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It's that time of year again, when houses all over Manumi light a candle by the door and leave out cakes for the Candle King to come and deliver their yearly gifts. That's right: it's Candlebells again!Description: 'Twas the Night before CandleBells, and all through the lands, no one could have known that those reigns would change hands. But who would it be, this new Candle King? Could he eat all the cakes, give each bell a ring? Tune in to this tale, dear listener and friend. And trust when I say, "Stick around 'till the end."Thank you all so very, very much for supporting us through 2023. We hope that you are all doing well, and that you have a very Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!Have you seen the awesome MBH Patreon? If not, go check it out and see the awesome rewards we're offering! https://www.patreon.com/makebelieveheroes/Also, quick note, WE HAVE MERCH! http://tee.pub/lic/E16wZvDeYO8 Also also, if you're looking for some sweet Dice, check out diceenvy.com! If you use our link, it helps out our show.Thank you to BattleBards: the spiciest of all gaming spice! Check them out for access to some rad music and sound effects for your gaming table.Website: Visit www.makebelieveheroes.com.Email: letters@makebelieveheroes.comTwitter: @MBHPodcast Instagram: @mbhpodcastFacebook: MBHPodcastTo view full attribution and credits for the sound effects from this episode, visit our Attribution Page. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Toot toot. Chugga chugga. Jackson and Starr are hopping into their proverbial Big Red Car this week as they're chatting all things Wiiggles, in celebration of Prime Video's new documentary ‘Hot Potato: The Story of The Wiggles'. In this week's episode of POPSUGAR Rush, Jackson and Starr discuss: Hozier's one-time stint as a Wiggle Their favourite parts of the documentary The ethos around John, the Hot Wiggle Who would be more fun on a night out — The Wiggles or Hi-5? And much, much more. Each week, Jackson Langford, editor/perpetual doom-scroller/internet tragic, and Starr McG, TikTok superstar and deeply #relatable content queen, will be breaking down the best and worst of the week's pop culture news. You're busy, we get it, but you still want that fix of everything celebrity, streaming and reality TV. Trust us — POPSUGAR Rush is the place to get it. Follow POPSUGAR Australia, Jackson Langford and Starr McG on Instagram. POPSUGAR Rush is brought to you by Prime Video. Sign up for your 30-day-free-trial today to watch smash hit movies and TV shows like Gen V and Hot Potato: The Story of The Wiggles. POPSUGAR Australia acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of Country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay respect to their Elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Producer: Forbes Street StudiosSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Unlock the aftershow and tons of other cool perks! https://www.patreon.com/offthecutpodcast ------------------------- Questions Got a question that you want us to answer? Send us an email at offthecutpodcast@gmail.com Be sure to hit up the links below to get even more content from us! ------------------------- Hang Out with Us Watch the live stream of the podcast on YouTube! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcRJPIp6OaffQtvCZ2AtWWQ ------------------------- Pick Up Some Merch! Windbreaker - https://www.spencleydesignco.com/products/off-the-cut-podcast-embroidered-champion-windbreaker-jacket ------------------------- Exclusive Discounts Bits & Bits Router/CNC Bits (10% off Using Code "SDC") - https://rebrand.ly/njveuj3 Starbond CA Glue (15% off Using Code “SDC15”) - https://rebrand.ly/97osl75 RZ Masks (10% off Using Code "SPENCLEY10") - https://rebrand.ly/mtv0j8t Elgin Bluetooth Hearing Protection (10% off Using Code “SDC10”) - https://rebrand.ly/o8v4x9k Serious Grit Sandpaper (15% off Using Code “SPENCLEY”) - https://rebrand.ly/z1cdlc0 Arbortech Tools (10% off Using Code “ACP10”) - https://rebrand.ly/9ptbqc6 TotalBoat Epoxy + Finishes (5% off Code "60C7XF2XQQAS") - https://rebrand.ly/r6yxcaf ------------------------- Follow Zac Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/zacbuilds/ YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/c/ZacBuilds TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@zacbuilds ------------------------- Follow Eric Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/spencleydesignco/ YouTube - https://youtube.com/spencleydesignco TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@spencleydesignco --------------------------- --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/offthecutpodcast/message
Special guest Shirley tells KC and Faye about the history of the FBIs most wanted list. Sources: an article on How Stuff Works by Julia Layton, an article on Saturday Evening Post by Jeff Nilsson, and the FBIs website https://www.fbi.gov/wanted/topten Follow us on social media! http://Facebook.com/unholygossipgirls http://Twitter.com/girlsunholy https://www.instagram.com/unholygossipgirls Email us! Unholygossipgirls@gmail.com Check out our merch! https://teespring.com/stores/unholygossipgirlsmerch Leave us a voicemail! https://anchor.fm/unholygossipgirls Warning: content may be upsetting, triggering, and terrifying. Listen at your own risk. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/unholygossipgirls/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/unholygossipgirls/support
My good friend and fellow hockey coach told me a story about a caribou hunt that his son took with his grandfather.
It's game night at Mindy's gingerbread mansion, and a rip roaring round of “What's that Sound” is on the menu. All goes well until Guy Raz begs to end the game as the “sounds” are more than his ears can handle! Why is it that certain sounds cause some people's brains to go bonkerballs? It's the Who, What, When, Where, Why, How, and Wow in the world of Misophonia! Originally aired 12/21/20.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The Indy puts out a poll, a possible train connecting Las Vegas and LA, and an overview of the economic forum. This week, hosts Joey Lovato and Jacob Solis are joined by D.C. reporter Gabby Birenbaum to go over a new poll of voters in Nevada from The Indy. After that they all talk about … Continue reading "Chugga chugga cha ching" The post Chugga chugga cha ching appeared first on The Nevada Independent.
The Indy puts out a poll, a possible train connecting Las Vegas and LA, and an overview of the economic forum. This week, hosts Joey Lovato and Jacob Solis are joined by D.C. reporter Gabby Birenbaum to go over a new poll of voters in Nevada from The Indy. After that they all talk about … Continue reading "Chugga chugga cha ching" The post Chugga chugga cha ching appeared first on The Nevada Independent.
This mini episode is an ode to childhood memories and grown up debates. A meme went viral due to the question it posed...How many Chuggas come before the Choo Choo? Every platform, group chat, and get-together rose in an uproar as they debated the number of Chuggas necessary to get the Choo Choo Train going. We thought, why not add our podcast to the list of debates going on? Y'all we had a TIME! Listen In!
The LA Time Festival of Books was explosive! And Malik Books has been named a special seller for the Children's Stage! And Malik went on an interview spree talking with… Aaron Becker, Author/ Illustrator of The Tree and the River Aida Salazar, Author of Jovita Wore Pants Amerie, author of You Will Do Great Things Raissa Figueroa, illustrator of You Will Do Great Things Katherine Schwarzenegger Pratt, author of Goodnight Sister Kwame Alexander, author of How to Write a Poem Actor Leslie Odom Jr. and Nicolette Robinson authors of I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know Actor Max Greenfield, author of I Don't Want to Read This Book Aloud Michael Sampson, author of The Story of Ukraine and Bing! Bang! Chugga! Beep! Nic Stone, author of Clean Getaway and Chaos Theory Peloton Head Instructor Robin Arzón, author of Strong Mama and Strong Baby E-mail Malik at RealMalikMuhammad@gmail.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Chugga chugga toot toot! That sound you hear isn't our rumbly tummies, it's Bong Joon Ho's SNOWPIERCER (43:09 SPOILERS)! We examine the fun gelatinous food bricks, the poop logistics of a never-ending train, and a popular fan theory connecting Snowpiercer to Willy Wonka! We also discuss: KFC's new suspiciousy Chick-Fil-A style nuggets, Twister 2's casting announcements, PlutoTV, Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies (Paramount+), and Brent reveals his April trilogy watch with To All the Boys I've Loved Before (2018 - Netflix), To All the Boys: P.S. I Still Love You (2020 - Netflix), and To All the Boys: Always and Forever (2021 - Netflix)! Outtakes: 1:50:00 Check out Rhino Stew's Snowpiercer/Wonka fan theory: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEX52h1TvuA —————————————————————— Go here to get some LTAS Merch: tee.pub/lic/huI4z_dwRsI Email: LetsTalkAboutStuffPodcast@gmail.com Follow LTAS on social media: Twitter: twitter.com/LTASpod Instagram: www.instagram.com/ltaspod/?hl=en Follow Steven on Letterboxd: letterboxd.com/stevenfisher22/ Follow Brent on social media: Twitter - twitter.com/BrentHibbard Instagram - www.instagram.com/brenthibbard/?hl=en A 5-Star rating on your podcast app is appreciated! And if you like our show, share it with your friends! THEY'RE ROCK HARD AND SO AM I.
The international break gave Léo Chú the opportunity for a break out performance and holy Schmetz did he perform. Chú was critical to Jordan Morris' record breaking 4 goal performance against Sporting KC in the cauldron de azul. Cameron and Aaron discuss:Secondary assists. Also, Léo Chú.Messi to MLS? Also, Léo Chú.How do the Sounders compare to England clubs? Also, Léo Chú.The best performance of the season? Also, Léo Chú.Peru scuffle the Madrid police. Also, Léo Chú.Who do we start now?! Also, Léo Chú.Preview of Seattle at LA Galaxy. Also, Léo Chú.Informal intro to Scuttlebutt Bag (of questions). Also, Léo Chú.Join our Scuttlebutt Discord server for fan batter with us and other Sounder fans. We'll ask YOU to fill our Scuttlebutt Bag. Come one, come all!Twitter:Aaron Lingley - @aaronlingleyCameron Collins - @legalmindedpunk
The Crambones check out the influence of trains on rock music. Chugga chugga choo choo!
Chugga Chugga, Two Two! All aboard, Elliot is officially two years old! Joe and Caroline discuss their youngest child's milestones and his birthday party, which was themed all around trains.What We Are DrinkingCocoa PorterWest Sixth BrewingLexington, Kentucky ABV: 6%New PorterEnglish Brown PorterWooden Cask Brewing Company - Newport, KentuckyABV: 5%***Spread the Word and Connect With UsIf you like what you hear, please consider leaving us a rating and reviewFollow us on Facebook and InstagramHelp us spread the word about the podcast so we can grow Send us feedback, comments, and questions at craftparentingpodcast@gmail.comVisit our website at https://www.craftparentingpodcast.com to read our blog posts about life as parents, our family adventures, craft beer, and more.Send us stuff to our PO Box address: Craft Parenting Podcast P.O. Box 112294 Cincinnati, Ohio 45211Buy Us A CoffeeIf you enjoy listening to our podcast and reading our blog posts every week, then you can help offset our equipment and software costs through Buy Me a Coffee.Here's what you need to know:It's super easy to do. You don't have to set up an account to contribute. You have options. Send us a one-time donation or sign-up as a member to donate monthly or yearly.Unlock exclusive content. Choose a membership level that fits your budget and unlock exclusive content.We wouldn't be able to do any of this without the loyalty of our listeners and readers. THANK YOU from the bottom of our hearts for all of your support!Support the show
Lorem Ipsum Pikachu Conduit Check for rags! In this episode we're looking at how we plan for the long term and look to add (if only temporarily) to our systems.
Lorem Ipsum Pikachu Conduit Check for rags! In this episode we're looking at how we plan for the long term and look to add (if only temporarily) to our systems.
Chugga-chugga choo-choo! It's train month! Dan and Brian kick the month off discussing Dan's pick for the ultimate train movie, the classic romantic drama by David Lean. Join as they discuss postwar ennui, eye injuries, connections to other Goods-discussed films, and the ideal number of "chugga"s before a "choo-choo." Check out Dan's movie reviews: http://thegoodsreviews.com/ Subscribe, join the Discord, and find us on Letterboxd: http://thegoodsfilmpodcast.com/ Music credits: RetroFuture Clean by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4277-retrofuture-clean License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Mikey is starting a Pittsburgh Power Washers Gang - Whopper Lullabies - How Man Chugga Chugga's - Tom Brady says he is retiring - Bad Boys 4... Shake Ya Tail Feather - Hey Beyonce is coming to Pittsburgh... uhhhh Heinz Field - What is happening at the Dallas Zoo - The Mayor of Ponytown - Wait did Beyonce bring back the ketchup bottle to Acrisure Field - Want to say Hi or have anything fun for the show... Listen on the iHeartRadio app hit the little mic and leave us a talkback message
Mikey is starting a Pittsburgh Power Washers Gang - Whopper Lullabies - How Man Chugga Chugga's - Tom Brady says he is retiring - Bad Boys 4... Shake Ya Tail Feather - Hey Beyonce is coming to Pittsburgh... uhhhh Heinz Field - What is happening at the Dallas Zoo - The Mayor of Ponytown - Wait did Beyonce bring back the ketchup bottle to Acrisure Field - Want to say Hi or have anything fun for the show... Listen on the iHeartRadio app hit the little mic and leave us a talkback message
2...4...6..8...10+.... If you say an odd #, then you're a monster :-) How many chuggas do you say before getting to the CHOO CHOO! ?
