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Tot és culpa meva. Crítica teatral de l'obra «Opereta imaginària (L’Opérette imaginaire)», de Valère Novarina. Traducció i adaptació: Albert Arribas. Intèrprets: Mònica Almirall, Màrcia Cisteró, Antònia Jaume, Oriol Genís, Roosevelt Jimenez i Griselda Ramon. Música original i espai sonor: Lucas Ariel Vallejos. Il·luminació: Marc Salicrú. Vestuari i caracterització: Manuel Mateos. Producció executiva: Centaure Produccions. Foto cartell: Pablo Bernal Pena (fotografia), Manuel Mateos (estilisme i edició) i Relda (caracterització). Producció: Centaure Produccions i Centre de les Arts Lliures de la Fundació Joan Brossa. Amb el suport de l’ICEC – Departament de Cultura Generalitat de Catalunya. Amb el suport de Teatre de Lloret. Ajudanta de direcció i tècnica companyia: Aurembiaix Montardit. Direcció: Albert Arribas. Centre de les Arts Lliures - Fundació Joan Brossa, Barcelona, 23 abril 2025. Veu: Andreu Sotorra. Música: Mein Herr Marquis from The Fledermaus. Interpretació: Ed Lewis, Gerhard Kanzian, Johann Strauss. Composició: Johann Strauss. Àlbum: Operetten Opern Ouvertüren, 2010.
Ed Lewis, Representative in District 6 and Missouri House Education Committee Chairman, joins Chris and Amy to discuss the pending education bills in the Missouri General Assembly, which includes a bill to prohibit cell phones in classrooms.
In the final hour on this Thursday Chris and Amy are joined by Ed Lewis, Representative in District 6 and Missouri House Education Committee Chairman to discuss pending education bills in the Missouri General Assembly, no cell phones in the classroom and more. Regular guest of the Major Garrett and a reaction to President Trump's joint address. Finally, as we get ready for 3-1-4 day we want to know how St. Louis are you.
Toady on the Chris and Amy Show; CBS News Justice Correspondent Scott MacFarlane joins the show to discuss President Trump joint address, tariffs and more. Actor and Comedian Michael Winslow, known as The Man of 10,000 Sound Effects joined in studio to promote being at the St. Louis Funny Bone March 6-9. KMOX Sports contributor Bernie Miklasz joins the show to talk about the Jordan Walker injury, his adjustment at the plate. NHL trade deadline is tomorrow and more. Ed Lewis, Representative in District 6 and Missouri House Education Committee Chairman joined to discuss pending education bills in the Missouri General Assembly, no cell phones in the classroom and more.
We catch up with a major Louisville nonprofit on this week's Access Louisville podcast.Tamera Reif, senior director of Housing Services at Volunteers of America Mid-States, is on this week's show to talk about a number of ongoing projects with the organizaiton. She spends her days in the world of residential homeless and housing work — a key issue affecting Louisville in recent years. She talks about how she is inspired to do the work.Volunteers of America Mid-States (VOA) broke ground on its new headquarters, the $58 million Community Care Campus, in September. Reif tells us on the show that one of the most exciting parts of that project is a new family emergency shelter, which will more than double the available space for families experiencing homelessness. The campus also includes transitional housing for 18 to 24 year old youths and respite care for homeless people leaving the hospital. The space will also include meeting rooms and partner spaces, she explains. And she speaks with LBF Editor-in-Chief Shea Van Hoy talks with Reif about how the campus project came together with the support of Louisville Metro Government.The start of construction comes nearly two years after Louisville Metro Government purchased the Smoketown properties on Breckinridge Street near Floyd and Brook streets for nearly $7 million. Existing facilities on the property included the Vu Hotel and Guest House as well as the C2 event space, which George Stinson and his partner Ed Lewis opened in 2016.The majority of the funding for the project is coming from the Kentucky General Assembly and Louisville Metro Government, which are contributing a combined $22.5 million, according to VOA's website. Low income housing credits are responsible for $19 million in funds and the VOA has been able to raise $2.5 million for the project to date. But that still leaves a $17.5 million gap in funding.The new campus is expected to fully completed in 2027 and will employ 75 people. Miranda Construction is handling the buildout of the Community Care Campus. Hancock said the new Unity House will have 34 rooms and be able to serve 80 to 90 people at a time.Access Louisville is a weekly podcast from Louisville Business First. It's available on popular podcast services, including Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
The buoyant alto player known for his 1930's recordings is here presented leading bands in the 1940's that go from swing to bop to rhythm and blues . . records for Savoy and World Transcriptions featuring Jonah Jones and Ed Lewis on trumpets, Zed Jackson and Ray Parker on piano, Al Casey and Bill Moore on electric guitar, Dallas Bartley on bass, Ed Nicholson on drums and others. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/john-clark49/support
Flyover Friday, March 1, 2024A flyover from this weeks top heartland stories including:Texas Is On Fire | Colorado Oil Wells Are Not So Well | Missouri Meat Packing Ponds Stink | Kansas legislators behave like bullies | Texas AG Making Lists Of Undesirables SOURCES: The heartland collective, Missouri independent, Kansas Reflector, Colorado Sun, Associated Press, Advocate and journalist - Erin Reed's blog, Erin In the MorningEvery thing is bigger in Texas, Including The States Largest Ever WildFirehttps://apnews.com/article/texas-panhandle-fire-evacuations-cbbb6a279bef1bd020722ed48927114aSTINNETT, Texas (AP) — A dusting of snow covered a desolate landscape of scorched prairie, dead cattle and burned out homes in the Texas Panhandle on Thursday, giving firefighters brief relief in their desperate efforts to corral a blaze that has grown into the largest in state history.The Smokehouse Creek fire grew to nearly 1,700 square miles (4,400 square kilometers). It merged with another fire and is just 3% contained, according to the Texas A&M Forest Service.Gray skies loomed over huge scars of blackened earth in a rural area dotted with scrub brush, ranchland, rocky canyons and oil rigs. In Stinnett, a town of about 1,600, someone propped up an American flag outside of a destroyed home.Colorado Oil Well Eye Sores Subject of new law suithttps://coloradosun.com/2024/02/24/colorado-orphaned-oil-wells-cleanup-lawsuit/It is just one orphan well among an estimated 1,800 in Colorado, but a lawsuit filed in Adams County District Court contends it is part of a large, fraudulent scheme to dump old, played-out wells onto the state.Adams County leads the state in orphan wells with 318. “It is a serious concern for the county and a growing concern as the number keeps increasing incrementally,” said Gregory Dean, the county's oil and gas administrator.The lawsuit, in which McCormick and her husband, Ronald, are among the plaintiffs, focuses on Denver-based HRM Resources LLC, which was the recipient of hundreds of low-producing oil and gas wells from some of the state's largest operators.For Adams County, orphan wells have been a big problem. Since July 2021 there have been 75 leaks and spills from orphan wells and 92% of the orphan well sites checked by county oil and gas inspectors were out of compliance.The lawsuit is seeking monetary damages. HRM currently has no active wells, according to the Colorado Energy and Carbon Management database, and in the last four years produced the equivalent of 550 barrels of oil.The company has been financed by Los Angeles-based Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors, which according to its website manages $34 billion in investments, many in niche areas including oil and gas fields. The company is mentioned but not named as a defendant.https://www.coloradoan.com/story/news/2017/05/02/cut-abandoned-gas-line-caused-firestone-home-explosion/309230001/In April 2017, in nearby FIRESTONE CO — A home explosion that killed two people was caused by unrefined natural gas that was leaking from a small abandoned pipeline from a nearby well, fire officials saidThe April 17 explosion in Firestone about 30 miles (48 kilometers) north of Denver happened when the odorless gas in the old line leaked into the soil and made its way into the home's basement, Ted Poszywak, chief of the Frederick-Firestone fire department, said Tuesday.Investigators do not know how or when the small pipe was cut. The house was within 200 feet (60 meters) of the well, and the pipeline was buried about 7 feet (2.1 meters) underground.Missouri Meatpacking Plant Lagoon Wretched Stenchhttps://missouriindependent.com/2024/02/29/missouri-house-bill-takes-aim-at-cesspool-of-meatpacking-sludge/Between Vallerie Steele, her seven siblings and their children, there's always a birthday or anniversary to celebrate on the family's southwest Missouri farm. The summer months are typically a parade of pool parties and barbecues.Until last year. The stench coming from the lagoon across the road from Steele's home has become unbearable. It holds waste Denali Water Solutions collects from meatpacking plants before spreading it as free fertilizer on farmers' properties. The smell from the “cesspool of rotting flesh” has forced the family inside, she said. “Nobody wants to eat a burger or a hot dog if it smells like rotten crap in the air,” Steele said in an interview with The Independent. “It's just disgusting.”She tried to stain her porch three times last summer but couldn't stand to be outside because of the smell. One of her sons was bullied at school because the stench of the lagoon clung to his clothes. Children at her younger son's combined elementary and middle school beg their teachers to stay inside during recess.“It literally burns your lungs, your chest,” she said. “I'm an ICU nurse — like, I know this isn't normal.”Steele leads a coalition of southwest Missouri residents fighting for more regulation of Denali's — and similar — lagoons. She implored state lawmakers last month to pass legislation meant to protect rural neighbors and impose more regulations on wastewater sludge haulers.And on Thursday, the Missouri House voted 151-2 to pass legislation that would require companies like Denali to have water pollution permits and follow certain design requirements for its facilities. Facilities like Denali's would have to be at least 1,000, 2,000 or 4,000 feet from the nearest public building or home depending on the size of the lagoon. And the state would have to establish sampling rules for the basins and require groundwater monitoring in hydrologically sensitive areas.Sponsored by state Reps. Ed Lewis, a Moberly Republican, and Dirk Deaton, a Noel Republican, the legislation now moves to the Missouri Senate for consideration. The House attached an emergency clause, meaning if it clears the Senate and is signed by the governor the new regulations would go into effect immediately. Kansas Lawmakers School Yard Bully Routine with LGBTQ+ personshttps://kansasreflector.com/2024/02/29/legislative-bullies-target-kansas-lgbtq-kids-for-harassment-with-anti-trans-bills/When Kansas GOP leaders consider three bills Thursday targeting transgender kids in the state, they might as well file into a local high school and line the hallways. From their posts, leaning arrogantly against lockers, they could yell slurs and throw elbows at beleaguered LGBTQ+ kids trying to make their way through the day.They're bullying our fellow Kansans.If lawmakers actually behaved like that at high school, they would face discipline and possibly suspension. In the Kansas Legislature, however, they will revel in news media coverage and behave as though they're protecting someone from something nefarious. You know, the same way a high school bully “protects” a target in P.E. class by shoving them to the floor.These lawmakers will profess to be concerned about gender-affirming care for those younger than 18. Here's the truth: They don't give a rip about gender-affirming care guidelines. If they did, they would listen to the bevy of medical experts, families and trans folks who explain the lifesaving necessity of this treatment.As American Academy of Pediatrics CEO Mark Del Monte put it, his group wants to “ensure young people