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The guys are live from the 2025 NFL scouting combine to translate what the coaches and general managers really meant in their press conferences (1:33). Later, they talk about the NFLPA survey results (59:04), and emails (1:07:06)! Check out our 2025 Ringer NFL Draft Guide here! Email us! ringerfantasyfootball@gmail.com The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit www.rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available. Hosts: Danny Heifetz, Danny Kelly, and Craig Horlbeck Social: Kiera Givens Producers: Carlos Chiriboga and Tucker Tashjian Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Season 6 Episode 4! THE LETTER! This one got us in our feels! It's a real 'Kids these days' episode! Maggie's younger self tries to hame her! The new barber in town puts Joel and punk ass Chris in their places! A Doogie Howser doctor makes Joel thins he has a brain tumor! Shelly gets nhillistic! Ed and Marylin are The. Best. as per usual! We cried! (Well. Tim did) We loved it!
Welcome to the Mighty McCabe!
Grab a sandwich and sit back because it's time for JUDGE CUTS! LET'S GO! We hit the highlights and lowlights of the acts from Judge Cuts. Commenter discovers that he's "peckish" for Judge Cuts and that there is an act that is adequately "whelming". Commenter also makes Super Bowl predictions... Summary In this episode, the hosts discuss the Judge Cuts of AGT Season 10, reflecting on the performances, guest judges, and the overall format of the show. They delve into the significance of Judge Cuts, share their thoughts on the NFL Fan of the Year controversy, and provide updates on Season 20 of AGT, including changes in the judging panel. The conversation also highlights Neil Patrick Harris's role as a guest judge and the performances that stood out during the episode. In this segment of the conversation, the hosts discuss various performances from the show, highlighting the unique storylines, the quality of acts, and the judges' comments. They delve into the dynamics of a mother-son duo, the impressive balancing act by Victor, and the return of the professional cuddler. The conversation also touches on nostalgia with a Doogie Howser segment, critiques of dance performances, and the standout magic act by Piff the Magic Dragon. The hosts express their opinions on comedy acts, rock bands, and a powerful vocal performance by Samantha Johnson, providing insights into the talent show landscape. In this segment, the hosts discuss various performances from the latest AGT episode, focusing on the strengths and weaknesses of the acts, particularly singers and their challenges on the show. They delve into the dramatic process of Judge Cuts, evaluate which acts made it through, and share their thoughts on individual performances, including a singing puppet and an acrobat. The conversation also touches on the celebration of Mel B's birthday and concludes with a review of the Golden Buzzer act, the Craig Lewis Band. In this episode, the hosts discuss various performances from America's Got Talent, including the frustrations with guest judges, the hilarious return of Dr. Danger's All Stars, and the mixed reactions to dance groups like DM Nation and Chip N' Doubles. They also delve into the awkward moments of hypnotist Chris Jones and the disappointing performance of comedian Scott Hyerman. The Selected of God Choir delivers a solid performance, leading to discussions about the results and overall ratings for the episode. Contact Information Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Threads | Bluesky | Email About AGT Time Podcast AGT Time Podcast is a weekly podcast covering the hit NBC talent competition America's Got Talent. The hosts, Cody Patterson & Jay Bock recap each episode during the regular season. We do rewatch older seasons during the offseason, have guest interviews, or review movies. AGT Commenter makes a frequent appearance on the podcast and gives his deep insight into America's Got Talent. The podcast is typically recorded on Thursday nights and released on Fridays. Riverside.fm We are in the affiliate program for Riverside.fm. If you sign up using this link, then we receive a percentage from your subscription. This really helps us support this podcast. #AGT #AmericasGotTalent
Before getting into this new podcast, have you checked out the recent newsletter editions of Ground Truths?—how are gut microbiome drives sugar cravings—the influence of sleep on brain waste clearance and aging—the new findings of microplastics in the brain—the surprise finding about doctors and A.I.In this podcast with Dr. Emily Silverman, an internist and founder of The Nocturnists, an award winning podcast and live show, we discuss what inspired her in medicine, what led to her disillusionment, the essentiality of storytelling, of recognizing uncertainty, the limits of A.I., and promoting humanity in medicine. The audio is available on iTunes and Spotify. The full video is linked here, at the top, and also can be found on YouTube.“Storytelling is medicine's currency. Storytelling is not just an act of self-healing; it may actually create better physicians.”—Emily SilvermanTranscript with links to audio and relevant publications, websitesEric Topol (00:07):Well, hello. This is Eric Topol with Ground Truths, and with me, I am delighted to welcome Dr. Emily Silverman, who is Assistant Volunteer Professor of Medicine at UCSF, an old training grounds for me. And we're going to talk about some of the experience she's had there and she is the Founder of the remarkably recognized podcast, The Nocturnists. It's more than a podcast folks. We'll talk about that too. So Emily, welcome.Emily Silverman (00:40):Thank you for having me.Inspiration by Kate McKinnonEric Topol (00:42):Yeah. Well, I thought I would go back to perhaps when we first synapsed, and it goes back to a piece you wrote in JAMA about going to the Saturday Night Live (SNL) with Kate McKinnon. And it was one of my favorite columns, of course, it brought us together kind of simpatico because you were telling a story that was very personal, and a surprise factor added to it. We'll link to it. But it said, ‘Sometime in 2016, I fell in love with SNL comedian Kate McKinnon.' You wrote, ‘It was something about her slow-mo swagger; her unilateral dimple, flickering in and out of existence; the way she drinks up her characters and sweats them from her pores.' I mean, you're an incredible writer, no less podcast interviewer, organizer, doctor. And you talked about my sterile clinical life, which was kind of maybe a warning of things to come and about the fact that there's two very different career paths, comedy and medicine. One could argue they are in essence the same. So maybe you could tell us about that experience and about Kate McKinnon who, I mean, she's amazing.Emily Silverman (02:09):You're making me blush. Thank you for the kind words about the piece and about the writing, and I'm happy to give you a bit of background on that piece and where it came from. So I was in my internal medicine residency at UCSF and about halfway through residency really found myself hitting a wall. And that is actually what gave birth to The Nocturnists, which is the medical storytelling program that I run. But I think another symptom of my hitting that wall, so to speak, and we can talk more about what exactly that is and what that means, was me really looking outside of medicine and also outside of my typical day-to-day routine to try to find things that were a part of me that I had lost or I had lost touch with those aspects of myself. And one aspect of myself that I felt like I had lost touch to was my humorous side, my sense of humor, my silly side even you could say.Emily Silverman (03:17):And throughout my life I have this pattern where when I'm trying to get back in touch with a side of myself, I usually find somebody who represents that and sort of study it, I guess you could say. So in this case, for whatever reason that landed on Kate McKinnon, I just loved the surrealism of her comedy. I loved how absurd she is and loved her personality and so many things. Everything that you just read and really found her and her comedy as an escape, as a way to escape the seriousness of what I was doing on a day-to-day basis in the hospital and reconnect with those humorous sides of myself. So that's the understory. And then the story of the article is, I happened to be traveling to New York for a different reason and found myself standing in line outside of 30 Rock, hoping to get into Saturday Night Live. And there was basically a zero chance that we were going to get in. And part of the reason why is the musical guest that week was a K-pop band called BTS, which is one of the most famous bands in the world. And there were BTS fans like camped out in three circles around 30 Rock. So that week in particular, it was especially difficult to get in. There was just too many people in line. And we were at the very end of the line.Eric Topol (04:43):And it was in the pouring rain, too.Emily Silverman (04:45):And it was pouring rain. And my husband, God bless him, was there with me and he was like, what are we doing? And I was like, I don't know. I just have a feeling that we should stay in line, just go with it. So we did stay in line and then in the morning we got a number, and the way it works is you get your number and then that evening you show up with your number and our number was some crazy number that we weren't going to get in. But then that evening when we went back with our number to wait in line again to get in, what ended up happening is a young woman in the NBC gift shop, she passed out in the middle of the gift shop and I was right there. And so, I went over to her and was asking her questions and trying to help her out.Emily Silverman (05:27):And fortunately, she was fine. I think she just was dehydrated or something, and the security guards were so appreciative. And the next thing I knew, they were sweeping me backstage and up a staircase and in an elevator and they said, thank you so much for your service, welcome to Saturday Night Live. So it became this interesting moment where the very thing that I had been escaping from like medicine and serving and helping people ended up being the thing that gave me access, back to that side of myself, the humorous side. So it was just felt kind of cosmic, one of those moments, like those butterfly wing flapping moments that I decided to write about it and JAMA was kindly willing to publish it.Eric Topol (06:15):Well, it drew me to you and recognize you as quite an extraordinary talent. I don't know if you get recognized enough for the writing because it's quite extraordinary, as we'll talk about in some of your other pieces in the New York Times and in other JAMA journals and on and on. But one thing I just would note is that I resort to comedy a lot to deal with hard times, like the dark times we're in right now, so instead of watching the news, I watch Jimmy Kimmel's monologue or Colbert's monologue or the Comedy Show, anything to relieve some of the darkness that we're dealing with right at the moment. And we're going to get back to comedy because now I want to go back, that was in 2019 when you wrote that, but it was in 2016 when you formed The Nocturnists. Now, before you get to that critical path in your career of this new podcast and how it blossomed, how it grew is just beyond belief. But maybe you could tell us about your residency, what was going on while you were a medical resident at UCSF, because I can identify with that. Well, like any medical residency, it's pretty grueling experience and what that was like for you.Medical ResidencyEmily Silverman (07:45):There were so many wonderful positive aspects of residency and there were so many challenges and difficult aspects of residency. It's all mixed up into this sticky, complicated web of what residency was. On the positive side, some of the most amazing clinicians I've ever met are at UCSF and whether that was seasoned attendings or chief residents who they just seemed to have so many skills, the clinical, the research, the teaching, just amazing, amazing high caliber people to learn from. And of course, the patient population. And at UCSF, we rotate at three different hospitals, the UCSF hospital, the SF General Hospital, which is the public county hospital and the VA hospital. So having the opportunity to see these different patient populations was just such a rich clinical and storytelling opportunity. So there was a lot there that was good, but I really struggled with a few things.Emily Silverman (08:48):So one was the fact that I spent so much of my sitting in front of a computer, and that was not something that I expected when I went into medicine when I was young. And I started to learn more about that and how that happened and when that changed. And then it wasn't just the computer, it was the computer and other types of paperwork or bureaucratic hurdles or administrative creep and just all the different ways that the day-to-day work of physicians was being overtaken by nonclinical work. And that doesn't just mean thinking about our patients, but that also means going to the bedside, sitting with our patients, getting to know them, getting to know their families. And so, I started to think a lot about clinical medicine and what it really means to practice and how that's different from how it was 10, 20, 40 years ago.Emily Silverman (09:43):And then the other part of it that I was really struggling with was aspects of medical culture. The fact that we were working 80 hour weeks, I was working 28 hour shifts every fourth night, every other month. And the toll that took on my body, and I developed some health issues as a result of that and just felt in a way, here I am a doctor in the business of protecting and preserving health and my own health is kind of being run into the ground. And that didn't make sense to me. And so, I started asking questions about that. So there was a lot there. And at first I thought, maybe this is a me thing or maybe this is a California thing. And eventually I realized this was a national thing and I started to notice headlines, op-eds, articles, even pre-Covid about the epidemic of clinician burnout in this country.Emily Silverman (10:40):And there are so many different facets to that. There's the moral injury aspect of it, there's the working conditions and understaffing aspect of it. I learned about how physicians were starting to think about unionizing, which was something that had not really been in the physician, I think consciousness 20, 40 years ago. So just started learning a lot about how medicine had evolved and was continuing to evolve and felt myself wanting to create a space where people could come together and tell stories about what that was like and what their experience was. And that was the birth of The Nocturnists. But I guess that wasn't really your question. Your question was about residency.Birth of The NocturnistsEric Topol (11:20):That's a good answer actually. It kind of gives the background, lays the foundation of how you took a fork in the road here, which we're going to get into now. We're going to link to The Nocturnists website of course, but you have an intro there about, ‘shatter the myth of the “physician God” reveal the truth: that healthcare workers are human, just like everyone else, and that our humanity is our strength, not our weakness.' And that's a very deep and important point that you make to get people