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CPA Trendlines Podcasts
Disguised Tax Hikes Are Back on the Table | Quick Tax Tip

CPA Trendlines Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2025 3:24


This stealthy tax rule could hit clients starting in 2026.Quick Tax TipWith Art WernerCPE TodayEvery tax bill hides a few surprises, and the OBBB is no exception. According to tax guru Art Werner, one of those surprises could wallop high earners through the quiet return of the PEASE limitation.Click here for more Art WernerIn the newest episode of Quick Tax Tip, he breaks down this often-overlooked provision, its history, and what it could mean for your clients. 

The Pat Walsh Show
The Pat Walsh Show September 8th Third Hour 

The Pat Walsh Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2025 28:35


Auctioning off baseball cards. Chucky Cheese story. Disguised cops.

The Pat Walsh Show
The Pat Walsh Show September 8th Second Hour 

The Pat Walsh Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2025 27:06


Lottery winners. Disguised police at football games.

True Crime Psychology and Personality: Narcissism, Psychopathy, and the Minds of Dangerous Criminals
Poorly Disguised SUV at Center of Teen's Disappearance After Missed Flight | Phoebe Bishop Analysis

True Crime Psychology and Personality: Narcissism, Psychopathy, and the Minds of Dangerous Criminals

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2025 17:01


This video answers the question: Can I analyze the case of Phoebe Bishop? Remove your personal information from the web at https://joindeleteme.com/DRGRANDE and use code DRGRANDE for 20% off DeleteMe international Plans: https://international.joindeleteme.com Support Dr. Grande on Patreon: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.patreon.com/drgrande⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Dr. Grande's book Harm Reduction: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.amazon.com/Harm-Reduction-Todd-Grande-PhD/dp/1950057313⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Dr. Grande's book Psychology of Notorious Serial Killers: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.amazon.com/Psychology-Notorious-Serial-Killers-Intersection/dp/1950057259⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Check out Dr. Grande's merchandise ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://teespring.com/stores/dr-grandes-store Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Pulp Writer Show
Episode 267: Summer Movie Review Roundup