get the reproductive and gender-affirming care they need and are seen, heard and valued as they are.”Forget expert opinion. These lawmakers want to harass and exclude kids who look and behave differently.They're bullies, no matter their age.Not To Be Outdone In Texas They Are Making Listshttps://www.erininthemorning.com/p/retaliation-texas-ag-paxton-demands?publication_id=994764&utm_campaign=email-post-title&r=1n4up&utm_medium=emailIn a legal filing Thursday, PFLAG (National sought to block a new demand from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton that would require the organization to identify its Texas transgender members, doctors who work with them, and contingency plans for anti-transgender legislation in the state. The civil investigative demand, issued on Feb. 5, calls for extensive identifying information and records from the LGBTQ+ rights organization. PFLAG, in its filing to block the demands, describes them as "retaliation" for its opposition to anti-transgender laws in the state and alleges that they violate the freedom of speech and association protections afforded by the United States and Texas constitutions.Founded in 1973, PFLAG is the first and largest organization dedicated to supporting, educating, and advocating for LGBTQ+ people and their families.The demands are extensive. The letter to PFLAG National demands "unredacted" information around claims made by Brian Bond, PFLAG's Chief Executive Officer, in a legal fight against the ban on gender-affirming care in the state. Bond's claims highlighted that PFLAG represents 1,500 members in Texas, many of whom are seeking contingency plans if SB14, the ban on gender-affirming care, takes effect.Per the lawsuit, PFLAG National states that it would be required to disclose Texas trans youth members, including "complete names, Social Security numbers, dates of birth, jobs, home addresses, telephone numbers, [and] email addresses." It also states they would need to hand over documents and communications related to their medical care, hospitals outside the state, and "contingency plans" discussed among members for navigating the new laws on gender-affirming care in Texas.Learn more and support PFLAG at PFLAG.ORG @TheHeartlandPOD on Twitter and ThreadsCo-HostsAdam Sommer @Adam_Sommer85 (Twitter) @adam_sommer85 (Post)Rachel Parker @msraitchetp (Post) Sean Diller (no social)The Heartland Collective - Sign Up Today!JOIN PATREON FOR MORE - AND JOIN OUR SOCIAL NETWORK!“Change The Conversation”Outro Song: “The World Is On Fire” by American Aquarium http://www.americanaquarium.com/
Flyover Friday, March 1, 2024A flyover from this weeks top heartland stories including:Texas Is On Fire | Colorado Oil Wells Are Not So Well | Missouri Meat Packing Ponds Stink | Kansas legislators behave like bullies | Texas AG Making Lists Of Undesirables SOURCES: The heartland collective, Missouri independent, Kansas Reflector, Colorado Sun, Associated Press, Advocate and journalist - Erin Reed's blog, Erin In the MorningEvery thing is bigger in Texas, Including The States Largest Ever WildFirehttps://apnews.com/article/texas-panhandle-fire-evacuations-cbbb6a279bef1bd020722ed48927114aSTINNETT, Texas (AP) — A dusting of snow covered a desolate landscape of scorched prairie, dead cattle and burned out homes in the Texas Panhandle on Thursday, giving firefighters brief relief in their desperate efforts to corral a blaze that has grown into the largest in state history.The Smokehouse Creek fire grew to nearly 1,700 square miles (4,400 square kilometers). It merged with another fire and is just 3% contained, according to the Texas A&M Forest Service.Gray skies loomed over huge scars of blackened earth in a rural area dotted with scrub brush, ranchland, rocky canyons and oil rigs. In Stinnett, a town of about 1,600, someone propped up an American flag outside of a destroyed home.Colorado Oil Well Eye Sores Subject of new law suithttps://coloradosun.com/2024/02/24/colorado-orphaned-oil-wells-cleanup-lawsuit/It is just one orphan well among an estimated 1,800 in Colorado, but a lawsuit filed in Adams County District Court contends it is part of a large, fraudulent scheme to dump old, played-out wells onto the state.Adams County leads the state in orphan wells with 318. “It is a serious concern for the county and a growing concern as the number keeps increasing incrementally,” said Gregory Dean, the county's oil and gas administrator.The lawsuit, in which McCormick and her husband, Ronald, are among the plaintiffs, focuses on Denver-based HRM Resources LLC, which was the recipient of hundreds of low-producing oil and gas wells from some of the state's largest operators.For Adams County, orphan wells have been a big problem. Since July 2021 there have been 75 leaks and spills from orphan wells and 92% of the orphan well sites checked by county oil and gas inspectors were out of compliance.The lawsuit is seeking monetary damages. HRM currently has no active wells, according to the Colorado Energy and Carbon Management database, and in the last four years produced the equivalent of 550 barrels of oil.The company has been financed by Los Angeles-based Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors, which according to its website manages $34 billion in investments, many in niche areas including oil and gas fields. The company is mentioned but not named as a defendant.https://www.coloradoan.com/story/news/2017/05/02/cut-abandoned-gas-line-caused-firestone-home-explosion/309230001/In April 2017, in nearby FIRESTONE CO — A home explosion that killed two people was caused by unrefined natural gas that was leaking from a small abandoned pipeline from a nearby well, fire officials saidThe April 17 explosion in Firestone about 30 miles (48 kilometers) north of Denver happened when the odorless gas in the old line leaked into the soil and made its way into the home's basement, Ted Poszywak, chief of the Frederick-Firestone fire department, said Tuesday.Investigators do not know how or when the small pipe was cut. The house was within 200 feet (60 meters) of the well, and the pipeline was buried about 7 feet (2.1 meters) underground.Missouri Meatpacking Plant Lagoon Wretched Stenchhttps://missouriindependent.com/2024/02/29/missouri-house-bill-takes-aim-at-cesspool-of-meatpacking-sludge/Between Vallerie Steele, her seven siblings and their children, there's always a birthday or anniversary to celebrate on the family's southwest Missouri farm. The summer months are typically a parade of pool parties and barbecues.Until last year. The stench coming from the lagoon across the road from Steele's home has become unbearable. It holds waste Denali Water Solutions collects from meatpacking plants before spreading it as free fertilizer on farmers' properties. The smell from the “cesspool of rotting flesh” has forced the family inside, she said. “Nobody wants to eat a burger or a hot dog if it smells like rotten crap in the air,” Steele said in an interview with The Independent. “It's just disgusting.”She tried to stain her porch three times last summer but couldn't stand to be outside because of the smell. One of her sons was bullied at school because the stench of the lagoon clung to his clothes. Children at her younger son's combined elementary and middle school beg their teachers to stay inside during recess.“It literally burns your lungs, your chest,” she said. “I'm an ICU nurse — like, I know this isn't normal.”Steele leads a coalition of southwest Missouri residents fighting for more regulation of Denali's — and similar — lagoons. She implored state lawmakers last month to pass legislation meant to protect rural neighbors and impose more regulations on wastewater sludge haulers.And on Thursday, the Missouri House voted 151-2 to pass legislation that would require companies like Denali to have water pollution permits and follow certain design requirements for its facilities. Facilities like Denali's would have to be at least 1,000, 2,000 or 4,000 feet from the nearest public building or home depending on the size of the lagoon. And the state would have to establish sampling rules for the basins and require groundwater monitoring in hydrologically sensitive areas.Sponsored by state Reps. Ed Lewis, a Moberly Republican, and Dirk Deaton, a Noel Republican, the legislation now moves to the Missouri Senate for consideration. The House attached an emergency clause, meaning if it clears the Senate and is signed by the governor the new regulations would go into effect immediately. Kansas Lawmakers School Yard Bully Routine with LGBTQ+ personshttps://kansasreflector.com/2024/02/29/legislative-bullies-target-kansas-lgbtq-kids-for-harassment-with-anti-trans-bills/When Kansas GOP leaders consider three bills Thursday targeting transgender kids in the state, they might as well file into a local high school and line the hallways. From their posts, leaning arrogantly against lockers, they could yell slurs and throw elbows at beleaguered LGBTQ+ kids trying to make their way through the day.They're bullying our fellow Kansans.If lawmakers actually behaved like that at high school, they would face discipline and possibly suspension. In the Kansas Legislature, however, they will revel in news media coverage and behave as though they're protecting someone from something nefarious. You know, the same way a high school bully “protects” a target in P.E. class by shoving them to the floor.These lawmakers will profess to be concerned about gender-affirming care for those younger than 18. Here's the truth: They don't give a rip about gender-affirming care guidelines. If they did, they would listen to the bevy of medical experts, families and trans folks who explain the lifesaving necessity of this treatment.As American Academy of Pediatrics CEO Mark Del Monte put it, his group wants to “ensure young people get the reproductive and gender-affirming care they need and are seen, heard and valued as they are.”Forget expert opinion. These lawmakers want to harass and exclude kids who look and behave differently.They're bullies, no matter their age.Not To Be Outdone In Texas They Are Making Listshttps://www.erininthemorning.com/p/retaliation-texas-ag-paxton-demands?publication_id=994764&utm_campaign=email-post-title&r=1n4up&utm_medium=emailIn a legal filing Thursday, PFLAG (National sought to block a new demand from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton that would require the organization to identify its Texas transgender members, doctors who work with them, and contingency plans for anti-transgender legislation in the state. The civil investigative demand, issued on Feb. 5, calls for extensive identifying information and records from the LGBTQ+ rights organization. PFLAG, in its filing to block the demands, describes them as "retaliation" for its opposition to anti-transgender laws in the state and alleges that they violate the freedom of speech and association protections afforded by the United States and Texas constitutions.Founded in 1973, PFLAG is the first and largest organization dedicated to supporting, educating, and advocating for LGBTQ+ people and their families.The demands are extensive. The letter to PFLAG National demands "unredacted" information around claims made by Brian Bond, PFLAG's Chief Executive Officer, in a legal fight against the ban on gender-affirming care in the state. Bond's claims highlighted that PFLAG represents 1,500 members in Texas, many of whom are seeking contingency plans if SB14, the ban on gender-affirming care, takes effect.Per the lawsuit, PFLAG National states that it would be required to disclose Texas trans youth members, including "complete names, Social Security numbers, dates of birth, jobs, home addresses, telephone numbers, [and] email addresses." It also states they would need to hand over documents and communications related to their medical care, hospitals outside the state, and "contingency plans" discussed among members for navigating the new laws on gender-affirming care in Texas.Learn more and support PFLAG at PFLAG.ORG @TheHeartlandPOD on Twitter and ThreadsCo-HostsAdam Sommer @Adam_Sommer85 (Twitter) @adam_sommer85 (Post)Rachel Parker @msraitchetp (Post) Sean Diller (no social)The Heartland Collective - Sign Up Today!JOIN PATREON FOR MORE - AND JOIN OUR SOCIAL NETWORK!“Change The Conversation”Outro Song: “The World Is On Fire” by American Aquarium http://www.americanaquarium.com/
In this episode, I discuss the first five years of Ed "Strangler" Lewis' career.
