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In this episode of Gangland Wire, Gary Jenkins sits down with Bob Cooley, the once–well-connected Chicago lawyer who lived at the center of the city's most notorious corruption machine. After years out of the public eye, Cooley recently resurfaced to revisit his explosive memoir, When Corruption Was King—and this conversation offers a rare, firsthand look at how organized crime, politics, and the court system intersected in Chicago for decades. Cooley traces his journey from growing up in a police family to serving as a Chicago police officer and ultimately becoming a criminal defense attorney whose real job was quietly fixing cases for the Chicago Outfit. His deep understanding of the judicial system made him indispensable to mob-connected power brokers like Pat Marcy, a political fixer with direct access to judges, prosecutors, and court clerks. Inside the Chicago Corruption Machine Cooley explains how verdicts were bought, cases were steered, and justice was manipulated—what insiders called the “Chicago Method.” He describes his relationships with key figures in organized crime, including gambling bosses like Marco D'Amico and violent enforcers such as Harry Aleman and Tony Spilotro, painting a chilling picture of life inside a world where loyalty was enforced by fear. As his role deepened, so did the psychological toll. Cooley recounts living under constant threat, including a contract placed on his life after he refused to betray a fellow associate—an event that forced him to confront the cost of the life he was leading. Turning Point: Becoming a Federal Witness The episode covers Cooley's pivotal decision in 1986 to cooperate with federal authorities, a move that helped dismantle powerful corruption networks through FBI Operation Gambat. Cooley breaks down how political connections—not just street-level violence—allowed the Outfit to operate with near-total impunity for so long. Along the way, Cooley reflects on the moral reckoning that led him to turn on the system that had enriched and protected him, framing his story as one not just of crime and betrayal, but of reckoning and redemption. What Listeners Will Hear How Bob Cooley became the Outfit's go-to case fixer The role of Pat Marcy and political corruption in Chicago courts Firsthand stories involving Marco D'Amico, Harry Aleman, and Tony Spilotro The emotional and psychological strain of living among violent criminals The decision to cooperate and the impact of Operation Gambat Why Cooley believes Chicago's corruption endured for generations Why This Episode Matters Bob Cooley is one of the few people who saw the Chicago Outfit from inside the courtroom and the back rooms of power. His story reveals how deeply organized crime embedded itself into the institutions meant to uphold the law—and what it cost those who tried to escape it. This episode sets the stage for a deeper follow-up conversation, where Gary and Cooley will continue unpacking the most dangerous and revealing moments of his life. Resources Book: When Corruption Was King by Bob Cooley Hit me up on Venmo for a cup of coffee or a shot and a beer @ganglandwire Click here to “buy me a cup of coffee” Subscribe to the website for weekly notifications about updates and other Mob information. To go to the store or make a donation or rent Ballot Theft: Burglary, Murder, Coverup, click here To rent ‘Brothers against Brothers’ or ‘Gangland Wire,’ the documentaries click here. To purchase one of my books, click here. 0:03 Prelude to Bob Cooley’s Story 1:57 Bob Cooley’s Background 5:24 The Chicago Outfit Connection 8:24 The Turning Point 15:20 The Rise of a Mob Lawyer 23:54 A Life of Crime and Consequences 26:03 The Incident at the Police Station 50:27 The Count and His Influence 1:19:51 The Murder of a Friend 1:35:26 Contracts and Betrayal 1:40:36 Conclusion and Future Stories Transcript [0:00] Well, hey guys, this is a little prelude to my next story. Bob Cooley was a Chicago lawyer and an outfit associate who had been in, who has been in hiding for many years. I contacted him about six or seven years ago when I first started a podcast, I was able to get a phone number on him and, and got him on the phone. He was, I think it was out in the desert in Las Vegas area at the time. And at the time he was trying to sell his book when corruption was king to a movie producer And he really didn’t want to overexpose himself, and they didn’t really want him to do anything. And eventually, COVID hit, and the movie production was canceled. And it was just all over. There were several movie productions were canceled during COVID, if I remember right. A couple people who I have interviewed and had a movie deal going. Well, Bob recently remembered me, and he contacted me. He just called me out of the clear blue, and he wanted to revive his book and his story. He’s been, you know, way out of the limelight for a long time. And so I thought, well, I always wanted to interview this guy because he’s got a real insider’s knowledge to Chicago Outfit, the one that very few people have. [1:08] You know, here’s what he knows about. And he provides valuable insight into the inner workings of the Outfit. And I don’t mean, you know, scheming up how to kill people and how to do robberies and burglars and all that. But the Chicago court system and Chicago politics, that’s a, that’s a, the, the mob, a mafia family can’t exist unless they have connections into the political system and especially the court system. Otherwise, what good are they? You know, I mean, they, they just take your money where they give you back. They can’t protect you from anybody. [1:42] So I need to give you a little more of the backstory before we go on to the actual interview with Bob, because he kind of rambles a little bit and goes off and comes back and drops [1:54] names that we don’t have time to go into explanation. So here’s a little bit of what he talked about. He went from being, as I said before, Chicago Outfit’s trusted fixer in the court system, and he eventually became the government star witness against them. He’s born, he’s about my age. He was born in 1943. He was an Irish-American police family and came from the Chicago South side. He was a cop himself for a short period of time, but he was going to law school while he was a policeman. And once he started practicing law, he moved right into criminal law and into first ward politics and the judicial world downtown. [2:36] And that’s where the outfit and the old democratic machine intersected. He was in a restaurant called Counselor’s Row, which was right down. Bob had an office downtown. Well, he’s inside that system, and he uses his insider’s knowledge to fix cases. Once an outfit started noticing him that he could fix a case if he wanted to, he immediately became connected to the first ward power broker and outfit political conduit, a guy named Pat Marcy. Pat Marcy knew all the judges He knew all the court clerks And all the police officers And Bob was getting to know him too During this time But Bob was a guy who was out in He was a lawyer And he was working inside the court system Marcy was just a downtown fixer. [3:22] But Bob got to where he could guarantee acquittals or light sentences for whoever came to him with the right amount of money, whether it be a mobster or a bookmaker or a juice loan guy or a crap politician, whoever it was, Bob could fix the case. [3:36] One of the main guys tied to his work he was kind of attached to a crew everybody’s owned by somebody he was attached to the Elmwood Park crew and Marco D’Amico who was under John DeFranco and I can’t remember who was before DeFranco, was kind of his boss and he was a gambling boss and Bob was a huge gambler I mean a huge gambler and Bob will help fix cases for some notorious people Really, one of the most important stories that we’ll go into in the second episode of this is Harry the Hook Aleman. And he also helped fix the case for Tony Spolatro and several others. He’s always paid him in cash. And he lived large. As you’ll see, he lived large. And he moved comfortably between mobsters and politicians and judges. And he was one of the insiders back in the 70s, 60s or 70s mainly. He was an insider. But by the 80s, he’s burned out. He’s disgusted with himself. He sees some things that he doesn’t like. They put a contract out on him once because he wouldn’t give somebody up as an informant, and he tipped one of his clients off that he was going to come out that he was an informant, and the guy was able to escape, I believe. Well, I have to go back and listen to my own story. [4:53] Finally in 1986 he walked unannounced they didn’t have a case on him and he walked unannounced in the U.S. Courthouse and offered himself up to take down this whole Pat Marcy and the whole mobster political clique in Chicago and he wore a wire for FBI an operation called Operation Gambat which is a gambling attorney because he was a huge gambler [5:17] huge huge gambler and they did a sweeping probe and indicted tons of people over this. So let’s go ahead and listen to Robert Cooley. [5:31] Uh, he, he, like I said, he’s a little bit rambling and a little bit hard to follow sometimes, but some of these names and, and, uh, and in the first episode, we’ll really talk about his history and, uh, where he came from and how he came up. He’ll mention somebody called the count and I’ll do that whole count story and a whole nother thing. So when he talks about the count, just disregard that it’ll be a short or something. And I got to tell that count story. It’s an interesting story. Uh, he, he gets involved with the only own, uh, association, uh, and, uh, and the, uh, Chinese Tong gang in, uh, Chicago and Chicago’s Chinatown. Uh, some of the other people he’ll talk about are Marco D’Amico, as I said, and D’Amico’s top aide, Rick Glantini, uh, another, uh, connected guy and worked for the city of Chicago is Robert Abinati. He was a truck driver. [6:25] He was also related to D’Amico and D’Amico’s cousin, former Chicago police officer Ricky Borelli. Those are some of the names that he’ll mention in this. So let’s settle back and listen to Bob Cooley. Hey, all you wiretappers. Good to be back here in studio gangland wire. This is Gary Jenkins, retired Kansas City Police Intelligence Unit detective. And, you know, we we deal with the mob here once a week, sometimes twice a week on the podcast. And I have a special guest that hadn’t been heard from for a while. And, you know, to be honest, guys, I’ve kind of gotten away from the outfit. I’ve been doing a lot of New York stuff and Springfield, Massachusetts and all around the country. And I kind of got away from Chicago. And we’re going back to Chicago today. And I’m honored that Bob Cooley got hold of me. Now, you may not know who Bob Cooley was, but Bob Cooley was a guy. He was a mob lawyer in Chicago, and he really probably, he heard him as much as anybody’s ever heard him, and he did it all of his own accord. He was more like an undercover agent that just wasn’t officially designated an FBI agent rather than an informant. But anyhow, welcome, Bob. [7:37] Hello. Nice meeting you. Nice to meet you. And I’ve talked to you before. And you were busy before a few years ago. And you were getting ready to make some movies and stuff. And then COVID hit and a lot of that fell through. And that happened to several people I’ve talked to. You got a lot in common with me. I was a Kansas City policeman. And I ended up becoming a lawyer after I left the police department. And you were a Chicago copper. And then you left the police department a little bit earlier than I did and became a lawyer. And, and Bob, you’re from a Chicago police family, if I remember right. Is that correct? Oh, police, absolute police background, the whole family. Yes. Yeah. Your grandfather, your grandfather was killed in the line of duty. Is that right? [8:25] Both of my grandfathers were killed in the line of duty. Wow. In fact, that’s one of the reasons why I eventually did what I did. I was very, very close with my dad. Yeah, and your dad was a copper. [8:38] He was a policeman, yeah. And in fact, you use that term. I, for many, many years, wouldn’t use that word. It just aggravated me when people would use the word copper. To me, it would show disrespect. Oh, really? I said to us in Kansas City, that’s what we call each other, you know, among coppers. Oh, I know. I know. But I know. But, you know, I just, for whatever reason, one of the things that aggravated me the most, in fact, when I was being cross-examined by this piece of shit, Eddie Jensen, the one I wrote about in my book that was, you know, getting a lot of people killed and whatever. And he made some comment about my father. and I got furious and I had to, you know, my father was unbelievably honest as a policeman. [9:29] Everybody loved him because they didn’t have to share, uh, you know, but he was a detective. He had been written up many times in true and magazines and these magazines for making arrests. He was involved in the cartage detail. He was involved in all kinds of other things, but honest as the day is long. And, and, um, but, uh, again, the, uh, my father’s father was, uh, was a policeman and he was killed by a member of the Capone gang. And, uh, and when he was killed, after he was killed. [10:05] The, uh, well, after he got shot, he got shot during a robbery after he got shot, he was in the hospital for a while. And then he went, then he went back home. He went back home to his, uh, you know, to his house, uh, cause he had seven kids. He had a big family too. And, uh, stayed with his, you know, with his wife and, and, and eventually died. And when he died they had a very mediocre funeral for him. They had a bigger, much bigger funeral when Al Capone’s brother died. But during that time when I was a kid when I was about 13, 12, 13 years old, I worked among other places at a grocery store where I delivered to my grandmother. My grandmother lived in South Park which later became Mark Luther King Drive. She lived a very, very meager life because she basically had nothing. [11:09] What they gave them for the, at that time, what they gave them for the police department was a portion of the husband’s salary when they died, whatever. It was never a big deal like it is now, you know, like it is now when policemen get killed in the line of duty. and I’m thinking at the same time I’m thinking down the road, You know, about certain things from my past did come back to affect me. [11:38] Doing what I was doing, when I got involved, and I got involved absolutely with all these different people. My father hated these people. I didn’t, you know, I didn’t realize how much. I didn’t realize much when I was growing, you know, when I was growing up and whatever. And even when I was practicing law and when I opened up Pratt-Mose, I would have my father and mother come along with other people. And the place was all full of mobsters. I mean, we’re talking about, you know, a lot of Capone’s whole crew. A lot of the gunmen were still alive. In fact, the ones that ran the first award were all gunmen from Capone’s mob. And never said a word, never said a word about it. You know, he met my partner, Johnny Diaco, who was part of the mob, the senator, and whatever colitis could be. My dad, when my dad was dying. [12:38] When my dad was dying, he had what they didn’t call it, but it had to be Alzheimer’s because my dad was a unbelievably, he was a big, strong man, but he was never a fighter, sweet as could be to anybody and everybody. When he started getting bad, he started being mean to my mother and doing certain things. So we finally had to put him into a nursing home. When I went to see him in the nursing, and I had a close relationship with my dad because he saved my life many times when I was a kid. I was involved with stolen cars at school. I should have been thrown out of school. It was Mount Carmel, but he had been a Carmelite, almost a Carmelite priest. [13:25] And whatever, and