interested in The Nocturnists. But now you finished your residency, you're now on the faculty, assistant professor at UCSF, and then you have this gathering that you hadn't already named it the Nocturnists yet had you?Emily Silverman (12:15):I named it in residency.Eric Topol (12:17):Oh, okay in residency. So this was even before you had finished, you started the podcast before you finished?Emily Silverman (12:25):Correct. Before we were a podcast, we were a live show. So the very first live show was in 2016, so I consider that the birth year of the program. And then I graduated residency in 2017, so I started it about halfway through residency.Eric Topol (12:39):Got it. So tell us about that first live show. I mean, that's pretty amazing. Yeah.Emily Silverman (12:46):Yeah. I went to a live taping of The Moth in San Francisco, which some of your listeners may know. The Moth is a live storytelling show in the US, it's often on the radio on NPR. You may have heard it. It's a very ancient way of telling stories. It's more like monologues, people standing up on stage and just spontaneously telling a story the way you would around a campfire or something like that. It's not hyper scripted or anything like that. So I came out of that event feeling really inspired, and I had always loved live performance and live theater. I grew up going to the theater and ended up deciding that I would try that with my community, with the clinicians in my community. So the very first show that we did was in 2016, it was about 40 people in this living room of this Victorian mansion in San Francisco.Emily Silverman (13:42):It was a co-op where different people lived. In the living space, they occasionally rented out for meetings and presentations and gatherings, and it was like $90. So I rented that out and people came and residents, physician residents told stories, but a couple of faculty came and told stories as well. And I think that was a really nice way to set the stage that this wasn't just a med student thing or a resident thing, this was for everybody. And there was definitely an electricity in the air at the show. I think a lot of people were experiencing the same thing I was experiencing, which was having questions about the medical system, having questions about medical culture, trying to figure out how they fit into all of that, and in my case, missing my creative side, missing my humorous side. And so, I think that's the reason people came and showed up was that it wasn't just a night out of entertainment and coming was really more out of a hunger to reconnect with some aspect of ourselves that maybe gets lost as we go through our training. So that was the first show, and people kept asking, when are you going to do another one? When are you going to do another one? The rest is history. We have done many shows since then. So that was the beginning.Eric Topol (14:58):Well, you've been to many cities for live shows, you sold out hundreds and hundreds of seats, and it's a big thing now. I mean, it's been widely recognized by all sorts of awards, and the podcast and the shows. It's quite incredible. So a derivative of The Moth to medicine, is it always medical people telling stories? Does it also include patients and non-medical people?Emily Silverman (15:28):So we're nine years in, and for the first several years, this question came up a lot. What about the patient voice? What about the patient perspective? And the way that I would respond to that question was two ways. First, I would say the line between doctor and patient isn't as bright as you would think. Doctors are also patients. We also have bodies. We also have our own medical and psychiatric conditions and our own doctors and providers who take care of us. So we're all human, we're all patients. That said, I recognize that the doctor, the clinician has its own unique place in society and its own unique perspective. And that's really what I was trying to focus on. I think when you're making art or when you're making a community, people ask a lot about audience. And for me, for those first several years, I was thinking of The Nocturnists as a love letter by healthcare to healthcare. It was something that I was making for and with my community. And in recent months and years, I have been wondering about, okay, what would a new project look like that pulls in the patient voice a bit more? Because we did the clinician thing for several years, and I think there's been a lot of wonderful stories and material that's come out of that. But I'm always itching for the next thing. And it was actually an interview on the podcast I just did with this wonderful person, Susannah Fox.Eric Topol (17:04):Oh yeah, I know Susannah. Sure.Emily Silverman (17:04):Yeah. She was the chief technology officer at the Department of Health and Human Services from 2015 to 2017, I want to say. And she wrote a book called Rebel Health, which is all about patients who weren't getting what they needed from doctors and researchers and scientists. And so, they ended up building things on their own, whether it was building medical devices on their own, on the fringes or building disease registries and communities, online disease communities on their own. And it was a fabulous book and it was a fabulous interview. And ever since then I've been thinking about what might a project look like through The Nocturnists storytelling ethos that centers and focuses on the patient voice, but that's a new thought. For the first several years, it was much more focused on frontline clinicians as our audience.Why is Storytelling in Medicine so Important?Eric Topol (17:55):And then I mean the storytelling people that come to the shows or listen to the podcast, many of them are not physicians, they're patients, all sorts of people that are not part of the initial focus of who's telling stories. Now, I want to get into storytelling. This is, as you point out in another JAMA piece that kind of was introducing The Nocturnists to the medical community. We'll link to that, but a few classic lines, ‘Storytelling is medicine's currency. Storytelling is not just an act of self-healing; it may actually create better physicians.' And then also toward the end of the piece, “Some people also believe that it is unprofessional for physicians to be emotionally vulnerable in front of colleagues. The greater risk, however, is for the healthcare professional to appear superhuman by pretending to not feel grief, suffer from moral distress, laugh at work, or need rest.” And finally, ‘storytelling may actually help to humanize the physician.' So tell us about storytelling because obviously it's one of the most important, if not the most important form of communication between humans. You nailed it, how important it is in medicine, so how do you conceive it? What makes it storytelling for you?Emily Silverman (19:25):It's so surreal to hear you read those words because I haven't read them myself in several years, and I was like, oh, what piece is he talking about? But I remember now. Look, you on your program have had a lot of guests on to talk about the massive changes in medicine that have occurred, including the consolidation of it, the corporatization of it, the ways in which the individual community practice is becoming more and more endangered. And instead what's happening is practices are getting gobbled up and consolidated into these mega corporations and so on and so forth. And I just had on the podcast, the writer Dhruv Khullar, who wrote a piece in the New Yorker recently called the Gilded Age of Medicine is here. And he talks a lot about this and about how there are some benefits to this. For example, if you group practices together, you can have economies of scale and efficiencies that you can't when you have all these scattered individual self-owned practices.Emily Silverman (20:26):But I do think there are risks associated with the corporatization of healthcare. The more that healthcare starts to feel like a conveyor belt or a factory or fast food like the McDonald's of healthcare, MinuteClinic, 15 minutes in and out, the more that we risk losing the heart and soul of medicine and what it is; which is it's not as simple as bringing in your car and getting an oil change. I mean, sometimes it is. Sometimes you just need a strep swab and some antibiotics and call it a day. But I think medicine at its best is more grounded in relationships. And so, what is the modern era of medicine doing to those relationships? Those longitudinal relationships, those deeper relationships where you're not just intimately familiar with a patient's creatinine trend or their kidney biopsy results, but you know your patient and their family, and you know their life story a little bit.Emily Silverman (21:26):And you can understand how the context of their renal disease, for example, fits into the larger story of their life. I think that context is so important. And so, medicine in a way is, it is a science, but it's also an art. And in some ways it's actually kind of an applied science where you're taking science and applying it to the messy, chaotic truth of human beings and their families and their communities. So I think storytelling is a really important way to think of medicine. And then a step beyond that, not just with the doctor patient interaction, but just with the medical community and medical culture at large. I think helping to make the culture healthier and get people out of this clamped down place where they feel like they have to be a superhuman robot. Let's crack that open a little bit and remind ourselves that just like our patients are human beings, so are we. And so, if we can leverage that, and this is also part of the AI conversation that we're having is like, is AI ever going to fully substitute for a physician? Like, well, what does a physician have that AI doesn't? What does a human being have that a machine doesn't? And I think these are really deep questions. And so, I think storytelling is definitely related to that. And so, there's just a lot of rich conversation there in those spaces, and I think storytelling is a great way into those conversations.Eric Topol (22:57):Yeah. We'll talk about AI too, because that's a fascinating future challenge to this. But while you're talking about it, it reminds me that I'm in clinic every week. My fellow and I have really worked on him to talk to the patients about their social history. They seem to omit that and often times to crack the case of what's really going on and what gets the patient excited or what their concerns are really indexed to is learning about what do they do and what makes them tick and all that sort of thing. So it goes every which way in medicine. And the one that you've really brought out is the one where clinicians are telling their stories to others. Now you've had hundreds and hundreds of these physician related stories. What are some of the ones that you think are most memorable? Either for vulnerability or comedy or something that grabbed you because you've seen so many, and heard so many now.A Memorable StoryEmily Silverman (24:02):It's true. There have been hundreds of physician stories that have come through the podcast and some non-physician. I mean, we are, because I'm a doctor, I find that the work tends to be more focused around doctors. But we have brought in nurses and other types of clinicians to tell their stories as well, particularly around Covid. We had a lot of diversity of healthcare professionals who contributed their stories. One that stands out is dialogue that we featured in our live show. So most of our live shows up until that point had featured monologues. So people would stand on stage, tell their story one by one, but for this story, we had two people standing on stage and they alternated telling their story. There was a little bit more scripting and massaging involved. There was still some level of improvisation and spontaneity, but it added a really interesting texture to the story.Emily Silverman (24:58):And basically, it was a story of these two physicians who during Covid, one of them came out of retirement and the other one I think switched fields and was going to be doing different work during Covid as so many of us did. And they were called to New York as volunteers and ended up meeting in the JFK airport in 2020 and it was like an empty airport. And they meet there and they start talking and they realize that they have all these strange things in common, and they sit next to each other on the plane and they're kind of bonding and connecting about what they're about to do, which is go volunteer at the peak of Covid in New York City, and they end up staying in hotels in New York and doing the work. A lot of it really, really just harrowing work. And they stay connected and they bond and they call each other up in the evenings, how was your day? How was your day? And they stay friends. And so, instead of framing it in my mind as a Covid story, I frame it more as a friendship story. And that one just was really special, I think because of the seriousness of the themes, because of the heartwarming aspect of the friendship and then also because of the format, it was just really unusual to have a dialogue over a monologue. So that was one that stood out. And I believe the title of it is Serendipity in Shutdown. So you can check that out.Eric Topol (26:23):That's great. Love it. And I should point out that a lot of these clinical audio diaries are in the US Library of Congress, so it isn't like these are just out there, they're actually archived and it's pretty impressive. While I have you on some of these themes, I mean you're now getting into some bigger topics. You mentioned the pandemic. Another one is Black Voices in Healthcare, and you also got deep into Shame in Medicine. And now I see that you've got a new one coming on Uncertainty in Medicine. Can you give us the skinny on what the Uncertainty in Medicine's going to be all about?Uncertainty in MedicineEmily Silverman (27:14):Yes. So the American Board of Internal Medicine put out a call for grant proposals related to the topic of uncertainty in medicine. And the reason they did that is they identified uncertainty as an area of growth, an area where maybe we don't talk about it enough or we're not really sure how to tolerate it or handle it or teach about it or work with it, work through it in our practice. And they saw that as an area of need. So they put out this call for grants and we put together a grant proposal to do a podcast series on uncertainty in medicine. And we're fortunate enough to be one of the three awardees of that grant. And we've been working on that for the last year. And it's been really interesting, really interesting because the place my mind went first with uncertainty is diagnostic uncertainty.Emily Silverman (28:07):And so, we cover that. We cover diagnostic odyssey and how we cope with the fact that we don't know and things like that. But then there's also so many other domains where uncertainty comes up. There's uncertainties around treatment. What do we do when we don't know if the treatment's working or how to assess whether it's working or it's not working and we don't know why. Or managing complex scenarios where it's not clear the best way to proceed, and how do we hold that uncertainty? Prognostic uncertainty is another area. And then all of the uncertainty that pops up related to the systems issues in healthcare. So for example, we spoke to somebody who was diagnosed with colon cancer, metastatic to the