In this episode we go longer than any other episode. Its episode 100 but we did nothing for it except talk too much. We discuss the bucket pooper2.0 medical science and the buffalo bills. we have Brittney as a guest and go way too far in to reddit. like follow and all that @wwatspodcast
Chugga chugga chugga chugga... Hop on for surprisingly modern attitudes, surprisingly little hardship, and a surprisingly nameless woman. The person most confused by the film this week was: that guy who got pancaked by an oncoming train.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In your new Phone Tap, Alexis is calling a college-level teacher's assistant and seeing if she can blackmail him into giving her answers to the quiz coming up!
In your new Phone Tap, Alexis is calling a college-level teacher's assistant and seeing if she can blackmail him into giving her answers to the quiz coming up!
The much anticipated part two! We want to thank Sara for so graciously returning back to the podcast but also give a tribute out to her brother Sam and everyone out there who has experienced sibling loss. You are not alone in the strange journey called life. If the second part Sara continue on the dissaperance of JJ and Tylee Vallow and how it all comes to a tragic end. CONENT WANRING: Today's case involves children and graphic senses of violence. if you or someone you know needs help Crime Victims. National Center for Victims of Crime. Phone: 1-855-4VICTIM (1-855-484-2846) Missing and Abducted Children. Child Find of America, Inc. Phone: 1-800-I-AM-LOST (1-800-426-5678), or National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. Phone: 1-800-THE-LOST (1-800-843-5678) Runaway and Homeless Youth. National Runaway Safeline. Phone: 1-800-RUNAWAY (1-800-786-2929), or Text: 66008 Be sure to follow us at: Twitter: @rarwpodcast Instagram: @rarwpodcast Contact us at: E-mail: redrumandredwinepodcast@gmail.com All music written and produced by: Savasas savasas | Free Listening on SoundCloud
It's game night at Mindy's gingerbread mansion, and a rip roaring round of “What's that Sound” is on the menu. All goes well until Guy Raz begs to end the game as the “sounds” are more than his ears can handle! Why is it that certain sounds cause some people's brains to go bonkerballs? It's the Who, What, When, Where, Why, How, and Wow in the world of Misophonia! (Originally aired 12/21/20)See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This week we talk about the weather. Also: Flight of the Conchords, feeling old but looking young, lying, and some reflecting. Oh, and Clive Palmer bought Hitler's car (Clive's car). (Allegedly). Do you still like us? Let us know! You can follow us on Twitter and Instagram @DYSLMpod You can email us at DYSLMpod@gmail.com You can send us an anonymous message forms.gle/eh7QiUePasS1n2aK6 WE HAVE MERCH and you can buy it https://www.redbubble.com/i/t-shirt/Do-You-Still-Like-Me-80-s-by-Ukulady/98565516.FB110 Merch design by @lchyeahart Podcast artwork by @niceboyart
It's the comedy part of our Train to Busan episode with Nicole Adsit and Christina Song. We missed out on the remake rights to Train to Busan, so we put our Goofy costumes on, stuck our whole head and face into the candy mixture, and designed our own zombie movies. Plus we play a GOOD game about movie trains, a SUCCESSFUL game that people were wrong to doubt. And you can play along at home too! You can follow us:On Instagram (@nofuturenyc)On Twitter (@nofuturenyc)On Letterboxd (@nofuturenyc)Email us at:nofuturemailbag@gmail.com
This episode, we talk about train robberies. We end up discussing smart bulbs by the end of it. Hey, sometimes our brains go sideways too.
Thank GOODNESS The Wiggles Always Have a Red Skivvy Handy Incase of Spills! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Chugga chugga CHOO CHOO Rodney/Brandon J/Chris G/Martin/Leroy trains are leaving the station! You may want to look for a transfer to one of these trains soon if you are on the Nayte or Joe train…but that's a hot take we hope doesn't come to fruition. Another unpopular opinion is that we are happy that Michelle is saved from walking red flags Peter and Jamie but…we wished their villain potential could have festered for a few more weeks. Their delusion was just too comical. They burned too bright, too soon. We laughed more than we probably ever have recording this episode so we hope you enjoy it. Instacart Referral Link - https://instacart.oloiyb.net/c/3017650/1140284/7412Buzzsprout Referral Link - https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=1376989Music - www.bensound.comSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/canwestealyou)
Good friend Chugga Stevens is just an avid hunter.
A caribou hunt that a son took with his grandfathe.r
Roy breaks down writing and recording the song “Bring Balance to the Force.” You'll hear the vocals, guitars, and drums isolated from the mix in this part by part walk-through. On this episode: why this song is unique out of all the RGL “hits” how the theme of the song is best shown through the YouTube video version what elements Roy would change for the “Special Edition” remix of the song which lyrics should've been changed (according to YouTube comments) the accidental melodic word painting in the chorus The Darkness song that inspired the chorus arrangement how Roy looks at vocal arranging like a Michael Bay film the trick to making just two guitar tracks sound massive Inside the Song (YouTube playlist) ►► https://bit.ly/Inside-the-Song_YouTube Inside the Song (Spotify playlist) ►► https://spoti.fi/3fL4uZ0 00:00 Intro, song background (genre, lyrics, & themes) 03:39 The music video & the concept of “balance” 05:44 Song breakdown begins 06:01 INTRO: Drums only intro?! 07:02 VERSE 1: Drum grooves & clean guitar riffs 08:24 Dark-side synth choir 09:07 Vocal delay for days! 10:15 YouTube comments re-writing the lyrics?! 11:42 The bass guitar is super boring 12:24 “Bring Balance” tagline & big fat guitars 13:10 Interlude or pre-chorus? Two verses?! 13:41 VERSE 2: Menacing guitars & positive lyrics 14:32 CHORUS 1: Rhythmic accents & syncopation 15:28 Vocals: melodic vartion & designing harmonies 16:45 VERSE 3: It's amped up!! 17:04 Palm muted guitar riffs & more synth choir 17:48 CHORUS 2: brand new drum-beat, same old music 18:30 Cue the background vocals! 19:17 BRIDGE: it's classic RGL! 19:35 Dueling guitar arrangements 20:40 Belting vocals & 3-part-harmonies 21:32 You wanna change MORE lyrics?! 22:04 I think about cymbals a lot more than you'd think 22:48 CHORUS 3: More vocal variations & word painting 23:37 CHORUS 4: Chugga chugga guitars & drums 23:54 More background vocals & piano!!! 24:31 RGL Bingo?! 24:47 Anakin's Redemption & Ritardano Support Royish Good Looks on Patreon ►► https://bit.ly/RGL-Patreon Subscribe to Royish Good Looks on YouTube: Main Channel ►► https://bit.ly/Sub-to-RGL 2nd Channel ►► https://bit.ly/Sub-to-RGL-2 Follow Royish Good Looks on Socials: Instagram ►► https://www.instagram.com/RoyishGoodLooks Twitter ►► https://www.twitter.com/RoyishGoodLooks Facebook Page ►► https://www.facebook.com/RoyishGoodLooks Facebook Group ►► https://bit.ly/RGL_Facebook-Group Tik Tok ►► https://bit.ly/RGL_TikTok Listen to Royish Good Looks' Music: Bandcamp ►► https://royishgoodlooks.bandcamp.com Spotify ►► https://spoti.fi/2rUQCpr Apple Music ►► https://apple.co/36QoUZX Amazon Music ►► https://amzn.to/31uJbVo Pandora ►► https://pdora.co/30uaiPG Deezer ►► https://bit.ly/RGL-Deezer Buy T-Shirts ►► https://bit.ly/RGL-Merch Artwork by Chaoticeniir ►► https://www.instagram.com/chaoticeniir
Chugga chugga CHOO CHOO! This week, we’re talkin’ about TRAINS! It’s “The Berenstain Bears ALL ABOARD!”
Dr. Franchell HamiltonShe recognized that many of her patients needed a more personalized plan to help them maintain their weight loss goals. By addressing the mental, behavioral, medical, and environmental factors that kept them from a meaningful transformation, her patients began to regain control in these areas.Ari Gronich: Hey everyone, welcome back to another episode of create a new tomorrow I am your host or Ari Gronich and today I have with me Dr. Franchell Hamilton. She is a bariatric surgeon with not only several years of medical and surgical training, but chemistry psychology as well, who's now kind of grown a little tired of the system, as it is, and is looking to help support patients in a more holistic way. So I want I wanted to have her on here because she truly is part of who's making medicine, good for tomorrow, helping them activate their vision for a better world through medicine. So wanted to bring her on Dr. Franchell, thank you so much for coming on. Franchell Hamilton: Thank you. Thank you for having me. Ari Gronich: Absolutely. Why don't you tell us a little bit about your background? And what made you go from traditional medicine towards some more holistic approach?Franchell Hamilton: Sure. So I was traditionally trained MD, medicine, went through residency, general surgery, and then I did extra training and bariatric or weight loss surgery, and was in private practice for about 10 years. And it wasn't until I was in private practice, actually, kind of with my own patients doing the things the way I want it. To do that I started realizing the system that I've been trained all this time wasn't really effective. And I have three clinics, right. So we had a pretty large practice. We're in a big Metropolitan Dallas Fort Worth area. And I was probably one of the top geriatric surgeons as far as volume, what I started noticing probably about seven years in actually, that I was doing a lot more revision surgeries, which means they've already had a bariatric surgery, gastric bypass, sleeve, lap band, whatever it is, and they were coming back to get a revision surgery. And I noticed that several years in the practice changed from doing predominantly first time, weight loss, whatever, surgery, medication wellness, I do a lot of things in my clinic that I saw a lot of repeat customers that regained. And I had to ask myself, what am I doing here, like I did all the checkboxes that I was taught to do. All the patients had to go see a nutritionist, they had to go see a psychologist, they had to get their heart checked out. They did all the checkboxes that was required by insurance. And that was required from my training. But patients weren't getting better. They were requiring revisions. And even the ones that were doing just the medical weight loss, they just weren't progressing the way I thought they should be. And I didn't go into medicine just to be busy. Just to be a busy surgeon, I actually wanted to make a difference. I have a heart for people with a lot of medical problems and complicated obesity. And I really wanted them to not just treat their medical problems, but to resolve them. I wanted them to go away. And I felt like in that moment, we I wasn't doing the right thing for them. So I really had to kind of rethink what I was doing revamp and I actually got more education and almost like what we call Eastern medicine or holistic medicine during those years because I was getting burned out with traditional medicine because I felt like I was not helping my patients because they didn't get better. Like I was trained bariatric surgery will not only help them lose weight, but their diabetes and hypertension, cholesterol, all this stuff will resolve. Right. And it did for a brief moment in time. And then the majority of patients were regaining. So that was my turning point for me.Ari Gronich: Awesome. Thank you so much for that and your dedication in general to wanting to find the best results for your patients. Because we all know that that's not happening so much in the industry right now. And one of the questions I wanted to ask you is what's been your, you know, the pushback from the system or from your colleagues, and so forth? Or what's been the adaptation from them where they've said, Oh, yeah, I've seen this too. And I also want to do what's best. So how can I get on board with what you're doing? So how have you seen on both sides of that?Franchell Hamilton: So, believe it or not, I felt like and still feel like I'm almost like a sore thumb in my industry because I will tell you, especially in the surgical industry, a lot of us are them. They're not there yet. Like they just they operate the and to be honest, I don't even know if it's their fault, like we were trained as a surgeon, we see a problem, we fix the problem or take out the problem. And then we move on to the next thing before I started my own private practice, I was with a group that was very much like that I was employed. And I immediately got out of that, because I was like, this is definitely not the way I want to practice medicine. And the only way that I felt like I can even come close was by starting my own practice. So that's kind of how I ended up in my own private practice. But I will tell you, in my own private practice, it was a struggle, like, I felt like I got pushback from all sides, I got pushback from the insurance companies, I got pushback from a lot of my own colleagues, when I surgical colleagues, when I brought up the idea that patients have to do other things to help them with their weight, diabetes, when I talked about positive affirmations, or maybe including meditation or yoga, I got pushed back all the way around to the point where I had said, almost like leave those I'm not a part of a lot of those organizations. And from the insurance standpoint, they did not pay for any of the more holistic things that I wanted to do that I saw worked, I saw this work. And I even wrote a letter saying this is medical necessity, I think they need this, this and this. And it was denied left and right. And I often found patients were almost mad at me or my office because we couldn't get this approved. And I'm like insurance companies will pay for their blood pressure medication. But if I want it to treat their blood pressure in another way that I know would actually benefit them by helping them reduce stress, change their environment, whatever the case, I got pushback, I wasn't paid, the insurance company didn't pay. And a lot of my surgical colleagues thought I was actually kind of crazy. So I literally had to shut everything down and almost start over the way I felt like with my own vision, the way I felt like things that should be it almost gave me an aha moment. On the way healthcare was practice, like everything it was it was almost like a brief down moment for me, because I've been in this system for so long. And I didn't even recognize this was happening until my patients weren't progressing. And then if I was in fight with the insurance to get stuff covered, I felt like my voice really wasn't being heard. On the other side, some of my medical colleagues, medical non-surgical, were very open to that idea. So I had to shift almost to the more holistic or integrative community, where they got it, lifestyle medicine, doctors, integrative medicine, functional medicine, meditation therapist, yoga therapist, so I almost shifted into that community. And that's kind of where I felt more welcomed, because in my traditionally trained community, a lot of us, some of us are jumping over, but a lot of us are still with the typical mindset when it comes to how we should treat health care.Ari Gronich: Right. So, you know, part of this show has always been a lot about the health care industry, because that's where I started. And, you know, I know from my own medical history, having a brain tumor that I was told, I'd be basically gaining weight until I was dead. And I was 342 pounds at one point where I'm just going okay, so I went on to a cleanse, I went on to another cleanse after that I did a 40 day fast, and I did a 10-day water fast. I mean, it was like one after another of just Something's got to give. And but, you know, misdiagnosed and mistreated my entire childhood. It's kind of why I'm in the business to begin with. What I what I saw was that results never seemed to matter. It was procedures and the incentive system