that’s what kept me from being kicked out of school at Marquette when they were going to throw me out there because I was, again, involved in a lot of fights, and I also had an apartment that we had across the hall from the shorter hall where I was supposed to stay when I was a freshman, and we were throwing huge parties, and they wanted to throw me out of school. My dad came, my dad came and instead of throwing me out, they let me resign and whatever he had done so much, you know, for me. Yeah. [14:00] Now when I, when I meet, when I meet him up in the hospital, I, I came in the first time and it was about maybe 25 miles outside, you know, from where my office was downtown. And when I went in to see him, they had him strapped in a bed because apparently when he initially had two people in the room and when somebody would come in to try to talk to him and whatever, he would be nasty. And one time he punched one of the nurses who was, you know, because he was going in the bed and they wouldn’t, and he wouldn’t let him take him out. You know, I was furious and I had to go, I had to go through all that. And now, just before he died, it was about two or three days before he died, he didn’t recognize anybody except me. Didn’t recognize my mother. Didn’t recognize anybody. Yet when I would come into the room, son, that’s what he always called me, son, when I would come in. So he knew who I basically was. And he would even say, son, don’t let him do this to me when he had to go through or they took out something and he had to wear one. Of those, you know, those decatheters or whatever. Oh, yeah. [15:15] Just before he died, he said to me, he said, son, he said, those are the people that killed my father. He said, and his case was fixed. After, I had never known that. In fact, his father, Star, was there at 11th and State, and I would see it when everyone went in there. Star was up there on the board as if there’s a policeman or a policeman killed in the line of duty. When he told me that it really and I talked to my brother who knew all about all that that’s what happened, the gunman killed him on 22nd street when that happened the case went to trial and he was found not guilty apparently the case was fixed I tell you what talk about poetic justice there your grandson is now in that system of fixing cases. I can’t even imagine what you must have felt like when you learned that at that point in your life. Man, that would be a grief. That would be tough. That’s what eventually made me one day decide that I had to do something to put an end to all that was going on there. [16:25] I’m curious, what neighborhood did you grow up in? Neighborhood identity is pretty strong in Chicago. So what neighborhood do you claim? I grew up in the hood. First place I grew up, my first place when I was born, I was at 7428 South Vernon. Which is the south side, southeast side of the city. I was there until I was in sixth grade. That was St. Columbanus Parish. When I was in sixth grade, we had to move because that’s when they were doing all the blockbusting there in Chicago. That’s when the blacks were coming in. And when the blacks were coming in, and I truly recall, We’ve talked about this many times elsewhere. I remember knocking on the door and ringing the doorbell all hours of the day and night. A black family just moved in down the street. You’ve got to sell now. If you don’t, the values will all go down. And we would not move. My father’s philosophy, we wouldn’t move until somebody got killed in the area. Because he couldn’t afford it. He had nine kids. he’s an honest policeman making less than $5,000 a year. [17:45] Working two, three jobs so we could all survive when he finished up, When he finished up with, when we finally moved, we finally moved, he went to 7646 South Langley. That was, again, further south, further south, and the area was all white at that time. [18:09] We were there for like four years, and about maybe two or three years, and then the blacks started moving in again. The first one moved in, and it was the same pattern all over again. Yeah, same story in Kansas City and every other major city in the United States. They did that blockbusting and those real estate developers. Oh, yeah, blockbusters. They would call and tell you that the values wouldn’t go down. When I was 20, I joined the police department. Okay. That’s who paid my way through college and law school. All right. I joined the police department, and I became a policeman when I was 20. [18:49] As soon as I could. My father was in recruit processing and I became a policeman. During the riots, I had an excuse not to go. They thought I was working. I was in the bar meeting my pals before I went to work. That’s why I couldn’t go to school at that time. But anyhow, I took some time off. I took some time off to, you know, to study, uh, because, you know, I had all C’s in one D in my first, in my first semester. And if you didn’t have a B, if you didn’t have a C average, you couldn’t, you kicked out of school at the end of a quarter. This is law school. You’re going to law school while you’re still an active policeman. Oh yeah, sure. That’s okay. So you work full time and went to law school. You worked full-time and went to law school at the same time. When I was 20, I joined the police department. Okay. That’s who paid my way through college and law school. All right. I joined the police department, and I became a policeman when I was 20, as soon as I could. My father was in recruit processing, and I became a policeman. Yeah, yeah. But anyhow, I went to confession that night. [20:10] And when I went to confession, there was a girl, one of the few white people in the neighborhood, there was a girl who had gone before me into the confessional. And I knew the priest. I knew him because I used to go gambling with him. I knew the priest there at St. Felicis who heard the confessions. And this is the first time I had gone to confession with him even though I knew him. [20:36] And I wanted to get some help from the big guy upstairs. And anyhow, when I leave, I leave about maybe 10 minutes later, and she had been saying her grace, you know, when I left. And when I walked out, I saw she was right across the street from my house, and there’s an alley right there. And she was a bit away from it, and there were about maybe 13, 14, 15 kids. when I say kids, they were anywhere from the age of probably about 15, 16 to about 18, 19. And they’re dragging her. They’re trying to drag her into the alley. And when I see that, when I see that, I head over there. When I get over there, I have my gun out. I have the gun out. And, you know, what the hell is going on? And, you know, and I told her, I told her her car was parked over there. I told her, you know, get out of here. And I’ve got my gun. I’ve got my gun in my hand. And I don’t know what I’m going to do now in terms of doing anything because I’m not going to shoot them. They’re standing there looking at me. And after a little while, I hear sirens going on. [22:00] The Barton family lived across the street in an apartment building, and they saw what was going on. They saw me out there. It was about probably about seven o’clock at night. It was early at night and they put a call in 10-1 and call in 10-1. Assist the officer. Is that a assist the officer? It’s 1031. Police been in trouble. Yeah. And the squad’s from everywhere. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. So you can hear, you can hear them coming. And now one of them says to me, and I know they’re pretty close. One of them says to me, you know, put away your gun and we’ll see how tough you are. And I did. [22:42] Because you know they’re close. And I’m busy fighting with a couple of them. And they start running and I grab onto two of them. I’m holding onto them. I could only hold two. I couldn’t hold anymore. And the next thing I know, I wake up in the hospital about four days later. Wow. What had happened was they pushed me. Somebody, there was another one behind who pushed me right in front of a squad car coming down the street. Oh, shit. Yeah, man. And the car ran completely over me. They pulled me off from under the, just under the back wheels, I was told were right next to, were onto me, blood all over the place. Everybody thought I was dead. Right. Because my brothers, my one brother who was a police kid that, you know, heard all the noise and the family came in. I tried to prostrate my house and they all thought I was dead. But anyhow, I wake up in the hospital about three days later. When I wake up in the hospital, I’m like. [23:54] Every bone of my body was broken. I’m up there like a mummy. And the mayor came to see me. All kinds of people came to see me. They made me into an even bigger star in my neighborhood. The Count lives down the street and is seeing all this stuff about me and whatever. Jumping quickly to another thing, which got me furious. Willie Grimes was the cop that was driving this quad. He was a racist. We had some blacks in the job. He was a total racist. When my brother and when some others were doing their best to try to find these people, he was protecting them. Some of them, if they caught, he was protecting them. [24:48] I was off the job for like nine months when I came back to work. I never came to the hospital to see me. I mean, everybody came. Every day, my hospital went. Because one of the nurses that I was dating, in fact, she was one of those killed. That’s when Richard Speck wound up killing her and some of the others at the same time. It was at the South Chicago Hospital. Holy darn. What they did for me, I had buckets in my womb with ice. We were bringing beer and pizzas and whatever. Every day was like a party in there. When I finally came back to work, it was 11 o’clock at night. I worked out in South Chicago, and I’m sitting in the parking lot, and the media is there. The media, they had all kinds of cameras there. Robert Cooley’s coming back to work after like nine months. They wouldn’t let me go back. [25:51] I’m walking by the squads. And Willie was a big guy. He was probably about 220, a big one of these big muscle builders and all that nonsense. [26:04] He’s sitting in the first car. The cars are all lined up because when we would change, when we would change at like 11 30 uh you know the cars would all be waiting we jumped into the cars and off we go as i’m walking by the car i hear aren’t you afraid to walk in front of my car. [26:26] I look over and he had a distinctive voice i walk over to the car and i reach in and i start punching them, and I’m trying to drag them out of the car. The cameras, the cameras are, you know, they’re all basically inside. They’re all inside. You know, as you walk in there, they’re all inside there. When I do, I eventually walk up there. But the other police came, and they dragged me. They dragged me away, and they brought me in, and whatever. We got transferred out the next day out of the district. And the first policeman I meet is Rick, Rick Dorelli, who’s connected with, who’s a monster. He’s connected with them. And, and he’s the one who told me, he said to me, you know, we played cards and he realized I was a gambler, but I had never dealt with bookmakers. And he said, he says, yeah, you want to make some money? You want to make some easy money? Well, yeah, sure. You know, uh, you know, and thinking that’s, you know, working security or something like that, like I had done back in Chicago, you know, like I had done on the south side. And he said, I want you to make some bets for me with somebody who said. [27:43] And I remember him using the term. He said, I want you to be my face. He said, and I want you to make some bets for me. He said, and he said, and if you, if you’ll do it, I’ll give you a hundred dollars a week just to make the bets for me. And then, you know, and then meet with these people and pay these people off. And I said, sure. You know, I said, you know, why? He says, because I can’t play with these. people he said i’m connected with him he said and i’m not allowed to gamble myself he said but he told me he said i’ve got a couple people i take bets from i’ve got my own side deal going so i want you to do it i want you to do it and i’ll give i’ll give you to them as a customer, and you’re gonna be a customer and he’s and he tells people now that i got this other police He’s in law school. He comes from a real wealthy family, and he’s looking for a place to bet. He’s in Gambia. He’s looking for a place to bet. [28:47] So I call this number, and I talk to this guy. He gives me a number. When you bet, you call, and you do this, and you do that. And I’m going to get $100 at the end of the week. Now, I’m making $5,200 a year, and they’re taking money out of my chest. I’m going to double my salary. I’m going to double my salary immediately. Why wouldn’t you do it? That’s fantastic money at the time. So I start doing it. And the first week I’m doing it, it was baseball season. [29:19] And I’m making these bets. He’s betting $500 a game on a number of games. And he’s winning some, he’s losing some. But now, when I’m checking my numbers with the guy there, he owes, at the end of the week, he owes $3,500. [29:38] And now, it’s getting bigger and bigger, he’s losing. I’m getting worried. What have I got myself into? Yeah, because it’s not him losing, it’s you losing to the bookie. That’s what I’m thinking. I’m thinking, holy, holy, Christopher, I’m thinking. But, you know, I’ve already jumped off the building. So anyhow. I’d be thinking, you better come up with a jack, dude. It’s time to pay up, man. Anyhow, so when I come to work the next day, I’m supposed to meet this guy at one of the clubs out there in the western suburbs. [30:21] I’m supposed to meet the bookmaker out there. And Ricky meets me that morning, and he gives me the money. It’s like $3,400, and here’s $100 for you. Bingo. That’s great. So, okay. When I go to make the payment to him, it’s a nightclub, and I got some money in my pocket. Somebody, one of the guys, some guy walks up. I’m sitting at the bar and, you know, I hear you’re a copper. I said, pardon me? He says, I hear you’re a copper. He was a big guy. Yeah. I hear you’re a copper. Because at that time, I still only weighed maybe like, well, maybe 60, 65 pounds. I mean, I was in fantastic shape, but I wasn’t real big. And I said, I’m a policeman. I don’t like policemen. I said, go fuck yourself. or something like that. And before he could do anything, I labeled him. That was my first of about a half a dozen fights in those different bars out there. [31:32] And the fights only lasted a few minutes because I would knock the person down. And if the person was real big, at times I’d get on top and just keep pounding before they could do anything. So I started with a reputation with those people at that time now as I’m, going through my world with these people oh no let’s stay with that one area now after the second week he loses again, this time not as much but he loses again and I’m thinking wow, He’s betting, and I’m contacted by a couple of people there. Yeah. Because these are all bookmakers there, and they see me paying off. So I’m going to be, listen, if you want another place to play, and I say, well, yeah. So my thought is, with baseball, it’s a game where you’re laying a price, laying 160, laying 170, laying 180. So if you lose $500, if you lose, you pay $850, and if you win, you only get $500. [32:52] I’ve got a couple of people now, and they’ve got different lines. And what I can do now is I check with their lines. I check with Ricky’s guy and see what his line is. And I start moving his money elsewhere where I’ve got a 30, 40, sometimes 50 cent difference in the price. So I’d set it up where no matter what, I’m going to make some money, No matter what happens, I’ll make some money. But what I’m also doing is I’m making my own bets in there that will be covered. And as I start early winning, maybe for that week I win maybe $1,000, $1,500. And then as I meet other people and I’m making