The Pulp Writer Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2025 32:31


In this week's episode, I take a look back at the movies and streaming shows I watched in Summer 2025. This coupon code will get you 50% off the audiobook of Ghost in the Serpent, Book #1 in the Ghost Armor series, (as excellently narrated by Hollis McCarthy) at my Payhip store: FALLSERPENT50 The coupon code is valid through September 15, 2025 (please note the shorter expiration date). So if you need a new audiobook this fall, we've got you covered! TRANSCRIPT 00:00:00 Introduction and Writing Updates Hello, everyone. Welcome to Episode 267 of The Pulp Writer Show. My name is Jonathan Moeller. Today is September 5, 2025 and today I'm doing a review roundup of the movies and streaming shows I saw in Summer 2025. Before we do that, we will have Coupon of the Week and a progress update on my current writing and audiobook projects. First up, this week's coupon code will get you 50% off the audiobook of Ghost in the Serpent, Book One in the Ghost Armor series (as excellently narrated by Hollis McCarthy) at my Payhip store. That is FALLSERPENT50. This coupon code will be valid through September 15th, 2025 (exactly one week). So if you need a new audiobook to listen to as we head into fall, we have got you covered. Now for an update on my current writing and audiobook projects. I am pleased to report that the rough draft of Blade of Flames, which will be the first book in my new Blades of Ruin epic fantasy series is finished. The rough draft came at about 90,000 words long, which was what I was aiming for. Next up, I will be writing a short story set as sort of a bonus in that plot line called Thunder Hammer and that will be the backstory of one of the characters in Blade of Flames. And when Blade of Flames comes out (which will hopefully be later this September), newsletter subscribers will get a free ebook copy of Thunder Hammer. So this is an excellent time to subscribe to my newsletter. I am also 8,000 words into Cloak of Worlds. At long last, I am coming back to the Cloak Mage series after nearly a year's absence. Longtime listeners will know the reason was that I had five unfinished series and I wanted to spend the summer of 2025 finishing the unfinished ones and focusing up so I will only have three ongoing series at any given time. I'm hoping Blade of Flames will come out before the end of September and Cloak of Worlds before the end of October, and after that I will be able to return to the Rivah series at long last. In audiobook news, recording is finished on Shield of Power. That will be excellently narrated by Brad Wills and hopefully once it gets through processing and quality assurance and everything, it should be showing up on the various audiobook stores before too much longer. Hollis McCarthy is about halfway through the recording of Ghost in the Siege, which was, as you know, the last book in the Ghost Armor series that just came out. And if all goes well, the audiobook should be coming out probably in October once everything is done with recording and quality assurance and all that. So that is where I'm at with my current writing and audiobook projects. 00:02:34 Main Topic: Summer 2025 Movie/TV Roundup So without further ado, let's head into our main topic. The end of summer is nigh, which means this time for my summer movie review roundup. As is usual for the summer, I saw a lot of movies, so this will be one of the longer episodes. For some reason I ended up watching a bunch of westerns. As always, the movies are ranked from least favorite to most favorite. The grades of course are totally subjective and based on nothing more than my own opinions, impressions, and interpretations. Now on to the movies. First up is the Austin Powers trilogy, the three movies of which came out in 1997, 1999, and 2002. The Austin Powers movies came out just as the Internet really got going in terms of mass adoption, which is likewise why so many Austin Powers and Dr. Evil memes are embedded in online culture. Despite that, I had never really seen any of them all the way through. They've been on in the background on TBS or whatever quite a bit when I visited people, but I've never seen them all. But I happened upon a DVD of the trilogy for $0.25 (USD), so I decided for 25 cents I would give it a go. I would say the movies were funny, albeit not particularly good. Obviously the Austin Powers movies are a parody of the James Bond movies. The movies kind of watch like an extended series of Saturday Night Live skits, only loosely connected, like the skit is what if Dr. Evil had a son named Scott who wasn't impressed with him or another skit was what if a British agent from the ‘60s arrives in the ‘90s and experiences culture clash? What if Dr. Evil didn't understand the concept of inflation and demanded only a million dollars from the United Nations? What if Dr. Evil was actually Austin's brother and they went to school together at Spy Academy? Michael Caine was pretty great as Austin's father. Overall, funny but fairly incoherent. Overall grade: C- Next up is Horrible Bosses, a very dark and very raunchy comedy from about 14 years ago. It came out in 2011. Interestingly, this movie reflects what I think is one of the major crises of the contemporary era, frequent failures of leadership at all levels of society. In the movie Nick, Dale, and Kurt are lifelong friends living in LA and all three of them have truly horrible bosses in their place of employment, ranging from a sociopathic finance director, the company founder's cokehead son, and a boorish dentist with a tendency to sexual harassment. At the bar, they fantasize about killing their horrible bosses and then mutually decide to do something about it. Obviously, they'd all be prime suspects in the murder of their own bosses, but if they killed each other's bosses, that would allow them to establish airtight alibis. However, since Nick, Dale and Kurt are not as bright as they think they are, it all goes hilariously wrong very quickly. Bob Hope has a hilarious cameo. If the best “crude comedies” I've seen are Anchorman, Zoolander, Tropic Thunder, and Dodgeball, and the worst one was MacGruber, I'd say Horrible Bosses lands about in the middle. Overall grade: C Next up is Cowboys and Aliens, which came out in 2011. Now I almost saw this in 2011 when it came out, but I was too busy to go to the theater in July of 2011, so I finally saw it here in 2025 and I would say this was almost a great movie, like the performances were great, the concept was great, the scenery was great, the special effects were great, and the story was packed full of really interesting ideas, but somehow they just didn't coalesce. I'm not entirely sure why. I think upon reflection, it was that the movie is just too overcrowded with too many characters and too many subplots. Anyway, Daniel Craig portrays a man who wakes up with no memory in the Old West, with a mysterious bracelet locked around his wrist. He makes his way to the town of Atonement, and promptly gets arrested because he is apparently a notorious outlaw (which he doesn't remember). While he is locked in jail, space aliens attack the town. The aliens, for unknown reasons, abduct many of the townspeople, and Daniel Craig's character, who is named Jake even if he doesn't remember it, must lead the town's effort to recover their abducted citizens. Harrison's Ford has an excellent performance as this awful cattle baron who nonetheless has virtues of courage and fortitude that you can't help but admire. An excellent performance. That said, the movie was just too packed, and I thought it would work better as a novel. After I watched the movie, it turned out that it was indeed based off a graphic novel. Novels and graphic novels allow for a far more complex story than a movie, and I don't think this movie quite managed to handle the transition from a graphic novel to a film. Overall grade: C Next up is Heads of State, which came out in 2025. This was kind of a stupid movie. However, the fundamental question of any movie, shouted to the audience by Russell Crow in Gladiator is, “are you not entertained?!?” I was thoroughly entertained watching this, so entertained I actually watched it twice. Not everything has to be Shakespeare or a profound meditation on the unresolvable conflicts inherent within human nature. Anyway, John Cena plays Will Derringer, newly elected President of the United States. Idris Elba plays Sam Clark, who has now been the UK Prime Minister for the last six years. Derringer was an action star who parleyed his celebrity into elected office (in the same way Arnold Schwarzenegger did), while Clarke is an army veteran who worked his way up through the UK's political system. Needless to say, the cheerful Derringer and the grim Clarke take an immediate dislike to each other. However, they'll have to team up when Air Force One is shot down, stranding them in eastern Europe. They'll have to make their way home while evading their enemies to unravel the conspiracy that threatens world peace. So half action thriller, half buddy road trip comedy. The premise really doesn't work if you think about it too much for more than thirty seconds, but the movie was funny and I enjoyed it. Jack Quaid really stole his scenes as a crazy but hyper-competent CIA officer. Overall grade: C+ Next up, Captain America: Brave New World, which came out in 2025 and I think this movie ended up on the good side of middling. You can definitely tell it went through a lot of reshoots and retooling, and I suspect the various film industry strikes hit it like a freight train. But we ended up with a reasonably solid superhero thriller. Sam Wilson is now Captain America. He's not superhuman the way Steve Rogers was and doesn't have magic powers or anything, so he kind of fights like the Mandalorian – a very capable fighter who relies on excellent armor. Meanwhile, in the grand American political tradition of failing upward, Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross, who spent years persecuting The Hulk and whose meddling caused the Avengers to disband right before Thanos attacked, has now been elected President. To Wilson's surprise, Ross reaches out and wants him to restart the Avengers. But Ross (as we know) did a lot of shady black ops stuff for years, and one of his projects is coming back to haunt him. Wilson finds himself in the middle of a shadowy conspiracy, and it's up to him to figure out what's going on before it's too late. I was amused that lifelong government apparatchik Ross wanted to restart the Avengers, because when the Avengers had their biggest victory in Avengers: Endgame, they were essentially unsanctioned vigilantes bankrolled by a rogue tech billionaire. Overall grade: B- Next up is Ironheart, which came out in 2025. I'd say Ironheart was about 40% very weird and 60% quite good. It's sort of like the modern version of Dr. Faustus. The show got some flak on the Internet from the crossfire between the usual culture war people, but the key to understanding it is to realize that Riri Williams AKA Ironheart is in fact an antihero who's tottering on the edge of becoming a full-blown supervillain. Like Tony Stark, she's a once-in-a-generation scientific talent, but while she doesn't have Stark's alcohol problems, she's emotionally unstable, immature, ruthless, indifferent to collateral damage and consequences, and suffering from severe PTSD after her best friend and stepfather were killed in a drive-by shooting. This volatile mix gets her thrown out of MIT after her experiments cause too much destruction, and she has to go home to Chicago. To get the funds to keep working on her Iron Man armor, she turns to crime, and falls in with a gang of high-end thieves led by a mysterious figure named Hood. It turns out that Hood has actual magic powers, which both disturbs and fascinates Riri. However, Hood got his magic in a pact with a mysterious dark force. When a job goes bad, Riri gains the enmity of Hood and has to go on the run. It also turns out Hood's dark master has become very interested in Riri, which might be a lot more dangerous for everyone in the long run. Overall, I'd say this is about in the same vein as Agatha All Along, an interesting show constructed around a very morally questionable protagonist. Overall grade: B Next up is A Minecraft movie, which came out in 2024. I have to admit, I've never actually played Minecraft, so I know very little about the game and its ecosystem, only what I've generally absorbed by glancing at the news. That said, I think the movie held together quite well, and wasn't deserving of the general disdain it got in the press. (No doubt the $950 million box office compensated for any hurt feelings.) One of the many downsides of rapid technological change in the last fifty years is that the Boomers and Gen X and the Millennials and Gen Z and Gen Alpha have had such radically different formative experiences in childhood that it's harder to relate to each other. Growing up in the 1980s was a wildly different experience than growing up in the 2010s, and growing up in the 2010s was an even more wildly different experience than growing up in the 1960s. Smartphones and social media were dominant in 2020, barely starting in 2010, and implausible science fiction in 2000 and earlier, and so it was like the different generations grew up on different planets, because in some sense they actually did. (A five-year-old relative of mine just started school, and the descriptions of his school compared to what I remember of school really do sound like different planets entirely.) The Minecraft game and A Minecraft Movie might be one of those generation-locked experiences. Anyway, this has gotten very deep digression for what was essentially a portal-based LitRPG movie. A group of people experiencing various life difficulties in a rural Idaho town get sucked into the Minecraft world through a magic portal. There they must combine forces and learn to work together to master the Minecraft world to save it from an evil sorceress. As always, the fundamental question of any movie is the one that Russell Crowe's character shouted to the audience in Gladiator back in 2000. “Are you not entertained?” I admit I was entertained when watching A Minecraft Movie since it was funny and I recognized a lot of the video game mechanics, even though I've never actually played Minecraft. Like, Castlevania II had a night/day cycle the way Minecraft does, and Castlevania II was forty years ago. But that was another digression! I did enjoy A Minecraft Movie. It was kind of crazy, but it committed to the craziness and maintained a consistent creative vision, and I was entertained. Though I did think it was impressive how Jack Black's agent managed to insist that he sing several different times. Overall grade: B Next up is Back to School, which came out in 1986 and this is one of the better ‘80s comedies I've seen. Rodney Dangerfield plays Thornton Melon, who never went to college and is the wealthy owner of a chain of plus-sized clothing stores. His son Jason is attending Great Lakes University, and after Thornton's unfaithful gold-digging wife leaves him (Thornton is mostly relieved by this development), he decides to go visit his son. He quickly discovers that Jason is flailing at college, and decides to enroll to help out his son. Wacky adventures ensue! I quite enjoyed this. The fictional “Great Lakes University” was largely shot at UW-Madison in Wisconsin, which I found amusing because I spent a lot of time at UW-Madison several decades ago as a temporary IT employee. I liked seeing the characters walk past a place where I'd eat lunch outside when the day was nice, that kind of thing. Also, I'm very familiar with how the sausage gets made in higher ed. There's a scene where the dean is asking why Thornton is qualified to enter college, and then it cuts to the dean cheerfully overseeing the groundbreaking of the new Thornton Melon Hall which Thornton just donated, and I laughed so hard I almost hurt myself, because that is exactly how higher ed works. The movie had some pointless nudity, but it was only a few seconds and no doubt gets cut in network broadcasts. Overall grade: B Next up is Whiskey Galore, which came out in 1949 and this is a comedy set in Scotland during World War II. The villagers living on an isolated island have no whiskey due to wartime rationing. However, when a government ship carrying 50,000 cases of whiskey runs aground near the island, wacky hijinks ensue. I have to admit the first half of the movie was very slow and deliberate, gradually setting up all the pieces for later. Then, once the shipwreck happens, things pick up and the movie gets much funnier. Definitely worth watching both as a good comedy movie and an artifact of its time. A modicum of historical knowledge is required – if you don't know what the Home Guard is, you might have to do some Googling to understand the context of some of the scenes. Regrettably, the version I watched did not have captioning, so I had to pay really close attention to understand what the characters were saying, because some of the accents were very strong. Overall grade: B Next up is Happy Gilmore 2, which came out in 2025. This was dumb and overstuffed with celebrity cameos but thoroughly hilarious and I say this even though it uses one of my least favorite story tropes, namely “hero of previous movie is now a middle age loser.” However, the movie leads into it for comedy. When Happy Gilmore accidentally kills his wife with a line drive, he spirals into alcoholism and despair. But his five children still love him, and when his talented daughter needs tuition for school, Happy attempts to shake off his despair and go back to golf to win the money. But Happy soon stumbles onto a sinister conspiracy led by an evil CEO to transform the game of golf into his own personal profit center. Happy must team up with his old nemesis Shooter McGavin to save golf itself from the evil CEO. Amusingly, as I've said before, the best Adam Sandler movies are almost medieval. In medieval fables, it was common for a clever peasant to outwit pompous lords, corrupt priests, and greedy merchants. The best Adam Sandler protagonist remains an everyman who outwits the modern equivalent of pompous lords and corrupt priests, in this case an evil CEO. Overall grade: B+ Next up is Superman, which came out in 2025 and I thought this was pretty good and very funny at times. I think it caught the essential nature of Superman. Like, Superman should be a Lawful Good character. If he was a Dungeons and Dragons character, he would be a paladin. People on the Internet tend to take the characterization of superheroes seriously to perhaps an unhealthy degree, but it seems the best characterization of Superman is as an earnest, slightly dorky Boy Scout who goes around doing good deeds. The contrast of that good-hearted earnestness with his godlike abilities that would allow him to easily conquer and rule the world is what makes for an interesting character. I also appreciated how the movie dispensed with the overused trope of the Origin Story and just got down to business. In this movie, Lex Luthor is obsessed with destroying Superman and is willing to use both super-advanced technology and engineered geopolitical conflict to do it. Superman, because he's essentially a decent person, doesn't comprehend just how depraved Luthor is, and how far Luthor is willing to go out of petty spite. (Ironically, a billionaire willing to destroy the world out of petty spite is alas, quite realistic). Guy Gardener (“Jerkish Green Lantern”) and the extremely competent and the extremely exasperated Mr. Terrific definitely stole all their scenes. The director of the movie, James Gunn, was quite famously fired from Disney in 2018 for offensive jokes he had made on Twitter back when he was an edgy young filmmaker with an alcohol problem. I suppose Mr. Gunn can rest content knowing that Superman made more money than any Marvel movie released this year. Overall grade: A-   Next up is Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, which came out in 1988. This was a very strange movie, but nonetheless, one with an ambitious premise, strong performances, and a strong artistic vision. It's set in post WWII Los Angeles, and “toons” (basically cartoon characters) live and work alongside humans. Private eye Eddie Valiant hates toons since one of them killed his brother five years ago. However, he's hired by the head of a studio who's having trouble with one of his toon actors, Roger Rabbit. Roger's worried his wife Jessica is having an affair, and Valiant obtains pictures of Jessica playing patty cake (not a euphemism, they actually were playing patty cake) with another man. Roger has an emotional breakdown, and soon the other man winds up dead, and Roger insists he's innocent. Valiant and Roger find themselves sucked into a dangerous conspiracy overseen by a ruthless mastermind. This movie was such an interesting cultural artifact. It perfectly follows the structure of a ‘40s film noir movie, but with cartoons, and the dissonance between film noir and the cheerfulness of the toons was embraced and used as a frequently source of comedy. In fact, when the grim and dour Valiant uses the toons' comedy techniques as a tactical improvisation in a moment of mortal peril, it's both hilarious and awesome. Christopher Lloyd's performance as the villainous Judge Doom was amazing. (I don't think it's a spoiler to say that he's villainous, because his character is named Judge Doom and he's literally wearing a black hat.) Like, his performance perfectly captures something monstrous that is trying very hard to pretend to be human and not quite getting it right. And the amount of work it must have taken to make this movie staggers the mind. Nowadays, having live actors interact with cartoon characters is expensive, but not unduly so. It's a frequent technique. You see it all the time in commercials when a housewife is smiling at an animated roll of paper towels or something, and Marvel's essentially been doing it for years. But this was 1988! Computer animation was still a ways off. They had to shoot the movie on analog film, and then hand-draw all the animation and successfully match it to the live film. It wouldn't have worked without the performance of Bob Hoskins as Eddie Valiant, who plays everything perfectly straight in the same way Michael Caine did in A Muppet Christmas Carol. So kind of a strange movie, but definitely worth watching. And it has both Disney and Warner Brothers animated characters in the same movie, which is something we will never, ever see again. Overall grade: A Next up is K-Pop Demon Hunters, which came out in 2025. Like Who framed Roger Rabbit?, this is a very strange movie, but nonetheless with a clear and focused artistic vision. It is a cultural artifact that provides a fascinating look into a world of which I have no knowledge or interest, namely K-pop bands and their dueling fandoms. Anyway, the plot is that for millennia, female Korean musicians have used the magic of their voices to keep the demons locked away in a demon world. The current incarnation is a three-woman K-Pop group called Huntrix, and they are on the verge of sealing away the demons forever. Naturally, the Demon King doesn't like this, so one of his cleverer minions comes up with a plan. They'll start a Demon K-Pop Boy Band! Disguised as humans, the demon K-Pop group will win away Huntrix's fans, allowing them to breach the barrier and devour the world. However, one of the Huntrix musicians is half-demon, and she starts falling for the lead demon in the boy band, who is handsome and of course has a dark and troubled past. Essentially a musical K-drama follows. I have to admit I know practically nothing about K-Pop groups and their dueling fandoms, other than the fact that they exist. However, this was an interesting movie to watch. The animation was excellent, it did have a focused vision, and there were some funny bits. Overall grade: A Next up is Clarkson's Farm Season Four, which came out in 2025. A long time ago in the ‘90s, I watched the episode of Frasier where Frasier and Niles attempt to open a restaurant and it all goes horribly (yet hilariously) wrong. At the time, I had no money, but I promised myself that I would never invest in a restaurant. Nothing I have seen or learned in the subsequent thirty years has ever changed that decision. Season 4 of Clarkson's Farm is basically Jeremy Clarkson, like Frasier and Niles, attempting to open a restaurant, specifically a British pub. On paper it's a good idea, since Clarkson can provide the pub with food produced from his own farm and other local farmers. However, it's an enormous logistical nightmare, and Clarkson must deal with miles of red tape, contractors, and a ballooning budget, all while trying to keep his farm from going under. An excellent and entertaining documentary into the difficulties of both the farming life and food service. I still don't want to own a restaurant! Overall grade: A Next up is Tombstone, which came out in 1993. The Western genre of fiction is interesting because it's limited to such a very specific period of time and geographical region. Like the “Wild West” period that characterizes the Western genre really only lasted as a historical period from about 1865 to roughly 1890. The Western genre was at its most popular in movies from the 1940s and the 1960s, and I wonder if it declined because cultural and demographic changes made it unpopular to romanticize the Old West the way someone like Walt Disney did at Disneyland with “Frontierland.” Of course, the genre lives on in different forms in grittier Western movies, neo-Westerns like Yellowstone and Longmire, and a lot of the genre's conventions apply really well to science fiction. Everyone talks about Firefly being the first Space Western, but The Mandalorian was much more successful and was basically a Western in space (albeit with occasional visits from Space Wizards). Anyway! After that long-winded introduction, let's talk about Tombstone. When Val Kilmer died earlier this year, the news articles mentioned Tombstone as among his best work, so I decided to give it a watch. The plot centers around Wyatt Earp, played by Kurt Russell, who has decided to give up his career in law enforcement and move to Tombstone, Arizona, a silver mining boomtown, in hopes of making his fortune. However, Tombstone is mostly controlled by the Cowboys outlaw gang, and Earp is inevitably drawn into conflict with them. With the help of his brothers and Doc Holliday (Val Kilmer's character), Earp sets out to bring some law and order to Tombstone, whether the Cowboys like it or not. Holliday is in the process of dying from tuberculosis, which makes him a formidable fighter since he knows getting shot will be a less painful and protracted death than the one his illness will bring him. Kilmer plays him as a dissolute, scheming warrior-poet who nonetheless is a very loyal friend. Definitely a classic of the Western genre, and so worth watching. Overall grade: A Next up is Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning, the eighth Mission Impossible movie. Of the eight movies, I think the sixth one was the best one, but this one comes in at a close second. It continues on from Dead Reckoning. Ethan Hunt now possesses the key that will unlock the source code of the Entity, the malicious AI (think ChatGPT, but even more obviously evil) that is actively maneuvering the world's nuclear powers into destroying each other so the Entity can rule the remnants of humanity. Unfortunately, the Entity's source code is sitting in a wrecked Russian nuclear sub at the bottom of the Bering Sea. Even more unfortunately, the Entity knows that Hunt has the key and is trying to stop him, even as the Entity's former minion and Hunt's bitter enemy Gabriel seeks to seize control of the Entity for himself. A sense of apocalyptic doom hangs over the movie, which works well to build tension. Once again, the world is doomed, unless Ethan Hunt and his allies can save the day. The tension works extremely well during the movie's underwater sequence, and the final airborne duel between Hunt and Gabriel. I don't know if they're going to make any more Mission Impossible movies after this (they are insanely expensive), but if this is the end, it is a satisfying conclusion for the character of Ethan Hunt and the Impossible Mission Force. Overall grade: A Next up is Deep Cover, which came out in 2025. This is described as a comedy thriller, and I didn't know what to expect when I watched it, but I really enjoyed it. Bryce Dallas Howard plays Kat, a struggling comedy improv teacher living in London. Her best students are Marlon (played by Orlando Bloom), a dedicated character actor who wants to portray gritty realism but keeps getting cast in tacky commercials, and Hugh (played by Nick Mohammed), an awkward IT worker with no social skills whatsoever. One day, the three of them are recruited by Detective Sergeant Billings (played by Sean Bean) of the Metropolitan Police. The Met wants to use improv comedians to do undercover work for minor busts with drug dealers. Since it plays 200 pounds a pop, the trio agrees. Of course, things rapidly spiral out of control, because Kat, Marlon, and Hugh are actually a lot better at improv than they think, and soon they find themselves negotiating with the chief criminals of the London underworld. What follows is a movie that is both very tense and very funny. Kat, Marlon, and Hugh are in way over their heads, and will have to do the best improv of their lives to escape a very grisly fate. Whether Sean Bean dies or not (as is tradition), you will just have to watch the movie and find out. Overall grade: A Next up is Puss in Boots: The Final Wish, which came out in 2022. I don't personally know much about the history of Disney as a corporation, and I don't much care, but I do have several relatives who are very interested in the history of the Disney corporation, and therefore I have picked up some by osmosis. Apparently Disney CEO Michael Eisner forcing out Jeffrey Katzenberg in the 1990s was a very serious mistake, because Katzenberg went on to co-found DreamWorks, which has been Disney's consistent rival for animation for the last thirty years. That's like “CIA Regime Change Blowback” levels of creating your own enemy. Anyway, historical ironies aside, Puss in Boots: The Final Wish was a funny and surprisingly thoughtful animated movie. Puss in Boots is a legendary outlaw and folk hero, but he has used up eight of his nine lives. An ominous bounty hunter who looks like a humanoid wolf begins pursuing him, and the Wolf is able to shrug off the best of Puss In Boots' attacks. Panicked, Puss hides in a retirement home for elderly cats, but then hears rumors of the magical Last Wish. Hoping to use it to get his lives back, Puss In Boots sets off on the quest. It was amusing how Little Jack Horner and Goldilocks and the Three Bears were rival criminal gangs seeking the Last Wish. Overall grade: A Next up is Chicken People, which came out in 2016. A good documentary film gives you a glimpse into an alien world that you would otherwise never visit. In this example, I have absolutely no interest in competitive chicken breeding and will only raise chickens in my backyard if society ever collapses to the level that it becomes necessary for survival. That said, this was a very interesting look into the work of competitive chicken breeding. Apparently, there is an official “American Standard of Perfection” for individual chicken breeds, and the winner of the yearly chicken competition gets the title “Super Grand Champion.” Not Grand Champion, Super Grand Champion! That looks impressive on a resume. It is interesting how chicken breeding is in some sense an elaborate Skinner Box – like you can deliberately set out to breed chickens with the desirable traits on the American Standard of Perfection, but until the chickens are hatched and grow up, you don't know how they're going to turn out, so you need to try again and again and again… Overall grade: A Next up is The Mask of Zoro, which came out in 1998. I saw this in the theatre when it came out 27 years ago, but that was 27 years ago, and I don't have much of a memory of it, save that I liked it. So when I had the chance to watch it again, I did! Anthony Hopkins plays Diego de la Vega, who has the secret identity of Zorro in the final days before Mexico breaks away from the Spanish Empire. With Mexico on the verge of getting its independence, Diego decides to hang up his sword and mask and focus on his beloved wife and daughter. Unfortunately, the military governor Don Montero realizes Diego is Zorro, so has him arrested, kills his wife, and steals his baby daughter to raise as his own. Twenty years later, a bandit named Alejandro loses his brother and best friends to a brutal cavalry commander. It turns out that Montero is returning to California from Spain, and plans to seize control of California as an independent republic (which, of course, will be ruled by him). In the chaos, Diego escapes from prison and encounters a drunken Alejandro, and stops him from a futile attack upon the cavalry commander. He then proposes a pact – Diego will train Alejandro as the next Zorro, and together they can take vengeance upon the men who wronged them. This was a good movie. It was good to see that my taste in movies 27 years ago wasn't terrible. It manages to cram an entire epic plot into only 2 hours and 20 minutes. In some ways it was like a throwback to a ‘40s movie but with modern (for the ‘90s) production values, and some very good swordfights. Overall grade: A Next up is Wick is Pain, which came out in 2025. I've seen all four John Wick movies and enjoyed them thoroughly, though I've never gotten around to any of the spinoffs. Wick is Pain is a documentary about how John Wick went from a doomed indie movie with a $6.5 million hole in its budget to one of the most popular action series of the last few decades. Apparently Keanu Reeves made an offhand joke about how “Wick is pain” and that became the mantra of the cast and crew, because making an action movie that intense really was a painful experience. Definitely worth watching if you enjoyed the John Wick movies or moviemaking in general. Overall grade: A The last movie I saw this summer was Game Night, which came out in 2016. It was a hilarious, if occasionally dark comedy action thriller. Jason Bateman and Rachel McAdams play Max and Annie Davis, a married couple who are very competitive and enjoy playing games of all kinds. Jason has an unresolved conflict with his brother Brooks, and one night Brooks invites them over for game night, which Max resents. Halfway through the evening, Brooks is kidnapped, with Max and Annie assume is part of the game. However, Brooks really is involved in something shady. Hilarity ensues, and it's up to Max and Annie to rescue Brooks and stay alive in the process. This was really funny, though a bit dark in places. That said, Max and Annie have a loving and supportive marriage, so it was nice to see something like that portrayed on the screen. Though this also leads to some hilarity, like when Annie accidentally shoots Max in the arm. No spoilers, but the punchline to that particular sequence was one of the funniest things I've ever seen. Overall grade: A So no A+ movie this time around, but I still saw a bunch of solid movies I enjoyed. One final note, I have to admit, I've really come to respect Adam Sandler as an entertainer, even if his movies and comedy are not always to my taste. He makes what he wants, makes a lot of money, ensures that his friends get paid, and then occasionally takes on a serious role in someone else's movie when he wants to flex some acting muscles. I am not surprised that nearly everyone who's in the original Happy Gilmore who was still alive wanted to come back for Happy Gilmore 2. So that is it for this week. Thank you for listening to The Pulp Writer Show. I hope you found the show enjoyable and perhaps a guide to some good movies to watch. A reminder that you can listen to all the back episodes at https://thepulpwritershow.com. If you enjoyed the podcast, please leave a review on your podcasting platform of choice. Stay safe and stay healthy and see you all next week.  