is to do more procedures rather than to actually get the good results for the patients. And so, one of this is like the audience here. A lot of them obviously hear me a lot, but to the people that are in what they would say mainstream, I'm considered maybe woo woo because I don't have a doctor degree other than my doctor of metaphysics, right. So, I would be discredited, you know, because of that. So, you're a medical doctor who's in this industry, right? And so how do we get that system to start shifting itself to more of a results-oriented system?Franchell Hamilton: Yeah, and I'm glad you mentioned that because one of the reasons I got into, particularly obesity medicine was because of the labels like I was labeled as a kid, I didn't have the best childhood. And I had all this kind of like negative labels slapped on me. And so, when I got into medicine, I knew I wanted to be in a field, where people felt like either they were defeated, or they're, you know what I'm saying they just have this negative connotation. So that's what drew me to obesity medicine in general, because there's all this negativity around it, that most of it is not true, which a lot of it I also felt growing up. And so I want it to be that kind of voice for my patients and be that advocate truly be that advocate. And that's one of the things when I got into medicine, where over time, I felt like I'm not advocating for them, kind of like what you were saying. It's a procedural driven society. I mean, we can talk about what happened in COVID, when elective surgeries got shut down, like there's so much stuff in the hospitals that got shut down, I think the way to change it is to do stuff like what you're already doing, talking to more people getting the word out what me and you are both doing try to promote, I still have my practice, it's completely changed now. But a lot of my work now is to get the word out on the way this healthcare system is having practiced in it for a decade before my eyes were open. And realizing like this is not the way it needs to be practiced. There are actually several communities of physicians now who also believe this, which is helpful, we are partnering with a lot of people like you like yoga therapists, like other people who years ago, they're just like, oh, they don't know what they're talking about. Yes, they do, because they're also seeing results. So it's a matter of like getting the word out there that these other modalities exist. And I think it has to be a combination of patients, patients now are also getting frustrated with their results, they're getting frustrated, for paying these high insurance premiums, and not having anything covered, and not getting the treatments that they feel like are going to resolve their medical problems. So I think it took everybody being frustrated and wanting to make a change in the system it's starting. And I think it's just the combination of us getting the word out joining together and getting a change in this area.Ari Gronich: Yeah, so one of my questions, then is being that you're in the unique position that you're in, of being in that medical side, and now bridging the gaps. You know, to the western side, my question would be, how do we get some of those organizations that are individual like IFM, FMU, a forum, right? Those are all individual organizations to kind of come together and literally create the next kind of healthcare system. Because, you know, the way I look at it, the battle that we've been having has been about who pays the insurance company bills, right? Whether it's the government paying or whether it's the insurance paying, it's still who's paying, but there's been no talk about how do we make the system more effective so that people are healthier so that it costs us less money in general? And so that's kind of one of the conversations I like to have is, how do we come together in a way that honors and respects all aspects of medicine, minus, of course, the fraud and deceit and all that shit. But that honors the risk and respects all the good that medicine is mixed with all the good that the holistic side has to offer, and come and create a new system that just is outperforming the old system.Franchell Hamilton: I agree. And that's a loaded question. Because as you and I both know, that's going to take a lot. That's going to take a lot of manpower. On all ends, physicians, support staff like you other health care workers like you and patients to kind of come in and say we want this change, I can tell you, I have stayed one of the reasons I've stayed with my foot in medicine, like clinical practice is so I can help dictate and start being the change. There's so many other opportunities, I've had to completely leave medicine and kind of and maybe at some point, I will do that. But right now, I am trying to bridge the gap. There are several people that are trying to bridge the gap with their patients and these organizations. So I sit on a lot of committees on a lot of these organizations that do not see it this way. yet. One of the reasons I started They'll stay on these committees. So I can almost be a voice inside that committee to help create the change that I think is needed. I'm, I still sit on my Council Committee for American College of Surgeons and so I'm over all of North Texas as a bariatric surgeon, I represent that one of the reasons I still stay there is so I can voice some of the changes that need to be made, I think it's going to take people higher up honestly, in these organizations to say something, and then to start kind of weaving, which we already had, we met each other. I've met several people who are on the same playing field, but I would have never met until I kind of started this whole thing. I think there needs to be a movement. That's what I'm talking about on my podcast and shows. That's what you're talking about. There's a lot a lot of us that are talking about it and we need to all come together, believe it or not, we are making some headwing. CMS which is Medicare, Medicaid, they the government insurance is considering at least looking at functional and integrative medicine, as far as coverage, which is huge. I know, it doesn't seem like a lot. But that is a huge thing that in general, we've been trying to push just like coverage for bariatric surgery, right? Like there's a lot of issues with that. There's a lot of these like grass roots going on in these organizations. I'm part of AMA, which is an American Medical Association. We're trying to in these organizations, I know there are several of them. And yes, we need to come together more, but we're trying to get stuff passed. So integrative and functional medicine has gotten a bill to Congress saying this is what needs to happen in order to help treat patients better, they've actually looked at it and are considering approving it. Once Medicare and Medicaid approves the coverage of functional and integrative medicine, which is currently not approved, that will be a ripple effect, and all other insurances will follow. So I think it's steps like that that's like big, it's hard for like the lay person to see it who's not working. And it takes years, it takes years. Like it took about six years for even that to get to Congress, you know what I'm saying? It just takes a long time for this stuff to happen.Ari Gronich: So because it takes a long time, when it's us industry, people that are not lobbyists? What is the thing that we can do with our patients? Like what are what are the things that patients can do to accelerate it within their groups? Because I'll tell you, I look at all of the Facebook groups and you know, people, some complaining and some promoting and some other things, but all of them is like it's disconnected. And it's what I would consider to be frantic, complaining or gathering to complain instead of collaborating to succeed. So, my question is both for the patients and the physicians who are starting to work with their holistic counterparts, right? How can they combine together to create more power in that movement.Franchell Hamilton: So I think in kind of what we're doing, and this has also already started, where we're forming networks, right, and networks among our area, or region. And I think from a patient standpoint, they need to complain to their insurance company for coverage, which a lot of my patients when I was accepting insurance and alert or accept it, but when I was accepting insurance, I was like, you need to talk to your insurance and ask to get a coverage, believe it or not, when you're an insurance physician or practitioner of any sort, there are several people that's not a physician that takes insurance, there's only so much that we can do, believe it or not, insurance don't want to pay us but as the patient and I'm a patient too, you're paying into the system. So the patient has more power when it comes to their insurance than the physician or the provider does. So those complaints need to be directed towards their insurance companies demanding coverage or demand to leave. There's so many other options out there. If everybody pulled away from the insurance companies and just decided to that that's not that's not working from them, they have to make changes, right. This is what happened and financial infant structures. You almost like wherever the money is going. So in my community, we've formed networks with everybody massage therapist, physical therapist, nutritionist where you can either do like a subscription, which a lot of people are doing now, and you pay into this network, a subscription and it will cover whatever visits almost like an insurance But you're cutting out the insurance, you're cutting out the middleman, this is getting provided directly to whatever group that you're with, or you because a lot of us physicians, we just want to treat the patient, most providers just want to treat the patient. And so we will make something that's reasonable, and that they can afford a lot. And I can speak on physicians, and a lot of these holistic practices are no longer or don't accept insurance, and they're doing their own models, but we have to network and collaborate. Because if I can't offer something, I need to be able to refer that patient to other services that are in our cash pay, holistic integrative network that they can go see. And a lot of patients, believe it or not, are leaving insurance companies and only getting what they need in the event of traumatic or event. Yeah, exactly. And they're paying the doctors and the providers that are providing care for a lot cheaper than paying these high premiums in these high deductibles. So I think that's what needs to be done all over. And that movement has already started.Ari Gronich: That's awesome to hear. I'm so glad to hear that that is going on. And we'll have to make sure that people know how to connect into networks like that, when they listen to the show, so we'll have links and stuff for that as well. So here is a, an off the cuff. Right? So let's say you're not taking insurance, right? I'm taking insurance, you're not taking insurance, you're getting results, I'm not getting results. Alright, so we're just taking a scenario that I think happens quite a lot. So we're going in for weight loss, counseling, weight loss care, right? How much is the difference in cost for say, bariatric surgery compared to a functional medicine approach? And, you know, an average cost, right? So a bariatric surgery costs, how much and then the average approach for functional medicine costs How much?Franchell Hamilton: Well, in the other question, I guess we have to ask is the results, right? So okay. So the first part, so average bariatric surgery probably costs about 20 grand between the hospital and the doctor. And usually the doctor's offices provide all the pre care and a lot of the post care. So about $20,000 functional medicine, typical subscription cost, cost about 100 and 100 to 150 a month. And so let's say 13,000, right? Are there I'm sorry, yeah, sorry, 13 100 a month. So 1300 for the year versus $20,000, for bariatric surgery. So that's a huge cost difference.Ari Gronich: Okay, so now we're going to go to vote who results on both sides. Since you were talking earlier about how many people come back, let's just do that how many people come back after bariatric surgery versus how many people do average, see come back, meeting more care or knowledge or whatever, after going through a functional medicine program.Franchell Hamilton: So with the functional medicine program, it's kind of ongoing, which it's a lot of support. And so people may not come back because they have recurrence of their disease, it's more just maintenance, right? So that's a little so we're not adding money into the system, because we're not treating anything per se anymore. We're just maintenance, right? So that taking into account, my bariatric patient population. For me, I felt like it was at least 50% that needed a revision, which is high considering the cost of a bariatric surgery. So I felt like there was a piece missing there.Ari Gronich: So, is the cost of the revision about the same as the cost of the original?Franchell Hamilton: No, it's significantly higher, significantly higher, because it's more complicated. Anytime you have to go and this is not this is all surgery. Anytime you have to do a revision, your complications increase dramatically. And so the length of stay in the hospital increases dramatically. Like your postdoc, potential complications are higher, like everything is more expensive in a revision surgery.Ari Gronich: Okay. Cost of ongoing care for functional medicine since there really isn't any revisions. But what's the ongoing cost? Oh, it's just the 13. Franchell Hamilton: Yes, your monthly fee. Yeah. Ari Gronich: So on top of the monthly fee, for instance, whatever that is, so they're, you know, they're all programs are different costs, right. So then there's obviously supplement costs, food cost, so people are freaking out. Let's gonna cost me so much money to get healthy. So let's talk about those costs a little bit, how they go high and how they go low, comparatively to what other people are doing. So in bariatric surgery, typically there's medicine medications that they're taking, which have a cost, right? What's the average cost of the medications of maintenance for somebody who's going through the surgical route.Franchell Hamilton: So bariatric surgery, you have to have supplements, they all have to have supplements. And there are specific variadic supplements that most bariatric surgeons or nutritionist, or baria-nutritions provide in the office because that's what the ASMBS, the people kind of write the rules say they need this supplement. And so there's an approval process. And so those supplements are usually about $60 a month for your basic supplements, let alone if you actually have some deficiencies, and then you start adding on and those supplements can range up to 60 to $100 additional a month, not to mention before surgery, there's protein drinks and supplements that you have to do. And after surgery for the first six to eight weeks, there's also protein supplements that people have to stay on to make sure they're getting all the protein that they need. And let me also mention to stay healthy. There are certain foods the bariatric patients have to eat, they eat less, but almost the same healthy foods to stay healthy that people in a maintenance program will need. So that's the bariatric cost, functional medicine cost. They don't have some way, if you don't have bariatric surgery, you don't necessarily have some of the deficiencies that bariatric patients get. So you don't necessarily need all of the supplements. Some people do, right? But very extra patients require us because of the way we rerouted you, you are 100% going to have these deficiencies because of the way the surgery was made. Other functional medicine patients that didn't have the surgery may or may not have those deficiencies, but everybody should be on a basic supplemental regimen that