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NBL24 is boiling over already with Aron Baynes receiving a 5 game ban for his halftime altercation with Adam Forde during the Sunshine Stoush last week, another budding young superstar blooms in Adelaide's first win of the year, United look stronger than ever along with the Kings and both teams still have big names to join their line-up. Will DJ Vasiljevic sign with the 36ers to improve their standing in NBL24? Based in Melbourne, Australia the lads pull no punches in delivering the most humorous, ill-conceived and original takes on basketball! Get your sicko baller mates together, pop the lid on a cool Ice Break after the game and listen to Rodney E, Mat and Frank aka The Oracle launch lyrically from 30 feet away about the 23-24 NBA/NBL Season nailing every dumb-hot take as they go. It's Garbage Time Basketball ya dig? CONTACT EMAIL: garbagetimepodcast@protonmail.com RSS FEED: https://feed.podbean.com/garbagetimepodcast/feed.xml
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Would you like to learn firsthand about the power of Love? Trust that Love will deliver the Panacea we all need, especially during the most tragic, challenging moments of our lives! Join Kim Cantin and me on Wednesday, July 19th, from 10 AM - 11 AM CDT U.S. to learn how her Healing Journey amid Tragedy That Gives Rise to Unexpected Wisdom, Affirming Love Transcends Beyond Life from her heart-centered memoir! Kim enjoyed a twenty-year sales and marketing leadership career in medical devices, working for a Fortune 500 company. She met her loving husband, Dave, at Johnson and Johnson, and they started a family with two great kids and their goofy dog. Later, Kim created her successful marketing consulting firm and became a senior marketing director for Teleflex Urology. Where Yellow Flowers Bloom, Kim's first book, chronicles events leading up to the devastating mudslides of January 2018 in Montecito, CA, that took the lives of her husband, Dave, their son Jack, and their dog Chester. Miraculously, Kim and her daughter Lauren survived the catastrophe. The book details Kim's journey of survival—through mourning her husband's death while recreating life for herself and her daughter- to following her intuition and receiving extraordinary support from her community to find Jack's remains. It is full of mysterious and awe-inspiring messages, signs, and synchronicities, proving reality is greater and kinder than we can conceive. Kim desires her story to show others, especially those affected by trauma and grief, the power of determination, resilience, and the importance of looking for positivity when it seems impossible to find at times. She wants to offer hope and inspire others that despite the magnitude of loss and grief, like her, Kim ended up seeing beauty where there should be none. In the end, the Love found a way.
A 30-foot wave of mud and debris crashed down on Kim Cantin's home in 2018, and life changed in an instant. She lost her husband and son, while Kim and her daughter survived. Hear Kim's inspiring story based on her book "Where Yellow Flowers Bloom."
Kim Cantin – Where Yellow Flowers Bloom – A true story of hope through unimaginable loss...with TRE's Hannah Murray
In this fourth episode of The Women Who Inspire Me series, I speak with author Kim Cantin. She wrote a book called Where Yellow Flowers Bloom depicting the tragic story of how her family was forever changed by the devastating Monticeto Mudslide the night of January 9, 2018. Kim's journey since then has required her to learn how to listen to her intuition, trust the process, and believe in Divine timing. Her ability to manage her mind around such a tragic event and then try to help others is so inspiring to me and I know it will be to you too.If you are interested in speaking to Kim yourself or purchasing her book Where Yellow Flowers Bloom, click on the link below. https://kimcantin.com/
This is another depresso song. Yes, it's a depresso song about askin' spirits for help and hopin' the flowers come out again.
A True Story of Hope through Unimaginable Loss Kim Cantin's powerful memoir, Where Yellow Flowers Bloom, is a heartfelt testament of a mother's love and a wife's devotion in the midst of sudden loss and trauma, with an enlightened perspective on mortality. Through her patience, perseverance, and willingness to be open to help and to heal, she confirms love's ability to connect and transcend beyond life. In the dark, at 3:30 am, a thirty-foot wave of mud and debris crashes down on her home – with Kim's family inside. Life changed in an instant. Most devastating, her husband and teenage son have been swept away to their deaths. Miraculously, Kim and her daughter survive the unimaginable. This show and her book is about hope. Despite the magnitude of loss and grief, yellow flowers grow in a place that they shouldn't; this helps Kim see the beauty where there should be none. Indeed, Love found a way. Get the book- Where Yellow Flowers Bloom by Kim Cantin Kim Cantin Find Jane Asher's book The Next Room and books by other MindBodySpirit.fm podcast hosts in the online store Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
OPINION: The heat wilts us, but the flowers bloom | May 5, 2023Subscribe to The Manila Times Channel - https://tmt.ph/YTSubscribe Visit our website at https://www.manilatimes.net Follow us: Facebook - https://tmt.ph/facebook Instagram - https://tmt.ph/instagram Twitter - https://tmt.ph/twitter DailyMotion - https://tmt.ph/dailymotion Subscribe to our Digital Edition - https://tmt.ph/digital Check out our Podcasts: Spotify - https://tmt.ph/spotify Apple Podcasts - https://tmt.ph/applepodcasts Amazon Music - https://tmt.ph/amazonmusic Deezer: https://tmt.ph/deezer Stitcher: https://tmt.ph/stitcherTune In: https://tmt.ph/tunein #TheManilaTimes #OPINION Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
https://kimcantin.com/ WHERE YELLOW FLOWERS BLOOM A True Story of Hope through Unimaginable Loss Cantin's powerful memoir, Where Yellow Flowers Bloom, is a heartfelt testament of a mother's love and a wife's devotion in the midst of sudden loss and trauma, with an enlightened perspective on mortality. Through her patience, perseverance and willingness to be open to help and to heal, she confirms love's ability to connect and transcend beyond life. In the dark, at 3:30 am, a thirty-foot wave of mud and debris crashes down on her home – with Kim's family inside. Life changed in an instant. Most devastating, her husband and teenage son have been swept away to their deaths. Miraculously, Kim and her daughter survive the unimaginable. Where Yellow Flowers Bloom, is the story of a wife and a mother's journey through loss and grief and the redemptive power of love even through death. This book takes you on this mother's fascinating journey to find her missing son as she follows her intuition, and becomes open to spiritual guidance and unmistakable synchronicities. Through tenacity and perseverance against insurmountable odds, Kim affirms that her husband and son are still with her. This book is about hope. Despite the magnitude of loss and grief, yellow flowers grow in a place that they shouldn't; this helps Kim see the beauty where there should be none. Indeed, Love found a way. WHERE YELLOW FLOWERS BLOOM Paperback and Kindle Available on Amazon April 7, 2023 Cantin writes gracefully and honestly about unimaginable loss. Her courage and perseverance to find her son is a testament to her family. Her brave voice will have you grabbing your hankies in this gripping memoir. Leslie Zemeckis actress, filmmaker, and author of ``Feuding Fan Dancers, Goddess of Love Incarnate``, and ``Behind the Burly Q`` Where Yellow Flowers Bloom is more than a portrait of a family disaster. It's a riveting account of surviving personal achievement, love, and perseverance that carries a mother and daughter into a new life where kindness becomes intrinsically entwined with survival. D. Donovan Sr. Reviewer, Midwest Book Review CLICK HERE FOR MORE TESTIMONIALS! This telling of unimaginable loss is captivating and inspiring. Cantin relates her experiences in a clear and vulnerable style, never presenting herself as a victim; she participates in healing activities even as she continues searching for her son. Blue Ink Review Kim CantinKim Cantin Kim Cantin enjoyed a twenty-year career in sales and marketing leadership in medical devices working for a Fortune 500 company. She met her loving husband Dave at Johnson and Johnson, and they started a family with two great kids and their goofy dog. Later Kim created her own successful marketing consulting firm and eventually worked as a senior director of marketing for Teleflex Urology. After the devastating mudslides of January 2018 and surviving the experience, she felt compelled to write her first book, Where Yellow Flowers Bloom, with the hope that it will help and inspire others. She is still an active member of the Santa Barbara community. When she isn't spending time with her daughter, friends, or family, she is with her two pups.
Dee and Carol talked about stock, asparagus, sunflowers, a new flower book, and what's going on in Dee's garden after the fires in Oklahoma.Check out our Substack newsletter for more info about this week's episode and subscribe to get it directly in your email inbox!A few links: Carol's latest blog post about weeding. Dee's article in Oklahoma Living about how it's hard to garden in Oklahoma.Dee's Instagram post with more info about the fires and her garden.Flowers: Info on stocks from Missouri Botanical Garden. Veggies: Info about growing asparagus on Renee's Gardens websiteMore asparagus history and growing info in The Seed Dectective, by Adam Alexander. (Amazon link) (last week's book) and The Chef's Garden, by Farmer Lee Jones (Amazon link)On the Bookshelf: The Story of Flowers and how they change the way we live by Noel Kingsbury. (Amazon link)Our Dirt:Sunflower Steve Rabbit holes:The Creative Cove on YouTubeOur Affiliates:Botanical InterestsFarmers DefenseEtsyTerritorial SeedsTrue Leaf Market Eden BrosBook and Amazon links are also affiliate links.Email us anytime at TheGardenangelists@gmail.com For more info on Carol visit her website. Visit her blog May Dreams Gardens. For more info on Dee, visit her website. Visit her blog Red Dirt Ramblings.Support the showOn Instagram: Carol: Indygardener, Dee: RedDirtRamblings, Our podcast: TheGardenangelists.On Facebook: The Gardenangelists' Garden Club.On YouTube.
