POPULARITY
Frankie Miller has one of those voices that stops you mid-sentence — gritty, soulful, aching, and unmistakably real. It's the sound of lived experience, shaped by smoky pubs, late nights, hard miles on the road, and a deep love of rhythm and blues. Born William Malcolm Miller in 1949, in Glasgow, Scotland, Frankie grew up in a working-class environment where music wasn't a luxury — it was a lifeline.As a teenager, Frankie was already soaking up American blues and soul records, falling hard for artists like Muddy Waters, Otis Redding, and Ray Charles. Those influences never left him. You can hear them in every rasp, every shout, every tender moment in his singing. By the late 1960s, he was fronting his own band, Frankie Miller and the Powerhouse, building a reputation as a formidable live performer around the UK. Long before the record deals and chart success, Frankie was earning his stripes the old-fashioned way — on stage, night after night.His big break came in the early '70s when he signed to Chrysalis Records. His debut album Once in a Blue Moon (1972) immediately showcased his emotional range and powerful voice. The album also revealed something else: Frankie wasn't just a belter — he was a storyteller. Songs like “I'm Falling in Love” hinted at the soulful depth that would define his career.Over the next decade, Frankie Miller released a run of albums that firmly established him as one of the great blue-eyed soul singers of his generation. Records like High Life (1974), The Rock (1975), and Full House (1977) blended rock, soul, and blues with effortless confidence. The Rock in particular is often cited as a high point — raw, energetic, and brimming with personality. It also helped cement his reputation internationally, especially in the United States, where his sound resonated deeply.Frankie's songwriting talent didn't go unnoticed either. In fact, some of his most famous songs became hits for other artists. “Darlin',” co-written with Ian McLagan, was famously recorded by Elvis Presley, while “You Don't Know” was covered by artists including Ray Charles. Rod Stewart also became a close friend and champion, recording several Frankie Miller songs and helping introduce his music to an even wider audience. It was clear: musicians loved him as much as fans did.Despite the success, Frankie never chased trends or tried to polish away the rough edges that made him special. His voice remained raw and honest, often sounding like it might crack — and sometimes it did — but that vulnerability was exactly the point. He sang like someone who meant every word.Then, in 1994, everything changed. Frankie suffered a massive brain hemorrhage that left him unable to speak or sing, abruptly ending his performing career. It was a devastating blow, not just to fans, but to the music world as a whole. One of rock and soul's most distinctive voices was suddenly silenced.In the years that followed, Frankie's wife helped him through a long and difficult recovery. While he would never return to the stage, Frankie's spirit — and his music — endured. Fellow musicians rallied around him, and tribute albums like A Tribute to Frankie Miller helped reintroduce his catalogue to new listeners while honoring his immense influence.Today, Frankie Miller is remembered not just for his powerful voice, but for his authenticity. He was never a glossy superstar or a carefully manufactured rock icon. He was a singer's singer — admired by peers, respected by critics, and adored by fans who recognised something deeply human in his music.Frankie Miller's songs still feel alive because they come from a place of truth. Whether he was roaring through a blues rocker or whispering through a tender ballad, he sang like a man laying his heart on the line. Joining us this week is Scottish author, Davy Arthur who has recently penned a book to honour Frankie. You can pick up the book 'Long Way Home' - The Frankie MIller story here. It's published by New Haven
Dr. Deb 0:01Welcome back to another episode of Let’s Talk Wellness Now, and I’m your host, Dr. Deb, and today we’re pulling back the curtain on a topic that barely gets a whisper in conventional medicine. Chronic bladder symptoms, biofilms, and the hidden genetic drivers that keep so many women stuck in a cycle of pain, urgency, and infection that never truly resolves. My guest today is someone who is not only brilliant, but battle-tested, like myself. Dr. Kristen Ryman is a physician, a mom, and the author of Life After Lyme, a book and blueprint that has helped countless people reclaim health after complex chronic illness. After healing herself from advanced Lyme, she has spent her career helping patients recover their most vibrant, resilient selves through her Inner Flow program. Her Healing Grove podcast, her membership community, and her deep dive work on bladder biofilms and stealth pathogens. And what I love about Kristen is that she teaches from lived experience. In 2022, she suffered a stroke. And not only survived it, but rebuilt her brain, resolved lateral strabismus, restored balance, and regained her ability to multitask That journey uncovered her own genetic predisposition to clotting, the very same patterns she sees in her chronic bladder patients. And that personal revelation ultimately led to her Introducing this groundbreaking work that we’re talking about today. So let’s get into it, because bladder biofilms, clotting genetics, stealth pathogens, and real recovery is the conversation women have been needing for decades. And we’ll get started. Where did this one go? There we go. Alright, so welcome back to Let’s Talk Wellness Now. I have Dr. Kristen with me, and I am so excited to talk to her for multiple reasons. A, she’s got a fabulous story, and B, she’s an expert in a topic that nobody’s talking about, and I want to learn from her, too. So, welcome to the show. Kristin Reihman 3:07Thank you! I’m so happy to be here, Dr. Deb. Dr. Deb 3:10Thank you. Well, let’s dive right in, because we have so much to talk about, and you and I could probably talk for hours. So, let’s dive into this conversation, and tell us a little bit about yourself and how you got involved in this. Kristin Reihman 3:23Well, I mean, like so many people, I think, on this path, I had, had to learn it the hard way. You know, I had to find my way into a mystery illness, a complex, mysterious set of symptoms that sort of didn’t fit the… the sort of description of what, you know, normal doctors do, and even though I was a normal doctor for many years, nothing I’d been trained in could help me when I was really debilitated from Lyme disease back in 2011, 20212, 2023. And so I kind of had to crawl my way out of that, using all the resources at my disposal, which, you know, started out with a lot of ILADS stuff, you know, a lot of the International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society, resources online, found some Lyme doctors, and then my journey really quickly evolved to sort of, like, way far afield of normal Western medicine, which is what my training is in you know, I think within a year of my diagnosis, I was, like, you know, at a Klingheart conference, and learning all sort of, you know, the naturopathic approach to Lyme, and really trying to heal my body and terrain, and heal the process that had led me to become so, so ill from, you know. A little bacteria. Dr. Deb 4:29Yeah. Yeah, same here. Like, I’ve been an ILADS practitioner for over 20 years, and when I got sick with Lyme, I was like… how did I not realize this? And I knew I had Lyme before I even was ILADS trained, but when I got really sick and got diagnosed with MS, I never thought about Lyme or mycotoxins or any of that, because I was too busy, head down, doing what I’m doing, helping people. And I, too, had to take that step back, not just physically, but more spiritually and emotionally, and say, how did my body get this sick? Like, what was I doing, and what was I not doing? That allowed this to happen, and now look at this from a healing aspect of not just the physical side, but that spiritual-emotional side as well. Kristin Reihman 5:13Totally. I have the same… I have the same realization as I was coming out of it. I was like, wow, this wasn’t just about, sort of, physically what I was doing and not doing. There was something spiritual here as well for me, and I… I feel like it really was a wake-up call for me to get on the path that I’m supposed to be on, the path that I’m on now, really, which is stepping away from the whole medicine matrix model and moving into, you know, working with really complex people. Listening to their bodies, understanding intuition, understanding energy, understanding all these different pieces that doctors just aren’t trained to look at. Dr. Deb 5:46Right? We don’t have time to learn everything, right? Like, you have time to learn the body and the medical side of things, and that’s a whole prism of itself, but then learning the spiritual energy medicine, that’s a completely different paradigm. That’s a full-time learning aspect, and it’s so different than what we learn in conventional medicine. Kristin Reihman 6:04Yeah, it’s a complete health system. Like, it’s a complete healthcare system. Dr. Deb 6:10Yes, and nobody takes it that seriously, but I, for myself, I’ve been spiritual healing for decades, and it wasn’t until I got really sick that I dived deeper into that and looked at what is it in this world that I’m owning, what belongs to generational things that were brought to me from childbirth and other generations in my family that I’m carrying their old wounds. And how do I clear some of that so that it’s not still following me? And then how do I help my kids so that they don’t have to carry what I brought forth? And it’s just… a lot of people, that may sound crazy, but that’s the kind of stuff that we need to be looking at if we want to truly heal. Kristin Reihman 6:54Yeah, and I think it’s also, it’s inspiring, you know, because when people… and I would tell this to my patients with Lyme and these sort of mystery illnesses, like, look, you are on this path for a reason, and this is going to teach you so much that you didn’t necessarily want to learn, but you need to learn. And this… nothing that you learn or change about your lifestyle or the way in which you move through the world is gonna make you a worse person. Like, it’s only gonna sort of up-level you. You know, it’s gonna up-level your diet, and your sleep habits, and your relationships, and your toxic thinking, like, it’s all gonna change for you to get better, and that’s… that’s a gift, really. Dr. Deb 7:27It really is, and I tell people the same thing. Like, we can look at this as… something that’s happening to us, or we can look at this as something that’s happening for us. And that’s how I looked at my MS diagnosis. This was happening for me, not to me. I wasn’t going to be the victim. And you have a very similar story, so tell us a little bit about your story and what kind of catapulted you into this in 2022. Kristin Reihman 7:52Well, by 2022, I was, like, 10 years out of my Lyme hole, and I had been seeing patients, you know, I had opened my own practice, and I was working for another company, seeing, families who have brain-injured children. I was their medical director, still am, actually. And so I was doing a patchwork of things, all of which really fed my soul. You know, all of which felt like this is, like, me, aligned with my purpose on the planet. And so, based on a lot of my thinking, I sort of figured, okay, well, I’m good now, right? Like, I’m on my path now, like, the universe is not going to send another 2×4. And then the universe sent another 2×4. And in 2022, I had an elective neck surgery. You kind of still see the little scar here for my two-level ACDF. Because I had crazy off-the-hook arm pain for, like, a year and a half that I just finally became, like, almost like it felt like I was developing fasciculations and fiery, fiery pain, and I just got the surgery, and the pain went away. But when I woke up, I was different. I didn’t have a voice. Which is a common side effect, actually, of that surgery that resolves after a few months, and in many cases, and mine did. But I also didn’t have, normal balance anymore, and my right eye turned out a little bit, and I couldn’t multitask. And my job is all about multitasking. As you know, with very complex people in front of you, you’re hearing all these pieces of their story, and you’re kind of categorizing it, and thinking about where they fit, and you’re making a plan for what to work up, and you’re making a plan for what to wait until next time. It’s like all these pieces, right? You’re in the matrix. And I… I couldn’t hold those pieces anymore. And I didn’t realize that until I went back to work a couple months after my, surgery, because my voice came back and was like, okay, well, now I’m going back to work. And then I realized, I can’t do simple math. In fact, I can’t remember what this person just said to me, unless I read my note, and I can’t remember taking that note. What is going on? And so I had a full workup, and indeed, I had some neurological deficits that didn’t show up on an MRI, so they must have been quite tiny. Possibly were even low-flow, you know, episodes during my surgery when my blood pressure drops really low with the medicines that you’re on for surgery. But I, basically had, like, a few mini strokes, and needed to recover from that. So that was sort of the… that was the 2×4 in 2022. Dr. Deb 10:09Wow. So, what are, what are some of the things that you learned during that process of that mini-stroke? Kristin Reihman 10:17Well, the first thing I learned is that, something that I already knew from working with the Family Hope Center, which is that organization I mentioned that helps families heal their kids’ brains, I know that motivation lives in the ponds, and if you have a ding or a hit to the ponds, like, you don’t want to get out of bed in the morning, you don’t want to do the work it takes to heal your brain, in my case. And I remember spending several months in the fall of 2022 just sort of walking around my yard. With my puppies, being like, This is enough. I don’t really need to work anymore, right? Like, I don’t… why do I need my brain back? Like, I don’t need to have my brain back to enjoy life. You know, I’ll have a garden, I have people I love and who love me, like, why do I need to work? Like, my whole, like, passion, purpose-driven mentality and motivation to kind of do and be all the things I always strive to do and be in the world, was, like, gone. It was really interesting, slash very alarming to those who knew me, but being inside the brain that wasn’t really working, it wasn’t alarming to me. I was just sort of like, oh, ho-hum, this is my new me.Well, luckily I have some people around me, I like to call them my healing team, who sort of held up a mirror, and they’re like, this is not you, and we’re gonna take you to a functional neurologist now. And so, I ended up seeing a functional neurologist who, you know, within… within, like probably 6 visits. I had all these, like, stacked visits with him. Within 6 visits, my brain just turned on. I was like, oh! Right! I need my brain back! I gotta fix this eyesight, I gotta get my balance back, and I gotta learn how to do simple math again and multitask. So, after that sort of jumpstart, I actually did the program that I, you know, know very well inside and out from the Family Hope Center, where I’d been medical director for 10 years. And, it’s a hard program, it’s not… not for wimps, and it’s certainly… I wasn’t