could cost anywhere from 40 to $60 a month. Ari Gronich: So what's the cost of obesity without any intervention at all? Do you know about those what those numbers are the statistics for those numbers.Franchell Hamilton: So because obesity, so let me tell you what obesity cost big picture, because they've looked at different sectors. So obesity caused, apparently 40% of less workdays, obesity in general, because you're obese, you have all of these other chronic problems that come about that people don't even realize that they will get you're sicker. So COVID, for example. I mean, there's so many studies showing obesity alone is reason why there was high death and high hospitalizations with a ventilator. Okay, so outside of that, though, people your immune system is down, you have more missed workdays, or missed work days, which is costing the economy money, you have a higher propensity for diabetes, and all of those medications, hypertension, high cholesterol, depression, anxiety, we don't even care enough to get into the emotional and mental side of what obesity can cause. So overall, they were in this was probably several years ago, when that I saw these numbers, the cost of obesity was taking up about 56% of our total healthcare, that's just for obesity, because of all of the other sub-quella that it has with obesity and this, I use that number because that's the number I used back in the day to try to get bariatric surgery covered because it wasn't covered as readily. It's better, but we still have coverage issues. Ari Gronich: Alright, so, I want to do the numbers because I want people to kind of grasp the gravity, not just of the obesity, just of the cost of bad results, right? You think that it's costing you a lot to go into a physician, a doctor who actually gets the job done? Who is not taking maybe insurance, but is really about caring for you and your patients? Right? And then you go, but I can't afford you. I have to go to where the insurances and then you have to go to 15 people, you have streamlet high expenses. I find it fascinating that somebody can go in for an MRI without insurance and it costs $200 and they go in with insurance and it costs 1600 or 2000, or however much they decide to charge because the whole idea of insurance at the very beginning is we all pay into it. Cool, so that they negotiate better rates for us, right so that they are taking care of those kinds of things. And I think that people are in such a cognitive dissonance about what is really happening in the world around them like, well, they wouldn't, you know, choose money over, over my health, right? They wouldn't allow the system of medicine to be about that. And so there's this disbelief, even though we see after we see after we see the evidence that something is shifty is going on, right.Franchell Hamilton: Yeah, yeah, I agree. And just to kind of piggyback on that, a lot of people think that they're there, it's almost like insurance for them as a security blanket of some sort, when it's actually not doing anything for you. I mean, I get it, I was in that boat too, for a while, like, Oh, we have to have just in case just in case, in, we're pouring 1000s of dollars a month into insurance. And over time, it's changed right now, everybody not only has their high monthly premiums, but they have this huge deductible that they have to pay out. So they're paying high monthly premiums. And then when you come see me or whatever, Doctor, you owe me your deductible, so your insurance is not even covering that they don't kick in until after your deductible is met. Even when I had insurance, I got rid of it myself. You're right, that same scenario happened to me, I needed an MRI, because of my neck. And so I was gonna go and pay insurance. And I had to pay my deductible. They're like, Oh, you need to pay a $2500 deductible. And I was like, pin. And then my therapist, my chiropractor, he ordered it. He was like, you know, I just I know a cash place, go pay cash, and don't tell him you have insurance. And I went there those 350. And I'm like, why when I had insurance, I was gonna have to pay $2500 out of pocket with insurance. I go to another place and say no, I don't have insurance. And I paid 350. Like, what is wrong with this picture, we're actually paying more into the system with insurance than without insurance the same way with physicians, my rate to see me is the same rate that insurance charged for a deductible plan. And so they're not only paying me that, that they're paying, they're also paying their monthly fee, you know, so it's, it's crazy.Ari Gronich: Yeah, it's, it's intriguing to me, but it also intrigues me to the level at which I guess our industry just doesn't even pay attention or explain it or talk about it. Because to me, it's so obvious, right? If the only thing you did, as a scientist, as a medical scientist was look at the numbers of diabetes, of rates of autism, of rates of obesity, of rates of heart disease, right? You would say, Well, shit, we have all this new technology. But the results that we're getting are like 10 times worse than we were getting before we had all this technology. So you'd think that there'd be some cognitive awareness of this? So my question is, how do we bring back the cognitive awareness to people in their own profession? I mean, in their own world, so that it's not incumbent on the patients alone, to have to fight for their right to feel good?Franchell Hamilton: Yeah, yeah, I agree. And that was the problem. And I was a part of this, where I was completely clueless. I was completely clueless, because they didn't teach this to me in school. And I don't know if they taught it at the school you went to but believe it or not, in most healthcare, professional fools, they're not talking about this. And why would they talk about this, because, you know, this could potentially bring down insurance companies or whatever, I was just looking while you were talking, the gross domestic product for our first quarter was $22 trillion. And that's for to 2020. It has gone up, but it's gone up every year. And this was my kind of aha moment. So when I was giving you those numbers, this was probably back in 2018, or 19, when it was a little bit less, but it was still in the trillions. And so if you think 56% of OB takes 56% of that obesity takes up this $18 trillion number, how much we are spending because of obesity, and we're not doing anything. I mean, that was kind of my big thing. Like this person just paid $20,000 for the bariatric surgery, and they're back in here two years later, and now it's going to cost them 35 you know, because they have to have an extra hospital stay because now it's more complicated and the insurance are willing to dish this out. But when I requested that they see counseling or therapy or food addicts? You know, they denied that like, this does not make sense to me why as a country are we willing to spend money on stuff that may only band aid the problem, but we're not willing to spend money on things that will actually resolve the problem? I can't answer that, because I was blind to it also, because I didn't see it. And I don't even know what kind of the only reason why it was brought is because I want it better for my patients. Not everybody is like that some people are just happy going to work collecting, they're checking going home. And if that's the mentality, that they we will always have that system where our head is kind of down. And our blinders are on, because they're going to work the collecting their check, regardless of the healthcare profession. And they're not seeing this bigger picture. I think what helped me is because I was in private practice, I wasn't employed. But a lot of this, if you're in a hospital setting, or an employed setting, honestly, in the defensive providers, it's hard to see, because you have a patient who comes in with diabetes, you have 30 minutes to talk about their nutrition, prescribe some type of medication, and your hospital, or your clinic has already scheduled the next patient for you. So they've got to go. And that's all you see. And so awareness has to come from the people that are doing this, but only if they want to, like me and you talking about it can only help hopefully that helps people kind of think twice, especially providers that have been there in those employees conditions where their employer doesn't see this, they may not see this, you know,Ari Gronich: Right, I just, you know, I look back on this last year, and I go, what an amazing amount of opportunity got lost, because we weren't allowed to talk about building your immune system versus treating a disease, right, we weren't allowed to talk about the ways in which we develop a system that is immune to these kinds of things, because we're so healthy, and our healthy immune system takes care of this stuff like, Good, right. And so I'd like what a missed opportunity we had this last year. The positive, I think is that we've gotten the opportunity a little bit to recognize and to start building the numbers for what you were saying a little earlier, which is look at all the medical intervention that did not happen this year. And the deaths by medicine toll, how much that's dropped. And we'll we might if somebody is actually interested in doing this be able to figure out what really is the cost and the toll death toll wise and cost toll of medical intervention that's unnecessary. what's the overages of what we're doing that we should not be doing? And, and so I'm looking forward to seeing if that gets any play in the community, you know?Franchell Hamilton: Yeah, and I think it will. So I and that's one of the things like in my practice, I never did research. And I'm getting physicians, because I'm like, we need the data, the only way that we're going to be able to beat this thing is the data like in bariatric surgery, which is where I was for so many years, we have data on how bariatric surgery causes a decrease in diabetes, a decrease in hypertension, and how this is saving money, how much obesity is costing America and how we treat this right. So we have those numbers. But then that's it, it drops off, it doesn't talk about or show the aftermath, right? We hadn't even and I think part of it is because people don't want to, we did so much to kind of get it approved. And even my own community is not showing the data afterwards. Because once they get the surgery, that's it. There's no prevention, there's no once their diabetes has resolved. And that's what we're missing the boat. And part of that, believe it or not, is insurance, you're healthy, wanna pay for your one wellness visit a year in your lab work, and that's it. And then patients are left having to what do I do now as they're like medical problems and everything else is slowly increasing. We need data on what prevention does in the big picture. But what we do have data on and this is kind of what I'm trying to educate other physicians about is that every medical disease has increased since the beginning of time since 2000. Diabetes has increased, hypertension and cardiovascular disease has increased obesity has increased, yet, we're supposed to have some of the best health care in America. And we have all these technologies and all these great meds that have come out right these $1,000 meds that are treating epilepsy in cancer and heart disease. But yet the incidence is not going down. The incidence is not going down people because we're not doing prevention, because the focus is not on prevention. This is why the incidence is not going down. And I don't understand why anybody else is not seeing this. They do offer grants, which mean one of the companies that I'm working with digital health company, to increase access to kind of ask these questions, I will tell you what the pandemic I think, like you were alluding to help with open eyes, we had way more deaths than we should have, because of the pandemic because people were not healthy. And if we have the best expensive meds that everybody's paying for in the best health care of all these technologies, why do we have so many deaths, we have more deaths than some other underserved countries. So what, like what's going on there? So we need to start focusing on prevention. And I think, as the whole people are starting to see that now, I've seen more of a shift, kind of towards the end of this pandemic than I've seen before. So I think all of us like you like me, all of us who are like advocates of prevention, now is our time to try to make changes, policy changes come together, educate our other so I'm educating as many physicians as I can I host webinars, you know, conferences, I'm speaking at conferences, in order to cut these to get the word out conferences where it normally wasn't spoken about before. I think at this point, we as a medical society, all providers have to look at this and look at what happened this past year, and start scratching our head like something is not right. It shouldn't make everybody open their eyes this past year. Ari Gronich: Yeah, absolutely, I completely agree. Here's goes to the system, but it goes towards the fear side. So, yes, there are a lot of physicians like you who were blinded for a lot of years. But there's also a lot of physicians who have felt threatened. Right. So I'll give two examples. One is just there's approximately 70 plus holistic health practitioners who have been found, murdered, suicide, whatever, in like a very short period of time, it was like in a three year period of time, there was like 70, some odd, holistic health practitioners, many of them working on vaccine stuff, like the research and in vaccines, kind of interesting, because that ended right before COVID. And I didn't actually put that together until just now, but it's just a thing. So that and then the amount of like, we had a gynecologist in Orlando, who I met at a functional medicine training. And she had gotten, basically, her business completely shut down, she had gotten investigated by the AMA, she had gotten shut down by insurance companies, because what they consider to be the standard of care is if you're going into a gynecologist, you have four sessions that you could go in, where you either have to be prescribed a medicine or a procedure, if one of those two things is not done in four sessions, all of a sudden, you're not practicing in the standard of care. And she did that with a lot of her patients, because she was actually treating them holistically for whatever the ailments were that they were having. And so she had to, I mean, lose her entire practice. And so the fear factor, the only way, in my opinion, to alleviate fear is to become bigger than the bully. And the only way to become bigger than the bully is to get loud. And to bring a crowd. That's kind of where I'm looking at what you're wanting to do what I'm wanting to do a little bit. And so I want to talk to you about that. What do you say to those doctors who are doing frontier medicine, that are on the fringes of, of the new frontier? Really, it's frontier medicine for reason. They're doing the things that are getting the results that are currently not in the standard of care,they're afraid. What do you what do we tell them?Franchell Hamilton: So, you know, it's really unfortunate that this is happening. And that has happened to me, I've been under investigation, because I didn't want to practice the way other people were practicing. So I've been through it. And I think one of the things is you have to, from a physician standpoint, data will help you a provider standpoint. So if you can show data that it's working, that will help you in a courtroom, for example, the other thing is, in every provider knows this a consent and making sure your patients understand. So I've gotten sued, and I've gotten investigated, and I've gotten dissolved, like dismissed because I have consents, and I tell them, this is the way we're practicing. And honestly, at this point, I even tell them, if you don't like this practice, you know, there's other people that are