liver, ended up having a bunch of radiation of the mets in the liver and then got all this liver scarring and then got liver failure and then needed a liver transplant and saw this decorated transplant surgeon who recommended the transplant was already to have that done.Emily Silverman (29:06):And then the insurance denied the liver transplant. And so, dealing with the uncertainty of, I know that I need this organ transplant, but the coverage isn't going to happen, and the spoiler alert is that he ended up appealing several times and moving forward and getting his transplant. So that one has a happy ending, but some people don't. And so, thinking about uncertainty coming up in those ways as well for patients. So for the last year we've been trying to gather these stories and organize them by theme and figure out what are the most salient points. The other exciting thing we've done with the uncertainty series is we've looked to people outside of medicine who navigate high uncertainty environments to see if they have any wisdom or advice to share with the medical community. So for example, we recently interviewed an admiral in the Navy. And this person who was an admiral in the Navy for many years and had to navigate wartime scenarios and also had to navigate humanitarian relief scenarios and how does he think about being in command and dealing with people and resources and it is life or death and holding uncertainty and managing it.Emily Silverman (30:18):And he had a lot of interesting things to say about that. Similarly, we spoke to an improvisational dancer who his whole job is to get on stage and he doesn't know what's going to happen. And to me, that sounds terrifying. So it's like how do you deal with that and who would choose that? And so, that's been really fun too, to again, go outside the walls of medicine and see what we can glean and learn from people operating in these different contexts and how we might be able to apply some of those.Eric Topol (30:51):Yeah, I mean this is such a big topic because had the medical community been better in communicating uncertainties in medicine, the public trust during the pandemic could have been much higher. And this has led to some of the real challenges that we're seeing there. So I'm looking forward to that series of new additions in The Nocturnists. Now, when you get this group together to have the live show, I take it that they're not rehearsed. You don't really know much about what they're going to do. I mean, it's kind of like the opposite, the un-TED show. TED Talk, whereby those people, they have to practice in Vancouver wherever for a whole week. It's ridiculous. But here, do you just kind of let them go and tell their story or what?Emily Silverman (31:44):In the beginning it was more open mic, it was more let them go. And then as the years went on, we moved more toward a TED model where we would pair storytellers with a story coach, and they would work together pretty intensively in the six to eight weeks leading up to the event to craft the story. That said, it was very important to us that people not recite an essay that they memorized word for word, which surprise, surprise physicians really love that idea. We're like, we're so good at memorization and we love certainty. We love knowing word for word what's going to come. And so, it's really more of this hybrid approach where we would help people get in touch with, all right, what are the five main beats of your story? Where are we opening? Where are we closing? How do we get there?Emily Silverman (32:34):And so, we'd have a loose outline so that people knew roughly what was going to, but then it wasn't until the night of that we'd fill in the blanks and just kind of see what happens. And that was really exciting because a lot of unexpected things happened. Certain stories that we thought would be really comedic ended up landing with a much more serious and thoughtful tone and vice versa. Some of the stories that we thought were really heavy would unexpectedly get laughs in places that we didn't expect. So I think the magic of live audience is, I guess you could say uncertainty of not quite knowing what's going to happen, and sort of a one time night.Eric Topol (33:17):I'd like to have a storytelling coach. That'd be cool. I mean, we could always be better. I mean, it takes me back to the first story you told with the Saturday Night Live and Kate McKinnon, you told the story, it was so great. But to make telling your story, so it's even more interesting, captivating and expressing more emotion and vulnerability and what makes the human side. I mean, that's what I think we all could do, you never could do it perfectly. I mean, that's kind of interesting how you organize that. Alright, well now I want to go back to your career for a moment because you got into The Nocturnists and these shows and you were gradually, I guess here we are in the middle and still a global burnout, depression, suicide among clinicians, especially physicians, but across the board. And you're weaning your time as a faculty member at UCSF. So what was going through your mind in your life at that time? I guess that takes us to now, too.A Career MoveEmily Silverman (34:36):Yeah, when I was a little kid, I always wanted to doctor and fully intended when I went to med school and residency to find my way as a physician and didn't really think I would be doing much else. I mean, I'd always love reading and writing and the arts, but I never quite thought that that would become as big of a piece of my career as it has become. But what ended up happening is I finished residency. I took a job in the division of hospital medicine at SF General and worked as a hospitalist for about four years and was doing that and balancing with my medical storytelling nonprofit and eventually realized that it wasn't quite working, it wasn't the right fit. And ended up taking a step back and taking a little break from medicine for a while to try to figure out how am I going to balance this?Emily Silverman (35:26):Am I going to shift and go full medicine and retire The Nocturnists? Am I going to go full art, creative journalism, writing and leave clinical medicine behind? Or am I going to continue to proceed in this more hybrid way where I do a little bit of practicing, and I do a little bit of creative on the side? And thus far, I have continued to pursue that middle road. So I ended up starting a new outpatient job, a part-time job that's actually outside of UCSF. I'm still on faculty at UCSF, but my practice now is in private practice. And so, I do that two days a week and it feeds me in a lot of ways and I'm really glad that I've continued to keep that part of myself alive. And then the rest of the days of the week I work from home and some of that is charting and doing clinical work and some of that time is podcasting and working on these other creative projects. So that's where I've landed right now. And I don't know what it will look like in 5, 10, 20 years, but for now it seems to be working.Taking On EpicEric Topol (36:31):Yeah. Well, I think it's great that you've found the right kind of balance and also the channel for getting your exceptional talent, your niche if you will, in medicine to get it out there because people I think are really deriving a lot of benefit from that. Now, another piece you wrote in the New York Times, I just want to touch on because it is tied to the burnout story. This was a great op-ed, Our Hospital's New Software Frets About My ‘Deficiencies' and I want to just warn the listeners or readers or watchers that Epic, this company that you wrote about has non-disparaging agreements with hospitals, censors hospitals and doctors to say anything bad about Epic. So when anybody ever writes something, particularly if it's published in a widely read place, the Epic company doesn't like that and they squash it and whatnot. So what was in your mind when you were writing this op-ed about Epic?Emily Silverman (37:39):So this came out of personal experience that I had where, and maybe this is some of the reason why the hospital medicine work wore me down so much is the frequent messages and alerts and popups just having a lot of fatigue with that. But also what the popups were saying, the language that they used. So you'd open up your electronic chart and a message would pop up and it would say, you are deficient, or it would say you are a delinquent. And it was this scary red box with an upside down exclamation point or something. And it really started to get to me, and this was definitely in that phase of my life and career where I was peak burnout and just kind of raging into the machine a little bit, you could say, I think right now I'm somewhat past that. I think part of the reason why is, I've been able to get myself out into a more sustainable situation, but ended up, it actually came out of me, this piece poured out of me one night.Emily Silverman (38:37):It was like two, three in the morning and my laptop was open and I was laying in bed and my husband was like, go to sleep, go to sleep. And I said, no, this wants to come out, these moments where things just, you just want to give birth, I guess, to something that wants to come out. So I wrote this long piece about Epic and how tone deaf these messages are and how clinicians are, they're working really hard in a really difficult system and just the lack of sensitivity of that language and ended up pitching that to the New York Times. And I think there was something in there that they appreciated about that. There was some humor in there actually. Maybe my Kate McKinnon side came out a little bit. So yes, that piece came out and I think I did get a message or two from a couple folks who worked at Epic who weren't thrilled.Eric Topol (39:33):They didn't threaten to sue you or anything though, right?Emily Silverman (39:35):They didn't. NoEric Topol (39:37):Good.Emily Silverman (39:37):Fortunately, yeah.Medicine and A.I.Eric Topol (39:38):Yeah. Wow. Yeah, it was great. And we'll link to that, too. Now, as they say in comedy, we're going to have a callback. We're going to go to AI, which we talked about and touched on. And of course, one of the things AI is thought that it could help reduce the burden of data clerk work that you've talked about and certainly affected you and affects every person in working in medicine. But I wanted to get to this. For me, it was like a ChatGPT moment of November 2022. Recently, I don't know if you've ever delved into NotebookLM.Emily Silverman (40:18):I have.Eric Topol (40:19):Okay, so you'll recognize this. You put in a PDF and then you hit audio and it generates a podcast of two agents, a man and a woman who are lively, who accurately take, it could be the most complex science, it could be a book, and you can put 50 of these things in and they have a really engaging conversation that even gets away from some of the direct subject matter and it's humanoid. What do you think about that?Emily Silverman (40:57):Well, a lot of what I know about AI, I learned from your book, Eric. And from the subsequent conversation that we had when you came on my podcast to talk about your book. So I'm not sure what I could teach you about this topic that you don't already know, but I think it's a deeply existential question about what it means to be human and how machine intelligence augments that, replaces that, threatens that. I don't really know how to put it. I had Jamie Metzl on the podcast. He's this great historian and science policy expert, and he was saying, I don't like the phrase artificial intelligence because I don't think that's what we're making. I think we're making machine intelligence and that's different from human intelligence. And one of the differences is human beings have physical bodies. So being a human is an embodied experience.Emily Silverman (41:57):A machine can't enjoy, I was going to say a cheeseburger and I was like, wait, I'm talking to a cardiologist. So a machine intelligence being can't enjoy a cucumber salad, a machine intelligence can't feel the endorphins of exercise or have sex or just have all of these other experiences that human beings have because they have bodies. Now, does empathy and emotion and human connection and relationships also fall into that category? I don't know. What is the substrate of empathy? What is the substrate of human connection and relationships and experience? Can it be reduced to zeros and ones or whatever, quantum computing, half zeros and half ones existing simultaneously on a vibrating plane, or is there something uniquely human about that? And I actually don't know the answer or where the edges are. And I think in 5, 10, 20 years, we'll know a lot more about what that is and what that means.Emily Silverman (42:55):What does that mean for medicine? I don't know about the human piece of it, but I think just practically speaking, I believe it will transform the way that we do medicine on so many levels. And this is what your book is about. Some of it is image analysis and EKG analysis, X-ray analysis and MRI analysis. And some of it is cognition, like diagnostic reasoning, clinical reasoning, things like that. I already use OpenEvidence all the time. I don't know if you use it. It's this basically a search engine kind of GPT like search engine that's trained on high quality medical evidence. I'm always going to OpenEvidence with questions. And I actually saw a headline recently, oh gosh, I'll have to fish it out and email it to you and you can link it in the show notes. But it's a little bit about how medical education and also medical certification and testing is going to have to quickly bring itself up to speed on this.Emily Silverman (43:56):The USMLE Step 1 exam, which all physicians in the US have to pass in order to practice medicine. When I took it anyway, which was back in I think 2012, 2013, was very recall based. It was very much based on memorization and regurgitation. Not all, some of it was inference and analysis and problem solving, but a lot of it was memorization. And as you said, I think Eric on our interview on my podcast, that the era of the brainiac memorizing Doogie Howser physician is over. It's not about that anymore. We can outsource that to machines. That's actually one of the things that we can outsource. So I'm excited to see how it evolves. I hope that medical schools and hospitals and institutions find ways safely, of course, to embrace and use this technology because I think it can do a lot of good, which is also what your book is about, the optimistic lens of your book.Eric Topol (44:55):Well, what I like though is that what you're trying to do in your work that you're passionate about is bringing back and amplifying humanity. Enriching the humanity in medicine. Whether that's physicians understanding themselves better and realizing that they are not just to be expected to be superhuman or non-human or whatever, to how we communicate, how we feel, experience the care of patients, the privilege of care of patients. So that's what I love about your efforts to do that. And I also think that people keep talking about artificial general intelligence (AGI), but that's not what we are talking about here today. We're talking about human emotions. Machines don't cry, they don't laugh. They don't really bond with humans, although they try to. I don't know that you could ever, so this fixation on AGI is different than what we're talking about in medicine. And I know you're destined to be a leader in that you already are. But I hope you'll write a book about medical storytelling and the humanity and medicine, because a natural for this and you're writing it is just great. Have you thought about doing that?Emily Silverman (46:24):It's very kind of you to say. I have thought about if I were to embark on a book project, what would that look like? And I have a few different ideas and I'm not sure. I'm not sure. Maybe I'll consult with you offline about that.Eric Topol (46:42):Alright, well I'd like to encourage you because having read your pieces that some of them cited here you have it. You really are a communicator extraordinaire. So anyway, Emily, thank you for joining today. I really enjoyed our conversation and your mission not just to be a physician, which is obviously important, but also to try to enhance the humanity in medicine, in the medical community particularly. So thank you.Emily Silverman (47:14):Thank you. Thank you for having me.***************************************Thanks for listening, watching or reading Ground Truths. Your subscription is greatly appreciated.If you found this podcast interesting please share it!That makes the work involved in putting these together especially worthwhile.All content on Ground Truths—newsletters, analyses, and podcasts—is free, open-access.Paid subscriptions are voluntary and all proceeds from them go to support Scripps Research. They do allow for posting comments and questions, which I do my best to respond to. Many thanks to those who have contributed—they have greatly helped fund our summer internship programs for the past two years. And such support is becoming more vital In light of current changes of funding by US biomedical research at NIH and other governmental agencies. Get full access to Ground Truths at erictopol.substack.com/subscribe