about to do it when I had no motivation, so I’m really grateful to the functional neurologist who helped me kind of, like get my brain… get my pawns back, and my motivation back, my mojo. And then I’m really grateful to the Family Hope Center, because if I didn’t have that set of tools in my back pocket, I would still have an eye that turns out to the side, I would still have a positive Romberg, you know, closing my eyes, falling over backwards, and I would still have, a lot of trouble seeing patients, and probably wouldn’t be working anymore. Dr. Deb 12:32I can totally relate to that. When I got my MS diagnosis, you know, there’s a period of time where you go, okay reality kicks in, and I’m thinking, okay, how long am I going to be able to work? How long am I going to be able to play with my kids and my grandkids and be able to be me? And I started looking at, how do I sell my practice, just in case I need to do this? How do I step back? And I spent probably about 9 or 10 months in that place of, this is gonna be my life, and it’s not gonna be what I’m used to, and, you know, how are we gonna redesign my house, and do this, and that, and… Finally, my husband looked at me one day, and he’s like, what the hell is wrong with you? And I was like, what are you talking about? He’s like, this is ridiculous. He’s like, you fix everybody else. He’s like you can fix yourself. Why do you think you can’t fix yourself, or you don’t know the people that can fix you? You need to get out of this, and pick yourself up, and start doing what you tell your patients. And… and I sat there, and at first I was like just did he know that I’m sick? Like, I have MS. I took that victim mode for a little bit, and then I went, no, he’s right. Like, this is my wake-up call to say, I can reverse this, I can fix this, and total, total turnaround, too. Like, I started reaching out to my friends and colleagues, because I kept myself in this huge bubble, like, I didn’t want anyone to know what was going on with me, because I was afraid my patients wouldn’t see me, what are my staff going to say? My staff are going to leave, and if I lose my business, what am I going to do? And da-da-da-da, all those fears. And then… when I finally started opening up and sharing with people, people started bringing me other people, and you need to talk to this person, you need to talk to this person. They connected me here and there, and this place, and 18 months later, I was totally back to normal again. And now my practice is growing, and we’re adding on, and it’s bigger, and I’m taking on more projects than I feel like myself, and… and I was a lot like you, too. Like, I couldn’t remember my protocols that I’ve done for 20 years. I had to depend on what was in the EHR to pull forward, because I always had them in my notes, so I didn’t have to type them all the time, but I was like I have to pull that forward, because I don’t remember the name of the supplement that I’ve used for 15 years. I don’t remember what laps I’m ordering. I don’t remember the normal values of this stuff. And now it’s back on the tip of my tongue, but at the time, it was a little scary, for sure. Kristin Reihman 14:47Wow, so scary. Well, that’s a remarkable story, and why I can’t wait to have you on my podcast, but I’m really… I’m really happy that you had a healing team around you, too, who was like, yeah, nope, that’s not your… that’s not the train we’re on. Get off that train. Come back on your usual train. What are you doing over there? Dr. Deb 15:03Yeah, and you know, I hope that a lot of patients have that, or people that are experiencing this have that, but there’s so many people who don’t have that. And they need somebody, they need somebody in their corner, like we had in our corners, to help pick them up and say, this doesn’t have to be your reality. It can change, but it is a lot of work, like you said. It’s a lot of work. It’s not… Kristin Reihman 15:25Yeah, no, it’s a lot of work. So when I started off. I was work… I was doing probably 4 hours a morning, like, 4… basically, my entire morning was devoted to brain training and healing my brain through the ref… you know, we… I mean, I can get into the details of it, but basically it’s a lot of, like, crawling on the floor. On your belly, creeping on your hands and knees, doing reflex bags to stimulate, you know, more blood flow to the brain, doing a lot of smells. You know, and just staying with it, you know? And I remember balking, even in the beginning, I was, like, seeing some changes, I was feeling more motivated. I remember feeling this… I started noticing it was changing about 2 weeks in, when I would get up in the morning. And I would… I noticed I would start… I would do my, like, beginnings of the day, I would get the kids on the bus, I would do everyone’s breakfast, I’d do the dishes, and I’d be, like, sitting down and being like, hmm, like, what am I supposed to be doing now? Like, where… What is my purpose today? And because I had this plan, I was just like, well, I know that has to happen, so I may as well do that now. And I would get on the floor, and I would start crawling down the length of our hallway. And within about 8 laps, I would feel my brain, like. I felt like it integrating. I would feel things, like, just coming online, and I’d be like, oh, right. I know who I am, I know what I’m doing today, I have these other things this afternoon, I gotta get this done before noon, and I would do it. But it was really interesting, and I’ve never been a coffee drinker, but when I thought of what that felt like, to me, that’s how people often describe, like, my brain doesn’t wake up until I have coffee. I never needed coffee to have… my brain woke up before I’d wake up, and I’d be like, bing, and I’m ready to go. But when I had the brain injury for those 9 months, it wasn’t that way the whole time. In the beginning, it was very hard to get my brain back in the morning, and it was creeping and crawling that would pull it in. Dr. Deb 17:08Wow. Is there one particular thing that you did that you felt made the biggest difference to rebuilding your brain? Kristin Reihman 17:15Crawling on my belly like a commando, wearing elbow pads, knee pads, actually two sets of knee pads, wearing toe shoes, and just ripping laps on my floor. Dr. Deb 17:26Oh, and that’s so simple to do. So why does that work? Kristin Reihman 17:31So interesting, and I… this is the kind of… this is the… the story of this is something that I think is bigger than all of us, and I wish everybody knew how to optimize your brain using just the simple hallway in your house. But essentially, if you take a newborn baby. And you put them on mom’s belly, and they’re neurologically intact, and maybe you’ve seen videos of this. There used to be a video circulating about a baby born onto mom’s belly, nobody touches the baby, and in about 2 minutes and 34 seconds, that baby crawls on its belly, like, uses arms, uses its toe dig with its little babinsky, and pushes its way up to mom’s breast. Latches on with its reflexes, and there you go. That baby keeps itself alive through its primitive reflexes. So it’s essentially telling its brain, every time it runs those reflexes, every time it does a little toe dig, every time it, like, swings its arm across in a cross-later, hetero… what do we call, a homolateral pattern. That little baby is getting a message to its brain that says, grow and heal and organize. And because all the reflexes come out of the middle and lower brain stem. That’s the part of the brain that’s organizing as a baby. And as a baby grows and does the various things a baby does using its reflexes, like eventually on its belly, crawling across the floor, and then popping up to hands and knees, and creeping across the floor, and eventually standing and walking, all of those things are invoking a different set of reflexes that tell the brain to grow and heal and organize. So it’s almost like the function creates the structure, and if you run those pathways again and again and again your brain will get the message to basically invoke its own neuroplasticity, and that’s how a baby’s brain grows. And it turns out, any brain of any age, if you put it through those same pathways, it will send a message of neuroplasticity to the brain, and the brain will grow and heal and organize. Dr. Deb 19:16That was going to be my question, is why aren’t we using this for elderly people with dementia, or Alzheimer’s, or stroke, or Parkinson’s, or things like that, to help them regrow their brain? Kristin Reihman 19:28Well, because number one, nobody knows about it. Number two, even when people do know about it, nobody likes to be on the floor like a baby, creepy and crawling. And least of all the stubborn old people with dementia who are, like, who don’t even think they have a problem. I mean, the problem with the brain not working, as I discovered, and it sounds like you discovered, too, is the brain that’s not working doesn’t know it’s not working, or worse, doesn’t care. You know, and so it’s tricky with adults. With kids who, you know, you have some sort of power over, you can often make your kids do things that they don’t want to do, like eat their vegetables, or creep and crawl on the floor for 80, you know, 80 laps before they get to go, you know, do their thing. But adults are a little trickier. Dr. Deb 20:10Is there another way for us to be able to do that same thing without the crawling on the floor? Like, could they do it in a sitting motion, or do they need that whole connection to happen? Kristin Reihman 20:21Well, they need to be moving in a cross pattern, and they need to be moving their arms and their legs in such a way that stimulates the reflexes. But you can do that on your bed, you can do it face down on your bed by getting into a pattern, and switching sides and, you know, moving your legs and your arms in the opposite… in the, you know, an opposite cross pattern, and that will get you some of the benefit. And we, in fact, we have… we work with kids who are paralyzed and who don’t… aren’t able to independently move forward in a crawling pattern, who have people coordinating their movements so that they get the same movement, and the brain registers it, and they do make progress, and some of them eventually. Crawl, and then creep, and then walk. Dr. Deb 20:59Wow, that’s so… and it’s so simple and easy for people to do. Kristin Reihman 21:04Well, it’s simple. I don’t know that it’s easy. I do… I do… having done it myself, I will say it’s probably the hardest thing I’ve ever done, was literally crawl my way out of that brain injury. And I’m so glad that I knew what to do, and I’m so glad I had people push me to remind me that it was important, because… I’ll even… I’ll share another story of my own resistance. So, about 2 or 3 weeks into it, I was up to 300 meters of crawling on my belly. And 600 meters of creeping on hands and knees, which was really killing my knees, which was why I was wearing two knee pads. And, I started to get this feeling that maybe I wasn’t doing enough. Like, even though I was noticing changes, and even though I was feeling more purpose, and I was getting organized in the morning, I could tell it was making a difference. I… I knew, I remembered that usually the kids on our program are doing a lot more than that, including my own… my youngest kids, but I made them creep and crawl, even though they didn’t have serious brain injuries, I just thought, we’re gonna optimize everyone, get on the floor, get on the floor. Lord so I was… I was nervous about not doing enough, so I… I reached out to the member… one of the members of the team, and I said, you know, hey, Maria, what’s… what do you think about my numbers? And here’s a… here’s a video of me creeping and crawling, what do you think? Am I doing it right? And she said, you’re doing it right, but how many, how many meters are you doing? And I said, I’m doing 300 meters of crawling on my belly, and 600 meters of creeping, and she’s like, oh. Yeah, that’s not nearly enough for an adult. She’s like, Matthew probably gave you those numbers because he felt bad for you and thought you were going to be still working. He didn’t know you were going to take off from patients. Now that you’re… since you’re not working, you need to do more. I was like, okay, tell me… tell me how much I’m supposed to do. And she goes, you need 900 meters of crawling on your belly, and 3,600 meters, 3.6 kilometers of basically crawling on my hands and knees. Dr. Deb 22:51Oh my gosh. Kristin Reihman 22:52And I just shut down. Dr. Deb 22:54Yeah. Kristin Reihman 22:55I was like, okay, screw it. I’m not doing it. Dr. Deb 22:58And I spent a day or two just not doing it and feeling petulant, and then I was like, you know what? Kristin Reihman 23:01Forget that, I was noticing some benefit. I’m gonna do my 300-600. So, the next day, I went and did 300 and 600 while my daughter was at physical therapy, and we got back in the car, and I said, hey, I’m so excited, I finished my… all my creepy and crawling, and it’s only 10 a.m. on a Saturday, I’m done for the weekend. And she did this. She’s sitting in the car, she looks at me, she goes. Was that your whole program, or was that a third of your program? Dr. Deb 23:28How old is she? Kristin Reihman 23:01Well, she’s, like, 20 now, but she was 18 at the time, and she… she had my number, and I was like, Tula! How can you say that? I’m working so hard! And she’s like, Mom? You need to stop seeing patients completely, and do what they tell you at the Family Hope Center. Because we’re your family, and this is your brain we’re talking about, and we need you to have all your brain back. And I must have looked terrible, because she goes, too much? Dr. Deb 23:54You raised a good daughter. Kristin Reihman 23:58And I was like, well, let me tell… let me ask you, do you mean that? She goes, yeah, I really mean that. I’m like, then it’s not too much. I needed to hear that. Thank you. And I went home, and I finished another 600 of crawls. I didn’t… I never got up to 3,600 of creeps. It was just too much for my knees. I got to 900 and 900, but that was the end of my resistance, and I just did it. Dr. Deb 24:17I just did it. Yeah, your family needed you, right? I mean, when somebody in your family that you love tells you they need you, that’s a huge motivating factor. Kristin Reihman 24:27Yeah, yeah, I’m so grateful for that. So, I did that for 9 months, and at the end of 9 months, my eye was straight and stayed straight, my balance was back, I was multitasking again, and I could take, you know, days and days off of creeping and crawling and not notice a dip. I was like, I’m done. Dr. Deb 24:45Wow, that’s awesome. Kristin Reihman 24:46Yeah. Dr. Deb 24:47During this process, you also discovered that you’re part of 20% of the people with clotting genetics. Tell us a little bit about that. What’s your understanding in that? Kristin Reihman 24:58Well, so, I’ll back up. So, before I had my stroke, I had already been seeing patients with really complex, you know, patients like yours, really complex stories, lots of different things going on, kind of the perfect storm for if they got a tick bite, they tanked. Dr. Deb 25:12and… Kristin Reihman 25:13And I’m one of those people, and my patients were those people. And about 7 years ago, I had one of these patients who said to me, you know, I’ve never told you this, but when I was in my 20s, I had so many bladder infections, so much, like, you know, kind of interstitial cystitis, they said it was, and they said it wasn’t an infection, but it felt like one. And I’ve been doing a little research, and