News Connect(ニュースコネクト)あなたと経済をつなぐ5分間 1日1つ、5分間で、国際政治や海外のビジネスシーンを中心に、世界のメガトレンドがわかる重要ニュースを解説。朝の支度や散歩、通勤、家事の時間などにお聴きいただけるとうれしいです。 ▼出演: 新井里菜(Podcast ディレクター) https://twitter.com/RinaAraiLevia ▼支援プログラム「Chronicleサポーター」については、こちらをご参照ください。 https://chronicle-inc.net/support/ https://note.com/t_nomura/n/n43e514e703b4 ▼参考ニュース: Meta lay-offs: Facebook owner to cut 10,000 staff(BBC) https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-64954124 Update on Meta's Year of Efficiency(Meta) https://about.fb.com/news/2023/03/mark-zuckerberg-meta-year-of-efficiency/ OpenAI Plans to Up the Ante in Tech's A.I. Race(NYT) https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/14/technology/openai-gpt4-chatgpt.html ‘Let 1,000 Flowers Bloom': A.I. Funding Frenzy Escalates(NYT) https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/14/technology/ai-funding-boom.html ▼Podcast Studio Chronicle公式サイト https://chronicle-inc.net/
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*** Please See New Album Information: 23rd selection album *** #3332: Jan. 28, 2023: During summer new flowers bloom one after another each day (this title is from "A guidebook to Japan and its Cuspoms") Today's pure primal piano music here. Happy if this music makes you feel peaceful.. : ) Looking for absolute natural beauty every day for Piano Ten Thousand Leaves. Target number is 4536 and 3332(73.5%) achieved today. Find my project.. : ) This piece may might have good 1/f fluctuation characteristic although I stopped investigating it each piece. ######## NEW 23rd SELECTION ALBUM JUST RELEASED ######## "Golden Light" - the 23rd selection album of piano ten thousand leaves Youtube: Full(20 songs, 50 minutes) and Free 4K Video with Super Beautiful Motion Graphics of Artgrid https://youtu.be/3Gc813k8eec Youtube: Digest of "Golden Light" music video. 12 minutes in 4K https://youtu.be/GB7oBTB0yOo spotify https://open.spotify.com/album/6kJ3Xoy0jSjx1AmUNyKu6T apple music https://music.apple.com/jp/album/golden-light-piano-ten-thousand-leaves-volume-23/1662304120 amazon music https://www.amazon.com/music/player/albums/B0BRJ258Z7?&_encoding=UTF8&tag=tcjaz-22&linkCode=ur2&camp=247&creative=1211 Line Music https://music.line.me/webapp/album/mb0000000002b2e80a AWA https://s.awa.fm/album/948948aecf74cfc9ee19 Other Every music streaming services in the world https://linkco.re/QebcGtzF?lang=en
Again in today's first reading from the prophet Isaiah we have a very striking image for Israel -- a desert -- which evokes aridity, barrenness, and death. Yet. The prophet tells us that the desert will be filled with an abundance of flowers. Of course, he does not mean that a desert will literally bloom, but that the "desert" of Israel, which at this point in its history seem lifeless and fruitless will not always be so but will again produce fruit, in Jesus. The same thing happens to the "desert" of our heart when Jesus comes -- flowers begin to bloom there. Let's pray and wait for this during Advent!
Date: October 19, 2022Name of podcast: Backstage Pass RadioEpisode title and number: S3: E13: Kirstie Kraus - Flowers Bloom Where They Are PlantedArtist Bio -She's thirsty for love and magic, for joy and sunshine. She's thirsty for compassion and authenticity. And more than anything, she's thirsty for anything that sets her soul on fire.Kirstie Kraus carries her thirst in her songwriting, in her live shows, and in her everyday connection with other kindred spirits. Nowhere is her appetite more quenched than on a stage in front of her fans, appropriately named “Thirsties”. Her confidence naturally shines under the bright lights, taking concertgoers on a well-defined path of self-discovery and bliss. Her writing infuses her own transparent journey with others' experiences to create sustainable lyrics and catchy melodies.The result is a perfect blend of country, funk, blues, and rock because, with Kirstie, there are no boundaries. There's only the process of “letting go” and letting the song tell you what it wants to be. It will also tell you WHERE it wants to be and for an intuitive deep thinker like Kirstie, that place is Nashville. Three years ago, the Wisconsin native made the move to Music City and having heavily toured the summer before with her Midwest band, Thirsty Jones, Kirstie made the decision to really focus on honing her craft in town. She immediately began demoing out songs for her upcoming full-length record and playing established Nashville venues, like the Listening Room Café and the Bluebird. She also leaned into the production side of her album, gaining great insight from her then producer about arrangements, vocal styling, and mixing. Her first Nashville based single, “Delusional” (2018) fancies a sassy 80s funk groove while 2019's “Gotta Do” pulls in early 2000s Shania vibes. “Silver”, her July 2020 release, possesses the licks of Joan Jett and attitude of Avril Lavigne, proving that she's not a one lane roadmap.Sponsor Link:WWW.ECOTRIC.COMBackstage Pass Radio Social Media Handles:Facebook - @backstagepassradiopodcast @randyhulseymusicInstagram - @Backstagepassradio @randyhulseymusicTwitter - @backstagepassPC @rhulseymusicWebsite - backstagepassradio.com and randyhulsey.comArtist Media Handles:Website - www.kirstiekraus.comInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/kirstiekrausFacebook - https://www.facebook.com/kirstiekrausTwitter - https://twitter.com/kirstiekrausCall to actionWe ask our listeners to like, share, and subscribe to the show and the artist's social media pages. This enables us to continue pushing great content to the consumer. Thank you for being a part of Backstage Pass RadioYour Host,Randy Hulsey
In this episode Abi talks with Peter Seibel. Peter previously was the Director of Engineering for the Democratic National Committee, and before that led Twitter's Engineering Effectiveness (EE) team. In this interview, Peter reflects on his experience at Twitter, sharing why it's better to invest in EE early and his vision for how EE teams can fulfill their potential. Useful links: Follow Peter on Twitter and LinkedIn Read Peter's post about leading Engineering Effectiveness at Twitter: Let a 1,000 Flowers Bloom. Then Rip 999 of Them Out by the Roots
Why do flowers bloom? How do flowers grow? Why are flowers different colors? Why do people find flowers beautiful? How are seeds made? Why do plants grow from seeds? Why do we put seeds in the garden? We're answering your questions about seeds and flowers with garden writer Charlie Nardozzi and Hannes Dempewolf from The Crop Trust. Find more answers to plant questions in two of our older episodes: How Do Big Plants Grow From Such Small Seeds? and Are Seeds Alive? Download our learning guides: PDF | Google Slide | Transcript New seeds are made through pollination, plant reproduction. Pollen makes its way to the ovary of a flower in various ways. Sometimes it is spread from one flower to another by a pollinator, like a bee or hummingbird. Some flowers are called “perfect”, meaning they can reproduce with their own pollen–not the pollen from another plant. But they still need a way for their own pollen to drop onto their egg. A gentle gust of wind, or the jostling of the plant by a gardener's hand can do the trick. The flower will create the seed and then the flower structure will fade, leaving behind a seed. Sometimes it's in a pod, sometimes it's in a fruit or other structure to protect it. Seeds are alive, but dormant. They contain all the nutrients needed to make a new plant. That seed will wait for the right conditions to germinate and create a new plant. Some seeds only need a little moisture to germinate, others need to be submerged in water. There are many different kinds of seeds and they have different necessary conditions. Flowers can be many different colors. They use those colors to attract pollinators. Those colors are created by pigments, natural colorings, in the plants. Some plants only flower once per year, others can bloom multiple times. Some plants flower in spring, others in summer, and some in fall. There is a lot of diversity in plants and the way they reproduce. That benefits all of us because if some plants aren't thriving in certain conditions, other plants may do better. Resources Seed sprouting experiment Window gardening for kids Webinar: Gardening with Kids
In this episode we are talking about focus, discipline, and the respect and value we have for our unique own journey in achieving our vision. Short term plans, horse blinders, coffee, and elevator rides to the penthouse, and blooming in your time! Tune in to listen to our thoughts!
The Flowers are blooming in Minnesota ladies and gents. We'll talk about Marc-Andre Fleury's debut and circle back on the goalie debate one last time. Speaking of newbies, Tyson Jost joins us to talk about joining the Minnesota Wild and answers your fan questions.Presented by SotaStick (https://sotastickco.com/), Brought to you by Jim Beam (https://www.jimbeam.com/), Bettor Edge (https://www.bettoredge.com/ - Promo Code “BEAUTS” for $10 FREE).
The Flowers are blooming in Minnesota ladies and gents. We'll talk about Marc-Andre Fleury's debut and circle back on the goalie debate one last time. Speaking of newbies, Tyson Jost joins us to talk about joining the Minnesota Wild and answers your fan questions. As always, we're created by new voice studios, presented by SotaStick, brought to you by Jim Beam and BettorEdge this is Season 3, episode 118.