Elaine Aronson joined me to discuss 60's TV; growing up in Newton, Mass; going to college for dance; graduating from UCSB with a degree in dramatic arts w/o talking a drama class; teaching dance; being a secretary at Empire Pictures; writing scenes for child actors; getting Ron Zimmerman as a mentor; writing a spec Molly Dodd; getting hired on It's the Garry Shandling Show; first episode is Gilda Radner episode; strike happens and goes back to being a waitress; "Save Mr. Peck's" an all guest star episode; "Worry Wort"; how an episode doesn't start with tricks; moving to Night Court; Phil / Will; meeting Bill Clinton; writing the final episode and 30 Rock redoing it; doing Doogie Howser, MD; the Bochco method; having an ear infection and not being able to hear when having to interview deaf actresses; meeting her husband, Curtis Armstrong; Gilbert Gottfried; Clinic Defense Alliance; working on Good Advice & Cybill; Christine Baranski; the failure of The Gregory Hines Show; Maggie; The Weber Show; That 80's Show; The Game; Mystery Girls; Project MC2; You, Me, Her; how mini rooms are not leading to young writers being able to later run shows; her pilot Kitty's Dish; long hours currently on The Gilded Age; Long Island sets; Curtis' taping American Dad; Moonlighting
Kelli and Sarah discuss Season 5, Episode 10 of Below Deck Sailing Yacht. Topics include: SC vs TX, the stews competing for Chase, roommate life with Gaisy, the rosé hunt, passive-aggressive communication, Cloyce enjoying being reprimanded, coffee orders, berries, Ronnie getting stung and Daisy spilling Danni's tea. In Hot Tub Convo we discuss the breakup of Sunny and Ben, Chef Dave getting hitched, Chase and Cloyce on WWHL and Doogie Howser, M.D. Meet us in the crew mess for a preference sheet meeting - a new episode of Above Deck is out now! Follow us on Instagram: @abovedeckpod Get in touch: abovedeckpod@gmail.com Get ya some Above Deck merch! https://shop.hurrdatmedia.com/collections/above-deck Thank you to Keen for sponsoring this episode. Go to www.trykeen.com/abovedeck to get your first 5 minute reading for $1. Please subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts, and tell a friend! 00:00 Intro 00:47 Episode Recap 1:03 Discussion 14:15 Keen Ad 15:19 Hot Tub Convo 19:22 Join Me in the Wheelhouse 19:54 Outro GEAR WE USE TO MAKE PODCASTS: https://amzn.to/4dg7uZF SOFTWARE WE USE TO MAKE PODCASTS: https://hurrdatmedia.com/our-gear/ This is another Hurrdat Media Production. Hurrdat Media is a podcast network and digital media production company based in Omaha, NE. Find more podcasts on the Hurrdat Media Network by going to HurrdatMedia.com or Hurrdat Media YouTube channel! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
There was a Young Ryan from Limerick Who joined That 80s Show with his little... Let's leave that there - Young Ryan returns with tales from The Emerald Isle and his list of Top 3 Lesbians in a segment that has nothing to do withe nudie films. Paulo introduces his guests to the sweetest piece of Last Christmas content of the year, but whatever you do DON'T Google, ''Whamster''. Dori quizzes Ryan on the 80s, and stumps Paulo with her viewing recommendation. Paulo's movie of the week is the Christmas Horror called Elves. incestuous Nazi Satanists in wheel chairs and Ninja Turtle Pyjamas - and no sign of the guy from Anchorman. We have great new about Dolph Lundgren and want to get invited to the Murphy/Lawrence wedding stand-up special. **Young Ryan's Experience in Ireland (00:00:51)** **Sabrina Carpenter's Netflix Special (00:04:45)** **Chappel Roan's Popularity (00:05:55)** **Harry the Hamster's Christmas Adventure (00:16:59)** **80s Christmas Quiz Introduction (00:20:37)** **80s References in Pantheon (00:35:35)** **Plot Overview of "Elves" (00:41:26)** **Dolph Lundgren's Health Update (00:58:46)** **Comedy Super Baby (01:01:21)** **Show Plans and Holidays (01:02:43)** #Young Ryan, #ChappelRoan, #Ireland, #crack connoisseur, #holiday season, #Last Christmas, #Wham!, #Netflix special, #Sabrina Carpenter, #Chaperone, #80s music, #nostalgia, #South African Podcast Award, #Hub Hopper International Award, #Best Entertainment Podcast, #80s pop culture, #Doogie Howser, #Back to the Future, #Pantheon, #animated series, #Elves, #absurd movies, #holiday traditions, #Christmas songs, #Elf, #family dynamics, #cultural significance, #memories, #festive spirit, #humor, #engaging conversation, #heartwarming moments, #music covers, #original songs, #Andrew Ridgeley, #Harry the Hamster, #supermarket advertisement, #80s quiz, #Cabbage Patch Kids, #holiday specials, #movie recommendations, #Christmas movies, #Die Hard, #Gremlins, #Band Aid, #pop culture references, #Christmas parties, #family gatherings, #joyful memories, #Merry Christmas, #New Year.
On this episode of the Growing with Purpose podcast, host Paul Spiegelman sits down with Kyle David, CEO of The Kyle David Group. He is also a graduate of the Small Giants Leadership Academy Class of 2021. Kyle got his professional career started earlier than most. Due to childhood autoimmune issues, he couldn't participate in a lot of physical activities, and instead turned to reading – mostly books about technology and business. This self education led to a job with a consulting firm at just 14 years old. Thanks to a meritocracy culture and supportive mentors, Kyle was able to grow his skills as a technology consultant well before he could drive himself to his clients (good thing his colleagues didn't mind giving him a lift!). When Kyle started his own firm after school, he took the values from both his previous job and his church upbringing and instilled them into his own culture. Now, Kyle takes pride in leading an organization that gives back to its people and works with values-aligned clients. Listen to this episode to hear about Kyle's jump start in the consulting world, his grandfather's wise words about entrepreneurship, and what growing up in a church-focused household taught him about leadership. Show Notes: 1:11 - In his Doogie Howser era 13:33 - A grandfather's wisdom 24:10 - Challenges & humbling moments 32:35 - “Establish humility young”
In the latest episode of The Nick Fong Podcast, Nick talks with Jonathan Spears, a prominent real estate agent from Florida. The episode explores Jonathan's journey in the real estate world, starting with his impressive story of beginning college at 14 and earning his real estate license by the age of 18. The Doogie Howser of Real Estate! Throughout the conversation, Jonathan shares how he overcame the challenge of the 2008 financial crisis, building a real estate empire focused on the second-home market. They have sold over $2 billion in real estate, with a focus on markets like 30A, known as "The Hamptons of the South." Jonathan also shares his vision on how to grow a team of agents, the strategies he uses to maintain a high level of professionalism in his business, and how he has aligned his team with his core values: long-term relationships and building loyal clients. Additionally, they discuss the evolution of luxury real estate markets, the opportunities and challenges that arose during the pandemic, and the growth of his team within Compass Group. The episode closes with a discussion on the impact of technology in the industry, the importance of storytelling in building brands, and how the accumulated experience in real estate cannot be replicated by online resources. This episode provides a deep perspective on growth in luxury real estate, team leadership, and the keys to generating sustainable long-term business.
Subscriber-only episodeTW: SA - We do use a major trigger word a few times, being that it is in the title and very much the subject of this episode. Veronica and Wallace visit the local college that Veronica doesn't want to attend but obviously will. This college has not one but TWO stars from Arrested Development in its student body. Daddy Mars, or should we say Doctor Janitor Mars... helps the local public defender get out of a lil pickle. And Stacey has the sniffles, but would love Veronica to be more like Doogie Howser.Subscribe to our Patreon to access the video version, our Discord community, plus all of our other bonus content.Send us a text
Mikey & Jeremy Ketchup on the fall of The Big Bang Theory, roastin' mallows, and a very special episode of Tales from the Janitor's Closet. They also discuss dinner sitcoms, Beetlejuice, and wrestling.
This week the boys look back at ER after hearing there was an attempted reboot. After the break Andrew gets quizzed on his knowledge of ER and other 90s medical shows.Like the show? Leave us a 5 star review and subscribe!Send us a tweet at @Namely90s.bsky.social Discuss the show on Instagram @Namely90sFind us online at Namely90s.comConsider joining our Patreon at Patreon.com/Namely90sFollow Brandon on Bluesky at @bschwitty.bsky.socialFollow Andrew on Bluesky at @therocdoc.bsky.socialOutro:Pixelland by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4222-pixelland License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
In this special interview, Bryce talks with actor and producer Cameron Arnett. He is one of the stars of the upcoming movies, "The Forge," which hits theaters on August 23rd. He also starred in the No. 1 family movie of 2019, "Overcomer". Earlier in his career, he appeared on Miami Vice, Star Trek: The Next Generation, and Doogie Howser, MD. He has won actor of the year by ICFF, as well as other acting awards and nominations. Cameron founded "Christ Over Career", a global movement calling the church back to the Lordship of Jesus Christ. He also played college football at Miami prior to becoming an actor.This conversation will encourage you to live for Jesus in every area of your life, and to devote your life to discipling others to follow Jesus.Chapters0:00 Teaser0:23 Intro2:25 Cameron Arnett3:00 The Olympics and Steph Curry5:13 Cameron's Hat Collection6:30 Cameron's Production Company7:50 Why Cameron is Excited about his new movie, “The Forge”9:32 Dicipleling Teenager's 12:26 The Impact An Owner Can Have on the Lowest Employee14:57 The Importance of Mentorship19:33 Insight on “The Forge”21:17 Benjamin Watson Starring in the Movie23:00 Helping the Next Generation26:20 Balancing Grace and Truth29:53 The State of Faith-Based Movies in Hollywood34:08 OutroFind out more about Cameron and his ministry work by visiting his official website.Discover more about "The Forge", which hits theaters on August 23rd.Bring meaning and purpose to your Fantasy season by signing up for Fantasy Football Fellowship.Learn more about our sponsor, Upward Sports. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In today's podcast, Manuel discusses how you can unlock your superpower and transform your business by leveraging the power of AI and the knowledge at your fingertips. Listen as he breaks down how to identify and enhance your unique abilities to drive growth and success. Key points covered include: Defining Your Superpower: Manuel explains his definition of a superpower as the ability to positively influence others through your message, products, or services. He uses ChatGPT to help identify what makes you extraordinary in your field. The Power of Knowledge: Discover how you can enhance your superpower by acquiring the right knowledge. Manuel demonstrates how AI can recommend books tailored to your specific strengths and how you can quickly absorb valuable information to stay ahead in your niche. Practical Application of AI: Manuel shares a practical example of how he uses AI to summarize books and provide actionable insights in minutes, enabling you to implement new strategies and ideas faster than ever before. The Doogie Howser Effect: Reflecting on the iconic character Doogie Howser, Manuel draws a parallel to how you can accelerate your learning and become exceptional in your field by rapidly acquiring and applying knowledge. Building Certainty: Manuel emphasizes the importance of having certainty in your abilities. He shares personal stories that illustrate how confidence in your knowledge and skills can significantly increase your value and impact. Join us to explore how identifying your superpower, acquiring targeted knowledge, and leveraging AI can empower you to transform your business and achieve remarkable success. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Today on the Rarified Heir Podcast, we are talking to actor David Pressman and both delving into both of his actor parents, Lawrence Pressman and Lanna Saunders. Like our previous guest, Christopher Murray, David seemed destined to become an actor – not just because of his parents but also because his grandparents and even his great grandfather were actors as well – going all the way back to the Russian/Ukrainian stage before he emigrated to America. We are talking generations! David spoke to us about his time growing up in Los Angeles with his mother Lanna who appeared on more than 500 episodes of the popular soap opera Days of Our Lives as Marie Horton and his father who is still going strong at age 85. Depending on how old you are, you will know Lawrence's best from his roles in Nine to Five, Mulligan's Stew, M*A*S*H, Doogie Howser and so much more. We also talk about both of his parents love of theater and their time on Broadway, working on the stage prior to their move out to Los Angeles when David was seven years old. Along the way we speak about the such things as the CIA, Robby Benson's gang film Walk Proud, the difference between overtime and golden time on set, a fear of flying that led to a marriage, partying with Steve Coogan on the set of Tropic Thunder, famous LA restaurants, Jane Fonda's kindness at a dinner party and much more. This is the Rarified Heir Podcast and everyone has a story. Take a listen.