I’ve learned about this woman whose name’s Ruth Kriz, she’s a nurse practitioner, and she sees Patients, and she has… she works with practitioners, and she basically heals interstitial cystitis. And I want you to work with her, I want you to learn from her. And I was like, I’m game. That sounds really interesting, I have no idea what she’s doing, and you don’t usually hear the words cure and interstitial cystitis in the same sentence, so, like, I’m in. So I reached out to Ruth, and long story short, I’ve been working with her for the last 5 or 7 years basically increasing the number of patients who I’m diagnosing now with these hidden bladder infections that are really often what’s at the root of these interstitial cystitis symptoms, meaning, you know, you go to the doctor, you pee in a cup, they look for something, they say there’s no infection here, so, you know, you’re probably crazy, or, you know, you probably have just a pain syndrome, we can’t help you. And actually, if you look with a much more sensitive test, and if you break down the biofilms where these bugs kind of are living in the bladder, you find them. And then you can treat them, and then people get well. So I knew about this, and I, didn’t have any bladder infections that I knew about, and what I did start to think about after my stroke was, well, maybe, since these people who have these bladder infections often have issues breaking down biofilms, the same genetics that lead you to have trouble breaking down biofilms, which are these places where the bugs are kind of hiding in your body, have trouble breaking down clots. And I just had some strokes. I wonder if I have maybe some of these clotting genetics that I’m looking for in all my bladder people. And so I looked, and surprise, surprise, I had not one, not two, but, like, six of them. Ruth said to me, Ruth said, Darlin, I don’t know how you’re standing up. This is more than I’ve ever seen in any of my patients. And she’s been doing this for, like, 4 years now. I was like, oh boy, that’s not good. But in retrospect, it made a lot of sense to me, because having the clotting genetics I have. puts me at risk for severe, you know, chronic Lyme that’s intractable, which I had. It puts me at risk for trouble with, you know, having surgery and clotting and, you know, low blood pressure and low flow states. It puts me at risk for the cold hands and cold feet that I had my entire life until I started treating the clotting issues by taking an enzyme that breaks down little microclots. I mean, I was the person in med school who’d put my hands on people, be like, I’m so sorry. My hands are ice. Warm heart, cold hands, warm heart. Yeah, not anymore, because I’ve treated it. But yeah, so I was surprised slash not surprised to find that I’m one of the people in my community who is a setup for chronic infections and, strokes and bladder infections. Dr. Deb 28:22So you just had that predisposition that took you down that path. Kristin Reihman 28:28Yeah, I think so. Dr. Deb 28:30What are some of the layers of biofilm and the stealth pathogens, like tick-borne diseases and things like that, hiding inside us that… what are some of the symptoms look like, and how do they look different in people with clotting disorders versus the common tick-borne disease? Kristin Reihman 28:47I would say they’re very similar, so it tends to be poor peripheral circulation, so if you put your hands on your neck, and your hands feel cold to your neck difference in the heat, right? The amount of blood flow in your sort of axial skeleton and area as compared to the periphery. And that can indicate a biofilm kind of predisposition or a clotting disposition. It doesn’t necessarily mean it’s there, but it’s a clue, right? Another clue is a family history of any kind of clotting disorders. So, miscarriages, heart attacks, especially early heart attacks, strokes, especially strokes in young people. These things are… are clues that we should probably look for some kind of clotting issue. And of course, in my population, I’m always thinking about it now, because if you have not been able to get well with the usual things for Lyme disease, for example, or Babesia or Bartonella, all of which, by the way, can form biofilms or, you know, love to live and hide in biofilms, then chances are your body’s having a hard time addressing those biofilms. And it turns out, so the connection between the clotting and the biofilm piece is that the same proteins that our body uses to break down Biofilms are used to break down microclots, blood clots, and soluble fibrin, which are the sort of precursors to those clots. And so, if we have an issue kind of grinding up those just normal flotsam and jetsam in our blood flow, then our blood flow is going to become sticky, and our blood will become sort of stagnant and sludgy, and that’s sort of a setup for not being able to heal from infections. Dr. Deb 30:25Is one of the genetic markers you look at MTHFR? Kristin Reihman 30:28I look at that, but I don’t consider that a clotting issue, unless it leads to high homocysteine. So, homocysteine can be either high or low, they’re both problematic. And MTHFR can create either an over-methylation situation, and sometimes if people have low homocysteine, it’s almost worse, because they’re such poor detoxers that they can’t actually get anything out of their system, and they get sludgy for that reason. But I think in terms of the clotting, the bigger issue is high homocysteine, which, you know, typically the MTHFRs, the 1298 would be more implicated for that. Dr. Deb 31:02Yeah, it kind of sets you up. Dr. Deb 31:04Yeah, yeah. Kristin Reihman 31:05I’m curious what you’re seeing. I know since the pandemic, we see a lot of people with elevated D-dimer levels.Are you seeing some of that in your practice, too? Like, we’re seeing more of it, and now that you’re talking about this, I’m wondering if some of those people are predisposed to some of these genetic makeups, and that’s why we’re seeing such a high rise in that.It… and this is connected, and it’s a piece we’re missing. Kristin Reihman31:29Yes, I do think it’s a piece we’re missing. There was a very interesting study that came out of South Africa. A physician in his office did a clinical study on his patients using 3 blood thinners. So he put people on Plavix, and Eliquis, and aspirin, all at once. It… yeah, you’d be hard-pressed to find a doctor in the States to, like, you know, kind of risk that, because most people don’t even want people on aspirin and Flavix at the same time. Dr. Deb 31:55But Kristin Reihman 31:56They put them on 3 different blood thinners, people with long COVID, and in 6 months, 80% of those people were completely free of symptoms. Dr. Deb 32:04Wow. Kristin Reihman 32:05Yeah, yeah. Now, my question is, what about that 20%? Like, what’s going on with them? And I suspect, they weren’t looking at the other half of the pathway, because when you give a blood thinner, you’re not doing anything to help the body break down clot. You’re simply stopping the body from making more of it. And you rely on the body’s own mechanisms, you know, plasminogen activating inhibitor, for example to kind of grind up those clots and take them out. But when people have a mutation, say, in that protein, they’re not going to be able to grind up the clots, and so my suspicion is the 20% of people who didn’t get well in that study were people who had issues on the other side of the pathway. Dr. Deb 32:44Yeah, they weren’t able to excrete that out and maybe have some fiber and issues and things like that, and that wasn’t being addressed. Kristin Reihman 32:50Yeah Dr. Deb 32:51Yeah Kristin Reihman 32:52Of course, COVID makes its own biofilm. There’s a whole… there’s a whole new, you know, arm of research looking at sort of the different proteins that get folded in the body when COVID spike proteins are in there, kind of creating these almost, like, little amyloid plaque situations in your blood vessels. So, I do think that people who can’t break those down are really at risk for both COVID and the shots. You know, the spike protein comes at you for both of those, right? Dr. Deb 33:17Yeah. Did you use any lumbrokinase or natokinase in your situation? Kristin Reihman 33:22So lumbar kinase is what I use. It’s my main player. I use the Canada RNA one, which is, you know, I think, you know, more studied than any of the other ones, and because of its formulation, it’s about 12 times more potent than anything else out there. So that’s what I’m pretty much on for life. You know, that’s… I consider that kind of my…My… my main game. Dr. Deb 33:44Yeah, I agree, I love Limerocheinase for that, that’s really good. So you recently hosted a retreat around this topic. What were some of your biggest aha moments for the participants as they started unraveling some of these biofilm layers? Kristin Reihman 34:00Yeah, no, it was so fun. My sister and I host retreats together. She came out from California and did the yoga, and I did the teaching about biofilms and bladder issues, and it was really fabulous, because a lot of these folks are people already in my community. A few of them were new, and so we had this wonderful Kind of connection, and learning together, and just validation of what it is to live with symptoms that are super inconvenient, you know? Like, one of the… one of the members even, or participants even brought a big bag of, like, pads, and she’s like, listen, ladies. This is what I’m going to use to get through the week. If you want to borrow, I’ll put my little stash over there, and I think they all went by the end of the week. So we… my aha moment was just how powerful it is to be, hosting community and facilitating conversations where people really feel seen and heard, and just how important that is, especially post-COVID, right? When we, you know, so many people just really missed that piece of other humans. And, yeah, I love… I love being able to help people connect around stuff like that. Dr. Deb 35:00That’s awesome. So, for people who are listening that have that mystery, quote-unquote bladder issue, frequent UTIs, interstitial cystitis symptoms, or pelvic pain, or bladder spasms. Where should they start, and what are the first clues that tell you this is biofilm-driven? Kristin Reihman 35:20So, I think it’s always a good idea to… to do a test, you know, to take a microgen test. There’s a couple companies out there, I think Microgen’s the one that I rely on more than any of the others, and it requires, you know, not only doing a very sensitive test like Microgen, but breaking down biofilm before you take it. So, I always encourage people to take a biofilm breaker like lumbrokinase for 5 days leading up to the test, so you’re really grinding into the bladder wall and opening up those biofilms so that when you catch whatever comes out of your bladder, there’s something in there. If you don’t have bladder biofilm, nothing will come out, and you’ll have a negative test, and that’s usually confirmatory. If you’ve done a good provoking with BLUC or, you know, lumbrokinase for 5 days, and nothing comes out then I usually say mischief managed. That’s… that’s a great… that’s great news for you, right? And most people in my community, when they look, they find something, because, you know, not for nothing, but you’re in my community for a reason, right? Dr. Deb 36:17And so… Kristin Reihman 36:18So, yeah, and typically then we need to get into the ring with those bladder biofilms, and it doesn’t… it doesn’t usually take one or two tests, it’s many tests, because the layers are deep. I’m working with children, too, and even in small kids, they… if they have the right genetics, and if they’re living in an environment that is… that kind of can also push them to make more biofilms, like living in mold, for example, is a huge instigator of inflammation and biofilms, and also, you know, microclots and fibrin in the body. then those layers can go deep. And so, we’re peeling the layers one at a time, and we’re treating what comes out, and supporting people along the way. Dr. Deb 36:57With these microgen tests, can you find biofilms in other parts of the body as well, or is it primarily bladder? Kristin Reihman 37:03No, you can find… you can culture… and you can send a microgen PCR for any… any, you know, secretion you want. So they have a semen test, they have a vaginal test, they have a nasal test, you can send sputum, you can culture out what… you can stick a swab in your ear. There’s all sorts of… anything that you can put a swab in, you can… you can send in there. Oh, that’s awesome, that’s amazing. Yeah. Dr. Deb 37:26So, once you identify the drivers, genetics, environment, stealth infections, what does an effective treatment or reversal process look like for people? Kristin Reihman 37:36For the… for the bladder in particular? Well, I wish I could say it was herbs or oxidation, which are my favorite things for Lyme. I haven’t found those to work for the bladder, and so I’m using antibiotics. Which, even though I’m a Western-trained MD, it was not my bag of tricks. You know, when I left, sort of, the matrix medicine model, I really stopped using those things as much as possible, and I’ve had to come back to them, because they really, really work, and they’re really, really needed. So I love it if someone else out there is getting results with something other than antibiotics, please contact me and let me know, because I have plenty of patients who are like, really? Another antibiotic? I’m like, I know. But they work. We also do a really careful job, you know, I work with Ruth Kriz on every case, and we do a very careful job in finding the drug that’s going to be the least broad spectrum, and that’s really only going to tackle the highest percentage bug there. So, MicroGen does this really cool thing. It’s a PCR, next-gen sequencing, they’re looking at genetics, so you don’t have to have it on ice, it can sit on your countertop for a month, and you can still send it in. And they, they, they categorize by percentage, like, what’s there. And they’re not just looking for the 26 or 28 different bacteria that you would get if you were looking at a culture in your doctor’s office. They’re looking for 57,000 different organisms. Fungal and bacterial, yeah? And so, this is why I say, if there’s something there, and you’ve broken down the biofilm, microgen will find it. Dr. Deb 39:06That’s really great. That was going to be my question, is does it pick up fungal biofilms as well? So I’m so glad you mentioned that, because a lot of times with bladder stuff, it’s fungal in that bladder, too, and then we’re throwing an antibiotic at it and just making it worse if it’s fungal in there. Kristin Reihman 39:21Yeah, yeah, that’s… they… and I recently saw one, I had a little Amish girl who came back with 5 different fungal organisms in her bladder. And a whole flurry, a slurry of bacteria, too. Yeah, pretty sick. And that’s usually an indication that you’re living in mold, honestly. Dr. Deb 39:37Now, conventional medicine treats the bladder as a sterile organ, and rarely looks at biofilms. Why do we believe that this has been overlooked for so long, and what are they missing? Kristin Reihman 39:53Dr. Dr. Deb 39:53I’m loaded up. Kristin Reihman 39:54One of the many mysteries of medicine. I have no idea why people are like, la la la, biofilms. I mean, we know, so when I say we know, so when I trained, you know, I trained at Stanford for my medical school, I trained at Lehigh Valley for residency. Great programs, and I learned that, oh yes, biofilms, they exist in catheters of bladders. When people