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Amy and Sandy joins me and we shared our experiences from the Red Carpet at PaleyFest. In this episode, you will hear interviews from Ralph Macchio, the creators Jon Hurwitz, Josh Heald and Hayden Schlossberg, Xolo Mariduena, Gianni DeCenzo, Tanner Buchanan, fight choreographer Don Lee, and Mary Mouser. Twitter: @CobraKaiPod / Instagram: @CobraKaiKompanion Email: CobraKaiPod@gmail.com Cobra Kai Kompanion Website Merch store: ckkompanion.threadless.com The Kompanion Network Group
The OTRNow Radio Program 2024-022The Shadow Of Fu Manchu. August 02, 1939. Program #37. Radio Attractions syndication. Sponsored by: Music fill for local commercial insert. Escape from the house of Fu by sliding across on a wire. Hanley Stafford, Gale Gordon. The Shadow Of Fu Manchu. August 04, 1939. Program #38. Radio Attractions syndication. Sponsored by: Music fill for local commercial insert. "The Fiery Hand.". Hanley Stafford, Gale Gordon. Calling All Cars. March 28, 1934. Program #18. CBS Pacific net (Don Lee net). "The Spinoza Case". Sponsored by: Rio Grande Oil. A pyromaniac has set a fire that has done $147,000 worth of damage. The story is introduced by Chief James Davis of the Los Angeles police department. The Spotlight Revue. December 3, 1948. CBS net. Commercials deleted. The first tune is, "On Notre Dame." The band also plays, "It's Magic." Guest Frank Sinatra sings, "Once In Love With Amy" and, "Prisoner Of Love" (with embellishments by Spike). Spike Jones and The City Slickers, George Rock, Doodles Weaver, Dorothy Shay, Freddie Morgan, Dick Morgan, Frank Sinatra, Dick Joy (announcer). The Anacin Hollywood Star Theatre. December 18, 1948. NBC net. "Fogbound". Sponsored by: Anacin, BiSoDol Mints. A romance set in San Francisco. A beautiful and wealthy girl from Nob Hill falls for a bitter piano player in a bar. Helena Carter admits that this is her first time before a microphone and before an audience. Helena Carter, Jack Webb, Douglas Fairbanks Jr. (host), Donald Woods, Martha Wilkerson (writer), Stacy Harris, Ken Peters (announcer). The Adventures Of Philip Marlowe. June 17, 1947. NBC net. "The Red Wind". Sponsored by: Pepsodent. The first show of the series, as a summer replacement for Bob Hope. The same story was re-done a year later with a different cast (see cat. #8612). Forty-one matched pearls with a diamond propeller clasp...a good reason for murder! The show is referred to as "The Pepsodent Show." Van Heflin, Lyn Murray (composer, conductor), Raymond Chandler (creator, writer), Milton Geiger (adaptor), Lurene Tuttle, Wendell Niles (announcer), William Conrad, James Fonda (producer, director), William Johnstone, Harry Bartell.Macabre. December 11, 1961. Program #5. AFRTS-FEN origination. "The Midnight Horseman". A good screamer. A painting of a black knight...with occult powers! The announcer mentions that it's Halloween, indicating a possible rebroadcast at a later date. Al Lepage (announcer).
Capcom had a pretty awesome spotlight. Granted - lots of stuff from last year, but announcing demos for a lot of them was very cool. Personally, I got the main thing I wanted which was more info about Onimusha. Plus we got more eyes on with Capcom Fighting Collection 2 (which I couldn't remember the name of because ya boy started running again and I made the mistake of doing it too close to recording time. Find me here: a little breathless, thirsty and apparently woozy - BUT I'LL GET GUD I SWEAR). Beyond those two games, of course we should all be excited for Okami 2 and most of us are very excited by the new Monster Hunter. Other whoozy brain farts (new band name): The Don Lee movies I was talking about Binging was the Round Up franchise. Very Fun, just solid cop movie shit and Don Lee is a tank as always. This franchise has the added benefit that many of the great Korean character actors are featured through out and you'll recognize them all over Korean cinema and TV after you watch this.
In dieser Folge sprechen Robin (Korean Movies Germany) und ich darüber, auf welche südkoreanischen Filme und Serien wir uns dieses Jahr freuen können. Beispielsweise startet auf Netflix der Actionfilm Bogotá, der aufgrund des Schauplatzes in Kolumbien einen Blick wert ist. Dieses Jahr wird es keinen Roundup Film geben, dafür vermöbelt Don Lee in Holy Night: Demon Hunters übernatürliche Kreaturen. Dark Nuns ist ein Spin off vom 2015 erschienenen Film The Priests und kurz vor unserer Aufnahme wurde bekannt, dass auch der neue Park Chan-wook Film No Other Choice in diesem Jahr erscheinen wird. Außerdem erwartet uns am 27. Juni die letzte Staffel Squid Game. Noch mehr über kommende Filme und Serien könnt ihr im Podcast erfahren.E-Mail: kinokorea@gmx.deKino Korea auf Steady unterstützenGeld per Paypal sendenInstagram: @kinokorea_podcastLetterboxd: kim_chiZu Gast und Co-Host in dieser Folge:Robin von Korean Movies Germany (Instagram)Korean Movies Germany (Discord)
It's that time of year again! The whole Flow Roll gang gets together to talk about their favorite picks for TV and Movies of 2024. ****************** NMCD Civil War Fredo 5. Deadpool and Wolverine 4. alien rombulous 3. Flow 2. Saturday Night 1. Anorac Lechuga 3. The Count of Montecristo 2. My Old Ass 1. Dune 2 Primo 5. Beetlejuice 4. Bad Boys: Ride or Die 3. Godszilla new empire 2. Godzilla Minus One (oops) 1. Wolverine Xmen whatever (Deadpool and Wolverine) Edgar 5. Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In 4. The Roundup: Punishment (Ma Dong-seok, Don Lee) 3. Transformers One 2. The fall guy 1. Deadpool and Wolverine *********** TV *********** NMCD 5. kevin can f*ck himself 4. Griselda 3. Dark Matter 2. Severance 1. 3 Body Problem Fredo 5. Lovely Runner 4. Fallout 3. Dandadan 2. The Penguin 1. Shogun Honorable mention Succession Beautiful runner Primo 5. The Penguin 4. The Bear 3. Only Murders in the Bear 2. Star Wars: Skeleton Crew 1. X-Men '97 Honorable Mention Tulsa Kings Reacher Edgar 5. The Inside Man (Netflix - Ted Danson) 4. Shogun (on Hulu) 3. My Hero Academia 2. Nobody wants this (Netflix - Kristen bell) 1. Dandadan Honorable Mention Like water for chocolate Creature Commandos Bookie Lechuga 5. Fallout 4. Dandadan 3. X-Men '97 2. The Penguin 1. Shogun Honorable Mention Pantheon Say Nothing English Teacher Batman: The Cap Crusader Dishonorable Mention The Bear True Detective ********************************************** Please feel free to send your recommendations via email at theflowrollpodcast@gmail.com. Follow Us > Edgar OtraVez on Instagram: https://instagram.com/edgarotravez/ > The Flow Roll on Instagram: https://instagram.com/theflowroll/ > The Flow Roll Website: https://TheFlowRollPodcast.com/ > Fredo on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fredosvideogames/ > Cousin Primo on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_real_cousinprimo/ > Not-My-Cousin Dan on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dantasticsizzler/ ********************************************** Music > "My Name" by Swif7 can be found on Epidemic Sound **********************************************
Die warmen Herbsttage des Septembers und Oktobers sind vorbei und langsam ist überall die Kälte eingezogen. Die perfekte Jahreszeit, um sich aufs Sofa zu hauen und eine Menge Filme und Serien nachzuholen. Deshalb liefern wir euch in dieser neuen Ausgabe von HEIMKINO IM SAAL allerlei Empfehlungen von Action über Thriller bis hin zu Comedy und verschiedensten, aktuellen Anime. Sei es die Backpfeifen-Parade von Don Lee in THE ROUNDUP: PUNISHMENT, korrupte Polizisten in REBEL RIDGE, blutiges Gemetzel unter Assassinen oder viele, viele andere Tipps - in dieser Heimkino-Episode sollte für jeden Geschmack etwas dabei sein. Worauf wartet ihr? Gönnt euch die neue Episode von Ruhe im Saal und danach ab auf die Couch mit euch!——
On the Labor Day Special from CBS News Radio hosted by Gil Gross, labor unions are peaking in popularity after decades in decline. And that means we are also seeing more labor strikes over that same time period. Joseph McCartin, professor in the Department of History and the executive director of the Kalmanovitz Initiative for Labor and the Working Poor at Georgetown University explains why this labor negotiating tool is on the uprise.Gil Gross examines the history of labor through music, profiling the songs and stories that have propelled the labor movement over the decades.Record numbers of journalists are being captured or killed across the globe in recent years. The CEO of The Committee to Protect Journalist Jodie Ginsberg is at the forefront of the effort to keep journalists safe from harm as they conduct their very important work around the world.As the longevity of our lives continues to increase, many retirees are now discovering their second careers and having the time of their lives pursuing their new vocations. Mike Cerre, founder of Nexttracks, tells the story of a man whose love of music and passion for travel led him over a thousand miles south from wintery Minnesota to the hotspots of Havana.Finally, business leaders are trying to woo workers back to the office, while many are reluctant to change their work-from-home lifestyle. LA Times reporter Don Lee has researched the productivity of remote workers, hybrid workers, and the old Nine-to-Fivers, to see which scenario is the most productive.