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Curtis Cook preaches "Psalm 16" from Psalm 16, in this Sunday morning gathering of Grace Harbor Church.
It's difficult to imagine being born to an enslaved African mother in 18th century France and then growing up to be one of the most celebrated composers and swordsmen in the whole country. Any one of these circumstances would be difficult on their own, but Joseph Bologne fought against the challenges to play violin at private parties for the queen and live with the famous composer, Mozart. He even led troops into battle during the French Revolution. All of this was accomplished as a Black man during a time of slavery and discrimination. Let's go learn about his amazing story. About Honest History Honest History creates award-winning books, magazines, and this show for young historians across the world. Our mission is to inspire kids to create a positive impact on history themselves. Learn more at honesthistory.co and @honesthistory. Credits This episode was hosted by Curtis Cook, written by Heidi Coburn, and produced by Randall Lawrence. Original theme music was written and recorded by Luke Messimer. More Enjoy this episode? Share with your friends and don't forget to rate and review. See you next time!
IT Desk is back for another fiscal season! Season 3 is where we made important updates, new staff, and systems! Tune into this episode where we strive for communication and we even get technical at times. No matter if you think we lose control, we are able to maintain ourselves and carry through with providing quality customer service. Hear for yourselves! Specialists guests: Curtis Cook (This Fool on Hulu, American Dad, NW Black Comedy Festival), Arlo Weierhauser (Timmy Failure, Late Show With Stephen Colbert, EPIX), Jaren George --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-it-desk/support
There's no place like Lovett Or Leave It for the holidays, as we gather with our loved ones: an AI chatbot who answers to our every whim. Sam Sanders and Zach Stafford bring the end-of-year vibes way up when they tackle our prestige drama soundscape. A goblin (Danielle Perez) stops by to rail against goblin mode. The one-and-only Jennifer Tilly bets you can't answer the question, “Was I In This?” Curtis Cook and Danielle Perez say “Good Boning America” to cheating scandals, and we get heated as we gather around the Rant Wheel. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Host Luke Burbank and announcer Elena Passarello share some "personal Mt. Everests" from our listeners; writer and mountaineer Silvia Vasquez-Lavado discusses how she became the first openly gay woman to climb “The Seven Summits” while overcoming addiction and childhood trauma; comedian Curtis Cook explains why you shouldn't wear a suit to Red Lobster; and Patterson Hood, frontman of Drive-By Truckers, unpacks his decades-long collaboration with bandmates, then performs "Shake and Pine" from their album Welcome 2 Club XIII.
In this Episode, long-time Boston church planter and pastor, Curtis Cook, speaks on the importance of sending your best people when planting new churches. This talk was originally recorded at the Pillar Network's annual Unite Conference.
Curtis Cook, despite his own protestations and sometimes self-identifying as petty in own comedy, is truly one of the most thoughtful comedians around on top of being so damn hysterical and writing for several hit shows, the latest of which just happens to be This Fool on Hulu. This week's Comedy Bureau Field Report goes into the ethos of comedy and the relationship between one's intended joke and how it's received and how there's no magical balance for all of it. Also, "hot" takes on The Daily Show pondering a trio of hosts, a new Naked Gun, and more. Find Curtis @curtiscookcomedy on IG and @curtis_cook on Twitter. The Comedy Bureau @thecomedybureau across platforms and please, please support TCB via GoFundMe, Patreon, or on Venmo (@jakekroeger). Produced by Jake Kroeger Music by Brian Granillo Artwork by Andrew Delman and KT
Are white people purposely making milk and dairy products more dangerous for people of color? Langston and David shoot the cheese breeze with Curtis Cook (Hulu's This Fool) to explore the startling truths about dairy and dairy farming. We all get sad for the cows and the children.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week Justin sits down with Curtis Cook! Topics include: living in La, his new show, "This Fool", writing for American Dad, and finally getting a TikTok account. Check out This Fool here: https://hulu.tv/3vXHz4Y
Curtis Cook / 1 Corinthians 15:1-11
Curtis Cook / 2 Corinthians 5:11-21
Host Luke Burbank and announcer Elena Passarello talk "personal Mt. Everests;" writer and mountaineer Silvia Vasquez-Lavado discusses how she became the first openly gay woman to climb “The Seven Summits” while overcoming addiction and childhood trauma; comedian Curtis Cook explains why you shouldn't wear a suit to Red Lobster; and Patterson Hood, frontman of Drive-By Truckers, unpacks his decades-long collaboration with bandmates, then performs "Shake and Pine" from their forthcoming album.
