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Hey before I begin I just want to thank all of you who have joined the patreon, you guys are awesome. Please let me know what other figures, events or other things you want to hear about in the future and I will try to make it happen. If you are a long time listener to the Pacific War week by week podcast over at KNG or viewer of my youtube channel you have probably heard me talk about Tomoyuki Yamashita, the Tiger of Malaya quite often. It goes without saying when it comes to Japanese generals of WW2 he stands out. Not just to me, from the offset of the war he made a large impression on westerners, he achieved incredible feats early on in the war. Now if you look up books about him, you will pretty much only find information in regards to his infamous war crimes trial. Hell it was so infamous the legal doctrine of hierarchical accountability for war crimes, whereby a commanding officer is legally responsible for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by his subordinates, was created. This is known as the command responsibility or “the Yamashita standard”. His court case was very controversial, he remains a controversial figure, certainly to the people of territories he campaigned in, but I think what can be said of him the most is he was special amongst the Japanese generals. Anyways lets get the show on the road as they say. So who was Yamashita? When he was 59 years old commanding forces in the Philippines against General Douglas MacArthur, he weighed 220 ls and stood 5 feet 9 inches. His girth pressed out against his green army uniform. He had an egg shaped head, balding, wide spaced eyes and a flat nose. He wore a short mustache, sort of like Hitlers, until it grayed then he shaved it off. He was not a very attractive man, Filipinos referred to him as “old potato face” while Americans called him “a florid, pig faced man”. Tomobumi Yamashita was born in 1885, he was the second son of Dr. Sakichi Yamashita and Yuu Yamashita in Osugi village, on Shikoku island. Like most males of his day he was indoctrinated into military preparatory school from a young age. Yamashita had no chosen the army as a career, in his words ‘my father suggested the idea, because I was big and healthy, and my mother did not seriously object because she believed, bless her soul, that I would never pass the highly competitive entrance examination. If I had only been cleverer or had worked harder, I would have been a doctor like my brother”Yamashita would graduate from the 18th class of the IJA academy in november of 1905, ranked 16th out of 920 cadets. In 1908 he was promoted to the rank of Lt and during WW1 he fought against Imperial German and Austro-Hungarian forces in the famous siege of Qingdao, which if you are interested I did an episode over on my Youtube channel about this battle. Its a very overlooked battle, but many histories firsts occurred at it like the first carrier attack. In 1916 he was promoted to captain and attended the 28th class of the Army War college to graduate sixth in his class that year. He also married Hisako Nagayama in 1916, she was the daughter of the retired General Nagayama. It seems Yamashita's brush against the Germans in 1914 had a huge influence on him, because he became fascinated with Germany and would serve as assistant military attache at Bern and Berlin from 1919-1922. He spent his time in Germany alongside Captain Hideki Tojo, both men would run into each other countless times and become bitter rivals. Both men toured the western front, visiting Hamburg and witnessed first hand the crippling inflation and food prices that came from Germany's defeat. Yamashita said to Tojo then “If Japan ever has to fight any nation, she must never surrender and get herself in a state like this.” He returned to Japan in 1922, was promoted to major and served a few different posts in the Imperial Headquarters and Staff College. Yamashita became a leading member of the Kodoha faction, while Tojo became a leading member of the rival Toseiha faction. In 1927 Yamashita was sent again to Europe, this time to Vienna as a military attache. Just prior to departing he had invested in a business selling thermometers starting by one of his wife's relatives, the business failed horribly and Yamashita was tossed into debt, bailiffs literally came to seize his house. As told to us by his biographer “For a regular officer to have contracted such a debt, however innocently, was a disgrace. He felt he should resign his commission.” Yamashita's brother refused to allow him to quit, instructing him to leave for Vienna, while he resolved his debts. His days in Vienna were the best of his life, professed Yamashita. He studied economics at Vienna university and made friends with a Japanese widow, who introduced him to a German woman named Kitty and they had an affair. This would spring forward his reputation as an eccentric officer. Yamashita was obsessed over hygiene,and refused to eat fruit unless it was thoroughly washed. He avoided ice water, hated dancing and never learnt how to drive a car. One of his most notable quirks was his habit of falling asleep often during meetings where he legendarily would snore. Like I may have said in previous podcast and youtube episodes, this guy was quite a character, often described as a big bear. Now this is not a full biography on Yamashita so I cant devolve to far into things, such as his first fall from grace. During the February 26th coup incident of 1936, Yamashita was a leading member of the Kodoha faction and helped mediate a peaceful end to the standoff, however in truth he was backing the coup. He simply managed to not get caught red handed at the time doing too much for the mutineers, regardless he lost favor with the outraged Emperor and many young captains whom he loved like sons killed themselves in disgrace. If you want to know more about the February coup of 1936, check out my series on Emperor Hirohito or General Ishawara, they both talk about it in depth and touch upon Yamashita's role a bit. The coup led to the dissolvement of the Kodoha faction and the dominance of the Toseiha, led by Tojo. Yamashita tried to resign from the IJA, but his superiors dissuade him. He was relegated to a post in Korea, which honestly was a punishment. Yamashita would say “When I was posted to Korea, I felt I had been given a tactful promotion but that in fact my career was over. Even when I was given my first fighting company in North China, I still felt I had no future in the Army, so I was always on the front line, where the bullets flew the thickest. I sought only a place to die.” He had some time to reflect upon his conduct while in Korea, he began to study Zen Buddhism. He was promoted to Lt General in November of 1937 and when the China war broke out he was one of those speaking out that the incident needed to end swiftly and that peaceful relations must be made with the UK and US. He received a unimportant post in the Kwantung army and in 1938 was assigned command of the IJA 4th division. He led the forces during in northern china against insurgents until he returned to Tokyo in July of 1940. His fellow officers lauded him as Japan's finest general. Meanwhile Tojo had ascended to war minister and one of his first moves was to send a delegation to Germany. Tojo considered Yamashita a ruthless and forceful commander and feared he would become a powerful rival against him one day. Yamashita would go on the record to say then “I have nothing against Tojo, but he apparently has something against me.” You see, Yamashita had no political ambitions, unlike Tojo who was by nature a political monster. “My life, is that of a soldier; I do not seek any other life unless our Emperor calls me.” In late 1940, Tojo asked Yamashita to lead a team of 40 experts on a 6 month train tour of Germany and Italy, a move that kept him out of Tokyo, because Tojo was trying to solidify his political ambitions. This is going to become a looming theme between the two men. He was presented to Adolf Hitler in January of 1941, passing along messages from Tojo and publicly praising the Fuhrer, though privately he was very unimpressed by the man “He may be a great orator on a platform, with his gestures and flamboyant way of speaking. But standing behind his desk listening he seems much more like a clerk.” Hitler pressed upon him to push Japan to declare war on Britain and the US. At the time of course Japan was facing China and had two major conflicts with the USSR, thus this was absolutely not in her interest. “My country is still fighting in China, and we must finish that war as soon as possible. We are also afraid that Russia may attack us in Manchuria. This is no time for us to declare war on other countries.” Yamashita hoped to inspect Germany's military techniques and technology to help Japan. Hitler promised open exchanges of information stating “All our secrets are open to you,”, but this would prove to be a lie. “There were several pieces of equipment the Germans did not want us to see. Whenever I tried to persuade the German General Staff to show us things like radar—about which we had a rudimentary knowledge—the conversation always turned to something else.” Yamashita met with field Marshal Hermann Goring who gave him an overview of the war in europe. Goring would complain about Yamashita falling asleep during lectures and meetings and he believed the man was drunk often. Yamashita met Benito Mussolini in June of 1941 receiving a similar rundown to what he got in Germany. Yamashita visited Kitty in Vienna for a quick fling, but overall the trip deeply impacted Yamashita's resolve that Japan should stay out of the Europeans war and that Germany made a grievous error invading the USSR in June of 1941. This is what he said the members of the commission “You know the results of our inspection as well as I do. I must ask you not to express opinion in favor of expanding the alliance between Japan, Germany and Italy. Never suggest in your report that Japan should declare war on Great Britain and the United States. We must not and cannot rely upon the power of other nations. Japan needs more time, particularly as there may be aggression against us from Russia. We must have time to rebuild our defense system and adjust the whole Japanese war machine. I cannot repeat this to you often enough.” His report was similar, and it really pissed off Tojo who was trying to develop plans for a war against America. Yamashita would then get exiled to Manchuria in July of 1941, but Tojo's resentment towards him could only go so far, because Yamashita was one of their best generals and in his planned war against Britain and America, he would need such a man. Yamashita's time in Europe reshaped his views on how to conduct war. He saw first hand blitzkrieg warfare, it seems it fascinated him. He consistently urged the implementation of new proposals calling for the streamlining of air arms; to mechanize the Army; to integrate control of the armed forces in a defense ministry coordinated by a chairman of Joint Chiefs of staff; to create a paratroop corps and to employ effective propaganda. Basically he saw what was working for the Germans against the allies and wanted Japan to replicate it. Tojo did not like many of the proposal, hated the fact they were coming from Yamashita, so he obviously was not keen on making them happen. Luckily for Yamashita he would be given a chance to implement some of his ideas in a big way. On November 6th of 1941, Lt General Yamashita was appointed commander of the 25th Japanese army. His orders were to seize the Malay Peninsula and then the British naval base at Singapore. The Malaya Peninsula snakes 700 miles south of Thailand, a rugged sliver of land that constricts at its narrowest point to about 60 miles wide. It hold mountains that split the peninsula in half, some going as high as 7000 feet. During this time Malaya produced around 40% of the worlds rubber, 60% of its tin, two resources vital for war. At its very southern tip lies Singapore, a diamond shaped island connected to the mainland by a 1115 stone causeway. Singapore's largest asset was its naval base guarding the passage from the Pacific and Indian oceans. Together Malay and Singapore represented the key to controlling what Japan called the Southern Resource Area. Singapore was known as the gibraltar of the east for good reason. It was a massively fortified naval base. The base had been developed between 1923-1938 and cost 60 million pounds, around 2 billion pounds today. It was 21 square miles, had the largest dry dock in the world, the 3rd largest floating dock and enough fuel tanks to support the entire royal navy for 6 months. She was defended by 15 inch naval guns stationed at the Johre battery, Changi and Buona vista battery. And despite the infamous myth some of you may have heard, these guns were fully capable of turning in all directions including the mainland. For those unaware a myth perpetuated after the fall of Singapore that her large 15 inch guns could not turn to the mainland and that this spelt her doom, no it was not that, it was the fact they mostly had armor piercing shells which are using to hit ships