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Dander enemies. Gluten intolerances. Runny noses. Shellfish bummers. Skin prick tests. Epipen pockets. Allergies? WE GOT ‘EM, folks. And we've got double board-certified allergist, immunologist, and author of the New York Times Bestseller “All About Allergies” Dr. Zachary Rubin. The Doc takes a quick break from his many demanding jobs to let me pepper him with questions about sneezing, allergy shots, Benadryl naps, home testing vs. office visits, oral challenges, unfriendly fruits, street tree sexism, and so much more. We've been itching to do this one for a while, so get it in your system ASAP. Follow Dr. Rubin on Instagram, TikTok and YouTube Buy his book, All About Allergies: Everything You Need to Know About Asthma, Food Allergies, Hay Fever and More on Amazon or Bookshop.org A donation went to Red Sneakers for Oakley More episode sources and links Other episodes you may enjoy: Rhinology (NOSES), Ophthalmology (EYES), Dendrology (TREES), Phenology (FALL/SEASONS), Fromology (CHEESE), Entomology (INSECTS), Melittology (BEES), Culicidology (MOSQUITOES), Spheksology (WASPS), Plumology (FEATHERS), Carobology (NOT-CHOCOLATE TREES) 400+ Ologies episodes sorted by topic Smologies (short, classroom-safe) episodes Sponsors of Ologies Transcripts and bleeped episodes Become a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a month OlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, hoodies, totes! Follow Ologies on Instagram and Bluesky Follow Alie Ward on Instagram and TikTok Editing by Mercedes Maitland of Maitland Audio Productions and Jake Chaffee Managing Director: Susan Hale Scheduling Producer: Noel Dilworth Transcripts by Aveline Malek Website by Kelly R. Dwyer Theme song by Nick Thorburn Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
I am Archer, leader of the Gorgonites. Chip Hazard WAS on the island. Thanks to URBAN NOMAD for letting us use their track "Falling Into Blue" for the intro and outro! Check them out at https://urbannomad.bandcamp.com/. Check out our merch! ▶ https://pleasestopshopping.com/ Support the podcast on Patreon ▶ https://www.patreon.com/SirMeowMusic Join the PST Discord server! ▶ https://discord.gg/YNqTT65 Links: @SirMeowShow ▶ https://bsky.app/profile/sirmeow.gay @BrendanielGaming ▶ https://bsky.app/profile/brendaniel.bsky.social @MandaloreGaming ▶ https://bsky.app/profile/lordmandalore.bsky.social Cameron ▶ https://bsky.app/profile/cameron1.bsky.social Podcast ▶ https://bsky.app/profile/pstpodcast.com Podcast also available on Spotify and iTunes! iTunes ▶ https://goo.gl/X1C3nG Spotify ▶ https://goo.gl/fdVg9V Art ▶ https://bsky.app/profile/b00rad.bsky.social Video Template ▶ https://bsky.app/profile/thehangingrabbit.bsky.social Chapters: 0:00 Intro 0:26 Epic Ayahuasca Shaman Ritual 6:07 Cockleganger 8:56 Needing an EpiPen (as a bit) 10:47 We don't get it either 13:15 Just Inane CEO Things 18:37 Short Stroke Intermission 18:59 Let's go gambling, wagie 25:55 Hidden Spidies 29:02 r/maleliminalspace Spider-Man 33:09 Extended Movie Talk (again) :^) 40:34 The Sludge Cinematic Universe 43:31 Patreon QnA 1:12:12 Outro + Credits Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Fluent Fiction - Danish: Spring in Nyhavn: A Lesson in Friendship and Reliance Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.com/da/episode/2026-03-10-07-38-19-da Story Transcript:Da: Foråret var kommet til Nyhavn.En: Spring had come to Nyhavn.Da: De farverige bygninger spejlede sig i kanalen, og turisterne flokkedes foran caféerne.En: The colorful buildings reflected in the canal, and the tourists crowded in front of the cafes.Da: Kasper, Astrid og Mikkel gik i roligt tempo langs vandet.En: Kasper, Astrid, and Mikkel walked at a leisurely pace along the water.Da: Kasper, en praktisk og stædig mand i starten af 30'erne, havde besluttet at nyde en stressfri dag med sine venner.En: Kasper, a practical and stubborn man in his early 30s, had decided to enjoy a stress-free day with his friends.Da: Han var ikke typen, der bad om hjælp, men i dag var anderledes.En: He wasn't the type to ask for help, but today was different.Da: Han ville blot nyde dagen.En: He just wanted to enjoy the day.Da: Astrid gik ved hans side med sin taske fyldt med ting til enhver nødsituation.En: Astrid walked beside him with her bag filled with things for any emergency.Da: Hun var altid forberedt.En: She was always prepared.Da: Mikkel, derimod, vrimlede omkring dem med sine sædvanlige drillerier.En: Mikkel, on the other hand, bustled around them with his usual teasing.Da: Han var charmerende, men altid ude på lidt ballade.En: He was charming, but always up to a little mischief.Da: "Hvorfor skal vi altid følge din plan, Kasper?"En: "Why do we always have to follow your plan, Kasper?"Da: spurgte Mikkel med et grin og puffede blødt til ham.En: asked Mikkel with a grin, giving him a gentle nudge.Da: "Lad os finde noget sjovt!"En: "Let's find something fun!"Da: Kasper smilede, men følte pludselig en kløende fornemmelse i halsen.En: Kasper smiled, but suddenly felt an itchy sensation in his throat.Da: Han ignorerede den først, men den blev hurtigt værre.En: He ignored it at first, but it quickly got worse.Da: Solen skinnede, og kronblade af kirsebærtræer dansede i vinden.En: The sun was shining, and cherry blossom petals danced in the wind.Da: Men i stedet for at nyde det, begyndte hans vejrtrækning at blive besværet.En: But instead of enjoying it, his breathing started to become labored.Da: "Er du okay, Kasper?"En: "Are you okay, Kasper?"Da: spurgte Astrid bekymret og bemærkede hans ubehag.En: asked Astrid worriedly, noticing his discomfort.Da: "Jeg har det fint," svarede Kasper hastigt og forsøgte at fortsætte.En: "I'm fine," replied Kasper hastily, trying to continue.Da: Men hans ansigt begyndte at hæve, og han kunne mærke, hvordan hans hals snørede sig sammen.En: But his face began to swell, and he could feel his throat tightening.Da: Mikkel stoppede op og kiggede bekymret på sin ven.En: Mikkel stopped and looked at his friend with concern.Da: "Kasper, det ser ikke godt ud.En: "Kasper, it doesn't look good.Da: Du burde virkelig..." Astrid afbrød: "Jeg har en EpiPen.En: You really should..." Astrid interrupted: "I have an EpiPen.Da: Lad mig hjælpe dig."En: Let me help you."Da: Kasper tog en dyb indånding, eller forsøgte på det.En: Kasper took a deep breath or tried to.Da: Hans stædighed kæmpede mod han stigende nød.En: His stubbornness battled against his growing distress.Da: Men han kunne ikke ignorere alvoret i situationen længere.En: But he couldn't ignore the seriousness of the situation any longer.Da: Med et tungt suk og et venligt blik mod Astrid nikkede han endelig.En: With a heavy sigh and a kind look at Astrid, he finally nodded.Da: Han vidste, at det var det klogeste at gøre.En: He knew it was the wisest thing to do.Da: Astrid fandt hurtigt EpiPen'en frem fra sin taske og gav Kasper den nødvendige dosis.En: Astrid quickly retrieved the EpiPen from her bag and administered the necessary dose to Kasper.Da: I løbet af få minutter begyndte hævelsen at aftage, og hans vejrtrækning blev lettere.En: Within a few minutes, the swelling began to subside, and his breathing became easier.Da: "Tak," sagde Kasper stille, en anelse skamfuld men dybt taknemmelig.En: "Thank you," said Kasper quietly, slightly ashamed but deeply grateful.Da: Mikkel klappede ham på skulderen med et skævt smil.En: Mikkel patted him on the shoulder with a crooked smile.Da: "Næste gang, være sød at lytte lidt tidligere, ikke?"En: "Next time, please listen a bit earlier, okay?"Da: Kasper lo let, stadig lidt rystet men lettet.En: Kasper laughed lightly, still a bit shaken but relieved.Da: "Ja, jeg skal nok.En: "Yes, I will.Da: Jeg er heldig at have jer."En: I'm lucky to have you guys."Da: De tre fortsatte deres tur langs Nyhavns charmerende gader.En: The three continued their walk along Nyhavn's charming streets.Da: Kasper havde lært, at det var okay at stole på sine venner – det var netop det, der gjorde båndet mellem dem stærkere.En: Kasper had learned that it was okay to rely on his friends – it was precisely what made the bond between them stronger.Da: Foråret havde bragt en ny begyndelse med sig, og med den en dybere forståelse af venskabet og kærligheden, der omringede ham.En: Spring had brought a new beginning with it, and with it a deeper understanding of the friendship and love that surrounded him. Vocabulary Words:leisurely: roligtpractical: praktiskstubborn: stædigcrowded: flokkedesignored: ignoreredeitchy: kløendesensation: fornemmelselabored: besværetdiscomfort: ubehaghastily: hastigtswelling: hævelsetightening: snøredeconcern: bekymretinterrupted: afbrødretrieved: fandtadministered: gavdose: dosissubside: aftageashamed: skamfuldgrateful: taknemmeligshaken: rystetrelieved: lettetbond: båndbeginning: begyndelsesurrounded: omringedeemergency: nødsituationmischief: balladesunshine: solenbreathing: vejrtrækningunderstanding: forståelse
Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary
Breaking testimony from the Kouri Richins murder trial as the prosecution's key witness takes the stand. Carmen Lauber, testifying under immunity deals with three Utah counties and federal authorities, has told jurors she purchased drugs for Kouri Richins four separate times in early 2022—and that Kouri knew the final batch contained fentanyl.According to Lauber's testimony, the drug procurement evolved from pain pills to something lethal. Cash was left in properties Kouri was flipping. Pills were dropped in a firepit. When Lauber told Kouri the drugs were fentanyl, not just standard painkillers, Kouri allegedly said to proceed anyway.The timeline prosecutors have presented is damning. Weeks before Eric Richins died, Kouri allegedly obtained a fraudulent life insurance policy. Months earlier, she had already booked a Caribbean vacation with her boyfriend—scheduled for the month after her husband's death. Text messages to that boyfriend included: "If he could just go away and you could just be here, life would be so perfect."A forensic toxicologist has confirmed Eric had five times the lethal dose of illicit fentanyl in his system when he died. Two weeks before his death, Eric allegedly told a friend he believed his wife was trying to poison him after a sandwich she left him caused severe hives requiring an EpiPen.Defense attorney Wendy Lewis is attacking Lauber's credibility on multiple fronts. Lauber admitted to regular methamphetamine use during the period of the alleged drug purchases. She initially told investigators Kouri asked for oxycodone—not fentanyl. And the defense introduced a recording where an investigator told Lauber to provide details that would ensure conviction. Lauber's response: she'd do whatever it takes.Cross-examination continues. Kouri Richins has pleaded not guilty and is presumed innocent.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KouriRichinsLive #RichinsTrialDay4 #CarmenLauber #EricRichinsMurder #FentanylTrial #UtahCourtroom #LiveTrialCoverage #SummitCountyTrial #TrueCrimeLive #HiddenKillersLive