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Krallen und Katanas: wir schnitzeln uns durch DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Mit Dominik, der sich zu Andi und Schröck in die Videothek gesellt. Endlich mal wieder. Und wo er schon mal da ist gehen wir auch gleich noch auf die Frage ein, ob wir nun Superhelden- oder Marvel-müde sind. Aber natürlich auch noch auf ene ganze Reihe von anderen Filmen. Zum Beispiel weitere Kinostarts wie ZWEI ZU EINS, die Theaterstück-Adaption DIE ERMITTLUNG oder die Wiederaufführung von PARIS, TEXAS. Daneben geht es selbstverständlich auch noch um ein paar Streaming- und Mediatheken-Tipps wie den neuen Guy Ritchie aka THE MINISTRY OF UNGENTLEMANLY WARFARE, den letzten John Woo aka SILENT NIGHT: STUMME RACHE, den vorletzten Don Lee aka THE ROUNDUP: NO WAY OUT, die gefühlte Twitter-Diskussion aka BODIES BODIES BODIES oder die schlimmste Tante der Welt aka M3GAN. Dazu stoßen dann noch Klassiker wie HALLOWEEN - DIE NACHT DES GRAUENS, noch ältere Klassiker wie ES GESCHAH AM HELLICHTEN TAG oder eben DIE BLECHTROMMEL aber auch neuere Streifen wie BORG VS: MCENROE oder THE WAVE - DIE TODESWELLE, was wie gewohnt durch die Filme abgerundet wird, die die Drei zuletzt gesehen haben. Infolgedessen wird mal wieder über Tim Burtons BEETLEJUICE geschwärmt, es geht ein weiteres Mal um SPEAK NO EVIL und weil es mal wieder sein muss, dürfen auch good ol' Alfred Hitchcock und DER UNSICHTBARE DRITTE ein Thema sein. Damit dürften wir dem Motto „Maximaler Einsatz“ hoffentlich gerecht werden. Und selbst wenn nicht, war oder ist es eine sehr ausgelassene und kurzweilige Runde geworden, bei der wir Euch nun viel Spaß wünschen. Das gilt dann auch für jeden Film, ob nun im Kino der auf der Couch. Demnach: bleibt gesund, gut drauf und vergesst Eure Lieblingssocken. In diesem Sinne: upsi, pupsi. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this episode of Eclipse on Tap, we welcome first time guest, Don Lee to Pub 39A Studios and welcome back Bryan Oberymeyer to discuss their 2024 totality experience in Ohio. From seeking out mountain bike trails in advance, to finding the perfect spot for viewing totality, their stories provide great conversation on Episode 77. Available now on your favorite podcast platforms. Give us a follow on our social media pages at @eclipseontap [Episode recorded live from Pub 39A on 6/6/24. Produced by Matt Deighton]
Time Stamps: 0:00 - Welcome Don Lee 3:03: - Allergy season in ATL 5;51 - Building the stunts from the script 13:47 - reppin your stunt team 17:41 - Making time to watch 18:18 - Importance of family 24:30 - Career turning point 28:53 - Where do Xolo and Jacob rank? 31:42 - Working with Don Lee on set 40:30 - Learning choreo 42:00 - Martial arts to stunting pipeline 46:29 - Advice for next gen 48:35 - LL Madness FALL IN! This week, we have one of our lobitos on the Lone Lobos podcast, the team welcomes Cobra Kai stunt coordinator Don Lee. Xolo Maridueña and Jacob Bertrand delve into how fight choreography goes from the page to the screen. Don shares stories about his supportive family and his first encounter with William Zabka at 14 years old. The trio also reminisce on their big fight scene from season 4 and create their martial arts madness bracket. And, Don gives some friendly advice for the next generation of martial artists and stunt actors.
Rhode Island School of Design student Carina Zhang is a winner in the L. Ron Hubbard Illustrators of the Future Contest earning them a trip to Hollywood for a week-long master-class workshop, an awards event and their winning art will be published in the international bestselling anthology, L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume 40. The awards event will be April 25th at the Taglyan Complex in Hollywood, California. Carina (Jiayun) Zhang is a US-based Chinese artist studying at the Rhode Island School of Design. Their expertise lies in interdisciplinary creative health works, encompassing projects for educational institutions, hospitals, galleries, and publications. Carina strives to improve cultural humility in illustrations, explore the therapeutic aspect of the art-making process in clinical use, and use storytelling to bring joy to the world. Best known for celebrating the whimsical minds and lovely imperfections of life, their artistic journey revolves around the core principles of play and therapy, employing a kaleidoscope of colors and diverse mediums to give voice to their emotions. As Carina grows alongside their art, they aspire for their art to resonate with the intricacies of the human heart, and honor the beauty within its multifaceted nature. Through their creations, they invite you to embrace the joyful dance of life and revel in the magnificence of our shared complexity. Storm Humbert is a science fiction and fantasy writer from a small town called Fayette (literally a one stoplight town) in northwest Ohio near the Michigan border. He did his undergraduate studies at The Ohio State University, where he earned a degree in English literature with minors in creative writing and theater. For two years after he finished his bachelor's degree, Storm worked odd jobs ranging from newspaper editing to creating animated digital advertisements (and basically anything in between). Storm later earned an MFA from Temple University in Philadelphia, where he had the opportunity to study under Samuel R. Delany, Don Lee, and other great instructors. He has taught a variety of writing classes at Temple University and Sienna Heights University in Adrian, Michigan. He currently lives in Michigan with his wife, Casey, cats: Chicken Nugget (Nugget for short) and Honey Mustard, and is a professional legal writer, while he continues his own writing. Storm is also currently teaching a workshop at his local library in Westland, and local writers can sign up here https://westlandlibrary.evanced.info/signup/EventDetails?EventId=17672&backTo=Calendar&startDate=2023/03/16. Chris Arias of Cartago, Costa Rica is a winner in the L. Ron Hubbard Illustrators of the Future Contest and was honored among the twelve winning artists and twelve winning writers at the Taglyan Complex in Hollywood, California on April 28th 2023. Chris created illustrations for the story, "The Fall of Crodenra M" by T.J. Knight--a Writers of the Future winner. The story and illustration along with the other writers' and illustrators' stories and art is published in the international bestselling anthology, L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume 39 which was officially released on May 16th 2023. Chris Arias was born in 1997 in Cartago, Costa Rica, in a small farming town on the slopes of an extinct volcano. Chris has been passionate about art ever since he could hold a pencil in his right hand. He was inspired by the fantastic stories about goblins, witches, knights, and dragons that his mother told him during their long walks through the local mountains and forests.
Rhode Island School of Design student Carina Zhang is a winner in the L. Ron Hubbard Illustrators of the Future Contest earning them a trip to Hollywood for a week-long master-class workshop, an awards event and their winning art will be published in the international bestselling anthology, L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume 40. The awards event will be April 25th at the Taglyan Complex in Hollywood, California. Carina (Jiayun) Zhang is a US-based Chinese artist studying at the Rhode Island School of Design. Their expertise lies in interdisciplinary creative health works, encompassing projects for educational institutions, hospitals, galleries, and publications. Carina strives to improve cultural humility in illustrations, explore the therapeutic aspect of the art-making process in clinical use, and use storytelling to bring joy to the world. Best known for celebrating the whimsical minds and lovely imperfections of life, their artistic journey revolves around the core principles of play and therapy, employing a kaleidoscope of colors and diverse mediums to give voice to their emotions. As Carina grows alongside their art, they aspire for their art to resonate with the intricacies of the human heart, and honor the beauty within its multifaceted nature. Through their creations, they invite you to embrace the joyful dance of life and revel in the magnificence of our shared complexity. Storm Humbert is a science fiction and fantasy writer from a small town called Fayette (literally a one stoplight town) in northwest Ohio near the Michigan border. He did his undergraduate studies at The Ohio State University, where he earned a degree in English literature with minors in creative writing and theater. For two years after he finished his bachelor's degree, Storm worked odd jobs ranging from newspaper editing to creating animated digital advertisements (and basically anything in between). Storm later earned an MFA from Temple University in Philadelphia, where he had the opportunity to study under Samuel R. Delany, Don Lee, and other great instructors. He has taught a variety of writing classes at Temple University and Sienna Heights University in Adrian, Michigan. He currently lives in Michigan with his wife, Casey, cats: Chicken Nugget (Nugget for short) and Honey Mustard, and is a professional legal writer, while he continues his own writing. Storm is also currently teaching a workshop at his local library in Westland, and local writers can sign up here https://westlandlibrary.evanced.info/signup/EventDetails?EventId=17672&backTo=Calendar&startDate=2023/03/16. Chris Arias of Cartago, Costa Rica is a winner in the L. Ron Hubbard Illustrators of the Future Contest and was honored among the twelve winning artists and twelve winning writers at the Taglyan Complex in Hollywood, California on April 28th 2023. Chris created illustrations for the story, "The Fall of Crodenra M" by T.J. Knight--a Writers of the Future winner. The story and illustration along with the other writers' and illustrators' stories and art is published in the international bestselling anthology, L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume 39 which was officially released on May 16th 2023. Chris Arias was born in 1997 in Cartago, Costa Rica, in a small farming town on the slopes of an extinct volcano. Chris has been passionate about art ever since he could hold a pencil in his right hand. He was inspired by the fantastic stories about goblins, witches, knights, and dragons that his mother told him during their long walks through the local mountains and forests.