payments, within about four or five months, I’ve got 10 different bookmakers I’m dealing with. Who I’m dealing with. And it’s become like a business. I’m getting all the business from him, 500 a game, whatever. And I’ve got other people that are betting, you know, are betting big, who are betting through me. And I’m making all kinds of money at that time. [34:14] But anyhow, now I mentioned a number of people, A number of people are, I’ve been with a number of people that got killed after dinner. One of the first ones was Tony Borsellino, a bookmaker. Tony was connected with the Northside people, with DeVarco, the one they called DeVarco. And we had gone to a we had gone to a I knew he was a hit man, we had gone to a basketball game over at DePaul because he had become a good friend of mine he liked hanging with me, because I was because at that time now I’m representing the main madams in Chicago too and they loved being around me they liked going wherever I was going to go so I always had all kinds of We left the ladies around. And we went to the basketball game. Afterwards, we went to a restaurant, a steakhouse on Chicago Avenue. [35:26] Gee, why can’t I think of a name right now? We went to a steakhouse, and we had dinner. And when we finished up, it came over there. And when we finished up, I’d been there probably half a dozen times with him. And he was there with his girlfriend. We had dinner and about, I’d say it was maybe 10, 30, 11 o’clock, he says, you know, Bob, can you do me a favor? What’s that? Can you drop her off? He said, I have to go meet some friends. I have to go meet some friends of ours. And, you know, okay, sure, Tony, not a problem. And, you know, I took her home. [36:09] The next day I wake up, Tony Barcellino was found dead. They killed him. He was found with some bullets in the back of his head. They killed him. Holy Christopher. And that’s my first—I found that I had been killed before that. But, you know, wow, that was—, prior to that, when I was betting, there was i paid off a bookmaker a guy named uh ritten shirt, rittenger yeah john rittenger yeah yeah yeah he was a personal friend yeah was he a personal friend of yours yeah they offed him too well i in fact i he i was paying him i met him to pay him I owed him around $4,500, and I met him at Greco’s at my restaurant he wanted to meet me out there because he wanted to talk to me about something else he had a problem some kind of a problem I can’t remember what that was. [37:19] But he wanted to meet me at the restaurant so I met him at Greco’s, And I paid him the money. We talked for a while. And then he says, you know, I got to go. I got to go meet somebody. I got to go meet somebody else. I got to go straight now with somebody else. And he said, I’ll give you a call. He said, I’ll give you a call later. He said, because, you know, I want to talk to you about a problem that I have. He says, I want to talk to you about a problem that I have. I said, okay, sure. He goes to a pizza place. Up there in the Taylor Street area. That’s where he met Butchie and Harry. In fact, at the time, I knew both of them. Yeah, guys, that’s Butch Petrucelli and Harry Alem and a couple of really well-known mob outfit hitmen. Yeah, and they’re the ones that kill them. I’m thinking afterwards, I mean, But, you know, I wish I hadn’t, I wish I hadn’t, you know, I wish I could save him. I just gave him. Man, you’re cold, man. [38:34] You could have walked with that money. That’s what I’m saying. So now, another situation. Let me cut in here a minute, guys. As I remember this Reitlinger hit, Joe Ferriola was a crew boss, and he was trying to line up all the bookies, as he called it. He wanted to line them up like Al Capone lined up all the speaks, that all the bookies had to fall in line and kick something into the outfit, and Reitlinger wouldn’t do it. He refused to do it no matter. They kept coming to him and asking him his way. I understand that. Is that what you remember? I knew him very well. Yeah. He was not the boss. Oh, the Ferriola? Yeah, he wasn’t the boss, but he was kind of the, he had a crew. He was the boss of the Cicero crew. Right. I saw Joe all the time at the racetrack. In fact, I’m the one who, I’m the one, by the time when I started wearing a wire, I was bringing undercover agents over. I was responsible for all that family secret stuff that happened down the road. Oh, really? You set the stage for all that? I’m the one who put them all in jail. All of them. [39:52] So anyhow, we’re kind of getting ahead of ourselves. Reitlinger’s been killed. Joe Borelli or Ricky Borelli’s been killed. These guys are dropping around you, and you’re getting drawn into it deeper and deeper, it sounds to me like. Now, is this when you – what happens? How do you get drawn into this Chicago outfit even more and more as a bookie? Were you kicking up, too? Well, it started, it started, so many things happened that it just fell into place. It started, like I say, with building a reputation like I had. But the final situation in terms of with all the mobsters thinking that I’m not just a tough guy, I’m a bad guy. [40:35] When I get a call, when Joey Cosella, Joey Cosella was a big, tough Italian kid. And he was involved heavily in bookmaking, and we became real close friends. Joey and I became real close friends. He raised Dobermans, and he’s the one who had the lion over at the car dealership. I get a call from Joey. He says, you’ve got to come over. I said, what’s up? He says, some guys came in, and they’re going to kill the count. They want to kill the count. And I said, And I said, what? This is before the Pewter thing. I said, what do you mean? And so I drive over there, and he says, Sammy Annarino and Pete Cucci. And Pete Cucci came in here, and they came in with shotguns, and they were going to kill them. I said, this was Chicago at the time. It’s hard to believe, but this was Chicago. And I said, who are they? I didn’t know who they were. I said, who are they? I mean, I didn’t know them by name. It turns out I did know them, but I didn’t know them by name. They were people that were always in Greco’s, and everybody in Greco knew me because I’m the owner. [41:49] But anyhow, so I get a hold of Marco, and I said, Marco, and I told him what happened. I said, these guys, a couple of guys come in there looking for the talent. That are going to kill him because apparently he extorted somebody out of his business. And I said, who were they with? And he said, they were with Jimmy the bomber. They were with Jimmy Couture. [42:15] I said, oh, they’re for legit then? I said, yeah. I said, can you call? I said, call Jimmy. I knew who he was. He was at the restaurant all the time. He was at Threatfuls all the time with a lot of these other people. And I met him, but I had no interest in him. He didn’t seem like a very friendly sort of anyone. I could care less about him. I represented a lot of guys that worked for him, that were involved with problems, but never really had a conversation with him other than I. [42:53] I’m the owner. So I met with him. I wrote about that in the book. I met with them and got that straightened out where the count’s going to pay $25,000 and you’ll get a contract to the… He ripped off some guy out of a parlor, one of those massage parlors, not massage parlor, but one of those adult bookstores that were big money deals. Oh, yeah. So when I go to meet these guys, I’m told, go meet them and straighten this thing out. So I took Colin with me over to a motel right down the street from the racetrack, right down from the racetrack, and I met with him. I met with Pete Gucci. He was the boss of, you know, this sort of loop. When I get finished talking with him, I come back, and here’s the count and Sammy, and Sammy’s picking a fork with his finger and saying, you know, I rip out eyes with these. [43:56] And the count says, I rip out eyes with these. And I said, what the fuck is going on here? I said, Pete, I said, you know, get him the fuck out of here. And you all at the count said, what’s the matter with you? You know, these guys are going to kill him. And now the moment I get involved in it, he knows he’s not going to have a problem. You know, he’s pulling this nonsense. [44:23] So anyhow, this is how I meet Pete Gucci and Sammy Annarino. After a while, I stopped hanging around with the count because he was starting to go off the deep end. Yeah. Yeah. [44:39] And we were at a party, a bear party with, I remember Willie Holman was there, and they were mostly black, the black guys up there on the south side. And I had just met this girl a day or two before, and the count says, you know, let’s go up to a party, a bear’s party up there on Lakeshore Drive. If we go up there, we go to this party, it’s going to be about maybe 35, 40 people in there, one or two whites, other than the players. And other than that, we’re the only white people there. When we walk into the place, there’s a couple of guys out there with shotguns. It was in a motel. And you walk through like an area where you go in there, and there’s a couple of guys standing there with shotguns. We go in and we go upstairs and, hey, how are you? And we’re talking with people. And I go in one room. I’m in one room. [45:45] There were two rooms there. I’m in one room with a bunch of people and, you know, just talking and having a good old time. And the count was in the second room. And I hear Spade. He always called me Spade. Spade, Spade, you know. And I go in there, and he’s talking with Willie Holman. I remember it was one of them. He was the tackle, I think, with the Bears and a couple of others. And this whole room, all these black guys. And he goes, that’s Spade Cooley. He says, him and I will take on every one of you. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And we’re in a room, and he goes, that’s what he says. You know, him and I will take it on every one of you. And Willie did that. He calmed down. He’s telling him, calmed down. What the fuck? It was about a week or so after this. And because I had been out with the county, he’s calling me two or three times a week to go out. And we’re going, a lot of times it was these areas in the south side with a lot of blood. He liked being around Blacks. [47:00] That’s when I met Gail Sayers, and I met some of these others through him. But a lot of the parties and stuff were in the South Side out there, mostly Blacks and all. But we had gone someplace for dinner, and we’re heading back home. We’re heading back to my place, and we’re in his car. He had a brown Cadillac convertible. On the side of it, it had these, you know, the Count Dante press. And he always ran around. He ran around most of the time in these goofy, you know, these goofy outfits with capes and things like that. I’m driving and when we’re talking and I’m like distracted looking at him. And I’m waiting at a stoplight over there right off of Chicago Avenue. And as we’re there. [47:48] I barely touched the car in front of us, you know, as I’m drifting a little bit and barely touch it. There were four guys in the car and, you know, and the one guy jumps out first, one guy jumps out first and then second one, and they start screaming. And when the count gets out, the guy starts calling you, you faggot or something like that, you know, whatever. And as the other one gets out, I get out of the car. And the next thing I know, they jump back in the car, and they run through a red light, and they disappear. Somebody must have recognized them. One of the other people there must have realized who this is that they’re about to get into a little battle with. In fact, they ran the red light. They just ran the red light and disappeared. They come, no, no, no, no, no. And we go off to my apartment and I’m here with this girl, another girl I had just met a day or so before, because I was constantly meeting new people, uh, running around and, uh, we’re sitting on the couch. I’m sitting in the couch next to her and the count, the count was over there. And he suddenly says to her, he says, he says, this is one of the toughest people I’ve ever met. He said, and he says, tell her how tough you are. Tell her how tough you are. [49:10] I said, you know, I said, you know, you know, and he says, tell them how tough you are. And I said, John, you know, and he walks over, And he makes a motion like this towards me. And he barely touched my chin. But I thought he broke it. He then steps back and he goes, I got to cut this hand off. He says, you saved my life. He said, you saved my life. He said, the only two friends I’ve had in the world were my father and you. He says, I wasn’t even that crazy about my mother. That’s when I said then he goes and he stands and I’m looking at it now he stands up against the window I looked up on the 29th floor, he stands by the window he says get your gun he says and I want you to aim it at me, and say now before you pull the trigger and I’ll stop the bullet, I’ll stop the bullet this guy was nuts and I said I said, what? [50:28] He says, before you pull the trigger. [50:36] Tell me before you pull the trigger and I’ll stop the bullet. He wanted me to shoot him. He stopped the bullet. When I got him out of there, Now when he’s calling me, I’m busy. I’m busy. Once in a while, I’d meet him someplace. No more driving or whatever. That was smart. I hadn’t seen him in probably five or six months. And this is, again, after the situation when I had met with Anna Randall and Gooch and the others. I’m up in my office and I get a I get a call from the county, and he said and I hadn’t probably seen him even maybe in a month or two at all and he said, can I come over and talk to you and I was playing cards in fact I had card games up in my office and, we called him Commissioner. [51:41] O’Malley Ray O’Malley, he was the head of the police department at night. On midnights, he got there at 4 to 12. He started at 4 to 12 until midnights. He was the head of them. He was the commissioner. He was in charge of the whole department. He used to play cards up in my office. We had big card games up in my office. And when he’d come up there, we’d have the blue goose parked out in front. We’d have his bodyguard sitting out there by my door. When he was playing in the games. This went on for a couple of years. [52:15] I was at the office, but, you know, I’m at the office playing cards. [52:20] And I had a, it was a big suite. We had, you know, my office was a big office in this suite. We had about six other, you know, big, big suites in there. And so he comes over, he comes over to meet with me. And so I figure he’s in trouble. He’s arrested. He says, I’ve got a situation going. He says, well, you can get a million dollars. And he said, but if I tell you what it is, he says, and you’re in, he said, you got to be in. I’ll tell you what it is. I said, John, if I need money, I said, you get $2 million, then you can loan me if you want, but I don’t want to know what it is. I said, I just don’t want to know what it is. [52:59] It was about a week or two later. It was a pure later, basically. It was a pure later caper. Yeah, guys, this was like the huge, huge. And the one he set it up with was Pete Gucci, the guy that was going to kill him. That was the one who set it up. I knew that. I thought I remembered that name from somewhere. I don’t remember. They ended up getting popped, but everybody got caught, and most of the money got returned. No, no. No bit that the outfit kept, I understand, if I remember right. What was the deal on that? There was more to it than that. Just before that happened, I go up, and Jerry Workman was another lawyer. Actually, he was attorney up in the office, post-rending bank. When I’m going up into the office, I see Pete Gucci there. This is probably a week or so after the situation with the count. Or maybe even a little bit longer than that. I said, Pete, what are you doing? I said, what are you doing here? Jerry Workston’s my lawyer. Oh, okay. [53:55] Okay. He said, I didn’t know you were off here. I said, yeah. I