practicing other ways. But this is the way we're going to do it in order to get you to your surgery, or in order to get you to your weight loss goal, because this is what I found has worked. And it's not your typical medicine. And so I make sure they all my patients sign a consent. And I have data. So I didn't put it in a research form. But my EMR tracks, right, you can track the bloodwork, you can track the weight, you can track there's so many different ways to track it without doing an official study. And so I didn't do a study. And that's why I'm encouraging my doctors that I kind of talked to, let's all put data together that shows and then publish it. We need to put data together and we need to publish it. And believe it or not, this is the way medicine used to be practiced. You experimented, you experimented. And that's how breakthroughs came. And now stuff is so regulated in the United States. I go to these international conferences, and some of these European countries are so far ahead of us, because it needs to be regulated. Let me not like take that away. But I mean, come on, you know, how do you think polio was discovered the vaccine for polio? I mean, some of these things were through experiments, and as long as you explain to the patient whoever you're treating, this is the way I'm going to do things, you have data showing their cholesterol numbers are going down. Because this I'm treating with tumeric. And I don't want to treat them with a static drug, you know what I'm saying. But I'm still getting the same results as your stat and drug by doing the things that I've, they do yoga twice a week, meditate every day for 10 minutes, and I'm giving them tumeric. And this is their cholesterol numbers, right? That will hold up in any investigation or suit as long as you can keep that data. So that's what I would tell to the doctors who are going through this, or providers, because I've been through it and I had that I had my data, I had consent. And I'm not giving up. If this is something that you're passionate about, then what you need to do is start bringing people in with you grabbing people that you know, that's also practicing this because as he stated, you stated, I mean, we're bigger in numbers. So now, a lot of my colleagues are no longer unfortunately, my surgical colleagues, but they're my colleagues that are practicing very similar to what I do. So guess what, when one of them gets investigated, they're gonna call me or their lawyer can call me as a witness or one of us, and I will write letters on their behalf, I will witness to them on behalf, we are much stronger, like you said, and numbers. That's the only way. I don't even know if we can do it with money, because I know this is completely off the topic, but that whole COVID vaccine thing. There was definitely money involved. I don't Bill Gates, I mean, all of a sudden, you know that some of that stuff seemed a little questionable, to be honest. Um, I there was money involved. We don't A lot of us don't have Bill Gates money, you know what I'm saying? So the only way we can kind of start defeating This is by speaking up, don't feel like don't let investigators, lawyers states, like, close your voice down. Because if you're doing things the right way, they can't do it. I mean, it's frustrating. And it's depressing during the time because I went through it. But if you're doing things the right way, you're getting your consents, you're slogging your data, they can't shut you down. I mean, they can't.Ari Gronich: Yeah, I've never been investigated. But I'm, I'm not a physician. Franchell Hamilton: It's higher among us because, you know, physicians, everybody's like, oh..Ari Gronich: There's more scrutiny, which is part of why I want to talk to that side of medicine, because, you know, I watch Zeedog MD, for instance. And he talks a lot about the moral dilemma that physicians are having, because they're being told to practice in a way that is not equivalent to the reason why they got into business, right, why they got into the industry. And I don't remember the exact term that he calls it the moral, something moral injury, it's moral injury. And knowing that he feels that way, he and I disagree, obviously, on a lot of the vaccine things and what he considers science and what I consider to be clinical evidence are very different. But I like the fact that he's willing to have the conversations and so like, I would want to have a conversation with him. And you. And then maybe Dave Asprey, you know, who knows, like somebody who's completely on the other side of the pie, and has his own science to back up what he's saying. And I'd love to have these kinds of discussions regularly with it, like within view of the world, right, so that people can see the differences, how much more similar they really are than differences, and then how we get to a kind of a consensus for practicing medicine in a way that actually gets the results that we want. Because really, that's at the end of the day, the only thing that matters, right?Franchell Hamilton: Yeah, I agree. And, and to talk about his moral injury, I mean, everybody talks about a kind of in the medical field, burnout, right? Like burnout is all of a sudden, significantly higher than perhaps 20, 30 years ago, you didn't really hear about it that much. I never heard about burnout in med school, like you know, or other people getting burned out. And that is why burnout is so high, because there's this mismatch on what a lot of providers or healthcare workers want to do. And what's happening even in nurses and you've probably talked to some nurses too, like I have worked with so many nurses who are just burnt out. And the reason they're burned out, most nurses are hospital employed, or for some type of facility employed, and that's not what they want it to do. That's not the way they wanted to practice. They truly want to help people. You know what I'm saying? And then you start to see like, we're not getting the results. We're not doing what I wanted to do, and that's where the burnout come, I got burned out because there was this mismatch in what I want it to do and what was happening. And boy did it hit hard. And so that's the reason so many healthcare workers are getting burned out is because we all live in a system where they're saying healthcare is this, and a lot of us are waking up and realizing, but that's not helping, you know. And so if there needs to be a revolution in healthcare, and I'll be the first to talk to whoever will hear me talk about this revolution, because we're not getting the job done. Our medical problems are increasing,and we're not doing anything about them.Ari Gronich: And so for me, I feel like right now we're on a 19, or like an 1890s 1800, steam train. Right, and we're going Chug, chug, chug. And what I'm wanting to see is Ilan Musk's mag train going through the boring tunnels, right? And so bridging the gaps, I'm going to go really far back to where we were at the beginning of that conversation, bridging the gaps between the speed at which change looks like it wants to happen, because of the powers that be, and the possibility of what can happen if we have the movement with a leader that is like an Elan Musk, that is like, somebody who's there going, Okay, we're about to do this thing. Let's go, there's no option no stop in us, you know, like Kennedy saying, we're going to the moon by the end of the decade. There's no question, like, make that happen. Right. So if we were to do that, what do you see the steps are to making that happen faster? If you could, like, if you could imagine a sped-up version of what you thought was gonna happen? And then we could kind of plan that out? What would that look like?Franchell Hamilton: So kind of, like you said, We need somebody who's already well known, already well recognized, to be an ear. And, and to also identify and be on the same page as what this movement is about. And to be honest, I think I think we have a couple candidates. And Amazon, for example, they announced a couple years ago, they're over the way the healthcare is being practiced, and they want it to do their own health care, you model, you know, and so these big corporations, I just saw thing about JP Morgan, they want to do, you need to find these companies, we all need to find these companies who want these big changes and who get it right. And then we need them to help us because they already have the clout, they already have the ear of America, to kind of say, this is what needs to happen. Oprah would be a great person, I'm still working on that, I'm gonna get up, I'm still working on that. So somebody like that, who's like, this is the way we need to change the way healthcare is done. And then she will have this movement of people who was already on board. So I think that's what we need to kind of bridge the gap, somebody who has the power in that can be a listening ear to all of these, our voices to say, and they don't even have to do it, right. There's enough of us on the ground level that can take it where it needs to go. But we need somebody who's going to listen and help kind of drive this force, because right now, you have the providers and all the providers and we're a big force if we work together, but we need somebody bigger, honestly, to be able to kind of compete, because once we do that, and when we do this, we're competing with the big pharma companies. We're competing with insurance companies, we're competing with a lot of Congress and Senate, people who honestly, they all have nice pockets, and they don't want things to change, to be honest. So you have to have somebody who has as much power with the crowd who can come back that because right now we have work competing with pharma, and insurance come billion and trillion dollar companies who likes everything to stand or wraps. If I publish an article or almost like some of those healthcare workers you were talking about, there's people more powerful than us, that can make things disappear. You know, so we need someone or a group of powerful people who understand the way healthcare is who have nothing to lose, and they can compete with those bigger companies. So that's what we need. I'm actively working on getting bigger companies involved when the digital company that I'm working with is talking to Walmart. I just got an email a couple days ago saying JP Morgan is looking for a change. So when we get This is part of the digital health arena, because this is also how we can reach more people, right? So once we see these us on this level need to jump on that, and how do we get at least in the door with their whoever their health and wellness coordinator is right, every major company has one of those, you have to start with that and then maybe move your way up.Ari Gronich: Unfortunately, not every single major company has one of those. You know, that's kind of my part of my bailiwick, like I was 18, starting three of the first corporate wellness programs in the country, because my school backed up to Intel, Nike and Tektronix, in Beaverton, Oregon, and I was like, Oh, well, we need to bring people to our clinic. So let's just bring our clinic to them. I've done a lot of corporate wellness programs, a lot of consulting with companies. And unfortunately, the majority still do not have a corporate wellness program, what they have what they consider to be that is, they have a health fair twice a year, or they have a few booths with vendors, and then they give flu shots. And maybe they have an on-call psychologist, you know, where you call in to psychology department or something. But yeah, the creating a complete culture of wellness and accompany is definitely one of my bailiwick's that I wish I had more companies that would say, yes, easily to that possibility. But I do agree that the company's you know, here's the thing, following the money are the companies tied to the insurance companies in any way other than that, and typically they are through investment. And because the investment is from the insurance companies, it's really hard for them to do anything that's really going to get their employees well, so they could do a lot of treatment stuff, a lot of educational stuff, not a lot of policies in place to make it happen. And that's definitely an area where I would like to see shifted and changed. You know, we were talking a little bit earlier, you said, you know how burnout is I remember going into good Samaritan Hospital back in the late 90s, and early 2000s. And they still were on 30 something hour shifts. So they, you know, if you got a surgery at the 28th hour, and it was a 15 hour surgery, you were on for 40 something hours, I mean, some of the most unhealthy people I ever met. And it was a shame, because there's some of the kindest, most loving, giving people, get treated really poorly. And so that's part of the thing is, if we made the system a little bit better, and people were less sick, then the health care workers would have less moral injury, because they'd be doing the thing that they signed up for. And people would be treating them? Well, because they're not the what I would call the sounding board for the administration, for the insurance companies, they're, you know, like, the physicians, the providers have been the sounding board for all the complaints of their patients instead of who's really at fault, or who's really, you know, at cause. So let's, let's wrap up with, I want some positives in this as well, as far as like, I want, you know, things that the audience can do immediately if, especially if they're physicians, but if they're not, that they could do immediately to shift the way that they're getting health care. And some of those behaviors and mindset more to prevention versus, you know, reaction.Franchell Hamilton: Yeah. And, you know, I'll piggyback to and I'll make sure I answer that, because we are kind of like this digital health company that I'm working with. And I have a couple of investments in a couple of them. And there have been some leeway on that area, because a lot of them want kind of digital health. And they have the way we're pitching it to them. Kind of like what I started earlier is if your employees are healthier, they can give you more work days, they don't have to have as much time off from work they don't have so it's benefits you to kind of implement these wellness programs. And so like I said, we have entered into Walmart which surprisingly their chief health officer is very open to the idea of integrative changes. We're still Working with we're working with them. And then other companies such as share-care, which are kind of in a lot of there are people in there are people making, we're making some leeway. But you're right about the train, right, it's Chugga chugga. But I will say at least it's not stopped, like, we're, we're moving, we're moving along slowly, I think it needs to get implemented much quicker. But because of a lot of the regulations, and the pocket, the insurance has such deep roots with so many companies like you just did it, like they're investing in other companies. And that kind of keeps everything at bay and kind of this vicious cycle. It's gonna take some time, but I think a lot of people's eyes kind of got opened after this pandemic. One of the things for physicians, I would say, in order to shift this mindset, if you feel like remember the reason why you went into medicine, first of all, and if you feel like when you see your patients on a regular basis, they're not improving, you have to consider why what other factors maybe the reasons for them not improving, and honestly, you'll give my information out. But this is kind of one of the things that I do now I help physicians kind of help figure this out, because they're all getting frustrated. And so it's like, let's take a look at how the way your practice is set up. And your assessment as a physician, we need to ask patients more questions, right? Like we I'm over the, what's your chief complaint, family history, medical history? Do you smoke? Like, that's