and not land targets. Basically if you fire an armor piercing shell at land it imbeds itself then explodes, while HE shells would have torn any Japanese army to pieces. Alongside the 15 inch monsters, there were countless other artillery pieces such as 9.2 inch guns. By December of 1941 Malaya and Singapore held 164 first line aircraft out of a total of 253 aircraft, but many of the fighters were the obsolete Brewster F2A Buffalo, a pretty slow, fat little beast that could take a licking as it was armored, but against the Zero fighter it was unbelievably outmatched in speed and maneuverability. The Japanese acquired a major gift prior to the outbreak of war. On november 11th, 1940, the SS Automedon, a German raider attacked the HMS Atlantis which was carrying documents intended for the British far east command. The documents indicated the British fleet was not going to help Singapore; that Britain would not declare war if Thailand was invaded and that Hong Kong was expendable. The Germans gave the documents to the Japanese who were very excited by the information. Starting in January of 1941, Colonel Masanobu Tsuji led the Taiwan Army Research section based on Formosa to investigate how a campaign could be waged in Malay and Singapore. His findings on the defenses of Malay and Singapore were summed up in these 3 points: 1. Singapore Fortress was solid and strong facing the sea, but vulnerable on the peninsular side facing the Johore Strait; Newspaper reports of a strong Royal Air Force (RAF) presence were propaganda; Although British forces in Malaya numbered from five to six divisions (well over 80,000 men), less than half were Europeans. Now just a little bit about Tsuji as he was to become the chief of staff operations and planning under Yamashita. Tsuji was extremely insubordinate and a political schemer. He was a Toseiha faction fanatic, loyal to Tojo and thus definitely an enemy to Yamashita. Yamashita wrote of Tsuji in his war diary “is egotistical and wily. He is a sly dog and unworthy to serve the country. He is a manipulator to be carefully watched.” Tsuji would go on to have a infamous reputation for ordering atrocities in the name of his superiors, often without them knowing and this would be very much the case under Yamashita. Now using Tsuji's intelligence Yamashita began plans at his HQ at Samah, a port on Hainan island, starting in November of 1941 on how to launch the campaign. He was initially offered 5 divisions for the invasion, but he felt he could accomplish the objective with only three. There are a few reasons why he believed this; first, Tsuji's research suggested the peninsula roads would be the center of the battlefront and that the flanks would extend no more than a km or so to the left or right due to the dense jungle terrain (in fact Yamashita was planning to assault from the jungle specifically); 2nd intelligence indicated the defending troops were not of the highest caliber (the British were busy in Europe thus many of the troops in southeast asia were poorly trained, half were british regulars the rest were Australian, Indian and Malayan); 3rd Yamashita was aware “the Japanese army were in the habit of flinging more troops into the battle than could possibly be maintained” boy oh boy tell that one to the future boys on Guadalcanal. Thus he calculated 3 divisions was the maximum to be fed, equipped and supplied. Based on his recommendations the 25th army was created with 3 divisions; the 5th under Lt General Takuma Matsui; 18th under Lt General Renya Mutaguchi and the Imperial guards division of Lt General Takuma Nishimura. Supporting these would be two regiment of heavy field artillery and the 3rd tank brigade. Something that made Yamashita's campaign quite interesting was the usage and amount of tanks. He was invading with around 200 or so tanks consisting of the Type 95 Ha-Go light tank, type 97 Chi-Ha and Type 89 I-Go medium tanks and Type 97 Te-Ke tankettes. For aircraft he had the 3rd Air division, 459 aircraft strong with an additional 159 aircraft from the IJN to support them. The 3rd air division had a variety of aircraft such as Nakajima Ki-27 Nate's, Nakajima ki-43 Oscars, Kitsubishi ki-51 Sonia's, Kawasaki ki-48 Lily's, Mitsubishi ki-21 sally's, Mitsubishi ki-30 Ann's, Mitsubishi ki-15 babs and Mitsubishi ki-46 dinahs. For the IJN it was the 22nd air flotilla using Mitsubishi G3M1 Nell's, Mitsubishi A5M4 Claudes and some A6M Zeros. To say it was a lot of firepower at his disposal is an understatement, Yamashita was packing heat, heat he could use in a blitzkrieg fashion. His staff at Samah identified 5 operational objectives: 1 Simultaneous capture of Singora and Patani, Thailand and Kota Bharu, Malaya. 2 Capture of all enemy airfields in southern Thailand and Malaya. 3 Occupation of Kuala Lumpur, Malaya. 4 Occupation of Johore Bahru, and control of Johore Strait. 5 Conquest of Singapore. Colonel Tsuji, appointed Chief of Operations and Planning for the 25th Army, proposed the following plan which was readily approved: Land the main strength of the 5th Division simultaneously and without warning at Singora and Patani, and at the same time land a powerful section of the 18th Division to attack Kota Bharu. The troops disembarked at Singora and Patani to press forward immediately to attack the line of the Perak River Hand capture its bridge and the Alor Star aerodrome. The troops landed at Kota Bharu to press forward along the eastern coast as far as Kuantan. The landing at Kota Bharu, the only one in Malaya was expected to be opposed and quite risky. But if it was successful, it would create a useful diversion away from the main force landings in Thailand. The landings took place around 2:15am local time on December 8th, about an hour and 20 minutes before the attack on Pearl Harbor. The landings went largely unopposed, except at Kota Bahru where the Japanese saw heavy resistance. The British had anticipated this landing point and created operation Matador, a plan to pre-emptively invade southern thailand to secure defensive lines against the Japanese, however this plan was never accepted by British high command for obvious political reasons. But on December 5th, with a Japanese invasion looking certain, suddenly London gave permission to the Far east commanders to decide if Operation matador should be activated or not. The commander in Malaya, General Arthur Percival recommended forestalling it, fearing to violate Thai sovereignty, which ultimately would be the doom of a defense for Malaya. At the battle of Kota Bharu, the 9th infantry division of Major General Barstow attempted holding off the Japanese from taking the important Kota Bharu airfield. The 8th brigade of Billy Key had fortified the beaches with pillboxes, barbed wire and land mines. The Japanese took heavy losses, but they were able to find gaps and fill them up until Brigadier Key had to ask permission to pull out. The royal air force at Kota Bharu tossed Hudson bombers to hit the troop transports, but it was a suicide mission to do so. Meanwhile the IJA 5th division landed at Pattani and Songkhla in Thailand while the Imperial guards division marched over the border from French Indochina. The Japanese encountered very little resistance, the leader of Thailand Plaek Pibulsonggram had been trying to get assurances from the allies and Japanese all the way up until the invasion, once the Japanese landed he knew his best option was to play nice and sign an armistice. This basically spelt doom for malaya as the Japanese were given access to Thailand's airfields which they used to smash the forward airfields in Malaya. The first day of aerial encounters were a catastrophe for the British. General Percival would comment “The rapidity with which the Japanese got their air attacks going against our aerodromes was quite remarkable. Practically all the aerodromes in Kelantan, Kedah, Province Wellesley, and Penang, were attacked, and in most cases fighters escorted the bombers. The performance of Japanese aircraft of all types, and the accuracy of their bombing, came as an unpleasant surprise. By the evening our own air force had already been seriously weakened.” Brigadier Key withdrew after causing an estimated 800 casualties upon the Japanese while taking roughly 465. While Kota Bharu was being fought over, Percival unleashed Operation Krohcol, a 2.0 of Matador seeing British forces cross into Thailand to intercept the incoming enemy. It was an absolute disaster, the British attackers were defeated not only by the Japanese 5th division, but some Royal Thai police also defended their territory. The operation had basically become a race to who could seize the important focal point first and the Japanese took it first thus winning decisively. To add to that misery, force Z, consisting of the battleship HMS Prince of Wales,, battlecruiser Repulse and 4 destroyers tried to intercept the Japanese invasion fleet only to be utterly destroyed by overwhelming Japanese airforces. Within 4 days of the landings, the 5th division advanced from Singora through the town of Jitra to capture the RAF airfield at Alor star, around 100 miles away. Yamashita managed this using flanking techniques that saw his army take town after town and airfield after airfield. There were numerous natural obstacles to the advance such as dense jungles, very long supply lines, torrential rain and heat, but he had a secret weapon, bicycles. At Jitra Percival made his first major stand. Holding Jitra would safeguard the northern airfields of Malaya, but it was a folly to do so as the airfields in question were not provided adequate aircraft and the British lacked something extremely important to be able to defend themselves, tanks. Colonel Tsuji saw the fighting at Jitra first hand and reported “Our tanks were ready on the road, and the twenty or so enemy armored cars ahead were literally trampled underfoot … The enemy armored cars could not escape by running away, and were sandwiched between our medium tanks … It was speed and weight of armor that decided the issue.” The British had spread themselves far too thinly across a 14 mile front with jungle on their right flank and rubber plantations and mangrove swamps to their left. Yamashita used a innovative blitzkrieg like tactic, he combined his air, artillery, tanks and bicycle infantry to punch holes in concentrated attacks forcing allied defenders to withdraw. As Percival would write later in his memoirs “This withdrawal would have been difficult under the most favorable conditions. With the troops tired, units mixed as the result of the fighting, communications broken and the night dark, it was inevitable that orders should be delayed and that in some cases they should never reach the addressees. This is what in fact occurred … the withdrawal, necessary as it may have been, was too fast and too complicated for disorganized and exhausted troops, whose disorganization and exhaustion it only increased” Yamashita had ingeniously thought of employing large numbers of bicycles for his infantry so they could keep up momentum and speed with his mechanized forces. Oh and he didn't bring thousands of bicycles over to Malaya, the real genius was that they were there ready for him. His intelligence prior to the invasion indicated nearly all civilians in malaya had bicycles, so when the Japanese came over they simply stole them. Half of Yamashitas troops moved in motor vehicles while the rest road on 18,000 bicycles. As noted by Tsuji “With the infantry on bicycles, there was no traffic congestion or delay. Wherever bridges were destroyed the infantry continued their advance, wading across the rivers carrying their bicycles on their shoulders, or crossing on log bridges held up on the shoulders of engineers standing in the stream.” They Japanese overwhelmed the defenders who were forced to fight, flee into the jungles or flee along the roads where they were simply outsped by the faster Japanese. The defenders left numerous stores of food, abandoned vehicles, and supplies that Yamashita's men would dub “churchill's allowance”. British Lt Colonel Spencer Chapmanwas forced to hide on the sides of roads watching Japanese pedal past remarking “The majority were on bicycles in parties of forty or fifty, riding three or four abreast and talking and laughing just as if they were going to a football match.” The Japanese had the ability to carry their gear on the bicycles, giving them an enormous advantage over the allies fleeing on foot. The Japanese could travel faster, further and less fatigued. When the British destroyed 250 bridges during their flight, “the Japanese infantry (to continue) their advance, wading across the rivers carrying their bicycles on their shoulders, or crossing on log bridges held up on the shoulders of engineers standing in the stream”. The British could not escape the bicycle blitzkrieg as it became known, countless were forced to surrender under constant pressure and relentless pursuit. Alongside the bicycle warfare, whenever Yamashita faced terrain unsuitable for his tanks, he ordered amphibious landings further south to outflank the enemy's rear. Meanwhile the war in the air went equally terrible for the allies. The RAF had pulled back its best pilots and aircraft to deal with the war for Britain against the Luftwaffe. 