have an indwelling catheter for more than a month and they spike a fever, it’s a biofilm, but it’s only in the catheter. Really? Why does it stop at the catheter? Dr. Deb 40:23Yeah. Kristin Reihman 40:25Or, you know, now chronic sinusitis, people are recognizing this is a bladder… this is not a bladder, this is a biofilm infection in your sinuses. But we’re really reluctant to kind of admit that there’s, you know, that we’re teeming with microorganisms, that they might be setting up shop, and for good, right? Like, it’d be great if they were in biofilms as opposed to our bloodstream. Like, we don’t want them in our bloodstream, so thankfully they wall themselves off. But yeah, I think they’re everywhere. I mean, they found a microbiome in the brain, in the breast, in the, you know, the lung. There’s microbiome, there’s bugs everywhere. And the question is, are they friend or foe? And the bladder really shouldn’t have anybody in it. Because, think about it, you’re flushing it out, you know, 6 times a day. You know, most people who can break down biofilm because their clotting genetics are normal, and because they’re peeing adequately, will never set up an organism shop in their bladder. Even though things are always crawling up, we’re always peeing them out. Dr. Deb 41:23Yeah. Kristin Reihman 41:23And then there’s the 20% of us who… Who aren’t that way. Dr. Deb 41:30Oh, so you run the Interflow program and a number of healing communities. What tools and teachings have been the most transformational for people going through this journey? And tell us a little bit about the Interflow program, too, please. Kristin Reihman 41:44Okay, maybe I’ll start there, because honestly, I have to think about the which tools are most transformational. The Interflow program is my newest offering, and we developed it because my team and I were looking around at the patients we had, and so many folks were needing to go down this… we call it the microgen journey, like, get on the microgen train and just start that process. And there was just a lot of hand-holding and support, and… education that they were requiring. And by the way, their brains aren’t working that great, because when you have these infections, you know, you’re dealing with, like, downloads of ammonia from time to time from the bladder organisms, you’re dealing with a lot of brain fog, overwhelm, you know, there’s just a lot of… you know how our patients are, they… they… they’re struggling, and they really need a lot of hand-holding, and so we were providing that. But we kept thinking, like, gosh, it would be great to get these guys in community, like you know, we can say all we want, like, you know, it’s important to check your pH, it’s important to, like, stay on top of the whatever, but it’d be great to have them hear that from one another, and to have them also hear, sort of, that they’re not alone. So, because we had some experience running communities online, which we started during the pandemic and has been super successful, we said, let’s do this, let’s create a little online community of our inner… of our, you know, call them… informally, we call them our bladder babes. But, like, let’s create a community of people who are looking to really heal and get to this deep, deep root that no one else is doing. And that was really the key for me, that nobody else is really doing this. Very few people are doing it or aware of it. I wish that weren’t the case, but as it stands now, it’s pretty hard to find someone to take this seriously. Most doctors, if you even take a microgen to them, they’ll say, oh, there’s 10 organisms on here, that’s a contamination. That must be contaminated. Well, yeah, buy your biofilms, but they don’t know about biofilms, so they think it just comes from the lab. Dr. Deb 43:31Something. Kristin Reihman 43:32I don’t know. But, yeah, basically it was because I felt called to do this service that no one else is providing, and I wanted to do it in a way that was going to be really optimally supportive for people. So we created a membership, basically. Dr. Deb 43:44Do you see a difference in men and women? Obviously, women have this problem more than men, but do you see a difference in how many men that have these self-infections or live in mold compared to women? Kristin Reihman 43:57I… it’s hard to know, really, what the, sort of, prevalence is out there, I will say, in terms of who calls our office. Dr. Deb 43:03It’s, you know, 95% women call our office. Kristin Reihman 44:08And occasionally, we’ve had someone call our office on behalf of a husband or a son. I just saw a woman whose 2-year-old son is in our Bladder Babes community. But typically, it’s the women who are seeking care around this, and I don’t know if that’s a function of their having more of the issues. I suspect it is, because as you said before, so many more women deal with these complex mystery illnesses than men.But there certainly are men who have them. Dr. Deb 44:33Yeah. So, you’ve lived through Lyme, chronic illness, stroke, and now biofilm-driven bladder issues, and you’ve come out stronger. What mind shifts helped you stay resilient through all of these chapters? Kristin Reihman 44:50I think there have been many. I think the first one I had to really, Really accept and lean into and kind of internalize. Was this idea that, I… I couldn’t… I didn’t have to do the work that I was doing. Dr. Deb 45:09You know? Kristin Reihman 45:09In order to be of value to the world. You know, I’d trained in a certain way, I had, you know, I had this beautiful practice. I was working in the inner city, I was working with my best friend, we were seeing really needy people who had no money, and it felt really, like, you know, I felt very sort of service-driven and connected to a purpose. And I think the hardest thing in the beginning for me was realizing, I can’t do that work anymore. That’s not the work that I’m… needing to do, and to make a leap into the unknown. It felt like, you know, having a baby at 45 and not doing any ultrasounds, or any tests, and just being like, I’m birthing something here. I don’t know what it is, it’s me, but who knows what she’s gonna look like, or… what this doctor is going to be, you know, what, you know, peddling in terms of her tools. That was a big leap of faith, and I think letting go of the kind of control of needing to be… needing to look a certain way and be a certain kind of doctor was a big step for me, my big initial step. Dr. Deb 46:05That’s really hard, because you’re taught and ingrained in who you’re supposed to be as a doctor, and what that person’s supposed to be, what your persona’s supposed to be. And doing a lot of the Klinghart work and some of those things, and I’m sure on the days crawling through the floor, you’re like, this is not what I was trained to do. If my colleagues could only see me now, they’d… they’d… Commit me, right? But like you said, just giving that leap of faith and saying, I’m gonna turn this over to your higher power, and you’re gonna bring me out on the other side, and trusting that, that is a vulnerability for us that is huge. Kristin Reihman 46:43Yeah, and I mean, I’d like to say it’s because I’m some sort of strong person, but truthfully, I feel like there was no other choice. Like, I had to surrender because there was… the alternative was death or something. I didn’t… I don’t know, right? There was no other choice. Dr. Deb 46:56Yeah. Kristin Reihman 46:56I couldn’t move. I was in so much pain. I couldn’t move. Couldn’t get out of bed. Dr. Deb 47:01Thank you so much for sharing all of this and being vulnerable with our audience. Where can people find you? Find your book, your podcast, your programs, if they want to go deeper with you? Kristin Reihman 47:12Yeah, thanks for asking. So, I have a website, it’s my name, kristenRymanMD.com, and all my programs are listed there. I have several, you know, I have a, sort of, a wellness… I have an online membership for well people who want to stay well and pick my brain every week around, sort of, healthy, holistic tools. It’s called The Healing Grove.I have a podcast that people can listen to for free, where I interview people like you, and you’re gonna be on it, right? She’s gonna be on it soon. Dr. Deb 47:38I’d love to. Kristin Reihman 47:39So I can share stories of hope and transformational tools with people. I also have a Life After Lyme coaching program, which is kind of the place where I invite people who are dealing with a mystery illness to come get some support, community, and guidance from someone like me, and also just from the other people in the room. There’s a lot of wisdom in those groups. And that’s… I guess that’s the answer I’ll share for what you asked earlier, like, what’s the main tool they take away? I think they take away an understanding that community really matters, and that they’re not alone. You know, I think it can be very lonely to be stuck in these… to feel stuck in these illnesses, and people need to be reminded that they’re… that they’re human, you know, and that they’re worthy of love and acceptance. I think that’s what people get from my… from my community, is kind of like, that’s the common thread. Dr. Deb 48:23They definitely need that. Kristin Reihman 48:25Man. Dr. Deb 48:26Kirsten, thank you so much for sharing your powerful story. Your work is so needed, and your ability to weave personal experience and advanced clinical insight is exactly what our community craves. And this kind of conversation helps women finally be seen and heard, which is my motto too, and gives them just the real tools to get their life back. And for everyone listening, if you’re struggling with unexplained bladder pain, frequent UTIs, pelvic discomfort, or symptoms that never match your labs, because they never quite do. You are not crazy, you are not alone. You need to find the answers, you need to be with community, and there are solutions, and conversations like this is how we bring them forward. So, thank you all for tuning in to Let’s Talk Wellness Now. I’m your host.And until next time… Kristin Reihman 49:15Thanks, Dr. Dove. Dr. Deb 49:16Thank you. This was awesome. Thank you so much. This was… Kristin Reihman 49:21You’re so welcome, you’re such a great interviewer.The post Episode 251 – Chronic Bladder Symptoms, Biofilms, and the Hidden Genetic Drivers first appeared on Let's Talk Wellness Now.
De eerste TORcast in het nieuwe jaar: Happy New Year, gewenst door verschillende jazz-cats. Met een beetje melancholieke inslag, na een New Years Eve met ruim bubbels en bollen, zullen we maar zegen…. Wij wensen iedereen een fijn en jazzy 2026. Nat King Cole: Happy New Year; Ella Fitzgerald: What Are You Doing New Years Eve? Dubbelaar: Toots Thielemans: What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life? Frank Sinatra: What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life?; Dubbelaar: Mathilde Santing: You Go To My Head; Roy Hargrove: You Go To My Head; Chet Baker: When You’re Gone; Shirley Horn: Never Let Me Go; Chick Corea, Christian McBride, Brian Blade, Nino Josele, Jorge Pardo: My Foolish Heart; New Sound Jazz Machine: First Of All; Kurt Elling: Lil’ Darlin’; Patricia Barber: The New Years’ Eve Song. Beluister deze TORcast
Count Basie/ Joe Williams - Every Day I Have The BluesCount Basie/ Ella Fitzgerald - Honeysuckle RoseCount Basie/ Ella Fitzgerald - Dream A Little Dream Of MeCount Basie Big Band/ Ella Fitzgerald Basella (Live)Count Basie/ Ella Fitzgerald - 'Deed I DoCount Basie/ Frank Sinatra - Pennies from HeavenCount Basie/ Frank Sinatra - Please Be Kind Count Basie/ Ray Charles - Georgia on My MindCount Basie/ Lambert/ Hendricks/ Ross - Lil' Darlin'
Kristy lives in Ft. Mitchell, KY and works for Carpets Direct. She's been listening to B-105 for over 40 years and loves all the music and personalities! Kristy is also a huge Disney fan and loves Chinese food. For her induction song, Kristy wanted to hear Chase Matthew's "Darlin'". Welcome to the B-105 Country Club, Kristy!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
SOCA THERAPY - NOVEMBER 16, 2025Soca Therapy PlaylistSunday November 16th 2025Making You Wine from 6-9pm on Flow 98.7fm TorontoSoca Make You Ram Ram (Dr. Jay Plate) - General GrantBachelor - ScrunterDarlin’ - Johnny KingSenorita - Troots N IceMy Love Will Never Die - Da BhaanPush - Imij & Co.Unknown ArtistWhat A Feeling - KrosfyahSaddle - Anika BerrySaddle (Dr. Jay Plate) - Anika BerryDotish - LyrikalKettle Pot - Yung BreddaBet Meh - Machel MontanoRetro - VoiceIn We Veins - Hey Choppi x VoiceHaunted - Machel MontanoWorkout - Kes x Nailah BlackmanTrending - Shal MarshallDe Baddest - Scrilla De Road - Problem Child Thief A Wine - Kirton aka Alma BoyThief A Wine - Kes The BandBlessing - Blaka DanLow Key - Blaka DanSweet Spot - Patrice RobertsNot Normal - Problem ChildRecipe - Imani Ray x PumpaHot Foot - Shal MarshallRoad Ting - LyrikalWassi - Rome x Nessa PreppyBad Gyal - Patrice Roberts x Nailah BlackmanCooking (Kompa Remix) - Farmer Nappy x Shelly x NorthDown Dey - GBM Nutron x DJ SpiderTOP 7 COUNTDOWN - Powered By The Soca SourceTop New Soca (as of November 6th) Streamed in Trinidad & Tobago7. Sweet Music - Voice x Trini Baby6. Rock So - Patrice Roberts x MadLypso5. Bacchanal Mode - Patrice Roberts x Preedy4. Kaya - Freetown Collective3. No Horn - Lady Lava2. Wedding Band - Coutain x Tano1. Last Train - Mical TejaBody Tea - Adam O Judgemental - LyrikalPieces - Nadia Batson Duck De Wuk - DevHoliday (Jet 2 Muv Edit) - Problem ChildCocoa Tea (Mr Vik Band Edit) - KesCalypso (Jus Now Road Mix) - GBM NutronI Am Soca - Kerwin Du Bois x Patrice RobertsBig Bad Soca (Jester Anthem Edit) - Bunji GarlinVagabond (Crown Prince Anu Intro) - Ricardo DrueSmile - Alison HindsHappy - HypasoundsHappy Papi - Machel Montano x Travis World x Dan EvensMind My Business - Patrice Roberts x Travis World x Dan EvensAll Eyes On You - Skinny Fabulous x Travis World x Dan EvensGo Dung (Remix) - Lil Rick x MachelDown Dey - MelickSteam On D Road - Sackie x Lady Lava x MelickFree Again - Destra Garcia x MadLypsoBeautiful People - Teddyson John x GMS ProductionsOn Fire - BenjaiPolicing - Lil’ BittsMy Party - Rane BlackmanTek One - Reniece BonnettSteamy - Yung BreddaSo Long - Nadia BatsonHookin’ Meh - Farmer NappyPAN MOMENTS(2019) Hookin’ Meh (arr. Duvone Stewart) - BP RenegadesTANTY TUNE(1990) Bus Conductor - PoserNORTHERN PRESCRIPTIONOld Time Christmas - ConnectorCheers - Problem Child Liming Spirit - Shal MarshallFunday - Shal MarshallBig Truck - Imani RayParty Bag - Anika BerryNot For The Swift Master (Trilo G Dj MiX) - BassCompromise - Machel Montano x TanoBoomerang - Hey Choppi x MadLypso Wassy - Full BlownGirl Meets Brass - Salty Road - Orlando OctaveTrouble (When De Sun Rise) - M1Generals - Bunji GarlinMaster Of Mas - BlaxxPowder Posse - Machel Montano x BlazerSavannah Grass (Magic Touch Family x Razorshop Jouvert Remix) - KesBury All - Lil KerryGrease It Down - Socallective x Dred LionExplore - V'ghnJab Decisions - V'ghn x Terra D GovernorFollow Dr. Jay @socaprince and @socatherapy“Like” Dr. Jay on http://facebook.com/DrJayOnline
Label: Capitol 2068Year: 1967Condition: MPrice: $50.00This is a beautiful copy of a great Beach Boys single, featuring a B side that could have been an A side on its own, taken from the Pet Sounds LP. Chock full of Brian Wilson production surprises, like his best work. I've been seeking a nice copy of this single ever since the A side was featured on the "Big Bang Theory" TV show. I really love that line "You soften my life with your love, your precious love..." Note: This 45 record comes in a Near Mint picture sleeve. It has Mint labels and pristine sound.