united states ceo american california president movies chicago ai power europe uk disney school internet ghosts mexico state british pain arizona marvel russian evil western mit spain wisconsin scotland ptsd world war ii millennials aliens chatgpt wolf gen z superman private hunt iron man farm computers mask cia avengers shakespeare james bond dvd saturday night live cowboys idaho perfection worlds korean united nations heads twenty naturally smartphones mandalorian disneyland dungeons and dragons ruin shield avengers endgame hood longtime minecraft captain america arnold schwarzenegger hulk origin stories blade john wick needless walt disney adam sandler boots mission impossible clarke siege hoping stark halfway james gunn usd yellowstone national park flames k pop atonement john cena gen x vega wild west thanos serpent gladiator ironically boomers boy scouts warner brothers daniel craig firefly idris elba jack black novels blades thornton gunn dreamworks russell crowe tbs kurt russell tombstone anthony hopkins goldilocks wacky googling game nights happy gilmore frasier entity cloak michael caine hilarity austin powers westerns air force one montero wick valiant zorro terrific clarkson old west puss lex luthor coupon roger rabbit dodgeball jason bateman christopher lloyd orlando bloom anchorman rachel mcadams dead reckoning niles holliday agatha all along who framed roger rabbit rodney dangerfield steve rogers ironheart muppet christmas carol captain america brave new world book one disguised bob hope zoolander tropic thunder gen alpha sean bean sam wilson bryce dallas howard ethan hunt minecraft movie wyatt earp riri metropolitan police summer movie bob hoskins uk prime minister uw madison kilmer jeremy clarkson puss in boots horrible bosses panicked last wish longmire jack quaid three bears macgruber regrettably zoro deep cover luthor frontierland earp jeffrey katzenberg bering sea faustus demon king shooter mcgavin spanish empire movie roundup american standard derringer litrpg katzenberg sam clark lawful good space western eddie valiant home guard skinner box little jack horner impossible mission force chicken people rivah thornton melon
An Evolving Man Podcast
Disguised Trauma of Early Boarding & Adoption | Complex PTSD | Addictions | AEM #138 Paul Sunderland