Episode 1 of Anders' new podcast. Special thanks to Jules Taylor for producing, Jose Carneiro for the logo and Don Lee for recording the intro and quotes from Walter Mondale. Subscribe to The Vanquished: https://open.spotify.com/show/0MaaYMTaw1z5mpNy35RbDv
On this segment of "Real Talk", the Ring Gang crew review one of the latest offerings from Netflix: Badland Hunters
Héctor ya ha visto el último estreno de Netflix, la coreana "Cazadores en tierra inhóspita". Con el reparte guantazos Don Lee de protagonista. ¿Estamos delante de otra mediocridad de Netflix? Ya sabéis, ¡Escuchad y opinad, Amig@s! También nos podéis encontrar aquí: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/52i1iqZ56ACal18GPkCxiW Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/es/podcast/los-tres-amigos/id1198252523 Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3zK2XsnpHDGRujSTWHpL8Q Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/e0b56d4f-4537-47e0-a252-9dfe56b5a490/los-tres-amigos Grupo de Telegram: https://t.me/LosTresAmigos https://www.facebook.com/LosTresAmigosPodcast/ X / Twitter: @tresamigospod Instagram: lostresamigospodcast Threads: lostresamigospodcast Letterbox: https://letterboxd.com/LosTresAmigos/
Adkins Undisputed: The Most Complete Scott Adkins Podcast in the World
Andy Gorham and Brandon Streussnig join Mike and Vyce to talk the meatiness of Alan Ritchson and Don Lee
Jean Shepherd was born on July 26th, 1921 on the South Side of Chicago to Jean and Anna Shepherd. He grew up in Hammond, Indiana, which according to Shep was a “tough and mean” industrial city. As an adolescent, Shepherd worked as a mail boy in a steel mill. He began his radio career at the age of sixteen, doing weekly sportscasts for WJOB in Hammond. That job led to juvenile roles on network radio in Chicago, including that of Billy Fairchild in the serial “Jack Armstrong, the All American Boy.” One of the programs that later came to symbolize Shepherd's childhood, thanks to his 1983 film A Christmas Story, was Red Ryder. During World War II, Shepherd served in the U.S. Army Signal Corps, installing radar equipment and furthering a lifelong dislike for authority figures. After the war, he studied acting in Chicago at the Goodman Theatre and briefly engineering and psychology at Indiana University. He left Indiana without a degree to take a radio gig in Cincinnati, which led him to a series of radio jobs, each better than the previous. After working at WTOD in Toledo, Ohio, Shepherd spent the early 1950s at WSAI and WLW in Cincinnati, and had a late-night broadcast on KYW in Philadelphia. He moved to New York for WOR and debuted on February 26th, 1955. WOR is a fifty-thousand watt clear-channel AM station and was the flagship affiliate of the Mutual Broadcasting System. Mutual Broadcasting had formed on September 28th, 1934 as a cooperative of stations WOR New York, WGN Chicago, WXYZ Detroit, and WLW Cincinnati. The members shared telephone-line transmission facilities and agreed to collectively enter into contracts with advertisers for their network shows. After a deal with Don Lee's chain of west coast networks, Mutual went coast-to-coast on December 29th, 1936. The other major networks, ABC, CBS, and NBC, were corporations. When World War II ended, domestic manufacturing restrictions were lifted. TV became a focal point as the other networks pumped their radio profits into the new medium. Mutual's cooperative status meant it never had the resources to move into TV, although affiliates like WOR did run a local TV station in New York. Mutual remained a cooperative until 1952 when General Tire became the parent company. By 1955 radio was changing. Drama, which had dominated the dial for more than two decades, was on its way out due to both its and TV production costs. More and more network programming was being turned over to local affiliates. These local affiliates employed a new generation of hosts that had grown up with Jack Benny, Fred Allen, and other observant humorists. Shepherd's peers were Johnny Carson, Jack Paar, Rod Serling, and Steve Allen. Shepherd was working an overnight slot for WOR in 1956. Facing a lack of sponsorship, he was about to be fired when he did an unauthorized commercial for Sweetheart Soap who didn't sponsor his program. WOR immediately canned him. But, listeners complained in droves and Sweetheart actually offered to sponsor him. WOR immediately brought him back. The overnight slot allowed him to riff with little need for the kind of corporate oversight that faced daytime and primetime hosts. That year, during a discussion on how easy it was to manipulate the best-seller lists, Shepherd suggested that his listeners visit bookstores and ask for a copy of a fictional novel called I, Libertine by a Frederick R. Ewing. Fans of the show planted references so widely that there were claims it made The New York Times Best Seller list. It led to an actual book deal with Ballantine. Theodore Sturgeon wrote most of it with Shepherd's outline guiding him. Betty Ballantine finished the novel when Sturgeon fell asleep during a marathon writing session to meet the deadline. Famed illustrator Frank Kelly Freas did the cover art. The book was published on September 13th, 1956 with all proceeds going to charity.
Keith Giffen has died at age 70. Matt Kindt channels Heavy Metal for a new Dark Horse Comics book. Oni Press has revealed its first wave of new titles for 2024. Don Lee launches a new comic from Dynamite. All on Comic Book Club News for October 12, 2023.SUBSCRIBE ON RSS, APPLE, ANDROID, SPOTIFY, OR THE APP OF YOUR CHOICE. FOLLOW US ON TWITTER, INSTAGRAM, TIKTOK, AND FACEBOOK. SUPPORT OUR SHOWS ON PATREON.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
October 11, 2023 ~ Don Lee, Executive Director of Ann Arbor for Public Power, talks with Guy, Lloyd, and Jamie about their plan to create their own power system in Ann Arbor.
Welcome back to another exciting episode of Not A Bomb podcast. Normally, this is the podcast where we go back and re-examine some of the biggest bombs in cinematic history and see if they deserve a second chance. However, this week we've decided to invoke the “Don Lee Clause.” What is the “Don Lee Clause?” Without using a ton of legal jargon, we reserve the right to discuss any Don Lee film regardless of the movie's critical or box office success. This week's show is a full house as we bring a ton of guests to discuss 2018's Champion. Sammy from the GGTMC, Jose from Watch/Skip+, and professional Don Lee cosplayer John Nance take time out of their busy schedule to discuss this Korean sports film centered around competitive arm wrestling. We kick things off talking about some of our favorite sports films that make our eyeballs sweat (because guys don't cry). Eventually, everybody spends ample time gushing over this amazing film that showcases the acting prowess of Korea's most popular movie star of 2023. Please do yourself a favor and watch Champion! This film deserves all the attention!Champion is directed by Kim Yong-wan and stars Don Lee (Ma Dong-seok), Kwon Yul, and Han Ye-ri. Troy and Brad were recently on the Moviestruck podcast to talk about the Hong Kong classic - 8 Diagram Pole Fighter. Head over to Moviestruck and check it out!Be sure to subscribe to the Gentlemen's Guide to Midnite Cinema to hear more of Sammy. Also, check out Jose's podcast - Watch/Skip+ • A podcast on Anchor. Both are highly recommended.If you want to leave feedback or suggest a movie bomb, please drop us a line at NotABombPod@gmail.com or Contact Us - here. Also, if you like what you hear, leave a review on Apple Podcast.Cast: Brad, Troy, Jose, Sammy, John
This week we review 2019's Korean serial killer thriller, THE GANGSTER, THE COP, THE DEVIL and Cyrus gets his first taste Don Lee literally slapping someone silly. We go over the interesting themeso of what the "devil" represents, discuss Korean fight choreography and applaud the blurring of lines found throughout the film. Later on, we answer listener questions where we chat about the underrated one-liners found in comedies, what film we'd have an alien watch and Cyrus gives us his views on how to beat The Hulk. Enjoy!