Day four of the Kouri Richins murder trial delivered the testimony prosecutors had been building toward. Carmen Lauber—the former housekeeper who allegedly supplied the fentanyl that killed Eric Richins—faced the jury and described a drug procurement operation conducted through cash drops and firepit exchanges.Lauber testified under immunity agreements with three Utah counties and federal authorities. She told jurors Kouri Richins requested drugs four times in early 2022, with each purchase allegedly escalating. What started as a request for pain pills for a "supposed investor" became something deadlier. When Lauber informed Kouri the next batch was fentanyl, the alleged response was simple: get them anyway.Three days after Eric Richins died, Lauber says Kouri texted asking if she still had her drug connection. Payment came via check labeled as construction cleaning. When Lauber later confronted Kouri about the pills, Kouri allegedly told her Eric died from a brain aneurysm.The forensic evidence backs up the prosecution's theory. A toxicologist confirmed Eric had five times the lethal dose of illicit fentanyl in his system—no hydrocodone detected. Prosecutors have also presented Eric's alleged statement to a friend two weeks before his death: "I think my wife is trying to poison me." That came after eating a sandwich Kouri left him and suffering hives severe enough to require an EpiPen.Internet searches allegedly recovered from Kouri's devices included "what is a lethal dose of fentanyl" before Eric's death and "can cops uncover deleted messages iPhone" after.Defense attorney Wendy Lewis went after Lauber's credibility aggressively. Lauber confirmed regular methamphetamine use during the alleged drug buys. She initially told investigators Kouri requested oxycodone, not fentanyl. And the defense played a recording where an investigator encouraged Lauber to provide testimony ensuring conviction.Kouri Richins maintains her innocence.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KouriRichinsTrial #CarmenLauberTestimony #EricRichins #FentanylPoisoning #UtahTrial #SummitCountyCourt #RichinsMurderCase #ParkCityUtah #TrueCrimeTrial #HiddenKillersPod
The prosecution is laying out its case against Kouri Richins—and the evidence spans fentanyl purchases, life insurance fraud, and a relationship with another man that allegedly motivated murder.Carmen Lauber, the former housekeeper who prosecutors say procured the drugs that killed Eric Richins, delivered key testimony under immunity deals. She told jurors Kouri requested drugs four times in early 2022, with each purchase allegedly stronger than the last. When Lauber informed Kouri the final batch was fentanyl, Kouri allegedly approved the transaction. Cash was left in houses Kouri was flipping. Pills were exchanged through a firepit.Three days after Eric's death, according to Lauber, Kouri texted asking about the drug connection again—and paid with a check labeled as construction cleaning.The forensic evidence supports the prosecution's theory. A toxicologist confirmed Eric had five times the lethal dose of illicit fentanyl in his system. No hydrocodone was detected. Prosecutors have also presented Eric's alleged warning to a friend two weeks before he died: "I think my wife is trying to poison me." That statement followed a Valentine's Day sandwich that caused hives severe enough to need an EpiPen.Kouri's internet search history allegedly included "what is a lethal dose of fentanyl" before Eric died and "can cops uncover deleted messages iPhone" afterward. Prosecutors showed the jury text messages Kouri sent to a boyfriend, including: "If he could just go away and you could just be here, life would be so perfect." A Caribbean vacation with that boyfriend was already booked—scheduled for the month after Eric's death.Defense attorney Wendy Lewis attacked Lauber's credibility, highlighting her methamphetamine use, inconsistent statements about the drugs requested, and a recording where an investigator told Lauber to help ensure conviction.Kouri Richins has pleaded not guilty and maintains her innocence.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KouriRichins #KouriRichinsTrial #EricRichinsMurder #CarmenLauber #FentanylPoisoning #UtahMurderCase #RichinsTrialUpdate #SummitCounty #ParkCityUtah #KouriRichinsGuilty
I teach people how to monetise their own home! Register for my next FREE webinar here - https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/h15hgvyqQYmHk4GFjlaTAg In this episode, Neil reflects on the rare occasions when drama unfolds in the world of hosting. Drawing from over a decade of experience and more than 18,000 guest nights, Neil shares three distinct stories of ‘crisis', from a midnight EpiPen emergency to a mysterious police investigation involving a garden dome. With a blend of humor and wisdom, he explores the fine line between real emergencies and mere noise, emphasising why a host's primary job is to remain a ‘calm center' rather than a detective or a judge. KEY TAKEAWAYS Out of 18,000 guest nights, Neil only encountered two truly unusual ‘crisis' scenarios, proving that the vast majority of hosting experiences are smooth and joyful. When a crisis occurs, a host's job is to facilitate help and remain calm, not to investigate, judge, or construct their own narrative about the guests. Trust the expertise of paramedics, police, or other first responders. Your role is to support them so they can do their jobs effectively. Not every declared emergency is a true crisis. Learning to observe without getting swept up in the guest's personal drama is vital for your own peace of mind. Sometimes being a host puts you in the right place at the right time to help a friend or a stranger, turning a potential crisis into a meaningful connection. BEST MOMENTS "In over 18,000 guest nights, I've had exactly two that make me pause with a kind of fascinated curiosity over what was actually going on." "Hosting isn't about avoiding drama; it's about knowing your role when it appears." "As hosts, we don't always see the full picture, and we don't need to." "Our job as a host is not to get swept up in the drama, but to stay steady should drama unfold around you." "Calm hosts win, because calm hosts are worth more than gold." CONTACT DETAILS Visit Neil's Airbnb https://bit.ly/SuperhostNeil Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/superhostneil/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SuperhostNeil TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@superhostneil Email: SuperhostNeil@gmail.com ABOUT THE HOST Neil has led a fulfilled and unconventional life, navigating an extraordinary journey from the Royal Navy to prop-making in London's West End theatres. Born into a military family, it was a twist of fate which led him to the theatre, where he contributed to iconic productions such as Phantom of the Opera. Eventually, Neil transitioned to Corporate Event Team Building, eventually founding his own venture in 1999. Financial challenges in 2017 are what prompted a strategic shift to Airbnb hosting, proving a reliable backup income. By 2021, Neil and his business partner triumphed over significant debt, fuelled by their resilience and the success of Neil's Airbnb venture. Now, Neil has left the corporate world behind, thriving solely through his flourishing Airbnb endeavours. Disclaimer: The Airbnb Superhost is in no way affiliated with Airbnb. All ideas, thoughts, concepts and data presented in this podcast are entirely Neil's own and do not represent the views of Airbnb.
Hey, first! We’re looking for your help. Can you take a couple minutes and fill out our Audience Survey? We’re dying to know more about the community that’s using this show — and about what’s working for you and what you’d like to see. Let us know! Today we’re switching it up. We’re sharing an episode from the new podcast Drug Story. In each episode, science journalist and self-described “public health nerd” Thomas Goetz goes deep on the story of a single drug — what it treats, how it came to be, and what it reveals about the business of health and disease. On this episode: the EpiPen, a device you’ll find in classrooms, on airplanes, in glove compartments — basically everywhere — because the EpiPen can be a literal life-saver for people with severe allergies. And of course, the EpiPen is also one of the most infamous examples of pharmaceutical profiteering gone bananas. That part of the story makes us especially geeked to share this episode. And there are more threads here — on the drug’s discovery, on the science of severe food allergies, and on what researchers have learned about preventing them — that Goetz does a great job of weaving together. If you like it, new episodes of Drug Story come out every week. We’ll be back with more Arm and a Leg in a few weeks. Meanwhile, don’t forget to help us by filling out our quick survey. Here’s a transcript of this episode. Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG. Of course we’d love for you to support this show.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary
This is the episode I've been thinking about for months.The Kouri Richins trial just started in Utah. The headlines are all about the fentanyl, the children's book about grief, the alleged affair. But nobody's talking about what Eric Richins actually lived through—the years of psychological warfare before the night prosecutors say she killed him.According to court documents, Eric discovered Kouri had allegedly stolen nearly half a million dollars from him. Forged his signature. Drained his accounts. He confronted her. She promised to pay it back. She allegedly never did.He consulted divorce attorneys. Changed his will in secret. Created a trust so Kouri could never control his assets. Warned his family: if anything happens to me, she's to blame.And then—on Valentine's Day 2022—he ate one bite of a sandwich she left him. Hives. Couldn't breathe. Used his son's EpiPen. Called a friend and said: "I think my wife tried to poison me."Eighteen days later, he was dead.So why didn't he leave? Because he had three boys under ten. And there's no custody arrangement that protects kids from a parent whose mind doesn't work like yours. Eric stayed close because he thought staying was safer than leaving.He was wrong.This episode is for everyone who's ever lived with someone whose reality didn't match theirs. Who questioned their own sanity. Who stayed too long because leaving felt more dangerous than staying.Eric Richins deserves to be more than a true crime headline. He deserves to be a warning.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KouriRichins #EricRichins #HiddenKillers #KouriRichinsTrial #NarcissisticAbuse #CoerciveControl #TrueCrime #ToxicRelationships #DomesticViolence #PsychologicalAbuse
We've covered the timeline. We've covered the evidence. We've covered the charges. But today we're going somewhere different—inside Eric Richins' experience of being married to Kouri.This isn't speculation. It's documented.According to court filings, Eric discovered in 2020 that Kouri had allegedly stolen nearly $500,000 from him—forging his signature, draining accounts, funneling money from his business. When he confronted her, she allegedly promised to pay it back. She never did.Eric met with divorce attorneys. Created a secret trust. Changed his life insurance beneficiary. And according to his family, he stayed anyway—because he had three sons and no exit that didn't lead back to her.On Valentine's Day 2022, prosecutors say Kouri left Eric a sandwich while she spent the day with her alleged boyfriend. Eric took one bite. Hives. Couldn't breathe. EpiPen. Bottle of Benadryl. When he woke up, he called a friend: "I think my wife tried to poison me."He went home that night. Eighteen days later, he was dead.This episode examines the psychological patterns documented in the Kouri Richins case—the alleged financial exploitation, the compartmentalization, the victim narrative that prosecutors say never broke even after Eric's death. We look at what forensic psychologists say about these behavioral profiles and why so many people trapped in similar relationships will recognize every detail.If you've followed this case from the beginning, this is the episode that puts it all in perspective. Eric Richins isn't just a victim. He's a warning.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.#KouriRichins #EricRichins #KouriRichinsTrial #KouriRichinsCase #UtahMurderTrial #FentanylPoisoning #NarcissisticAbuse #PsychologicalAbuse #TrueCrime #CoerciveControl