An Evolving Man Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2025 66:30


In this episode, I sit down with Paul Sunderland, an internationally respected addiction specialist and trainer. With decades of clinical experience on both sides of the Atlantic, Paul has become a leading voice on the often-hidden connection between complex PTSD, adoption, boarding school trauma, and addiction.We explore:Paul's personal story of addiction and recovery.Why early separation wounds are disguised traumas that shape lifelong patterns.The link between complex PTSD and addiction as an adaptive response.Why boarding school syndrome should be understood as a form of complex PTSD.Pathways to healing — from psychoeducation to co-regulation and trauma therapies.Paul's work is a reminder that beneath the pain of addiction often lies unacknowledged trauma — and that recovery is not about fixing overnight, but about finding safety, connection, and growth.---Paul Sunderland is a renowned addiction specialist, consultant and trainer.With over 35 years of experience, Paul's ground-breaking work has especially illuminated the deep and often-overlooked links between adoption, trauma, and addictions. His powerful presentations available on YouTube have resonated with thousands around the world.Questions for Paul:How did you get into the work you now do?Could you please talk me through Complex PTSD – what is it and how does it differ from PTSD?Could you please talk about addictions. Why is addiction an adaptive response to complex PTSD?How do addictions migrate?Could you please speak to the disguised trauma of early boarders?Could you also please speak to how adoptees are over represented in addiction treatment?What are some of the techniques that you use for helping people recover from complex PTSD and addictions?Could please speak to how mental and emotional health are relational?How do people find out more about your work?For Paul's TED X talk: https://youtu.be/liCfwTFUYNw?si=uYDWXQrO077TTVh7--- Piers is an author and a men's transformational coach and therapist who works mainly with trauma, boarding school issues, addictions and relationship problems. He also runs online men's groups for ex-boarders, retreats and a podcast called An Evolving Man. He is also the author of How to Survive and Thrive in Challenging Times. To purchase Piers first book: https://www.amazon.co.uk/How-Survive-Thrive-Challenging-Times/dp/B088T5L251/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=piers+cross&qid=1609869608&sr=8-1 For more videos please visit: http://youtube.com/pierscross For FB: https://www.facebook.com/pierscrosspublic For Piers' website and a free training How To Find Peace In Everyday Life: https://www.piers-cross.com/community Many blessings, Piers Cross http://piers-cross.com/

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast
Tryndamere Jungle Takes Over The LTA | The Dive Driven by Kia

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2025 87:32


Welcome back to a brand new episode of The Dive Driven by Kia!The crew kicks off the episode with a discussion on whether scrims remakes should be allowed and their historical impact on international performance. We had some ridiculous matches this past week, including what was nearly the biggest upset in NA history from Disguised. Plus, Inspired's blind pick Tryndamere jungle against Shopify Rebellion. RIP solo queue.Lastly, the team breaks down the match previews for this weekend - who do you have winning?Don't forget! Super Week is back, with matches starting this upcoming Friday, September 5th at 1PM PT/4PM ET. Get your tickets to watch the action live at the Riot Games Arena here: https://www.tixr.com/groups/ltanorthTimestamps:0:00 - Intro & Reminder for Super Week this Friday2:17 - Should you be able to remake scrims?24:04 - Team Liquid Spawn BTS Video35:14 - Cloud9 vs Disguised Recap51:40 - 100 Thieves vs Team Liquid Recap1:00:18 - FlyQuest vs Shopify Rebellion Recap1:13:54 - Cloud9 vs 100 Thieves Preview1:19:14 - Weekend Matchup Predictions

TELL ME A STORY: THE TRUE LIFE OF JAKOB STANLEY
Introducing Strange Midnight AV • Vision Quest Video Club • The Disguised Mask Visualization

TELL ME A STORY: THE TRUE LIFE OF JAKOB STANLEY

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2025 15:35


Here is an audio preview of one of the new shows coming out on our Strange Midnight AV YouTube channel.

Minimum Competence
Legal News for Weds 9/3 - Trump Appeals Tariff Strike-down, Google Spared Antitrust Worsts, Alien Enemies Act Blocked, Machine Guns Stay Banned, and he CTC Gap

Minimum Competence

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2025 10:10


This Day in Legal History: Frederick Douglass Escapes SlaveryOn this day in legal history, September 3, 1838, Frederick Douglass escaped from slavery, setting in motion a life that would fundamentally reshape American legal and political thought. Disguised as a free Black sailor, Douglass boarded a train in Baltimore and made his way north to freedom, ultimately arriving in New York City. His flight from bondage was not just a personal liberation—it was a direct challenge to the legal regime of American slavery, upheld at the time by both state laws and federal statutes such as the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793. Douglass's successful escape, aided by forged documents and the relative leniency of northern vigilance at the time, highlights the tension between laws protecting property in human beings and the moral and constitutional arguments against such laws.Once free, Douglass became one of the most powerful legal thinkers of the 19th century, though he was never formally trained as a lawyer. Through his speeches, writings, and public advocacy, he shaped legal discourse on citizenship, equal protection, and constitutional interpretation. He directly influenced Reconstruction-era legal developments, including debates over the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments. His 1852 speech “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” offered a searing legal and moral critique of the Constitution's complicity with slavery, while still asserting its potential as a freedom-promoting document when interpreted through a natural rights lens.Douglass's escape, and the career it made possible, also underscored the limits of law in the face of moral justice: in 1838, his very existence in the North was criminal under federal law. That reality would not change until the formal abolition of slavery in 1865. His advocacy helped lay the groundwork for a new legal order that could no longer reconcile itself with the ownership of people. September 3 is not just the anniversary of one man's flight—it marks a turning point in the long legal struggle to align American law with its professed ideals.President Donald Trump is prepared to ask the U.S. Supreme Court to uphold his administration's use of emergency powers to impose broad tariffs, including those targeting fentanyl and “reciprocal” trade imbalances. This follows two significant legal defeats, including a 7-4 ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which found that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) does not grant the president sweeping tariff authority. The court held that the statute, enacted in 1977, lacks any reference to tariffs among its regulatory tools, creating a serious challenge to the legal basis for Trump's actions.Despite the legal headwinds, Trump's team remains optimistic, noting the conservative 6-3 majority on the Supreme Court and the Court's traditional deference in matters of foreign affairs. However, legal scholars suggest the case hinges on the major questions doctrine, which requires Congress to speak clearly when authorizing executive action with major economic or political impact. This doctrine was previously used to strike down President Biden's student loan forgiveness plan in 2023.Observers expect the Court to address whether IEEPA's silence on tariffs means such powers were never intended. If the Court rules against Trump, his administration is already eyeing fallback legal authorities, including Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act and Section 338 of the Smoot-Hawley Act, to keep tariffs in place. Meanwhile, nearly $66 billion in collected duties could be subject to refunds if importers challenge payments. A Supreme Court decision is likely by early 2026, with significant consequences for presidential trade powers.Trump to ask Supreme Court to save tariffs but faces tough legal questionsA U.S. federal judge ruled that Google can keep its Chrome browser and Android operating system, dealing a blow to antitrust enforcers who had hoped for more aggressive remedies. However, the judge ordered Google to begin sharing key search and advertising data with competitors in an effort to restore competition in online search. This decision follows a five-year legal battle in which Judge Amit Mehta previously found Google to be maintaining an illegal monopoly in search and related advertising. Despite that finding, Mehta declined to force structural changes like breaking up Google, citing recent advances in AI as creating new, organic competition.The ruling is a partial victory for Google and Apple, as it allows the two tech giants to continue their $20 billion annual deal that makes Google the default search engine on Apple devices. It also permits Google to maintain similar agreements with device makers like Samsung and Motorola, although exclusive contracts are now banned. Google stock jumped over 7% in after-hours trading following the decision.The court emphasized that AI companies like OpenAI are already better positioned to compete with Google than traditional search competitors have been in decades. The data-sharing order could benefit developers of AI-powered search tools and browsers, but the competitive impact may not be felt immediately. Google, while considering an appeal, expressed concerns that the order could undermine user privacy.The ruling is likely to be reviewed by the U.S. Supreme Court, where Mehta's restrained approach may stand a better chance of surviving appeal. The case is part of a broader government crackdown on Big Tech, which includes ongoing legal battles involving Google, Meta, Amazon, and Apple.Google keeps Chrome and Apple deal but must share data in big antitrust rulingThe U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled that President Donald Trump unlawfully used the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to deport a group of Venezuelans he alleged were members of the Tren de Aragua gang. In a 2–1 decision, the court issued a preliminary injunction blocking the deportations, marking the first appellate ruling to directly address Trump's invocation of the centuries-old law through a March 14 presidential proclamation.Writing for the majority, Judge Leslie Southwick rejected the administration's claim that the gang's presence constituted a "predatory incursion" under the law, which only authorizes deportations during times of declared war or invasions. The court emphasized that neither condition was met. Judge Irma Carrillo Ramirez joined Southwick, while Trump appointee Judge Andrew Oldham dissented.The ruling is a setback for the Trump administration, which had sought to use the Alien Enemies Act—a wartime measure—to conduct swift removals of alleged gang members without traditional due process. The Supreme Court had already intervened in May, halting removals on procedural grounds and criticizing the administration for providing only 24 hours' notice to detainees without clear instructions on how to contest deportation.The American Civil Liberties Union, representing the Venezuelans, hailed the decision as a vital check on presidential power, warning against executive overreach during peacetime. Legal experts expect the issue to eventually return to the Supreme Court. The administration may first seek a rehearing from the full Fifth Circuit.US appeals court rejects Trump's use of Alien Enemies Act to deport VenezuelansThe 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a lower court ruling that had declared the federal machine gun ban unconstitutional, upholding the long-standing prohibition on such weapons. The case centered on Tamori Morgan, a Kansas man charged with possessing a machine gun and a conversion device known as a "Glock switch." A federal judge in Wichita, appointed by President Donald Trump, had previously dismissed the charges, citing the Supreme Court's 2022 Bruen decision, which required modern gun laws to align with the nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation.The appeals court, however, found that Bruen did not dismantle the existing legal framework established in District of Columbia v. Heller (2008), which protects weapons “in common use” for lawful self-defense. Writing for the unanimous three-judge panel, Judge Scott Matheson held that machine guns do not meet that standard and are primarily used for unlawful purposes, even if their usage is more widespread than official data suggests.Congress first regulated machine guns in 1934 and fully banned the possession of newly manufactured ones in 1986. The appellate ruling reinforces the idea that such weapons fall outside the Second Amendment's protections, despite recent expansions of individual gun rights. The court emphasized that even under Bruen, regulations do not require a perfect historical match—only a relevant analogue, which the machine gun ban has.US appeals court upholds machine gun ban, reversing trial judgeMy column for Bloomberg this week takes a hard look at the newly expanded federal Child Tax Credit (CTC) and asks whether it's really doing what it claims: reducing child poverty. On the surface, the policy looks like progress. The maximum credit is up to $2,200 and now indexed to inflation—something advocates have long called for. But dig into the mechanics, and a more troubling picture emerges.Despite the expansion, around 19 million children—28% of all kids in the U.S.—will remain ineligible for the full credit simply because their families don't earn enough. That's not a glitch; it's built into the law. The income phase-in structure means the poorest families, those most in need, get the least. In fact, a family of four has to make $41,500 to qualify for the full benefit—well above the federal poverty line of $32,150.This flawed design disproportionately affects Black, Latino, and Native American children, as well as kids in single-parent and rural households. And it's a bipartisan failure: Columbia University's data shows the exclusions cut across red and blue congressional districts almost evenly. That's part of what makes this so frustrating—lawmakers on both sides get to claim credit for “expanding” the CTC, even as millions of children continue to be left behind.Meanwhile, states are quietly filling the gap. Since the expiration of the more generous pandemic-era CTC in 2021, about a dozen states have implemented their own refundable credits. The results speak volumes. In Minnesota, for example, a $1,750 per-child credit is projected to lift 13,000 children out of poverty—nearly half the impact of the expanded federal credit in that state. Colorado and Vermont have seen similar success.The message here is that small, targeted, refundable state credits can work—and are working. Columbia's numbers prove that these policies are more than symbolic; they're helping real families. But that momentum could vanish if states assume Washington has solved the problem. The federal version may dominate headlines, but it's the state-level credits doing the actual heavy lifting.Tax policy doesn't usually offer much moral clarity, but this time it does. States have the tools to fight child poverty. The only real question is whether they'll use them—or wait around for Congress to deliver another “big, beautiful” fix that never arrives.Trump's New Child Tax Credit Deems Millions ‘Too Poor' to Qualify This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.minimumcomp.com/subscribe