OTRnow Radio Program The 4th Of July2 1/4 hours of classic old time radio celebrating the 4th of July!COLUMBIA WORKSHOP (Columbia Presents Corwin) July 04,1944 CBS net. "Home For The Fourth". Sustaining. A story typical of America and the things it stands for. Norman Corwin (writer, producer, director), Dane Clark, Bernard Herrmann (music), Dick Cutting (announcer). RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT July 5,1938. Red net. Sponsored by: Post 40% Bran Flakes. The first tune is, "Chansonette." Ripley's features are about "The Foreign Queen Who Became A U. S. Citizen," "The Naming Of Canada," "Mortgaging The U. S. Capitol and the White House," "Backwoods Genius," "The Youngest Preacher" and the most valuable letter. Robert Ripley, B. A. Rolfe and His Orchestra, Linda Lee (vocal), Ford Bond (announcer), Bennett Kilpack.CALLING ALL CARS July 4,1934 CBS Pacific net (Don Lee net). "July Fourth In A Radio Car". Sponsored by: Rio Grande Oil ("Calling All Cars Radio Log"). Fireworks are being exploded within the city limits. The announcer twice mentions that this is "broadcast #35." A holiday spent by radio in a police car. "A slice of actual life." The above date is accurate (the program is about the fourth of July holiday). The program number is possibly #32, despite what the announcer says, unless there is a three week error in the relationship of the program numbers and dates. After the drama, Mr. Lindsley announces that "there were thirty-four characters (in the radio drama)...played by twelve people," and unlike other programs, names them all. Mary Tuthill, Jeanette Nolan, Martha Wentworth, Ralph Scott, Joe Franz, Hanley Stafford, Sam Pierce, Charlie Lung, Richard LeGrand, Robert Frazer, Fred Harrington, Lindsay MacHarrie, William N. Robson (writer, producer), Charles Frederick Lindsley (narrator The Bill Stern Colgate Sports Newsreel. July 4, 1947. Program #399. NBC net. Sponsored by: Colgate Shave Cream. Bill Stern, George Jessel, Joe Howard, June Haver. ESCAPE- July 04,1948. CBS net. "A Tooth For Paul Revere". Sustaining. How the American Revolution really started, a humorous look at a Yankee farmer's point of view. The script was previously used n "The Cavalcade Of America" on May 11, 1942 (see cat. #22924) and on "Adventure Ahead" on September 9, 1944 (see cat. #5132). Stephen Vincent Benet (author), Harry Bartell, Parley Baer, Berry Kroeger, Norman Macdonnell (producer, director), John Dunkel (adaptor), Ivan Ditmars (special music).
This week is Felicia's pick and she chose The Roundup, featuring Don Lee, aka Thicc Dad (Train to Busan). This one is unhinged quick! Jesse can't stop noticing all of the weird stuff in the backgrounds, which causes him to forget to read the subtitles.https://www.idiots.fm00:00 Introduction02:09 What We're Watching02:56 The Watchalong Instructions04:04 Countdown Hit play on GO!12:24 Re-sync at 7:49. Sorry!01:45:44 Our thoughts on the movie!
Jeff Stanfield & Andy Shaver are joined by Dr. Don Lee. He is a veterinarian, specialzing in competition horses. They discuss the advancements in treatments for the athletic animals, having a badger for a pet, and dealing with the temperament of a 1500 pound animal.
We jump right into the shenanigans this episode... Would you take $250 in food stamps or dinner with Soulja Boy? If not him, who would you sit with and how much money would you pass up? (4:35) Don Lee was scammed out of 26k cash! He thought he was buying a Dodge Hellcat off of craigslist for 26k. Someone rented the car from a Turo like company and some guy sold someone else car and ran off with the cash. Not only did he lose his money, he lost some of his friends money too. (17:43) Mississippi kills her husband on Facebook Live. They were having a heated argument and he was trying to pack up and leave to blow off steam, and then it took a turn for the worst. (37:06) A Houston rapper, BTB Savage was killed. He recently had an incident where he thought he was collaborating with another rapper and it was a set up and he ended up having to kill this person to defend himself. He later takes a picture and posts it online showing him posing in that mans blood he was killed hours after posting the picture. (52:50)
Cleveland Clinic recently announced that they would begin charging for certain patient-initiated messages. This flies in the face of everything the industry is talking about when it comes to patient engagement and value-based care. At the same time, it is quite unreasonable to think that a doctor should be available for questions at any time, for free. How can we protect the clinicians' time AND provide the patients with the care and attention they need? And why are we moving away from value-based care? Craig Joseph, MD, Chief Medical Officer of Nordic Consulting Partners, and Matt Lambert, MD, Chief Medical Officer for Curation Health join Don Lee to share their take. Craig's article that led to this episode: To charge or not to charge For full show notes and links, visit https://thehcbiz.com
In episode 5 of The Really Rich Podcast, I sit down with Miami personality and style entrepreneur, Don Lee. Don Lee is a gallerist, stylist, and clothier for celebrities and athletes. He specializes in sourcing rare, streetwear garments and has built his entire business offline via word-of-mouth after working in commercial real estate. (If you missed episode 4, check it out HERE) Love the content? Subscribe on YouTube --- All Links: The Really Rich Journal (My weekly newsletter) FastOutreach.ai (My AI Startup) TikTok Instagram LinkedIn Facebook Twitter
Korea24 – 2022.12.02 (Friday) News Briefing: A Seoul court is deliberating over an arrest warrant for the former national security adviser, Suh Hoon, over cover-up allegations involving the death of a fisheries official by North Korean soldiers in 2020. (Koo Hee-jin) In-Depth News Analysis (Weekly Economy Review): South Korea's consumer prices rose five percent in November, the slowest on-year gain since April, suggesting a continuing slowdown in inflation. Meanwhile, exports fell for the second consecutive month in November, leading to eight straight months of a trade deficit for the first time since the Asian financial crisis in the 1990s. Economics Professor Yang Jun-sok from the Catholic University of Korea reviews the data for us. Korea Trending with Walter Lee: 1. Prosecutors have indicted nine people, including the grandson of Namyang Dairy Products’s late founder, on drug related charges. (남양유업 손자 마약 구속 기소…'재벌 3세 마약 스캔들' 터지나) 2. RM of the K-pop sensation BTS has released his first official solo album, Indigo. (BTS RM, 첫 공식 솔로 음반 '인디고' 발표) 3. Japan shocked the footballing world by advancing into the round of 16 of the 2022 FIFA World Cup after beating powerhouse Spain. ([월드컵] 일본, 두 대회 연속 16강…아시아 새 역사) Movie Spotlight: “The Night Owl (올빼미)”, a historical drama centered about a mysterious death at a royal palace, is our first film this week. We also look at a comedy, “Men of Plastic (압꾸정)”, starring Ma Dong-seok, aka Don Lee, about a local chancer looking to start his own plastic surgery business. Critics Jason Bechervaise and Darcy Paquet provide the reviews. Next Week From Seoul with Richard Larkin: - South Korea faces Portugal in the final FIFA World Cup group match on Saturday 12AM(KST). - President Yoon Suk Yeol will hold a summit with Vietnamese President Nguyen Xuan Phuc in Seoul on Monday. - Next week marks 10 years since the Korean traditional song “Arirang” was added to UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage list.
Initially running at 7:45PM, Mutual moved I Love a Mystery to 10:15 in 1950. Although geared for teenagers, it was obviously not standard juvenile programming. Many listeners remembered tuning in under blankets with the lights down low. But, as entertaining as the program was, by 1952, television was taking over in big cities. One Man's Family began running on TV in 1949. Tony Randall appeared in telecasts. Mutual ran as a cooperative, rather than a corporation. The network's top stations — WOR in New York, WGN in Chicago, and Don Lee's KHJ in Los Angeles — all boasted powerful signals. But, while Mutual had the most affiliated stations of the big four networks, many of these were small stations in rural areas. This limited their advertiser appeal. As families left cities and farms for the suburbs, the network's shared programming structure left it at a distinct disadvantage against NBC, CBS, and ABC. Those three networks would use their soaring revenue to move into TV. Although some Mutual affiliates developed television programming, the full network was never able to launch into TV. With dramatic radio on its way out, the writing was on the wall. The final Mutual I Love A Mystery adventure aired on December 26th, 1952. By then the Red Scare was a major issue in the entertainment industry, as Himan Brown remembered.
Mystery is My Hobby originally came to Don Lee's west coast airwaves in April of 1945, before going full network over Mutual that October as Murder Is My Hobby. It starred Glenn Langan as Barton Drake, a police inspector and the author of the book Mystery Is My Hobby. Drake combined his professions by collecting material for stories while he solved crimes. The program went off the air in July of 1946, but returned the next summer under the Mystery title. Barton Drake was now a writer who worked with the police. Each episode was presented as cases from his book. The October 29th, 1947 episode was called “Death Speaks with Ten Fingers,” and guest-starred Barney Phillips, Gloria Blondell, Ken Christy, and Jean Vander Pyl, who was later famous as the voice of Wilma Flintsone.