21 airfields were in Malaya and Singapore, few of them had modern facilities, only 15 concrete runways. The heavy rain made the grass airstrips unusable. All the airfields were allocated around 8 heavy and 8 light anti aircraft guns. Quality radar units were completely inadequate. The Super Spitfires and Hyper Hurricanes were mostly in Britain fighting the Germans, while Buffaloes were allocated to Malaya. The Japanese airforces easily overcame the allied opposition and established air superiority quickly. Launching from airfields in Vietnam, they bombed all the airfields into submission and continuously applied pressure to Singapore. . The aerial dominance of the Zero and ‘Oscar' fighters served to undermine the morale of the British infantryman on the ground. As historian H. P. Wilmot has observed, “in the opening phase of the war the Zero-sen was just what the Japanese needed, and the Allies were devastated by the appearance of a ‘super fighter.' To add insult to injury, every airfield taken starting at the most northern going further and further south towards Singapore offered the Japanese new launching points to make for faster attack. Yamashita's forces reached the southern tip of the peninsula in just 8 weeks, his men had covered some 700 miles, about 12 miles a day on average. They fought 95 large and smaller battles doing so. Multiple lines of defense were erected one after another to try and halt the Japanese advance, to kill their momentum. Starting at the beach landings, to Jitra, then to Kampar, over the Slim river, then Johor. The British failed to employ “leave behind forces” to provide guerilla warfare in lost territories leading not only the Japanese to easily consolidate their gains, the Thai's also came down and grabbed some territory. At the battle of Muar Major General Gordon Bennet deployed the allied defenders south of the Muar River and it was widely believed here they would finally halt the Japanese. Then the Imperial Guards division outflanked them performing an amphibious landing and advancing down the coastal route. The 5th Japanese division followed a parallel route through the center and the 18th division landed near Endau. The allies were thus surrounded and took heavy casualties, countless were forced to flee through swamps and thick jungle abandoned their stuff. Gordons 45th brigade were absolutely shattered, effectively disbanded and left north of the Muar river as the rest of the allies fled south. The defeat at Muar broke the British belief they could hold even a toehold on Malay. Percivals strategy to fight delaying actions until the arrival of reinforcements to Singapore had fatally undermined his troops ability to hold onto defensive positions. As the British governor of the Johore straits settlement, Sir Shenton Thomas would say on January 6th ‘“We … have gone in for mechanized transport to the nth degree. It is a fearsomely cumbersome method. We have pinned our faith to the few roads but the enemy used tracks and paths, and gets round to our rear very much as he likes.”” Yet alongside the conquest came a series of atrocities. At the Parit Sulong Bridge south of the Muar, Captain Rewi Snelling was left behind with 150 wounded Australian and Indian soldiers not able to trek south. The Imperial guards division herded them into buildings, denied them medical treatment, many of the Indians were beheaded, others shot. This become known as the parit sulong massacre. Its hard to saw what Yamashita would have known about this incident, it technically was under the command of Takuma nishimura. On January 22nd, Nishimura gave the orders for prisoners to be forced outside, doused with petrol and set on fire. Nishimura would be sentenced to life in prison by a Singapore court, but on a flight back to Japan he was hijacked by Australian military police in Hong Kong who grabbed him and held a trial for the Parit Sulong massacre, finding him guilty and hanging him on june 11th of 1951. When the Japanese reached the straits of Johore, Yamashita took several days to perform reconnaissance, allowing his forces to regroup and prepare to attack the massive fortress. His plan for the invasion would see the Imperial guards perform a feint attack on the northeast side of Singapore, landing on the nearby Palau Ubin island on february 7th. The 5th and 18th division would remain concealed in the jungle until the night of the night of the 8th when they would cross the Johore and hit the northwest side of Singapore. The causeway to Singapore had been blown up by the retreating British, but the ability for Singapore to defend itself from a northern attack was lackluster. When Churchill was told by Wavell the Japanese sat on the other side of the Johore strait ready to attack the fortress he said ““I must confess to being staggered by Wavell's telegram. It never occurred to me for a moment that … Singapore … was not entirely fortified against an attack from the Northwards …”” With barely enough supplies or logistical support for his campaign, Yamashita's rapid advance down the Malay peninsula walked a tightrope of what was possible. His 70,000 men of which 30,000 were frontline troops had overcome a British force double their number. In Japan he garnered the epithet “Tiger of Malaya”, which ironically he was not too happy about. Later on in the war he would bark at a German attache “I am not a tiger. The tiger attacks its prey in stealth but I attack the enemy in a fair play”. By this point Singapore had swollen from a population of 550,000to nearly a million. Percival had a total of 70,000 infantry of mixed experience plus 15,000 clerks and support staff to man lines if necessary. 38 battalions, 17 Indian, 13 British, 6 Australian and 2 Malayan. He placed his weakest troops west of the causeway, near the abandoned naval base rather than nearby the airfield which he considered was going to be Yamashita's thrust. He placed his best forces over there, which would prove fatally wrong as Yamashita hit west of the causeway. Yamashita meanwhile could only muster 30,000 troops, he was outnumbered 2:1 and amphibious assaults called for the attacker to hold a 2:1 advantage for success. Yamashita's men were exhausted, they had suffered 4565 casualties, roughly 1793 deaths in their 55 day advance south. Worse yet, Yamashita had a critical supply issue. He had greatly exceeded his supply lines and had been surviving on the abandoned churchill stores along the way. His ammunition was critical low, it is said he was down to 18 functional tanks, allowing his men to fire 100 rounds per day, the fuel ran out, and as Yamashita put it “My attack on Singapore was a bluff—a bluff that worked. I had 30,000 men and was outnumbered more than three to one. I knew that if I had to fight for long for Singapore, I would be beaten. That is why the surrender had to be at once. I was very frightened all the time that the British would discover our numerical weakness and lack of supplies and force me into disastrous street fighting.” He told his men of the 5th and 18th division not to build any cooking fires so they could conceal their positions in the jungle as he gathered hundreds of collapsible boats and other crafts to ford the strait. He gathered 40 divisional commanders and senior officers to a rubber plantation and with a flushed red face read out his attack orders while pouring them Kikumasamune (ceremonial wine). He made a traditional toast and said “It is a good place to die; surely we shall conquer”. He had to get the British to surrender quickly, he had to essentially ‘bluff” his enemy. He had to make the British think he was fully armed and supplied for a prolonged siege, how could he do so? He fired his artillery like a mad man, knowing full well they would run out of shells. Starting on February 3rd, Yamashita's artillery supported by aerial bombings hit Singapore for 5 days. On the night of the 7th, 400 Imperial Guards crossed to the Ibin island performing their feint attack. Percivals attention was grabbed to the east successfully, while on the night of the 8th the 5th and 18th divisions assembled carefully at the water's edge. At 8:30pm the first wave of 4000 Japanese troops crossed the Johore strait aboard 150 small vessels. The noise of their engines was drowned out by artillery. The thinly spread Australian lines, 3000 or so men led by Major General Bennet were breached fast leading to pockets of surrounded australian troops. As Lewis Gunner cliff olsen recalled “We were horribly spread out and it was pitch black and they [Japanese troops] were very hard to see. They walked through us half the time.” A beachhead was formed, a soon 14,000 Japanese had crossed by dawn. Communications broke down for the allies, Percival unwilling to believe the Japanese's main thrust was in the west declined to send reinforcements there. When he did finally realize the main thrust was in the west he began to withdraw troops from quiet sectors and built up a reserve. The Japanese held air supremacy and their artillery was fierce. The big 15 inch guns of singapore held mostly armor piercing shells designed to hit ships, there were few HE shells available. When they fired upon the Japanese the shells would hit the ground they would embed deeply before exploding doing little damage. The defenders had no tanks, basically no more aircraft. The last departing ships fled the scene as everything was burning chaos around them. Morale was breaking for the defenders. By the 9th, Japanese bombers were raining bombs on allied positions unopposed. Bennet was forced to pull men back to a new line of defense from the east of the Tengah airfield to the north of Jurong. Poor communications hampered the northern sector of Brigadier Duncan Maxwell whose troops actually battered the hell out of the Imperial Guards who had landed at 10pm on the 9th. The Imperial guards gradually managed a foothold on a beach, but Maxwell feared encirclement and withdrew his men against direct orders of Bennet. The retreat opened up the flank of the 11th indian division who were overrun. All of the beaches west of the causeway fell to the enemy, when they did Yamashita brought over his tanks to smash the new Jurong line. The Japanese could have potentially stormed the city center at this point, but they held back, because in reality, Percival had created a formidable reserve in the middle. The Australian 22nd brigade took the brunt of the fighting. Yamashita was running out of reserves and his attacks were reaching their limit, but he needed the battle to end swiftly. Yamashita was shocked and shaken when he received a report that the British troop strength within the city was twice what they believed. With covert desperation, Yamashita ordered his artillery to fire until their last rounds and sent Percival a demand for surrender. “In the spirit of chivalry we have the honour of advising your surrender. Your army, founded on the traditional spirit of Great Britain, is defending Singapore, which is completely isolated, and raising the fame of Great Britain by the ut¬ most exertions and heroic feelings. . . . From now on resistance is futile and merely increases the danger to the million civilian inhabitants without good reason, exposing them to infliction of pain by fire and sword. But the development of the general war situation has already sealed the fate of Singapore, and the continuation of futile resistance would only serve to inflict direct harm and in¬ juries to thousands of non-combatants living in the city, throwing them into further miseries and horrors of war. Furthermore we do not feel you will in¬ crease the fame of the British Army by further resistance.” Singapore had received another order prior to this from Churchill “It is certain that our troops on Singapore Island greatly outnumber any Japanese that have crossed the Straits. We must defeat them. Our whole fighting reputation is at stake and the honour of the British Empire. The Americans have held out on the Bataan Peninsula against far greater odds, the Russians are turning back the picked strength of the Germans, the Chinese with almost complete lack of mod¬ ern equipment have held the Japanese for AVi years. It will be disgraceful if we yield our boasted fortress of Singapore to inferior enemy forces. There must be no thought ofsparing troops or the civil population and no mercy must be shown to weakness in any shape or form. Commanders and senior officers must lead their troops and if necessary die with them. There must be no question or thought of surrender. Every unit must fight it out to the end and in close contact with the enemy. ... I look to you and your men to fight to the end to prove that the fighting spirit that won our Empire still exists to enable us to defend it.” What was Percival to do? The Japanese had seized control over Singapore water reservoirs, the population would die of thirst within 2-3 days. Japanese shells were causing fires and death everywhere. People were panicking, trying to get on the very last boats leaving the port, even though that surely meant death to the IJN. An American sailor recalled “There was a lot of chaos and people killed on the docks during these bombardments. Everywhere you looked there was death. Even in the water there were dead sharks and people floating all around.” Defeatism was endemic. Australian troops were overheard saying “Chum, to hell with Malaya and Singapore. Navy let us down, air force let us down. If the bungs [natives] won't fight for their bloody country, why pick on me?” Sensing a complete collapse Percival formed a tight defense arc in front of the city, and by the 13th his commanders were telling him they believed Singapore was already doomed. Wavell was asked for approval for surrender, but he replied “to continue to inflict maximum damage on enemy for as long as possible by house-to-house fighting if necessary.” Percival then told him the water reservoirs were taken, so Wavell sent back “YOUR GALLANT STAND IS SERVING A PURPOSE AND MUST BE CONTINUED TO THE LIMIT OF ENDURANCE” On the 15th, Percival held a morning conference reported there was no more fuel, field gun nor bofor ammunition. In 24 hours their water would be done. He told them he would ask for a ceasefire at 4pm, by the end of the day Wavell gave him permission to surrender. Over at his HQ on the Bukit Timah heights, Yamashita was staring at a Union Jack fluttering over Fort Canning. Then a field phone rang, and a frontline commander reported the British were sending out a flag of truce. Meanwhile back on February the 14th, Japanese forces reached the Alexandra Barracks hospital at 1pm. At 1:40pm a British Lt greeting them waving a white flag and was bayoneted on the spot. The Japanese stormed the hospital and murdered the staff and patients. 