Fiercely Fueled Podcast
Diet Culture Disguised as Nutrition Advice- Episode 142

Fiercely Fueled Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2025 45:52


In this episode of the Fiercely Fueled Nutrition Podcast, Coach Bela and Coach Joni critique common misleading practices such as fearmongering food labels, overemphasis on protein, fasted cardio, and carb cycling. Listen in as they debunk myths around juice cleanses, detox diets, and the portrayal of thinness as the pinnacle of health and athleticism.  Also shared are some valuable insights on how to properly fuel the body for strength and performance.      Links and Resources:  Get our free pre & post-training meals guide https://guide.fiercelyfueled.com/podcast  Follow Fiercely Fueled Nutrition:    Instagram: @fiercelyfuelednutrition https://www.instagram.com/fiercelyfuelednutrition/    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/fiercelyfueled    YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7sAH26zWzvrI-73I1J3icA

The Future of Jewish
Holocaust inversion is hate disguised as activism.

The Future of Jewish

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2025 13:20


Holocaust inversion is a rhetorical strategy in which Jews are depicted as having become the new Nazis, while others, in this case the Palestinians, are cast as the new Jews.

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast
T1 Skins Revealed, Patch 25.17, & LTA Super Week | The Dive Driven by Kia

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2025 106:23


This week on The Dive Driven by Kia, solo bolos are back with Patch 25.17 and the squad's raising eyebrows at all the new faces showing up in the jungle like Vayne and Nilah. Which change are you most surprised to see?We also dive into the challenges facing struggling LTA rosters like Dignitas, Team Liquid and LYON from the perspectives of players and coaches. After the break, we break down 100 Thieves' shocking upset over LYON and the heated rematch between Disguised and Dignitas.The LTA returns this Friday at 1PM PT - so don't forget to mark your calendars and tune in for Cloud9's elimination match against Disguised. See you then!Timestamps:0:00 - Intro & LTA returns this FRIDAY!1:11 - Team Environment Challenges26:33 - Patch 25.17: Jungle Vayne and Lane Kayn?48:11 - T1 Worlds Skins Revealed: Gnar, Vi, Yone, Varus, Pyke, Prestige Sylas52:41 - 100 Thieves upsets LYON, Dhokla is back1:07:07 - Disguised takes down Dignitas1:08:11 - Cloud9 vs Disguised Preview1:19:03 - 100 Thieves vs Team Liquid Preview1:34:01 - FlyQuest vs Shopify Rebellion Preview

Dark Side of Wikipedia | True Crime & Dark History
Donna Adelson Trial: Undercover Agent “Sammy” Details Sting Operation to Provoke Donna's Reaction

Dark Side of Wikipedia | True Crime & Dark History

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2025 18:53


Donna Adelson Trial: Undercover Agent “Sammy” Details Sting Operation to Provoke Donna's Reaction The Trial of Donna Adelson took a tense turn as undercover FBI agent “Sammy” testified about his role in the bold operation known as “the bump.” Disguised as a gang member with supposed ties to the Latin Kings, Sammy approached Donna Adelson in a parking lot, handing her a note and suggesting that some people involved had already been “taken care of” while others had not. The goal was clear: rattle Donna enough to trigger a telling response—and it worked. Sammy explained to jurors how the sting was carefully orchestrated. While he delivered the message face-to-face, agents were already monitoring wiretaps on the Adelson family's phones. Almost instantly after the encounter, Donna picked up her phone and dialed her son Charlie Adelson. That call, intercepted and recorded, became a centerpiece of the prosecution's case. Jurors heard Donna's own words in conversations with Charlie, including coded remarks that prosecutors argue reveal the depth of her involvement. This testimony pulled back the curtain on how undercover tactics and surveillance combined to build a case that prosecutors say shows Donna as a key player—not just an anxious mother. Sammy emphasized that this wasn't a chance meeting; it was a deliberate move to shake loose the truth and confirm suspicions investigators already had. Why does this matter? Because the jury didn't just hear secondhand accusations—they heard Donna's own immediate reaction under pressure. Rather than distancing herself or seeking help, she called Charlie, the very person prosecutors say worked hand-in-hand with her to arrange Dan Markel's murder. For the state, Sammy's account of the bump—and the recordings it triggered—may be some of the most compelling evidence yet that Donna was at the center of the conspiracy. #DonnaAdelsonTrial #UndercoverAgent #TheBump #FBI #DonnaAdelson #CharlieAdelson #DanMarkel #TrueCrime #CourtroomDrama #FloridaTrial Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@hiddenkillerspod Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/tonybpod Listen Ad-Free On Apple Podcasts Here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/true-crime-today-premium-plus-ad-free-advance-episode/id1705422872

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary
Donna Adelson Trial: Undercover Agent “Sammy” Details Sting Operation to Provoke Donna's Reaction

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2025 18:53


Donna Adelson Trial: Undercover Agent “Sammy” Details Sting Operation to Provoke Donna's Reaction The Trial of Donna Adelson took a tense turn as undercover FBI agent “Sammy” testified about his role in the bold operation known as “the bump.” Disguised as a gang member with supposed ties to the Latin Kings, Sammy approached Donna Adelson in a parking lot, handing her a note and suggesting that some people involved had already been “taken care of” while others had not. The goal was clear: rattle Donna enough to trigger a telling response—and it worked. Sammy explained to jurors how the sting was carefully orchestrated. While he delivered the message face-to-face, agents were already monitoring wiretaps on the Adelson family's phones. Almost instantly after the encounter, Donna picked up her phone and dialed her son Charlie Adelson. That call, intercepted and recorded, became a centerpiece of the prosecution's case. Jurors heard Donna's own words in conversations with Charlie, including coded remarks that prosecutors argue reveal the depth of her involvement. This testimony pulled back the curtain on how undercover tactics and surveillance combined to build a case that prosecutors say shows Donna as a key player—not just an anxious mother. Sammy emphasized that this wasn't a chance meeting; it was a deliberate move to shake loose the truth and confirm suspicions investigators already had. Why does this matter? Because the jury didn't just hear secondhand accusations—they heard Donna's own immediate reaction under pressure. Rather than distancing herself or seeking help, she called Charlie, the very person prosecutors say worked hand-in-hand with her to arrange Dan Markel's murder. For the state, Sammy's account of the bump—and the recordings it triggered—may be some of the most compelling evidence yet that Donna was at the center of the conspiracy. #DonnaAdelsonTrial #UndercoverAgent #TheBump #FBI #DonnaAdelson #CharlieAdelson #DanMarkel #TrueCrime #CourtroomDrama #FloridaTrial Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@hiddenkillerspod Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/tonybpod Listen Ad-Free On Apple Podcasts Here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/true-crime-today-premium-plus-ad-free-advance-episode/id1705422872

Awaken Beauty Podcast
Cult Conditioning Disguised: Unmasking Hidden Control

Awaken Beauty Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2025 7:33


Social media is a CLUSTER-F of scrolling and passive judgement.No matter the feedback, when someone attacks you - you're forced to own it. To get CLEAR and confident on what you stand for.