Van Badham and Ben Davison dive head first into the big political stories of the week. Morrison makes an apology for bullying and harassment in parliament but prioritises a bill allowing the bullying of trans children over laws that would give people escaping family violence paid leave, make sexual harassment a workplace health and safety issue and would mean 200,000 women who aren't paid super got super on every dollar they earned. The Australian Union Movement "We Won't Wait" Campaign continues to press on getting real action on these issues, you can join at australianunions.org.au/wow Grace Tame and Brittany Higgins appeared at the National Press Club today and outlined their concerns with the Morrison government's inaction on violence against women and put forward three priorities for how we can move forward on these issues. Van and Ben look at the religious discrimination bill and break down the parliamentary parlour games that are now being played in place of making real reforms on issues impacting people while talking through some of the hurt that is being caused. Morrison has come to the defence of his aged care minister after it was revealed he didn't attend senate hearings about the COVID19 response. The Australian defence force has finally been called into assist the sector which has seen 500 deaths in the time between the unions and providers calling for help and the Morrison government providing support. QAnon and anti-vax protests in Canberra are getting support from Morrison Senators and MP's as they call for Morrison to face a gallows and get signed into parliament by former Liberal and current Palmer pupper Craig Kelly. And the good news is a million sunflowers are blooming! Plus we are doing a Fabian's event, Van is discussing her book "QAnon and On" and we give shout outs to our supporters, which you can also find here https://www.buymeacoffee.com/WeekOnWednesday
What you'll learn in this episode: Why the most important thing a jewelry designer can invest in is high-quality photography How Amy finds the topics she writes about for JCK's “All That Glitters” blog How designers can find the story that helps them break through the crowded marketplace Who today's most exciting emerging and independent designers are How the jewelry industry changed during the pandemic, and what retailers must do to engage young consumers About Amy Elliott Amy Elliott is a writer, editor and brand storyteller who specializes in fine jewelry and fashion, and is fluent in other lifestyle categories, including food, weddings and travel. As a former staff editor at The Knot, Bridal Guide, Brides Local Magazines + Brides.com and Lucky, Amy is known for delivering high-quality editorial content across a variety of print and digital media. After recently serving as the Engagement Rings Expert for About.com, Amy joined the freelance staff of JCK as its All That Glitters columnist, while contributing articles about jewelry trends, estate and antique jewelry and gemstones to its prestigious print magazine. Amy also serves as the Fine Jewelry Expert for The Bridal Council, an industry organization composed of luxury bridal designers, retailers and media, and her byline has appeared in Gotham, Hamptons, DuJour, Martha Stewart Weddings, GoodHousekeeping.com and more. Additional Resources: Amy's Website Amy's Twitter Amy's Instagram JCK Article: Cicadas Swarm on Sienna Patti Gallery in Lenox, Mass. JCK Article: Christopher Thompson Royds' Flowers Bloom at Sienna Patti Gallery JCK Article: Look What Happens When Annoushka Gives Peridot A Go Examples of posts that reflect the intersection of jewelry with history, culture and current events: Bob Goodman Wants Jewelers To Join Him in Disrupting the Status Quo: https://www.jckonline.com/editorial-article/bob-goodman-jewelers-disrupting/ The Ten Thousand Things x Met Museum Collaboration Is Coming In Hot: https://www.jckonline.com/editorial-article/ten-thousand-things-x-met-museum/ Go “Sea” Some Serious Silver Treasures At Mystic Seaport Museum: https://www.jckonline.com/editorial-article/sea-as-muse-silver-seaport-museum/ New Jewelry From Rafka Koblence, Olympic Wrestler Turned Designer: https://www.jckonline.com/editorial-article/new-jewelry-from-rafka-koblence/ Transcript: As author of the “All That Glitters” blog for JCK, Amy Elliott has a front row seat to the jewelry industry's up-and-coming trends and designers. She's also been lucky enough to work with some of these designers, helping them refine their brands and create stories that resonate with customers. She joined the Jewelry Journey Podcast to talk about what designers and retailers should do to stay relevant with younger consumers, how art jewelry has influenced high jewelry, and what jewelry trends to watch out for in the coming months. Read the episode transcript here. Sharon: When you say you like strong, new collections, what catches your eye when somebody's presenting a new collection to you or sends you a press kit or email? Amy: Every time I'm ever interviewed for something, I always say this, but photos are so important, beautiful, beautiful photos. Whatever budget you have, use it for the photography. I love glamorous jewelry. I love high jewelry. I love glamor, big, bold, extremely extravagant jewels; from an editorial standpoint, I love them. I love to excite the senses with beautiful jewelry that makes you stop in your tracks. So, the jewels have to be beautiful, and you need to have beautiful photos to accurately portray that. It's just a strong point of view. Boucheron came to me, and they have a whole series inspired by a cat that belonged to the Maison Boucheron early on in their life. His name is Vladimir, and it's a whole collection that takes this Persian cat with his swept fur. There's a story there; there's a heritage story. I love that. I love to take a new collection and look back at how it came to be. I love figuring out what a designer's signature is, whether they're well-established or they're just coming out. Every once in a while you'll find a newcomer with a strong point of view and you're like, “I've never seen this before. I'm so excited to tell that story.” Sharon: I think it's so important to say or to reiterate that for everybody, no matter what kind of jewelry you're selling, whether it's fine jewelry or antique jewelry. I'm thinking of some of the tradeshows when I've talked to dealers and they're like, “Oh, I don't have the money for photos.” Amy: I don't know what to say. I've been saying it for 20 years and it's still a problem. There are some designers that are really overexposed and there are some that are underexposed. I'm always excited to discover somebody I'm not following on Instagram. How exciting! A lot of times, they're international. I'm connected with a PR firm in Paris right now. They've been calling me a lot, and it's a goldmine of designers that don't get featured a lot over here. I think I'm the only editor at JCK that covers estate and antique jewelry. I'm always covering auctions and exhibitions in that vein and all of the art fairs. I've written about Sienna Patti up in the Berkshires several times. It really is a pleasure, and anything goes. I have an action-packed calendar for the holidays. Sharon: It sounds like it, yes. Sienna Patti, I know she's in the western part of Massachusetts. Amy: Yes, she's in the Berkshires. Sharon: She has an art jewelry gallery I'd love to get to someday. How does art jewelry fit in here? Does it catch your eye if the right photos are sent to you? Do you see it taking more of the market or having a higher profile? Amy: It's interesting. The one thing I will say, and it's so hard to speak in terms of trends when you're dealing with very expensive, high-end, collectible jewelry, but what I have noticed a little bit of is the selling of sweet sets, something that might be convertible, a multipiece set. Christopher Thompson Royds does that. You get a beautiful box, and then it's an earring that can be worn three or four different ways. Annoushka did a collaboration with Fuli Gemstones. Beautiful, bright green peridot like you've never seen. It was not really a collection; it was an eight-piece set. That is what the customer is being asked to buy into, and that feels very collector, very connoisseur, a very specific kind of angle. It's a very specific customer that is going to want to invest in jewelry that can be worn but is presented as an art object or sculpture or something to display in your home as sculpture, but then you can take it out and wear it. I see that as a direction with very, very high-end jewelry that's being shown in galleries, this notion of buying a boxed set. Sharon: When you said sweet sets, I was thinking edible sweets. That's interesting. Amy: Sets of jewels. Sharon: There's an idea. Tell us who the emerging, independent designers are today. Who should we keep our eye on? Who's overlooked? Who's being so creative, knocking it out of the park, but you don't hear talked about? Who's collectible? Amy: I know this is a very informed and qualified audience, Sharon, so I'm sure these names are going to be familiar to many in your audience, but I think the industry has collectively embraced the work of Harwell Godfrey. Sharon: Now, that's one I don't know. Amy: Lauren Harwell, I think she's based in LA, and she has a strong point of view. It's beautiful inlaid jewels, weighty, substantial, geometric, absolutely a strong point of view, Sharon. Sharon: I see her on Instagram a lot. Amy: Yes, Harwell Godfrey is probably one of the strongest voices to emerge in the pandemic era. Before that it was Anna Courey, absolutely with her diamond ear cuffs. I think she set us on a course with that. Glenn Spiro is an under-the-radar but highly, highly couture jeweler. There's a book out from Assouline on him that Jill Newman wrote. I think his name is going to become more well-known among collectors. He's a private jeweler based in London, I believe, and I think we're going to be hearing more about that. Anytime there's a book or an auction, the names are elevated; the names are surfaced and get a little more traction, so I definitely would be watching Glenn Spiro. Nikos Koulis has been around for the last three or four years. He's Greek, and it's sort of neo-Art Deco, very geometric, very strong uses of color, edgy, really modern. Bea Bongiasca with her enamel and ceramic pieces— Sharon: How do you say that? Is she here? Amy: Bea. I think she's based in London but is Italian. She works at Central St. Martin's. Alice Cicolini, also British, does extremely beautiful work with enamel. I think her work is going to be really collectable in the coming years. I think she has a strong point of view. Sharon: Can I interrupt? What does that mean, a strong point of view? What does that mean to you? Amy: It means singular and inimitable. Sharon: You know it's her when you see the piece of work. Amy: Yes. It's very singular and striking and absolutely inimitable. There's a lot of borrowing of ideas that goes on in the jewelry industry. I think the people I'm mentioning here, their voices present themselves to me as something unique. You can't replicate it; you're not going to see that show up in some form on Amazon. Maggi Simpkins, we all fell in love with her in the Brilliant and Black exhibit at Sotheby's. She did the most beautiful pink diamond ring. Everything is centered in these fan-like, feathered cocoons of gems. It's very feminine and lavish and beautiful. So, Maggi Simpkins is someone, and then Studio Renn. My editor at JCK, Victoria Gomelsky, writes for the New York Times and she did a piece on them. She really has seen everything. They are part of an exhibit that is now ongoing at Phillips that Vivienne Becker curated. I think Studio Renn is a newcomer that is going to be sticking around for a while. Finally, there's Fabio Salini, who's also part of the Vivienne Becker capsule at Phillips. Those are just a few. It changes all the time, but the pandemic era has brought incredible work from the designers in our industry, and they are just now hitting their stride. After all that time creating and dreaming and ruminating, refining their voices, cultivating their Instagram audiences, getting feedback from buyers—now they're out there in the world and ready to be embraced. Sharon: What about pre-pandemic? Everybody's at home in their living room thinking and designing, so I could understand why it's emerging right now, but what about pre-pandemic? Do you see a big difference? Amy: Yes, the industry has modernized considerably since the before times. The biggest difference is that a mom-and-pop jeweler in the middle of country who had a website but never updated it, they've gone in there, hired a firm, hired a chat bot, completely modernized. The pandemic era forced the industry to fast-track into the digital age. That is a huge, huge difference, making it so you are available to your customers, wherever they may be, whether that's texting or someone dedicated to Instagram inquiries. A lot of this is being done on Instagram now, and that was not true in January 2020. Since jewelry emerged as a category that is a portable asset, it's not a flash in the plan; it has staying power. It's not like buying a trendy handbag, but using your discretionary income to buy jewelry became a thing and was embraced a lot of people during the pandemic as they were sparkle scrolling, as they call it, on their phones. Sharon: I haven't heard that term. Amy: A lot of people used the time to upgrade their engagement rings and wedding bands, so the bridal industry saw a huge boost. The jewelry industry is really healthy right now, I think, in terms of sales, but what I have noticed is not everybody has a wedding band. Not everyone has a budget to upgrade to a big, giant, 20-carat eternity band, so I'm noticing a lot of brands creating price