200 male staff and patients, badly wounded were bound over night and marched to an industrial estate half a mile away. Anyone who collapsed was bayoneted. The survivors of the march were formed into small groups and hacked to death or bayoneted. For a few days over 320 men and women were massacred. Only 5 survivors would give recounts of the event. It is suspected by historians that Tsuji was the architect of the Alexandra hospital massacre. This is because he was the instigator of countless atrocities he ordered unbeknownst to his superior commanders such as Yamashita. Percival was ordered to go to the Ford motor factory to where he met with Yamashita. Yamashita was hiding his surprise that the surrender party came and as he glanced at the surrender terms he said through his interpreter “The Japanese Army will consider nothing but surrender,” Yamashita knew his forces were on the verge of running out of ammunition and he still held half troops Percival did, he was anxious Percival would figure it out. Percival replied “I fear that we shall not be able to submit our final reply before ten-thirty p.m.,” Percival had no intention of fighting on he simply wanted to work out specific details before signing the surrender. Yamashita was sure Percival was stalling. “Reply to us only whether our terms are acceptable or not. Things must be settled swiftly. We are prepared to resume firing.Unless you do surrender, we will have to carry out our night attack as scheduled.”” Percival replied ““Cannot the Japanese Army remain in its present position? We can resume negotiations again tomorrow at five-thirty A.M”. Yamashita screamed “Nani! I want the hostilities to cease tonight and I want to remind you there can be no arguments.” Percival replied ““We shall discontinue firing by eight-thirty p.m. Had we better remain in our present positions tonight?” Yamashita said yes and that firing would cease at 8:30pm and that 1000 allied men could keep arms to maintain order within the city. Yamashita stated “You have agreed to the terms but you have not yet made yourself clear as to whether you agree to surrender or not.” Percival cleared his throat and gave a simple nod. Yamashita looked at his interpreter “There's no need for all this talk. It is a simple question and I want a simple answer.” He turned to Percival and shouted, “We want to hear ‘Yes' or ‘No' from you! Surrender or fight!” Percival finally blurted out “Yes, I agree. I have a request to make. Will the Imperial Army protect the women and children and British civilians?”Yamashita replied “We shall see to it. Please sign this truce agreement”. At 7:50 the surrender was signed off, 40 minutes later Singapore was in the hands of the Japanese. In 70 days Yamashita took at the cost of 9824 casualties, had seized Malaya and Singapore, nearly 120,000 British surrendered. It was the greatest land victory in Japanese history. Churchill called the fall of Singapore to the Japanese "the worst disaster and largest capitulation in British history" Churchills physician Lord Moran wrote The fall of Singapore on February 15 stupefied the Prime Minister. How came 100,000 men (half of them of our own race) to hold up their hands to inferior numbers of Japanese? Though his mind had been gradually prepared for its fall, the surrender of the fortress stunned him. He felt it was a disgrace. It left a scar on his mind. One evening, months later, when he was sitting in his bathroom enveloped in a towel, he stopped drying himself and gloomily surveyed the floor: 'I cannot get over Singapore', he said sadly With the fall of singapore came another atrocity, the Sook Ching massacre. After February 18th, the Japanese military began mass killings of what they deemed undesirables, mostly ethnic Chinese. It was overseen by the Kempeitai and did not stop in Singapore, but spread to Malaya. It seems the aim of the purge was to intimidate the Chinese community from performing any resistance. According to postwar testimony taken from a war correspondent embedded with the 25th army, Colonel Hishakari Takafumi, he stated an order went out to kill 50,000 Chinese, of which 20 percent of the total was issued by senior officials on Yamashita's operations staff, most likely Tsuji. It is certain at the behest of Tsuji the orders were extended to Malay. The death toll is a tricky one, the Japanese went on the record to admit to 6000 murders, the Singaporean Chinese community and the Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew allege 70,000-100,000. Historians analyzing the scale of discovered mass graves after some decades think around 25,000-50,000. How much Yamashita knew of the massacre is debatable, the orders came from his office after all, but it seems Tsuji had orchestrated it. Many of Japan's generals wanted Yamashita to be appointed war minister, a move that obviously threatened then Prime Minister Hideki Tojo, who feared his rival. Tojo retaliated, ordering Japan's new war hero back to Manchuria. On the surface, the assignment appeared worthy as Yamashita would serve as the first line of defense against a possible Soviet invasion. But since the two nations had signed a neutrality pact in April 1941, and Soviets were bogged down fighting the Germans, immediate war appeared unlikely. In reality, Tojo had parked Yamashita on the war's sidelines. Tojo went even further, he barred Yamashita any leave in Tokyo, preventing him from visiting his wife as well as from delivering a speech he had written for the emperor. No worries though, an aide of Yamashita's sent him three geishas. Allegedly he said this “I know they want to please me with these girls. But send them back—and don't forget to tip them.” The Tiger of Malaya would maintain a low profile in Manchuria where he received a promotion to full General. As months fell to years Yamashita sat on the sidelines helpless to aid the Japanese forces. His exile would come to an end in 1944 when Tojo was outed and the Tiger was required to try and save the Philippines from General Douglas MacArthur.
GUESTS: Scott Reid - CTV Political Commentator and advisor to a number of Prime Ministers, premiers and political leadersGeorge Ruiter - trade show manager at Outset Media Jerry Agar
GUESTS: Amanda Galbraith - co-founder and partner at reputation management company Oyster Group and host of Free For All Fridays Melody Jackson - Executive Director of the CP24 CHUM Christmas Wish Tim Hudak - Former leader of the Ontario Conservatives now a Partner with Counsel Public Affairs, one of Canada’s leading public affairs agencies
GUESTS: Steven Del Duca - Vaughan MayorGeorge Stroumboulopoulos
GUESTS: Ron Butler - Principal Broker at Butler Mortgage Inc.John MooreRoger Ashby Jessica Smith - CTV Weather Special ReporterListener Mina - her mom made an incredible donation for the Christmas Wish
Cette semaine, je reçois Dre Arline-Aude Bérubé, neurologue et médecin responsable de la clinique des troubles neurologiques fonctionnels au CHUM. Aujourd'hui, on parle des troubles neurologiques fonctionnels et des autres types de troubles fonctionnels. Parle-moi de santé est présenté par Physiovélo, partenaire officiel du podcast. C'est la clinique de référence pour le positionnement à vélo (bikefitting). Appelle à la clinique pour voir comment leur équipe peut t'aider à être plus confortable sur ton vélo : (450) 486-3888. Pour trouver des trucs utiles pour le confort à vélo : https://bit.ly/physiovelo Pour écouter l'épisode en vidéo sur YouTube : https://youtu.be/bXW_VrttC-s Code promo GOUGEON15 pour les formations en ligne à prix régulier de Bia Éducation. Clique ici pour les découvrir : https://bit.ly/4ads0ZC Tu es physio et tu veux t'inscrire à la formation sur les céphalées et douleurs orofaciales en janvier 2026 avec l'École PhysioLab? Clique ici! Retrouve Parle-moi de santé sur toutes les plateformes Instagram YouTube Facebook Pour m'écrire : parlemoidesante@gmail.com Pour écouter l'épisode #59 sur le TNF : Le trouble neurologique fonctionnel - Parle-moi de santé Pour consulter les ressources sur le site du CHUM : Ressources | CHUM
Today on The Marilyn Denis Show we call one lucky listener to let them know they've won $75,000 with CHUM's Keyword to Cash! We learn when it's to cold for Marilyn Denis and David Corey, learn what not to do with $10,000,000, and ask the question, is frugal sexy?
In this Thanksgiving Day episode, Mike reflects on the holiday, family, and the evolving character of Traverse City. It's a bittersweet year—his family's first Thanksgiving without his dad—but also a moment to appreciate traditions, good food, and time spent together. From recent crime stories to long-standing local quirks, Mike explores whether Traverse City still feels like the small town he grew up in. He shares personal stories, local history, neighborhood breakdowns, and observations about everything from fast food failures to the layout of the airport and high schools. Topics Covered Thanksgiving Reflections Sending well-wishes to listeners celebrating the holiday. The first Thanksgiving without Mike's dad and the tradition of leaving an empty chair at the table. Is Traverse City Still a Small Town? Recent unusual crime events: The Walmart stabbing last summer. A fatal parking-deck shooting involving car break-ins. An attempted abduction at the Meijer gas station. Why these big incidents still feel like “small-town news.” Population & Geography 2020 Census: About 16,000 people inside Traverse City limits. Metro area: ~153,000 across four counties (Grand Traverse, Leelanau, Benzie, Kalkaska). Mike's spot just outside the city—technically East Bay Township, but “still Traverse City” in daily life. Neighborhoods & Areas Mentioned Downtown District Traverse Heights Old Town Central Neighborhoods Greilickville Acme / Williamsburg “Miracle Mile” – hotels and tourist strip on the bay Tourism & Seasons Summer vs. winter crowds Winter visitors: snowmobilers, skiers, ice fishermen Bars downtown still feel local and familiar in the off-season Traverse City Schools Current schools: Central, West, Traverse City High School (Mavericks), plus Catholic Central. Stories about the old buildings, snow-exposed walkways, and campus redesigns. The near-identical design of TC West and the Columbine High School campus. Airports & Travel Cherry Capital Airport still feels small—Mike knows most of the airline and TSA staff. No Amtrak service in Traverse City yet; nearest connections are Grand Rapids or Holland. Mike's go-to workaround: driving to New Buffalo to catch the train to Chicago. Parking & Downtown Life Legacy of parking meters (now digital), plus multiple parking decks. Cherry Festival setup: rides, games, food stands—including local favorite Gibby Fries. Arnold Amusements (based in Acme) runs many Michigan carnivals. Roundabouts, Traffic, and Small-Town Quirks Late-night flashing signals The ongoing roundabout debate Getting across town in only ~15 minutes even on a busy day Fast Food in Traverse City – A Unique Landscape Chains that didn't survive: several McDonald's, Burger Kings, Arby's, Ruby Tuesday, Hooters Three Meijer stores serving the area (original, Acme/Williamsburg, and soon Chum's Corners) Local burger highlights: Slabtown Burgers, Bubba's, Eastfield's Proper Burger (with commentary) Local Dining Identity Traverse City tends to favor local restaurants over big chains Well-loved local Mexican places like La Señorita Closing Thoughts Mike wraps up with a warm Thanksgiving message—hoping listeners enjoy good food, family, and gratitude—and shares appreciation for being able to create a daily episode for NaPodPoMo.
