Podcasts about Doolittle

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Best podcasts about Doolittle

Latest podcast episodes about Doolittle

That 80s Show SA - The Podcast
Danish Juices | Dennis Hopper getting reverse sucked out | Going Cher-less

That 80s Show SA - The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2025 38:11


**This Podcast is part of the South African Podcasters Guild and has taken a pledge to be a cool podcaster. Read the pledge here: https://www.sapg.co.za/the-south-african-podcasters-pledgeRDJ & AMH on SNL? WTF?!?! An 80s something Paulo didn't know and even though Robert Downey Junior as George Michael wasn't funny at all, it was still better than Doolittle.Paulo recommends an 80s teen time travel movie that would be the best 80s teen time travel movie - if Back to the Future 1, Back to the Future 2, Peggy Sue Got Married, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure or Flight of the Navigator didn't exist.You'll never guess who the richest actress from the 80s is and imagine ignoring the unknown opening act at an 80s Hall & Oates concert - only to look back from the bar and see that the lead singer is Cher.Jump To: - Robert Downey Jr. and Anthony Michael Hall on SNL (00:01:44): https://x.com/georgekyria/status/1680616447431565312?utm_source=chatgpt.com - Christiania Podcast (00:12:28): https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/598-christiania/ - My Science Project Overview (00:23:02): https://youtu.be/Vlqmk2URDFY?si=Wmi58nMtlzMq3xcM - Jamie Gertz's Wealth (00:31:19): https://www.2oceansvibe.com/2025/05/09/this-billionaire-you-forgot-from-the-80s-is-richer-than-taylor-swift-and-clooney-combined/ - Cher's Rock Band (00:33:05): https://ultimateclassicrock.com/cher-black-rose/https://youtu.be/bbtmMV_OAN0?si=VOHdIx9Pqnm-Kl3F#1980s, #pop culture, #Robert Downey Jr., #Anthony Michael Hall, #Saturday Night Live, #SNL, #Brat Pack, #Sixteen Candles, #The Breakfast Club, #Less Than Zero, #nostalgia, #Christiania, #Copenhagen, #alternative community, #drug use, #countercultural movement, #Bifrost, #flower power rock band, #Icon, #99% Invisible, #sci-fi teen movies, #Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure, #Explorers, #The Last Starfighter, #Flight of the Navigator, #My Science Project, #female billionaires, #Oprah Winfrey, #Jamie Gertz, #Cher, #Black Rose, #entertainment industry, #cultural landscape, #humor, #addiction, #legacy of 80s stars, #comedy, #creativity, #chaos.

Voices of Today
Sea Garden_sample

Voices of Today

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2025 3:41


The complete audiobook is available for purchase at Audible.com: https://n9.cl/ijxnp Sea Garden By H.D. (Hilda Doolittle) Read by Nancy Beard Hilda Doolittle was an American poet and novelist who was one of the founders of the Imagist movement, which includes such poetic luminaries as Ezra Pound and Richard Aldington, with both of whom Doolittle had romantic relationships. Sea Garden, a collection of 27 short poems, was published in 1916. The verse is characterized by an economy of expression and frequent allusions to Greek myths.

Beekeeping at Five Apple Farm Podcast
Ep. 131 The best for last: Reverse Doolittle Split (and Split Dynamics review)

Beekeeping at Five Apple Farm Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 50:57


This episodes concludes the series on splits, with the best saved for last: The Reverse Doolittle, aka The Cutdown. (Best for intermediate beekeepers. ) Also, a review of split dynamics for beginners. Exclusive for patrons on the Patreon post are links for the how-to, drawing of the whole process, and the complete handout for the splits talk I gave to a few bee clubs on this topic: https://www.patreon.com/posts/ep-131-best-for-127402747   -- https://www.patreon.com/fiveapple You are warmly invited to become a Friend of Five Apple on Patreon to join the folks who make the podcasts possible and keep it advertising-free. In addition to huge gratitude, you get:   • Detailed show notes with links, tips, comments • Access to Patreon blog posts including tips and videos • bonus podcasts and early access episodes • Commenting on posts (and DMs) allows me to answer questions • Input on the podcast topics • Shout-outs on the show because I appreciate you!    If you can support the show with $3 a month or more, please sign up today: https://www.patreon.com/fiveapple -- About Beekeeping at Five Apple: Leigh keeps bees in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina (gardening zone 6b). She cares for around a dozen hives in a rural Appalachian highland climate. Colonies are managed for bee health with active selection for vigor, genetic diversity and disease resistance, but without chemical treatments for over a decade. The apiary is self-sustaining (not needing to buy/catch replacement bees since 2010) and produces honey and nucs most every year. 

Racconti di Storia Podcast
TOKYO 1942 - L'Impossibile ATTACCO Di DOOLITTLE

Racconti di Storia Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 24:32


Acquista il piano biennale di NordVPN per iniziare a proteggerti online, otterrai 4 Mesi Extra e come al solito 30 giorni di soddisfatti o rimborsati Vai su https://nordvpn.com/dentrolastoria Il nostro canale Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1vziHBEp0gc9gAhR740fCw Il Nostro SITO: https://www.dentrolastoria.net/ Sostieni DENTRO LA STORIA su Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/dentrolastoria Abbonati al canale: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1vziHBEp0gc9gAhR740fCw/join Il nostro store in Amazon: https://www.amazon.it/shop/dentrolastoria Sostienici su PayPal: https://paypal.me/infinitybeat 18 aprile 1942: in pieno Oceano Pacifico una task force aeronavale americana al comando dell'ammiraglio William "Bull" Halsey sta puntando verso il Giappone. Sul ponte della portaerei USS Hornet ci sono dei bombardieri terrestri, 16 B-25B Mitchell dell'Esercito: alleggeriti e modificati per l'occasione, quei velivoli sono comandati dal tenente colonnello James Doolittle che ha sviluppato la teoria del capitano di corvetta Low sulla possibilità di colpire i giapponesi al cuore. Il riscatto dopo Pearl Harbor è rappresentato da Doolittle e dai suoi uomini, i Raiders, il cui obiettivo è Tokyo per una missione a metà strada tra l'impossibilità e la leggenda. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

History & Factoids about today
April 18th-Animal Crackers, Doolittle's Raid, San Fran Earthquake, James Woods, Conan O'Brien, America Ferrera (2024)

History & Factoids about today

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 13:31


National Animal Cracker day.  Entertainment from 2002.  Paul Revere and 2 others made the famous midnight ride, Jimmy Doolittle led one way bombing run on Japan, Ernie Pyle died in combat, Saudi Arabia allowed western movies in its theatres.  Today birthdays - James Woods, Rick Moranis, Eric Roberts, Jane Leeves, Kelly Hansen, Eric McCormack, Conan O'Brien, Melissa Joan Hart, America Ferrera.  Dick Clark died.Intro - Pour some sugar on me - Def Leppard    http://defleppard.com/Thursday - Pet Shop BoysAnimal Crackers - Katie Cutie kids tvAin't it funny - Jennifer Lopez  Ja RuleMy list - Toby KeithBirthdays - In da club - 50 Cent    http://50cent.com/Frazier TV theme songI'm on to you - HurricaneExit - Its not love - Dokkenhttps://coolcasts.cooolmedia.com/

The Morning Drive Podcast by Double-T 97.3
April 18th, 2025: Rangers playing pickleball, Doolittle raid, Red Raiders in the transfer portal, Tech Spring Game tomorrow, and Jacob DeGrom.

The Morning Drive Podcast by Double-T 97.3

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 43:15


Chuck Heinz and Jamie Lent talk about Rangers playing pickleball, Doolittle raid, Red Raiders in the transfer portal, Tech Spring Game tomorrow, and Jacob DeGrom.

Beekeeping at Five Apple Farm Podcast
Ep 130: Spring Nuc Split, Quiet Box, Doolittle Box

Beekeeping at Five Apple Farm Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2025 37:13


Talking today about the handy and easy Nuc (or Retirement Nuc) split; using a quiet box; making and using a Doolittle Box....with a printable PDFs on making a Nucleus Split and a Doolittle box exclusively for patrons on the Five Apple Patreon Post -- https://www.patreon.com/fiveapple   You are warmly invited to become a Friend of Five Apple on Patreon to join the folks who make the podcasts possible and keep it advertising-free. In addition to huge gratitude, you get:   • Detailed show notes with links, tips, comments • Access to Patreon blog posts including tips and videos • bonus podcasts and early access episodes • Commenting on posts (and DMs) allows me to answer questions • Input on the podcast topics • Shout-outs on the show because I appreciate you!    If you can support the show with $3 a month or more, please sign up today: https://www.patreon.com/fiveapple -- About Beekeeping at Five Apple: Leigh keeps bees in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina (gardening zone 6b). She cares for around a dozen hives in a rural Appalachian highland climate. Colonies are managed for bee health with active selection for vigor, genetic diversity and disease resistance, but without chemical treatments for over a decade. The apiary is self-sustaining (not needing to buy/catch replacement bees since 2010) and produces honey and nucs most every year.   

Critical Readings
CR Episode 266: Pygmalion, Part II

Critical Readings

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2025 72:33


The panel discusses Shaw's work on Wagner and a brief overview of the classical inspiration for his Pygmalion, before reading the second act with attention to the characters of Professor Higgins and Mr. Doolittle, and to contemporary social conventions.Continue reading

PORTRÆTALBUM
Silas Bjerregaard og The Pixies “Doolittle”

PORTRÆTALBUM

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 55:09


”Vi startede Turboweekend som en slags joke. Det skulle bare være sjovt.” Sådan fortæller Turboweekends forsanger Silas Bjerregaard i en ærlig snak med vært Anders Bøtter. Ugens udgangspunkt er The Pixies andet studiealbum ”Doolittle”, der for den kun 12-årige Silas Bjerregaard blev et syret, skævt og inspirerende bekendtskab, som stadig motiverer ham som sangskriver her i 2025. Men hvad var det The Pixies kunne, siden de både blev Silas og Kurt Cobains favorit band? Og hvordan er det at miste sig selv i musikbranchens seriøse voksen-hamsterhjul, når man egentlig bare ville lave noget der skulle være sjovt? Det kan du få svar på i denne uges Portrætalbum, hvor du også kan høre meget mere om, hvorfor Turboweekend nu synger på dansk og hvad der er det vigtigste for dem at opnå efter deres gendannelse. Udsendelse nr.: 168 Vært: Anders Bøtter Klip og lyddesign: Emil Germod Redaktør: Michelle Mølgaard Andersen Produceret af: Bowie-JettSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tore Says Show
Thu 20 Mar, 2025: Bloodlines And Blackmail - Tainted Sugar - Seven Sisters - Influencer Assets - BCCI Repeat - All 2B Negated - Lone Dissent

Tore Says Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2025 119:23


Today's show starts with Tore's short TikTok message about judges. Then, the released files detail early CIA operations that include some nasty sugar for the Russians. Fire Molly for warmongering and murder. It's all so insane that it has to get better. NATO is so pissed. Oh, and we're going to need Greenland too. The judicial coup is happening as we predicted long ago. If the judicial branch is broken, the other two don't work at all. So many JFK files were missing from the release. The true value of a person comes out when they get some power. Think JFK, Doolittle and Byrd. Kennedy's role had to be fullfiled. NATO players encourage a focus on Israel. The pope has been dead for a hot minute. Plant the seeds even though you may never feel the shade. Too many people are surrounding the President. Deep state tools seem to abound everywhere. People will be diving off roofs soon. Amalgamated Bank is in the middle of the grift. All that union money is gone. How do we bail them out? The Chinese are the best at laundering money. Act Blue handles the big corrupt finances. No one is paying attention to the people, and it hurts. We have to crash the entire financial system. It's a repeat of BCCI. The autopen story turned out to be true. So much is headed our way soon. Now is the time to make your preparations and remember that God loves you.