points under $1,500. They're creating little capsules, creating diffusion lines, if you will, so a customer with modest means can have that same meaningful purchase, that same, “I'm investing and treating myself to something that will last, my first diamond bracelet or my first diamond pendant.” I'm seeing more of those opportunities at the retail level. Sharon: That's interesting. In terms of the emerging designers you've mentioned, is this trickling down to the rest of us who don't have $15,000 to go out and buy a trinket tomorrow? Amy: There's definitely a spectrum. I think estate jewelry in general is so hot, and there are a gazillion ladies on Instagram. They're moving delicate, little gold charms for $200 a pop. There's so much. I hate the term low-hanging fruit, but there is so much attainable luxury out there at the regular-person level. If you're the type to spend $200 on a bunch of drinks on a Saturday night, you can easily do that and buy yourself a beautiful paper clip chain estate piece on someone's Instagram feed. Also, even further than the art jewelry investment piece, there's a run on pink diamonds, practically, and yellow diamonds were a big story coming out of JCK. That color, yellow, that bright, hopeful, joyful feeling that yellow presents, suppliers and manufacturers—cases were filled with yellow diamond engagement rings. A lot of people are talking about a potential uptick in yellow diamond engagement ring sales, both from the rarity of the investment angle and from the pure joy of it, the feeling that it gives. Also, there's this idea that today's young woman getting engaged doesn't want anything to do with what her mother had. Any ring that remoted resembles that chunky, big, platinum, three-stone diamond ring from 1990, she wants something completely new and different feeling, and yellow diamonds fulfill that. They check that box. I have heard from some of my diamond tiara friends that people are buying very high-end and special loose, fancy-colored diamonds from an investment standpoint because it's a portable asset and they are decreasing in supply. Like I said, there's a whole spectrum of possibilities. Sharon: It's interesting you mention that diamonds are not so much in demand for young women getting engaged or getting married today. Sometimes I look at my diamond wedding ring, which is actually an upgrade from my first one, and I look at it and go, “This looks really dated.” What are you seeing in terms of what's more contemporary or modern? Amy: Here's what everyone's doing. Everyone is taking their old jewelry and up-cycling it, whether their old engagement ring, in your case, or they're taking their grandmother's engagement ring that was given to them and creating a whole new design and style. Heirloom stones are recast as something new and wearable. It could be an engagement ring; they could be breaking apart a clustered diamond pin and creating a “diamonds by the yard” style necklace. That is a huge trend right now because it also covers sustainability. You have this precious item in your possession, but it just isn't your style. You have the materials to work with a designer to make it something new you can wear and enjoy. I feel like every independent designer I speak with nowadays has taken on commissions along those lines. Entire businesses are being built around that very concept of reimagining old jewelry. Sharon: What about non-diamond wedding rings or engagement rings? Are other stones being used besides yellow diamonds? Amy: I think we can anticipate a sapphire—I hate to say a sapphire boom because jewelry is slow and static, but blue sapphires. The Crown season four, I think, came out last winter, and it centered around Diana. There's a whole generation of young women out there that were not clued into that story, and that blue sapphire engagement ring from Garrard was back in the spotlight again, even though Kate Middleton wears it as hers now. Anyway, there's a whole generation of consumers for whom Diana's blue sapphire ring was not on their radar. Then there is a movie coming out with Kristen Stewart in the starring role called “Spencer” that will center on Diana. I think that's going to put the blue sapphire engagement ring on people's radar again. Honestly, any time the royals or once-were royals are in the news—and they are—it definitely trickles down into consumer appetite. Sharon: Amy, you've seen a lot from both sides of the desk. You've seen the big people; you've talked to people on the business side; you've talked to the designing side, the creative side, and I know you've written several books and things like that. If you had to distill it down into one book or a couple of paragraphs, what would you say are the main challenges? How would you advise people like this? Amy: I love to give advice. I'm solicited in other ways. To retailers, I would say listen to your customers and tune into the social climate. The customers are giving you information you need every time they set foot in your store. Ask them what they like, what they're into. There's an adversarial relationship, almost, between the younger consumers of today and the old-school jewelry retailer, and change is necessary. Try to learn and understand them. If they want a salt and pepper diamond ring and you think it's ugly, that's fine, but you still have to find it for them if you want to retain them as a customer. I think a willingness to change is vital; a willingness to modernize is vital on the part of the retailer. Diversity and inclusion and social justice is very important to the majority of young consumers. You can look at what Zales and Kay Jewelers and these mainstream guys are doing for clues; the same with Tiffany. You can look at what they're doing. That's all informed by serious market research that is telling them that today's younger consumer prioritizes diversity and inclusion, and they're watching companies to see if what they're doing aligns with their values. I'm certainly not the first person to say that, but it is critical; it's essential. To designers, I would say please use whatever discretionary funds you have, again, towards shooting your jewelry with a professional photographer. That is the most important thing. Don't worry about a campaign. Don't worry about hiring models. Literally just still-life photos and giant, big files are what you should be spending your money on. Stay true to your signature and try to be as authentic as possible, but also take advice. Just don't design in a vacuum. Look at what's out in the world and try to see where your point of view fits in. The market is saturated with a lot of same old, same old. How can you break through that? How can you break through the basic and come at it in a different way? It could be as simple as everybody knows alphabet charms are popular and wonderful and a new jewelry wardrobe essential, so what's your thought going to look like? How's your thought going to reflect who you are? What does the alphabet charm reflect for you, and what's the story? Did you see it on a poster for a 1960s Grateful Dead show? Did you go to an exhibit and see an illuminated manuscript? There are so many ways, I think, to get inspired and find your voice. Sharon: That's great. That's very good advice for both sides of the desk. Amy, thank you so much for being here today. Amy: Thank you, Sharon, it's a pleasure. I'm always happy to talk about jewelry and give my opinions. Thank you again for listening. Please leave us a rating and review so we can help others start their own jewelry journey.
What you'll learn in this episode: Why the most important thing a jewelry designer can invest in is high-quality photography How Amy finds the topics she writes about for JCK's “All That Glitters” blog How designers can find the story that helps them break through the crowded marketplace Who today's most exciting emerging and independent designers are How the jewelry industry changed during the pandemic, and what retailers must do to engage young consumers About Amy Elliott Amy Elliott is a writer, editor and brand storyteller who specializes in fine jewelry and fashion, and is fluent in other lifestyle categories, including food, weddings and travel. As a former staff editor at The Knot, Bridal Guide, Brides Local Magazines + Brides.com and Lucky, Amy is known for delivering high-quality editorial content across a variety of print and digital media. After recently serving as the Engagement Rings Expert for About.com, Amy joined the freelance staff of JCK as its All That Glitters columnist, while contributing articles about jewelry trends, estate and antique jewelry and gemstones to its prestigious print magazine. Amy also serves as the Fine Jewelry Expert for The Bridal Council, an industry organization composed of luxury bridal designers, retailers and media, and her byline has appeared in Gotham, Hamptons, DuJour, Martha Stewart Weddings, GoodHousekeeping.com and more. Additional Resources: Amy's Website Amy's Twitter Amy's Instagram JCK Article: Cicadas Swarm on Sienna Patti Gallery in Lenox, Mass. JCK Article: Christopher Thompson Royds' Flowers Bloom at Sienna Patti Gallery JCK Article: Look What Happens When Annoushka Gives Peridot A Go Examples of posts that reflect the intersection of jewelry with history, culture and current events: Bob Goodman Wants Jewelers To Join Him in Disrupting the Status Quo: https://www.jckonline.com/editorial-article/bob-goodman-jewelers-disrupting/ The Ten Thousand Things x Met Museum Collaboration Is Coming In Hot: https://www.jckonline.com/editorial-article/ten-thousand-things-x-met-museum/ Go “Sea” Some Serious Silver Treasures At Mystic Seaport Museum: https://www.jckonline.com/editorial-article/sea-as-muse-silver-seaport-museum/ New Jewelry From Rafka Koblence, Olympic Wrestler Turned Designer: https://www.jckonline.com/editorial-article/new-jewelry-from-rafka-koblence/ Transcript: As author of the “All That Glitters” blog for JCK, Amy Elliott has a front row seat to the jewelry industry's up-and-coming trends and designers. She's also been lucky enough to work with some of these designers, helping them refine their brands and create stories that resonate with customers. She joined the Jewelry Journey Podcast to talk about what designers and retailers should do to stay relevant with younger consumers, how art jewelry has influenced high jewelry, and what jewelry trends to watch out for in the coming months. Read the episode transcript here. Sharon: Hello, everyone. Welcome to the Jewelry Journey Podcast. Today, our guest is Amy Elliott, founder of Amy Elliott Creative. She is a writer, editor and thought leader who specializes in fine jewelry and fashion which makes most of us envious. That's a great profession. She is a contributing editor to the industry publication we all know, JCK, and writes the blog “All That Glitters.” We will hear all about her jewelry journey today. Amy, welcome to the program Amy: Thank you very much for having me, Sharon. It's a pleasure to be here. Sharon: So glad to have you. I'm always envious of people who are writing about jewelry or makers and designers. That's fabulous. I have no talent in that area, so when I hear about people writing, I think, “Wow, it's great.” Tell us all about your jewelry journey. Amy: My jewelry journey is a mix of personal and professional. I'm an avid collector of jewelry. My mother is a big collector of jewelry, so from age 12 on, jewelry was always a part of my life and something that I gravitated to. As a professional, jewelry has been central to my career as a journalist and a writer since the very beginning, starting at The Knot in 1999. Sharon: The Knot being the bridal publication. Amy: Yes. At that time, it was just a website. I was there when they moved into magazines. I helped coordinate the gowns and accessories for fashion shoots and got a taste of engagement rings and diamonds, the 4Cs. That was my first introduction to jewelry on a professional level. Then I took a job at Bridal Guide Magazine, which is a leading print publication still around, privately owned. I was a senior editor there. I had many duties, but one of them was to produce a jewelry column, and that is when my education in jewelry really began. I began forming connections within the industry to educate myself on the 4Cs, pearl buying, colored gemstones. I've always been drawn to color, so that's when I became a student, if you will, of gems and jewelry and how jewelry fits into conversations about fashion trends and cultural and social current events. That was when I really got into jewelry as a métier. I was one of the founding editors of Brides local magazines, which was a Condé Nast publication of regional wedding magazines that no longer exists. Because we were short on staff, I would call in all the jewelry for our cover shoots. Even though I had a leadership role there—I was the executive editor—I also made it part of my job to call in jewels for art cover shoots. I kept that connection, and then on the side I would freelance for luxury publications. It became the thing that I liked to do the best. I loved the people in the industry. I would always learn something. No matter what I was doing or writing about, I would learn something new, and that's still true to this day. There's always something for me to learn. I discovered that jewelry is the perfect combination of earth science, history, culture, and straight-up beauty and aesthetics. It's a very gratifying topic to cover. I love the way it intersects with current events and with, as I mentioned, the fashion conversations at large. Sharon: When you went to Vassar, did you study writing? They're not known for their metalsmithing program, so did you study writing with the idea “I just want to write”? Amy: Pretty much. I was always pretty good at writing and facility with language, so I