniversario de LaFonoteca Barcelona y escuchamos a Sierra, Doble Pletina y Hazte Lapón. Otro especial sobre la próxima edición del Womad Fuerteventura 2016 y escuchamos a The Birkins, Hans Laguna y Flavia Coelho. Escuchamos novedades como Regina Spektor, Hope Sandoval & The Warm Inventions, La Casa Azul y Tinariwen. Nacho Ruiz nos presenta lo nuevo de His Clancyness. Buena escucha. TWITTER | BLOG | IVOXX | FACEBOOK | TWITTER
La Casa Azul, Joe Crepúsculo, Cineplex… y los festivals Deleste de Valencia y Sueños de Libertad de Ibiza. Las novedades nacionales abren el programa de esta semana, escuchando lo nuevo de La Casa Azul, Joe Crepúsculo, Tórtel, Os Amigos Dos Músicos, Cálido Home, Las Ruinas, Rocco, Delamina, Shinova, Meridian Response, Error6, Plan Marmota, Full, Elena Setien y Muñeco. Completamos el apartado nacional con Niza versioneando a New Order y echando la vista atrás 15 años para recuperar a Muy Poca Gente. Los festivales también tienen su hueco en esta edición, hablándote del inminente Deleste en Valencia (mientras suenan Aullido Atómico, Xoel Lopez y Polar) y el recien anunciado Sueños de Libertad en Ibiza que se celebrará el próximo 2017 y en el que actuarán Sidonie y Depedro entre otros. Y en la recta final del programa ponemos el oido más allá de nuestras fronteras para escuchar lo nuevo de Cineplexx, Thomas Cohen y DBFC. Además en nuestra conexión con Rock Nights Radio suenan Metallica y el Instituto Francés de Valencia nos descubre a Clea Vincent. TWITTER | BLOG | INSTAGRAM | FACEBOOK
Electricitat | Mixcloud | Facebook | Twitter | Tumblr Guia de concerts del programa Electricitat a Raidió Na Life 106.4 FM dedicat a repassar alguns dels esdeveniments que tindran lloc a Dublín durant el mes de novembre. Un programa musical presentat en català a l'emissora dublinesa. Kate Tempest - Lionmouth Door Knocker Le Boom - What We Do Peaches – Rub Teleman – Tangerine Julia Holter - Sea Calls Me Home Swords - Tidal Waves Basia Bulat – Fool Mutual Benefit - Skipping Stones Ben Watt - Between Two Fires Nada Surf - Believe You're Mine Primal Scream - I Can Change John Blek - Ruby Blood Dinosaur Jr. – Tiny Hinds - Castigadas En El Granero Ash – Dispatch Steve Gunn - Conditions Wild Chance The Rapper - Angels (feat. Saba) IMLÉ – Criochfort Danny Brown – Pneumonia Pantha Du Prince - In an Open Space (feat. Queens) St Germain - Forget Me NotBasement Jaxx - Never Say Never
Rev. Alex HoltThis Source reminds us that wisdom is a powerful component of our spiritual development. How can the Third Source help that process?Listen here.
Rev. Anya Drew JohnstonThe notion of atonement is inherently religious, but not at all exclusive to Jewish or Christian practices. Are we to forgive? To make reparations? To become whole? Today I will ask Unitarians and Universalists to consider an approach to atonement that is both rational and heartfelt and, perhaps, the entire reason for religion of any kind.Listen here.
Listen this week as Dillon and Dutch take time out of their busy life to discuss the finer points of art valuation based on 16th Century Gothic buttresses.
Rev. Alex HoltToday we will consider the First Source of our Living Tradition. How can the rise of the IT (Information Technology) Age still bring mystery and wonder beyond the technology and cat videos?Listen here.
Cecelia Hayes and Jason DourosIt has been 15 years since the 9/11 attacks. This month's Praise Service will provide an opportunity to "hold" our thoughts and feelings about that day in a sacred space and consider how our collective experience has evolved as a result. Reverence, Joyful singing, soulful reflection, and a message of hope.Listen here.
Rev. Alex HoltUU's know the Seven Principles quite well but what about the Six Sources? This service will be the first of several to explore the meaning and power of the Six Sources that refresh and nurture the Principles in every generation.Listen here.
Rev. Alex HoltThis was a service where anyone from Westside was welcome to submit a question to Alex for the service. He did not see or hear them until the service leader read them nor did he know who is asking the question. Listen here.
Crystal Zerfoss, SeminarianWe manifest love in the world whenever we build community and foster relationships, whenever we live into understanding and peace, whenever we work together for justice and equality. The arc of the moral Universe bends toward justice, yet it takes the effort of each one of us to shorten the trajectory. My dear friends, we have work to do!Listen here.