By October of 1947, nearly eleven million babies had been born in the U.S. since the end of World War II. Young parents were staying home with their children. Movie attendance bombed. The 1947-48 season had the largest radio audience in history. Homes with radios jumped 6%, car radios 29%. NBC, CBS, ABC, and Mutual added nearly one-hundred fifty affiliates. Ninety-seven percent of the nation's AM stations were now linked to one of the big four. Network revenue topped $200 Million. World War two had created fundamental changes in society. While men of all races and creeds were overseas spilling the same colored blood, women mobilized and took charge of the workforce. When veterans were discharged, they returned home with different ideals, and what we'd now call PTSD. As new cars, roads, and homes brought young families to the suburbs, racial descrimination came to the forefront in the face of the G.I. Bill, where a much higher percentage of white Americans were having their applications accepted. On October 29th, the national civil rights committee delivered a report to the White House. The document made thirty-five specific recommendations, including asking the President to create a permanent Federal commission on civil rights. President Truman said that he'd study the report with great care and recommend that all citizens do the same thing. Americans were organizing. In the year after VJ Day, more than five million struck for better wages and benefits. This hurt key sectors of the economy and stifled production. Consumer goods in high-demand were slow to appear on shelves and in showrooms, frustrating Americans who desperately wanted to purchase items forsaken during the war. It caused the largest inflation rise in the country's modern history, and the Taft-Hartley Act, limiting the power of Labor Unions. President Truman was seemingly at odds with Congress over every domestic policy and his approval rating sank to 32%. Reelection the following year seemed unlikely. The U.S. War Debt topped two-hundred-forty billion dollars. Emerging as one of the world's leaders, America was expected to have the largest hand in rebuilding Europe. News outlets reported that, to create European stability, Americans should resume sacrifices they made during the war. Not agreeing to do so could result in political enemies taking over the continent. That October, as the major networks were enjoying the largest ratings in radio history, one network, The Mutual Broadcasting System, was still struggling to grab audiences. Airing out of WOR in New York, The Shadow was the network's most-listened to program. While it pulled a rating of thirteen — strong for a show airing on Sundays at 5PM easten — it was nowhere near radio's top fifty. Mutual's top stations — WOR in New York, WGN in Chicago, and Don Lee's KHJ in Los Angeles — all boasted powerful signals and had equal shares in the network. And, while Mutual reached four-hundred affiliates in 1947 and would add another hundred over the next year, many of these were small stations in rural areas. This limited their advertiser appeal. Mutual was run as a cooperative, rather than a corporation. As families left cities and farms for the suburbs, the network's shared programming structure left it at a distinct disadvantage against NBC, CBS, and ABC. Those three networks would use their soaring revenue to move into TV. Although some Mutual affiliates developed television programming, the full network was never able to launch into TV. That's not to say MBS didn't have quality programming. Just the opposite, and with Halloween around the corner, tonight we'll delve into Mutual's horror, mystery, and suspense shows of the late 1940s.
On this episode, Don Lee and Shahid Shah celebrate 200 episodes of The #HCBiz Show! We discuss what we've done over the past 6 years and tell you where we're headed next. In a nutshell, we're going to work to codify what we've learned about innovation in healthcare over the past 200 episodes and in our decades of deploying digital health solutions. We're steering the effort, but we need your help. There will be plenty of ways to get involved. Thanks for learning with us over the past 200 episodes. Here's to 200 more! Oh... and we're on YouTube now too if you prefer the visuals: The #HCBiz Show! - YouTube Learn more at https://TheHCBiz.com
The voice at the top of this clip is that of former WOR chief engineer Jack Poppele. The station went online on February 22nd, 1922. In 1934, WOR became one of the flagship stations of the Mutual Broadcasting System. The next March, Poppele was chiefly responsible for the creation of radio's first directional antenna just as WOR increased its power to fifty-thousand watts. In December of 1936, Don Lee's west coast chain of networks joined Mutual, giving it coast-to-coast access. But in the fall of 1937 The Mutual Broadcasting System had no top-fifty rated shows. Seventy-four percent of the U.S. population now had a radio set. Sunday evening's most-heard shows belonged to Edgar Bergen, who pulled a 32.1, and Jack Benny, who pulled a 29.5. Both ran on NBC Red. Overall NBC's Red Network had twenty-six of the nation's top fifty shows, while CBS had nineteen, and NBC's Blue Network had five. WOR's Sunday afternoon programming had concerts, sports, and news bulletins. Their schedule was ripe for a new melodrama.
NASA's Artemis program which will return people to the surface of the moon will have a big test on Monday. We will see a launch of the new moon rocket called the Space Launch System. It will send an uncrewed Orion capsule around the moon and back and eventually take people to the moon surface in 2025. Miriam Kramer, space reporter at Axios, joins us to discuss if NASA's old way of space exploration will stand up in the modern space age. Next, the fall Covid-19 booster campaign will be upon us soon and how well the new Omicron-specific boosters will work may depend on a phenomenon called “original antigenic sin.” Since people have been infected, vaccinated, and boosted, people's immune systems are on different playing fields and your first exposure may play a bigger part in future immune responses. Carolyn Johnson, science reporter at the Washington Post, joins us for what to know. Finally, everyone wants that opportunity to achieve the perfect work/life balance and remote work is a big factor, but would you take a pay cut for it? Some employers are currently debating whether remote work can be classified as a perk or benefit and pocket the savings by reducing salaries for people working at home, especially if they move to lower-cost markets. Don Lee, economics reporter at the LA Times, joins us for how you may soon be asked to take a pay cut to keep working from home.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In his interview with acclaimed author Don Lee, host Hopeton Hay discussed the inspiration for his short collection THE PARTITION. The collection explores Asian American identity in settings across the U.S. and Asia. Learn more about THE PARTITION at http://www.akashicbooks.com/catalog/the-partition/. Host Hopeton Hay cab be contacted at hbh@diversevoicesbookreview.com.
Will and Norm discuss the family dynamics of among Chinese immigrant parents and their children and the politics being played behind the scenes in building jails and shelters in immigrant communities with activist Don Lee. Listeners are invited to support our Patreon for special features and early access to the podcast here: www.patreon.com/oldkidproductions Check out the Merch: https://teespring.com/stores/lucky-boys-store Check out the video version of the podcast at youtube.com/luckyboyspodcast You can follow Lucky Boys Podcast on Instagram @luckyboyspodcast, Will Hue @iamwillhue, Norm Lam @nlam25 --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/luckyboys/support
In INBW32, I talked about telehealth. In this episode, I'm talking about collaboration between healthcare stakeholders or the lack thereof. My grandfather suffered from heart failure. This was many years ago now. But when I say suffered, I mean it. As many of you know, when heart failure is uncontrolled, it is painful to go through or even watch a loved one go through. There was that one time when I accompanied my grandfather (and my grandma was there, too) on a trip to the emergency room, you know, because he was drowning in his own lung fluid and could barely breathe. And when we arrived, they were going to wheel him into one of the exam rooms. But my grandmother put her foot down. She did not want to go into that one exam room because the TV was broken in there. Yes, the two of them had been in the ER so many times that they were familiar with the pros and cons of the various exam rooms. The end of my grandfather's life was almost unbearable, and I can't even begin to estimate the hundreds of thousands of dollars racked up in ER visits and inpatient stays. He was in the ER once a month at a minimum, and he would come home disoriented and confused. Now, as everybody listening to this show knows, this anecdote is also a data point that is, dare I say, all too common. But to that end, let me just talk about heart failure data for a second. Patients with heart failure generate a third of Medicare spending and 40% of Medicare fee-for-service deaths. They are also responsible for 55% of Medicare readmissions. You'd think that if there were any chronic condition that we'd be looking to improve outcomes on, it'd be this one. So, everybody's on it, right? Oh, wait … heart failure readmissions have actually gone up in recent years. I just want to point out that in between ER visits and inpatient stays, my grandfather received effectively no education, no PCP or cardiology follow-ups, no community support. He did not get a case manager. He got no coaching. He got 25 pages of tiny, printed instructions just before the door hit him in the butt on his way out to the parking lot. Obvious point here, but to do any of this in-between stuff would have required collaboration between the hospital and others. And it was conspicuous in its absence. Look, this is sad and I'm not telling the story because I think it's unique. If I asked who else has a story like this one where a family member or a loved one got lost in the gaps between their care, I am suspecting that everyone would raise their hands—even those of you who have medical degrees. No matter how much any of us know or care or try to help, stories like my grandfather's are painfully and unequivocally common in this country today. OK, so how to improve care, especially for chronic care patients. At its core, and I am not telling anyone listening something that you probably have not already thought about at great length, but there are two important contributors to patient outcomes. Not the only contributors for absolutely sure, but here are two important ones: Nonfragmented patient journeys that adhere to evidence-based best-practice care. My grandfather and anyone with a chronic condition requires a patient journey that isn't a game of whack-a-mole. Carly Eckert, MD, says this so well in EP361. Steering patients to the best care setting, which is required to get the highest-value best-practice care and also reduce financial toxicity. Short but important sidebar: We know that financial toxicity is clinical toxicity. There was just a study that came out that said in 2030, a leading cause of death will be noncompliance to treatment due to patients abandoning care because it costs too