fine, we'll get all that. But we need to truly ask our patients, how are they doing? Like, how are you doing? Like, we need to get a feel of where they are at emotionally, mentally. And to be honest, that takes up a lot of time. So physicians that are employed may not want to do that, then create an assessment that does it create a questionnaire that acts that you'd be surprised if you're seeing diabetic patients. When I switched up my questions the way I asked the questions instead of just prescribing them a regimen. Let's take diabetes, for example. They come in and I'm like, oh, you're diabetic? Here is a med or insulin. And here is your nutrition or diet that you're supposed to be on? I'll see you in two to three weeks, right? You need to start asking, Can they even afford that? To be honest? What do they normally like to eat, you almost need to cater more to the patient and work with them as a partner, not as like a doctor kind of throwing out orders and then you expect them to do it. One of the reasons why our healthcare is not working is because we're putting demands on patients. And then we expect them to do that. And then when they come back the expectations aren't there. And then we were like, Well, why is your numbers not down? or Why didn't you exercise? or Why? And we didn't even ask them? How are they doing? How do can even do what we're asking them to do? That needs to be your question, if you're going to prescribe them some type of treatment plan, and it doesn't even have to be a medication you need to ask your patient, do you think you can do this? What do you think you can do to help bridge the gap? This is my goal for you. And this is where you are. So here are some options as the physician, what are some things that you think you can do for us to help bridge the gap? That needs to be the question you ask not just medical history, here is what the American Heart Association, American Diabetes Association says. And I'll see you in three weeks. So that is what I want to offer to providers in general, nutritionist, therapists, chiropractors, I mean, there's several people, we're all in this trying to defeat this together, show them help them understand they have to understand so many patients don't even understand go to their doctor, and then they don't even know why they're started on this or what medical problem they have. That was always so frustrating for me. Make sure your patient understands what they have. I mean, come on, you know, that's number one, and then make sure they understand what your goal is for them. Right as the physician or provider, what is your goal, and then you guys have to work together to meet in the middle. That's number one. Number two for the patient. Patients need to demand more, you need to demand better. And I have told my patients to like what do you want x? What do you want patient just like the same way physicians need to provide Why did I Why am I in medicine, if it's to collect a check, you're in the wrong field, go to admin. If you're doing patient care, you need to meet in the middle with your patient and for my patients. They're so quick to just go in, get their meds or get their refills and then leave and I'm like you need to demand more. This is your health. This is your body. This is your mind, body soul. What do you want for your mind, body and soul, I always tell my patients health is not absence of disease, you need to be whole healthy whole socially, mentally and in the body. So when you think of you need to think of health that way. And if you feel like you are not getting what you need, you need to start looking for ways to get what you need. So much stuff is done virtually now. So even if your primary care doctor, they provide her meds or whatever, but they're not, but you feel like you're not getting some of the other things that you need. Go online. There's a whole host of integrative you can use integrative medicine, lifestyle, medicine, functional medicine, you can use those terms and find people that you can treat virtually the pandemic has helped people like me treat people all over. So we're not limited now to just I'm not limited to just Dallas Fort Worth, I can treat people all over, you know what I'm saying. And so for patients, if you feel like when you're leaving your physician office, and you're not getting what you want out of that you need to find another physician, you're not married to that physician, and you need to consider if your insurance won't cover it, paying out of pocket long term to pay for your health, your health is an investment, it is the most important investment you will ever make. It is more important than your house, your car, what other people spend on money, your health is more important. So spending an extra 100 or 200 a month is nothing that's groceries or half of groceries for most people, you know what I'm saying? So you need to take time and invest in your health, that's the most important investment. You cannot have joy, peace, happiness, and all these other things that we strive to have or even help others if your health is compromised. So spend the investment. So those were kind of the closing points that I would tell both those patients and physicians.Ari Gronich: One last closing point is what would you say to the system as it is? As it's going away?Franchell Hamilton: That's a good question. Um, I would say that for sure the current system, we, we need to make changes we need what we're doing is not working. And I would be happy to see a transformation in our healthcare system to something that's going to resolve medical problems. So I am happy to see it go away in order to revolutionize healthcare and heal our patients in America. So that's and I feel like our current medical system is actually preventing us from being able to actually heal, not just treat that heal and resolve medical problems and make people truly healthy the definition of health.Ari Gronich: Awesome. Thank you so much for being here. I am so glad to have you on. And I know that the audience has gotten a lot out of this conversation, hopefully enough that they'll start acting upon it. We can all create a new tomorrow and activate our vision for a better world. Thank you so much for being here. I appreciate you having me. Thank you. Got it. Thank you so much. Audience I appreciate you listening in. This is our garage and it
The latest episode of the Celtic Down Under podcast is now available. On this podcast Jarrod Sean & John discuss the following topics:* Ange & Dom's press conferences they had last Friday with the MSM & Fan Media* Rumoured incomings & departures at Celtic Park * Discuss the leaked Celtic home & third kits* And MorePlease check out our website www.celticdownunder.com for articles & our podcast back catalogueWe appreciate your support as always. Please subscribe to the Celtic Down Under Podcast via your podcast app
Combat mode engaged! As Anton makes his presence known on board the speeding train, the rest of the crew finally gets down to business. We've got dueling hackers, desperate sprints to hop on a moving train, and lots and lots of looking up the rules to make sure we're doing this thing right. Oh, and the ever present threat of the Dove of Peace ready to turn everything to goo just as soon as it figures out what's going on. If you thought the crew of the Admiral Grace was incompetent last time, just wait till you hit play on part 2 of this epic combat!If you enjoy the show, please follow us on your favorite platform for new episodes every Wednesday. We also love seeing your 5 star reviews over on Apple Podcast; it really helps us spread the word and find even more fantastic audience members just like you. You can check us out online at www.astronomicapodcast.com; here you'll find links to all of our social media as well as an open invite to our Discord server. If you have questions, comments, or general observations you can check us out on our subreddit at /r/AstronomicaPodcast or email them to astronomicapodcast@gmail.com. And finally, if you have enjoyed this show and wish to provide support in a monetary manner, you can check out our Patreon at patreon.com/AstronomicaPodcast. Not only will you enjoy the warm fuzzy feeling of helping us foot production costs, you'll also find a number of fantastic extra perks plus get bragging rights with all your nerdiest friends. Thanks as always for listening and we'll see ya next week!The theme music for our show includes recordings from the Hubble telescopeEditing done by Kristen Schebler
Beep beep! What's that? A brand new episode just touched down for landing? What's that?! Planes don't beep? I don't know a lot about planes?? Yeah that checks out. Anywhoosles, this week hosts Courtney and Alissa lay down on the big leather sofa to talk to a counselor all about mental health, the stigmas surrounding it, and what we can do about it. And it's not just any counselor, but Alissa's sister Gabby! So buckle up, cause we're pulling out of mental health station! Next stop, validating your feelings and growing overall as a person! What's that? Planes don't leave a station? Chugga chugga chugga chugga chugga chugga choo chooo!! We hit on some heavy topics in this episode and if you listen to the end, we have some resources listed out. Here they are as well: National Suicide Prevention Hotline- 1-800-273-8255 La Country Dept of Mental Health - dmh.lacounty.gov 24/7 hotline - 1-800-854-7771 or text LA to 741741 Want to join in the challenge? Head over to Instagram or Facebook @smilingthroughtheconfusion to let us know! DM us anytime with any questions, comments, or ideas for new episodes. We'd love to hear from you!
This Week: Homework [Fonso]: The Founder (2016) Extra Credit [Harley]: Open Range (2003) Next Week: Homework [MCP]: The Sea of Trees (2015) Extra Credit [Fonso]: High Fidelity (2000)
Vaccine Jingle: The word is out that Jim and Them released a banger of a jingle for the vaccine and now Offspring has decided to throw their hat in the ring.Chet Hanks: Chet doing what he does, getting everyone riled up and looking for attention.FOOD WARS: The great cookie war of 2021 is upon us and we break down donuts and pastries for your bitch ass.BIFF TANNEN!, LORRAINE YOU'RE MY GIRL!, BACK TO THE FUTURE!, ZACK SNYDER'S JUSTICE LEAGUE!, SUCKS DICK!, PATREON!, SYMPATHY!, YEARS REMOVED!, UNDERDOG!, NOT OK!, MOTHER BOX!, AMAZON!, YOUTUBE!, LIKE!, SUBSCRIBE!, COMMENT!, TIKTOK!, ASSTERPIECE!, YEEHAWKINS!, BURPS!, COMPILATION!, FARTS!, VACCINE'D UP JINGLE!, DARKWING DUCK!, JOE BIDEN!, DR. FAUCI!, ANTI-VAX!, THE OFFSPRING!, KEEP EM SEPARATED!, GO GET VACCINATED!, OFFICIAL!, DEXTER!, NOODLES!, PENNYWISE!, BRO HYMN!, PUNK SONGS!, PRETTY FLY FOR A VAX GUY!, CRAZY TAXI!, PRE AND POST VACCINE!, STERILE!, CHET HANKS!, WHITE BOY SUMMER!, SELF AWARE!, BOMBOCLAT!, FEELING!, NASCAR!, TRUMP!, JON B!, JACK HARLOW!, EPSTEIN!, HIP HOP!, BLACK BOY WINTER!, LUMPED!, VAPID!, NONSENSE!, EGOMANIAC!, POSITIVITY!, IMPAULSIVE!, LOGAN PAUL!, LOGANG!, WHAT'S POPPIN!, LIL WAYNE!, DABABY!, QANON!, CONSPIRACIES!, JIMMY FALLON!, BACKGROUNDS!, CHIPS AHOY!, OREO'S!, CHEWY!, DIP!, NUTTER BUTTER!, EL FUDGE!, SAMOA!, PREMIUM COOKIES!, GIRL SCOUTS!, DOUBLE STUFF!, STUFF!, OOPS ALL STUFF!, DONUTS!, KRISPY KREME!, HOT BAGEL!, CREAM FILLED!, JELLY DONUT!, CINNAMON ROLL!, STICKY BUNS!, HONEY BUN!, GAS STATION FOOD!, MUNCHKINS!, DONUT HOLES!, POPPABLE!, RITZ CRACKERS WITH CHEESE!, BIG LEAGUE CHEW!, WARM OTTER POP!, CHUGGA!You can find the videos from this episode at our Discord RIGHT HERE!
Russ and Zoe Ellis – Oom Chugga Remix Challenge, Songs From the Garden - As his daughter Zoe would say, Russ’ album is more than just him finding his songwriting voice at 85, it’s his celebration of learning and doing. He is a participator in life and a connector of humans. Get on Berkeley Cat records berkeleycatrecords.com/category/russ-ellis This father-daughter duo joins us to discuss new songs, family ties, participating and enabling participation. chimed in, his Berkeley Cat Records produced Oom Chugga Remix #4. Oom Chugga Remix bassist and friend chimed in as well to complete the old “back yard crew”. Pete A Turner, Jon Leon Guerrero and the Break It Down Show proudly present family. Check out the LIVE! version of the - Please support the Break It Down Show by doing a monthly subscription to the show All of the money you invest goes directly to supporting the show! Haiku Oom Chugga Remix Joined the creative forces That's a gift to Russ Similar episodes: - - - Join us in supporting Save the Brave as we battle PTSD. Executive Producer/Host: Pete A Turner Producer: Damjan Gjorgjiev The Break It Down Show is your favorite best, new podcast, featuring 5 episodes a week with great interviews highlighting world-class guests from a wide array of shows.
Hello and welcome to our conversation about S13E10 - Wayward Sisters! What's that, you remember us covering Wayward Sisters before? Well, we did, but we're doing it again for a couple of reasons. The big one is that we didn't really have the context to talk about the episode at the time it came out, since we were way back in S6, and we didn't really get into the details of the episode like we're doing nowadays. Don't worry, I checked, and we only repeated about 60% of our jokes. Monster of the Week is on Patreon (https://patreon.com/monsteroftheweek)! If you want to directly support the show and ensure we keep putting out that sweet hashtag content week to week, consider pledging. You get some sweet rewards like early access to weekly episodes, access to our Discord, exclusive podcasts, and more! Monster of the Week is also on Twitter (https://twitter.com/motwcast), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/monsteroftheweekpodcast/), and Tumblr (https://monsteroftheweekpodcast.tumblr.com/). Jeremy is on Twitter (https://twitter.com/jggreer), and you probably shouldn't follow him unless you know what you're doing. Chris is on Twitter (https://twitter.com/localbones), and you probably should follow him if you like #hunks and #swords. Like that intro? The music was done by our friend bansheebeat (https://twitter.com/bansheetweet), who has done all of our fancy intros over the last couple of years. Go check out his music! The vocals are by Alice Does Karate (https://aliceknowskarate.bandcamp.com/), a wonderful singer that didn't even bat an eye at the words "no one's really sure who's nutting blud today." Mark of a true professional. We also made an entire music video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LNjbrC1S-CI) for it. It's awesome. Please watch.
This week we have an episode with more trains than Atlas Shrugged! Eden tells the tale of two boys on a railroad track and the worst medical examiner ever. Later, Nicole tells us about a mysterious light that loves trains more than a two-year-old loves tantrums! These are the stories of Don Henry and Kevin Ives and The Gurdon Light!
Chugga-chugga-choo-choo bone ponies! All aboard the Railroad campaign! That's right! Get ready to make no decisions that actually matter as your characters are reduced from mightly heroes to sidekicks for the overpowered and overly present DMPC. Perhaps you'd rather lose all sense of enjoyment and purpose as the Game Keeper drags you forcefully through their confusing and barely intriguing novel! Many have horror stories of such Railroading while others, even among the wise, claim it is a necessary evil. Come on down and listen to find out how to accomplish goals as a DM or set necessary plot points without steamrolling your players and running right off the tracks. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/curgan-ruinkeeper/support
Chugga-chugga choo-choo, there's a gruesome murder that needs solving!
It's game night at Mindy's gingerbread mansion, and a rip roaring round of "What's that Sound" is on the menu. All goes well until Guy Raz begs to end the game as the "sounds" are more than his ears can handle! Why is it that certain sounds cause some people's brains to go bonkerballs? It's the Who, What, When, Where, Why, How, and Wow in the world of misophonia!