Check out our new podcast episode to learn how we're engaging Summit Technology Academy students in meaningful, hands-on career education. Listen to Josie L., La'Maya S., Laura M. and Mr. Curtis Cook from STA discuss these highlights: Students develop valuable workforce skills through client-connected projects. Students collaborate & network through opportunities with Go Global KC, Operation […]
Curtis Cook / 1 Peter 4:7-11
Curtis Cook / 1 Peter 5:1-11
This week Justin sits down with Curtis Cook! Topics include: writing for American Dad on TBS, losing his blue checkmark on Twitter, getting married during a pandemic, and Yeomen and Yeowmen.
Guests: Kent Hrbek (1:48:53), Tracey Blake (2:23:32), Curtis Cook (2:47:37). The KQ Morning Show - Originally aired on August 20, 2021 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Curtis Cook / 1 Corinthians 6.12-7.5
Writer and comedian Curtis Cook (The Jim Jefferies Show) returns to join Andrew to discuss Election Day 2017, moving from Portland to Los Angeles, Papa John’s not wanting neo-nazis to buy its pizza, and much more. As always, leave us a message about anything you think is racist at (323) 389-RACE.
In another episode of BORING OPINIONS, Dave talks to Steph Tolev about her favorite ways in which buttons are placed on clothes. Dave is honestly astonished about Steph's insane button knowledge, and also the fact that she has to ice her face. Also featuring standup clips from Curtis Cook, Stuart Thompson and Alex Hooper.Support the show (http://patreon.com/davetotheross)
Follow Curtis Cook on Twitter and InstagramResources!BLM resources mailing list!Vote With Us - voter resources campaignThe next episodes of You Can Do It with Bri Pruett drops Wednesday November 10th! Follow the show on Twitter & Instagram. Follow Bri on Twitter & Instagram
Curtis Cook comes to play Chris and Dave this week. He isn't quite sure how the game works, but he plays it FULL TILT
Comedian, Screen Writer and Ohioan made good Curtis Cook stops in. We don't talk about writing at all really. However we had fun and learned some good stuff.
Comedian Curtis Cook excels at a kind of curveball - unassuming riffs that steer you right where he wants you. Cook has been on fire lately, telling tales on his own post-feminist angst, calling out racial hang-ups, and generally skewering progressive Portland. He's co-hosting several showcases around town, including Earthquake Hurricane and the new Do What You Love show at We Work. And he's writing columns for Willamette Week. We sat down with Curtis to talk about how working in Portland has affected his writing and style. Spoiler alert: this is the extra-long version of our conversation. Just a few highlights:On why Oberlin was good training for working stages in Portland: I grew up outside of Cleveland in a small, relatively conservative town. I spent a lot of time thinking one day I'd grow up and move to a place full of liberals and hippies and they'd get it. And going to Oberlin showed me that liberals and hippies can also be awful people. It was just a lot of people screaming about their beliefs, having very important meetings about nothing. We were all going through different phases — it's college. Some people decided “I”-statements and trust falls were their thing. I decided Old Crow and PBR were my thing, and that I should have gone to a different school.On how Portland has changed his performance style: I'm more relaxed. Before…there was this big push. We were post Richard Pryor, post-Bill Hicks, post-Lenny Bruce… everyone started leaning toward social consciousness [in stand-up]… I got suckered into this feeling that stand-up was inherently brave. Then I moved to Portland and I realized that it's only brave if you're taking your ideas to people who don't necessarily agree with you.On keeping his work fresh:I've been doing stand-up for a little over five years now, which is nothing. It's a drop int he bucked. But what I've started to realize is the performative aspect of [stand up] should be able to change for every performance. Maybe I tell this joke every time, but every single time, a person in one of the front three rows reacts and I can talk to them for thirty seconds. That thirty seconds is the magic of the performance for me. That's thirty seconds you'll never be able to duplicate. That's something that's just for you and the audience.Curtis Cook is part of seven showcases at the Bridgetown Comedy Festival — five intense days of nonstop comedy with performers from around the country. It runs June 1st through the 5th. Check him out.
In hanging around with Curtis Cook, we stumbled across a pretty interesting event he's involved with. The Do What You Love comedy showcase at We Work. Check it out - next edition is June 16th. Watch for full info on our website soon.