The Kouri Richins murder trial is here. Prosecutors allege she poisoned her husband Eric with fentanyl — first in a Valentine's Day sandwich that sent him reaching for an EpiPen, then in a Moscow Mule that killed him less than three weeks later. Eric had five times the lethal dose in his system. Less than a year later, Kouri was on television promoting a children's book about grief. The digital trail is devastating. Google searches for lethal fentanyl doses and luxury prisons. Texts to her boyfriend saying life would be "so perfect" if Eric could "just go away." Nearly two million dollars in life insurance policies allegedly taken out without Eric's knowledge while her business was collapsing. But defense attorney Bob Motta says the prosecution has real vulnerabilities. The biggest: Robert Crozier, the alleged fentanyl supplier, has recanted. He now claims he sold OxyContin, not fentanyl, and was detoxing when he gave his original statement. No fentanyl pills were ever recovered from the Richins home. The chain connecting Kouri to the drug relies entirely on witness testimony the defense will attack. The judge excluded evidence that Eric was allegedly abusive and barred a domestic violence expert. Motta analyzes how damaging that ruling is and whether alternative paths to that narrative exist. The "Walk the Dog" letter allegedly found in Kouri's jail cell looks like witness tampering instructions. The defense says it's fiction from a sixty-five-page manuscript. The judge partially admitted it. Then there's Lisa Darden — Kouri's mother — whose romantic partner died of an oxycodone overdose in 2006 shortly after naming Darden as beneficiary. A detective wrote it's "possible" Darden was involved in Eric's death. She was present that night. Motta breaks down every vulnerability, every defense strategy, and what five weeks of testimony will look like from both sides of the courtroom.#KouriRichins #KouriRichinsTrial #EricRichins #FentanylMurder #BobMotta #RobertCrozier #DefenseStrategy #UtahTrial #TrueCrime #HiddenKillersJoin Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
Jury selection just wrapped in one of the most anticipated murder trials of 2026. On February 23rd, Kouri Richins goes to trial for allegedly poisoning her husband Eric with fentanyl—and the case could go either way.The prosecution has bombshell evidence. Google searches for lethal fentanyl doses. Texts to her boyfriend wishing Eric would "go away." A Valentine's Day sandwich that allegedly contained fentanyl and left Eric reaching for an EpiPen. Nearly $2 million in insurance policies prosecutors say she took out without his knowledge. A jail letter prosecutors describe as witness tampering instructions.But the defense just landed a devastating blow. Robert Crozier, the man prosecutors say supplied the fentanyl through Kouri's housekeeper, recanted his statement in October 2025. He now claims he sold OxyContin, not fentanyl, and was "out of it" during his original interview. No fentanyl was ever found in the home.The trial will last five weeks. Over 100 witnesses. More than 1,000 exhibits. And several key pieces of evidence the jury won't hear—including Kouri's claims that Eric was abusive and a domestic violence expert the judge barred from testifying.There's also the shadow of Kouri's mother. Lisa Darden's romantic partner died of an oxycodone overdose in 2006. Darden had recently been named beneficiary. She was present the night Eric died. No charges filed.Today we break down what both sides will argue, where the weaknesses are, and what eight jurors will have to decide. This isn't a simple case. The evidence cuts both ways—and the verdict is far from certain.#KouriRichins #TrueCrimeToday #EricRichins #MurderTrial2026 #FentanylPoisoning #UtahCrime #TrialPreview #WitnessRecantation #SummitCounty #TrueCrimeNewsJoin Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@hiddenkillerspodInstagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodListen Ad-Free On Apple Podcasts Here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/true-crime-today-premium-plus-ad-free-advance-episode/id1705422872This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
Trial starts February 23rd. This is everything you need to know about the evidence before opening statements.The prosecution's case: Kouri Richins allegedly poisoned her husband Eric twice—first with an allegedly fentanyl-laced sandwich on Valentine's Day 2022 that left him using his son's EpiPen, then allegedly with a Moscow Mule less than three weeks later. Five times the lethal dose. Medications prescribed to Kouri found in his system. Google searches for lethal doses, poison death certificates, and luxury prisons. Texts to her boyfriend saying life would be perfect if Eric would "just go away." Nearly $2 million in insurance policies. A jail letter prosecutors describe as witness tampering instructions.The defense's counterattack: The key fentanyl supplier recanted. Robert Crozier now says he sold OxyContin, not fentanyl, to Kouri's housekeeper—and was detoxing when he gave his original statement. No pills were ever found in the home. Evidence that Eric was abusive was excluded. A domestic violence expert was barred. The chain linking Kouri to fentanyl depends entirely on contested testimony.The overlooked details: Kouri's mother Lisa Darden's romantic partner died of an oxycodone overdose in 2006, shortly after naming Darden as beneficiary. Darden was present the night Eric died. The detective wrote it's "possible" she was involved in planning Eric's death. No charges filed.What the jury faces: Over 100 witnesses, 1,000+ exhibits, five weeks of testimony. And a question with no easy answer—was this premeditated murder or something more complicated?This deep dive covers every layer: the financial collapse, the affair, the prenup that made death pay better than divorce, and the witness recantation that could blow up the prosecution's case.#KouriRichins #KouriRichinsTrial #EricRichins #FentanylMurder #EvidenceBreakdown #RobertCrozier #LisaDarden #WalkTheDogLetter #SummitCountyTrial #UtahMurderJoin Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@hiddenkillerspodInstagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodListen Ad-Free On Apple Podcasts Here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/true-crime-today-premium-plus-ad-free-advance-episode/id1705422872This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
Contributor: Aaron Lessen, MD Educational Pearls: What is anaphylaxis and what are its treatments? Anaphylaxis is a broad term for potentially life threatening allergic reactions that can progress to cardiovascular collapse (anaphylactic shock). It is triggered by IgE and antigen cross-linking on mast cells to induce degranulation and the release of histamines, which can cause diffuse vasodilation and respiratory involvement with end-organ hypoperfusion. First line treatment is the immediate administration of epinephrine at 0.01 mg/kg (max dose for pediatrics is 0.3 mg and for adults is 0.5 mg) as well as removal of the offending agent causing the reaction. Additional pharmacologic treatments such as anti-histamines and steroids should be considered but not used instead of epinephrine when anaphylactic shock is evident as the sole therapy. What is biphasic anaphylaxis and what is its occurrence? Biphasic anaphylaxis is the return of anaphylactic symptoms after the initial anaphylactic event. Previous studies have reported an incidence ranging from 1-20% of patients having an initial anaphylactic reaction having biphasic anaphylaxis, at a range of time from 1-72 hours. The mechanism of biphasic anaphylaxis is not completely known, but can be contributed to by initial interventions wearing off (and why patients will be monitored for 2-4 hours after initial symptoms and treatment), or delayed immune mediators beginning to take effect. Recent studies show that the rate of biphasic anaphylaxis may be closer to 16% occurrence with a median time of occurrence being around 10 hours. What is the key take away and patient education on biphasic anaphylaxis? After patients have been observed for the initial 2-4 hours in the emergency room, they are generally safe to go home. Patients should be informed of the need to carry an Epi-Pen for similar anaphylactic reactions, and informed that there is a chance within the next day (10-20 hours) that they may have the symptoms occur once again. The biphasic reaction may be more mild, and patients should be educated on how to treat it and to seek immediate emergency care if the symptoms do not improve. References Golden DBK, Wang J, Waserman S, et al. Anaphylaxis: A 2023 practice parameter update. Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. 2024;132(2):124-176. doi:10.1016/j.anai.2023.09.015 Rubin S, Drowos J, Hennekens CH. Anaphylaxis: Guidelines From the Joint Task Force on Allergy-Immunology Practice Parameters. afp. 2024;110(5):544-546. Weller KN, Hsieh FH. Anaphylaxis: Highlights from the practice parameter update. CCJM. 2022;89(2):106-111. doi:10.3949/ccjm.89a.21076 Gupta RS, Sehgal S, Brown DA, et al. Characterizing Biphasic Food-Related Allergic Reactions Through a US Food Allergy Patient Registry. The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice. 2021;9(10):3717-3727. doi:10.1016/j.jaip.2021.05.009 Summarized by Dan Orbidan OMS2 | Edited by Dan Orbidan & Jorge Chalit OMS4 Donate: https://emergencymedicalminute.org/donate/ Join our mailing list: http://eepurl.com/c9ouHf
In this episode of the Working Perspectives Podcast, things get strange, statistical, and a little bit stabby. The guys are playing a high-stakes game of "Guess the Missing Piece." Each host brings a bizarre news story, leaves out the juicy details, and gives the others just 4 minutes to uncover the truth. The 3 Stories Tonight: The Heroin Map: Liam challenges Matt and Bern to identify the Top 10 U.S. cities struggling with the highest heroin use per capita. The results might surprise you. The Potty Mouth Index: Bern dives into the data of the Top 10 "Cursiest" cities in America. Which city uses the most profanity per person daily? "Allergic to Drunks": Matt brings the weirdest crime story of the week. A night of drinking ends with an EpiPen stabbing. Can the guys guess the age, gender, and location of this sibling rivalry gone wrong? Timestamps 0:00 - The Rules of the Game 1:15 - Story 1: America's Heroin Hubs (Liam) 5:30 - Story 2: The Most Profane Cities in the US (Bern) 9:45 - Story 3: The EpiPen Sibling Attack (Matt) 14:00 - Final Scores & Wrap Up Don't forget to Like, Subscribe, and comment below: How many of the Top 10 cities did you get right? https://www.tiktok.com/@workingppod?lang=en https://www.instagram.com/workingperspectivespodcast/ https://www.facebook.com/workingperspectivespodcast-100884222318497 https://twitter.com/workingppod https://linktr.ee/Workingperspectives
Are we diagnosing allergies all wrong? Join pediatric allergist and clinical immunologist Dr. Zainab Abdurrahman as we debunk common myths in allergy management. We dive deep into why patient history matters more than testing, the danger of using Benadryl, and the life-changing impact of early food introduction. Dr. Abdurrahman also discusses the "diversity gap" in Canadian healthcare, explaining why cultural sensitivity and representation are vital for better patient outcomes. Whether you're a parent, a medical professional, or someone living with allergies, this episode offers a masterclass in modern immunology and health equity. In this episode, we cover: Early Food Introduction: How to reduce allergy risks in infants. Allergy vs. Intolerance: Clearing up the most common misconceptions. The Specialist Shortage: Why Canada needs more pediatric allergists. Cultural Sensitivity: Why representation in medicine saves lives. Learn how to advocate for better care and understand the critical role of social media in spreading accurate allergy awareness. More about Dr. Abdurrahman: Dr. Zainab Abdurrahman, president of the Ontario Medical Association, is an allergist and clinical immunologist, advocating for health equity, medical innovation and inclusive leadership. She brings a strong background in biostatistics and a deep commitment to systemic change. Dr. Zainab Abdurrahman (she/her) is the president of the Ontario Medical Association and a practising allergist and clinical immunologist in the Greater Toronto Area. She serves as an assistant clinical professor of the School of Medicine at the Toronto Metropolitan University and an adjunct assistant clinical professor in pediatrics at McMaster University. Dr. Abdurrahman earned her doctorate of medicine from the University of Toronto. She completed her pediatrics residency and subspecialty training in allergy and clinical immunology at McMaster University. She also holds a master's degree in statistics, with a specialization in biostatistics. She is deeply committed to advancing health and has been a key contributor to the Black Scientists Taskforce on COVID-19 Vaccination Equity and the Black Health & Vaccine Initiative, in partnership with the Black Physicians' Association of Ontario. Beyond equity work, Dr. Abdurrahman is passionate about the intersection of technology and medicine. She is dedicated to leveraging innovation to enhance patient care and is a strong advocate for advancing the medical profession through inclusive leadership and systemic change. https://www.oma.org/expert-advice/request-a-physician-speaker/speakers-search/dr-zainab-abdurrahman/ https://www.qandaallergy.ca/post/dr-a-explains-the-concerns-about-older-sedating-antihistamines Keywords pediatric allergy, immunology, health equity, representation in medicine, food allergies, EpiPen, allergy diagnosis, cultural considerations, adult allergies, social media awareness * Listen on Apple Podcasts – : The Gritty Nurse Podcast on Apple Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-gritty-nurse/id1493290782 * Watch on YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@thegrittynursepodcast Stay Connected: Website: grittynurse.com Instagram: @grittynursepod TikTok: @thegrittynursepodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100064212216482 X (Twitter): @GrittyNurse Collaborations & Inquiries: For sponsorship opportunities or to book Amie for speaking engagements, visit: grittynurse.com/contact Thank you to Hospital News for being a collaborative partner with the Gritty Nurse! www.hospitalnews.com