much. Wayne Jenkins, MD, from Centivo (EP358) talks about other implications of financial toxicity for a half-hour. Also, there's another paper that, again, is just more on this point. At this juncture, it is not arguable. Financial toxicity is clinical toxicity. So, we need to get patients, people, customers to the next place that is the highest value for them. Doing either or both of these things—nonfragmenting the patient journey and making sure patients get to the next care setting—it requires collaboration. Let me quote Dr. Steve Klasko, who, until recently, was president and CEO over at Jefferson Health in Philly. He said—and this is an adaptation of an old Steve Jobs mantra—but Steve Klasko said that for hospitals, our old math was inpatient revenue, outpatient revenue, and in-person tuition and funding. The new math is going to be strategic partnerships around this healthcare at any address model. Right? But good collaborations don't just improve patient outcomes. Here's another benefit: They also make happier clinicians or employees. If every outside interaction is a friction point, where employees, clinicians, doctors, nurses are rubbed raw because every interaction becomes a battle, if that's the ecosystem that any given party has created for themselves, patients aren't happy and clinicians aren't happy. And since everything in healthcare spirals around that one relationship, the one between the patient and their clinicians, this could not be more vital. There's that famous Richard Branson quote, which I'll paraphrase: If you want to keep the customers happy, keep the employees happy. How anyone thinks that patients are going to get amazing care when those providing the care are miserable is just the very definition of magical thinking. All right … so, let's get into the hard thing about hard things: why with the lack of collaboration across the industry there are a lot of excuses for why parties cannot collaborate. For example, interoperability, HIPAA, legal, cyber, bureaucracy … Also, people are busy, COVID response, being overworked and burned out is a big deal. And I'm not saying that some of these are not valid, but the elephant in the room is this: In healthcare today, most (if not all) big organizations for sure and a lot of small ones have a business model that is built on revenue maximization. Look, when I'm referring to organizations as revenue maximizers, maybe I'm not talking specifically about specific departments and people working hard in those departments within any given organization. Organizations are not one-celled organisms, after all. But what I am saying is that, as a whole, healthcare organizations—the vast majority and certainly every so-called incumbent payer and health system—when you factor in the actions of the CFO, the actions of the billing department, the group that sets premiums, the one that sets prices, the group that incentivizes brokers, the group that sells to employers, the group that lobbies politicians, the group that writes the contract terms … if you factor in the whole organization, what you get is an organization who acts to maximize outcomes—financial outcomes, that is. As per my normal MO, I'm gonna say the quiet part out loud here. One big reason why parties do not collaborate is because they are thinking they are going to maximize their revenue by info blocking to prevent network leakage, or not sharing data with an employer because then the employer might steer the employee to an infusion center for their chemo, or drugs will get switched from the profitable one to the not profitable one. I just saw another article the other day, entitled “The Many Barriers to Payer-Provider Alignment on Value-based Care.” Two entities vital for a nonfragmented frictionless patient journey cannot figure out how to align incentives, share data, or even figure out what good looks like. Speaking industry-wide here, but if patient outcomes were the top of either the payer or the provider's organizational lists of priorities, I do not think that this would be the case decades later. Listen to the show with Kevin Schulman, MD (EP366); Scott Haas (EP365); or an upcoming one with Autumn Yongchu and Erik Davis coming out in a few weeks that just drives this point home. So, can you do well by doing good? Yes, you can. I have a degree from a business school, after all; but there is a line that gets crossed when maximizing revenue harms patients. And I'll tell you how you can tell if you're over the line. And again, I'm talking organizations here who have power and control in their local markets. I would say that a lack of collaboration is a symptom. If we all agree that collaboration is essential and some organization is not doing it, maybe it is a sign. It is an actionable bit of information that I hope, if relevant, gets contemplated. For example, back to my grandfather for a sec, it's pretty well known how to reduce heart failure revisits. There are more than a few care models that have definitely been shown to work. Here is one of them, and this was talked about in Dr. William Bestermann's Substacks. There was a nurse in the Carolinas—and I talked about this before—but there was a nurse in the Carolinas who decreased heart failure readmissions markedly by simply calling up heart failure patients and making sure they were doing OK and that they understood how to take care of themselves. She was caring, and she had relationships with these patients. That's all she did. So, hospital collaborates with a payer case manager or a CBO (community-based organization) or an MSO (management services organization), or maybe the hospital has pop health capabilities internally. I mean, we can manage to transplant important organs in this country, and most healthcare organizations cannot figure out how to work together well enough that a nurse calls up a bunch of patients? Is this some arcane or highly complex thing to do? No, it's not. But most are not doing anything even close to this because revenue maximization is the goal of one or more of the entities who would need to be a party to this, and everything else is just an excuse. If anyone is thinking interoperability right now, I've heard Don Lee say on The #HCBiz Show! often enough that there's lots of evidence at this point that interoperability has been solved from a technical standpoint. It's been solved for years. The problem is a business case problem. No one wants to be interoperable because … revenue maximization All right … aspirationally here, despite all of this, great collaborations happen every single day—collaborations that are bright spots and that definitely improve patient outcomes and reduce financial burdens short-term and long-term. Let me give you some examples: what 32BJ is doing in New York City (upcoming episode with Cora Opsahl talking about the cool things that they are doing with Mount Sinai); CINs (clinically integrated networks), like Lisa Trumble, who talks about SoNE HEALTH in EP349. There are MSOs that work with ACOs (accountable care organizations) and others. Listen to Shawn Rhodes (EP354); also what Nicole Bradberry and Kelly Conroy are doing in Florida (EP324). In an upcoming episode, Dave Chase from Health Rosetta: He's got one great story after another about how employers these days are teaming up with provider organizations, pharmacies, and their communities to put a serious dent in costs while raising patient outcomes and satisfaction. Doug Hetherington's episode (EP367) talks about direct contracting with hospitals. Katy Talento (EP350) talks about this also. Steve Schutzer, MD, talks about collaborating with other local orthopedic surgeons to stand up a now nationally recognized center of excellence in Connecticut (EP294). We also have some pharma companies who are developing some pretty great disease-centric resources for providers. Some pharma companies and some internal teams at those companies can actually be fair and good community players. Mike Levitt and the work that he has done on the Accountable Care Learning Collaborative, which is headed up by Dr. Eric Weaver, who has been on the show (EP277); or I'm sure after this show airs, I'm gonna hear about more. Please send them my way. Now, look … let's get real here. These collaborations may have been initiated with, let's just say, other beneficial side effects; but they all improve care and reduce costs. If I were gonna list some common and appealing side effects that could motivate some prospective collaborators to come to the table, some of the usual suspects are proposing that the collaboration will, for example, improve HCAHPS scores, quality metrics, star ratings; improve predictable spend; reduce shock claims; avenge your common competitor and steal their market share; gang up against a payer or some consolidated health system; improve OR utilization; or improve efficiency in some way. What I would say, though, is that if leveling up patient care happens and costs do not rise as a result, that's the shared priority I'd focus on. If someone gets some beneficial side action, this is kind of the definition of doing well by doing good. All right, so let's talk about the different kinds of collaboration just briefly. I'm gonna say that there's three kinds of collaboration: Collaboration along the patient journey by multiple parties who are all along the patient journey Collaboration by parties who can help inform the patient journey, but they're not necessarily on the patient journey themselves Collaboration by parties who can help navigate the patient journey I am mentioning these three because there's often sort of this insinuation that collaborators should have equal stature in the care journey or have similar roles, that if you're not actually on the clinical journey, then you don't have any responsibility or accountability for the clinical journey and, therefore, are not a worthy collaborator. That is limiting if you are trying to figure out who you might be able to collaborate with to help you. The patient journey is not like a movie showing all the minutes a patient spends in clinic, and then all the gaps in between visits are edited out. Care can be improved at the population level, at the community level. Care can be improved at the disease or the condition level when clinicians get needed insights or information or tools. I mean, frankly, to my mind, it shouldn't be considered a plus when a pharma company or a payer actually does something in the service of improving patient outcomes. It should almost be a requirement that they do. I don't mean by delivering care in any way. And for the record, most prior auth programs are the opposite of collaborative. Payers can collaborate by supplying data, as just one example. Heck, external collaborations are great, but we also could think about collaborating internally, like invite the CFO or maybe the gang rewarding brokers with sales competitions. I don't know. I'd consider ethically dubious: Invite them to come to some meeting where oncology patients are choosing to die rather than bankrupt their families. Communication is the first step to collaboration, after all. That's a place to start. Or life science types: They can supply knowledge and expertise about specific diseases or conditions with the purpose of improving patient outcomes. Informing the patient journey could be a collaboration with some of these amazing patient efficacy organizations or CBOs that are out in the community. Now, I think one barrier to collaboration