BENNIE MOTEN / COUNT BASIE – BASIE BEGINNINGS 1929-1932 Chicago, October 23, 1929The Jones law blues, Small black, Everyday blues [Yo yo blues]Ed Lewis, Booker Washington (cnt) Thamon Hayes (tb) Eddie Durham (v-tb,g,arr) Harlan Leonard (cl,sop,as) Jack Washington (cl,as,bar) Woody Walder (cl,ts) Count Basie (p,vcl) Ira “Buster” Moten (p,accor) Leroy “Buster” Berry (bj) Vernon Page (tu) Willie McWashington (d) Bennie Moten (dir) Chicago, October 24, 1929New Vine Street blues Agregado: Willie McWashington (d,vcl) ELLA FITZGERALD / CHICK WEBB ORCH – ELLA FITZGERALD 1939 New York, February 17, 1939Tain't what you do, One side of me (ef vcl), My heart belongs to daddy (ef vcl,wc arr)Dick Vance, Bobby Stark, Taft Jordan (tp) Sandy Williams, Nat Story, George Matthews (tb) Garvin Bushell (cl,as) Hilton Jefferson (as) Teddy McRae (ts) Wayman Carver (ts,arr) Tommy Fulford (p) Bobby Johnson (g) Beverly Peer (b) Chick Webb (d) Ella Fitzgerald (vcl) New York, March 2, 1939Sugar pie (ef vcl), I'm up a tree (ef vcl)John Trueheart (g) replaces Bobby Johnson, Ted McRae (ts,bar) ARTIE SHAW AND HIS ORCHESTRA – THE INDISPENSABLE ARTIE SHAW, VOL. Continue reading Puro Jazz 18 diciembre 2023 at PuroJazz.
Ed Lewis with Kensington Investment Company discusses Utah's new tallest high rise – Astra Tower. (00:00)Then, Beth Rossi with Pendry Park City highlights their second annual Dia de los Muertos celebration. (25:53)And Mountain Money explores the inner workings of Live PC Give PC with Park City Community Foundation's Alexis Brown and Danielle Wright, Managing Director with J.P. Morgan Private Bank. (40:36)
In this episode, we look at Ed "Strangler" Lewis' wrestling schedule in the first six months of 1913.
Managing the Ecosystem With e3 is a Cybercrime Magazine podcast series brought to you by eSentire, the Authority in Managed Detection and Response. In this episode, Ed Lewis, Field Channel Manager UK/Ireland at eSentire, joins host Hillarie McClure to discuss cyber resiliency and the right time to bring in MDR service. eSentire's mission is to hunt, investigate, and stop cyber threats before they become business disrupting events. To learn more about our sponsor, visit https://esentire.com
Enjoy: "To enjoy something is to take delight or pleasure in something." Upcycling: “The act of taking something no longer in use and giving it a second life and new function. In doing so, the finished product often becomes more practical, valuable and beautiful than what it previously was.” Ed Lewis started his first business in 1996 right out of college and since then his goals have shifted significantly. In the beginning work was all about self and making a living… admitting that in his twenties he couldn't see too far past himself. photo credit: Nate Perraccini In 2005 after experiencing the birth of his daughter, something shifted for him and he suddenly had a view of the world that was less about self and more about others. In 2010 he cofounded Enjoy Handplanes with the mission of making products from other peoples trash. It was a cool way to save broken surfboards, old wetsuits and production waste from going to the landfills while creating products that are fun to use and environmentally responsible. He describes this time as an awakening that got him thinking seriously about the environment and how doing business could actually have a positive impact on his community locally and globally. In the process of doing business he also became a filter for community and became a resource for people to drop off their trashed products. Over the past 10 years he has been a pioneer in the space of converting trash to beautiful, functional products and his business became a lab for him to think more and more outside the box. In this experience, he has learned valuable lessons along the way and has helped to inspire others around the world to do the same. His latest venture is Enjoy the Farm. Enjoy The Farm is a 9.5 acre upcycled maker space, learning center and regenerative rare fruit farm located in North County San Diego and is focused on DIY regenerative - food, water, energy, materials, shelter and soils. This passion driven endeavor created a space to come learn how to incorporate upcycling and holistic land management into lives and businesses, and most importantly cultivate community. This is definitely not just a story of a business evolution. Can we also upcycle what life tosses at us and to us? Yes Indeed, and Ed is the perfect example of an evolution of personal growth through regenerating experiences. This up cycled energy is infinite and will germinate and spread like collards. Enjoy! https://enjoy-the-farm.com/ https://www.enjoyhandplanes.com/ Instagram @enjoy_the_farm @enjoyhandplanes Intro Music: J45 & Dime by Will Kimbrough Episode Artwork Photo Credit: Alia Lewis
The early version of the classic Moten orchestra recording for Victor - featuring Lammar Wright, Ed Lewis, Paul Webster, Thamon Hayes, Harlan Leonard, Jack Washington, Woodie Walder, Sam Tall, Leroy Berry, Vernon Page and Willie McWashington with the leader on piano - some great territory jazz that became an early prototype of the Basie band of the 1930's. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/john-clark49/support
American slavery may have been the most successful totalitarian system in history, lasting ten generations, far longer than comparable 20th century totalitarian regimes. In some ways, slavery's success as an economic and socio-political system was that it was just brutal enough to generate effective rates of return on investment. But it became even more brutal from the beginning of the 19th century to the Civil War, in part in response to slave rebellions, and to the attacks on the institution made by abolitionists. In part three of our six part episode on Abraham Lincoln and the Emancipation Proclamation, we analyze the economic institution of slavery as practiced in the Antebellum South, and its consequences for the black and white people that lived in it. And borrowing from the American writer James Baldwin, we try and understand why this institution led to so many racial attitudes that informed Lincoln's time--and our own. Part 3: Slavery and Human Rights Audio Clips: James Baldwin, “You're the Nigger” (1963): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=My5FLO50hNM Music Clips: “Long John,” Prisoners of Darrington State Prison Farm, Texas (1933/34?): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4G5KtQynWvc “St. Louis Blues,” Bessie Smith (1929): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Bo3f_9hLkQ “I Be So Happy When The Sun Goes Down,” Ed Lewis: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-zlSq4mWiE “CC Rider Blues,” Ma Rainey (1924): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trtxZgF3Dns “Early in the Mornin',” Prisoners of Parchman Farm, Louisiana (1947): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zsiYfk5RV_Q “Berta, Berta,” Prisoners of Parchman Farm, Louisiana (1947):https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWWgN7837Tk “Stackolee,” Woody Guthrie (1944): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccgyJQJEMsM Bibliography: Eugene Genovese, Roll, Jordan Roll: The World the Slaves Made (Vintage, 1976) Elizabeth Fox-Genovese and Eugene Genovese, Slavery in Black and White: Race and Class in the Southern Slaveholders' New World Order (Cambridge, 2008) Frederick Law Olmstead, The Cotton Kingdom: A Traveller's Observations On Cotton And Slavery In The American Slave States, 1853-1861 (1861; Bedford/St. Martin's 2014) Calvin Schermerhorn, The Business of Slavery and the Rise of American Capitalism, 1815-1860 (Yale, 2015) George Fitzhugh, Cannibals all! or, Slaves without masters (1857; Kindle, 2015) Mary Chesnut, Mary Chesnut's Civil War (1981; edited by C. Vann Woodward) J.H. Ingraham, The South-West By a Yankee. In Two Volumes. (1835; Kindle, 2017) Sally Hadden, Slave Patrols: Law and Violence in Virginia and the Carolinas (Harvard University Press, 2001) Richard Blackett, Making Freedom: The Underground Railroad and the Politics of Slavery (University of North Carolina Press, 2013)
In this final part of our six part episode on Abraham Lincoln and the Emancipation Proclamation, we review exactly how Lincoln made his decision--one that was forced upon him by circumstance, and the unwavering insistance of millions of Americans that slavery be abolished, forever. Audio Clips: Martin Luther King, Jr., excerpt from the “I Have a Dream” speech (1963): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=smEqnnklfYs Musical Clips: “Let Jesus Lead You,” The Jubilee Gospel Team (date unknown): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Pqx8bkCkL8 “I Be So Happy When The Sun Goes Down,” Ed Lewis: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-zlSq4mWiE “When Johnny Comes Marching Home,” Henry Burr (1911): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-KQHU3wJq4o “Rock My Soul,” The Heavenly Gospel Singers (1936?): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSkkeceOtFg “We're Coming, Father Abraam” (date unknown): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rS5fDOiQJA0 “CC Rider Blues,” Ma Rainey (1924): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trtxZgF3Dns “Battle Cry of Freedom,” Vic Bondi (2022): https://vicbondi.bandcamp.com/track/battle-cry-of-freedom Bibliography: Hans L. Trefousse, Lincoln's Decision for Emancipation (Lippincott, 1975) C.Vann Woodward, The Strange Career of Jim Crow (1955; Oxford, 2001) Eric Foner, Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution - 1863-1877 (1989; Harper, 2014)
In arguably the best World Cup Final in recent memory Argentina and Lionel Messi fought off two French comebacks to win on penalty kicks. Plus, Rep. Ed Lewis talks about a bill that would raise teacher salary.
MO Rep. Ed Lewis of District 6 joins The Show to talk about a Bill that would raise the salaries of teacher's across the state.