Fluent Fiction - Serbian: Courage in the Snow: A High School Hero's Test of Life Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.com/sr/episode/2026-01-20-08-38-20-sr Story Transcript:Sr: Зима је забелила школско двориште, а сурови ветар чинио је да се свака улица чини као истински изазов.En: Winter had blanketed the školsko dvorište (schoolyard) with snow, and the harsh wind made every street feel like a real challenge.Sr: Међутим, у пространим и увек врвим ходницима средње школе, топло је и гужва од омладинаца који се смеју и журе да стигну на часове.En: However, in the spacious and always bustling hallways of the srednja škola (high school), it was warm and crowded with young people laughing and hurrying to get to their classes.Sr: У гомили је био Милан, матурант.En: In the crowd was Milan, a senior.Sr: Његова коса била је скривена испод црне капе, а поглед му је био као да тражи нешто далеко у будућности, нешто што га је читавог држало у напетости.En: His hair was hidden under a black cap, and his gaze looked as if he were searching for something far off in the future, something that kept him in constant tension.Sr: Поред њега је корачала Јована, његова дугогодишња пријатељица.En: Beside him walked Jovana, his long-time friend.Sr: Њена огромна марама облепљивала ју је као ћебе.En: Her enormous scarf wrapped around her like a blanket.Sr: Видело се да је забринута, али је својом обичном добродушном природом увек успевала да одахне свакоме ко би јој пришао.En: She looked worried, but her naturally kind nature always managed to put at ease anyone who approached her.Sr: Тек што су прошли кроз једну широку улазну врата, зачуше вапаје за помоћ.En: Just as they passed through one wide entrance door, they heard cries for help.Sr: Јована је изненада стала, лице јој побледе као снег.En: Jovana suddenly stopped, her face turning pale as the snow.Sr: "О, не!" завика Милан, хватајући Јовану за руку да је задржи.En: "Oh, no!" shouted Milan, grabbing Jovana by the hand to steady her.Sr: "Орашасти плодови," прошапта она слабо.En: "Oraashti plodovi," she whispered weakly.Sr: "Нисам знала..."En: "I didn't know..."Sr: Милановом срцу је убрзало.En: Milan's heart raced.Sr: Знао је за њену алергију, али никада није мислио да ће му требати оволико хладне главе.En: He knew about her allergy, but he never thought he would need to stay so calm.Sr: Свет око њега одједном је постао замагљен, а време се чинило успореним.En: The world around him suddenly became blurred, and time seemed to slow down.Sr: "Треба ти ЕпиПен," рекао је, али су му речи биле промукле.En: "You need an EpiPen," he said, but his words came out hoarse.Sr: Јована је успела да климне главом, али њено дисање је било све теже.En: Jovana managed to nod, but her breathing was becoming more difficult.Sr: "Милан," рекла је тихо, очима пуним панике.En: "Milan," she said softly, her eyes full of panic.Sr: "Немам више времена."En: "I don't have much time."Sr: Милан је знао шта мора да уради.En: Milan knew what he had to do.Sr: Али, да ли је могао?En: But could he do it?Sr: Да ли је био довољно способан да то уради?En: Was he capable enough to handle it?Sr: На крају, одлука је пала.En: In the end, the decision was made.Sr: Знао је да не може чекати медицинску сестру.En: He knew he couldn't wait for the nurse.Sr: Његове руке су дрхтале док је извадио ЕпиПен из Јованине торбе.En: His hands trembled as he took the EpiPen out of Jovana's bag.Sr: Свако одлагање могло је бити кобно.En: Any delay could be fatal.Sr: Милан удахну дубоко и пробијањем слободног рукава, лагано је, али чврсто, притиснуо ЕпиПен уз њену ногу.En: Milan took a deep breath and, pushing aside a free sleeve, slowly but firmly pressed the EpiPen against her leg.Sr: Јована затвори очи, лице јој се полако ослобађало тензије док је лек почео деловати.En: Jovana closed her eyes, her face slowly relaxing as the medication began to take effect.Sr: Све се одвијало само пар секунда али њему се чинило као вечност.En: It all happened in just a few seconds, but it felt like an eternity to him.Sr: Убрзо су пристигли медицински техничари и преузели Јовану.En: Soon, the medical technicians arrived and took over Jovana.Sr: Милан је остао у месту, окружен хаосом, али некакав мир пронађен је у његовом срцу.En: Milan stood still, surrounded by chaos, yet a sense of peace was found in his heart.Sr: Када су расходи почели враћати се у своје нормално стање, Милан је осетио како га неколико ученика тапше по рамену, хвалећи његову брзу реакцију.En: As things began to return to normal, Milan felt several students pat him on the shoulder, praising his quick reaction.Sr: Јована се захвално насмешила из носила.En: Jovana smiled gratefully from the stretcher.Sr: Са овим догађајем, Милан је спознао нешто о себи.En: Through this event, Milan learned something about himself.Sr: У том тренутку, схватио је да је успео положити прави испит живота.En: In that moment, he realized he had passed a true test of life.Sr: Осећао се да и на највеће проблеме може реаговати смирено и храбро.En: He felt that he could respond calmly and courageously to even the greatest problems.Sr: Знао је да, без обзира на недоумице које га муче о будућности, има снаге у себи да буде вођа и ослонац, како себи тако и другима.En: He knew that, regardless of the uncertainties bothering him about the future, he had the strength within him to be a leader and support both for himself and others.Sr: Зима се изненада учини знатно топлијом.En: Suddenly, winter seemed much warmer. Vocabulary Words:blanketed: забелилаharsh: суровиspacious: пространимbustling: врвимgaze: погледsteadied: задржиhoarse: промуклеtrembled: дрхталеblurry: замагљенurgent: одлагањеeternity: вечностtechnicians: техничариstreets: улицеpat: тапшеpale: побледеdeceptively: ослободитиallergy: алергијуmedication: лекdecision: одлукаblurred: замагљенworry: забринутаnaturally: обичномbothering: мучеrealized: схватиоleader: вођаsupport: ослонацconstant: читавогrelaxed: ослободилаchallenge: изазовencounter: одвијало
Send us a textA Costco pallet stacked with 5,400 emergency servings sounds impressive, but does the math—and your storage plan—actually work for you? We open with the numbers, then shift to the skills that turn stored food into real resilience: first aid choices that keep small problems small when the lights go out and help is far away.We break down stubborn myths with clear, usable guidance. Butter on burns seals in heat and germs; skip it and use cool water, gentle cleansing, and loose sterile dressings. Snakebite suction and knife cuts don't remove venom; immobilize, keep the limb below the heart, and seek medical care. Hydrogen peroxide and isopropyl alcohol can damage healing tissue when overused, so reach for clean water first and disinfect sparingly. From eyebrow lacerations that bleed like crazy to hard-to-bandage palms, we share calm, step-by-step approaches that reduce panic and conserve scarce supplies.Allergy readiness gets real: check EpiPen expirations, know when to use them, and add antihistamines when appropriate. We make the case for a pulse oximeter in every kit to spot dangerous drops in oxygen saturation during asthma or severe reactions. Shock care is practical and human: lay flat, legs up, warm blanket, steady talk, and grounding questions that pull focus back from the edge. We cover over-the-counter meds—ibuprofen for inflammation, acetaminophen for fever—and how to think about expiration dates, especially for liquids and creams. Most of all, we double down on hygiene: wash hands, use friction if soap is scarce, dry with something clean, and treat wounds early to stay ahead of infection.Ready to prep smarter, not louder? Hit follow, share this with someone who needs a clear first aid plan, and leave a review to help more practical preppers find us.https://augasonfarms.com?sca_ref=9315862.VpHzogdDNuAugason FarmsSupport the podcast. Click on my affiliate link and use coupon code PODCASTPREP for 10% discount!Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showHave a question, suggestion or comment? Please email me at practicalpreppodcast@gmail.com. I will not sell your email address and I will personally respond to you.
Have you ever been caught in a situation where you had to use an epipen on someone because of an emergency? Joe was almost caught in that situation...
Have you ever been caught in a situation where you had to use an epipen on someone because of an emergency? Joe was almost caught in that situation... See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This time around, we have an experimental format, featuring the first episode of a brand-new podcast launching next week, Drug Story. I rarely feature episodes from other shows, but I think this one is well worth your time. It changed how I think about allergies, especially as someone who carries an EpiPen and has wondered: why on earth have food allergies seemed to skyrocket in the last few decades?Drug Story is a podcast that tells the story of the disease business, one drug at a time. Each episode explores one disease and one drug, and it kicks off with EpiPen and food allergies. A quick teaser: What if I told you that a well-meaning medical recommendation may have caused millions of kids to develop food allergies?Make sure to subscribe to Drug Story on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also simply go to DrugStory.co and learn more.The host is Thomas Goetz. He is a senior impact fellow at the University of California Berkeley School of Public Health, and much earlier, Thomas was the executive editor at WIRED, which he led to a dozen National Magazine Awards from 2001 to 2013. His writing has been repeatedly selected for the Best American Science Writing and Best Technology Writing anthologies.P.S. To help you kick off 2026, I recommend checking out Henry Shukman, a past podcast guest and one of the few in the world authorized to teach Sanbo Zen. Henry's app, The Way, has changed my life. I've been using it daily, often twice a day, and it's lowered my anxiety more than I thought possible. For 30 free sessions, just visit thewayapp.com/tim No credit card required.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
No RunItBackJones? No problem! That just means we had to double the dose of the DISGUSTING BROTHERS. Texas Pete and Ole Chisum don't just hold down the fort on this eppy, they bring an EpiPen to the chest of college football, ya dig.