said, Jerry’s a good friend of mine. Okay. And as I’m walking away, he says, you tell your friend the count to stop calling me at two, three in the morning. He says, I got a wife and kids and whatever. And I said to him, I said, Pete, you got no business dealing. I don’t know what it is. I said, but you guys got no business dealing involved in anything. You got no business being involved with him. And I walked away. I see him and I see him as he’s leaving. I see him as he’s leaving and say goodbye to him. Jerry was going to be playing cards. [54:39] It was card night too. Jerry was going to be playing cards in my office because the people would come in usually about 9 o’clock, 9.30 is when the game would usually start. I talked with Jerry. He had been in there for a while. He was arrested a day or two later. The fbi comes in there because he had stashed about 35 000 in jerry’s couch oh really that was his bond money he got that was his bond money if he got to get bailed out to get him bailed out that was his bond money that was there that’s how bizarre so i got involved in so many situations like this but anyhow anyhow now sammy uh, So it’s about maybe a week or two later after this, when I’m in the car driving, I hear they robbed a purulator. The purulator was about a block and a half from my last police station. It was right down the street from the 18th district. That was the place that they robbed. And not long after that, word came out that supposedly a million dollars was dropped off in front of Jimmy the bomber, in front of his place. With Jimmy the bomber, both Sammy Ann Arino and Pete Gucci were under him. They were gunmen from his group. Now I get a call from, I get a count was never, you never heard the count’s name mentioned in there with anybody. [56:07] The guy from Boston, you know, who they indicated, you know, came in to set it up. The count knew him from Boston. The count had some schools in Boston. And this was one of his students. And that’s how he knew this guy from Boston that got caught trying to take a, trying to leave the country with, you know, with a couple thousand, a couple million dollars of the money. Yeah, I read that. It was going down to the Caribbean somewhere and they caught him. And Sammy Ann Arino didn’t get involved in that. He wasn’t involved in that because I think he was back in the prison at the time. [56:44] Now, when he’s out of prison, probably no more than about maybe three or four months after all that toilet stuff had died down, I get a call from Sam, and he wants me to represent him because he was arrested. What happened was he was shot in a car. He was in a car, and he had gotten shot. And when they shot him, he kicked out the window and somehow fought the guys off. When they found him there in the car and in his trunk, they found a hit kit. They said it was a hit kit. How could they know? It was a box that had core form in it, a ski mask, a ski mask, a gun, a gun with tape wrapped around it and the rest of it. Yeah. And he’s an extra time. Mask and tape or little bits of rope and shit like that. I’d say no. So he was charged with it, and he was charged with it in his case, and he had a case coming up. I met him the first time I met him. He came by my office, and he said, you know, and I said, no, that’s not a problem. And he says, but I’ve got to use Eddie Jensen, too. [57:52] And I said, I said, what do you mean? I said, you don’t need Eddie. And he says, I was told I have to use him. Jimmy Couture, his boy, he said, I have to use him. I know why, because Eddie lets these mobsters know whenever anybody’s an informant, or if he’s mad at somebody, he can tell him he’s an informant, they get killed. And so I said, you know, that piece of shit. I said, you know, I want nothing to do with him. I had some interesting run-ins with him before, and I said, I want nothing to do with that worthless piece of shit. You know, he’s a jagoff. And I said, you know, I says, no. He said, please. I said, no. I said, Sammy, you know, you don’t need me. He knows the judge like I know the judge, Sardini. I said, you know, you’re not going to have a problem in there. I get a call from him again, maybe four or five days after that. He’s out of my restaurant and he says, Bob, please. He said, You know, he says, please, can I meet you? He says, I got a problem. I go out to the meeting. And so I thought, there’s something new. I want you to represent me. I want you to represent me, you know, on the case. And I says, did you get rid of that fence? He says, no, I have to use him. But I says, look, I’m not going to, I want, no, Sammy, no, I’m not going to do it. He leaves the restaurant. He gets about a mile and a half away. He gets shotgunned and he gets killed. In fact, I read about that a couple of days ago. [59:22] I know it’s bullshit. They said he was leaving the restaurant. It was Marabelli’s. It was Marabelli’s Furniture Store. They said he was leaving the furniture store. What they did was they stopped traffic out there. They had people on the one side of the street, the other side of the street, and they followed, they chased him. When he got out of his car and was going to the furniture store, They blasted him with shotguns. They made sure he was killed this time. After that happened, it’s about maybe three or four days after that, I’m up in my office and I get a call. All right, when I come out, I always parked in front of City Hall. That was my parking spot. Mike and CM saved my spot. I parked there, or I parked in the bus stop, or in the mayor’s spot. Those were my spots. They saved it for me. I mean, that was it, for three, four, five years. That’s how it was. I didn’t want to wait in line in the parking lot. So my car is parked right in front of the parking lot. And as I go to get in my car, just fast, fast, so walking, because he was at 134 right down the street from my office and he parks like everybody else in the parking lot so he can wait 20 minutes to get his car. [1:00:40] And, and, and Bob, Bob, and, you know, and when I meet up with him, I’m both standing and we’re both standing right there in front of the, in front of the, uh, the parking lot. And he was a big guy. He weighed probably about 280, 290, maybe more. You know, mushy, mushy type, not in good shape at all. In fact, he walked with a gimp or whatever. And he says, you better be careful, he says. Jimmy Couture is furious. He heard what you’ve been saying about me. [1:01:17] You’ve been saying about me. and something’s liable to happen. And I went reserved. I grabbed him, and I threw him up on the wall, and I says, you motherfuckers. I said, my friends are killing your friends. [1:01:34] I said, my friends, because he represented a number of these groups, but I’m with the most powerful group of all. And when I say I’m with him, I’m with him day and night, not like him just as their lawyer. Most of them hated him, too, because most of them knew what he was doing. Yeah most of these and most of these guys hated him and i said you know but i and and i just like you’re kissing his pants and i don’t know if he crapped in his pants too and uh you know because i just turned around i left that same night jimmy katura winds up getting six in the back of the head maybe three miles from where that took place yeah he was uh some kind of trouble been going on for a while. He was a guy who was like in that cop shop racket, and he had been killing some people involved with that. He was kind of like out away from the main crew closer to downtown, is my understanding. Like, you were in who were you in? Who was I talking about? Jimmy Couture? Jimmy Couture, yeah. He was no, Jimmy Couture was Jimmy Couture, in fact, all these killers, we’ll try and stay with this a little bit first. Jimmy Couture was a boss and he had probably about maybe a dozen, maybe more in his crew and, He didn’t get the message, I’m sure. [1:03:01] Eddie Jensen firmly believes, obviously, because it’s the same day and same night when I tell him that my friends are killing your friends. [1:03:14] He’s telling everybody that I had him kill, I’m sure. Yeah, yeah. Because it was about another few days after that when I’m out in Evanston going to a courthouse. And there you had to park down the street because there was no parking lot. Here I hear Eddie, you know, stay. I’m going to say Bob, Bob. And when he gets up, he says, Bob, he says, when I told you, I think you misunderstood. When I told you it was Jimmy Cattrone. it was it was jimmy katron was a lawyer that you know worked in out of his office close friend of mine too he was a good friend of mine it was jimmy it was jimmy katron that you know not because he obviously thought he believed so he’s got all these mobsters too bosses and all the rest thinking that i was involved in that when i when i wasn’t uh when i was when i wasn’t actually But it’s so amazing, Gary. And that’s one of a dozen stories of the same sort. I met unbelievable people. I mean, we’re talking about in New Orleans. We’re talking about in Boston. Now, if you were to say, who were you with? Always somebody’s with somebody. Were you with any particular crew or any particular crew. [1:04:41] Buzz, were you totally independent? [1:04:46] Everybody knew me to be with the Elmwood Park crew. And that was Jackie Cerrone before Michael, I mean, before Johnny DeFranco. That was Jackie Cerrone. Okay. That was Giancana. That was Mo Giancana. Mo was moving at the clubhouse all the time. That was the major people. [1:05:13] And where was their clubhouse? What did they call their clubhouse? Was that the Survivors Clubhouse, or what was the name of their operation? Every group had one, sometimes more clubhouses. Right. That was where they would have card games in there. They’d have all kinds of other things going. the place was full of like in Marcos I call it Marcos but it was actually Jackie Sharon’s when I first got involved Jackie Sharon was the boss who became a good friend of mine, Jackie Sharon was the boss and Johnny DeFranco was, right under him and then a number of others as we go down, our group alone we had. [1:06:04] Minimum, I’d say, a thousand or more people in our group alone. And who knows how many others, because we had control of the sheriff’s office, of the police department, of the sheriff, of the attorney general. We had control of all that through the elections. We controlled all that. So you had 1,000 people. You’re talking about all these different people who we would maybe call associates. It would be in and out of our club all the time. Okay. Yeah. We’re talking a number of policemen, a number of policemen, a number of different politicians of all sorts that we had. I knew dozens of people with no-show jobs there. We had control of all the departments, streets and sanitation, of absolutely urbanizing. We controlled all the way up to the Supreme Court. What about the first ward, Pat Marcy, and the first ward now? Was your crew and Jackie Cerrone’s crew, did that fall into the first ward, or were they totally there? How did that relate, the Pat Marcy and the politicians? And I found out all this over a period of time. [1:07:28] Everything had changed right about the time I first got involved with these people. All these people you’ve read about, no one knows they were still alive. I met just about all of them when I got connected over there with the first word. A lot of the, we were talking about the gunmen themselves. All the Jackie not just Jackie but I’m talking about Milwaukee Phil Milwaukee Phil and all the rest of them they were over there at Councilors Row all the time because when they were to meet Pat Marcy, what they had there in the first war and, It just so happened, when I started in my office, it was with Alan Ackerman, who was at 100 North, where all their offices were upstairs. The first ward office was upstairs. [1:08:22] And below the office, two floors below, I found out on this when I got involved with them, we had an office. looked like it was a vacant office because the windows were all blackened out. That’s where he had all the meetings with people. When Arcado or Yupa, anybody else, any of the other people came in, this is where he met them. When the people from out of town came in, we’re talking about when, what do you think? [1:08:58] But when Alpha, when Fitzgerald, when all these people would come in, this is where they would have their meetings. Or these are the ones who would be out with us on these casino rides. When these people came in, this is where they would do the real talking because we’d go to different restaurants that weren’t bugged. If this office was checked every day, the one that they had down below, and nobody, nobody, their office was, I think it was on the 28th floor, the first ward office. You had the first ward office, and right next to it, you had the insurance office when everybody had to buy their insurance. Obviously at upper rates big office connected to the first ward office when the back there’s a door that goes right into into theirs but the people were told you never get off or you get off you get off at the office floor but then you you walk you you get off it and i’m sorry you get off it at the. [1:10:11] You don’t get off at the first ward office you get off at one of the other offices one of the other offices or the other floors and when you come in there, then you’ll be taken someplace else after that a double shop that’s where they would go and in fact when I had to talk to Petter Cary messages or whatever people like Marco couldn’t talk to Marcy. [1:10:41] Only a few people could. Only people at the very top level could. Marco, he was a major boss. He could not talk to Marco. If he needed, you know, whatever. Marco D’Amico. Marco was, you had, Marco was the one right under Johnny DeFonza. Yeah. Marco’s the one that was in charge. He was the one who was in charge of all the gambling. Not just in Chicago, but around all those areas in Cook County. We had not just Chicago. They were also the ones that were in charge of all the street tax, collecting all the street tax. That’s where the big, big money was also. Everybody paid. What happened was in the 70s, right as I got involved
LEARN MORE at http://teach4theheart.com/367 We all look forward to that much-needed break, but what happens when we come back expecting to feel magically refreshed, only to be met with opposite? In this episode, Linda and Julie discuss common mistakes teachers make after a break and how to avoid them. We talk about practical tips to help you reestablish order, refocus yourself and students, and ease the transition back into the classroom with confidence. 00:00 Returning to School: Mistakes to Avoid 03:08 The Importance of Change After Break 05:56 Managing the First Week Back 09:39 Revisiting Classroom Procedures 12:30 Building Relationships with Students 15:16 Seeking God's Guidance in Teaching Resources/Links Mentioned: Classroom Management 101: https://teach4theheart.com/cm101 Reclaim Your Time: https://teach4theheart.com/reclaim Hope Renewed: https://teach4theheart.com/hope CM 101: https://teach4theheart.com/cm101
On this weeks TWC Show, Justin and Arvy give out their year end awards for 2025. Enjoy!My Official Website + Demo Reel - https://www.justindhillon.com Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thewrestlingclassic/ TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@thewrestlingclassic X - https://x.com/twcworldwide Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/@TheWrestlingClassic/ Limited Edition TWC Tee https://headquartersclothing.com/products/headquarters-x-the-wrestling-classic-logo-tee?_pos=1&_psq=wrestlinhg&_ss=e&_v=1.0 WWE Shop Affiliate wwe-shop.sjv.io/RGRxQv 500 Level https://www.500level.com/ Join the Discord Community https://linktr.ee/thewrestlingclassic All Episodes are on "The Wrestling Classic" Youtube Channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOQOYraeFlX-xd8f3adQtTw#TWCShow #YearEndAwards #WWE #AEWBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/twc-show--4417554/support.