The Design Vault
Citroën DS: When France Built a Spaceship Disguised as a Car

The Design Vault

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2025 39:09 Transcription Available


Episode Overview In this episode of The Design Vault, hosts Albert Shum and Thamer Abanami explore the extraordinary story of the Citroën DS, arguably the most audacious automobile ever created. Born from the devastation of post-WWII France, this revolutionary car emerged from an 18-year development odyssey that challenged every automotive convention. With insights from retired Apple and Motorola design leader Tim Parsey, who owned multiple DS models, this episode reveals how a dream team of engineers and designers created a vehicle so advanced it seemed to come from the future. From its magical hydropneumatic suspension to its aerodynamic sculpture-on-wheels aesthetic, the DS completely reimagined what a car could be. Original Air Date: August 26, 2025 Episode Length: 38:31 Hosts: Albert Shum, Thamer Abanami Guest: Tim Parsey (Former Apple, Motorola, Mattel Design Leader)   Key Segments & Timestamps The Context: Post-War France's Design Challenge (00:20 - 03:58) Post-WWII devastation creating space for radical innovation Rough roads, high fuel taxes, and the culture of efficiency Charles de Gaulle's “grandeur” vision driving technological ambition How constraints became catalysts for breakthrough thinking The Automotive Landscape: A World Ripe for Disruption (03:58 - 06:10) American excess era: 42-inch tail fins and chrome measured by weight Germany's people's car philosophy with the Beetle Britain maintaining pre-war conservatism France's strategy to leapfrog rather than catch up Citroën's Culture of Radical Innovation (06:10 - 08:45) André Citroën's front-wheel-drive gamble with the Traction Avant The critical 1934 bankruptcy and Michelin's revolutionary takeover Pierre Boulanger's radical decision: “Keep engineers, fire accountants” The 2CV's parallel development funding DS ambitions The Dream Team (08:45 - 11:50) André Lefebvre: Aeronautical engineer with a backlog of innovations Paul Magès: Self-taught genius behind hydropneumatic suspension Flaminio Bertoni: Italian sculptor turned automotive stylist Why letting creative minds loose is “highly risky but necessary” The 18-Year Development Odyssey (11:50 - 16:21) Simple question: Why improve roads when you can improve cars? Secret development during WWII The hydropneumatic breakthrough: Gas compresses, liquid transmits Systems integration: One technology powering suspension, brakes, steering 40% of build cost invested in hydraulic complexity The Theatrical Launch: Paris 1955 (17:16 - 20:03) Grand Palais transformed into theater The silk sheet drops, crowds gasp 12,000 pre orders—a record until Tesla Model 3 The strategic 500-customer beta program with dedicated engineers Living with Revolutionary Complexity (20:03 - 23:05) The infamous “mushroom brake” and its quirks Tim's near-death experience  “Marking territory with hydraulic fluid” Why the experience had to be driven to be understood The Meditative Magic: What Made DS Special (23:05 - 27:03) “Like gliding around… a meditative experience” Magic carpet ride over speed bumps Why no other manufacturers copied the formula Engineering complexity as competitive moat Evolution and Variants (27:03 - 28:55) From “frog eyes” to swiveling directional headlights (1967) Power progression: DS 19, DS 21, DS 23 Safari wagons, Pallas luxury, SM with Maserati power “Frogs have personality. Fairings don't.” Design Philosophy: Engineering as Art (28:55 - 32:39) Perfect tension between engineering and sculptural beauty Authentic aerodynamics vs. American “rocket ship” styling Three-dimensional airflow management with under-car panels Flush door handles decades before Tesla Interior as Living Room (32:39 - 35:20) Four interior lights creating ambient atmosphere Bench seats and column-mounted gear shifter maximizing space Single-spoke steering wheel for unobstructed view Dashboard-mounted mirror at natural eye level Personal Connection: Tim's First DS Story (35:20 - 38:27) £30 for two broken cars to make one working DS Brilliant engineering: body panels removable with single bolts Digging holes in frozen ground to replace hydraulic lines The devotion that revolutionary design inspires Legacy and Lessons for Modern Innovators (38:27 - 38:31) Showing possibilities people never imagined The courage to exist “outside of time” Why serving people sometimes means ignoring market research Dream teams without financial constraints    Connect With The Design Vault The Design Vault explores iconic products from the innovation-rich 1970s-early 2000s, extracting strategic insights for today's designers, engineers, and business leaders. Each episode combines nostalgic storytelling with actionable lessons for modern product development. Subscribe: Available on all major podcast platforms including Spotify, Apple, and more Follow us: Instagram: @thedesignvaultpodcast, LinkedIn: Thamer Abanami, Albert Shum We'd love to hear your thoughts, episode ideas and feedback via the links above.   Credits Hosts: Albert Shum and Thamer Abanami Guest: Tim Parsey Editor: Rachel James Intro Music: Red Lips Media LLC Brand Design: Rafael Poloni​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

The Great Detectives of Old Time Radio
The Falcon: The Case of the Disguised Murder (EP4785)

The Great Detectives of Old Time Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2025 28:14 Transcription Available


Today's Mystery: A notorious collector comes to Mike alleging that he's been framed for murder.Original Radio Broadcast Date: Sometime in 1953 or 1954Originating from New YorkStarring: George Petrie as The FalconSupport the show monthly at patreon.greatdetectives.netPatreon Supporter of the Day: Yigal, Patreon supporter since March 2023Support the show on a one-time basis at http://support.greatdetectives.netMail a donation to: Adam Graham, PO Box 15913, Boise, Idaho 83715Take the listener survey at http://survey.greatdetectives.netGive us a call at 208-991-4783Follow us on Instagram at http://instagram.com/greatdetectivesFollow us on Twitter @radiodetectivesJoin us again tomorrow for another detective drama from the Golden Age of Radio.

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast
SR's Huge Upset | The Dive Driven by Kia

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2025 88:15


Welcome back to a brand new episode of The Dive Driven by Kia!We saw some wild matches in the first week of Bo5s from the LTA North, including a crazy upset by Shopify Rebellion. If you missed the series, be sure to check out the VODs! The crew also shares their thoughts on the recent online debate surrounding a challenger player and the discussion behind bought accounts and smurfing. Finally, we preview the upcoming Week 5 Bo5 matchups: Disguised vs Dignitas & LYON vs 100 Thieves.Oh, and a show of hands - does anyone still remember the number one rule of League?Timestamps:0:00 - Intro & Race to World First4:24 - Challenger Smurf Convo24:50 - Shopify Rebellion's huge upset over Cloud952:03 - FlyQuest sweeps Team Liquid1:08:59 - Disguised vs Dignitas Preview1:18:38 - LYON vs 100 Thieves Preview

Daily Soap Opera Spoilers by Soap Dirt (GH, Y&R, B&B, and DOOL)
Bold and the Beautiful Predictions: Brooke Rips Out Taylor's Heart | Soap Dirt

Daily Soap Opera Spoilers by Soap Dirt (GH, Y&R, B&B, and DOOL)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2025 8:01


Click to Subscribe: https://bit.ly/Youtube-Subscribe-SoapDirt Bold and the Beautiful predictions hint at Luna Forrester's (Lisa Yamada) devious plans and Brooke Logan's (Katherine Kelly Lang) confrontation with Taylor Hayes (Rebecca Budig). Fans of the soap opera are also anticipating an intimate moment between Hope Logan (Annika Noelle) and Liam Spencer (Scott Clifton), as well as possible tension between Carter Walton (Lawrence Saint-Victor) and Hope.  B&B predictions indicate that Luna is expected to crash a party celebrating the promotion of Will Spencer (Crew Morrow) at Forrester Creations. Disguised in a wig and glasses, Luna hopes to deceive Will into thinking she's Electra Forrester (Laneya Grace). The party also seems to be a potential site of conflict, as Li Finnegan (Naomi Matsuda) discovers Luna's absence and calls Sheila Carter (Kimberlin Brown) in panic. Plus, Bold and the Beautiful spoilers show that a there will be a rift between Brooke and Taylor. Brooke loses her patience with Ridge Forrester's (Thorsten Kaye) indecisiveness and decides to reveal to Taylor that Ridge has promised to be with her. Despite this, Taylor is expected to dismiss Brooke's claim, believing it to be a result of more pressure from her and her family. And, next week's B&B spoilers suggest an intimate moment between Hope and her ex, Liam. Despite her engagement to Carter, Hope's feelings for Liam seem to resurface, hinting at a possible kiss between the two. Consequently, Carter's relationship with Hope appears to be at risk. Lastly, more spoilers for the Bold and the Beautiful reveal that Li is expected to confront Sheila, blaming her for Luna's actions.  Soap Dirt is the most subscribed to YouTube soap opera channel. Visit our Bold and the Beautiful section of Soap Dirt: https://soapdirt.com/category/bold-and-the-beautiful/ Listen to our Podcasts: https://soapdirt.podbean.com/ And Check out our always up-to-date Bold and the Beautiful Spoilers page at: https://soapdirt.com/bold-and-the-beautiful-spoilers/ Check Out our Social Media... Twitter: https://twitter.com/SoapDirtTV Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SoapDirt Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/soapdirt/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@soapdirt Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/soapdirt/

tiktok social media podcasts predictions dirt li checkout soap rips disguised bold and the beautiful ridge forrester katherine kelly lang brooke logan forrester creations thorsten kaye
The Roys Report
Joni Lamb: Damage Control Disguised As Spirituality

The Roys Report

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2025 53:32


Guest Bios Show Transcript Daystar TV President Joni Lamb is once again framing serious allegations as “cancel culture” and “gossip”—while making it sound deeply spiritual. On a recent Table Talk episode, Lamb and her panel repeated familiar churchy lines like, “When we point a finger, we have all the others pointing back,” and “The same measure that they judge with, God will judge them.” But behind the platitudes lies a troubling context: credible claims that Lamb helped cover up the alleged sexual abuse of her granddaughter—claims first reported by The Roys Report last November.

Patriots With Grit
408. Disguised Euthanasia: The Brain Death Fallacy | Dr. Heidi Klessig, MD-Anesthesiologist

Patriots With Grit

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2025 70:12


Meet Dr. Heidi Klessig, retired anesthesiologist and author of The Brain Death Fallacy. In this episode she covers such topics as: Are hospitals pulling the plug on patients too early? Why are doctors and organ donation organizations eager to so quickly pronounce someone as brain dead? What happens to patients who are on their way for organ donation and wake up prior to the procedure? Heidi breaks it all down in this jaw-dropping interview.Follow Dr. Heidi Klessig at: https://www.respectforhumanlife.com--------------------------Check out all of our vendors at: https://patriotswithgrit.com/patriot-partners/ SPONSORS FOR THIS VIDEO❤️ Cardio Miracle - Boost your energy, help support your immune system, and improve your mental clarity-plus use promo code GRIT and save 10% on your order https://cardiomiracle.myshopify.com/discount/GRIT➡️ RNC Store- Immunity is your first line of defense and laetrile/B17 from Richardson Nutritional Center can provide you with natural health supplements to improve your wellness. - Use promo code GRIT and save 10% on your order https://rncstore.com/GRIT

WORDbreak
Prayer Call Opportunities Disguised Possibilities 3 Snowy Day 08_13_2025.mp3

WORDbreak

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2025 22:01


Prayer Call Opportunities Disguised Possibilities 3 Snowy Day 08_13_2025.mp3 by Sherman L. Young, Sr.

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Prayer Call Opportunities Disguised As Impossibilities 1 Sarah 08_11_25.mp3

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Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2025 17:11


Prayer Call Opportunities Disguised As Impossibilities 1 Sarah 08_11_25.mp3 by Sherman L. Young, Sr.