that we all need to get over is the whole, I call it, stakeholder prejudice thing. Here's what Colton Ortolf wrote on Twitter the other day. He tweeted, “Hospitals are the Lance Armstrong of healthcare. Pissed [off] at all the [crappy] things they do economically, but also grateful for all the lives they save.” If we're gonna eliminate everybody in healthcare who has revenue maximization as their organizational goal, as aforementioned, there is going to be basically no one left standing. As Ge Bai, PhD, CPA, said in EP356, there's no angels and no demons in healthcare. Everybody is both. If we're talking about stakeholder prejudice, though, I would be remiss not to single out Pharma. When I mentioned them a sec ago, I bet some of your eyebrows went up. Here's my take on it. Consider Pharma's potential role in leveling up disease-/condition-specific outcomes. I mean, there are thousands, millions probably, of diseases and conditions and health problems out there that any given doctor or clinician has to be familiar with. Pharma has huge infrastructures and physicians and smart people who focused on, like, six of them. They know more about those six than anybody else. We pay a ton also for their drugs. It's my view that people along the patient journey should ask for what they want and need relative to the expertise that Pharma possesses. It should be about helping those providing care on the patient journey to level up the standard of care. Frankly, I'd expect collaboration from some of these entities. Ask for it on your own terms, and if all you get back is a sales pitch, you deserve better than that. Find somebody higher up on the food chain to talk to. And also, outcomes-based contracts … yeah, we need to figure out how to operationalize them so that really good drugs that actually produce outcomes like overall survival get paid for and those that do not do not. Point of note must be said: Colluding and conflict of interest is not cost neutral. If someone is getting things bought for them and then thinking, falsely, that it does not impact prescribing, that is not collaboration. Any of these revenue-maximizing hookups are not included in my definition of collaboration. So, in sum, ultimately, what we're talking about here is our legacy. As David Muhlestein, PhD, JD, talks about really well in EP364, we got to ask ourselves, What do we want to leave behind to our children and our grandchildren? Some of this is generational change, for sure. But seriously, talking about today, I mean, who wants to sign their family member up for what my grandfather went through? Right now, across the country, there are heart failure patients going through exactly what he did; and there are other patients with care journeys so dysfunctional that lives are shattered. Chronic care patients, oncology patients … and this isn't going to change unless we contemplate, first of all, what we can do today—right now. Even little things can matter a lot, but then also to really consider what we want healthcare to look like in 20 or 25 years and then start working back from that vision and collaborating today so that, slowly and surely, we reach a place with better care that is not financially toxic. Check out the 8-Step Collaboration Roadmap for more resources to operationalize a collaboration. For more information, go to aventriahealth.com. Each week on Relentless Health Value, Stacey uses her voice and thought leadership to provide insights for healthcare industry decision makers trying to do the right thing. Each show features expert guests who break down the twists and tricks in the medical field to help improve outcomes and lower costs across the care continuum. Relentless Health Value is a top 100 podcast on iTunes in the medicine category and reaches tens of thousands of engaged listeners across the healthcare industry. In addition to hosting Relentless Health Value, Stacey is co-president of QC-Health, a benefit corporation finding cost-effective ways to improve the health of Americans. She is also co-president of Aventria Health Group, a consultancy working with clients who endeavor to form collaborations with payers, providers, Pharma, employer organizations, or patient advocacy groups. 03:07 How do we improve care, especially for chronic care patients? 03:18 What are two important contributors to patient outcomes? 03:40 EP361 with Carly Eckert, MD. 03:56 “We know that financial toxicity is clinical toxicity.” 04:09 EP358 with Wayne Jenkins, MD. 06:05 Why can't parties across the healthcare industry seem to collaborate? 08:05 EP366 with Kevin Schulman, MD. 08:07 EP365 with Scott Haas. 08:10 Upcoming episode with Autumn Yongchu and Erik Davis. 08:34 “I would say that a lack of collaboration is a symptom.” 10:10 There's lots of evidence that interoperability has been solved. It's been solved for years. 10:37 Upcoming episode with Cora Opsahl. 10:46 EP349 with Lisa Trumble. 10:53 EP354 with Shawn Rhodes. 10:57 EP324 with Nicole Bradberry and Kelly Conroy. 11:04 Upcoming episode with Dave Chase. 11:19 EP367 with Doug Hetherington. 11:25 EP350 with Katy Talento. 11:28 EP294 with Steve Schutzer, MD. 11:50 EP277 with Eric Weaver, DHA, MHA. 13:00 What are the three kinds of collaboration in healthcare? 13:23 Do collaborators need to have equal status in a collaboration? 13:57 “Care can be improved at the population level, at the community level … at the disease or the condition level.” 15:10 How is stakeholder prejudice holding healthcare back? 15:42 EP356 with Ge Bai, PhD, CPA. 16:55 “Outcomes-based contracts … we need to figure out how to operationalize them.” 17:08 “Colluding and conflict of interest is not cost neutral.” 17:30 EP364 with David Muhlestein, PhD, JD. For more information, go to aventriahealth.com. Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab How do we improve care, especially for chronic care patients? Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab What are two important contributors to patient outcomes? Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab “We know that financial toxicity is clinical toxicity.” Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab Why can't parties across the healthcare industry seem to collaborate? Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab “I would say that a lack of collaboration is a symptom.” Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab There's lots of evidence that interoperability has been solved. It's been solved for years. Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab What are the three kinds of collaboration in healthcare? Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab Do collaborators need to have equal status in a collaboration? Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab “Care can be improved at the population level, at the community level … at the disease or the condition level.” Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab How is stakeholder prejudice holding healthcare back? Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab “Outcomes-based contracts … we need to figure out how to operationalize them.” Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab “Colluding and conflict of interest is not cost neutral.” Stacey discusses #healthcarecollaboration on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #healthcollab Recent past interviews: Click a guest's name for their latest RHV episode! Ashleigh Gunter, Doug Hetherington, Dr Kevin Schulman, Scott Haas, David Muhlestein, David Scheinker, Ali Ucar, Dr Carly Eckert, Jeb Dunkelberger (EP360), Dan O'Neill, Dr Wayne Jenkins, Liliana Petrova, Ge Bai, Nikhil Krishnan, Shawn Rhodes, Pramod John (EP353), Pramod John (EP352), Dr Eric Bricker, Katy Talento, Stacey Richter (INBW33), Stacey Richter (INBW32), Dr Steve Schutzer (Encore! EP294), Lisa Trumble, Jeb Dunkelberger, Dr Ian Tong, Mike Schneider, Peter Hayes, Paul Simms
Will and Norm discuss the family dynamics of among Chinese immigrant parents and their children and the politics being played behind the scenes in building jails and shelters in immigrant communities with activist Don Lee. Listeners are invited to support our Patreon for special features and early access to the podcast here: www.patreon.com/oldkidproductions Check out the Merch: https://teespring.com/stores/lucky-boys-store Check out the video version of the podcast at youtube.com/luckyboyspodcast You can follow Lucky Boys Podcast on Instagram @luckyboyspodcast, Will Hue @iamwillhue, Norm Lam @nlam25 --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/luckyboys/support
The Assembly Required crew gets back to reassembling the MCU movie by movie as they take a look at 2021's ETERNALS! Join Eduardo, Peach3z, Chris, and Robbie as they discuss the polarizing film from Chloé Zhao. Is it as bad as its reviews indicated? Better? Worse? Buckle up, because Arishem isn't the only judge in town!This episode of Assembly Required: An MCU Retrospective is brought to you by Audible. Go to https://www.audibletrial.com/assemblyrequired for a free 30-day trial today!Assembly Required has a Patreon! Join us at https://www.patreon.com/assemblyrequired for access to our exclusive Discord server and other Patron-exclusive benefits!
Korea24 – 2022.05.20. (Friday) News Briefing: US President Joe Biden has arrived in Seoul for his first trip to South Korea as President. He will be staying for three day and hold his first summit with President Yoon Suk Yeol on Saturday. (Tom MCCARTHY) In-Depth News Analysis: In President Yoon Suk Yeol’s first summit with US President Joe Biden there promises to be much on the agenda. North Korea’s nuclear threat and the widespread COVID-19 outbreak in the regime is set to be a key topic. They are also expected to discuss supply chain issues and economic security. The US-led Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF), which South Korea has now agreed to join, is also set to feature. To help us preview the summit in a special in-depth, Professor Kim Hyun-wook from the Korea National Diplomatic Academy joins us on the line. Korea Trending with Walter Lee: 1. Sri Lanka has defaulted on its debts for the first time, due to effects from the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and soaring inflation. (스리랑카, 건국 후 첫 디폴트 선언) 2. First Lady Kim Keon-hee is said to be considering making her first formal public appearance since President Yoon’s inauguration at a concert on Sunday. (김건희 여사, 靑에서 열리는 '열린 음악회' 관람 검토) 3. High jump star Woo Sang-hyeok received a hero’s welcome on his return to South Korea, after becoming the first Korean to capture a Diamond League title last Friday. ('2m40 세계선수권 우승' 우상혁 금의환향) Movie Spotlight: In welcome news for the local film industry, a major Korean commercial release has finally hit cinemas. "The Roundup (범죄도시2)" starring Ma Dong-seok, aka Don Lee, was released on Wednesday. Film Critic Jason Bechervaise joins us to review this sequel to the 2017 sleeper-hit "The Outlaws (범죄도시)”. He will also review the US drama "Mass (매스)” starring Jason Isaacs. Next Week From Seoul with Richard Larkin: - A memorial service commemorating the 13th anniversary of the late former President Roh Moo-hyun’s death is taking place next Monday. - The Environment Ministry will announce more details next week on the new deposit refund scheme for single-use cups at franchise stores. - Football player Son Heung-min will look to become the first Asian player to win the Premier League Golden Boot at the final game of the season on Sunday.