In this Thanksgiving Day episode, Mike reflects on the holiday, family, and the evolving character of Traverse City. It's a bittersweet year—his family's first Thanksgiving without his dad—but also a moment to appreciate traditions, good food, and time spent together. From recent crime stories to long-standing local quirks, Mike explores whether Traverse City still feels like the small town he grew up in. He shares personal stories, local history, neighborhood breakdowns, and observations about everything from fast food failures to the layout of the airport and high schools. Topics Covered Thanksgiving Reflections Sending well-wishes to listeners celebrating the holiday. The first Thanksgiving without Mike's dad and the tradition of leaving an empty chair at the table. Is Traverse City Still a Small Town? Recent unusual crime events: The Walmart stabbing last summer. A fatal parking-deck shooting involving car break-ins. An attempted abduction at the Meijer gas station. Why these big incidents still feel like “small-town news.” Population & Geography 2020 Census: About 16,000 people inside Traverse City limits. Metro area: ~153,000 across four counties (Grand Traverse, Leelanau, Benzie, Kalkaska). Mike's spot just outside the city—technically East Bay Township, but “still Traverse City” in daily life. Neighborhoods & Areas Mentioned Downtown District Traverse Heights Old Town Central Neighborhoods Greilickville Acme / Williamsburg “Miracle Mile” – hotels and tourist strip on the bay Tourism & Seasons Summer vs. winter crowds Winter visitors: snowmobilers, skiers, ice fishermen Bars downtown still feel local and familiar in the off-season Traverse City Schools Current schools: Central, West, Traverse City High School (Mavericks), plus Catholic Central. Stories about the old buildings, snow-exposed walkways, and campus redesigns. The near-identical design of TC West and the Columbine High School campus. Airports & Travel Cherry Capital Airport still feels small—Mike knows most of the airline and TSA staff. No Amtrak service in Traverse City yet; nearest connections are Grand Rapids or Holland. Mike's go-to workaround: driving to New Buffalo to catch the train to Chicago. Parking & Downtown Life Legacy of parking meters (now digital), plus multiple parking decks. Cherry Festival setup: rides, games, food stands—including local favorite Gibby Fries. Arnold Amusements (based in Acme) runs many Michigan carnivals. Roundabouts, Traffic, and Small-Town Quirks Late-night flashing signals The ongoing roundabout debate Getting across town in only ~15 minutes even on a busy day Fast Food in Traverse City – A Unique Landscape Chains that didn't survive: several McDonald's, Burger Kings, Arby's, Ruby Tuesday, Hooters Three Meijer stores serving the area (original, Acme/Williamsburg, and soon Chum's Corners) Local burger highlights: Slabtown Burgers, Bubba's, Eastfield's Proper Burger (with commentary) Local Dining Identity Traverse City tends to favor local restaurants over big chains Well-loved local Mexican places like La Señorita Closing Thoughts Mike wraps up with a warm Thanksgiving message—hoping listeners enjoy good food, family, and gratitude—and shares appreciation for being able to create a daily episode for NaPodPoMo.
Inside the Village - A weekly podcast featuring newsmakers in Ontario
Send us a textThis week, the OPP announced a major development in an unsolved mystery that devastated a small community in northern Ontario.As reported by TimminsToday, police say they've identified the specific pickup truck believed to have been involved in a hit-and-run incident that killed a young woman in Moose Factory, Ont., more than two years ago.The victim was 21-year-old Loni Chum. A beloved daughter and sister, she was walking home from a friend's house on the early morning of Nov. 7, 2023 when she was struck and left for dead.Police have released a new video with footage of the dark-coloured pickup truck — and a renewed plea for information. There is currently a $100,000 reward for details leading to an arrest and conviction in the case.“Despite extensive investigation, we are still trying to uncover the truth in Loni's tragic death,” Detective Inspector Tom McVey said in the video.For Loni's grieving father, the new lead offers fresh hope after so many sleepless nights.“I just want my daughter's case to be solved, and I want closure for our family and for the community,” said Robert Chum, speaking to Village Media's Closer Look podcast. Robert has been a fierce advocate for his daughter, doing everything he can to keep her case in the spotlight. Every day, he adds a new post to his TikTok page in her memory.Asked if he has a message for the person who was behind the wheel of that pickup truck, Robert did not hesitate.“It's time to admit what you did that night,” he said. “All I ask is: come forward. Close this case. Be honest with yourself. Be honest with your family. Be honest with us.”Anyone with information on Loni's death is encouraged to call the OPP at 1-800-310-1122, or contact their nearest policing authority. Anyone wishing to remain anonymous can call CrimeStoppers at 1-800-222-8477.Hosted by Village Media's Michael Friscolanti and Scott Sexsmith, and produced by Derek Turner, Closer Look is a new daily podcast that goes way beyond the headlines with insightful, in-depth conversations featuring our reporters and editors, leading experts, key stakeholders and big newsmakers.Fresh episodes drop every Monday to Friday at 7 p.m. right in your local news feed — and on the show's dedicated website: closerlookpodcast.ca. Of course, you can also find us wherever you get your favourite podcasts.Want to be the first to know when a new episode lands? Sign up for our free nightly newsletter, which delivers the latest Closer Look straight to your email inbox. You can also subscribe to our YouTube channel or follow us on X,
Fred Richani interviews actor Chum Ehelepola about his decorated career, recent work in AMC's Nautilus series, giving his children the experience of a lifetime of the set of Disney's live action Mulan, his humble beginnings from Sri Lanka to Sydney, Australia, as well as his love for family, travel, and the Australian UFC/MMA scene! Follow TSC Gaming and Entertainment: ✅FB: https://www.facebook.com/TSCGamingEnt ✅IG: https://www.instagram.com/tscgamingent/ ✅Twitter: https://twitter.com/TSCGamingEnt ✅Website: http://tscnews.com/ ✅TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@fredrichani 00:00 Meet Actor Chum Ehelepola 00:59 Chum Ehelepola on Nautilus series 06:14 Chum Ehelepola on AMC picking up Nautilus, Disney 08:17 Chum Ehelepola on Sydney Actors Collective, coaching 13:39 Civil Engineer to Actor, Sri Lankan family 15:46 Chum Ehelepola on living in Sri Lanka, escaping war 17:25 Chum Ehelepola on how life changed after Covid 18:55 Chum Ehelepola on raising his children, marriage 21:14 Chum Ehelepola on MMA, training Soa The Hulk Palelei 23:23 How MMA is like acting 24:17 Chum Ehelepola on being MMA fan since UFC 1 25:56 Being inspired by UFC champion Alexander Volkanovski 27:33 Chum Ehelepola on Israel Adesanya 28:43 Chum Ehelepola rapid fire / random questions 29:21 Chum Ehelepola on alternate career path, challeging roles 31:06 Actors not getting lost in characters they play 33:12 Acting is a job, not life 35:10 Chum Ehelepola on his family 36:39 Ramtish in Mulan (2020) 39:08 Chum Ehelepola's advice for success 40:35 Why watch Nautilus on AMC on AMC Plus? 43:35 Follow Chum Ehelepola, upcoming films If you share this podcast, please use the hashtags #ChumEhepola #TSCNews and #TSCGamingEnt
Catherine-Emmanuelle de chez Elliot et Lily nous parle du produit Zenka pour animaux Chantal Lamarre aimerait être une poule pondeuse le temps d'une journée On parle de la Journée mondiale des droits de l'enfant dans le monde de Marika
À l’approche des Fêtes, Patrick, Tatiana et Isabelle explorent un phénomène étonnant : la location de « chum » pour esquiver les questions gênantes en famille. Patrick met en garde contre les dérives potentielles de cette industrie inattendue, tandis qu’Isabelle admet que la tentation devient réelle face à la pression sociale du célibat. On plonge aussi dans l’histoire fascinante de Hello Kitty, née d’un dessin rejeté 47 fois et devenue un phénomène mondial. Laurie Lévesque, astrologue, invite à profiter de la nouvelle lune en Scorpion pour réfléchir, libérer les blocages et transformer tensions et inconforts en opportunités. Un épisode qui mêle humour, persévérance et introspection pour bien finir l'année.Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee pour notre politique de vie privée
This month's JAWS50 takes us into a movie starring Richard Dreyfuss (Jaws) and Scout Taylor-Compton (Halloween). Some super bad guys, make these people dive down for some stuff, but there's sharks in the way, and then...wait, haven't we done this before?Check out our friends:Twisted Tales And for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom MoorePoodini Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
THIS EPISODE IS CURSED!This was recorded some time ago, and never released because I thought it was bad. Turns out I was just sick and wasn't as bad as I thought. Even editing it for this release, I was sick. But here it finally is!A gangster loses a shipment of gold, and hires a crew of divers in 1940's Australia. And the guess what? Yeah, a shark comes and ruins everyone's day.And for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom MoorePoodini Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Aujourd'hui dans la gang ➜ Le chum de Jo fait quelque chose d'inacceptable la nuit tombée! La phrase que tu ne pensais jamais dire a tes enfants! Steph est la fan numéro 1 de toute! Bonne écoute!