ぬるぽ放送局おたより投稿フォーム https://forms.gle/6tbmBzK6wbyavJG47 2025年12月パワープレイ 「Critikal & RoughSkreamZ - 89seconds Death Ride」 収録アルバム:Critikal Distorxion EP 2025・10・26 Release https://notebookrecords.net/discographyportal.php?cdno=NBCD-051 番組時間:57分57秒 出演者:夕野ヨシミ、たくや VOICEVOX:ずんだもん VOICEVOX:四国めたん ---- 2025/12/25に公開録音したものを配信いたします。 ラジオ記事はリスナーのEEチャンピオンさんが書いてくれているので楽してます。 <オープニング> ・2本録りの1本目 ・メリークリスマス ・置き配の元祖・サンタさん ・コートを着たサンタ女子 ・以上ですねクリスマストークは ・ホールケーキ買ってきました ・これ持って、すすきのに行きます ・イオシスくんの活動情報 ・タイトーさんのお知らせ 『QQQbeats!!! オリジナルサウンドトラック』各種音楽配信サービスにて配信開始されました!聴いてね! ・作詞提供のお知らせ 『鳴潮』Ver3.0 テーマソング 「Dawnbreaker」 作詞:夕野ヨシミ(IOSYS) ボーカル:神山羊 ・ゲームも是非遊んでください ・YouTube IOSYSチャンネル累計再生数が1億! ・来年は10億くらいになってほしいですね ・はかせを見れるのは、くま牧だけ ・作詞提供のお知らせ 『ブルーアーカイブ』5周年記念楽曲 「Let's Go With...」 アーティスト:アスナ(CV:長谷川 育美)/キララ(CV:山下 七海)/スバル(CV:天海 由梨奈)/ミカ(CV:東山 奈央)/ミヨ(CV:花岩 香奈)/ ユカリ(CV:村上 まなつ) 作詞:夕野ヨシミ 作曲:ミツキヨ ・作詞提供のお知らせ 『ブルーアーカイブ』イベント「魔法少女ヘヴィキャリバー~エラの野望と正義の資格~」挿入曲 「Someday Certainly」 アーティスト:スズミ(CV:社本 悠) 作詞:夕野ヨシミ 作曲:ミツキヨ ・夕野ヨシミさんは3人組ユニット ・みんな仕事してて偉い ・ブルアカはCDの受注販売中です ・MV公開! 「参戦決定☆メタモリディオス」 歌唱:Idios 作詞:七条レタス 作曲・編曲:D.watt ・楽曲提供のお知らせ 「ぺこぺこ チキンフィーバー☆」 歌:兎田ぺこら 作編曲:D.watt 作詞:まろん イラスト・映像:ひとびと ケーキパティシエール:西沢5㍉ アシスタント:すわ ・27日はイベントが3つあります ・どこにでもいるなイオシス ・体を裂いて行ってください ・八つ裂きは2つに裂くんですよ ・入山さんと前川さんは大事にした方がいいですよ ・今年はくたびれたねー ・来年もがんばるぞい! <Aパート> ・はかせのCMは48秒もある ・話は一つも入ってこない ・ふつおたです ・しわーす ・ぬるぽリスナーいのちだいじに ・笑点の扇子はMOCさんの顔でも成り立つ ・21世紀の四半世紀がおわりますよ ・何歳になろうが変わらない ・パワーが増してるラフさん ・たどり着いた定食 ・梅干しかけごはん??? ・サプリメント100品目 ・来年はAIを使いこなしたい ・公式見た方が早い ・SNSに一括投稿できるクライアント情報お待ちしてます ・X無課金おじさん ・ブルアカ作詞おじさん ・イオシスゲーミングにおすすめ作品 ・バレットガールズ ファンタジア ・尋問特訓 ・山田じぇみこさんはいいぞ ・ざこのあひるは出来ますよ <Bパート> ・みつをたです ・ルゥティンさんご結婚おめでとうございます ・人妻小町って言いそうになりました ・ホロライブさんのサンタ衣装 ・創作昔話 ごんぎつね ・除夜のキンタマ ・完全に煩悩 ・ホロピックアップニュース ・ガンプラ付きCD ・同意するゲーム ・最近年越し配信やってないよね ・昔の年越しはローソンかセブン ・ちゃんとシャケ食うたか? ・クイズ答えは1月7日 ・マクドナルドさんの方がもっと好きです ・毎日マック食った方がいいのでは? <エンディング> ・今年も52回 抜けなくお送りしました ・みなさんのお便りで成り立ってます ・来年もよろしくお願いします ・SASUKEは2日間も放送してたのね ・また、来年お会いしましょう
Sea Turtle Swims the Ocean by William and Peggy Stephens - part 2 ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
■【次回公演情報】『もっと!新ニッポンの話芸スピンオフvol.7』2026年2月14日(土) 18時30分開場 19時開演渋谷区総合文化センター 大和田 6階伝承ホールhttps://www.confetti-web.com/events/10972■怪奇幽玄亭https://youtube.com/channel/UCOceBDbvqnIASN6wH4mWfHg?feature=shared■参考動画https://www.youtube.com/@%E6%B8%8B%E8%B0%B7%E3%82%89%E3%81%8F%E3%81%94/videos■レギュラーメンバー・立川こしら(たてかわ こしら)1975年生まれ 千葉県出身1996年5月立川志らくに入門「らく平」2002年5月二つ目昇進「こしら」2012年12月真打昇進落語立川流の落語家として、談志の孫弟子初の真打となる。落語家らしからぬ見た目と行動力で「立川流の異端児」の異名をとるが、独自の道を開拓し、観客に楽しい落語を提供することに徹底している。アナログからデジタルまで使いこなすマルチクリエイター。WEB製作をおこなう合同会社第プロの設立、ラジオDJの経験、無農薬農業など多角的に活躍。エイベックスよりCDを発売中。「高速落語 R-30(Vol.1〜3)」「真打昇進記念版 高速落語 大ネタ十(じゅう)」「死神」・鈴々舎馬るこ(れいれいしゃ まるこ)1980年生まれ 山口県出身2003年5月鈴々舎馬風に入門「馬るこ」2006年5月二つ目昇進2017年3月真打昇進落語協会所属。「落語初心者も落語マニアも大爆笑」をモットーに、"エンターテイメント"として楽しい落語を貪欲に追及する。新作・古典どちらも取り組み、アグレッシブな演目もあるが、確かな技術に裏打ちされた高座は常に成長を続けている。BS日テレ「笑点特大号」若手大喜利、文化放送ラジオ「くにまるジャパン」レギュラー。2010年「さがみはら若手落語家選手権」優勝、2013年「NHK新人演芸大賞」&「読売杯争奪二つ目バトル」優勝。 新ニッポンの話芸ポッドキャストを提案した張本人。安定したMCぶりを発揮している。・広瀬和生(ひろせ かずお)1960年生まれ。埼玉県出身。へヴィーメタル雑誌「BURRN!」編集長年に300席以上の高座に接し、現在進行形の「今の落語」の魅力を語る第一人者として知られる。2008年『この落語家を聴け!いま、観ておきたい噺家51人』(アスペクト)を皮切りに、『噺家のはなし』(小学館)『現代落語の基礎知識』(集英社)など、落語に関する著書多数。2012年よりライブ盤「この落語家を聴け!」公演を北沢タウンホールで行いインタビューをまとめたものが『落語家という生き方』(講談社)として書籍化した。プロデュース興行も多数。近著に『噺は生きている 名作落語進化論』(毎日新聞出版)など。■準レギュラー・柳亭信楽(りゅうてい しがらき)1983年生まれ 東京都出身2014年6月 柳亭楽輔に入門「楽ちん」2014年7月下席楽屋入り2018年8月中席より二ツ目昇進「信楽」落語芸術協会が誇る広瀬和夫絶賛の新作落語家。一つの設定を軸に力技で押し通す信楽落語は、非凡な発想と確固たる実力が合わさって確立されている。特技は洋楽カラオケ(フレディ・マーキュリーなど)・立川かしめ(たてかわ かしめ)1989年生まれ 愛知県出身2015年6月 立川こしらに入門「仮面女子」2016年10月 命名権満了により改名「かしめ」2020年4月 二つ目昇進落語立川流の落語家として、立川談志初のひ孫弟子となる。師匠こしらと同様に改作落語を得意とし、可笑しくもどこか小気味悪い後味を残す独特の世界観を持つ。特技はその人が求める商品を精一杯検索して提案すること。■ゲスト・ナツノカモ(なつのかも)作家。1983年生まれ。主にコント舞台脚本、演出。他にテレビ番組の構成、ゲームシナリオ制作、創作落語など幅広く活動。また自らプレーヤーとして舞台に出演、ラジオCMのナレーターなどもこなす。好きな季節は夏、好きな動物は鴨。■殿堂入り・三遊亭萬橘 (さんゆうてい まんきつ)1979年生まれ 愛知県出身2003年7月三遊亭圓橘に入門「橘つき」2006年10月二つ目昇進「きつつき」2013年3月真打昇進4代目「萬橘」襲名五代目圓楽一門会に所属。円楽党のホープとも称される抜群の実力派。論理的に落語を分析し、独自の演出を加えた高座は奇をてらうことなく、それでいて爆笑を誘う。ポッドキャストであつい議論を展開することも。2007年3月「さがみはら若手落語家選手権」優勝 2014年から3年連続で国立演芸場花形演芸大賞(金賞)、2016年彩の国落語大賞ほか受賞多数。
Welcome to the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast, created and hosted by Sonal Patel, BA, CPMA, CPC, CMC, ICD-10-CM.Thanks to all of you for making this a Top 15 Medical Billing & Coding Podcast for 5 years on Feedspot.Sonal's 16th Season starts up and Episode 17 features Newsworthy updates on the month's fraud, waste, and abuse cases. Sonal's Trusty Tip and compliance recommendations focus on podiatry practices' evaluation and management services with modifier 25.Spark inspires us all to reflect on resilience based on the inspirational words of Winston Churchill.Paint The Medical Picture Podcast now on:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6hcJAHHrqNLo9UmKtqRP3XApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/paint-the-medical-picture-podcast/id1530442177Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/bc6146d7-3d30-4b73-ae7f-d77d6046fe6a/paint-the-medical-picture-podcastFind Paint The Medical Picture Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzNUxmYdIU_U8I5hP91Kk7AFind Sonal on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sonapate/And checkout the website: https://paintthemedicalpicturepodcast.com/If you'd like to be a sponsor of the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast series, please contact Sonal directly for pricing: PaintTheMedicalPicturePodcast@gmail.com
CM preveiws and predicts the next round of the CFP, as well as touching on several bowl games.
Sea Turtle Swims the Ocean by William and Peggy Stephens - part 1 ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
羊文学「光るとき」が第102回箱根駅伝CMに起用特別コメントも「とても嬉しく、光栄」神谷浩史、花江夏樹ら声優5名が“たすき”役で出演ッポロビール株式会社は、2026年1月2日(金)、3日(土)に日本テレビ系列で放送される、第102回東京箱根間往復大学駅伝競走で、豪華声優5名を起用した「第102回箱根駅伝用オリジナルCM 」年始特別バージョンを放映します
Join me as I talk with Father John Odongo, about his book, "The Role of the Mother of Jesus in the Gospel of John: An Exegetical Study of John 2, 1-12; 19, 25-27."Fr. John Bosco Odongo, CM., born in Uganda on 26th December 1981, is a Roman Catholic Vincentian Missionary Priest, ordained on 28th May 2016 in Nairobi Kenya. This book is aimed at encouraging devotion to the mother of Jesus and with her take up a journey to knowing Jesus better and thereby believe in him and attain eternal life. For questions, clarification, new ideas or consultation contact: johnforchristjesus@gmail.com; Tel: +39 371 382 3802.
ぬるぽ放送局おたより投稿フォーム https://forms.gle/6tbmBzK6wbyavJG47 2025年12月パワープレイ 「Critikal & RoughSkreamZ - 89seconds Death Ride」 収録アルバム:Critikal Distorxion EP 2025・10・26 Release https://notebookrecords.net/discographyportal.php?cdno=NBCD-051 番組時間:84分10秒 出演者:夕野ヨシミ、たくや VOICEVOX:ずんだもん VOICEVOX:四国めたん ---- 2025/12/18に公開録音したものを配信いたします。 ラジオ記事はリスナーのEEチャンピオンさんが書いてくれているので楽してます。 <オープニング> ・2人ともビキニを着用しています ・zipファイルに入ったままのマイクロビキニ ・毛量が多い ・冬至がもうすぐです ・日没が早い ・1泊2日で何回お風呂に入ります? ・旅先にデカいノートPCを ・温泉お楽しみでしたね ・デジタルデトックスのデの字もない ・イオシスくんの最新情報 ・楽曲提供のお知らせ 「KP all the way/亞生うぱる・雨庭やえ・音門るき(VEE)」 作詞:七条レタス 作編曲:D.watt ・イオシスファンボックスご覧ください ・オンライン飲み会をする夢の話 ・流行っているらしい恋の病 【東方MV】行列のできるえーりん診療所【IOSYS】 歌編曲:D.watt 音編曲:溝口ゆうま(Innocent Key) 作詞:七条レタス ボーカル:3L MV:take 収録アルバム:IO-0142 東方真華神祭 Release 2008.5.25 ・「ラミィズバリバリワークアウト/雪花ラミィ(hololive)」 作詞・作編曲:まろん (IOSYS) YouTube100万再生おめでとうございます! ・工場作る人と奈落に落ちる人 ・イースラーかよ ・『QQQbeats!!! オリジナルサウンドトラック』本日より各種音楽配信サービスにて配信開始しました! ・お安くなってますので、QQQbeats!!! 買ってください ・ずんだもんが使える ・ずんだもんの正しい使い方 ・天天天国地獄国はいろんな方が歌ってくれてる ・累計再生数がもううぐ1億再生 ・誰か脱いでくれませんか? ・体1つで行けるDJ ・CDが使えないCDJ ・RTAJapan始まります ・M1は誰が優勝するんですかね? ・来週は2本撮りなので、たくさんお便りお待ちしてます ・『鳴潮』Ver3.0 テーマソング「Dawnbreaker」日本語版の作詞を担当しました! ・PVを是非ご覧ください ・エルサルバドルから、コメント来てます <Aパート> ・新しいラジオCMが流れました ・イオシスゲーミング大賞を決めましょう ・どれもよかったので大賞はなしにしますか? ・再生数にします? ・2025年イオシスゲーミング大賞は「Terraria」に決まりました ・たくや賞は「Factorio 2.0 SPACE AGE」で ・夕野ヨシミ賞は「すってはっくん」 ・何年前のゲームだよ ・お寿司を奢りますので、関係者はイオシスまで来てください ・まだやれてないへべれけばにーがーでん ・来年もゲームやりますので、よろ ・メンバーシップもありがとうございます ・ふつおたです ・2025年買ってよかったもの ・マキタの充電式ヒートガン ・てのひらまつりちゃん ・センサーライトとスマホ ・ずっと家にいるのに家にカメラを? ・ガレリアのデスクトップPC ・リューターとは ・カツオ節をリューターで? ・豆のお便り ・マイクロビキニ買ったね ・漫画買い過ぎでは? ・アスガール ・得体のしれないイカのおもちゃ ・買ってよかったとろ〜り3種のチーズのビーフシチューパイ ・福岡にD.watt ・ボカロ曲のイベントでチルパにえーりん ・この時期の飛行機はしんどい ・私の車は後ろから追突されました ・示談の条件とは ・車には気を付けてください <Bパート> ・音楽っていいですよね ・みつをたです ・コッコロちゃんは大人に ・地上波やらないWBC ・野球のラジオ中継は味があっていい ・THE W見ましたか? ・空いてていい京都 ・ホロピックアップニュース ・納得の最弱王みこち ・リアルお母さん過ぎるミオしゃ ・センシティブ挨拶とは ・エルサルバドルのマックはビットコイン対応 ・1日2食 マックかすき家 ・食べ美レイディオはどうですかね? ・今だけラジオやる美 <エンディング> ・今年も無事にぬるぽをやってこれました ・ただ来週は大丈夫かな? ・あ、ポンポロだ ・来週は年末と年始のお便りお待ちしてます ・完全にヨシ! ・出がらしになったからおわろう
CM has another loaded episode in store for us. Reviewing Army/Navy, discussing coaching madness, Trophy winners and previewing the 1st round matchups of the College Football Playoff.