Send us a Text Message.In the wake of an auditory collapse that is forcing all podcasts to shed 20% of their listener base, a group dinner meeting erupts into chaos when the producer's plan to accept a corporate buyout goes horribly awry. On Episode 625 of Trick or Treat Radio we discuss the film Humane from director Caitlin Cronenberg! We also discuss obscure 90s sitcoms that feature comic book artists, we have an unfortunately oversized coffin corner, and we learn what cartoon scenes freaked us out as kids. So grab your euthanasia exemption card, whisper to the closest wombat, and strap on for the world's most dangerous podcast!Stuff we talk about: Mike Flanagan, Midnight Mass, Doctor Sleep, Haunting of Bly Manor, Hush, a plan that involves not having a plan, Sista Sage, The Boys, Spongebob Squarepants, Karl Urban, Jack Quaid, death by twerking, wombat whisperer, leap tall buildings in a single bounce, Claude Balls, coffin corner, RIP Bob Newhart, RIP Richard Simmons, RIP Dr. Ruth, Kirk Cameron, Different Strokes, Kirk, sitcoms with main characters that are artists, Ray Bulger, Anthrax, Rick Rubin, Married with Children, Charmed, RIP Shannen Doherty, Doogie Howser, Mallrats, Heathers, Alyssa Milano, Rose McGowan, Sweating to the Oldies, Pauly Shore, Drew Carey, Whose Line Is It Anyways, Art Bradish, Vimeo or Venmo?, Johnny Sins, using a knife and a fork to drink beer, David Cronenberg, Jay Baruchel, Emily Hampshire, Schitt's Creek, Peter Gallagher, American Beauty, emotional horror, The Fly, Jeff Goldblum, Caitlin Cronenberg, Humane, MIFF, Nick Cave, Godzilla, Longlegs, The Wuzzles, Fire In the Sky, Metalocalypse, Thundarr the Barbarian, Red Dawn, Gloomy Gus, silks and fine linens, Jack Black, Tenacious D, Battle of the Bulger, laugh exempt, Stupid Humane Tricks, and Thanksgiving Dinner From Hell.Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradioJoin our Discord Community: discord.trickortreatradio.comSend Email/Voicemail: mailto:podcast@trickortreatradio.comVisit our website: http://trickortreatradio.comStart your own podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=386Use our Amazon link: http://amzn.to/2CTdZzKFB Group: http://www.facebook.com/groups/trickortreatradioTwitter: http://twitter.com/TrickTreatRadioFacebook: http://facebook.com/TrickOrTreatRadioYouTube: http://youtube.com/TrickOrTreatRadioInstagram: http://instagram.com/TrickorTreatRadioSupport the Show.
Today on America in the Morning Republican National Convention Today is Day Two of the Republican National Convention, and in Day One, delegates in Wisconsin officially nominated Donald Trump for President, and the candidate names who his V-P will be. With the details, our Steve Futterman reports from the RNC in Milwaukee. Latest On The Attempted Trump Assassin Two days after a gunman tried to assassinate former President Donald Trump, authorities are still trying to figure out what could have motivated the 20-year-old would-be assassin. John Stolnis has more from Washington. Judge Tosses Trump Classified Docs Case Days after he dodged a bullet during a campaign rally in Pennsylvania, former President Donald Trump is catching a break in the Federal classified documents case against him. Correspondent Clayton Neville reports. Judge Allows Abortion On The Ballot A state court judge's ruling will keep an abortion-rights question on the November ballot in South Dakota. The judge dismissed a lawsuit brought by the pro-life group, the Life Defense Fund that sought to have the question removed even though supporters turned in more than enough valid signatures to put it on the ballot. Judge Throws The Book At Alaska Killer Saying the man who was found guilty of torturing and killing two Alaska women treated his victims as horribly as anyone could be treated, a judge sentenced Brian Steven Smith to a total of 226 years in prison. Heading To The Space Cave When astronauts head to the moon, and possibly stay there for long periods, their first home may be inside a newly-discovered cave. Sue Aller explains. Vance Named Trump's VP Candidate The RNC Convention began just two days after an assassination attempt on the GOP nominee for president, and one of the first orders of the event was to officially nominate Donald Trump for president, who announced he would select Ohio Senator J.D. Vance as his Vice President running mate. Correspondent Jackie Quinn reports. Who Was The Trump Attempted Assassin More is being learned about the 20-year-old who attempted to assassinate former President Donald Trump, and also how police initially responded to the threat. Those details from correspondent Julie Walker. RNC Security Away from the arena hosting the RNC Convention, there were throngs of protesters denouncing the former president and what they claim to be the GOP agenda, all of this creating extra concerns for safety following the assassination attempt against Donald Trump just two days before. Washington correspondent Sagar Meghani reports on security at the week's Republican National Convention. Heat, Winds, & Flooding Depending on where you are in America you could be dealing with record breaking heat or potential severe weather impacting much of the country, while some have concerns of flooding, and Texans are still without power. Correspondent Clayton Neville has the latest. California's New School Law California Governor Gavin Newsom signed a first-in-the-nation law barring school districts from passing policies that require schools to notify parents if their child asks to change their gender identification. War Games The United States is keeping a watchful eye on joint naval drills now being conducted between Russia and China. Correspondent Karen Chammas reports. Tech News Amazon prime day happens twice a year or so, and tech correspondent Chuck Palm has put together a top 5 list of deals on tech gadgets you can find today, if you're an Amazon Prime subscriber. Finally Actor James Sikking, who had starring roles in TV shows including Hill Street Blues and Doogie Howser, MD has passed away. Entertainment correspondent Margie Szaroleta has more. We all know about conspiracy theories when it comes to politics, but as Kevin Carr reports, fans of Taylor Swift are wondering if there's a new song deepfake when it comes to a recent concert she gave overseas. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This week we're joined by boxer turned doctor, Hafiz Kassam. We're talking about getting punched in the face, Doogie Howser, and more!
On Episode 138 of The Unique CPA, join host Randy Crabtree as he chats with Timothy Wingate Jr., founder of G+F Business and Financial Consulting, about his journey from wanting to be the next Doogie Howser to creating a niche accounting practice focused on the construction industry. Timothy's father worked in construction, so his experience runs deep and across generations, so his insights on niching, work-life balance, and effective marketing strategies are sure to be relevant to any accounting firm that is looking to drill down. Get the full show notes and more resources at TheUniqueCPA.com
Jake may or may not have a heart defect, which is why he stays away from the "One Chip Challenge". At least that's according to Doogie Howser M.D. who decided to call and break the bad news. Also on the show, we react to John Kennedy's hilarious soundbite while questioning FDIC Chair Martin Gruenberg and an update on Wanda Watch. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Ten Minute Bible Hour Podcast - The Ten Minute Bible Hour
Nehemiah 6:5-9 Thanks to everyone who supports TMBH at patreon.com/thetmbhpodcast You're the reason we can all do this together! Discuss the episode here Music by Jeff Foote
Mike Post is the multi-Grammy-winning composer behind some of the most recognizable TV theme songs of all time, from “The A-Team” and “Magnum, P.I.” to “Doogie Howser, M.D.” and “Law & Order.” Now, Mike is back with new music — but not for the small screen. He's released a bluegrass and blues record, titled “Message from the Mountains & Echoes of the Delta.” He chats with Tom about the record and his incredible career in music, including how he came up with the famous dun-dun sound on “Law & Order.”Plus, the singer-songwriter Joel Plaskett is breaking some new ground with his latest release: a spoken word performance of a poem called “The New Joys.” He tells us the story behind the piece and what made him want to explore poetry.
This is a bonus clip of my conversation with Benny Blanco. We talk about Benny's days of making music, beat competitions, and more. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week on It Was a Thing on TV we reach a milestone with our 450th episode! First for Episode 449, in an era where game shows were goofy, outrageous, and random, this game show was the goofiest, most outrageous, and the most random. The Cheap Show was ridiculous, messy, and...well...cheap. Sorry for the short episode. There isn't much multimedia out there, nor is there much information about it. Then for Episode 450, Steven Bochco, the genius behind hit shows including Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, and Doogie Howser, created Cop Rock, which was labeled as being revolutionary and potentially changing the landscape of television. Despite tons of promotion, the show ran 3 months and has been deemed one of the biggest failures in television history. Not only do we cover the series as always, but we will feature one song from each episode. Follow us at all our socials via our Linktree page at linktr.ee/itwasathingontv Timestamps 1:13 - The Cheap Show 17:15 - This Week in Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour History (1/30/84-2/3/84) 21:53 - Classic Commercial Break (October 1990) 24:31 - Cop Rock 2:03:00 - The Russell Westbrook Update
Maiah y Gabriel pasan dos semanas en cama gracias a la influenza —probablemente culpa de ir a comer con un amigo o de Miami, no se sabe—. En el camino, Gabriel debe llevar a Maiah a la sala de emergencias con una crisis respiratoria —llevando el título de propiedad de la casa en la mano para poder pagar la factura—, se topan a la versión Gen Z de Doogie Howser, M.D. (El doctorcito) y descubren que The Notebook se queda en pañales ante el dramón de su romance. Por cierto: se revela que Gabriel casi quema la casa el 31 de Diciembre y tienes que ver el video en Patreon para mirar la prueba irrefutable de que su amor está on fire.
Week 21 - May 21-27, 1990 and we discuss everything that was happening during the 18th week of 1990. Which movies were at the theater? What music were you hearing on the radio? What news was hitting the headlines? What were you watchin on T.V.? We have the answer to all these questions and so much more! Back To The Future III, Doogie Howser Graduates and a Special Guest with Video Game Corner.