Send us a textIntro song: Darlin' by Chase MatthewAlbum 5: Fearless by Taylor SwiftSong 1: The Best DaySong 2: The Way I Loved YouSong 3: FifteenAlbum 6: Revolution by Miranda LambertSong 1: Only PrettierSong 2: Maintain the PainSong 3: The House That Built MeOutro song: Secret (Gravel Drive Sounds) by Tyler Braden
Episode #285 - September SaladPlaylist: Theo Croker - Wrapped in the Weight - A COLORS SHOWSamantha Schmütz & Adrian Younge - Quando Sol ChegarJustice Der - In My RoomNate Smith , Jermaine Holmes, Charlie Hunter, DJ Harrison - JUKE JOINTkawfee - MantranadaKatalyst, Adrian Younge, Ali Shaheed Muhammad - DaybreakBlue Wednesday, featuring Magnus Klausen - RunawayEl Michels Affair, Rogê - MágicaNaman Cale - MontaraGalt MacDermot - Coffee ColdKokoroko - Never LostOtis McDonald - RINGSNostalgia 77 - Cheney LaneKassa Overall - C.R.E.A.M. (CASH RULES EVERYTHING AROUND ME)Charles Kynard - Smiling Faces SometimesSargeant X Comrade - River (feat. Wakefield Brewster) (Mo Gravy Mix)_BY.ALEXANDER - a l'exterieurThe Circling Sun - ConstellationHemai, Wallace - VertigoAshley Henry - Today (Interlude)Dave Guy - Pinky RingTalib Kweli, Bilal - Talk To You (Lil' Darlin')
In this episode Jen talks to Lauren about Trauma Informed Breath Work, her amazing story how she came to this practice, why she believes it's important and what to look out for when selecting a breath work coach. Lauren is a Breathwork Facilitator certified by Owaken Breathwork, Coach and Intuitive Healer currently working in Central Scotland. Services include stress management and understanding your nervous system, confidence and self concept healing, gaining clarity from within and realising you're so much more powerful than you were ever taught. Coming from growing up in the medical world and astoundingly low self esteem, Lauren transformed her world and belief systems and is now walking others through their own journey to believing in themselves, not what anyone else thinks.Follow Jen: Get your copy of 9 Rules to Sort Your Shit here - https://amzn.to/4eYtVnqGet your free Posture 101 masterclass here https://iamjenwilson.thrivecart.com/posture101/Get your Rebel and Divine Anarchist hoodies and t-shirts here https://iamjenwilson-2.teemill.com/collection/new/Get my Gut Friendly, Easy Recipe book here https://amzn.to/4gJsGICFor all information on working with me:www.iamjenwilson.comFollow my social channelsSubscribe to my YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/iamjenwilsonLike my Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/IamJenWilsonFollow me on Instagram https://instagram.com/iam.jenwilson
DJ Глюк - Ragga Jungle 03 2025 @ DJ Глюк 1. Scuffed, Serial Killaz, Natty Campbell - Turn & Twist 2. Reggae Roast, Zen Lewis, Mowty Mahlyka - Rockin' Dubs (DnB Remix) 3. Ego Trippin - Wasting Time 4. Conrad Subs - Vintage 5. Ed Solo - BOOMBASTIC 6. Doktor, Benny Page, Mad Sam - Mash It Up 7. Dr. Apollo - Low Rider 8. Green Vibes - Attention 9. Eva Lazarus, MONSS - Everyday Shella 10. Speaker Louis, Afroditetoolively - No Reason 11. Callum Bishop, Artan - 3PS 12. Conrad Subs - Sugar Cube 13. Murdock, Omar Perry - Fire Burning (TANTRON Remix) 14. General Levy, Pengwin, K - Warrior 15. Dr. Apollo - Turn The Crowd Up 16. Mad Sam, M4DZ, Phaase, Gwillz - Rum 17. Luude & Sean Paul & brodie - Darlin' 18. Hologram, Georgia Phoenix, Mc AD, Jim Lawton - Sweetest Sensation 19. Speaker Louis, NAVIGATOR - No Tears
On today's episode of the Craft Industry Alliance podcast, we're talking about building a cross-stitch business with my guest Zoe Frost. Zoe is the heart, hands, and creative force behind Junebug & Darlin, a queer owned brand based in Portland, OR. When she's not crafting, you'll find her adventuring through the Pacific Northwest's pine trees, ferns, and rivers with her partner and a dog or two. Zoe's artistic journey is deeply rooted in her love for nature, queerness, and a fierce “f-- the system” attitude, which she channels into every cross-stitch kit she creates. +++++ This episode is sponsored by Valari by Crafteaze. Meet the Valari by Crafteaze—the original gaming pillow turned crafting game-changer. This ergonomic support pillow reduces pressure on your shoulders and neck and encourages better posture, so you can craft for hours without pain. The Maker's version even includes built-in storage for your hooks and needles. Try it risk-free for 90 days and get 15% off with code CIA15 at crafteaze.com. For wholesale orders, visit valari.faire.com. +++++ To get the full show notes for this episode visit Craft Industry Alliance where you can learn more about becoming a member of our supportive trade association. Strengthen your creative business, stay up to date on industry news, and build connections with forward-thinking craft professionals. Join today.
Start Name Artist Album Year Comments Rockin' Robin Don Feely Pipes To Go [Organ Grinder Cassette OGP-103C] 4-48 Wurlitzer, Organ Grinder Restaurant, Portland, OR 3:32 Java Chris McPhee In The Spotlight 1999 4-29 Hybrid, Capri Theatre, Adelaide, Australia 5:49 Vaya Con Dios (May God Be With You) [Waltz] David Graham Promenade [Potomac Dance Club Series - Grosvenor GPR 21] 1986 3-14 Wurlitzer, Tower Ballroom, Blackpool 8:08 Holiday In Rio Lyn Larsen Live At The Rialto 2005 [Banda CD] 2005 3-24 Allen Lyn Larsen Signature (LL-324Q); Rialto Theatre, South Pasadena 11:14 No, Not Much! Ron Rhode Together [Roxy RP-118-CD] 2011 4-34 Wurlitzer, Shanklin Center, Groton, MA; Console from Metropolitan Theatre, Boston, MA; Core pipework from the Palace Theatre, Cleveland, OH 16:20 I Get Ideas (When I Dance With You) (aka Adios Muchachos) Bill Vlasak Music! Music! Music! [WJV Productions CD] 1996 4-42 Wurlitzer, Paramount Music Palace, Indianapolis; originally 4/20 Crawford Special, Paramount Oakland 18:49 Because You're Mine; Be My Love Hubert Selby Mr President Entertains 1976 4-16 Wurlitzer, Gaumont State Theatre, Kilburn, London 25:57 Calcutta Dave Wickerham Concert: ATOS Unconventional Convention 2021-07-10 2021 3-20 Wurlitzer + 1 virtual rank, Blackwood Performing Arts Center, Harrisville, PA 30:44 Lisboa Antigua Stephen Vincent Yamaha EL90 with Paramount 450 2018 35:17 Allegheny Moon Ken Double Great Ladies Of Song [CIC-ATOS CD] 2003 3-18 Barton, Warren Performing Arts Center, Indianapolis, IN 38:27 Rock And Roll Waltz George Wright Red, Hot, And Blue [Banda DIDX 438] 1985 Hollywood Philharmonic Organ 41:42 Li'l Darlin' Don Simmons Swinging Pipes [Gamba LP] 4-18 Wurlitzer, Oaks Park Roller Rink, Portland, OR; ex-Broadway Theatre, Portland, transplanted 1955 45:39 Jezebel; High Noon Phil Kelsall The Unforgettable [Delta Blue 63 006] 1998 3-14 Wurlitzer, Tower Ballroom, Blackpool 50:18 Young At Heart Don Baker The Birmingham [Concert Recording CR-0174] 4-20 Wurlitzer, Alabama Theatre, Birmingham, AL 54:39 One Of Those Songs [Le Bal De Madame De Mortemouille] Byron Jones My Thanks To You [CDBJ 012] 2005 3-8 Compton, Eden Grove Methodist Church Hall, Filton, Bristol 57:07 Jamaica Farewell Tom Hazleton Something To Remember You By [CVTOS CD] 1987 3-15 Marr & Colton, Thomaston Opera House, CT; Originally recorded Sept 27, 1987; Remastered for CD 2009 60:43 That's All John Seng Midnight Sessions 4-19 Howell-Wurlitzer, St. Mary of the Lake Seminary, Mundelein, IL
In this week's episode, Rand is miserable; the people of Arad Doman are miserable; Darlin is miserable and you-know-who remains captured.SAVE THE WHEEL OF TIME SHOW - CLICK HERE!Ali's NEW bingo card can be found HERE! Check out THE HOT NUANCE BOOK CLUB!This is Episode 249 of our main book series episodes.~~~Material covered in this episode: Chapter 41 of THE GATHERING STORMThis episode contains SPOILERS through CHAPTER 41 of THE GATHERING STORM~~~Check out our TWITTER, INSTAGRAM, and TIKTOKCheck out our Patreon at patreon.com/wheeltakesEmail us at wheeltakespodcast@gmail.comUS-friendly MERCHANDISE: https://www.zazzle.com/store/wheeltakesmerch/productsEurope-friendly MERCHANDISE: https://wheel-takes-merch.myspreadshop.co.uk/allSend us a card!Wheel Takes PodcastP.O. Box 1457El Segundo, CA 90245Ali's nicknames confusing you? Check out our NAME KEY!Check out the Prediction Tracker: https://bit.ly/37cyadl!~~~Support the Prague Shakespeare Company!US-based donation link: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https:/www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=P3XXBTWT4SKLY__;!!LpKI!yRseJwkaasaNLZf5LUF-SJG--u97dLQUppRndhKmWCQxNXuV5SUOaJdbb7svXF1Kug$Donate via check:Payable to: Prague Shakespeare Company AmericaPrague Shakespeare Company America1111 North Country Club DriveShoreacres, TX 77571Memo: In Support of PSCEuropean resources: https://www.pragueshakespeare.com/support-psc.html~~~Music: DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS by Alexander Nakarada.COVER OF "JAK O THE SHADOWS" by KARYN of BARD SONGS - youtube.com/c/karynbardsongsArt: Collin Rice.