The Numlock Podcast
Numlock Sunday: Alissa Wilkinson on We Tell Ourselves Stories

The Numlock Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2025 34:39


By Walt HickeyDouble feature today!Welcome to the Numlock Sunday edition.This week, I spoke to Alissa Wilkinson who is out with the brand new book, We Tell Ourselves Stories: Joan Didion and the American Dream Machine.I'm a huge fan of Alissa, she's a phenomenal critic and I thought this topic — what happens when one of the most important American literary figures heads out to Hollywood to work on the most important American medium — is super fascinating. It's a really wonderful book and if you're a longtime Joan Didion fan or simply a future Joan Didion fan, it's a look at a really transformative era of Hollywood and should be a fun read regardless.Alissa can be found at the New York Times, and the book is available wherever books are sold.This interview has been condensed and edited. All right, Alissa, thank you so much for coming on.Yeah, thanks for having me. It's good to be back, wherever we are.Yes, you are the author of We Tell Ourselves Stories: Joan Didion and the American Dream Machine. It's a really exciting book. It's a really exciting approach, for a Joan Didion biography and placing her in the current of American mainstream culture for a few years. I guess just backing out, what got you interested in Joan Didion to begin with? When did you first get into her work?Joan Didion and I did not become acquainted, metaphorically, until after I got out of college. I studied Tech and IT in college, and thus didn't read any books, because they don't make you read books in school, or they didn't when I was there. I moved to New York right afterward. I was riding the subway. There were all these ads for this book called The Year of Magical Thinking. It was the year 2005, the book had just come out. The Year of Magical Thinking is Didion's National Book Award-winning memoir about the year after her husband died, suddenly of a heart attack in '03. It's sort of a meditation on grief, but it's not really what that sounds like. If people haven't read it's very Didion. You know, it's not sentimental, it's constantly examining the narratives that she's telling herself about grief.So I just saw these ads on the walls. I was like, what is this book that everybody seems to be reading? I just bought it and read it. And it just so happened that it was right after my father, who was 46 at the time, was diagnosed with a very aggressive leukemia, and then died shortly thereafter, which was shocking, obviously. The closer I get to that age, it feels even more shocking that he was so young. I didn't have any idea how to process that emotion or experience. The book was unexpectedly helpful. But it also introduced me to a writer who I'd never read before, who felt like she was looking at things from a different angle than everyone else.Of course, she had a couple more books come out after that. But I don't remember this distinctly, but probably what happened is I went to some bookstore, The Strand or something, and bought The White Album and Slouching Towards Bethlehem off the front table as everyone does because those books have just been there for decades.From that, I learned more, starting to understand how writing could work. I didn't realize how form and content could interact that way. Over the years, I would review a book by her or about her for one publication or another. Then when I was in graduate school, getting my MFA in nonfiction, I wrote a bit about her because I was going through a moment of not being sure if my husband and I were going to stay in New York or we were going to move to California. They sort of obligate you to go through a goodbye to all that phase if you are contemplating that — her famous essay about leaving New York. And then, we did stay in New York City. But ultimately, that's 20 years of history.Then in 2020, I was having a conversation (that was quite-early pandemic) with my agent about possible books I might write. I had outlined a bunch of books to her. Then she was like, “These all sound like great ideas. But I've always wanted to rep a book on Joan Didion. So I just wanted to put that bug in your ear.” I was like, “Oh, okay. That seems like something I should probably do.”It took a while to find an angle, which wound up being Didion in Hollywood. This is mostly because I realized that a lot of people don't really know her as a Hollywood figure, even though she's a pretty major Hollywood figure for a period of time. The more of her work I read, the more I realized that her work is fruitfully understood as the work of a woman who was profoundly influenced by (and later thinking in terms of Hollywood metaphors) whether she was writing about California or American politics or even grief.So that's the long-winded way of saying I wasn't, you know, acquainted with her work until adulthood, but then it became something that became a guiding light for me as a writer.That's really fascinating. I love it. Because again I think a lot of attention on Didion has been paid since her passing. But this book is really exciting because you came at it from looking at the work as it relates to Hollywood. What was Didion's experience in Hollywood? What would people have seen from it, but also, what is her place there?The directly Hollywood parts of her life start when she's in her 30s. She and her husband — John Gregory Dunn, also a writer and her screenwriting partner — moved from New York City, where they had met and gotten married, to Los Angeles. John's brother, Nick Dunn later became one of the most important early true crime writers at Vanity Fair, believe it or not. But at the time, he was working as a TV producer. He and his wife were there. So they moved to Los Angeles. It was sort of a moment where, you know, it's all well and good to be a journalist and a novelist. If you want to support yourself, Hollywood is where it's at.So they get there at a moment when the business is shifting from these big-budget movies — the Golden Age — to the new Hollywood, where everything is sort of gritty and small and countercultural. That's the moment they arrive. They worked in Hollywood. I mean, they worked literally in Hollywood for many years after that. And then in Hollywood even when they moved back to New York in the '80s as screenwriters still.People sometimes don't realize that they wrote a bunch of produced screenplays. The earliest was The Panic in Needle Park. Obviously, they adapted Didion's novel Play It As It Lays. There are several others, but one that a lot of people don't realize they wrote was the version of A Star is Born that stars Barbra Streisand and Kris Kristofferson. It was their idea to shift the Star is Born template from Hollywood entities to rock stars. That was their idea. Of course, when Bradley Cooper made his version, he iterated on that. So their work was as screenwriters but also as figures in the Hollywood scene because they were literary people at the same time that they were screenwriters. They knew all the actors, and they knew all the producers and the executives.John actually wrote, I think, two of the best books ever written on Hollywood decades apart. One called The Studio, where he just roamed around on the Fox backlot. For a year for reasons he couldn't understand, he got access. That was right when the catastrophe that was Dr. Doolittle was coming out. So you get to hear the inside of the studio. Then later, he wrote a book called Monster, which is about their like eight-year long attempt to get their film Up Close and Personal made, which eventually they did. It's a really good look at what the normal Hollywood experience was at the time: which is like: you come up with an idea, but it will only vaguely resemble the final product once all the studios get done with it.So it's, it's really, that's all very interesting. They're threaded through the history of Hollywood in that period. On top of it for the book (I realized as I was working on it) that a lot of Didion's early life is influenced by especially her obsession with John Wayne and also with the bigger mythology of California and the West, a lot of which she sees as framed through Hollywood Westerns.Then in the '80s, she pivoted to political reporting for a long while. If you read her political writing, it is very, very, very much about Hollywood logic seeping into American political culture. There's an essay called “Inside Baseball” about the Dukakis campaign that appears in Political Fictions, her book that was published on September 11, 2001. In that book, she writes about how these political campaigns are directed and set up like a production for the cameras and how that was becoming not just the campaign, but the presidency itself. Of course, she had no use for Ronald Reagan, and everything she writes about him is very damning. But a lot of it was because she saw him as the embodiment of Hollywood logic entering the political sphere and felt like these are two separate things and they need to not be going together.So all of that appeared to me as I was reading. You know, once you see it, you can't unsee it. It just made sense for me to write about it. On top of it, she was still alive when I was writing the proposal and shopping it around. So she actually died two months after we sold the book to my publisher. It meant I was extra grateful for this angle because I knew there'd be a lot more books on her, but I wanted to come at it from an angle that I hadn't seen before. So many people have written about her in Hollywood before, but not quite through this lens.Yeah. What were some things that you discovered in the course of your research? Obviously, she's such an interesting figure, but she's also lived so very publicly that I'm just super interested to find out what are some of the things that you learned? It can be about her, but it can also be the Hollywood system as a whole.Yeah. I mean, I didn't interview her for obvious reasons.Understandable, entirely understandable.Pretty much everyone in her life also is gone with the exception really of Griffin Dunn, who is her nephew, John's nephew, the actor. But other than that, it felt like I needed to look at it through a critical lens. So it meant examining a lot of texts. A lot of Didion's magazine work (which was a huge part of her life) is published in the books that people read like Slouching Towards Bethlehem and The White Album and all the other books. What was interesting to me was discovering (I mean, not “discovering” because other people have read it) that there is some work that's not published and it's mostly her criticism.Most of that criticism was published in the late '50s and the early '60s when she was living in New York City, working at Vogue and trying to make it in the literary scene that was New York at that time, which was a very unique place. I mean, she was writing criticism and essays for both, you know, like National Review and The Nation at the same time, which was just hard to conceive of today. It was something you'd do back then. Yeah, wild stuff.A lot of that criticism was never collected into books. The most interesting is that she'd been working at Vogue for a long time in various positions, but she wound up getting added to the film critic column at Vogue in, '62, I want to say, although I might have that date slightly off. She basically alternated weeks with another critic for a few years, writing that until she started writing in movies proper. It's never a great idea to be a critic and a screenwriter at the same time.Her criticism is fascinating. So briefly, for instance, she shared that column with Pauline Kael. Pauline Kael became well known after she wrote about Bonnie and Clyde. This was prior to that. This is several years prior to that. They also hated each other for a long time afterward, which is funny, because, in some ways, their style is very different but their persona is actually very similar. So I wonder about that.But in any case, even when she wasn't sharing the column with Pauline Kael, it was a literal column in a magazine. So it's like one column of text, she can say barely anything. She was always a bit of a contrarian, but she was actively not interested in the things that were occupying New York critics at the time. Things like the Auteur Theory, what was happening in France, the downtown scene and the Shirley Clark's of the world. She had no use for it. At some point, she accuses Billy Wilder of having really no sense of humor, which is very funny.When you read her criticism, you see a person who is very invested in a classical notion of Hollywood as a place that shows us fantasies that we can indulge in for a while. She talks in her very first column about how she doesn't really need movies to be masterpieces, she just wants them to have moments. When she says moments, she means big swelling things that happen in a movie that make her feel things.It's so opposite, I think, to most people's view of Didion. Most people associate her with this snobbish elitism or something, which I don't think is untrue when we're talking about literature. But for her, the movies were like entertainment, and entering that business was a choice to enter that world. She wasn't attempting to elevate the discourse or something.I just think that's fascinating. She also has some great insights there. But as a film critic, I find myself disagreeing with most of her reviews. But I think that doesn't matter. It was more interesting to see how she conceived of the movies. There is a moment later on, in another piece that I don't think has been republished anywhere from the New York Review of Books, where she writes about the movies of Woody Allen. She hates them. It's right at the point where he's making like Manhattan and Annie Hall, like the good stuff. She just has no use for them. It's one of the funniest pieces. I won't spoil the ending because it's hilarious, and it's in the book.That writing was of huge interest to me and hasn't been republished in books. I was very grateful to get access to it, in part because it is in the archives — the electronic archives of the New York Public Library. But at the time, the library was closed. So I had to call the library and have a librarian get on Zoom with me for like an hour and a half to figure out how I could get in the proverbial back door of the library to get access while the library wasn't open.That's magnificent. That's such a cool way to go to the archives because some stuff just hasn't been published. If it wasn't digitized, then it's not digitized. That's incredible.Yeah, it's there, but