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Join us for a bonus episode in the form of a minisode! Today we travel to Vancouver and make a stop at Waterfront Station to learn about the Headless Brakeman!Resources:https://www.ghostsofvancouver.com/haunted-locations/waterfront-station/ https://www.mint.ca/store/coins/haunted-canada-brakeman-2015-prod2500025 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Character Collective - Writing Words and Character Conversations
NaNoWriMo - Day 17: Did you know that the 'win' ratio on NaNoWriMo is about 12%. Phew! Welcome to our NaNoWriMo Special Edition episode of the Character Collective. This is Episode #17 - Chugga chugga chugga chugga toot toot! Get your free NaNoWriMo Personal Planner Word Count Tracker here: http://kaiparker.com/podcast Join NaNoWriMo here: www.nanowrimo.org Join our NaNoWriMo support group here: https://nanowrimo.org/writing-groups/character-collective Follow our NaNoWriWro Pinterest Boards here: https://www.pinterest.com.au/Character_Collective_Podcast Listen to our Spotify NaNo Playlists here: https://open.spotify.com/user/18069jnk4jhf971xwjxsgxaw3 How are you doing with your Nanowrimo project? Let us know. Send your words and art to character.collective.podcast@gmail.com Subscribe/like/follow/favorite... do the thing because we two writers and our characters need to know you like us. Please like us! Haha. Share too, because sharing is caring... or something like that. Visit Kristy at www.kristywestaway.com Visit Kai at www.kaiparker.com and www.pjsilva.com Thank you to the following for making this podcast episode look and sound a little better! Podcast logo art by @jayiisnthome Music: Liturgy Of The Street by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/charactercollective/message
We may not know who the next President of the United States is yet when we go live Friday night at 10pm Eastern, but we know that #sonoflibertyradio will be live.Kansas City is looking at banning flavored reduced risk products that help smokers stop. Oregon voters pass a tax on their fellow citizens who want to improve their life with THR vape products. In Colorado, you can buy MJ but voters decided to tax e-cigarettes to help fund youth substance abuse education programs. Idaho dental hygienist claims vaping worsens Covid-19 risk. The government of the Ukraine differentiates heated tobacco products and vaping liquid from other tobacco products. Hollywood director uses vaping as a joke in film. Humans demand animal testing of vape products end, animals fight to stop human testing. Kiwis more attracted to criminals than smokers(that means you Aussies might have a chance). Altria take a hit on Juul market value. All of that and Yolande Jeffares is coming to talk about the "EN ZED".This will be a fun show so come and hang with us Friday night at 10pm Eastern on Twitter, YouTube and Twitter
Chugga chugga toot toot! In this episode Kyle has us racing from post office box to model car. Sky goes over everything trains while Tim somehow miraculously runs into video games, again. Subscribe in iTunesListen on Stitcher Radio
DATS Life goes back to their roots in this episode by quizzing themselves to find out how much of an "A" hole Tom and Dave really are with some surprising results!Dave also talks about his trip to the zoo (amazing!) and a trip down musical memory lane. Whereas Tom has some life changing news! This and much more on the latest episode of DATS Life! The greatest podcast you didn't know you needed to listen to.Also, in a world first - this episode of DATS LIFE has been edited entirely by Dave. So expect strange things going on with the sound! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Thanks for tuning in to dood for thought! keep it locked to our Instagram for fresh news and updates as we are making some fundamental changes in the near future, and as always thanks for listening!
Jisne chonch Di hai wo chugga bhi dega | जिसने चोंच दी है वो चुग्गा भी देगा --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/suren-alambaan/message
On this weeks episode of KMWSU! the boys drink beer mocktails, we dive deeper into the world of Captalan, plus discuss Nick Cannon’s worst live regrets. Plus music from German punk rock band Bad Advice! BIG UPS TO DEUTSCHLAND! Continue Reading → The post KMWSU! S4E23 – Chugga Chug. appeared first on Moot.tv.
On this weeks episode of KMWSU! the boys drink beer mocktails, we dive deeper into the world of Captalan, plus discuss Nick Cannon's worst live regrets. Plus music from German punk rock band Bad Advice! BIG UPS TO DEUTSCHLAND! Continue Reading → The post KMWSU! S4E23 – Chugga Chug. appeared first on Moot.tv.
4 - 29 - 20 REMEMBERING KYLES CHUGGA CHOO CHOO CALL by Maine's Coast 93.1
Quarantine Life: Are we used to this yet? The life of isolation, gloves, masks and spraying Lysol everywhere.Post Coronavirus World: We discuss the possibilities around our upcoming trip, we also watch the Dean of NYU Tisch and her reaction to students requesting refunds.Corey Feldman: Corey checks in to make sure everyone is holding up during the Coronavirus but more importantly complain about his film being available for free on Youtube.HOW STRAIGHT ARE YOU!?, PORN!, NOT THAT STRAIGHT!, TIGER KING!, LADIES AND GERMS!, NATIVE AMERICANS!, WORLDSTAR COMMENTS!, TRUMP ATE A BAT!, PIZZA!, HANDS!, OFFICIAL PODCAST OF THE QUARANTINE!, OFFICIAL PODCAST OF THE CORONAVIRUS!, TRUMPULUS!, DD BOIS!, CHECK PAPER BOI!, GIG WORKERS!, UNEMPLOYMENT!, PAID AND LAID!, UNLOAD ON LISTENERS!, DISCORD!, BACKWARDS FITTED!, FRED DURST!, HITLER!, STACHE!, LONG BOYS!, SHOGUN!, YOUTUBE!, BEER!, CHUG!, CHUGGA!, CORONAVIRUS!, FLU!, NOVEMBER!, SICK!, POKEFLU!, UGANDA PSA!, VIETNAM!, POTENTIAL VICTIM!, UNDER THE SEA!, DRAKE!, GIGGS!, QUARANTINE!, GLOVES!, MASKS!, SKATEBOARDING!, BLOOD BROTHERS!, CAT FOOD!, BUSSES!, PURELL!, MASKS!, BIRD MASKS!, THROW DIRT IN THEIR FACE!, SLIPKNOT!, JERKING THE BEAK OFF!, US THE MOST CASES!, GOVERNOR!, BAIL OUT!, TOKYO!, JAPAN!, TRIP!, OUTLOOK NOT GOOD!, AIRLINES!, REFUNDS!, BULLSHIT!, FLY SOMEWHERE!, DOMESTIC!, FIRST CLASS!, TAX DOLLARS!, HILTON!, LET IT RIDE!, ROULETTE!, GAMBLE!, THE RUSH!, SUPER CHINESE!, NYU TISCH SCHOOL OF ARTS!, DEAN!, DANCE!, ALLYSON GREEN!, REM!, LOSING MY RELIGION!, DANCE WITH ME!, HIPPY DIPPY SHIT!, GUILLOTINE!, COMEDY CHARACTERS!, REAL LIFE!, TOO BROAD!, RHONDA FROM GREASE!, RESPECT!, RIZZO!, FISH EYES!, MYSTIKAL!, THAT'S THAT BULLSHIT!, SYNC UP!, JABBAWOCKEEZ!, COREY HAIM!, U R FREE!, PEE IS POOP!, DOC!, HIGH!, MONEY!, MASK!, ILLEGAL!, PIRACY!, WOLF PACK!, RISKING THEIR LIVES!, PETER PAN!, MONETIZED!, IT GUYS!, SEX PERVERT!, SCAM!, REFUNDS!, KREAYSHAWN!, LIL DEBBIE!, V NASTY!, SPIRITUALLY!, GOD!, BIBLE!, EATEN BY DOGS!, SATAN!You can find the videos from this episode at our Discord RIGHT HERE!
O papo dessa semana vai viajar pra Ásia pra entender um pouco mais sobre a música, cultura e comportamento da sociedade sul-coreana. Quer participar dessa conversa? Oga Mendonça e Hel Mother vão bater um papo com elas que entendem tudo do assunto: Carol Chugga, fotógrafa, youtuber e kpopper e Mandy Candy, youtuber e streamer. Vem com a gente!
Robert's pony villagers have finished their tasks, Kelsey picks up her toys so she won't burn to death in the night, we make room in our homes and our hearts for hobbies old and new. Our theme song is "The Grim Reaper Blows the Horn" by Firage. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Visit YMBToAP on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram
Chugga chugga chugga chugga, choo choo. Choo choo Story chugga chugga choo CHOO! Story chugga choo, Story chugga chugga. Train whistle! Train whistle, Story! Heh, chugga choooo. Invocation The Rite of the Blessing Hose Liturgical Reading: “Come on Ride a Train” Concluding Prayer This is likely the last of our refurbished Stories from the apocrypha of season 1. Embrace it like your son returned to you after six years exile. Next week, we'll have something sweet and new, ooh, and your son will leave you again.
This episode deals primarily with two young bois, wee Dave and Lil’ Joel, and their personal betrayals by two once-revered and beloved bands: Tool and Metallica. “I Am A Little Water Boy” by Fish Friends Delta Blues Email Readin’s How much money do you think Tool has? Comparing and contrasting Jimmy Eat World and Tool […]
Read It On Reddit - Chugga Chuggas Ask Reddit - Quantity Over Quality - Fast Walker Society Today I Learned - Legal Loophole Shower Thoughts - Ultimate Aquatic Experience - Signature - Connected Podnapping - Karaok Big E Podcast AMA - readitpodcast@gmail.com - Ask Us Anything! :)
Read It On Reddit - Chugga Chuggas Ask Reddit - Quantity Over Quality - Fast Walker Society Today I Learned - Legal Loophole Shower Thoughts - Ultimate Aquatic Experience - Signature - Connected Podnapping - Karaok Big E Podcast AMA - readitpodcast@gmail.com - Ask Us Anything! :)
LOBBY SHOW: We are broadcasting LIVE from our hotel lobby, because Jim and Them is across the pond and ACTING AS IF, how long will it last? Disneyland Paris: Not only did we make the trek to London, but we also flew in the wee hours of the morning to Paris to visit a THEME PARK! Tales From London: We got the rundown on an American podcast travelling through the streets of London! New friends, new frenemies, and lots of drinks! NO SOUNDBOARD!, ROAD SHOW!, LONDON!, DOUBLETREE HILTON!, TOWER OF LONDON!, LOBBY SHOW!, ACT AS IF!, BBC AMERICA!, VICE!, BUTTERY!, PATREON COWBOY!, SOUTHERN ACCENT!, BRITISH MCDONALDS!, ALABAMA!, TIME ZONES!, JAKOB BURROWS!, GREENWICH MEANTIME!, ADAM AND EVE!, FANNY PACK!, BUM BAG!, SFO!, SAN FRANCISCO AIRPORT!, ENEMIES!, LAX!, DELAY!, UNITED!, INTERNATIONAL!, FOREIGNERS!, RUDE!, PUSHING!, PERSONAL SPACE!, PLEASE!, AIRPORT!, JOHNNY CARSON!, ED MCMAHON!, YES!, HIYO!, UBERXL!, FISH AND CHIPS!, MAYFAIR CHIPPY!, CHUGGA!, BLAND!, FLAVOR!, EXECUTIVE LOUNGE!, ZECKY!, DIAMOND STATUS!, STELLA!, ROOM 420!, SAVAGE GARDEN!, ROOFTOP BAR!, COCKTAIL!, FLIPPING!, COINS!, CURRENCY!, POUNDS!, PO BOY!, SUBS!, SHRIMP!, UBER!, LASZLO!, TALLEST UBER DRIVER!, HUNGARIAN!, CIGAR!, FIRST CLASS!, ACT AS IF!, FRENCH!, LATE NIGHT!, JET SETTING!, FRENCH SCUM!, ASSIGNED SEATS!, PUSHY!, RUDE!, BULLET TRAIN!, DISNEYLAND PARIS!, HOLLYWOOD STUDIOS!, TOWER OF TERROR!, ROLLER COASTERS!, MILITARY DISCOUNT!, MARVEL LIVE!, CAPTAIN MARVEL!, HIGHER FURTHER FASTER!, AEROSMITH!, ROCK AND ROLLER COASTER!, TRAM TOUR!, CASTLE!, BIG THUNDER MOUNTAIN!, HYPERSPACE MOUNTAIN!, CRUSH’S COASTER!, RATATOUILLE!, TRAIN DELAY!, TGV!, CDG AIRPORT!, POLITE!, MANNERS!, PASSIVE AGGRESSIVE!, LEBOOMY!, SOUNDCLOUD!, MANIAC!, CRAZY PERSON!, TATTOO!, SHIT ARTIST!, SCAM!, TEACHING A KID TO SKATE!, CHARLES DICKENS MUSEUM!, MAIDEN TOUR!, CALLE!, FLAKE!, NO SHOW!, PASSPORT!, CHRIS COALES!, PICCADILLY CIRCUS!, IRISH PUB!, NICKY COALES!, COALES BROTHERS!, NIKOLA!, BOOK OF MORMON!, THAI FOOD!, M&M STORE!, LAS VEGAS ARCADE!, WORLD OF LEGO!, PIZZA!, LEANING TOWER OF PISA!, TRAFALGAR SQUARE!, SUNDAY ROAST!, DRINKING GAMES!, RULES!, SWEARING!, LAST NAMES!, GOD SAVE THE QUEEN!, LONDON CALLING!, CIDER!, WHISKEY!, NICK GARD!, FRIENDS!, SHITTY!, UNIMPRESSED!, BACK TO REALITY!, HANDSOME LAD!, CONTEXT!, DRUNK!, DANCING!, FLOSSING!, MACCAS!, MCDONALDS!, I’M AMERICAN!, RICKSHAW!, SNORING!, SNEEZING!, HOMELESS MAN!, SHOWDOWN!, WHORE SPITTAL!, HOSPITAL!, OLIVER TWIST!, BUCKINGHAM PALACE!, CAMDEN MARKET!, SODAS!, WATER!, CUT BOIS!, NO FORESKIN!, YOU KNOW THIS!, SMELL YOUR COCK!, NEW FRIENDS!, FAVORITE PART OF THE TRIP! CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD JIM AND THEM #587 RIGHT HERE!