After years of bitterness, brutality, schemes, double crosses, screw jobs, and financial politicking, it finally happened: Ed Lewis vs Joe Stecher in a title unification match. Listen to Nick and Chango discuss the intrigue, the build up, and the initial fall out of the biggest match of 1928! -Research donations to @nicholas-gossert on venmo Sources: -Ed Lewis: Facts Within A Myth, by Steve Yohe -The Nebraska Tigerman- The John Pesek Story", by Geoff Pesek -Fall Guys: The Barnums of Bounce, by Marcus Griffin -Double-Crossing The Gold Dust Trio: Stanislaus Zbyszko's Last Hurrah, By Ken Zimmerman Jr. -American Newspaper archives, various
Moving on with unofficial Franklin Mint Month we come across another extremely talented and influential saxophone player. His tragic life may have mirrored another sax player featured in a past episode, but Lester's playing was all his own. So get ready to hear the musician Billie Holiday nicknamed Prez in Volume 90: Sax Master Young. https://www.theguardian.com/music/2015/apr/08/billie-holiday-and-lester-young-friendship-between-lady-day-and-prez Credits and copyrights Various – Jazz Masters Of The Sax Label: The Franklin Mint Record Society – FM JAZZ 014 Series: Institute Of Jazz Studies Official Archive Collection, The Greatest Jazz Recordings Of All Time Format: 4 x Vinyl, LP, Compilation, Red Vinyl Box Set Country: Sweden Released: 1983 Genre: Jazz Jones-Smith Inc. – Shoe Shine Boy Written by Saul Chaplin Tenor Saxophone – Lester Young Trumpet – Carl "Tatti" Smith Piano - Count Basie String Bass - Walter Page Drums - Jo Jones Recorded Autumn 1936 Released on Vocalion Records Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra – I Can't Get Started Music by Vernon Duke and lyrics by Ira Gershwin Trumpet - Buck Clayton Trombone - Dicky Wells Piano – Margaret "Queenie" Johnson Guitar - Freddie Greene String Bass - Walter Page Drums - Jo Jones Vocals – Billie Holiday Tenor Sax Lestor Young Recorded September 15, 1938 Released on Columbia Records Count Basie & His Orchestra– Clap Hands! Here Comes Charley! written by Billy Rose, Ballard MacDonald and Joseph Meyer Alto Saxophone – Earle Warren Alto Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone – Jack Washington Trombone – Dickey Wells, Benny Morton, and Dan Minor Trumpet – Buck Clayton, Ed Lewis, Harry Edison and Shad Collins Guitar - Freddie Greene String Bass - Walter Page Drums - Jo Jones Piano - Count Basie Alto Sax - Lester Young Recorded August 4, 1939 Released on Vocalion Records Young Quartet– I Never Knew written by Gus Kahn, Ted FioRito Piano - Johnny Guarnieri String Bass - Slam Stewart Drums - Sid Catlett Alto Sax - Lester Young Recorded on December 28, 1943 Released on Kenote Records Young Quintet– Lester Blows Again Written by Lester Young Trombone – Vic Dickenson Piano - Dodo Marmarosa Guitar - Freddy Greene String Bass - Red Callendar Drums - Henry Tucker Green Alto Sax - Lester Young Recorded in October 1945 Released on Alladin Young Quartet– Neenah Could not find the composer on this one Acoustic Bass – Joe Shulman Drums – Bill Clarke Piano – John Lewis Recorded in July of 1950 Released on Clef Records Young-Cole-Rich Trio – I Want To Be Happy written by Vincent Youmans, Otto Harbach, Irving Caesar Piano - Nat King Cole Drums – Buddy Rich Alto Sax - Lester Young Recorded in December 1945 Released on Clef Records I do not own the rights to this music. ASCAP, BMI licenses provided by third-party platforms for music that is not under Public Domain.
COUNT BASIE W BENNIE MOTEN ORCHESTRA “VOLUME 1 1929-30” – Chicago, October 23-24, 1929 Rumba negro, The Jones law blues, Band box shuffle, Small black, Everyday blues [Yo yo blues], Sweetheart of yesterday (wm vcl) Ed Lewis, Booker Washington (cnt) Thamon Hayes (tb) Eddie Durham (v-tb,g,arr) Harlan Leonard (cl,sop,as) Jack Washington (cl,as,bar) Woody Walder (cl,ts) […]
In 1922 an effort was make to put Jack Dempsey in the ring with Ed "Strangler" Lewis. Was it a money making scheme or a legitimate attempt at mixed style competition? Listen to Nick and Chango sort it out as they explore the year 1922 in pro wrestling! *CONTENT WARNING* If discussions of sexual abuse is upsetting, skip 19:10-24:41. -Primary Sources -Ed Lewis: Facts Within A Myth, by Steve Yohe -The Nebraska Tigerman- The John Pesek Story", by Geoff Pesek -Fall Guys: The Barnums of Bounce, by Marcus Griffin -Double-Crossing The Gold Dust Trio: Stanislaus Zbyszko's Last Hurrah, By Ken Zimmerman Jr. -American Newspaper archives, various
In this edition of Freedom's Call, Brett talks with Missouri State Rep. Ed Lewis about losing his mom during the Covid pandemic and how that led to him co-authoring the "No One Left Alone" bill that is now law in Missouri. It essentially forbids hospitals and nursing homes from blocking access to patients by family members and medical staff. Brett and Ed both share personal stories of being denied access to their hospitalized mothers during the Covid pandemic.
Nick and Chango are back to talk about the intersection of Ed Lewis and Joe Stecher's careers, the power of talking shit, swindling money marks, and even a little wrestling! It's part two of our look at the career of Ed "Strangler" Lewis. Primary Sources- -Ed Lewis: Facts Within A Myth, by Steve Yohe -Fall Guys: The Barnums of Bounce, by Marcus Griffin -Masked Marvel to the Rescue, by Ken Zimmerman Jr & Tamara Zimmerman -Newspaper Archives, various
How did Bob Fredrick wrestle Ed Lewis? Why did the sinking of the Titanic lead to violence over a movie reel? Why did yet another riot nearly break out after a match? Find out when Nick and Chango discuss the early life and career of Ed "Strangler" Lewis! -Primary Sources -Ed Lewis: Facts Within A Myth, by Steve Yohe -Fall Guys: The Barnums of Bounce, by Marcus Griffin -Showman, by William Brady. -American Newspaper archives, various
In the Woodland neighborhood on Duluth's east side, the average person lives to be more than 90 years old. Six miles away, in the west side's Lincoln Park neighborhood, the average person lives to be only 69. Twenty-one years of life, separated by a 12-minute drive. That data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention puts into sharp focus the geographical and generational divide separating Duluth's more working class, racially diverse west side above the St. Louis River from the city's whiter, more prosperous east end, overlooking Lake Superior. The gaps extend from health to income to housing but are perhaps most evident in education, where graduation rates and test scores are substantially lower at the west side's Denfeld High School than at East High School, and where recent efforts to redraw school boundaries laid bare the divisions that remain between the two sides of town. “It's a justice issue,” said Mary Owen, a Native American physician and professor at the University of Minnesota Medical School in Duluth who helped found a community group that advocates for equity among the city's public schools. “This is not a level playing field … if you don't have the resources because of where you were born.” Map: Duluth's east and west sides https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/qo9hv/3/ There have been significant efforts to close those gaps in recent years. Owen and other advocates have persuaded school officials to allocate additional funding to western schools. Efforts within the schools to improve outcomes have begun to bear fruit. But achievement gaps remain stubbornly persistent. Recent test scores showed 73 percent of East High students scoring proficient in reading, compared to 44 percent of students at Denfeld. “That shows you the difference in the education that our students are getting from the west side of town in comparison to the east side of town,” said Ebony Hillman, education committee co-chair of the local chapter of the NAACP. Derek Montgomery for MPR News Duluth East High School (foreground) and Northland Country Club (top) as seen on Sunday in Duluth. Redlining's legacy The roots of Duluth's east-west divide can be traced to the city's industrial boom in the late 1800s, when lumber mills, grain elevators and factories sprouted up along the St. Louis River southwest of downtown. Those jobs lured low-income, immigrant laborers, who lived in nearby neighborhoods so they could walk to their jobs, said regional historian Tony Dierckins. Those early factories were powered by coal-fired generators that belched clouds of black smoke into the air. The city's wealthier residents began migrating east, away from the pollution, where they built large homes and imposing mansions overlooking Lake Superior. “So you get this wealthy, residential, eastern end of town, and the poor, blue-collar, industrial, lower-income folks on the west part of town,” said Dierckins, who wrote about the east-west divide in his book, “Duluth: An Urban Biography.” Racial segregation began to take root in the early 1900s when U.S. Steel built a mill along the St. Louis River, and recruited African Americans from the South to work there. They weren't allowed to live in Morgan Park, the company town U.S. Steel built to house employees, so many instead settled in neighborhoods farther west. That segregation was further cemented in the 1930s when the federal government evaluated the perceived lending risk in neighborhoods in more than 200 cities, including Duluth. The maps drawn by the federal Home Owners' Loan Corp. color-coded in red the neighborhoods that were considered the highest risk for lenders. “They looked at neighborhoods through a very racist perspective,” said Duluth city planner Kathy Wilson, who's researched redlining in Duluth. Many of Duluth's western neighborhoods were infamously “redlined,” either coded red for “hazardous” or yellow for “definitely declining.” They included descriptions such as “occupied by many nationalities of the low income class, including negroes,“ and “foreign industrial workers occupy the area, Italians predominating.” Even people who were able to buy homes, Wilson said, couldn't get loans to help maintain them. “And then that legacy is those neighborhoods were not invested in for decades.” The disparities that exist today between the east and west sides of Duluth are clear reflections of those past policies, Wilson added. Almost two-thirds of Duluth homes built more than 75 years ago are in western Duluth. More than three-quarters of the city's Native and Black populations live on the west side. Two-thirds of people living in poverty live in western Duluth. Life expectancy is significantly greater in many eastern neighborhoods. “It's like they … took a snapshot of the neighborhoods in Duluth in 1936, and said, ‘We're gonna keep it like this,'” Wilson said. “And that's the problem that we now are faced with.” An In Focus conversation On equity in education Equal is not equitable The city's geographical divide intensified in 2011, when Duluth's Central High School closed. That left just two public high schools in the city — Denfeld on the west side, and East High. In the years since, Denfeld's enrollment has hovered around 1,000 students or fewer, as hundreds of students left for schools in neighboring districts, or for private and charter schools. East, meanwhile, has grown, and now serves about 1,600 students. That's created its own challenges, including crowded classrooms and study halls. But more students also mean added opportunity, including more scheduling options for students to take upper-level courses. The school district also added a voluntary class period several years ago called “Zero Hour,” after officials canceled a seventh hour of classes because of budget cuts. Zero Hour is available at both schools. But critics argue it unfairly benefits students from more privileged backgrounds at East because the students have to provide their own transportation. “What it really did was it widened the opportunity and the educational gap between students,” says Tonya Sconiers, a former assistant principal and principal at Denfeld for 19 years. Sconiers joined a group of Denfeld parents and teachers in 2017 to push for greater equity between the two high schools. They argued that because students came to Denfeld with greater needs, the school needed additional resources to help them succeed. A system based on equality, where schools receive the same amount of money per pupil, only perpetuates disparities, they said. “I can honestly tell you that it was an ongoing struggle and battle and challenge to make known the resources that were needed at Denfeld to meet the needs of the students,” Sconiers said. The equity group eventually convinced the school district to reallocate funding it received for low-income students, to keep a greater percentage of those dollars at schools like Denfeld with higher concentrations of poverty. Derek Montgomery for MPR News Duluth East spanish teacher Kim Kroll Strukel talks to her students during her class on March 18 at East High School. But Sconiers' advocacy came at a cost, she said. In 2019, she was fired for, among other reasons, “insubordination" and "inappropriately" using sick leave. Sconiers sued. In her 52-page federal lawsuit, she argued she was fired for speaking out on equity issues in a district divided by “East vs. West, or, the haves and the have-nots.” She also alleged Duluth schools treated her differently as a Black woman. The school district denied discriminating against Sconiers. Eventually the two sides settled. Sconiers received $229,000 after attorney's fees. The district didn't admit any wrongdoing. Sconiers, who now works for a statewide group pushing for education equity, said the legal fight helped shine a light on inequities in the system. Since Sconiers' firing, Duluth schools have hired new leaders who community members say are committed to addressing equity issues. 