you can barely print them off because they're in PDFs. They're like scanned images that are super high res, so the printer just dies when you try to print them. It's all very fascinating. I hope it gets republished at some point because I think there's enough interest in her work that it's fascinating to see this other aspect of her taste and her persona.It's really interesting that she seems to have wanted to meet the medium where it is, right? She wasn't trying to literary-up Hollywood. I mean, LA can be a bit of a friction. It's not exactly a literary town in the way that some East Coast metropolises can be. It is interesting that she was enamored by the movies. Do you want to speak about what things were like for her when she moved out?Yeah, it is funny because, at the same time, the first two movies that they wrote and produced are The Panic in Needle Park, which is probably the most new Hollywood movie you can imagine. It's about addicts at Needle Park, which is actually right where the 72nd Street subway stop is on the Upper West Side. If people have been there, it's hard to imagine. But that was apparently where they all sat around, and there were a lot of needles. It's apparently the first movie supposedly where someone shoots up live on camera.So it was the '70s. That's amazing.Yes, and it launched Al Pacino's film career! Yeah, it's wild. You watch it and you're just like, “How is this coming from the woman who's about all this arty farty stuff in the movies.” And Play It As It Lays has a very similar, almost avant-garde vibe to it. It's very, very interesting. You see it later on in the work that they made.A key thing to remember about them (and something I didn't realize before I started researching the book)was that Didion and Dunn were novelists who worked in journalism because everybody did. They wrote movies, according to them (you can only go off of what they said. A lot of it is John writing these jaunty articles. He's a very funny writer) because “we had tuition and a mortgage. This is how you pay for it.”This comes up later on, they needed to keep their WGA insurance because John had heart trouble. The best way to have health insurance was to remain in the Writers Guild. Remaining in the Writers Guild means you had to have a certain amount of work produced through union means. They were big union supporters. For them this was not, this was very strictly not an auteurist undertaking. This was not like, “Oh, I'm gonna go write these amazing screenplays that give my concept of the world to the audience.” It's not like Bonnie and Clyding going on here. It's very like, “We wrote these based on some stories that we thought would be cool.”I like that a lot. Like the idea that A Star is Born was like a pot boiler. That's really delightful.Completely. It was totally taken away from them by Streisand and John Peters at some point. But they were like, “Yeah, I mean, you know, it happens. We still got paid.”Yeah, if it can happen to Superman, it can happen to you.It happens to everybody, you know, don't get too precious about it. The important thing is did your novel come out and was it supported by its publisher?So just tracing some of their arcs in Hollywood. Obviously, Didion's one of the most influential writers of her generation, there's a very rich literary tradition. Where do we see her footprint, her imprint in Hollywood? What are some of the ways that we can see her register in Hollywood, or reverberate outside of it?In the business itself, I don't know that she was influential directly. What we see is on the outside of it. So a lot of people were friends. She was like a famous hostess, famous hostess. The New York Public Library archives are set to open at the end of March, of Didion and Dunn's work, which was like completely incidental to my publication date. I just got lucky. There's a bunch of screenplays in there that they worked on that weren't produced. There's also her cookbooks, and I'm very excited to go through those and see that. So you might meet somebody there.Her account of what the vibe was when the Manson murders occurred, which is published in her essay The White Album, is still the one people talk about, even though there are a lot of different ways to come at it. That's how we think about the Manson murders: through her lens. Later on, when she's not writing directly about Hollywood anymore (and not really writing in Hollywood as much) but instead is writing about the headlines, about news events, about sensationalism in the news, she becomes a great media critic. We start to see her taking the things that she learned (having been around Hollywood people, having been on movie sets, having seen how the sausage is made) and she starts writing about politics. In that age, it is Hollywood's logic that you perform for the TV. We have the debates suddenly becoming televised, the conventions becoming televised, we start to see candidates who seem specifically groomed to win because they look good on TV. They're starting to win and rule the day.She writes about Newt Gingrich. Of course, Gingrich was the first politician to figure out how to harness C-SPAN to his own ends — the fact that there were TV cameras on the congressional floor. So she's writing about all of this stuff at a time when you can see other people writing about it. I mean, Neil Postman famously writes about it. But the way Didion does it is always very pegged to reviewing somebody's book, or she's thinking about a particular event, or she's been on the campaign plane or something like that. Like she's been on the inside, but with an outsider's eye.That also crops up in, for instance, her essays. “Sentimental Journeys” is one of her most famous ones. That one's about the case of the Central Park Five, and the jogger who was murdered. Of course, now, we're many decades out from that, and the convictions were vacated. We know about coerced confessions. Also Donald Trump arrives in the middle of that whole thing.But she's actually not interested in the guilt or innocence question, because a lot of people were writing about that. She's interested in how the city of New York and the nation perform themselves for themselves, seeing themselves through the long lens of a movie and telling themselves stories about themselves. You see this over and over in her writing, no matter what she's writing about. I think once she moved away from writing about the business so much, she became very interested in how Hollywood logic had taken over American public life writ large.That's fascinating. Like, again, she spends time in the industry, then basically she can only see it through that lens. Of course, Michael Dukakis in a tank is trying to be a set piece, of course in front of the Berlin Wall, you're finally doing set decoration rather than doing it outside of a brick wall somewhere. You mentioned the New York thing in Performing New York. I have lived in the city for over a decade now. The dumbest thing is when the mayor gets to wear the silly jacket whenever there's a snowstorm that says “Mr. Mayor.” It's all an act in so many ways. I guess that political choreography had to come from somewhere, and it seems like she was documenting a lot of that initial rise.Yeah, I think she really saw it. The question I would ask her, if I could, is how cognizant she was that she kept doing that. As someone who's written for a long time, you don't always recognize that you have the one thing you write about all the time. Other people then bring it up to you and you're like, “Oh, I guess you're right.” Even when you move into her grief memoir phase, which is how I think about the last few original works that she published, she uses movie logic constantly in those.I mean, The Year of Magical Thinking is a cyclical book, she goes over the same events over and over. But if you actually look at the language she's using, she talks about running the tape back, she talks about the edit, she talks about all these things as if she's running her own life through how a movie would tell a story. Maybe she knew very deliberately. She's not a person who does things just haphazardly, but it has the feeling of being so baked into her psyche at this point that she would never even think of trying to escape it.Fascinating.Yeah, that idea that you don't know what you are potentially doing, I've thought about that. I don't know what mine is. But either way. It's such a cool way to look at it. On a certain level, she pretty much succeeded at that, though, right? I think that when people think about Joan Didion, they think about a life that freshens up a movie, right? Like, it workedVery much, yeah. I'm gonna be really curious to see what happens over the next 10 years or so. I've been thinking about figures like Sylvia Plath or women with larger-than-life iconography and reputation and how there's a constant need to relook at their legacies and reinvent and rethink and reimagine them. There's a lot in the life of Didion that I think remains to be explored. I'm really curious to see where people go with it, especially with the opening of these archives and new personal information making its way into the world.Yeah, even just your ability to break some of those stories that have been locked away in archives out sounds like a really exciting addition to the scholarship. Just backing out a little bit, we live in a moment in which the relationship between pop culture and political life is fairly directly intertwined. Setting aside the steel-plated elephant in the room, you and I are friendly because we bonded over this idea that movies really are consequential. Coming out of this book and coming out of reporting on it, what are some of the relevances for today in particular?Yeah, I mean, a lot more than I thought, I guess, five years ago. I started work on the book at the end of Trump One, and it's coming out at the beginning of Trump Two, and there was this period in the middle of a slightly different vibe. But even then I watch TikTok or whatever. You see people talk about “main character energy” or the “vibe shift” or all of romanticizing your life. I would have loved to read a Didion essay on the way that young people sort of view themselves through the logic of the screens they have lived on and the way that has shaped America for a long time.I should confirm this, I don't think she wrote about Obama, or if she did, it was only a little bit. So her political writing ends in George W. Bush's era. I think there's one piece on Obama, and then she's writing about other things. It's just interesting to think about how her ideas of what has happened to political culture in America have seeped into the present day.I think the Hollywood logic, the cinematic logic has given way to reality TV logic. That's very much the logic of the Trump world, right? Still performing for cameras, but the cameras have shifted. The way that we want things from the cameras has shifted, too. Reality TV is a lot about creating moments of drama where they may or may not actually exist and bombarding you with them. I think that's a lot of what we see and what we feel now. I have to imagine she would think about it that way.There is one interesting essay that I feel has only recently been talked about. It's at the beginning of my book, too. It was in a documentary, and Gia Tolentino wrote about it recently. It's this essay she wrote in 2000 about Martha Stewart and about Martha Stewart's website. It feels like the 2000s was like, “What is this website thing? Why are people so into it?” But really, it's an essay about parasocial relationships that people develop (with women in particular) who they invent stories around and how those stories correspond to greater American archetypes. It's a really interesting essay, not least because I think it's an essay also about people's parasocial relationships with Joan Didion.So the rise of her celebrity in the 21st century, where people know who she is and carry around a tote bag, but don't really know what they're getting themselves into is very interesting to me. I think it is also something she thought about quite a bit, while also consciously courting it.Yeah, I mean, that makes a ton of sense. For someone who was so adept at using cinematic language to describe her own life with every living being having a camera directly next to them at all times. It seems like we are very much living in a world that she had at least put a lot of thought into, even if the technology wasn't around for her to specifically address it.Yes, completely.On that note, where can folks find the book? Where can folks find you? What's the elevator pitch for why they ought to check this out? Joan Didion superfan or just rather novice?Exactly! I think this book is not just for the fans, let me put it that way. Certainly, I think anyone who considers themselves a Didion fan will have a lot to enjoy here. The stuff you didn't know, hadn't read or just a new way to think through her cultural impact. But also, this is really a book that's as much for people who are just interested in thinking about the world we live in today a little critically. It's certainly a biography of American political culture as much as it is of Didion. There's a great deal of Hollywood history in there as well. Thinking about that sweep of the American century and change is what the book is doing. It's very, very, very informed by what I do in my day job as a movie critic at The New York Times. Thinking about what movies mean, what do they tell us about ourselves? I think this is what this book does. I have been told it's very fun to read. So I'm happy about that. It's not ponderous at all, which is good. It's also not that long.It comes out March 11th from Live Right, which is a Norton imprint. There will be an audiobook at the end of May that I am reading, which I'm excited about. And I'll be on tour for a large amount of March on the East Coast. Then in California, there's a virtual date, and there's a good chance I'll be popping up elsewhere all year, too. Those updates will be on my social feeds, which are all @alissawilkinson on whatever platform except X, which is fine because I don't really post there anymore.Alyssa, thank you so much for coming on.Thank you so much.Edited by Crystal Wang.If you have anything you'd like to see in this Sunday special, shoot me an email. Comment below! Thanks for reading, and thanks so much for supporting Numlock.Thank you so much for becoming a paid subscriber! Send links to me on Twitter at @WaltHickey or email me with numbers, tips or feedback at walt@numlock.news. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.numlock.com/subscribe