Dans cet épisode, Maripier Morin se laisse emporter par une déclaration d’admiration brûlante pour Élise Guilbault, partageant ses réactions physiques incontrôlables devant des scènes torrides et ses conseils pour « protéger ses yeux ». Isabelle Racicot et Maripier explorent ensuite le fantasme d’un millionnaire de 79 ans, Sir Benjamin Slade, et ses conditions farfelues pour trouver une héritière, entre romance et transactions improbables. Julie Ringuette raconte sa folle aventure à l’ADISQ, où audace et complicité transforment son rêve de coécriture en réalité. Les filles abordent enfin l’inconfort du style, entre pantalons taille haute, brassières strapless et bottillons récalcitrants, suivi d’un moment de vérité avec Seb Benoit sur les ajustements masculins. Un épisode où rire, fascination et absurdité se côtoient à chaque instant.Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee pour notre politique de vie privée
Before it was “110 Munson Ave” The site used to be addressed as 1504 E. Front Street in Traverse City. Back then it was part of the old fast food strip east of downtown. At some point in the early 1990s, that section was renumbered/reassigned and the same building became 110 Munson Ave (Munson Ave and E. Front basically merge/split in that corridor). So: same physical spot, two different street numbers over time. The business history, oldest to newest Arthur Treacher's Fish & Chips (late 1970s / very early 1980s) One of the classic British-style fried fish & chips chains. The Traverse City location was listed at 1504 E. Front St., which is the same building that later became 110 Munson Ave. Arthur Treacher's expanded hard in the ‘70s/early ‘80s and then started fading nationally in the mid-'80s. The Traverse City shop was part of that early wave. Burger Square (≈1981–1984) After Arthur Treacher's left, the spot became Burger Square around 1981. Locals describe Burger Square as a slider/burger place, kind of White Castle-ish. It only lasted a few years, into the mid-1980s. Dairy Queen (mid-1980s to early 1990s) After Burger Square, the same building turned into a Dairy Queen. Sources say that Dairy Queen ran there through the late '80s and very early '90s, then closed/relocated. This is also the point where the address shifts: that old DQ at 1504 E. Front is later referred to as 110 Munson Ave. Schlotzsky's Deli (early 1990s) In the early '90s, after Dairy Queen, the building became a Schlotzsky's Deli (the Austin-style sandwich chain). That didn't last super long; by the mid/late '90s it had flipped again. Luigi's Pizzeria & Café (mid/late 1990s into 2000s) Next up was Luigi's Pizzeria & Café, doing pizzas, pasta, sandwiches. Luigi's shows up in business directories at 110 Munson Ave and is tied to the Gutowski family locally. One listing says Luigi's (at that address) dates back to the 2000s and had a handful of employees. A note from the owners suggests this Munson Ave location eventually closed around the late 2000s/very early 2010s. Mancino's Pizza & Grinders (late 1990s / 2000s era overlap) The same family (Valentine “Billy” and Linda Gutowski) also operated Mancino's Pizza & Grinders in Traverse City. Mancino's is described as their independent, mom-and-pop pizza/grinder shops that started in the area in the 1990s and expanded to multiple Traverse City locations. Mancino's is specifically listed at 110 Munson Ave in older directories, and some maps still show “Mancino's Pizza & Grinders” or “Gutowski Restaurants” tied to that address even after it was gone. Over time, the Gutowskis rebranded/relocated the Mancino's/“bread nuggets” operation to other Traverse City spots (Chum's Corner, West Bayshore, etc.), and the Munson Ave shop closed. That'sa Pizza (2010s–2020) After Mancino's/Luigi's, the building housed That'sa Pizza, a long-running Traverse City pizza brand that traces back to 1981. That'sa Pizza ran takeout/delivery from 110 Munson Ave through the 2010s. By early 2021 the Munson Ave location had shut down; That'sa Pizza continues today at other Traverse City locations (Long Lake Rd, Hammond Rd, Acme/Williamsburg), but not at 110 Munson. Jersey Mike's Subs (2021–present) In 2021, a Jersey Mike's Subs franchise moved in. Local business news in February/March 2021 said Jersey Mike's would open in the “former That'sa Pizza space” at 110 Munson Ave, targeting a late-March grand opening. Jersey Mike's is still the current tenant, and their official store listing shows the address as 110 Munson Ave, Traverse City, MI 49686, phone (231) 421-1379, open daily. Quick summary timeline Late '70s / early '80s: Arthur Treacher's Fish & Chips
Before it was “110 Munson Ave” The site used to be addressed as 1504 E. Front Street in Traverse City. Back then it was part of the old fast food strip east of downtown. At some point in the early 1990s, that section was renumbered/reassigned and the same building became 110 Munson Ave (Munson Ave and E. Front basically merge/split in that corridor). So: same physical spot, two different street numbers over time. The business history, oldest to newest Arthur Treacher's Fish & Chips (late 1970s / very early 1980s) One of the classic British-style fried fish & chips chains. The Traverse City location was listed at 1504 E. Front St., which is the same building that later became 110 Munson Ave. Arthur Treacher's expanded hard in the ‘70s/early ‘80s and then started fading nationally in the mid-'80s. The Traverse City shop was part of that early wave. Burger Square (≈1981–1984) After Arthur Treacher's left, the spot became Burger Square around 1981. Locals describe Burger Square as a slider/burger place, kind of White Castle-ish. It only lasted a few years, into the mid-1980s. Dairy Queen (mid-1980s to early 1990s) After Burger Square, the same building turned into a Dairy Queen. Sources say that Dairy Queen ran there through the late '80s and very early '90s, then closed/relocated. This is also the point where the address shifts: that old DQ at 1504 E. Front is later referred to as 110 Munson Ave. Schlotzsky's Deli (early 1990s) In the early '90s, after Dairy Queen, the building became a Schlotzsky's Deli (the Austin-style sandwich chain). That didn't last super long; by the mid/late '90s it had flipped again. Luigi's Pizzeria & Café (mid/late 1990s into 2000s) Next up was Luigi's Pizzeria & Café, doing pizzas, pasta, sandwiches. Luigi's shows up in business directories at 110 Munson Ave and is tied to the Gutowski family locally. One listing says Luigi's (at that address) dates back to the 2000s and had a handful of employees. A note from the owners suggests this Munson Ave location eventually closed around the late 2000s/very early 2010s. Mancino's Pizza & Grinders (late 1990s / 2000s era overlap) The same family (Valentine “Billy” and Linda Gutowski) also operated Mancino's Pizza & Grinders in Traverse City. Mancino's is described as their independent, mom-and-pop pizza/grinder shops that started in the area in the 1990s and expanded to multiple Traverse City locations. Mancino's is specifically listed at 110 Munson Ave in older directories, and some maps still show “Mancino's Pizza & Grinders” or “Gutowski Restaurants” tied to that address even after it was gone. Over time, the Gutowskis rebranded/relocated the Mancino's/“bread nuggets” operation to other Traverse City spots (Chum's Corner, West Bayshore, etc.), and the Munson Ave shop closed. That'sa Pizza (2010s–2020) After Mancino's/Luigi's, the building housed That'sa Pizza, a long-running Traverse City pizza brand that traces back to 1981. That'sa Pizza ran takeout/delivery from 110 Munson Ave through the 2010s. By early 2021 the Munson Ave location had shut down; That'sa Pizza continues today at other Traverse City locations (Long Lake Rd, Hammond Rd, Acme/Williamsburg), but not at 110 Munson. Jersey Mike's Subs (2021–present) In 2021, a Jersey Mike's Subs franchise moved in. Local business news in February/March 2021 said Jersey Mike's would open in the “former That'sa Pizza space” at 110 Munson Ave, targeting a late-March grand opening. Jersey Mike's is still the current tenant, and their official store listing shows the address as 110 Munson Ave, Traverse City, MI 49686, phone (231) 421-1379, open daily. Quick summary timeline Late '70s / early '80s: Arthur Treacher's Fish & Chips
Today on The Marilyn Denis Show we call one lucky listener to let them know they've won $75,000 with Chum's Keyword to Cash. Plus, how to get a hold of your friends, a new money scam, and is there a doctor on aboard.
Hostem pondělního pořadu Na síti s Andreou Sestini Hlaváčkovou byl parkourista Jaroslav Chum. „Kdybych se s parkourem nesetkal, tak bych rozhodně neměl takovou disciplínu, jakou mám teď,“ přiznává borec, který ukončil kariéru po zisku stříbra na letošních Světových hrách v Číně. Co mu dala atletika, které se věnoval od útlého dětství? Poslechněte si celý rozhovor se čtyřnásobným mistrem světa.
Spooky Sharktober has come to an end!This week, I asked BAD MOVIES WORSE PEOPLE to join me, and finish a journey we started ages ago, and finish this franchise off.This sequel comes TEN YEARS after the original! How does it hold up? And does it answer those burning questions we had from the first one?Tune in now to find out!Thanks to BAD MOVIES WORSE PEOPLE for joining me and be sure to check out their links below!WebsiteSpotifyPatreonInstagramAnd for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube Channel Theme song written and performed by Mike Trebilcock Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Jann revisits her conversation with her dear friend and broadcasting icon, Marilyn Denis! She shares her journey through broadcasting, family life, and the evolution of media. She reflects on the joys of Christmas with her family, the challenges of building a home, and the sacrifices she has made throughout her career. The discussion also touches on the impact of social media on broadcasting, the challenges posed by AI and technology, and the impact of scams on public figures. The conversation also touches on celebrity encounters and the balance between privacy and public life. More about Marilyn Denis: In 2023, Marilyn announced she would bid adieu as host of the popular Canadian Screen Award-winning series THE MARILYN DENIS SHOW, following 13 incredible seasons and a 34-year career of daily daytime television. Formerly co-host of Roger & Marilyn, the veteran radio broadcaster now hosts Marilyn Denis and Jamar, weekday mornings on Toronto's #1-ranked radio station CHUM 104.5. Follow along with Marilyn on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marilyndenis Read more about her Lifetime Achievement Award: https://broadcastdialogue.com/marilyn-denis-john-brunton-among-canadian-academy-special-award-recipients/ Listen to Marilyn on CHUM: https://www.chum1045.com/shows/the-marilyn-denis-show.html Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
À l'occasion de sa revue de presse, lundi, Paul Arcand revient sur la loi spéciale concernant la rémunération des médecins qui a été adoptée sous bâillon tôt samedi matin. Les réactions ont été nombreuses, notamment de la part des médecins qui se sentent surveillés par Québec. Le ministre de la Santé, Christian Dubé, a quant à lui défendu sa loi spéciale lors de son passage à l'émission Tout le monde en parle dimanche soir, réitérant l'urgence d'agir face aux moyens de pression des médecins dans le milieu de l'enseignement, mais aussi à propos de l'attente des Québécois pour un rendez-vous ou une chirurgie. Autres sujets abordés Donald Trump est toujours fâché contre le Canada; Vol au musée du Louvre: deux hommes arrêtés, dont un qui tentait de quitter le pays; L'ouragan Melissa frappe les Caraïbes; Nouveau balado «Déjouer la maladie: mon doc et moi» avec Paul Arcand, réalisé en collaboration avec la Fondation du CHUM. Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee pour notre politique de vie privée
Week 3 of SPOOKY SHARKTOBERThis week I look into one of the entries for the CAMP BLOOD franchise, CAMP BLOOD: CLOWN SHARK (2024) directed by our favourites, Mark Polonia and Jeff Kirkendall.When a killer clown is put down, months later he returns as a clown fish (not to be confused with a clownfish) and later, the titular CLOWN SHARK!So how does this one stack up to the rest this month? Tune in now to find outCheck out our friends:SlashU And for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom MoorePoodini Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Aujourd'hui à l'émission : On vous pose la question : la chose que ta blonde ou ton chum déteste ? On jasera d'un ÉNORME mensonge d'une influenceur avec notre informateur Étienne Phénix. On joue à Té qui toé animé exceptionnellement par Phil Branch ! Bonne écoute !