Rev. Amanda AikmanWhy are habitable exoplanets bad news for humanity? What would it mean to discover that we are not alone in the universe?Listen here.
Rev Amanda Aikman"You are closer to glory leaping an abyss/than upholstering a rut," said poet James Broughton. What are the perils and rewards of risk-taking, and what can spur us to taking more risks in our precious lives?Listen here.
Rev. Barbara CornellPeople with a lived experience of mental illness and addiction, along with their families and friends, often struggle with bias, ignorance, misunderstanding, exclusion and a lack of support and funding for even the most basic of services. As one in five or six people struggle with mental illness or addiction issues, this situation impacts nearly every family in our communities. Rev. Barbara will reflect on her ministry with those who struggle and how our congregations could consider an alternative response to the mentally ill and the addicted with compassionate presence at the foundation.Listen here.
El Salmo 51 se produjo como resultado de la caída del Rey David cuando peco con Betsabé. David cometió adulterio y luego en un esfuerzo para encubrir su pecado, él cometió homicidio. Después de un tiempo, David fue enfrentado acerca de su pecado por el profeta Natán. Y fue tan sólo después de que sus pecados se hicieron públicos que David decidió arrepentirse. Así que, durante ese tiempo de arrepentimiento y examen de conciencia, David escribió este Salmo. En este Salmo hay una expresión del deseo y la necesidad del creyente para estar bien con Dios después de una caída. Ahora, para hacer el tema del caer más personal y para entenderlo mejor empecemos desde este punto de partida: Satanás es el tentador y él tienta a todo creyente a pecar.•Psalm 51 was the result of the fall of King David when he sinned with Bathsheba. David committed adultery and then in an effort to conceal his sin, he committed murder. After a while, David was confronted about his sin by the prophet Nathan. And it was only after his sins were made public that David decided to repent. So, during this time of repentance and soul, David wrote this Psalm. In this psalm is an expression of desire and need for the believer to be right with God after a fall. Now, to drop the subject of more staff and begin to understand better from this starting point, Satan is the tempter and tempted him to every believer to sinAudio of the Sermon.Download the PDF • Descarge el PDFemail: Senior Pastor Joshua PintoFaro Church20918 Bake PkwySuite 108Lake Forest, CA 92630949.916.3276www.farous.org
La bendición de este pasaje es que enseña una verdad que muchos nunca captan. La verdad de que si tú eres un creyente, un hijo de Dios, puedes estar seguro de la seguridad eterna con el Señor Jesucristo. Si estás en Jesús, eres parte de la familia de Dios y puedes experimentar la paz y la seguridad que Él quiere que todos Sus hijos disfrutemos. En la Bahía de San Francisco, durante la construcción del puente Golden Gate, veintitrés trabajadores perdieron sus vidas mientras construían el puente. En vista de esas pérdidas de vida, la ciudad decidió erigir enormes redes de seguridad debajo de la estructura donde estaban trabajando.•The truth is, if you are a believer, a child of God, you can be assured of eternal security with the Lord Jesus Christ. If you are in Jesus, you are part of the family of God and can experience the peace and security. He wants all of His children to enjoy. In the Bay of San Francisco's Golden Gate bridge construction, twenty-three workers lost their lives while building the bridge. In view of these losses the city decided to build huge safety net underneath the structure they were working.Audio of the Sermon.Download the PDF • Descarge el PDFemail: Senior Pastor Joshua PintoFaro Church20918 Bake PkwySuite 108Lake Forest, CA 92630949.916.3276www.farous.org
El cristiano puede saber con seguridad que es salvo y que su destino es el Cielo. Como cristianos no nos tenemos que conformar con una “posible” esperanza para la salvación, o con una cristiandad “tal vez”. Podemos tener una verdadera seguridad de nuestra salvación en nuestro corazón y en nuestra alma.•The Christian can know for sure their safe and destiny is heaven. As Christians we do not have to settle for a "possible" hope for salvation, Christianity or a "maybe." We have a real assurance of our salvation in our hearts and our soul.Audio of the Sermon.Download the PDF • Descarge el PDF email: Senior Pastor Joshua Pinto Faro Church 20918 Bake Pkwy Suite 108 Lake Forest, CA 92630 949.916.3276 www.farous.org
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Podcast - March 2008Chic - Le Freak Kool & The Gang - Get Down On It Shalamaz - A night To Remember Charades - Gimme The Funk Indeep - Last Night a DJ Save My Life Incredible Bongo Band - Apache Jackson Sisters - I beleve in miracles George Duke - Reach Out Prince - Kiss Michael Jackson - Don't stop you Get Enough Queen - Another One Bites The Dust