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Prayer Call Opportunities Disguised as Impossibilities 2 David 08_12_2025.mp3

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Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2025 22:01


Prayer Call Opportunities Disguised as Impossibilities 2 David 08_12_2025.mp3 by Sherman L. Young, Sr.

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Prayer Call Opportunities Disguised as Impossibilities 4 Prison Break 08_14_25.mp3

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Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2025 22:40


Prayer Call Opportunities Disguised as Impossibilities 4 Prison Break 08_14_25.mp3 by Sherman L. Young, Sr.

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Prayer Call Opportunities Disguised as Impossibilities 5 With God 08_15_25.mp3

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Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2025 21:06


Prayer Call Opportunities Disguised as Impossibilities 5 With God 08_15_25.mp3 by Sherman L. Young, Sr.

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast
Smurfing Changes, Patch 25.16, and Bo5s are back! | The Dive Driven by Kia

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2025 98:10


Hey everyone, and welcome back to another episode of The Dive Driven by Kia!The crew is fired up to talk about a bunch of exciting changes coming to League. Doom Bots are back! WASD controls are coming soon to PBE! Sheriff Caitlyn and the dev team are on the hunt for smurfs! Boosters, hitchhikers and botted accounts beware. Meteos's top lane alt account is safe (from the devs, at least).Next, Kobe and Azael respond to Palafox from the latest PROS episode (https://youtu.be/1MTPIylw-80?feature=shared). We also break down the meta shakeup in Patch 25.16 and dive into all the new jungle additions plus their early day one win rates. Which change are you most excited to try out?Finally, we preview the LTA North Week 4 matchups: Shopify Rebellion vs. Cloud9 and Team Liquid vs. FlyQuest. If you're hyped to watch the first set of Bo5s in Split 3, head over to the Riot Games Arena this weekend. Grab your tickets in the link down below!https://www.tixr.com/groups/ltanorthTimestamps:0:00 - Intro & Dev Update7:13 - Doom Bots Return8:12 - Smurfing Changes26:02 - Palafox on PROS34:21 - Patch 25.1657:13 - Disguised vs Dignitas 1:00:56 - Shopify Rebellion vs Cloud9 Preview 1:20:44 - Team Liquid vs FlyQuest

Unemployedidealist
281 A Plea for Perspective Disguised as a Curmudgeonly Rant

Unemployedidealist

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2025 30:38


I'm trying not to be easily irritated. So join me trying to figure out if there is a good reason for a trendy phrase that I find significantly irritating.

Church of the Word Lancaster, PA
Witchcraft disguised as Obedience.

Church of the Word Lancaster, PA

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2025 81:26


Witchcraft disguised as Obedience.

The Smerconish Podcast
'Trojan Horse' Border Agents

The Smerconish Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2025 15:41


A Penske truck. Disguised border agents. Day laborers at an L.A. Home Depot. In this episode, Michael unpacks the controversial “Operation Trojan Horse” immigration sting in Los Angeles—and asks if it was an ingenious enforcement tactic or a violation of civil rights. Plus, poll results on Hiroshima/Nagasaki, Peggy Noonan's emotional plea, and the deeper debate over immigration, labor, and legality in America. Listen here, then head over to Smerconish.com and let us know your thoughts.

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast
Jensen Retires & Week 3 Preview | The Dive Driven by Kia

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2025 73:53


Welcome back to another episode of The Dive Driven by Kia! This week, Kobe, Azael and Meteos take a trip down memory lane to celebrate Jensen's legendary career after his recent retirement announcement. We'll miss you Jensen! Next, the crew give their thoughts on balancing champions across multiple roles. Nautilus jungle, anyone? Finally, we dig into this weekend's upcoming LTA North matchups.Tickets are still available for this weekend's LTA North matches at the Riot Games Arena featuring the last round of Best-of-3s. Next week, we'll have some banger Best-of-5s between the upper bracket teams. Get your tickets here: https://www.tixr.com/groups/ltanorthTimestamps:0:00 - Intro & Jensen Retirement12:03 - Game Balance Philosophy21:29 - 100 Thieves vs Shopify Rebellion Preview40:52 - Disguised vs Dignitas Preview51:22 - Team Liquid vs Cloud9 Preview59:12 - LYON vs FlyQuest Preview

Church of the Word Lancaster, PA
Witchcraft disguised as Obedience

Church of the Word Lancaster, PA

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2025 81:26


Witchcraft disguised as Obedience

Digging for Kryptonite: A Superman Fan Journey
And Who Disguised as CLARK KENT — Behind the (HYPNO) GLASSES

Digging for Kryptonite: A Superman Fan Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2025 100:42


Host Anthony Desiato and guest Ed Gross dig into SUPERMAN #330 from the Bronze Age — aka the comic book origin of the hypno-glasses that inspired their use in James Gunn's Superman. Anthony and Ed also offer up a wider survey of the Clark/Superman identity across time and media, from the traditional Pre-Crisis depiction to its Post-Crisis inversion, and the exceptions and nuances along the way.PLUS: Head on over to the Digging for Kryptonite Patreon this Friday (7/25/25) for a FREE BONUS episode — in which Anthony mounts a defense for Superman maintaining a secret identity with guest Perry Constantine (Superhero Cinephiles).Support the show and receive exclusive podcast content at Patreon.com/AnthonyDesiato, including the spinoff podcasts BEYOND METROPOLIS and DIGGING FOR JUSTICE!Visit BCW Supplies and use promo code FSP to save 10% on your next order of comics supplies. FACEBOOK GROUP: Digging for Kryptonite: A Superman Fan GroupFACEBOOK PAGE: @diggingforkryptonitepodINSTAGRAM: @diggingforkryptonitepodTWITTER: @diggingforkrpodBLUESKY: @diggingforkrpod.bsky.socialEMAIL: flatsquirrelproductions@gmail.comWEBSITE: FlatSquirrelProductions.com Digging for Kryptonite is a Flat Squirrel Production. Theme music by Dan Pritchard. Key art by Isaiah Simmons. Mentioned in this episode:Caline: A Vlada Tale of the DamnedThis Podcast Will Never DieHang On To Your Shorts Film FestivalFat Moose ComicsAw Yeah ComicsAlways Hold On To SmallvilleSingle Bound Podcast

Church of the Word Lancaster, PA
Witchcraft disguised as Obedience.

Church of the Word Lancaster, PA

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2025 77:41


Witchcraft disguised as Obedience.

Digital Marketing for Coaches & Consultants
#210: Why This Transformational Novel Disguised as Self-Help Is Converting Readers into Their Most Authentic Selves with Angel & Rocio

Digital Marketing for Coaches & Consultants

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2025 25:34


Forget everything you know about transformation books. Angel and Rocio cracked the code on why traditional self-help fails—and created something completely different. Their novel "The Orchid" uses storytelling to slip past your mental defenses and deliver profound change through the back door. What you'll discover: The Hollywood secret to making transformation stick (it's not what you think) Why entertainment beats coaching for creating lasting change How six women's stories unlock your own hidden potential The mirror technique that turns you into your own best advocate Why being "a little crazy" in business pays off big This isn't another cookie-cutter approach. It's a movement that's already gone global, with readers from 18 to 80 saying the same thing: "I couldn't put it down." Ready to stop fighting your growth and start enjoying it?   Join The Live Well Earn Well Mastermind™ Today: https://livewellearnwellmastermind.com/    Let's hop on a quick Zoom call so I can focus on your business and offer my help: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0tdO2urTooHNLQuGo9wdTbJHJcjXoghF8N#/registration    Oh yeah, and please join free Facebook community here: Heartrepreneurs.com   Want More!? Subscribe to this podcast on your favorite podcast platform… Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/live-well-earn-well-for-coaches-consultants/id1585895518  Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5OjsOxN7MqwKio4Ae6vSMQ  Or anywhere else podcasts are found!    Watch all the episodes and more to gain more insight on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@coachterri/videos

The Tom and Curley Show
Hour 4: John's friend disguised himself as an EMT to get on stage at Live Aid 

The Tom and Curley Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2025 29:11


6pm: The Foreword:  Message in a Bottle // Guest - Brad & Anita Squires - Message in a Bottle // A love note in a bottle is found years later, an ocean away // Today in History // 1985 - Live Aid concerts in Philly & London // John’s friend disguised himself as an EMT to get on stage at Live Aid 

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast
The Best MSI Ever? | The Dive Driven by Kia

The Dive - A League of Legends Esports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2025 50:38


Welcome back to a brand new episode of The Dive Driven by Kia. Chronicler joins Azael and Kobe right after the insanity of the MSI Finals! They discuss the future of Fearless within the competitive scene, cover FlyQuest's intense series against BilliBilli Gaming, and reflect on their experience at MSI. Thank you to the fans who showed up for an epic MSI in Vancouver, and for all the listeners who tuned into these episodes!With MSI now concluded, get ready as the LTA North returns July 26th with FlyQuest taking on Disguised at 1PM PT/4PM ET, followed by Cloud9 vs Lyon.Timestamps:0:00 Intro and T1 vs Gen.G Finals Recap 21:46 Doran was not the problem27:29 FlyQuest vs BiliBili Gaming42:52 MSI Memories & Fan Appreciation

The New Age Coach
Personal Problems Disguised as Business Problems

The New Age Coach

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2025 13:56


Will talks about deep 1:1 conversations he has with some of his private clients, and questions that you can ask yourself as well when it comes to building your business and why you might feel stuck.

Lisa Harper's Back Porch Theology
An Antidote to Self-Centeredness Disguised as Spirituality with Dr. Trevin Wax

Lisa Harper's Back Porch Theology

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2025 51:51


Purchase A Jesus-Shaped Life here. During today's conversation on Back Porch Theology Alli and I are diving into the swampy waters of ideology with Dr. Trevin Wax. Trevin will help us understand and learn how to better practice what some have called counter-catechesis – that is sorting out our Christian belief system in a thoughtful way that effectively says, “You've heard it communicated like this on a popular podcast or Instagram reel, but now let's look at what the Bible actually says about that issue.” Grab a caffeinated beverage and a hearty snack, plus your Bible and a notebook if you've got one handy, and then come pull up a chair on the porch with us. We're really glad you're here!