SPOOKY SHARKTOBER episode 2 is here!This week I look at a sequel to one of my favourite movies from the first year of the podcast. OUIJA SHARK 2 finds us mere months after the first one, and this time we've got singing demons, ghost shark AND a Tarot Gator! Oh, and even a cameo from Bucket of Chum theme song creator MIKE TREBILCOCK!Get the planchette ready, and let me tell you the tale of the shark vs the gator.Check out our friends:Ouch Was That A Ghost?And for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom MoorePoodini Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
SPOOKY SHARKTOBER STARTS NOW!I'm kicking this month off with a Polonia Brother's Shark take on The Mummy! MUMMY SHARK (2024) finds a group of researchers and government employees digging up the past, that was better left buried and forgotten. The Polonia's have given us SHARKULA and SHARKENSTEIN for the Halloween season, and now we have this. How does it hold up against the others? Listen now to find out.Check out our friends:No More Late FeesAnd for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom MoorePoodini Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today on The Marilyn Denis Show we learn how many kilometers are on Marilyn Denis' car, how David Corey's apartment move went and give someone $50,000 with CHUM's Keyword to Cash.
e530 with Michael and Michael - An AI extravaganza with #VibeCoding, #AI #GamingChums, rating #LLMs via #Infocom games, #robots for #construction, #SelfAssembling #SpaceHabitats and a whole lot more.
Ochelli Effect 9-15-2025 SNAFU NEWS 2quod erat demonstrandumHow many wrongs make the right paradox.The 22 Year old captured suspect in Charlie Kirk Assassination wrote a bunch of Gamer taunts on shell casings, from a Christian Republican home wasn't with ANTIFA, the slang was about getting Owned in Call Of Duty. There is a connection on ALL sides that the other in the RED/B:LUE game is Evil and destroying YOU (same tone for elimination Commies and The Hitlers), and your country is under attack from Jack Boots or Crocks, because the other seeks to end the Devil they declare is so evil you must fight like hell. Neither side seems to understand how people too incompetent to function in there jobs are a victory for no one. NOW I have heard left and Right wingnuts screw together the idea that, The guy at The Kirk Assassination scene heard yelling I did it and Shoot me, the first captured person of interest may be a 9-11 mass casualty event Crisis Actor. OCHELLI does not endorse this AT ALL. A strange piece of common ground no rational observer wants to go viral. 2 Captured Suspects they had to retract and the really angry ONLINE Right Fringe Doxed and terrorized about 30 connected people that the detained had on their FRIEND lists, While THE LEFTY MOB is so bad at their propaganda that they were hurling bloody Chum and what ever a Vegan Fish eats into the ponds and reeling their BS fishing lines back in so fast that as you attempt to research the ridiculous and verify, BLAME WHITEY TIGHY RIGHTY hook and Race Bait is gone before you finish cranking!Patel faces congressional hearings after missteps in Kirk assassination probe and turmoil at FBIhttps://apnews.com/article/fbi-patel-russia-epstein-c3e70633befef64b60613709c9919b0cFired FBI agents sue Kash Patel over retribution claimshttps://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn95318rzwvoValhalla? Inviting scrutiny of any objective observer who could see the FBI as over zealous in building a case?Third-party culprit defense: A strategy used by defendants argues that another person, not the defendant, is the true perpetrator.THIS IS WHAT CAN BE OFFERED BECAUSE PATEL PUBLICLY STATED AN EARLIER DETAINED PERSON OF INTEREST WAS THE SHOOTER.There are about a dozen motions my non-lawyer brain sees as likely to uphold the entitlement to a vigorous defense.Creating reasonable doubt: Evidence that points to an alternative suspect.DNA evidence found near scene of Charlie Kirk's shooting matches suspect, FBI director sayshttps://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/dna-evidence-found-near-scene-150851829.html JURY POOL?Various pieces of publicly released information have already caused many conclusions in the general public and media. Various officials have talked about The Death Penalty. The Governor of Utah made careful statements about punishments, but subtle differences in words from local law enforcement to President Trump were made.Facing Your Accusers - Fair Trial - 4th Amendment - Presumption of Innocence Means, Motive, Opportunity be damned. Summery Judgement with less solid evidence than 2 turns into a game of Clue and not only is an individual GUILTY, but Collective Punishment and Civil War are now reasonable responses.One question. No Matter which uniform you chose or flag to wave, What does Victory look like? Kari Lake at Charlie Kirk Memorial Servicehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N5q6yZmMJpgI Know B Pete Loves Gutfeld But that guy thinks God will ask for Charlie's Autograph?https://x.com/EastEndJoe/status/1967295282800210016A FREE THINKER must ask why is left and right both, pushing and pulling the Narrative with misinformed disinformation. So currently THE TRUTH IS NOT OUT THERE.Media Casts are spells cast by the uniform program to program you to only operate in their operating system so you are in, of, and enforcing the Caste System 1984 + Animal Farm Earth or The Brave New World Order Matrix.---BE THE EFFECTEmergency help for Ochelli and The NetworkMrs.OLUNA ROSA CANDLEShttp://www.paypal.me/Kimberlysonn1Ochelli Link Treehttps://linktr.ee/chuckochelli2 new Social Media experimentsBLUESKYhttps://bsky.app/profile/ochelli.bsky.socialTRUTH SOCIALhttps://truthsocial.com/@Ochelli---NOVEMBER IN DALLAS LANCER CONFERENCEDISCOUNT FOR YOU10 % OFF code = Ochelli10https://assassinationconference.com/Coming SOON Room Discount Details The Fairmont Dallas hotel 1717 N Akard Street, Dallas, Texas 75201BE THE EFFECTListen/Chat on the Sitehttps://ochelli.com/listen-live/TuneInhttp://tun.in/sfxkxAPPLEhttps://music.apple.com/us/station/ochelli-com/ra.1461174708Ochelli Link Treehttps://linktr.ee/chuckochelliAnything is a blessing if you have the meansWithout YOUR support we go silent.---NOVEMBER IN DALLAS LANCER CONFERENCEDISCOUNT FOR YOU10 % OFF code = Ochelli10https://assassinationconference.com/Coming SOON Room Discount Details The Fairmont Dallas hotel 1717 N Akard Street, Dallas, Texas 75201. easy access to Dealey Plaza
Join me and my guest Cpt Steve Coates from the bucket of chum podcast as we discuss once again this month a movie that does not get talked about anywhere near as much as it should.Don't breathe is a fantastic movie and another prime example of the type of movies that I love talking about on this podcastit's a very stylised, creative and a very unpredictable tension driven horror created by Fede Alvarez who you may know from directing evil dead from 2013This is a proper in-depth and fun discussion and of course we talk a lot about the turkey baster scene Remember to listen right to the end for a first time horror movie memory that was sent over from a member of this fantastic horror communityand if you aren't already then please be sure you go and check out everything that Cpt Steve coates is doing over on bucket of chum on the below linkhttps://www.bucketofchumpodcast.com/and if you are somebody that prefers to watch video versions of podcasts rather than listening, then you can click the below link to go to our YouTube channel to watch this episode and so many morehttps://youtube.com/@theletstalkhorrorchannel?si=TGME1PTgfgG0VaL9
OCTOPUS AUGUST CONTINUESThis week I dive in to the sequel (?) of last week's movie and check out OCTOPUS 2: RIVER OF FEAR (2001).In this installment we head to New York City where people are mysteriously disappearing, and it's up to a hard headed detective to convince everyone a giant sea monster is responsible. It's like Alligator or Jaws, but with an octopus.Does this movie deliver? Or does it disappoint like last week's movie? Tune in now to find out!Check out our friends:The Truth TankAnd for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom MoorePoodini Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Octopus August starts now!I kick off the month with, OCTOPUS (2000). A movie that doesn't know whether it's a creature feature, spy thriller or something else. But don't worry, they manage to get in a sneaky JAWS reference that I didn't even notice at first!Tune in now to kick off a month of squirmy slimy tentacle fun!Check out our friends:No More Late FeesAnd for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom MoorePoodini Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
My Transistor Radio Vol. 1Growing up in the late 60's and early 70's AM Radio was king and your prime source for your favorite music. For me I can't forget those on-air jocks and that beautiful music on my transistor radio. In Toronto we got our fix on stations like 1050 CHUM and CFTR. This episode goes back to those days which seems to feel like a forgotten era with each passing year.This episode features Freda Payne, The Main Ingredient, Chicago, The Temptations, Blood Sweat & Tears, The Jackson 5, and many more!Remember when music was Music!DJ Rhythm DeePLAYLIST1. WHAT DOES IT TAKE/JR. WALKER AND THE ALLSTARS2. EVERYBODY PLAYS THE FOOL/MAIN INGREDIENT3. BAND OF GOLD/FREDA PAYNE4. WANT ADS/HONEY CONE5. I CAN'T GET NEXT TO YOU/TEMPTATIONS6. I'M GONNA MAKE YOU LOVE ME/TEMPTATIONS7. MY CHERIE AMOUR/STEVIE WONDER8. YOU MAKE ME SO VERY HAPPY/BLODD SWEAT & TEARS9. CRYSTAL BLUE PERSUASION/TOMMY JAMES & THE SHONDELLS10. PATCHES/CLARENCE CARTER11. FAMILY AFFAIR/SLY & THE FAMILY STONE12. BACKFIELD IN MOTION/MEL & TIM13. I JUST WANT TO CELEBRATE/RARE EARTH14. BEGINNINGS/CHICAGO15. GOT TO BE THERE/JACKSON 516. STARTING ALL OVER AGAIN/MEL & TIM17. LA LA LA MEANS I LOVE YOU/THE DELFONICS18. CHOICE OF COLORS/THE IMPRESSIONS19. TO LOVE SOMEBODY/BEE GEES20. STONE SOUL PICNIC/5TH DIMENSION21. GRAZING IN THE GRASS/FRIENDS OF DESTINCTION
Peter Benchley's novel JAWS was adapted into one of the greatest movies ever put to film. But this wasn't the only time he dipped his toes into the world of aquatic horror. He's written a few novels in the aquatic horror world, and one of those was CREATURE.Featuring some of the best practical shark monster effects ever, this 1998 TV movie doesn't get the attention it deserves. So to celebrate 50 Years of Jaws, I am releasing this two-part episode as one mega episode from the Patreon Vault.And for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom Moore Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In honor of Shark Week we are bringing in EVERYONE and we mean ALMOST EVERYONE to talk about the best monsters, best creatures features, and our favorite shark movies of all time. Thank you to every creator that made this dream a reality. Horror Hour with the Hanna's - 0:00-17:44 Movies & Us - 17:44-26:18 Movie Friends - 26:18-35:00 Nothing to Fear - 35:00-45:40 No Bodies - 45:40-51:48 The Revisionist Almanac - 51:48-1:01:00 Paranormal in Pennsylvania - 1:01:00-1:05:27 Movie Postmortem Podcast - 1:05:27-1:14:33 Red Treehouse / One Good Scare - 1:14:33-1:20:19 Spooky Sips 1:20:19-1:26:31 Cinema's Charm - 1:26:31-1:29:37 Bucket of Chum - 1:29:37-1:33:19 Ric's Horror Review Show - 1:33:19-1:45:11 Follow Us on Instagram and TikTok: @horrorhourwiththehannas Music by Aries Beats - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPpnxLYrzVA
And we are BACK!Live (to tape) from Chum's Crib Nate and Benjamin catch each other up on all the summer haps. Galleries closing, tennis playing and all the rest.All that and so much more on THE ONLY ART PODCAST.