2021 Advocates call for constitutional amendment to help close state's achievement gaps Inside one Minnesota school district's battle Over an equity training program Derek Montgomery for MPR News Duluth Denfeld principal Tom Tusken talks about being an educator at Denfeld High School. They include Tom Tusken, Denfeld's principal, who served as assistant principal under Sconiers and was involved with the community equity group. A former civics teacher, who graduated from Denfeld, met his wife there and lives less than a block away. Tusken choked up as he talked about Denfeld's students and the daily hurdles many face. He said it's hard to grasp the challenges many of his students face before even showing up at school. Nearly half qualify for free and reduced-price lunches. About a quarter are eligible for specialized education services. Many face trauma at home stemming from mental health issues and other challenges. “And what really can get to me is the fact that sometimes the only thing that we report on is test scores or graduation numbers, but we don't look at what's behind those,” Tusken said. “What is reported simply is a comparison to our counterpart across town.” That “counterpart” is East High School, where fewer than 15 percent of students qualify for free or reduced-price lunches, and where test scores and graduation rates consistently outpace Denfeld. The community, he said, needs to start looking at high school students not as Denfeld kids or East kids, but Duluth kids. “People have to understand the challenges, so they can then say ‘I'm OK with supporting kids that are not, quote-unquote, my own kids,'” he said. Derek Montgomery for MPR News Duluth Denfeld principal Tom Tusken shakes hands with sophomore Nevaeh Sanders earlier this month at Denfeld High School in Duluth. Some programs at Denfeld that give students additional emotional, social and academic support have begun to show promise. One of those, “Check and Connect,” was developed by researchers at the University of Minnesota. At Denfeld, it's geared toward students of color and those receiving special education services. Mentors work closely with students to check on their assignments and attendance and identify challenges they're facing. They also connect with the student's family and teachers and identify additional resources, including an after-school tutoring program that offers free city bus passes so students have a way to get home. Since the program began at Denfeld about five years ago, the graduation rate of participating students is 100 percent. During a recent visit to the school Tusken described “glimmers of hope.” That included the story of a student that morning who received a perfect score on an international studies project. “This kid doesn't smile,” Tusken said. “But he actually had a smile on his face.” “‘I guess I did pretty well,'” the boy told him. In Duluth Groups are working to close the 'adventure gap' in ourdoor sports ‘Change is hard' Despite signs of progress, a proposal two years ago to shift school boundaries to better balance student demographics between East and Denfeld revealed just how entrenched the divide remains. At a public meeting at East High School, parents reacted furiously, yelling and interrupting presenters. “I was taken aback,” said Nikolas Bayuk, an east-side father of two who became involved with a Facebook parent group opposed to the proposed boundary changes. But while he disagreed with how opponents to the changes behaved that night, he shared their point of view. Under some of the proposals, Bayuk's kids would have been sent to Lincoln Park Middle School and Denfeld on the west side of town. Bayuk said he wasn't worried about the quality of education his kids would receive there, but with the hourlong bus ride the change would create. “It wasn't so much of a concern for our kids being at the, quote-unquote, ‘bad school,'” he said. “It was how long is it going to take for our kids to get to school. We didn't move to the east end of town so our kids would go to school on the west end.” But the debate over the boundary proposal — and how western schools were often portrayed at those meetings — was frustrating for parents like Lindsay Kern, whose oldest daughter is a freshman at Denfeld. She said she's fielded all kinds of questions and comments about their decision to send her daughter there, from “Do you think she'll be safe?” to “You guys can afford to send her anywhere, we're surprised that you made the decision to send her there.” Kern said those comments, which she described as based in fear, only reinforced their decision, adding that it's important to her and her husband, who are white, that their kids experience racial and socioeconomic diversity at school. She now counts herself a proud ambassador for western schools. “I think that that's really where the change is most likely to happen, when people have those opportunities to have one-on-one conversations with people who are actually a part of that school community.” But it's hard to change long-held perceptions. On her street, only two families attend Denfeld. The rest send their children to private and charter schools, or to public schools in neighboring districts. Derek Montgomery for MPR News Math teacher Ed Lewis works through some math problems during his class on March 15 at Denfeld High School. Meanwhile, some families have moved to eastern neighborhoods because of concerns about the schools. Jnana Hand got involved in the discussions over border changes because she feels people of color are often left out of those conversations. Hand is of African American, Native American, Hispanic and European heritage. She's very concerned about racial segregation in Duluth schools and the concentration of poverty in western schools. But as the mom of a ninth grader, she was also concerned about sending her daughter to a high school that she didn't feel was getting the support it needed to serve its students. “I just wasn't confident that my daughter would be OK.” So, Hand ended up moving to the east side of the district, where she found a good deal on a house she could afford. She says her daughter is slowly acclimating to a new school, and that staff there have been very supportive. The Duluth school board eventually put the boundary debate on hold. The district says the time frame for revisiting the issue is still under consideration. Tusken, Denfeld's principal, doesn't believe the community will ever get past its east-west divisions until it addresses the boundary issue. Part of that responsibility, he said, lies with Denfeld to do a better job attracting students. Families, he noted, need to trust that regardless of where their children go to school, they will receive an excellent education. “Because change is hard. And part of that conversation has to be how we address some of the disparities and inequities that have been inherent in Duluth for a long time.” Derek Montgomery for MPR News Duluth Denfeld principal Tom Tusken helps student Gabriel Carrillo with a map on March 15. More from North Star Journey series As state considers repairs to I-94, Rondo residents look for reconnection Moorhead museum tells long-overlooked stories of Black history Artists craft new ways to teach Indigenous languages Worthington's fast-growing communities of color see economic gains but little political power. Yet. Minnesota names reveal our connections, struggles for inclusion
"Good Morning Blues" (1937) Count Basie and His Orchestra: 1936 - 1938. The Classics Chronological Series (Classics, Ed. 1990) Count Basie, Buck Clayton, Ed Lewis, Bobby Moore, Eddie Durham, George Hunt, Dan Minor, Earl Warren, Jack Washington, Herschel Evans, Lester Young, Freddie Green, Walter Page, Jo Jones, Jimmy Rushing, Lloyd "Skippy" Martin, Harry "Buster" Smith. El tema es una composición de Eddie Durham, Count Basie y Jimmy Rushing. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 ¿Sabías que? Count Basie nació en 1904. Su padre era cochero; su madre, que era lavandera, le enseñó a tocar el piano. Aunque nació en Red Bank, New Jersey, es uno de los representantes principales del sonido Kansas City. En el año 1929 ya estaba grabando junto a Bennie Moten. En los años 30 su orquesta, junto con las de Duke Ellington y Benny Goodman, es una de las máximas representantes del swing. Entre 1936 y 1940 actuó ininterrumpidamente en giras y actuaciones en salas de concierto o de baile, grandes hoteles y restaurantes. En la orquesta que grabó este tema en agosto de 1937 hay grandes músicos como Jimmy Rushing (que es quien canta), Lester Young, Buck Clayton, Freddie Green o Jo Jones. El tema es un clásico en cualquier recopilación de Count Basie. He elegido la incluida en la serie The Classics Chronological, pero podrían haber sido otras muchas como The Complete Decca Recordings. En anteriores episodios de JazzX5/HDO/LODLMA/Maltidos Jazztardos/Tomajazz Remembers… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=23849 Más información sobre Count Basie https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=count+basie&submit=Search http://countbasie.com/home/ Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
About Ed: Ed Lewis is a Voice Director for Video Games, Animation, Audiobooks, Commercials, Documentaries, Promos and for pretty much anything else you want him for. Ed's extensive experience casting Film, Television and Theatre for ten years, paired with his actor training from the University of Michigan give him a unique perspective on how to approach Voice Over projects. He treats his work as a VO Director exactly the same as his time directing auditions for The Wire, Chappelle's Show, 24 and others. Ed's experience working in casting with amazing directors like David Simon, David Koepp, David Esbjorson and all other sorts of Davids has taught him how to direct projects from children's animation to first-person shooters. Communicating with actors can be a challenge, but Ed has the vocabulary, insight, experience and knowledge to communicate the client's vision and to make the recording sessions productive with even the most difficult and complex individuals. What did casting directors do during the pandemic? It's not the casting director's job to make the choices for you, it's that actor's job. You don't have to throw a ton of ideas out, you have to settle on your choices. Casting directors are put under such rigorous standards, actors need to realize that CD's have so much going on. Audiobook: Prepping is your friend! Prepping for Commerical and VO auditions: Watch a lot of commercials! Watching commercials online vs watching on TV: If you don't know a product exists, you're not going looking for it as opposed to watching tv commercials on cable, these products come up. It's not about your voice, it's about your acting and you got to make a full scene. Video games: Play a lot of video games There are so many roles right now for women, women who can fit into that world and understand the action world, there is a huge market Casting Directors love actors, they want you to succeed! His pet peeve? Apologizing for your work!
Getting conflicting messages on C19 and State Rep. Ed Lewis
New Moten Stomp - Benny Moten's Kansas City Orchestra from October, 1930 . . one year into the Depression and the Moten band was still popular enough for a marathon recording session for Victor in KC . .featuring Count Basie, Hot Lips Page, Jimmy Rushing, Ed Lewis, Thamon Hayes, Harlan Leonard, Woodie Walder and Willie McWashington --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/john-clark49/support
Hosts John Fenn and Stephen Winick are joined by staff member Jennifer Cutting to discuss and play some of their favorite ballads and songs about ghosts, goblins, fairies, and elves—not to mention the Devil himself. Songs include “The Unquiet Grave” sung by Jean Ritchie; “Polly Vaughan” sung by Albert Lancaster “Bert” Lloyd; “The Three Babes” or “The Wife of Usher’s Well” sung by Isaac Garfield “Ike” Greer and accompanied by Willie Spainhour Greer on a mountain dulcimer; “Bolakins,” also known as “Lamkin” or “Long Lankin,” sung by Lena Bare Turbyfill; “The Stolen Bride” or “A Bhean Úd Thíos (The Woman Of The Fairy Mound)” sung by Séamus Ennis; and “Tom Devil” sung by James Carter, Ed Lewis, Henry Mason, Johnny Lee Moore. All the recordings are from the American Folklife Center archive at the Library of Congress, and the hosts and guests talk about the songs, the singers, and the archive.
Last Sunday Ed Lewis preached from Matthew 22:34-46.Follow us on Twitter, Insta and Facebook.Visit our website.
Last Sunday Ed Lewis preached of the Parable of the Tenants from Matthew 21.
Last Sunday Ed Lewis preached on 'The Parable of the Wedding Banquet' from Matthew 22:1-14.Follow us on Twitter, Insta and Facebook.Visit our website.
Professor Mauro F. Guillén joined Mountain Money (1:24) to talk about his book 2030: How Today's Biggest Trends Will Collide and Reshape the Future of Everything . The book highlights trends that will converge and dramatically disrupt the paradigm we have grown accustomed to. (22:29) Mountain Money spoke with Ed Lewis, CEO of Kensington Investment Company about their new projects under construction in Prospector Square. (27:25) Ginger Wicks with the Park City Area Restaurant Association highlighted the Dine-About, two-week culinary affair, featuring savory two-course lunches and three-course dinners at more than 30 area dining establishments.
Is it true that you can get Bell's Palsy from your refrigerator? Did Babe Ruth actually call his shot? Is Tokyo Drift part of Fast and Furious canon? The Wiki Boys answer these questions and more as they wrestle their way across Wikipedia going from Bell's Palsy the the Sears Modern Home.Topics Covered:Bells PalseyAcupunctureRetconProfessional WrestlingEd “The Strangler” LewisBabe RuthFor more Wiki U content follow Kyle and Jheisson Nunez on Instagram: @kyleberseth and @jheissonnunez ---Music provided by Davey and the Chains
Last Sunday Ed Lewis preached from Matthew 20:1-16 on the Parable of the Vineyard Workers. He spoke on the importance of the phrase "are you envious because I am generous" and how it is so relevant to us today!Follow us on Twitter, Insta and Facebook.Visit our website.
I'm joined on the podcast by Ed Lewis, Magazine publisher and entrepreneur, he co-founded Essence, a magazine specifically targeted to black women and went on to serve as CEO and publisher of Essence Communications, Inc. for three decades. In the 1980s and 1990s. We talk about his early years, founding the magazine, its success, the pandemic and its disproportionate effect on people of color and self care.
Last Sunday Ed Lewis spoke on the account of the birth of Jesus across all the gospels. He spoke on the thing that is seen to be common among all accounts. They each speak of the 'Light'. This Light that has come into the world is how we truly see ourselves and how we can truly see God. He challenged us to walk in this light and let it shine so brightly that others would learn to worship our Lord.Follow us on Twitter, Insta and Facebook.Visit our website.
Brutality and inhumanity were central to the Southern state prison farms, in their theory and their practice, and of them all, the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman Farm was the most brutal and inhuman. Both John A. and Alan Lomax made repeated visits to Parchman, recording — under the eye of the disinterested white captains, sergeants, and warden, and the guns of the "trusty" prisoner-guards — a body of American song unmatched in its depth, dignity, and power. Folklorist and prison documentarian Bruce Jackson once said that the group work songs sung by the black inmates of the Southern penitentiary farms were means of "making it in Hell." Alan Lomax, writing in 1947, said that: "In the pen itself, we saw that the songs, quite literally kept the men alive and normal.... These songs, coming out of the filthy darkness of the pen, touched with exquisite musicality, are a testimony to the love of truth and beauty which is a universal human trait." In this episode, spurred by the ongoing horrors being reported in the Mississippi Department of Corrections in general and at Parchman in particular, we listen back over the four decades of recordings made by the four white folklorists (the Lomaxes, Herbert Halpert, and William Ferris) who took the trouble to visit the place and document the singing of its prisoners: work songs for clearing ground, felling trees, picking cotton, or breaking rocks, as well as solo field hollers, spirituals, and blues.No one can mourn the passing of this song tradition and the system of black disenfranchisement and white supremacy that made it necessary to its singers. But, despite the 1971 class-auction lawsuit that forced federal reorganization of Parchman due to its epidemic use of "cruel and unusual punishment," it's only differently awful in 2020. In his harrowing "Worse Than Slavery: Parchman Farm and the Ordeal of Jim Crow Justice," Michael Oshinsky provides a 1975 quote from a convict named Horace Carter, who'd been at Parchman for fifty years. What was missing in the “new” Parchman, Mr. Carter said, was “the feeling that work counted for something… awful bad as it was in most camps, that kept us tired and kept us together and made me feel better. I'm not looking to go backwards. I know the troubles at old Parchman better than any man alive. I'm 73 years old. But I look around today and see a place that makes me sad.” This episode was completed before the announcement that William Barr's Justice Department will open a civil rights investigation into conditions at Parchman. It's hard to imagine an administration with less sympathy for incarcerated people of color, but who knows, maybe, at last, Parchman Farm will be shuttered for good. “These songs are a vivid reminder of a system of social control and forced labor that has endured in the South for centuries, and I do not believe that the pattern of Southern life can be fundamentally reshaped until what lies behind these roaring, ironic choruses is understood.” —Alan Lomax, 1958For streaming audio of all of Alan Lomax's 1947, 1948, and 1959 Parchman Farm recordings, visit archive.culturalequity.org.PLAYLIST:[Bed music:] Unidentified ensemble, including Lonnie Robertson, guitar, and possibly "Black Eagle," cornet. Camp 1, April 1936. *Frank Devine and unidentified man: In the Bye and Bye. Unidentified camp, August 1933. *Bowlegs (real name unknown): Drink My Morning Tea. Camp 12, August 1933. *Unidentified men: He Never Said A Mumblin' Word. Unidentified camp, August 1933. *M.B. Barnes, Louella Dade, Passion Buckner, Alberta Turner, Bertha Riley, Lily Mallard, Christine Shannon, and Josephine Douglas: Oh Freedom. Women's camp, April 1936.*Big Charlie Butler: Diamond Joe. Unidentified camp, March 1937.[Bed music:] John Dudley: Cool Drink of Water Blues. Dairy camp, October 1959. *Mattie May Thomas: Workhouse Blues. Women's camp, May 1939.*"22" (Benny Will Richardson) and group: It Makes A Long Time Man Feel Bad. Camp B, November or December 1947. *Ervin Webb and group: I'm Goin' Home. Dairy camp, October 1959. *Johnny Lee Moore, Henry Mason, Ed Lewis and James Carter: Tom Devil. Camp B, October 1959.[Bed music:] James Carter and group: Poor Lazarus. Camp B, October 1959. *Unidentified prisoners: Water Boy Drowned In the Mobile Bay. Unidentified camp, August 1968. *Heuston Earms: Ain't Been Able to Get Home No More / interview. Camp B, October 1959.
Brutality and inhumanity were central to the Southern state prison farms, in their theory and their practice, and of them all, the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman Farm was the most brutal and inhuman. Both John A. and Alan Lomax made repeated visits to Parchman, recording — under the eye of the disinterested white captains, sergeants, and warden, and the guns of the "trusty" prisoner-guards — a body of American song unmatched in its depth, dignity, and power. Folklorist and prison documentarian Bruce Jackson once said that the group work songs sung by the black inmates of the Southern penitentiary farms were means of "making it in Hell." Alan Lomax, writing in 1947, said that: "In the pen itself, we saw that the songs, quite literally kept the men alive and normal.... These songs, coming out of the filthy darkness of the pen, touched with exquisite musicality, are a testimony to the love of truth and beauty which is a universal human trait." In this episode, spurred by the ongoing horrors being reported in the Mississippi Department of Corrections in general and at Parchman in particular, we listen back over the four decades of recordings made by the four white folklorists (the Lomaxes, Herbert Halpert, and William Ferris) who took the trouble to visit the place and document the singing of its prisoners: work songs for clearing ground, felling trees, picking cotton, or breaking rocks, as well as solo field hollers, spirituals, and blues.No one can mourn the passing of this song tradition and the system of black disenfranchisement and white supremacy that made it necessary to its singers. But, despite the 1971 class-auction lawsuit that forced federal reorganization of Parchman due to its epidemic use of "cruel and unusual punishment," it's only differently awful in 2020. In his harrowing "Worse Than Slavery: Parchman Farm and the Ordeal of Jim Crow Justice," Michael Oshinsky provides a 1975 quote from a convict named Horace Carter, who’d been at Parchman for fifty years. What was missing in the “new” Parchman, Mr. Carter said, was “the feeling that work counted for something… awful bad as it was in most camps, that kept us tired and kept us together and made me feel better. I’m not looking to go backwards. I know the troubles at old Parchman better than any man alive. I’m 73 years old. But I look around today and see a place that makes me sad.” This episode was completed before the announcement that William Barr's Justice Department will open a civil rights investigation into conditions at Parchman. It's hard to imagine an administration with less sympathy for incarcerated people of color, but who knows, maybe, at last, Parchman Farm will be shuttered for good. “These songs are a vivid reminder of a system of social control and forced labor that has endured in the South for centuries, and I do not believe that the pattern of Southern life can be fundamentally reshaped until what lies behind these roaring, ironic choruses is understood.” —Alan Lomax, 1958For streaming audio of all of Alan Lomax's 1947, 1948, and 1959 Parchman Farm recordings, visit research.culturalequity.org. PLAYLIST:[Bed music:] Unidentified ensemble, including Lonnie Robertson, guitar, and possibly "Black Eagle," cornet. Camp 1, April 1936. *Frank Devine and unidentified man: In the Bye and Bye. Unidentified camp, August 1933. *Bowlegs (real name unknown): Drink My Morning Tea. Camp 12, August 1933. *Unidentified men: He Never Said A Mumblin' Word. Unidentified camp, August 1933. *M.B. Barnes, Louella Dade, Passion Buckner, Alberta Turner, Bertha Riley, Lily Mallard, Christine Shannon, and Josephine Douglas: Oh Freedom. Women's camp, April 1936.*Big Charlie Butler: Diamond Joe. Unidentified camp, March 1937. [Bed music:] John Dudley: Cool Drink of Water Blues. Dairy camp, October 1959. *Mattie May Thomas: Workhouse Blues. Women's camp, May 1939.*"22" (Benny Will Richardson) and group: It Makes A Long Time Man Feel Bad. Camp B, November or December 1947. *Ervin Webb and group: I'm Goin' Home. Dairy camp, October 1959. *Johnny Lee Moore, Henry Mason, Ed Lewis and James Carter: Tom Devil. Camp B, October 1959.[Bed music:] James Carter and group: Poor Lazarus. Camp B, October 1959. *Unidentified prisoners: Water Boy Drowned In the Mobile Bay. Unidentified camp, August 1968. *Heuston Earms: Ain't Been Able to Get Home No More / interview. Camp B, October 1959.
Voices of GenU is a 5 part speaker series held on Wednesday Nights, at 6:30pm from November 6, 2019 - December 11, 2019 at Generations United Church in Niceville, Florida. This is week 5 featuring Ed Lewis and Kristen Boisjolie on 12/11/19. Each night you will hear two brief sermons, along with an interview and Q&A, from your peers and friends here at GenU. None are full-time pastors. All are eager to share what God's Spirit is up to in their lives. We hope you enjoy, and make sure to follow our social media channels and subscribe to this channel so you never miss anything we post! Website: www.genuchurch.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/genuchurch/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/genuchurch/ Spotify: https://genuchurch.us19.list-manage.com/track/click?u=310886bc047a4aefdfcab84ec&id=4a265bf314&e=ff56ead52d Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/generations-united-church/id1479292093?ign-mpt=uo%3D4
Becky Mendoza was born and raised in Miami, Florida to parents who emigrated from Cuba, it wasn’t until she graduated from the University of Florida and backpacked through Europe, that her desire for an education through travel and adventure, was born. With a Law Degree and Masters in Sports Administration in-hand, she moved to Encinitas, CA and began her career as an action sports and entertainment lawyer, opening up her own firm, Action Sports Law Group (ASLG), in 2009. Through ASLG, Becky works with top companies, artists and athletes in action sports helping them with general contract matters and visas to the US. As she became more well-traveled, she began to seek more from her adventures. In 2014, she did her first Clean Water Courier trip through Waves for Water to Nicaragua, where she raised funds to purchase and distribute 54 Sawyer water filters on a surf trip. After that, she decided the following year to bring filters to Mainland Mexico, to the remote coastal areas of Jalisco, south of Puerto Vallarta, launching “Clean Mexi-Agua” with fellow CTF board member, Sam Bennett. After a successful first trip, their intent was to return to provide more filters for the surrounding communities. Unfortunately, Hurricane Patricia hit the Clean Mexi-Agua communities head-on just 6 months later and she returned for some very impactful disaster relief work. Through her work in Nicaragua and Mexico, Becky has realized her calling to help others around the world, which is where the idea for Changing Tides Foundation was born. Her goals are to inspire others to help while they’re on their adventures, because there is no better way to show your appreciation to the places you visit than to give back to its people. Changing Tides Foundation was born from the simple idea that the world would be a better place if we were all given the opportunity to give back. Established in 2016, by a group of water women and adventurers, they feel it is their calling to help others. They do this by teaming up with local organizations globally to raise awareness and address social, environmental, health and safety concerns in the places they visit, because TOGETHER WE ARE BETTER. Their mission is to bridge the gap between you, the traveler, and the causes on the ground. They are paving a way for you to SERVE NATURALLY, adding life-changing experiences to your journey. By collaborating with eco-minded brands, ADVENTURE CONSCIOUSLY, leaving behind the smallest footprint possible, in an effort to preserve the beauty of the places we travel to. INSTAGRAM @changingidesfoundation @actionsprtslaw Links: Every link discussed can be found on The Changing Tides Foundation website www.changingtidesfoundation.org Instagram links discussed Ed Lewis: @enjoyhandplanes and @enjoy_the_farm Captain Liz Clark: @captainlizclark Kimi Warner: @kimi_swimmy
In this latest Beltway Talk we take the opportunity to pick the brain of Ed Lewis, Director of Public Policy Communications at Toyota. Ed gives us an update on Toyota's activity in Washington, D.C., and discusses trade, fuel regulations, and why Toyota's dealers are so critical to their mission as a company.
This episode we are joined by CMC Ed Lewis, the Command Master Chief for the Deputy Commandant for Mission Support, for a high-level discussion on what's behind the effort to provide increased access for military members seeking merchant mariner credentials; otherwise known as "captain's licenses". If you've ever wondered why boatswain's mates don't automatically earn a credential based on the nature of our work and level of training, you'll definitely want to give this one a listen! Submit show show suggestions to cgbmrfmc@gmail.com Disclaimer: The views, information, or opinions expressed during the Course Made Good podcast series are solely those of the individuals involved and do not represent those of the United States Coast Guard or any other government agency. The primary purpose of this podcast series is to educate and inform. This podcast series does not constitute official policy guidance from the speakers nor the United States Coast Guard.
The Fall 2019 season of the program will commemorate the 60th anniversary of the so-called "Southern Journey" field-recording trip and explore various regions, traditions, and performers Lomax and Collins visited and recorded. This first episode is a (highly cursory) survey.1. Hobart Smith: Railroad Bill. Bluefield, Virginia, August 25.2. Texas Gladden: Whole Heap of Little Horses. Salem, Virginia, August 26.3. Charlie Higgins, Wade Ward, and Bob Carpenter: Did You Ever Seen the Devil, Uncle Joe? Galax, Virginia, August 31.4. Fred McDowell with Fanny Davis and Miles Pratcher: Gravel Road Blues. Como, Mississippi, September 22.5. Ed Young, Lonnie Young, Sr., and Lonnie Young, Jr.: Church I Know We Got Another Building. Como, Mississippi, September 21.6. Ed Lewis and group (consisting of, at least, Wesley Lee Brown, Oscar Crosby, Robert Lewis, Willie Matthews, John Edmonds, Willie P. Roberts, and Henry Mason): I'll Be So Glad When the Sun Goes Down. Camp B, Parchman Farm (Mississippi State Penitentiary), September 19 or 20.7. Vera Ward Hall: Wild Ox Moan. Livingston, Alabama, October 10.8. Almeda Riddle: Rainbow Mid Life's Willows. Heber Springs, Arkansas, October 6 or 7.9. Big John Davis and the Spiritual Singers of Coastal Georgia (soon to be renamed the Georgia Sea Island Singers): Moses, Don't Get Lost. St. Simons Island, Georgia, October 12.
The Fall 2019 season of the program will commemorate the 60th anniversary of the so-called "Southern Journey" field-recording trip and explore various regions, traditions, and performers Lomax and Collins visited and recorded. This first episode is a (highly cursory) survey. 1. Hobart Smith: Railroad Bill. Bluefield, Virginia, August 25.2. Texas Gladden: Whole Heap of Little Horses. Salem, Virginia, August 26.3. Charlie Higgins, Wade Ward, and Bob Carpenter: Did You Ever Seen the Devil, Uncle Joe? Galax, Virginia, August 31.4. Fred McDowell with Fanny Davis and Miles Pratcher: Gravel Road Blues. Como, Mississippi, September 22.5. Ed Young, Lonnie Young, Sr., and Lonnie Young, Jr.: Church I Know We Got Another Building. Como, Mississippi, September 21.6. Ed Lewis and group (consisting of, at least, Wesley Lee Brown, Oscar Crosby, Robert Lewis, Willie Matthews, John Edmonds, Willie P. Roberts, and Henry Mason): I'll Be So Glad When the Sun Goes Down. Camp B, Parchman Farm (Mississippi State Penitentiary), September 19 or 20.7. Vera Ward Hall: Wild Ox Moan. Livingston, Alabama, October 10.8. Almeda Riddle: Rainbow Mid Life's Willows. Heber Springs, Arkansas, October 6 or 7.9. Big John Davis and the Spiritual Singers of Coastal Georgia (soon to be renamed the Georgia Sea Island Singers): Moses, Don't Get Lost. St. Simons Island, Georgia, October 12.
Ed Lewis... common name, uncommon man. Over the course of his career, the senior advisor to the Dean of the Auburn University Samuel Ginn College of Engineering has improved the processes on everything from Combos production to record-setting fundraising campaigns. And thankfully, then 1972 industrial engineering graduate passion for his alma mater knows no bounds.
This week we discussed the CREDENCE trial published in the NEJM, on the effect of Canaglifozin on diabetic nephropathy. There was lots to discuss so it may be a long podcast.The article is available here.The NephJC summary can be read here, with links to the visual abstract, and the wrapup.Links from the show:Swapnil’s first post at AJKDblog on SGLT2i in 2014! SGLT-2 Inhibitors: Can They Prevent Diabetic Nephropathy?Lonnie Pyne’s brilliant tweetorial on proteinuria as a proposed end-point in CKD trials.Combined RAAS blockade (don’t do it)Combining ACEI and direct renin inhibitorsCombining ACEi and ARBWe repeatedly compare CREDENCE to IDNT by Ed Lewis and RENAAL by Barry BrennerYou will need to be familiar with EMPA-REG and CANVAS (links to summaries on NephJC)Why run-in periods are bad for clinical trials: Run-in Periods in Randomized TrialsImplications for the Application of Results in Clinical PracticeHispanics in the study: https://twitter.com/VladoPerkovic/status/1121078118029103105Lot of discussion on mechanisms: • The original description of phlorizin by Josef von Mering in 1800• Podocyte effects in JCI• Effect on Hyperfiltration by SGlT2i in humans• Emerging role of proximal tubule in CKD via GWAS studies• SGLT2i effect on Na/H exchangers in heart and kidney• SGLT2i interact with heart NHE1 (mouse model)• SGLT2i as the ‘betablockers’ of the kidney?Jordan Weinstein on the clinical scientists’ mechanism of SHGLT2i:https://twitter.com/drjjw/status/1121577808164159491Why subgroups should be interpreted very carefullyHost: Joel TopfDiscussants: Samira Farouk, Swapnil Hiremath, Jennie Lin and Matt Sparks.
RUNNING TIME: 3 Hours 20 MinutesHosted by Don Tony SYNOPSIS: Episode 32 (08/07 - 08/13) Hulk Hogan (wrestling as the Super Destroyer) makes his pro wrestling debut for the CWF Promotion losing to Don Serrano. Looking back at WWF Showdown At Shea event (Shea Stadium, Flushing NY, 36,295 fans). Hogan vs Andre, Bruno vs Zbyszko in a cage, questioning why was Bob Backlund in the Tag Title Match, and so much more. Junkyard Dog leaves Georgia Championship Wrestling without giving notice and makes surprise debut on WWF TV. Ric Flair defeats Dusty Rhodes for NWA World Heavyweight Championship (5th Reign). Audio: Iron Shiek wrestles last ever singles match for WWF. Audio: Owen Hart (as Blue Angel) makes memorable WWF debut. Curt Hennig leaves AWA Promotion and returns to WWF after a lengthy absence. AWA runs it's last ever TV Taping before closing its doors. Looking back at the horrendous AWA $1 Million Team Challenge Series. Audio: Black Scorpion trolls and challenges Sting. Flashback: August 1990 (Non-Wrestling History). Masahiro Chono def Ravishing Rick Rude for the vacated NWA World Heavyweight Championship. Audio: Razor Ramon makes his WWF in ring debut against Paul Van Dow (Dale), the father of WWE star, Carmella. Eddie Gilbert and Dark Patriot win vacated ECW Tag Titles. Tito Santana def Don Muraco for NWA Eastern Championship Wrestling Title. Audio: WCW airs Steamboat vs Regal No DQ match, that ends in a no contest. Looking back at ECW Hardcore Heaven '94: Cactus Jack vs Terry Funk ends with Public Enemy interference and fans throwing close to 100 chairs into the ring. A pair of Hog/Road Wild events end with Hulk Hogan World Championship Title Wins: 1996 (vs The Giant), 1997 (vs Lex Luger). Sturgis fans show no love for Rey Mysterio / Ultimate Dragon match. Audio: Interesting fan chants towards Shawn Michaels as he confronts Commissioner Slaughter about having an 'insurance policy'. Audio: Mankind vs HBK ends with interference from the 'insurance policy' (Ravishing Rick Rude). The era of Degeneration X has begun. Audio: The Rock joins the Nation Of Domination. Dutch Mantel def Jerry Lawler to win USWA Unified Heavyweight Title. Audio: Looking back at ECW Born To Be Wired match between Sabu vs Terry Funk. Includes audio comments by Joey Styles and a vintage ECW commercial. A week after having his pee pee choppy choppy, Val Venis appears on Raw with John Wayne Bobbitt. Crappy storyline involving Hawk allegedly under the influence, startled by pyro, and falling into the crowd. Kane & Mick Foley win Tag Titles in a 4 corners match against The Rock / Dlo Brown, Steve Austin / Undertaker, New Age Outlaws. Audio: Jay Leno and DDP vs Hulk Hogan and Eric Bischoff main events 1998 WCW Road Wild PPV. Lex Luger def Bret Hart to win WCW United States Title. Chris Benoit def David Flair to win WCW US Title. Raw 1999: Chyna wins #1 Contendership Match def Undertaker and Triple H (Guest Referee: Shawn Michaels). Audio Raw 1999: XPac and Kane win Tag Titles and Kane Speaks! Audio: #1 Moment in the history of Monday Night Raw: Chris Jericho makes his WWF debut. Lance Storm def Mike Awesome in a 'Canadian Rules' match with Guest Referree: Jacques Rougeau. Goldberg walks out of 3 Way Match against Kevin Nash and Scott Steiner. Audio: Steve Austin begins to use 'What'? Audio: Memorable segment involving Rhyno, Chris Jericho, The Rock, Booker T, and Stephanie McMahon who shows some 'enhancements' to her 'look'. Audio: Ron 'The Truth' Killings def Ken Shamrock to become the first Black NWA Heavyweight Champion. Audio: Brock Lesnar vs Hulk Hogan battle in #1 Contenders Match. Christian wins WWE IC Title match on a house show against Booker T. Audio: Memorable pre match promo cut by John Cena on Undertaker. Colt Cabana def CM Punk 2-1 in a best 2 out of 3 falls match for Ring Of Honor in Chicago, IL. Adam 'Pacman' Jones makes his TNA debut. Andrew Test Martin wrestles his first and only match ever for TNA. (Abyss, Test, Sting def Christian, AJ Styles, Tomko). TNA World Champion & IWGP Heavyweight Champion Kurt Angle def Samoa Joe to win X Division and World Tag Titles. WWE tapes 35th and final Saturday Night's Main Event from Madison Square Garden featuring Evander Holyfield vs Matt Hardy Boxing Match. WWE signs Colby Lopez (Seth Rollins) Looking back at TNA Hardcore Justice 2010 PPV featuring ECW stars. Audio: Don Tony performs 'Me Kahoneys'. WWE releases Alberto Del Rio after physical altercation with employee who made a racist remark. Brian Cage loses a hair vs hair match against Alberto El Patron at AAA'a Triplemania Event. Audio: Finn Balor gives Seth Rollins and WWE Universe some insight on the Demon King. And so much more! NOTABLE BIRTHDAYS: Lord Alfred Hayes, Lord James Blears, Penny Banner, Little Brutus, Tony Nero, Nicole Bass, Big Daddy Lipscomb (RIP), Jim Crockett Jr. 74, Jim Brunzell 69, Hulk Hogan 65, Terry Taylor 63, Fred Ottman 62, Bill Alfonso 61, Brett Sawyer 58, Ralph Soto 56, Koji Kitao 55, Savio Vega 54, Johnny Smith and Dr. Wagner Jr. 53, Asya 52, Sable, Eric Angle, and Chad Fortune 51, The Head Hunters 50, Johnny Villalobos 49, Spike Dudley 48, Ultimo Dragoncito 46, Jonathan Coachman 45, Scott D'Amore 44, Shark Boy 43, Kid Vicious 42, Kongo Kong 39, Silas Young, Shayna Baszler and Stu Bennett 38, D-Ray 3000 36, Rampage Brown and Lizzy Valentine 35, Marti Belle 30, Alexa Bliss 27 NOTABLE PRO WRESTLING DEBUTS: Adrian Street (1957), Riki Choshu (1974), Gran Apache (1975), Hulk Hogan (1977), Malia Hosaka (1987), Ian Rotten (1990), Alberto El Patron (2000), Matt and Nick Jackson )(2004) NOTABLE DEATHS: Karl Von Hess and Friedrich Von Schacht 90, Gladys Gillem 89, Bronko Lubich and Red Bastien 81, Bulldog Jackson 79, Karl von Stroheim and Bobby Fields 77, Ed Lewis 76, Mike Sharpe Sr. 66, Jim 'Anvil' Neidhart 63, Jonathan Boyd 56, Buddy Austin 52, Brian Adams 43, Lance Cade 29 RIGHT CLICK AND SAVE to download the TWIWH EP32 (08/13/18) CLICK HERE to listen to the TWIWH EP32 (08/13/18) online. CLICK HERE to listen to the AD FREE (08/13/18) episode (Patreon Link) ITUNES LINK Please subscribe to us on ITUNES ================= PROGRAMMING NOTE: 'TWIWH (EP33)' HOSTED BY DON TONY Your next episode of 'TWIWH (EP33)' will be posted Tuesday, August 21, 2018. In addition to download links, a preview of TWIWH airs every week immediately following the live episode of Don Tony And Kevin Castle Show. #ThrowbackTuesday =============== IF YOU ARE A FAN OF 'DON TONY AND KEVIN CASTLE SHOW' and 'BREAKFAST WITH BLASI' and just can't get enough of the shows, check out our PATREON PAGE! You'll gain access to our Patreon Exclusive shows such as 'The Castle Chronicles' hosted by Kevin Castle, and 'BREAKFAST SOUP' hosted by Don Tony & Missionary (Wrestling Soup), and early access to other content. You also have exclusive access to lost episodes of 'The Minority Report' from 2004/2005, select vintage episodes of 'The Masked Maniac Show', and retro Blackhearts Hotline reports from 2001/2002. In addition to the shows, we hold monthly PPV Predictions Contests and other prize giveaways! And by signing up, you'll help us keep the DTKC Show and BwB free for everyone, and get interactive with DTKC like never before. You get it all for as little as $5! CLICK HERE to visit our Patreon page and gain access now! =============== DTKC SHOW / BwB / BREAKFAST SOUP / MATARRAZ T-SHIRTS ON SALE!Pro Wrestling Tees has launched the only source for T-Shirts of' Don Tony and Kevin Castle Show', 'Breakfast w/ Blasi', 'Breakfast Soup', and even 'Deli Man'! Please visit our T-Shirt store now. More designs will be added shortly. CLICK HERE to visit our T-Shirt Store now! =============== PROGRAMMING NOTE: DON TONY AND KEVIN CASTLE SHOWYour next episode of the 'Don Tony And Kevin Castle Show' will air Monday August 20, 2018 LIVE at 11:15PM EST following WWE Raw. Thank you to everyone who enjoys what we do. Please spread the word of our show. 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Facebook admits Russian trolls bought election ads, Interview from William of Scamming Scammers action, Equifax gets hacked, Interview with Ed Lewis who drove to Houston to help Hurricane Harvey victims, You Stink ( Rush Limbaugh says hurricanes are liberal conspiracy)
In this Episode of our Six Weeks to Fitness podcast, I am joined by former fashion model, Ed Lewis, Sr. and his son, Ed Lewis, Jr. Instead of pursuing his promising career as a fashion model, where he modeled for Sean John clothing line and was featured in various magazines such as Vibe, DNR and The Source, Eddie Lewis, Sr., decided to turn his back on the modeling industry and all that the industry had to offer, the money, travel and more, to raise his son, who is now one of the most heavily recruited high school football players in New Jersey. He has offers from over 10 Division 1 colleges. It has been a long, hard road for Eddie, Sr., and in the midst of days when there was no food on the table and no money in the bank, he always made sure his son was well fed and had a roof over his head. In Eddie Sr.’s words, “I had to rob Peter to pay Paul” and then mug Paul to pay back Peter”. This interview is about the journey of a parent who has risked it all for his son and how his son is now reaping the rewards of his father’s sacrifice. Father and son join me to talk about the struggle and triumphs that they both endured. This is a very moving and inspiring episode on a personal level.
- A special morning of celebration will include reports on Vacation Bible School. Dozens of teens from across the nation, who are here for Operation Barnabas orientation, will minister to us. Ed Lewis, Executive Director of CE National, will challenge us from God's Word.
- A special morning of celebration will include reports on Vacation Bible School. Dozens of teens from across the nation, who are here for Operation Barnabas orientation, will minister to us. Ed Lewis, Executive Director of CE National, will challenge us from God’s Word.
- A special morning of celebration will include reports on Vacation Bible School. Dozens of teens from across the nation, who are here for Operation Barnabas orientation, will minister to us. Ed Lewis, Executive Director of CE National, will challenge us from God’s Word.
What the unholy hell is going on with the cops? There's been another killing of an unarmed Black man in Missouri. The Los Angeles PD shot an unarmed homeless man. Cleveland city officials are blaming twelve year old Tamir Rice, who was playing with a toy gun, for his own death. And the Chicago PD is accused of Gitmo-like detention and torture in a secret location in Chicago. And it's a secret no more! The only good news is that marijuana in Washington DC is no longer a crime, which should help to ease tensions between the DC police department and the community. Music by Lauryn Hill, Richie Havens, Mahalia Jackson, In Process, En Vogue, and Ed Lewis & the Prisoners of a South Carolina prison chain gang. Tuesday, March 3, 6 pm Pacific Time. Listen live or download archives for your convenience.
GeoFencing: DealerApp Vantage's Ed Lewis talks with us about how GeoFencing can fit into your marketing strategy.
GeoFencing: DealerApp Vantage's Ed Lewis talks with us about how GeoFencing can fit into your marketing strategy.
Ed Lewis, Executive Director at CE National, preaches on Reaching the Overlooked.