Woody Bianchi/Re-Tide - Changes,Shabi - Salsoul Jam,Yooks/Ellis Aaron - Do It For The Soul,Jimpster - Beat of An Era,Ben Westbeech - Do Me Right (Crackazat Remix), Mortimer Snerd III - A Good Good Time,Diogo Strausz/Kai Alce - Canto Trēs Raças,Dave Leatherman - Bahama Funk (Funky Nassau),David Morales - Boriqua,The Jade - Let The Light In,Janice Lakers Quintet - He Loves You,Shirley Eubanks Ensemble - The Blessing Song,Brian Jackson/Masters At Work - It's Your World,Greyboy feat. Karl Denson - Unwind Your Mind,James Brown - You Took My Heart,Lynn White - I Don't Know Why,Ramsey Lewis - Love Will Find A Way,Rayowa - Can You Feel The Love (Dr Packer Remix),Thommy Davis/Randy Roberts - Darlin' Darlin' Baby,Change feat. Tanya Michelle Smith - Got 2 Get Up(Micky More/Andy Tee Prime Time Mix),
THIS WEEK: Offspring (2009), The Woman (2011) and Darlin' (2019)We're wrapping up our aughts horror binge by barely discussing Lucky McKee, whose indie horror hit The Woman was inexplicably the middle film in a trilogy of cannibal flicks. It won't make any more sense when you've watched the films.Donate to Palestinian Medical Aid Support Optimism Vaccine on Patreon
Tracklist 0:30 Purple Disco Machine - Substitution (Birdee Remix) [Radio Edit] 5:00 Purple Disco Machine - Substitution (Birdee Remix Extended) 7:30 Phyllis Hyman - You Know How to Love Me 13:30 Candi Staton - Young Hearts Run Free (WAG Anthems) 27:00 Balkan Express - On The Run 29:30 BBwhite - Lose Control (Original Mix) 32:30 Disko Junkie - Love You Better (Original Mix) 36:30 Fizzikx - Your My Starlight (Original Mix) 41:30 House Punkz - Let The Music Play (Original Mix) 47:00 Ken@Work - Nightbirds (Original Mix) 53:30 Martello - This Feeling (Original Mix) 56:30 Ministry Of Funk - Rolling Stone 1:00:30 Purple Disco Machine - Paradisco (Hifi Sean Remix) 1:04:00 Ministry Of Funk - What's Going On feat. Liber Galloso 1:08:00 Kennedy - Ain't Gonna Stop 1:12:00 Glenn Underground - Lush 1:20:00 Robin S - Show Me Love (Acapella) 1:29:00 Scruscru - Anytime (Original Mix) 1:30:30 Scruscru - Phunky Trip (Original Mix) 1:34:00 Shabi - She Said House 1:40:00 Soul Nomad - I Miss You 1:42:00 Tom Glide - Soul Life 1:47:00 Oded Nir - Jack Attack (Instrumental Mix) 1:49:30 Oded Nir - Jack Attack (Original Mix) 1:51:00 Ezirk - Pure Disco (Original Mix) 1:54:30 Daweird - To You (Alan de Laniere Soulful Mix) 1:57:30 Candido - Jingo (12" Version) 2:18:30 Maiqel - Wide Open (Roberto Bedross Remix) 2:24:30 Re-Tide - Funky Feelin' 2:28:30 Glenn Underground - U Don't Own Me 2:32:00 Stewart Birch - The Relentless Track (Original Mix) 2:36:00 The Realm, Atjazz, Manoo - On The Road - Manoo Abstrakt Vocal Remix Edit 2:39:30 The Realm, Atjazz, Manoo - On The Road - Manoo Abstrakt Instrupella 2:41:30 Thommy Davis;Neal Conway;Randy Roberts - Darlin' Darlin' Baby (Sweet and Tender Love) 2:47:00 Winkar - Those Things (Original Mix) 2:54:30 Ben Banjo Field - Like That 2:56:00 Ben Banjo Field - Like That (Original Mix) 2:58:00 Chemars - Until It's Gone 3:01:30 DreamGrid - Rise Up (Original Mix) 3:11:00 David Harness, Roland Clark - The Deejay's an Alien - Manoo & François A Main Invasion Remix 3:14:30 David Harness, Roland Clark - The Deejay's An Alien - Manoo & François A Main Invasion Remix 3:17:00 DJ Le Baron - Back & Forth (Instrumental Mix) 3:20:30 Gavin Boyce - Divine in You 3:25:30 Joey Chicago - What To Do 3:31:00 Kiko Navarro - Blown Flow 3:33:30 Kleeer - I Love to Dance (Joey Negro Extended Mix) 3:39:30 Meital De Razon - In Love Again (Asi Tal Smooth Remix) 3:44:00 Oded Nir - Space In Town (Olav Basoski Remix) 3:49:00 GU - Magic 3:53:00 Glenn Underground - Magic 3:58:00 Satoshi Fumi & Berny - Argonaut (Satoshi Fumi Dub Mix) 4:00:00 Berny - Argonaut (Satoshi Fumi Dub Remix) 4:05:30 Chicago Syndicate - Move Your Body (feat. LaVette) [Radio Mix] 4:11:00 Carrie Lucas - Dance With You 4:17:30 Chappell - I Choose You (R.O.N.N. Ron Carroll Acid Dub Remix) 4:20:30 Dafunkeetomato - In the Mix 4:23:00 FLIP-DA-FUNK - Over You (Original Mix) 4:28:00 G.Q. - Boogie Oogie Oogie (12" Disco Remix) Deep House, Deep Nu Disco, disco house, Disco House, vocal Type: DJ-Set120 bpm Key: BmCannes, France
We are once again joined by our friend Adeline, who challenges us to a game of increasingly vulnerable questions. Along the way, we discuss life transitions, accountability, and practice how to say no. Enjoy!The game we played was the Friendship Edition of We're Not Really Strangers. They aren't a paid sponsor, we just love an excuse to make one another uncomfortable.We'd love to hear from you! Here's how to join the conversation:* Leave us a voice message at www.speakpipe.com/picklesandvodka* Subscribe to our Substack: Pickles and Vodka: a Mental Health Podcast* Watch on YouTube: @picklesandvodkapodcast* Follow our Instagram: @picklesandvodkapodcast* Join our Facebook group: Pickles and Vodka: a Mental Health Podcast* Send us an email: picklesandvodkapodcast@gmail.com* Christina's personal Instagram: @xtinajumper* Christina's Substack: crisis corner* Lauren's personal Instagram: @lauren___afh (but mostly @picosauve) Get full access to Pickles and Vodka at picklesandvodka.substack.com/subscribe
Thommy Davis, Neal Conway & Randy Roberts - Darlin' Darlin' Baby (Sweet and Tender Love) (Dr Packer Remix) [Quantize Recordings] 2fox & Laville - Elevation (Soul Clap Remix) [Soul Clap Records] Masters At Work - Mutin' Hook (Original Mix) [MAW Records] The Reflex - Weekend (Extended Mix) [Glitterbox Recordings] Eridu - Jean Babbie's Theme (Original Mix) [Flipsight] Kiko Navarro & Pere Navarro - Byrd's Groove (Extended) [Rekids] Everlasting Touch - Good Life (Underground Mix) [Weekend Warriors Night] Earth n Days - Stronger (Capri Extended Remix) [HouseU Tunes] Ashee - Forever (Extended) [Aus Music] EMJIE - Don't Hold Back (Original Mix) [Get Physical Music] Ranger - Pushing On (Extended Mix) [HouseU Tunes] DiscoGalactiX - Live Your Life (Original Mix) [Pina Colada Records]
Tous les jeudis soir entre 20h et 22h sur FG CHIC. Every Thursday Night between 7pm & 9pm on FG CHIC. 1/ SEDUCTIVE SOULS FEAT ONITA BOONE Ain't Nobody (ROB HARDT Mix) 2/ JODY WATLEY I Want Your Love (DANNY KRIVIT Edit) 3/ REEL PEOPLE I Want To Thank You (KAIDI TATHAM Remix) 4/ BILLY PORTER For What It's Worth (TRACY YOUNG "Groove for Good" Mix) 5/ JAMIROQUAI Hollywood Swinging (THE REFLEX Revision) 6/ ART OF TONES FEAT ANGIE STONE Don't Stop the Music (Modern Disco Mix) 7/ FUNKATOMIC & LEE WILSON Take My Heart (You Can Have It If You Want It) 8/ SAUCY LADY Why 9/ THOMMY DAVIS, NEAL CONWAY & RANDY ROBERTS Darlin' Darlin' Baby (Sweet and Tender Love) (DR PACKER Remix) 10/ MICHAEL GRAY & KELLI SAE MacArthur Park (Classic Mix) 11/ GROOVE JUNKIES & MUNK JULIUS FEAT B. VALENTINE, DEEP SOUL SYNDICATE Lovin' You 12/ YOUNG PULSE & FUNKY FRENCH LEAGUE FEAT NATASHA WATTS Keep the Fire Burning (DR PACKER Remix) 13/ ANANE Let Me Be Your Fantasy (DIMITRI FROM PARIS Mix) 14/ MONSIEUR WILLY & FUNKY FRENCH LEAGUE A.I.E. A Mwana (Disco Mix) 15/ LADY AYA Shake Your Body (JOEY NEGRO Disco Mix)
Welcome to your weekly dose of true HedKandi Anthems! We bring you the ultimate selection of house music, vocal house, nu-disco, funky house, and the occasional chill-out track every week! Follow us on social media: https://www.facebook.com/hedkandi https://www.instagram.com/hedkandi/ Join our community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/hedkandigroup TRACKLIST ⤵ HOUR1 ******** 00:00:00 Close Counters & shiv - Butter Bread 00:03:20 Thommy Davis, Neal Conway, Randy Roberts, Dr Packer - Darlin' Darlin' Baby (Sweet and Tender Love) (Dr Packer Remix) 00:09:34 Tensnake & mOat - Heat (Extended Mix) 00:14:48 Luis Radio, Earl W. Green, Groove Junkies, Reelsoul - He Gives Me Joy (Groove Junkies, Reelsoul Vocal MIx) 00:20:47 Gwen Dickey - If i'm gonna be with you - Michael Gray Extended Mix 00:26:48 T-Connection, Dr Packer - Saturday Night (Dr Packer Extended Remix) 00:32:30 Millie Jackson, Dimitri From Paris - We Got To Hit It Off (Dimitri From Paris Liberated Women Mix) 00:37:36 Maurice Joshua - Are You Ready (Extended) 00:41:10 The PH Project - What You Need (Original Mix) 00:45:57 2fox, Laville, Louie Vega - Elevation (Louie Vega Remix) 00:55:08 NESI (ES) - Bring Me Up (Extended Mix) HOUR2 ******** 01:00:00 Faded - Just You (CJ Cooper Remix) 01:05:20 Jaegerossa - Out Stretching 01:11:46 Jules Liesl - Cherry (Birdee Extended Remix) 01:17:24 Purple Disco Machine & Alison Goldfrapp - Dream Machine (Extended) 01:22:22 Shabi - The Get Down (Original Mix) 01:26:52 Cassara - On Fire (Extended Mix) 01:32:33 T.Markakis & Blanco K - Havana Jazz (Extended Mix) 01:39:38 Shaka Loves You - Hear Me Today (Extended Mix) 01:43:44 Trimtone - What You Missing (Extended Mix) 01:48:36 Francesco V, Jossu & PRECIAT - PostMan (Extended Mix) 01:53:30 Point85, Kane Reyna - Davids 5 Cents (Original Mix)
Hey hey Beautiful People I'm back once again like a Renegade master this Sunday on Cruise FM. so try and control your excitement!! The paradise sessions - Discos Revenge returns this Sunday with @markymmp on @cruise_fm 10 am - 12 pm UK cruise FM. So in Sundays's program i will be featuring this weeks super hero of the musical universe, the incomparable and incredibly talented DJ, Remixer Producer and Broadcaster, The mighty DJ “S” .So we'll be travelling on the DJ S-Express for a full 90 minutes of this Extended Stars on 45's Special edition show part 2 following on from last weeks amazing ride. We'll be playing tribute to some of the most delicious remixes and reworks to hit the musical Universe. Not forgetting the Master DJ Allan delivers another Awesome 4Some for us to toe tap too so be prepared for another high energy uplifting radio show that brings sunshine and smiles on a Sunday morning. Tracks title Yarbrough & Peoples - Don't Stop The Music (DJ S" Remix - Mastermix Exclusive - Extended)" Teddy Pendergrass - Joy (Dj ''S'' Bootleg Bonus Beat Extended Re-Mix) Rene & Angela Feat Notorious BIG - I Love You More (DJ S Remix) Luther Vandross - Never Too Much (DJ S" Remix - Extended)" Bobby Womack - Across 110th Street (DJ S Remix) Vicky D" - This Beat Is Mine (DJ "S" Remix - Extended)" Tom Browne - Brighter Tomorrow (Dj ''S'' Remix) David Bowie - Let's Dance (DJ S Remix) Cheryl Lynn - Got To Be Real (DJ S Remix) Narada Michael Walden - I Should Have Loved Ya (DJ S Remix) Colonel Abrams - I'm Not Gonna Let You (DJ ''S'' Remix) Jimmy Ross - First True Love Affair (DJ S Remix) Chateau - Feelings (DJ S Remix) Nomad - (I Wanna Give You) Devotion (DJ S" Remix - Extended)" Chicago - Street Player (DJ S" Remix - Extended)" The Originals - Down To Love Town (Dj ''S'' Remix) Shakedown - At Night (DJ S" D Train Remix) (DJ S D Train Remix)" Cerrone - Supernature (DJ S" Remix - Extended)" GQ - Disco Nights (Dj S" Remix) (Dj S Remix)" Diplomats Of Soul, Incognito, Vanessa Haynes, Micky More & Andy Tee - Never Gonna Fall In Love Again (Like I Fell In Love With You) (Micky More & Andy Tee Remix) Destiny II, Aria Lyric, Dave Lee ZR - I'm Here For This (Extended Mix) Michael Gray, Tatiana Owens, Risk Assessment - Season High (Risk Assessment Remix) Thommy Davis, Neal Conway, Randy Roberts, Dr Packer - Darlin' Darlin' Baby (Sweet and Tender Love) (Dr Packer Remix) Much Love Marky MMP Cruise FM, and hope you can join me on this special weekly journey delivered with love.. I love you all
Thomas and I pontificate about the daily bullshit
The heroes sneak through the ducts and grates of Dr. Killdeath's lair in search of the missing Guardian, only to find out they're not alone – it's a radical reunion!Abnimals Theme by Justin McElroy, Eric Near (https://bit.ly/ericnearmusic) and Jonathan Coulton (https://www.jonathancoulton.com/).Additional Music in this Episode: "The Get Away", "Courage My Love", "Action", "The Heavy Three", "Discipline", "Blood in the Water", and "Questions" by Mr. Smith: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSk2j0fTMw9V94UGyfWrSuA?; "Rather Never Than Ashamed" by done with fish: https://soundcloud.com/donewithfish; "RF-Silly Saturday" by legacyAlli: https://legacyalli.com/; "Emerald Therapy" and "Sk8board" by Jason Shaw: https://audionautix.com/; "Hoist" by Andy G. Cohen: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Andy_G_Cohen/; "Task Man" by Gamesharkoff: https://gagmesharkoff.bandcamp.com/; "Darlin'" by Beat Mekanik: https://linktr.ee/beatmekanik; "Jingle Bells 3" by Kevin MacLeod: https://incompetech.com/; "Metal Goat" by Midnight Commando: https://midnightcommando.com/; "Taffy Machine" by Kate Kody: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/kate-kody/; and "Sick of" and "Turn around" by Koi-discovery: https://koi-discovery.lescigales.org/.National Immigration Project: https://nipnlg.org/
The Abnimal heroes drive a hard bargain with Clamgela to meet the Walrus. But first they have to make another deal – with Dr. Killdeath!Abnimals Theme by Justin McElroy, Eric Near (https://bit.ly/ericnearmusic) and Jonathan Coulton (https://www.jonathancoulton.com/).Additional Music in this Episode: "Neptune" by Joseph R. Lilore: https://josephlilore.com'; "Darlin'" by Beat Mekanik: https://linktr.ee/beatmekanik; "Lurking Terror" and "Quickening" by malictusmusic: https://www.malictusmusic.com/; "Emerald Therapy" by Jason Shaw: https://audionautix.com/; "Task Man" by Gamesharkoff: https://gagmesharkoff.bandcamp.com/; "First Rays", "Catch and Release", "Bittersweet", "Nashville Lights", "Awkward Cafe", "Chill Down", "Mindsweep", and "Action" by Mr. Smith: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSk2j0fTMw9V94UGyfWrSuA?; "Air" by Jesse Spillane: http://www.jessespillane.com/; "Electric Birds" by Scott Holmes Music: https://scottholmesmusic.com/; "Taffy Machine" by Kate Kody: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/kate-kody/; and "Hoist" by Andy G. Cohen: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Andy_G_Cohen/.World Central Kitchen: https://wck.org/
Rising Nashville country music star, Chase Matthew, joins us on this episode of The Adamantium Podcast. We discuss his 25-track long sophomore album, Get Your Memory, and the two EPs and various singles he's hustled to release in the last two years. We also talk about his hit singles “Love You Again” and “Darlin',” collaborating with Flo Rida, his small town Tennessee upbringing, and his upcoming debut show at the legendary Ryman Auditorium.