MONTH OF ACTION continues this week with Halle Berry's 2012 action adventure shark movie DARK TIDE! Directed by John Stockwell (Into The Blue, Blue Crush)A rich douche takes his son for an adventure he doesn't want to go on, and shit goes sideways. It's like the Titan Sub story but with sharks.Check out the MONTH OF ACTION participantsMovie DumpsterGood Beer Bad Movie NightVideo Villa EntertainmentB-Movie BrainDissect That FilmDoom Generation PodcastBad Movies Worse PeoplePlay 4 KeepsFlicks and FriendsGeeks With BeardsssssserjfromletheanBrainBuster VideoGive Me Back My Action & Horror Movies/B-ActionThe Barrens HideoutOld Man BradFor more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteCheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom Moore Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Diễn viên Quốc Trường, Mạc Văn Khoa, Phương Thanh và Mai Cát Vi kể chuyện hậu trường cực kỳ thú vị khi đóng phim "Út Lan: Oán linh giữ của".
There has been schedule change for the Month of Mattei. This chapter I'm joined by Dan from Geeks with Beards to talk the Fulci/Mattei mashup Zombi3. We also have a mashup of our own with the Month of Mattei and Month of Action!(eagle screech). Hope you enjoy the next peek into the world of Mattei. Thanks for listening!Follow Geeks with Beards:https://www.instagram.com/thegeekswithbeardspodcast/https://www.youtube.com/@TheGeeksWithBeardsPodcastJoin everyone taking part in the Month of Action!Movie Dumpster, Good Beer Bad Movie Night, Video Villa Entertainment, Bucket of Chum, B-Movie Brain, Doom Generation, Dissect That Film, Bad Movies Worse People, Play 4 Keeps, Flicks and Friends, Give M Back My Action & Horror Movies, Brainbuster Video, Barrens Hideout, B-Action, Geeks with Beards, Extra SpoookyJoin me at the Esquire theater on the 3rd Friday of the month for Frightful Fridays! https://www.esquiretheatre.com/Follow me https://letterboxd.com/OldManBrad/https://linktr.ee/oldmanbradBecome a patron for even more content! https://www.patreon.com/OldManBradSupport me on Kofihttps://ko-fi.com/oldmanbradA huge thank your to the patrons of Old Man Brad: Two Peas on a Podcast, Flicks and Friends, Nerdrovert, Chris Yeany, Brett Parker, KaraMusic:Ghoul by Carl Kasey @ White Bat Audio
Month of Action Continues this week with the true story of the USS Indianapolis. Stuck at sea for 5 days, and no one coming to the rescue as they're picked off by sharks because the government and military suck. Also, it's directed by Mario Van Peebles!Luckily I don't have to endure it alone, as Derrick from Bad Movies Worse People joins me to dive into this story mentioned by Quint in JAWS.Check out all the other creators for MONTH OF ACTION!Movie DumpsterGood Beer Bad Movie NightVideo Villa EntertainmentB-Movie BrainDissect That FilmDoom Generation PodcastBad Movies Worse PeoplePlay 4 KeepsFlicks and FriendsGeeks With BeardsssssserjfromletheanBrainBuster VideoGive Me Back My Action & Horror Movies/B-ActionThe Barrens HideoutOld Man BradBucket of Chum: The Shark Movie PodcastAnd for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteCheck out the YouTube Channel Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In 1975, a film was made that would change the trajectory of Hollywood forever. A film that a 27 year old Steven Spielberg thought would destroy his career. That film is JAWS. Join us, along with Alli from the Quad Pro Pro Podcast and Steve Coates from the @bucketofchumpodcast , as we dive into 50 years of the original summer blockbuster. Also, hear some of our friends talk about there history with the film and why it's still so loved to this day. #jaws #70smovies #stevenspielberg #50thanniversary #moviepodcast #moviebreakdown Follow Alli and Quad Pro Quo here: https://linktr.ee/quadproquopod Follow Steve and Bucket of Chum here: https://linktr.ee/bucketofchum Intro/Outro Music by DARKRAIZARD Intro video created by Mickey Joe Smith Help support the show and join us on PATREON: https://patreon.com/dissectthatfilm LIKE, COMMENT, SUBSCRIBE, and HIT THE BELL GO TO OUR LINKTREE FOR ALL OF OUR LINKS https://linktr.ee/dissectthatfilm Check out Dan's MTG podcast Manawurm on Spotify. Time Stamps: Intro/Trivia - 0:00:00-0:33:55 Movie Breakdown - 0:33:55-1:53:00 Tribute section - 1:53:00-2:15:25 Movie Breakdown - 2:15:25-2:49:24 Thoughts and Comments - 2:49:24-3:11:51
With the amount of butthurt about JAWS reviews from last week's episode on either end of the spectrum, I thought I'd make things fair and read some stellar 5 Star (and some 1 Star) reviews of 1995's Jaws knockoff spectacular CRUEL JAWS a.k.a. JAWS 5What did you think of the movie? Let me know in the comments!Reviews can be found from the follow sources:LetterboxdiMDBRotten TomatoesDon't forget to check out our friends:Give Me Back My Action and Horror MoviesOld Man Brad (Thanks for the episode idea!) And for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom Moore Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
JAWS is celebrating 50 years since it came out, and while there's those of us that LOVE the movie, what about the people who don't (and are wrong for it)?Well this week, we dive deep into the 1 star reviews on Letterboxd, iMDB and more, and see what nonsense people have to say.Check out all the reviews in the links below:LetterboxdIMDBRotten TomatoesCommon Sense MediaCheck out our friends:Dissect That FilmAnd for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom Moore Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Open wide and receive my chum!I'm back with shark movie reviews! This week I take a trip to Malibu which is ruined by god damn goblin sharks and dumbasses, and a love triangle for the ages. Can all the bikini babes and buff dudes save this movie from mediocrity? Tune in now to find out!Check out our friends:SlashU And for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom Moore Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Time Stamps:8:18 - Foreign Policy Round-up40:23 - Cuomo's Chomo Chum58:16 - False Flag Season1:11:22 - AI BlackmailWelcome to The Morning Dump, where we dive headfirst into the deep end of the pool of current events, conspiracy, and everything in between. Join us for a no-holds-barred look at the week's hottest topics, where we flush away the fluff and get straight to the substance.Check out nadeaushaveco.com today & use code Jose for 10% off your entire order!!!Please consider supporting my work- Patreon- https://www.patreon.com/nowayjose2020 Only costs $2/month and will get you access to episodes earlier than the publicNo Way, Jose! Rumble Channel- https://rumble.com/c/c-3379274 No Way, Jose! YouTube Channel- https://youtube.com/channel/UCzyrpy3eo37eiRTq0cXff0g My Podcast Host- https://redcircle.com/shows/no-way-jose Apple podcasts- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/no-way-jose/id1546040443 Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/0xUIH4pZ0tM1UxARxPe6Th Stitcher- https://www.stitcher.com/show/no-way-jose-2 Amazon Music- https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/41237e28-c365-491c-9a31-2c6ef874d89d/No-Way-Jose Google Podcasts- https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5yZWRjaXJjbGUuY29tL2ZkM2JkYTE3LTg2OTEtNDc5Ny05Mzc2LTc1M2ExZTE4NGQ5Yw%3D%3DRadioPublic- https://radiopublic.com/no-way-jose-6p1BAO Vurbl- https://vurbl.com/station/4qHi6pyWP9B/ Feel free to contact me at thelibertymovementglobal@gmail.com#ChrisCuomo #CNNScandal #MediaAccountability #CNNProducers #CuomoControversy #ChildProtection #MediaEthics #CNNNews #JournalismIntegrity #CuomoCNN #FalseFlag #TelAvivBomber #EmbassyAttack #ConspiracyTheories #GeopoliticalTensions #FalseFlagSeason #TelAvivNews #MiddleEastConflict #AIRunAmok #ArtificialIntelligence
Week 3 of GRIZZLY MAY!This week I dig my incy tincy finger nails into 1977's CLAWS! A JAWS knockoff this is not! It's not even a GRIZZLY knockoff. Although marketed as a GRIZZLY sequel in Canada and Mexico, this movie stands tall on it's own, and all I'm wondering is, where is the blu ray for this?Watch the movie here.Check out our friends:Death Before Boos And for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom Moore Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
GRIZZLY MAY continues with director William Girdler's follow up to GRIZZLY (1976), DAY OF THE ANIMALS (1977)!Starring Leslie Nielson, Christopher George and Richard Jaeckel, the ozone layer is fubar, and the animals get infected, for reasons that are still unclear...But Leslie Nielson fights a bear, so how bad can it be?Check out our friends:No More Late Fees And for more Bucket of Chum, check out the links below:Join the Patreon!For only $2 USD a month you'll get a bonus episode each month, a newsletter, and more!Bucket of Chum WebsiteFollow me on Letterboxd HERECheck out the YouTube ChannelTheme song written and performed by Mike TrebilcockThanks to the Patrons!Benji IrwinArties AngelsKatie LampeCassandraJennifer HallmanScott McCallumBrett ParkerTom Moore Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hour 3 of A&G features... Walmart prices & the biggest media failure in history Air traffic controllers A ride along, Trump tariffs & bags of cash Bruce Springsteen & his political rants See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.