Fluent Fiction - Swedish: Navigating Allergies: A Story of Courage and Friendship Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.com/sv/episode/2025-11-14-08-38-20-sv Story Transcript:Sv: Det var en klar och kylig höstmorgon på internatskolan.En: It was a clear and chilly autumn morning at the boarding school.Sv: Träden var fulla av röda och gula löv som prasslade under fötterna när eleverna rusade till sina lektioner.En: The trees were full of red and yellow leaves that rustled underfoot as the students hurried to their classes.Sv: Erik, som alltid var försiktig, promenerade långsamt mot kafeterian.En: Erik, who was always cautious, walked slowly towards the cafeteria.Sv: Han kände sig lite nervös idag.En: He felt a little nervous today.Sv: På tavlan stod det att dagens lunch skulle innehålla hans värsta fiende, jordnötter.En: On the board, it said that today's lunch would include his worst enemy, peanuts.Sv: Erik hade en allvarlig jordnötsallergi.En: Erik had a severe peanut allergy.Sv: Han visste att han alltid behövde vara på sin vakt.En: He knew he always needed to be on his guard.Sv: Men idag ville han bara ha en vanlig lunch med sina vänner.En: But today, he just wanted to have a normal lunch with his friends.Sv: Linnea, hans kamrat och rumskompis, gick bredvid honom.En: Linnea, his classmate and roommate, walked beside him.Sv: Hon var nyfiken och orädd, alltid redo för äventyr, men hon förstod också hur viktigt det var att Erik kände sig trygg.En: She was curious and fearless, always ready for adventure, but she also understood how important it was for Erik to feel safe.Sv: När de kom in i kafeterian slog doften av de mustiga hösträtterna emot dem.En: When they entered the cafeteria, the aroma of the hearty autumn dishes hit them.Sv: Luften var varm och fylld med ljudet av skrattande studenter.En: The air was warm and filled with the sound of laughing students.Sv: Erik såg på sin tallrik med tvekan.En: Erik looked at his plate with hesitation.Sv: Linnea märkte det direkt.En: Linnea noticed immediately.Sv: "Är du orolig, Erik?"En: "Are you worried, Erik?"Sv: frågade hon försiktigt.En: she asked gently.Sv: "Ja, lite.En: "Yeah, a little.Sv: Jag är bara rädd för att det kanske finns jordnötter någonstans," svarade Erik.En: I'm just afraid there might be peanuts somewhere," Erik replied.Sv: Han visste att det fanns bouillabaisse på menyn idag, och även om skolan var noggrann, kunde man aldrig veta helt säkert.En: He knew there was bouillabaisse on the menu today, and even though the school was careful, you could never be completely sure.Sv: "Jag tror att du borde säga något till personalen," föreslog Linnea.En: "I think you should say something to the staff," suggested Linnea.Sv: "Dina vänner och jag skulle förstå om vi behöver ändra något."En: "Your friends and I would understand if we need to change something."Sv: Erik tvekade.En: Erik hesitated.Sv: "Kanske ska jag försöka," suckade han.En: "Maybe I should give it a try," he sighed.Sv: Lunchen fortskred utan händelser först.En: Lunch proceeded without any incidents at first.Sv: Men när Erik reste sig från bordet, råkade han stöta till en skål från ett annat bord.En: But when Erik got up from the table, he accidentally bumped a bowl from another table.Sv: En bit av maten innehöll jordnötter och rullade över till hans tallrik.En: A piece of food containing peanuts rolled over to his plate.Sv: Panikslagen tittade Erik ner, förlamad av rädslan han alltid haft.En: Panicked, Erik looked down, paralyzed by the fear he always had.Sv: Linnea agerade snabbt.En: Linnea acted quickly.Sv: "Erik, din EpiPen," sa hon lugnt men bestämt.En: "Erik, your EpiPen," she said calmly but firmly.Sv: Med darrande händer fann Erik sin EpiPen och injicerade den omedelbart.En: With trembling hands, Erik found his EpiPen and injected it immediately.Sv: Pulsen saktade ner och färgen återvände till hans ansikte.En: His pulse slowed down and the color returned to his face.Sv: Skolans vårdpersonal kom fram och hjälpte honom att stabilisera sig.En: The school's medical staff came over and helped him stabilize.Sv: Snart kunde han andas lugnt igen.En: Soon he could breathe calmly again.Sv: Efter händelsen bestämde skolan att bli mer medvetna om allergier.En: After the incident, the school decided to become more aware of allergies.Sv: Persien redogjorde mer noggrant för ingredienserna i menyn.En: They detailed the ingredients on the menu more carefully.Sv: Erik kände sig starkare, mer självsäker.En: Erik felt stronger, more confident.Sv: Han visste nu att han kunde tala om sina behov utan att känna sig skamsen.En: He now knew he could speak about his needs without feeling ashamed.Sv: Linnea lärde sig också något nytt.En: Linnea also learned something new.Sv: Hon förstod bättre hur det var för Erik och fick en djupare respekt för hans dagliga kamp.En: She understood better what it was like for Erik and gained a deeper respect for his daily struggle.Sv: Och i skuggan av de fallande höstlöven, fanns det en ny känsla av förståelse och vänskap mellan dem, starkare än någonsin.En: And in the shadow of the falling autumn leaves, there was a new sense of understanding and friendship between them, stronger than ever. Vocabulary Words:chilly: kyligboarding: internatcautious: försiktignervous: nervösallergy: allergicurious: nyfikenfearless: oräddadventure: äventyraroma: dofthearty: mustighesitation: tvekanafraid: räddbouillabaisse: bouillabaissemenu: menyincident: händelsepanicked: panikslagenparalyzed: förlamadtrembling: darrandeinject: injiceradecalm: lugnbreathe: andascalmly: lugntconfident: självsäkerashamed: skamsenrespect: respektstruggle: kampshadow: skuggaunderstanding: förståelsefriendship: vänskapstable: stabilisera
Hello mother friender, hey, hi, how ya durn. We did it, we recorded a podcast and didn't mess up the recording!!! Unfortunately, the episode that we finally record correctly is so peanut-heavy, I'm pretty sure we're going to set off some people's allergies. Keep that EPIPen on you, stay strapped. We begin on a topic near and dear to Carrington's heart, cylindrical foods. He loves them so much, he wants to create a new way to eat them!! Granted, I love the idea, but I think it's a little suspicious. Next, Jaymi brings us our yearly science lesson, once again related to peanuts; just can't get enough of those little guys. After that, we play a game; it goes swimmingly per usual. Thank you for listening. Don't forget to check your closet. Email: hotcrossbunspod@gmail.com TikTok/Instagram: @hotcrossbunspod
What Fresh Hell: Laughing in the Face of Motherhood | Parenting Tips From Funny Moms
This episode is brought to you by Amazon One Medical. Ever notice how kids only seem to get rashes in the middle of the night? Or get pinkeye only while you're on vacation? It's what we like to call a typical “mom worst”—and here comes a great new solution: Amazon One Medical Pay-Per-Visit is now offering trusted care through telehealth visits for families with kids ages 2-11. No insurance required, no waiting rooms, no hassle! In this episode we speak to Dr. Natasha Bhuyan—mom, practicing family physician, and National Medical Director at Amazon One Medical. Dr. Bhuyan is responsible for driving clinical innovation at One Medical, as well as growth, strategic partnerships, care model design, and quality primary care. Dr. Bhuyan's health and wellness commentary has appeared in outlets such as The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, HuffPost, ABC News, Prevention, Well+Good, and NBC News. Dr. Bhuyan explains how Amazon One Medical Pay Per Visit allows parent things like pink eye, lice, and EpiPen prescription renewals. Even at night, even on the weekend. Solved it! Find out more: health.amazon.com/children. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Meghan Riordan Jarvis was a practicing psychotherapist when she found herself devastated by the loss of her two parents. She suddenly saw she was no different from those she helped, but she still needed outside support to recover. In this Blue Sky episode, she describes how this realization led her to become an expert about grief and an advocate for all of us to learn about this important and challenging part of life. Chapters: 02:20 Journey to Psychotherapy Megan shares her personal journey into psychotherapy, beginning with a ‘normal breakup' that led her to seek therapy. This experience uncovered an unacknowledged childhood trauma, sparking her interest in understanding human behavior and emotions. 06:30 From Teacher to Campaign Manager Megan recounts her early career, which included earning a master's degree in early childhood education and a brief stint as a campaign manager in D.C. This period of professional uncertainty, coupled with a dissolved relationship, propelled her further into therapy and solidified her path towards psychotherapy. 09:17 Experiencing Grief Firsthand Megan discusses her personal experience with grief after losing both parents, particularly the sudden death of her mother. Despite her professional expertise, she found herself profoundly destabilized, experiencing traumatic grief that mirrored the struggles of her own patients. 13:04 Clinician's Fury at Personal Grief Megan recounts her frustration and ‘fury' as a psychotherapist experiencing severe personal grief, realizing her education didn't shield her from its intensity. Her inpatient trauma treatment revealed the profound difference between theoretical knowledge and the embodied experience of loss. 15:55 Bridging Mental and Physical Health Megan advocates for dissolving the cultural divide between physical and mental health, highlighting how societal biases hinder seeking help for grief. She draws parallels between adolescent growth and the transformative, often messy, process of grieving, emphasizing its physical and mental impacts. 21:38 Grief as a Transformative Process Megan explains how grief, though painful, can be a transformative process leading to ‘traumatic growth' and new purpose. She details her Grief Mentor Method, a personalized approach to developing daily practices and tools like the ‘grief EpiPen' to manage intense emotional and physical responses to loss. 26:50 Normalizing and Processing Grief Megan emphasizes the importance of normalizing grief and understanding it extends far beyond crying. She introduces the ‘grief mentor method,' which focuses on physical system connection, distinguishing between nervous systems, nourishing practices, storytelling, and connecting with external support, including ‘finding your five' to test sharing your story. 31:56 Grief in Education and the Workplace Megan highlights the physical impact of grief on the body's 12 systems, citing statistics on increased heart attack risk for widowers. She passionately advocates for integrating grief education into schools and professional training, noting the lack of comprehensive grief studies in psychotherapy programs and the need for better workplace support. 39:24 Supporting Grievers: Practical Tips Megan offers practical advice for supporting someone in grief, emphasizing collective effort and long-term planning, ideally for a year or more. 46:30 Megan's Resources and Farewell Bill Burke reviews Megan's diverse offerings, including her memoirs, ‘Can Anyone Tell Me Essential Questions about Grief and Loss?', her podcast ‘Grief is My Side Hustle,' and her corporate and online courses. Megan details how individuals, helpers, and leaders can access her work via her website and Instagram.
Remember when Kelly mentioned she might have had an allergic reaction to anchovies in Detroit? Well, it turns out she was onto something as it happened again and this time sent her to the ER! After some time at home recovering, she's feeling better and getting ready to get into her purse era as she has to start carrying an EpiPen wherever she goes. The time recovering also allowed Kelly to finally watch "The Summer I Turned Pretty" and she has some hot takes. Plus, the TikTok creator that she spent a lot of time consuming and how it's inspiring Kelly to get into her bread era. Speaking of bread eras, Lizz is getting ready to get into her sourdough era thanks to a party from one of her neighbors. She's having a "Soup, Sourdough and Sips" party and this is something we can all get on board with. Now Lizz needs to start planning an adult party of her own and has some really great ideas. In Industry News, Kelly can't wait to get into her newest press car, a Toyota Grand Highlander. Lizz is ecstatic to hear that the Nissan Xterra is getting a reboot and will be back on the market in 2029. Will it be worth the wait? Crock-tober continues as Kelly and Lizz give their take on last week's chicken and dumplings recipe. They had completely different experiences and only one of them added the recipe to their cookbook. What's on the menu this week? It's a butter chicken dish that sounds incredibly flavorful! Finally, in honor of Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month, Kelly and Lizz share the story of Teddy, Letty and the cardinal that came as a comfort to one family.
Joe almost had a moment over the weekend where he almost had to save a friends life using an epipen. Only problem is ... he doesn't know how to use one!