Kevin Drew stops by the program to talk about the first records he bought, which were in some order: Beastie Boys, Madonna, Cowboy Junkies, and the Jesus and Mary Chain, making him the Doogie Howser of music appreciation. We also discuss his gorgeous new solo record “Aging,” and why authenticity is the most attractive quality, all on another episode of '24 Question Party People'. Host: Yasi Salek Guest: Kevin Drew Producer: Jesse Miller-Gordon Associate Producer: Chris Sutton Additional Production Supervision: Justin Sayles Theme Song: Hether Fortune Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Hoy les voy a contar la historia de un joven #Actor protagonista de la serie de #Television #DoogieHowser y quien al pasar los años decidió salir del #Closet aunque no le fue muy bien que digamos y hoy te contaré por qué.
In this episode we return to a former subject of this podcast, Cotton Mather and tear another chapter from his life story. We first met Cotton in the episode, A Pox to You, where Cotton was the voice of reason, the man of science who stood up to superstitious misgivings and disinformation. He was, not to put too finer point on it, the hero of that story. So how does our man of science and reasoning acquit himself at the Salem Witch Trials? Spoiler alert. Not good. This episode features special guest star appearances from Richard Mather, John Cotton, Harvard University, Doogie Howser, Anne ‘Goody' Glover, Martha Goodwin, Thomas Oakes, Abigail Williams, Elizabeth Parris, Massachusetts, Ann Putnam Jr, Arthur Miller, The Crucible, Susanna Wallcott, Doctor Griggs, George Burroughs, Robert Calef, William Phips, Dorothy Good, Sarah Good, Margret Atwood, Handmaid's Tale, Peter Miller, Samuel Sewell and Danvers. Sauceshttps://salem.lib.virginia.edu/people/c_mather.htmlhttps://famous-trials.com/salem/2037-sal-bmathttps://famous-trials.com/salem/2075-asal-chhttps://thehistoryjunkie.com/cotton-mather-and-the-salem-witch-trials/ https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo/A50139.0001.001/1:1?rgn=div1;view=fulltexthttps://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo/A70086.0001.001/1:9.1?rgn=div2;view=fulltexthttps://salem.lib.virginia.edu/letters/to_richards1.html
Deadly Friend (1986) is the story of a Doogie-Howser-esque robotics and AI genius who through a series of wildly inadvisable blunders sets a murderous-robot-brain-powered undead Kristy Swanson loose on an unsuspecting series of neighborhood jerks. All in the name of love, we think. We know Wes Craven can deliver on horror, but can he deliver… Continue Reading BMFcast 588 – Deadly Friend – Cadavernapping The post BMFcast 588 – Deadly Friend – Cadavernapping first appeared on Bad Movie Fiends - The BMFcast.
It's time for the Comic Talk Headlines with Generally Nerdy! Plenty of new music to discuss. Some gaming and TV follow-ups. An interesting Batman day celebration, and tons of new rumors to go over.Tune in Wednesdays for the regular show. Plus, don't forget to subscribe for more fresh content. MusicFollow-ups/CorrectionsFive Finger Death Punch - The Ivan Moody situation seems to get a little stranger. Moody came down with a “terrible Flu” and had to sit out the band's Metallica date on Aug 27 in LA. Filling in for him was Phil Labonte, Howard Jones, and Fire From the Gods' frontman AJ Channer. https://blabbermouth.net/news/five-finger-death-punch-performs-without-ivan-moody-at-sofi-stadium-phil-labonte-howard-jones-fill-in Rammstein - Germany has dropped their investigation of Till Lindemann. Basically it boils down to the legal system found that the allegations were only brought AFTER YT'ers connected dots and the accusers based their accusations on THAT and not their own memories. https://loudwire.com/germany-dropped-investigation-rammstein-till-lindemann-allegations/ New Music/VideoAsking Alexandria - Let Go https://youtu.be/v3H_swfQscc I want to like these guys… but their move to “active rock” is disappointing.Spiritbox - Jaded https://youtu.be/EjnZVpVvJ-k The Fear of Fear EP set for release on Nov 3. Video-wise the shooting must have been crazy with all those mirrors.Carnifex - Death's Forgotten Children (feat Tom Barber from Chelsea Grin) https://youtu.be/SsqNooo-2UU from the album, Necromanteum, out October 6, 2023. Carnifex is quality Deathcore. The RBS is strong with this one.Oni - Aura (feat. Howard Jones) https://youtu.be/h15cz5y0S7Y Previous single featured Randy Blythe and Iggy Pop. More of their signature sound. Metalcore with a softer side.Job for a Cowboy - The Agony Seeping Storm https://youtu.be/rdte-9YqWoI Deathcore Originators bring heat. RBS not an issue here!Dying Wish - Lost in the Fall https://youtu.be/VyLMV9UAS7M Metalcore is alive and well! Bring on the soar-y chorus.Callous Daoboys - Waco Jesus https://youtu.be/feRMvnP-rj8 God Smiles Upon The Callous Daoboys – Available October 20. Moving passed the Dillinger comparisons? Exploring their melodic side.Imminence - Heaven Shall Burn https://youtu.be/3rAUiieikoE Swedish melodic death metal? Whatever these guys are GREAT!Tom MacDonald, Adam Calhoun & Dax - Black & White https://youtu.be/dwQIDFB4CHQ Tours/FestivalsTSO - Yeah they are going everywhere again… https://blabbermouth.net/news/trans-siberian-orchestra-announces-2023-tour-the-ghosts-of-christmas-eve-the-best-of-tso-more https://youtu.be/jUa4Ir6O09c Carnifex - Signs of the Swarm, To The Grave, The Last Ten Seconds of Life. From Oct 10 in Tuscon AZ through Nov 11 in LA.https://metalinjection.net/new-music/carnifex-release-new-song-featuring-chelsea-grin-vocalist-tom-barber SuggestsGaming/TechFollow-ups/CorrectionsMK1 - Kronika revealed in first chapter playthroughs, but Nitara image leaked.Robocop Nov 2 new release date. No longer set for sept. Also no longer going to Switch.CoD - Now adding Laura Croft as a playable character. 21 Savage, Jackal Mace https://twitter.com/CallofDuty/status/1696206105032937562 TrailersMK1 - https://youtu.be/1RHrXmLBp1k https://youtu.be/BBH_KrEFetA Reg ‘ol NewsNightdive Studios - the studio that gave us the System Shock remaster, has announced Star Wars: Dark Forces, and Turok 3 remasters.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4b9TTurkH4c&t=1s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdCaj5ZRp-A Ghostbusters Short - https://youtu.be/Oh4LtXSOSlI proof of concept built in Unreal Engine 5 with use of a digital motion capture stage.Nintendo Direct - Aug 31 at 7am PT/10am ET talking about Super Mario Bros. Wonder. https://twitter.com/NintendoAmerica/status/1696523235138158892 SuggestsGhostbusters - https://youtu.be/YsaHsMUlc0A Comic Books/BooksTrailersMighty Morphin Power Rangers - Darkest Hour https://youtu.be/f92RANbUgus head writer Melissa Flores and artist Simona Di Gianfelice BOOM! Studios.SuggestsUnity https://t.co/efCfmgr0n1 TV ShowsFollow-ups/CorrectionsSpiderwick Chronicles - Disney+ has passed on the finished series. Will now be shopped to other outlets by Paramount TV Studios and 20th Television. https://deadline.com/2023/08/the-spiderwick-chronicles-canceled-disney-plus-cost-cutting-shopped-paramount-1235528689/ Doogie Kamealoha M.D. - The Doogie Howser successor has been canceled before airing it's first episode. https://deadline.com/2023/08/doogie-kamealoha-m-d-canceled-disney-plus-1235528655/ The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim - originally going to be released on April 12, 2024, but now has been delayed until Dec. 13, 2024. The Idol - Canceled at HBOReg ‘ol NewsArleen Sorkin - passed at 67. Bob Barker - Passed at 99AMC on Max - Fear the Walking Dead, Interview with the Vampire, A Discovery of Witches, Dark Winds, Gangs of London, Killing Eve, Ride with Norman Reedus, are all splitting streaming duties between the 2 streamers to some degree. AMC Picks on Max tab from Sept 1 through Oct 31 https://variety.com/2023/digital/news/max-amc-plus-series-fear-walking-dead-1235706198/ SuggestsAhsokaMoviesFollow-ups/CorrectionsGodzilla x Kong: The New Empire - originally going to roar into theaters on March 15, 2024, but will not get released a month later on April 12, 2024Dune: Part Two - originally set for a Nov. 3, 2023 release date but now will be released on March 15, 2024.TrailersThe Killer - https://youtu.be/vs1epO_zLG8 David Fincher's newest movie is a comic adaptation starring Michael Fassbender.Reg ‘ol NewsBatman Day - Showcase Cinemas will be running all 3 Chris Nolan Batman movies in celebrations. https://comicbook.com/movies/news/the-dark-knight-trilogy-batman-day-limited-theater-run-where-to-watch/ SuggestsRumor MillNew RumorsAvengers: Kang/Secret - Michael Waldron and Jeff Loveness, who were to write Avengers Secret Wars and Avengers Kang's Dynasty respectively, have reportedly been axed from their projects. Loveness wrote Quantumania, Waldron wrote Multiverse of Madness.LOTR: Rings of Power - Producers of the series want the second season to focus on the Numenoreon story, Editors want a more Elf-centric second season. Apparently if the Editors win, then the big 2-episode battle that is supposed to end the season will make more sense.Nintendo Focus - Rumored name of the next gen console.She-Hulk - Season 2 incoming…?Thirteen Ghosts - TV series in the works? Sony said to be primary rights holder and the final decision maker.You can support this show by visiting our merch store, or by leaving us an Apple Podcasts review.