went there knowing I'd be an English major. For my thesis I wrote a creative writing thesis; it was like a little novella. I've always had a love affair with words and expression of thoughts, and I loved reading, so I knew I would do something that had to do with words and writing. I actually graduated thinking I would be a romance novelist. That was what I thought I would do. Then, of course, I started out in book publishing, and I found it really, really slow and boring, just painfully slow, and I decided perhaps that wasn't for me. Then I took a job in public relations. I really loved the marketing aspect of it and the creativity involved. Of course, it involved a lot of writing. Eventually I decided I wanted to be on the editorial side of things once and for all. I had always written for the high school newspaper. I had done an internship at Metropolitan Home Magazine in the design department in college, so magazines were always lurking there and were always the main goal. I ended up there; it just took a couple of years for me to get there. Once I did, I knew I wanted to work for a women's magazine. I love things that would fall under the heading of a women's magazine, relationships, fashion. The wedding magazines I worked at were a great fit for me because it's pure romance and fantasy and big, beautiful ball gowns and fancy parties. It was a good fit for me, and I was able to take that and home in on jewelry as a particular focus elsewhere in my career after those first years. I will say Vassar is known for its art history program. I was not a star art history pupil by any means, but I took many classes there. I find myself leaning on those skills the most as a jewelry writer, looking closely at an object, peeling back the layers and trying to understand what the artist or jeweler is trying to say through jewelry, much like you would with a painting from the Renaissance. So, I am grateful for that tutelage because I found myself drawing on it often, even though I was definitely a B- student in art history. Sharon: It seems to me if you're not going to be a maker, if you're not going to be a metalsmith or a goldsmith or if you're not going to be selling behind the counter, it seems like art history is a fabulous foundation for jewelry in terms of the skills you draw on. Amy: Absolutely. Historical narratives and every historical event that's going on in the world can be—you can look at jewelry from the past and tie it into something that was going on, whether it was the discovery of platinum or the discovery of diamonds in South Africa. It all intersects so beautifully. Vassar taught me to think critically; it taught me how to express myself, to develop a style of writing that I think is still present in my writing today. I always try to get a little lyricism in there. A good liberal arts foundation took me into the world of magazines and eventually digital publishing. I stayed with Condé Nast for a long time. Then I went to Lucky Magazine and was on staff there for a little over a year and a half. I was exposed to fine jewelry on a more fashion level, like the kind cool girls would wear, gold and diamond jewelry that wasn't big jewels by Oscar Heyman. It was a different category, but still within that universe. That was a great education, to look at fine jewelry in a fashion context. They had layoffs in 2012 and I was forced to strike out on my own, but I've been freelance ever since, doing a mix of copywriting for fashion brands and writing for various publications. I've been writing for JCK since 2016. Sharon: Wow! Amy, we want to hear more about that, but just a couple of things. First, thank you to our subscribers. I want to thank everybody who's gotten in contact with me with their suggestions. I love to get them, so please email me at Sharon@ArtsandJewelry.com or DM me @ArtsandJewelry. Also a big shoutout to Kimberly Klosterman, whose jewelry is featured in the exhibit “Simply Brilliant: Jewelry of the 60s and 70s” at the Cincinnati Art Museum. It's on now through February 6. You can listen to our interview with Kimberly on podcast number 133. Now, back to our interview with Amy. Amy, what I like about what you said—you expressed it very well—is the intersection of jewelry with current events and history. I know I always have difficulty explaining to people why I'm interested in jewelry or jewelry history. They think, “Oh, you like big diamonds,” and it's hard to explain how it tells you so much about the period. Amy: Yes, I think acknowledging how global our industry is and learning about different cultures has been so critical to becoming fluent in this world and the gemstones that come from Afghanistan or Ethiopia or Mozambique. Just learning about the sapphires from Sri Lanka—it's so global and all-encompassing. I read the Cartier book, and their story is so fascinating. I am interested particularly in World War II and how that impacted the jewelry industry, how Susan Beltran saved the business of her lover, how the events of World War II Germany impacted Paris and the jewelers there, how the Cartiers would do the birds in the cage and all that stuff. I think you can look at historic jewels and see reflected back at you current events and moments in our history. Sharon: Definitely. I imagine when you look at something, it's not just seeing the jewel, but you're seeing the whole background behind it, how it sits within that context, that nest of history with World War II and platinum. It's an eye into the world. Amy: Even someone like Judith Leiber, who fled Hungary during wartime and became this amazing designer of handbags in New York. So many of the jewelers that are leaders and pillars of our industry came here because of the pogroms in Russia and Eastern Europe. It really does intersect with what was happening in the world. The jewelry industry is a microcosm of all those events, even going to back to the Silk Road and Mesopotamia and the Armenians and the Ottoman Empire. It is a rich tapestry of moments. Historic jewels in particular can give you insight, not just into an artist's vision, but into a moment of time. Sharon: I didn't know that about Judith Leiber; that's interesting. You left Lucky Magazine and opened your own shop. You do a lot of writing and editing. How do the graphics also play into it? Do you art direct? If clients come to you and say, “I need a brochure,” I assume you're doing all the copy and editing, but do they bring you the photos? How does that work? Amy: My background in magazines definitely has given me a pretty robust skillset in terms of working with graphic designers and art directors, conveying ideas and working with them to solve problems. You do emerge with a sense of the visuals, and a taste level is part of it when you're covering fashion and jewelry and things related to style. So yes, I think as a copywriter, one of the things I bring to the table is that I will be able to advise you on the quality of your photos and your look book on the crops, on the model even. Also there's the hierarchy of information; that's definitely a form of direction. It's not very glamorous, but I'm good at understanding how things should be stacked and arranged on a page in terms of hierarchy of messaging. I do have a lot of opinions, I guess, about what looks good and what doesn't. If that feedback is welcome, I'm always happy to share it. Sometimes a client will send me an email for review, and I know they just want to get it out, but I'm like, “No, this is spelled wrong, and the headline should be this, and this needs to go there,” and I'll mock it up on the screen as to where things should go. The best editors and writers, especially when you're dealing with jewelry and fashion and beautiful objects, you have to have a strong sense of the visual. Sharon: I know sometimes clients push back, but I assume they come to you because they want your opinion or they'd do it themselves, right? Amy: Yes. My favorite clients to work with are emerging designers who are just getting out there. They have so many ideas, so many stories to tell, and I help them refine their vision, refine their voice. For many of them, it's the first time they're coming to market, and I can help them present themselves in a professional way that will be compelling to buyers and to media. Sharon: What type of issues are potential clients coming to you for? Is there an overarching—problem might not be the right word—but something you see, a common thread through what they're asking? Amy: There are a number of things. One could be a complicated concept that needs to be explained, something technical like the meteorite that's used in a wedding ring. “We have all this raw material from our supplier. How do we make that customer-facing? How do we make that dense language more lively and easier to digest?” Sometimes it's collection naming. “Here's my collection. Here are the pieces. Can you give them a name? Can you help name this product?” Sometimes it's, “We want to craft a story around this,” and I'm able to come at it with, “I know what the story is here. We've got to shape you to be able to present that story to the world, whether it's a buyer or an editor.” Usually there is some sort of a concept that is involved; it just hasn't been refined and it's not adjustable. They're so focused on the work and the design vocabulary, they need someone to come in and look at it holistically and figure out how they're going to package this as an overarching idea. Sometimes it's as simple as, “I need to write a letter. These are the things I want to get across to buyers or new accounts or an invitation to an event.” I can take these objectives, these imperatives, and spin them into something compelling and customer-facing and fun to read. It's a mix of imaginative work and down-and-dirty, let me take this corporate document and finesse it and make it more lively and more like something a consumer would want to read on a website. Sharon: They must be so appreciative. Their work may be beautiful, but they have to condense it to say what they are trying to express and get that across to somebody who may not know the language, so somebody wants to pick it up and say, “Oh, that's really interesting.” Amy: Storytelling is a big buzzword right now in the industry, but it's so important. The marketplace is so crowded, and it's not enough to be like, “I have a new collection of stacking rings,” or “I've expanded these rings to include a sapphire version.” You have to come up with some sort of a story to draw in an audience, and then you can use that story on all of your touchpoints, from social media to your email blasts to a landing page on your website. There are a host of jewelry professionals out there that can advise in different ways, to help you get into stores, to help you with specific branding, refining your collection from a merchandising standpoint. There are so many professionals out there that specialize in that, but I think what I bring to the table is knowledge of the industry and a facility with language. It's almost like I'm a mouthpiece for the designer or the corporate brand and a conduit to the consumers' headspace. Sharon: It sounds like a real talent in the areas where there are gaps in what a designer and retailer/manufacturer needs. Telling the story may be a buzzword, but it's words, and you have to use the right words. Tell us about the JCK. You write the blog “All That Glitters,” which is very glittery. It's very attractive. Tell us about it. Amy: Thanks. I was JCK's center for style-related content. Obviously, there's no shortage of breaking news and hard business news, because JCK's first and foremost a serious business publication. Sharon: With the jewelry industry. Amy: With the jewelry industry. I've evolved the blog to be—my favorite things to cover are new collections. I like to interview designers about inspirations. I like to show a broad range of photos from the collection. A lot of it is just showing collections that I love. Maybe I've seen them at Fashion Week; maybe I saw them at the JCK shows or at appointments in the city; maybe I saw something on Instagram. I love to cover design collaborations. Those are one of my favorites things to cover: how two minds can come together to create a new product, like when Suzanne Kalan partnered with Jonathan Adler to do a line of trinket trays. I am interested in cultural events. I like to cover museum exhibits. I covered the Beautiful Creatures exhibit at the Natural History Museum. Because I live in Connecticut, I was able to make it up to Mystic Seaport. They have a beautiful collection of silver trophies by all the best makers, from Tiffany to Shreve, Crump & Low and Gorham. I was able to go up there and see that collection. It's a blog about culture. It's a blog about things I love. I've written about TV shows that have to do with jewelry. I like the title “All That Glitters” because it gives me a lot of leeway in terms of what I can cover. I've written about writing instruments. Fabergé did a collaboration with whiskey brands and I wrote about that. I try to leave it open, but if there's a strong, new, exciting collection, especially from a high jewelry brand—I'm going to be writing something on one from David Webb coming up. They just released a new collection called Asheville, inspired by his hometown. I like to do a deep dive into a designer story or to show a new collection. My colleague, Brittany Siminitz, does beautiful curations. Sometimes I'll do curations, meaning a roundup of beautiful products that correspond to an overarching theme. I love to do those, but I am happiest when designers come to me with a new collection and something that people haven't seen before. I particularly love discovering new voices and emerging designers that haven't been featured in the press before, so I can be that first introduction.