–Darlin', that's a championship team.As I regard his 60-something stride, the scream fighting to escape my throat dissolves into a plan.Annette L. Brown is a mother, wife, and retired teacher, who lives on an almond farm in Central California where she enjoys spending time with family and friends. She is grateful for the support of The Taste Life Twice Writers and The Light Makers' Society and for simply having time to write. Annette has pieces reflecting her love of nature, family, beauty, and humor in several publications including Cathexis Northwest Press, Last Stanza Poetry, Flash Fiction Magazine, Every Day Fiction, and other PSP Project anthologies.
This week is hosted by Philippa & Lauren.A short midweek round up of The Archers SO FAR focusing on Sunday, Monday & Tuesday episodes up to and including 29/10/24.You can support us on PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/AllAboutTheArchersOr you can BUY US A COFFEE here: buymeacoffee.com/allaboutthearchersYou can buy our MERCH here: https://www.redbubble.com/people/aboutthearchers/shopDo join our FACEBOOK Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1127587031446013/ You can also watch this on YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/@AllAboutTheArchers-vv8jz/videosThe ArchersAmbridgeBBCRadio4#Brookfield #TheArchers #AllAboutTheArchers #radio4 #bbcradio #bbcradio4 #ambridge #soapopera #borchester #bridgefarm #podcast Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Abnimal heroes have a job interview with one of the best of the best. Well, a job interview that involves dodging buzzsaws, sword-wielding dummies, and pushing/smushing paddles. A map of The Carvery and alt text for the map can be found here: https://bit.ly/AbnimalsMaps Spike Splosion is performed by Sandeep Parikh: https://linktr.ee/sandeepparikh Abnimals Theme by Justin McElroy, Eric Near (https://bit.ly/ericnearmusic) and Jonathan Coulton (https://www.jonathancoulton.com/). Additional Music in this Episode: "Gearing Up", "Questions," and "Mindsweep" by Mr. Smith: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSk2j0fTMw9V94UGyfWrSuA?; "Funky Energy Loop" by Kevin MacLeod: https://incompetech.com/; "Task Man" by Gamesharkoff: https://gagmesharkoff.bandcamp.com/; and "Heartache" and "Darlin'" by Beat Mekanik: https://linktr.ee/beatmekanik.
From Mark Farner's humble beginnings in1969 and his blue-collar outlook, he's captured a global crusade for love, peace and freedom and become am rock ‘n' roll icon. His new album "Closer To My Home" lands on November 8. “Closer to My Home” is Mark's long-awaited work bridging the past and present, the grit of the music industry and the calloused hard work of a rural man, It also champions Mark's multi-faceted artistry. Celebrating the 55th anniversary of the iconic hit “(I'm Your Captain) Closer To My Home.” The album is highlighted with a re-record, finding Farner in exactly the same form as 1970. From the rebellious “Anymore” to the endearing “Darlin” and to the defiant “Same Game” Farner's journey as one of rock's statesmen is undeniable. “Façade”, “Friends For Forever”, “Real”, “Tiny Fingers” Farner's journey has always called him towards love and light. Mark collaborated with Jim Peterik (The Ides of March, Survivor) on the CD-exclusive “Friends Forever”*. He also enlisted the songwriter of multi-platinum rocker Mark Slaughter on “Same Game”; Slaughter produced “Closer to My Home”. “These songs are honest and from my heart,” Farner said. “The collaboration with Jim (Peterik) and Mark (Slaughter) came from a place of trust and that makes the whole experience so much more rewarding as songwriters. The audience can feel that, and these songs reflect those very human moments that you can't find creating a song from a computer. Closer to My Home' comes from the idea that love is at the heart of all that I do, and music is my home.” Mark Farner's American Band continues to tour and in celebration of the 55th anniversary of the ground-breaking hit, “I'm Your Captain (Closer To Home)”, the band is coming to a town near you, with additional dates to be announced. Order the Closer to my Home LP and CD at: www.markfarner.com
Darlin' it's better, down where it's wetter, so here's 10 trivia questions on marine biology! If you'd like to choose a specific topic or dedicate an episode to a friend send a donation of your choice on Venmo to @NoChitChatTrivia and write the topic you'd like in the comments: https://account.venmo.com/NoChitChatTrivia Our official store is live! Support the show by grabbing a NCCT shirt, hat, puzzle, or more: https://www.thetop10things.com/store Visit our sister site thetop10things.com for travel and entertainment information! Thank you to everyone who listens! Say hello or let's collaborate: nochitchattrivia@gmail.com
long-awaited, new album from legendary guitarist and singer/songwriter Mark Farner . Bridging past and present, the grit of industry and the calloused hard work of a rural man, “ Closer to My Home ” champions Farner's multi - faceted artistry. Celebrating the 55 th anniversary of the iconic hit “(I'm Your Captain) Closer To My Home” the album is highlighted with a re - record, finding Farner in exactly the same form as 1970. From the rebellious “Anymore” to the endearing “Darlin” and to the defiant “Same Game” Farner's journey as one of rock's statesm e n is undeniable. “Façade”, “Friends For Forever”, “Real”, “Tiny Fingers” Farner's journey has always called him towards love an d light. He collaborated with Jim Peterik (The Ides of March, Survivor) on the CD - exclusive “Friends Forever” * . Farner also enlisted the songwriter of multi - platinum rocker Mark Slaughter on “Same Game ”; Slaughter produced “Closer to My Home”. Farner is coproducer. “These songs are honest and from my heart,” Farner said. “ The collaboration with Jim (Peterik) and Mark (Slaughter) came from a place of trust and that makes the whole experience so much more rewarding as songwriters. The audience can fe el that and these songs reflect those very human moments that you can't find creating a song from a computer.” “‘Closer to My Home' comes from the idea that love is at the heart of all that I do, and music is my home
From our inception, we wanted to be a podcast platform that honored the important and valuable voices of female singer-songwriters. This episode, we feature some amazing women making meaningful music. We also have some conversations with special guests Skye Peterson, Sara Groves, & Michelle Lynn Thompson.--- TRACK LIST FOR EP.104 ---Amen - Madison Ryann WardPull My Chute - Jac ThompsonHow I See The World - Skye PetersonNo Bread - Liz ViceLoving A Person [Reimagined] - Sara GrovesVan Gogh - Mandi MapesThe Devil and the Darlin' - Michelle Lynn ThompsonSower Song - Hpe Newman KempWe Are Love - Sixpence None the RicherWhy They Call This Stuff Good News - Sixpence None the RicherMore and More Beautiful - Skye PetersonRich - Cecily--- CREDITS ---Host/Producer - Dave TroutSPONSOR1: Hope Newman Kemp - https://is.gd/hnklinksSPONSOR2: Charlie Peacock - https://utrmedia.org/ekouUTR Beats Solo3 Contest - https://utrmedia.org/winsolo3Critics' Picks Playlist - Best Music of 2024(A) - https://utrmedia.org/cpjuly2024UTR's New & Notable for August 2024 - https://utrmedia.org/nn0824Email: gourmetmusicpodcast@gmail.comAll Songs used with permission or under fair use provisions(c) 2024 UTR Media. All Rights Reserved. A 501(c)(3) non-profit org - info at https://utrmedia.org
Become a Sponsor of the In My Beach Boys Room Podcasthttps://www.matthewhartzmusic.com/sponsorIn this episode of In My Beach Boys Room, hosts Matthew Hartz and Adam Schreiner take a deep dive into the Beach Boys' 1967 album Wild Honey. Known for its raw, soulful sound, Wild Honey stands apart in the Beach Boys' catalog, and the hosts explore each track with insightful musical analysis. From the R&B-inspired title track to the underrated gems hidden throughout the album, Adam and Matthew break down the unique elements that give Wild Honey its distinct character.Timestamps00:00 Intro03:55 Wild Honey Context28:05 Wild Honey35:00 Aren't You Glad44:30 I Was Made to Love Her49:30 Country Air53:15 A Thing or Two58:30 Darlin'01:04:20 I'd Love Just Once to See You01:08:30 Here Comes the Night01:12:50 Let the Wind Blow01:16:20 How She Boogalooed It01:18:25 Mama Sayswww.matthewhartzmusic.com
Spin It is getting Splanky! We're talking about Big Band royalty, the one and only Count Basie! His 1958 instrumental record The Atomic Mr. Basie is the culmination of the talent of dozens of musicians and decades of bandleading experience. Find out how The Kid From Red Bank went from being the town's (second) best drummer to one of the genre's best pianists! On E=MC2, the Count joins arranger (and Batman theme song composer) Neal Hefti to create a pop-friendly swing record that holds tight to jazz tradition. Will they accomplish their goals? The Mixtaper teaches us about Spain, space, and a namesake kingdom that's 472,000,000 wide. Fight the Foo Birds, watch the Fantails, and hop along with Teddy The Toad as we give Basie a good ol' Double-O this week! And remember... it's all about the notes you DON'T play.Keep Spinning at www.SpinItPod.com!Thanks for listening!0:00 Intro4:46 About Count Basie14:56 About The Atomic Mr. Basie18:45 The First Grammys21:58 Basie's Career Continued23:10 Awards & Accolades24:20 Fact Or Spin25:17 He's A Real-Life Count30:31 His Kingdom Is 472,000,000 Wide34:15 Neal Hefti Helped Basie Accomplish His Goal39:33 Batman Can Go Space Truckin' Past Count Basie43:49 Album Art45:09 The Kid From Red Bank47:50 Duet49:41 After Supper51:32 Flight Of The Foo Birds54:39 Double-O56:41 Teddy The Toad57:49 Whirly-Bird59:22 Midnite Blue1:00:57 Splanky1:02:54 Fantail1:04:28 Lil' Darlin'1:06:47 Final Spin Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Singer/songwriter Chris Bullinger visits The Hook Rocks New Music Spotlight to discuss his new single "Darlin' In Me" & his upcoming album "Waitin' To Be Seen". Chris also shares how John Mellencamp reached him as a young kid and put him on a path of making music. Please enjoy the episode! Chris Bullinger https://www.chrisbullinger.com/ https://www.facebook.com/chrisbullingermusic https://www.instagram.com/chrisbullingersings/ https://x.com/chris_bullinger The Hook Rocks https://www.facebook.com/TheHookRocks/ https://www.instagram.com/thehookrocks/ https://twitter.com/TheHookRocks Pantheon Podcasts http://pantheonpodcasts.com/ https://www.facebook.com/PantheonPodcasts https://www.instagram.com/pantheonpods/ https://twitter.com/pantheonpods ' Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Beach Boys have been an actively legendary group over 60 years! With a new documentary and updated memoir, I wanted to show their talent by counting down 10 rare songs from their catalog. Text Music Notes with Jess!Support the Show.The Beach Boys Rare 10 playlist10. “Forever” (1970, 1971)2000 biopic clipFull House wedding"Forever" (1992) - John Stamos & The Beach Boys9. “Dance, Dance, Dance” (1964)"Dance, "Dance, Dance" - Wilson Phillips (2003)8. “Rock and Roll Music” (1976)7. “Our Prayer” (1963)"Our Prayer" - 2000 biopic scene (17:20-20:50)"Lord's Prayer" commentary6. “Feel Flows” (1971)Almost Famous (2000) - William meets Penny (0:34-1:07)Almost Famous - end credits5. “The Warmth of the Sun” (1965)"The Warmth of the Sun" (2001)4. “Sail On, Sailor” (1973)3. “Surf's Up” (1971)"Surf's Up" (2001) - Vince Gill, Jimmy Webb, David Crosby2. “I Just Wasn't Made for These Times” (1966)"I Just Wasn't Made for These Times" (2001) - Aimee Mann & Michael PennAimee Mann 2019 concert: https://www.instagram.com/p/Bz4MDKdAUNt/?img_index=5, https://www.instagram.com/p/Bz4QIrXgJZd/1. “Darlin'” (1966-1967)"Darlin'" - Three Dog Night & The Beach Boys (1986)The Beach Boys - IMDB searchFull House - IMDBAlmost FamousWilson PhillipsThe Beach Boys - Full House YouTube searchAn All-Star Tribute to Brian Wilson (2001)A Grammy Salute to The Beach Boys (2023)Related episode: Ep 144 - Yacht Rock - Boat Songs