Trigger Warnings: children in danger, death, zombies, instensely stressful situations throughout, blood, gore, intense violence Scare Level: TERRIFYING The BasicsDirector: Sang-Ho YeonWriters: Joo-Suk Park, Sang-ho YeonStars: Gong Yoo, Yu-mi Jung, Ma Dong-seok (you may also know as Don Lee), Su-an Kim, Kim Eui-sung, Choi Woo-sik, and former K-Pop star SoheeIMDB says: While a zombie virus breaks out in South Korea, passengers struggle to survive on the train from Seoul to Busan.Recommendations:Chris: The HandmaidenBen: SnowpiercerEmily: 28 Days LaterJeremy UnstoppableFollow our guest Chris Sanchez Follow us on twitter @proghorrorpodFollow Emily on twitter @megamothEmily's Website: Megamoth.netFollow Ben on twitter @benthekahnPre-Order Ben's new book, Renegade Rule.Follow Jeremy on twitter @jrome58Visit his website at JeremyWhitley.comRSS Feed: https://feeds.transistor.fm/progressively-horrifiedWebsite: https://progressivelyhorrified.transistor.fm/Join our Patreon at: patreon.com/progressivelyhorrified to support the show, get bonus episodes, early access to upcoming episodes, and a cool Progressively Horrified t-shirt.★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
A short, spoiler free review on Eternals followed by a post viewing discussion. Written and directed by Chloe Zhao, starring Gemma Chan, Richard Madden, Angelina Jolie, Salma Hayek, Kumail Nanjiani, Lia McHugh, Brian Tyree Henry, Lauren Ridloff, Don Lee, and Barry Keoghan A group of immortal beings created by celestials, live on Earth and fight the Deviants. Rated: PG-13 REEL-View Rating: ⭐️ 5/10 Length of film: 2h 36m Time Stamps for this episode: 0m 0s - 5m 18s Spoiler Free 5m 19s - 10m 54s *Spoiler Alert* Viewable In/On: Disney+ Rent or Buy on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3zfetye TRANSCRIPTION IN PROCESS Show Notes: · Transcription via Descript · Intro music by Wataboi / Outro Music by TimTaj – Pixaby - https://pixabay.com/music/ · Contact me by email at klchaney@reel-film-reviewed.productions or message me on Twitter @reelfilmpkc · Check out the REEL Film Reviewed Website: https://reel-film-reviewed.productions/ for episode releases, episode transcriptions, exclusive Merch from the REEL Merch, upcoming films, advertising opportunities, and much more, thank you for supporting! · Subscribe to REEL Film Reviewed for exclusive access to all episodes and membership benefits such as live chats with me and REEL Merch discounts - https://reel-film-reviewed.supercast.com/ · If you're enjoying REEL Film Reviewed, visit https://linktr.ee/REEL_Film_Reviewed to see how you can support the show and see multiple listening platforms!
World Water Day is quickly approaching on Tuesday, March 22. To help create excitement and hype around the largest day of impact for our ministry, RickEy Lumpkin II and Don Lee, two Team World Vision Southern California legends, talk with Lyndsey about continuing to say “yes" to moving in the name of clean water.
Punch your ticket for some really bad customer service as we flee a zombie outbreak by high speed locomotive in the South Korean hit film Train to Busan (2016). This episode, Running Scared hosts, Jamie Roberts and Robert Lendrum, are joined by a film critic for the Korea JoongAng Daily, Jae-lim Lee. She gives us perspective on the film's reception in Korea, discusses her interview with choreographer Jeon Young, and introduces us to the term 'Shinpa'. What were the top 5 sh*ttiest Dad moves? Why did Jamie miss the greatest spectacle Toronto had ever seen? Plus we introduce our new 1-line challenge! Consider supporting us on Patreon patreon.com/runningscaredFollow us on Twitter @runningscaredpdEmail us at: therunnningscaredpodcast@gmail.comFollow us on Instagram @runningscaredpod
How is ETERNALS like eating tapas in New York? Believe it or not, that question is answered in this week's episode, alongside a Sundance recap, blockbuster casting news, and more with Hollywood Reporter TV Critic Angie Han. And of course, your Hall of Excellence champion (category: Badass Denzel Performance) is revealed!What's Good MentionsAlonso - honeycrisp applesDrea - refurbishing videosIfy - Grand Crew and recipe bindersAngie - Gelly Roll metallic pensITIDICJason Momoa Is Joining the Fast FamilyNightmare Alley Gets a Second Life in Black & WhiteStaff Picks:Ify - After YangDrea - Beyond the Infinite Two MinutesAlonso - Date and SwitchAngie - The Outside StoryBuy Alonso's book - I'll Be Home for Christmas MoviesSupport our sponsors!DoordashGet 25% off and zero delivery fees on their first order of $15 or more, when you download the DoorDash app and enter code MAXFILM.Lumi LabsGet free shipping and 30% off your first order at MicrodoseGummies.com with code: MAXFILMWith:Ify NwadiweDrea ClarkAlonso DuraldeAngie Han
James and Jerah are joined by actor and writer William DeMeritt to discuss Marvel's Eternals, a movie about a race of immortal superheroes who have lived on earth for thousands of years and then reunite to battle the Deviants.The film was directed by Chloé Zhao and stars Gemma Chan, Kumail Nanjiani, Brian Tyree Henry, Lauren Ridloff, Don Lee, Harish Patel, and Salma Hayek. Produced by Melisa D. Monts Executive produced by Brett Boham, Joe Cilio and Alex Ramsey Listen to Black Men Can't Jump [In Hollywood] Ad-Free on Forever Dog Plus: http://foreverdogpodcasts.com/plus FOLLOW BLACK MEN CAN'T JUMP [IN HOLLYWOOD]: https://twitter.com/blackmenpodcast https://www.instagram.com/blackmenpodcast BUY BLACK MEN CAN'T JUMP [IN HOLLYWOOD] MERCH: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/black-men-can-t-jump-in-hollywood SUPPORT BLACK MEN CAN'T JUMP [IN HOLLYWOOD] ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/BMCJ BLACK MEN CAN'T JUMP [IN HOLLYWOOD] IS A FOREVER DOG PODCAST: https://foreverdogpodcasts.com/podcasts/black-men-cant-jump-in-hollywood Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Geek Buddies with John Rocha, Michael Vogel and Shannon McClung
The Geek Buddies aka John Rocha, Michael Vogel and Shannon McClung are here LIVE to bring you their SPOILER review of Marvel's ETERNALS! They'll discuss the acting, script, cinematography, score, plot points, and direction. Plus they'll get into the divisive reaction about the movie from viewers and critics.Marvel's ETERNALS is now in theaters from Oscar winning director Chloe Zhao and starring Gemma Chan, Richard Madden, Kumail Nanjiani, Lia McHugh, Brian Tyree Henry, Lauren Ridloff, Barry Keoghan, Don Lee, Kit Harington, Salma Hayek, and Angelina Jolie.#ETERNALS #Marvel #Review #ChloeZhao #GemmaChan #AngolinaJolie #SalmaHayek #BryanTyreeHenry #KumailNanjianiJoin The Outlaw's Patreon at: https://patreon.com/JohnRochaFollow John Rocha: https://twitter.com/TheRochaSaysFollow Michael Vogel: https://twitter.com/mktoonFollow Shannon McClung: https://twitter.com/Shannon_McClung--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-geek-buddies/message
Zo gives you his impressions of Marvel Studios Eternals. Should you see it? Check out this episode to find out.www.backlookcinema.comEmail: fanmail@backlookcinema.comTwitter: @backlookcinemaFacebook: The Back Look Cinema Podcast Instagram: backlookcinemapodcastBack Look Cinema Merch at Teespring.comBack Look Cinema Merch at Teepublic.com
For our main podcast review this week, I am joined by Josh Parham & guests Amanda Guaraggi and Kevin Lee. Today, we're discussing the newest film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, "Eternals," starring Gemma Chan, Richard Madden, Kumail Nanjiani, Lia McHugh, Brian Tyree Henry, Lauren Ridloff, Barry Keoghan, Don Lee, Harish Patel, Kit Harington, Salma Hayek & Angelina Jolie. After winning Best Picture and Best Director last year with "Nomadland," filmmaker Chloé Zhao's follow-up is a massive leap forward for her into big-budget filmmaking. With a ton of discourse surrounding the film, including the lowest rating for an MCU film on Rotten Tomatoes to date, what did we all think of it? How did we like the story, characters, visual effects, action, and humor? Tune in below to find out in our SPOILER-FILLED review, and enjoy! Check out more on NextBestPicture.com Please subscribe on... SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/nextbestpicturepodcast iTunes Podcasts - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/negs-best-film-podcast/id1087678387?mt=2 Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/7IMIzpYehTqeUa1d9EC4jT And be sure to help support us on Patreon for as little as $1 a month at https://www.patreon.com/NextBestPicture
Equine veterinarian & husband of Ryann Pedone, Don Lee joins the podcast to discuss his path into his profession and Conor the Badger.