It's time for the Comic Talk Headlines with Generally Nerdy! Plenty of new music to discuss. Some gaming and TV follow-ups. An interesting Batman day celebration, and tons of new rumors to go over.Tune in Wednesdays for the regular show. Plus, don't forget to subscribe for more fresh content. MusicFollow-ups/CorrectionsFive Finger Death Punch - The Ivan Moody situation seems to get a little stranger. Moody came down with a “terrible Flu” and had to sit out the band's Metallica date on Aug 27 in LA. Filling in for him was Phil Labonte, Howard Jones, and Fire From the Gods' frontman AJ Channer. https://blabbermouth.net/news/five-finger-death-punch-performs-without-ivan-moody-at-sofi-stadium-phil-labonte-howard-jones-fill-in Rammstein - Germany has dropped their investigation of Till Lindemann. Basically it boils down to the legal system found that the allegations were only brought AFTER YT'ers connected dots and the accusers based their accusations on THAT and not their own memories. https://loudwire.com/germany-dropped-investigation-rammstein-till-lindemann-allegations/ New Music/VideoAsking Alexandria - Let Go https://youtu.be/v3H_swfQscc I want to like these guys… but their move to “active rock” is disappointing.Spiritbox - Jaded https://youtu.be/EjnZVpVvJ-k The Fear of Fear EP set for release on Nov 3. Video-wise the shooting must have been crazy with all those mirrors.Carnifex - Death's Forgotten Children (feat Tom Barber from Chelsea Grin) https://youtu.be/SsqNooo-2UU from the album, Necromanteum, out October 6, 2023. Carnifex is quality Deathcore. The RBS is strong with this one.Oni - Aura (feat. Howard Jones) https://youtu.be/h15cz5y0S7Y Previous single featured Randy Blythe and Iggy Pop. More of their signature sound. Metalcore with a softer side.Job for a Cowboy - The Agony Seeping Storm https://youtu.be/rdte-9YqWoI Deathcore Originators bring heat. RBS not an issue here!Dying Wish - Lost in the Fall https://youtu.be/VyLMV9UAS7M Metalcore is alive and well! Bring on the soar-y chorus.Callous Daoboys - Waco Jesus https://youtu.be/feRMvnP-rj8 God Smiles Upon The Callous Daoboys – Available October 20. Moving passed the Dillinger comparisons? Exploring their melodic side.Imminence - Heaven Shall Burn https://youtu.be/3rAUiieikoE Swedish melodic death metal? Whatever these guys are GREAT!Tom MacDonald, Adam Calhoun & Dax - Black & White https://youtu.be/dwQIDFB4CHQ Tours/FestivalsTSO - Yeah they are going everywhere again… https://blabbermouth.net/news/trans-siberian-orchestra-announces-2023-tour-the-ghosts-of-christmas-eve-the-best-of-tso-more https://youtu.be/jUa4Ir6O09c Carnifex - Signs of the Swarm, To The Grave, The Last Ten Seconds of Life. From Oct 10 in Tuscon AZ through Nov 11 in LA.https://metalinjection.net/new-music/carnifex-release-new-song-featuring-chelsea-grin-vocalist-tom-barber SuggestsGaming/TechFollow-ups/CorrectionsMK1 - Kronika revealed in first chapter playthroughs, but Nitara image leaked.Robocop Nov 2 new release date. No longer set for sept. Also no longer going to Switch.CoD - Now adding Laura Croft as a playable character. 21 Savage, Jackal Mace https://twitter.com/CallofDuty/status/1696206105032937562 TrailersMK1 - https://youtu.be/1RHrXmLBp1k https://youtu.be/BBH_KrEFetA Reg ‘ol NewsNightdive Studios - the studio that gave us the System Shock remaster, has announced Star Wars: Dark Forces, and Turok 3 remasters.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4b9TTurkH4c&t=1s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdCaj5ZRp-A Ghostbusters Short - https://youtu.be/Oh4LtXSOSlI proof of concept built in Unreal Engine 5 with use of a digital motion capture stage.Nintendo Direct - Aug 31 at 7am PT/10am ET talking about Super Mario Bros. Wonder. https://twitter.com/NintendoAmerica/status/1696523235138158892 SuggestsGhostbusters - https://youtu.be/YsaHsMUlc0A Comic Books/BooksTrailersMighty Morphin Power Rangers - Darkest Hour https://youtu.be/f92RANbUgus head writer Melissa Flores and artist Simona Di Gianfelice BOOM! Studios.SuggestsUnity https://t.co/efCfmgr0n1 TV ShowsFollow-ups/CorrectionsSpiderwick Chronicles - Disney+ has passed on the finished series. Will now be shopped to other outlets by Paramount TV Studios and 20th Television. https://deadline.com/2023/08/the-spiderwick-chronicles-canceled-disney-plus-cost-cutting-shopped-paramount-1235528689/ Doogie Kamealoha M.D. - The Doogie Howser successor has been canceled before airing it's first episode. https://deadline.com/2023/08/doogie-kamealoha-m-d-canceled-disney-plus-1235528655/ The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim - originally going to be released on April 12, 2024, but now has been delayed until Dec. 13, 2024. The Idol - Canceled at HBOReg ‘ol NewsArleen Sorkin - passed at 67. Bob Barker - Passed at 99AMC on Max - Fear the Walking Dead, Interview with the Vampire, A Discovery of Witches, Dark Winds, Gangs of London, Killing Eve, Ride with Norman Reedus, are all splitting streaming duties between the 2 streamers to some degree. AMC Picks on Max tab from Sept 1 through Oct 31 https://variety.com/2023/digital/news/max-amc-plus-series-fear-walking-dead-1235706198/ SuggestsAhsokaMoviesFollow-ups/CorrectionsGodzilla x Kong: The New Empire - originally going to roar into theaters on March 15, 2024, but will not get released a month later on April 12, 2024Dune: Part Two - originally set for a Nov. 3, 2023 release date but now will be released on March 15, 2024.TrailersThe Killer - https://youtu.be/vs1epO_zLG8 David Fincher's newest movie is a comic adaptation starring Michael Fassbender.Reg ‘ol NewsBatman Day - Showcase Cinemas will be running all 3 Chris Nolan Batman movies in celebrations. https://comicbook.com/movies/news/the-dark-knight-trilogy-batman-day-limited-theater-run-where-to-watch/ SuggestsRumor MillNew RumorsAvengers: Kang/Secret - Michael Waldron and Jeff Loveness, who were to write Avengers Secret Wars and Avengers Kang's Dynasty respectively, have reportedly been axed from their projects. Loveness wrote Quantumania, Waldron wrote Multiverse of Madness.LOTR: Rings of Power - Producers of the series want the second season to focus on the Numenoreon story, Editors want a more Elf-centric second season. Apparently if the Editors win, then the big 2-episode battle that is supposed to end the season will make more sense.Nintendo Focus - Rumored name of the next gen console.She-Hulk - Season 2 incoming…?Thirteen Ghosts - TV series in the works? Sony said to be primary rights holder and the final decision maker.You can support this show by visiting our merch store, or by leaving us an Apple Podcasts review.
A coach and some parents attacked a basketball referee...the "Doogie Howser" of impersonators has been arrested again...and 2 dads were arrested after firing guns at a kid's birthday party over who bought the beer!
When you hear of scouts giving scholarships, you think of the University of Alabama discovering a defensive lineman in rural Georgia. This is a story of the long-term result of the federal government discovering and developing talent. This effort had a tremendous long-term impact on improving cybersecurity in the government and commercial sector as well. Today we have Travis Ross, the new CTO Federal for Rubrik. During the interview, you will learn about his fascinating career. Somewhat of a “Doogie Howser,” Travis was spotted early in his schooling to be a whiz at solving puzzles. DISA saw his potential and helped him with a scholarship and training to leverage these unique skills to solve some perplexing problems. The amazing part is that his scholarship letter arrived on September 10, 2001. The incident the next day set the stage for his career. He engaged in the early days of DoD PKI and the Public Key Encryption Program. After a distinguished federal career, he moved on to commercial organizations. He has chosen to work for Rubrik because he can apply the full spectrum of his varied skill set to apply commercial innovation to federal concerns. If you are not hooked by now, you may want to know what his thoughts are on topics like compliance, software development, and continuous improvement. The overview is that compliance must be a continuous process and security must be “baked in” the code before it ever gets released. Great perspective from a person who has sat in the federal and commercial seat helping federal leaders overcome major challenges. Twitter: @FedInsider LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/fedinsider/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FedInsiderNews
If you're in need of a crash course on what's going down in the entertainment industry and how its affecting talent behind the camera as much as the faces we see up front, don't miss writer/producer Nat Bernstein (Center of the Universe, Doogie Howser). This week the damsels get some hot takes on pressing topics and some great ideas to keep the momentum going even when the phone may not be ringing for opportunities. If you have a project you'd like us to give a shoutout to, send us a DM and we'll see what we can do! Want to be featured on the pod? https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScGSAuXcPkCkdx3qoWiG1trcQYzksClzVes4u7YXcR2td9ALg/viewform Want to send a voice message? https://www.speakpipe.com/DamselsintheDMs Want to pitch a guest or topic? https://www.damselsinthedms.com/contact.html
SPECIAL POD ALERT! Episode 18 of the TV Junk Podcast is our first Retro episode! Jay, Doug, Sean and Greg sit down to discuss a handful of episodes of the popular late '80s show "Doogie Howser, M.D." We chat about the banger of a theme song, Doogie being the first blogger, the Wednesday night line-up, the cast of characters and one of us had the nickname "Doogie" as a kid. Check it out here or download, subscribe and send us a 5* review wherever you get your favourite podcasts.
We're talking more TV themes on this episode of the Fan2Fan Podcast! Bernie and Pete are joined by Allen, Jon, and Rebecca as they continue going down the unending rabbit hole of memorable tv theme songs. In part five we discuss a few classic sitcoms including Step by Step, Perfect Strangers, and Happy Days. And we wrap up our discussion by sharing some honorable mentions including Miami Vice, Wonder Years, CHiPs, Amazing Stories, Shameless, Mission Impossible, Doogie Howser, and more. For more info about the Fan2Fan Podcast, visit fanpodcast.com
Keith graduated from San Jose State University with a degree in Business Management. After his graduation pursuit of his real dream began; Keith moved to Los Angeles to become a fashion designer. While studying at the Los Angeles Trade and Technical College, he met and became an assistant designer to his mentor the late Bill Whitten. With the help and support of Bill Whitten, Stella Ruata, Bessie Nelson, Warren R. Caton- he reached his goal rather quickly. Keith was working with entertainers such as Don Cornelius, Dolly Parton, Jermaine Stewart, Chico Debarge, Blair Underwood, Bobby Brown, Whitney Huston, Michael Jackson, Heavy D, Boyz II Men, GUY, New Edition, Johnny Gill, LSG, Patti Labelle, The Body Sisters, Sam Kinison, Little Richard, The Temptations, Surface, Barry White, Chante Moore and Latin super star Juan Gabriel. Some of his memorable and stylish pieces were displayed for “A Renaissance Gypse Affair” gala at Cielo Celeste Farm hosted by Celeste Huston and attended by Angelica Huston, Bo Derek, Jacqueline Stallone and other celebrities and dignitaries from around the world. Recently at Keith Holman Presents “7 Decades in Hollywood,” costumes and archives were presented from Michael Jackson, Dame Elizabeth Taylor, the 1939 Judy Garland version of “The Wizard of Oz” and other legendary performers. The next natural step for Keith was to branch out and produce a clothing line, Holman Harper Designs, which was picked up by major retailers and specialty boutiques including Macy's, H. Lorenzo, Exclusive, Fred Siegel and others. Shortly after, Keith took his creativity to music, television and movies. He designed clothing and wardrobe for more than two hundred music videos designed for special episodes of hit TV shows, such as LA Law and Doogie Howser, M.D., for various award shows including the Grammy's, Soul Train Music Awards, Academy Awards, and American Music Awards. Keith's designs also were showcased on major artists' tours including Michael Jackson's, Victory, Bad, Dangerous and History tours; Dolly Parton's Treasures tour; New Edition's Tours; Bobby Brown; Johnny Gill; L.S.G; Heavy D and Boys to Men; Guy; Cassandra Pierson “Elvira Mistress of the Dark;” the late Sam Kinison and others. Wanting to strengthen and expand his talent and creativity into the interior/exterior design industry, Keith studied at Thomas Schoos Designs. His unerring eye moved from the body to the home in the design of custom water features, indoor and outdoor furniture pieces, furniture accessories and landscaping. The list of celebrities that have put their home decorating into Keith's capable hands includes Bernadette Peters, Eddie and Nicole Murphy, Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen, Jamie and StevenTisch, Tracey Bregman-Recht, Kim Novak, Mrs. John Huston, Will and Jada Smith, and Countess Maria Cortez. During this time, he also began facilitating the sale of antiques and designing meditation gardens for his top clients. Effortlessly moving between personal and commercial spaces, Keith's restaurantdesigns include Koi Restaurant in Las Vegas and Los Angeles. Working alongside Icrave Design, Keith decorated and designed for casual elegance One Sunset on the Sunset Strip, STK Restaurant in West Hollywood, Coco De Ville in West Hollywood and Boudoir West Hollywood. During this time, Keithcontinued to create costume masterpieces for his celebrity clientele for events, premiers and their personal wardrobes. Keith has been featured in television and radio on shows like Entertainment Tonight, the Arsenio Hall Show and more. He's been written about in articles for Ebony Man, GQ, Boston Globe, LA Times, The London Mail, and more. He has received several awards such as the coveted Gold Thimble Award and the humanitarian NAACP Image Award for Black Designers, Humanitarian Award “Kids Feeding The World,” RSMA Legends Award, and the 30th Anniversary Thriller Award. Keith donates his time and money to various charities and foundations. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/moviemakingpod/support
Mar 24-30: John Travolta makes a movie that's basic, Indiana Jones joins the commies, Hilary Swank journeys to the center of the earth, Quantum Leap breaks its rules, Ryan Gosling rides again, Doogie Howser graduates, the hobbits are getting naughty, Tyler Perry yields to temptation, Stephanie Meyer is possessed by aliens, and RIP Brandon Lee. All that and more, this week on Thirty Twenty Ten!