Flossie Mcneill shares lessons of life she learned from her grandmother growing up in a small Mississippi village called Eden. She has since retired from serving as Program Administrator for Unshackled, the award-winning radio drama from Pacific Garden Mission in Chicago.
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://davidaolson.wordpress.com/2017/10/13/flowers-bloom-only-for-themselves/
Matt Flowers returns and joins Rick and Mark to talk about CM Punk possibly joining AEW, how Chris Jericho vs. Nick Gage might turn out, and what the best wrestling show on TV is right now. Also, Keith Lee losing twice in a row, what an attitude era might look like today and who would be better than Charlotte as Queen Of The Ring. Enjoy!
Because you have to water yourself, it's not selfish there's no one else --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rose-zee/message
It's time for part 2 of our Spring anime preview! As we are now in the thick of things, another bunch of TV shows present their beautiful rose petals to the general public as they spray us with their pheromones in order to entice us to watch their supple offerings on various streaming platforms. Yes, that is what anime is for: To expand our collective knowledge. Yes, that metaphor was forced (again). Let's move on. Cam and Mike are joined by extra-special guest hosts Teresa and Haley as they embark on yet another long preview journey! Let's get going! #Anime #SpringPreview #Animation #TheWorldEndsWithYou #TokyoRevengers #86 #Higehiro #DontToyWithMeMissNagatoro #MarsRed #Crunchyroll #Funimation --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/renegadepopculture/support
It's time for another anime preview episode! As we are now in the season of Spring, it's time for yet another bunch of anime to come out of the universal vortex and let their flowers bloom, as it were. Yes, that metaphor was forced. Let's move on. Cam and Mike are joined by extra-special guest hosts Teresa and Haley as they embark on a 15-show preview journey! Let's get it started! Support us on Ko-Fi! #Funimation #Crunchyroll #Anime #Animation #Spring #Preview #Fantasy #Sports --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/renegadepopculture/support
「明日香のキッチン・トーク」Episode130は、春の朗読。「花咲じじい」を読んでみたのでお届けします。「花咲じじい」は日本の昔話の中でも有名なお話ですよね。誰もが知っていると思いますが、そのストーリーって案外覚えていないんじゃないでしょうか?改めてじっくり読んでみると、起伏のある内容に惹きつけられ、とっても面白かったんですよね。2021年の桜のシーズンはもう終わりですが、きょうはのんびり映画でも見るつもりで「花咲じじい」の物語に耳を傾けてみてください。 --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/djasuka/support
Episode 66 of the Travels With Randy Podcast is here! For the second week in a row, Bubba travels while Randy babbles. Bubba makes a trip to his homeland - Central Illinois. Champaign, Decatur, Warrensburg, Latham, and Mt Zion are all on the docket. Sadly, it was for a funeral, but he gets to spend some time with family and old high school friends and even visits his Alma Mater, the University of Illinois. They then launch into a high-level overview of cryptocurrency, Bitcoin, Ethereum, blockchain, and NFT's (nothing TOO rough). They finish with an introspective look at what birthdays mean to each of them as they age. Listen on iTunes, Spotify, and everywhere else! You can also listen here: https://travelswithrandypodcast.libsyn.com/ #podcast #blockchain #covid19 #NFT #vaccine #ecommercebusiness #Bitcoin #podcaster #onlineselling #Ethereum #podcasts #Champaign #travelswithrandy #amazon #UofI #RemoteSchool #Warrensburg #Cryptocurrency #twitter #Latham
B-Movie Mania Presents: The Mythos Minute Podcast ep. 5 Written by: Jason Huls To submit your short horror poetry email Jason at TheMythosMinutePodcast@gmail.com.
Peter is joined by Tom Sharples, the pair talk about the wide range of experiences that a horticultural career can offer, share some amusing moments and offer a few tips. Elsewhere Peter shares a reminiscence of a presidential garden and suggests time may be of the essence. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Dr. Jewel Williams | Co-Pastor |Author Introducing a series within a series Titled: Chronicles of the Year 2020! Throughout the year, not only have people been sharing their personal stories of inspiration but also their feelings/experiences of the pandemic and other major events.Listen as Dr. Williams shares her life journey and story of strength and perseverance. Website: drjewelwilliams@publishthevision.com Social Media: jewel D. Williams (facebook) @Publishthevision (facebook business page) @thejewelboxonline (facebook business page) ***** Book Info Pending**** To get New episodes sent to your Email ! Click the link [here]
Kalsaur, Tjalle, Chanielle, and the soldiers are rushing from the remains of their armoured vehicle. How are they going to make their way deeper into this city swarmed by ghouls?Flowers Bloom @ 7:44, Ballad Theme -dcolemusic https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKclgweFe7swHCF2g6c2B8AArs_Sonor - I am You Wind of ChangesCone of Cold Spell, Lightning Bolt Spell - Daniel WarnekeDoors and Portals - Heavy Stone Door - Danio Cionini Cthulhu Mythos - H.P. Lovecraft Horror Music - Horror in Lovecraft Country - 01 Welcome to Arkham ( https://gplowman.bandcamp.com ) Forsaken Mikael HellmanZombie Horde - Attack of the Dead Ones - Franco CugusiGathering Darkness, Stormfront, Parting of the Ways - Part-2 - Kevin Macleod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ The Legion by Alexander Nakarada (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Samantha Bresnahan, a 2018 MFA graduate, reads a chapter from her book “In the Blood, Flowers Bloom,” which is currently seeking a publisher.The story follows American and Japanese veterans of Iwo Jima during World War II and how the keepsakes that soldiers took from enemies kept the battle alive long after the fighting stopped. Bresnahan’s story concerns the trauma of war, but is ultimately about the necessity of reconciliation and forgiveness, no matter how long that takes.Bresnahan is a senior writer and copy editor at CNN in the international features division, where she has worked for more than a decade.
An immortal girl raised an orphan human boy as her own child, developing an everlasting love like mother and son. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
What if Biden's open hostility to medicare 4 all, and Trump's desire to win in 2020 led to a realignment of the two parties? Arish Singh share's his musings with us in this 2-hour bottle rocket ride of a Patreon exclusive. Subscribe for 5$ for all access Patreon.com/rumspringa
Follow Kaylee — @kayleecreates | kayleecreates.com | Let The Flowers Bloom///Welcome to the #wildheartsclub! Join Gennean and her wild-hearted friends every two weeks for conversations around real, relevant topics that will encourage you to step into a more full and abundant life.Follow Gennean — @gennean | gennean.com
EVEN FLOWERS BLOOM IN HELL, SOMETIMES (A MIXTAPE) by Franky D. Gonzalez is an examination of prison inmates trying to discover meaning in the face of isolation and doubt in their own worth over a 25-year bid. The play explores familial ties, love, race, inmate-correctional officer relations, the passing of time, and the succeeding generation… The post Play4Keeps Podcast | Free full play: EVEN FLOWERS BLOOM IN HELL, SOMETIMES by Franky D. Gonzalez appeared first on Play4Keeps.
Fantastic Four #583 from November 2010. "Three, Part One: In Latveria, the Flowers Bloom in Winter" by Jonathan Hickman and Steve Epting.