Who on the show almost had to use an epipen on one of our friends?! Joe and Jed remix some of their favorite songs and so much more. Stream all of our favorite segments on demand today
Joe almost had a moment over the weekend where he almost had to save a friends life using an epipen. Only problem is ... he doesn't know how to use one! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Who on the show almost had to use an epipen on one of our friends?! Joe and Jed remix some of their favorite songs and so much more. Stream all of our favorite segments on demand todaySee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
John continues his conversation with Bunny Young. They discuss setting healthy boundaries, asking for help, and balancing work and family life. They also share why saying “no” is sometimes the best choice and what it means to grow, heal, and build strong relationships at home and at work In Part 1, they talked about Bunny's marriage, family, career choices, and living with purpose. Listen to this episode to learn more: [00:00] - How pain shaped Bunny's purpose [05:13] - Chronic vs. acute pain [06:42] - Change can be hard, but necessary [08:21] - Why support and asking for help are important in life [14:08] - Setting boundaries, even with family [24:21] - e-books written by Bunny [28:09] - Update on John's book [30:02] - Business success doesn't always mean happiness at home [32:50] - Healthy disagreements in front of children [35:43] - How childhood experiences shape how we handle arguments as adults [40:54] - How being a wife and mom made her a better person [42:52] - Bunny's definition of success [44:46] - Traits of a great leader [46:04] - What legacy means to Bunny [48:13] - How Bunny invests in her growth [52:16] - Best way to connect with Bunny [54:46] - Book recommendations [57:18] - Wrap-up NOTABLE QUOTES: “There's a level of pain involved with change, and you have to decide which pain is better: the pain of staying the same, or the pain of change.” “At the end of the day, the thing that keeps you the safest is support. Asking for help.” “The word no is also a sentence—a complete sentence.” “You are the problem. Yes, it's 100% your fault, and that's also the best news ever, because you are also the solution.” “Entrepreneurship and marriage take so much support. And you have to be willing to receive that. Otherwise, you're going to get so exhausted constantly moving to make sure that you don't get burnt.” “We actually argue and we disagree to make our relationship stronger, to hear each other's feedback.” “To me, wealth comes from my ability to wake up each morning and choose what I'm doing with my time, my energy, and my money.” “Therapy is not meant to be an EpiPen. It's meant to be a daily vitamin.” “I am the highest ROI that I could invest in.” BOOKS MENTIONED: A Happy Pocket Full of Money by David Cameron Gikandi (https://a.co/d/1BT3hDp) Man's Search For Meaning: The classic tribute to hope from the Holocaust by Viktor E. Frankl (https://a.co/d/a7F1Ffq) The Tao of Pooh by Benjamin Hoff (https://a.co/d/hW5kFRZ) USEFUL RESOURCES: https://www.bunnyyoung.com/ https://www.abetterplaceconsulting.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/bunnysumneryoung/ https://www.linkedin.com/company/abetterplaceconsulting/ https://www.instagram.com/thebunnyyoung/ https://www.instagram.com/abetterplaceconsulting https://www.facebook.com/thebunnysyoung https://www.facebook.com/abetterplaceconsulting/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCA0R6-q6BKrKXBgSEDaEFdg/videos Pawprints on My Heart: The Story of Goose, the Service Animal (https://a.co/d/9S8Z0pN) CONNECT WITH JOHN Website - https://iamjohnhulen.com LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnhulen Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/johnhulen Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/johnhulen X - https://x.com/johnhulen YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLX_NchE8lisC4NL2GciIWA EPISODE CREDITS Intro and Outro music provided by Jeff Scheetz - https://jeffscheetz.com/
Fluent Fiction - Hindi: Courage Amidst Shadows: A Tale of Friendship and Triumph Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.com/hi/episode/2025-09-09-22-34-02-hi Story Transcript:Hi: धुंधलके में लिपटे एक पुराने गोदाम का दृश्य था जहाँ से हल्की धूप की किरणें टूटकर भीतर आ रही थीं।En: The scene was of an old warehouse wrapped in twilight, where rays of sunlight were breaking through and entering inside.Hi: चारों ओर धूल भरे क्रेट्स और बिखरे हुए मलबे थे।En: All around were dust-laden crates and scattered debris.Hi: ये गोदाम अब एक खोए हुए खजाने की तरह था, और इस नीरवता के बीच तीन युवा खड़े थे - अर्नव, नेहा और कबीर।En: This warehouse was now like a lost treasure, and amidst this silence stood three young people - Arnav, Neha, and Kabir.Hi: अर्नव एक संवेदनशील और वाक्पटु युवक था, और नेहा उसकी दृढ़ संकल्पी मित्र।En: Arnav was a sensitive and eloquent young man, and Neha was his determined friend.Hi: कबीर अभी इन दोनों का नया साथी बना था, जिसकी गुप्तमयता उसे रहस्यमयी बनाती थी।En: Kabir had just become their new companion, whose secretive nature made him mysterious.Hi: वे तीनों गोदाम में एक नई चुनौती का सामना कर रहे थे।En: The three of them were facing a new challenge in the warehouse.Hi: गोदाम की तलाशी के दौरान अचानक नेहा के चेहरे पर अजीब सी बेचैनी छा गई।En: During the search of the warehouse, suddenly a strange unease appeared on Neha's face.Hi: उसकी सांसें भारी लगने लगीं।En: Her breaths started to feel heavy.Hi: अर्नव समझ गया कि नेहा को किसी चीज से एलर्जी हो गई है।En: Arnav understood that Neha had developed an allergy to something.Hi: उसकी आंखों में चिंता साफ झलक रही थी।En: The worry was clearly visible in his eyes.Hi: वह जानता था कि अगर तुरंत मदद नहीं मिली, तो स्थिति और गंभीर हो सकती है।En: He knew that without immediate help, the situation could become more serious.Hi: अर्नव ने कहा, "हमें कुछ करना होगा।En: Arnav said, "We have to do something.Hi: कबीर, हमें बाहर निकलने का रास्ता खोजना होगा और मदद लेनी होगी।En: Kabir, we need to find a way out and get help."Hi: "कबीर ने जल्दी से आसपास के दरवाजे और खिड़कियों की जांच शुरू कर दी।En: Kabir quickly began checking the nearby doors and windows.Hi: लेकिन यह गोदाम मानो एक भूलभुलैया थी।En: But this warehouse seemed like a maze.Hi: अर्नव ने नेहा को शांत रखने की कोशिश की, उसे सांत्वना दी कि सब कुछ ठीक हो जाएगा।En: Arnav tried to keep Neha calm, reassuring her that everything would be alright.Hi: तभी, अर्नव की नजर एक पुरानी फर्स्ट-ऐड किट पर पड़ी।En: Just then, Arnav spotted an old first-aid kit.Hi: धूल में लिपटी हुई ये किट बहुत समय से अछूती पड़ी थी।En: Covered in dust, this kit had been untouched for a long time.Hi: उसने फौरन उसे खोला और अंदर से एक पुराना, लेकिन अब एक्सपायर्ड हो चुका ईपीपेन निकाला।En: He immediately opened it and took out an old, but now expired, EpiPen.Hi: उसके पास कोई और विकल्प नहीं था।En: He had no other choice.Hi: उसने प्रार्थना की कि ये मददगार साबित हो।En: He prayed that it would prove helpful.Hi: इसी बीच कबीर ने ऊंची जगह से कुछ कपड़े उठाए और उन्हें लहराकर एक ट्रक ड्राइवर को संकेत दिया।En: Meanwhile, Kabir picked up some clothes from a high place and waved them to signal a truck driver.Hi: ट्रक ड्राइवर ने स्थिति समझते हुए तुरंत मदद बुलवाई।En: Understanding the situation, the truck driver immediately called for help.Hi: आपातकाल सेवाएं कुछ ही देर में पहुंचीं, और नेहा को जल्द ही अस्पताल ले जाया गया।En: Emergency services arrived shortly, and Neha was taken to the hospital soon after.Hi: अस्पताल में फौरन इलाज मिलने से नेहा की तबीयत तेजी से सुधरी।En: Due to the prompt treatment at the hospital, Neha's condition improved quickly.Hi: यह अनुभव आंखें खोलने वाला साबित हुआ।En: This experience proved to be eye-opening.Hi: अर्नव ने खुद में अंदरूनी ताकत और आत्मविश्वास महसूस किया।En: Arnav felt an inner strength and confidence.Hi: कबीर की जानकारी और उसकी त्वरित सोच ने भी उसे एक भरोसेमंद साथी बना दिया था।En: Kabir's knowledge and quick thinking also made him a trustworthy companion.Hi: अब अर्नव, नेहा और कबीर के बीच की दोस्ती और भी गहरी हो गई थी।En: Now the friendship between Arnav, Neha, and Kabir had deepened even more.Hi: उन्होंने सीखा कि कठिन परिस्थितियों में एकता और समझदारी से सबकुछ संभव है।En: They learned that with unity and understanding, everything is possible in difficult situations.Hi: गोदाम का वह धुंधला अंधेरा अब उनके लिए हिम्मत की एक कहानी बन गया था।En: That dim darkness of the warehouse had now become a story of courage for them. Vocabulary Words:twilight: धुंधलकेsunlight: धूपmasked: लिपटेcrates: क्रेट्सdebris: मलबेeloquent: वाक्पटुdetermined: दृढ़ संकल्पीsecretive: गुप्तमयmysterious: रहस्यमयीunease: बेचैनीallergy: एलर्जीreassuring: सांत्वनाfirst-aid kit: फर्स्ट-ऐड किटuntouched: अछूतीexpired: एक्सपायर्डoption: विकल्पwaved: लहराकरsignal: संकेतemergency: आपातकालimproved: सुधरीeye-opening: आंखें खोलने वालाinner strength: अंदरूनी ताकतconfidence: आत्मविश्वासprompt: फौरनcircumstances: परिस्थितियोंunity: एकताtrustworthy: भरोसेमंदmaze: भूलभुलैयाcourage: हिम्मतscattered: बिखरे
It was the perfect way to begin The Big Year Podcast On the Road, Again, with discovery of a very rare bird, right here in my backyard, near Cambridge, Ontario. A young birder by the name of Nathan Hood found a Spotted Redshank, a rare visitor lost on its way back from Eurasia. Almost every birder I know in Ontario, from within 2 to 3 hours drive, has shown up to see this amazing rarity. It's September 1, 2025 and I t's hard to believe summer's nearly over and that fall migration is really underway. It certainly got started in a big way with this Spotted Redshank. While I was there, I talked to a couple of birders, including Nathan Hood, who found the bird and a local Waterloo birder who lives close by. He told me he's not a chaser but couldn't pass up seeing an incredible rarity, so close to home. This is only the third or forth sighting of this bird in Ontario. It was also a big deal for those birders doing doing Big years, including Ellen and Jerry Horak doing their Canada Big Year and Jude Szabo, on his Ontario Big Year. They were there early in the morning, long before I arrived. I was glad to have made it by late morning and get to see, photograph, record videos, and talk about this amazing bird with many of my birder friends. But, before we head back out on the road, just a quick update on me. And no, it's not about the bloody Wilson's Warbler. I finally saw a juvenile at the Long Point Field Station on August 29, so we can finally put that one to rest. However, about a week ago I was set upon by an angry, vicious mob of… Yellowjacket Wasps. These wasps are a predatory social species of wasps, recognized by their small size and black and yellow striped abdomen and painful venomous sting. The morning began, innocently enough. Our neighbors were replacing their fence and Sue asked me to remove a birdhouse before the workers tore it down. I trotted out with a screwdriver bit on my drill and proceeded to take the retched old bird house off the fence. As I removed the second screw, the birdhouse fell to the ground. What I didn't know was that instead of birds nesting in the house, it had become a Yellowjacket home. They were not happy. When I reached down to pick up the old bird house the enraged wasps attacked me. I began yelping for help as my hands were repeatedly stung. Wasps, unlike bees do not leave their barbed stinger in your skin, so they can sting you multiple times. Once the first wasp stings you it releases a pheromone, alerting other wasps to engage in the attack. I tried to run away from them, screaming, “Why are they after me?” as Sue tried to calm me, but I was, as the old saying goes, “running around like a chicken with its head cut off.” Now the wasps were stinging my ankles through my socks as I was desperately trying to swat them off. I probably got a bonus sting on my hand from that maneuver. Finally, the wasps had made their point and went back to regroup with the others and find a new base of operations from which to strike. I quickly took two Benadryl, and lay down, hoping that would work and I'd be better in a few hours. No such luck. Fifteen years ago, I was bit by an ant in Florida and went into anaphylactic shock. When returned home my doctor prescribed an EpiPen. I've had to carry it with me at all times since then, getting a new one every 18 months or so. And I had never needed to use it. Many people, over time, forget to get fresh EpiPens or just figure if they haven't needed it in a decade, why bother with the expense. My wasp attack is why. Around 15 minutes after the battle ended, I started to feel swelling in my mouth. Not good! My throat felt like I had just eaten a big spoonful of peanut butter. I reported my condition to Sue and she rightly said, “That's not good.” It was time. I was getting pretty agitated, as was the case first time this happened. I warned Sue I was going to be a bit crazy. Well, relative to how crazy I normally am. I sent Sue to grab my EpiPen and she handed it to me. I held it near my leg and froze. I gently as possible told Sue she had better do it. She did it. After a sharp sting, no worse than anything the wasps did to me, the magical elixir began pumping through my veins and Sue went off to call the ambulance, with me chattering at her, impatiently from the other room. The fire department arrived first, followed by the paramedics. They shot me full of Benadryl and off we went to Brantford General Hospital. After a brief assessment, I was brought quickly into a treatment room, since they would rather I not suffocate in their triage department in front of multiple witnesses. I was taken care of by a very nice nurse, whom I assume worked their way through college waiting tables at Red Lobster, since every time I answered a question, they responded with “perfect,” as though I had picked the chef's favorite dish from the menu. After a doctor was consulted, off screen, I was given the obligatory steroid injection,(lucky for me I am not scheduled to be competing in any sanctioned sporting event), and spent the rest of the day in my hospital bed, trying to sleep, but was continuously annoyed by one guy who was watching a video on his phone, with the volume loud enough to be heard throughout the room, another guy talking loudly on his phone right next to me, and the moaning guy on the other side, who screamed every time they tried to stick a needle in his arm. Suffice it to say, I survived yet another medical ordeal,(I have a standing reservation at the Brantford General Hospital emergency room), and I am slowly recovering. The itchy, scratchy rash has finally gone away, and now its a matter of time before the wounds heal. Enough about me. So, let's now head out on the road, again. Presented in no specific order, sit back, relax, don't let the wasps bite and enjoy the stories of some of the birders who were kind enough to let me distract them from the serious game of spot the warbler, during, mostly, Spring Migration.