Ukraine: The Latest
Russia ‘disguised' its war dead as Ukrainians & Trump ‘may' meet Zelensky at key NATO summit in The Hague

Ukraine: The Latest

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2025 67:44


Day 1,217.Today, as the NATO summit gets underway in The Hague, we look at how the alliance is shifting the goalposts on how members' contributions should be counted. We report on last night's closed door session with President Zelensky - which we attended - and we hear the panel event Francis moderated recently at the Black Sea Security Forum in Odesa.Contributors:Dominic Nicholls (Associate Editor of Defence). @DomNicholls on X.Francis Dearnley (Executive Editor for Audio). @FrancisDearnley on X.With thanks to our panel: Tony Abbott, Vadym Prystaiko, Dr Robert Seely and Richard Kemp.Content Referenced:See us at Chalke History Festival THIS FRIDAY (27th):https://www.chalkefestival.com/SIGN UP TO THE NEW ‘UKRAINE: THE LATEST' WEEKLY NEWSLETTER:https://secure.telegraph.co.uk/customer/secure/newsletter/ukraine/ Each week, Dom Nicholls and Francis Dearnley answer your questions, provide recommended reading, and give exclusive analysis and behind-the-scenes insights – plus maps of the frontlines and diagrams of weapons to complement our daily reporting. It's free for everyone, including non-subscribers.Subscribe: telegraph.co.uk/ukrainethelatestEmail: ukrainepod@telegraph.co.uk Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Eternally Amy - A Sober Mom of Eight's Journey from Jail to Joy
Breaking Free from Disguised Dependencies: Emotional Sobriety and Recovery

Eternally Amy - A Sober Mom of Eight's Journey from Jail to Joy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2025 54:26


In this episode, Amy dives into the concept of Disguised Dependencies: the subtle emotional and behavioral patterns that can quietly undermine our recovery, self-worth, and relationships. Through candid reflection and humor, Amy explores how unnoticed dependencies—from rituals like infrared saunas to the comfort of Lifesavers Orange Mints—can shape our sense of safety, identity, and connection, even after achieving sobriety.Key Points:Understanding Disguised Dependencies: Amy defines disguised dependencies as the often unseen emotional and physical habits that we rely on for comfort and stability, highlighting how they can persist beneath the surface even in recovery.The Role of Self-Awareness: She emphasizes the importance—and challenge—of developing self-awareness, sharing her own journey of digging deep and facing uncomfortable truths about motives, coping mechanisms, and the need for approval.The False Self & Emotional Dependency: Drawing on Alan Berger's insights and her own experience, Amy unpacks the concept of the “false self”—the persona we create to manipulate others' responses—and how it feeds emotional reliance on external validation.Vulnerability & Acceptance: Amy encourages embracing vulnerability and releasing the need for perfection, recounting her personal struggles with insecurity, loneliness, and the urge to control, especially as a mom and woman in recovery.Tools for Growth: Through practical exercises (like sentence completion to uncover disguised dependencies), Amy provides listeners with actionable ways to identify, understand, and begin to heal from emotional dependencies.Faith, Motherhood, & ADHD: The episode weaves in Amy's reflections on her evolving spirituality, the complexities of parenting in a tech-driven era, and the impact of ADHD on habits and routines.Humor & Humanity: With her signature blend of lightheartedness and depth, Amy shares relatable anecdotes about everything from Botox to love languages, reminding listeners that growth comes from awareness, not perfection.Practicing Emotional Sobriety: The path to emotional freedom, Amy says, is one of ongoing curiosity, resilience, and self-compassion—letting go of blame, embracing imperfection, and making room for the true self to emerge.Hosted by Amy Liz HarrisonBuy Amy's Books: https://amzn.to/3ys8nuvhttp://amylizharrison.com/Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3Lgxy8FSubscribe on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3vHHHoi#EternallyAmy #DisguisedDependencies #RecoveryJourney #EmotionalSobriety #SelfAwareness #PersonalGrowth #Spirituality #Motherhood #ADHD #Vulnerability #Resilience #Authenticity #EternallyAmy #Recovery

Amusing Jews
Ep. 106: Who was Jack Ruby? – with biographer Danny Fingeroth

Amusing Jews

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2025 40:01


Danny Fingeroth is a biographer, cultural historian, and former writer and editor at Marvel Comics whose latest book is Jack Ruby: The Many Faces of Oswald's Assassin. He also authored A Marvelous Life: The Amazing Story of Stan Lee; Disguised as Clark Kent: Jews, Comics, and the Creation of the Superhero; and Superman on the Couch: What Superheroes Really Tell Us About Ourselves and Our Society. Co-hosts: Jonathan Friedmann & Danny Fingeroth Producer-engineer: Mike Tomren The Many Faces of Jack Rubyhttps://www.chicagoreviewpress.com/jack-ruby-products-9781641609128.php Danny's websitehttps://dannyfingeroth.com/ Amusing Jews Merch Storehttps://www.amusingjews.com/merch#!/ Subscribe to the Amusing Jews podcasthttps://www.spreaker.com/show/amusing-jews Adat Chaverim – Congregation for Humanistic Judaism, Los Angeleshttps://www.humanisticjudaismla.org/ Cool Shul Cultural Communityhttps://www.coolshul.org/ Atheists United Studioshttps://www.atheistsunited.org/au-studios

Football for kids

Chapter 2: Lady Patricia – A Wig, a Worry, and a Very Weird House Charlie's back on the case! This time, his summer holiday detective work has him teaming up with the eccentric Mrs Amber once again. Disguised as a parking warden and a Swedish lad named Elof (complete with curly wigs and stick-on moustaches), the unlikely duo set off to investigate their first suspect – the mysterious Lady Patricia, owner of a Rottweiler who's as fancy as she is. But things quickly get weird. When their search for 405 Twirler Avenue hits a dead end, they squeeze through a hidden gap between two fences and stumble into a secret world – complete with a disguised house, a trapdoor, and a slide that dumps them right into Lady Patricia's underground lair, face to face with a confused Rottweiler in a bonnet. Cornered by a suspicious Lady Patricia and her fashion-forward pooch, Charlie and Mrs Amber have to think fast – and then things get even more bonkers when their local postman comes crashing in through the same secret slide! Can Charlie, Mrs Amber, and the nosey postman convince Lady Patricia to spill what she knows about the missing Famous Cup? Or have they just stumbled into a trap even trickier than they imagined? Grab your disguises and steady your nerves – this is one wild ride you won't want to miss! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Situation with Michael Brown
6-14-25 The Weekend Hour 2: No Kings Just Another Anarchist Movement Disguised As Protests

The Situation with Michael Brown

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2025 37:08 Transcription Available


American Conservative University
Glenn Beck Special - LA Riots: The Marxist Revolution Disguised as Anti-ICE “Protests”

American Conservative University

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2025 48:06


LA Riots: The Marxist Revolution Disguised as Anti-ICE “Protests” | Glenn TV Remember this old prediction from Glenn's chalkboard on Fox News: “Marxists, anarchists, radical leftists, and Islamists will work together to destroy capitalism and the West”? Well, that movement has cascaded all over the world and has now arrived on American streets. As Los Angeles continues to spiral into violent riots, more anti-ICE demonstrations are popping up all over the country in cities like Chicago, San Antonio, Atlanta, and New York. Democrat politicians and rioters blame the violence on President Trump's deportation agenda, but the chaos isn't organic — it's well-organized and well-funded. Interim U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California Bill Essayli joins to separate fact from fiction on what actually ignited the protests. He also reveals an ongoing investigation into the organizers and their sources of funding and gives an update on the FBI manhunt for the suspect who hurled rocks at law enforcement vehicles. Watch this video at- https://youtu.be/lmSR2Eybo2I?si=0NtnArTwKZwF4Tin Glenn Beck 1.48M subscribers 93,226 views Premiered 15 hours ago #glennbeck #glenntv #blazetv ► Click HERE to subscribe to Glenn Beck on YouTube: https://bit.ly/2UVLqhL ► Click HERE to subscribe to BlazeTV: get.blazetv.com/glenn ► Click HERE to subscribe to BlazeTV YouTube:    / @blazetv   ► Click HERE to sign up to Glenn's newsletter: https://www.glennbeck.com/st/Morning_... Connect with Glenn on Social Media:   / glennbeck     / glennbeck     / glennbeck   #glennbeck #glenntv #blazetv #theblaze #lariots #marxist #marxistrevolution #colorrevolution #antiice #iceriots #billessayli #nokings

The Nonmicrowaved Truth With C.L. Whiteside
The Poison Disguised as Culture

The Nonmicrowaved Truth With C.L. Whiteside

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2025 22:54


In this episode, we'll confront a hard non-microwaved truth: Not everything culture celebrates is harmless. From viral mantras like “live your truth” and “do you” to deeper societal shifts around race, justice, identity, and pleasure—have we been drinking poison dressed in the clothes of freedom, fun, or fairness?Matthew 24:38,39Proverbs 6:27–29Matthew 6:33Luke 23:18–21Mark 9:38–41Philippians 3:6–11You can now also WATCH C.L.! That's right: C.L. is also recording The Nonmicrowaved Truth on video! Just go to our Time of Grace video site (timeofgrace.org/TV), search for the Time of Grace app on your devices, or watch on C.L.'s YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfmL7jUfMBm0FKV-I0Op_Vg or on Time of Grace's YouTube channel: https://bit.ly/3Hcyk5JAbout "The Nonmicrowaved Truth":How fast do you have to have "IT"? Our culture tells us to find a microwave to speed up the process. C.L. Whiteside, a man who sees and hears multiple perspectives through his life of coaching sports, serving in education, and attempting to conform to Christ, searches for the nonmicrowaved truth. C.L. gets that what's cool and acceptable now, may not be cool and acceptable tomorrow—and most importantly, may not be what's best.Hit up C.L. on social media:- Twitter or Instagram: @ChampionLife23- TikTok: @clwhiteside 

Work Stoppage
Ep 261 - Mismanagement Disguised as Innovation

Work Stoppage

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2025 88:29


We start with some check-ins Starbucks' war on workers, the fight by workers at Butler Hospital, and the continuing cruel attacks on workers by the Trump Administration. We've also got headlines this week from Duke, Western Washington University, Sutphen Corp, Golden Gate Nursing Home, and UPMC. Canadian port workers in British Columbia are fighting attempts to replace their jobs with robots. Farm workers in New York are fighting the brazen refusal of farm owners to abide by their legal contract. A recent piece in Labor Notes reports on efforts by both the SEIU and the Machinists to return their union siblings home after being abducted by ICE. Finally, video game workers have been organizing in bigger numbers every year, and this week saw workers at Zenimax reach a new milestone with a first contract. Join the discord: discord.gg/tDvmNzX  Follow the pod at instagram.com/workstoppage, @WorkStoppagePod on Twitter,  John @facebookvillain, and Lina @solidaritybee

Crime Alert with Nancy Grace
Prison Guard Lets the "Devil In The Ozarks" Escape Disguised as Officer Crime Alert 3pm 05.30.25

Crime Alert with Nancy Grace

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2025 6:11 Transcription Available


Grant Hardin, "The Devil of the Ozarks" is still on the lam after walking out of prison disguised as a law enforcement officer! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Pursuit with James Griffin
How to Spot a Lie Disguised as Truth | The Pursuit with James Griffin

The Pursuit with James Griffin

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2025 63:14


In this episode, James, Carlos and Matt talk about how to spot false teachers, and the consequences of believing their lies.  To submit a question, send us a DM on Instagram or Facebook.Crosspoint City Church exists to relentlessly pursue those far from God to help them know and follow Jesus. To help support this mission and work, visit https://www.mycpcc.com/giveTo learn more about all of our locations or what is coming up at Crosspoint City, check out https://www.crosspointcity.com/ or follow us on your favorite social platform @crosspointcity