1009 Talk It Up! (메밀꽃 필 무렵 / 이효석) Guest: Anton & Sophie Theme: 메밀꽃 필 무렵 /이효석 When Buckwheat Flowers Bloom / Lee Hyoseok
Die 53. Folge Humoralpathologie!Der älteste Podcast Tübingens meldet sich zurück aus ganz Deutschland. Ein feuchter Traum für alle mit einem Fetisch für disjunkte Einzelsätze geht in Erfüllung…Diesmal mit - Eroterisches Autoorakel (ab ~ 10:00) - Traumdeutungen (ab ~ 30:37)- Beccas hottes Bibelquiz (ab ~ 40:15)- Deutschlernen mit Hentai (ab 1:14:35)- Philipp Lahm (ab ~ 1:34:38)und die Tasties (ab ~ 1:49:00): www.youtube.com/user/MishutiirioStar Wars Ep. I - IIIBrooklyn Nine-NineAlben der Woche: 666 - Aphrodite’s Child / Live at Carnegy Hall - Harry BelafonteSendet Anregungen, Fragen und andere Kommentare an: humoralpathologie@gmail.com oder schreibt uns auf Facebook und erhaltet einen kostenlosen Ursprungsnamen - Jetzt auch via Twitter @ZunZunChao. Außerdem bei Twitter: @rogerbraun @timschierbaum @Benkei2000 @beccatosaurusBesucht uns unter:http://humoralpathologie.de/und beweist Geschmack, indem ihr unserem Podcast auf Facebook ein Thumbs-Up gebthttps://www.facebook.com/humoralpathologieWeiterführende Links:Das Auto spirituell erklärtStimulierender DeutschkursFür die Musik bedanken wir uns bei Revolution Void.Angespielte Tracks: The Modern Divide & Obscure Terrain.Von dem Album “Increase the Dosage” und Burned Sky vom Album “Let 1,000 Flowers Bloomhttp://www.revolutionvoid.com/Sämtliche Musik ist unter der Creative Commons Lizenz veröffentlicht worden.
Die 51. Folge Humoralpathologie! Nach einem Jahr zum ersten Mal wieder mit fünf Beitragenden im selben Raum. Selbstverständlich ist dies Fluch und Segen zugleich, denn ein gewisser Audio-Ingenieur hat es anscheinend verlernt, die Mikrophone richtig einzustellen. Entschuldigt also bitte die durchwachsene Tonqualität im zweiten Teil. Das Menü setzt sich diesmal wie folgt zusammen: - Begrüßung und missmutiger Ursprungsname (ab ~ 03:50), leben in Berlin, Flatterball - Survival und Vorbereitung auf den Ernstfall (ab ~ 15:15), Army of Two, Schweizer Tamponmesser, X-Survival, Blade City, Tipps zur Survivor-Fitness, Dosenöffnen, Forenbullshit - Philipp Lahm oder aufhören wenn es am Schönsten ist (ab ~ 59:30), Contactarbeitsblatt, Dropboxunlogik, Wie viel muss man trinken, um intus zu kriegen? Shazam-Future, gleichseitige Beziehungen, Hausaufgabenhilfe - Papillon-Empfehlung (ab ~ 1:10:00), Audible, Downpour-Empfehlung - Hennings gescheitertes Leben (ab ~ 1:14:00), Hennings Tindererfahrungen, House-Parties mit Run the Jewels, Gone till November vs Die Jahresuhr, Udo Lindenberg Nachruf - Tasties: Element of Crime, Top Gun OST & The Guest (ab ~ 1:28:00) - Aliensprache Krak (ab ~ 1:34:00) Albert Tomschi, Kronszessor usw. Und wie immer der Linkdump: Aliensounddokumente: http://www.parainstitut.at/space/index.html Trailer “The Guest” mit Cousin Matthew: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-psayRM1XqU Survival-Webserie mit epischer Musik: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YoMBF8J8cX8 Sendet Anregungen, Fragen und andere Kommentare an: humoralpathologie@gmail.com oder schreibt uns auf Facebook und erhaltet einen kostenlosen Ursprungsnamen - Jetzt auch via Twitter @ZunZunChao. Außerdem bei Twitter: @rogerbraun @timschierbaum @Benkei2000 @beccatosaurus Besucht uns unter:http://humoralpathologie.de/und beweist Geschmack, indem ihr unserem Podcast auf Facebook ein Thumbs-Up gebthttps://www.facebook.com/humoralpathologie Für die Musik bedanken wir uns bei Revolution Void.Angespielte Tracks: The Modern Divide & Obscure Terrain. Von dem Album “Increase the Dosage”. http://www.revolutionvoid.com/ sowie Burned Sky von dem Album “Let 1,000 Flowers Bloom” Und bei Kara Square für den Philipp Lahm-Track Ukulele Vs. Kazoo and Whistle, Too von dem Album “Ukulele Duels” Sämtliche Musik ist unter der Creative Commons Lizenz veröffentlicht worden.
Die 49. Folge Humoralpathologie! Vor dem groÃen Jubiläum noch eine ganz klassische Folge Humoralpathologie mit allen beliebten Rubriken. 00:20 â 16:39 Interkontinentale WM-Erfahrungen, Nudelfrühstück, die Fanreportage, Drakes Flusenroller, Kommunalwahlen in Tübingen, Ursprungsname: Rapavo 16:40 â 35:20 Neue Produkte aus Ãbersee, White Power Milk, Lactose, Karrierechancen, Gefahren, Angelina und Sean, Vegetarier, dumme Fragen an Vegetarier, Prestige Lifestraw, 99,9999 ist nicht gleich 100!, Wasserfilter vs. Keime 35:22 â 58:28 Modernes Powerdressing, Dress for Success, Schulterpolster, JoyOfClothes, persönliche Kleidungstile, klassischer vs. veralteter Stil, Hygiene, Arbeitsethos in Deutschland und Nordamerika, Lebensgefühl in Deutschland und den Nordamerika, A… 59:48 â 1:02:05 Traum, eine mir nahestehende private Person sitzt auf einem dicken Mann seinen Bauch, Transcendence, Samurai Cop 1:02:06 â 1:08:24 Blitzrunde: Philipp Lahm oder aufhören wenn es am schönsten ist 1:08:25 â 1:32:38 Hennings Thema: Weià oder Vice, Bagelheads und Sackgesichter, WeiÃe Erotik, Body Integrety Identity Disorder, Zity.biz, sexy Fiebermess-Geschichte, ein sexy Experiment, Zäpfchenherstellung, Zäpfchendinowitze 1:32:39 â 1:37:13 Traum, interessanter kämpferischer FIlm, der Boss, verflucht hoch zehn 1:37:14 â 1:53:17 Tasties: Quizduell, Jodorowskiâs Dune, Flatterball, (Euro Truck Simulator), Pfanderotik Sendet Anregungen, Fragen und andere Kommentare an: humoralpathologie@gmail.com oder schreibt uns auf Facebook und erhaltet einen kostenlosen Ursprungsnamen - Jetzt auch via Twitter @ZunZunChao. AuÃerdem bei Twitter: @rogerbraun @timschierbaum @Benkei2000 @beccatosaurus Besucht uns unter: http://humoralpathologie.de/ und beweist Geschmack, indem ihr unserem Podcast auf Facebook ein Thumbs-Up gebt https://www.facebook.com/humoralpathologie Für die Musik bedanken wir uns bei Revolution Void. Angespielte Tracks: The Modern Divide & Obscure Terrain. Von dem Album “Increase the Dosage”. und Burned Sky von dem Album âLet 1,000 Flowers Bloomâ. http://www.revolutionvoid.com/ Für Hennings Lovecorner: “Jam in jazz-guitar for my friends by Philippe Mangold” von Jazz Friends Und bei DJ Krio für den Traumdeutungstrack Atmospherica. Sämtliche Musik ist unter der Creative Commons Lizenz veröffentlicht worden.
Die 47. Folge Humoralpathologie! Worin wir darüber sprechen, wie lange ein Nieser eigentlich bis zum Mond braucht. 00:19 – 06:10 Kein Internet, Ausreden für nichtgemachte Hausaufgaben für die neue Zeit, das Ende der Schnürlischrift 06:11 – 25:03 Michael Jackson Buch, ungeschickte Bebilderungen von Nachrufen, mediumistischer Spiritismus, MJ Emailsignaturen, gemeinsames Stillen des Astralkindes, non-existentes Oxymoron des Universums: Lesbische Frauen, Eintritt eines großen Sprungs im Bewusstsein durch MJs Tod 25:50 – 41:52 Ping, Gute und schlechte Schauspieler, Johnny Depp, George Clooney, Milla Jovovich, Al Pacinos menschliche und intellektuelle Intelligenz, Marlon Brando, Winona Ryder, die mit dem Wespenstachel am Hintern, Christopher Walken, Amelie, Die schönste Geschichte der Welt 41:54 – 1:05:45 Die Gefahren des Niesens, Nies-Fakten, Paraforum, Glutamat gegen Lernstörungen, Pisaschwindel, Hippocampus, Das Relikt, das große M, Pornodarstellerargumentation, Schopenhauer, Katzenfuttertest, Elekrolytecocktail, Fürst Pücklers Halswehbremse, Opas Stinkesocken 1:06:25 – 1:26:49 Zahnarztpraxenwerbung in Menschengestalt, Keimling, Stromgewinnung beim Bäcker, Rassenunruhen in Vancity, Craigslist, Rants&Raves, Chinese Moms‘ Mutant Looking Kidz, White Trash Immigrants, chinesische Stinks, 5000 Jahre Anschiss 1:26:50 – 1:38:26 Markus Lanz aggressiver Interviewstil, Sahra Wagenknecht, Horst Janson, Das Brisante Buch, die geheime Rhetorikschulung der Öffentlich-Rechtlichen Sendet Anregungen, Fragen und andere Kommentare an: humoralpathologie@gmail.com oder schreibt uns auf Facebook und erhaltet einen kostenlosen Ursprungsnamen - Jetzt auch via Twitter @ZunZunChao. Außerdem bei Twitter: @rogerbraun @timschierbaum @Benkei2000 @beccatosaurus Besucht uns unter:http://humoralpathologie.de/und beweist Geschmack, indem ihr unserem Podcast auf Facebook ein Thumbs-Up gebthttps://www.facebook.com/humoralpathologie Für die Musik bedanken wir uns bei Revolution Void.Angespielte Tracks: The Modern Divide, Obscure Terrain.Von dem Album “Increase the Dosage" und Ode to Sun Ra & YeYeYe von dem Album "Let 1,000 Flowers Bloom”.http://www.revolutionvoid.com/Sämtliche Musik ist unter der Creative Commons Lizenz veröffentlicht worden.
Die 46. Folge Humoralpathologie! Wir widmen uns großartiger Hörerpost aus der Schweiz, erfahren so einige (Halb-)wahrheiten aus der Tierwelt und hören einen Reisebericht über Mexico, der streng genommen auch – wenn man Mexico gegen Mallorca und Tequila gegen Sangria austauscht – von jener heiß geliebten Balearischen Insel berichten könnte… 00:17 – 05:59 Unangenehme Skypekonferenz, Ping Pong, keine Ursprungsnahmen 06:00 – 39:50 Humoralpathologie im Angesicht des Todes, Henning braucht Freunde, Deutsche in Kanada, Hörspielrezension, Fossilien und Versteinerungen, Andre Agassi und Steffi Graf, Donald der Kaufhauserpresser, die Sintflut, Puff Daddy, Godzilla 40:32 – 53:00 Eine Art Quiz über Tierfakten, Schielende Koalas, Schweineschwänze, das peinlichste Tier: der Blamingo, Säugetiere die nicht springen können, Kühe beim Tierarzt 53:01 – 1:28:14 Hennings Aus- und Umwanderungserfahrungen, Schikane an US-Kanadischen Grenze, Kleidungsdeals vs. Informationelle Selbstbestimmung, Subway in Mexico, Rochenattacke auf die Stiefmutter der Freundin, Gehfaule beleibte Touristen, Tequila Volleyball, Life News, Yellow Face-Clowns, Spring Breakers, Butterbrezel Sendet Anregungen, Fragen und andere Kommentare an: humoralpathologie@gmail.com oder schreibt uns auf Facebook und erhaltet einen kostenlosen Ursprungsnamen - Jetzt auch via Twitter @ZunZunChao. Außerdem bei Twitter: @rogerbraun @timschierbaum @Benkei2000 @beccatosaurus Besucht uns unter:http://humoralpathologie.de/und beweist Geschmack, indem ihr unserem Podcast auf Facebook ein Thumbs-Up gebthttps://www.facebook.com/humoralpathologie Für die Musik bedanken wir uns bei Revolution Void.Angespielte Tracks: The Modern Divide, Obscure Terrain.Von dem Album “Increase the Dosage" und Alcyone, Pleiades, Taurusvon dem Album "Let 1,000 Flowers Bloom”.http://www.revolutionvoid.com/Sämtliche Musik ist unter der Creative Commons Lizenz veröffentlicht worden.
Die 45. Folge Humoralpathologie! “Der mit Abstand beste und stets am längsten erwartete Podcast zum Thema #DingsBums” (Twitter) meldet sich mit der alljährlichen Halloweenfolge zurück! 00:20 – 11:21 Neues aus Mexiko, Hörerpost von Seppoco, Vollmondbier, Ursprungsnamen: Nulemahro, Pathorodi 11:22 – 18:50 Traum 1, geschmacklos gekleidete Frau, Traum 2, Pferdetraum, Fiebertraum auf Diktiergerät, Insektengin, Gin der Familienalkohol 18:51 – 54:49 Candy Tampering, Cattle Mutilation, die Pferderipperin von Krefeld, Reiki Marmelade und Gelees, das Schamanenorakel, das Schwabenorakel, Hobby: Ferien, Küsschen auf die Wange mit Zunge, der alternative Bereich 55:21 – 1:05:48 Rate My Professor, silly quizzies, crazy critical thinking, Lehrer mit Logiklöchern 1:05:49 – 1:25:57 Kochmythen, Öl ins Nudelwasser? Alkohol beim Kochen? Fleisch scharf anbraten? Hülsenfrüchte und Salzwasser? Pilze waschen? 1:25:59 – Tranarten, Helge Schneider Traum, Tatort-Podcast, Tasties: Aus julianischen Tagen, The Flop House, The Musketeers BBC, Rick and Morty, Gefriersabber Sendet Anregungen, Fragen und andere Kommentare an: humoralpathologie@gmail.com oder schreibt uns auf Facebook und erhaltet einen kostenlosen Ursprungsnamen - Jetzt auch via Twitter @ZunZunChao. Außerdem bei Twitter: @rogerbraun @timschierbaum @Benkei2000 @beccatosaurus Besucht uns unter:http://humoralpathologie.de/und beweist Geschmack, indem ihr unserem Podcast auf Facebook ein Thumbs-Up gebthttps://www.facebook.com/humoralpathologie Für die Musik bedanken wir uns bei Revolution Void.Angespielte Tracks: The Modern Divide, Obscure Terrain.Von dem Album “Increase the Dosage" und The Turtle Speaksvon dem Album "Let 1,000 Flowers Bloom”.http://www.revolutionvoid.com/Außerdem bedanken wir uns bei DJ Krio für den Traumdeutungstrack Dark Sol.Sämtliche Musik ist unter der Creative Commons Lizenz veröffentlicht worden.
Die 44. Folge Humoralpathologie! Der Abschied von Henning fällt schwer, weswegen diese Folge ein wenig länger geworden ist. Es geht diesmal um Raelismus, die schönsten Gärten Norddeutschlands, CB Funk und Truckermusik. Außerdem geben wir ein paar Reisetipps für Japan und unternehmen einen schaurigen und weniger schönen Ausflug in die Vergangenheit indem wir uns mit einem völkerkundlichen Buch vom Dachboden befassen. 00:20 – 16:20 Ursprungsname: Hitarori, Free Henning, Ōmu-Sekte, Tims russische Nachtspeicherofentundra, Auswandern, Beccas Callcentererfahrungen, Vorwerk, Lux, Gin Cola, Preview: Henning in Mexico, Polizei wegboxen 16:20 – 28:53 Raelistische Religion, Claude Vorilhon, Klonen, Elohim, Intelligentes Design, Atomstreik, Noach, The Woman‘s Right to be Topless, BH - ja oder nein 28:54 – 48:50 Reisetipps: Japan, Der Dragonball Tempel in Kobe (Suma dera), das internationale Kuriositätenmuseum Kobe (Uroko no ie), Silent Hill Spielhölle, Kansai, Kyōto, Ōsaka, Japan Rail Pass, Sapporo, First Cabin Hotels, Nara, Fushimi Inari, Arashiyama Herbstlaub, McDonald‘s in Nara, Yokohama Chinatown, Ōsaka Korea-Town (Tsuruhashi), das beste (imaginäre) Ninjakaffee, traditionelle Ohrenreinigung, Tōsa-Hunde 49:46 – 56:30 Träume, Silvie Meis (van der Vaart), drei Rapidfire-Träume, Tims Tübingentraum 56:31 – 1:04:58 Neujahrsspringen, Maeaettae, die 20 schönsten Gärten Norddeutschlands, Bestattungen mit Brustimplantaten und geschmacklose Kommentare, Plastikmenschen 1:04:59 – 1:35:53 Truckermusik, Auf Achse, gleich hinter Hamburg fängt der Wilde Wilde Westen an, Gunter Gabriel, Jonny Hill, Trucker Bushido, Freddy Quinn, Ruf Teddybär 14, CB Funk, Tims Messeerlebnis, Joyride, Hennings Countrysongideen, Die CB-Oma und Tims Zivi-Oma 1:36:20 – 2:01:01 Das Weib im Leben der Völker, Die Kanadierin, die Weiblichkeit in der nordischen Kolonie, die rühmliche Eigenschaft der Fruchtbarkeit, die tugendhaften Arkardierinnen, die britische Kanadierin – anspruchslos und sportlich, Afrika, What is love, Countdown zum N-Wort, die Khoi Khoi (Hottentotten), Der Stand der Frau im Volk, Anti-Umerziehungs-Petition Baden Württemberg, Cliffhanger, Renny Harlin 2:01:02 – 2:20:19 Die Aufgabe, die kein Quiz ist, Anstiftung zum wüsten Schlagen, Frauenproblem, zu viel Fett in der Geschlechtsregion, Schlappenzustand, Stubentiger, Siamkatzin, Messihaushalt, Fummelbrett, Verleihung der Katzennobelpreise 2:20:20 – 2:25:12 Tasties: Castro von Reinhard Kleist, Sherlock, Top Gear, RetroGames e.V. Karlsruhe, Planescape: Torment Sendet Anregungen, Fragen und andere Kommentare an: humoralpathologie@gmail.com oder schreibt uns auf Facebook und erhaltet einen kostenlosen Ursprungsnamen - Jetzt auch via Twitter @ZunZunChao. Außerdem bei Twitter: @rogerbraun @timschierbaum @Benkei2000 @beccatosaurus Besucht uns unter:http://humoralpathologie.de/und beweist Geschmack, indem ihr unserem Podcast auf Facebook ein Thumbs-Up gebthttps://www.facebook.com/humoralpathologie Für die Musik bedanken wir uns bei Revolution Void.Angespielte Tracks: The Modern Divide, Obscure Terrain.Von dem Album “Increase the Dosage" und Oceanarium & Implanted Informationvon dem Album "Let 1,000 Flowers Bloom”.http://www.revolutionvoid.com/Außerdem bedanken wir uns bei DJ Krio für den Traumdeutungstrack Dark Sol.Sämtliche Musik ist unter der Creative Commons Lizenz veröffentlicht worden.
Toby Meadows (Arché Research Centre) gives a talk at the Axiomatic vs Semantic Truth Conference (14-16 March, 2012) titled "Let Three Flowers Bloom".
Wade, Mary Dodson. FLOWERS BLOOM!