Bane of My Life -Tales of triumphs and toil from two decades in UK punk.
Holy Smokes BoML fans it’s the Tinman, legendary content creator and a big noise in the North Wales Punk Rock scene (NWPR) that The Kirkz were lucky enough to ghost in and out of back in the naughty noughties. Always a man in demand Ton’s drummed in several Kick-ass outfits such as Seize the Day, Instant Agony and Face of Christ. Now, with his partner in crime, Steve Brute, they’re smashing out bitesize hardcore gold in Chugga. The one true Chugga. If that’s not enough he’s hosting YouTube Horror-score Vinyl show Splattered Plastic and making screened documentaries, including one about NWPR if my plan to guilt him back into action worked here. Final word from me, released an Episode in Jan from Pressure Drop studios in Stockport, we’re rocking that place at their Summer party on June 02nd. Down in Coalville for the Unholy Messtival July 12th and then back in black in Birkenhead at Molly’s Chambers on the 13th courtesy of Lord Hockey. Don’t fuck this up, be there. Here’s your must have links: Splattered Plastic https://www.facebook.com/Splatteredplastic/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuh97nSttmFr2qgMe_ykjEg Chugga. https://deathbychugga.bandcamp.com/ Upcoming Gigs https://www.facebook.com/events/1581691958627373/ https://www.facebook.com/events/265684544186095/ https://www.facebook.com/events/1300642013411781/
I was challenged to record today’s podcast while running a race up a hill and so I did. #challengeaccepted
Flip Florey's Super Saturday Board Game Serial | A podcast about the fun in BoardGames
The post Episode 65 – Chugga Chugga Dracarys appeared first on Flip Floreys Super Saturday Board Game Serial!.
There's Thomas the Tank Engine and the little engine that could. I think I can, I think I can, I think I can see a ghost. That's what trains say when they're in the NYC Subway system or on the San Antonio Railroad. Thank you to our patreon donor, Andy, for picking this topic. Have ghost stories of your own? E-mail them to us at twogirlsoneghostpodcast@gmail.com This episode is sponsored by [Pretty Litter](http://prettylitter.com), [Care/Of](https://takecareof.com/) and [FabFitFun](https://fabfitfun.com/). [PrettyLitter](http://prettylitter.com) has made my life as a cat owner way easier in a lot of different ways: it's lightweight, lasts a whole month, AND monitors my cats health. visiting [PrettyLitter.com](http://prettylitter.com) and use promo code **TGOG** for 20% off your first order. Give yourself an extra boost this season whether you’re looking for more energy, better sleep, to maintain stress, or something else to help you feel your healthiest. Care/of delivers daily vitamin and supplement packs customized to your recommendations to promote personal health and wellness. For 50% off your first month of personalized Care/of vitamins, go to [TakeCareOf.com](https://takecareof.com/) and enter **tgog50.** [FabFitFun](https://fabfitfun.com/) Spring Box is on sale NOW! Treat yourself or perhaps treat your mom for mothers' day. FabFitFun is a seasonal subscription box delivered 4x/year with FULL SIZE beauty, fashion, home, fitness and wellness products. Go to [fabfitfun.com](https://fabfitfun.com/), and use our code **TGOG**, to get $10 off your first FabFitFun box! If you enjoy our show, please consider donating to our [Patreon](https://www.patreon.com/twogirlsoneghostpodcast). We promise to make it worth your time and we promise not to haunt you. We have a variety of different tiers that will give you access to bonus content, special shoutouts, discounted merch and more! [Patreon.com/twogirlsoneghostpodcast](https://www.patreon.com/twogirlsoneghostpodcast). Editing by the awesome Eric Foster at [Upfire Digita](https://upfiredigital.com/)l. Finally, please Rate and Review the podcast on [iTunes](https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/two-girls-one-ghost/id1271249164?mt=2) and follow us on social media! [Twitter](https://twitter.com/tgogpodcast?lang=en), [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/twogirlsoneghost/), and [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/groups/twogirlsoneghostpodcast/). Original Music by [Arms Akimbo](http://www.armsakimbomusic.com/)!
A new debate has taken the internet by storm: How many times should you say “chugga” before “choo choo”? A Reddit user recently posted the question, and soon thousands of comments came in with other Reddit users expressing their answers. At Visit My Smokies, we have a question of our own for visitors: How many […] The post How Many Times Should You Say Chugga Before Choo Choo on the Dollywood Express? appeared first on Visit My Smokies.
Every week Holly & Jon discuss the very latest from the twitter sphere, Instagram and the news. This week they discuss the hashtag #RuinAFilmByAddingUpYourBum, the most ordinary things they've never done & how many times you say chugga before saying Choo Choo . We also find out why the word BAT is hilarious, why Hollys childhood keyboard came in handy recently & why Jon is never going to anything Holly organises ever again! Follow @MansNotWhat on twitter & Instagram. Rate & Review. Peace!
Jen and Erin weigh in on two debates that recently tore the Twitter world apart: "how many chuggas come before choo choo?" and "what is the correct way to put on a bra?" Elsewhere they discuss spring drivers in Winnipeg, NASA's confusing lack of Size M spacesuits, and what to do if you're tired of internet dating in the return of Erin's advice segment, Tough Love.
How many Chugga's does it take to get to the Choo-Choo? Netflix granted Colleen a wish just a day after she made it! CSI - Pancake Batter Battery, and the Meats.
Shlompitude Nation's moyst famous "famous" train.
Off the rails on the entertainment train! Chugga-chugga, Chugga-chugga, Chugga-chugga... w00t! w00t! -- Subscribe to us on iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, Tune In, or SoundCloud. Please give us a good rating on your preferred podcast platform! It would really help us out. If you'd like to interact with us, we are most active in our Discord and Facebook group, but we also have a Twitter. Links below: Discord: https://discord.gg/TKQdEfU Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/fi.pod Twitter: @fi_pod -- We stream! Chase is on Twitch as DavisCD. Fred is on Mixer as P0WERFULfred. The "O" in the name is a zero.
YouTube: youtube.com/swstudiozEmail: wickedawesomecast@gmail.comWe also have a FaceBookSometimes we remember to post on Twitter
Chugga-chugga chugga-chugga chugga-chugga TOOT TOOT
This week is a Willow and Oz episode... You know what that means, right? And no, it's not "a new celebration of a beautiful romance". A huge thank you to our good friend Nile from the It Gets Weird podcast for reprising his role as Oz this week! It's always hard to have your heart broken, but it stings less when coming from a friend. I think.
Hosts: Ed Brown, Penny Dumsday, Lucas Randall. 00:01:06 New research has uncovered how and why frog tongues have developed to be extremely soft and super-sticky. 00:10:57 By studying the globular cluster 47 Tucanae, researchers have found more evidence of a hypothetical category of black holes. Smaller than supermassive black holes, but more massive than stellar black holes, intermediate-mass black holes have a mass between 100 and 10,000 times the mass of our sun. 00:14:43 When a baby-food company asked child psychologist Caspar Addyman to develop a song to make babies laugh and be happy, he took a scientific approach. Most music made for babies, he says, "sounds frankly deranged". 00:35:37 The Gaia spacecraft has found a 'bridge of stars' between the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds. The stream of stars connects the two dwarf galaxies and is over 43,000 light years long. This episode contains traces of Professor Hans Rosling talking about world population growth. The Swedish academic and statistician died on 7 February 2017 of pancreatic cancer.
Chugga chugga choo choo! That's right, folks! Unite 2015 is here and we're uber excited to be hopping on the hype train going straight to Boston. We can't wait to engage with the growing Unity community at the conference and hope we can meet a few of our listeners while there — whether it's at a bar, restaurant, library, or alleyway (um…scratch that)! In this episode, we start by talking about some of the new features and fixes that came with Unity's 5.2 release. We then scrub through some of our highly-anticipated talks that we're eager to attend while at the conference. To wrap things up, the guys offer up some general ‘tips and tricks' to networking at game conferences like Unite 2015. Thanks, as always, for tuning in this week and we hope that you enjoy the show! Feel free to send any emails with comments, questions, and concerns about Unite 2015 to: thedebuglog@gmail.com
Feat new music by Chelsea Wolfe, Baroness, Empires Fade, New Deadline & Chugga Boom. Plus the usual news & chat from the alternative world. contact us - info@machograndepodcast.co.uk Twitter - @machogranderock merch - http://www.machogrande.bigcartel.com/ Voicemail - 05603 689 842 'This podcast is intended for promotional purposes only' Macho Grande Podcast' does not claim to own copyright etc, all copyright is respected to the artists and labels.
"Chugga chugga BOOM!" Renee watches the silent movie The General with Small Town Doctor's De Blennis!
Just Nathan this week as Jon travels to the US to chill with Chugga and Sean travels light to his hometown. Rusty's Real Deal Baseball and Work Time Fun make up the games section this week, then a few news stories concerning Nintendo, some Microsoft rumors that may as well just be considered facts and EA's decision to stop supporting a bunch of old multi-player games (get those final Battlefield sessions in before June 30th). The its on to about thirty minutes of Nathan doing his best to answer questions about games he's never played. Thanks for listening to this, the second Ramblin' Rohr episode of TDP.
In this, the 7th episode of The Last Podcaster Standing, "Chugga chugga choo choo... awe, who gives a f@*K!" - The Angry Gingers version of this write up. My version of the write up - What begins as a brilliant idea rapidly descends into utter chaos. By rapidly, I mean immediately. The plan was to podcast while 4 cameras transmitted the podcast through the Chat Roulette application. The hope was that we would connect with many people from all over the world and use CR as free advertising. Couple that concept with having not 1, but 2 guest podcasters and a Ninja in the studio to help liven things up. For those who know math, that's 7 live bodies (with regular show hosts Grant, Jason, Joe, and Tom included) and untold numbers of digital ones in the room at one time. Now imagine that 3 of the 7 people are drinking and/or already drunk when the show starts. See? The train left the station on fire and off the rails. We attempt to hold a show that falls within the format, which is a bit of general chat followed by headlines that make you scratch your head and say WTF? This, as you will hear, is not exactly what happened. It was like watching a bunch of ADD kids who went off of their adderall and instead decided crack was a better option. It listens the same. So after 2 full program edits (1 by Ginger and 1 by Producer Tom) and no less than 103 individual cuts of a 1 hour and 36 minute program, you are left to hear 48 of those minutes. Enjoy. What have we learned from this experience? There are a lot of penis's on Chat Roulette, but very few boobs. Emmett listened to the show before being a guest, Marlee did not. Tom is NOT the Founder of MySpace. Marlee knows about Reaganomics. The gun WAS loaded... GRANT! Emmett plays a mean guitar and is only able to say the title of the podcast correctly while intoxicated. It's Led Zepplin NOT Eric Clapton. The Ninja would prefer Tom NOT have Chat Roulette girl remove the covers. No one penis looks like another. Jason interrupts Tom more than he doesn't. Between The Covers may be the best comedic web series ever! And Joe... Joe is in there somewhere, like a ghost who occassionally rattles his chain. Emmett's improvisational song writing made me pee from laughing. But more importantly, Russia has Gingers to. Ok, ok, I concede Ginger, my write up is as much a train wreck as is the episode. So let me sum it all up in one sentence - "Chugga chugga choo choo... awe, who gives a f@*K!" - The Kilted One Links: Deadly Sex Fantasy Accident Real Life A$$ Kick Drunk Babysitter Dead Sex Mummified Passenger Auto Arrest Underwear Robber Roaming Minstrel (Emmett Terbeek) Between The Covers Webseries Have a quiz, survey, or test for us to take? Send it to us, we'll make a show out of it! Have a story that needs to be told? Have questions you want answered? Need advice? (Ann Landers was never as honest as we are) Send us an email, drop us a line on Facebook, or post a comment right here in this blog post. Wanna be a guest podcaster? Do you live in the Grand Rapids area, or are you willing to drive to Grand Rapids? Send us an email, drop us a line on Facebook, or post a comment right here in this blog post. Kicking the news while it's down since 2010. Thanks for listening.thelastpodcaster@gmail.comThe Last Podcaster Standing @ Facebook Right Click the link below and select Save Target As to save a copy of the podcast to your computer.
In this show: SLASH - Fusspot Farm, VMAs, Tinkerbell Towers, The Evil Wind, Slash, Chugga chugga, Mr Pricklefingers. Noel on phone. "You are a JUDAS!" If anyone wants to donate even a pound to help with the costs of hosting the podcasts it would be much appreciated! PayPal is Bellybouncelinglongling@gmail.com.