The Basketball Fix
140 | NBL Free Agency Fix: Day 1 – Keanu Pinder to Depart Perth, Kristian Doolittle Re-Signs & Josh Bannan to the JackJumpers!

The Basketball Fix

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 18:51


Day 1 of NBL Free Agency is here, and the moves are already shaking up the league!

NDR - Hör mal 'n beten to
Eenmal Hund sien

NDR - Hör mal 'n beten to

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2025 1:50


Wie Dr. Doolittle versetzt Gerrit Hoss sich in die Lage seines Haustieres und beginnt mit ihm zu sprechen. Die Welt snackt Platt - Alles rund um das Thema Plattdeutsch: https://www.ndr.de/plattdeutsch

Alpenzoo Late Morning Show
Von singenden Mäusen und quietschenden Elefanten | Dr. Angela Stöger-Horwath

Alpenzoo Late Morning Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2025 47:24


Der Februar und explizit der Valentinstag sind voll von liebevollen Gesten und herzzerreißenden Liebesschwüren und das nicht nur bei uns Menschen. Vor allem auch Tiere zeigen sich auf unterschiedlichste Art und Weise ihre Zuneigung. Eine Frau namens Dr. Doolittle - äh Frau Dr. Angela Stöger-Horwath versteht sogar, was sich die Tiere da genau zu schmachten und gibt uns in dieser Folge spannende Einblicke in die Welt der Tierkommunikation.Wir freuen uns euch die charmante Verhaltensforscherin, Kognitionsbiologin und Expertin für Bioakustik und Lautkommunikation vorstellen zu dürfen.Zudem bekommt ihr wieder tolle Filmtiertipps und die latest News aus dem Alpenzoo.Der Frühling steckt in den Startlöchern, deshalb schicken wir hiermit auch eine große Portion Liebe an euch raus und bedanken uns fürs Einschalten.Love is in the air…

Milwaukee Admirals Podcast
Epsiode 160 Chase De Leo and Three Stars

Milwaukee Admirals Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 33:59


Admirals forward Chase De Leo tells his true-life Dr. Doolittle story. We also announce the week's Three Stars for the Milwaukee Admirals.

SeanGeek and FastFret Podcast
Episode 531 – Breaking The Pixies Doolittle

SeanGeek and FastFret Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 37:12


The Pixies were trailblazers, arriving on the music scene just before the Grunge revolution hit the mainstream. Despite their early timing, their influence is undeniable, shaping the sounds of iconic bands like Nirvana, Soundgarden, and The Smashing Pumpkins, and even touching artists such as Arcade Fire and David Bowie. Join us as we delve deep into one of their most seminal albums, Doolittle, to uncover its lasting impact on the music world.Linktree: https://linktr.ee/seangeekpodcastPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/meetthegeeksMerch: Tee Public: https://www.teepublic.com/seangeekpodcastRed Bubble: https://www.redbubble.com/people/seangeekpodcast/shop@seangeekpodcast on Twitter, Instagram and FacebookMentioned in this episode:New Merch AdAn ad that incorporates Red Bubble and Tee Public

NBL Podcasts
The Huddle: Kristian Doolittle - Playoff Preparation

NBL Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2025 30:03


The Perth Wildcats are once again set to feature in the Playoffs and Kristian Doolittle has been a major player in helping to get them there again in NBL25. Pete catches up with Kristian to get an insight into how he's settled into the Wildcats lineup in his second season in the NBL.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Look What You Made Me View
Ep. 111: Dr. Doolittle (1998)

Look What You Made Me View

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2025 77:11


This week! Things get a little hairy because we watched "Dr. Dolittle" (1998)! We're kicking off the Season of Slaps with a Norm McDonald Dog, a fart attack, and a new definition for the word "consume." Don't forget to spay or neuter your pets and send us your dog questions. Interruption: "911 Is a Joke" by Public Enemy  *Please enjoy this explicit content responsibly*Corrections and Omissions: Eliza Dolittle is a fictional character in "My Fair Lady"

Talkhouse Podcast
Paul Banks (Interpol) with Frank Black (Pixies)

Talkhouse Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2025 50:27


So picture this: It's 1994. The Pixies had been music-world darlings for half a decade or so, releasing some incredible records before fizzling to a stop. Their enigmatic singer, Black Francis, changes his name (again—his parents named him Charles Thompson) to Frank Black and embarks on a solo career that feels a little vexing at the time. His self-titled debut felt deeply connected to his old band, but for the next one, he struck an even richer songwriting vein: The songs kept coming and they turned into the double album Teenager of the Year, recorded with a crack studio band that included Eric Drew Feldman of Pere Ubu both as a player and producer. Teenager of the Year wasn't particularly well received upon its release 30 years ago, but it has slowly been recognized as a high point in Black's career, celebrated as his masterpiece by those paying the closest attention. It may not get the widespread attention that Pixies' Doolittle does, but the love it gets might even run a little deeper, both from its creator and his biggest fans. It's meaningful enough that Black and the original band that created it have just embarked on an anniversary tour during which they'll play the whole record, and it's being re-released on gold vinyl, a gold record that should have been. You can find dates online, they'll be hitting major US cities throughout January, ending in New York February 1 before heading to Paris and London. As a high school student, Paul Banks came to the Pixies via a love of Nirvana, and eventually found his way to Teenager of the Year, an album that—as you'll hear in this conversation—was massively important to him. Banks would of course go on to form the band Interpol, for which he has been the singer and guitarist since 1997. Their latest is 2022's The Other Side of Make-Believe, but Interpol has also been revisiting a beloved album recently, touring on the anniversary of their classic second record, Antics. These two have a great chat about Teenager of the Year here, plus they talk about Black's kids and their musical ambitions, lyric writing in general, and the time Black was asked to audition for the part of a serial killer in a David Fincher movie. They also get into some specifics about Teenager of the Year songs, including a great story about album opener "Whatever Happened to Pong?" Enjoy. Chapters: 0:00 – Intro 2:28 – Start of the chat 8:30 – Paul Banks on 'Teenager of the Year' 13:52 – The making of 'Teenager of the Year' 15:51 – How Frank almost became the Zodiac Killer (on the big screen) 18:10 – On characters in music 21:10 – On writing lyrics 24:15 – Film and book recommendations 28:22 – The formation of Frank Black's solo band 33:00 – On "Pong" and Pong 38:30 – Paul Banks on when he decided to become a musician 44:15 - The freedom of releasing music Thanks for listening to the Talkhouse Podcast, and thanks to Frank Black and Paul Banks for chatting. If you liked what you heard, please follow Talkhouse on your favorite podcasting platform and check out all the great shows on the Talkhouse Podcast Network. This episode was produced by Myron Kaplan, and the Talkhouse theme is composed and performed by the Range. Find more illuminating podcasts on the Talkhouse Podcast Network. Visit talkhouse.com to read essays, reviews, and more. Follow @talkhouse on Instagram, Bluesky, Twitter (X), Threads, and Facebook.

Exploration: LIVE!
Dohad Y'all (w/ Patrick Doolittle)

Exploration: LIVE!

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2025 105:38


Ideas Covered:Is vegetable asexualModern rorschachPun restaurantDohad y'allGuest: Patrick DoolittleExploration: LIVE! is a weekly podcast in which Brooklyn comedians Charlie Bardey and Natalie Rotter-Laitman explore some of the most (and least) pressing ideas, theories, axioms and concepts out there. Subscribe and Rate Exploration: LIVE! on Apple Podcasts and Spotify and leave us a review to read on a future episode!Exploration: LIVE! has a Patreon! Subscribe here for 3 bonus episodes every month!Follow Charlie on Instagram and Twitter.Follow Natalie on Instagram and Twitter.Follow the show:Twitter: @explorationliveInstagram: @explorationlivecomedyTikTok: @explorationlivecomedyAdvertise on Exploration Live via Gumball.fm.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Ryan Kelley Morning After
TMA (1-14-25) Hour 2 - Get a Life, Doolittle

The Ryan Kelley Morning After

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 44:02


(00:00-17:35) Ed Hermann joins us in-studio. Talking about the legalities of what happened with the Philadelphia Eagles fan. Personal insults hit a little closer to home. Representing your company off the clock. A woman calls in with a female perspective on what occurred. Doug found the origin of the word in question. Super Bowl thoughts.(17:43-33:25) TV Voice of the Blues John Kelly joins us,. The critical nature of the upcoming stretch for the Blues. Two big games against the Flames. What has been the cause of the inconsistency? Joe Lunardi's got some bracketology out and he's got SLU vs. Illinois in the first round. Tigers in the play-in game. (33:35-43:54) Who's the oldest person in radio? Casey Kasem's death. Time to bring it up with Doolittle. Imagining a world where transactions aren't permitted in MLB, which kinda rings familiar here in STL. GET A LIFE, DOOLITTLE! Doug's not happy with Doolittle's exercise. Cards ranked 13th. Stout little rotation. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Ryan Kelley Morning After
TMA (1-14-25) Hour 2 - Get a Life, Doolittle

The Ryan Kelley Morning After

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 48:32


(00:00-17:35) Ed Hermann joins us in-studio. Talking about the legalities of what happened with the Philadelphia Eagles fan. Personal insults hit a little closer to home. Representing your company off the clock. A woman calls in with a female perspective on what occurred. Doug found the origin of the word in question. Super Bowl thoughts. (17:43-33:25) TV Voice of the Blues John Kelly joins us,. The critical nature of the upcoming stretch for the Blues. Two big games against the Flames. What has been the cause of the inconsistency? Joe Lunardi's got some bracketology out and he's got SLU vs. Illinois in the first round. Tigers in the play-in game. (33:35-43:54) Who's the oldest person in radio? Casey Kasem's death. Time to bring it up with Doolittle. Imagining a world where transactions aren't permitted in MLB, which kinda rings familiar here in STL. GET A LIFE, DOOLITTLE! Doug's not happy with Doolittle's exercise. Cards ranked 13th. Stout little rotation. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Hey Milo!
David Thatcher: From Stillwater County to the Skies - A Doolittle Raider's Tale | Ep 4 TGOTB Series

Hey Milo!

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2025 70:07


Join us on The Big Fat Podcast as we uncover the remarkable journey of David Thatcher, a local hero from Stillwater County, Montana. From his humble beginnings in the rugged landscapes of Montana to becoming a key member of the historic Doolittle Raid during WWII, David's story is one of courage, survival, and a return to a quiet life of service. Discover how this unassuming man played a pivotal role in one of the most audacious missions of the war, and how his legacy continues to inspire. This episode, part of our "They Gazed on the Beartooth" series, is brought to you in collaboration with the Museum of the Beartooths and sponsored by Pinnacle Property of Montana. Like, subscribe, and share to keep history alive! Thank You To Our Sponsor Pinnacle Property Of Montana Donna West Owner/Broker https://www.pinnacleproperty.com Thank You to Penny Redli, Executive Director - Museum Of The BearTooths https://www.museumofthebeartooths.com Also In Studio: Cole Waltner  https://www.youtube.com/@chasingthewildoutdoors Chapter Timestamps: [00:00:00] - Introduction: David Thatcher's Life and Legacy Overview of David's journey from Montana to the Doolittle Raid. [00:01:00] - Early Life in Stillwater County Discussion on David's childhood, education, and family connections in Stillwater. [00:03:00] - Enlisting in the Army Air Corps Details on how David joined the military and his initial training. [00:06:00] - The Doolittle Raid: Preparation and Mission Insights into the secretive training, the USS Hornet, and the mission objectives. [00:10:00] - The Raid and Its Aftermath The journey, the bombing, and the crash landing in China; survival stories. [00:16:00] - Post-Raid Heroics David's actions post-crash, receiving the Silver Star, and the trek to safety. [00:23:00] - Life After the Raid David's continued service during WWII, his return to civilian life, and marriage. [00:30:00] - Personal Reflections and Artifacts Personal anecdotes from interviews, and the significance of memorabilia. [00:38:00] - Legacy and Memorials How David's story is remembered locally and nationally, including the Thatcher Memorial Highway. [00:45:00] - David Thatcher's Humility Reflections on David's character, his modest nature, and contributions to history. [00:52:00] - The Doolittle Raiders' Reunions The camaraderie among the Raiders and their annual gatherings. [00:56:00] - Educational Impact and Community Memory How David's story educates and inspires, especially in local schools. [01:02:00] - The Museum Exhibit Description of the museum's exhibit dedicated to David Thatcher. [01:08:00] - Conclusion and Acknowledgements

Discord and Rhyme: An Album Podcast
153: Pixies - Doolittle (1989)

Discord and Rhyme: An Album Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2024 141:17


Well, sit right down, my wicked son, and let us tell you a story, about the subject of this year's Discord & Rhyme holiday episode: the Pixies! (Or technically, just Pixies.) Hailing from Boston, the alternative rock quartet dealt with mounting intra-band tension with little to nothing to show for it financially, leading bandleader Charles Thompson (alias Black Francis) to break up the band via fax in 1991. But the band's critical stature gradually grew to gigantic proportions in the ‘90s, as their albums influenced bands like Pavement, PJ Harvey, Radiohead, Weezer, and especially Nirvana, who built an entire movement out of the classic Pixies “quiet-loud” formula. When they reunited for a reunion tour in 2004, they found, much to their shock and awe, that their songs had grown into anthems. Their 1989 album Doolittle is arguably the peak of their original run, featuring songs that could plausibly fill an arena without sacrificing their scrappy indie energy, so join Rich, John, and Dan as they sail away on a (festive) wave of mutilation.Cohosts: Rich Bunnell, John McFerrin, Dan WatkinsComplete show notes: https://discordpod.com/listen/153-pixies-doolittle-1989Discord & Rhyme's merch store: http://tee.pub/lic/discordpodSupport the podcast! https://www.patreon.com/discordpodMalört: The Redemption of a Revered and Reviled Spirit by Josh Noel: https://www.joshnoel.net/malort-book

What's Up Next Podcast
586. How to Retire Happy w/ Ryan Doolittle

What's Up Next Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 49:54


Today we talk with Ryan Doolittle of the Happiest Retirees Podcast about what it takes to truly enjoy retirement. We also delve into what a modern version of retirement looks like and debate whether making money makes a difference. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

H3 Podcast
Jake Doolittle Blackmails His Friends - H3 Show #91

H3 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 220:00


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Minnesota Matters
Missouri Military Minute - Jimmy Doolittle

Minnesota Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2024 1:00


Missouri Military Minute - Jimmy Doolittle by Minnesota News Network

Team Fat Kid Chews The Fat
The Annual Thanksgiving Mac& Cheese Battle Cast S8E46

Team Fat Kid Chews The Fat

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2024 58:01


we recap the glorious day of Thanksgiving and all the craziness of the day! We also talk about how Jason is becoming Dr. Doolittle with how all his his animals he has coming to the house

Stoneybrook Reunion: The Baby-Sitters Club Book Club
Seeing Through Someone Else's Shoes

Stoneybrook Reunion: The Baby-Sitters Club Book Club

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2024 89:04


After Stacey moves back to New York, a vacancy in the club creates an opportunity for the eldest Pike child to graduate from charge to sitter–but opinions differ on whether Mallory is ready for the responsibility. Bolstered by a budding best friendship, Mallory and the latest new girl in town, Jessi Ramsey, decide to strike out on their own and threaten the BSC's monopoly. Join us at the moping tree to hatch plans, talk horse books, and greet/meet the ambitious sixth grade sitters in Hello, Mallory. Animal-themed reading list Lizard Music by Daniel Pinkwater Dr. Doolittle by Hugh Lofting The Incredible Journey by Sheila Burnford Impossible Charlie by Barbara Morgenroth A Morgan for Melinda by Doris Gates The Chronicles of Narnia books, specifically The Horse and His Boy, by C.S. Lewis Homework assignment: Draw the divestive digestive system from memory.  Did your parents (like the Pikes) order literal name-brand clothing from Lillian Vernon? Share your stories or alternative sources at stoneybrookreunion@gmail.com.  See snaps of some of our special trees on Instagram @stoneybrookreunion.

Mish'N Accomplished
The Mike & Mish Show ep 251: Luis Palomino, Steven Townsel, Taylor Starling, Isaac Doolittle

Mish'N Accomplished

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2024 122:19


We have a big show, featuring four BKFC fan favorites. Tune in as we talk with the p4p #1 bareknuckle fighter on the planet, the undefeated/undisputed Luis “Baboon” Palomino. Next we chat with a guy that's never been in a boring fight. The hard-hitting cruiserweight, Steve “Tomahawk” Townsel. Then we have one half of the highly anticipated co-main event at January's BKFC Prospect Series card in Albuquerque. Taylor “Killa Bee” Starling will pop in to talk about her fight. And finally, we'll catch up with Isaac Doolittle before he toes the line with Jomi Escoboza on February 2nd in Hollywood Florida.

An Armao On The Brink
Chapter Thirty-Two - On the Brink: Of Losing Your Mind and Your Self

An Armao On The Brink

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2024 53:46


Dementia is a family disease that affects not just the afflicted person but everyone who loves, depends on, and cares for her. Alzheimer's and related diseases don't kill off their victims right away but instead drains them over years of their ability to think or do or even really be themselves. Watching that happen is horrifying and tests caregivers. Writer Will Doolittle knows this. Seven and one half years ago his wife Bella was diagnosed with Alzheimer and told she probably had eight years to live. He writes about how the disease has changed their lives. Rosemary's family care for her 98-year-old mother who is slowly disappearing. Ruth Fish is a nurse practitioner who offer support and hope and sees the bright spots for families like Doolittle's and Armao's. Will Doolittle is 64. He met his wife, Bella, when he was 13 and living in Saranac Lake, and she came over from Lake Placid to see her boyfriend, Dave, who was one of Will's best friends. Bella was 15. Will worked at the Adirondack Daily Enterprise, his family's business, as a teenager, and then again after college and some time abroad. In 1986, he was living in Lake Placid,, working on the newspaper there, when he went into the Lake Placid bar P.J. O'Neill's and, after pushing through a crowd, saw a bartender he thought he recognized. "I think I know you," he said to Bella. "Yeah? Half the guys in here think they know me," she said. Before long  they were seeing each other. After several months, Will moved into the apartment in Saranac Lake where Bella lived with her two children, Travis and Ginny, who were 8 and 7.  Will and Bella got married in April of 1990, and the family moved the next year to Malone, where Will worked as the editor of the local paper, the Telegram.  Bella commuted to Saranac Lake to continue working as a photographer for the Enterprise, then took a job as a bartender at a notorious biker bar in Malone.  They moved to Glens Falls in the fall of 1993, where Will had taken a job as an editor at the Post-Star. He worked as night, Sunday, features, editorial page and special projects editor — not all at once — over the next 29 years, retiring in January of 2022 to stay home and take care of Bella full-time.  Bella worked various jobs and finished her undergraduate degree, then got a master's and a teaching certificate while she was working full time as a domestic violence counselor at Catholic Charities.  Will and Bella adopted their son Zo in 1990 and daughter Tam a couple of years later.  Bella took a job as a teacher and administrator for the Ticonderoga branch campus of North Country Community College but was forced to retire in 2018 after informing the college in 2017 she had been diagnosed with Alzheimers.   Will was able to keep working for a few years but eventually had to stop. He is now writing a memoir that will include what's happening with my life now with Bella. He also writes a Substack column about that which you can read here: https://kentingley.substack.com/ Ruth E. Fish is a certified family nurse practitioner with more than 35 years of experience in internal medicine and geriatrics. She is an educator for the Center for Excellence for Alzheimer's Disease at the Glens Falls NY Hospital. She holds a bachelor's degree in nursing from SUNY Plattsburgh and a master's from the Medical College of Virginia at Richmond in Family Nurse Practice and Community Healthy. She has been awarded the Warren County Bar Association's Liberty Bell prize for work helping adult reach physical and neuron-cognitive wellness. A nurse beloved by patients she also has an extensive volunteer history including helping refugees coming into her community. 