Fairy Kittens by Jack Bechdolt & Decie Merwin ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
■【次回公演情報】『もっと!新ニッポンの話芸スピンオフvol.7』2026年2月14日(土) 18時30分開場 19時開演渋谷区総合文化センター 大和田 6階伝承ホールhttps://www.confetti-web.com/events/10972■怪奇幽玄亭https://youtube.com/channel/UCOceBDbvqnIASN6wH4mWfHg?feature=shared■参考動画https://www.youtube.com/@%E6%B8%8B%E8%B0%B7%E3%82%89%E3%81%8F%E3%81%94/videos■レギュラーメンバー・立川こしら(たてかわ こしら)1975年生まれ 千葉県出身1996年5月立川志らくに入門「らく平」2002年5月二つ目昇進「こしら」2012年12月真打昇進落語立川流の落語家として、談志の孫弟子初の真打となる。落語家らしからぬ見た目と行動力で「立川流の異端児」の異名をとるが、独自の道を開拓し、観客に楽しい落語を提供することに徹底している。アナログからデジタルまで使いこなすマルチクリエイター。WEB製作をおこなう合同会社第プロの設立、ラジオDJの経験、無農薬農業など多角的に活躍。エイベックスよりCDを発売中。「高速落語 R-30(Vol.1〜3)」「真打昇進記念版 高速落語 大ネタ十(じゅう)」「死神」・鈴々舎馬るこ(れいれいしゃ まるこ)1980年生まれ 山口県出身2003年5月鈴々舎馬風に入門「馬るこ」2006年5月二つ目昇進2017年3月真打昇進落語協会所属。「落語初心者も落語マニアも大爆笑」をモットーに、"エンターテイメント"として楽しい落語を貪欲に追及する。新作・古典どちらも取り組み、アグレッシブな演目もあるが、確かな技術に裏打ちされた高座は常に成長を続けている。BS日テレ「笑点特大号」若手大喜利、文化放送ラジオ「くにまるジャパン」レギュラー。2010年「さがみはら若手落語家選手権」優勝、2013年「NHK新人演芸大賞」&「読売杯争奪二つ目バトル」優勝。 新ニッポンの話芸ポッドキャストを提案した張本人。安定したMCぶりを発揮している。・広瀬和生(ひろせ かずお)1960年生まれ。埼玉県出身。へヴィーメタル雑誌「BURRN!」編集長年に300席以上の高座に接し、現在進行形の「今の落語」の魅力を語る第一人者として知られる。2008年『この落語家を聴け!いま、観ておきたい噺家51人』(アスペクト)を皮切りに、『噺家のはなし』(小学館)『現代落語の基礎知識』(集英社)など、落語に関する著書多数。2012年よりライブ盤「この落語家を聴け!」公演を北沢タウンホールで行いインタビューをまとめたものが『落語家という生き方』(講談社)として書籍化した。プロデュース興行も多数。近著に『噺は生きている 名作落語進化論』(毎日新聞出版)など。■準レギュラー・柳亭信楽(りゅうてい しがらき)1983年生まれ 東京都出身2014年6月 柳亭楽輔に入門「楽ちん」2014年7月下席楽屋入り2018年8月中席より二ツ目昇進「信楽」落語芸術協会が誇る広瀬和夫絶賛の新作落語家。一つの設定を軸に力技で押し通す信楽落語は、非凡な発想と確固たる実力が合わさって確立されている。特技は洋楽カラオケ(フレディ・マーキュリーなど)・立川かしめ(たてかわ かしめ)1989年生まれ 愛知県出身2015年6月 立川こしらに入門「仮面女子」2016年10月 命名権満了により改名「かしめ」2020年4月 二つ目昇進落語立川流の落語家として、立川談志初のひ孫弟子となる。師匠こしらと同様に改作落語を得意とし、可笑しくもどこか小気味悪い後味を残す独特の世界観を持つ。特技はその人が求める商品を精一杯検索して提案すること。■ゲスト・ナツノカモ(なつのかも)作家。1983年生まれ。主にコント舞台脚本、演出。他にテレビ番組の構成、ゲームシナリオ制作、創作落語など幅広く活動。また自らプレーヤーとして舞台に出演、ラジオCMのナレーターなどもこなす。好きな季節は夏、好きな動物は鴨。■殿堂入り・三遊亭萬橘 (さんゆうてい まんきつ)1979年生まれ 愛知県出身2003年7月三遊亭圓橘に入門「橘つき」2006年10月二つ目昇進「きつつき」2013年3月真打昇進4代目「萬橘」襲名五代目圓楽一門会に所属。円楽党のホープとも称される抜群の実力派。論理的に落語を分析し、独自の演出を加えた高座は奇をてらうことなく、それでいて爆笑を誘う。ポッドキャストであつい議論を展開することも。2007年3月「さがみはら若手落語家選手権」優勝 2014年から3年連続で国立演芸場花形演芸大賞(金賞)、2016年彩の国落語大賞ほか受賞多数。
Vamos con el menú del día: 00:00:00 - Introducción Mildre nos recomienda un cómic: 00:08:19 - 'Molly Wind. Bibliotecarias a caballo' de Catalina González Vilar y Toni Galmés Phoebe nos habla de unas jornadas de juegos de mesa a las que ha asistido. De paso nos reseña tres juegos de los que probó. 00:16:28 - Festival Internacional de Juegos de Córdoba. “Asociación jugamos tod@s”. -'Star Wars: La batalla de Hoth' de Asmodee. -'Zenith' de Zacatrus. -'El bosque de los susurros' de Maldito Games. -'Campeones: Oliver y Benji - El Juego de Cartas' de PIF Games. Malcolm no decepciona y nos trae un juego de bandas sonoras. 00:28:37 - Juego de BSOs: Anuncios bandasoneros. Y para terminar, como no: 01:02:32 - Sección del CM. Podcast recomendado por Seidon: 'Despierta tu curiosidad' de National Geographic. 01:17:49 - Tomas extras. Música inicial: 'Pequeño Peskiter', versión de 'Pequeño Planeta' de 'La llamada de los Gnomos'. Voz y ukelele by Joy. Te recordamos que si quieres tener charlas frikis en Telegram no dudes en unirte a este grupo hecho por y para Peskiters ❤️: https://t.me/peskiters3 Como siempre, os pedimos que le deis a "Me gusta" en iVoox y nos comentéis a través de esa plataforma. Decidnos cómo de "pipongo" os lo habéis pasado escuchándonos. Ya sabéis, a los que comentéis en iVoox o en Spotify os saludaremos en el próximo programa ;) Enlace al programa en iVoox: https://go.ivoox.com/rf/164536710 Síguenos en nuestras redes sociales: https://linktr.ee/peskitoymedio Suscríbete en iVoox y dale a Me gusta
Welcome to the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast, created and hosted by Sonal Patel, CPMA, CPC, CMC, ICD-10-CM.Thanks to all of you for making this a Top 15 Medical Billing & Coding Podcast for 5 Years on Feedspot. Sonal's 16th Season starts up and Episode 16 features a Newsworthy update on the PEPPER program. It's back.Sonal's Trusty Tip and compliance recommendations focus on skin substitutes and the upcoming LCDs.Spark inspires us all to reflect on resilience based on the inspirational words of Thomas Edison.Paint The Medical Picture Podcast now on:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6hcJAHHrqNLo9UmKtqRP3XApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/paint-the-medical-picture-podcast/id1530442177Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/bc6146d7-3d30-4b73-ae7f-d77d6046fe6a/paint-the-medical-picture-podcastFind Paint The Medical Picture Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzNUxmYdIU_U8I5hP91Kk7AFind Sonal on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sonapate/And checkout the website: https://paintthemedicalpicturepodcast.com/If you'd like to be a sponsor of the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast series, please contact Sonal directly for pricing: PaintTheMedicalPicturePodcast@gmail.com
Heroes of Asgard - A Poetic Epilogue: Tegner's Drapa by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
The Devil's Ledger — Week of December 15 Welcome back—and happy holidays. It's that special time of year filled with forced cheer, soft lighting, and quietly wondering whether leftovers have crossed from festive into forensic. Whether you're decking halls, dodging relatives, or just surviving December, we're glad you're here. This week's Ledger is packed with folklore, fanaticism, lost idealism, and a reminder that some remakes exist solely to make us feel ancient.
CM continues to carry the show by dropping another BANGER. It's CFP season baby, we're in the thick of it!
Mark and Mike discuss a wide range of topics in this episode, including the difference between the Minnesota and Massachusetts development models. Plus, who are the favorites? CM, St. John's Prep, St. John's Shrewsbury, Xaverian, Arlington, Hingham, Winchester, Archies, St. Mary's, AC, Bishop Feehan, all discussed, along with Weymouth, Natick, and notes from the Reagan Summit. To hear more, visit massnz.substack.com
The Heroes of Asgard by Annie and Eliza Keary - part 36: Ragnarok, or, The Twilight of the Gods ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
■【次回公演情報】『もっと!新ニッポンの話芸スピンオフvol.7』2026年2月14日(土) 18時30分開場 19時開演渋谷区総合文化センター 大和田 6階伝承ホールhttps://www.confetti-web.com/events/10972■怪奇幽玄亭https://youtube.com/channel/UCOceBDbvqnIASN6wH4mWfHg?feature=shared■参考動画https://www.youtube.com/@%E6%B8%8B%E8%B0%B7%E3%82%89%E3%81%8F%E3%81%94/videos■レギュラーメンバー・立川こしら(たてかわ こしら)1975年生まれ 千葉県出身1996年5月立川志らくに入門「らく平」2002年5月二つ目昇進「こしら」2012年12月真打昇進落語立川流の落語家として、談志の孫弟子初の真打となる。落語家らしからぬ見た目と行動力で「立川流の異端児」の異名をとるが、独自の道を開拓し、観客に楽しい落語を提供することに徹底している。アナログからデジタルまで使いこなすマルチクリエイター。WEB製作をおこなう合同会社第プロの設立、ラジオDJの経験、無農薬農業など多角的に活躍。エイベックスよりCDを発売中。「高速落語 R-30(Vol.1〜3)」「真打昇進記念版 高速落語 大ネタ十(じゅう)」「死神」・鈴々舎馬るこ(れいれいしゃ まるこ)1980年生まれ 山口県出身2003年5月鈴々舎馬風に入門「馬るこ」2006年5月二つ目昇進2017年3月真打昇進落語協会所属。「落語初心者も落語マニアも大爆笑」をモットーに、"エンターテイメント"として楽しい落語を貪欲に追及する。新作・古典どちらも取り組み、アグレッシブな演目もあるが、確かな技術に裏打ちされた高座は常に成長を続けている。BS日テレ「笑点特大号」若手大喜利、文化放送ラジオ「くにまるジャパン」レギュラー。2010年「さがみはら若手落語家選手権」優勝、2013年「NHK新人演芸大賞」&「読売杯争奪二つ目バトル」優勝。 新ニッポンの話芸ポッドキャストを提案した張本人。安定したMCぶりを発揮している。・広瀬和生(ひろせ かずお)1960年生まれ。埼玉県出身。へヴィーメタル雑誌「BURRN!」編集長年に300席以上の高座に接し、現在進行形の「今の落語」の魅力を語る第一人者として知られる。2008年『この落語家を聴け!いま、観ておきたい噺家51人』(アスペクト)を皮切りに、『噺家のはなし』(小学館)『現代落語の基礎知識』(集英社)など、落語に関する著書多数。2012年よりライブ盤「この落語家を聴け!」公演を北沢タウンホールで行いインタビューをまとめたものが『落語家という生き方』(講談社)として書籍化した。プロデュース興行も多数。近著に『噺は生きている 名作落語進化論』(毎日新聞出版)など。■準レギュラー・柳亭信楽(りゅうてい しがらき)1983年生まれ 東京都出身2014年6月 柳亭楽輔に入門「楽ちん」2014年7月下席楽屋入り2018年8月中席より二ツ目昇進「信楽」落語芸術協会が誇る広瀬和夫絶賛の新作落語家。一つの設定を軸に力技で押し通す信楽落語は、非凡な発想と確固たる実力が合わさって確立されている。特技は洋楽カラオケ(フレディ・マーキュリーなど)・立川かしめ(たてかわ かしめ)1989年生まれ 愛知県出身2015年6月 立川こしらに入門「仮面女子」2016年10月 命名権満了により改名「かしめ」2020年4月 二つ目昇進落語立川流の落語家として、立川談志初のひ孫弟子となる。師匠こしらと同様に改作落語を得意とし、可笑しくもどこか小気味悪い後味を残す独特の世界観を持つ。特技はその人が求める商品を精一杯検索して提案すること。■ゲスト・ナツノカモ(なつのかも)作家。1983年生まれ。主にコント舞台脚本、演出。他にテレビ番組の構成、ゲームシナリオ制作、創作落語など幅広く活動。また自らプレーヤーとして舞台に出演、ラジオCMのナレーターなどもこなす。好きな季節は夏、好きな動物は鴨。■殿堂入り・三遊亭萬橘 (さんゆうてい まんきつ)1979年生まれ 愛知県出身2003年7月三遊亭圓橘に入門「橘つき」2006年10月二つ目昇進「きつつき」2013年3月真打昇進4代目「萬橘」襲名五代目圓楽一門会に所属。円楽党のホープとも称される抜群の実力派。論理的に落語を分析し、独自の演出を加えた高座は奇をてらうことなく、それでいて爆笑を誘う。ポッドキャストであつい議論を展開することも。2007年3月「さがみはら若手落語家選手権」優勝 2014年から3年連続で国立演芸場花形演芸大賞(金賞)、2016年彩の国落語大賞ほか受賞多数。
Welcome to the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast, created and hosted by Sonal Patel, CPMA, CPC, CMC, ICD-10-CM.Thanks to all of you for making this a Top 15 Medical Billing & Coding Podcast for 5 Years on Feedspot. Sonal's 16th Season starts up and Episode 15 features a Newsworthy update on the OIG Work Plan for November 2025.Sonal's Trusty Tip and compliance recommendations focus on chronic care management documentation.Spark inspires us all to reflect on resilience based on the inspirational words of Edmund Hillary.Paint The Medical Picture Podcast now on:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6hcJAHHrqNLo9UmKtqRP3XApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/paint-the-medical-picture-podcast/id1530442177Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/bc6146d7-3d30-4b73-ae7f-d77d6046fe6a/paint-the-medical-picture-podcastFind Paint The Medical Picture Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzNUxmYdIU_U8I5hP91Kk7AFind Sonal on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sonapate/And checkout the website: https://paintthemedicalpicturepodcast.com/If you'd like to be a sponsor of the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast series, please contact Sonal directly for pricing: PaintTheMedicalPicturePodcast@gmail.com
This week join us with our special guest Logan a CM at Saber Interactive! Bobby plays WoW if it were only mythic raids game Fellowship, Taylor gets graphic with Succubus and Logan has also been sucked into Arc Raiders fever. Tune in next week for our coverage of The Game Awards! ADD THESE TO YOUR BACKLOG Fellowship, Succubus, Arc Raiders OTHER TOPICS Dispatch, Dogpile, Routine To connect with us, visit dlgaming.net! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Heroes of Asgard by Annie and Eliza Keary - part 35: The Punishment of Loki ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
★★あなたの1分で朝ポキを延命★★ポッドキャストアワードに投票してください!https://yoshimotomasahir.github.io/asapoki_vis/award2025.html (分散を避けるため、今回は「報談」へ投票をお願いします) 【番組内容】本日の議題は…シリーズもの 配信先を一部お引っ越し(1:36)Apple Podcasts トップチャンネル10局に朝ポキ (10:03)Apple Podcastsのエディターによる 2025年のベスト番組に報談 (12:57)ポッドキャストアワード 番組名は「報談 【HOU-DAN】」で (17:51)https://yoshimotomasahir.github.io/asapoki_vis/award2025.html (リスナーのおんささん作:投票用の便利ツールです)神田大介 朝日新聞社のCMに本人役で登場 (30:00)https://www.asahi.com/corporate/brand/hachigakeshakai/ シメクイズ(38:16) 観戦チケットキャンペーンのキーワードをお伝えしているバスクラ12月号 #2083はこちら↓https://buff.ly/fIIQWJI 【SoftBank ウインターカップ2025 観戦チケットキャンペーン中】https://ciy.digital.asahi.com/ciy/11017934 (12/14締め切り) ※2025年11月25日に収録しました。広告が入っているときは説明文の時間表記がズレる場合があります。これまでの制作会議はこちら( https://buff.ly/3XER8Co ) 【朝日地球会議2025】オンラインは来年1月15日まで視聴できます↓https://www.asahi.com/eco/awf/?iref=omny 【出演・スタッフ】神田大介安田桂子 https://buff.ly/3yD5gmf 杢田光 https://bit.ly/3F7W8dm MC・音源編集 堀江麻友 https://bit.ly/4kepWoO 【おねがい】朝日新聞ポッドキャストは、みなさまからの購読料で配信しています。番組継続のため、会員登録をお願いします! http://t.asahi.com/womz 【朝ポキ情報】アプリで記者と対話 http://t.asahi.com/won1 交流はdiscord https://bit.ly/asapoki_discord おたよりフォーム https://bit.ly/asapoki_otayori 朝ポキTV https://www.youtube.com/@asapoki_official メルマガ https://bit.ly/asapoki_newsletter 広告ご検討の企業様は http://t.asahi.com/asapokiguide 番組検索ツール https://bit.ly/asapoki_cast 最新情報はX https://bit.ly/asapoki_twitter 番組カレンダー https://bit.ly/asapki_calendar 全話あります公式サイト https://bit.ly/asapoki_lp See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
संसद में आज वंदे मातरम के 150 साल पूरे होने पर चर्चा होगी, इंडिगो संकट के बीच हैदराबाद एयरपोर्ट पर 77 उड़ानें प्रभावित रहीं, गोवा के अरपोरा क्लब हादसे में पुलिस ने मैनेजर सहित चार लोगों को गिरफ्तार किया, पश्चिमी यूपी में फर्जी वोटिंग की शिकायतों पर CM योगी ने सख्ती के निर्देश दिए, भारत पहली बार यूनेस्को ICH समिति के सत्र की मेज़बान करेगा, शंघाई में भारतीय कॉन्सुलेट के नए भवन का उद्घाटन हुआ, ट्रंप ने ज़ेलेंस्की पर शांति प्रस्ताव न पढ़ने पर निराशा जताई और थाईलैंड-कंबोडिया के बीच फिर हिंसा भड़की, सिर्फ़ 5 मिनट में सुनिए सुबह 10 बजे तक की बड़ी ख़बरें.
This week on Derry Public Radio, join CM, Josh, and Eve as they navigate the chilling depths of Mike Flanagan's adaptation of Stephen King's "Gerald's Game". From the intense emotional weight of her past to the shocking twists of her present, the trio explores how Flanagan masterfully translates King's complex themes of trauma and survival into a visual medium. With a mix of humor and heartfelt analysis, they delve into the film's standout performances, particularly Carla Gugino's portrayal of Jesse, and the haunting presence of the Moonlight Man. As they wrap up their discussion, expect a deep dive into the film's powerful imagery, character dynamics, and the unsettling moments that linger long after the credits roll. For more Derry Public Radio, head over to www.patreon.com/derrypublicradio for exclusive episodes, early releases, and more bonus content!
गोवा के नाइटक्लब में लगी आग में 25 लोगों की मौत, दिल्ली–NCR का AQI 300 पार, इंडिगो संकट पर सरकार ने 48 घंटे में पूरा रिफ़ंड देने का आदेश दिया,आज राजनाथ सिंह लद्दाख में रणनीतिक सुरंग का उद्घाटन करेंगे, कर्नाटक सत्र से पहले CM सिद्धारमैया ने विपक्ष को चुनौती दी, चिक्कमगलूरु में कांग्रेस कार्यकर्ता की हत्या के बाद सियासी तनाव बढ़ा, उत्तर भारत में कड़ाके की सर्दी और कोहरे के बीच पहाड़ों पर बर्फबारी की संभावना है, मैक्रों लंदन में जेलेंस्की, स्टार्मर और मर्ज से यूक्रेन मुद्दे पर मुलाकात करेंगे, रूस के हमले से यूक्रेन में ऊर्जा ढांचा प्रभावित हुआ और भारत ने विशाखापट्टनम वनडे में दक्षिण अफ्रीका को 9 विकेट से हराया, सिर्फ़ 5 मिनट में सुनिए सुबह 10 बजे तक की बड़ी ख़बरें.
Vanaf volgend jaar zie je bij een online betaling niet alleen het bekende roze logo van iDEAL, maar ook het logo van Wero. Dit Europese alternatief gaat de komende jaren geleidelijk iDEAL vervangen. Maar de Europese Centrale Bank ziet het liefst dat iedereen over een paar jaar met de digitale euro betaalt. Welke rol is hier weggelegd voor iDEAL, en hoe gaan ze hierover met Europa in gesprek? Daniel van Delft, CEO van iDEAL is te gast in BNR Zakendoen. Macro met Boot Elke dag een intrigerende gedachtewisseling over de stand van de macro-economie. Op maandag en vrijdag gaat presentator Thomas van Zijl in gesprek met econoom Arnoud Boot, de rest van de week praat Van Zijl met econoom Edin Mujagić. Ook altijd terug te vinden als je een aflevering gemist hebt. Blik op de wereld Wat speelt zich vandaag af op het wereldtoneel? Het laatste nieuws uit bijvoorbeeld Oekraïne, het Midden-Oosten, de Verenigde Staten of Brussel hoor je iedere werkdag om 12.10 van onze vaste experts en eigen redacteuren en verslaggevers. Ook los te vinden als podcast. Ondernemerspanel Nu CM.com definitief het overnamebod van Bird af heeft geslagen laat die laatste het er niet bij zitten. Het bedrijf van Robert Vis ontketent een prijzenslag door klanten van CM.com gegarandeerd voor de helft van de prijs over te laten stappen op zijn eigen dienst voor klantrelatiesoftware. Pesterij, of serieuze bedreiging voor CM.com? En: Bol.com haalt alle sekspoppen uit de digitale schappen nadat onderzoek van RTL aantoonde dat er tot deze week kindersekspoppen werden verkocht. Dat en meer bespreken we om 11.30 in het ondernemerspanel met: Remy Gieling, oprichter van AI.nl Elske Doets, eigenaar en directeur van Doets Reizen Zakenlunch Elke dag, tijdens de lunch, geniet je mee van het laatste zakelijke nieuws, actuele informatie over de financiële markten en ander economische actualiteiten. Op een ontspannen manier word je als luisteraar bijgepraat over alles wat er speelt in de wereld van het bedrijfsleven en de beurs. En altijd terug te vinden als podcast, mocht je de lunch gemist hebben. Contact & Abonneren BNR Zakendoen zendt elke werkdag live uit van 11:00 tot 13:30 uur. Je kunt de redactie bereiken via e-mail. Abonneren op de podcast van BNR Zakendoen kan via bnr.nl/zakendoen, of via Apple Podcast en Spotify. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
CM has another loaded show in store this week. Recapping the final week of the regular season, the coaching carousel heard around the world, and what's in store with the conference championship matchups.
The Heroes of Asgard by Annie and Eliza Keary - part 34: Honour ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
De banenmarkt in de VS mag dan afkoelen, de experts zijn positief over de beurzen in 2026. Er zijn, als altijd, de nodige risico's, maar de groeikansen zijn er. "Voorzichtig positief", zegt Marc Langeveld van het Antaurus AI Tech Fund. "Het is even wachten op het rentebesluit van de Fed volgende week en dan met name de toelichting op het besluit." Als dat meevalt kan de beurs verder stijgen. Overigens gaat Marc ervan uit dat de Fed de rente met 25 basispunten verlaagt. Ook Wilbert Aarts van Bond Capital Partners is zich voorzichtig positief. "De Fear & Greed-index kruipt weer richting greed. Ik zie vroeg cyclische indicatoren, zoals de koperprijs, weer oplopen. Daarnaast zien de Europese inkoopmanagersindices er goed uit, die lopen weer op." Wilbert constateert ook dat er iets meer tractie zit in de Europese economie dan in de Amerikaanse. Salesforce liet na een aantal lastige kwartalen prima cijfers zien. Het bedrijf, groot in CRM-software, heeft de groei te pakken, met dank aan de toepassing van AI. Salesforce is daarmee een voorbeeld van de enorme potentie die AI heeft, en potentie die niet eens ten volle is gerealiseerd. De experts verwachten dat de groei in de techsector dan ook nog lange tijd zal aanhouden. Verder in de podcast aandacht voor CM.com en de cijfers van Snowflake (cloudservice) en CrowdStrike (cyber security). Natuurlijk behandelen we ook de luisteraarsvragen en geven de experts hun tips. Wilbert gaat deze keer voor een degelijk AEX-fonds, Marc kiest een Amerikaans concern. Geniet van de podcast! Let op: alleen het eerste deel is vrij te beluisteren. Wil je de hele podcast (luisteraarsvragen en tips) horen, wordt dan Premium lid van BeursTalk. Dat kost slechts 9,95 per maand, 99 euro voor een heel jaar. Abonneren kan hier!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
■【次回開催決定】『もっと!新ニッポンの話芸スピンオフvol.7』2026年2月14日(土) 18時30分開場 19時開演渋谷区総合文化センター 大和田 6階伝承ホールhttps://www.confetti-web.com/events/10972※11/15(土)10時より発売開始!■怪奇幽玄亭https://youtube.com/channel/UCOceBDbvqnIASN6wH4mWfHg?feature=shared■参考動画https://www.youtube.com/@%E6%B8%8B%E8%B0%B7%E3%82%89%E3%81%8F%E3%81%94/videos■レギュラーメンバー・立川こしら(たてかわ こしら)1975年生まれ 千葉県出身1996年5月立川志らくに入門「らく平」2002年5月二つ目昇進「こしら」2012年12月真打昇進落語立川流の落語家として、談志の孫弟子初の真打となる。落語家らしからぬ見た目と行動力で「立川流の異端児」の異名をとるが、独自の道を開拓し、観客に楽しい落語を提供することに徹底している。アナログからデジタルまで使いこなすマルチクリエイター。WEB製作をおこなう合同会社第プロの設立、ラジオDJの経験、無農薬農業など多角的に活躍。エイベックスよりCDを発売中。「高速落語 R-30(Vol.1〜3)」「真打昇進記念版 高速落語 大ネタ十(じゅう)」「死神」・鈴々舎馬るこ(れいれいしゃ まるこ)1980年生まれ 山口県出身2003年5月鈴々舎馬風に入門「馬るこ」2006年5月二つ目昇進2017年3月真打昇進落語協会所属。「落語初心者も落語マニアも大爆笑」をモットーに、"エンターテイメント"として楽しい落語を貪欲に追及する。新作・古典どちらも取り組み、アグレッシブな演目もあるが、確かな技術に裏打ちされた高座は常に成長を続けている。BS日テレ「笑点特大号」若手大喜利、文化放送ラジオ「くにまるジャパン」レギュラー。2010年「さがみはら若手落語家選手権」優勝、2013年「NHK新人演芸大賞」&「読売杯争奪二つ目バトル」優勝。 新ニッポンの話芸ポッドキャストを提案した張本人。安定したMCぶりを発揮している。・広瀬和生(ひろせ かずお)1960年生まれ。埼玉県出身。へヴィーメタル雑誌「BURRN!」編集長年に300席以上の高座に接し、現在進行形の「今の落語」の魅力を語る第一人者として知られる。2008年『この落語家を聴け!いま、観ておきたい噺家51人』(アスペクト)を皮切りに、『噺家のはなし』(小学館)『現代落語の基礎知識』(集英社)など、落語に関する著書多数。2012年よりライブ盤「この落語家を聴け!」公演を北沢タウンホールで行いインタビューをまとめたものが『落語家という生き方』(講談社)として書籍化した。プロデュース興行も多数。近著に『噺は生きている 名作落語進化論』(毎日新聞出版)など。■準レギュラー・柳亭信楽(りゅうてい しがらき)1983年生まれ 東京都出身2014年6月 柳亭楽輔に入門「楽ちん」2014年7月下席楽屋入り2018年8月中席より二ツ目昇進「信楽」落語芸術協会が誇る広瀬和夫絶賛の新作落語家。一つの設定を軸に力技で押し通す信楽落語は、非凡な発想と確固たる実力が合わさって確立されている。特技は洋楽カラオケ(フレディ・マーキュリーなど)・立川かしめ(たてかわ かしめ)1989年生まれ 愛知県出身2015年6月 立川こしらに入門「仮面女子」2016年10月 命名権満了により改名「かしめ」2020年4月 二つ目昇進落語立川流の落語家として、立川談志初のひ孫弟子となる。師匠こしらと同様に改作落語を得意とし、可笑しくもどこか小気味悪い後味を残す独特の世界観を持つ。特技はその人が求める商品を精一杯検索して提案すること。■ゲスト・ナツノカモ(なつのかも)作家。1983年生まれ。主にコント舞台脚本、演出。他にテレビ番組の構成、ゲームシナリオ制作、創作落語など幅広く活動。また自らプレーヤーとして舞台に出演、ラジオCMのナレーターなどもこなす。好きな季節は夏、好きな動物は鴨。■殿堂入り・三遊亭萬橘 (さんゆうてい まんきつ)1979年生まれ 愛知県出身2003年7月三遊亭圓橘に入門「橘つき」2006年10月二つ目昇進「きつつき」2013年3月真打昇進4代目「萬橘」襲名五代目圓楽一門会に所属。円楽党のホープとも称される抜群の実力派。論理的に落語を分析し、独自の演出を加えた高座は奇をてらうことなく、それでいて爆笑を誘う。ポッドキャストであつい議論を展開することも。2007年3月「さがみはら若手落語家選手権」優勝 2014年から3年連続で国立演芸場花形演芸大賞(金賞)、2016年彩の国落語大賞ほか受賞多数。
Welcome to the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast, created and hosted by Sonal Patel, BA, CPMA, CPC, CMC, ICD-10-CM.Thanks to all of you for making this a Top 15 Medical Billing & Coding Podcast for 5 years on Feedspot.Sonal's 16th Season starts up and Episode 14 features a Newsworthy update on World AIDS Day.Sonal's Trusty Tip and compliance recommendations focus on a new Medicare hospice outpatient services edit.Spark inspires us all to reflect on resilience based on the inspirational words of Marcus Aurelius.Paint The Medical Picture Podcast now on:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6hcJAHHrqNLo9UmKtqRP3XApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/paint-the-medical-picture-podcast/id1530442177Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/bc6146d7-3d30-4b73-ae7f-d77d6046fe6a/paint-the-medical-picture-podcastFind Paint The Medical Picture Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzNUxmYdIU_U8I5hP91Kk7AFind Sonal on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sonapate/And checkout the website: https://paintthemedicalpicturepodcast.com/If you'd like to be a sponsor of the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast series, please contact Sonal directly for pricing: PaintTheMedicalPicturePodcast@gmail.com
The Heroes of Asgard by Annie and Eliza Keary - part 33: The Secret of Svartheim ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
#cuttheclutter Karnataka CM Siddaramaiah & Deputy CM DK Shivakumar will meet on Tuesday amid the ongoing tussle over CM chair. This will be the second meeting between the two Congress leaders in 4 days. In Ep 1764 of #CutTheClutter, ThePrint Editor-In-Chief Shekhar Gupta and Political Editor DK Singh explain the ongoing power tussle. They also look at the complexities of politics in Karnataka, a state which has had only three Chief Ministers complete their full term so far. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- @MSArenaOfficial #Victoris #VictorisSUV #GotItAll #MarutiSuzukiSUV #MarutiSuzukiArena
The next two episodes of Reliability Matters will be all about contract manufacturing, an area that can make or break the reliability and success of a product. Mike Konrad's guest on this episode is Raymond Novara, founder and owner of East End Assemblies, a US-based contract manufacturer recognized for its focus on quality, customer service, and compliance with AS9100 and IPC standards. During our conversation, Raymond talks about key questions that every OEM should be considering: What are the best practices for selecting a contract manufacturer? What common mistakes do companies make when working with a CM—especially in communication and hand-offs? How can design-for-manufacturability feedback prevent problems down the road? What should customers know about transitioning from prototypes to volume production? And how can contract manufacturers help ensure long-term product reliability, not just passing initial tests? If you're an OEM evaluating partners, an engineer preparing to hand off a design, or someone interested in how contract manufacturers contribute to product reliability, this episode is packed with insights.
https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/curiousminds/CM_306_Jennifer_Garvey_Berger.mp3
Welcome to the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast, created and hosted by Sonal Patel, BA, CPMA, CPC, CMC, ICD-10-CM.Thanks to all of you for making this a Top 15 Medical Billing & Coding Podcast for 5 years on Feedspot.Sonal's 16th Season starts up and Episode 13 features Newsworthy updates on the month's fraud, waste, and abuse cases. Sonal's Trusty Tip and compliance recommendations focus on a Medicare telehealth update.Spark inspires us all to reflect on resilience based on the inspirational words of Dalai Lama.Paint The Medical Picture Podcast now on:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6hcJAHHrqNLo9UmKtqRP3XApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/paint-the-medical-picture-podcast/id1530442177Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/bc6146d7-3d30-4b73-ae7f-d77d6046fe6a/paint-the-medical-picture-podcastFind Paint The Medical Picture Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzNUxmYdIU_U8I5hP91Kk7AFind Sonal on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sonapate/And checkout the website: https://paintthemedicalpicturepodcast.com/If you'd like to be a sponsor of the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast series, please contact Sonal directly for pricing: PaintTheMedicalPicturePodcast@gmail.com
CM gets prepped for the final week of the regular season on this holiday edition of the College Football Function.
Today on the Camp Cast we welcome Jake Herman! Jake is a former camper, CIT, counselor, megaphone editor, program director and now famously the voice of the 2022 16A walk off victory! Jake is now in the sports media industry joining a legacy of CM alumni in the same field. We talk all about Jakes time at camp, give him time to defend his age group, and get into some great stories from his time at CM. Jake came prepared! Enjoy. PLEASE CONSIDER DONATING TO THESE AMAZING CAMP SCHOLARSHIP FUNDS: Camp for All Kids & the Nate Wasserman Camp Fund. GET INVOLVED! Sign up to join our 100th Anniversary Committee and our Fantasy Camp Commissioners Council
On this episode of The Still Real to Us Show:-- We break down AEW Full Gear 2025 from top to bottom, including the biggest surprises, standout matches, and the moments everyone will still be talking about weeks from now!-- Samoa Joe and CM Punk are World Champions at the same time for the first time since 2008 — 17 years ago — so we ask the big question: Which two wrestlers competing today are most likely to be World Champions together 17 years from now in 2042? We each make bold predictions!-- The field for the 2025 AEW Continental Classic is officially set, and we evaluate the lineup, potential sleepers, early favorites, and how this year's tournament could shape AEW's entire 2026 landscape.-- It's WWE's final PLE of the year, so we break down the Survivor Series: WarGames card with full previews and predictions, including who we think walks out of the double-cage carnage with the win.-- PLUS: The SRTU Holiday Schedule is here!
The next two episodes will be all about contract manufacturing, an area that can make or break the reliability and success of a product. My guest on this episode is Raymond Novara, founder and owner of East End Assemblies, a U.S.-based contract manufacturer recognized for its focus on quality, customer service, and compliance with AS9100 and IPC standards.During our conversation, I'll be asking Raymond some key questions that every OEM should be considering:What are the best practices for selecting a contract manufacturer?What common mistakes do companies make when working with a CM—especially in communication and hand-offs?How can design-for-manufacturability feedback prevent problems down the road?What should customers know about transitioning from prototypes to volume production?And how can contract manufacturers help ensure long-term product reliability, not just passing initial tests?If you're an OEM evaluating partners, an engineer preparing to hand off a design, or someone interested in how contract manufacturers contribute to product reliability, this episode is packed with insights.Raymond Novara's Company:East End Assemblieshttps://eastendassemblies.com
Send us a textEp 304 Jim Miller BEFORE the UFC w/ Brian McLaughlin Jim Miller is on the precipice of becoming the first ever member of the 50 Fights in the UFC. Jim Milers journey to the UFC is largely undocumented and with the help of his long time friend and trainer Brian McLaughlin we explore his path within the independent grind. Special Thank You to friend of the show Brian McLaughlin for helping out this together. Ep 304 Jim Miller BEFORE the UFC 0:00 MMA history podcast intro 0:32 Joey Venti's guest introduction 1:01 interview start 2:05 Forced to miss weight against Thigo Alves11:44 Interactions with Joe Silva 14:13 beginnings in MMA 18:09 story about Jim Millers father 23:14 Micky Galls original coach 26:04 thoughts on Cm punk vs Micky Gall28:28 Cm punks training camp 29:21 Jim Miller vs Eddie Fyvie33:41 Jim Miller vs Kevin Roddy36:31 Kevin Roddy story 38:15 Watching brother Dan Miller lose a fight 39:29 Jim Miller vs Ryan Ciotoli42:42 Reality Fighting 13 4 man tournament 45:40 Jim Miller vs Muhsin Corbbrey46:48 Johnathon Helwig vs Mike Constantino48:12 thoughts on Frankie Edgar50:49 Muhsin Corbbrey story before fight 52:08 Jim Miller vs James Jones 52:41 Planet Jiu jitsu closing doors week of fight 54:51 training partner Chris Liguori 56:57 Jim Miller vs Frankie Edgar 1:01:23 not returning to Reality fighting1:03:28 TUF 5 tryouts 1:06:29 previous opponents at TUF tryouts 1:08:41 receiving nick name A10 1:10:08 not getting into TUF 5 1:11:03 training at AMA 1:13:46 Jim Miller vs Al Buck1:15:39 Jim Miller vs Anthony Morrison1:17:55 Jim Miller vs Nuri Shakir “Weight miss” 1:23:08 undefeated in welterweight fights 1:24:31 fighting at different weight classes 1:29:29 Jim Miller vs Chris Ligori1:31:06 Dan Miller vs John Howard 1:34:40 finishing Chris Ligori 1:36:21 the “Jim Miller rule”1:36:41 AMA fighting training partners 1:38:38 Jim Miller vs Chris Ligori rematch 1:41:22 researching Jim Miller 1:42:51 getting the call from UFC while in IFL 1:46:06 Jim Miller vs Bart Palaziewski1:48:50 fights prior to UFC being in New Jersey 1:50:55 feelings when receiving call from UFC 1:54:19 interview wrap up 1:55:14 outro/closing thoughtsPlease follow our channels on Follow the MMA History Team on Instagram: MMA Detective Mike Davis @mikedavis632 Co Host Joey Venti @aj_ventitreRecords Keeper- Andrew Mendoza @ambidexstressSocial Media Manager Andy Campbell @martial_mindset_Thumbnails Julio Macedo @juliosemacentoInstagram https://www.instagram.com/mmahistorypodcast?igsh=aHVweHdncXQycHBy&utm_source=qrSpotify https://open.spotify.com/show/3q8KsfqrSQSjkdPLkdtNWb?si=aL3D5Y3aTDi-PQZdweWL8gApple Podcast MMA History PodcastYouTube https://youtube.com/@MMAHistoryPodcast?si=bj1RBXTZ2X82tv_JOutro song: Power - https://tunetank.com/t/2gji/1458-powerMike - The MMA Detective - @mikedavis632 Cash App - $mikedavis1231Venmo - Mike-Davis-63ZELLE: Cutthroatmma@gmail.com / ph#: 773-491-5052 #MMA #UFC #NHB #MixedMartialArts #MMADetective #MikeDavis #MMAHistory #OldSchoolMMA #MMAPodcast #fightpodcast Thank You for your supportSupport the show
This week on Derry Public Radio, join CM, Josh, and Eve as they plunge into the haunting conclusion of "Gerald's Game". Picking up from the harrowing events that left Jesse Burlingame handcuffed and vulnerable, the hosts dissect the psychological and physical struggles she faces in her desperate bid for survival. As they wrap up this intense discussion, the hosts reflect on the nature of horror, both real and imagined, and how it shapes our understanding of survival and agency. Expect a thought-provoking exploration that balances the grotesque with moments of unexpected empowerment. For more Derry Public Radio, head over to www.patreon.com/derrypublicradio for exclusive episodes, early releases, and more bonus content!
In the 750th episode of the Football Function, CM inches us closer to the finish line of the CFB season.
Welcome to the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast, created and hosted by Sonal Patel, CPMA, CPC, CMC, ICD-10-CM.Thanks to all of you for making this a Top 15 Medical Billing & Coding Podcast for 5 Years on Feedspot. Sonal's 16th Season starts up and Episode 12 features a Newsworthy update on RAC audits for 2025.Sonal's Trusty Tip and compliance recommendations focus on specific RAC audits for 2025.Spark inspires us all to reflect on resilience based on the inspirational words of Isabel Allende.Paint The Medical Picture Podcast now on:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6hcJAHHrqNLo9UmKtqRP3XApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/paint-the-medical-picture-podcast/id1530442177Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/bc6146d7-3d30-4b73-ae7f-d77d6046fe6a/paint-the-medical-picture-podcastFind Paint The Medical Picture Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzNUxmYdIU_U8I5hP91Kk7AFind Sonal on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sonapate/And checkout the website: https://paintthemedicalpicturepodcast.com/If you'd like to be a sponsor of the Paint The Medical Picture Podcast series, please contact Sonal directly for pricing: PaintTheMedicalPicturePodcast@gmail.com
“It's not if you get sued; it's when.” That's what one of my preceptors told me when I was in PA school. I was floored. Now that I've been practicing as a PA for over a decade, I've seen colleagues be named in lawsuits and better understand the liabilities I face in my job. This is why it's imperative for PAs to have medical malpractice insurance. As the PA profession is modernizing, PAs have more exposure to patients, which is excellent to be able to care for more people but also opens up a greater possibility of being sued. My guest today is Will Sullivan, the executive vice president of CM&F group, a leading malpractice insurance company that has been serving PAs and other healthcare professionals for decades. In today's episode, Will explains the nuances of different types of malpractice policies and how your premium can be determined. We also discuss whether or not you can rely solely on your employer-sponsored malpractice policy or whether you should purchase your own. As Will says in today's episode, your license is your biggest asset as a healthcare provider. Learn how you can best protect it. SPONSORS