This Week's Sponsors: – Athletic Greens – AG1 Powder + 1 year of free Vitamin D & 5 free travel packs – Boll & Branch Bedding & Sheets – 15% Off + Free Shipping | USE CODE: MONEWS Headlines: – TikTok's Hearing From Hell: CEO Shou Zi Chew Tries To Avoid Ban (02:05) – Denver School Shooting Has Parents Demanding Armed Officers In School (11:10) – Live Emotional Reunion: Reporter Covers Incident at Son's High School (14:00) – Michigan Appeals Court Rules Parents of School Shooter Can Stand Trial (14:45) – Potential Trump Legal Woes Move To Federal Court Friday (17:50) – Utah Law Could Curb Use of TikTok and Instagram by Children, Teens (19:55) – End of the Road for Chevy Camaro But It May Come Back As SUV (23:50) – Large Asteroid To Fly Very Close to Earth This Weekend (25:45) – On This Day: The Office; Presidential Term Limits; Doogie Howser (28:10) – What We're Watching, Reading, & Eating (31:00) Links: – After the Winter Kids Just Had, Pediatricians Are Not Okay ~ Washington Post – Ron DeSantis Is Right About Ukraine ~ The Atlantic – Please remember to subscribe to the podcast and leave us a review. – Mosheh Oinounou (@mosheh) is an Emmy and Murrow award-winning journalist. He has 20 years of experience at networks including Fox News, Bloomberg Television and CBS News, where he was the executive producer of the CBS Evening News and launched the network's 24 hour news channel. He founded the @mosheh Instagram news account in 2020 and the Mo News podcast and newsletter in 2022. Jill Wagner (@jillrwagner) is an Emmy and Murrow award- winning journalist. She's currently the Managing Editor of the Mo News newsletter and previously worked as a reporter for CBS News, Cheddar News, and News 12. She also co-founded the Need2Know newsletter, and has made it a goal to drop a Seinfeld reference into every Mo News podcast. Follow Mo News on all platforms: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mosheh/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mosheh Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MoshehNews Snapchat: https://t.snapchat.com/pO9xpLY9 Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/moshehnews TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@mosheh Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The O'Leary Review Podcast March 3, 2022 Guest: Dave Peterson Show notes available: https://briandoleary.substack.com/p/helping-kids-graduate-from-college?sd=pf Dave Peterson – Quick Bio Dave The Scholarship Coach is the father of a college Sophomore that is attending college completely free, thanks mostly to private outside scholarships. Using the same methodology that he developed for his son, Dave now coaches other students and families to achieve their own debt-free college dreams. Dave is also the author of "Debt-Free College: Proven Strategies for Winning Scholarships and Other Tools to Help You Avoid Student Loan Debt" and the founder of NoDebtCollege.com. Dave's Mission & Purpose “To help kids graduate from college debt free… and help parents not drain their life savings.” Three Types of Scholarships · Need-based · Merit-based (academic, athletic, artistic) · Private outside scholarships (what Dave specializes in) Somewhat obscure television show mentioned Doogie Howser, M.D. Tom Woods School of Life https://tomschooloflife.com/ “An awesome example of liberty in action,” said Dave. Tom Woods 100 One of the goals of this program is to get at least 100 people within the Tom Woods orbit on the podcast. “Tom's orbit” is loosely defined, but we have less than 90 to go now! WhoIsInTheTomWoodsWorld.com — A page with all the #TomWoods100 conversations. Florida State University professors mentioned · James D. Gwartney · Randy Holcombe · Bruce Benson Mises Institute https://mises.org/ M. Stanton Evans Blacklisted by History https://www.c-span.org/video/?201983-1/blacklisted-history Bobby Bowden Hall of Fame football coach for Florida State Remembering Bobby Bowden https://youtu.be/6z0pwMJhYxM Five Pillars Lead to a “personal narrative.” · Academics · Extracurriculars · Leadership · Volunteerism · Paid employment experience Dave's Links -Website: No Debt College -Substack ("Your Daily Scholarship") -Podcast ("Your Daily Scholarship") -Scholarships 101 Course Go to BrianDOLeary.com for more information.
We talk about marshmallow heads, the real-life T-1000, and Doogie Howser's non-existent redhead neighbor. All that and more as we watch season 5, episode 18 of our favorite ‘80s hit sitcom, Perfect Strangers. Rate and review us in Apple Podcasts! Support the show! Be a part of the show! Shop for merch! Leave us a voice message! Email: danceofjoypod@gmail.com Instagram: @danceofjoypod Twitter: @danceofjoypod Facebook: facebook.com/danceofjoypod Facebook Group Visit our website Follow Balkiduds on Instagram Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | RSS Originally recorded Feb. 12, 2023.
Today's guest is Dr. Thomas Hemingway. He is a holistic and integrative medical doctor, but like so many guests on this show, he didn't start that way. He worked for two decades in ER medicine before making the move to integrative practices that we discuss today.With so much first-hand experience with chronic illness, he committed himself and his career to finding ways to prevent them. And as of February, he has a new book on the shelves that does just that, PREVENTABLE: 5 Powerful Practices To Avoid Disease And Build Unshakeable Health. We unpack those five powerful practices – Food, Movement, Sleep, Gut Health, and Stress – and apply them to family life, the imperfect, impatient, always-something-new lifestyle that keeps parents of young children like us on the lookout for practical, easily applicable advice wherever we can get it.As you'll hear in this one, Dr. Thomas Hemingway is full of energy and you can be too.I love the motivation and hope that Dr. Hemingway shares with our community today. There's a lot of doomsday talk with an increase in obesity, heart disease, diabetes, chronic lifestyle diseases, and the like – but every day is a fresh new start, an opportunity to start a new healthy habit and get back on track to a full and vibrant life.We also cover…00:02:50 — Dr. Hemingway's Path to Integrative MedicineGraduating top-of-class from UCSD's MD programBeing inspired by Doogie Howser and ERSeeing a rise in sick young people Leaning into the preventative side of healthCDC's latest troubling guidelines on child obesity 00:10:46 — Powerful Food & Diet Practices To Prevent DiseaseBenefit of adding vs. subtracting things from our dietMaking healthy food choices around the worldCorn, wheat, soy, and rice = 60% of plant-based food3 things to avoid in your diet (sugar, seed oils, and processed grains)Make it easy – try one new food a weekTips for intuitive eating for the family Kelly gives a look into her kids-in-the-kitchen dynamic at home00:26:02 — Benefits of Mindful Movement & SleepWalking after meals and blood sugar monitoring Staying active without a gymSitting is the new smokingUnderstanding sleep and the human brain (glymphatic system)How natural sunlight resets our circadian rhythm Avoiding screen time before bedBest practices for a good's night sleep00:43:41 — Balancing Your Gut Health & Managing Stress60% of our immune system lives in the gutSupporting gut bacteria with fiber and fermented foods 2012 stress study with 180,000 subjects Stress, perception, and resilience Tips and tools for optimizing stress Teaching kids that stress is normal and healthy ways to copeSimplify your miracle morning routineResources:Read:
March 16-22, 1991 This week Ken welcomes writer, YouTuber and fellow Baywatch Nights fan Allison Pregler to the show. Ken and Allison discuss how she's a requested guest, Baywatch, It's a Wrap, growing up in Central Time, memorabilia, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Barbara Walters, Fish Police, Family Dog, Capital Critters, Amazing Stories, cartoons for adults, The Simpsons, feeling old, Mann and Machine, America's Funniest People, Golden Girls, America's Funniest Home Videos, Tarzan in Manhattan, drunken Lon Chaney Jr, Ricky Schroeder: Human Garbage, Wilfred Brimley's firing squad, MacGuyver, when shows get weird, The Wizard, Quantum Leap, Frog Girl, dissecting animals, What A Dummy!, Wizard of Oz, Ken meeting Meinhart Raabe the Munchkin Coroner, Unsolved Mysteries, Beyond Belief, turning into a doll, Doogie Howser, bad early 90s stand up, Michael Floorwax, LA Law, falling down an elevator shaft, Dr. Giggles, talking baby movies, replacing George Clooney with Scott Baio, The Doghouse, Poochinski, talking dogs, Return of the Jedi, signing development deals about your trauma, Amy Fischer TV Movies, John Wayne Bobbitt, Uncle Buck, loving John Candy, Weird Science, remaking Peter Gunn, and Little Richard on the greatest episode ever of Baywatch.
Neil Patrick Harris (Uncoupled, How I Met Your Mother, Doogie Howser) is an Emmy and Tony-award-winning actor, singer, writer and producer. Neil joins the Armchair Expert to discuss the escape hedge maze he's building in his backyard, his time as the President of the Magic Castle, and how Doogie Howser created imposter syndrome in him. Neil talks about his desire to build things out of wood, how his biggest fear is inadvertently making someone feel bad, and how much he struggles with bandwidth. Dax and Neil discuss how uncomfortable it is to be naked on camera, how helpful it is working with an intimacy coordinator on set, and Neil's first time playing a gay man as the lead role in Uncoupled. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Episode 625 - Robyn Lively and Bart Johnson are First Class Parents and Actors. Together, the married couple, star as Husband & Wife in the new PureFlix movie STRONG FATHERS, STRONG DAUGHTERS. Bart Johnson starred as Coach Jack Bolton in the “High School Musical” series opposite Zac Efron -his acting resume includes “Hyperion Bay,” “Hawaii Five-O” and the 2018 adaptation of Little Women. Robyn Lively is a former 80's child actress (“Silver Spoons”, “Punky Brewster”) and is the half-sister to actress BLAKE LIVELY. She has over 80 credits that includes The Karate Kid III, “Twin Peaks,” “Doogie Howser, M.D.”, and “JAG”. Inspired by the best-selling book “Strong Fathers, Strong Daughters,” by Dr. Meg Meeker, follows the heartfelt journey of a dad who is desperately trying to hold onto his little girls but learns he must give up control and have faith in their future. In this Episode, Bart and Robyn share their parenting journey which includes three children. They discuss their experience playing a husband and wife on the screen and how it differs from acting in movies with other romantic partners. They describe the importance of having a Father or Father figure in the home and why the Fatherless Crisis is hurting our society. They talk about their discipline styles as parents, their faith, family traditions and values they hope to instill in their kids. They offer advice for new or soon-to-be parents and more! STRONG FATHERS, STRONG DAUGHTERS - www.pureflix.com/movie/strong-fathers-strong-daughters FamilyMade - https://familymade.com First Class Fatherhood: Advice and Wisdom from High-Profile Dads - https://bit.ly/36XpXNp Watch First Class Fatherhood on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCD6cjYptutjJWYlM0Kk6cQ?sub_confirmation=1 More Ways To Listen - https://linktr.ee/alec_lace Follow me on instagram - https://instagram.com/alec_lace?igshid=ebfecg0yvbap For information about becoming a Sponsor of First Class Fatherhood please hit me with an email: FirstClassFatherhood@gmail.com
Joe and Ollie are all over the place this week as they get into everything from a trip to Hawaii to going to college to Doogie Howser, M.D., Russian Roulette, acting, Joe's broadcast mishaps and upcoming speech…and SO much more!! For clips, bonus footage, & so much more: https://linktr.ee/daddyissuesbuckhudson Subscribe to the show page here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClqBf3Z_93R8w9_6N97WnAw See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Rob Has a Podcast | Survivor / Big Brother / Amazing Race - RHAP
Rob Cesternino and Akiva Wienerkur need a podcast, so this week, they recapped season 3, episode 7 of Doogie Howser, M.D. and spin the Wheel of Ideas to learn what they will podcast about next. The post Rob & Akiva Need a Podcast #174: Doogie Howser, M.D. | Season 3, Episode 7 Recap appeared first on RobHasAwebsite.com.