Fluent Fiction - Danish: A Friendship Tested: The Heroic High School Rescue Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.com/da/episode/2025-08-19-22-34-02-da Story Transcript:Da: Det var en varm sommerdag på gymnasiet.En: It was a warm summer day at the high school.Da: Sollys pressede sig ind gennem vinduerne og oplyste den store samlingssal, hvor klassen var samlet.En: Sunlight pressed through the windows, illuminating the large assembly hall where the class was gathered.Da: Søren stod foran sine klassekammerater, klar til at imponere med sin præsentation.En: Søren stood in front of his classmates, ready to impress with his presentation.Da: Han havde forberedt sig hele ugen og ønskede at gøre indtryk.En: He had prepared all week and wanted to make an impression.Da: Søren var kendt som en selvsikker elev, men indeni bar han på angst for fremtiden.En: Søren was known as a confident student, but inside he harbored anxiety about the future.Da: Han bekymrede sig om, hvad der skulle ske efter gymnasiet.En: He worried about what would happen after high school.Da: Astrid, hans veninde, vidste det.En: Astrid, his friend, knew it.Da: Hun bemærkede hans uro, selv om han prøvede at skjule det under et skævt smil.En: She noticed his unease, even though he tried to hide it under a crooked smile.Da: Præsentationen startede godt.En: The presentation started well.Da: Søren talte klart og stærkt om sit emne.En: Søren spoke clearly and strongly about his topic.Da: Men pludselig ændrede noget sig.En: But suddenly, something changed.Da: Hans stemme begyndte at knække, og han så ud til at få det dårligt.En: His voice began to crack, and he seemed to get sick.Da: Hans ansigt blev rødt, og han begyndte at hive efter vejret.En: His face turned red, and he started gasping for air.Da: Astrid sad på kanten af sit sæde, helt opmærksom.En: Astrid sat at the edge of her seat, fully attentive.Da: Hun vidste, hvad der var galt.En: She knew what was wrong.Da: Dette var ikke bare nervøsitet.En: This was not just nervousness.Da: Søren havde en alvorlig allergisk reaktion.En: Søren was having a severe allergic reaction.Da: Klassen så forvirret til.En: The class looked on in confusion.Da: Søren begyndte at klø sig på halsen, hvor der opstod røde udslæt.En: Søren began to scratch his neck, where red rashes appeared.Da: Astrid måtte tage en hurtig beslutning.En: Astrid had to make a quick decision.Da: Hun kunne se, at situationen hastede, men hun ønskede ikke at gøre Søren flov foran alle.En: She could see the situation was urgent, but she didn't want to embarrass Søren in front of everyone.Da: Med et dybt åndedrag rejste hun sig hurtigt fra stolen.En: With a deep breath, she quickly got up from her chair.Da: "Undskyld, jeg skal lige bruge et øjeblik," sagde hun og gik med bestemte skridt ud af rummet.En: "Excuse me, I just need a moment," she said and walked with determined steps out of the room.Da: Astrid skyndte sig til skolekontoret, hvor førstehjælpskassen stod.En: Astrid hurried to the school office, where the first aid kit was located.Da: Hun fandt en EpiPen og hastede tilbage til salen.En: She found an EpiPen and rushed back to the hall.Da: Uden at tøve lagde hun en hånd på Sørens skulder.En: Without hesitation, she placed a hand on Søren's shoulder.Da: "Det skal nok gå," sagde hun roligt.En: "It's going to be okay," she said calmly.Da: Hun administrerede EpiPen'en, og langsomt kom farven tilbage til Sørens ansigt.En: She administered the EpiPen, and slowly the color returned to Søren's face.Da: Han begyndte at trække vejret mere normalt, mens eleverne kiggede lettet på.En: He began to breathe more normally, while the students looked on relieved.Da: Efter den dramatiske hændelse blev Søren bragt til sygeplejersken for observation.En: After the dramatic incident, Søren was taken to the nurse for observation.Da: Astrid blev ved hans side hele tiden, og han hviskede taknemmeligt: "Du reddede mig, Astrid."En: Astrid stayed by his side the whole time, and he whispered gratefully: "You saved me, Astrid."Da: I dagene efter reaktionen talte de to mere end nogensinde før.En: In the days following the reaction, the two talked more than ever before.Da: Søren åbnede op om sin angst for fremtiden, og Astrid lyttede tålmodigt.En: Søren opened up about his anxiety for the future, and Astrid listened patiently.Da: Hun opfordrede ham til at være åben og stole på sine venner.En: She encouraged him to be open and trust his friends.Da: Søren indså værdien af sandt venskab og lærte at dele sine bekymringer i stedet for at bære dem alene.En: Søren realized the value of true friendship and learned to share his worries instead of carrying them alone.Da: Solen skinnede stadig over gymnasiet, men noget havde ændret sig for Søren.En: The sun still shone over the high school, but something had changed for Søren.Da: Han var ikke længere alene.En: He was no longer alone.Da: Omverdenen føltes ikke så overvældende længere, og han vidste, at med venner som Astrid ved sin side, kunne han klare mere, end han først troede.En: The world didn't seem so overwhelming anymore, and he knew that with friends like Astrid by his side, he could handle more than he first believed. Vocabulary Words:assembly: samlingssalimpress: imponerepresentation: præsentationanxiety: angstfuture: fremtidenunease: urocrooked: skævtreaction: reaktionurgent: hastedeobservation: observationencouraged: opfordredeoverwhelming: overvældendeharbored: bar pågasping: hive efter vejretscratch: klørash: udslætdetermined: bestemteaid: hjælpeadministered: administrerededramatic: dramatiskgratefully: taknemmeligttrust: stole pårelieved: lettetconfident: selvsikkernoticed: bemærkedebreath: åndedraghurried: skyndte signurse: sygeplejerskepatiently: tålmodigtilluminating: oplyste
In this episode of Let's ComBinate, Subhi Saadeh sits down with Jeff Gensler, a quality and regulatory leader with 30+ years in MedTech, pharma, and combination products.Jeff takes us inside FDA warning letters, consent decrees, and massive remediation efforts—including the 1,400 DHF Zimmer Biomet project and achieving 99.999% reliability with the EpiPen. He shares the CAPA playbook he's refined over decades, the high-stakes negotiations with FDA, and the critical role of containment, third-party reviews, and inspection readiness.The conversation shifts to Quality 4.0 how electronic batch records (EBRs), AI, and digital systems can move quality from reactive to preventive. Jeff also introduces his new Quality 4.0 Consortium, designed to bring proven digital solutions to small and mid-sized pharma companies.Timestamps:00:00 – Introduction & Guest Welcome00:42 – Facing a Warning Letter: The Zimmer Experience02:05 – Remediation Strategies & Challenges06:03 – Orthopedic Industry Insights09:58 – Transition to Pfizer & Meridian12:54 – Navigating FDA Negotiations16:18 – Balancing Risk & FDA Visibility16:55 – Implementing Quality Systems & Processes18:15 – Leveraging Third-Party Reviews & Audits20:26 – Inspection Readiness & CAPA Processes25:08 – Mergers, Acquisitions & Facility Upgrades27:32 – Digital Transformation in Quality Management31:12 – The Future of Quality Systems & AI Integration33:01 – Benefits of Electronic Batch Records34:13 – Conclusion & Contact InfoJeff Gensler is a veteran quality and regulatory executive with more than 30 years of leadership experience in MedTech, pharmaceuticals, and combination products. Over his career, Jeff has navigated some of the industry's most complex compliance challenges, including FDA warning letters, consent decrees, and large-scale quality system remediations. He has held senior leadership roles at Zimmer Biomet, where he oversaw the remediation of 1,400 design history files involving $300M in resources and 1,500 contractors, and at Pfizer's Meridian Medical Technologies, where his team achieved 99.999% reliability for the EpiPen through advanced quality processes and close FDA engagement. Jeff later served as Vice President of Quality at Kindeva Drug Delivery, where he helped lead a state-of-the-art facility buildout recognized by ISPE as a Facility of the Year finalist. A recognized advocate for modernizing quality systems, Jeff has championed Quality 4.0, integrating electronic batch records, AI, and advanced analytics to shift organizations from reactive to preventive quality management. Most recently, he founded the Quality 4.0 Consortium, a collaborative platform bringing proven digital solutions to small and mid-sized pharma companies.Subhi Saadeh is a Quality Professional and host of Let's Combinate. With a background in Quality, Manufacturing Operations and R&D he's worked in Large Medical Device/Pharma organizations to support the development and launch of Hardware Devices, Disposable Devices, and Combination Products for Vaccines, Generics, and Biologics. Subhi serves currently as the International Committee Chair for the Combination Products Coalition(CPC) and as a member of ASTM Committee E55 and also served as a committee member on AAMI's Combination Products Committee.For questions, inquiries or suggestions please reach out at letscombinate.com or on the show's LinkedIn Page.
TOP STORIES - Governor Ron DeSantis prepares to appoint Florida's next lieutenant governor — Jay Collins, a potential contender for the 2026 governor's race. Florida's CFO says the DOGE is uncovering “egregious” government waste, fraud, and abuse. A new state law requires EpiPen training for K-8 teachers to protect students with severe allergies. Plus, DeSantis and Chief of Staff James Uthmeier push for more U.S. House seats for Florida, and a judge denies the Trump administration's request for the Ghislaine Maxwell transcripts.
This week's episode is a short one but a good one. Rob is out on vacation, so Greg is joined by SpendMend colleague Sabrina Allen to discuss the recent policy changes impacting FQHCs related to a Trump Administration executive order from earlier this year that address insulin and injectable epinephrine 340B pricing provisions. SpendMend is at Booth #413 this week at the 340B Coalition Summer Conference in National Harbor, MD. Come meet our team, eat some chocolate and discuss what's happening in the 340B world. Webinar Alert! Join us for a webinar on 340B Patient Definition on Thursday July 24 at 2PM ET. Register here: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/1724500873792685151?source=340B+Unscripted
Cicada Invasion Continues: They're still here, causing chaos, and even responsible for a wild car crash that flipped a car in Blue Ash. Expect them for about three more weeks and hear about the mayhem they're causing at Kings Island, including being so loud you can't hear music over them.New Fear Unlocked: Asian Needle Ants: Just when you thought cicadas were bad, a new invasive species, the Asian needle ants, are arriving in Kentucky and parts of Ohio. Their bites are severe, requiring an EpiPen, and they're described as "pretty bad" and an "invasive species".We got some great Talkbacks from people breaking KiddChris' balls! Father's Day Fun & Real Talk: KiddChris and Sara dive into the often-overlooked holiday for dads, highlighting how fathers are typically "forgotten" and often just want to "hang out with [their] children" rather than expensive celebrations LIKE MOMS. Plus, there's a look back at favorite TV dads from shows like Modern Family and Home Improvement.
Welcome to the Civilian Medical Podcast episode 077 Intro Common Medical Emergencies at Camp Allergic reactions and anaphylaxis (e.g., bee stings, food allergies, poison ivy). Broken bones, sprains, and concussions. Heat exhaustion, dehydration, and sunburn. Drowning or near-drowning incidents. Camp-specific issues (archery injuries, animal bites, etc.). Medical Equipment AED Drugs (depending on the training and medical oversight), such as epi, Benadryl Bandages, wound closure, ice packs, splints Tourniquets- CAT (minimum age? Should we have an extra small option) Electrolytes What kits does MGO sell that would be good for camp staff IROK Kit: Good for medical staff or groups going on all-day excursions Hiking Kit: For smaller groups or individuals (good to send with your teenager to camp) MOM Kit: Lower-risk activities, expecting small cuts. Boo-boo Kit: Send to camp with younger kids Essential Training for Staff First Aid, CPR (including child-specific CPR), AED, bleeding control training for everyone. Training resources (American Heart Association, Stop the Bleed, Red Cross). EpiPen training and asthma inhaler use. Scenario-based training: role-playing and drills. Establish a helicopter landing zone Policies and Legal Medical protocols, including when and how to call EMS. Establish a helicopter landing zone Incident documentation and parent communication. Good Samaritan laws and liability protections. Closing Thoughts Recap key takeaways. Assess readiness, think through each camp activity Next Month: Off-grid excursion medical prep?