Hudson Mohawk Magazine
Armao on the Brink: with Will Doolittle and Ruth Fish

Hudson Mohawk Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2024 10:12


Dementia is a family disease that affects not just the afflicted person but everyone who loves, depends on, and cares for her. Alzheimer's and related diseases don't kill off their victims right away but instead drains them over years of their ability to think or do or even really be themselves. Watching that happen is horrifying and tests caregivers. Writer Will Doolittle knows this. Seven and one half years ago his wife Bella was diagnosed with Alzheimer and told she probably had eight years to live. He writes about how the disease has changed their lives. Rosemary's family care for her 98-year-old mother who is slowly disappearing. Ruth Fish is a nurse practitioner who offer support and hope and sees the bright spots for families like Doolittle's and Armao's. Will Doolittle is 64. He met his wife, Bella, when he was 13 and living in Saranac Lake, and she came over from Lake Placid to see her boyfriend, Dave, who was one of Will's best friends. Bella was 15. Will worked at the Adirondack Daily Enterprise, his family's business, as a teenager, and then again after college and some time abroad. In 1986, he was living in Lake Placid,, working on the newspaper there, when he went into the Lake Placid bar P.J. O'Neill's and, after pushing through a crowd, saw a bartender he thought he recognized. "I think I know you," he said to Bella. "Yeah? Half the guys in here think they know me," she said. Before long they were seeing each other. After several months, Will moved into the apartment in Saranac Lake where Bella lived with her two children, Travis and Ginny, who were 8 and 7. Will and Bella got married in April of 1990, and the family moved the next year to Malone, where Will worked as the editor of the local paper, the Telegram. Bella commuted to Saranac Lake to continue working as a photographer for the Enterprise, then took a job as a bartender at a notorious biker bar in Malone. They moved to Glens Falls in the fall of 1993, where Will had taken a job as an editor at the Post-Star. He worked as night, Sunday, features, editorial page and special projects editor — not all at once — over the next 29 years, retiring in January of 2022 to stay home and take care of Bella full-time. Bella worked various jobs and finished her undergraduate degree, then got a master's and a teaching certificate while she was working full time as a domestic violence counselor at Catholic Charities. Will and Bella adopted their son Zo in 1990 and daughter Tam a couple of years later. Bella took a job as a teacher and administrator for the Ticonderoga branch campus of North Country Community College but was forced to retire in 2018 after informing the college in 2017 she had been diagnosed with Alzheimers. Will was able to keep working for a few years but eventually had to stop. He is now writing a memoir that will include what's happening with my life now with Bella. He also writes a Substack column about that which you can read here: https://kentingley.substack.com/ Ruth E. Fish is a certified family nurse practitioner with more than 35 years of experience in internal medicine and geriatrics. She is an educator for the Center for Excellence for Alzheimer's Disease at the Glens Falls NY Hospital. She holds a bachelor's degree in nursing from SUNY Plattsburgh and a master's from the Medical College of Virginia at Richmond in Family Nurse Practice and Community Healthy. She has been awarded the Warren County Bar Association's Liberty Bell prize for work helping adult reach physical and neuron-cognitive wellness. A nurse beloved by patients she also has an extensive volunteer history including helping refugees coming into her community.

Blue Dot
BLUE DOT: Episode 086: Community Mural on Indian Creek Trail w/ Andrew Reich

Blue Dot

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2024 29:07


Today's episode is dedicated to a handful of exciting art exhibits, projects, and events happening in our community. We interview Andrew Reich, member of the Indian Creek Trail board, who has recently led a project to paint a mural on the Doolittle section of Indian Creek Trail. We cannot wait to see this project to its completion in the Spring 2025. THINGS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Harrison County Arts Annual Showcase Reception: Saturday, September 14th 5:30pm - 7:30pm Indian Creek Trail - Home IAC: Arts Project Support (in.gov) Madison Area Arts Alliance | Madison, Indiana Harrison County Community Foundation (hccfindiana.org) NuArt (nuartfestival.no) Nuart (@nuartfestival) • Instagram photos and videos ARTMOSPHERE: A Whimsy Event Friday, September 20 5:30pm - 9:00pmSaturday, September 21 10:00am - 4:00pm Refreshments on both dates. Artists have collaborated to create an immersive garden: An environment designed to surprise and delight. Come and enjoy our vision. Walk through an indoor garden of exotic plants and created worlds meant for fun and whimsy. LOCATION: 326 S. Capitol Ave Gallery venue is located in the rear of the address. Parking is availbable at Harrison County Fairgrounds and also neighborhood parking on Ridley Street. Look for arrows and directional indications.

The
Did The 10 Commandments Arise From Imitation? with Curt Doolittle (WiM507)

The "What is Money?" Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 101:15


// GUEST // X: https://x.com/curtdoolittleNatural Law Institute: https://naturallawinstitute.com/ and https://www.naturallawinstitute.org/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheNaturalLawInstitute// SPONSORS // In Wolf's Clothing: https://wolfnyc.com/ The Farm at Okefenokee: https://okefarm.com/ Heart and Soil Supplements (use discount code BREEDLOVE): https://heartandsoil.co/Swan Bitcoin: https://www.swanbitcoin.com/breedlove22/// EVENTS I WILL BE ATTENDING //  The Art of Alpha Retreat: https://www.breedloveevents.com/ // PRODUCTS I ENDORSE // Protect your mobile phone from SIM swap attacks: https://www.efani.com/breedlove Noble Protein (discount code BREEDLOVE for 15% off): https://nobleorigins.com/ The Bitcoin Advisor: https://content.thebitcoinadviser.com/breedlove Lineage Provisions (use discount code BREEDLOVE): https://lineageprovisions.com/?ref=breedlove_22 Colorado Craft Beef (use discount code BREEDLOVE): https://coloradocraftbeef.com/  // SUBSCRIBE TO THE CLIPS CHANNEL // https://www.youtube.com/@robertbreedloveclips2996/videos // OUTLINE // 0:00 - WiM Intro 1:15 - Helping Lightning Startups with In Wolf's Clothing 2:06 - Introducing Curt Doolittle 5:55 - Defining Moral and Ethical 17:24 - Freedom of Speech and Coercion 28:36 - The Art of Alpha Retreat 30:09 - The Farm at Okefenokee 31:29 - "Eat First, Then Ethics" 50:45 - Money and Human Cooperation 55:06 - Private Property, Responsibility, and Cooperation 1:02:46 - Bitcoin's Impact on the State and Private Property 1:10:12 - Heart and Soil Supplements 1:11:12 - Rene Girard and Mimetic Desire 1:22:49 - The Observation of Private Property 1:28:39 - Justice and Private Property 1:33:51 - The Cost of Criminality 1:40:05 - Where to Find Curt Doolittle// PODCAST // Podcast Website: https://whatismoneypodcast.com/Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-what-is-money-show/id1541404400Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/25LPvm8EewBGyfQQ1abIsE?RSS Feed: https://feeds.simplecast.com/MLdpYXYI// SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL // Bitcoin: 3D1gfxKZKMtfWaD1bkwiR6JsDzu6e9bZQ7 Sats via Strike: https://strike.me/breedlove22 Sats via Tippin.me: https://tippin.me/@Breedlove22Dollars via Paypal: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/RBreedloveDollars via Venmo: https://account.venmo.com/u/Robert-Breedlove-2The "What is Money?" Show Patreon Page: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=32843101// WRITTEN WORK // Medium: https://breedlove22.medium.com/Substack: https://breedlove22.substack.com/ // SOCIAL // Breedlove Twitter: https://twitter.com/Breedlove22WiM? Twitter: https://twitter.com/WhatisMoneyShowLinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/breedlove22/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/breedlove_22/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@breedlove22All My Current Work: https://linktr.ee/robertbreedlove

The Skeptical Shaman
A Psychic Dr. Doolittle, with Abigail Kochunas

The Skeptical Shaman

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2024 72:34


In this episode of The Skeptical Shaman, host Rachel White (of TOTEM Readings) reconnects with "friend of the show" Abigail Kochunas, owner of of Sacred Healing Art AND an incredibly talented energy worker and animal communicator. Abigail outlines her journey discovering her natural talents with animal communication and energy work, and how she's adding these services to her otherwise human-centered spiritual healing practice--not to mention to her charity work at a variety of animal sanctuaries and equine therapy facilities. Rachel shares her recent experience with Abigail's remote animal communication and reiki work with her four backyard TOTEM Flower Essence garden chickens: Circe Lannister, Melisandre (The Red Witch), Arya Stark and Sansa Stark. Needless to say, Abigail-- the real life, psychic Dr. Doolittle-- totally tapped into issues and behaviors impossible for her to observe in real life from her home in California!Spoiler alert: Circe really is the HBIC. I know. You're shocked;)What's more: two of Rachel's chickens had major health turnarounds after their remote energy session with Abigail, laying their first eggs the next day and exuding health and happiness everyday since!Animal communication is anything but silly. When done properly-- by practitioners like Abigail-- it can be a game-changing, value add Woo service that brings your whole family (pets included) closer together!The TOTEM Tarot Deck (deck used in episode): https://www.amazon.com/dp/0578980126?ref=myi_title_dpTOTEM Readings Website (Rachel's practice): https://www.totemreadings.comTOTEM Readings Substack: https://totemrach.substack.comRachel's Other Links: https://linktr.ee/totemrachAbigail's Links and Website: https://linktr.ee/sacredhealingartAbigails IG: https://www.instagram.com/sacredhealing_art/Please note: The views and opinions expressed on The Skeptical Shaman do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the podcast. Any content provided by our guests, bloggers, sponsors or authors are of their opinion and are not intended to malign any religion, protected class, group, club, organization, business individual, anyone or anything. And remember: sticks and stones may break our bones, but words—or discussions of religious or spiritual topics-- will never hurt us.

FINE is a 4-Letter Word
153. The Real Purpose of Pets with Maribeth Decker

FINE is a 4-Letter Word

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 39:02 Transcription Available


In conversations with friends and through my own experiences, I know our animals who've crossed the rainbow bridge can still communicate with us. My kitty girls show up in my dreams from time to time. My guest today is Maribeth Decker. And when she started receiving messages from her dogs after they passed away, it led her to her current vocation.Like many of my guests, Maribeth was raised to conform to social expectations. Be good, be quiet, be smiley. Don't ask questions. Do as you're told. Whatever you're told is the absolute truth. At age 13, she was out in the woods when she asked God if He existed. She received an incredible response from a loving, intelligent presence. Part of the message was that maybe the humans in her life didn't have all the answers after all.In college, she studied pre-med and was horrified by being forced to do experiments on live turtles and mice. After college, her boyfriend suggested she join the Navy, which was a “Fuck Yes” decision for her. In the service she lived up to the drunken sailor stereotype. But when she lost her drinking partner because he decided to get sober, she decided to get sober too. After 17 years, Maribeth took early retirement from the Navy and became an association manager. During that time, her first husband died, leaving her with young children. She could have worked as an association manager until she retired, and given all she had been through, that would have been fine for Maribeth.But Fine is a 4-Letter Word.Instead, Maribeth felt a calling to do something else – massage therapy, then Reiki. After 21 years as an association manager, having already taken courses in massage therapy and Reiki, she retired from her job and went into these practices full-time. Things were going great; this was a right fit. Then her deceased dogs began sending her messages.Eddie transitioned right before she left for a business trip. While on the airplane, Maribeth felt Eddie's presence in the aisle and even petted her. Eddie stayed with her the first night in the hotel to make sure she was able to do her best work. Similarly, Timmy, who had passed years before, visited her at her home. He was a full-body apparition, grinning to say he was OK, he was happy and he loved her. Had Maribeth become Dr. Doolittle? What did all this mean?In a moment, when you meet Maribeth, you'll discover how this led her to a new and exciting chapter working with animals to help them become better family members through intuitive communication, medical intuition, and energy healing.Maribeth's hype song is “Pyro” by Kings of Leon.Resources:Maribeth Decker's website: https://sacredgrove.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/maribethdecker/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/spiritualpetpeopleInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/maribethdecker/ Also, check out the following episodes we discussed during our interview:Tap Into Your Intuition & Own Your True Self with Brigitte BakerYou Have a Ghost in Your Neck with Melanie...

6 Ranch Podcast
America's Boots, with Tate Doolittle

6 Ranch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2024 74:00 Transcription Available


Curious about the life behind the design of top-quality boots and the rugged lifestyles that demand them? Join us as we sit down with Tate Doolittle, the Director of Business Development at Nicks Handmade Boots, for a fun conversation about leather, and craftsmanship. This episode celebrates the heritage of boot-making and the satisfaction of owning durable, high-quality footwear. We'll explore the process of crafting boots that can withstand the toughest conditions, and the functional benefits of owning high quality boots.Find more about NICKS BOOTS, YOUTUBE, and INSTAGRAM.Send Tate a message at tate@nicksboots.comCheck out the new DECKED system and get free shipping.

The Commercial Investing Show
350: Unpacking the Culture War, Gender Roles and Social Responsibility in History with Curt Doolittle

The Commercial Investing Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2024 34:21


Jason Hartman welcomes Curt Doolittle, founder of the Natural Law Institute, referred by previous guest Rudyard Lynch. Doolittle, an expert on Culture War economics and historical contexts, discusses the transformation of cultures over time. He explains the cyclical nature of societal changes, using historical examples like the Greek and Roman impact on the Middle East and the Industrial Revolution's social shifts. Doolittle highlights the challenges and resistances faced by societies in adapting to new responsibilities and the role of law, religion, and state in shaping civilizations. The conversation also explores gender roles, anti-social behaviors, and the impacts of colonization. https://naturallawinstitute.com/ #CurtDoolittle #NaturalLawInstitute #CultureWar #HistoricalContext #PodcastInterview #CulturalChange #EconomicHistory #WesternCivilization #IndustrialRevolution #SocialEvolution #CulturalAnalysis #MiddleEastHistory #GreekRomanHistory #EconomicDevelopment #Colonization #PoliticalSystems #GenderRoles #SocialResponsibility #SocietalChange #PodcastGuest #HistoricalExamples #PhilosophicalDiscussion #EconomicTheory   Follow Jason on TWITTER, INSTAGRAM & LINKEDIN Twitter.com/JasonHartmanROI Instagram.com/jasonhartman1/ Linkedin.com/in/jasonhartmaninvestor/ Call our Investment Counselors at: 1-800-HARTMAN (US) or visit: https://www.jasonhartman.com/ Free Class:  Easily get up to $250,000 in funding for real estate, business or anything else: http://JasonHartman.com/Fund CYA Protect Your Assets, Save Taxes & Estate Planning: http://JasonHartman.com/Protect Get wholesale real estate deals for investment or build a great business – Free Course: https://www.jasonhartman.com/deals Special Offer from Ron LeGrand: https://JasonHartman.com/Ron Free Mini-Book on Pandemic Investing: https://www.PandemicInvesting.com  

Citizen Heights
Summer Playlist | The Journey of Faith | Lashanor Doolittle

Citizen Heights

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2024 36:02


True Crime with Kendall Rae
High School Teen & Rodeo Star Murdered by Her Ex: The Case of Ashley Doolittle

True Crime with Kendall Rae

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2024 51:12


Ashley Doolittle was an 18-year-old with a passion for horses and horse shows, and dreams of studying agriculture at university, which she'd begin in the fall. But her life was cut short by a controlling and possessive ex-boyfriend, Tanner Flores, who couldn't handle that she had broken up with him. Ashley Doolittle Foundation: https://www.ashleydoolittlefoundation.org/ Learn more about teen dating violence: https://www.nationalsafeplace.org/teen-dating-violence How to talk to teens about dating violence: https://www.futureswithoutviolence.org/talk-teens-teen-dating-violence/ National Domestic Violence Hotline: https://www.thehotline.org/ Lauren Dunne Astley Memorial Fund: https://laurendunneastleymemorialfund.org/ Donate to NCMEC through my campaign! https://give.missingkids.org/campaign...  Shop my Merch! https://kendallrae.shop This episode is sponsored by: Huggies Earnin - promo code: Kendall Rae Nutrafol - promo code: KENDALLRAE Rocket Money Check out Kendall's other podcasts: The Sesh & Mile Higher Follow Kendall! YouTube Twitter Instagram Facebook Mile Higher Zoo REQUESTS: General case suggestion form: https://bit.ly/32kwPly Form for people directly related/ close to the victim: https://bit.ly/3KqMZLj Discord: https://discord.com/invite/an4stY9BCN CONTACT: For Business Inquiries - kendall@INFAgency.com

Creating Wealth Real Estate Investing with Jason Hartman
2180: Unpacking the Culture War, Gender Roles and Social Responsibility in History with Curt Doolittle

Creating Wealth Real Estate Investing with Jason Hartman

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2024 37:42


Jason Hartman welcomes Curt Doolittle, founder of the Natural Law Institute, referred by previous guest Rudyard Lynch. Doolittle, an expert on Culture War economics and historical contexts, discusses the transformation of cultures over time. He explains the cyclical nature of societal changes, using historical examples like the Greek and Roman impact on the Middle East and the Industrial Revolution's social shifts. Doolittle highlights the challenges and resistances faced by societies in adapting to new responsibilities and the role of law, religion, and state in shaping civilizations. The conversation also explores gender roles, anti-social behaviors, and the impacts of colonization. https://naturallawinstitute.com/ #CurtDoolittle #NaturalLawInstitute #CultureWar #HistoricalContext #PodcastInterview #CulturalChange #EconomicHistory #WesternCivilization #IndustrialRevolution #SocialEvolution #CulturalAnalysis #MiddleEastHistory #GreekRomanHistory #EconomicDevelopment #Colonization #PoliticalSystems #GenderRoles #SocialResponsibility #SocietalChange #PodcastGuest #HistoricalExamples #PhilosophicalDiscussion #EconomicTheory Key Takeaways: 2:26 Greetings from Milan, Italy 3:53 Empowered Investor Pro members- we are changing the TIME for our monthly meetings Curt Doolittle interview 5:02 How we got to where we are 9:09 The integration of women into society 14:20 "Least capturable" 17:27 The sun never sets on the British Empire 19:24 Male: predator, Female: prey 24:53 Empathizing in time vs. systematizing over time 28:10 Successful matriarchal societies in history   Follow Jason on TWITTER, INSTAGRAM & LINKEDIN Twitter.com/JasonHartmanROI Instagram.com/jasonhartman1/ Linkedin.com/in/jasonhartmaninvestor/ Call our Investment Counselors at: 1-800-HARTMAN (US) or visit: https://www.jasonhartman.com/ Free Class:  Easily get up to $250,000 in funding for real estate, business or anything else: http://JasonHartman.com/Fund CYA Protect Your Assets, Save Taxes & Estate Planning: http://JasonHartman.com/Protect Get wholesale real estate deals for investment or build a great business – Free Course: https://www.jasonhartman.com/deals Special Offer from Ron LeGrand: https://JasonHartman.com/Ron Free Mini-Book on Pandemic Investing: https://www.PandemicInvesting.com  

Ortho Eval Pal: Optimizing Orthopedic Evaluations and Management Skills
Chatting BFR with John Doolittle from Kaatsu Global |OEP345

Ortho Eval Pal: Optimizing Orthopedic Evaluations and Management Skills

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 52:50


Send us a Text Message.In today's interview with John Doolittle from Kaatsu Global, Dr. Susie Lachowski-Glass and I chat with him about...-How John became part of the Kaatsu team.-How Kaatsu bfr is being utilized at the 2024 Olympics.-Why John uses Kaatsu blood flow restriction.-The population of people John has seen benefit from Kaatsu BFR training.-New term considerations for "Blood Flow Restriction (BFR) Training and so much more!

Live Inspired Podcast with John O'Leary
Retired Navy SEAL Captain John Doolittle (ep. 686)

Live Inspired Podcast with John O'Leary

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2024 56:08


Retired Navy SEAL Captain John Doolittle dedicated 25 years of service to the United States of America, embodying resilience, determination, faithfulness and humility. Today, John shares his incredible journey of becoming a Navy SEAL, the struggles he faced and the invaluable lessons he learned along the way. Plus, the importance of camaraderie, the power of leaning on others, the immense strength found in mental toughness, how these qualities shaped his path and what it can do for you as you navigate your path forward. My friends, this conversation is a reminder that life is a series of challenges, and developing the strength to rise again and again can make a difference for ourselves and those that we are called to serve.

Driftwood Outdoors
Ep. 248: American Family American Dream

Driftwood Outdoors

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2024 88:18


Happy 4th of July! Brandon Butler and Nathan “Shags” McLeod sit down with the guys at Doolittle Trailer Mfg., Inc including Ryan Werdehausen (Owner/CEO), Mike McPeak (Sales Manager), James Dial (Sales rep), Crappie Craig Hansen(Sales rep) and Garrett Bradley (Marketing specialist). Doolittle Trailer Manufacturing came together in 1978 as a small, family owned business building utility trailers in the state of Missouri. Over 40 years later, Doolittle is still owned and run by the same family. The family has grown but so has our business. Doolittle Trailer Mfg. is now one of the premier trailer manufacturers in the United States. With over 100 dealers nationwide, we are on the grow, on the move, and always “Tougher Than The Rest”. Topics Discussed: Gators in Missouri lakes, duck hunting, fishing for armadillos, history of the company, Alaska, stinky fish challenge, hunting out west, crappie fishing, customization of trailers, mystery bait bucket and more.   For more information:Doolittle WebsiteDoolittle FacebookDoolittle InstagramCrappie Craig Hansen Fishing VideoSpecial thanks to:Living The Dream Outdoor PropertiesSuperior Foam Insulation LLCDoolittle TrailersScenic Rivers TaxidermyConnect with Driftwood Outdoors:FacebookInstagramEmail:info@driftwoodoutdoors.com

Nats Chat
Third Straight Win Over the Braves

Nats Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2024 38:08


The Nats topped the Braves 8-5 on Sunday afternoon to end the weekend with three consecutive victories. Mark & Al discuss the Nationals second series win over Atlanta in just the past few weeks. (05:00) Keibert Ruiz had a big day as he hit a 3 run homer and knocked in four runs. Ruiz's home run was part of a seven run inning for Washington in the bottom of the 4th while facing a rookie pitcher (Hurston Waldrep). (16:00) DJ Herz had a short outing and Mark analyzes what he has seen from the lefty so far. Before the game it was announced that Patrick Corbin's next start was pushed back a few days and won't pitch in Detroit. Is this a sign that he is on way from being out of the rotation? (23:00) Kyle Finnegan was unexpectedly needed to record the final three outs as Jordan Weems struggled with a six run lead in the final inning. Weems had a bad homestand and his ERA for the year is at 7.13. (29:00) Sean Doolittle was elevated for the weekend as the pitching coach Jim Hickey was away. Will the positive press that Doolittle is garnering lead to him getting other job offers after the season? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Conspiracy Theories & Unpopular Culture
BONUS: Twin Peaks S2E19- White Lodge Black Lodge, Owl Cave's Gateways, Astrological Alignments & Doolittle Aliens! TP29

Conspiracy Theories & Unpopular Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2024 9:23


On today's episode of the Occult Symbolism and Pop Culture with Isaac Weishaupt podcast we head back to the Grey Lodge in this bonus Twin Peaks episode only for supporters! This episode we're covering Twin Peaks S2E19 "Variations and Revelations!" Today we're headed back to Owl Cave to learn more about the petroglyph map! We'll unpack symbolism of gateways, astrological alignments, phases of the moon and even get a full description of the White Lodge vs Black Lodge! We'll learn about a man full of occult secrets that was friends with Pete Martell (the Doolittle twins), another strange parallel that'll make you say “Wow BOB Wow” and some fun facts about Heather Graham, so grab your hearty beaver broth and join along!EXCLUSIVE GREY LODGE SHOWS NOW UP ONLY ON AD-FREE SUPPORTER FEEDS!See images discussed on Isaac's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/isaacweishaupt/Index of Twin Peaks Grey Lodge series: https://illuminatiwatcher.com/twin-peaks-occult-symbolism-guide-enter-the-grey-lodge/*HOT COUPON OFFER- Get into VIP Section at cost! Get 80% off your first month of Tier 1 (or Tier 2) monthly plans! For $1 you can try it out! Use coupon code "badboy" (Limited to first 100 signups and expires last day of June 2024). For more details go here: https://illuminatiwatcher.com/coupon-code-for-80-off-vip-section-limited-to-first-100-people-expires-july-1st-2024/Links:SUPPORTER FEEDS: Go ad-free with 160+ bonus episodes, early access and books!Patreon.com/IlluminatiWatcher,VIP Section (*with comparsion of Apple vs Patreon vs VIP): https://illuminatiwatcher.com/members-section/Apple Podcasts Premium! You can now go ad-free with ALL the bonus episodes on the Apple app- just open up the podcast and subscribe!

The Daily Poem
H. D.'s "Eurydice"

The Daily Poem

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2024 6:19


Today's poem features a failed resurrection and a response that spirals through all the customary stages of grief.Hilda Doolittle was born on September 10, 1886, in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. She attended Bryn Mawr College, where she was a classmate of Marianne Moore. Doolittle later enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania, where she befriended Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams.H.D. published numerous books of poetry, including Flowering of the Rod (Oxford University Press, 1946); Red Roses From Bronze (Random House, 1932); Collected Poems of H.D. (Boni and Liveright, 1925); Hymen (H. Holt and Company, 1921); and the posthumously published Helen in Egypt (Grove Press, 1961). She was also the author of several works of prose, including Tribute to Freud (Pantheon, 1956).H.D.'s work is characterized by the intense strength of her images, economy of language, and use of classical mythology. Her poems did not receive widespread appreciation and acclaim during her lifetime, in part because her name was associated with the Imagist movement, even as her voice had outgrown the movement's boundaries, as evidenced by her book-length works, Trilogy and Helen in Egypt. Neglect of H.D. can also be attributed to her time, as many of her poems spoke to an audience which was unready to respond to the strong feminist principles articulated in her work. As Alicia Ostriker said in American Poetry Review, “H.D., by the end of her career, became not only the most gifted woman poet of our century, but one of the most original poets—the more I read her the more I think this—in our language.”H.D. died in Zurich, Switzerland, on September 27, 1961.-bio via Academy of American Poets Get full access to The Daily Poem Podcast at dailypoempod.substack.com/subscribe

Sound Opinions
College Radio, Opinions on Vampire Weekend & Alejandro Escovedo

Sound Opinions

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2024 50:52


Hosts Jim DeRogatis and Greg Kot talk all-things college radio with Dr. Katherine Rye Jewell, author of Live from the Underground: A History of College Radio. Jim and Greg also review the latest records from Alejandro Escovedo and Vampire Weekend.Donate to Al Otro Lado Here: gum.fm/charityVolunteer with Al Otro Lado Here: alotrolado.org/volunteerJoin our Facebook Group: https://bit.ly/3sivr9TBecome a member on Patreon: https://bit.ly/3slWZvcSign up for our newsletter: https://bit.ly/3eEvRnGMake a donation via PayPal: https://bit.ly/3dmt9lUSend us a Voice Memo: Desktop: bit.ly/2RyD5Ah Mobile: sayhi.chat/soundops Featured Songs:R.E.M., "Radio Free Europe," Murmur, I.R.S., 1983The Beatles, "With A Little Help From My Friends," Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, Parlophone, 1967Alejandro Escovedo, "John Conquest," Echo Dancing, Yep Roc, 2024Alejandro Escovedo, "Too Many Tears," Echo Dancing, Yep Roc, 2024Alejandro Escovedo, "Bury Me," Echo Dancing, Yep Roc, 2024Alejandro Escovedo, "Last to Know," Echo Dancing, Yep Roc, 2024Vampire Weekend, "Prep-School Gangsters," Only God Was Above Us, Columbia, 2024Vampire Weekend, "Mary Boone," Only God Was Above Us, Columbia, 2024Vampire Weekend, "Ice Cream Piano," Only God Was Above Us, Columbia, 2024Vampire Weekend, "Gen-X Cops," Only God Was Above Us, Columbia, 2024Man or Astro-man?, "Television Fission," Experiment Zero, Touch and Go, 1996The Replacements, "Left of the Dial," Tim, Sire, 1985Pixies, "Monkey Gone to Heaven," Doolittle, Elektra, 1989Phil Collins, "You'll Be in My Heart," Tarzan: An Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack, Walt Disney, 1999See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Passion Struck with John R. Miles
CAPT John Doolittle on Why Anything is Achievable with Perseverance EP 441

Passion Struck with John R. Miles

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2024 65:08


https://passionstruck.com/passion-struck-book/ - Order a copy of my new book, "Passion Struck: Twelve Powerful Principles to Unlock Your Purpose and Ignite Your Most Intentional Life," today! Picked by the Next Big Idea Club as a must-read for 2024.In this episode of Passion Struck, retired Navy SEAL Captain John Doolittle shares his remarkable journey from the US Air Force Academy to the challenging world of the US Navy SEALs. He recounts his experience swimming across the English Channel in honor of a fallen teammate and his involvement in the Tampa Bay Frogman Swim to support the Navy SEAL Foundation. Captain Doolittle also discusses the innovative Kaatsu device he discovered during his surgery recovery and now works with to help veterans and individuals with chronic injuries.Full show notes and resources can be found here: https://passionstruck.com/john-doolittle-leading-through-tough-times/In this episode, you will learn:Physical and Mental Resilience: The episode highlights the importance of mental toughness and resilience in challenging situations, such as SEAL training, marathon swims, and injury recovery.Purpose-Driven Actions: Captain John Doolittle's experiences emphasize the power of undertaking challenges for a greater purpose, whether in memory of fallen comrades or supporting charitable causes like the Navy SEAL Foundation.Leadership and Teamwork: Lessons from SEAL training, such as empowering junior members and focusing on the mission's intent rather than micromanaging, can be applied to various aspects of life and business.Innovative Health Solutions: Introducing the Kaatsu device showcases innovative health solutions that can aid in rehabilitation, muscle hypertrophy, and overall fitness, especially for individuals with chronic injuries or older individuals.All things John Doolittle: https://johndoolittle.com/SponsorsBrought to you by Indeed. Head to https://www.indeed.com/passionstruck, where you can receive a $75 credit to attract, interview, and hire in one place.Brought to you by Nom Nom: Go Right Now for 50% off your no-risk two week trial at https://trynom.com/passionstruck.Brought to you by Cozy Earth. Cozy Earth provided an exclusive offer for my listeners. 35% off site-wide when you use the code “PASSIONSTRUCK” at https://cozyearth.com/This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at https://www.betterhelp.com/PASSIONSTRUCK, and get on your way to being your best self.This episode is brought to you By Constant Contact:  Helping the Small Stand Tall. Just go to Constant Contact dot com right now. So get going, and start GROWING your business today with a free trial at Constant Contact dot com.--► For information about advertisers and promo codes, go to:https://passionstruck.com/deals/Catch More of Passion StruckWatch my interview with Colonel Robert Adams, MD On Be Your Own Best AdvocateCan't miss my episode with Navy SEAL Astronaut Capt. 'Chris' Cassidy On The Importance In Life Of Being PresentListen to my interview with William Branum On Why Transition Points Are Vital To SuccessCheck my interview with Navy SEAL Dan O'Shea On Escaping Afghanistan: How A Navy SEAL Saved A Family Of FourteenCatch my episode with Jason Redman On How You Confront The Dragon In Your MindLike this show? Please leave us a review here-- even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter or Instagram handle so we can thank you personally!How to Connect with JohnConnect with John on Twitter at @John_RMiles and on Instagram at @john_R_Miles.Subscribe to our main YouTube Channel Here: https://www.youtube.com/c/JohnRMilesSubscribe to our YouTube Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@passionstruckclipsWant to uncover your profound sense of Mattering? I provide my master class with five simple steps to achieving it.Want to hear my best interviews? Check out my starter packs on intentional behavior change, women at the top of their game, longevity and well-being, and overcoming adversity.Learn more about John: https://johnrmiles.com/