SOCA THERAPY - MAY 19, 2024Soca Therapy PlaylistSunday May 19th 2024Making You Wine From 6-9pm on Flow 98.7fm TorontoD Call (Dr. Jay Plate) - KemmyMad Government (Dr. Jay Plate) - Mirror DanDanger - Skinny Fabulous x Problem ChildDo What You Want - Skinny Fabulous x Asa Banton x Mr. KillaEnergy - DJ Cheem x TallpreeCarnival - GhazaWDS - AidolJab Jab Festival - Pumpa x Travis WorldHotspot - Lyrikal x Travis WorldNot From Here - Lavaman x Travis WorldChopping The Line - Jab KingToot Toot - TemptressOutside Again (Riddim Master Edit) - Rucas H.E x DejourCome Home - Nailah Blackman x Skinny FabulousRestless - JaxxSimple Things - KILong Time - Miguel MaestreInventor (Izaman) - OlatunjiMental Day - KesUmbrella - Bunji GarlinBehavior Nothin -Skinny FabulousThe Spirit - Machel MontanoAngel - Imani RayOutside Jam - GBM Nutron x DJ SpiderStink Behaviour (TW Edit) - Teddy Rhymez x Machel MontanoNeed Ah Fete - BoyzieFinally (Riddim Master Edit) - V'ghnDNA (DJ Kevin Festival Intro Edit) - Mical TejaDNA (Madness Muv & D Ninja Roadmix) - Mical TejaCarnival Contract - Bunji GarlinIn The Water - Suhrawh x Chow MinisterWet Me Down - Lil VghnRef (Blow D Whistle) - ShattaDe Last Time - Miss CaliTOP 7 COUNTDOWN - Powered By The Soca SourceTop Soca from iTunes (World) in Canada from April 20247. Work It - Tian Winter6. How ah Livin - Farmer Nappy5. Rum Bucket ‘Party Mashup’ - Preddy x King Bubba x Lavaman4. Human Nature - Voice x Jada Kingdom3. Pump Me Up - Krosfyah2. Eating Preference - Tallpree1. The Plumber - StarbriteTrust Issues - RupeeBYE x2 - Saddis x Jus Jay KingLife After Fete - Kerwin Du BoisEverytime - Nadia BatsonWhen Last (Remix) - GBM Nutron x Jus Jay King featt Grateful CoBest Jam Ever - Patrice Roberts Sample - Problem Child Bare Good Vibes - Shal MarshallBad Gyal - Erphaan AlvesTack Back - Kes x TanoJunction - Coutain x TanoSoca Party - Jimmy October x TanoSweet Love - Jimmy October (WORLD PREMIERE)Champion - Coutain x DwalaPAN MOMENTSBob Marley Pan Medley - Michael The PannistTANTY TUNE(1980) Dat Soca Boat - The Mighty ShadowSoca In Meh Vein - Alison HindsGood Vibes Only - Alison HindsSoca Therapy - Patrice RobertsPlan B (D Ninja Edit) - Orlando OctaveGive Away The Wine - M1Darlin - Aaron DuncanDarlin’ - Johnny KingParty With You - H2O PhloCoal Pot - TraffikAnxiety - Patrice RobertsHard Fete (DJ Shy “Hands Up” Edit) - Bunji GarlinMiracle/Beat Rum Bad (Muv Tone Play) - Kes, WadicksBruk Time - GrabbaBend - Nessa PreppyThe A List - PumpaPretty Gyal - Adam OOut Ah Order - LyrikalWhatever Yuh Want - Nadia Baston Slip In - GeoParty In The Road - Skinny FabulousAh Love It Here - Ricardo DrueInstructions Pt. 2 - Deejay AsapKedek Kedek - MightyNORTHERN PRESCRIPTIONLeggo Mi Man - Taste Of Madness feat Shayne BaileyI Dare You - Destra Soca Global - Erphaan AlvesFollow Dr. Jay @socaprince and @socatherapy“Like” Dr. Jay on http://facebook.com/DrJayOnline
I love using the podcast to spotlight our different community members and their unique businesses and stories because we know that no two businesses are the same. We all have our lived experiences and interests that play into the types of businesses we create and how we choose to run these businesses each day. Today's guest is Paper Camp Alumni Priyanka Batra from My Darlin', a colorful Brooklyn-based paper goods studio. Through her work, she aims to romanticize everyday moments through a contemporary, but playful design aesthetic while simultaneously evoking a sense of nostalgia. Priyanka's line has grown steadily since 2019, and her products are now carried in more than 300 stores in the United States plus distribution in Australia. On today's episode, Priyanka shares her love of fashion and how that influences her products, how growing up the daughter of immigrants influenced her career path, and she talks about overcoming imposter syndrome. We also talk about how she jumped into her first trade show too quickly with only 3 weeks to prepare and the lessons she learned the hard way in that experience. Today's episode is sponsored by our Unlock Buyer Secrets Interview series. To make a strong first impression with wholesale buyers, we need to do a few things really well: We need to make it easy for stores to purchase from us We need to have clear pricing and terms & conditions We need to clearly communicate and add value at each touchpoint We need to focus on building strong relationships with our customers. And all of this becomes infinitely easier when we actively listen to our customers. This on-demand interview series will give you a competitive edge by providing an exclusive window into what buyers want and need from you. And, the best part, its only $27 bucks. Get Access to the Unlock Buyer Secrets Interview Series You can view full show notes and more at http://prooftoproduct.com/341 Quick Links: Free Wholesale Audio Series Free Resources Library Free Email Marketing for Product Makers PTP LABS Paper Camp
Ch. 5–6 take us to the fantasy U.N. summit, and it could only be more Jordan-ish if there were nude women for no reason. We talk about Official Court Spankings, the Aiel as Cops, Rand's Unrealistic Goals, Egg Throwing Shoes, and the Literal Four Horsemen.
This week, Danielle and Millie discuss MILDRED PIERCE (1945) and AUTUMN LEAVES (1956), how far people should go for their kids, and Millie's dog's wild treat diet. To see a full ISWYD movie list, check out our Letterboxd here: https://letterboxd.com/isawwhatyoudid/films/diary/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Happy Monday! A certain jar gets a lot of use in this episode, featuring... Five-Minute Fight - Ethan Coen's Drive-Away Dolls Music Music Music - Brad joins Corey and Rachel to discuss the gimmicks they're sick of in modern music. Corey reveals he doesn't listen to much modern music, surprising no one. What's up with these darn kids these days and their loud music, anyway? (Also, TikTok catches some strays.) Hosted by your own personal cinematic D student & A student! Music by Splash '96 Recorded & Edited by Boutwell Studios Email us at podcast@sidewalkfest.com if you're a bad enough dude NEW: Sidewalk is on Threads! Follow us!
Krazy Train with Jasmin St. Claire Special Guest: Jessica Darlin Sponsored By: BetOnline.Ag: https://www.betonline.ag/ Tigerlyfe Energy https://tigerlyfeenergy.com/ Promo Code: JASMIN SC for Free Shipping In a captivating conversation on "Off The Rails," Jessica Darlin delves into her multifaceted journey through the adult film industry and beyond, alongside host Jasmin St Claire. Reflecting on iconic moments from 'Dark Side of the Ring' to cherished memories with Rob Black, Jessica opens up about the evolution of wrestling and adult entertainment in the 90s. From her transition from valet to manager, wielding the Singapore cane, to discussing the enigmatic Van Damage, Jessica offers a raw and insightful look into her career. Venturing beyond the ring and set, Jessica shares the complexities of organizing events with Jasmin, highlighting the challenges and triumphs they encountered. Her candid reflections on leaving the adult industry, confronting negative experiences, and the drive to break taboos showcase her resilience and dedication to forging new paths. Jessica's discussion on her relationship with Rob Black, standing up for personal values in the face of industry challenges, and her ventures into new opportunities like OnlyFans and WrestleCon, illuminate her ongoing journey of exploration and friendship with Jasmin. This conversation is a testament to adaptability, the importance of supportive relationships, and the endless pursuit of personal and professional growth in the ever-changing landscapes of wrestling and adult film.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Link to "You Down with OPT" VideoWelcome to Guess the Year! This is an interactive, competitive podcast series where you will be able to play along and compete against your fellow listeners. Here is how the scoring works:1 point: get the year correct within 10 years (e.g., you guess 1975 and it is between 1965-1985)4 points: get the year correct within 5 years (e.g., you guess 2004 and it is between 1999-2009)7 points: get the year correct within 2 years (e.g., you guess 1993 and it is between 1991-1995)10 points: get the year dead on!Guesses can be emailed to drandrewmay@gmail.comI will read your scores out on the following episode, along with the scores of your fellow listeners! Please email your guesses to Andrew no later than 12pm EST on the day the next episode posts if you want them read out on the episode (e.g., if an episode releases on Monday, then I need your guesses by 12pm EST on Wednesday; if an episode releases on Friday, then I need your guesses by 12 pm EST on Monday). Note: If you don't get your scores in on time, they will still be added to the overall scores I am keeping. So they will count for the final scores - in other words, you can catch up if you get behind, you just won't have your scores read out on the released episode. All I need is your guesses (e.g., Song 1 - 19xx, Song 2 - 20xx, Song 3 - 19xx, etc.). Please be honest with your guesses! Best of luck!!The answers to today's ten songs can be found below. If you are playing along, don't scroll down until you have made your guesses. .....Have you made your guesses yet? If so, you can scroll down and look at the answers......Okay, answers coming. Don't peek if you haven't made your guesses yet!.....Intro song: O.P.P. by Naughty by Nature (1991)Song 1: Way Down Yonder in New Orleans by Louis Armstrong & Bing Crosby (1960)Song 2: In This Shirt by The Irrespressibles (2008)Song 3: NO by Meghan Traitor (2016)Song 4: And So It Goes by Billy Joel (1989)Song 5: Shut Up and Dance by WALK THE MOON (2014)Song 6: Liquid Time by Phish (2009)Song 7: Darlin' by Dave Barnes (2014)Song 8: The Bomb by The Hives (2023)Song 9: I Feel Love by Donna Summer (1976)Song 10: Self Esteem by The Offspring (1994)
Songs include: Tumbling Tumbleweeds, Montana Plains, There's No Hiding Place, Nobody's Darlin, Cattle Call and Beautiful Texas. Performers include: The Sons of the Pioneers, W. Lee O'Daniel, Red Foley, Patsy Montana, the Carter Family and Milton Brown.