Allergies have been documented in historical records dating as far back as 2,400 years ago, when Hippocrates wrote about “hostile humors” in some people who suffered badly after eating cheese. But why do we experience them to begin with? What even is an allergy? Are allergies on the rise? And why are some mere nuisances, while others are deadly?This episode is a roundup of allergy stories—from the mundane to the frightful—and a round up of allergy questions we're asking Dr. Theresa MacPhail, author of Allergic: Our Irritated Bodies in a Changing World, to answer for us.Featuring Beni Osei Duker, Theresa MacPhail, Dwayne Smith, and Lily Ko.Produced by Felix Poon. For a transcript and full list of credits, go to outsideinradio.org. SUPPORTOutside/In is made possible with listener support. Click here to become a sustaining member of Outside/In. Follow Outside/In on Instagram or join our private discussion group on Facebook. LINKSCheck out Theresa MacPhail's book, Allergic: Our Irritated Bodies in a Changing World.Read up on the different hypotheses on why we get allergies in the first place:The parasite hypothesisThe toxin hypothesisThe hygiene hypothesisThe old friends hypothesisLearn about the history of the EpiPen.
Rover started watching the Karen Reed documentary. Can Rover's smart watch be causing his neck pain? Will an all-digital sprinkler system be the next big purchase? Lawn rollers, aeration, and sink less sinks. Snitzer ordered a couch, and it had to be sent back. Duji's ice skating coach would beat her. Charlie is his uncle's executor. Charlie and Snitz took a tour of Audio-Technica. Conspiracy on Snitzer's daughter's upcoming wedding. People weigh in on the motorboating scandal. Snitzer thinks motorboating is cheating. What have the guys said to make their ladies upset? Former Yankees player Brett Gardner's son's cause of death has been revealed. Rover thinks Duji needs an EpiPen at her house. Caller upset that a woman hit his son while she was backing out of a parking spot. The Washington Post sent an email to Elon Musk's dad. Trump officials sharing confidential information through Signal.
Former Yankees player Brett Gardner's son's cause of death has been revealed. Rover thinks Duji needs an EpiPen at her house. Caller upset that a woman hit his son while she was backing out of a parking spot. The Washington Post sent an email to Elon Musk's dad. Trump officials shared confidential information through Signal. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Rover started watching the Karen Reed documentary. Can Rover's smart watch be causing his neck pain? Will an all-digital sprinkler system be the next big purchase? Lawn rollers, aeration, and sink less sinks. Snitzer ordered a couch, and it had to be sent back. Duji's ice skating coach would beat her. Charlie is his uncle's executor. Charlie and Snitz took a tour of Audio-Technica. Conspiracy on Snitzer's daughter's upcoming wedding. People weigh in on the motorboating scandal. Snitzer thinks motorboating is cheating. What have the guys said to make their ladies upset? Former Yankees player Brett Gardner's son's cause of death has been revealed. Rover thinks Duji needs an EpiPen at her house. Caller upset that a woman hit his son while she was backing out of a parking spot. The Washington Post sent an email to Elon Musk's dad. Trump officials sharing confidential information through Signal. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Former Yankees player Brett Gardner's son's cause of death has been revealed. Rover thinks Duji needs an EpiPen at her house. Caller upset that a woman hit his son while she was backing out of a parking spot. The Washington Post sent an email to Elon Musk's dad. Trump officials shared confidential information through Signal.
Yes, the world may be out to get us with allergens around every corner, but we've got some tricks up our sleeve to help us cope. Our allergy treatment toolkit includes an impressive suite of tools, and in the second episode of our two-part series on allergies, we focus on three in particular: antihistamine medications, allergy shots, and the epinephrine auto-injector (aka the EpiPen). We take you through how exactly each of these work, trace their development from concept to product, and highlight some of the most promising areas of allergy treatment research today. Have you ever wondered why we have so many different types of antihistamines? Or thought about what the Cold War has to do with the EpiPen? Then this is the episode for you. Support this podcast by shopping our latest sponsor deals and promotions at this link: https://bit.ly/3WwtIAu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report” talks about Joe Biden breaking his promise to not pardon his son Hunter Biden and Elon Musk's perfect response to X's community notes concerning Biden's lie; Kash Patel, Trump's controversial pick for FBI director, telling Glenn Beck why Jeffrey Epstein's list has been protected by the FBI and what he plans to do to dismantle the deep state; Kevin O'Leary of "Shark Tank” telling shocked CNN hosts why Trump's tariff plan could bring China to its knees; Marc Andreessen explaining to Joe Rogan the shocking truth of how various tech entrepreneurs have been targeted and debanked under Operation Choke Point for being “politically exposed persons” and having the wrong political beliefs as well as why so many wealthy people supported Kamala Harris; Coleman Hughes shutting down CNN's Ameshia Cross for accusing Joe Rogan of being a grifter who changed his political beliefs; and much more. WATCH the MEMBER-EXCLUSIVE segment of the show here: https://rubinreport.locals.com/ Check out the NEW RUBIN REPORT MERCH here: https://daverubin.store/ ---------- Today's Sponsors: Lumen.Me - Lumen is the world's first handheld metabolic coach that measures your metabolism through your breath. It lets you know if you're burning fat or carbs, and gives you tailored guidance to improve your nutrition, workouts, and sleep. Go to: https://lumen.me/rubin to get 15% OFF! Rumble Premium - Corporate America is fighting to remove speech, Rumble is fighting to keep it. If you really believe in this fight Rumble is offering $10 off with the promo code RUBIN when you purchase an annual subscription, Go to: https://Rumble.com/premium/RUBIN and use promo code RUBIN Field Emergency Kit - This prescription Field Emergency Kit from The Wellness Company provides you with life-saving antibiotics, antivirals, anti-parasitics, non-addictive pain relief, and even a generic EpiPen. This is a Rumble Exclusive Offer, and quantities are limited. Rubin Report viewers save $200 off at checkout PLUS free shipping when they use code: RUMBLESALE. Kits are ONLY AVAILABLE IN THE USA. Go to: https://TWC.health/RUBIN and use CODE: RUMBLESALE Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report” talks about his conversation with Jordan Peterson about how the Democratic Party could easily have won the election if Democrats hadn't doubled down on lying to the American public; Peterson explaining how mainstream media and the Democrats completely underestimated the power of independent media and podcasters like Joe Rogan and Ben Shapiro; “The View's” Whoopi Goldberg and Ana Navarro sparring over how to resist and respond to a second Trump presidency — and Whoopi coming off as the sane one; Ana Navarro's worrying about her mental health during a Trump presidency and how she plans to prepare for it; Sage Steele trying to explain to Sean Hannity why more women are joining the 4B movement in response to male voters supporting Donald Trump; Bill Clinton telling MSNBC's Jonathan Capehart how conservative media was able to do an end run around mainstream media outlets to reach rural voters; and much more. Dave also does a special “ask me anything” question-and-answer session on a wide-ranging host of topics, answering questions from the Rubin Report Locals community. WATCH the MEMBER-EXCLUSIVE segment of the show here: https://rubinreport.locals.com/ Check out the NEW RUBIN REPORT MERCH here: https://daverubin.store/ ---------- Today's Sponsors: The Wellness Company BLACK FRIDAY SALE- Save up to 25% on supplements, emergency kits, and memberships starting on Thanksgiving Day! This special sale ends Sunday night, December 1st. Rubin Report viewers unlock amazing Black Friday deals when they use code: RUBIN. Go to: https://TWC.health/RUBIN and use CODE: RUBIN 1775 Coffee - Peaberry coffee isn't your average bean—it's coffee's best-kept secret. It's denser, more flavorful, and packed with bold energy to kickstart your mornings. Rubin Report viewers get 15% off their order. Go to: https://1775coffee.com/RUBIN and use code RUBIN Field Emergency Kit - This prescription Field Emergency Kit from The Wellness Company provides you with life-saving antibiotics, antivirals, anti-parasitics, non-addictive pain relief, and even a generic EpiPen. This is a Rumble Exclusive Offer, and quantities are limited. Rubin Report viewers save $200 off at checkout PLUS free shipping when they use code: RUMBLESALE. Kits are ONLY AVAILABLE IN THE USA. Go to: https://TWC.health/RUBIN and use CODE: RUMBLESALE Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report” talks about Kamala Harris' latest desperate move of going all in on John Kelly's allegation that Donald Trump praised Adolf Hitler and is an actual fascist; “The View's” Joy Behar's unhinged attack on Trump voters; CNN's Abby Phillip having to break up a contentious argument between Scott Jennings and Bakari Sellers about Democrats' hypocrisy of denouncing violence against women while having Eminem headline a campaign event and remaining quiet about the accusations against Doug Emhoff; Bill Ackman telling “Squawk Box's” Andrew Ross Sorkin why the accusations of Donald Trump being a fan of Hitler are so ridiculous when compared to his actions as president; MSNBC's Alex Wagner being stunned by the number of black Trump supporters who weren't buying her propaganda; CNN's Anderson Cooper fact-checking Kamala Harris on her sudden reversal on a border wall; and much more. WATCH the MEMBER-EXCLUSIVE segment of the show here: https://rubinreport.locals.com/ Check out the NEW RUBIN REPORT MERCH here: https://daverubin.store/ ---------- Today's Sponsors: Kalshi - The first and only legal place in the U.S. where you can trade on the outcome of real-world events. You can trade on everything from who will win the presidency, which party will control Congress, and even swing state outcomes. The first 500 people to sign up with my code, deposit $50 will get a $20 bonus Go to https://kalshi.com/rubin and download the app Kids Emergency Kit - This prescription Emergency Kit from The Wellness Company provides you with a carefully selected assortment of 6 critical medicines like Amoxicillin, Ivermectin, EpiPen and Ofloxacin. Rubin Report viewers save $45 at checkout when they use code: RUBIN. Kits are ONLY AVAILABLE IN THE USA. Go to: https://TWC.health/RUBIN and use CODE: RUBIN Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report” talks about Justin Trudeau's appearance on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” where he raved about how amazing universal health care in Canada is while leaving out any details about the various shortages of health essentials like MRI machines; “Shark Tank's” Kevin O'Leary telling the Nelk Boys at the “Full Send Podcast” how Justin Trudeau is driving Canada into the ground; the “All-In Podcast's” Jason Calacanis being publicly humiliated by Megyn Kelly's legal knowledge of the inner workings of the various Trump trials; JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon telling CNBC's "Squawk Box" hosts how the border crisis has woken up his liberal NY friends about the dangers of illegal immigration; “Shark Tank's” Kevin O'Leary telling Fox News' Sandra Smith why Kamala Harris' economic plan appears to be meaningless smoke and mirrors; “Real Time with Bill Maher's” Bill Maher not knowing what to think of Bjørn Lomborg's data-backed correction of the media's narrative about the death of the Great Barrier Reef; and much more. WATCH the MEMBER-EXCLUSIVE segment of the show here: https://rubinreport.locals.com/ Check out the NEW RUBIN REPORT MERCH here: https://daverubin.store/ ---------- Today's Sponsors: Kids Emergency Kit - This prescription Emergency Kit from The Wellness Company provides you with a carefully selected assortment of 6 critical medicines like Amoxicillin, Ivermectin, EpiPen and Ofloxacin. Rubin Report viewers save $60 at checkout when they use code: RUBIN. Kits are ONLY AVAILABLE IN THE USA. Go to: https://TWC.health/RUBIN and use CODE: RUBIN Moink - Join the Moink movement today! Get grass-fed and grass-finished beef and lamb, pastured pork and chicken, and wild-caught Alaskan salmon, direct to your door. Rubin Report listeners and viewers will get get free hot rolls in your first order! Go to https://www.moinkbox.com/RUBIN River Financial Inc. - Protect your family and finances from inflation and government printing with Bitcoin. Unlike many crypto exchanges, River holds all client Bitcoin securely in 1:1 reserve and has the best-in-class cold storage. Go to: https://river.com/rubinreport 1775 Coffee - Their new Protein Creamer is a game-changer. With 10 grams of whey protein per serving. Rubin Report viewers get 15% off their order. Go to: https://1775coffee.com/RUBIN and use code RUBIN Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices